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‘Too early to tweak policy rates’
revisiting zÓbel Jesus at prayer
EAR Lord, the gospel often shows You at prayer. We see You draw apart to pray in solitude, even at night. You pray before the decisive moments of Your mission or that of Your apostles. In fact, all Your life is a prayer because You are in a constant communion of love with the Father. May we pattern our lives with that of Yours so that we will be assured of our place in heaven. Amen. COMPENDIUM OF THE CATECHISM OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
SEATED Man (Nothing III)
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THE BENEFIT OF LETTING KIDS SOLVE OWN BATTLES »D3
BusinessMirror
Saturday, January 24, 2015
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A PORTRAIT of Eric Pfeufer with Sword and Helmet
FERNANDO M. ZÓBEL
triumph of modernism and its influence on the contemporary, modern art can beat the contemporary through extra social dimensions that the contemporary does not have. These are a history and a legitimacy in an age of flatness. Perhaps, all these issues were conjectured by the artist who often explored visions of the future. Zóbel was a man who had ideas bigger than himself. He thought of critical projects years before their time and was often misunderstood by many who lacked the vision. Perhaps, this was one of the reasons for his exile to Spain. Aside from reaching an audience in Europe, exile, too, would provide space for his legend to grow. Times have changed. The Philippine art market has become relentless by finally affirming Zóbel’s vision. Future reports of high prices may be treated as spectacle but are only third-party valuations that Zóbel and the market have triumphed. And why not? Zóbel was not only a daring painter who challenged the prevailing status quo, but he was also a patron who funded many artistic projects, including donations to the Ateneo Art Gallery’s collection. He was also an educator in its mother institution. But it is Zóbel’s works that will ultimately endure because they allow for an endless stream of signification with an Asian sensibility. Ultimately, he was not an exile but an exponent of the Asian spark in Europe. Drop the bag of golden apples on the bidding table is León Gallery, which was approached by the heirs of Jim and Reed Pfeufer, the original owners of the collection that will be on sale, and Zóbel’s very close friends from way back in Harvard. The Pfeufers were artists who nurtured
Zóbel. For over 40 years, they engaged in intimate correspondence that eventually included the Pfeufer children. Some of these letters include illustrations that will also be on sale apart from oils, prints and drawings that the family has consigned to León Gallery. Among the lots are rare oils from the 1950s, including one important work, titled Seated Man (Nothing III), which has been previously published. The piece beautifully drafts an early modernist stirring for simplification, a knack that modernism overruled as more tenable than academic rendering. Also worthy of attention are a number of intimate representations. One of those high on the wish list is Portrait of Eric Pfeufer with Sword and Helmet, an oil that recalls Zóbel’s earlier naïf series. The work is a brother to Boy with Kite, a mainstay of the Ayala Museum’s permanent collection. Of course, when one talks about Zóbel, one eventually has to disclose utter jubilation at his Saeta series. Lucky for the discerning buyer, there is one early painting and almost a dozen drawings and prints in a smaller scale. The rest of the lots are works on paper, often whimsical, almost cartoonish drawings, serious studies, calligrafic experiments, ephemera and journal entries reminiscent of pages from an artist book. One particular drawing recalls Leonardo da Vinci’s studies of the deluge, complete with handwritten annotation. These works will be sold at auction on February 6, 7 pm, at the Makati Diamond Residences. For more information, call 856-2781, point your browser at www.leon-gallery.com, or e-mail info@leon-gallery.com. ■
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‘stalking’ pope francis Relationships BusinessMirror
D4 Saturday, January 24, 2015
AlYsA sAlen
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ma. stella f. arnaldo http://stella-arnaldo.blogspot.com @Pulitika2010
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ELL, in a way, that was what Aling Elena—a gregarious lady I met at the corner of Quirino and Taft Avenues—said she was going to do while Pope Francis was in town. She would be following him at all his events—“Sa Tacloban lang ako hindi pupunta...mahal ang pamasahe eh,” she said, giggling. I met her on the day Francis arrived in Manila, and as everyone on the corner and the entire length of Quirino Avenue were doing, we were waiting to get a glimpse of His Holiness. With Aling Elena were her adult kids and their respective spouses, as well as her one and only grandson, whom she said was primarily the reason she would be at most of the papal events, or at least along the routes to the event venues. “Bukas sa Manila Cathedral naman ako,” she added. Indeed, the five-day holiday put in place for the papal visit, which I initially opposed because it was coming at the heels of a two-week Christmas holiday, eventually made sense to me, as I went around ‘stalking’ the pope, as well. Those five days helped renew our faith as Catholics, and restored and strengthened our bonds within our own families. Along the papal motorcade’s route, families came out in full force, even taking their small babies with them, just on the off-chance the Francis would be able to see them and bless them. I was, especially touched with what the Philippine National Police and Metro Manila Development Authority personnel did along the motorcade routes. Although they were under strict orders to push back the crowds and minimize security risks for our very important visitor, a number of them even offered to take the kids from their families, carried them over the barricades, and plunked them down just right behind the security line, just so that the kids would have a better view of the pope. I offered Aling Elena some crackers that I had tucked into my bag to stave off hunger while waiting for the pope to motor to the Apostolic Nunciature, his official Manila residence, but she refused ever so politely with a thank you, adding she had already eaten. “Ewan ko nga kung sino nagbigay, pero nakakain na ako,” she said, laughing. People were willing to share their meager baon and drink with strangers in the crowd while waiting to see the pope—an impressive show of communion among Filipinos. At the Mall of Asia Arena last Saturday, Francis met with families from all walks of life—many of them
