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three-time rotary club of manila journalism awardee 2006, 2010, 2012

U.N. Media Award 2008

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A broader look at today’s business n

Friday, October 10, 2014 Vol. 10 No. 2

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GOVT, MRTH-II NEED TO AUGMENT RAIL RESERVES IMMEDIATELY TO ADDRESS SAFETY CONCERNS

Temporary shutdown of MRT likely

INSIDE

life is a fish bowl

Life

Never cry

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ear Lord, please be there when someone we love so much disappears. When a very special person seems not interested in us anymore. When others hurt us and we can’t understand why. When the person we treasure greatly broke off our relationship. When we simply hear that there is no more chemistry between us. When the words come unexpectedly expressed: “I do not love you anymore.” May we never cry, and just smile and say: Thank you for giving me a chance to find someone better than you. amen! yetta cruz and Louie M. Lacson Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

PoP! PoP! Parsley

BusinessMirror

Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com

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Ben aFFLecK

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cTor, director, screenwriter and twotime oscar winner Ben Affleck was preparing for his next directorial project when the opportunity to work with David Fincher on a film adaptation of Gillian Flynn’s global bestseller Gone Girl arose. Admitting it was “a dream come true”, Affleck postponed his production to take the role of Nick Dunne, a former journalist who becomes the prime suspect when his wife Amy (played by rosamund Pike) goes missing. Gone Girl the novel has already topped bestseller lists around the world, becoming a publishing phenomenon. The book, which explores marriage and the media against the backdrop of a troubled economy, was written by former Entertainment Weekly writer Gillian Flynn, who also wrote the screenplay for the film. Affleck is currently in Detroit filming Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, but he took time out of his busy schedule to discuss working on Gone Girl and having to live life in a fish bowl. When did you first become aware of Gone Girl? The book was a hot property in hollywood.

everyone was reading it. As you know, hollywood is the kind of place where there’s one thing and everyone is talking about it, until there’s the next thing. And this was that. When I heard about it, I read it and really liked it. I thought, “God, this would be hard to make into a movie.” Then I put it down and I didn’t think about it really until I got a call, saying, “David Fincher wants to meet you about Gone Girl.” I was actually going to direct another movie, but the chance to work with David Fincher was a dream come true. So I put off my other movie I was directing and Warner Bros. was very accommodating. I got the chance to do this, which was an amazing thing for somebody to walk in and hand you a dream on a platter. It was a thrill.

What were your first thoughts both on the character of Nick and the story in general? I kNeW that it was going to be a deceptively hard part to play because of the way that audiences’ perspective on the character had to be delicately calibrated, the idea being that you can change what you think about this guy as the story goes along. Neither David nor I wanted to do it in a way that wasn’t realistic, or wasn’t dramatic. So we had to fine-tune little things. Those are the things that, in some ways, are hardest to do because they’ve got to all be kind of convincing—“oh, maybe he did it…,” “Maybe he didn’t do it…—that sort of thing. And if you don’t have that question in the audience’s mind, the movie isn’t going to work, as well. What specifically did you and David discuss? For example, he said, “Look, there can’t be any vanity in this performance. This is a guy who gets kicked around and who we see the pale underbelly of.” I like that idea. I’ve recently become turned off by the vanity I can see in movies because it just doesn’t feel realistic. So, I said, “okay, I’ll go for it. Let’s do it.” Maybe with another director I wouldn’t, but with David, I would have done the phone book. And so we set off trying to make a character that felt real, that you could identify with in terms of his marriage and his relationship…and who you could also then believe maybe killed his wife.

BEN AFFLECK PHOTOGRAPHED BY JOHN RUSSO

So was one of the challenges playing someone who knows he’s being watched? It’s like you playing a person playing a role. YeS, I think what’s really important to this is the theme of role-playing. It was really powerful and resonant to me in this movie. The way that the media casts you in certain roles: “okay, you’re gonna be the adoring husband” or “You’re gonna be the murdering husband” or “You’re gonna be the scandalous backstabber” or whatever it is, we turn people into easily digestible archetypes within the media. And, of course, there’s also the role-playing that goes on in relationships. You know, you expect something from someone, they expect something from you in a spousal relationship—the dutiful wife, the obedient husband—and anytime you behave in ways that don’t sync up to those expectations, it causes problems. And, when Nick doesn’t behave the way that a grieving husband is supposed to behave, it really inflames people who are watching through the media. I thought that was really interesting. You’re someone who has experience of media scrutiny. YeS, I’ve definitely experienced that in my own life, both in terms of being characterized in ways that were totally unrecognizable to me and also during periods in my life where I decided, “I don’t care what’s going to happen, I’m just going to be who I really am and let the chips fall where they may.” Seeing the negative response I got from that was so powerful and I thought to myself, “Why do you care

