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Wednesday, August 03, 2005

Ocampo's Column

Looking Back : Bells are not just for ringing

Ambeth Ocampo aocampo@ateneo.edu
Inquirer News Service

LAST Sunday, in his homily during a Mass on the feast of St. Ignatius, Jesuit Provincial Superior Fr. Danny Huang mentioned that the saint would often sit on a small balcony in the Jesuit curia in Rome and gaze at the stars. This would move St. Ignatius to see and feel how small he was in the context of the universe, so he would fall on his knees and praise God.

That was centuries ago. But if the saint were alive today, would it be possible to see stars from the same balcony? In Metro Manila, the glare of the city lights has made star gazing very difficult. Often one needs to go out of town to see stars and constellations clearly set in a dark sky.

Most people in the city have other diversions, like malls, cable TV and the Internet, that make them forget simpler things like nature. City dwellers thus make do with small pocket Zen gardens or perhaps spend a quiet time having a massage in a day spa.

I am grateful for simple pleasures available in my corner of the universe that make life worth living like: birds chirping in the morning, squirrels running along electric wires, and even the sound of a church bell from the Anglican church that gives us the time of services on Sunday mornings. I've always wondered why the bells in the nearby Catholic church can't be heard as clearly. Bells are so antiquated that some parishes install loud speakers on rooftops and, instead of real bells, taped pealing is played. Who needs bells in the age of text messaging and e-mail?

In colonial times, church bells did not only provide time or warn of danger, they also signified the service being held in church as they tolled differently for a funeral or a marriage, for example. The area covered by a parish or Spanish control was measured by the sound of bells within earshot, thus literally "bajo de las campanas" [under the bells]. Since most churches built these days have no provision for church bells, the ancient ritual of "baptizing" church bells is rarely performed.

According to Regalado Trota Jose, the authority on colonial churches and ecclesiastical art in the Philippines, the bell is not only blessed but also washed inside out with holy water and salt. Then, seven crosses are drawn on the outside of the bell with the Oil of Cathechumens (used for baptism) and four crosses are drawn on the inside of the bell with Holy Chrism (the oil used for anointing the sick and dying). After being so anointed, a name of a saint is given to the bell, and incense is made to smoke it into holiness. After a reading from the Scriptures and closing prayers, the presiding priest makes the Sign of the Cross over it and the deed is done.

Bells were believed to purify the air of evil and to be unbearable to evil creatures and hopefully evil people, as well. Bells were rung during storms in the belief that holy sound could quell any tempest.

Years ago, following Ricky Jose's example, I would visit colonial churches in and around Manila, taking notes and pictures. Once I climbed up one of the spires of San Sebastian Church in Manila to look at its bells. Perhaps I was so occupied with keeping my balance that I didn't notice that one of the bells was inscribed "Circuncision del Señor" and was cast in 1861.

This name may be too much for the Movie and Television Rating and Classification Board or those raised on the post-Vatican II Catholic Church calendar. But Jan. 1 used to be the Feast of the Circumcision, although this was changed in 1969 to the Solemnity of Mary Mother of God.

The earlier feast explains why one of the little old women who came to the wake of my grandfather was named Circumcision Garcia; her parents obviously took her name straight from the Church calendar. To add insult to injury, her nickname was "Tuli" and in later life she was known as "Apung Tuli." For those who think I'm inventing a new urban legend, I will try and find the Mass card she left at my grandfather's wake in San Fernando, Pampanga.

There is a lot of history we can learn from church bells, and researchers will forever be grateful to Ricky Jose for compiling all the data on bells he could get his hands on. A small picture book on bells in the Philippines will be quite interesting. The only problem is that most of the bells listed by Jose were cast in the 19th century. Over the centuries of war and want, church bells were often melted down and the metal made into more utilitarian objects like plows and cannons.

Data from churches in many provinces from north to south have been compiled and classified alphabetically and thematically. The results were published in "The Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society" subsidized by the University of San Carlos Cebu.

Of course, many bells are named in honor of the Virgin Mary, who is known under so many titles, including N[uestra] S[eñora] de Guia, Antipolo, Guadalupe, Loreto, etc. San Jose was the most popular, at least compared to the bells named after the Son of God. And there were some that were named after really obscure saints like Caralampio in Bacoor, Cavite, that was commissioned by none other than Fr. Mariano Gomes (one of the three martyr priests known as Gomburza).

One will not find a listing of bells and names interesting, but seen in the context of art history, church architecture, legend and iconography, they generate many interesting stories and connections indeed.

Tuesday, August 02, 2005

Usa ka Pahimangnu...Usa ka Pagpahinumdum... Sa Una pa Kita Masugamak nga Dili na Makabangon Pagbalik, Kapamilya!

DESIDERATA

Go placidly amid the noise and haste, and remember what peace there may be in silence.

As far as possible, without surrender, be on good terms with all persons. Speak your truth quietly and clearly; and listen to others, even to the dull and the ignorant, they too have their story.

Avoid loud and aggressive persons; they are vexations to the spirit.
If you compare yourself with others, you may become vain and bitter; for always there will be greater and lesser persons than yourself.

Enjoy your achievements as well as your plans. Keep interested in your own career, however humble; it is a real possession in the changing fortunes of time.

Exercise caution in your business affairs, for the world is full of trickery. But let this not blind you to what virtue there is; many persons strive for high ideals, and everywhere life is full of heroism.

Be yourself.

Especially, do not feign affection. Neither be cynical about love, for in the face of all aridity and disenchantment it is perennial as the grass.

Take kindly to the counsel of the years, gracefully surrendering the things of youth.

Nurture strength of spirit to shield you in sudden misfortune. But do not distress yourself with imaginings. Many fears are born of fatigue and loneliness.

Beyond a wholesome discipline, be gentle with yourself.
You are a child of the universe, no less than the trees and the stars; you have a right to be here. And whether or not it is clear to you, no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should.

Therefore be at peace with God, whatever you conceive Him to be, and whatever your labors and aspirations, in the noisy confusion of life, keep peace in your soul.

With all its sham, drudgery and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world.

Be cheerful. Strive to be happy.
(Max Ehrmann)

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High Seas

Sense and Sensibility : Romance in the high seas

Bambi Harper
Inquirer News Service

(The following article should open up an area of research that Filipinos in Spain interested in the subject or those on the lookout for Philippine artifacts and antiques may find informative. Since we're not given to keeping journals, diaries and letters, I overlooked the fact that others might have, or that commerce continued after the Galleon Trade ended.)

ALONG THE WHARFS in Santander were houses constructed by shipping magnates that composed a group and who had enriched themselves in overseas commerce. These were mansions, tall and massive, with balconies and bay windows on each floor. On the ground floors, facing the wharf, were the warehouses and offices of their enterprise. At the back of these houses was a plaza that bore the name of the richest of those rich men -- Plaza Pombo -- where they parked their carriages.

These merchants possessed some curious and rare collections -- not of paintings, sculptures or books, but items of a distinct type, amassed without any order or inventory. These were remembrances of the journeys of their frigates, presents that the captains had brought for their wives or their children and had accumulated in their cabinets and salons.

On top of a "piano de cola," or mahogany console, covered by "manton de Manila," were: nuggets of unrefined gold used as paperweights; Turkish sabers and Malay arrows; idols from Mindanao and Bornean tribes; parasols used by Mandarins, snuffboxes of shell and lacquer; tea pots of black enamel decorated with gold dragons; stuffed crocodiles, turtles and parrots; spurs made from the fish "Espada"; bolts of silk; shells of various sizes whose nacre reflected the light of the Indies; ivory miniatures carved and filigreed by artists with infinite patience.

The loquacious parrot wasn't lacking in his cage of thick brass bars plated in gold. The whole tropics, the entire jungle and the remote archipelagos were there represented by its most characteristic examples. Seeing these artifacts gave one the idea of what the Spanish realm had been when Cuba and the Philippines were still a part of it.

Don Ignacio Fernandez de Castro owned ships of 250-400 tons displacement that made the run between Cadiz and the Philippines (covering the 1820s to the 1850s). They bore names such as "La Hispano-Filipina," "La Paz," "La Guadalupe," "La Virgen del Carmen," "La Virgen de los Angeles" -- names of familiar devotions. They made the romantic and long trips, reaching the Indian Ocean via the Cape of Good Hope, docking at the ports of Goa, Macao, Canton but their goal was almost always the remote and beloved Manila.

Their cargo was composed of pleasant materials, clean and fragrant: cacao, coffee, cotton, bolts of silk, cinnamon and vanilla. Nothing of carbon, petroleum, grease and steel. The ships of Don Ignacio also brought mail and passengers. Aristocratic ladies related to high colonial officials trembled at the prospect of the 135 to 140 days that the voyage entailed from Santander to Manila or from Manila to Cadiz. It wasn't only the length but also the hardships that the trip inflicted on the passengers. Water was rationed, and if the ship entered a windless zone, a water shortage followed. It wasn't unusual that food would also be scarce and then a sailboat would be launched to beg from the rare ships that they might meet en route. In "Diarios de Navegacion del Capitan San Juan" are various references to these anguished demands:

"At 2:30 a brigantine was seen leeward and after six hours we were alongside it and they asked us for the longitude because their chronometer had stopped for eight days. We asked them for some supplies and salt. They answered that they couldn't provide any necessities but could give us salt."

Many of these ships had no doctors or medicine kits or first-aid stations; their captains had to serve as physicians in the event of emergencies. The cures were primitive as "Diario de Navegacion" illustrates: "At 1 o'clock, the ropes holding the taut foresail broke and the frame fell on the head of the cabin boy Paulino Ignacio, causing two big wounds. The profuse bleeding was stopped with sugar and brandy. After five hours, we were informed that the bleeding resumed and we tried to remedy it immediately but no matter how many things we tried we couldn't stop the bleeding. Finally at 8, it stopped after we applied quicklime with the consent of the patient." (It doesn't say whether the cure was worse than the injury and the patient died anyway.)

