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Let the children come to me
EAR Lord, the greatest manifestation of your message, let the children come to me was evidently shown during Pope Francis visit to our country. He has shown his true love, mercy and compassion to the children. It is noteworthy that special attention was given to abandoned children by their parents when these children do not know yet what is going on around them. Were they abandoned for a better tomorrow? If they were left with their own unloving parents, would they have a chance to be embraced by the pope? I have worked with poor children and when I embrace them, many thoughts I always ponder. Amen. LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life
Friday, January 23, 2015
By Cai U. Ordinario & Genivi Factao
he Philippines could miss its target of growing gross domestic product (GDP) by 7 percent to 8 percent in 2015—and could even see growth slowing to 5.4 percent— especially if the government would not increase its spending and the output of the local manufacturing sector would slump this year, economists said on Thursday.
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CLINT EASTWOOD & BRADLEY COOPER TAKE AIM F
ROM Academy Award-winning director Clint Eastwood comes American Sniper, starring Bradley Cooper as Chris Kyle, whose skills as a sniper made him a hero on the battlefield. But there was much more to him than his skill as a sharpshooter. Navy SEAL Chris Kyle is sent to Iraq with only one mission: to protect his brothers-in-arms. His pinpoint accuracy saves countless lives in the battlefield and, as stories of his courageous exploits spread, he earns the nickname “Legend.” However, his reputation is also growing behind enemy lines, putting a price on his head and making him a prime target of insurgents. He is also facing a different kind of battle on the home front: striving to be a good husband and father from halfway around the world. Despite the danger, as well as the toll on his family at home, Chris serves through four harrowing tours of duty in Iraq, personifying the spirit of the SEAL creed to “leave no one behind.” But upon returning to his wife, Taya (Sienna Miller), and their kids, Chris finds that it is the war he can’t leave behind. A two-time Oscar nominee for his work in Silver Linings Playbook and American Hustle, Cooper heads the cast which also includes Sienna Miller, Luke Grimes, Jake McDorman, Cory Hardrict, Kevin Lacz, Navid Negahban and Keir O’Donnell. Oscar-winning filmmaker Clint Eastwood (Million Dollar Baby, Unforgiven) directed American Sniper from a screenplay written by Jason Hall, based on the book by Chris Kyle. What was it about Chris Kyle’s story that resonated with you and made you so passionate about wanting to bring it to the screen? Cooper: I liked the fact that it’s not really a movie about war so much as a character study. Chris’s story is a universal one about what veterans have to go through, really—the idea of dealing with the emotional seesaw of going into a warzone to fight and then coming
home, back to your family life, and the challenges that experience presents to all our soldiers. That was very moving to me. Eastwood: When the studio called me and asked me if I’d be interested in doing it, I was doing another picture and I was reading the book (American Sniper) just for fun. And I was curious about the story and the guy. So, they called me about it, and I said, “Well, gee, let me finish the next 30 pages and I’ll call you back.” It was interesting, ironic, a good story. So I said, “I’d love to see the script.” We met them and Bradley called and said, “They’d like to have you do it.” And that was the end of it. When you were developing the movie, you met Chris and his wife, Taya. What was that experience like and what did you learn about him beyond what was already in the book? Cooper: Well, I don’t want to speak for Clint, but I feel like the most of what we gleaned from Chris wasn’t even from the book. It was much more about the weekend we spent in Midlothian, Texas, with Taya Kyle, their children McKenna and Colton, his brother Jeff, and (his parents) Wayne and Debbie. We got to spend a full weekend, which happened to be the same weekend that was the anniversary of his murder. So, it was a pretty heavy time to be there. We went there sort of curious and as we were flying back, (Clint and I) were looking at each other like, “Wow, we got a lot from that.” Eastwood: Pretty heavy stuff. It turned out that the second day we were there was the first anniversary. So, Taya was not in a great state then, needless to say. But we rode in a car with her, and she was great. We all just talked pretty frankly about what we thought about stuff. Cooper: No book could ever really give you what you get from meeting people in the flesh. You just watch somebody move through the house that Chris lived in and it tells you a thousand things—to sit at the dining room table or on the couch, or go into his backyard.
