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Sports
TORONTO’S Demar Derozan (10) passes the ball away from Orlando’s Channing Frye (8) during the first half of their game on Tuesday. AP
C | T, N , mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
RAPTORS OVERRUN MAGIC
CLEVELAND—The National Basketball Association (NBA) has stripped LeBron James of a tripledouble. After reviewing film of the Cavaliers’ 118-111 win on Monday night over New Orleans, the league took away a rebound and assist from James, who initially had been credited with his 38th career triple double—at least 10 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists. James finished with 32 points, 11 rebounds and nine assists as the Cavs
LaMarcus Aldridge added 25 points and 14 rebounds for the Blazers, who have won four of their last five games and improved to 5-1 at the Moda Center. Al Jefferson scored 22 points, while Lance Stephenson had 14 points and 14 rebounds for the Hornets.
LAKERS GUARD’S DAD KILLED
THE Los Angeles Lakers have confirmed that a man shot and killed in Philadelphia over the weekend was the father of guard Wayne Ellington Jr. Police say 57-year-old Wayne Ellington was found shot in the head in the driver’s seat of a car in the Germantown section of northwest Philadelphia just after 8 p.m. local time on Sunday. The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that he was taken to Einstein Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead later that night. No arrests have been reported. Wayne Ellington Jr. said in a statement on the Lakers’ web site that he and his family are “devastated by the news of my father’s murder.” The player has been granted an indefinite leave of absence. General Manager Mitch Kupchak said players, officials and employees are saddened. Ellington was not with the Lakers on Tuesday night for their game in Memphis. Lakers coach Byron Scott said in his pregame comments that he learned of the senior Ellington’s death Sunday night after the Lakers win over Charlotte. “Driving home all I did was think about [Ellington Jr.],” Scott said. “It’s really just very sad news.” Scott said there is no timetable for the guard’s return. Ellington Jr. will be given the time to spend with his family. “When he’s ready. I’m sure he will rejoin us.” Scott recalled that Ellington Jr. was going to his car after the game when he apparently got the news about his father. The coach said other Lakers were with Ellington Jr. when Scott reached the player. “This is our livelihood, but this is still just a game,” Scott said. “This thing that’s happened to Wayne is real life. It kind of puts everything in perspective. “I think all of us, every now and then, during the game, after the game, before the game, will have Wayne on our mind,” Scott added. AP
TORONTO’S KYLE LOWRY SCORES 19 POINTS AND TERRENCE ROSS HAS 17, AS THE EASTERN CONFERENCE LEADERS THE RAPTORS NOTCH THEIR FIFTH STRAIGHT WIN AND IMPROVE TO 7-1. THE RAPTORS HAVE WON THEIR FIRST FIVE HOME GAMES OF A SEASON FOR THE FIRST TIME IN 11 YEARS.
improved to 3-3. The league routinely reviews videotape to maintain the integrity of statistics. With 3:27 left in third quarter, James was incorrectly awarded an assist when he tipped the ball to Tristan Thompson, who passed to Kyrie Irving for a lay-up. In the fourth quarter, James was given an offensive rebound that should have gone to teammate Mike Miller. League Spokesman Tim Frank said the changes have been made to
DIRK NOWITZKI becomes the highestscoring National Basketball Association player born outside of the United States. AP
the official box score. The Minnesota Timberwolves, meanwhile, will make their second attempt to play a regular-season game in Mexico City, after last year’s game with the San Antonio Spurs was canceled because of smoke inside Mexico City Arena. The Timberwolves will face the Houston Rockets on Wednesday in the same venue where a short circuit in a generator room sent fumes inside the building during warmups. NBA Mexico Director Raul Zarraga
says “stricter measures” have been taken to “prevent this from happening again.” The arena was evacuated about 45 minutes before tipoff. The $300-million glass-clad arena opened in 2012. The last regular-season NBA game in Mexico was on December 6, 1997, when the Rockets beat the Dallas Mavericks 108-106. AP
A REVIEW of the game shows LeBron James was a rebound and an assist short. AP
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taking a bite out of the big apple, without breaking the bank Good and gentle Jesus
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OOK upon us, good and gentle Jesus, as we fall on our knees in Your sight. With all our heart we pray to You, fill our heart with living faith and charity. Give us true sorrow for our sins and strengthen in us the will to live a better life. With all the love of our heart, and with sorrow for Your pains. We call to mind and reflect upon Your five wounds. And we hear within us the words concerning Yourself oh good Jesus, which Your prophet David put into Your mouth: “They have pierced my hands and my feet; they have numbered all my bones.” Oh good and gentle Jesus, let be our sufferings be for the love of You. Amen. WORD AND LIFE PLANNER AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life
Thursday, November 13, 2014
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How to take a bite out of the Big Apple, without breaking the bank ➊
WALKING the High Line along Manhattan’s West Side provides a feast for the eyes, with art installations, sculptures and murals throughout the 1.45-mile elevated park. PHOTOS: COLLEEN KELLY/MINNEAPOLIS STAR TRIBUNE/MCT
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A BRONZE and gilt sculpture of Diana by Augustus Saint-Gaudens commands a glass-roofed gallery in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.