nominated by their bishops and parishes, were members of the Catholic lay religious groups, or were brought in by Catholic charities. Among those in the audience were lawyer Macel Fernandez Estavillo, her husband Karlo, and their two children Javea and Maria. “We all woke up with joy and excitement in our hearts—we were going to see the pope! My kids had a full day at school, and I went to school to read for my younger daughter. We got them both early and rushed home in excitement and happiness,” she said. “We were in a convoy that left Makati at 2 pm. All roads were blocked and we were so worried the gates would close! We ran the last mile, worried that our IDs which had the tickets stuck to them would fall, and that our kids, aged 5 and 8, would not be able to keep up with the pace. But they did! We made it on the dot, at 3:30 pm right before the doors closed. There was no line at that time, and we were among the last people who got in.” Macel, who many may still remember as the 1997 bar topnotcher, and the youngest member of the Estrada Cabinet as chief of the Presidential Management Staff, is currently the head for legal and regulatory affairs of RCBC. Husband Karlo, a lawyer as well, is general manager of San Miguel Properties. “Our children, especially the older one, understood what it meant to see the pope. We told them that he was the leader of the Catholic Church and that he was good and loved the poor, children, and the sick. We shared with them what we had been reading over the past two years, and days before the event, they watched a documentary on his life, so they knew him and loved him. They were shouting, ‘We love you Pope Francis!’ at the Arena, though maybe their small voices were not heard because of the distance and crowds.” Macel said it meant so much for her and her family to see Francis. “He is an inspiration and a guide to us,
and we have been following his teachings ever since he assumed the papacy. We love him for his humanity, humility, kindness, and openness of heart. We also wanted to see him because we came with the prayers and intentions of family and friends who could not be there.” What touched her most, among all the things Francis said during the encounter at the Arena, was: “As a family, you must always continue dreaming together, because your shared dreams are the foundation of family life; you must make time to rest because in rest, you will discern God’s will through prayer; and pray to the sleeping Saint Joseph, to whom God spoke often in his sleep—God who will solve, in his own time, all our problems. I think every home should have a statue of the sleeping Saint Joseph.” She stressed that “Pope Francis is such an inspiration to do something more to help the poor, and to make a difference in their lives. I hope our family can heed his call to serve.” I was particularly moved by the pope’s surprise visit to the street children being cared for by the Tulay ng Kabataan Foundation in Intramuros. He knew that in lending his presence to the foundation, it would drive home the message that children shouldn’t be neglected and thrown to the streets like refuse. Many of the children staying at the foundation came from broken homes, and it was important for Francis to impress on them, young as they were, that Jesus loved
them. Similarly, in Tacloban, he also got down from his popemobile in an unscheduled stop at a shanty in an area still trying to recover from the devastation wrought by Supertyphoon Yolanda in late 2013. The real surprise in the visit was that he had kissed the child of an unmarried couple. Said Narciso Ay-ay, the father, it was significant that the pope gave them his blessing just the same, despite their flaws in the eyes of the Catholic Church. We may not all be in agreement with the teachings of the Catholic Church and the pronouncements from the Vatican, some of which seem to ignore the realities of actual family life, but I am almost certain that most of us have been inspired by the pope’s recent visit. Each smile, each hug, and his words of comfort whispered into the ears of the afflicted have been magnified by our TV sets 100 times over, and have thus become powerful images of consolation and hope for our people. During the papal visit, we showed our capacity for kindness and compassion to our fellowmen. We were patient, cooperative, disciplined, and eager to hear the word of God. The real test for us comes now that pope has left. As Cardinal Luis Antonio “Chito” Gokim Tagle said at the end at the Mass, led by His Holiness at the Quirino Grandstand that rainy Sundat, let us all take Francis’s words and actions to heart and “bring the light of Jesus Christ” to wherever it is needed. n
dtsi clinches avaya Philippines’s Business Partner of the Year plum for 11th time THE Diversified Technology Solutions International (DTSI) Group bags, for the seventh consecutive year, the most coveted Avaya Business Partner of the Year Award in the Philippines, making 2014 the 11th time it has won the award over 13 years of partnership. The award is in recognition of the company’s unceasing loyalty and commitment to
diversified technology solutions international President and Ceo miguel C. Garcia (right) receives the award from avaya senior Country manager for the Philippines and acting asean managing director edgar doctolero during the awarding ceremony, themed “avaya Beyond,” in taguig City.