Taya really opened up her life to us. She let us look through all of his clothes. She was a major reason we were able to take so many specific things about him that actually made it into the movie. There are a handful of scenes that came out of that weekend we spent in Texas where she was just telling us stories about their relationship. Eastwood: It was also important casting-wise, because we wanted to get somebody to play Taya that we felt would not just do an imitation, but have that same spirit, which Sienna (Miller) did have. She came in to read for the part, and did a splendid job. It was surprising—she has this great American accent, so you don’t even know she’s British. Was it important for you to get the truth up on the screen, to shape what actually happened in this man’s life into a narrative story? Cooper: Well, the movie is based on the source material, and the source material is the book called American Sniper. Jason Hall wrote a script based on that book, which Clint and I both found ourselves, at separate times, compelled by, and it just starts from there. Eastwood: Where there weren’t actual incidents, all these various people that were hands-on or had lived this experience with Chris said, “Well, that could have been”—because it all seemed to fit into this guy’s MO There were other sequences, too, which we shot and could have put in. But we ended with something that we thought would be realistic, and something that Chris would like. What do you think drove Chris to this absolute extreme of the experience of fighting a war? Cooper: I think it’s those things that may seem saccharine in this day and age, but in the movie, he says to Taya in the bar, “I’d lay down my life for my country. I want to be of service.” Those aren’t just words to him. He meant that. He wanted to be a cowboy and a soldier,
period. And he lived his life that way since he was a kid, taking care of his younger brother and growing up to be the man that he was. That’s the guy that I got to know, and that’s the guy in the movie. It’s really kind of nuts and bolts. That’s just the way it is. It doesn’t make him a martyr; it doesn’t make him anything other than just a man, but that’s the kind of man that he was. Eastwood: But he liked taking care of people. He liked the leadership aspect of it. I guess he felt that was his calling. He worked hard to become a great Navy SEAL, and a great shot, and he had to work hard, because those guys are all really solid citizens as far as their physical abilities, but they have to have the mental ability, too. He went back for four tours with his wonderful family back home, so he could have easily taken the other direction and said, “Well, I’ve done a tour. What the hell?” But he felt that he had to go back, because he lost people and he wanted to avenge that. He felt that we should complete the mission there. What it was like to work with each other? Cooper: Well, he’s one of the reasons I wanted to be an actor. The truth is when I was growing up, I always thought there were two guys I wanted to work with: Robert de Niro and Clint Eastwood. And the fact that I’ve gotten to do both is incredible. (De diro costarred with Cooper in Silver Linings Playbook.) I first started auditioning for Clint’s movies on Flags of Our Fathers and put myself on tape for all of them. There was one thing that looked like it was maybe going to happen, and then, when that fell through, I thought, “Oh, wow, I can’t believe it.” Then this project happened, and it was the perfect match. He met every thought I had and surpassed it, and the truth is, we just get along great. We laughed a hell of a lot in the movie, and it’s important to have that kind of levity, I think, especially when the content is so heavy. Making this movie with Clint was just an utter joy and I
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china’s pm tells davos: Dont worry about china’s slowdown The World BusinessMirror
news@businessmirror.com.ph
Friday, January 23, 2015 B3-3
China’s PM tells Davos: Don’t worry about China’s slowdown
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HINA will avoid a hard landing and is focused on ensuring long-term medium-to-fast growth, Premier Li Keqiang told global leaders in Davos. While the economy will still face large downward pressures in 2015, China won’t have systemic financial risks and will seek to improve the quality of growth to ensure an “appropriate” pace of expansion, Li said on Wednesday in a speech at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss ski town. A few hours earlier, the central bank governor said on a panel that a slower expansion is “good news” if it’s more sustainable. The comments and the first reverse-repurchase agreements in a year on Thursday follow data this week, showing 7.4 economic percent growth for 2014, the slowest in 24 years and the first failure to meet government targets this century. “For now, the Chinese leaders are trying to hold off broad-based policy easing,” said Liu Li-Gang, head of Greater China economics at Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Hong Kong. “But, if economic indicators in the coming months point to further weakness, China has to act.” Liu said investors aren’t fully convinced that the world’s second-largest economy can engineer a smooth “soft-landing” into the “New Normal” era of steadier growth. He cited risks in local government debt and shadow banking. Kaisa Group Holdings Ltd., a property developer based in Shenzhen, missed
HISTORIC IMPROVEMENT IN LIVES OF WORLD’S POOREST IN 15 YEARSBILL GATES
Risks contained?