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THE Philippines’s festive booth at the World Trade Mart
B C K Star Tribune
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Y family eagerly waited for the curtain to rise on our first Broadway show. We were about to see the Tony Award-winning Newsies. Our plush red-velvet seats were on the main floor with clear views of the stage. And the price? Probably less than others in the same row paid. It was the 13th birthday of our younger daughter, a budding actress who’d pined for New York City for years. I, on the other hand, dreaded the idea of planning—and paying for—a trip to the heart of Manhattan. But this year, my husband, Jeff; our actress, Talia; our 16-year-old Anya, and I finally took the plunge, booking a six-day vacation that was heavy on the city’s free attractions, but left room for some splurges, too. With careful planning, a smattering of credit-card points, MetroCards good for unlimited rides and a sense of adventure, our family of four managed to take on Manhattan without breaking the bank. The money-crunching began with our theater tickets. I’d bought them months before we ever left Minneapolis with a discount code I found on TheaterMania. We skipped the great deals on same-day tickets people can nab at three TKTS Discount Booths around the city, because we didn’t want to waste time in line—or risk coming up empty on such an important part of the trip. Then, the day of the show, we continued to limit the damage that Broadway can do to a budget. Keeping to our splurge-and-save plan, we skipped the fancy sitdown restaurants so many attend before a show. Instead, we grabbed tasty falafel sandwiches, taking advantage of the stellar people-watching near Times Square. The bill came in at just $42. A family our size could spend nearly twice that amount on another New York City institution, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, if we paid the posted price (adults $25, children $12). Faced with cashiers and large signs, many tourists don’t realize that the prices
are merely “recommended” fees, thanks to an 1893 state law. You can pay what you want, and we did, offering up $20 for the whole family during each of two visits. Prices for Manhattan hotel rooms are notoriously high—which is why we worked so diligently to get a deal. By travel hacking to amass credit-card points, we sliced our hotel costs to $40 per night at the Holiday Inn Express, a comfortable, centrally located hotel with free, hot breakfast. (In a nutshell, travel hacking is working to accumulate miles, points or elite status to travel for free, or as cheaply as possible.) And, yes, we all stayed in one room and it was a tight fit, but we were rarely there. So what if the breakfast area was chaotic? The free breakfasts and free all-day coffee saved us at least $50 a day. The Midtown location was important, too, because it put us near two subway stops and within easy walking distance of the Empire State Building, Penn Station— and NY Pizza Suprema, where you can find some of the best slices in town for only $4 a piece. When it came to getting around the city, we went hard-core for the subway. The seven-day unlimited ride MetroCards ($30, good for buses and subway) were our tickets to everywhere and anywhere we wanted to go, saving us hundreds of dollars in transportation costs. We even used it to connect to the AirTrain ($5), which brought us to and from JFK. The NYTransit mobile app was our constant guide, and we had few missteps. By the end of the week, the whole family felt like subway experts, with the kids reading, listening to music—and averting their eyes—like natives. On the day we arrived, we barely set down our bags before jumping on the subway for a quick ride to the southern tip of Manhattan, where we caught the Staten Island Ferry. Such a good call. The weather was perfection and the views of the city skyline unmatched. As we pulled away from the dock, we sat in the back of the ferry and watched the metropolis recede. The ferry ride also offered great, free views of the Statue of Liberty. After the ferry ride, we headed to nearby ground zero. Although construction around the September 11 Memorial is still in progress and work continues near the base of One World Trade Center, the building near the site of the 9/11 attacks has risen to its full, impressive
