Timeline of patients
More than 300 new viral mutations identified in latest strain
Thomas Eric Duncan
Oct. 8: Duncan dies.
Sept. 28: Duncan returns to Presbyterian by ambulance and is isolated.
Sept. 24: Duncan begins running a fever.
Oct. 19: The last day on which those who came in contact with Duncan before his isolation must be monitored.
Researchers rushing study on Ebola’s increase in virulence
Oct. 31: The last day on which those who came in contact with Pham before her isolation will be monitored.
Nina Pham Sept. 30: Tests confirm Duncan has Ebola.
Sept. 25: He arrives at Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas with the fever and other symptoms. He is sent home early the next morning.
Oct. 10: Pham, a nurse who cared for Duncan at Presbyterian, discovers she has a fever. She arrives at the hospital and is isolated.
Oct. 12: State officials announce Pham’s illness. It’s thought to be the first case of Ebola transmission in the U.S.
Nov. 4: The last day on which those who came in contact with Vinson before her isolation will be monitored.
Oct. 8: A second Presbyterian nurse who helped care for Duncan, Amber Vinson, travels to Ohio, her native state.
September
Oct. 13: Vinson returns to Dallas on a commercial flight.
Oct. 14: Vinson reports to the hospital with a fever. She is isolated. Officials say she had close contact with three people, who will be monitored.
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JAPAN PM SENDS OFFERINGS TO WAR SHRINE
US lawmakers criticize Dallas medics for poor handling of Ebola crisis
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ASHINGTON—MembersofaUSHousesubcommittee sharply criticized national and Dallas medicalofficialsonThursdayforerrorsintheEbolacrisis that they say have eroded public trust in the hospital system.
PRO-DEMOCRACY students remove their belongings as riot police clear their encampment in the Mong Kok district of Hong Kong, early on Friday. Riot police took down barnicades, tents and canopies. AP/WALLY SANTANA
Vatican alters draft report translation about gays V
translation was hasty and error-ridden. When Lombardi was shown how significantly the meaning had changed, he pledged to investigate and didn’t rule out a third version. Lombardi stressed that the original Italian remains the official text, and noted that the draft is being revised top-tobottom for a final report, which will go to a vote among bishops on Saturday. If two-thirds approve it, the report will form the basis of discussions in dioceses around the world before another meeting of bishops next year, and ultimately a teaching document by Pope Francis. Based on the complaints to the original text and the number of amendments proposed Thursday, the drafting committee appointed by the pope has its work cut out for it if it wants to get a two-thirds majority. AP
the English was changed. The first English version asked if the church was capable of “welcoming these people, guaranteeing to them a fraternal space in our communities.” The new version asks if the church is “capable of providing for these people, guaranteeing...them...a place of fellowship in our communities.” The first version said homosexual unions could often constitute a “precious support in the life of the partners.” The new one says gay unions often constitute “valuable support in the life of these persons.” Other changes were made in other sections of the text, but without significantly altering the meaning or tone. The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, said Englishspeaking bishops had requested the changes on the grounds that the first
ATICAN CITY—The Vatican is watering down a groundbreaking overture to gays—but only if they speak English. After a draft report by bishops debating family issues came under criticism from many conservative Englishspeaking bishops, the Vatican released a new English translation on Thursday. A section initially entitled “Welcoming homosexuals” is now “Providing for homosexual persons,” and the tone of the text is significantly colder. The initial English version—released on Monday along with the original—accurately reflected the Italian version in both letter and spirit, and contained a remarkable tone of acceptance to gays. The other translations were similarly faithful to the Italian and didn’t deviate in tone. Conservatives were outraged, and
spoke from Texas. Frieden faced some of the toughest questions. He was pressed to explain whether Vinson should have been allowed to travel by commercial airliner to visit family in Ohio after she was identified as having been one of Duncan’s caregivers. That would have been fine, Frieden said, had she worn proper protective gear while treating Duncan. If she hadn’t, she shouldn’t have traveled, he said. More than 70 are Presbyterian health-care workers who had contact with Duncan, sometimes without proper protective clothing, according to nurses at the hospital. (Varga disputed the nurses’ claim about inadequate protective gear.) Other developments: ■ The death toll from Ebola will rise this week to more than 4,500 people from the 9,000 infected and the outbreak is still out of control in three West African nations. Dr. Isabelle Nuttall, director of the World Health Organization’s global capacities, alert and response, said new numbers show the outbreak is still hitting health workers hard despite precautions—with 427 medical workers infected and 236 dead—mainly because Ebola victims are most contagious around the time they die. ■ Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Thursday that a trust fund he launched to provide fast and flexible funding for the fight against Ebola has only $100,000 in the bank. UN Spokesman Stephane Dujarric said the trust fund is part of a nearly $1-billion UN appeal for humanitarian needs in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, the three countries hardesthit by the deadly virus. ■ House Republicans demanded a travel ban from Ebola-ravaged West Africa on Thursday, calling it the only sure way to protect Americans from the virus’s deadly reach. Administration officials resisted, as anxiety over the disease raced through the country and rattled the White House and Congress.
