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NEW MARY ON ‘downton abbey’
Life
FR. SAL PUTZU, SDB AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Port Congestion Multisectoral Working Group Chairman Ernesto M. Ordoñez warned that the holidays this month would push the yard utilization at Manila’s two terminals past their maximum levels, resulting in worse conditions at the ports if not immediately averted. The head of the public-private group, working to eliminate the congestion at the ports in Manila, noted
MY SCOTCH EGGS »D3
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Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Friday, January 9, 2015
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Michelle Dockery’s new Mary on ‘Downton Abbey’
MICHELLE ON MARY:
“She’s got this attitude a little bit with people who are going through something. There’s no fussing around. So I love that about her. She doesn’t suffer fools.”
B Y V Los Angeles Times
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ER performance as Lady Mary on Downton Abbey has brought Michelle Dockery many a thing: fans with tales of their own repressed sisterhood memories, a few Emmy nominations and a Twitter account for her eyebrows. The fifth season of the PBS drama premieres in North America on January 4—and the 33-yearold actress said it’s one, in which some color comes back into her character’s life. (Downton Abbey is aired around these parts on cable TV via The Lifestyle Network on SKYcable.—Ed.) There’s a weird and contentious rollout period—Britain gets the show first, and then months later it drops in the US. Are you just constantly on edge about what you can say about the show and to whom? Oh, yeahhhh. We’re all very cautious not to give the game away and not give away any storylines because it would only spoil it for everyone. But then at the same time, there’s curiosity and people want to know what’s happening. I’m always checking for accents and wondering who I can tell a little more to and who I can’t, depending on what time of year it is. Where do we pick up? We pick up...we pick up...gosh, it was so long ago now. See, this is another problem! I can’t keep track of it all. It’s six months on since the Christmas special. I guess the thing I feel for this series, in terms of Mary, is she’s a new Mary. She’s through her grief. She’s really embracing the social climate. Literally, the color has come back into her life since the death of Matthew. She’s wearing lilacs. She’s picked herself back up again, and she’s moving on with her life. It’s really a new side of her that I love playing. You see more of her with George, now that he’s a little bit older. And she’s taking on responsibilities of the estate with Branson. But she’s also trying to move on romantically.
who are going through something. There’s no fussing around. So I love that about her. She doesn’t suffer fools. I get a kick out of it, especially the stuff that involves Edith. I just love their dynamic.
It’s like you’re living in the period. What’s another modern element you wish you could infuse onto the set or into the show? Sometimes I just want a simple blow dry! The hairstyles on the show take a bit of time. It’s not that I dislike it, it just takes so much time.
life
Downton Abbey is heading into its fifth season—and it’s a show that people are always wondering how long it will span. Is there a show you’d be sad, or were sad, to see end? I’m a big fan of Mad Men. And I know it’s on its way out, so I’m really interested to see how everything plays out. It’s such a stunning show. And I have been known to watch Two and a Half Men—people always find that odd.
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Has Downton Abbey made you think about class or culture differently? It’s just like any job. You’re always learning. For me, I’m fascinated by the history and what was happening at the time. The changes that were happened postWorld War I. I think being part of a show that started in the Edwardian period and is now in the 1920s, it’s a huge leap, and it’s been interesting to see that.