height. We skipped the relatively pricey Memorial Museum ($24 adult, $15 youth), instead spending quiet time at nearby Saint Paul’s Chapel, which has small displays of letters, photos and memorabilia from 9/11. The chapel, where many first responders sought refuge and took breaks after the attacks, is open to the public (free, donations accepted). Some of the pews still bear the gouges made by their heavy equipment. Two other Manhattan freebies competed for highlights of the trip: walking the Brooklyn Bridge, and exploring the High Line, an unusual elevated greenway on Manhattan’s west side. For the bridge walk, we took the subway to Brooklyn so we could stroll with Manhattan in our sights. The outing provided some of the best photos from the trip and although the bridge was fairly crowded, the atmosphere was celebratory. Just remember to stay on the pedestrian side of the stripe; fast-moving bicyclists aren’t shy about their space. Walking the High Line, way up on an elevated freight rail line, provided a more relaxed experience. The 1.45-mile-long pedestrian walkway offers amazing views of sunset over the Hudson—and into the back windows of apartment dwellers. We walked it on a Sunday night, using it to connect for an evening stroll in Greenwich Village. After strolling the length of the High Line, we went in search of a coffeehouse—at nearly 9 pm on a Sunday. Alas, we discovered that bohemians abandon the coffeehouses when the sun goes down. Instead, we discovered a rather garishly lit tea house, selling, not cups of tea, but a bewildering range of loose teas and infusions. The girls were enchanted, falling down an Alice-in-Wonderland rabbit hole, spending 40 minutes just before—and slightly after—closing as a saleswoman at David’s Tea pulled tin after tin down from the seemingly endless shelves, insisting that they smell this one, that one, carefully explaining the differences. When we finally left, having purchased $10 worth of tea more out of a sense of decency than need, the key turned quietly in the door. The shopkeeper had clearly relished an audience. And we had enjoyed another great show. There was Newsies, of course. But also the drum-
line performance on the High Line, the mime in Central Park, the man playing an ancient Chinese instrument in the subway—and the city itself. We all agree that this is the best trip we’ve ever taken. For me, one of the best parts came after we returned home. My e-mail pinged with an alert that my creditcard statement was ready. I hopped online and clicked “pay now” as easily as swiping an NYC MetroCard. IF YOU GO Free attractions: ■ Walk the Brooklyn Bridge: We took the subway to Brooklyn to walk with Manhattan in our sights. It takes less than an hour, depending on crowds. ■ September 11 Memorial and Saint Paul’s Chapel: We skipped the September 11 Memorial Museum ($24 adult, $15 youth), instead spending time at the memorial and exhibits at the nearby Saint Paul’s Chapel, which first responders used as a refuge and resting place after the attacks (free; donations accepted). ■ Staten Island Ferry: Sit in back when leaving Manhattan for great views of the Statue of Liberty and city skyline. You have to get off and re-board for the return trip. ■ The High Line: Built along an unused 1.45mile section of elevated rail line on the West Side, this park is an unusual, tranquil oasis with views over the Hudson River. ■ Central Park and more: In addition to New York City’s crown jewel, we enjoyed Washington Square Park in Greenwich Village and Bryant Park near Times Square. Find free events: www.nycgovparks.org/events. Getting around: Seven-day unlimited MetroCard, ($30 per person) covers all subway and bus travel. Add a $5 AirTrain ticket to connect from JFK. (Taxis are flat rate from JFK to Manhattan, $54 plus tolls and tip). The NYTransit Mobile Web app is priceless, http:// tripplanner.mta.info/MyTrip. Also, save the subway map (PDF) to your smartphone: http://strib.mn/nycsubway. Accommodations: Holiday Inn Express Madison Square Garden: Free breakfast. Clean, small rooms. Aim for a higher floor: www. madisonsquaregardenhotel.com. ■
