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#221 |
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good news ambassador
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 675
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April 15, 2009
BACOLOD: Tower monument to Pope being built ![]() (pic by thesugarfairy of ssc-bacolod) If you are wondering what that derrick is doing at the sea front gate of SM Mega Mall, you will be in for a surprise. By May it will boast a seven-storey tower – a monument to the 1981 visit of the late Pope John Paul II. This monumental project is a donation by Bacolod Real Estate Development Corp., headed lawyer Simplicio (Sammy Palanca) to the San Sebastian Cathedral. It aims to provide the Bacolod Diocese a steady source of income for the upkeep of the Cathedral. It will cost some P6-million to finish, Palanca admitted. He had to buy back the 900 square meter lot on which the tower is to be constructed. Already in his early eighties, Palanca is focused on the project. His recent bout with a gastro-intestinal ailment has not diminished his enthusiasm for the shrine project. “The February 20, 1981 visit the Pope John Paul II to Bacolod was not just historic, it also represented a blessing for the New Bacolod City rising from the sea,” was how he put it during a recent talk with this author. For him, it is important that Bacolod folk and Negrenses should remember that event where some 700,000 people from all walks of life swarmed into the seaside altar to witness the Pope celebrate the mass and also to listen to him deliver his message to the people of Negros Occidental. Bishop Antonio Y. Fortich led the group of the Negros clergy who were at the altar. The seven storey monument will boast a tower with a parapet from which visitors will enjoy a panoramic view of Bacolod City and the Guimaras Strait. Able-bodied visitors can trudge up the stairway to the tower. But there is also an external elevator, glass encased. This will be for the disabled and the aging seniors. The elevator had already been ordered from Korea, according to one of the coordinators of the project. The elevator will accommodate four to five persons. The ground portion will have spaces for a maximum of eight vehicles in four separate parking areas. The Church is expected to ask for entrance fee to the shrine. Or it could be in the form of donations to the shrine. Palanca said he intends to collect and print outsized photos of that visit along the walls of the various floors of the seven storey structure. It will also include religious artifacts. All are designed to uplift the spirit of visitors and stress the importance of religion in their lives, was how Palanca put it. Fr. Felix Pasquin, the rector of the San Sebastian Cathedral, was the one who negotiated the donation of the project. And Palanca said this will be turned over to the Bacolod Diocese in May when the project shall have been completed. Pope John II traveled by Pope Mobile to the seaside sprawling platform on February 20, 1981, from the 1982 Bishop’s residence along Rizal Street. By that time, the road was already cemented. By that time thousands had already congregated in the area. Thousands more followed the Pope who was accompanied by bishop Fortich and members of the local clergy. Actually, it was in 1961 when a group of forward-looking Bacolod residents, joined Palanca in putting up BREDCO to reclaim some 250 hectares of Bacolod’s foreshore area into a docking place for inter island vessels and international boats. Work was initially slow-paced, by 1975, it picked up with the entry into the scene of Marsteel Corporation and Marsteel Consolidated, Inc. headed by Antonio Martel. The Development Bank of the Philippines also provided financing for the project. By the time of the Pope’s visit, BREDCO had already reclaimed 100 of the 250 hectares it had envisioned to carve out of the Bacolod foreshore area. Today, the once sea-covered area has become a bustling commercial center with promises of becoming an industrial beehive following the approval by the Philippine Export Processing zone of its initial offer to put up an economic zone. The 1981 visit, therefore, served as a blessing for the city from the sea. Another reason why Palanca gazes with joy at the donation of a shrine that will serve to immortalize that historic chapter in Bacolod’s progress as a city.*
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are you sometimes tempted to wish you have never learned certain information? the hour is late but perhaps not too late to preserved our precious lifes and freedoms. what you have just read is peanuts compared to the other scenario that will become more obvious as the year progresses. this is just only the beginning of the end. therefore, our advice to any non-jews is you'd better hurry up. your time is quickly running out. once you read it or hear it, go for it, it is yours for life in getting yourself right w/ our SAVIOR |
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#222 |
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good news ambassador
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 675
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FAMILIA LIZARES MANSION IN NEGROS OCCIDENTAL
