Cutting oil production
OPEC is in talks to cut the production of oil, which has not been done since the 2008 economic crisis. OPEC output target adjustments
Brent crude oil monthly price $150 per barrel
3 Million barrels per day OPEC’s preferred price level
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Oil plunge a panacea for crude-reliant Asia A
renewed plunge in oil prices is a worrying sign of weakness in the global economy that could shake governments dependent on oil revenues. It is also a panacea as pump prices fall, giving individuals more disposable income and lowering costs for many businesses. Partly because of the shale-oil boom in the US, the world is awash in oil; but demand from major economies is weak, so prices are falling. The latest slide was triggered by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ (Opec) decision on Thursday to leave its production target at 30 million barrels a day. Member-nations of the cartel are worried they’ll lose market share if they lower production. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils, was at $72.50 a barrel on Friday, down nearly 30 percent in the past three months and at its lowest in four years. US crude oil slid 7.5 percent to near $68 a barrel on Friday, and is down 27 percent over three months. »Continued on A2
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B3-4 Saturday, November 29, 2014
ARIS—French authorities have detained two people suspected of selling jihadi DVDs and other propaganda, under a new anti-terrorism law aimed at stopping French extremists from joining fighters abroad. The Interior Ministry said in a statement on Thursday that the two were taken into custody on Wednesday night in the village of Amberieuen-Bugey in southern France. The ministry said it’s the first time anyone has been detained under the new law, finalized this month. Hundreds of French extremists have joined fighters for the Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq, including young teenagers and families, some from Muslim families and some who are converts. The French government is particularly concerned that extremists will return and stage attacks at home, and is trying to stop them from traveling in the first place. AP
Mosul residents: IS group cuts phone networks in Iraq city
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AGHDAD—Militants from the Islamic State (IS) group blocked all mobile-phone networks in the largest Iraqi city they control, Mosul, accusing informants in the city of tipping off coalition forces to their whereabouts, residents told the Associated Press on Thursday. Residents described a scene of “chaos” and “paralysis” in the city on Thursday, a day after the militants announced their decision on their Mosul-based radio network. Businesses were at a standstill as residents tried to understand what was happening, they said. Some are still able to access the Internet, which operates under a different network. All residents spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal. The militants seized the city in June during their lightning advance across northern Iraq, after the Iraqi military virtually crumbled when confronted by the group. The US began launching air strikes on August 8 and has conducted at least 22 strikes around the city of Mosul alone. The city has come to represent the expanding power and influence of the extremist group, which was born in Iraq but spread to Syria, where it grew exponentially in the chaos of the country’s civil war. Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the group’s reclusive leader, made his first video appearance in Mosul in July to announce his vision for a self-styled caliphate, a form of Islamic state. Baghdad-based political analyst Hadi Jalo said this move by the IS group is a clear sign that the militants are losing confidence after a string of recent victories by Iraqi troops, backed by Shiite and Kurdish militiamen. AP
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For 600 Syrian migrants, harrowing sail ends in Greece
AttAck cAme After suicide cAr-bomber hit british embAssy cAr
Taliban attack rocks upscale Kabul district
A gReeK coast-guard officer, wearing a mask for fear of infectious disease, stands next to a small group of immigrants on a launch carrying them to shore from a crippled smuggling ship with hundreds of people at the coastal Cretan port of ierapetra, greece, on Thursday. The ship, whose passengers are mostly syrians, including children, women and elderly men, suffered engine failure 70 nautical miles off ierapetra on Tuesday. AP/PetRos GIANNAkouRIs
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ERAPETRA, Greece—Hour after hour, the coast-guard boats shuttled from the crippled freighter to a concrete pier, discharging a steady flow of humanity: Families with small children, blackclad elderly women, battered-looking youths with backpacks. For nearly 600 migrants, most of them fleeing the conflict in Syria for Europe, the harrowing journey on a smuggling ship that broke down in gale-force winds ended on Thursday in the southern town of Ierapetra on the Greek island of Crete. The Baris cargo ship lost engine power on Tuesday in international waters, and limped into Ierapetra at sunrise after being slowly towed for 40 hours by a Greek navy frigate. In brief interviews while being shepherded away by police, many refugees said they had fled violence by militants from the Islamic State group in Syria or Iraq. “They attacked us and killed our people, so we came here to save ourselves,” said one man who said he was from Iraq. He only identified himself by his first name, Mohaned, to protect his kin, who stayed behind, from retribution. Another, who identified himself as Qassim, from the besieged northern Syrian town of Kobani, said he and his family had spent 11 days on the Baris. “It was a very challenging operation: A large number of people in a confined space...after leaving stressful circumstances,” Serafeim Tsokas, the head of Greece’s Civil Protection Authority, said. “After serious illnesses on the ship were ruled out...everyone was brought ashore safely.” Authorities said its passengers were exhausted but overall in good health. The number of immigrants on board was revised down from an estimate of more than 700 to 585 after all were brought to shore. Nineteen of them were arrested on human smuggling charges. As dozens of Ierapetra residents looked on from behind a police cordon, newly disembarked passengers received preliminary care and food before being taken to temporary shelter at a basketball arena. One young woman knelt and kissed the
AfghAn security forces inspect a British embassy vehicle, which was targeted in a suicide attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Thursday. AP/RAhmAt Gul
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ABUL, Afghanistan—Taliban fighters staged an attack on Thursday evening in an upscale district in the Afghan capital Kabul.