Visit the Philippines Year 2015 introduced at World Travel Mart in London THE Philippines joined the World Travel Mart (WTM) to promote Visit the Philippines Year (VPY) 2015, a campaign to raise the country’s international profile next year. Held at the ExCeL Exhibition Center in London, England, earlier this month, the event showcased the global travel trade industries. The Philippines booth caught the eyes of international travel professionals. The Department of Tourism (DOT), with the Tourism Promotions Board (TPB), took the opportunity to present the destination and events-focused VPY 2015 which
complements the government’s “It’s more fun in the Philippines” tourism campaign. At the booth, visitors enjoyed watching the Dinagyang Festival cultural performances by the renowned Lahing Kayumanggi Dance Troupe and Grupo Tribale disc jockey and drum beaters, songs by Filipino crooners and exhibitions by bartenders sharing cocktail mixes of homegrown liquor such as Mango Rum, Manille Calamansi Vodka, Don Papa Rum and others partnered with native Filipino food. Participants get a taste of the “fun” when they visit the country with Filipino-
flavored ice cream as contest prizes. The Philippines also hosted a Blogger Expo where travel connoisseurs shared their experiences in the country; the Mission APP@PHL trivia contest where visitors were asked about Philippine tourism; and a short program thanking the members of the international community that aided the victims of Supertyphoon Yolanda. “The World Travel Mart is clearly an event that matters a lot in terms of generating tourism business for Philippine travel industry partners and creating awareness about the
Philippines as a fun tourism destination,” said Domingo Ramon Enerio III, TPB COO. “To make an assertive presence at WTM, we launched our campaign, Visit the Philippines Year 2015. We are developing, organizing and shall be promoting a yearround calendar of events and activities that will make international and domestic visitors tour our country and truly experience that It’s more fun in the Philippines. These events consist of traditional festivities, commercial events, rural activities and special tourism projects—all integrated into the subject of
music and arts, lifestyle and entertainment, history and culture, business and investment, and adventure, sports and ecotourism,” Enerio added. At WTM, the DOT and TPB highlighted destinations specifically catering to European holiday-makers, such as Huma Island in Coron-Busuanga, Palawan, Boracay, Cebu, Bohol, Camarines Sur and Siargao. They also assisted participating establishments from the Philippines in networking with other travel professionals and gaining media mileage during the event.
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edward carey’s gothic adventure Pages BusinessMirror
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Edward Carey discusses his gothic adventure B M G | Los Angeles Times
these large, heavy-looking wooden objects, and looking at us with a great deal of disapproval. I think all the old objects that are around us are still part of lost time. They’re clues, the single clues to lives that have been. And we’re so cruel to objects! We just throw them out.
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T’S 1875, and all of London’s trash is banished to a wasteland known as “the heaps.” The Iremonger family presides over this grim realm from Heap House, a mansion itself made up of parts of other buildings. Cut off and intermarrying for generations, they have developed their own versions of English names: Moorcus, Pinalippy and Timfy. This whimsically gothic scenario is the brainchild of the English-born writer and illustrator Edward Carey. Heap House (Overlook: 406 pp.), his first foray into fiction for young readers, is part of a trilogy. Iremonger family traditions are idiosyncratic. Each baby is assigned a birth object—a hot water tap, a toast rack, a single woman’s shoe—which he or she must always keep. Young Master Clod Iremonger was born with the power to hear the birth objects announcing their own names. (His birth object is a bath plug called James Henry Hayward.) When a birth object gets lost, Clod is summoned to find it. Along the way he meets a rebellious servant girl, Lucy Pennant, and they team to solve the growing mystery in Heap House. Carey has written and illustrated two novels for adults, Observatory Mansions and Alva and Irva: The Twins Who Saved a City. He spoke by phone from Austin, Texas, where he lives with his wife (writer Elizabeth McCracken) and their two young children.