Prudent policy
LI reiterated that China would pursue a
Bloomberg
prudent monetary policy and proactive fiscal policy. Leaders are using effective methods to prevent potential risks in finance, and the nation’s savings ratio of as high as 50 percent provides “strong support” to growth, he said. Li was the first Chinese premier to speak at the annual Alps gathering since 2009. China sent its first official delegation there in 1979, when former supreme leader Deng Xiaoping was starting to open China to the outside world. In 1992, when relations with western nations were thawing after the 1989 crackdown on the Tiananmen
Square democracy movement, thenPremier Li Peng told the Davos audience that China would continue its economic reforms. In 2009 Wen Jiabao expressed confidence in maintaining stable growth even as the US and Europe were roiled by the global financial crisis and outlined his massive stimulus response. China’s industrial output and retail sales for December increased at higherthan-anticipated rates, reflecting the initial effects of pro-investment efforts and the central bank’s first interest-rate cut in two years. Bloomberg News
Fighting extremism with schools, not guns B Z E
($148,000) to build and equip each new school, so the total bill for all 141 institutions stands at some 21 million dollars. With a track record of building 40-50 schools a year, however, the NGO is confident that it will honor its pledge within three years.
Inter Press Service
Combating extremism
THE Pakistan Taliban has destroyed over 838 schools between 2009 and 2012. KULSUM EBRAHIM/IPS
same, the citizens who comprise TCF want to shift focus away from bloodshed and onto longer-term solutions for the future of this deeply troubled country. The charity, which began in 1995, has completed 1,000 school “units,” typically a primary or secondary institution capable of accommodating up to 180 pupils, all built from scratch in the most impoverished areas of some 100 towns and cities across Pakistan. The 7,700 teachers employed by the nongovernment organization (NGO) go through a rigorous training program before placement, and the organization maintains a strict 50:50 male-female ratio for the 145,000 students who are now benefiting from a free education, according to TCF Vice President Zia Akhter Abbas. In a country where 25.02 million school-aged children—of which 13.7 million (55 percent) are girls—do not receive any form of education, experts say TCF’s initiative may well act as a game changer in the years to come, especially given that
the government spends just 2.1 percent of its gross domestic product on education. “Our job is to ensure that, wherever we have our schools, there are no out-ofschool children, especially girls,” Abbas told Inter Press Service (IPS). “We believe the change in society will come automatically once these educated and enlightened children grow up into responsible adults.” He added that the schools are designed to “serve as a beacon of light restricting the advance of extremism in our society.” The project has received widespread support from a broad spectrum of Pakistani society. Twenty-four-year-old Usman Riaz, a student at the Berklee College of Music in Boston who recently donated the proceeds of his jam-packed concerts in Karachi to TCF’s efforts, says the Schools for Peace are a “wonderful way to honor the innocent victims”. But it will take more than one-off charitable donations to make the scheme a reality. It costs about 15 million rupees
BESIDES immortalizing the victims of the Taliban’s attack, experts here say that shifting the focus away from terrorism and onto education will help combat a growing pulse of religious extremism. The prominent Pakistani educator and rights activist A.H. Nayyar told IPS that it is crucial for the country to begin educating children who would otherwise be turned into “fodder for extremists”. In fact, part of the government’s 20-point National Action Plan—agreed upon by all political parties dedicated to completely eradicating terrorism—includes plans to register and regulate all seminaries, known here as madrassas, in a bid to combat extremism at its root. With thousands of such religious institutions springing up across the country to fill a void in the school systems, policymakers are concerned about the indoctrination of children at a young age, with distorted interpretations of religious texts and the teaching of intolerance playing a major role in these schools. Some sources say that between 2 million and 3 million students are enrolled at the nearly 20,000 madrassas spread across Pakistan; others say this is a conservative estimate. While there is some talk about bringing these institutions under the umbrella of the public school system, experts like Nayyar believe this will do little to combat the “forcible teaching of … false and distorted history, excessive emphasis on Islamic teachings to the extent of including them in textbooks of all the subjects, explicit teaching of jihad and militancy, hate material against other nations, peoples of other faiths, etc, [and] excessive glorification of the military and wars.” Nayyar and other independent scholars have been at the forefront of calling for an overhaul of the public school curriculum, which they believe is at odds with the goals of a modern, progressive nation. But until policy-makers and politicians jump on the bandwagon, independent efforts like the work of TCF will lead the way.
