Businessmirror december 30, 2014

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NEW DESIGN SERIES (WILL BE DEMONITIZED) DEADLINE SET ON USE, EXCHANGE OF OLD BILLS By Bianca Cuaresma

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he Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) announced on Monday that peso bills with the old currency design, collectively branded as the “New Design Series” (NDS), will be demonetized and will no longer be accepted starting January 1, 2016. In a news briefing on Monday, the central bank said it will start demonetizing the old bank notes on January 1, and will only accept the new-generation currency bank notes as part of the BSP’s objective to “preserve the integrity of the Philippine currency.” “This move is in line with the provisions of Section 57 of Republic Act 7653, otherwise known as the New Central Bank Act, which authorizes the BSP to replace banknotes that are more than five years old,” the central bank said. »Continued on A2

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5 WAYS TO REFUEL YOURSELF DURING THE HOLIDAYS

Life

WORD OF LIFE, FR. SAL PUTZU, SDB, AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

‘BONIFACIO: ANG UNANG PANGULO’ TAKES HOME 9 AWARDS »C2

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

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

B M C G | Tribune News Service HE holidays are a time of magic, and mania, aren’t they? We are all so busy making merry, shopping for gifts for loved ones, baking and cooking, and entertaining, that we risk running ourselves ragged. Take a moment to stop and refuel yourself. Here are my top 5 refresh strategies:

REFRESH 1: POUR YOURSELF A CUP OF CHEER WHEN you’ve wrung the last ounce of energy from your hard-working holiday-making self, what is your favorite beverage to indulge in? Mine is hot cocoa: Steaming, creamy rich, liquid chocolate heaven in a cute-as-a-button mug. When I come home on a freezing cold winter night, chilled to the bone, all I want to do is soak in the tub while I drink a cup of cocoa. Perhaps this is why I will never be thin.... Filling yourself with your favorite beverage is only half the fun. The other is enjoying the indulgence of serving it up in a beautiful mug or glass, stirring things up with a sweet little spoon, perhaps balancing it all on a lovely plate. When you have the right dishes, even the simple things in life become luxurious. REFRESH 2: GET YOUR BEAUTY SLEEP WE’VE always known it; science has proven it: A good night’s sleep does wonders for our physical and mental wellbeing. Unfortunately, too few of us get the shuteye we need every night, especially during the hurly-burly holiday season. I am convinced that a good night’s sleep starts with the sheets. I am rather OCD about my sheets. I like high-quality cotton sheets that are freshly ironed (yes, I literally iron my sheets, and yes, I can see you rolling your eyes right now!). There is something magical to me about slipping into those crisp, soft sheets. Next, I like to pile up my bed with layers of blankets. I sleep best when the room is chilly, buried under a stack of blankets. Maybe this is a result of living in a drafty old house! REFRESH 3: INDULGE IN SOME EYE CANDY THOSE of us who love beautiful spaces need to indulge ourselves is books and magazines and Pinterest boards filled with decorating eye candy, don’t we? These beautiful tomes, filled with gorgeous photos of homes we’d love to live in (or at least visit!) restore our creativity and rekindle our passion to feather our own nests. My prepare-myself-for-the-world morning ritual includes 30 minutes with a decorating book. Bundled up under a throw, cup of coffee in hand, I join homeowners and designers on their journeys to make their spaces beautiful. Right now, my decorating book faves are: ■ One Man’s Folly: The Exceptional Houses of Furlow Gatewood, by Julia Reed. Besides having a fabulous name, Furlow Gatewood has a singular ability to use antiques in his décor so they look fresh, not like your grandmother’s parlor. Furlow is an antique dealer in New York who refers to his homes as “laboratories.” One of the tips I gained from Furlow was to use light colors with my antiques so they don’t look stale and stuffy. ■ Veranda—A Passion for Living: Houses of Style and Inspiration, by Carolyn Englefield. I will never live in a luxurious European home. But I can visit them every day through indulgent books like this one. Chock full of take-me-away photos, the book features 30 stunning homes in France, Italy, Switzerland and Sweden. Threaded throughout the photos are tips from top designers on how to create drool-worthy interiors. ■ Nell Hill’s: Rooms We Love, by Mary Carol Garrity. Do you have a copy of my latest book? It features the interiors of my home and a few of my dear friends. I hope you like it! ■ The Shoebox, by Lisa Fernandez. It’s also wonderful to hit the pause button on your chaotic schedule to enjoy a take-me-away read. Maybe your favorite is a romance novel or a mystery. Recently, my friend Lisa Fernandez sent me a copy of her novel, The Shoebox. It was so fun to read this story of love, loss and regret, especially since I know the author. REFRESH 4: TREAT YOURSELF TO LUXURIOUS BATH PRODUCTS WHEN you’re tired and weary from holiday shopping, baking, wrapping and decorating, give yourself a mini spa break with some luxurious bath products. It may be as simple as keeping some lovely scented hand cream in your purse