The young protagonists of Heap House suffer a lot in the course of their adventure. Did you experience great adversity in childhood? Not really. I had a very happy childhood. But I was sent off to boarding school at quite a young age, this massive Victorian house that was suffocated in ivy. I think there is a part of that school in Heap House. One of my brothers said to me, “You do realize the name of the cooks in Heap House, Groom, was the name of the cooks at our school.” I hadn’t even realized I’d done that. What inspired you to turn to children’s fiction, after publishing two novels for adults? Part of the joy of writing for kids is that you have to have a real adventure story. You can get really involved in the fantastic in a way that perhaps you can’t so much in adult fiction. In this trilogy, objects actually speak and sometimes have lives of their own. That was something I’ve always longed to do.
It must have been fun to assign the characters their birth objects. It was tremendous fun. I knew right from the start that Clod would have a plug. They’re not very highly regarded, but they’re enormously useful. And I knew that Pinalippy, whom Clod is assigned to marry, would have a doily, because I despise doilies. Was it freeing to you as a writer to set the story in Victorian London rather than today? Totally. I inhaled Dickens as a kid, and I’ve always been fascinated by the Victorians. So many ridiculous objects they had! They created things like mustache cups, so you wouldn’t wet your mustache when you were drinking tea. And eyebrow combs. What’s happened to all the eyebrow combs? Marvelous things.
The Iremongers are both enthralled and enslaved by their possessions. The relationship seems to reflect the magical thinking of childhood, but more than that it’s a comment on the materialism of our species and its consequences for our planet. Do you have a complicated relationship to objects? Yes, Elizabeth and I collect all sorts of things. We shouldn’t be allowed out of the house because we always come back with something else. But in the book I wanted to explore how, as a child, your first companions are your toys, and you give them voices and you animate them. And you convince yourself—and that’s part of the magic of childhood—that these things are actually alive. Then, when people die, all their objects are left behind them, orphaned. Recently my great aunt died in Wales at the age of 109. Some of her objects came over here to Texas, and it was if bits of her were somehow now here,
Heap House has been described as Dickensian and compared to the work of Lemony Snicket. Dickens was not specifically writing for children; Lemony Snicket is. What do you think is the difference between adult fiction and children’s fiction? Or is there one? I find it frustrating sometimes that everything needs to be pigeonholed. I hope that Heap House is as much for adults as for kids. Some of the writers I really love— Neil Gaiman, Robert Louis Stevenson, Poe—are read by all ages. But with a children’s book, one of the things you absolutely have to have is a plot that moves. I had a huge section about an aunt called Moyball, who had a load of seagulls in her room. It had nothing to do with the plot whatsoever. As much as I loved Moyball and her seagulls, my editor said, “But, you know, what would happen if you took Moyball out?” It was a revelation. I was like, “Yeah. Sorry, Moyball.” Do you think your work is part of a trend toward darkness in children’s literature? I hope so! Well, I didn’t mean Heap House to be as dark as it turned out to be, but I wasn’t going to stop it from being dark. Fairy tales, before they were sanitized,
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AUTHOR Edward Carey and the cover of Heap House.