■ Jamaica, Guyana and Trinidad and Tobago on Thursday became the latest countries in the Western Hemisphere to restrict travelers from West African nations struggling with an epidemic of the Ebola virus. The announcements came a day after Colombia and Saint Lucia ordered similar prohibitions. Authorities in Jamaica imposed an immediate entry ban on anyone who has been in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone within four weeks. Frieden acknowledged that Vinson called the CDC before her return flight to Dallas, said she had a minor fever, and asked whether she could travel. “My understanding is she reported no symptoms to us,” he told the committee. But a day earlier, Frieden said that since Vinson had a fever, she shouldn’t have flown. A series of bad decisions, beginning with Presbyterian’s failure to admit Duncan when he showed up at the emergency room with a high fever and severe pain, has left hundreds of people with potential exposure to the deadly virus. Many more were either on the Frontier Airlines flight that Vinson took from Cleveland to Dallas or were on subsequent flights before the aircraft was taken out of service. Concerns about passengers’ exposure have spread nationwide, including in North Texas. On Thursday Rockwall County announced that four residents who were on Monday’s flight were being monitored by the state health department and the CDC. Another county resident, a Presbyterian health-care worker, is also being monitored. Despite her slight fever, health officials said, the chance that Vinson spread Ebola to other passengers was very small. Still, school districts in Ohio and Texas contacted parents after learning that some of their students had been passengers on the plane or were the children of passengers. Some schools were closed so they could be disinfected. MCT and AP
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ANSELM KIEFER: PERHAPS EUROPE’S GREATEST LIVING ARTIST Taking some actions
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EAR God, help us resolve our problems by understanding the situation. Not complaining because it will lead us to nothing. Not telling it to people not concerned about it. Not blaming the problems on others. Not absorbing and feeling depressed about them. But taking some actions and pieces of advice from professionals and more reflections accompanied by prayers and trust in God. Amen. 95.1 SHINE AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Source: CDC
© 2014 MCT
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NARCISSISTIC D3 BEHAVIOR— AND HOW THE REST OF US CAN COPE
BusinessMirror
Saturday, October 18, 2014
A broader look at today’s business n
Saturday, October 18, 2014 Vol. 10 No. 10
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NTERNATIONAL Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde lamented last week that the world has “too little economic risktaking, and too much financial risk-taking.” In the Philippines there might be both.