to keep those dry winter hands happy. Or a favorite body butter to use after you shower to hydrate and heal your body and mind and spirit. There is something wonderful about the silky texture and alluring aroma that just does us good. Since I end every day with a long, indulgent soak in the tub, I’m always on the lookout for fabulous bath products. Right now I’m hook-line-and-sinker in love with Lollia products. I discovered them at market a few years ago and knew I had to start carrying them at Nell Hill’s. My favorite scents are the Relax foaming bath and the Calm hand cream. REFRESH 5: NOSH ON SOME YUMMIES OK, all you health nuts out there, whose idea of an indulgent snack is an extra carrot stick or two, you might want to quit reading. Because when I’m bone-

dead tired from the holiday crazies, I crave baked goods. Rich, gooey, flakey, sinfully high-calorie croissants and éclairs and cookies and cakes and pies and...oh my goodness, I got carried away there. My friend Tracy, who owns the French Bee Bakery in Parkville, Missouri, keeps me supplied with the best pastries in the world. It’s super easy for me to swing by her bakery in this adorable old river town on my way to work. I fill up a box with an assortment of bite-sized treats to share with the Nell Hill’s team or to take and give to guests when I entertain. Even though these appropriately portioned treats are just the right size for a little indulgence, I don’t just eat one. This is another reason I will never be thin. What is your favorite binge food, the little treat you give yourself when you are ready to indulge? After you finish a monumental holiday task, like wrapping a stack of gifts or sending out that last holiday letter, treat yourself. ■

Coral Reef is the ‘it’ color for 2015 B V P The Charlotte Observer

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OW does a paint chip become an “it” color? The team at SherwinWilliams researches color influences from around the world. The result each year is a color forecast of 40 colors grouped into four palettes. The company has just introduced its Color of the Year for 2015, and the winner is Coral Reef. It blends pink, orange and red for an uplifting, vivacious hue with floral notes. It’s part of a collection called the Buoyant palette. Coral Reef is showing up on fashion runways, in jewelry and on the home

accessory front. It is strong enough to stand on its own as an accent wall or occasional chair but is happy to add excitement as an accessory to a neutral color scheme. Unlike some past years’ color selections, Coral Reef is a color most homeowners can feel comfortable embracing for home décor. If you have been hesitant to fully embrace the shades of blazing orange, this might be your perfect color option. Coral Reef plays happily with white, black, lush greens and lilacs. For a more subdued palette, mix it with warm neutrals such as gray or buttery yellows and soft browns. For the mid-century modern enthusiast, Coral Reef is a softer, more approachable orange than the pumpkin of the 1950s. Its

undertones work well with warm wood finishes such as walnut. For transitional décor, this color works well with trendy copper finishes and aged matte brass finishes. Don’t limit the color to the interior. Consider brightening your home’s exterior by applying it to your front door, shutters, flower boxes or garden structures. But don’t go overboard; pick just one element to accent. It is clear that 2015 is shaping up to be a very colorful year for home décor.

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■ Designer and home improvement expert Vicki Payne is host and producer of For Your Home, available on PBS, Create TV and in national and international syndication. Reach her at ForYourHome.com.

LIFE

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MALARIA KILLING THOUSANDS more THAN EBOLA IN W. AFRICA B2

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

briefs

Ebola chief says CDC lab

incident poses no risk to public

In this October 6, file photo, licensed clinician Hala Fawal practices drawing blood from a patient using a dummy in Anniston, Alabama. AP ATLANTA—The US Ebola response coordinator is calling the mishandling of materials that led to a lab technician’s possible exposure to the virus “unacceptable.” Ebola Response Coordinator Ron Klain told CBS television’s Face the Nation on Sunday that the incident at a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention lab carried no risk to the public because of protocols and procedures in place. Klain says the CDC technician, who may have come into contact with a small amount of live virus during an experiment, is being monitored daily and shows no signs of infection. Klain also said the Food and Drug Administration has approved widespread testing to begin in three or four weeks in West Africa of a vaccine to prevent Ebola. AP