PHOTO: TOM LANGDON/ OVERLOOK
were very dark, and kids love that. Coraline by Neil Gaiman feels like Beckett for kids. I think there’s plenty of room for that. And I think there’s a danger of being too patronizing to children, having things too sanitized. How do the illustrations figure into your creative process? The whole trilogy started with a drawing of Clod.... I was doodling away, and I drew this really unhappylooking, ill-faced child, with a parting and pink circles under his eyes, in an ill-fitting dinner jacket.... And I wondered, “Well, who are you?” Do you have an ideal reader in mind? Somebody who might be sort of picking up objects on the side of the road and caring for them. At readings, I give out birth objects. Like a pen nib, but it will have a label next to it with a person’s name. And I watch the children holding these objects in the palms of their hands as if they were ducklings. Has becoming a father changed you as a writer? It’s maybe a difference of compassion. Before, I’d be quite willing to dispense with my characters, and now I don’t do it with as much glee. I’m slightly more careful. That doesn’t mean I don’t dispatch most of them, but I do it with maybe a little more tenderness. ■
Carol Burnett is working on a book about her TV show B C K Los Angeles Times COMEDIAN Carol Burnett is working on a book about her television show, she told Rosie O’Donnell before an audience at the 92nd Street Y in New York. The Wall Street Journal reports that Burnett “is writing liner notes about various sketches she performed with cast members” on the show. The Carol Burnett Show ran on CBS from 1967 to 1978. The variety show featured Burnett and a troupe of fellow players: Tim Conway, Harvey Korman, Vicki Lawrence and Lyle Waggoner. The sketches were comedic, often featuring stagy costumes and sometimes broke into song. At the end of many episodes, Burnett
THIS WEEK’S
FROM PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
CAROL BURNETT is working on a book about her television show, she said in an interview this week. AP
HERE are the best sellers for the week that ended on November 2, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide, powered by Nielsen BookScan 2014, The Nielsen Co. Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by PWxyz Llc. HARDCOVER FICTION 1. Gray Mountain, John Grisham, Doubleday 2. The World of Ice & Fire, George R.R. Martin, Bantam 3. The Slow Regard of Silent Things, Patrick Rothfuss, DAW 4. Prince Lestat, Anne Rice, Knopf 5. Havana Storm, Cussler/Cussler, Putnam 6. Pegasus, Danielle Steel, Delacorte 7. Leaving Time, Jodi Picoult, Ballantine 8. Edge of Eternity, Ken Follett, Dutton 9. The Handsome Man’s Deluxe Café, Alexander McCall Smith, Pantheon
uslim rebels will ensure economic gains from this year’s peace agreement are shared evenly to sustain the truce and alleviate suffering in the country’s poorest region, seen to play a major role in the administration’s pursuit of an 8.5-percent gross domestic product (GDP) growth goal in 2016.
“Everyone should feel the fruits of peace,” Mohammad Yacob, 44, executive director of the Bangsamoro Development Agency, said in a November 10 interview in Manila. “We don’t want people to feel they are still oppressed. The only solution to a lasting peace is if you involve communities, make them self-sufficient.” President Aquino is seeking to create an autonomous political region called Bangsamoro in Mindanao, after signing a peace accord with Muslim rebels in March to end a four-decade insurgency. Mindanao is the least-developed island in the Philippines, as the Muslim rebels, bandits and private armies deterred investors from tapping resources, including about $312 billion in mineral deposits.
EDWARD CAREY DISCUSSES HIS GOTHIC ADVENTURE »D4
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INSIDE