LIZARES MANSION - BACOLOD CITY ![]() ![]() LIZARES MANSION - TALISAY CITY ![]() (Photos courtesy from Rogue Magazine)
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are you sometimes tempted to wish you have never learned certain information? the hour is late but perhaps not too late to preserved our precious lifes and freedoms. what you have just read is peanuts compared to the other scenario that will become more obvious as the year progresses. this is just only the beginning of the end. therefore, our advice to any non-jews is you'd better hurry up. your time is quickly running out. once you read it or hear it, go for it, it is yours for life in getting yourself right w/ our SAVIOR |
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#223 |
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Bacolod On My Mind
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 887
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Dr. Cecilia Locsin-Nava: Nurturing the ‘Inaton’ Literature
By Gil Alfredo B. Severino I love the way Dr. Cecilia Nava would integrate laughter into her method of teaching. In my several visits to her lovely home, she would unselfishly show her books and never fail to mentor using her good command of the English language. She can communicate in Spanish as this is very useful in her chosen discipline but long to study it intently. She is not just an educator but walked the main streets of Bacolod to raise funds for cancer patients. She practised Tai-Chi and is conversant in any topic that pops up. She had even dreamt of becoming a suicide bomber to end corruption. Most of all, Dr. Nava is the “mother” of the scholarly approach in studying the Hiligaynon literature here in Negros Island. I have good reasons to believe no one can surpass the seriousness of her studies. She mentioned about the “annales” school of interpreting history as the theoretical framework for her doctoral dissertation in the Philippine Studies Program of the University of the Philippines. Reading her “History and Society in the Novels of Ramon Muzones,” one can see the Lucien Febvre’s approach to social and economic history using a wide range of sources like maps, folklores, songs and literature at the same time examining her Muzones-protagonist against the geography, social, cultural and political features of the early 20th century Iloilo or Panay for that matter. She has no pretensions of being a prolific writer of books but her knowledge of the Hiligaynon literature is a legacy which will make things easy for the next generation. I saw two books laid in our conference and brought to my TV program “Check and Balance” last week. The other book she wrote is “Corrido” published and exclusively sold by the National Historical Commission. Here, Dr. Nava taught us the historical affinity of the Philippines and Mexico using a musical medium “Corrido” but could have been more Hiligaynon had she used the letter “K” for “Korrido” instead of “C”. I have not yet read Dr. Nava’s “Corrido” book but the transfer of the Spanish culture through the Mexican filtration is yet to be realized. Dr. Nava is never tired of pounding this and for the Philippine educational system to realized that Spanish rule was through the Viceroy of Mexico. I asked Dr. Nava why in many of her studies and two books, “Panay” appeared to be the standout dwarfing Negros in almost all materials she used for study. It is unfortunate, she said, that Negros society has not institutionalized nor valued historiography. Negros still look up to Panay for serious study of it history and society besides being but a settlement of commerce through Nicholas Looney. Negros is still a young society but with an umbilical cord attached to its mother Panay, a reality which every Negrense has to reckon with. This piece cannot contain Dr. Nava’s stories and how she tells them is a memorial kept in the heart.* www.ndb-online.com
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BACOLOD IS WHERE MY HEART IS. "LIFE ISN'T ABOUT FINDING YOURSELF. LIFE IS ABOUT CREATING YOURSELF" |
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#224 | |
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Bacolod On My Mind
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 887
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BACOLOD IS WHERE MY HEART IS. "LIFE ISN'T ABOUT FINDING YOURSELF. LIFE IS ABOUT CREATING YOURSELF" |
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#225 | |
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Bacolod On My Mind
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 887
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Quote:
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BACOLOD IS WHERE MY HEART IS. "LIFE ISN'T ABOUT FINDING YOURSELF. LIFE IS ABOUT CREATING YOURSELF" |
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#226 |
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good news ambassador
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 675
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Talisay Ruins on list