Avaya’s credo of delivering value-for-money information technology (IT) solutions to its customers in the Philippines. “We have been working closely with Avaya Philippines in delivering cutting-edge communications technology solutions since May 2000 and won our first Business Partner award in 2001,” according to Miguel Garcia, DTSI Group president and CEO. “As one of the country’s valued Business Partners, the DTSI Group fulfills part of its business objective to further boost its technology offering with Avaya by taking on the best communication solutions in the market to fit the expanding needs of our customers,” Garcia said during the awarding ceremony held recently in Blue Leaf at McKinley Hill in Taguig City. “The DTSI Group has been a valuable business partner of Avaya Philippines in providing our customers a rewarding experience in terms of offering various technology solutions for the next-generation contact center solutions that help drive improvements in customer satisfaction, productivity and efficiency in the workplace.” Avaya Philippines Senior
Country Manager and Acting Asean Managing Director Edgar Doctolero said. “We look forward to a more fruitful collaboration with the DTSI Group in the years ahead.” The DTSI Group is now working closely with Avaya in launching a cloud solution to the Philippine market, Garcia said. “Everybody is gearing toward cloud solutions,” he said. “Instead of companies and end-users investing heavily in an entire IT infrastructure, which does not figure in their core business, DTSI will be offering companies customized technology solutions from start-ups to expanding business operations. Our proposition is simple: Why invest in an entire team of IT personnel, upgrade your IT infrastructure every three years, when we can provide all of these plus more, minus the aggravation of managing that entire IT infrastructure?” As a cloud service provider, the DTSI Group and Avaya will be offering its customers an entire cloud-based data and communications center solution. Garcia said, “It’s like having your own IT team and infrastructure at minimal investment.”
life
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saudi king abdullah dies; prince salman Successor
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he Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC) said it is looking for consultants, who would help the government implement its rehabilitation and expansion program for the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) System. MRT Spokesman Hernando T. Cabrera said the government has earmarked P50 million for the services of a consulting firm, which would help the DOTC address pressing problems being faced by the
World The
B3-1 | Saturday, January 24, 2015 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion
King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz Al-Saud of Saudi Arabia waves to members of the Saudi Shura “consultative” council in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, in this photo taken on March 24, 2009. Early on January 23 Saudi state TV reported King Abdullah died at the age of 90. AP/HAssAn AmmAr
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IYADH, Saudi Arabia—Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah, the powerful US ally who fought al-Qaeda and sought to modernize the ultraconservative Muslim kingdom, including by nudging open greater opportunities for women, has died. He was 90.
A royal court statement said the king died at 1 a.m. on Friday. His successor was announced as 79-yearold half-brother, Prince Salman, a Royal Court statement carried on the Saudi Press Agency said. Salman was Abdullah’s crown prince and had recently taken on some of the ailing king’s responsibilities. The 69-year-old Prince Muqrin, a former head of intelligence in Saudi Arabia and half-brother to both Salman and Abdullah, was announced as the kingdom’s crown prince. More than his guarded predecessors, Abdullah—who ascended to the throne in 2005—assertively threw his oil-rich nation’s weight behind trying to shape the Middle East. His priority was to counter the influence of rival, mainly Shiite Iran wherever it tried to make advances. He and fellow Sunni Arab monarchs also staunchly opposed the Middle
East’s wave of pro-democracy uprisings, seeing them as a threat to stability and their own rule. Regionally, perhaps Abdullah’s biggest priority was to confront Iran, the Shiite powerhouse across the Gulf. He backed Sunni Muslim factions against Tehran’s allies in several countries, where colliding ambitions stoked proxy conflicts around the region that enflamed SunniShiite hatreds—most horrifically in Syria’s civil war, where the two countries backed opposing sides. Those conflicts, in turn, hiked Sunni militancy that returned to threaten Saudi Arabia. Abdullah was selected as crown prince in 1982 on the day his halfbrother Fahd ascended to the throne. He became de facto ruler in 1995 when a stroke incapacitated Fahd. Abdullah was believed to have long rankled at the closeness of the alliance with the US, and as regent he pressed Washington to withdraw
the troops it had deployed in the kingdom since the 1990 Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. The US finally did so in 2003. He was constantly frustrated by Washington’s failure to broker a settlement to the Israel-Palestinian conflict. In 2000 Abdullah convinced the Arab League to approve an unprecedented offer that all Arab states would agree to peace with Israel if it withdrew from lands it captured in 1967. Alarmed by the prospect of a rift, President George W. Bush soon after advocated for the first time the creation of a Palestinian state alongside Israel. Abdullah also pushed the Obama administration to take a tougher stand against Iran and to more strongly back the mainly Sunni rebels fighting to overthrow Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Expressing his condolences, President Barack Obama focused on Abdullah’s efforts to nurture the kingdom’s ties with the US. “As a leader, he was always candid and had the courage of his convictions,” Obama said. “One of those convictions was his steadfast and passionate belief in the importance of the US-Saudi relationship as a force for stability and security in the Middle East and beyond.” Abdullah was born in Riyadh in 1924, one of the dozens of sons of Saudi Arabia’s founder, King Abdul-Aziz Al Saud. Like all AbdulAziz’s sons, Abdullah had only rudimentary education. His strict upbringing was exemplified by three
