6 MILLION FILIPINOS TO WELCOME POPE ➜ See story on A8
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INSIDE
fruit flush diet
‘PHL underinvesting by ₧1T’ T By Cai U. Ordinario
health&fitness
more destinations for travelers to set their sights on in 2015 The gift of our family
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HANK You, Lord, for the gift of our family. We know that ours is not perfect and that it could be better if You will always reign in every member of our family. Please help us make our family united and peaceful always. Make us instruments of Your healing and life-giving love. Make us more eager to give than to receive and ready to help, share and give comfort. Make us more concerned about the good of other families for we are all members of Your great family here on earth. Amen. WORD AND LIFE, FR. SAL PUTZU, SDB AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
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GOLDEN GLOBES 2015: WHAT YOU DIDN’T SEE ON TV »D2
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Thursday, January 15, 2015
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More destinations for travelers to set their sights on in 2015
B C R Los Angeles Times Editor’s note: As 2014 further fades into memory, here are the other destinations the author has listed down as among the top 15 possibilities for your vacation time this year. CHOQUEQUIRAO ARCHAEOLOGICAL PARK, PERU AS Machu Picchu gets busier and the tourist economy surrounding it gets bigger, people will consider visiting this Inca ruin, about 30 miles away. To reach Choquequirao, a mountaintop stone complex that dates to the 15th century, travelers drive five hours from Cuzco to the village of Cachora, then trek two days. (If you like, you can continue the trek to Machu Picchu.) In 2013 authorities tallied just 3,000 visitors to Choquequirao. But solitude-seekers should get there soon because the Apurimac regional government has proposed construction of a 3-mile-long aerial tram that could bring in 3,000 tourists a day, with completion possible by the end of 2015. The project has been delayed by a court decision, but once regional leaders in Cuzco and Apurimac agree on plans, the construction could be rapid. ■ Info: Among the tour operators that go to Choquequirao: Crooked Trails (www.crookedtrails.org), a US-based nonprofit organization; SAS Travel Peru (www.sastravelperu.com) and Choquequirao Trek (www. choquequiraotrail.com) BRITAIN THIS month, mark the 50th anniversary of Winston Churchill’s death by going to his family’s Blenheim Palace just outside Oxford. In March queue up at Leicester Cathedral to see the reburial of the remains of Richard III, which were found in 2012 beneat2h a parking lot. In June stop by the British Library to glimpse a copy of the Magna Carta, the foundation of Britain’s common law, signed by King John at Runnymede 800 years ago. (The library will mount a Magna Carta exhibition from March 13 to September 1.) On September 9 nod in the direction of Balmoral
Castle in Scotland, where Queen Elizabeth II is expected to become the longest-reigning monarch in British history—more than 63 years on the throne. The current record-holder is Queen Victoria, Elizabeth II’s greatgreat-grandmother. ■ Info: www.visitbritain.com MILAN, ITALY THIS capital of design and art history has been a fetching destination for years. Besides its vital fashion industry and many iconic buildings (including the 14th century Milan Duomo, the Sforza Castle and the skylighted hall of the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II), it is home to Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper. In 2015 it gains an additional charm: Expo Milano, set to open on May 1 and close on October 31. Granted, world’s fairs aren’t the world-shaking spectacles they used to be. But it can’t hurt to see a cosmopolitan city dolled up for the rest of the world. Some 147 countries are readying exhibits for the occasion. Even if organizers fall short of the 20 million visitors they’re seeking, newcomers to Milan and the north of Italy have fun ahead. ■ Info: www.expo2015.org, www.bit.ly/1zvR9sj SINGAPORE FOR years, the city-state of Singapore has been one of the easiest places in Asia to visit—great street food, sparkling streets, dozens of high-end shops and hotels along Orchard Road. But 2015 will be especially festive, because it’s Singapore’s golden jubilee. On August 9, 1965, Singapore (which at about 270 square miles is bigger than Guam but smaller than Hong Kong) split from Malaysia and became an independent republic. Also in 2015 the National Gallery Singapore is due to open, occupying the country’s reconfigured city hall and Supreme Court buildings, focusing on Southeast Asian art from the 19th century to now. ■ Info: www.yoursingapore.com, www.orchardroad. org, www.nationalgallery.sg COACHELLA VALLEY, CALIFORNIA A LOT has happened in the last year, including the openings of the Ritz-Carlton Rancho Mirage in May
