Businessmirror november 4, 2014

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27

18

17% More laws passed signed by Obama

Laws and the 114th Congress

A YouGov poll asks Americans for their prediction on what will happen with laws being passed if: If the Democratic Party keeps If the Republican Party controls control of the Senate and the Senate and keeps control of Republicans keep control of the the House: House:

52

38 18

More laws passed signed by Obama

17

12%

Same amount

Fewer

19 No Opinion

Same amount

Fewer

19 No Opinion

World»B3-2

W Democrats slipping in Tuesday Senate contests

Do you think there have been too many, too few, or the right amount of laws passed by Congress and signed into law by President Obama?

Too many Republicans Independents

27

17%

17

12%

Democrats

Too few

23%

Right amount

41%

24

18% 9

36 56

7

11 © 2014 MCT

Source: YouGov

Do you think there have been too many, too few, or the right amount of laws passed by Congress and signed into law by President Obama?

Too many

Too few

23%

Republicans

Right amount

41%

18%

BusinessMirror

24

Independents

9

36

56

7

Democrats

11

© 2014 MCT

Source: YouGov

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

U.N. Media Award 2008

www.businessmirror.com.ph

Life

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ear Lord, we learn to love what we have. We look for the needs that we want. We smile when we accept what we receive. We share what we can afford to give. Keep reminding us, Lord that what goes around comes around. and we ever believe, yes we can. amen!

OLDERHOOD INSPIRATION AND LOuIE M. LAcSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

Their moThers’ daughTers

BusinessMirror

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

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Tuesday, November 4, 2014 D1

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A small house can be a great house ❸

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By Rebecca Teagarden | The Seattle Times

About 15 years ago, Burgess and her husband, Henry Shepherd, were searching for a house on the island. Shepherd was raised here. (Also, “beaches are minutes away in three directions.”) Friends told them about the cottage, but it was out of their league. They bid on a house in Port Madison. But it didn’t feel right. They took the offer back. A year later the cottage was still for sale. Burgess knew it was the one, her first and, so far, only house. The little place is both an intimate and interesting choice for a woman who is often called upon to transform and personalize far grander homes for others. “I didn’t anticipate that we’d still be here

CrySTAl Waters

or that the building would still be this size,” she says. Burgess guesses her home is 1,600 square feet. She is being generous. It’s kitchen to living room, left through the pocket doors to the “master” bedroom (also Burgess’s office). Daughter Paloma sleeps in the other bedroom off the short hallway. The attic has been conscripted into a bedroom for daughter Ava and office for Shepherd (up a ship’s ladder in the kitchen). One bathroom. Out back, what was once the garage is now the “Party Palace,” one room that holds a table for 12, a chandelier in the rafters, waiting to be called upon to cast a welcoming glow. That’s it. Burgess’s home is like her work, organic and evolutionary. Sometimes, on the job, a client might have to wait a year or more for the right dining-room fixture to appear. But it does. Burgess, a violinist by schooling and an art professional by happenstance (she worked at Linda Farris, was a partner at the Winston-Wachter gallery), calls what she

ichelle Burgess believes that if you look and if you listen, a house will tell you what to do.

does “3D composing.” “I’ve tweaked it over the years to a lighter palette. Light, that’s always my deal. There are windows everywhere, and everywhere you look it’s green. “It’s just a nice scale of living. I like it when things don’t get overthought.” To fit everybody into the kitchen, Burgess created a banquette, and Shepherd, a builder (and art director), designed a table. “I found a beautiful Schumacher fabric for the banquette that even with a discount was $175 a yard,” Burgess says. “I needed seven yards. But I just couldn’t pull the trigger on that.” And then the right thing turned up. “I found this heavy-duty fabric at Ikea, and it transformed the whole banquette; $8 a yard! I loved it so much I bought more.” Of the entire home and her solutions for making it work she says, “It is like living in a boat, actually. You are given a set of things to work with and you have to edit, edit, edit. “But there’s something about this place, I can’t tell you.”

❶ Henry SHepHerd and Michelle Burgess moved in when

daughter Ava was 1 and paloma was expected: “When I walked into the kitchen I thought, ‘How am I gonna fit two high chairs in with this woodstove in here?’” Out went the woodstove. The ladder leads to Shepherd’s office, Ava’s bedroom.

➋ THe master bedroom (also her office) expresses Burgess’s design approach, the “trust-me” instinctual method. “I think of myself as an architectural anthropologist (she has a graduate degree in music anthropology). I’m always trying to compose this environment that not only functions but feeds the people’s experiences in it.”

➌ “IT’S a humble home,” says interior designer Michelle

Burgess of her family’s cottage. “people ask me if I get jealous of my clients. I really don’t. Just like my clients I have a kitchen and a bedroom and a bathroom. Except sometimes mine would fit in their garage.” The sofa is from an island antiques store. The coffee table, Thomas O’Brien for Target.