A group of Japanese lawmakers bow to a Shinto priest after paying respect for the war dead at Yasukuni Shrine during an annual autumn festival in Tokyo, on Friday. The shrine enshrines war criminals, including wartime leader Hideki Tojo, among the 2.5 million war dead. Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe sent religious offerings to the shrine. Abe last visited Yasukuni in December, triggering anger from China and South Korea. AP/EUGENE HOSHIKO
Fumbles by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and by Texas Health Resources Presbyterian Hospital Dallas have demolished CDC assurances that any hospital in America could effectively deal with an Ebola case, said Rep. Tim Murphy, Republican-Pennsylvania, the subcommittee chairman. “CDC and our public-health system are in the middle of a fire. Job One is to put it out completely,” Murphy said. The subcommittee’s top Democrat, Rep. Diana DeGette of Colorado, echoed the concerns. “It would be an understatement to say that the response to the first US-based patient with Ebola has been mismanaged, causing risk to scores of additional people,” she said. The questions on Capitol Hill about Presbyterian—and about US hospitals in general—arose as Nina Pham, a Presbyterian nurse infected with the Ebola virus, was moved from Presbyterian to a National Institutes of Health (NIH) clinic in Bethesda, Maryland. Pham, 26, was among those who cared for Thomas Eric Duncan of Liberia, who died of Ebola in the Dallas hospital on October 8. Amber Vinson, 29, a second Presbyterian nurse diagnosed with the disease, was moved earlier to Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, which has special isolation units and has treated three Americans who contracted Ebola in Africa while on aid missions. The fact that two nurses at Presbyterian contracted the disease while treating an Ebola victim proves that “the frightening truth is that we cannot guarantee the safety of our health-care workers on the front lines,” said Rep. Michael Burgess, Republican-Texas, a physician. Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the CDC, and Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, a part of the NIH, testified before the committee in Washington. Dr. Daniel Varga, chief clinical officer at Presbyterian,
little effect on biz travel
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resolve the crisis with protesters, who were already angered by a video of a group of officers beating a handcuffed activist. Officers swiftly tore down metal barricades, bamboo and wooden planks used by protesters to block off the streets, as well as blue and white striped tarps covering their main campsite in the middle of a four-way intersection. Much of the protest zone was cleared in about half an hour. Police surrounded about 30 protesters, who did not put up resistance. There were no clashes but several activists lay down on the street after the operation and refused to budge. About 200 other protesters who had dispersed earlier returned to join them to occupy a block of the southbound lanes on busy Nathan Road. Police said they would be allowed to stay. Leung said on Thursday the protests, which have disrupted traffic in key roads and streets in three business districts since September 26, could not go on indefinitely. Protesters are pressing for a greater say in choosing the semiautonomous Chinese city’s leader in an inaugural direct election, promised for 2017. AP
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PHL business ‘vulnerable’
u.s. lawmakers criticize dallas medics for poor handling of ebola crisis
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Cats and dogs: There are no reports of cats or dogs contracting or spreading Ebola. There is some evidence that dogs can carry the virus without developing symptoms.
i.m.f. sees local companies taking too many risks as world economic outlook dims
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HK POLICE CLEAR SMALLER PROTEST ZONE
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Primates: Monkeys and apes can contract and spread Ebola. Primates infected with Ebola will experience fever, decreased appetite and sudden death.
BusinessMirror
three-time rotary club of manila journalism awardee
ONG KONG—Riot police cleared an offshoot Hong Kong pro-democracy protest zone in a dawn raid on Friday, taking down barricades, tents and canopies that have blocked key streets for more than two weeks, but leaving the city’s main thoroughfare still in the hands of the activists. Hundreds of officers, some in helmets and shields, descended in the early morning on the busy district of Mong Kok, a smaller protest zone across the Victoria Harbor from the main occupied area in the city’s fi nancial district. The key thoroughfare in Admiralty, near the heart of the city’s fi nancial district, remained occupied by protesters. The dawn operation—the third in recent days by police to retake streets from protesters—came hours after Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying sought to defuse a bitter standoff with student-led democracy protesters by reviving an offer of talks over democratic reforms in the city. However, Leung warned police wouldn’t refrain from clearing protest sites while holding talks and the latest operation is likely to make it harder to
World»B3-3
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Bats: Fruit bats in Africa can carry Ebola. There are no known cases of North American bats carrying Ebola, so the risk of an outbreak from bats in the U.S. is low.