days he spent in prison as a young man as punishment by his father for failing to give his seat to a visitor, a violation of Bedouin hospitality. His aim at home was to modernize the kingdom to face the future. One of the world’s largest oil exporters, Saudi Arabia is fabulously wealthy, but there are deep disparities in wealth and a burgeoning youth population in need of jobs, housing and education. More than half the current population of 20 million is under the age of 25. He was a strong supporter of education, building universities at home and increasing scholarships abroad for Saudi students. Abdullah for the first time gave women seats on the Shura Council, an unelected body that advises the king and government. He promised women would be able to vote and run in 2015 elections for municipal councils, the only elections held in the country. He appointed the first female deputy minister in 2009. Two Saudi female athletes competed in the Olympics for the first time in 2012, and a small handful of women were granted licenses to work as lawyers during his rule. One of his most ambitious projects was a Western-style university that bears his name, the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, which opened in 2009. Men and women share classrooms and study together inside the campus, a major departure in a country where even small talk between the sexes in public can bring a warning from the morality police. AP
IS militants start countdown for 2 Japanese hostages
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OKYO—Militants affiliated with the Islamic State (IS) group have posted an online warning that the “countdown has begun” for the group to kill a pair of Japanese hostages. The posting which appeared on Friday shows a clock counting down to zero along with gruesome images of other hostages who have been beheaded by the IS group. The militant group gave Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe a 72-hour deadline—which expired on Friday— to pay a $200-million ransom for the two hostages. The posting on a forum
popular among IS militants and sympathizers did not show any images of the Japanese hostages. In the past the web site has posted IS videos very quickly, sometimes before anyone else. Nippon Television Network first reported the message in Japan. The status of efforts to free the two men was unclear. Government Spokesman Yoshihide Suga, when asked about the latest message, said Japan was analyzing it. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe convened his National Security Council to discuss how to handle the crisis, as
the mother of one of the captives appealed for her son’s rescue. “Time is running out. Please, Japanese government, save my son’s life,” said Junko Ishido, the mother of 47-yearold journalist Kenji Goto. “My son is not an enemy of the Islamic State,” she said in a tearful appearance in Tokyo. Ishido said she was astonished and angered to learn from her daughter-in-law that Goto had left less than two weeks after his child was born, last October, to go to Syria to try to rescue the other hostage, 42-year-old Haruna Yukawa.
“My son felt he had to do everything in his power to try to rescue a friend and acquaintance,” she said. In very Japanese fashion, Ishido apologized repeatedly for “all the trouble my son has caused.” The national broadcaster NHK reported early on Friday that it had received a message from IS “public relations” saying a statement would be released soon. Lacking clout and diplomatic reach in the Middle East, Japan has scrambled for a way to secure the release of the two men, one a journalist, the other an adventurer fascinated by war. AP
Saudi’S new king Salman uniting force in royal family
CRown Prince Salman gestures during a session at the Shura Council on January 6. AP/sAudi Press Agency
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UBAI, United Arab Emirates—Saudi Arabia’s new king, Salman bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud, is a veteran of the country’s top leadership, versed in diplomacy from nearly 50 years as the governor of the capital Riyadh and known as a mediator of disputes within the sprawling royal family. Salman, 79, had increasingly taken on the duties of the king over the past year as his ailing predecessor and half-brother, Abdullah, became more incapacitated. Abdullah died before dawn on Friday at 90 years old. Salman had served as defense minister since 2011 and so was head of the military as Saudi Arabia joined the US and other Arab countries in carrying out air strikes in Syria in 2014 against the Islamic State, the Sunni militant group that the kingdom began to see as a threat to its own stability. He takes the helm at a time when the ultraconservative Muslim kingdom and oil powerhouse is trying to navigate social pressures from a burgeoning youth population—over half the population of 20 million is under 25—seeking jobs and increasingly testing boundaries of speech on the Internet, where criticism of the royal family is rife. Salman’s ascension hands throne to yet another aging son of Saudi Arabia’s founder, King Abdul-Aziz Al Saud, who is thought to have had more than 50 sons from multiple wives. Salman’s health has been a question of concern. He suffered at least one stroke that has left him with limited movement on his left arm. The Saudi throne has for decades passed between Al Saud’s sons.