❹ MOST people would look at the little place behind the

house and see a garage. Burgess sees the “party palace.” By day it is her work space for design projects. When guests are expected, she lowers the candlelit chandelier and sets a fine table. PHOTOS by bENJAMIN bENScHNEIDER/SEATTLE TIMES/McT

Lighting sculptures for everyday living

delpHInIuM

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rt without restraints, innovative, unique—these aptly describe the lighting sculptures of Dutch design label Brand van Egmond. You can now adorn your homes with these handcrafted art translated into light through Steltz, the Gallery, at the sixth floor, East Wing, Shangri-La Plaza. renowned for selling high-end lighting products for the last 26 years, Steltz International (www.steltzinternational. com) started an exclusive partnership with Brand van Egmond this year. In line with its launch and as an introductory treat, it offers special prices on the products. An international innovator in exclusive lighting and interior objects, Brand van Egmond was founded in 1989 by husband-and-wife team William Brand, an architect, and Annet van Egmond, a sculptor. Since then, the brand has become a trendsetter, illuminating the homes of the world’s aristocracy and glitterati, from royals to rappers.

It has also partnered with prominent establishments, such as Chopard, Louis Vuitton, Four Seasons Hotels, Hilton Hotels, La Cornue and Neuhaus. the versatility of their designs can be applied to both classic and modern interiors. Aside from their regular collection, Brand van Egmond also produces haute couture objects for clients’ specific requests and preferences. Its first famous lighting sculpture was the “Hollywood Chandelier” that became an instant icon. In 2004 it shed its light over the 76th Academy Awards presentation in the US. In their native country, Brand van Egmond’s “Night Watch” chandeliers were selected by the Dutch government to decorate the VIP Lounge of the Dutch pavilion at the World Expo 2008 in Zaragoza. In 2010 the couple even launched their first book Lighting Sculptures, which is carried by all major bookstores worldwide, including the Museum of Modern Art bookstore in New York.

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CUBAN CRISIS The World BusinessMirror

news@businessmirror.com.ph

Tuesday, November 4, 2014 B3-3

Tim Cook fills role-model void for LGBT employees

PEOPLE in the city of Bayamo in the eastern Cuban province of Granma use horse-drawn carts as public transportation. JORGE LUIS BAÑOS/IPS

APPLE chief executive and Alabama native Tim Cook waves to the crowd during an Alabama Academy of Honor ceremony at the state Capitol on October 27 in Montgomery, Alabama. Cook and seven others, including University of Alabama football Coach Nick Saban were inducted into the Alabama Academy of Honor. AP/BRYNN ANDERSON

B C H, J K  C G

“Bible Belt,” he has dealt with many incidents of bigotry.

‘Significant impact’

Bloomberg

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S CEO of Apple Inc., the world’s most valuable technology company, Tim Cook has license to say what he thinks, including announcing that he’s “proud to be gay” in Bloomberg Businessweek last Thursday. Th at pronouncement, almost universally lauded, is a lot riskier for gay executives still trying to get to the corner office. “He has helped push the rock a long distance uphill toward more openness and opportunity, but it isn’t going to be instant paradise in the C suite for gay people,” said Linda Hirshman, author of Victory, the Triumphant Gay Revolution. Cook is the first CEO of an S&P 500 company to come out in public. It’s a watershed moment for the gay community, which still lacks protections against workplace discrimination in 29 states in the US. Yet while a growing number of business leaders are now openly gay—including Burberry Group Plc. CEO Christopher Bailey, Anthony Watson, Nike Inc.’s chief information officer, and Robert Greenblatt, chairman at NBC Entertainment—others worry that coming out still carries a stigma. “Even in today’s more open climate, gays who come out risk derailing their advance, especially to the CEO spot,” said Pat Cook, president of Cook & Co., a boutique search firm in Bronxville, New York. Gay employees instead are often expected to stay discreet with customers or clients.

Oil industry

“IT’S much more accepted within company walls, but you’re not supposed to flaunt this to outsiders,” said Peter Crist, chairman of recruiting firm Crist/Kolder Associates in Downers Grove, Illinois. When boards are choosing between two candidates with equal credentials they almost always choose the person who fits in the most, according to executive recruiters. John Browne, the former CEO of BP Plc., was forced to resign in 2007, after being outed by a British tabloid. He has since written a book, The Glass Closet: Why Coming Out is Good Business, about being a closeted gay in the oil industry. During his tenure, BP had a joint venture in Russia, where President Vladimir Putin has approved laws against homosexuality. “To a headhunter, I would have been seen as ‘controversial,’ too hot to handle,” he wrote. Bob Page, founder of Replacements Ltd. in McLeansville, North Carolina, a retail company selling antiques, said in an interview that as an openly gay entrepreneur in the