"There were many deaths and the corpses were thrown overboard even as sharks escorted the sailboat during a good part of the crossing. Mortality rates were high especially when the trip involved government exiles to the Philippines or prisoners returning from prison there. There were rarely ocean crossings without a death.

"At 10:00 the political detainee, a soldier by the name of Narciso la Barca, boarded in Manila with dysentery that was complicated by chicken pox. He was unable to make a last will and testament since he suddenly took a turn for the worse and was unable to speak. An inventory was made of his belongings."

(From Vertice, "Las Fragatas de Filipinas," Jose del Rio Sainz 1942.)

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Uproar Over Elephant Rescue Plan

Kapamilya, here's something to read that has nothing to do with anything political...:)


Bernard O'Riordan in Sydney
Tuesday July 26 2005
The Guardian

To cabinet ministers it seemed like a grand gesture, and a way of offering eight homeless elephants a new life in a luxurious enclosure.

But the Australian government's decision to import eight Thai elephants for a conservation project caused derision and an international rumpus.

Bombarded by criticism from animal welfare groups and some 65,000 emails and more than 52,000 postcards of protest, Canberra has now been drawn into a court challenge which means the elephants must stay put for now.

The saga began when the environment minister, Ian Campbell, said the elephants, now in Thai quarantine, would be transported to Australia, five of them destined for a new A$36.6m (£16m) enclosure at Taronga Park Zoo in Sydney which includes a mini-rainforest. The three others were earmarked for Melbourne Zoo.

"We look forward to the first successful pregnancy," Mr Campbell told reporters.

But animal rights campaigners said the Australian government had broken its own tough laws against trading in endangered animals and took legal action.

The RSPCA, the International Fund for Animal Welfare (Ifaw), and the Humane Society have been granted an interim order stopping the elephants leaving Thailand until an appeal on Thursday.

"Keeping elephants in zoos is simply cruel," said Hugh Wirth, president of the RSPCA in Australia. "This plan places the welfare of these precious animals at risk."

Mr Campbell insists Australia would be helping to protect a species that faces extinction. It is estimated there are fewer than 35,000 Asian elephants across 15 countries.

"They're under serious threat," he said. "Australia's got to do what it can to save these elephants. If we can breed them in captivity here at Taronga Zoo and Melbourne Zoo ... then we can make an historic contribution as a nation to conserving this incredibly important species."

But wildlife organisations believe the money would be better spent improving their native habitat in Thailand. To support their argument, the groups cite the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, which says an endangered animal only be imported for conservation and breeding purposes, not for commercial benefit.

"We believe this is a primarily commercial venture," said Rebecca Brand, of Ifaw. "They are bringing elephants in because they're a drawcard."

Dr Wirth said he was suspicious that the breeding programme was really "a dressed-up commercial enterprise" and pointed to research showing that zoo elephants suffered obesity and shorter lifespans.

Copyright Guardian Newspapers Limited

Kapamilya, Magpakabana Ta Gawas sa Atong Tugkaran!

The 400,000 children at risk in Niger's worst hit area

Aid begins to trickle through, but agency says it is three months too late
Christian Allen Purefoy in Maradi
Tuesday July 26 2005
The Guardian

Reduced to the weight of a newborn baby, six-month-old Rabe was carried by her mother over 100km across Niger's hot and dusty terrain, to the shade of an intensive care tent in the middle of a barren football field.

"I didn't have enough money to buy her milk," said Rabe's mother, who didn't want to give her name. She had just been accepted into Médecins Sans Frontières' (MSF) hospitalisation camp in Maradi.

MSF, the major aid agency underpinning Niger's current relief effort, is calling the problem a "severe nutritional crisis" with an estimated 400,000 children at risk in the Maradi region alone.

"It could be double but, of course, we are not able to reach them," explained Mego Terzain, MSF's field emergency coordinator.

MSF has been working in Niger for about 15 years, but as soon as this year's malnutrition crisis became apparent it set up 10 mobile clinics and five malnutrition centres across the country. Its second hospital opened on June 27 with 150 beds, though this has been increased to 250.

One doctor explained how 30 to 40 people arrive every day, and 25 or 30 people leave. Outside the clinic, women are sleeping overnight to wait for their children to be screened, in the hope that they will be admitted.

The scale of the crisis has prompted what Mr Terzain believes is "the biggest nutritional operation in MSF history".

Last year, 10,000 children suffering severe malnutrition were admitted to MSF field hospitals and clinics in Niger.

This year, from June 21 to July 17, MSF admitted 12,838 children.

The first relief planes from France and aid agencies have just begun to arrive - the UK government has pledged an extra £1m for the World Food Programme's emergency operation in Niger, bringing the UK's total contribution to £3m.

But as early as October 2004 the Niger government announced there would be an acute problem from June this year.

"I'm afraid it's too late. The international community should have responded three months ago," said Mr Terzain.

Pinned to the wall behind him is a small graph with a thin line indicating a three- to four-fold rise in the number of admissions, and he warns the worst is yet to come. "In August there are traditionally three times more admissions."

Strangely, the area surrounding Maradi is now green with fresh crops such as millet, and puddles of muddy water from recent rain. But the people will continue to go hungry, waiting for the soudure to end - the period between planting and reaping the harvest.

This year, the soudure has been particularly arduous because last year's bad harvest has meant any food stocks have already been exhausted.

Though the UN estimates that about 800,000 children are suffering from hunger in Niger, aid agencies are concentrating on those under the age of five - the worst affected of this number are between the ages of six months and two years old.

"They are more fragile and not ready to fight against disease," explained Mr Terzain.

Niger is the second poorest country in the world, and although healthcare is not expensive, many mothers cannot afford to take their children to hospital.

Last year's drought was exacerbated, especially in the north, by an invasion of locusts. As it is, four-fifths of northern Niger is desert, with very little agriculture, and the country relies heavily on the savannah areas in the south, which are suitable for livestock and crops.

"People of the north come south, and if the food is not there then the whole village comes, so there is less food here," said Chief Abdou Bellas Marafa, the 381st chief of Canton Kyibir - an hour's drive from Maradi.

The Niger government gives Chief Marafa food to distribute and he helps with "some cereal that I have", but he insists the most serious problem is the lack of rain. "It rained half the normal amount last year," he said. There were other problems. "As the Sahara comes, the farms get smaller."

The issue of desertification - the expansion of the Sahara desert southwards - means Niger's agriculture will come under increasing stress as smaller yields are used to feed a growing population. There are 11 million people in the country but that figure is growing at 3.3%.

Over-grazing, soil erosion and deforestation - people will walk over 100km for wood - has meant desertification is a problem that will only get worse across the whole northern area of west Africa.

"The problem is not just in Niger but Mali, Nigeria and others," said Chief Marafa. "But in these countries food is not a problem as their government pays."

Unlike countries such as Nigeria that uses its massive oil revenues to import food, Niger's economy of only $9bn (£5.15bn) depends on its main export, uranium, whose value has decreased dramatically since the nuclear arms race in the 1980s.

Niger's economic situation is further complicated because it is landlocked deep in western Africa. Supplies must be transported by road through unstable countries such as Ivory Coast or Togo. The country relies on its much wealthier neighbour, Nigeria.

Nigeria's Jigawa state government last week sent trucks of aid. But because of Niger's size and its lack of infrastructure, Nigerian border controls suspect the aid did not penetrate deep inside the country.

People from Niger have begun to cross into Nigeria for food supplies in such numbers that Nigeria's border control is now supposed to refuse entry to anyone without the correct papers.

However, one immigration official - wishing to remain anonymous - said: "They are our brothers - we can't let them suffer. They come in [to collect food] - maybe even as far as Kano - and go again."

Two hours drive from the border, fans cool the inside of Maradi's intensive care unit. With essential equipment and two doctors available day and night, the mortality rate - in a country where infant mortality is as high as 12% - has been kept to 5%.

The two children dying on average each day often simply arrive too late to be helped. Rabe's mother has had 11 children, of whom five have died in similar circumstances.

The last one died two years ago aged 10 months. Rabe's mother is no stranger to Niger's problems. However, with her husband ill, she has planted this year's crop by herself, hoping that with the rains it will be a good harvest. But the present problems threaten her future and the future of many others.

"My child was about to die so I am worried about the field. No one is looking after it."

'I've seen some very, very thin children'

Nick Abrahams, emergency response team leader for Save the Children UK, Maradi region, Niger.

We've been in Niger for 10 days. At the moment we're working with the authorities here to try to work out exactly where our distribution centres should be. We want to establish them so that each village is a couple of miles walk away, so that every mother will be able to bring her children.

"In the Maradi region there are three feeding centres, which are all being run by [aid agency] MSF.

"What the agencies coming in now are doing is working with the children who don't need hospitalisation, but need to be stopped from going into hospital.

"We're expecting our plane to arrive on Wednesday, so lorries should be down here on Friday. The plane, paid for by [the UK ministry] DfID, is carrying about 50 tonnes of food, I think. It's got high protein biscuits and Unimix, a high protein porridge.

"Going into the villages, we've seen small children who are not getting enough calories. I've seen some very, very thin children.

"The people here are working hard to make what they've got last. They know it's going to be two months until the harvest comes in.

"Save the Children is planning to be here for nine months. We want to make sure people get back on their feet, and can get through the next hunger season. That's something which happens every year in this region. This year it's so much bigger because of the locusts, droughts, and localised flooding.

"I've seen food shortages before, in Congo, but not on this scale and not with so many children affected."

