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Life
ALL ACCESS: ‘PrInCeSS In The PAlACe’ mAkeS ITS mArk
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BusinessMirror
Monday, October 19, 2015 D1
A dozen years of dazzling women
2015 Best Dressed Style Icon businesswoman and cancer survivor Grace Ong Gobing in Amir Sali
THE Catalog Shopper cofounder Joy WambangcoRustia in Randy Ortiz
Twitter: @misscharlize
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N 2004 the Best Dressed Women of the Philippines (BDWP) awardees were Maricris Cardenas Zobel (in Christian Dior top and Rajo Laurel skirt), Carol Masibay (in Pepito Albert), Chuchu Madrigal (in Vera Wang), Julie Manning (in Inno Sotto), Rosemarie Arenas (in an unnamed London designer), Gul Tanghe (in Jeannie Goulbourn), Amparito Lhuillier (in Monique Lhuillier, naturally), Criselda Lontok (in Nolie Hans), Therese Coronel Santos (in Joe Salazar), Vicky
BUSINESSWOMAN and MTG Educational Program founder Maika T. Garcia in Frederick Peralta
Zubiri (in Christian Lacroix) and Gina Lopez (in Jennie Goulbourn). The Style Icon awardees were society swans Chito Madrigal Collantes and Imelda Ongsiako Cojuangco. These accomplished women’s impressive personal style (and awesome wardrobe) set the standard for anyone who aspires to be one of them. In the ensuing years, some exemplary Filipino women have joined their ranks. Cristina Ponce Enrile and Gretchen Oppen Cojuangco were the 2005 Style Icons, with Susan Reyes (in Pepito Albert), Menchu Menchaca Soriano (in Alberta Ferretti) and Nikki Prieto Teodoro (in Saint John Couture) among the best dressed awardees. Margie Moran Floirendo (in Katrina Goulbourn) was feted in 2006; Mariquita Yeung, Dawn Zulueta Lagdameo and Gov. Gwendolyn Garcia (all in Cary Santiago) in 2007; Frannie Aguinaldo Jacinto (in Ito Curata) in 2008; Agnes Huibonhua (in Paul Cabral) in 2009; Happy Ongpauco-Tiu (in Patrice Ramos Diaz) in 2010; Cris Albert (in Auggie Cordero) in 2011; Tootsy Echauz-Angara (in Dennis Lustico) with Ching Cruz as Style Icon in 2012; Charisse Marie Abalos (in Jojie Aguilar) in 2013; and
BLOOMWOODS Flowershop owner Mia Cabawatan-Lozada in Jojie Lloren
Pauline Laverne Lim (in Larry Espinosa) in 2014. The BDWP is a fundraising effort for the Philippine Cancer Society (PCS), with a glittering annual awards ball at the Makati Shangri-La Hotel. “Because of BDWP, we are now able to embark on a new project to provide a PCS Mobile Clinic [donated by Victory Liner] that can go to low-resource communities and screen for breast and cervical cancers, which are the two most common cancers in Filipino women. This endeavor is the first of its kind in the country,” an appreciative Dr. Roberto M. Paterno, PCS chairman of the board, said in the souvenir program. “This year’s women of substance were chosen out of the same mold: beauty, style and kind hearts,” event chairman Angola Consul Helen Ong says. “These women are leading lives worthy of merit on the personal, professional and civic front.” The 2015 Style Icons are businesswoman and cancer survivor Grace Ong Gobing in Amir Sali and The Catalog Shopper cofounder Joy Wambangco-Rustia in Randy Ortiz (lemon silk tulle gown embellished with dove-gray floral embroidery cascading from the bodice down the
SAINT Luke’s Medical Center’s top obstetriciangynecologist Dr. Elsie Badillo-Pascua in Eddie Baddeo