Alleged sex victims sue when predator wins lottery ORLANDO, Florida—Two alleged victims of a registered sex offender have filed a lawsuit seeking damages for pain and suffering after the man won $3 million in a Florida Lottery jackpot. Timothy Poole purchased the winning ticket earlier this month in Mount Dora, near Orlando. He took a lump-sum payment of about $2.2 million. Poole was accused of sexually battering a 9-year-old boy in 1999. Poole denied the allegations but pleaded guilty to attempted sexual battery and was sentenced to time served. AP

Blizzard causes pileup killing 1, injuring 26 LJUBLJANA, Slovenia—Police in Slovenia say a truck skidded in a blizzard, causing a pileup that killed one person and injured 26, three of them seriously. About 50 vehicles were involved in Sunday’s accident on a motorway connecting the capital, Ljubljana, with the Adriatic coast. Police have closed the road for traffic. AP

The World BusinessMirror

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UECKEDOU, Guinea—West Africa’s fight to contain Ebola has hampered the campaign against malaria, a preventable and treatable disease that is claiming many thousands more lives than the dreaded virus.

Guinea, where half the 12 million people have no access to health centers and die uncounted. Some 15,000 Guineans died from malaria last year, 14,000 of them children under 5, according to Nets for Life Africa, a New York-based charity dedicated to providing insecticidetreated mosquito nets to put over beds. In comparison, about 1,600 people in Guinea have died from Ebola, according to statistics from the World Health Organization (WHO). Malaria is the leading cause of death in children under five in Guinea and, after AIDS, the leading cause of adult deaths, according to Nets for Life. Ebola and malaria have many of the same symptoms, including fever, dizziness, head and muscle aches. Malaria is caused by bites from infected mosquitoes, while Ebola can be contracted only from the body fluids of an infected victim—hence doctors’ fears of

Brazil policeman killed, other officer hurt in Rio

In this February 20, 2010, file photo, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair (left), former nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, on Blair’s left, and religion leaders hold a mosquito net with a women lying inside to demonstrate the use of the net against malaria in Abuja, nigeria. The operation to fight Ebola in West Africa has hampered the campaigns against malaria, a preventable and treatable disease that is claiming many thousands of lives. AP

drawing blood to do malaria tests. People suffering malaria fear being quarantined in Ebola treatment centers and health centers not equipped to treat Ebola are turning away patients with Ebola-like symptoms, doctors said. WHO figures from Gueckedou show that of people coming in with fever in October, 24 percent who tested positive for Ebola also tested positive for malaria, and 33 percent of those who did not have Ebola tested positive for malaria—an indication of the

great burden of malaria in Guinea. Malaria killed one of 38 Cuban doctors sent to Guinea to help fight the Ebola outbreak. One private hospital had a kidney dialysis machine that could have saved his failing organ but the clinic was shut after several people died there of Ebola. The US President’s Malaria Initiative ground to a halt in Guinea months ago and the WHO in November advised health workers against testing for malaria unless they have protective gear.

The malaria initiative is doing a national survey of health facilities and elsewhere to try to find out “what’s actually happening here... where people with malaria are going,” said Nahlen, of the US campaign. There was some positive news in Guinea—it had just completed a national mosquito net campaign against malaria when Ebola struck, he said. Neighboring Liberia, on the other hand, suspended the planned distribution of 2 million nets, Nahlen said. In Sierra Leone, the third country hard-hit by Ebola, Doctors Without Borders took unprecedented, preemptive action this month, distributing 1.5 million antimalarial drugs that can be used to both prevent and treat, aiming to protect people during the disease’s peak season. “Most people turn up at Ebola treatment centers thinking that they have Ebola, when actually they have malaria,” said Patrick Robataille, Doctors Without Borders field coordinator in Freetown. “It’s a huge load on the system, as well as being a huge stress on patients and their families.” He said a second distribution is planned in Freetown and western areas most affected by Ebola. Robataille said the huge delivery of antimalarial drugs was “in proportion to the scale of the Ebola epidemic—it’s massive.” AP

NYC police boss: Less rhetoric, more dialogue needed

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ÃO PAULO—Brazilian authorities say a police officer has been killed and another one wounded in two separate attacks in Rio de Janeiro. The second officer survived a shooting. The dead man is military police Officer Ivo Leandro Zaru. Firefighters on Sunday found the 34-year-old’s body near a dam in a coastal city part of Rio’s greater metropolitan region. Police provided few details but said they are investigating the death as a possible homicide. AP

POlIcE officers salute as the hearse of new York city police officer Rafael Ramos drives along his funeral procession route in the Glendale section of Queens on Saturday in new York. Ramos and his partner, officer Wenjian liu, were killed on December 20 as they sat in their patrol car on a Brooklyn street. The shooter, Ismaaiyl Brinsley, later killed himself. AP