about this so much? Why is this engendering so much hostility?” There are also quite a lot of media outlets, particularly online, where perhaps traffic is more important than truth. cerTAIN media outlets seem to have no care at all for the truth, but their material is then picked up uncritically by more “responsible” media outlets and then, because of the Internet age, it’s just easier to cut and paste and “hurry up and get it up” than it is to stop and sit down and say, “Wait a minute, this doesn’t sound right. Let’s do research. Let’s give this a more thoughtful look….” If you look at the comments sections on many of those stories, it sometimes seems like the Internet is just populated by a lot of angry people. IT is crazy. recently I was looking up something on my iPhone. I was on a Google page or a You Tube page and these guys got into a full-on war about Android versus iPhone. And it just degenerated into ‘F%@k you, I’ll stab you in the heart, you c#$ksucker!’ I mean, how much can a person hate a phone? Has the world just got angrier? And is that something Gone Girl explores? I ThINk part of it is self-selecting because the people who tend to be angriest tend to be likeliest to write the comments. You perceive it as a general sample of the

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nsa tech spying hurts economy The World BusinessMirror

B3-2 Friday, October 10, 2014

NSA tech spying hurts economy, US senator says “We’re going to end up breaking the Internet,” warned Schmidt during a public forum on Wednesday convened by US Sen. Ron Wyden, Democrat-Oregon, who has been an outspoken critic of electronic data-gathering by the National Security Agency (NSA). Schmidt and executives from Facebook Inc., Microsoft Corp. and other firms say revelations of extensive NSA surveillance are prompting governments in Europe and elsewhere to consider laws requiring that their citizens’ online data be stored within their national borders. Rules like that would drive up costs and create technical obstacles to the way the Internet currently operates, making it “profoundly difficult in terms of our ability to deliver services,” said Facebook General Counsel Colin Stretch. Brad Smith, general counsel for Microsoft, said some European customers are worried their data will be more vulnerable to US government snooping, although he declined to give specific examples. “The reality is this is a real problem for American tech companies,” said Smith. “If trust falls, then the prospects for business are hurt.” Wyden, a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee and chairman of the Finance Committee,

convened the roundtable in the Palo Alto High School gym, where he played basketball as a student in the 1960s. He said he will take the executives’ message back to Washington, where bills to curb surveillance have stalled. Prospects for passing a reform bill this fall are shrinking, Wyden told the Associated Press. “I’m going to my best to use this. What I’m going to do is say there’s a clear and present danger to the Internet economy,” Wyden said. Wyden contends that the government’s “digital dragnet” of phone calls, e-mails and online communications doesn’t make the country safer, and only hurts the US economy. “When the actions of a foreign government threaten red-whiteand-blue jobs, Washington gets up at arms. But, even today, almost no one in Washington is talking about how overly broad surveillance is hurting the US economy,” he said in opening remarks. Microsoft’s Smith acknowledged that concerns over recent terrorist incidents in the Middle East might have undercut some public support for surveillance reform. However, he contends that “laws that the rest of the world doesn’t respect will ultimately undermine

IN this April 22, 2013, photo, Brad Smith, Microsoft’s general counsel and executive vice president, Legal and Corporate Affairs, testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington before the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on immigration reform. Sen. Ron Wyden, Democrat-Oregon, on Wednesday convened a roundtable to discuss the economic fallout from the surveillance programs revealed last year by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden. AP/JACQUELYN MARTIN

the fundamental ability of our own legal processes, law enforcement agencies and even the intelligence community itself.” When former NSA contractor Edward Snowden made details of NSA surveillance tactics public, tech executives and industry experts warned that consumers and business customers would fear that US technology companies can’t protect sensitive data from government prying. Some analysts estimated last year that US tech companies could lose tens of billions of dollars in sales, particularly after European firms began marketing themselves as being more secure than US competitors—or less vulnerable to legal demands from the US government. Most of the impact has been anecdotal, however. A few companies, including Cisco Systems Inc. and Qualcomm Inc., have said they be-