Witnesses described multiple explosions and bursts of gunfire in the Wazir Akbar Khan district, which contains numerous foreign embassies and compounds housing international agencies and companies—as well as the homes of some senior Afghan government officials. The attack came hours after a suicide car-bomber struck a British embassy vehicle, killing five people including a British citizen. Kabul Police Chief Gen. Mohammad Zahir said there were three explosions followed by extended gunfire. A Taliban spokesman said the intended target was a guesthouse in the district occupied by foreigners. The spokesman, speaking on condition of anonymity, refused to give further details, adding only that the target of the attack was “enemies.” Afghan police flooded into the area and locked down the surrounding streets. Footage from area security cameras showed heavily armed security forces and armored vehicles deploying in large numbers. The attack took place near the compound of the development agency International Relief and Development. The agency’s head
of security, Tony Haslem, told the Associated Press the attack lasted about 45 minutes and he heard rocket-propelled grenades and automatic weapons being fired. Deputy Interior Minister Mohammad Ayoub Salangi confirmed that the target of the attack was a guesthouse in the diplomatic area. He said no foreigners had been killed. “One Nepalese guard was wounded, but all the foreigner are fine,” Salangi said. Three attackers had been killed, two by Nepalese guards at the guesthouse, he said. “One of the attackers blew himself up,” he added. Kabul has come under regular attack in recent weeks. Earlier Thursday, a suicide bomber targeted a British embassy vehicle, killing at least five people, including a British security guard, officials said. An Afghan national, who was driving the vehicle, was also killed, and a second British security guard was wounded, Britain’s Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said in a statement. Afghanistan’s Interior Ministry Spokesman Seddiq Sediqqi confirmed that four Afghans were killed in the attack and said another 33 civilians were wounded.
Earlier the British Embassy said no diplomats were riding in the car at the time it was hit. Hammond, speaking at a news conference in Rome, called the attack “senseless and cowardly” and paid tribute to those killed. “Let me take this opportunity to offer my condolences to those who lost their lives this morning, the families and friends of those who lost their lives and were injured in this appalling attack,” Hammond said. “It reminds us once again of the risks that our personnel take every day in trying to help the Afghans to build a better future for their country and by helping them to do so to protect our own security and our own interests.” Police said a car packed with explosives rammed the heavily armored British embassy vehicle, exploding on impact and sending a huge plume of dust and smoke into the air. The midmorning attack happened on the traffic-choked road between Kabul and Jalalabad city. Witnesses said at least a dozen civilian cars were damaged by the blast, and the road was strewn with smoldering debris from the British vehicle. Video footage showed the roof of the embassy jeep had been blown off and flung about 15 meters along the road, an indication that it was a powerful blast, as the vehicles are built to withstand substantial impact. Taliban insurgents claimed responsibility for the attack in a brief statement. AP
rough harbor concrete, and a child held a piece of cardboard that read: “Thanks for Greece government saving children in the ship.” It was one of the largest single crossings of its kind in recent years. Tens of thousands of people fleeing war and poverty in African and the Middle East risk the journey to Europe every year, paying smuggling gangs to transport them in usually unseaworthy craft ranging from dinghies to aging rust-buckets. Most end up in Italy. According to Greek security and health officials, about 500 of the migrants said they were Syrians. One official involved in the operation said the passengers had been charged $2,000 to $6,000 to be taken to Italy, and about 20 suspected smugglers were arrested on the ship. He asked not to be named as he was not authorized to brief the press. According to the latest figures from the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, at least 3,000 people have drowned or disappeared trying to make the trip this year—almost 2 percent of the estimated total of 165,000 to attempt the journey. The 77-meter cargo ship lost power the same day Pope Francis called on European governments to do a better job of welcoming migrants in speeches to the European Parliament and Council of Europe. Francis said “we cannot allow the Mediterranean to become a vast cemetery!” The mayor of