THE diagnosis of Ebola in a second health worker in Texas raises questions about how well researchers understand how the virus spreads, and whether the virus is changing in a way that makes it easier to transmit. What Ebola? Survey finds
Amber Vinson
© 2014 MCT Source: Wire reports, Dallas Morning News research Graphic: Troy Oxford, Dallas Morning News
Ebola in animals
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Companies in the Southeast Asian nation eager to make acquisitions and capital investments are piling on foreign debt, in the process leaving the economy vulnerable should emerging-market currencies get roiled again. By year-end, Philippine companies would take as long as a record four years to repay debt using operating earnings, said Xavier Jean, the Singapore-based director of corporate ratings at Standard & Poor’s (S&P). By comparison, the figure is one year or less for Indonesian businesses, and about two years for Malaysian ones. Philippine corporate exposure to foreign debt climbed to 26 percent of total debt last year, from 15 percent in 2011, he said, citing a study of 100 Southeast Asian firms. Continued on A2
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THE RENOWNED ORDERS OF THE NIGHT SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
Anselm Kiefer: Perhaps Europe’s greatest living artist
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B S J the.beast@zoho.com
S an artist like a doctor? If a doctor is today’s version of what a tribal medicine man was in the past, yes, an artist is like a healer if he acts as a shaman to mankind. By addressing his country’s and the world’s dark past and unrealized future, a man who confronts us with deep truths has become perhaps Europe’s greatest living artist: Anselm Kiefer, a man not exactly known by many but is the recipient of an honorary membership in the United Kingdom’s Royal Academy (RA) and is the subject of a major retrospective in its halls which seems to have adopted him from his country of birth. To say that Kiefer was born in Germany might come as a shock when one finds out that he used to snap self-portraits in his father’s German army uniform standing on rocky outcrops, sea shores, or in front of famous war-time buildings giving the Nazi salute. The gesture made in various locations in France, Switzerland and Italy was not just shocking, but illegal in Germany,
despite the artist’s assertion that it was a call for Germans to remember and acknowledge the loss to their culture that was enabled by the mad xenophobia of the Third Reich, and not a neo-Nazi celebration, of which he has been accused of. Current law in Germany forbids the depiction of National Socialist images, including the swastika and the Hitler salute. But an artist will find ways of subversion in search of dire fundamentals. Kiefer’s project was his way of forcing his fellow Germans to confront the past rather than ignore its consequences. The affront he generated has seen his relationship with his countrymen remain uneasy. But surprisingly, the bulk of his oeuvre, he once said, has been bought by Jewish art collectors. And as some of the British themselves have been fond of telling, there is perhaps no country more open to welcome a prophet than Cool Britannia. Thus, the honorary RA membership and an ongoing retrospective in its halls. But whether Kiefer is the pinup boy for this or that demographic or national interest is beside the point. He has made himself one with humanity through the grist
of his work. For example, in the painting Margarete (oil and straw on canvas, 1981) the artist draws inspiration from Paul Celan’s famous poem Todesfuge (Death Fugue). Celan was a German-speaking Jew, born in Romania, and he wrote his poem in reaction to his incarceration in a Nazi concentration camp. Todesfuge’s two protagonists are Margarete, a German prison guard, and Shulamith, a prisoner. In Margarete, the painting, Kiefer creates a sort of cohabitation between representations of the remains of the female guard’s blond tresses and that of Shulamith’s dark hair. The meanings are as infinite as the stars and as open-ended as history itself. Other works deal with similar heavyweight issues in increasingly large and confrontational canvases with additions of lead, broken glass, dried flowers or other plant parts, resulting in encrusted surfaces and thick layers of impasto that seem suited to his choice of subject matter that ranges from themes of German history and the horror of the Holocaust to spiritual concepts, such that of the Kabbalah. From national identity, his oeuvre has spread to the collective memory,
and also includes occult symbolism, theology and mysticism. The theme of his entire corpus is the trauma experienced by entire societies, and the continuous cycles of life. On account of his becoming a man with ideas bigger than himself, it is no wonder he has been awarded. The retrospective at The Royal Academy follows Kiefer’s appointment to the chair of creativity in art at the Collège de France and other awards, including the Wolf Prize for Art (1990), the International Prize by the Jury of the 47th Venice Biennale (1997), the Praemium Imperiale of Japan (1999), the Merit Cross 1st Class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany (2005), and the Austrian Decoration for Science and Art (2005), among others. Kiefer is represented by Yvon Lambert Gallery in Paris, Gagosian Gallery in New York, White Cube in London and Thaddaeus Ropac in Paris and Salzburg. His ongoing RA retrospective in London runs till December 14. ■ For more information, visit RoyalAcademy.org.uk.