lieve they lost some deals in China and other emerging markets because of concerns about US spying. Germany did cancel a contract with Verizon this summer, citing a fear that it may provide customer phone records to the NSA. Some tech start-ups and telecommunications companies in France and Switzerland have claimed an increase in sales to customers who are wary of US providers. It’s difficult to quantify the losses because “companies don’t always know about the deals that they weren’t invited to be a part of,” said Daniel Castro, a senior analyst at the nonprofit Information Technology and Innovation Foundation in Washington, D.C. Castro estimated last year that losses to U.S. tech companies could amount to $35 billion by 2016. He said this week his estimate is still valid. AP

Day of legal confusion U.S. OFFICIAL DOWNPLAYS leaves gay couples in limbo CUBA’S INVITATION TO SUMMIT

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AS VEGAS—Confusion and uncertainty over gay marriage spread on Wednesday as couples in Las Vegas wondered whether they’d be allowed to wed, and partners in Idaho dealt with disappointment after a US Supreme Court ruling blocked them moments before they would have picked up marriage licenses. Officials and judges in a handful of other states weighed in, meanwhile, in the latest flurry of legal wrangling over an issue that has sparked a series of rulings this week that have left couples in limbo. “I think I have whiplash,” said Mary Baranovich who was a plaintiff in the Nevada case with Beverly Sevcik, her partner of 43 years. In the city that bills itself as the marriage capital of the world, wedding chapels and city officials prepared for a wave of gay couples after a morning of back and forth rulings that stemmed from the Supreme Court decision on Monday that effectively made gay marriage legal in about 30 states. The ruling did not, however, decide the matter for the rest of the nation, and the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, which handles much of the Western US, issued a decision on Tuesday that appeared to overturn gay marriage bans in cases from Nevada and Idaho, clearing the way for same-sex unions in those states. Hopeful couples crowded courthouses in Idaho, and Las Vegas chapels had photographers get ready to capture two brides in white dresses while ordained Elvis impersonators practiced their lines. But before couples were able to make their unions official, Justice Anthony Kennedy issued a ruling that seemed to block gay marriage in both states with a temporary delay. The news was delivered at 8:01 a.m. to a small crowd of gay couples and their supporters gathered in a Boise courthouse when Ada County Clerk Chris

Rich handed the Supreme Court memo to a lawyer and said, “We’re not issuing same-sex marriage licenses today.” The announcement left the room in stunned silence, except for a small child asking over and over, “Why?” “We were past the metal detectors, we were just a few feet away from the clerk,” said Amber Beierle. “And then our attorney was handed a one-page document. Apparently, it was Justice Kennedy telling us, No.” It initially appeared that the ruling would apply to Nevada as well, but hours later a new memo from the Supreme Court clarified the decision, saying it applied only to Idaho because officials there challenged the 9th Circuit’s decision but those in Nevada did not. The clarification prompted gay couples to begin trickling in to the city’s Marriage License Bureau on Wednesday. In other states, officials and judges made a patchwork of decisions. A judge in northeast Kansas, a state affected by the Supreme Court ruling Monday that kicked off the latest flurry of activity on the issue, ordered a county to issue same-sex marriage licenses and said the ruling was meant to clear up confusion. The attorney general in South Carolina asked the state Supreme Court to stop a judge from issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples. A federal judge in North Carolina has lifted temporary delays in two cases challenging the state’s same-sex marriage ban. And the governor of Wyoming, Matt Mead, said the state would continue to defend its law defining marriage as only between one man and one woman. Nevada, meanwhile, remained in abeyance, as a group fighting to uphold the state’s gay marriage ban filed a request for Kennedy to reinstate the temporary block. Clark County Clerk Diana Alba, who oversees Las Vegas, said at a late afternoon news conference that she would not issue any gay marriage licenses for the time being. AP