and the Palm Springs Art Museum Architecture and Design Center (www.psmuseum.org) and the Triada Palm Springs hotel (www.triadapalmsprings.com) in November. Several more restaurants and hotels are due in 2015, along with the 25th Dinah Shore Weekend (a lesbian-centric celebration that’s now officially the Club Skirts Dinah Shore Weekend) from April 1 to 5. Meanwhile, Modernism Week from (February 12 to 22) draws more mavens of Midcentury design every year, and the long-anticipated revitalization of downtown Palm Springs inches ahead. A new Palomar Hotel (part of the Kimpton chain and central to the redevelopment) is due to open in 2016. ■ Info: www.visitgreaterpalmsprings.com LOWER MANHATTAN, NEW YORK ON May 1 the Whitney Museum of American Art opens on Gansevoort Street in the old meatpacking district between the High Line (more on that in a minute) and the Hudson River. The new Whitney building, designed by Renzo Piano, replaces the museum’s longtime home (now closed) on Madison Avenue near East 75th Street, which will be taken over by the Metropolitan Museum of Art. As for the High Line, it’s a former elevated rail route born in 2009 as a much-celebrated linear park. In September it added a new northern section at West 34th Street near 11th Avenue, making it one-and-a-half miles long. With luck, a spur featuring a leafy amphitheater will open by the end of 2015 near 10th Avenue and West 30th Street. ■ Info: www.whitney.org, www.thehighline.org. www. thehighline.org ICELAND NO important anniversaries in Iceland in 2015, no new major museums, no revolutionary tours. But wild, remote, cool Iceland is beckoning. It would be good to get in and out before the next unpronounceable volcano erupts, and this year is as good as any to confront the glaciers and fiords, the expanses of Vatnajokull National Park (which covers 13 percent of the country), the sleek urban design of Reykjavik, the northern lights and that steaming blue lagoon you’ve seen in ads (www.bluelagoon.com). ■ Info: www.visiticeland.com, www.iceland.is
PATAGONIA NEITHER a nation nor a state, Patagonia is the southernmost stretch of South America—a 386,000-square-mile outback of wind-scrubbed mountains, glaciers, lakes and coastline, shared by Chile and Argentina. On the Argentine side: Los Glaciares National Park and, farther north, San Carlos de Bariloche, the foremost ski resort in South America. On the Chilean side, there’s Torres del Paine National Park (which includes a 52-mile trekking circuit with breathtaking views). There’s also the Patagonia National Park project, led by American activists Doug and Kristine Tompkins, which covers nearly 200,000 acres in rugged Chacabuco Valley, including the Lodge at Valle Chacabuco (www.conservacionpatagonica.org). The park (which closes for the South American winter) had its soft opening in October, with a grand opening planned sometime in 2015. ■ Info: REI Adventures (www.lat.ms/1sHPc5F) offers four different tours of Torres del Paine. Vancouver-based Bikehike Adventures (www.bikehike. com) has Argentina and Chile itineraries. NAMIBIA FORMERLY colonized by Germany and ruled by South Africa, this southern African country celebrates 25 years of independence in 2015. Though its population is just 2.2 million, its territory is epic, with remarkable landscapes, including the Kalahari Desert and the Skeleton Coast. The coast is renowned and feared for its remote, wind-raked shipwrecks, dunes and whale bones. At one edge is Hoanib Skeleton Coast Camp, opened in 2013 and affiliated with Wilderness Safaris (www.lat. ms/1sQsyOp). It has just eight tents (with concrete foundations and private baths; inclusive rates about $500 per person per day) and is reached only by air from Windhoek, the capital. Guests, keep an eye out for elephants, lions and giraffes. If weather permits, there are flights over the coastline. Meanwhile at Sossusvlei (in Namib-Naukluft National Park), visitors can climb some of the planet’s tallest known sand dunes or just admire their orange hues. ■ Info: www.namibiatourism.com.na ■
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suns foil lebron’s comeback B J L
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Akron Beacon Journal
HOENIX—The Cleveland Cavaliers rallied from a 19-point thirdquarter deficit in LeBron James’s return to briefly take the lead, but still fell to the Phoenix Suns, 107100, on Tuesday to fall below 0.500 for the first time since late November. James scored 33 in his return, JR Smith had 29 points and the Cavs rallied to tie the game at 88 midway through the fourth quarter before taking the lead with 7:20 to play. But Markieff Morris scored 35 points, including 11 in the fourth, and the Cavaliers lost for the 10th time in their last 12 games, including six in a row. “It’s the most difficult thing I’ve ever been through,” James said before the game, referring to sitting amid the losing. “I hated the fact we were playing some pretty decent ball when I went out and we’ve just dropped a lot of games when I was out. “Guys are hanging their heads low at times. We’ve just got to continue to work the habits and things we’ve built over the season. We’ve played some really good basketball, we’ve played some not good basketball. Obviously of late we haven’t played really good basketball so hopefully we get back to it.” The Suns shot 57 percent in the first half and scored 59 