ILL GATES, the world’s richest man, and his wife Melinda said conditions for the world’s poorest people will improve more dramatically in the coming 15 years than at any other time in history. Advancements in medical care and illness prevention for children, efforts to eradicate polio and other diseases and new farming techniques in Africa will drive “major breakthroughs” for most people in poor countries, according to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation annual letter published on Wednesday night in Seattle. Bill Gates, cofounder of Microsoft Corp., the world’s largest software maker, formed the foundation in 2000 with Melinda Gates. The charity focuses on poverty and health in developing countries and education and equal opportunity in the US. It had given $31.6 billion in grants as of September 30, according to its web site. The poor “will be living longer and in better health,” according to the letter. “They will have unprecedented opportunities to get an education, eat nutritious food and benefit from mobile banking. These breakthroughs will be driven by innovation in technology—ranging from new vaccines and hardier crops to much cheaper smartphones and tablets—and by innovations that help deliver those things to more people.” Gates predicted in the previous annual letter that by 2035, almost no country would be as poor as the 35-nation the World Bank classified as low-income as of 2014. He and Melinda Gates sought to puncture what they called myths about poverty, including the ideas that foreign aid is a waste and that saving lives leads to overpopulation. Gates, 59, owns a fortune valued at more than $85 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Microsoft’s CEO from 1981 to 2000, Gates stepped down as chairman last year and is a board member and technology adviser. Warren Buffett, the second-richest man in the US and a foundation trustee, has given about $15.1 billion of stock in his Berkshire Hathaway Inc., including a record $2.1 billion last year. Buffett pledged in 2006 to donate shares to the foundation every year. Bill Gates has been a Berkshire director since 2005. Bill and Melinda Gates, along with Buffett, helped found the Giving Pledge, which asks billionaires to give the bulk of their wealth to charity. More than 120 have committed, including Facebook Inc. CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Tesla Motors Inc. founder Elon Musk.
HILLARY CLINTON DECLINES TO COMMENT ON KEYSTONE
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INNIPEG, Manitoba—Hillary Rodham Clinton on Wednesday declined again to take a position on the Keystone XL pipeline, telling an audience in Canada that she would not express her views because of an ongoing review by the State Department. Clinton, a potential 2016 Democratic presidential candidate, was asked about US-Canadian relations during a wideranging question-and-answer session in Winnipeg as Congress considers approving construction of the contentious, Canada-backed project. Making her first public remarks in a month, Clinton also touched upon the deadly terrorist attacks in Paris, President Barack Obama’s State of the Union address and the debate in Congress over Iran. “We have differences and you won’t get me to talk about Keystone because I have steadily made clear that I’m not going to express an opinion,” she said. “It is in our process and that’s where it belongs.” Her views on Keystone have been closely watched in Canada. She has said it would be inappropriate for her to comment on whether the pipeline project should move ahead, given her past role as Obama’s top diplomat and the State Department’s ongoing assessment. Obama has vowed to veto the congressional legislation as long as the State Department is still conducting a formal review of the project. The TransCanada Corp. pipeline would carry more than 800,000 barrels of crude oil a day from Alberta and the US Bakken oil field across six US states to refineries on the Texas Gulf Coast. The House authorized construction of the pipeline last week, and the Senate is now considering the legislation. Republican and Democratic supporters hope to win final approval on the measure and send it to the White House by the end of the week. Republicans, the Canadian government and business and labor groups have pressured the Obama administration to approve the pipeline, arguing it would create jobs and move North America toward energy independence. AP
World
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favorites advance Sports
Aussie Open: Forget tennis, let’s talk twirling
BusinessMirror
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| FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
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ELBOURNE, Australia—To twirl or not to twirl? This is now a question at the Australian Open. Social media erupted overnight with reaction to Eugenie Bouchard being asked by an on-court interviewer to “give us a twirl” and show off her tennis dress after winning her second-round match. Some called the request by a male presenter sexist. Many on Twitter wondered if a man would be asked to twirl after winning a match. Serena Williams suspects not. “I wouldn’t ask Rafa or Roger to twirl,” Williams said on Thursday, referring to Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer. Williams was asked to twirl, too, by the same presenter a day earlier. “I didn’t really want to twirl because I was just like, you know, I don’t need all the extra attention,” said the No. 1-ranked player who is aiming to win her 19th Grand Slam singles title. She preferred not to enter the debate of whether the request was sexist. “Life is far too short to focus on that,” she said. “Whether I twirl or not, it’s not the end of the world.” Anyway, Williams said she always twirls. After winning matches, she walks back to court and twirls with a wave to thank the crowd. She’s taking dance class, too. “I twirl all the time in dance class,” she said. “I really have to work on my spotting. My coach tells me to whip my head around.” On Wednesday Bouchard told her post-match news conference the twirl request was “very unexpected.” “I don’t know, an old guy asking you to twirl. It was funny,” Bouchard said.