We’re doing this interview in Los Angeles at the Beverly Hilton—a place I’m sure Mary would stay in if she were around. How do you think you’re LA experience might differ from Mary’s? I eat a lot of sushi. I don’t really want to eat anything else when I’m here, because it’s the best. I’m at Sugarfish most of the time. It’s great. They have these set menus, so it’s good for a quick lunch. I try to get around as much as we can. I like to get to the beach whenever possible. It’s seems criminal to be in LA and not to go to the beach, especially when you’re a Brit. I think Mary might be into the sushi. I don’t know if she’d be game to lay on the beach. I think she might find that frivolous. She’s very uptight, you know. ■
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he near certainty of higher US interest rates down the line has compelled those intending to borrow foreign currency from banks’ foreign-currency deposit units (FCDUs) to do so in the third quarter last
B3-1 | Friday, January 9, 2015 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion
PEOPLE attend a demonstration in solidarity with those killed in an attack at the Paris offices of weekly newspaper Charlie Hebdo at the French Consulate in Barcelona, Spain, on January 7. Masked gunmen stormed the Paris offices of a weekly newspaper that caricatured the Prophet Muhammad, methodically killing 12 people, including the editor, before escaping in a car. It was France’s deadliest postwar terrorist attack. AP/MANU FERNANDEZ
‘JE SUIS CHARLIE’ GOES VIRAL
profi le pictures on Facebook, while Twitter users showed themselves with the slogan on signs with words of support for the 12 victims who were killed at Charlie Hebdo, a weekly newspaper that had caricatured the Prophet Muhammad. The Je Suis Charlie slogan grew into a trending hashtag on Twitter and spread to Instagram, along with an image of a machine gun with the words Ceci n’est pas une religion, or “This is not a religion.” One user on Instagram sent out a simple black-and-white drawing of the Eiffel Tower with the message: “Pray for Paris.” Another wrote: “Islam is a beautiful religion. This is not what we see on TV. Terrorists are not real Muslims. #IamCharlie.” Masked gunmen methodically killed the 12 people, including the newspaper’s editor, as they shouted “Allahu akbar!”—or “Allah is the greatest”—while firing, then fleeing in a car. The newspaper’s depictions of Islam have drawn condemnation and threats before. It was firebombed in 2011 and also satirized other religions and political figures. There were also protests in some American cities. AP
Hunt for 2 in Paris shooting that killed 12; 1 surrenders
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ARIS—One man sought in the deadly shooting at a French satirical paper has turned himself in, and police hunted on Thursday for two heavily armed men with possible links to al-Qaeda in the military-style, methodical killing of 12 people at the office of a satirical newspaper that caricatured the Prophet Muhammad. President François Hollande, visiting the scene of France’s deadliest such attack in more than half a century, called the assault on the weekly newspaper Charlie Hebdo “an act of exceptional barbarism.” France raised its terror alert system to the maximum—Attack Alert—and bolstered security with more than 800 extra soldiers to guard media offices, places of worship, transport and other sensitive areas. Fears had been running high in France and elsewhere in Europe that jihadis trained in warfare abroad would stage attacks at home. French brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi, in their early 30s, should be considered armed and dangerous, according to a police bulletin released early Thursday. Mourad Hamyd, 18, surrendered at
a police station in Charleville-Mezieres, a small town in France’s eastern Champagne region, Paris prosecutor’s Spokesman Agnes Thibault-Lecuivre said. She did not offer details on Hamyd’s relationship with the men. Heavily armed police moved into the nearby city of Reims, searching for the suspects without success, Thibault-Lecuivre said. Video from BFM-TV showed police dressed in white apparently taking samples inside an apartment. It was not immediately clear who lived there. One of the police officials said they were linked to a Yemeni terrorist network, and Cedric Le Bechec, a witness who encountered the escaping gunmen, quoted the attackers as saying: “You can tell the media that it’s al-Qaeda in Yemen.” The masked, black-clad men with assault rifles stormed the offices near Paris’s Bastille monument in the Wednesday noontime attack on the publication, which had long drawn condemnation and threats—it was firebombed in 2011—for its depictions of Islam, although it also satirized other religions and political figures. Shouting “Allahu akbar!” as they fired, the men used fluent, unaccented French as they called out the names of specific employees. AP
World expresses shock at attack on ‘Charlie Hebdo’
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ORLD leaders, journalists’ groups and others around the world have expressed horror at the deadly attack on Wednesday by gunmen on the Paris offices of the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo.