skirt, plus electro-pleated underlay in canary to create a two-tone effect), while the Best Dressed awardees are businesswoman and certified public accountant Eni Alba in Roulette Esmilla; Procter & Gamble Financial Shared Services Division Quality Management Head Natalie Diane Lim-Ang in Amir Sali; Rex Bookstore Director Danda Crimelda I. Buhain-Garcia in Avel Bacudio (emerald green off-shoulder bias Thai silk dress with yellow neoprene Thai chiffon long back with Swarovski beads); businesswoman and MTG Educational Program founder Maika T. Garcia in Frederick Peralta; Reimagine Global Health Fellowship founding fellow Jarelle Palabay Gonzales in Francis Libiran, Bloomwoods Flowershop owner (and pregnant) Mia Cabawatan-Lozada in Jojie Lloren (empire-cut lemon and champagne silk mikado gown with origami sculptural detail at the back) currency trader and licensed stockbroker Anna Moncupa in Mark Bumgarner; fashion accessory designer and advocate of Filipino craftsmanship Ann Ong in John Paras, Saint Luke’s Medical Center’s top obstetrician-gynecologist Dr. Elsie Badillo-Pascua in Eddie Baddeo (Grecian-inspired canary-yellow gown with heavy
NEUROLOGIST Dr. Hazel Paragua-Zuellig in Jun Escario
one-sided metallic copper-gold appliques in Swarovski); businesswoman Anna Sia in Ito Curata (black velvet, mermaid silhouette long gown accentuated with fan-like, over-sized ruffle, which wraps to the back to form a train, with mango gold hand-beaded, scalloped edge corded lace applique completing the ensemble); Vigan Plaza Hotel General Manager and socio-civic leader Patch SavellanoSingson in Andrea Tetangco, and renowned neurologist Dr. Hazel Paragua-Zuellig in Jun Escario (deep V neckline and 1950s silhouette fitted skirt with semi-bias ball skirt at the back, plus crystallized belt for a little shine). “The Best Dressed Women of the Philippines has always exceeded all the expectations that we have set in the previous years. It has made itself the best and most efficient fundraising activity of PCS,” says honorary Chairman Imelda Ongsiako Cojuangco. “The women chosen by the selection and organizing committee for [our 12th year] are those who exemplify the qualities of a true lady—driven, humble and kind-hearted.” Here’s hoping that any of these women will eventually make it to Vanity Fair Fair’s International Best-Dressed List.
Because your skin needs to look good B B K Seoul correspondent
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NYBODY around these parts who has seen a Koreanovela, or, better yet, has flown to Korean Peninsula to indulge in its beauty and culture, will invariably come away with the conclusion that Korean women have fabulous skin—and, yes, they are serious about keeping it that way. A new ally of Korean women in their pursuit is SkinIsGood.com, an online portal of everything a woman needs to keep her skin in fabulous shape. The company is the distributor of such acclaimed beauty brands
as Mary Cohr, Caviar, Decleor, and Sothys, and women can shop to their heart’s delight at the online shop and have their beauty goodies shipped pronto. SkinIsGood hosted its launch soiree at a hip venue in Seoul in late September, and the occasion also marked the announcement of the inclusion to its roster of beauty aids the popular all-natural beauty brand La Muse, which takes great pride in clinically proven products that will have your friends asking how you always look so amazing. To know more about SkinIsGood and the skin wonders it offers, visit en.skinisgood.com.
JAZZ artist Danny Jung
LEE KWANG GEOL (from left), Doosan Magazine director; Son Youn-ju, BEworks COO; Britney Kang; Jenny Kim, SkinIsGood president; Veronica Sae Hee, SkinisGood director; and Albert Bae, EWA Entertainment COO
LIFE
GEOL with Kang and RA Beauty Core President Hyun Tae
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DRINKING IN AMERICA Perspective BusinessMirror
E4 Monday, October 19, 2015
“Some in the business community share the position of [Director General of the Philippine Economic Zone Authority] Lilia B. de Lima that if it [RFI bill] affects, in any way, our competitiveness, ’wag na lang [we should not push through with it]. It has to improve our competitiveness, and not the other way around,” Makati Business Club (MBC) Executive Director Peter Angelo V. Perfecto said.