‘Embodied Narratives’ at Now
RECLAIMING LANDS by Benjie Cabangis
NOW Gallery and Auctions continues its last quarter programming with Embodied Narratives, a group exhibit that amplifies the artists’ power to tell a story. Artists are great storytellers. They do narrate, yes, not with words but through color, forms, symbols and the myriad ways of compositional device at their disposal. It is indeed a challenging task—to convey feelings of reverie, ennui, hope, or recount a moment of epiphany or strange incidents, not through the written or spoken word, but through a random or carefully planned arrangement of visual elements. The artist’s blank canvas is likened to a writer’s paper, waiting for the first drop of paint and inspiration, receptive to the commands of the artist who has envisioned a language that he deems
NOMINAL MARBLE by Jonathan Olazo
most creatively suitable. All throughout art history, every painting, drawing or sculpture made is an impassioned retelling of specific histories, incidents and metanarratives, from Rubens Massacre of the Innocents, which tells of the horrors of mass infanticide, to the anti-art and antiestablishment stance of Marcel Duchamp’s readymades. Embodied Narratives meanders around the individual stories of the 12 participating artists. For most of the time, these little and big stories serve as the painter or sculptor’s impetus for creating. As Pablo Picasso asserted, “Art is just another way of keeping a diary.” Every piece created is a reference to values held dear, to significant relations and future
aspirations. The exhibit is a compilation of such and other tales. Contributing their stories for the show are Leo Aguilar, Benjie Cabangis, Norberto Carating, Neil Doloricon, Rock Drilon, Noëll El Farol, Lenore RS Lim, Jonathan Olazo, Michelle Perez, Jinky Reynoso, Nestor Vinluan and Edwin Wilwayco. Now Gallery and Auctions (www. nowgallery.net) present with no small pride these artists who have continued to demonstrate consistency and commitment to their art and their continuing narratives. Now Gallery and Auctions will continue to represent them as it transitions to become Now Private Sale, a rebranded entity devoted to connecting these artists to the right market in the most professional and ethical manner.
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lakers Looking bad Sports LAKERS BusinessMirror
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| Saturday, OCtOber 18, 2014 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
LOOKING BAD
The Lakers got drilled again in another exhibition, 119-86, against Utah in front of a sparse Honda Center crowd. They have now experienced their worst two-game stretch in exhibition history, adding Thursday night to a 41-point loss last Sunday to Golden State. By Mike Bresnahan
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Los Angeles Times
NAHEIM, California—There are a handful of reasons for exhibition games. Get players in shape. See what schemes need work. Make a few extra bucks at the ticket office. Hope nobody gets hurt. For the Los Angeles Lakers, though, it has been a historic October for not-so-pleasant reasons. They got drilled again in another exhibition, 119-86, against Utah in front of a sparse Honda Center crowd. The Lakers have now experienced their worst twogame stretch in exhibition history, adding Thursday night to a 41-point loss last Sunday to Golden State. That makes consecutive losses totaling 74 points, easily outdoing their previous exhibition low of 47 points in back-to-back defeats in 2012. Kobe Bryant scored 27 points and Carlos Boozer had 17, but that was about it for the Lakers, who suddenly can’t make a three-point shot. They’ve gone 11 consecutive quarters without scoring from beyond the arc, missing all five attempts there on Thursday. Rookie Julius Randle was held out of the second half because of the dreaded “coach’s decision” and Steve Nash couldn’t suit up yet again. Lakers Coach Byron Scott liked one thing about the game. “That it’s over,” he said. In defense of the Lakers, they were without Nick Young, Jeremy Lin, Xavier Henry, Ryan Kelly, rookie Jordan Clarkson and Nash, whose case gets more curious every day. Nash aggravated his back on Wednesday while lifting travel bags at home and did not accompany the team to a scheduled event at a casino that night but, surprisingly, told Lakers trainer Gary Vitti on Thursday afternoon he wanted to play against Utah. So Nash went on the court an hour before the game, shot around for a while and went back to the locker room. He never made it back to the court. Randle didn’t make it to the second half. He was bothered by blisters on the bottom of his feet but they were a secondary reason for not playing after the second quarter. Scott said it wasn’t a punishment, but “I still don’t think the last couple of games that he’s played as hard as he can play.” At least there was Bryant. He made 10-of-23 shots in 28 minutes and showed a few things against Utah. 1) You still can’t leave him wide open. He moved around a solid screen by Jordan Hill and drilled a 17-footer alone on the right side. 2) The pump fake can still work. He got rookie Rodney
Hood to bite on one in the first quarter, drawing a foul and converting a three-point play. 3) He can still be a playmaker. He drove past Gordon Hayward, hung in the air for a bit and found Boozer underneath for an easy basket. On another play, he took an offensive rebound and immediately found Boozer underneath for a basket. 4) He also still loves motivation. He didn’t enjoy being the 25th-best player in ESPN’s annual preseason rankings last season, so he certainly didn’t like being No. 40 this season. “I’ve known for a long time that they’re a bunch of idiots,” Bryant said. He kind of smiled. Bryant got some support from his coach. “I would just hate to be one of the guys that doubted him,” Scott said. “I see where he’s come from to this particular point after the [Achilles] injury and I know he’s going to get stronger. I think he’ll have the last laugh.”