points, a recurring trend for Cavs opponents. The defense improved significantly late in the third quarter and into the fourth (the Suns shot 38 percent in the fourth), but it wasn’t enough to pull a slumping team out of this dive. Shawn Marion also returned after missing the last two games with a strained hip, making this the healthiest the Cavs have been in weeks with more help on the way soon in Iman Shumpert. The Cavs fell to 19-20, under 0.500 for the first time since November 24. They have 44 games left to rediscover their rhythm. Mo Williams scored a career-high 52 points, most in the National Basketball Association (NBA) this season, and Minnesota Timberwolves snapped a 15-game losing streak by beating the Indiana Pacers, 110-101. Williams made six three-pointers, including one that gave Minnesota a 102-96 lead. Andrew Wiggins added 20 points and Gorgui Dieng had 10 for the Timberwolves (631), who won for the first time since beating Portland, 90-82, on December 10. CJ Miles had 22 points and CJ Watson added 17 for the Pacers (15-25), who have lost three of four. Williams surpassed the 46 points scored this season by both Carmelo Anthony and Pau Gasol, which had been tops in the NBA. In Washington, John Wall broke yet another personal 0-for-forever streak, this one against an entire team, scoring 25 points with eight assists in Washington’s 101-93 win over San Antonio that gave him his first taste of success against the reigning NBA champs. Wall had been 0-7 against the Spurs since he was drafted No. 1 overall in 2010, and the Wizards as a whole had not beaten San Antonio since November 12, 2005—a streak of 17 games. Tim Duncan had 11 points and 12 rebounds, and Tony Parker scored 14 points for the Spurs. Al Horford had his first career triple-double, scoring 21 points with 10 rebounds and 10 AZARENKA misses out »on VICTORIA a seeding at the Australian Open as Juan Martin his streak going. AP
del Potro keeps
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| THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
Sports BusinessMirror
LEBRON JAMES grabs his head after being fouled in the first half during his return on Tuesday. AP
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NBA RESULTS Washington 101, San Antonio 93 Minnesota 110, Indiana 101 Phoenix 107, Cleveland 100 Golden State 116, Utah 105 Dallas 108, Sacramento 104, OT Miami 78, LA Lakers 75
The Mavericks rallied from a 10-point deficit in the fourth quarter to avoid their first four-game losing streak of the season. Dallas was coming off two humbling losses to Detroit (118-105) and the Clippers (120-100). DeMarcus Cousins, who fouled out late in the fourth quarter, had 32 points, 16 rebounds and nine assists for the Kings. Darren Collison had 18 points and seven rebounds, Rajon Rondo broke out of a scoring slump with 21 points and seven assists for Dallas, which rallied from a 24-point deficit to beat the Kings on November 11. Tyson Chandler had 16 points and 17 rebounds, Dirk Nowitzki scored 15 points and Chandler Parsons finished with 13. With AP
SUNS FOIL LEBRON’S COMEBACK
VICTORIA’S WOES M
ELBOURNE, Australia—Two-time champion Victoria Azarenka faces the prospect of drawing a top player in the first round at the Australian Open after missing out on a seeding on Wednesday. Last year was one to forget for Azarenka—injuries to her left foot, then right knee and right foot restricted her to just 24 matches last year and her Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) ranking has dropped to 41. The top 32 players are seeded, and tournament officials went strictly by the rankings released on Monday to determine the seedings list this year on both the men’s and women’s side. No. 1 Serena Williams and No. 2 Maria Sharapova will be on opposite sides of the draw after their world rankings were reflected in the seedings for the first major of the year. Former No. 1-ranked Azarenka, who won the Australian Open in 2012 and 2013 and reached two Grand Slam quarterfinals in 2014 during an injury-interrupted year, dropped from a No. 32 year-end ranking. Azarenka’s first-round loss last week at the Brisbane International to Karolina Pliskova, after wasting two match points in the second set, cost her any chance of climbing back into the top 32. China’s Li Na has retired and won’t be defending her Australian title. Dominika Cibulkova, the losing finalist last year at Melbourne Park, is seeded No. 11. Eugenie Bouchard, the 20-year-old Canadian who last year reached the semifinals at the Australian and French Opens before making the Wimbledon final, is seeded No. 7. On the men’s side, Nos. 1 to 3 Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal are all seeded ahead of defending men’s champion Stan Wawrinka, who is No. 4. US Open finalist Kei Nishikori of Japan was seeded fifth, one spot ahead of threetime Australian Open finalist Andy Murray. In Sydney Juan Martin del Potro continued his promising return from an 11-month injury layoff by beating top seed Fabio Fognini, 4-6, 6-2, 6-2, on Wednesday to reach the quarterfinals of the Sydney International. The second-round triumph over Fognini further demonstrated the Argentine’s return to top form ahead of next week’s Australian Open. The former No. 4 needed a wildcard to gain entry to the main draw as his world ranking had dropped to 338 during his lengthy absence. He showed the benefit of concerted preparation by beating Fognini in one hour and 48 minutes. Second seed David Goffin of Belgium also suffered a second-round loss, going down 6-3, 6-3 to Italy’s Simone Bolelli. The Argentine’s quarterfinal opponent will be Kazakhstan qualifier Mikhail Kukushkin, who upset sixth seed Pablo Cuevas ,7-5, 7-5. AP