ONE local told him, “I used to ride by your building and my dad would say, ‘that’s where the queers are,’” Page said. The father of twin 15-year-old boys, Page was also once told that having a picture of his children on his office wall was “flaunting your sexuality,” he said. “I think Tim Cook coming out can have a significant impact,” said Page. “Others may hear this and think, ‘here’s someone who’s very successful and admired for their business acumen who feels safe to come out’—and that might encourage another kid who’s struggling” with his sexual identity. Watson, Nike’s 37-year-old chief information officer who came out when he was a student at Dublin’s Trinity College, didn’t have a gay role model to look up to while growing up, he said in an interview. “There were never any role models, just some campy or effeminate people on TV who would get a laugh,” he said. Tim Cook’s coming out is “game changing. It’s fundamentally shifting perspectives on LGBT [lesbian gay bisexual and transgender] leaders.”

LGBT employees

MORE than 40 percent of LGBT employees are still in the closet at work in the US, according to Todd Sears, founder of Out Leadership, an advocacy group for LGBT employees in business and a former Wall Street banker who worked at Credit Suisse Group AG. In Asia 90 percent of LGBT workers are closeted, Sears said. Still, times have changed dramatically, said George Slowik, 59, a longtime publishing industry veteran. He was asked to step aside as publisher of Publishers Weekly in 1988 after being featured in the first issue of Genre Magazine, which was aimed at gay men, he said. He promptly joined Out Magazine. “For people growing up and thinking of their options who may be in a less supportive environment to know they can achieve whatever they want, it’s as significant in some ways as an AfricanAmerican president,” Slowik said in an interview. Cook’s coming out sends a message to the 78 countries around the world, including Uganda and Nigeria, where being gay is still illegal, according to Sears. Apple sells iPhones in all these countries, including Singapore, which earlier this week upheld its anti-homosexuality law. “The next time Cook comes to Singapore, are they going to arrest him?” asked Sears. “Tim has put a face to this, and in an indirect way, put his product there. It’s going to be very hard to be a homophobe holding an iPhone.”

Crisis in Cuba fuels use of horse-drawn carriages

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B I G | Inter Press Service

AVANA—Up and down the streets of towns and cities in Cuba go horse-drawn carriages with black leather tops and large back wheels, alongside more simple carts, operating as public transportation.

This ancient means of transportation can be seen throughout this country, in urban, suburban and rural areas, where motor vehicles are expensive and there are not enough cars and buses. And in the most remote parts of the country carts are virtually the only way to get around. As he has done every morning for the past 11 years, Bienvenido García waits for customers at the piquera or stop in the resort town of Varadero, 121 kilometers (km) east of Havana, to take them in his carriage along a fixed route down the main street of this tourist town. Depending on where, what kind of cart, and the distance to be traveled, the cost ranges from P2 to P10 pesos per passenger (10 to 50 cents of a dollar). But a jaunt in one of the comfortable fancy traditional carriages is much more costly, because they cater exclusively to foreign tourists. “I used to work in the guaguas [public buses]. But with the crisis, there weren’t any spare parts or fuel. So I started driving a carriage,” García, a cuentapropista, or self-employed worker, told Inter Press Service (IPS). Like most sectors of the economy, transportation collapsed in 1991 when the East European socialist bloc, Cuba’s main trade and aid partner, fell apart. Observers say measures aimed at recuperating transport have been slow and inefficient. Cubans were forced to find ways

of getting around that did not depend on fossil fuels—such as horses, carts, bicycles and three-wheeled pedal-powered bicitaxis. In response, as part of the socialist government’s opening up to small private businesses and cuentapropistas, new trades were added by the authorities: cochero or carriage driver, and bicitaxista and mototaxista, who drive bicitaxis and motorcycle taxis. In 2010 the government declared that private enterprise was key to easing the chronic public transportation shortage. Most of the country’s 473,000 cuentapropistas work in the areas of food and restaurants, housing rental or transportation. There are no specific statistics on the number of cocheros, who are mainly men. But they abound in cities like Bayamo, called “the city of the carriages,” and Guantánamo, in the east; Cárdenas and Varadero in the west; and Santa Clara, Ciego de Ávila and Santi Spíritus in central Cuba. Nor are there clear figures on how many motor vehicles are circulating today in this Caribbean island nation of 11.2 million people. But in July 2013 the local media reported that there were only 7,840 public transport buses—just half of the 15,800 buses serving the population in the 1980s. And due to the lack of new vehicles, classic US 1950s cars or Soviet-made Ladas are still plying the streets of Cuba’s cities.