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EW YORK—A day after the funeral of one of two police officers gunned down in their patrol car, New York City’s police commissioner called on Sunday for a “lot less rhetoric and a lot more dialogue” to defuse the tension between police officers and the minority communities they protect. Speaking on NBC television’s Meet The Press, Commissioner William Bratton said the “pent-up frustrations” that have caused people to take to the streets in recent weeks go far beyond policing policies across the US. “This is about the continuing poverty rates, the continuing growing disparity between the wealthy and the poor. It’s still about unemployment issues. There are so many national issues that have to be addressed that it isn’t just policing, as I think we all well know,” he said. Bratton said rank-and-file officers and much of America’s police leadership feels under attack, including “from the federal government at the highest levels.” He urged: “See us. See the

police. See why they have the anxieties and the perceptions they have.” Bratton also appeared on CBS’s Face the Nation, where he defended Mayor Bill de Blasio, saying it was wrong for hundreds of police officers to turn their backs to a video monitor outside a Queens church as de Blasio spoke at the funeral of slain Officer Rafael Ramos. “I certainly don’t support that action,” he said. “That funeral was held to honor Officer Ramos. And to bring politics, to bring issues into that event, I think, was very inappropriate.” He acknowledged, though, that the morale of officers is low and said their actions “unfortunately” reflected the feelings of some toward the mayor. Some police officers blame de Blasio for creating an atmosphere of negativity toward the New York Police Department in the city after a grand jury declined to charge an officer in the police chokehold death of Eric Garner on Staten Island. The gesture at Ramos’s funeral came amid contentious contract negotiations with the city. The rank-and-file police

union did not claim credit for the symbolic protest, and its head, Patrick Lynch, repeatedly dodged reporters’ attempts to ask about it after Ramos’s funeral. It was not clear if officers planned to turn their backs on de Blasio again at the funeral for Ramos’s partner. Arrangements for that service have not yet been announced. The silent protest was a continuation of the defiance shown at a hospital after the officers’ slayings on December 20, when Lynch and others turned their backs on de Blasio. Lynch said the mayor had “blood on his hands.” Bratton said de Blasio was “totally supportive” of officers and had contributed hundreds of millions of dollars outside the department’s budget this year, much of it focused on officer safety enhancements. After Bratton, former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani told the CBS program that it was wrong for officers to turn their backs on de Blasio or to try to blame him for officers’ deaths. But he also said de Blasio should apologize to the police department because he “created an impression with

the police that he was on the side of the protesters.” “Say you’re sorry,” Giuliani urged. De Blasio stayed out of sight on Sunday, staging no public events and continuing to let Bratton hold center stage in the week since the double murder. The five city police unions will meet with Bratton this week. Ramos and his partner, Wenjian Liu, were shot to death as they sat in their patrol car in daylight. After the officers’ deaths, the gunman, Ismaaiyl Brinsley killed himself. Police said he was troubled and had shot and wounded an ex-girlfriend in Baltimore earlier that day. In online posts shortly before the attack, Brinsley referenced the killings of two unarmed black men by white police officers—Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and Garner, in the New York borough of Staten Island. Bratton said the department had recently investigated more than 50 reports of threats against officers, closing out over half of them with nine arrests, and had warned officers to be alert to potential dangers. AP

THE WORLD

SURPLUS WIDENS DESPITE DROP IN NOV COLLECTION BY David Cagahastian

Malaria killing thousands more than Ebola in W. Africa G In Gueckedou, near the village where Ebola first started killing people in Guinea’s tropical southern forests a year ago, doctors say they have had to stop pricking fingers to do blood tests for malaria. Guinea’s drop in reported malaria cases this year by as much as 40 percent is not good news, said Dr. Bernard Nahlen, deputy director of the US President’s Malaria Initiative. He said the decrease is likely because people are too scared to go to health facilities and are not getting treated for malaria. “It would be a major failure on the part of everybody involved to have a lot of people die from malaria in the midst of the Ebola epidemic,” he said in a telephone interview. “I would be surprised if there were not an increase in unnecessary malaria deaths in the midst of all this, and a lot of those will be young children.” Figures are always estimates in

By Lorenz S. Marasigan

In lieu of the new runway, Transportation Secretary Joseph Emilio A. Abaya said his office would now shift its focus on constructing another terminal at the country’s main international gateway in Manila. The decision of the government to drop its plan of constructing a third runway came after Dutch consultant Ruud Ummels discouraged the transportation agency from pursuing the project, citing minimal gains and additional headaches.