Copyright Guardian Newspapers Limited

Arroyo Calls for Constitutional Reform

Arroyo calls for constitutional reform
Staff and agencies

Monday July 25 2005

The Guardian

Gloria Arroyo, the president of the Philippines, who is fighting for her political life amid corruption claims, today called for sweeping constitutional changes.

Ms Arroyo - who has been accused of vote-rigging during last year's general election - urged Congress to abandon the current presidential system in favour of a parliamentary democracy.

"The system clearly needs fundamental change, and the sooner the better," the president said during her annual state of the nation address.

Speaking shortly after opponents had filed impeachment proceedings against her, Ms Arroyo said in her 20-minute speech that her nation had become too polarised to make the changes needed to meet the challenges of the 21st century.

While the economy was "poised for take-off", the political system was a "hindrance to progress", she told a joint session of Congress and a gallery of government workers, army and police generals and members of the Roman Catholic clergy.

"It's time to start the great debate on charter change," she said.

Ms Arroyo suggested Congress should set up a constituent assembly to tackle the issue of charter change, but made no mention of a timeframe or whether she would be willing to step down early.

Opponents have been calling for her resignation since she admitted phoning an election official during the counting of last year's national poll.

During the conversation - a recording of which emerged last month - Ms Arroyo and the official allegedly discussed ways to ensure a 1m-vote lead for her. She has since apologised for phoning the official, but has denied manipulating the election's outcome.

The tired-looking president pointed to her administration's accomplishments in generating 4m jobs over the last four years, fighting drugs, curtailing kidnappings and easing a bloody Muslim separatist insurgency in the south.

She said the economy had grown by more than 6% last year, and was continuing to expand despite high oil prices.

Pro-impeachment congressmen had peach roses on their desks, while Arroyo supporters had lemon plants - often used in the Philippines to keep annoying insects away.

The impeachment complaint claims Ms Arroyo "cheated and lied" to obtain and hold power. Her aides have moved to block it on a legal technicality.

"By so flouting justice and the rule of law, she has committed an unforgivable outrage against the Filipino people," the claim says.

Around 6,000 police, along with a contingent of anti-riot air force personnel, provided a security cordon around the House of Representatives building in suburban Quezon City.

Nearby, some 20,000 protesters demonstrated to demand Ms Arroyo's resignation, while around 5,000 voiced their support for her.

Analysts believe a parliamentary system, in which MPs could vote out a sitting government, would ease the upheaval that accompanies the ousting of a leader who has lost the ability to govern.

The first "people power" revolt, in which the dictator Ferdinand Marcos was ousted in 1986, was widely hailed. But the second - which forced out Ms Arroyo's predecessor, Joseph Estrada, in 2001 - was criticised for setting the bar too low to throw out an elected government.

Copyright Guardian Newspapers Limited

Sunday, July 24, 2005

Luli Interview

Luli M. Arroyo: Her mother's daughter

July 23, 2005 
Inquirer News Service

Are you spending a lot more time with your mom now-with this series of events that's been happening-than you used to?

I try to spend more time with her. I have my own work, but my hours are flexible, so, yes, I try to spend more time with her. And then there are also more requests for me to attend to ceremonial things that my dad used to do.

What work do you do? I work in a non-profit called The Foundation for IT Education and Development. We deal with IT policy in Asia Pacific region. But within the Philippines we also do a lot of community work geared towards public high school teachers, training them to use technologies to enhance teaching method. It's not for teachers to teach IT literacy, it is for them to use the different technologies available to teach Math, Science, English and Filipino better... We cooperate with many other non-profits and foundations that give computer labs to schools and connectivity. So we focus on the training of the teachers.

Are you a techie yourself?

I used to be. But then, you know how fast the technology changes. So talagang naku, patay, na-overtake na naman. I remember when I was in grad school, and my mother came to visit. My computer-I just bought a generic one-would break down at times. So I would get my tool kit and open up the computer and fix the memory board. Tapos sabi niya, "Ano ba naman niyan? Bakit ikaw ang gumagawa iyan, anak?" "Kasi mahal dito, 'Nay." (laughter) (Why are you fixing it?" "Because it's expensive, mother."

Did she buy you a new one?

No. Kasi kami, you have your budget, you live with it.

Even now?

Oo. Now, I work. I don't earn much but I am self-sustainable.

From Day One of the present crisis, were you aware of what was happening?

When is your Day One?

Let's just say when the wiretapping scandal blew up.

When that happened I was abroad and when I heard the source, I said, "Polluted source."

When did you come back?

Latter part of June.

Your mom had said that she had talked to the family and that the family had counseled her not to resign. Is that what happened?

To us kasi, my mother was elected the President. And she has that obligation to everyone who voted her. She has that obligation to our nation. No matter how hard it is for our family, it would be very selfish for us to tell her, "Give up." We'll never do that.

Did you ever hear her talk about the possibility of resigning?

My mother is not the type. And it is not "I am going to hold on to power." It's not that. It's really because this is the rule of law and this is the situation where she must continue her duties and responsibilities.

Did she ask the family for advice before the apology and "lapse in judgment" speech? Were you privy to that?

We were there when she made the apology. The whole family was there... To me, that she knows our family is always behind her is enough.

Was it her personal decision to apologize?

We never tell my mother what to do. To me, I think, for other people to tell her what to do, kapal naman, medyo malakas ang dating. (The gall, it's too much.) You can advise the President what to do but ultimately it's a decision that she has to make. And we are there to support her.

In what ways do you give support to your mom these days?

Well, before, they would only ask me to do ceremonial stuff if the others were not available. But now, because parang I got moved up, I have to devote more time. It's really a matter of fixing my schedule.

Do you find yourself giving more personal attention to your mom these days?

I try to do that... Maybe I don't see my mom in the daytime but I sleep with her. Basta yung paa namin magka-connect sa gabi. (We make sure that out feet touch) (laughter) When I sleep with her, we have a big bed but we occupy only one-eighth of the bed kasi ang liit-liit namin (because we are both small) (laughter).

Have you been sleeping with her a lot these past weeks?

Uh-huh.

Does she sleep soundly?

Yeah, oo.

Have you seen your mom cry? Oo.

How about lately? No.

What makes her cry usually?

Iba-iba (Various things). I guess, like any normal woman-frustration, betrayal, stuff like that. Or her children- like me, if something happens to me, then she feels for me.

There's been a lot of betrayal lately. Did that make her cry?

My mom is very focused on what needs to be done. So she doesn't dwell on the things that may cloud the path to work. She's really focused on work. And my mom doesn't let emotion get in the way. I mean, even in the way she deals with people, she would get upset because something was not done. But hindi siya nagtatanim ng galit. (She does not hold grudges.) If you were able to fulfill what you were supposed to do before your deadline, or kahit na lumampas but you were able to do it right away after, then she'll acknowledge that you did it properly. And people don't realize that she's mabait (kind) that way.

Her reputation is mataray (snooty), di ba?

Because the media only take the part about her getting mad. They don't put the part where she says, "Oh, very good." That when she sees that guy again, she's smiling.

But doesn't your mom have a temper?

Even me, let's say you agree on a work program, on a deadline. If you don't do it, mapipikon ako sa iyo. (She gets irritated.) My mom also gets upset that the work is not done. But if you were able to make amends so you've done what you were supposed to do, then she's fine. She doesn't get mad at the person, she gets upset at the situation. Because you're wasting government time and effort and you're not doing your service to the community.

It's hard to be president because your concern is 81 million people, 81 provinces and how many municipalities. Dami niyan. And if you're just wasting people's time and energy, how can she not get frustrated by that? Or get upset by that? But if she gives you the opportunity to actually be able to do the work and to fulfill what you said you were going to do, it's a chance that nobody else gives you. And that's what people don't see.

What's the most frustrating part about being in the middle of all this?

I'm not in the middle of all this. I am on the sidelines of all this.

Being on the sidelines of all this, what is the most frustrating part?

I just don't think my mother deserves all this. Na she's the bruha (witch) of the... you know. She doesn't deserve it at all. She works so hard and to be cast as, like, the bane of society is so... so unfair.

Are there particular people whom you just really hate, in the middle of all this?

I try not to have evil thoughts. (Laughter) Like I've said, I don't have the grace that my mother has, though I am working on it... I love my mother dearly, so s'yempre it cannot be helped that it crosses my mind, but I just move on.

Do your friends talk about the situation with you around?

My friends are very supportive. They say, "Let's have lunch, let's have merienda, dinner." And now, whenever we go somewhere, the waiters come and say, "Pakisabi naman sa nanay mo, 'wag syang magre-resign." Ganyan. (Please tell your mother, do not resign.) It's very heartwarming. Talagang nakakataba ng puso. (I'm grateful.)

What do you say?

"'Wag kayong mag-alala, hindi naman sya magi-give up." (Don't worry, she will not give up.) Some give notes. "Pakibigay naman sa nanay mo." (Please give this to your mother.) And it's all very encouraging. [They say] "We're not big people and we're not in the media but, please, do not resign." It's really fantastic. And then I even get free stuff because of that (laughter)... an extra dollop of salad dressing or something, just because of the goodwill that comes out of it.

But have some people changed toward you? Maybe not friends but others you've known.

Yes! My lola also said there's a time when you'll know who your real friends are. And that Friday, when they had that setup [protest rally] of trying to snowball a resignation from my mom, oh, you knew who your friends were then.

Do you think the print media has been unfair to your mom more than the broadcast media?

Media in general. And, to me, it's not the first time they have been unfair to the President, but that doesn't excuse it. It's no excuse na "lahat naman ng Presidente iniintriga namin." That doesn't make it right, 'di ba?

Do you think the media was unfair to Erap (Joseph Estrada)?

My mother is not the first president the media has been beating up. I'm gonna leave it at that.