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ANAMA CITY—A senior State Department official said on Wednesday that the US is prepared to welcome Cuba for the first time to a region-wide summit but wants heads of state to focus attention on the communist government’s human-rights record. At the urging of Latin American leaders, host country Panama plans to invite Cuban President Raul Castro to the Summit of the Americas in April. Cuba was excluded from six previous summits because Washington said it didn’t meet the region’s standards for democracy and US lawmakers, led by Republican Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, are urging Panama to reconsider its invitation this time around. The deputy assistant secretary of state for Latin America, John Feeley, played down the significance of Cuba’s likely participation. Speaking to journalists in Spanish during a stop in Panama on Wednesday, Feeley said that “it’s not so important the guests at the table but the meal that’s served.” Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa boycotted the last summit in Cartagena, Colombia, over Cuba’s exclusion and several of his

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ALO ALTO, California—Google Chairman Eric Schmidt and other Silicon Valley executives say controversial government spying programs are undercutting the Internet economy and want Congress to step up stalled reform.

leftist allies have threatened to sit out the next gathering of 34 regional heads of state if Cuba isn’t invited to attend. The Washington-based Organization of American States, which organizes the summits, suspended Cuba shortly after Fidel Castro’s 1959 revolution. Feeley’s remarks were the strongest yet by a US official since Panamanian President Juan Carlos Varela took office in July and reversed his conservative predecessor’s objection to Cuba’s attendance at the summit. Last month he sent his vice president and foreign minister to Washington and Havana to discuss the matter. Feeley said that if Castro does participate it would be important that he learn from the experience of other countries in the region where democracy has prospered. President Barack Obama is expected to attend the summit and Castro’s presence could set the stage for an uncomfortable encounter between leaders from the two former Cold War enemies, but Feeley said what is more “uncomfortable is the basic lack of human rights in Cuba” that the US won’t shy from denouncing. AP

tell us where the structure is, in precise detail.” Homing in on such small structures has long been limited by properties of visible light. Several methods have bypassed this diffraction limit of optical microscopes, most notably by using Xrays or electrons. But specimens either had to be in a crystal form or be killed, sliced up and placed in a vacuum. The super-resolved fluorescent microscopy pioneered by the new laureates offers alternatives that allow researchers to watch nanoscaled biological processes unfold. “It’s really new science for a Nobel Prize,” said Tom Barton, president of the American Chemical Society. Hell developed his laserbased method of controlling fluorescence in 2000, while Betzig used single molecule microscopy for the first time in 2006, according to the academy. Moerner’s breakthrough spanned the late 1980s to recent years. Moerner said he learned of his award when his wife called as he was stepping out of the shower. And when he finished crediting a long list of predecessors, he paid due to science’s longtime muse, surprise. In the late 1990s, while at the University of California, San Diego, Moerner was surprised to see the jellyfish protein jumping around the frequency spectrum. “It’s those kinds of surprises that lead to some of the things that are truly important for what was recognized by the Nobel committee,” he said. Moerner began his work at IBM’s research facility in Silicon Valley, with the aim of improving optical storage, and extended it at UC San Diego and Stanford. Betzig, a physicist and engineer, took a less direct path. He left a research job at Bell Laboratories to help his father automate a machine shop in Michigan, according to the Howard Hughes institute, where he has worked since 2006. But he would frequently return to the knotty problem of the limits of microscopy, sometimes while drifting in a boat on Michigan’s Hi-Land Lake, with nothing more than “a laptop and a couple of really good ideas,” he told the institute. Hell has worked at the Max Planck Institute since 1997. He said he had been drawn to science since he was in high school.

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Los Angeles Times/MCTt

SVEN LIDIN (left), Staffan Nordmark (center) and Mans Ehrenberg at the Royal Academy of Sciences on Wednesday announce the Nobel Chemistry laureates 2014. Americans Eric Betzig and William Moerner, and German scientist Stefan Hell won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for “the development of super-resolved fluorescence microscopy.” AP/BERTIL ERICSON

Missing Vietnamese oil tanker released by pirates

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ANOI, Vietnam—A Vietnamese oil tanker missing for a week has been released by pirates who stormed the ship and siphoned off some of its cargo of gas oil, a crew member said on Thursday. The deputy captain of the Sunrise 689, Pham Van Hoang, said a group of more than 10 men, who he thought were Indonesians, armed with guns and knives in two speed-

boats boarded the tanker shortly after it left Singapore for Vietnam on October 2. He said the pirates destroyed the communication and navigation systems, and put all 18 Vietnamese crew members into a room. The pirates then siphoned off some of the gas oil into their vessels. “They put knives on our throats and threatened to kill us if we resist,” Hoang said by cell phone

from the tanker. One crew member broke his leg when he fell trying to flee from the pirates. Hoang said the crew was freed early on Thursday and the tanker is about 150 kilometers off Vietnam’s southern tip. He said the crew had to stop a fi shing boat to fi nd out its location. The Vietnam coast guard was dispatching a vessel to escort the tanker to shore, he added.