of 12 most fascinating BY CARLA GOMEZ ![]() source The Ruins in Talisay City, Negros Occidental, is among “12 of the World's Most Fascinating Ruins” featured under places on Oddee. Oddee at www.oddee.com is a blog with over 2.5 million visitors worldwide a month that “features the odd, strange and bizarre things of our world, Be amazed!”, its home page says. Ruins The Ruins in Talisay City* The Ruins in Talisay is ranked in 12th place and is described as “a mansion built by a sugar magnate at the turn of the last century that not once, but twice, was destroyed in the Second World War in order to prevent Japanese forces from using it. Once on their way out of the Philippines, the USAAFE bombed and strafed the home, and Philippines rebels burned it down to keep it from falling into Japanese hands.” The Ruins, built in the early 1990s by sugar planter Mariano Ledesma Lacson (1865-1948), is now a tourists attraction ran by his great grandson Raymund Javellana, who runs the place. Javellana told the DAILY STAR yesterday he does not know how The Ruins got included in Oddee or who runs the blog but he is grateful for the publicity it is giving the place. “I just hope that this can spur tourist arrivals to Negros,” he said. During the early part of the war, Filipino guerrillas from the United States Armed Forces in the Far East set fire to the mansion to prevent the Japanese forces from utilizing it as their headquarters, he said. But he denied that the USAAFE also bombed and strafed the home as stated on Oddee. Topping the Oddee list of fascinating ruins at http://www.oddee.com/item_96671.aspx is the most famous of all the Inca ruins built in the mid 15th century, Machu Picchu, which appears to be suspended between two mountains and is often enshrouded in mist. In second place is Babylon in Iraq, followed by Palenque in Mexico, the ruins of Ayutthaya in Thailand, the Colosseum in Italy, the Tikal Ruins in Guatemala, Chichén Itzá Ruin in Mexico, the Parthenon in Greece, Jesuitical Ruins of Trinidad in Paraguay, the Copan Ruins in Honduras, and the Palmyra Ruins in Syria.*CPG http://visayandailystar.com/2009/June/08/topstory6.htm
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are you sometimes tempted to wish you have never learned certain information? the hour is late but perhaps not too late to preserved our precious lifes and freedoms. what you have just read is peanuts compared to the other scenario that will become more obvious as the year progresses. this is just only the beginning of the end. therefore, our advice to any non-jews is you'd better hurry up. your time is quickly running out. once you read it or hear it, go for it, it is yours for life in getting yourself right w/ our SAVIOR |
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#227 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 9
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Thanks for sharing the photos of Silay postergirl.
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#228 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 50
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#229 |
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good news ambassador
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 675
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oonga,,,it looks more on bunsiness building...cool even the structure is a small but purposely for a mix-used (leisure & commercial building)
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are you sometimes tempted to wish you have never learned certain information? the hour is late but perhaps not too late to preserved our precious lifes and freedoms. what you have just read is peanuts compared to the other scenario that will become more obvious as the year progresses. this is just only the beginning of the end. therefore, our advice to any non-jews is you'd better hurry up. your time is quickly running out. once you read it or hear it, go for it, it is yours for life in getting yourself right w/ our SAVIOR |
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#230 |
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Wake me when it's over
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: east of eden
Posts: 673
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it's more in the nature of a glass tower, to afford a view I guess, it's not thick enough to look like a condo or a business building...just a modern glass tower...like I said..
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#231 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 0
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looking for old steam engines...
Hi All,
I'm new on this thread but I'm hoping that you can be of help, I'll be traveling to Negros in a couple of months and I'm hoping to see some of the old steam engines that are on display, the only problem is finding out where they are! I've found locations for the Lopez Sugar Co "shay" in Sagay City and also the big Baldwin "mallet" that is in the city plaza in Sagay city. I think there is a loco on display outside the Victorias mill in Victorias city. The Question is: Where are the other locos locations? Please help! Jeffrey |
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#232 | |
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Talonggo gid ya!