SERENA WILLIAMS yells in frustration during her second round match against Vera Zvonareva. (Below) Defending champion Stan Wawrinka made a forehand return to Marsel Ilhan. AP
FAVORITES ADVANCE DJOKOVIC, WAWRINKA JOIN WILLIAMS IN 3RD ROUND IN AUSTRALIA
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The Associated Press
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ELBOURNE, Australia—Topranked Serena Williams fended off three set points before going on a 10-game roll to beat Vera Zvonareva, 7-5, 6-0, and move into the third round of the Australian Open. Men’s No. 1 Novak Djokovic had an easier run, spending a minute less than Williams on Rod Laver Arena in his 84-minute, 6-0, 6-1, 6-4 win over No. 88-ranked Andrey Kuznetsov on Thursday. Defending champion Stan Wawrinka, who ended four-time champion Djokovic’s 25-match winning streak at Melbourne Park in the quarterfinals last year, advanced to the third round for the seventh consecutive
year with a 7-6 (4), 7-6 (4), 6-3 win over No. 194-ranked qualifier Marius Copil. Williams, seeking a sixth Australian and 19th Grand Slam title, saved three set points in the ninth game before holding to swing the momentum of her match against Zvonareva, a two-time Grand Slam finalist who played only five tournaments in 2014. That’s when she told herself: “’You know Serena, you’ve done so well here, you have nothing to lose.’” “Things really clicked. I had no other option but for things to click,” she added. “Yeah, I just had to start playing better.” Williams said she had to transition quickly to get past such an experienced player in the second round. “Playing Vera is like, I had to get my mind like, ‘Serena, this girl has been ranked as high
even by 10 percent, possibly,” ADMU Economic Department Chairman Luis Dumlao said in his presentation. “Construction is already growing by 9 percent and [for] manufacturing, we hope that Calabarzon continues its contribution to the entire economy’s growth,” Dumlao added. In the first three quarters of 2014, the economy grew by an average of 5.8 percent. Continued on A2
POWER OUTAGES SURE TO HAPPEN IF I.L.P. STAYS VOLUNTARY–D.O.E.
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CHINA’S Prime Minister Li Keqiang speaks during a session on the opening day of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on January 21. BLOOMBERG
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ARACHI—As a wave of outrage crossing Pakistan’s national borders continues a month after the December 16 attack on a school in the northern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, some citizens are turning away from collective expressions of anger and beginning the hard work of building grassroots alternatives to terrorism and militancy. While many millions of people are lashing out at the Taliban for going on a bloody rampage in a school in the province’s capital, Peshawar, killing 141 people including 132 uniformed children in what is being billed as the group’s single deadliest attack to date, The Citizens Foundation (TFC), a local nonprofit, has reacted quite differently. Rather than join the chorus calling for stiff penalties for the attackers, it busied itself with a pledge to build 141 Schools for Peace, one in the name of each person who lost their life on that terrible day. “We dedicate this effort to the children of Pakistan, their right to education and their dreams of a peaceful future,” Syed Asaad Ayub Ahmad, CEO of TCF, said in an e-mail launching the campaign. “With the formidable challenges facing the nation, we passionately believe that only education has the power to enlighten minds, instill citizenship and unleash the potential of every Pakistani,” he added. In their war against western, secular education, which the group has denounced as “un-Islamic”, the Pakistan Taliban have destroyed over 838 schools between 2009 and 2012, claimed responsibility for the near-fatal shooting of teenaged education advocate Malala Yousafzai and issued numerous edicts against the right of women and girls to receive proper schooling. In their latest assault on education, nine militants went on an eight-hourlong killing spree, throwing hand grenades into the teeming school premises and firing indiscriminately at any moving target. They claim the attack was a response to the military operation aimed at rooting out the Taliban currently underway in North Waziristan, a tribal region bordering Afghanistan. While armed groups and government forces answer violence with more of the