“You can just get by on this job as a cochero because the taxes are high,” said García, whose cart carries up to eight people, “the weight that the horse can pull without it being abusive.” “I keep the culero [manure bag] in good shape, to avoid getting the streets dirty, and I taught my horse to make the stops, so we don’t distort traffic on the road,” he said. But not all of the streets in towns with horse-drawn carts and carriages are as clean as Varadero’s. “To get something done, people had to complain to the authorities about horses on the streets. There was manure everywhere,” Aliuska Labrada, a young woman who lives in the town of Cayo Ramona, 200 km southeast of Havana, told IPS. The resurgence of this old means of transportation brought with it problems related to hygiene, the public image of rural and urban areas, traffic safety, and the welfare of draft animals. Rules established by local authorities included carriage stands that must be kept clean by the drivers, the following of traditional ways of handling carts, and urban areas off-limits to horse-drawn vehicles. And for the drivers to obtain a license, their horses must undergo veterinary exams. “It’s a more natural means of transportation…but at what price?” wrote a cybernaut who identified herself as Marina in an online IPS forum. “The horses damage the paved streets and can cause accidents because the drivers don’t have total control over their animals,” she said. “There’s also the question of mistreatment of the animals. Some people exploit them to exhaustion, just to make money from them.” That is a sensitive issue that animal-rights organizations have been complaining about for years. Since 1988, the Scientific Veterinary Council and the Cuban Association for the Protection of Animals and Plants have been presenting a proposed draft law on animal protection

to the Agriculture Ministry, without success. The local scientific community is pressing for the development of green-friendly, sustainable transportation in Cuba. In an e-mail response to IPS, engineer Lizet Rodríguez identified several short- and long-term alternatives, although she said the shift to a cleaner transportation system would require an in-depth feasibility study. “What are needed first of all are solutions that would strengthen and reorient the public-transportation system, improve road infrastructure and reduce vehicle emissions, which would mean upgrading the vehicle fleet,” she said. Rodríguez, a researcher at the Marta Abreu Central University in the city of Villa Clara, 268 km east of Havana, recommended “improving communications over the Internet, to make it possible to carry out a large number of operations online that today require that people physically go somewhere.” Few people in Cuba have online connection in their homes, most of them dial-up and some wireless. In 2013, there were 2,923,000 users, including both Internet and intranet accounts, which offer access to a limited number of local and international web sites. The engineer said, “The use of the bicycle [as long as there are bike paths] would be feasible above all in small and medium-sized towns, and the use of cleaner fuels like natural gas or socalled biofuels— methanol and ethanol, obtained from biomass residue— could be encouraged.” Last year, renewable energy sources made up 22.4 percent of the country’s primary energy production, according to the latest report by the national statistic institute, Onei. Up to now, renewable-energy sources have only been used in a handful of industries, mainly for generating electricity, pumping and heating water, and cooking food.

VIRGIN DISASTER IS A REMINDER OF DEADLY EXPLOSION B B M The Associated Press

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OJAVE, California—The loss of an experimental spaceship that broke up over the Mojave Desert, killing one pilot and seriously injuring another, has renewed criticism of the way the craft’s designer and Virgin Galactic handled a deadly explosion seven years ago. Space enthusiasts watching Virgin Galactic’s race to send tourists on suborbital flights have complained for years about

a 2007 explosion that killed three people on the ground and critically injured three others during a ground test in the development of a rocket engine for the same vehicle that crashed last Friday. “Now we’ve got another person killed, another person seriously injured. So we’ve got a lot that has hurt the industry,” said Geoff Daly, an engineer who has filed complaints with several federal agencies over the use of nitrous oxide to power the ship’s engine. SpaceShipTwo tore apart last Friday after the craft detached from the underside

of its jet-powered mothership and fired its rocket engine for a test flight. Authorities have not given any indication what caused the accident. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigators were on the scene on Sunday. The agency could take up to a year to issue a final report. The accident was the second fiery setback for commercial space travel in less than a week. Last Tuesday an unmanned commercial supply rocket bound for the International Space Station exploded moments after liftoff in Virginia.

Daly was co-author of a critical report on the 2007 incident at Scaled Composites, the Northrop Grumman-owned designer of SpaceShipTwo. Among the report’s complaints was that the public was never given a full accounting of what went happened. “Something is wrong here,” Daly said on Sunday. “We offered to talk, give our experience. It was either ignored or totally dismissed.” Virgin Galactic CEO George Whitesides issued a statement on Sunday. “Now is not the time for speculation,” he said. AP

WORLD

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ON SECTIONS Design&Space BusinessMirror