Ierapetra, a town of 16,000 people on a wide, open bay overlooked by jagged hills, said he sympathized with the migrants. But stretched local authorities couldn’t offer them shelter indefinitely, Theodossis Kaladzakis said. “Ierapetra can look after these people for a week, but afterward, unfortunately, we simply won’t have that ability,” he said. “It’s not that we don’t want to. We just can’t.” Doctors conducted preliminary health checks and polio vaccinations for children from Syria, where the disease has made a comeback, senior Greek public health official Panayiotis Efstathiou said. Kurds, Afghans and Palestinians were also aboard the ship, which originated in Antalya, Turkey, Efstathiou told the Associated Press. AP
Israel foils attacks plan by Hamas
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ERUSALEM—Israel uncovered a West Bank network of Hamas militants planning a series of large-scale attacks against Israelis in Jerusalem and other locations, the country’s domestic security agency said on Thursday. The targets were to include Jerusalem’s soccer stadium and light-rail system, and the militants were also instructed to abduct Israelis in the West Bank and abroad and carry out car bombings and other attacks, according to Shin Bet, the agency. The plot was exposed in an investigation sparked by a two bombs that were set off by a timer in the West Bank in late August, the agency reported to local media and on its web site. The blasts caused no injuries. Officials said the investigation led to the arrest of more than 30 suspects, most of whom were recruited by Hamas in Jordan as early as 2012 and received
military training in various locations, including Jordan, Syria, Turkey and the Gaza Strip. Several weapons, including firearms and bomb components, were also recovered, the officials said. There was no immediate response from Hamas to the arrests. According to the Shin Bet, the reported plots and other exposed networks showed that militant Islamic movement Hamas wants to rehabilitate its military infrastructure in the West Bank to challenge both Israel and President Mahmoud Abbas’ Palestinian Authority, which rules the West Bank. Hamas forcefully wrested control of the Gaza Strip from the Palestinian Authority in 2007. Despite a reconciliation accord signed this year between Hamas and Abbas’s Fatah movement, mutual mistrust persists. In recent years, both Palestinian
security forces and Israel’s military have checked Hamas’s power in the West Bank. In June, Israel launched a wide-scale crackdown on the organization, arresting hundreds of suspected sympathizers following the kidnapping of three Jewish teenagers, who were later found dead. On several occasions, Israel warned of Hamas plots to destabilize the Palestinian Authority run by Abbas, who opposes armed struggle and has negotiated with Israel. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised Israeli forces for “foiling very dangerous terrorist actions that could have claimed many victims.” While this particular intelligence operation was publicized, others remain secret, directed at “Hamas, which challenges the existence of the Jewish nation-state and, in effect, the existence of Jews in general,” the prime minister said. Los Angeles Times/TNS
WORLD
PAlesTiniAn security forces take off a hamas flag from the demonstrators during a protest against israeli restrictions at Jerusalem’s Al Aqsa Mosque in the West Bank City of nablus on november 7. The holy site in Jerusalem’s Old City is known to Jews as the Temple Mount and is the most sacred spot in Judaism. Muslims revere it as the noble sanctuary, islam’s third-holiest site and home to the Al-Aqsa Mosque and the gold-topped Dome of the Rock. AP/NAsseR IshtAyeh
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THE EFFECTS OF PSYCHOLOGICAL ABUSE CAN LAST A LIFETIME D
Developing Godly qualities
EAR God, we wish to please You the best way we can. Help us learn to love the things You hold dear. Your friends display the qualities of love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness, goodness, faith, mildness, self-control (Galatians 5:22-23). May we be inspired daily to display too the Godly qualities of a true Christian.Amen. WHAT DOES THE BIBLE REALLY TEACH? AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
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Saturday, November 29, 2014
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The effects of childhood psychological abuse can last a lifetime
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B D T Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