B L I | The Associated Press
enough into American history and booze, she said. “What about the fact that 100 years before Prohibition we were the drunkest country in the world, and what about the fact that in the 19th century, writers didn’t drink,” Cheever said. Her book is filled with detailed anecdotes and quirky, alcoholfueled moments through time. Cheever offers these observations among her favorite bits:
PAUL REVERE & THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION Some nations drink more and some less, but nowhere do those two things collide and replay on a loop through history quite like they have in the United States, said Susan Cheever, who’s written Drinking in America: Our Secret History. Cheever was addicted to alcohol, as was her father, author John Cheever. She’s visited the subject of drinking in the past, and she’s been in love with history since a college professor inspired her. But this project, published in October by Twelve Books, was “really a eureka moment,” she said in a recent interview. Nobody has really gone deep
RACELAND Louisiana beer drinkers
pened on Lexington Green, where Paul Revere stopped for a couple of shots,” she said. “He got there so much faster than the British. He got to Lexington at midnight, saying ‘The British are coming, the British are coming,’ and the militia turns out, and the British aren’t anywhere near. So they all go to Buckman Tavern and drink for three hours, then the British finally get there and what ensues was 70 relatively or very drunk militiamen,” Cheever said.
THE RUM
THINK evening, April 18, 1775: “I’ve been to Concord, Massachusetts, many times. I really thought that the first shots of the war were fired at the Old North Bridge, so I was really shocked and interested to read about what hap-
SURE, there was the Boston Tea Party, but rum ruled the colonies: “The British were trying to tax alcohol, so no taxation without representation wasn’t great on tea but it really wasn’t good on rum. In some ways, the American Revolution was about rum. It’s as if they fought the American Revolution not for the right to vote, but for the right to drink,” Cheever said. Rum was definitely the drink of the colonies, and “no one stood for rum consumption the way Ethan Allen did.” Stories abound, the most famous of which has the leader of the
Green Mountain Boys so soaked with rum that he was unaware a snake had bitten him multiple times after he fell asleep in a glen. When he awoke, he complained of the mosquitoes.
ABRAHAM LINCOLN
HE abstained, likely due to harddrinking relatives: “I thought I knew all about Abraham Lincoln. I did not know that he was one of those rare human beings, and I mean rare, who didn’t drink and didn’t judge. His mother asked him on her death bed not to drink and he took that very seriously,” Cheever said. “But he fired George McClellan, who was his sober general in the Union Army, and hired Ulysses S. Grant, who had already been courtmartialed once for drinking. When the generals came and complained to Lincoln that Grant was drinking too much, Lincoln famously said bring me some barrels of what he’s drinking so I can give it to all my generals. He wasn’t a temperance guy.”
Prohibition and women’s temperance were wrapped around each other. Many of the women’s suffrage crusaders, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, had started out as temperance crusaders,” Cheever said. “And it was thought that Prohibition would be great for women because drinking was a male problem. Men were drinking and they didn’t bring the money home to the women and children,” she said. “The income tax was instituted at the same time. Before then, thanks to Alexander Hamilton, almost the entire federal budget was based on liquor taxes, so they couldn’t have had Prohibition. It couldn’t happen until they had an income tax.”
WRITING & DRINKING
BOOZE and the muse: “For me the biggest revelation of the book was the link between writing and drinking. It’s so limited chronologically. It’s not true until about 1925. In the 19th century, writers didn’t drink. Hawthorne, Melville, Thoreau, Emerson, Longfellow. Nope. No drinkers. It’s not about the writers. It’s about the drinking culture,” Cheever said. “Of course, some writers drink a lot, so much so that the five people who won the Nobel Prize for literature were all alcoholics, but only for two generations. I hadn’t really done the math, and then it occurred to me that, of course, it came out of Prohibition, that Prohibition made drinking that much more attractive to writers,” she said. A year-by-year analysis shows that although many famous American writers drank too much, they did that only in the years after Prohibition and World War II.