In the Ateneo Eagle Watch forum on Thursday, economists from the Ateneo de Manila University (ADMU) projected GDP growth to fall within a range of 5.7 percent to 6.3 percent this year. “What we see for 2015 is the economy will grow by 5.7 percent to 6.3 percent. Supply drivers would be… we expectmanufacturingandconstruction growth by about 7 percent, construction
WARREN BUFFETT (right), chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway watches Bill Gates use an oversize paddle as they play doubles against table-tennis prodigy Ariel Hsing in Omaha, Nebraska, in this May 2012 photo. AP/NATI HARNIK
debt payments this month, highlighting stresses in the industry as a housing downturn weighs on growth. FOR Li, the risks are under control. “China has much room for urban, suburban and regional development, and domestic demand has huge potential,” he said. “China’s condition will continue to improve and China will bring more opportunities to the world if China’s economy keeps growing at medium-to-fast speed for 10 to 20 years.” At an earlier panel in Davos on Wednesday, Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), expressed willingness to sacrifice growth for stability. “If China’s economy slows down a bit, but, meanwhile, is more sustainable for the medium and long-term, I think that’s good news,” he said. Zhou said the PBOC would keep money supply stable and not inject “too much liquidity” into the economy. The central bank, on Thursday, conducted reverse-repurchase agreements for the first time in a year, helping to meet a seasonal pickup in demand for cash before the Lunar New Year holidays.
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2015 growth could slump to 5.4% T
‘FIFTY SHADES OF GREY’: FIVE THINGS TO EXPECT... »D4
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TfridayNovember 18, 2015 2014 Vol. 10 No. 106 40 Friday, January 23,
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ECONOMISTS HOPE GOVT UNDERSPENDING, SLOWER MANUFACTURING EXPANSION WILL NOT PERSIST
clint eastwood & bradley cooper take aim D
A broader look at today’s business
as No. 2 in the world...she’s a very quality player, she knows what to do,”’ Williams said. After breaking Williams’s serve twice in the first set, Zvonareva only won eight points in the second set and didn’t get close to another break-point chance. Williams will next play No. 26 Elina Svitolina, who beat Nicole Gibbs, 7-6 (3), 7-6 (6). Venus Williams had a 6-2, 6-3 win against fellow American Lauren Davis. The elder of the Williams sisters, a seven-time major winner, hasn’t been beyond the third round at a major since reaching the fourth round at Wimbledon in 2011. Sixth-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska needed only 44 minutes to race through her 6-0, 6-1 win over Johanna Larsson, continuing her run of reaching the third round or better at every Australian Open since 2010. In the next
round, she’ll face No. 30 Varvara Lepchenko, a 6-1, 7-6 (1) winner over Ajla Tomljanovic. No. 11 Dominika Cibulkova, the 2014 finalist, beat Tsvetana Pironkova, 6-2, 6-0; No. 24 Garbine Muguruza beat veteran Daniela Hantuchova, 6-1, 1-6, 6-0; and Madison Keys beat No. 29 Casey Dellacqua, 2-6, 6-1, 6-1. On the men’s side, US Open finalist Kei Nishikori beat Ivan Dodig, 4-6, 7-5, 6-2, 7-6 (0), getting a crucial service break in the 10th game of the fourth set when Dodig was serving for the set and then dominating in the tiebreaker. He will next face Steve Johnson, who beat No. 30 Santiago Giraldo, 6-3, 6-4, 6-2. No. 12 Feliciano Lopez was leading, 4-6, 4-6, 7-6 (3), 4-0, when Adrian Mannarino retired from their second-round match and No. 19 John Isner beat Andreas Haider-Maurer, 6-4, 7-6 (4), 4-6, 6-4.