ITTSBURGH—One 58-year-old woman from Indiana, Pennsylvania, still struggles daily from memories of her father forcing her, her mother and siblings at gunpoint against a wall, while he shot a ring of bullets around them. Robin, 43, of the North Hills, still lives with her mother, who she says has verbally abused her since childhood. Robin said she has repeatedly been told she’s worthless and a big disappointment. Now she’s undergoing weekly therapy, while seeing an abuse counselor, and taking medications to help her function. Still another 28-year-old woman of Washington, Pennsylvania, who asked that her name not be published, says she’s so emotionally terrorized by her mother that she’s adopted a survival strategy: “They say that time heals all wounds, but I’ve found distance to be more helpful.” It has long been clear: Childhood abuse of any kind—physical, sexual or psychological—has profound impacts on children, adversely affecting mental and physical health throughout life. The chronic levels of stress hormones kill off brain cells and shrink the hippocampus, the brain’s emotional center. Now a growing arm of research is pointing at the impacts of psychological and emotional abuse—the constant pronouncements that the child is worthless, stupid or doomed to failure, with chronic neglect causing its own dire impacts. A study published last month in the American Psychological Association journal, Psychological Trauma, Theory, Research, Practice and Policy, analyzed 5,616 youths in the National Child Traumatic Stress Network Core Data Set with lifetime histories of one or more of the three types of abuse—psychological maltreatment (emotional abuse or emotional neglect), physical abuse and sexual abuse. Most (62 percent) had a history of psychological maltreatment and 24 percent of all cases were exclusively that type of abuse, which included “inflicted bullying, terrorizing, coercive control, severe insults, debasement, threats or overwhelming demands” from a caregiver. Neglect includes a child being shunned or isolated. Psychological abuse during childhood becomes encoded in the brain. The memories become tyrannical, heightening the risk of high rates of depression, anxiety disorders, low self-esteem or post-traumatic stress.
Suicides among these victims occur at the same rate, and sometimes at a higher rate, than among children who were physically or sexually abused, the study says. The psychological effects also can lead to chronic health problems, including heart disease and diabetes. Impacts also can include problems dealing with others, isolation or desensitization or difficulty in dealing with authority. Some resort to self-injury. ■■■ TAMIKA, 35, of Bellevue, Pennsylvania, stepped forward to tell her story about persistent childhood abuse she experienced that has forged a difficult adulthood. She said her mother, who now lives in California, called her ugly and worthless, once impulsively cutting off her bun of hair to give her an uneven chop, only to deride her for being bald. She also would cut off her ponytails for no reason. The AfricanAmerican child was verbally abused on a daily basis, with her mother chiding her dark complexion, she said. There was also some physical abuse, she said. Based on lifelong self-analysis, Tamika says she believes she was mistreated because she resembled her father, who disappeared from the family in Mississippi when she was a young child. “The problem with my mother is that she had such evil intent toward my father, and I looked like him. So she tortured me because she wanted to torture him,” said Tamika, who spent years in foster homes and now is a single mother of two. “There were negative comments—that I would amount to nothing, that I would always be on the street, that no one wanted me. “To this day you still feel that no one will ever want you,” she said. Robin of the North Hills said her mother was controlling and never once said, “I love you.” “She would speak for me and to me, and I wasn’t allowed to speak,” she said. “She put me in the closet for hours for bad grades. She was badgering, calling me stupid, dummy and that I would never amount to nothing. I was always nervous around her and never wanted to tell her anything. If I brought home a friend, she would make the friend go home. She tried to be the center of attention. I will never hear something nice from her.” In time, she retreated into her own mind. She got involved with the wrong friends, which persists to this day. She married and has a young daughter, who is her sole source of joy, she said. But her husband committed suicide after she announced she was gay. She moved