Do you feel like you've had to put your personal life on hold because of all this?

No. I do have a personal life and I like to keep it that way.

You said you have a personal life. But are there days when you say "I wish I could do this or do that"?

I don't think there is anything I've not been able to do that I would want to do regularly.

Friday, July 22, 2005

What We Need to Know About Additives, Kapamilya!

FOOD ADDITIVES

Shopping was easy when most food came from farms. Now, factory-made foods have made chemical additives a significant part of our diet. Most people may not be able to pronounce the names of many of these chemicals, but they still want to know what the chemicals do and which ones are safe and which are poorly tested or possibly dangerous. This listing provides that information for most common additives. A simple general rule about additives is to avoid sodium nitrite, saccharin, caffeine, olestra, acesulfame K, and artificial coloring. Not only are they among the most questionable additives, but they are used primarily in foods of low nutritional value. Also, don’t forget the two most familiar additives: sugar and salt. They may pose the greatest risk because we consume so much of them. Fortunately, most additives are safe and some even increase the nutritional value of the food.
Cancer Testing
Chemicals usually are tested for an ability to cause cancer by feeding large dosages to small numbers of rats and mice. Large dosages are used to compensate for the small number of animals that can be used (a few hundred is considered a big study, though it is tiny compared to the U.S. population of 270 million). Also, the large dosages can compensate for the possibility that rodents may be less sensitive than people to a particular chemical (as happened with thalidomide).

Some people claim that such tests are improper and that large amounts of any chemical would cause cancer. That is not true. Huge amounts of most chemicals do not cause cancer. When a large dosage causes cancer, most scientists believe that a smaller amount would also cause cancer, but less frequently. It would be nice if lower, more realistic dosages could be used, but a test using low dosages and a small number of animals would be extraordinarily insensitive.

It would also be nice if test-tube tests not using any animals were developed that could cheaply and accurately identify cancer-causing chemicals. While some progress has been made in that direction, those tests have not proven reliable. Thus, the standard high-dosage cancer test on small numbers of animals is currently the only practical, reasonably reliable way to identify food additives (and other chemicals) that might cause cancer.

The Delaney Clause is an important part of the federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. That important consumer-protection clause specifically bans any additive that "is found to induce cancer when ingested by man or animal." The food and chemical industries are seeking to weaken or repeal that law.

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ADDITIVES TO AVOID

ARTIFICIAL COLORINGS

Most artificial colorings are synthetic chemicals that do not occur in nature. Because colorings are used almost solely in foods of low nutritional value (candy, soda pop, gelatin desserts, etc.), you should simply avoid all artificially colored foods. In addition to problems mentioned below, colorings cause hyperactivity in some sensitive children. The use of coloring usually indicates that fruit or other natural ingredient has not been used.

BLUE 1 ... Artificial coloring: Beverages, candy, baked goods. Inadequately tested; suggestions of a small cancer risk.

BLUE 2 ... Artificial coloring: Pet food, beverages, candy. The largest study suggested, but did not prove, that this dye caused brain tumors in male mice. The FDA concluded that there is "reasonable certainty of no harm."

GREEN 3 ... Artificial colorings: Candy, beverages. A 1981 industry-sponsored study gave hints of bladder cancer, but FDA re-analyzed the data using other statistical tests and concluded that the dye was safe. Fortunately, this possibly carcinogenic dye is rarely used.

RED 3 ... Cherries in fruit cocktail, candy, baked goods. The evidence that this dye caused thyroid tumors in rats is "convincing," according to a 1983 review committee report requested by FDA. FDA’s recommendation that the dye be banned was overruled by pressure from elsewhere in the Reagan Administration.

YELLOW 6 ... Artificial coloring: Beverages, sausage, baked goods, candy, gelatin. Industry-sponsored animal tests indicated that this dye, the third most widely used, causes tumors of the adrenal gland and kidney. In addition, small amounts of several carcinogens contaminate Yellow 6. However, the FDA reviewed those data and found reasons to conclude that Yellow 6 does not pose a significant cancer risk to humans. Yellow 6 may also cause occasional allergic reactions.

ACESULFAME-K... Artificial sweetener: Baked goods, chewing gum, gelatin desserts, soft drinks.

This artificial sweetener, manufactured by Hoechst, a giant German chemical company, is widely used around the world. It is about 200 times sweeter than sugar. In the United States, for several years acesulfame-K (the K is the chemical symbol for potassium) was permitted only in such foods as sugar-free baked goods, chewing gum, and gelatin desserts. In July 1998, the FDA allowed this chemical to be used in soft drinks, thereby greatly increasing consumer exposure.

The safety tests of acesulfame-K were conducted in the 1970s and were of mediocre quality. Key rat tests were afflicted by disease in the animal colonies; a mouse study was several months too brief and did not expose animals during gestation. Two rat studies suggest that the additive might cause cancer. It was for those reasons that in 1996 the Center for Science in the Public Interest urged the FDA to require better testing before permitting acesulfame-K in soft drinks. In addition, large doses of acetoacetamide, a breakdown product, have been shown to affect the thyroid in rats, rabbits, and dogs. Hopefully, the small amounts in food are not harmful.

OLESTRA (read more) (Olean) ... Fat substitute: Chips, crackers.

Olestra is Procter & Gamble’s synthetic fat that is not absorbed by the body, but runs right through. Procter & Gamble suggests that replacing regular fat with olestra will help people lose weight and lower the risk of heart disease.

Olestra can cause diarrhea and loose stools, abdominal cramps, flatulence, and other adverse effects. Those symptoms are sometimes severe.
Even more importantly, olestra reduces the body’s ability to absorb fat-soluble carotenoids (such as alpha and beta-carotene, lycopene, lutein, and canthaxanthin) from fruits and vegetables. Those nutrients are thought by many experts to reduce the risk of cancer and heart disease. Olestra enables manufacturers to offer greasy-feeling low-fat snacks, but consumers would be much better off with baked snacks, which are perfectly safe and just as low in calories. Products made with olestra should not be called "fat free," because they contain substantial amounts of indigestible fat.

POTASSIUM BROMATE (read more) ... Flour improver: Bread and rolls.

This additive has long been used to increase the volume of bread and to produce bread with a fine crumb (the not-crust part of bread) structure. Most bromate rapidly breaks down to form innocuous bromide. However, bromate itself causes cancer in animals. The tiny amounts of bromate that may remain in bread pose a small risk to consumers. Bromate has been banned virtually worldwide except in Japan and the United States. It is rarely used in California because a cancer warning might be required on the label. In 1999, the Center for Science in the Public Interest petitioned the FDA to ban bromate.

PROPYL GALLATE ... Antioxidant preservative: Vegetable oil, meat products, potato sticks, chicken soup base, chewing gum.

Propyl gallate retards the spoilage of fats and oils and is often used with BHA and BHT, because of the synergistic effects these preservatives have. The best studies on rats and mice were peppered with suggestions (but not proof) that this preservative might cause cancer. Avoid.

SACCHARIN (read more) ... Artificial sweetener: "Diet" products, soft drinks (especially fountain drinks at restaurants), packets.

Saccharin (Sweet ’N Low) is 350 times sweeter than sugar and is used in dietetic foods or as a tabletop sugar substitute. Many studies on animals have shown that saccharin can cause cancer of the urinary bladder. In other rodent studies, saccharin has caused cancer of the uterus, ovaries, skin, blood vessels, and other organs. Other studies have shown that saccharin increases the potency of other cancer-causing chemicals. And the best epidemiology study (done by the National Cancer Institute) found that the use of artificial sweeteners (saccharin and cyclamate) was associated with a higher incidence of bladder cancer.

In 1977, the FDA proposed that saccharin be banned, because of studies that it causes cancer in animals. However, Congress intervened and permitted it to be used, provided that foods bear a warning notice. It has been replaced in many products by aspartame (NutraSweet).
In 1997, the diet-food industry began pressuring the U.S. and Canadian governments and the World Health Organization to take saccharin off their lists of cancer-causing chemicals. The industry acknowledges that saccharin causes bladder cancer in male rats, but argues that those tumors are caused by a mechanism that would not occur in humans. Many public health experts respond by stating that, even if that still-unproved mechanism were correct in male rats, saccharin could cause cancer by additional mechanisms and that, in some studies, saccharin has caused bladder cancer in mice and in female rats and other cancers in both rats and mice.
In May 2000, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services removed saccharin from its list of cancer-causing chemicals. Later that year, Congress passed a law removing the warning notice that likely will result in increased use in soft drinks and other foods and in a slightly greater incidence of cancer.

SODIUM NITRITE, SODIUM NITRATE ... Preservative, coloring, flavoring: Bacon, ham, frankfurters, luncheon meats, smoked fish, corned beef.

Meat processors love sodium nitrite because it stabilizes the red color in cured meat (without nitrite, hot dogs and bacon would look gray) and gives a characteristic flavor. Sodium nitrate is used in dry cured meat, because it slowly breaks down into nitrite. Adding nitrite to food can lead to the formation of small amounts of potent cancer-causing chemicals (nitrosamines), particularly in fried bacon.

Nitrite, which also occurs in saliva and forms from nitrate in several vegetables, can undergo the same chemical reaction in the stomach. Companies now add ascorbic acid or erythorbic acid to bacon to inhibit nitrosamine formation, a measure that has greatly reduced the problem. While nitrite and nitrate cause only a small risk, they are still worth avoiding.
Several studies have linked consumption of cured meat and nitrite by children, pregnant women, and adults with various types of cancer. Although those studies have not yet proven that eating nitrite in bacon, sausage, and ham causes cancer in humans, pregnant women would be prudent to avoid those products.
The meat industry justifies its use of nitrite and nitrate by claiming that it prevents the growth of bacteria that cause botulism poisoning. That’s true, but freezing and refrigeration could also do that, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture has developed a safe method using lactic-acid-producing bacteria.