D4 Tuesday, November 4, 2014

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Urban Monologues V2.0

Nikki Boncan-Buensalido

ARTWORK BY NIKKI BONCAN-BUENSALIDO

Armless chairs help you squeeze more seating into your décor By Vicki Payne

The Charlotte Observer

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armless chairs by just replacing one chair with arms. Armless chairs are often ideal for small rooms, such as a secondary bedroom. their size and scale can vary from very petite to comfortable and plush. they are also great options for dining rooms. it is easier to pack a dining table with additional chairs if you don’t have to contend with chair arms. think of your guests. they will find it much easier to slip out of an armless chair at a crowded table. consider investing in an armless chair that you can move from room to room, which will add to its versatility. it may start off in your living room but end up in a guest room. the Middleton chair from Anna French, upholstered in oatmeal linen fabric from thibaut, has wonderful tailored details including self-welting and diamond tuck upholstery. Neutral upholstery is always timeless. Armless office chairs provide many benefits. A smaller width can be a great space-saver. that’s important as many of us transform utility rooms and small guest rooms into home offices where every inch of space counts. An armless chair may fit easier under the desk and have narrow enough proportions that you can stow the chair out of the way when it’s not in use. the smaller your office, the more important this benefit becomes. Armless chairs are also easier on the budget. Without adding arms, manufacturers can produce these designs at a lower cost. Furniture stores are filled with wonderful armless chair options. Don’t be afraid to experiment with bold colors and prints when purchasing an armless chair. these designs let you move a little out of your comfort zone. When it comes to color, it’s a good idea to experiment with smaller furniture rather than a sofa or pair of overstuffed lounge chairs. regardless of the color or the fabric you choose, you’re sure to find many benefits in having armless chairs in your décor. they can easily become the best seats in the house.

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ThE ribbon-cutting of Amaia Scapes in San Pablo, Laguna, during its launch. Nikko Reyes (from left), project development manager for South Luzon projects; Chay Viray, project sales officer; Donna Ramirez, sales regional director; and Milfa Pagsisihan, broker head.

design&space swimming pool, basketball court and jogging path. On top of everything, Amaia scapes san pablo puts everyone’s safety first before anything else. it is designed with guarded entrance and exits, a perimeter fence and tree-lined spine road. Amaia scapes san pablo is a quality residential project bearing the stamp of Makati Development corp.’s Buildplus track record and experience, and is maintained by Ayala property Management corp.

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a different kind of heat

Sports BusinessMirror

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| Tuesday, November 4, 2014 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

CHRIS BOSH works toward the basket against Toronto’s Tyler Hansbrough. AP

ERIK SPOELSTRA: It’s the power of working together that will make us more successful. AP

A DIFFERENT KIND OF HEAT Defense has taken a backseat because the way Miami has played on offense and the Heat once again put on a scoring show in Sunday’s 107-102 victory against the Toronto Raptors.

By Shandel Richardson

Sun Sentinel IAMI—A strong emphasis has always been placed on defense the past few seasons. The Miami Heat have often called it their “identity.” Defense first. Offense second. Yet, this season it’s been different. Very different. Defense has taken a backseat because the way they have played on offense. The Heat once again put on a scoring show in Sunday’s 107-102 victory against the Toronto Raptors at American Airlines Arena. “We’re three games into this, so it could quickly go the other way if guys start to feel comfortable and try to do it on their own, and that’s not the makeup of this group,” Heat Coach Erik Spoelstra said. “That’s not at all a referendum on our personnel. It’s the power of working together that will make us more successful.” The Heat have now topped the 100-point mark in every game, improving to 3-0. They are the only remaining undefeated team in the Eastern Conference after handing the Raptors their first loss. It was the second straight game they scored at least 60 points in the first half. Guard Dwyane Wade led the way with 19 points, 11 rebounds and seven assists, the closest he had come of recording a triple-double in nearly four years. Wade even hit a rare threepointer to put the Heat ahead by 16 with four minutes and 53 seconds remaining in the third quarter. “I took the shots that were there,” Wade said. “I was able to hit as many shots to start the game as I did all [on Saturday against Philadelphia].” The performance answered any questions about Wade’s playing status this season. He looked plenty healthy in the second

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Wozniacki N finishes NY run

CAROLINE WOZNIACKI is thrilled by her accomplishment outside of the tennis court. AP

game of a back-to-back. Last year Wade rarely played on consecutive nights because of his knees, missing 28 games. Before the game, he made it clear he was growing bothered by the constant concerns of his health. He’s stated several times he will approach these stretches on a game-by-game basis. The plan, though, is to play in as many games possible. “Just keep playing,” Wade said. “Don’t even think about it.... We’ve got a lot of games coming up. You knock on wood for your health. As you see around the league and in sports, it’s a lot of major injuries going on. You knock on wood to be able to go out there and just play.” Center Chris Bosh continued his impressive start to the season. He finished with 21 points and 11 rebounds—his second double-double of the season—in his third game as the primary scoring option. The Heat led by double-figures most of the second half until offense started flowing less smoothly. The open looks weren’t as frequent and the Heat got careless with the ball, allowing the Raptors to close within 93-84 on a layup by James Johnson. “We got a little stagnant in the third quarter,” Bosh said. “We had a chance to put them away, and we let them back in the game.... Hopefully, we can learn from our mistakes. What’s most important is we got the win, and we got a lot of contributions.” A three-pointer by DeMar DeRozan, who led the Raptors with a season-high 30 points, made it 98-83 with 5:18 remaining. The Raptors had a chance to pull even closer, but Luol Deng (18 points) blocked DeRozan on the following possession. The Heat then pushed the lead back to eight on a threepointer by Shawne Williams.