from job to job, quick to quit whenever reprimanded. “I didn’t give notice. I just say: bye-bye.” In time, Robin would be diagnosed with bipolar disorder and found herself taking 10 prescribed medications, including antidepressants and mood stabilizers. She had electric shock treatment. “I could write a horror book,” she said. In recent years, she began dealing with the issue. She found a doctor who replaced the medications with one that stabilizes her mood and emotions, along with help from her therapist and abuse counselor. “I’ve only started dealing with it recently,” Robin said of her mother’s behavior. And yet she can’t forgive, let alone forget. “Your mother is supposed to be your best friend. Not me.” ■■■ AMONG the three types of abuse, psychological maltreatment was most strongly associated with depression, general anxiety disorder, social anxiety disorder, attachment problems and substance abuse, the study states. Psychological abuse that occurs along with other types of abuse caused significantly more severe and far-ranging negative outcomes than when a child was involved in physical or sexual abuse. Maltreatment can be so impactful that the study equates it with the impacts on children who simultaneously had been sexually and physically abused. It leads to behavioral issues at school, with attachment problems and self-injurious behavior. Substantiating psychological abuse is difficult for caseworkers because there are no physical wounds, said study leader Joseph Spinazzola, vice president of the Justice Resource Institute and executive director of its trauma center in Brookline, Massachusetts. “We were surprised at how frequently psychological abuse was associated with the worst impacts of any maltreatment types,” he said. “Psychological abuse is like a hidden stain, and these people are stained with the sense of who they are.” They don’t like themselves, he said. They expect to fail. They have problems finding healthy relationships. They internalize messages that they are inferior and unworthy of love and success. “It leads people to hate themselves,” Spinazzola said. And, yet, the person often ends up spending a lifetime trying to establish a connection with the abusive mother or caregiver, even if they can’t make it happen. People innately seek to connect with their parent, with studies showing young monkeys preferring
to stay with their mothers and starve rather than be separated with access to food. “Those who never had security as children never let that go,” Spinazzola said. “And when people chronically are stuck there, the yearning for a connection doesn’t go away. Their target is the perpetrator [of abuse]. The person is longing for love and care. It’s ironic and sad.” ■■■ THOSE abused in childhood struggle to come to terms with their past while fighting urges to blame themselves. The 28-year-old Washington, Pennsylvania, woman said she decided to flee her mother, who was controlling to the point of being emotionally smothering. “I will never be able to talk to her on the phone again, her voice is so triggering,” she said, noting she’s been in therapy for three years with medications for depression. But she said she’s considering sending her mother in California an e-mail to reconnect with her and check on her health. “I know that I will not have a chance to see her again before she dies. I love her so deeply, but the hurt is deeper,” she said. The Indiana woman, whose father terrorized the family with guns, said she witnessed her father beating her mother and also was severely beaten by him. One time she grabbed a shotgun out of his hands. Another time, she wrestled with him as he wielded a loaded .41 Magnum revolver. Her mother grabbed the gun and fired it at him as he fled the house. She said she suffers post-traumatic stress and generalized anxiety disorders, with little help. But she married a man who’s now helping her deal with her past. “I am finally, after years of struggle, seeking help for emotional damage as a child,” she said. “I am now working via art to try to heal. I have reached out to someone who can perhaps guide me to therapy so I can fully heal.” But she also added, “I still loved him.” Tamika, who works in social services, says her only sources of joy are helping others in her job and raising her son, 8, and daughter, 1. Her therapist, she said, told her she has borderline personality disorder, which she links to childhood detachment from her mother and the lack of nurturing. She also cites problems with relationships, which she flees the moment she senses trouble. One time when a teacher called her mother, her mother claimed she had no daughter. Such memories feed her self-doubt. “Things haunt you,” Tamika said. “I just want people to know that the psychological torture will stay with you.” ■
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it’s going to be tight Sports
IT’S GOING TO BE TIGHT
A MOUNTAIN OF A HILL By Mike Bresnahan Los Angeles Times
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ARMELO ANTHONY or LeBron James made up Plan A. Pau Gasol was Plan B. Jordan Hill? Is there such a thing as Plan J? The Lakers re-signed Hill only after it became apparent that neither Anthony nor James would head west and Gasol would travel east. Then the Lakers acquired Jeremy Lin and Carlos Boozer, either