The use of nitrite and nitrate has decreased greatly over the decades, because of refrigeration and restrictions on the amounts used. The meat industry could do the public’s health a favor by cutting back even further. Because nitrite is used primarily in fatty, salty foods, consumers have important nutritional reasons for avoiding nitrite-preserved foods.

STEVIA (read more) ... Natural, high-potency sweetener: powdered dietary supplement. (Not approved as a food additive in the U.S., Canada, EC.)

Stevia, which is about 100 times sweeter than sugar, is obtained from a shrub (yerba dulce) that grow in Brazil and Paraguay. The name of the actual sweet chemical is stevioside. The health-food industry advocates stevia extract as a safe alternative to synthetic sweeteners, like saccharin, aspartame, and sucralose. It is said to be widely used in Japan and several other countries. However, just because a substance is natural, does not mean that it is safe.

The U.S. FDA has rejected stevia (or stevioside) for use as a food additive. Likewise, Canada has not approved stevia, and a European Community scientific panel declared that stevia is unacceptable for use in food. Studies found that high dosages fed to rats caused reduced sperm production and an increase in cell proliferation in their testicles, which could cause infertility or other problems. When pregnant hamsters were fed large amounts of a derivative of stevioside called steviol, they had fewer and smaller offspring.

In the laboratory, steviol can be converted into a mutagenic compound, which may promote cancer by causing mutations in the cells genetic material (DNA). In addition, very large amounts of stevioside can interfere with the absorption of carbohydrates in animals and disrupt the conversion of food into energy within cells. In sum, small amounts of stevia are probably safe, but it is inappropriate to endorse wide use of this sweetener.

CYCLAMATE ... Artificial sweetener: Diet foods.

This controversial high-potency sweetener was used in the United States in diet foods until 1970, at which time it was banned. Animal studies indicated that it causes cancer. Now, based on animal studies, it (or a byproduct) is believed not to cause cancer directly, but to increase the potency of other carcinogens and to harm the testes.

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CAUTION!!! [May pose a risk and needs to be better tested. Try to avoid THE FOLLOWING:]

CITRUS RED 2 ... Artificial coloring: Skin of some Florida oranges only. Studies indicated that this additive causes cancer. The dye does not seep through the orange skin into the pulp. No risk except when eating peel.
RED 40 ... Artificial coloring: Soda pop, candy, gelatin desserts, pastry, pet food, sausage. The most widely used food dye. While this is one of the most-tested food dyes, the key mouse tests were flawed and inconclusive. An FDA review committee acknowledged problems, but said evidence of harm was not "consistent" or "substantial." Like other dyes, Red 40 is used mainly in junk foods.

BROMINATED VEGETABLE OIL (BVO) ... Emulsifier, clouding agent: Soft drinks

BVO keeps flavor oils in suspension and gives a cloudy appearance to citrus-flavored soft drinks. Eating BVO leaves small residues in body fat; it is unclear whether those residues pose any risk. Fortunately, BVO is not widely used.

BUTYLATED HYDROXYANISOLE (BHA) ... Antioxidant: Cereals chewing gum, potato chips, and vegetable oil.

BHA retards rancidity in fats, oils, and oil-containing foods. While most studies indicate it is safe, some studies demonstrated that it caused cancer in rats. This synthetic chemical can be replaced by safer chemicals (e.g., vitamin E), safer processes (e.g., packing foods under nitrogen instead of air), or can simply be left out (many brands of oily foods, such as potato chips, don’t use any antioxidant).

BUTYLATED HYDROXYTOLUENE (BHT) ... Antioxidant: Cereals, chewing gum, potato chips, oils, etc.

BHT retards rancidity in oils. It either increased or decreased the risk of cancer in various animal studies. Residues of BHT occur in human fat. BHT is unnecessary or is easily replaced by safe substitutes. Avoid it when possible.
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CERTAIN PEOPLE should AVOID these additives:

ARTIFICIAL AND NATURAL FLAVORING ... Flavoring: Soda pop, candy, breakfast cereals, gelatin desserts, and many other foods.

Hundreds of chemicals are used to mimic natural flavors; many may be used in a single flavoring, such as for cherry soda pop. Most flavoring chemicals also occur in nature and are probably safe, but they are used almost exclusively in junk foods. Their use indicates that the real thing (often fruit) has been left out. Companies keep the identity of artificial (and natural) flavorings a deep secret. Flavorings may include substances to which some people are sensitive, such as MSG or HVP.

ASPARTAME ....Artificial sweetener: "Diet" foods, including soft drinks, drink mixes, gelatin desserts, low-calorie frozen desserts, packets

Aspartame (Equal, NutraSweet), made up primarily of two amino acids, was thought to be the perfect artificial sweetener, but questions arose about the quality of the cancer tests. Considering how widely aspartame is used, independent tests should be conducted.
Some people have reported dizziness, hallucinations, or headache after drinking diet soda, but such reports have never been confirmed in controlled studies. Obviously, anyone who thinks they have been affected by aspartame should avoid it. Also, the few people with the rare disease PKU (phenylketonuria) need to avoid it.

There is little evidence that this or other artificial sweeteners have helped people lose weight. Indeed, since 1980, consumption of artificial sweeteners and rates of obesity have both soared, however, those sweeteners certainly might aid some strong-willed dieters.
Finally, be wary of claims scattered around the Internet that aspartame is responsible for a wide range of diseases. Most such claims are not supported by studies.

YELLOW 5 ... Artificial coloring: Gelatin dessert, candy, pet food, baked goods. The second most widely used coloring causes mild allergic reactions, primarily in aspirin-sensitive persons.

GUMS: Arabic, Furcelleran, Ghatti, Guar, Karaya, Locust Bean, Tragacanth, Xanthan ... Thickening agents, stabilizers: Beverages, ice cream, frozen pudding, salad dressing, dough, cottage cheese, candy, drink mixes.

Gums are derived from natural sources (bushes, trees, seaweed, bacteria) and are poorly tested, though probably safe. They are not absorbed by the body. They are used to thicken foods, prevent sugar crystals from forming in candy, stabilize beer foam (arabic), form a
gel in pudding (furcelleran), encapsulate flavor oils in powdered drink mixes, or keep oil and water mixed together in salad dressings. Gums are often used to replace fat in low-fat ice cream, baked goods, and salad dressings. Tragacanth has caused occasional severe allergic reactions.

MYCOPROTEIN ... Meat substitute: Quorn-brand foods.

Mycoprotein, the novel ingredient in Quorn-brand frozen meat substitutes, is made from processed mold (Fusarium venenatum). Though the manufacturer s (Marlow Foods) advertising and labeling implied that the product is "mushroom protein" or "mushroom in origin," the mold (or fungus) from which it is made does not produce mushrooms. Rather, the mold is grown in liquid solution in large tanks. It has been used in the United Kingdom since the 1990s and has also been sold in continental Europe. The chunks of imitation meat are nutritious, but the prepared foods in which they are used may be high in fat or salt. Several percent of consumers are sensitive to Quorn products, resulting in vomiting, nausea, diarrhea, and, less often, hives and anaphylactic reactions.

CAFFEINE ... Stimulant: Naturally occurring in coffee, tea, cocoa, coffee-flavored yogurt and frozen desserts. Additive in soft drinks, gum, and waters.

Caffeine is the only drug that is present naturally or added to widely consumed foods (quinine is the other drug used in foods). It is mildly addictive, one possible reason that makers of soft drinks add it to their products. Many coffee drinkers experience withdrawal symptoms, such as headaches, irritability, sleepiness, and lethargy, when they stop drinking coffee.

Because caffeine increases the risk of miscarriages (and possibly birth defects) and inhibits fetal growth, it should be avoided by women who are pregnant or considering becoming pregnant. It also may make it harder to get pregnant (but don’t use it as a birth-control pill!).

Caffeine also keeps many people from sleeping, causes jitteriness, and affects calcium metabolism. The caffeine in a cup or two of coffee is harmless to most people. But if you drink more than a couple of cups of coffee or cans of caffeine-containing soda per day, experience symptoms noted above, are at risk of osteoporosis, or are pregnant, you should rethink your habit.

CARMINE; COCHINEAL EXTRACT ... Artificial coloring.

Cochineal extract is a coloring extracted from the eggs of the cochineal beetle, which lives on cactus plants in Peru, the Canary Islands, and elsewhere. Carmine is a more purified coloring made from cochineal. In both cases, the actual substance that provides the color is carminic acid.

These colorings, which are extremely stable, are used in some red, pink, or purple candy, yogurt, Campari, ice cream, beverages, and many other foods, as well as drugs and cosmetics.

These colorings have caused allergic reactions that range from hives (disease that causes large, itchy patches to appear on the skin, usually cased by an allergic reaction) to life-threatening anaphylactic shock. It is not known how many people suffer from this allergy. The Food and Drug Administration should ban cochineal extract and carmine or, at the very least, require that they be identified clearly on food labels so that people could avoid them. Natural or synthetic substitutes are available. A label statement should also disclose that, Carmine is extracted from dried insects so that vegetarians and others who want to avoid animal products could do so.

CASEIN, SODIUM CASEINATE ... Thickening and whitening agent: Ice cream, ice milk, sherbet, coffee creamers.

Casein, the principal protein in milk, is a nutritious protein containing adequate amounts of all the essential amino acids. People who are allergic to casein should read food labels carefully, because the additive is used in some “non-dairy” and “vegetarian” foods.

HYDROGENATED STARCH HYDROLYSATE (HSH) ... Sweetener: Dietetic and reduced-calorie foods.