Prince Muqrin, the youngest of the sons at 69, was named crown prince in the royal court statement that announced Salman as king. Each succession has brought the kingdom closer to a time when the next generation—Al Saud’s grandsons—will have to take over. Although the family has successfully managed to close ranks throughout the years, a generational change would raise the specter of a power struggle by placing the throne in the hands of one branch at the expense of the others. King Abdullah had carried out a slow but determined series of reforms aimed at modernizing the country, including increasing education and nudging open the margins of rights for women. Salman appears to back those reforms, but he has also voiced concerns about moving too fast. In a 2007 meeting, he told an outgoing US ambassador that “social and cultural factors”—even more than religious—mean change has to be introduced slowly and with sensitivity, noting the power of the multiple tribes in the kingdom, according to an embassy memo of the meeting leaked by the Wikileaks whistle-blower site. He struck the same theme in a 2010 interview with Karen Elliot House, author of On Saudi Arabia: Its People, Past, Religion, Fault Lines. He told her that while Americans are unified by democracy, Saudi Arabia is in essence unified by his family, the Al Sauds. “We can’t have democracy in Saudi Arabia, he said, because if we did every tribe would be a party and then we would be like Iraq and would have chaos,” House told the Associated Press. AP
The world
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BYE, Roger! Sports
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| SATURDAY, JANUARY 24, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
Bouchard’s plea: Stop talking about ‘Twirlgate’ B J G The Associated Press
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FOUR-TIME Australian Open champion Roger Federer of Switzerland shows his frustration after losing to Italy’s Andreas Seppi (inset), who lost to Federer in their 10 previous matches. AP
FEDERER OUT OF AUSSIE OPEN IN 3RD ROUND AFTER LOSS TO SEPPI
BYE, ROGER! B J P
The Associated Press
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ELBOURNE, Australia—For the first time in a dozen years, Roger Federer won’t feature in the Australian Open semifinals after being beaten, 6-4, 7-6 (5), 4-6, 7-6 (5), on Friday in the third round by Andreas Seppi. The 17-time Grand Slam champion had never lost to Seppi in 10 previous meetings, but made some uncharacteristic errors including nine double-faults—including one to surrender a mini break in the fourth-set tiebreaker. Seppi, a 30-year-old Italian who had only advanced beyond the second round once at his nine previous trips to Melbourne Park, held his nerve despite some withering winners from Federer, who registered his 1,000th career match win when he collected the Brisbane International title earlier this month to open the season. Federer has won the Australian title four times, and had reached the semifinals or better
at Melbourne Park every year since winning the championship for the first time in 2004. “I had to believe that I could win,” said Seppi, who said he stuck out his racket and hoped for the best on match point—a forehand that sailed past Federer and landed in the corner. “I was just trying to stay relaxed and just focusing on every shot and to breathe calm and don’t get nervous. “I think I did pretty well. Very well. I’m very happy I could manage the emotions.” Eugenie Bouchard struggled through a scrappy opening set before getting on top in a 7-5, 6-0 third-round win over Carolina Garcia that featured 10 breaks of serve. There were six service breaks by the time the scores were level at 4-4, but seventh-seeded Bouchard started finding rhythm late and got the crucial break in the 12th game. “Yeah, I don’t think it was the prettiest tennis out there,” said Bouchard, who reached the semifinals in her first trip to Melbourne Park last year and went on to make the semifinals or better at two of the other three majors in a
breakthrough season. “But I’m happy that I just kept going. Even if it wasn’t going so well, I was able to turn it around.” Third-seeded Simona Halep advanced with a 6-4, 7-5 win over Bethanie Mattek-Sands, missing twice when she served for the match in the eighth and 10th games before finally serving out. Halep, who opened the season by winning the Shenzhen Open in China, will next play Yanina Wickmayer, who beat No. 14-seeded Sara Errani 4-6, 6-4, 6-3. “Here I started last year to play my best tennis. I [reached] my first quarterfinal in Grand Slams... then I made final in French Open,” Halep said. “I have more confidence now during Grand Slams and I believe I have my chance at every tournament.” No. 10 Ekaterina Makarova had a 6-4, 6-4 win over No. 22 Karolina Pliskova and No. 21 Peng Shuai beat Yaroslava Shvedova, 7-6 (7), 6-3, to move into a possible fourth-round showdown with No. 2 Maria Sharapova, who was playing No. 31 Zarina Diyas in a night match. Sixth-seeded Andy Murray beat Joao Sousa,
6-1, 6-1, 7-5, to set up a fourth-round clash with No. 10 Grigor Dimitrov. Murray is attempting to become the first man to win the Australian Open after losing three times in the final. He lost to Novak Djokovic in 2013 and 2011 and Roger Federer in 2010. Dimitrov had a tough third-rounder against 2006 Australian Open finalist Marcos Baghdatis before winning 4-6, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 6-3. Seventh-seeded Tomas Berdych beat Viktor Troicki, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4 , needing eight match points to clinch it. “It looks not very nice on the paper— mostly, all of them on a big first serve,” said Berdych, a semifinalist here last year and the 2010 Wimbledon runner-up. “It was a great save from him. I needed to wait one more game... when the first chance came up, I served well and took it.”
