Cyber Information

January 31, 2008

Strong aftershock jolts eastern Indonesia

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JAKARTA - A strong 5.9-magnitude aftershock rocked an eastern Indonesian province on Thursday, one day after a 6.6-magnitude quake prompted a brief tsunami alert, the meteorology and geophysics office said.

The aftershock struck at 10:41 am (0141 GMT) and was centered 248 kilometers northwest of Saumlaki town in Maluku province, the office said in a statement.

There was no risk of a tsunami, the office said.

Indonesia sits on the Pacific "Ring of Fire" where continental plates meet, causing frequent seismic and volcanic activity.

The archipelagic nation was hardest hit by the earthquake-triggered Asian tsunami in December 2004 which killed an estimated 168,000 people in Indonesia’s Aceh province.

Reference: www.abs-cbnnews.com

ABS-CBN poll: RP Q4 GDP likely eased to 6.32%

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The Philippine economy likely expanded at a slower pace in the fourth quarter as exports continued to weaken, hurt by a strong peso, analysts said.

But the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) for full-year 2007 could have climbed as high as 7.0 percent, the fastest rate in 30 years, owing to strong services and farm sectors as well as robust remittances from overseas Filipinos that buoyed consumer spending.

Economic growth in the fourth quarter slightly slowed to 6.32 percent from 6.6 percent in the third quarter, according to the median estimate in an ABS-CBN survey of ten economists.

"Weak export demand and ongoing peso strength probably mean a very aggressive bounce back from a weak real GDP growth in the third quarter will be harder to achieve and a moderation of four-quarter GDP growth should be expected in 2008," said UBS, which lowered its 2008 economic growth forecast for the Philippines to 5.0 percent from the previous 6.1 percent.

Singapore’s DBS said: "The impact of a sharply stronger peso on the economy will continue to be evident, with our estimates indicating an 8.3-percent year-on-year drop in exports."

Exports fell 2.0 percent in November and rose only 4.76 percent in the first 11 months of 2007 as global demand for electronic products softened. Electronics account for the bulk of the country’s export earnings.

Economists said that a recession in the US is sure to dampen Philippine exports as well as local and overseas jobs, even with diversified export markets.

The US is a vital market for Asian countries and a recession could lead to a global downturn.

But the government is confident that the Philippines would weather a US-led economic slowdown given its strong macroeconomic fundamentals.

The government earlier said that the economy probably grew by 6.9-7.3 percent in 2007.

Reference: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Petron to start operations of two feedstock facilities in Feb

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Oil giant Petron Corp. said Thursday it will start operating two petrochemical feedstock facilities at its refinery in Bataan province on February 28.

"The two units, scheduled to start operating within February, is part of the company’s Refinery Master Plan which will enable it to further diversify its business and sustain its growth momentum," Petron said in a statement.

The company said one of the facilities, a petro fluidized catalytic cracker, converts fuel oil to more high-value products like gasoline and diesel, and extracts petrochemical feedstock propylene. The propylene stream is then purified in a recovery facility that produces petrochemical grade propylene.

The petro cracker has a conversion capacity of 19,000 barrels a day while the propylene recovery unit can produce 140,000 metric tons of propylene yearly.

The two facilities are core components of the company’s initial $300-million refinery master plan, which also includes a BTX unit that can produce aromatics. The BTX facility is slated for completion by year-end.

"These new refinery units will hopefully jumpstart the local petrochemical industry and will result in exponential benefits for other vital downstream manufacturing sectors," Petron chairman and chief executive officer Nicasio Alcantara said.

Petron’s petrochemical feedstock will be used as raw material for various industrial products including automobile parts, electrical appliances, furniture and food packaging, among others.

Reference: www.abs-cbnnews.com

QC hospital denies SARS rumor

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The St. Luke’s Medical Center in Quezon City dismissed talk Wednesday that a patient confined at the hospital had died due to severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). The hospital also denied rumors that the patient’s doctor is now in critical condition.

Marilen Lagniton, the hospital’s vice-president for customer affairs St. Luke’s would be the first to issue an alert should there be such a case.

She called the text message that started the rumor as "malicious."