Here are some of their reactions: ■ “I don’t understand how people can attack a newspaper with heavy weapons. A newspaper is not a weapon of war.”—Charlie Hebdo Editor in Chief Gerard Biard to France Inter radio. ■ “This is an act of exceptional barbarism.”—French President Francois Hollande. ■ “The fact that this was an attack on journalists, attack on our free press, also underscores the degree to which these terrorists fear freedom of speech and freedom of the press.”— President Barack Obama. ■ “Regardless of the motive, homicidal violence is abominable and never justified. Life and human dignity must be guaranteed with decisiveness, and every instigation of hatred refuted and respect cultivated.”— Pope Francis, according to the Vatican spokesman. ■ “We condemn...this hateful, criminal act....While the terrorists are intensifying their acts to exacerbate the confrontation inside our country, both Muslim and Christians have to intensify their actions to give more strength to this dialogue, to make a united front against extremism.”— Mohammed Moussaoui, president of the Union of French mosques. ■ “We decisively condemn this cynical crime. We reaffirm our readiness to continue active cooperation in combating the threat of terrorism.”—Russian President Vladimir Putin said in a telegram of condolence to Hollande. ■ “This horrific attack was meant to divide. We must not fall into that trap. This is a moment for solidarity around the world.”—UN SecretaryGeneral Ban Ki-moon. ■ “I think all of Europe is crying today. All the free world is crying. All men and women who believe in freedom and reason are crying.”—Italian
dishonesty and stupidity. ‘Respect for religion’ has become a code phrase meaning ‘fear of religion.’ Religions, like all other ideas, deserve criticism, satire, and, yes, our fearless disrespect.”—Salman Rushdie, who spent years in hiding after his novel The Satanic Verses drew a death edict from Iran’s religious authorities. ■ “This abhorrent act is not just an attack on the life of French citizens and the internal security of France. It also represents an attack on freedom of opinion and of the press, a core element of our free and democratic culture.”—German Chancellor Angela Merkel. ■ “This House and this country stand united with the French people in our opposition to all forms of terrorism and we stand squarely for free speech and democracy. These people will never be able to take us off those values.”—British Prime Minister David Cameron in the House of Commons. ■ “Egypt stands by France in confronting terrorism, an international phenomenon that targets the world’s security and stability and which requires coordinated international efforts to eradicate.”—Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry.
Premier Matteo Renzi during a solidarity visit to the French Embassy in Rome. ■ “This is a brazen assault on free expression in the heart of Europe.”—Robert Mahoney, deputy director of the Committee to Protect Journalists. ■ “This will create fear among people on a whole different level than we’re used to. Charlie Hebdo was a small oasis. Not many dared do what they did.”—Swedish artist Lars Vilks, who lives under police protection after drawing caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad. ■ “I stand with Charlie Hebdo, as we all must, to defend the art of satire, which has always been a force for liberty and against tyranny,
■ “This is a dark day for freedom of expression and a vibrant press culture. But above all, it is an appalling human tragedy.”—Stephan Oberreit, director of Amnesty International France. ■ “Charlie Hebdo was among the magazines that showed the most solidarity with Jyllands-Posten when the Muhammad crisis was at its peak. We haven’t forgotten that. Here at Jyllands-Posten we feel strongly for our colleagues in Paris.”—Editorial in Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten, which faced numerous threats and foiled attacks after it published 12 caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad in 2005. ■ “I offer my condolences to the families and friends of those killed— the cartoonists, journalists and those who were trying to protect them. They paid a very high price for exercising their comic liberty. Very little seems funny today.”—Ian Hislop, editor of British satirical newspaper Private Eye. ■ “All North Atlantic Treaty Organization [Nato] allies stand together in the fight against terrorism. Terrorism in all its forms and manifestations can never be tolerated or justified.”—Nato Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg. AP
WORLD
B3-1
rivals no more los angeles lakers center robert sacre (left) tries to stop the rampaging los angeles Clippers forward Blake Griffin. AP
Sports BusinessMirror
Cavs make another deal, get Mozgov from Nuggets
RIVALS NO MORE L
Los Angeles Times
OS ANGELES—Whether Lakers-Clippers qualifies as a worthwhile National Basketball Association (NBA) rivalry remains open for debate. What was not disputable on Wednesday night inside Staples Center was which team enjoyed itself more. Clippers owner Steve Ballmer danced and forward Blake Griffin repeatedly dunked, while the Lakers largely disgusted their pockets of fans during a 114-89 defeat that felt a lot like the record wallopings the Clippers administered on their co-tenants last season. Griffin finished with 27 points on nine-for-13 shooting to go with nine rebounds and eight assists, his triple-double bid falling short only because he sat out a fourth quarter in which his team led by as many as 43 points. His dunks continually wowed the crowd during a designated Clippers home game. Griffin took advantage
of the lane mysteriously clearing of Lakers defenders late in the second quarter to drive for a windmill dunk and later added a ferocious left-handed slam. A noticeably more aggressive Chris Paul tallied 24 points on nine-for-15 shooting as well as 11 assists, to help the Clippers notch their fifth consecutive triumph over the Lakers, tying a franchise record. The Clippers have won nine of the last 10 games in the series. “It all started with our defensive intensity,” Paul said. “We played with better pace and that starts on the defensive end.” It was another rough night for Kobe Bryant, who hardly seemed rejuvenated two days after sitting out a game to rest. The Lakers star missed his first eight shots and did not score until making a 10-foot jumper with 5:49 to play in the third quarter and his team trailing by 30 points. Bryant added a turnaround fadeaway jumper a few minutes later and finished with a season-low four points on two-for-12 shooting to go with eight rebounds and seven assists. He last finished with so few points in December 2013, against Oklahoma City.