CAN TENNIS KEEP ITS CHINESE FANS AFTER LI NA? M
ELBOURNE, Australia—With Li Na in retirement and not defending her title at the Australian Open, there are far fewer Chinese flags and fans with red-and-yellowstreaked faces in the stands at Melbourne Park. So much so that when Peng Shuai, now China’s top-ranked tennis player, was beating Magdalena Rybarikova in a second-round match, there was just one fan shouting encouragement in Mandarin with a solitary Chinese flag. Contrast that scene with a stadium in the Australian capital on Sunday where thousands of red-shirt wearing Chinese supporters cheered on China’s soccer team as it defeated North Korea in a group match at the Asian Cup. With Li transitioning from tennis star to soon-to-be-mother, her departure from the sport raises an interesting question in China: Can tennis keep its nascent fan base and continue to grow in the country without its global superstar? “It’s literally the billion-dollar question. Ultimately, no one knows,” said Richard Heaselgrave, the commercial director for Tennis Australia, which has a considerable stake in the answer as host of the Australian Open, the selfdescribed Grand Slam of Asia Pacific. There’s no doubting that tennis’s popularity
has grown immensely in China due to Li’s success. According to the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA), a Chinese television audience of 116 million watched Li become the first Asian player to win a major at the French Open in 2011. Adding the Australian Open title last year cemented her status as one of China’s top celebrities—she now has more than 23 million followers on Sina weibo, China’s Twitter equivalent, more than almost all other athletes. Sensing a golden opportunity, the WTA jumped on Li’s success to expand aggressively in Asia, with a record seven tournaments in China this year, second only to the US. Now that China’s biggest star is no longer playing, though, some believe this rapid growth may have been premature. Zhang Bendou, the tennis writer for Titan Sports, the largest sports newspaper in China, said the crowds were visibly thinner at the Shenzhen Open tournament earlier this month without Li there to defend her title from the year before. “It’s embarrassing to see the pictures,” he said. “If the tournaments cannot attract enough sponsors and spectators and media interest, [China] will lose them eventually. I think they are in danger, some of them.”