SUCCESFUL SURGERY ON KD’S FOOT
THE Oklahoma City Thunder say star forward Kevin Durant had successful surgery on Thursday to address a broken bone in his right foot and will be out for at least six weeks. General Manager Sam Presti said the procedure was performed at a clinic in Charlotte, North Carolina, after the team, Durant and his representatives “jointly decided” surgery was needed. Durant will be reevaluated in six weeks. The reigning National Basketball Association Most Valuable Player was diagnosed over the weekend with a “Jones fracture,” a broken bone at the base of his small toe. The Thunder open the season on October 29 at Portland. A six-week absence could have Durant back for the start of December, with about 65 games remaining.
MODIFICATIONS ON INSTANT REPLAY
THE NBA’s Board of Governors has approved several modifications to the league’s instant-replay system. The most notable change announced on Thursday night allows officials to use replay only in the last two minutes of overtime. Last year instant replay was available for use in the entire overtime period. Referees can also now review plays to determine if a clear-path foul is warranted even if they did not initially call a clear-path foul. Previously a clear-path foul had to be called for the play to be eligible for review. Referees also will be able to use replay to determine if a foul merits being upgraded to a flagrant foul. Last season they could only use replay if a flagrant foul was called on the floor. With AP
LOS ANGELES Lakers forward Jeremy Tyler lands on Golden State warriors’ James Michael McAdoo during their preseason game in Ontario, California, recently. AP
GRIFFIN ExCITED AbOUT PLAYING FOR NEw OwNER By Ben Bolch Los Angeles Times
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bLAKE GRIFFIN writes about his uneasy existence under former team owner Donald Sterling and his excitement about playing for Sterling’s successor, Steve ballmer. AP
OS ANGELES—Blake Griffin continues to evolve in ways that have nothing to do with the increased range on his jumper, going from funny pitchman to deadpan poet to captivating essayist. In a story published online on Thursday, the Los Angeles Clippers star forward wrote about his uneasy existence under former team owner Donald Sterling and his excitement about playing for Sterling’s successor, Steve Ballmer. “Steve is a good dude,” Griffin wrote in the 1,843-word piece for the Players’ Tribune, a new digital venture founded by former New York Yankee Derek Jeter. “He’s like a cool dad who gives you candy. Donald was like a weird uncle.” Speaking with reporters at the Clippers’ practice facility, Griffin called the story his “farewell to that world” involving Sterling, who was stripped of his ownership this summer over disparaging remarks about black people. “The idea behind it is [that] for so long, we kind of just went with what we had, and now we’ve got something great, and I don’t want that to be overlooked,” said Griffin, who wrote under the title of senior editor. “That’s the thing that should be really important.”