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5 ways to refuel yourself during the holidays

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P25.00 nationwide | 4 sections 20 pages | 7 days a week

he Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC) has abandoned its plan to construct another runway to improve aircraft movement at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (Naia), the agency’s chief said.

INSIDE

Father and teacher of youth

Tuesday, Tuesday,November December 18, 30, 2014 Vol. Vol.10 10No. No.40 82

‘No need for new Naia runway’

15 DAYS

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D.O.T.C. HEEDS ADVICE OF DUTCH CONSULTANT constructing another TERMINAL IS BETTER OPTION

PAPAL VISIT 2015

EAR Lord, I wish to pay homage and full respect to Saint John Bosco, the” father and teacher of youth.” Another great event is the celebration of the Bicentenary of the Birth (August 16, 2015) of Saint John Bosco, the man who is known as the “father and teacher of youth” and who had a special love of predilection for the youth who are poor and in danger. Although Saint John Bosco’s birthday will be celebrated on August 16, the preparation for that great day and subsequent activities will last several months. Don Bosco Makati School was my first formative years of teaching that lasted for 48 years including my stint at Lasallians Institutions. To Saint Bosco and Saint La Salle, I gave my all in the service of Evangelization in Education. Amen.

A broader look at today’s business

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he disbursement of public funds designed to optimize growth this year and the next five years slowed by 8 percent to only P151.4 billion, a development resulting in a budget surplus as wide as P6.8 billion in November. Data from the Department of Finance (DOF) show collections in November aggregating P158.2 billion, or 4 percent lower than revenues collected in November last year. Total expenditures for the month amounted to P151.4 billion, or 8 percent lower than expenditures last year. The latest fiscal data is indicative of the government having reneged on its original commitment to accelerate spending in support of growth, measured as the gross domestic product (GDP), as high as 7 percent this year, primarily in the form of an infrastructure buildup.

PESO exchange rates n US 44.6170

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GOOD-BYE 2014 The Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) celebrated the last trading day of 2014 on Monday, December 29. Attending the event at the Ayala Triangle in Makati City were (from left) VP and Head of Corporate Governance Risk and Compliance J. Argel G. Astudillo; nominee for PSE board and IGC Securities Inc. President Ismael G. Cruz; Capital Markets Integrity Corp. President Cornelio Gison; PSE President Hans B. Sicat; and AVP and Head of PSE Capital Markets Integrity Surveillance Department Grace M. Calubaquib. KEVIN DELA CRUZ

Peso stands out among Asian peers in Q4

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he Philippine peso is set to be the only Asian currency, apart from the Hong Kong dollar, to strengthen this quarter, supported by a seasonal increase in remittances. Money sent home from abroad, which accounts for about 10 percent of the economy, usually peaks in the fourth quarter as some 10.5 million Filipinos living overseas send cash to their families before Christmas. The slump in global oil prices, a recent debt-rating upgrade from Moody’s Investors Service and stable inflation are also supporting the peso, said Alan Cayetano, head of foreignexchange trading at Bank of the Philippine Islands in Manila. “All these add up to less dollar demand,

more supply and increased investor confidence,” he said. “The peso may still succumb to the strong dollar trend in 2015, but the market expects stability in the currency compared with its emergingmarket peers.” The peso fell 0.2 percent to 44.750 a dollar as of the midday break in Manila, paring its gain since the end of September to 0.3 percent, according to Tullett Prebon Plc. data. It has weakened 0.8 percent this year. Local markets will close on Tuesday for the New Year holidays and reopen on January 5. Inflation cooled to 3.7 percent in November, the slowest pace in 12 months, and will ease to 3.1 percent this month, according to

the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey before data due next week. The Philippines plans to sell dollar bonds in early 2015, Treasurer Rosalia de Leon said last month. Nine banks were tapped for the benchmark-sized offer, according to people familiar with the details who are not authorized to speak publicly. The yield on benchmark two-year local-currency sovereign notes fell 14 basis points, or 0.14 percentage point, to 3.06 percent, according to fixing prices from the Philippine Dealing & Exchange Corp. The yield has risen 54 basis points this year, as the central bank raised its policy rate by 50 basis points, in two increases, to 4 percent. Bloomberg News

n japan 0.3706 n UK 69.4062 n HK 5.7489 n CHINA 7.1813 n singapore 33.6961 n australia 36.2063 n EU 54.3390 n SAUDI arabia 11.8899 Source: BSP (29 December 2014)


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