WITH the retirement of Li Na, Peng Shuai is now China’s biggest hope in tennis. AP
Part of the problem is that because tennis is relatively new to the country, Chinese fans typically only pay attention to the big-name stars and local players, Zhang said. This partly explains why the men’s tennis tour has been more cautious to expand in China—there are no bankable Chinese men’s players yet. Only one made the main draw at the Australian Open—Zhang
Ze, who lost in the first round to 33-year-old Australian veteran Lleyton Hewitt. Heaselgrave is optimistic the Australian Open will retain its Chinese fan base. To help ensure this, Tennis Australia has signed Li to a three-year contract to act as the tournament’s unofficial ambassador in China and recently signed a new contract with China Central Television to produce bespoke TV and digital content from the
tournament for Chinese consumers. There’s talk of opening Tennis Australia training centers for casual and club-level players in Shanghai and Beijing, as well. “We’re absolutely nowhere near being the Grand Slam of Asia Pacific that we want to be, but we’ve made a big start,” Heaselgrave said. The Chinese Tennis Association, meanwhile, is busy trying to find the next homegrown star. There are now 11 female players ranked in the top 200, led by Peng Shuai, the recent US Open semifinalist, at No. 22. But the one Chinese Fed Cup captain Peng Wang is most excited about is 17-yearold Xu Shilin, the No. 2 girl in the junior rankings, who goes by the English name Coco. The top seed in the girls draw at the Australian Open, she has the potential to be the next Li Na, Peng said. AP
ELBOURNE, Australia—Eugenie Bouchard—the unwitting protagonist of an Australian Open saga that has been dubbed “Twirlgate”—would prefer if people just focused on her tennis. For the record, Bouchard said on Friday she was “not offended” by the male interviewer who asked her to twirl for the crowd earlier in the week. “I think it was just kind of funny,” the Wimbledon runner-up said after advancing to the fourth round in Melbourne. “I’m fine with being asked to twirl if they ask the guys to flex their muscles.” This is not the first time the Australian Open has offered up a headline-grabbing sideshow that has nothing to do with tennis. In previous years, two-time champion Victoria Azarenka’s former boyfriend, the rap star Redfoo who was a regular frontrow fixture, got as much press as she did. In 2011 former No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki told a colorful tale about getting into a fight with a kangaroo and showed a scratch to prove it. She later retracted the story, saying she had bumped into a treadmill but wanted to spice up a dull news conference. This year the season’s opening Grand Slam tournament has Twirlgate, a term being used by Australian media and as a hashtag on Twitter. It started on Wednesday when Bouchard, one of the rising stars of women’s tennis, was asked by a male interviewer to “give us a twirl” and show off her tennis dress after winning her second-round match. Noticeably embarrassed, Bouchard complied with a laugh and later said, “it was very unexpected.” Social media erupted with chatter. Some called it sexist, some questioned whether a male player would be asked to twirl after winning a match, and some dismissed the debate, saying they didn’t feel sorry for a highly paid athlete being asked to twirl. Billie Jean King added to the chorus of criticism. “This is truly sexist,” tweeted King, an 11-time Grand Slam winner and a longtime campaigner for equal rights in tennis. “Let’s focus on competition and accomplishments of both genders, and not our looks.” The 20-year-old Bouchard, a 5-foot-10 photogenic blonde, has become one of tennis’s newest cover girls. She won the Wimbledon juniors’ title in 2012 and has made rapid progress ever since. She reached the semifinals at last year’s Australian and French Opens followed by the Wimbledon final which ushered her into the No. 7 ranking—the highest ever for a Canadian player. Bouchard won her thirdround match on Friday, beating Caroline Garcia of France, 7-5, 6-0. After a few questions on tennis, her postmatch news conference turned to the twirl. “I was waiting for this one,” Bouchard said, smiling. Players typically say that during big tournaments they try to stay away from newspapers and limit their time on social media to keep their minds on the game. But Bouchard said she was aware that the incident had caused a stir. “My friends are texting me, saying I dance and twirl well and stuff, as jokes,” she said. “It’s just funny how it’s taken a life of its own. I’m just going to try to focus on my tennis.” She raised her eyebrows when asked if this was a déjà vu of an embarrassing question she faced last year, when an oncourt interviewer asked her which celebrity she’d most like to date. “You mean the Bieber question?” she said. Her answer at the time had been fellow Canadian Justin Bieber. “I don’t know. They try to ask funny questions. It’s entertaining, I guess. I don’t mind it.” But she added that it would be nice to move on. “I’m happy that I’ve played three solid matches here,” Bouchard said, “and we could definitely be a little bit more focused on that.” CANADA’S Eugenie »Bouchard wants people to focus on her tennis than her twirling. AP
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terms of the gross domestic product in 2014. “We don’t yet see a strong impetus to change the stance of monetary-policy but we will continue to monitor new data and factor into our forecasts the dampening impact on inflation and possible second-round effects on global economic growth of lower oil prices, in light of fresh liquidity injections by the ECB and the expected path of policy normalization by the Fed [Federal Reserve],” Continued on A2
train line’s management. “The consulting firm would provide any and all assistance and guidance in all matters of the operations and maintenance of the mass-transit system,” Cabrera said. “The consultant would also extend assistance in the conceptualization, procurement, and implementation of any and all programs and projects for MRT 3,” he added. Consulting firms have until February 6 to signify their interest to the DOTC. See “MRT rehabilitation,” A2
Meralco electricity rates to go down on cheaper oil By Lenie Lectura
BusinessMirror
Oil Jumps as Saudi King’s Death Spurs Speculation Over Policy
Govt needs consultants for MRT rehabilitation By Lorenz S. Marasigan
BusinessMirror
Saudi King Abdullah dies; Prince Salman successor
t is too early for the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to make appropriate adjustments in its policy rates no matter the decision of the European Central Bank (ECB) to pursue its own quantitative easing (QE) program beginning March this year, BSP Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. said on Friday.