PERSPECTIVE
PROHIBITION
DRINKING, suffrage and taxes: “I didn’t know the way that
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VIDA Land Corp., the mid-income market brand of property developer Ayala Land Inc., said it will build more house-and-lot units in properties outside Metro Manila as part of its strategy to focus more on horizontal developments. Maria Teresa Tatco, Avida marketing head, said the company wants to increase its horizontal developments across the country in the coming years, as it tries to put its mix of vertical and horizontal developments at 50-50. Currently, 80 percent of Avida’s developments are still focused on high-rise buildings and condominiums, with the rest being subdivisions and villages whose buyers C A are mostly end-users.
POPULATION GROWTH THREATENS PHL RICE SELF-SUFFICIENCY GOAL
RICHARD NIXON
MARTINIS and rage: “I knew Nixon was a crook, but I didn’t realize how much drinking had to do with it because he never drank that much and he didn’t stagger around, but alcohol certainly impaired him,” Cheever said. Nixon was a “tightly wound Quaker with a longing for power,” she wrote. One night in 1960, “he even got drunk and seriously told his Catholic staffers what a great Pope he could be and how well he could run the Vatican.” Nixon didn’t drink at all until he was an adult, yet you can see that he was drunk or passed out at many, many important moments, Cheever said. One of those moments was on August 29, 1969, when two members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine hijacked TWA Flight 840, forcing the pilot to divert the Tel Aviv-bound airliner to the airport in Damascus, Syria. Nixon’s national security adviser, Henry Kissinger, reached the president by phone after dark, when Nixon had partaken of a drink or two and was in one of his common rages. He exploded into the phone: “Bomb the airport!” and sent Kissinger and Defense Secretary Melvin Laird into a scramble on how to avoid the direct order without seeming to, she said. Finally, Laird told the president weather conditions made bombing impractical, thereby avoiding action that might well have led to larger disaster.
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SPECIAL REPORT
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PRINCIPLES of the Prohibition Party campaign poster (1888).
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HORIZONTAL PROJECTS NEW FOCUS OF AVIDA
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DRINKING IN AMERICA
EW YORK—Drinking, and not drinking, is as old as America itself, from the beer-loving pilgrims on the Mayflower and Paul Revere’s boozy horse ride to Prohibition and the rise of Alcoholics Anonymous.
P. | | 7 DAYS A WEEK
MBC hoping RFI bill will stay dead in16th Congress USINESSMEN are hoping that the “already dead” Rationalization of Fiscal Incentives (RFI) bill would no longer be rescuscitated at the homestretch of the 16th Congress, noting that maintaining the country’s incentives regime would be better than rushing a potentially disruptive measure.
DAZZLING WOMEN EAR Lord, we could spot from a crowd, people who show cheerfulness. Aren’t they the force that inspire any group to do their task willingly and comfortably relaxed in finishing the work given them? Cheerful people don’t complain. They are too busy to give negative feedback. “Show cheerfulness on your countenance rather than sadness on any other ill-regulated emotion.” A line from Saint John Baptist de la Salle Collection of Various Treatises and Virtues. I should know because I served his school for 46 years as a Lasallian educator. May we, Lord, develop cheerfulness in all the things we do, think and say. Amen!
Thursday 2014 Vol. No. 40 Vol. 11 No. 11 Monday,18, October 19,102015
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INSIDE
Show cheerfulness
A broader look at today’s business
First of three parts
HE current El Niño episode may have been the single biggest factor behind the decision of the government to import more rice for this year and 2016. In the next five years, however, experts warned that the increase in the country’s population would make it more difficult for the Philippines to avoid the international rice market. The drought caused by El Niño has forced the Philippines to front-load its importation of 500,000 metric tons (MT) of rice for next year. The National Economic and Development Authority (Neda) said the government is looking to buy an additional 1 million metric C A
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 45.7960
n JAPAN 0.3852 n UK 70.9380 n HK 5.9092 n CHINA 7.2165 n SINGAPORE 33.2192 n AUSTRALIA 33.5330 n EU 52.1204 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.2155
Source: BSP (16 October 2015)