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 466
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Being in the middle of a canefield and far from the city, it wouldn't matter at all if the Japanese took over the Lacson house
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#233 |
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good news ambassador
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 675
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Rafe Totengco retraces his roots
THURSDAY, 16 JULY 2009 20:02 MOMAR G. VISAYA / AJPRESS NEW YORK (REPRINTED FROM BALIKBAYAN MAGAZINE) ![]() New York-based fashion accessories designer Rafael Felix (Rafe) Totengco’s foray into the fashion world began way early in his life. How early? How about fifth grade? "It kind of happened accidentally," Rafe tells Balikbayan Magazine. Then we began a trip down memory lane and we ended up on the corner of fifth grade and awkward, in the city of smiles, Bacolod. In the Philippines, when you go to mass every Sunday, you’re supposed to wear your Sunday’s best. When Rafe was young, he didn’t really care about clothing and he would just wear whatever he had. His sisters would be embarrassed and would tease him that he looks like the gardener’s son. Rafe’s mother, in one of her trips to Manila, bought fabrics in Divisoria, gave it to him in a box and told him to go to the tailor and have stuff made. Off he went to the tailor but he didn’t realize back then that he could actually tell the tailor what to create for him. He bought some fashion magazines and started looking at the illustrations. At that time, he says there was a magazine called Manila Women’s Wear and there was an incredible illustrator named Danilo Franco. He began tracing over Franco’s sketches because back then, he didn’t really know how to draw people. "I was in fifth grade and all I drew were horses, Voltes V, sharks. Then I thought, ‘What if take this pocket and put it here and this and that color would match," he recalls with a smile. Rafe returned to the tailor with all his sketches and after a week, he had a whole new wardrobe. "I was like, ‘Hmmmm. Who cares about horses?’ It was a Eureka moment and that triggered my interest. At that point, I was buying Manila Women’s Wear every time it came out. I was obsessed with all those illustrations," he admits. While his classmates in his fifth grade class played with toy robots and spiders, Rafe’s interest in fashion escalated. This was also the time when he began buying Vogue. Can you imagine, fifth grade in Bacolod, buying Vogue. There was only one department store there which carried Vogue and it was so expensive. Of course it was wrapped in plastic and you can’t just open it and look. You have to buy it!" he adds. The now celebrated designer never looked back. Rafe ran Schizo, a clothing business in Manila until he was 21. In 1989, he moved to New York to pursue a career in fashion design. He enrolled at the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) and gained experience working as a design assistant. In 1994, a Soho boutique asked him to produce a collection of belts and watch- bands. When they sold out instantly, the boutique requested for Rafe to design a grouping of handbags to sell alongside the small leather goods. One year later, the first collection of Rafe handbags debuted. Over the years, Rafe Totengco has become one of the most acclaimed among the new generation of American designers, garnering awards and nominations from the Accessories Council, The Council of Fashion Designers of America, Fashion Group International and other award-giving bodies in the fashion industry. On Coming Home year, Rafe opened his first Manila boutique at the posh Greenbelt 5. It was like a homecoming of sorts, as the Philippines welcomed him back with open arms. With the opening of this store, Rafe says his life has come full circle. The Manila boutique, designed to mimic the brand’s New York City showroom, boasts baby blue damask patterned walls, rich chocolate brown floors and an eclectic mix of Asian antiques and vintage furniture. The free-standing store carries an edited collection of Rafe handbags, shoes and leather goods which are merchandised to epitomize the brand’s fun, chic aesthetic. In addition, Rafe will produce a collection of limited edition accessories especially for the boutique. Owned by Ricco and Tina Ocampo, the husband and wife team behind multi-brand fashion boutique Mix, the store is a franchise that grew organically from the pair’s long-standing relationship with Totengco. "Ricco and Tina have supported me from the very beginning" says Totengco. "From my early years in the Philippines to now, with the store. I couldn’t have imagined two better partners to work with on this endeavor." Rafe has been going back to the Philippines