HSH, like sorbitol, is slightly sweet and poorly absorbed by the body. Like sorbitol, and other sugar alcohols, eating significant amounts of HSH may cause intestinal gas and diarrhea.
HYDROLYZED VEGETABLE PROTEIN (HVP) ... Flavor enhancer: Instant soups, frankfurters, sauce mixes, beef stew.

HVP consists of vegetable (usually soybean) protein that has been chemically broken down to the amino acids of which it is composed. HVP is used to bring out the natural flavor of food (and, perhaps, to enable companies to use less real food). It contains MSG and may cause adverse reactions in sensitive individuals.

LACTOSE ... Sweetener: Whipped topping mix, breakfast pastry.

Lactose, a carbohydrate found only in milk, is one of Nature’s ways of delivering calories to infant mammals. One-sixth as sweet as table sugar, lactose is added to food as a slightly sweet source of carbohydrate. Milk turns sour when bacteria convert lactose to lactic acid. Many people, especially non-Caucasians, have trouble digesting lactose. Bacteria in their guts may produce gas.

MONOSODIUM GLUTAMATE (MSG) ... Flavor enhancer: Soup, salad dressing, chips, frozen entrees, restaurant foods

This amino acid brings out the flavor in many foods. While that may sound like a treat for taste buds, the use of MSG allows companies to reduce the amount of real ingredients in their foods, such as chicken in chicken soup. In the 1960s, it was discovered that large amounts of MSG fed to infant mice destroyed nerve cells in the brain. After that research was publicized, public pressure forced baby-food companies to stop adding MSG to their products (it was used to make the foods taste better to parents).
Careful studies have shown that some people are sensitive to MSG. Reactions include headache, nausea, weakness, and burning sensation in the back of neck and forearms. Some people complain of wheezing, changes in heart rate, and difficulty breathing. Some people claim to be sensitive to very small amounts of MSG, but no good studies have been done to determine just how little MSG can cause a reaction in the most-sensitive people. To protect the public’s health, manufacturers and restaurateurs should use less or no MSG and the amounts of MSG should be listed on labels of foods that contain significant amounts. People who believe they are sensitive to MSG should be aware that other ingredients, such as natural flavoring and hydrolyzed vegetable protein, also contain glutamate. Also, foods such as Parmesan cheese and tomatoes contain glutamate that occurs naturally, but no reactions have been reported to those foods.

QUININE ... Flavoring: Tonic water, quinine water, bitter lemon.

This drug can cure malaria and is used as a bitter flavoring in a few soft drinks. There is a slight chance that quinine causes birth defects, so, to be on the safe side, pregnant women should avoid quinine-containing beverages and drugs. Relatively poorly tested.

SULFITES (SULFUR DIOXIDE, SODIUM BISULFITE) ... Preservative, bleach: Dried fruit, wine, processed potatoes

Sulfiting agents prevent discoloration (dried fruit, some "fresh" shrimp, and some dried, fried, or frozen potatoes) and bacterial growth (wine). They also destroy vitamin B-1 and, most important, can cause severe reactions, especially in asthmatics. If you think you may be sensitive, avoid all forms of this additive, because it has caused at least twelve known deaths and probably many more.
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CUT BACK on these! [Not toxic, but large amounts may be unsafe or promote bad nutrition.]

HIGH-FRUCTOSE CORN SYRUP (read more) ... Sweetener: Soft drinks, other processed foods

Corn syrup can be treated with enzymes to convert some of its dextrose to fructose, which results in High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS). HFCS has largely replaced ordinary sugar used in soft drinks and many other foods because it is cheaper. Americans consume about 59 pounds per year of HFCS (and a total of 150 pounds per year of all refined sugars).

CORN SYRUP (read more) ... Sweetener, thickener: Candy, toppings, syrups, snack foods, imitation dairy foods.

Corn syrup, which consists mostly of dextrose, is a sweet, thick liquid made by treating cornstarch with acids or enzymes. It may be dried and used as corn syrup solids in coffee whiteners and other dry products. Corn syrup contains no nutritional value other than calories, promotes tooth decay, and is used mainly in foods with little intrinsic nutritional value.

DEXTROSE (read more) ... Sweetener, coloring agent: Bread, caramel, soda pop, cookies, and many other foods

Dextrose is an important chemical in every living organism. A sugar, it is a source of sweetness in fruits and honey. Added to foods as a sweetener, it represents empty calories and contributes to tooth decay. Dextrose turns brown when heated and contributes to the color of bread crust and toast. Americans consume about 25 pounds per year of dextrose -- and a total of about 150 pounds per year of all refined sugars.

FRUCTOSE ... Sweetener: "health" drinks and other products

Fructose (also called levulose) is a sugar that is a little sweeter than table sugar. Modest amounts of fructose occur naturally in fruits and vegetables, which also contain other sugars. When table sugar is digested, it breaks down into equal amounts of fructose and glucose (dextrose). Another major source of fructose in the typical diet is high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS), which typically contains about half fructose and half glucose. Modest amounts of fructose are safe and do not boost blood glucose levels, making the sweetener attractive to diabetics. However, large amounts increase triglyceride (fat) levels in blood and, thereby, increase the risk of heart disease.

HYDROGENATED VEGETABLE OIL, PARTIALLY HYDROGENATED VEGETABLE OIL (read more) ... Fat, oil, shortening: Margarine, crackers, fried restaurant foods, baked goods.

Vegetable oil, usually a liquid, can be made into a semi-solid shortening by reacting it with hydrogen. Hydrogenation reduces the levels of polyunsaturated oils — and also creates trans fats, which promote heart disease (they act like saturated fats). Ideally, food manufacturers would replace hydrogenated shortening with less-harmful ingredients.

INVERT SUGAR (read more) ... Sweetener: Candy, soft drinks, many other foods
Invert sugar, a 50-50 mixture of two sugars, dextrose and fructose, is sweeter and more soluble than sucrose (table sugar). Invert sugar forms when sucrose is split in two by an enzyme or acid. It provides "empty calories," contributes to tooth decay, and should be avoided.

LACTITOL ... Sweetener: candy, chocolates, baked goods, ice cream, and other sugar-free foods.

Lactitol, like sorbitol, mannitol, and xylitol, is a sugar alcohol, also called a polyol. It is made from lactose, or milk sugar. Like other sugar alcohols, lactitol is not absorbed well by the body (which means it has fewer calories per gram than table sugar) and does not promote tooth decay. However, large amounts (above 20 to 30 grams) may cause loose stools or diarrhea.

MALTITOL ... Sweetener: Candy, chocolates, jams, and other sugar-free foods.

Maltitol, like sorbitol, mannitol, and xylitol, is a sugar alcohol, also called a polyol. It is made by hydrogenating maltose, which is obtained from corn syrup. Like other sugar alcohols, mannitol is not absorbed well by the body (which means it has fewer calories per gram than table sugar) and does not promote tooth decay. However, large amounts (above 20 to 30 grams) may have a laxative effect.

MANNITOL ... Sweetener, other uses: Chewing gum, low-calorie foods

Not quite as sweet as sugar and poorly absorbed by the body, it contributes only half as many calories as sugar. Used as the "dust" on chewing gum, mannitol prevents gum from absorbing moisture and becoming sticky. Safe — except that large amounts that are used in gum may have a laxative effect and even cause diarrhea.

POLYDEXTROSE ... bulking agent: reduced-calorie salad dressings, baked goods, candies, puddings, frozen desserts

Polydextrose is made by combining dextrose (corn sugar) with sorbitol. The result is a slightly sweet, reduced-calorie (only one calorie per gram because it is poorly digested) bulking agent. The FDA requires that if a serving of a food would likely provide more than 15 grams of polydextrose, the label should advise consumers that "Sensitive individuals may experience a laxative effect from excessive consumption of this product."

SALATRIM (read more) ... Modified fat: baked goods, candy

This manufactured fat (developed by Nabisco) has the physical properties of regular fat, but the manufacturer claims it provides only about 5/9 as many calories. Its use can enable companies to make reduced-calorie claims on their products. Salatrim’s low calorie content results from its content of stearic acid, which the manufacturer says is absorbed poorly, and short-chain fatty acids, which provide fewer calories per unit weight.

Critics have charged that it does not provide as big a calorie reduction as claimed by Nabisco. Moreover, only very limited testing has been done to determine effects on humans. Eating small amounts of salatrim is probably safe, but large amounts (30g or more per day) increase the risk of such side effects as stomach cramps and nausea. No tests have been done to determine if the various food additives (salatrim, olestra, mannitol, and sorbitol) that cause gastrointestinal symptoms can act in concert to cause greater effects.

Nabisco declared salatrim safe and has marketed it, as the law allows, without formal FDA approval. (Nabisco has since sold salatrim to another company, Cultor.) In June 1998, the Center for Science in the Public Interest urged the FDA to ban salatrim until better tests were done and demonstrated safety.

SALT (Sodium Chloride) ... Flavoring: Most processed foods, soup, potato chips, crackers.

Salt is used liberally in many processed foods and restaurant meals. Other additives contribute additional sodium. A diet high in sodium increases the risk or severity of high blood pressure, which increases the risk of heart attack and stroke. Everyone should eat less salt: avoid salty processed foods and restaurant meals, use salt sparingly, and enjoy other seasonings.

SORBITOL (read more) ... Sweetener, thickening agent, maintains moisture. Dietetic drinks and foods, candy, shredded coconut, chewing gum.

Sorbitol occurs naturally in fruits and berries and is a close relative of sugars. It is half as sweet as sugar. It is used many dietetic foods. It is used in non-cariogenic (non-decay-causing) chewing gum because oral bacteria do not metabolize it well. Some diabetics use sorbitol-sweetened foods because it is absorbed slowly and does not cause blood sugar to increase rapidly. Moderate amounts of sorbitol may have a strong laxative effect and even cause diarrhea, but otherwise it is safe.