EW YORK—Caroline Wozniacki was thrilled with her first marathon. The tennis star ran the 26.2-mile course in just under three hours and 27 minutes—a few minutes ahead of her desired time. She originally had hoped to come in under four hours and quickly adjusted her goal to 3:30 during the race. So when she crossed the line and saw her time she was ecstatic. “The crowd was amazing. It was incredible. It was such an incredible experience,” the 24-yearold former No. 1-ranked player said. “I’m so happy to have done this. I’m so proud. Now I have this medal. I can say that I’ve done the New York City Marathon. I’ve even done it at a cool time. So I’m really, really happy.” She was met at the finish line by her friend and tennis rival Serena Williams and the pair hugged. Wozniacki was somewhat amazed

that she had done so well since she admitted that she didn’t really prepare, as well as she could have, for the race. Her longest training run was 13 miles. “I think I’ve done everything you’re not supposed to do before a marathon,” Wozniacki said laughing. “I had a Halloween party three days ago and came back at like 4 in the morning. Two days ago I chilled a little bit, but I’ve been really busy.” She also said she went to the New York Rangers game on Saturday night, foregoing a traditional pasta dinner. Wozniakci was also busy raising money for charity. Her marathon raised over $81,000 for Team for Kids, which helps fund marathon organizer New York Road Runners’ youth programs. She said that Williams made a big contribution to the charity. Wozniacki left open the chance to run another marathon—just don’t expect it any time soon. “Right now I don’t think I’m going to do one for a few years, but probably at some point I’m going to do another one. Right now I’m just tired,” she said. “I’m exhausted. If you ask me right now, then I’d say no, but I’m sure that I’m going to look back on this experience and say that this was awesome and want to do it again.” AP

MELO POWERS KNICKS

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EW YORK—On a night when he joined the National Basketball Association’s 20,000-point club, Carmelo Anthony scored 28 points, including the go-ahead basket with 1:23 remaining, as the New York Knicks narrowly defeated the Charlotte Hornets, 96-93. Al Jefferson had 21 points, and Gary Neal added 17 points in a reserve role for the Hornets (1-2), who lost their second straight. Charlotte’s guard Michael Kidd-Gilchrist fell awkwardly late in the first quarter and didn’t return to the game. Amar’e Stoudemire had 17 points for the Knicks (2-1), who won their second straight. Iman Shumpert added 15 points. In Los Angeles, DeMarcus Cousins had 34 points and 17 rebounds, and Rudy Gay added 25 points as the Sacramento Kings handed the poor-shooting Los Angeles Clippers their first loss, 98-92. The Kings (2-1) rallied from a 10-point deficit in the third quarter and outscored the Clippers, 28-18, in the fourth. They took the lead for good on a lay-up by Gay with just under six minutes to play. Blake Griffin and Spencer Hawes both scored 17 points to lead five Clippers in double figures. Chris Paul had 16 points and 11 assists; JJ Redick had 12 points; and Jordan Farmar 10. Sacramento’s Darren Collison scored 14 points in his first game against his former team. The Golden State Warriors beat the Portland Trail Blazers, 95-90, after Klay Thompson scored 29 points, including a go-ahead jump shot with 8.7 seconds left. The victory gives the Warriors three straight wins to open the season—their best start since 1994-95 when they opened 5-0. LaMarcus Aldridge had 26 points and 13 rebounds to lead the Blazers, who dropped to 1-2 to start the season. After wrestling for the lead throughout the fourth quarter, Aldridge’s lay-up and a fadeaway jumper with 2:01 left gave Portland a narrow 90-88 lead. Andre Iguodala missed the second of a pair of free throws for Golden State with 26.3 seconds to go to keep the Blazers in front. But Thompson nailed the running jumper to give the Warriors a 91-90 lead. Steph Curry made free throws the rest of the way for the final margin. Curry finished with 21 points for the Warriors. AP

sports

ANG WANTS MORE STAKE IN ENERGY INDUSTRY

By Catherine N. Pillas

he Philippines has a huge potential to become a major player in the global aerospace industry, provided the government will put in place the necessary support mechanisms and incentives that include a longer incometax holiday (ITH) period.

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John Lee, president of the Aerospace Industries Association of the Philippines (AIAP), said the industry’s revenues from manufacturing of parts and components, alone, may already exceed $2.5 billion by 2022. This is if the government will put in place policy reforms that will entice more investors to set up manufacturing operations in the Philippines and integrate the industry’s supply chain. “Just for manufacturing only, with the interventions and programs we are trying to implement, we can have $2.5 billion or higher by 2022,” Lee said.