quite regularly specially in the past few years. As a balikbayan himself, he hopes to come back a few more times than the usual. "It is always fun for me to go back home and I really enjoy it because I get to see my old friends. I have Manila friends and Bacolod friends and the two groups don’t necessarily mix," he shares. He admits though that it is the myriad of food choices that he misses the most. Among the comfort foods that he craves constantly is the chicken inasal from his native Bacolod. For the past years that he has been going home and staying in Manila during his visits, he was always on the lookout for the authentic chicken inasal from his childhood. During his past trip, he had a photo shoot and the night prior, he bumped into Joel Torre. Rafe told him that he was craving for some inasal. "I told him I was naglilihi, and he said, ‘I’ll deliver it to you.’ I was like, ‘Really?’" Rafe recalls. Long story short, Torre (who operates JT Manukan Grille restaurants in Manila) delivered his famous chicken inasal to the studio where Rafe was shooting his spring campaign. When the food arrived, they were still in the middle of the shoot and they had to stop to eat the chicken he has been craving for. "It was so good. It triggered a lot of my childhood memories and the friendships I have built," he quips. The designer is thankful that despite his being away for so long, every time he comes home, he feels as if he never left. "That’s what’s so beautiful about the friendships that I have there," Rafe adds. If and when he gets more time to travel, Rafe wants to explore more of the Philippines and visit Vigan, Bohol, Zamboanga, Palawan and other tourist spots in the country. During our interview, we asked Rafe to play favorites, and here are excerpts of that conversation. Fashion icons: Coco Chanel is amazing, Christian Lacroix is very original, Givenchy, Rei Kawakubo, Yohji Yamamoto, they all have inspiring stories and I learned a lot from all of them. I’m like a sponge. Style icon today: Kate Moss, she couldn’t do no wrong. Season: Spring, then summer. It’s all about the colors and optimism. It’s time to be happy. You can be whimsical. Fall and winter, you get to be more serious and get into a cocoon. During the spring, you can have a little frivolity. Who doesn’t need that? Three words to describe himself now: Approachable. Curious. Adventurous. Design Inspiration: There is no one source for me. It happens every time, even when I am eating and I see a perfect shade of pasta sauce. Conversation, music, people, it is random. It’s up in the air and it’s hard to pinpoint. Things to Wear: I have my "uniform," which is jeans, printed or striped shirt. My friends could spot me from a mile away. I always wear the same things. City: Paris Hotel: The Grand Hyatt in Tokyo Restaurant: Le Voltaire in Paris Airport: Incheon in Seoul, it is spotless and very modern. Airline: Japan Airlines Travel Must-Haves: My iPod, notebook because I need to sketch while I am waiting or while I am doing nothing, and my eyemask, because you know.... (laughs), or maybe Ambien. Five items every man should have in his wardrobe: (1) A good watch because you don’t want to be embarrassed when you hold your wrist up. It doesn’t have to be expensive and as long as it is not fake. I like a little authenticity. (2) A good pair of shoes because at the end of the day, you can be in jeans and shirt but if your shoes are awful, it just speaks volumes. (3) Clean shirts. I don’t care if it is crumpled because sometimes it is kind of cute, but please make sure it is clean. (4) A good belt. I look at the finishing details. (5) Trousers that fit. Weekend Brunch: So many, like Pastis is fantastic and fun for the crowd, but if you just want to eat, SoHo House is it. Dimsum in Chinatown is also my idea of a good brunch. Bobby’s in TriBeCa. Work Lunch: Union Square Café, Republic and Tarallucci E Vino. Dinner: Zampa, Scarpetta, Cendrillon, Indochine and Il Buco Bar: SoHo House, Zampa Weekend getaway: Fire Island Art Gallery: I really love going to the galleries in Chelsea. Steely Wise, Mary Boone Museum: I love going to the MoMA. The architecture is really fantastic. I love the Costume Institute too. Store: Muji, it’s like no-design design. I love it. It’s like I can buy almost everything in the store. There are kind of things that are anonymous that are perfectly designed I think. I also love going to Odin on Lafayette Street. Relaxation spot: The swimming pool, I go to the Y in Vanderbilt. Broadway shows: All My Sons, with Katie Holmes and Patrick Wilson; History Boys, that was a lot of fun and Mamma Mia, of course. As a Filipino, how could you not love Abba? ( www.asianjournal.com ) ( Originally published in Balikbayan April 2009 p.34 )