The tanker, which was transporting more than 5,000 tons of gas oil from Singapore, should have arrived at a port in the central province of Quang Tri on Wednesday. The Sunrise was the 12th such piracy case since April in Southeast Asia, where tankers have been hijacked, and then released after the cargoes are stolen, according to the International Maritime Bureau. AP

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LEE WESTWOOD: It’s very difficult to pinpoint in a team environment whose fault it specifically is. It’s a combination of a lot of different things. AP

HORSE POISONING ALARMS VENEZUELA RACING INDUSTRY

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ARACAS, Venezuela—It sounds like a page-turning novel: Venezuelan authorities say a gambling ring poisons one of the country’s most popular race horses ahead of a key derby, nearly killing the animal and shining a light on an underworld where millions of dollars in bets are made under the table. But the attack on four-year-old Rio Negro as he prepared for the Army Day derby was real, and just the latest grim milestone in a wave of lawlessness and violence that has made Venezuela one of the world’s deadliest places. The horse is still struggling to regain his strength after almost dying. There have been other cases of using poison to “sleep” a race horse in Venezuela, including three in the last year. But the attention thrust on Rio Negro’s dramatic plight by the media and top-level government officials has underscored the growing brazenness of well-organized betting rings that many say threatens to destroy a sport nearly as popular here as baseball. Rio Negro had been heavily favored to win the derby until criminals injected him with a nearfatal overdose of cortisone sometime in June—police aren’t exactly sure when. His caretakers say he nearly collapsed and began urinating frequently during a training session four days before the June 22 race. He lost almost a fifth of his weight, his black-colored skin broke out in welts and he was diagnosed with temporary diabetes. “It was painful to watch,” said Julio Lobo, one of his veterinarians. Rio Negro is now kept in a dark, cold stable that looks more like a prison with iron bars and proliferation of security cameras to ward off intruders. Authorities have arrested nine people, among them former police officers and a horse owner linked to betting rings. But it’s unknown if the investigation, an outcry from top government officials and beefed-up security at La Rinconada track in Caracas can control the rings that some racing officials call “mafias.” Gambling on horse races is legal in Venezuela, but the socialist government tightly controls betting at the country’s four racetracks and 1,200 off-track betting houses. Illegal gambling is driven by the government’s limit of 1,000 bolivars on bets, or about $10 at the black market rate. Last year the industry in Venezuela handled about $120 million in legal bets, according to the Paris-based International Federation of Horseracing Authorities. But Jaime Casas and others who follow the local horse-racing industry say the real money is in illegal betting, especially now as Venezuelans try to boost the value of their bolivars in the face of 60-percent inflation and a plunge in the currency’s value on the black market. The illegal operations known as “offices” can frequently be seen operating in plain view from inside the state-sanctioned gambling halls by so-called bankers who receive bets in person and by phone. Venezuela’s state-run National Institute of Hippodromes declined to comment on the illicit operations. Casas, who runs the Hipicomputo 2000 web site that tracks race results, estimated that illicit betting rings move between 50 and 60 times the legal market for gambling. The state-run horse-racing agency says that on any given Sunday the government’s take from wagers at La Rinconada can surpass $3 million. Casas said violence has also increasingly encroached on the sport through the kidnapping of and threats against jockeys. “Illegal betting has existed in every part of the world for a long time,” he said. “But here it was allowed to flourish with so much freedom and impunity.” AP

MAYBE Tom Watson got a few things wrong. Maybe the US team just didn’t quite play well enough in general. AP

DIRTY LAUNDRY Various reports have quoted unidentified sources in the US team room as saying that Tom Watson was a heavy-handed captain who was dismissive of the team gift, spoke negatively to his players and didn’t communicate with them. That led to Watson writing an “open letter” over the weekend to say he regrets it if his message to the team came out the wrong way and that he takes full responsibility for any mistakes.