MozGoV
“I was trying to rush things, change momentum to get us back in it a little bit,” Bryant said, “but I didn’t play any different than I normally play.” Clippers Coach Doc Rivers said his team’s ball movement, spacing and defensive intensity reminded him of the way it was playing late last season when it was at its best. “It was one of those flashes from the end of the year, how we were playing,” said Rivers, whose team has been plagued by inconsistency this season, “and that’s what we have to get back to.” The Lakers were missing guard Ronnie Price (broken nose, flu) and forward Wesley Johnson (strained hip flexor), but it hardly seemed to matter on a night the Clippers reached 100 points in the opening moments of the fourth quarter. Ballmer boogied in the early going, but it had nothing to do with his team scoring a season-high 70 points in the first half. Pop star Fergie sat next to the billionaire before giving a brief performance during a time-out. “I’ll put it this way: He danced exactly how I expected him to,” Griffin said of Ballmer. “But
his enthusiasm was fun.” Hours after tweeting that he was not feeling well in far more colorful language, Clippers forward Matt Barnes played as if he was just fine. He scored 19 points while playing strong defense on Bryant. “I just felt terrible during the day,” Barnes said, “and once I got moving, running, I felt better.” Highlights were hard to find for the Lakers. Rookie Jordan Clarkson scored a team-high 14 points and Jeremy Lin made a buzzer-beater two nights after hoisting a late airball against the Portland Trail Blazers. Too bad this one was a threepointer that pulled the Lakers to within 10 points at the end of the first quarter. “They came out and punched us, and we were soft ,” Lakers Coach Byron Scott said. “Period.” Scott didn’t get any argument from Bryant, who had called his team “soft like Charmin” during a recent practice. “He said the same thing I said,” Bryant said of his coach. “He just didn’t use the toilet paper analogy.” No matter how anyone phrased it, it was just another night the Lakers would rather flush.
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uST before the Cleveland Cavaliers played their fifth game of 2014-2015 season, a Denver reporter asked Cavs Coach David Blatt about Nuggets center Timofey Mozgov. Blatt smiled, fondly remember coaching Mozgov on the Russian national team. “Timofey is a great young man, and I had the pleasure and honor to coach him for a number of years on the Russian national team in the national team environment and we had a lot of great success together, winning medals and titles, and obviously he was a big part of that,” Blatt said last November 7. “Except for tonight, I’ve got a very, very soft spot in my heart for him. Great kid. Great kid.” Now, Blatt gets to coach him in the National Basketball Association (NBA). The Cavaliers will acquire Mozgov from the Nuggets for two protected firstround picks, a person familiar with the deal told USA TODAY Sports. The person requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly until the deal was officially announced. Mozgov, 28, developed into a starter for the Nuggets this season, averaging 8.5 points, 7.8 rebounds and 1.2 blocks, and will fill a necessary hole in Cleveland’s frontcourt, especially with center Anderson Varejao (torn Achilles) out for the season. The Cavs need more defense at the rim and believe Mozgov can help. It’s been a roster-altering 48 hours for the Cavaliers. On Monday they acquired guards J.R. Smith and Iman Shumpert from the New York Knicks, getting scoring and defense, and then getting Mozgov, who the Cavs have had interest in since the season started. Cavaliers General Manager David Griffin deserves credit for a busy week, starting with his defense of Blatt on Sunday, and then two necessary trades. The Cavaliers, once healthy, could start Kyrie Irving, Smith, LeBron James, Kevin Love and Mozgov with Shumpert (out with a dislocated shoulder), Tristan Thompson, Shawn Marion, Mike Miller and Matthew Dellavedova off the bench. Denver had been reluctant to trade Mozgov, who is on a team-friendly contract at $4.65 million this season and $4.95 million in 2015-2016. But the Nuggets also have promising big men in 20-year-old Jusuf Nurkic, who is on the roster now, and 19-year-old Nikola Jokic, who is playing in Europe. The two draft picks going to the Nuggets are protected, and one of the picks will eventually be a first rounder. ESPN first reported the trade. USA Today