By Bianca Cuaresma

Imagine no more a picturesque home in the suburbs picturesque and affordable dream home seems far from your grasp. But, with Amaia, the economic housing arm of Ayala Land, you can turn that dream into a reality. Keeping its promise to provide better living for more Filipinos, Amaia Land (www. amaialand.com) recently launched another affordable, yet quality, development in san pablo city, Laguna, with Amaia scapes san pablo. the launching of this third Amaia project in Laguna was attended by Donna ramirez, sales regional director; Milfa pagsisihan, broker head; Nikko reyes, project development manager for south Luzon; and Willy del rio from general services office of san pablo city. Amaia scapes san pablo is a horizontal development in Barangay san Lucas 2, san pablo city, Laguna—a site that gives homeowners a scenic environment. it occupies 4.3 hectares of land with 313 residential units for its first sector. Buyers will have the freedom to choose from three house models: twin pod, Bungalow pod and Multi pod. What makes this project suitable for new and growing families is its close proximity to commercial and business establishments, such as puregold and san pablo Market, saving you time and money. it is also ideal to raise your children here because educational institutions are in the area, including Laguna college, san pablo college and Laguna state polytechnic university, among others. Getting your dream home at Amaia is also pocket-friendly since it offers different payment options, such as cash payment, deferred, pag-iBiG, bank and in-house financing. staying true to its mission of giving an affordable and balanced lifestyle, Amaia scapes san pablo prioritizes every family’s needs and happiness by providing a green patio for a fresher and greener environment. Also, homeowners don’t have to go far for recreational activities because there is a village patio equipped with a pavilion,

P25.00 nationwide | 7 sections 32 pages | 7 days a week

BSP TO CONTINUE INTERVENTION TO CUSHION PESO FALL

www.businessmirror.com.ph

have always had a fascination with sections. People on different floors do things simultaneously without realizing their parallel existence.

rMLess upholstered chairs are one of the most versatile occasional chairs you can buy. Often referred to as “slipper chairs,” they can easily slip into any room’s décor. perhaps that’s how they got their name. they provide a backrest and comfortable seating but don’t take up visual space or limit access as traditional chairs with armrest often do. chairs designed without arms allow seating access from three directions. the temptation for guests to use the arms as a spot to balance a beverage glass also is removed with this design. if your rooms seem crowded but you need extra seating, try replacing a bulky armchair. You may be amazed by how much more visual space a sleek armless chair can add. Many times, you can open up enough space for a pair of

Tuesday, November 4, 2014 Vol. 10 No. 27

See “PHL aerospace,” A5

On sections

In architecture, sections are equally as important as elevations, and, for concept-driven projects, sections are referenced even more. Sections depict some of the most intricate details that explain how to construct a structure. It is interesting to see how these drawings are detailed on paper and how the user’s lifestyle and habits change according to how these sections are designed. I was at a friend’s condo recently and found myself observing the habits of these vertical residential dwellers. As the sun set and dusk turned into night, I observed how the building came to life as lights were turned on. It was enchanting to witness a static structure turn into a living organism, as if revealing its internal organisms. Some units turned on their lights; others, their television sets, or were in the kitchen preparing dinner, or in the living room entertaining friends or having family time together. It was just alluring to see how different people adapt and change their lifestyles based on how developers and their architects design these urban spaces. Condo units are identically laid-out, save for a few changes in configuration, such as the number of bedrooms, but, as I sat there that evening and watched how each space was used and how each was decorated differently from the other, it became readily apparent how creative people can be—sometimes, even without them realizing it. They are able to customize the space according to their lifestyle. They are able to work around set conditions and adjust to the parameters dictated by the units themselves. The same is true with the office spaces that I routinely pass by on my way to the office or a meeting. The only difference is the usage and the function of the buildings. In office spaces, instead of couches, TV screens, kitchens and bedrooms, desks piled with paperwork, conference rooms and rooms brain-storming fill each window. It is fascinating to see how even the lighting preferences differ among people. Some use warm white, while others prefer daylight. They have different minds of their own. As we go about our busy days, it can be rewarding to look at things in different perspectives and different situations. Sometimes, the insights you gain from these musings become your daily doses of wisdom. Looking at different perspectives make us realize what life is all about. There are always insights that we can extract from these experiences—we just have to be sensitive enough to take in and process these to make us better creative individuals, perhaps even better people. These are instances, thoughts and perspectives from which we can draw inspiration as we continually study the habits and lifestyles of people that we, as designers, need to take into consideration when it comes to designing for communities that work.

n

PHL aerospace prospects bright

A SMALL HOUSE CAN BE A GREAT HOUSE Yes we can

A broader look at today’s business

AEROSPACE INDUSTRY SEEKS LONGER I.T.H. PERIOD TO ATTRACT MORE PLAYERS

INSIDE

This is the story of what the interior designer/artist did to hers. There are pictures of family and “things I found.” Antiques and bits from relatives. Art from those she likes and admires. Burgess is not above Ikea nor beneath fine textiles. The latest item to settle in is a love seat that belonged to a friend. “Every time I had a dinner party I borrowed it from her. Last year at Thanksgiving she brought it and said, ‘Here, this is yours.’” It all comes back to family and friends at the place she calls Taylor Cottage, cheery cherry red and tucked into the woods of Bainbridge Island, Washington.