ORONTO—Toronto erased an 11-point deficit in the fourth quarter and overran Orlando, 104-100, on Tuesday, notching their ninthconsecutive win over the Magic and opening a two-game lead atop the National Basketball Association (NBA) Atlantic Division. Among other games, Dallas’s Dirk Nowitzki set a career scoring record as he helped the Mavericks come back from an even bigger deficit to beat Sacramento, and Memphis’s underperforming reserves lifted to help the Grizzlies beat the Los Angeles Lakers. Toronto’s Kyle Lowry scored 19 points and Terrence Ross had 17 as the Eastern Conference leaders won their fifth-straight game and improved to 7-1. The Raptors have won their first five home games of a season for the first time in 11 years. Evan Fournier scored 24 for Orlando. Dallas’s Dirk Nowitzki became the highest-scoring NBA player born outside of the United States, helping the Mavericks rally from 24 points down to beat Sacramento, 106-98. Nowitzki passed Hakeem Olajuwon for ninth place on the all-time scoring list. The 7-foot German finished with 23 for 26,953 career points, seven more than the Nigerian-born former star of the Houston Rockets. The German hit a jump shot just inside the three-point line to get to 26,947 points, one ahead of the Nigerian-born former star of the Houston Rockets. Olajuwon, who spent 17 years in Houston, retired in 2002 after one season with Toronto. Elvin Hayes is the next on the list at No. 8 with 27,313 points. The 36-year-old Nowitzki, in his 17th season with the Mavericks, is second among active players behind Kobe Bryant, who is fourth all-time. Monta Ellis scored 10 of his 16 points in the third quarter when the Mavericks snatched back the lead. They have won 21-straight regular-season home games against Sacramento. Rudy Gay scored 26 to lead the Kings. Memphis extended its home-court dominance with a 107-102 win over the Lakers. Mike Conley scored 23 points for the Grizzlies, who have won 17-straight regular-season home games. Backup guard Beno Udrih had 16 points for Memphis. Courtney Lee scored 15 as six Grizzlies finished in double figures, including Zach Randolph with 11 points and 10 rebounds. Bryant led the Lakers (1-6) with 28 points, but shot 10 of 26 from the field and surpassed Boston Celtics great John Havlicek for the most missed field goals in an NBA career. Reserve guard Wayne Ellington was not with the Lakers after his father was killed in Philadelphia on Sunday night. Memphis has won 17-straight regular-season home games since a February loss to Dallas. Milwaukee held off a late rally by Oklahoma City to beat the Thunder, 85-78, with OJ Mayo scoring 19 points for the Bucks. Reggie Jackson had 29 points, nine above his season average, for Oklahoma City. Serge Ibaka added 14 as the Thunder fell to 0-5 on the road. The Bucks led by five after three quarters and extended their lead to as much as 11 in the fourth. Oklahoma City cut the lead to four on two free throws by Ibaka with 31 seconds left but got no closer. Portland came back from a 23-point deficit in the first half to beat Charlotte, 102-100, thanks chiefly to 29 points from Damian Lillard. San Antonio beat Golden State, 113-100, with Tony Parker contributing 28 points and seven assists and Kawhi Leonard scoring 19 as the Spurs. The defending NBA champions played their aging Big Three—Parker, Manu Ginobili and Tim Duncan—on consecutive nights to pull off San Antonio’s most difficult back-to-back victories. The Spurs rallied past the Clippers, 89-85, on Monday in Los Angeles before cooling off one of the league’s hottest teams in Oakland.cKlay Thompson scored 29 points, and Harrison Barnes had 22 points and eight rebounds for the Warriors, who have lost two straight after a 5-0 start under new coach Steve Kerr. Damian Lillard had 29 points and the Trail Blazers trailed by as many as 23 points in the first half before rallying in the fourth quarter to beat the Hornets. Charlotte’s Gary Neal made a lay-up at the final buzzer that would have sent the game into overtime, but the refs reversed the call after a review.
A broader look at today’s business
would take the stage in street clothes and take questions from the studio audience— and let out a Tarzan yell—bringing her closer to those watching on TV. Burnett, 81, is the recipient of multiple Emmy Awards, Golden Globes, a Tony, the Kennedy Center Honor and the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor. She is the author of the memoirs This Time Together, One More Time and Carrie and Me: A Mother-Daughter Love Story. Although the conversation with Burnett and O’Donnell is not currently online, many other 92nd Street Y interviews are available free, including George R.R. Martin with Laura Miller, Dick Cavett with Alec Baldwin, and, in separate appearances, Supreme Court Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer.