sports
Melo TrUsTiNG oN kNiCks’ TraDe MoVes By Barbara Barker
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Newsday
ASHINGTON—Carmelo Anthony said he knew it was going to be a rebuilding year when he signed a $124-million contract with the Knicks in July. What he never imagined is that by early January, the Knicks would have the worst record in the National Basketball Association (NBA), two of his closest friends would get traded and his sore left knee would be giving him so much trouble that he might have to start thinking about surgery or prolonged rest. Anthony, who missed his fourth straight game last night because of knee pain, told reporters before the morning shootaround that he has not talked to team president Phil Jackson since the three-team deal on Monday that sent J.R. Smith and Iman Shumpert to Cleveland. Anthony also said he did not talk with Jackson about the trade before it happened. Still, as hard as it is for him to lose his friends, he said he has to keep the faith that the organization is on the right track. “When I first committed back in New York, I said I have to trust that these guys know what they’re doing and believe in those guys,” Anthony said. “That’s
one of the reasons I wanted to come back. Here’s the opportunity with the trust. Everything starts now.” Despite the dismantling of the roster and the fact that the Knicks have lost 23 of their last 24 games, Anthony said he is hoping to be able to play on January 15 against the Bucks in London. If the knee is still bothering him then, however, he indicated he may have to take more drastic measures. “I thought these two weeks would really help me out, just as far as seeing if rest is the issue or I need to take proper precautions and get something done,” Anthony said. He likened the injury to an “annoying pebble in your shoe” because it sometimes bothers him and sometimes doesn’t. He said he’s had a number of “MRIs and scans” since the pain started in the second game of the season. He is expected to eventually need surgery. The only question is the timetable. It wasn’t only the knee that had Anthony in a somber mood on Wednesday. Talking for the first time since the trade, the seven-time All-Star painted a chaotic picture of the Knicks’ locker room on Monday night when news of the deal surfaced. Anthony said he was working out on his own in Memphis when both Shumpert and Smith came to
find him and bring him to the visitors’ locker room. “It was hard for me to come in that locker room,” Anthony said. “It was a state of confusion not really knowing what was going on. Shock. I had a chance to calm them down. “Them guys was really hurt. I had to calm them down and let them know everything was going to be all right from their standpoint. They had to move on and get past this. It was more upsetting from a friendship standpoint than a basketball standpoint. They understood the business of basketball.” And so does Anthony, although he admits he never thought he would see the team in such a bleak situation. “It’s hard to see that,” he said. “It’s easy to see it [now], cause it’s obvious and apparent. But it’s hard to see it for me.”
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ietnam, taking the lead in gay rights in Southeast Asia by abolishing a ban on same-sex marriage, has medical doctor Thuan Nguyen planning a wedding ceremony with his boyfriend of two years. “I am ready to have a wedding,” he said. “Many, many young people in love are optimistic about the acceptance of gay weddings.” The revised law, while not officially recognizing same-sex mar-
PESO exchange rates n US 45.0320 New York knicks forward Carmelo anthony, right, sits out with a sore ankle as he talks to teammate, knicks forward Quincy acy. AP
Notes and quotes
THE Knicks waived the three players acquired in the three-way deal—former Thunder forward Lance Thomas and former Cavaliers Alex Kirk and Lou Amundson. They signed D-League Westchester guard Langston Galloway to a 10-day contract.