SUGAR (SUCROSE)... Sweetener: Table sugar, sweetened foods

Sucrose, ordinary table sugar, occurs naturally in fruit, sugar cane, and sugar beets. Americans consume about 65 pounds of sucrose per year. That figure is down from 102 pounds per year around 1970, but the decrease has been more than made up for with HIGH-FRUCTOSE CORN SYRUP and DEXTROSE. About 156 pounds of all refined sugars are produced per person per year, an increase of 28 percent since 1983. Interestingly that’s just when the use of ASPARTAME started skyrocketing. In other words, it appears that artificial sweeteners have not replaced sugar, but may have stimulated America’s sweet tooth.

Sugar and sweetened foods may taste good and supply energy, but most people eat too much of them. Sugar, corn syrup, and other refined sweeteners make up 16 percent of the average diet, but provide no vitamins, minerals, or protein. That means that a person would have to get 100 percent of his or her nutrients from only 84 percent of his or her food. Sugar and other refined sugars can promote obesity, tooth decay, and, in people with high triglycerides, heart disease.

TAGATOSE ... sugar substitute

This new additive is chemically similar to glucose (dextrose, corn sugar), but is poorly absorbed by the body. That is why it yields only one-third as many calories and why large amounts cause diarrhea, nausea, and flatulence. In one study, 20 grams (about five teaspoons) caused nausea.
****************************
Glossary

ANTIOXIDANTS retard the oxidation of unsaturated fats and oils, colorings, and flavorings. Oxidation leads to rancidity, flavor changes, and loss of color. Most of those effects are caused by reaction of oxygen in the air with fats.

CARCINOGEN is a chemical or other agent that causes cancer in animals or humans.

CHELATING AGENTS trap trace amounts of metal atoms that would otherwise cause food to discolor or go rancid.

EMULSIFIERS keep oil and water mixed together.
FLAVOR ENHANCERS have little or no flavor of their own, but accentuate the natural flavor of foods. They are often used when very little of a natural ingredient is present.

THICKENING AGENTS are natural or chemically modified carbohydrates that absorb some of the water that is present in food, thereby making the food thicker. Thickening agents "stabilize" factory-made foods by keeping the complex mixtures of oils, water, acids, and solids well mixed.

Tuesday, July 19, 2005

Kapamilya Bloodletting

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Friday, July 15, 2005

Gloriagate Blogs

Posted by Alecks Pabico
PCIJ

LET a thousand (journalist) blogs bloom.

No doubt about it, the current political crisis rocking the Arroyo administration has made blogging, for all its unmediated, instantaneous and personal nature, an attractive reporting medium for Filipino journalists. Of course, the case for blogging journalists has already been made by the likes of Manuel L. Quezon III, Jove Francisco (By Jove!), Chin Wong ( Digital Life), Erwin Oliva (cyberbaguioboy), to name a few, even before we at the PCIJ started venturing into the blogosphere ourselves.

Recent welcome additions to the journalist blogging community are GMA Network's Howie Severino (Side Trip with Howie Severino), who has a blog on blogs today, and Philippine Daily Inquirer's editorialist John Nery (Newsstand). Much earlier, we also saw GMA reporters coming out with blogs of their own — Tina Panganiban-Perez ( crimson page) and Joseph Morong (Essays and Other Lullabies). The media network is said to be encouraging its reporters to go into blogging.

Another journalist has also been blogging anonymously since May at The Early Edition.

While the mainstream media based in Metro Manila seem slow in grasping the potential of blogging as an important addition to the journalistic toolkit, interesting developments have happened elsewhere. In Cebu, Sun.Star has spiced up its coverage of "Gloriagate" by launching the Citizen Watch: The Arroyo Presidency blog. There's also dyAB, the first radio station (as far as I know) that is complementing all its programs with blogs ( dyAB Abante Bisaya). 

Tuesday, July 12, 2005

Magkat-un Ta ug "Compost", Mare, Pare! :)

HERE'S TO A GARBAGE-FREE WORLD, KAPAMILYA!!! :)

Composting

With the right ingredients and a few simple tools, you can turn grass clippings, leaves, branches, weeds, and some kitchen waste into sweet smelling humus that contains plant nutrients and retains moisture. Composting speeds up the decay of these organic materials. The amount of time it takes to form humus depends on the materials used to make the compost pile, composting techniques, and the amount of effort you put into the process.

Freestanding compost piles can be left alone, and over time, they will decompose, depending on moisture and temperature. This method takes little effort, but requires more space than home composting units, which contain the pile, keep animals from digging into it, and allow you to aerate the compost, so it can decay faster.

Most organic material can go into your compost pile: leaves, branches, weeds, grass clippings, vegetable kitchen waste, saw dust, wood chips, egg shells, tea bags, coffee grounds, paper coffee filters, and paper towels.

BUT you shouldn't use:

· Animal feces. They can contain germs that may not be destroyed during decomposition. If the compost is used in vegetable gardens, the germs can make people sick when they eat the vegetables.

· Meat scraps or grease. They attract rats and flies.
· Plastics. They don't break down.

· Coal or charcoal briquette ashes. They are often chemically treated.

· Pesticides and fungicides. They contain toxic materials.

So what happens inside the compost pile?

Bacteria, fungi, and other microorganisms break down the organic material inside the pile. Microorganisms that live in temperatures from 50° - 113° F (10° - 45° C) begin the decomposition process. The microorganisms generate heat as they consume and digest the material in the pile. As the pile heats up, other microorganisms that live in temperatures from 113° - 158° F (45° - 70° C) take over the decomposition process.

The bacteria that decompose the pile require moisture and oxygen. If the pile is too dry, or if bacteria use up the available oxygen, the temperature drops and the decomposition process slows down. Turn the pile to add air and keep it moist. If the conditions are just right, you'll have rich compost in as little as three weeks.

"Just Follow the Recipe!"


Composting is like baking a cake. Simply add the
ingredients, stir, "bake," and out comes -- compost!

Whether you compost kitchen wastes or yard and
garden wastes, there are a few basic steps to
follow. Here are the necessary ingredients and
general directions for composting.
Ingredients

KITCHEN COMPOST

Add a mixture of some or all of the following
ingredients:

· vegetable peels and seeds
· egg shells
· fruit peels and seeds
· nut shells
· coffee grounds
· any other vegetable or fruit scraps

Note: (Do not add meat scraps, bones, dairy
products, oils, or fat. They may attract pesty
animals.)

YARD OR GARDEN COMPOST

Add a mixture of some or all of the following
ingredients:

· hay or straw
· wood chips
· grass clippings
· weeds and other garden waste
· leaves
· manure
· ashes
· shredded paper
· sawdust

Directions

1. Choose a "pot" for baking your compost. Any type of composting bin will do.

2. Place kitchen or yard wastes into the composting bin. Chop or shred the organic materials if you want them to compost quickly.

3. Spread soil or "already done" compost over the compost pile. This layer contains the microorganisms and soil animals that do the work of making the compost. It also helps keep the surface from drying out.

4. Adjust the moisture in your compost pile. Add dry straw or sawdust to soggy materials, or add water to a pile that is too dry. The materials should be damp to the touch, but not so wet that drops come out when you squeeze it.

5. Allow the pile to "bake." It should heat up quickly and reach the desired temperature (90° to 140°F, or 32° to 60°C) in four to five days.

6. Stir your compost as it bakes if you want to speed up the baking time.

7. The pile will settle down from its original height. This is a good sign that the compost is baking properly.

8. If you mix or turn your compost pile every week, it should be "done," or ready to use, in one to two months. If you don't turn it, the compost should be ready in about six to twelve months.

9. Your "best ever compost" should look like dark crumbly soil mixed with small pieces of organic material. It should have a sweet, earthy smell.

10. Feed compost to hungry plants by mixing it with the soil.

KAPAMILYA, REMEMBER: PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT! :)

Wednesday, July 06, 2005

Cosmetic Surgery, Anyone?!?

Mare, Pare!!!!

Mubalik sa atong panimalay-sa-kahanginan si Dr. Alain Senerpida, ang cosmetic surgeon nga atong nahinabi usa na ka bulan ang milabay, apan wala magdugay kay kinahanglan na tang manira sa atong ganghaan sa Balay ni Tikay! :)

Sama sa iyang gisaad, mubalik siya karong Sabado, petsa 9, sa alas 10 sa buntag kutob alas 12 sa udto, aron sa pagtubag sa inyong mga pangutana kabahin sa mga gikabuangan karon sa mga artista ug mga modelo ngadto sa kauluhan: ang Liposuction, Bust Lift, Nose Lift, ug uban pang mga pa-gwapa ug pa-sexy nga cosmetic surgery.

Uy, Pre, maghisgut sab ta sa mga panglalaki nga operasyun sama sa pagpadaghan ug buhok! hehehehe! :}

Ato sad unyang pangutan-un si Dr. Alain kung tinuod ba nga aduna nay mga nakalas nga mga kinabuhi samtang gepang-operahan?!? ( Pagkakuyaw niini, no, kung tinuod man?!?)

So, don't forget, Kapamilya, ha... karong Sabado, sa atong Balay, inyong Balay...ang Balay ni Tikay, magpadayun ta pagbalik ni Dr. Alain Senerpida alang sa duha ka oras nga kulukabildo sa PA-GWAPAHAY ug PA-GWAPUHAY!!!

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

Kahinumdum Ka ni Elvis Presley?!

Hola, Kapamilya!

Nakahinumdum mo ni Elvis Presley?! Dili katong taga Estados Unidos,kundi katong nanumba'ay sa atong Balay ug nikanta sa mga kanta ni Elvis...hehehehehehe! Daghan kaayo ang ni-request nga ibalik siya.