By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press

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APA, California—Lee Westwood was disappointed to see stories from the American team room at the Ryder Cup complaining about Tom Watson as the captain, saying on Wednesday those matters should be kept private and “nothing good can come of all this.” Westwood has played in nine Ryder Cups, winning for the seventh time when Europe beat the Americans at Gleneagles two weeks ago. In recent days, various reports have quoted unidentified sources in the US team room as saying that Watson was a heavy-handed captain who was dismissive of the team gift, spoke negatively to his players and didn’t communicate with them. That led to Watson writing an “open letter” over the weekend to say he regrets it if his message to the team came out the wrong way and that he takes full responsibility for any mistakes. “From my point of view, I think it’s a little bit disappointing to see the dirty laundry being out in public, first and foremost,” Westwood said at the Frys.com Open. “It’s very difficult to pinpoint in a team environment whose fault it specifically is. It’s a combination of a lot of different things. Yeah, maybe Tom got a few things wrong. Maybe the US team

just didn’t quite play well enough in general. If the other team plays well, you’re going to lose. “I’m just pleased that I don’t have to sort it all out because I don’t like to see people with great reputations... being brought down by something that shouldn’t really happen in public,” he said. “It should all be done behind closed doors and sorted out there, and the analysis should start there, and not be done in the press.” Westwood knows that feeling. He was benched for the first time in 2008 when Europe, with six-time major champion Nick Faldo as its captain, lost for the only time in the last 15 years. The European players defended Faldo at the closing news conference and closed ranks in the months that followed. “I think there were a lot of people disappointed in 2008, but we tried to come together and basically not say anything in public,” Westwood said. “Whenever you lose, you’re going to be disappointed and you’re going to think things could have been done better. It’s just a case of managing it and handling it and improving it for the next time professionally.” Phil Mickelson spoke on the final day at Gleneagles of how the Americans have strayed from a winning formula it had in 2008, praising endlessly the work of captain Paul Azinger at Valhalla even as Watson sat six seats away

Ayala Land’s ‘ultra luxury’ projects already 70% sold

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BusinessMirror

A HORSE eats hay at his stable in La Rinconada racetrack in Caracas, Venezuela. After the poisoning of Rio Negro, a four-year-old horse favored to win the Army Day derby, authorities have arrested nine people in the case. AP

By Vg Cabuag

Sports

| Friday, OCtOber 10, 2014 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

he operations of the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) Line 3 could be folded down in a matter of months if the operator and the owner of the train system would fail to augment the rail reserves within a semester. A document from the Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC) showing an inventory of spare parts for the ailing line revealed that the current number of spare tracks for the MRT 3 has diminished to 2.5 pieces from 29 pieces in 2013. This simply means that the transport agency, which oversees the maintenance of the line along with the current upkeep provider, has exhausted all the spare rail pieces that are needed to ensure the safety and the integrity of the line.

NOBEL PRIZE IN CHEMISTRY GOES TO 2 AMERICANS, 1 GERMAN CIENCE advances tool by tool, and on Wednesday it paused to recognize three practitioners who handed it the means to see the smallest secrets of a living cell. The Nobel Prize in chemistry went to two Americans and a German who pushed beyond the physical limits of light to find another way to illuminate the choreography of molecules that make organisms work or go awry. William Moerner, 61, of Stanford University and Eric Betzig, 54, of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Janelia Research Campus in Ashburn, Virginia, were recognized for an imaging method that relies on turning fluorescent molecules on and off, opening a window into biological processes on a nanoscale, according to the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, which grants the prizes. Stefan Hell, 51, director at the Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry in Goettingen, Germany, was credited with developing a similar imaging technique that controls this fluorescence with lasers. “Their groundbreaking work has brought optical microscopy into the nanodimension,” the academy said. The award was considered a swift acknowledgment of work that lies at the crossroads of chemistry, physics and biology. It also marked the second time in six years that the academy acknowledged biochemical research involving fluorescent molecules, which have helped illuminate how genes build proteins, how the human immunodeficiency virus infects cells, and how abnormal proteins accumulate in the brain, leading to diseases such as Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s and Huntington’s. Those advances relied in part on a protein isolated from a species of jellyfish that has floated around the deep oceans for about 160 million years. The academy awarded a Nobel six years ago to three scientists who discovered and developed green fluorescent protein, which has led to widespread use of molecular tags. “We use these individual molecules as tiny light sources now, on structures inside cells,” Moerner said by telephone from Recife, Brazil. “They’re like little beacons, or flashlights. And we use the light from those molecules to