A similar rumor circulated several months ago regarding a Danish national who was reportedly treated for SARS at St. Luke’s. The patient, however, died because of a respiratory disease.

Reference: www.abs-cbnnews.com

January 30, 2008

William Shakespeare

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William Shakespeare (1564–1616), `The Bard of Avon’, English poet and playwright wrote the famous 154 Sonnets and numerous highly successful oft quoted dramatic works including the tragedy of the Prince of Denmark, Hamlet;

"Neither a borrower nor a lender be;
For loan oft loses both itself and friend,
And borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry.
This above all: to thine ownself be true,
And it must follow, as the night the day,
Thou canst not then be false to any man.
Farewell: my blessing season this in thee!"

–Lord Polonius, Hamlet Act I, Scene 3

While Shakespeare caused much controversy, he also earned lavish praise and has profoundly impacted the world over in areas of literature, culture, art, theatre, and film and is considered one of the best English language writers ever. From the Preface of the First Folio (1623) "To the memory of my beloved, The Author, Mr. William Shakespeare: and what he hath left us"–Ben Jonson;

"Thou art a Moniment, without a tombe
And art alive still, while thy Booke doth live,
And we have wits to read, and praise to give."

Over the centuries there has been much speculation surrounding various aspects of Shakespeare’s life including his religious affiliation, sexual orientation, sources for collaborations, authorship of and chronology of the plays and sonnets. Many of the dates of play performances, when they were written, adapted or revised and printed are imprecise. This biography attempts only to give an overview of his life, while leaving the more learned perspectives to the countless scholars and historians who have devoted their lives to the study and demystification of the man and his works.

England’s celebration of their patron Saint George is on 23 April, which is also the day claimed to be the birth date of Shakespeare. Although birth and death dates were not recorded in Shakespeare’s time, churches did record baptisms and burials, usually a few days after the actual event. The infant William was baptised on 26 April 1564 in the parish church Holy Trinity of Stratford upon Avon. He lived with his fairly well-to-do parents on Henley Street, the first of the four sons born to John Shakespeare (c1530-1601) and Mary Arden (c1540-1608), who also had four daughters. John Shakespeare was a local businessman and also involved in municipal affairs as Alderman and Bailiff, but a decline in his fortunes in his later years surely had an effect on William.

In his younger years Shakespeare attended the Christian Holy Trinity church, the now famous elegant limestone cross shaped cathedral on the banks of the Avon river, studying the Book of Common Prayer and the English Bible. In 1605 he became lay rector when he paid £440 towards its upkeep, hence why he is buried in the chancel. Early on Shakespeare likely attended the Elizabethan theatrical productions of travelling theatre troups, come to Stratford to entertain the local official townsmen, including the Queen’s Men, Worcester’s Men, Leicester’s Men, and Lord Strange’s Men. There is also the time when Queen Elizabeth herself visited nearby Kenilworth Castle and Shakespeare, said to have been duly impressed by the procession, recreated it in some of his later plays.

Although enrolment registers did not survive, around the age of eleven Shakespeare probably entered the grammar school of Stratford, King’s New School, where he would have studied theatre and acting, as well as Latin literature and history. When he finished school he might have apprenticed for a time with his father, but there is also mention of his being a school teacher. The next record of his life is in 1582, when still a minor at the age of eighteen and requiring his father’s consent, Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway (1556–1623) married in the village of Temple Grafton. Baptisms of three children were recorded; Susanna (1583-1649), who went on to marry noted physician John Hall, and twins Judith (1585-1662) who married Richard Quiney, and Hamnet (1585-1596) his only son and heir who died at the age of eleven.

It is not exactly clear what Shakespeare was doing in the first few years after the marriage, but he did go to London and worked at The Globe theatre, possibly as one of the Queen’s Men whose works were harshly anti Catholic in a time of rising Protestantism. He was writing poems and plays, and his involvement with theatre troupes and acting is disparagingly condemned in a 1592 pamphlet that was distributed in London, attributed to Robert Green the playwright titled "Groats Worth of Witte" haughtily attacking Shakespeare as an "upstart crow";

"Yes trust them not: for there is an upstart Crow, beautified with our feathers, that with his Tyger’s hart wrapped in a Player’s hyde, supposes he is as well able to bombast out a blanke verse as the best of you: and beeing an absolute Iohannes fac totum [Jack-of-all-trades, Master of none], is in his owne conceit the onely Shake-scene in a countrey. O that I might entreate your rare wits to be employed in more profitable courses: & let these Apes imitate your past excellence, and never more acquaint them with your admired inventions."