This is significant in that the ECB’s €1.1-trillion QE program should not have a disruptive impact on the country’s macroeconomic underpinnings but should, instead, allow the $270-billion economy to expand as much as the economic planners have projected. Tetangco particularly said there is no compelling reason for the BSP to alter its monetary-policy stance designed to keep inflation well within the 5-percent ceiling and growth at optimum rate of up to 7 percent in
‘Stalking’ Pope Francis an estimated 6 million filipinos turned out despite dirty weather to hear sunday mass officiated by Pope francis on January 18.
By Bianca Cuaresma
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Revisiting Fernando M. Zóbel PPROACHING critical mass in the hot-button perception of the Manila art market is an unprecedented public auction by León Gallery of early works by Spanish-Filipino artist Fernando Zóbel de Ayala y Montojo, better known as Fernando M. Zóbel, an accomplished early modernist who grappled with technical pictorial challenges years before their time. Ultimately, Zóbel yielded an oeuvre that is noted for its unwavering modernity, discipline and nuance. Due to the historical and aesthetic considerations involved in pioneering new styles, his paintings have become examples of fearless improvisation and exploration, for they were made back when the language and capacity to appreciate modern art was wandering in the desert. From the wilderness, this visionary has stood the test of time. Because of treading the least likely path where a son of businessmen would dare venture—that is, the role of the artist—Zóbel stands tall as one of the founding exponents of nonrepresentational art in his country, an idea that was yet to find merit on the ground. But as classic modernism matured, became legitimate and then, in part, mostly obsolete, so, too, were the early experimentations that were no longer repeated because they were required for only a short and young period of time. Such early works should be seen in the context of his latter development. They are not obsolete in the sense that they are not worthy of possession but only in the context of the artist’s growth. In order to be made, an artist has to produce objects for the network. And the network desires the pristine. Whether the artworks are abstract or not, on the table are not merely a few pieces but an abundance of rare works, which are almost impossible to find, preserved in one family’s collection. There’s not just one but many acquisitions for one fell swoop. In the imagination, this kind of action should take place abroad, but there is no stopping the immediacy of local demand. Will the sudden availability of pristine work cause a devaluation? We argue that the market is strong enough to trigger another price spike and cushion more supply. As the record shows, we can expect profit since Philippine art is still undervalued internationally. Thus, the commodities are also good long-term investments. But whether you are an investor or collector, expect no bargains. Although we are not saying who will actually compete in the acquisition, the grapevine is aware that Zóbel’s family has been “recuperating” the pieces of their artistic rebelnow-turned-visionary, as these objects have the intrinsic honor of joining their private collections and the public one at the Ayala Museum. The museum closed a retrospective of Zóbel just last year. If you saw the show, the reasons for any buying frenzy need not be discussed. Aside from the critical verbiage about the
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ecb’s quantitative easing program not enough reason to change monetary-policy stance
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Tuesday, 18,2015 2014Vol. Vol.1010No. No.107 40 Saturday,November January 24,
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he continuous decline in world oil prices would result in lower electricity bills for consumers of the Manila Electric Co. (Meralco), as fuel price is one of the factors used in computing generation charge, an official of the Department of Energy (DOE) said on Friday. Energy Undersecretary Zenaida Y. Monsada said Meralco consumers will “experience the impact of Malampaya pricing” in their February electricity bills. Meralco’s Utility Economics Head Lawrence S. Fernandez said the company sources power sup-
PESO exchange rates n US 44.3610
ply from power plants that are fueled by the Malampaya natural-gas field. These power plants include the 1,200-megawatt (MW) Ilijan combined-cycle power plant, the 1,000-MW Santa Rita and the 500MW San Lorenzo natural-gas plants. Based on the December 2014 supply month, natural-gas-fired plants accounted for around 60 percent of the energy supply of Meralco, while coal-fired plants accounted for around 37 percent. The remaining 3 percent is a mix of oil-based and Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM)sourced energy. Continued on A2
Saudi King Abdullah in a June 27, 2014, file photo. AP/Brendan Smialowski
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il jumped after the death of King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, the biggest producer in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec). Futures rallied as much as 3.1 percent in New York and 2.6 percent in London, after the Saudi royal court announced Abdullah’s death in a statement. Crown Prince Salman bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud will succeed Abdullah on the throne. The kingdom, the world’s largest crude exporter, led the Opec’s decision to maintain its oil- production quota at a meeting last November, exacerbating a global glut that has driven prices lower. »A8
n japan 0.3741 n UK 66.5238 n HK 5.7234 n CHINA 7.1441 n singapore 33.1052 n australia 35.9868 n EU 50.2965 n SAUDI arabia 11.8094 Source: BSP (23 January 2015)