year, when such loans stood 4.3 percent higher to $12.1 billion. This, compared with FCDU loans totaling only $11.6 billion three months earlier that highlighted the ready availability of low-cost US dollar loans in an environment where See “FCDU loans,” A2
Vietnam finds new tourism niche in Asean: same-sex marriage
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A CARTOON tribute drawn by MacLeod was released in solidarity with those killed in an attack at the Paris offices of the weekly newspaper Charlie Hebdo after masked gunmen stormed its offices on January 7. As if to prove that pens are mightier than swords, cartoonists around the world reacted to the cold-bloodied assassination of their colleagues as only they can: with powerful drawings worth a thousand words. AP/MACLEOD CARTOONS
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| Friday, January 9, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
Clippers wallop lakers By Ben Bolch
By Bianca Cuaresma
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World
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F.C.D.U. LOANS CONTINUE CLIMB ON FORESEEN HIGHER U.S. RATES
BusinessMirror
ESSAGES of condolence, outrage and defiance over the Paris terrorist attack on a newspaper office spread quickly around the world on Wednesday with thousands of people taking to the streets to protest the killings and using the slogan “Je Suis Charlie” on social media. Related story on B3-3. Many who poured into Place de la Republique in eastern Paris near the site of Wednesday’s noontime attack waved papers, pencils and pens. Journalists led the march but most in the crowd weren’t from the media world, expressing solidarity and support of freedom of speech. Similar gatherings, including some silent vigils, took place at London’s Trafalgar Square, in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, in Madrid, Brussels, Nice and elsewhere. “No matter what a journalist or magazine has to say, even if it is not what the majority of people think, they still have the right to say it without feeling in danger, which is the case today,” said Alice Blanc, a London student who is originally from Paris and was among those in the London crowd, estimated in the hundreds. Online, the declaration Je Suis Charlie, or “I Am Charlie,” replaced
that the capital is host to the Feast of the Black Nazarene, which is celebrated today, Friday. Manila would also host the Roman pontiff from January 15 to 19, prompting the local government to close a number of roads to make way for the Church’s activities. “We are likely to see this situation worsening, as we deal with the Black
After Laura told me how you and she go nuts for Beyoncé and Rihanna, I like to imagine that you two are playing some of their numbers for the cast between takes. Wouldn’t that be something? It would make for a great extra on the DVDs. We should do that. We’re so limited with our sources of entertainment. There’s no cell signal in Highclere Castle. So it’s like living in that time because you can’t get any reception on your phone, so there’s no point to even bringing it to the set.
World expresses shock at attack We saw Mary go through a lot last season—and then we saw her farming, which was a bit jarring. But how was it to see her suffer at this level? Mary is not a dweller. I mean, we saw her in Series 4 being in the dark place and Violet Crawley (Maggie Smith) and Carson (Jim Carter) having to pull her out of it. But it would only have ever been brief with Mary anyway. I think she’s stronger than that. So you see her kind of getting her strength back. There’s almost a bit of her from (Season 1) that’s come back, as well. There’s a very interesting storyline for Edith (Laura Carmichael) this year, and Mary’s attitude toward Edith is kind of like, “Well, I lost a husband, as well as a sister, get on with it.” She’s got that attitude a little bit with people
By Lorenz S. Marasigan & Jae Denise Adolfo
he biggest Catholic Church events for the year —the Feast of the Black Nazarene and the papal visit happening this month—loom as logistical nightmares that could worsen the condition at the country’s main sea gateways in Manila, particularly if preemptive measures were not instituted immediately to prevent another port logjam.
INSIDE
Faith-building and peace mission
P25.00 nationwide | 7 sections 32 pages | 7 days a week
Jan. holidays seen clogging ports
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EAR God, this prayer corner was born on this day, January 9, on the year 2008. It is a faith-building and peace mission movement. We thank the Holy Spirit for sustaining, nurturing and inspiring us to make daily prayers for all who find time to talk to You. The prayers are the well spring of faith and peace that overflowed each moment when we called Your name, Oh God. We promise to expand globally our faith-building and peace mission. Amen!
Tuesday, 2014 10 No. Friday,November January 9,18, 2015 Vol.Vol. 10 No. 92 40
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PUBLIC-PRIVATE ACTIONS NEEDED TO ENSURE PAPAL VISIT WILL NOT LEAD TO LOGJAM AT MANILA PORTS
PAPAL VISIT 2015
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A broader look at today’s business
riage, places the communist country at the forefront of countries in Asia becoming more accepting of gay people. The National Assembly’s move is expected to attract more lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender travelers and boost Vietnam’s $9-billion tourism industry. “This makes Vietnam a leader in Asia,” Jamie Gillen, a researcher of culture geography at National University of Singapore, said by phone.
‘PAHALIK’ Braving the sweltering heat, thousands of Catholic devotees line the stretch of Roxas Boulevard fronting the Rizal Park and the Quirino Grandstand in Manila to take part in the traditional pahalik, where devotees line up to kiss and touch the image of the Black Nazarene. The pahalik is part of the celebration of the Feast of the Black Nazarene, which is celebrated today. Devotees believe that kissing the image can heal sickness and grant wishes when asked through prayers. ALYSA SALEN/ NONIE REYES
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n japan 0.3780 n UK 68.0479 n HK 5.8068 n CHINA 7.2486 n singapore 33.6688 n australia 36.2227 n EU 53.3089 n SAUDI arabia 11.9996 Source: BSP (08 January 2015)