By 1593 the plague was haunting London and many who were able fled the teeming city for the cleansing airs of open country. While it was a time for many upstart theatres, the popular public entertainment of the day, they were often shut down and forbidden to open for stretches of time. Shakespeare probably spent these dark days travelling between London, Stratford, and the provinces, which gave him time to pen many more plays and sonnets. Among the first of his known printed works is the comedic and erotically charged Ovidian narrative poem Venus and Adonis (1593). It was wildly popular, dedicated with great esteem to his patron Henry Wriothesly, third earl of Southampton, the young man that some say Shakespeare may have had more than platonic affection for. It was followed by the much darker The Rape of Lucrece in 1594, The Passionate Pilgrim in 1599 and the allegorical The Phoenix and the Turtle (1601).

At this time of prolific writing, Shakespeare began his association until his death with The Lord Chamberlain’s Men. With the accession of James I they became the King’s Men, who bought and performed most of Shakespeare’s plays. The troupe included his friend and actor Richard Burbage. They performed frequently at court, and in the theatres that Shakespeare was co-owner of including the Blackfriars, The Theatre, and The Globe in London until it burnt down during a performance of King Henry VIII. It is said that Shakespeare himself acted in a number of roles including the ghost in Hamlet and Old Adam in As You Like It. In the late 1590s he bought `New Place’ on Chapel Street in Stratford, one of his many real estate investments.

Shakespeare wrote most of his plays as `quarto texts’, that being on a sheet of paper folded four ways. A few of his plays were printed in his lifetime, though they appeared more voluminously after his death, sometimes plagiarised and often changed at the whim of the printer. First Folio would be the first collection of his dramatic works, a massive undertaking to compile thirty-six plays from the quarto texts, playbooks, transcriptions, and the memories of actors. The approximately nine hundred page manuscript took about two years to complete and was printed in 1623 as Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies. It also featured on the frontispiece the famous engraved portrait of Shakespeare said to be by Martin Droeshout (1601-c1651).

Under the favour of the court The Kings’ Men became the eminent company of the day. Most likely Anne and the children lived in Stratford while Shakespeare spent his time travelling between Stratford and London, dealing with business affairs and writing and acting. In 1616 his daughter Judith married Quiney who subsequently admitted to fornication with Margaret Wheeler, and Shakespeare took steps to bequeath a sum to Judith in her own name. William Shakespeare died on 23 April 1616, according to his monument, and lies buried in the chancel of the Holy Trinity Church in Stratford upon Avon. While there is little known of her life, Anne Hathaway outlived her husband by seven years, dying in 1623 and is buried beside him. It is not clear as to how or why Shakespeare died, but in 1664 the reverend John Ward, vicar of Stratford recorded that "Shakespeare, Drayton and Ben Johnson had a merie meeting, and itt seems drank too hard, for Shakespeare died of a feavour there contracted." His tombstone is inscribed with the following epitaph;

Good friend for Jesus sake forbeare
To digg the dust encloased heare
Blessed by y man y spares hes stones
And curst be he y moves my bones

Poetry

It is generally agreed that most of the Shakespearean Sonnets were written in the 1590s, some printed at this time as well. Others were written or revised right before being printed. 154 sonnets and "A Lover’s Complaint" were published by Thomas Thorpe as Shake-speares Sonnets in 1609. The order, dates, and authorship of the Sonnets have been much debated with no conclusive findings. Many have claimed autobiographical details from them, including sonnet number 145 in reference to Anne. The dedication to "Mr. W.H." is said to possibly represent the initials of the third earl of Pembroke William Herbert, or perhaps being a reversal of Henry Wriothesly’s initials. Regardless, there have been some unfortunate projections and interpretations of modern concepts onto centuries old works that, while a grasp of contextual historical information can certainly lend to their depth and meaning, can also be enjoyed as valuable poetical works that have transcended time and been surpassed by no other.