THE WILLIAMS DOUBLES MYSTERY VENUS and Serena Williams prefer not to say why they pulled out of the doubles competition at the Australian Open. “According to the rules, you don’t have to give a reason. I think we’ll stick with that,” Venus said on Thursday after winning her secondround singles match. The Williams sisters have won 13 Grand Slam doubles titles together, including four at the Australian Open. They were scheduled to play their first-round match on Wednesday but withdrew before it started without explaining why. The mystery continued on Thursday, with Venus saying she was allowed to be coy, which naturally prompted a string of questions. Was it the heat? “It was warm,” the 34-year-old American said. “I don’ think it was as warm as it could have been. But, no, that wasn’t it.” Was there a medical reason? Were doctors consulted? “No further questions on that,” Venus said. “I object. Sustained. Thank you.” But the questions continued at Serena’s postmatch news conference. “I don’t think we have to give a reason,” reiterated Serena, who also advanced to the third round. “I think Venus answered that already.” AP
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EUGENIE BOUCHARD finds the “twirl request” unexpected but funny. AP
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By Lenie Lectura
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nergy Secretary Carlos Jericho L. Petilla could not stress enough how important it is for Congress to pass the joint resolution that will grant President Aquino special powers to address the projected power deficit in Luzon this summer. He said—without hesitation—the feared power outages are imminent. “Without the Congress and Senate [resolution], the Interruptible Load Program [ILP] will run on red alert rather than on yellow, which means brownout muna before ILP runs,” Petilla said in a text message on Thursday. A red alert means there is a supply deficiency and a brownout is sure to occur. The House of Representatives has already passed its version of a joint resolution, but the Senate has yet to pass its own. For now, the ILP is still the government’s solution to address Lu-
PESO exchange rates n US 44.4960
zon’s power woes. However, it is voluntary for now, until the joint resolution is passed. Sen. Sergio Osmeña III, chairman of the Senate Committee on Energy, said in a recent hearing that the ILP should be implemented voluntarily. “The ILP works better when it’s not mandatory; when it’s voluntary.” The ILP works by calling on business customers with loads of at least 1 megawatt (MW) to run their own generator sets, if needed, instead of drawing power from the grid. With the ILP, power supply from the grid that will not be consumed by participating customers will be available for use by other customers within the franchise area. Through this, the aggregate demand for power from the system will be reduced to a more manageable level, helping ensure the availability of supply during the anticipated power crisis this year. See “Power,” A2
The Ateneo Eagle Watch holds a forum, titled “Philippine Economic Outlook 2015,” at the Ateneo Graduate School in Makati City. Speakers (from left) Dr. Luis Dumlao, chairman of the Economics Department of the Ateneo de Manila University; Dr. Alvin Ang, former president of the Philippine Economic Society; and former National Economic and Development Authority Director General Cielito Habito answer questions from attendees. NONIE REYES
‘Non-Opec members to be $310-M ‘HOT’ first to blink in output war’ MONEY LEFT
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il prices will rebound, rather than extend, their decline to as low as $20 a barrel because a collapse since June isn’t merited by global supply and demand, the secretary-general of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) said. Producers outside the Opec should be first to reduce their output amid a surplus that has pushed crude below $50 a barrel, Abdalla El-Badri said in an interview with Bloomberg Television at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, on Wednesday. Iraq, Opec’s fastest-growing supplier, said it needs to boost output to compensate for revenues eroded by the price slump. “The price will not go to $20 or
$25, I think the price will stay at where we are now,” El-Badri said. “We have seen this before—prices coming down very fast and go up very slow. But prices will rebound.” Oil slumped almost 60 percent since June, as Opec nations continued pumping amid the highest US production in more than three decades. The 12-nation group’s decision last November 27 to maintain output was based on economics, and wasn’t intended to target US shale drillers, Russia or any other country, El-Badri said. Brent slid 16 cents, or 0.3 percent, to $48.87 a barrel on the Londonbased ICE Futures Europe exchange at 12:28 p.m. Singapore time. See “Non-Opec,” A2
PHL IN 2014
By Bianca Cuaresma
S
hort-term foreign capital aggregating $310.21 million flowed out on net basis from the Philippines in 2014, a reversal from net inflows totaling $4.22 billion reported in 2013, according to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas. The outmigration of foreign capital came on the heels of the inward flow of opportunistic foreign funds, also known as “hot” or speculative money, totaling $397.02 million last December, and an indication of the sentiment among fund managers to invest in markets much more See “Hot money,” A2
n japan 0.3777 n UK 67.3847 n HK 5.7389 n CHINA 7.1635 n singapore 33.3253 n australia 36.3946 n EU 51.6554 n SAUDI arabia 11.8495 Source: BSP (22 January 2015)