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are you sometimes tempted to wish you have never learned certain information? the hour is late but perhaps not too late to preserved our precious lifes and freedoms. what you have just read is peanuts compared to the other scenario that will become more obvious as the year progresses. this is just only the beginning of the end. therefore, our advice to any non-jews is you'd better hurry up. your time is quickly running out. once you read it or hear it, go for it, it is yours for life in getting yourself right w/ our SAVIOR |
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#234 | ||
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good news ambassador
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 675
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JULY PERFORMING ARTS HIGHLIGHTS
Negrense Singers in World Championship in L.A. Four young singers – siblings Ma. Ama Karina, Ma. Ana Kristia and Kristopherson Madrigal, together with Aissa Mae Mateos - have qualified for in the World Championship of Performing Arts at Bonaventure Hotel in Los Angeles, California scheduled July 11-19. The four are pilot students of the Maestro Art Madrigal Music Production and Performing Arts and are also members of the Young voices of Negros, a children’s choral ensemble. Another group of Negrense signers, Kulay Pikata, will compete in the Seniors’ Rhythm & Blues and Jazz category. The Kulay Pikata singers are Jose Gentica VII, John Raymund Castiller, Ernesto Sanao, Joel Teodoro, Jubert and Jimmy Monserate. The World Championship of Performing Arts is an annual talent competition which is judged on the bases of acting, singing, dancing, modeling, instruments and a variety of categories. Filipinos have fared well in the Olympic-style competition with Jed Mandela winning the Senior Grand Performer of the World prize in 2005, and Raymund Sajor and Aria Clemente taking the Senior Grand Vocalist Champion and the Junior Grand Champion Performer of the World in 2007. The participation of the Negrense singers in the international competition are among the highlights of the local performing arts at this time of the year. At the Wifi Body 4: Independent Contemporary Dance Festival which ends today at the Cultural Center of the Philippines, the Pull School Performing Arts of Dwight Rodrigazo are among the regional groups competing for the top prizes; the competition, sponsored by the contemporary Dance Network Philippines and the National Commission for Culture and the Arts, aims to present contemporary dance as a viable art form and nurture local talents. The competition caps the two-week dance festival, which also featured Jed Amihan, a former UNO-Recoletos Kasadyahan Dance Company and Teatro Amorseco member, who is now connected with the Manila-based Air Dance, a contemporary group organized by Rodrigazo and Paul Morales. Dance Pull members Roque Saison, Ian Nick, Tiba and Marius Centeno will join the 3rd New Choreographer’s Competition along with Razel Ann Mitchao and Christopher Chan as dancers. The group will also perform Sakada and Birds for the Mind, choreographed by Rodrigazo. On the other hand, The Kagayon Dance Troupe of Colegio San Agustin-Bacolod will compete in the 7th Mindanao Modern Dance National Competition on July 15at the South Cotabato Gym and Cultural Center, Koronadal City. The group will interpret a contemporary dance choreographed by ballerina Georgette Sanchez. Two groups from the Province of Negros Occidental had already won the top slots in the previous editions of the competition – the VMA Poseidon Dance Theater, the 2007 champion, and Teatro Amorseco which placed second runner-up in 2003. The Koronadal-bound dancers are Charmae Cabrillos, Geraldin Braceros, Ma. Katrina Guevarra, Joan Ramos, Kriza May Pecaoco, Antonio Peralta, Jr., Anthony Teodosio, Reygiem Distrito, Condrado Cadapan Jr., and Jose Patrick Entiero. Ma. Victoria Fontanilla is artistic director, Rudy Reveche is technical director and Novella Radislao, the finance officer. School-based young theater directors will present new works and semi-classics in their respective compuses starting this July. The Maskara Theater Ensemble of the University of St. La Salle opens the theater season with Chance Encounters, a twin bill featuring Fundador Tipon’s Emo Trip and Dennis Teodosio’s Pobreng Alindanao slated on July 30 and 31 and on Aug. 1, 6-8 at the Gallaga Theater. Emo Trip Kian, portrayed by James Frederick Sibug, who is intensely going through an emotional trip and is rudely interrupted by Eli (Thomas Valiere Canonizado) who tries to engage him in a conversation. The exchange escalates into a confrontation between an unwilling participant and an enthusiastic aggressor. The boundaries of anonymity are swept aside when certain truths are revealed, which tragically concludes in a savage ending. Fundador Tipon directs from his own script. Pobreng