Evoking Petrarch’s style and lyrically writing of beauty, mortality, and love with its moral anguish and worshipful adoration of a usually unattainable love, the first 126 sonnets are addressed to a young man, sonnets 127-152 to a dark lady. Ever the dramatist Shakespeare created a profound intrigue to scholars and novices alike as to the identities of these people.

Reference: www.google.com

Referee charged over Ateneo shower room videos

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Charges have been filed against a collegiate soccer referee who was caught taking videos of varsity players taking a shower in Ateneo de Manila University’s Blue Eagle Gym last Sunday.

Superintendent Franklin Moises Mabanag, chief of the Quezon City Police District-Criminal Investigation and Detection Unit (QCPD-CIDU), said charges of unjust vexation and violation of Republic Act 7610 or the Child and Youth Welfare Act were filed the other day before the Quezon City

Fiscal’s Office against suspect Dennis Valoria.

"The video (stored in Valoria’s cellular phone) showed nine players topless while inside the shower room. Two of these female players are minors," he told The STAR.

Mabanag said the other videos seen stored in Valoria’s Nokia N91 cellular phone were erased before the suspect was brought to the police station. The suspect was not able to send copies of the stored video to others, he said.

Mabanag said Valoria faces six to 12 years’ imprisonment and fine of at least P20,000 if convicted. The suspect is still detained at the QCPD-CIDU inside the Camp Karingal compound in Quezon City.

A varsity player caught Valoria secretly taking videos of her teammates in the shower. The players and coaches of two schools having a game for the University Athletics Association of the Philippines (UAAP) were able to catch Valoria, who was about to leave the Ateneo campus along Katipunan road.

Ricky Palou, head of Ateneo’s Athletic Department, said it was the first time that such an incident happened at a UAAP game and the UAAP leadership will meet to discuss corrective measures, like posting a guard to secure players’ shower and locker rooms.

Reference: www.abs-cbnnews.com

17 fishers nabbed for illegal fishing

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CAMP DIEGO SILANG, La Union – Seventeen fishermen from Portside, Sual, Pangasinan were arrested while conducting illegal fishing activities along the coast of Caba, La Union Tuesday.

La Union police director Senior Superintendent Franklin Bucayu said the fishermen, led by the boat captain identified as Roger Flomentera, were using the prohibited fine mesh nets when they were caught by policemen headed by Inspector Bernabe Oribello.

Responding policemen confiscated hundreds of kilos of various kinds of fish stocked inside their fishing boat, Princess Kate 1.

The boat owners are identified as Nestor de la Cruz and Roy Olasiman, both residents of Portside.

Bucayu said the fishermen were arrested through the help of villagers who tipped off policemen regarding their illegal activity.

Reference: www.abs-cbnnews.com

No job opening for Pinoy DHs in Egypt - says DFA

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The foreign affairs department on Tuesday warned Filipinos seeking work abroad that there are no legal jobs available for domestic helpers in Egypt.

In a press statement, DFA said the Egyptian government issues working permits and visas only to foreign domestic helpers employed by foreign diplomats accredited to Egypt.

The Philippine embassy in Cairo said because of this, Filipinos who seek jobs in Egypt as domestic helpers are in danger of arrest by the Egyptian immigration authorities if they don’t have valid visas and working permits.

It added Filipino domestic service workers in Egypt who have no pertinent documents do not enjoy labor protection, hence, are vulnerable to abuse and maltreatment.

The embassy said among the modes being used by Filipino domestic helpers to enter Egypt were:

-Recruitment as domestic workers purportedly for a neighboring country like Jordan, United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait, but later brought to Egypt by their sponsors for delivery to their real employers.

The third-country approach is commonly used because Egyptian immigration laws allow foreign employers to bring with them their foreign domestic helpers when they vacation in Egypt.

-Recruitment as skilled workers such as factory workers, nurses, hotel service staff under a scheme that allows highly-skilled foreigners to work in Egypt. The scheme is abused by some employers who hoodwink Filipinos to come to Egypt as skilled workers only to make them work as domestic helpers.

-Entry into Egypt as tourists and work as domestic helpers. Eventually, they overstay and are locked up in the homes of their employers to avoid trouble due to their illegal immigration status.