of whom was a good bet to be the Lakers’ second-best player. Plenty of Lakers followers, intoxicated by a top-10 draft pick, predicted rookie Julius Randle would be more productive than Hill. They were wrong. Hill has established himself as the Lakers’ second-most important player after Kobe Bryant, recently ending a career-high run of six consecutive double-doubles in a season devoid of overall Lakers happiness. “Jordan Hill is somebody that we’re game-planning for,” Denver Coach Brian Shaw said earlier this week, possibly the first time such a phrase was ever uttered. He leads the National Basketball Association in offensive rebounds (4.3 per game) and averages 13.7 points
and 9.8 total rebounds. He’s added a midrange jumper after working out during the off-season with former Lakers sharpshooter Jodie Meeks. The two-year, $18-million contract Hill signed to stay with the Lakers no longer raises anybody’s eyebrows. Well, almost nobody. “I forgot what he signed for,” Lakers Coach Byron Scott said recently. He was reminded by a reporter. “That’s pretty good,” Scott said, raising his eyebrows. Hill, 27, more than doubled the $3.6 million he made last season. It was met with skepticism in many NBA corners. He averaged only 20.8 minutes. Didn’t average double figures in scoring (9.7 points) or rebounds (7.4). Sometimes
is in the Y (above) takes a RORY MCILRO Chalmers AP Greg Friday. hunt as t lead on one-sho
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The Associated Press
YDNEY—Two-time former champion Greg Chalmers took a one-stroke lead on Friday at the Australian Open after a five-under 66, while marquee attractions Rory McIlroy and Adam Scott weren’t far behind on a tough day for scoring. Chalmers had seven birdies in his second round to move to five-under 137 after 36 holes. Defending champion McIlroy played in difficult afternoon conditions at The Australian Golf Club and he persevered for an up-and-down 69 to be in a group tied for second. Scott and American Jordan Spieth played together in calmer morning conditions and Spieth (72) was in a group tied for sixth, two behind. Scott, who moved from potential cut to contention with a 66, was three strokes behind.
showed good bursts but would fade quickly. Hill isn’t the scoffing type. But he came as close to it as possible while discussing what changed this season. “I got the minutes. This is what I’ve been waiting for,” he said. “I knew once I got the minutes I was going to progress and show them what they bought.” Then he mentioned former Lakers Coach Mike D’Antoni, who helped Hill get career-highs almost across the board last season but wanted him to stay in one spot—the post. “D’Antoni wanted me to stand down there, just try to clean up and do the dirty work. I was already struggling for minutes with him so I couldn’t do nothing but listen to him,” Hill said. “Now
After two rounds, there were only 16 players under par. The group of four tied with McIlroy included American Conrad Shindler, who shot 68. Last year Schindler donated all his $15,000 prize money from his first win as a pro on a US developmental circuit to a relief fund for victims of tornadoes in Oklahoma. Chalmers, who won the Australian Open in 1998 and 2011, said the swirling winds on Friday made club selection difficult. “It seemed to move around a little bit and change direction,” Chalmers said. “Sometimes you think you should be downwind and because you’ve turned in a certain direction, you’re actually into the wind. I think I changed clubs two or three times on shots.” McIlroy only had only one par on the back nine—the 10th. The others, from the 11th, went birdie, bogey, bogey, eagle, birdie, bogey, birdie, birdie. He also birdied the ninth with about a 70-foot putt, but also plunked balls in the water on two holes for bogeys. “I felt like I had an opportunity today to maybe shoot a good one and put a little bit
I’ve got Byron Scott, who trusts me, and I can play my all-around game.” It’s a game that has added a midrange attack—he hit three in a row to help keep the Lakers in a recent game against Houston—and primarily features offensive rebounds. Lots of them. Only Tyson Chandler and Zach Randolph come close almost 20 percent into the season, each averaging 3.9 a game. “I’m just relentless on the glass. I feel like nobody can get me off it,” Hill said. “I feel like I can score at will. I’ve just got to keep it going.” His previous career-high was two consecutive double-doubles, a streak he tripled until getting 11 points and only seven rebounds on Wednesday against Memphis.
he bidding process for the fresh auction of the P35.42billion Cavite-Laguna Expressway (Calax) deal will be launched next month, officials from the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) disclosed on Friday.