Alindanao deals with the story of Chubbs (Care Angela Catahuran) and Tiny (Krizza Dia Jocame), two dragonflies struggling to fit inside a cocoon in the hope of emerging as butterflies until they encounter its old owner, Beauty (Jensen Artificial) – a butterfly who is attempting to beat the natural course of her existence. Their ensuing encounter reveals harsh truths about their existence while tackling age-old concerns of self-esteem, beauty and acceptance. Adam Riolo is the play’s director. The Colegio San Agustin Kanlaon Theater Guild will mount on Aug. 27 a trilogy of plays by National Artists for Theater Severino Montano, Rolando Tinio and Wilfredo Ma. Guerrero. Student director Mhelcar Anierdes directs Montano’s classic, “Sabina”, a 1953 one-act play in English. Ricardo Salanap, Jr. re-interprets Tinio’s “May Katwiran ang Katwiran” in its original lyrical Filipino while Charles Kevin Tan handles Guerrero’s comic play, “Away-Basketball”, an adaptation and translation from the original English. The trilogy is part of the multi-media event dubbed as “Saludo: Tribute to Philippine National Artists” by the CSA-B Performing Arts. It will open on Aug. 26 with a musical and dance presentation by the CSA-B Brass Band, Kalinaw Chorale and the Kagayon Dance Troupe showcasing the works of music masters Lucio San Pedro, Levi Celerio, Ernane Cuenco, Andrea Veneracion and dance icons Francisca Reyes-Aquino, Ramon Obusan, Lucresia Urtula and Leonor Orosa-Goquingco. Complimentary activities will include film showing of the works of Lino Broka, Ishmael Bernal and Eddie Romeo and an exhibit on the life and works of other national artists, like Leandro Locsin (architecture), Edith Tiempo (literature), J. Elizalde Navarro (visual arts) who are all from Visayas. Jerry Panisales, Virnal Lisa Clarion, Marivic Fontanilla and Rudy Reveche are the Artistic Directors for the Brass Band, Chorale, Dance Troupe and Theater respectively. Senior theater artists Tanya Lopez, Ismael Java and Rudy Reveche will direct full-length plays about a domineering Spanish mother, a Philippine wild shrub and a Frenchman considered as the patron saint of diocesan priests. Lopez will direct a translation of Federico Garcia-Lorca’s “La Casa de Bernada Alba” scheduled Sept. 9-12 and 17-19 at the USLS Gallaga Theater. La Casa is about a strange family of women who are mourning the death of the last man to have entered their house which is located in the middle of a vast plantation. The matriarch declares an indefinite period of mourning behind locked doors. The daughters spend long hours yearning for freedom while their grandmother dreams of retiring in a home by the sea. A neighboring bachelor offers to marry one of the daughters. One of them is in love with him. But all of them want to escape. The production is another Maskara Theater Ensemble production featuring current members and alumni Carlos Durana Jr. Noel Michael Morales, Dianne Valerie Galvan, Karen Ragas, Camille Jade Nayon, Honey Marie Celedonio, Adelyn Maloloy-on, Alyssa Gelongo and Junamae Quicson. Java on the other hand, will direct West Negros University Kalingaw: Teatro Hiligaynon’s musicale from his own libretto. Title after a shrub with enticing berries, “Anagas” deals with the planned wedding of characters Rosa and Doming amid natural disasters, calamities and sickness. Ceasar Pacalioga is the Musical Director with musical arrangement by Jegger Anhao. It is tentatively set on Sept. 10-12, first as a sing-through and on December for its full-length version. Reveche will direct Teatro Lingganay’s musicale on the life of St. John Mary Vianney, in celebration of the Roman Catholic Church’s declaration of the Year of the Priests on June 19 this year to June 19, 2010. The Sacred Heart Seminary-based theater group is composed of seminarians. It is scheduled to be staged in December. RReveche Quote:
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are you sometimes tempted to wish you have never learned certain information? the hour is late but perhaps not too late to preserved our precious lifes and freedoms. what you have just read is peanuts compared to the other scenario that will become more obvious as the year progresses. this is just only the beginning of the end. therefore, our advice to any non-jews is you'd better hurry up. your time is quickly running out. once you read it or hear it, go for it, it is yours for life in getting yourself right w/ our SAVIOR |
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#235 | |
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inasal hunter
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 2,065
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Quote:
the bacolod cathedral looks good as it is but the plaza really needs renovation especially the public restrooms and of course the fountains...