The Embassy also reported when the OFWs demand payment for their salaries or to be repatriated, they are abandoned at the Philippine Embassy.

It further said overworked, unpaid and maltreated OFWs are accused of theft by their employers to avoid paying their wages and/or plane fares back to the Philippines.

The Philippine embassy in Cairo appealed to Filipinos to be wary of recruiters and recruitment agencies offering jobs as domestic helpers in Egypt and to report such agencies immediately to Department of Labor Employment and Philippine Overseas Employment Administration.

Reference: www.gmanews.tv

January 29, 2008

13 killed as jeep hits truck in N. Cotabato

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Thirteen people were confirmed dead when the passenger jeepney they were riding collided with a 10-wheel truck in North Cotabato Tuesday morning. Radio dzBB quoted Senior Superintendent Lester Camba, North Cotabato police chief, as saying the incident took place at General Luna village in Carmen town in North Cotabato at about 8:45 a.m. Initial reports said that the passenger jeepney (DTW-743), with a still undetermined number of passengers on board, was plying the national highway when it collided head-on with the 10-wheel truck (RFN-365). Authorities initially identified the fatalities as jeepney driver Allan Balunot, passengers Mohammed Saidula, Lugaya Matalam and her four children, Kutog Amin Sapan, Lubayda Salapangan, Bay Nau Sapan, and two unidentified victims. Meanwhile, the other wounded passengers had already been rushed to a nearby hospital. Carmen is a first class municipality in the province of Cotabato with a population of 45,909 people in 9,395 households.

Reference: www.inq7.net

January 28, 2008

4 safe after military chopper crashes

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CEBU CITY — A Philippine Air Force (PAF) helicopter crashed in a mountain village of Balamban, Cebu Saturday afternoon.

The two pilots and two crew members were unharmed and were taken back to their camp by PAF personnel at 11 p.m. Saturday.

Sun.Star Network Online’s coverage of the Sinulog 2008 Festival

The PAF has yet to issue an official statement on what caused the accident.

A call to General Arthur Mancenido, 205th Tactical Helicopter Wing (THW) commander, went unanswered, while Mactan Benito Ebuen Air Base officials were also unavailable for comment.

Witnesses told the police that the Huey helicopter crashed in Sitio Mayana, Barangay Biasong at 5 p.m.

The incident followed the crash of two other helicopters in different areas of Cebu last year that led the PAF to temporarily ground all Huey helicopters.

In a text message to Police Regional Office (PRO) 7 Director Ronald Roderos, the 205th Tactical Helicopter Wing said three of its helicopters left the air base for Silay City to perform formation training and to pick up personnel.

On their way back, one ran into engine trouble, stated a report sent to the Cebu Provincial Police Office headquarters.

Balamban Mayor Alex Binghay said there is a field in Sitio Mayana that the PAF uses for practice landing.

He said the Air Force chopper managed to land at the area and had already taken off to go back to the base when it lost power and dropped back to the ground.

The chopper landed on its side.

The two pilots, identified as Captains Arañez and Mosomos, and the two crew members who reportedly refused to divulge their names, were declared safe.

According to the Balamban Police Station’s report, the helicopter was wrecked.

Members of the 78th Infantry Battalion, Balamban policemen, civilian volunteers and barangay officials led by Barangay Captain Pascual Piloto secured the helicopter, as requested by the 205th THW.

Binghay said the terrain leading to Mayana is difficult to manage, which was why the crew members were not rescued until 11 p.m.

Biasong is some seven kilometers from Balamban proper.

Last April 28, nine were killed while four were seriously injured when a Huey helicopter hit a high-tension wire and plowed into Humay-Humay Road in Barangay Gun-ob in Lapu-Lapu City.

The chopper was on a training flight at the South Road Properties and was heading back to the air base. Kite lines that got tangled in the chopper’s swash plates were eyed as the cause of the crash.

Barely a month after the grounding of all Huey UH-1H helicopters was lifted, another crashed in a Liloan town field. Luckily, there were no casualties.

In earlier interviews, PAF officials assured that all helicopters undergo periodic maintenance and are thoroughly inspected after every few hours of flight. (MEA/Sun.Star Cebu)

Reference: www.sunstar.com






















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