The agency, according to a highly placed source, is planning to publish the project’s invitation to bid by December. “The department aims to start the bidding process by next month. The DPWH is just finalizing the details of the rebidding,” the insider said in a phone interview. This information was confirmed by DPWH Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Officer in Charge Ariel C. Angeles, who said the agency will start publishing the invitation by the second week of December. “Hopefully, we could start the process by the second week of December. We just have to come up with a resolution and have it approved by higher authorities, including our secretary,” he said, referring to Public Works Secretary Rogelio L. Singson. The agency, he added, will final-
China Overtakes Japan as World’s Second Biggest Stock Market
ize the resolution by next week. “We have to come up with the details of the bidding process. We aim to issue the resolution by next week,” he noted. The source, meanwhile, said one of the considerations for the rebidding is to conduct it under a singlestage process to shorten the time frame of the auction. “Substantially, it will be under the same terms and conditions. The department is considering to implement the auction under a single-stage bidding process, but it is open to new investors, if any,” the source said. The insider noted that the four qualified bidders for the original contract still have to qualify to win the project. The minimum premium bid for the project, the source said, would be Continued on A2
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| Saturday, November 29, 2014 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
By Dennis Passa
By Lorenz S. Marasigan
Del Castillo writes 30
BusinessMirror
Greg Chalmers has seven birdies in the second round to move to five-under 137 after 36 holes, as defending champion Rory McIlroy plays in difficult afternoon conditions at The Australian Golf Club and perseveres for an up-and-down 69 to be in a group tied for second.
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France: Police arrest 2 over jihadi propaganda
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of space between myself and the rest of the field, but it didn’t really pan out that way,” McIlroy said. Spieth had to call for a rules official on the par-3 fourth hole when a marshal stood on his ball, but neglected to tell him when he got to the green. Members of the gallery informed Spieth, and after he took a drop, the American fluffed his chip and missed his putt for par. On the way to the next hole, he angrily flung his ball into a creek. His round ended well with birdies on his last two holes, but that wasn’t enough to make it feel like a good day for Spieth. “It was a struggle, big-time struggle,” Spieth said. “I wasn’t hitting it well. If I wasn’t putting well I may have shot 45 on the back nine.” Scott, starting on the 10th tee on Friday, made quick amends for his opening-round 74, which left him in 82nd place and in danger of missing the cut. He eagled the par-5 14th and had two birdies to make the turn in 32, then birdied the par-4 sixth coming home. “Yesterday I got off to a bad start, and I didn’t scramble well when I had to and it started to get away from me,” Scott said. “Today a couple of good shots coming up 14 and I made an eagle and momentum is on your side.” Scott said the reason scoring has been difficult is the mostly contoured greens at The Australian. “I think the greens were certainly testing us, getting to understand the slopes on the greens and especially around the edges,” Scott said. “So getting it very close to the hole is not that easy. I think the greens have to be the defense because there is no rough.” Players on Friday wore black ribbons on their hats or shirts in memory of cricketer Phillip Hughes, who died on Thursday, two days after being hit in the head by a ball during a match at the nearby Sydney Cricket Ground.
Scott wants more, believe it or not. Then again, he wouldn’t be a coach if he was completely satisfied. “He’s scoring for us, still rebounding for us. He’s playing a lot more minutes than he probably anticipated,” Scott said. “He showed me in training camp he could knock down that little 17-foot shot on a consistent basis. I think we also have to mix up getting him back in the post, as well. “He’s been very valuable for us, and he’s played extremely well, and I think he can play better.” LAKERS center Jordan Hill (27), seen here »shooting over the Denver Nuggets’ Darrell
sports Arthur in their game over the weekend, is filling up some big shoes. AP
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eteran newspaperman, columnist and radio broadcaster Romeo “Butch” del Castillo passed away on November 28, 2014. He had been battling colon cancer with as much fire and grace as he could bring to the fight. He was 73. Known for his incisive and indepth reportage and knowledge of the day-to-day business of running a publication, del Castillo served as president of the National Press Club of the Philippines (NPC) in 1998. He was also a member of the Samahang Plaridel, an association
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hina surpassed Japan as the world’s second-largest stock market for the first time in three years, amid growing investor confidence that policy-makers in Beijing will revive the economy with monetary stimulus. China’s market capitalization climbed to $4.48 trillion on Thurs-
day after a 33-percent increase this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Japan’s slipped to $4.46 trillion and has dropped 3.2 percent since the end of December. China was briefly the second-biggest market, behind the US, in March 2011, after an earthquake in Japan sent shares tumbling in Tokyo.
While the weakening yen played a role in Japan’s shrinking market value in dollar terms, the Shanghai Composite Index has climbed three times as much as Tokyo’s Topix this year. China cut interest rates for the first time since 2012 last week and economists predict authorities will See “China,” A2
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PESO exchange rates n US 44.9160
n japan 0.3815 n UK 70.7158 n HK 5.7937 n CHINA 7.3163 n singapore 34.6040 n australia 38.3865 n EU 56.0013 n SAUDI arabia 11.9706 Source: BSP (28 November 2014)