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Bacolod City | Invest Now! "Home of the Inasal Festival" Bacolod Inasal website:http://www.bacolodchickeninasal.com/...tive_menu.html Bacolod city website: http://www.bacolodcity.gov.ph/bacolod_city.htm Bacolod SM savemore clip: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-IrwCTHOA8 Bacolod eats clip: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4yXTIycGlz0 Bacolod shop clip: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FblmI...eature=related |
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#236 |
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good news ambassador
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 675
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Sons of Bacolod honored in Urian Awards
Monday, September 21 "No other name in filmmaking represents regional success more than Peque Gallaga that is why he was chosen as this year's Natatanging Gawad Urian (Lifetime Achievement) awardee." This was how "Manunuri Ng Pelikulang Pilipino" (MPP) member Mike Rapatan lauded Peque Gallaga at the recent Urian Awards Night held at the Cultural Center of the Philippines last Sept. 19. And in what seemed to be a true convergence of destinies, the Gallaga-megged film, "Yanggaw," yielded a Best Actor award for Ronnie Lazaro whose first major role was in "Oro Plata Mata," also by the master director. "Salamat Gid. (Thank you very much) Ang tagal ko nang nakikita ito sa bahay ng mga kaibigan ko gaya ni Joel (Torre), ngayon meron na rin ako. Ang sarap pala manalo. It's been a 27-year wait, now I am 51 years old," said Lazaro in accepting his trophy. He continued: "There's not enough time for me to explain what he (Gallaga) means to my career. He was the first to give me a break as an actor. Before that I was his prop man. I learned nearly everything from him." The attention being given to regional talents began in 2008 with the NCCA (National Commission for Culture and the Arts) project called Cinema Rehiyon. "We harvested a good number of regional films from that point on. What makes Filipino films truly Philippine cinema is that it has a lot coming from the regions," said Rapatan. "Yanggaw," set in and produced in Bacolod, is one of such examples. Another is "Oro Plata Mata," produced in 1982. Gallaga himself praised filmmakers from the different regions in the country. "Francis Ford Coppolla said, 'The next best film maker is a fat lil girl from Kansas with a lil camera'. Instead of Kansas, however, I suspect she's growing in Bacolod, San Fernando, or the Cordilleras," said Gallaga. The Cinema Rehiyon project will be having another video competition in which filmmakers from Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao can join by contacting the office of the Executive Director at the NCCA. Meanwhile, Mylene Dizon won as Best Actress for her role in "100." The actress credited "100" co-star Eugene Domingo for convincing her to take on the role of a woman dying of cancer. Mylene then dedicated her win to her sons, one of whom, Tomas, was with her that night. The Best Supporting Actress plum went to Aleera Montalla, a first time winner, for "Yanggaw" while Best Supporting Actor went to Coco Martin for "Jay." Other awards were for Best Short Film ("Andong" by Milo Tolentino), Best Musical Score ("Hunghong sa Yuta" by Popong Landero) and Best Editing (for "Jay" by Francis Pasion, Kats Serraon and Chuck Gutierrez). Best Film went to "Serbis" by Brillante Mendoza. It won three other awards namely for Best Director, Best Cinematography (Odyssey Flores) and Best Production Design (Benjamin Padero & Carlo Tabije). Mendoza wasn't on hand to receive the awards because he's in Brazil for the World Film Festival where a full retrospective of his work will be shown. Associate Producer Jun De Guzman said that the awards prove that Mendoza's films aren't only appreciated abroad but also locally. De Guzman was referring to Mendoza's recent Cannes Film Festival win as Best Director for his film, "Kinatay."
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are you sometimes tempted to wish you have never learned certain information? the hour is late but perhaps not too late to preserved our precious lifes and freedoms. what you have just read is peanuts compared to the other scenario that will become more obvious as the year progresses. this is just only the beginning of the end. therefore, our advice to any non-jews is you'd better hurry up. your time is quickly running out. once you read it or hear it, go for it, it is yours for life in getting yourself right w/ our SAVIOR |
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#237 | |
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good news ambassador
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 675
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Quote:
__________________
are you sometimes tempted to wish you have never learned certain information? the hour is late but perhaps not too late to preserved our precious lifes and freedoms. what you have just read is peanuts compared to the other scenario that will become more obvious as the year progresses. this is just only the beginning of the end. therefore, our advice to any non-jews is you'd better hurry up. your time is quickly running out. once you read it or hear it, go for it, it is yours for life in getting yourself right w/ our SAVIOR |
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#238 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 9
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#239 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 9
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THE PHILIPPINE ARANETAS
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Copyright@2009 Last edited by Roland V. Araneta; November 1st, 2009 at 07:08 PM. Reason: some duplicate |
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#240 | |
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inasal hunter
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 2,065
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Quote:
it needs to be preserved and maintained
__________________
Bacolod City | Invest Now! "Home of the Inasal Festival" Bacolod Inasal website:http://www.bacolodchickeninasal.com/...tive_menu.html Bacolod city website: http://www.bacolodcity.gov.ph/bacolod_city.htm Bacolod SM savemore clip: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-IrwCTHOA8 Bacolod eats clip: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4yXTIycGlz0 Bacolod shop clip: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FblmI...eature=related |
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