Pwes, karong Sabado, ang Elvis Presley sa Cebu mubalik sa Balay ni Tikay, alas 10 sa buntag hangtud alas dose sa udto.

Ato sang bisita ang mga miembro sa Caimito Police Assistance Volunteer Force haron atong maila-ila ug mahinabi kabahin sa ilang malampusun kaayo nga kalihukan alang sa pagsugpu sa krimen sa ilang kumunidad. Unsa kaha'y ilang sekreto ug nganung kinahanglan natong mahibaw-an kini?! Mao na ba kaha kini ang tubag sa nagkadaghan nga kaso sa krimen sa atong syudad?!

Hmmmmmmmmmm....... {",

So, see you, Kapamilya?!!!!

Sa atong Balay, inyong Balay, ang .... Balay ni Tikay!!!

Thursday, June 23, 2005

Si Rey Martinez Manumba'ay Karong Sabado!

Kapamilya! {",

Karong Sabado, petsa 25, ubani ako sa pagpadayun sa atong kumpare nga si Rey Martinez, and kontrobersyal nga bata-bata ni Mandaue Mayor Teddy Ouano.

Atong pangutan-un sa Rey kung unsa katinuod nga nalisu-an na kunu siya ug pangisip?! Nga magkanunay na lang kunu siya ug tago sa lugar sa iyang asawa ngadto sa Calubian, Leyte?! Ug kung atua siya didto, wala kunu siya'y laing buhatun kund di mag-atubang sa bukid o sa dagat?!

Nganu kaha, Kapamilya?!?

Aduna ba'y dakung suliran si kumpareng Rey?!?

O.... aduna ba kaha'y milagro nga nahitabo sa iyang kinabuhi, busa nahimu siyang 'bag-ong taw" ?!!

Ahhhh... unsa kaha'y ikatubag ni kumpareng Rey sa atong mga pangutana!!!

Busa...ayaw'g kalimot...karon na kining Sabado, sa alas 10 sa buntag (o! sayu na ta mangabri!!! {", ), sa atong Balay, inyong Balay...ang Balay ni Tikay, Kapamilya!!!

Panumba'ay, ha! :)

Monday, June 20, 2005

Hello, Garci Ring Tone Download

Here are Mp3 and wav files of the Hello Garci ring tone:

Indymedia server:
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (124.1 KB)
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (72.1 KB)

Server Mirror 1:
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (360KB)
"Hello Garci" ringtone, WAV format (197KB)

Server Mirror 2:
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (360KB)
"Hello Garci" ringtone, WAV format (197KB)

Server Mirror 3:
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (360KB)
"Hello Garci" ringtone, WAV format (197KB)

To save, right-click on the file and click save as.

Many thanks to QC Indymedia and Yuga of PinoyBlog and Ploghost for hosting the files.

Links to the entire tape are at the PCIJ blog.

How do I put it in my phone?

1. Download your choice by clicking any or all of the files.

2. Transfer the downloaded file/s from the computer to your phone using either an infrared connection or a USB-to-phone cable.

3. For those whose phones have GPRS/WAP access, point your phone's browser to www.txtpower.org and download it directly to your phone.

4. Once transferred to your phone, the sound file may be used as ringtone for calls or text messages.

Other options

1. Ask for file-transfer from friends who may already have the ringtone. Both your phones should have either infrared or bluetooth connections.

2. Join any of the future anti-GMA rallies and look for the TXTPower banner. Next big date is June 24.

3. Watch out for the TXTPower "Hello Garci" Ringtone Download Team when they go around offices, stores and tiangges, communities and schools!

Friday, June 17, 2005

Download Garci Ring Tone From TxtPower

June 17, 2005
Here are Mp3 and wav files of the Hello Garci ring tone:

Server Mirror 1:
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (360KB)
"Hello Garci" ringtone, WAV format (197KB)

Server Mirror 2:
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (360KB)
"Hello Garci" ringtone, WAV format (197KB)

Server Mirror 3:
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (360KB)
"Hello Garci" ringtone, WAV format (197KB)

To save, right-click on the file and click save as.

Many thanks to Yuga of PinoyBlog and Ploghost for hosting the files.

Links to the entire tape are at the PCIJ blog.

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

Veco's Announcement

SCHEDULED POWER SERVICE INTERRUPTION FOR JUNE 19, 2005

Visayan Electric Company, Inc.'s (VECO) Transmission and Distribution Department (T & D) has scheduled on June 19, 2005 the maintenance & upgrading of our primary lines that will require power interruption as follows:

1) Lateral portion of KBL221

at CABANCALAN substation.

Time: 6:00 AM to 12:00 PM

Purpose: To facilitate relocation of primary poles affected by the on-going

road widening project of DPWH at Binaliw area in Cebu City.

Areas/customers affected: Binaliw-1, 2, & 3, Agsungot, Guba, Adlawon, Mabini,

Paril, Cambinocot, Lusaran, Lanipga and part of Pit-os Talamban.

 

VECO apologizes for any inconvenience the temporary loss of power on Sunday might cause our customers.

For more information, please call VECO's Call Center at 230-VECO (8326).

 

(SGD.) PAUL G. HUBAHIB

Head, Community Relations Department

Newsbreak Tips

Wok with Me
By Marites D. Vitug

First, a disclaimer. I'm not the cook in the family. But I love food—not only as a dish to satisfy my hunger and thrill my senses but as a subject to read about. This tip comes from both my readings and from tasting the food cooked in this wok.

Our latest addition to the kitchen is a Le Creuset cast-iron wok. It's a precious gift bought on sale in the US at half the price of what it costs here. Locally, it is sold for about P11,000.

Why is it special? The traditional wok used in China is of cast iron, "preferred because it adds iron to food and conducts heat well," says Grace Young in her cookbook, which was excerpted in the book Best Food Writing 2000. "A well-seasoned cast-iron wok is a Chinese chef's most treasured utensil, for the more you use it, the more it becomes like a nonstick pan, requiring less and less oil for stir-frying."

What makes this cooking utensil fascinating is the phenomenon of the "breath of a wok," when piping hot stir-fried food is immediately served, fresh from the wok. Ms. Young captures it so well: "It is that elusive seared taste that only lasts for a minute or two." It's a prized taste—and only a great couple can achieve it: a good chef and a seasoned wok. I think we both have that in my family.


This Hotline Works!
By Glenda M. Gloria

Ever been refused by a cab driver because you live far away or he was simply having a bad day? You can report him to the Land Transportation Office (LTO) hotline. And the hotline actually works.

Last month, a friend arrived at the domestic airport from Palawan, flagged down a cab, and was refused by the driver when the latter learned that he was going to Quezon City. Tired, weary, and angry, the spurned passenger jotted down the cab's car plate number, dialed the LTO hotline (7890), and reported the incident.

In three days, LTO officer Felix Engbino wrote him a letter, saying that a hearing had been set to hear his complaint and that the driver had been found. And just to make sure, Engbino sent a text message to the complainant, asking him if he's available on a particular date, when he can meet the driver face to face. Because of LTO's action, the taxi operator suspended the driver for several days.

Some things do work in this country. Next time a cab driver snubs you, fret not. You can get back at him; just dial 7890.


Vigan's Inabel
By Glenda M. Gloria

You've heard this more than once before: the inabel (traditional Ilocano cloth) is cheapest and of highest quality in Vigan.

But don't get carried away once you reach the touristy city. Here's unsolicited advice from an Ilocana (and all its connotations): the best inabel buys are still found in Vigan's public market.

This means that once you're in the tourists' popular destination, Heritage area on Crisologo Street, just enjoy the sight. Ride a kalesa, walk on the cobbled stones, bask in the relics of our Spanish past, visit the shops that sell all sorts of souvenirs. But when in search of inabel, resist the urge to splurge.

Go instead to the public market, where the price is much, much lower, and where you can find all inabel varieties: tablecloths, placemats, tea mats, blankets (even for kids), etc. Hand towels sell for as low as P7 each.

The shop that I found to have the most quality choices is Ining's Store. I enjoyed its rare designs, not to mention the time I spent bargaining with the people running it. Look for Cris Alicante or, for orders, call (0919) 396-5191.


Minimalist in Tanay
By Marites D. Vitug

If you want to get away from this maddening heat, then drive to Tanay. There, it's just you and the Sierra Madre and the cool breeze. Your eyes will feast on vast greenery and undulating mountains that seem to touch the light blue sky. You won't find many residents, much less tourists. Very few houses are perched on the mountain slopes.

Tanay is all yours.

You'll find a small pine tree forest where the phrase "a walk in the woods" is so apt. The forest is part of an enterprise called "Munting Gubat," where they sell pine tree seedlings and trees for Christmas; they also offer a picnic area.

There are two resorts in Tanay that have restaurants, The Sierra Madre and Pranjetto Hills, but food is not immediately available. Not many people visit, so the restaurants cook only when you order. Food is not a come-on in these parts, though.

Both resorts have swimming pools. But there's more that can be done to enjoy the scenery, for instance, setting up bamboo beds under the trees facing the mountains.

Tanay is not far from the metropolis. Take Marcos Highway, and, except for a choke point in the Cogeo area, you'll find the rest of the drive a delight. From the flatlands of Antipolo, it takes about an hour to reach Tanay. It's approximately 40 kilometers from the intersection of Katipunan and Marcos Highway.

Tanay, some say, will be the Tagaytay of the future. Its potential is still untapped.

Monday, June 13, 2005

Gloria's Alleged Conversations

You can download the three-hour-three-CDs audio recording of the alleged telephone conversation between Pres. Arroyo and Comelec Commissioner Virgilio Garcillano through these 33 separate MP3 files provided by PCIJ:
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33
 
For first-timers:  You can download by right-clicking on the links above and save each one to your hard disk.