By Lorenz S. Marasigan

and listened to him. In a tense news conference, Watson’s rebuttal was that he had a different philosophy. Matt Kuchar said he was unaware of the post-Ryder Cup stories because he hasn’t turned on his TV or read the Internet since he returned from Scotland. Kuchar said he didn’t think Mickelson was taking a shot at Watson, rather answering a question about what worked for the Americans in 2008. “Whatever was aired out, I’m sure it was blown out of proportion,” Kuchar said. The PGA of America plans to wait until early next year to appoint its next captain and is contemplating a task force to figure out how to develope a winning culture. As much as the Americans will remember that closing press conference, Westwood said the Europeans won’t forget it, either. “It can’t do anything but building confidence for the European team going into the next one, that it’s been handled so publicly this time,” he said. “The fact that the fallout from the Ryder Cup on the US side is being handled publicly and there’s stuff being thrown backward and forward and stuff like that, we will remember that going into the next Ryder Cup. I guess we’ll see how easy it is to get the US team rattled by putting a bit of pressure on them. “I don’t think anything good can come out of all this.”

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yala Land Premier on Thursday said it already sold about 70 percent of its P22-billion “ultra luxury” developments in the Bonifacio Global City (BGC) and Makati Central Business District. Jose Juan Jugo, Ayala Land Inc. vice president and group head for the Ayala Land Premier, said the company sold about 70 percent each for its projects East Gallery Place Global City in BGC and Two Roxas Triangle in Makati City. The remaining 30 percent of the projects can be sold in three months to one year, Jugo said in a briefing with reporters. The company is expecting sales of P10 billion from the East Gallery and about P12 billion from Two Roxas Triangle. Both projects are targeting the higher end of the market, including foreign buyers from the region. See “Ayala,” A8

PESO exchange rates n US 44.7670

UK INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES

Winston Co (left), president of Emperador Distillers Inc., delivers his keynote speech as British Ambassador Asif Ahmad looks on at the GREAT Investment forum, which was organized by the British embassy to present the major investment opportunities in the UK in sectors like financial services, banking, food and drinks, retail, education, health care and infrastructure. ROY DOMINGO

Campi: Record number U.S. BUDGET DEFICIT DOWN TO $486 BILLION of cars sold in September

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he United States government’s budget deficit has fallen to $486 billion, the smallest pool of red ink of President Barack Obama’s six-year span in office, a new report said on Wednesday. The Congressional Budget Office’s (CBO) latest estimate shows better results than earlier projections by both CBO and the White House budget office. It comes as Congress has mostly paused in its wrangling over the deficit in the

run-up to the midterm elections next month. Obama inherited a trillion-dollar-plus deficit after the 2008 financial crisis, but that red-ink figure has improved in recent years as the economy has recovered. Last year’s deficit registered at $680 billion. The government registered deficits exceeding $1 trillion during Obama’s first term, but the recovering economy has boosted revenues while RepublicanSee “U.S. budget,” A8

By Catherine N. Pillas

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EHICLE sales surged by 41.7 percent in September, reaching a monthly record high of 20,924 units and a year-todate figure of 168,727 units, on the back of aggressive introduction of new models. According to a joint report of the Chamber of Automotive Manufacturers of the Philippines Inc. (Campi) and the Truck Manufacturers Association (TMA), 14,764 units were sold in September 2013, reflecting a growth in the ninth month of this year of 41.7 percent. Performance of both passenger

cars and commercial vehicles drove the growth, said a joint statement of Campi and TMA. The passenger-car segment’s sales reached 8,477 units and a significant growth of 65.1 percent year-on-year. The commercial-vehicle segment reported 12,447 units sold, up by 29.3 percent, or 2,819 units, versus in September 2013. “The exceptionally strong sales we have achieved for the past months, especially the unprecedented growth this September, prove that the automotive industry is continuously growing and aiming for better results. With this, we are going to keep See “Campi,” A2

n japan 0.4140 n UK 72.4151 n HK 5.7716 n CHINA 7.2922 n singapore 35.1887 n australia 39.1662 n EU 57.0242 n SAUDI arabia 11.9353 Source: BSP (9 October 2014)


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