sports
In a briefing on Wednesday, World Bank senior country economist Karl Kendrick Chua said the country’s investment deficit has reached P950 billion, or 6.8 percent of the country’s current gross domestic product (GDP). “Historically, the Philippines underinvested in physical capital and even more so in the last 10 years. Comparing the Philippines with our fast-growing Asean neighbors, the country also underinvested,
especially in infrastructure and education,” Chua said. The World Bank estimates showed that the country’s infrastructure deficit has reached 2.5 percent of GDP, or P350 billion, while the underinvestment in social services amounts to 4.3 percent of GDP, or P600 billion. The investment deficit has resulted in “monstrous traffic, flight delays and delays in importation,” as well as the decline in the Continued on A2
2015 GLOBAL ECONOMIC GROWTH SEEN TO HIT 3%
Atlanta 105, Philadelphia 87
assists to lead Atlanta to its ninth straight win at the expense of Philadelphia, 105-87. The Hawks easily thumped the Sixers even while resting 60 percent of their starting lineup. Leading scorer Jeff Teague, Paul Millsap and DeMarre Carroll all sat out with the team in a stretch of four games in five nights. The Hawks have won 23 of 25 and also won their ninth straight road game. They are in first place this late in the season for the first time since they won the East in 1993-1994. Michael Carter-Williams scored 20 points for the Sixers. In Sacramento, Monta Ellis scored six of his 28 points in overtime and added 10 assists, and Dallas beat Sacramento, 108-104.
he Philippines needs to increase investments in infrastructure and social services by about P1 trillion in the next five years to sustain a growth of 6 percent and improve its chances of eradicating poverty in one generation, according to the World Bank.
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he World Bank, citing stagnation in Europe and Japan and a slowdown in China, downgraded its forecast for the global economy this year. It also reported that world economic growth came in below expectations in 2014. The bank predicts the world economy will expand 3 percent this year, up from 2.6 percent in 2014. Last June World Bank
PESO exchange rates n US 44.8320
economists had forecast 3.4-percent global economic growth this year and 2.8 percent last year. “The recovery has been sputtering in the euro area and Japan, as legacies of the financial crisis linger.... China, meanwhile, is undergoing a carefully managed slowdown,” the bank said on Tuesday in the first of its twice-yearly Global Economic Prospects reports for Continued on A2
World Bank Group senior country economist Karl Kendrick Chua (left) briefs the media regarding the Philippine Economic Update January 2015 edition during a news conference held in Taguig City. Also present during the briefing is World Bank Group lead economist Rogier van den Brink. ALYSA SALEN
Remittance growth in Nov slowest in 5 years
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By Bianca Cuaresma
ash remittances slowed steeply in November last year amid the expected uptick of remittances nearing the holiday season. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said on Wednesday the money sent by millions of migrant Filipino workers aggregated $2.12 billion in November last year, representing growth of 2 percent compared to the same month the year before. The surprise 2-percent uptick was the slowest in five years, or
since January 2009, when remittances grew by just 0.1 percent. This was also the steepest slowdown to date. BSP Deputy Governor for the Monetary Stability Sector Diwa C. Guinigundo said volatility in the foreign exchange is partly to blame for the deceleration. “In the past, when the dollar appreciates against the peso, the tendency is for overseas workers to adjust so that the peso value of their remittance will more or less be the same. So if the peso depreciates against the dollar, then they can afford to send a lower amount
of dollar remittances, while the peso equivalent will be broadly the same,” Guinigundo told reporters at the sidelines of the Papal Commemorative Coin launch. The peso traded at 44 to 45 against the US dollar in November last year, weaker compared to the 43 to 44 to a dollar band in November 2013. “But if you look at the cumulative, it is still in excess of our target,” Guinigundo quickly added. The month’s actual remittance volume was also slower than the $2.22 billion reported in October 2014. Continued on A2
n japan 0.3804 n UK 68.0101 n HK 5.7827 n CHINA 7.2330 n singapore 33.6324 n australia 36.5826 n EU 52.8031 n SAUDI arabia 11.9453 Source: BSP (14 January 2015)