Griffin detailed Sterling’s vibe at one of the owner’s infamous “White Parties,” thrown at his Malibu mansion shortly after the Clippers made Griffin the No. 1 pick in the 2009 draft. Sterling, the only attendee dressed in black, led Griffin by the hand as he introduced him in the same fashion to each guest, asking Griffin not only what he thought of Los Angeles but of the women in LA. “At this point, a lot of you are probably wondering why I didn’t pull my hand away, or why I didn’t just leave the party,” Griffin wrote. “For one, I was a 20-year-old kid from Oklahoma. But even if I had been 25, I don’t know if it would’ve been any different. The guy was my boss. Ask yourself, how would you react if your boss was doing the same thing to you?” Griffin wrote he had known about Sterling’s past long before he watched the owner heckle Clippers guard Baron Davis in a game during Griffin’s rookie season. Griffin typed Sterling’s name into Google when he first figured the Clippers would draft him, triggering results that included “Donald Sterling is a racist.” The rookie-to-be said he figured everyone knew about Sterling’s indiscretions and didn’t think about raising the issue when he arrived in LA. “Just picture me at the press conference my rookie year,” Griffin wrote. “‘Uh...hey, guys, before we talk about today’s
game, did you happen to see that investigative report on my owner?’” Griffin acknowledged he was conflicted when audio recordings were released last spring in which Sterling told a female companion he did not want her bringing black people to games at Staples Center. Many friends questioned how he could play for someone so hateful. “My feeling, right or wrong, was that we should shut it all out and go out and play for our fans, our families, and for each other,” Griffin wrote. “For people to ever think we were playing for Donald Sterling is comical.” Griffin was sitting in the trainer’s room next to teammate Chris Paul when Sterling’s interview with CNN’s Anderson Cooper aired on television. Sterling told Cooper, almost defiantly, that his players loved him. “C. and I looked at one another from across the room and just tried our best not to laugh,” Griffin wrote. Ballmer has prompted a different kind of reaction since taking over the Clippers in August. Griffin wrote that he loved the new owner’s energy and his willingness to move team employees from temporary to permanent contracts, while providing trainers with body scanning software that Sterling had refused to purchase. “Top to bottom,” Griffin wrote, “everybody just appreciates being appreciated now.”
sports
SM to build P400-M hotel; eyes another mall in Negros Occ.
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ACOLOD CITY—Following the inauguration of its P1.5-billion expansion project at SM City Bacolod on Thursday, SM Prime Holdings Inc. (SMPH) CEO Henry Sy said they would also build a hotel in Bacolod and another mall in a yet-to-be identified site in Negros Occidental. “We have good intentions for Bacolod,” said Sy, also SMPH president. “The hotel is in the works. We might start developing the project next year.” Sy said he doesn’t have the final cost of the project yet, “but I believe that it will be [between] P400 million and P500 million.” He added that they are looking at negotiating in other towns in the province to put up a mall. The newly opened Annex at the mall’s North Wing includes the SMX Bacolod Convention Center, SMPH’s first in the Visayas. See “SM,” A2
PESO exchange rates n US 44.8180
FILIPINO CRAFTSMANSHIP Filipino designers from different parts of the country showcase their works in the Manila FAME 2014, the country’s premier design and lifestyle event. It showcases the craftsmanship, design innovation, eco-sustainability and artisanship of Philippine-made products. The event is ongoing at the SMX Convention Center, Mall of Asia Complex, Pasay City, until tomorrow. NONIE REYES
BSP exec sees stronger FDI flow if investors look at fundamentals
GUINIGUNDO: “If they are just looking at the fundamentals, I think we should merit a higher share of FDI [foreign direct investments] because the macroeconomy continues to improve. The government is also setting the stage for more infrastructure and power.”
By Bianca Cuaresma
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he Philippines could attract more foreign direct investments (FDI) if only investors were more discerning of fundamentals rather than sentiment in the local markets, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said on Friday. At the sidelines of the 44th International Association of Financial Executives Institutes (IAFEI) in Makati City, BSP Deputy Governor for the Monetary Stability Sector Diwa C. Guinigundo said more long-term investments from foreign investors could
flow to the Philippines given the record of stability of the $270-billion economy. “If they are just looking at the fundamentals, I think we should merit a higher share of FDI because the macroeconomy continues to improve. The government is also setting the stage for more infrastructure and power,” Guinigundo said. “So, if they are here for the long haul, there is every reason for them not only to stay but to relocate here in the Philippines. In other words, the prospects here continue to be bright,” he added. Continued on A8
n japan 0.4216 n UK 72.0942 n HK 5.7773 n CHINA 7.3195 n singapore 35.2149 n australia 39.3727 n EU 57.3939 n SAUDI arabia 11.9479 Source: BSP (17 October 2014)