10. Burn, Patterson/Ledwidge, Little, Brown HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. Make It Ahead, Ina Garten, Clarkson Potter 2. Killing Patton, O’Reilly/Dugard, Henry Hold 3. Yes Please, Amy Poehler, HarperCollins/Dey Street 4. The Motivation Manifesto, Brendon Burchard, Hay House 5. Dreamers and Deceivers, Glenn Beck, S&S/Threshold 6. Not That Kind of Girl, Lena Dunham, Random House 7. Jeter Unfiltered, Derek Jeter, S&S/ Gallery/Jeter 8. Guinness World Records 2015, Guinness World Records, Guinness World Records 9. You Can, You Will, Joel Osteen, FaithWords ($24) 10. Agents of the Apocalypse, David Jeremiah. Tyndale ($24.99). MCT
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U.S. President Barack Obama (right) smiles after a group of children waved flags and flowers to cheer him during a welcome ceremony with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, on Wednesday. When Xi took the reins of a booming China two years ago, Obama saw an opportunity to remake America’s relationship with the Asian power. But even after Obama’s unusually robust efforts to forge personal ties with Xi, the two leaders are meeting in Beijing amid significant tensions, both old and new. AP/Andy Wong
BIR clarifies ruling OBAMA, XI HIGHLIGHT on preferential tax AREAS OF AGREEMENT rates under treaties
Aquino stands pat on Calax deal rebid
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resident Aquino on Tuesday reaffirmed his earlier “inclination” to rebid the stalled P35.42billion Cavite-Laguna Expressway (Calax) deal, despite serious misgivings aired by local and foreign trade groups after his pronouncement. “We are obligated to get the best deal for our people,” Mr. Aquino told reporters in an interview at the Philippine Embassy, after attending the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) forum in Beijing. President Aquino cited as significant the P8.4-billion difference between the winning bid of P11.65 billion submitted by Team Orion of the Ayala-Aboitiz group and disqualified bidder San Miguel Corp.-Optimal Infrastructure Development Inc.’s (SMC-OIDI) P20.1-billion premium offer. He said the amount could be used to fund the construction of government infrastructure, such as socialized housing. Asked about the negative reactions from the concerned trade
By David Cagahastian
he Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) has given assurance that the Philippines will honor its tax-treaty commitments granting preferential tax rates to foreign corporations, but clarified that taxpayers availing themselves of the preferential treatment under the treaties must secure a BIR ruling confirming the transactions are, indeed, subject to preferential tax rates. At the International Tax Forum being hosted by the Philippines this week, the BIR said the issue on the self-executory nature of tax treaties entered into by the Philippines has already been settled by the Supreme Court, which said taxpayers availing themselves of preferential tax rates under tax treaties do not have to secure a BIR ruling prior to the transaction as a requirement for the preferential tax rate to apply. “According to the Supreme Court ruling, they don’t have to secure a BIR ruling before the transaction, but they still have to apply for a BIR ruling after the transaction,” said BIR Deputy Commissioner for Legal and Inspection Group Estela Sales at the sidelines of the forum. The discussions in Wednesday’s forum focused on the negotiation and enforcement of tax treaties in light of the coming economic integration of the 10 member-countries of the Asean by end-2015. Under the tax treaties entered into by the Philippines, nonresident aliens and foreign corporations are granted Continued on A8
PESO exchange rates n US 44.9120
P
resident Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping sought to play down points of tension between their two nations on Wednesday, unveiling a flurry of agreements on climate change, military cooperation and trade, while casting their own burgeoning relationship as candid and productive. Yet, areas of discord between the world’s largest economies still bubbled to the surface. Obama pressed Xi on human rights and the pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, while Xi repeatedly reminded his American guest that his nation wants to be seen as an equal to the US. “I believe that President Xi and I have a common understanding on how the relationship between our two countries should move forward,” Obama said, as he closed a three-day trip to China. “Where we have disagreements, we will be candid about our intentions, and we will work to narrow those differences where possible.” The two leaders addressed reporters in a rare joint news conference for the Chinese leader, whose government keeps tight control on the media in the country. Xi first appeared to ignore a question posed to him from an American reporter, who asked about restrictions placed on US news organizations operating in the country, then suggested it was unfavorable coverage that had led to the crackdowns. Obama has made significant personal investments in his relationship with Xi, including a two-day summit at a California estate last year. US officials have seen Xi as a potentially new kind of Chinese leader, with closer ties to the US than Continued on A8
By Butch Fernandez
P
AQUINO: “We are obligated to get the best deal for our people.”
groups that a rebidding could dampen investors confidence in future public-private partnerships projects, Mr. Aquino said he was willing to take the criticisms, rather than be blamed by the people. “Mamimili na ako kung sino ang magagalit sa akin. Siguro maganda nang magalit sila, kaysa taongbayan,” President Aquino said, acknowledging that business leaders have aired opposition to rebid the Calax toll-road project, even as both the Ayala-Aboitiz group and the SMC-OIDI gave separate assurances they would not go to See “Calax,” A2
n japan 0.3889 n UK 71.5089 n HK 5.7920 n CHINA 7.3323 n singapore 34.8047 n australia 38.9658 n EU 56.0367 n SAUDI arabia 11.9702 Source: BSP (12
November 2014)