ASHINGTON—Increasingly confident Republicans claimed new momentum on Sunday, just two days before Americans vote in a national election, assailing President Barack Obama in a final weekend push to motivate voters to give them a Senate majority. Democrats deployed their biggest stars to boost turnout in an effort to minimize expected losses. Obama started his presidency with Democrats controlling both houses of Congress, but in 2010, midway through his first term, his party lost the House of Representatives in a wave of very conservative Republican tea-party victories and backlash against the president’s health-care overhaul, widely called “Obamacare”.

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he Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) vowed on Monday to maintain a presence in the foreign-exchange market, as the peso weakened to as low as 45 per dollar at one point during trading. In a statement released late Monday, BSP Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. said the day’s fluctuations were on account of “two-way flows,” when foreign currency flowed inward in the form of investments or loan proceeds, but flowed out, as well, when these were also repatriated. Data from the Philippine Dealings System Holdings Corp. (PDS) showed the peso closing at 44.9 per dollar on Monday’s $411.9-million trades. This was 2 centavosweakerthanthepreviousday’scloseof44.88 per dollar. The local currency started the day at 44.96, and traded to as weak as 45 per dollar and to as strong as 44.89 at one point. “Initially, the peso’s weakness was in line with the US dollar strength, which was still in reaction to the Bank of Japan’s move last Friday. Some corporate dollar receipts and equity-related inflows Continued on A8

PESO exchange rates n US 44.8810 n japan 0.3995

ayala christmas streetlights The ceremonial switching-on of the Ayala Christmas Streetlights, an annual spectacle in the Makati Central Business District, was held on Monday night, with (from left) Ayala Land Inc. President and CEO Bernard Vincent Dy, Ayala Corp. Chairman Jaime Zobel de Ayala, Rep. Monique Lagdameo of the First District of Makati City, Patricia Zobel de Ayala, Ayala Land Inc. Vice President Anna Ma. Margarita Dy and Makati Commercial Estate Association President Dave Balangue leading the rites. ALYSA SALEN

By Lenie Lectura

iversified conglomerate San Miguel Corp. (SMC) is aggressively expanding its presence in the energy industry amid the problems the country faces, particularly the power-supply deficiency anticipated next year. At the listing of Petron Corp.’s 10 million preferred shares on Monday, SMC President Ramon S. Ang divulged his plans for the oil and power sectors. For oil, Ang said Petron, the country’s leading oil-refining and -marketing company, is keen on expanding further overseas, similar to what it did in 2012, when it acquired ExxonMobil’s downstream business in Malaysia. “We are looking at a possible overseas acquisition but we are being careful,” Ang said in Filipino. The businessman stressed that he does not want Petron to be involved in any environmental issue that could affect the company’s business. “Usually, there are many environmental issues in running an oil refinery or tank farm, such as leaks. If this happens, the cost for cleanup operations is expensive,” Ang explained. Ang did not elaborate when asked for details on its planned acquisition, saying it’s better for Petron to plan its moves carefully and thoroughly. Petron’s financial performance is improving. In the first half of the year, it posted P3 billion in net income, higher than the P1.1 billion posted in the same period last year. Continued on A8

MVP eyes JV with PNCC for connector road By Lorenz S. Marasigan

PANGILINAN: “The joint venture is a much easier process. We officially confirm that our inclination is to implement the project under a joint venture, if possible.“

T

he government has relaxed its position on the implementation of the P18-billion connector -road venture, prompting Metro Pacific Investments Corp. to express its preference to undertake the project under its existing North Luzon Expressway (Nlex) franchise. Chairman Manuel V. Pangilinan said his company prefers to implement the multibillion-peso road-linkage project under a joint venture (JV) with state-run Philippine National Construction Corp. (PNCC).

“The joint venture is a much easier process. We officially confirm that our inclination is to implement the project under a joint venture, if possible,” he said. Public Works Secretary Rogelio L. Singson earlier said President Aquino had ordered his office to sort out the legal aspect of the controversial proposal, whether it is best to implement the project on a JV or it follows the original proposal under the build-operate-transfer law. “Both are possible, both are legally possible,” the Cabinet official said in a recent interview. Continued on A8

n UK 71.8635 n HK 5.7872 n CHINA 7.3413 n singapore 34.9568 n australia 39.5497 n EU 56.2583 n SAUDI arabia 11.9635 Source: BSP (3 November 2014)


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