Saturday, July 30, 2011

The Search for Lil’ Miss Singapore & Jr. Mr. Singapore 2011 is coming very soon!

2010 Title Holders
Do you want to be like Francesca Pascua (Mini Miss Singapore 2010) or be like Christopher Chiang (Jr. Mr. Singapore 2010) or Claribel Chiang (Lil' Miss Singapore 2010)? If so, then this is your chance to be one of them.

"Most people have dreams. In fact, life is probably a series of dreams.
Once a dream is realized, new goals are set and off we go reaching for another." - Ms. Tan Beverly says.
Ms. Tan Beverly

Our philosophy is that by giving children an outlet to express themselves and their talents, they are presented with growth and development aspects for personality, communication, discipline, memory training and grooming habits.

Because parents play an important role when a child is in any competition, the family relationship is enhanced, especially that of the parent and child. Our educational competition does not condone stage parenting; the child must truly want to be a participant, enabling the fascination and glamour of Local to World events to become an educationally exciting family affair.

The search is now on the go for the said event for the following divisions:
Girls
Mini Miss Singapore 2011 (4 to 8yrs)
Lil’ Miss Singapore 2011 (9 to 12yrs)
Miss Teen Singapore 2011 (13 to 17 yrs)

Boys
Jr. Mr. Singapore 2011 (4 to 12 yrs)
Mr. Teen Singapore 2011 (13 to 17 yrs)

Catch this Facebook Page to get more info!

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Slow-moving tropical storm kills at least 27 in Philippines

A tropical storm moving through the Philippines on Wednesday has killed 27 people and left more than 60 injured or missing, according to a government disaster response agency.

Hours after Tropical Storm Juaning made landfall along northern Aurora province, the country's National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council began rescuing stranded people and searching for fishermen swept away by powerful waves.

The slow-moving storm continues to drag through northern parts of the island nation at about 10 mph (16 kph). It is expected to cross into parts of the Northern Luzon island Wednesday night, the agency said.

Though winds have decreased slightly, the agency warned against gusts of up to 60 mph. The government has been tracking the storm since it intensified from a depression Monday.

Several barangays, or villages, have been flooded, and rescue efforts are under way to find missing people, the agency said.

Government officials held an emergency meeting Wednesday to assess and coordinate their response to the storm damage.

Officials cautioned residents in low-lying areas and mountainous regions about flash floods and landslides, while coastal regions have been warned about storm surges and deadly waves.

The storm is expected to continue to bring widespread rain throughout the Luzon island until the end of the week, the agency said.

-cnn

Japanese electronics companies record large losses

Four of Japan's leading electronics companies lost more than $1.5 billion in the first quarter of the 2011 fiscal year, which ended June 30.

The companies partly blamed the losses on the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster that hit Japan in March.

Electronics giant Sony, who reported losing $191 million, said in its financial report that the losses were "due mainly to the negative impact of the Great East Japan Earthquake as well as the deterioration of the electronics business environment."

Panasonic reported $390 million in losses for the first quarter. Sharp reported a loss of $630 million. Nintendo reported a loss of $327 million.

The governor of the region where many of these manufacturers are based blamed the losses on a weak dollar.
"With a strong yen below 80 and a weak dollar, times are very hard for manufacturers in Japan," Aichi Gov.
Hideaki Oomura said. "And if manufacturers in Aichi are having trouble, then the whole Japanese economy is in trouble."

But not all companies were down.

Softbank reported $1.21 billion in profits, attributed to the company's work with products like the iPhone. Toshiba also reported $6 million in profits.

-cnn

Final Countdown for London's 2012 Olympic Games Has Started

London's 2012 Olympic Games Stadium
July 27 marks the start of the final countdown for London's staging of the 2012 Olympic Games.

One year from now, 14,700 competitors from 205 nations across the globe will take part in the opening ceremony. An estimated one billion people tuned in to watch Beijing's glittering extravaganza in 2008, and this time the eyes of the world will be on the British capital.

Despite fears that the venues would not be ready on time, that the city's creaking infrastructure would not be capable of dealing with such an influx of visitors, it appears that London is on track to deliver.

The International Olympic Committee has already given an interim thumbs up, with most venues at an advanced stage of completion.

But it has been a bumpy path since 2005, when it became the first city to be awarded the world's biggest sporting extravaganza three times in the modern era, previously having the honor in 1908 and 1948.

FINANCES

The projected cost of the 2012 Olympics ballooned from the initial bid estimate of £4 billion ($6.5 billion) to £9.3 billion ($15.2 billion) in 2007.

The London Organizing Committee for both the Olympics and Paralympics has a budget of £2 billion, which it says will be mostly funded by the private sector.

However, the public sector will foot most of the overall bill -- though the budget was not protected from the wide-ranging spending cuts implemented by the coalition government since 2010, losing £27 million ($44 million) that year.

On the other hand, with many events already sold out, organizers are well on the way to achieving their target of £500 million ($820 million) revenue from ticket sales.

TICKETS

With more than 20 million applications for 6.6 million tickets available for 39 sporting disciplines in the UK allocation alone, it was no surprise that many people were left unhappy.

It turned out that more people missed out in the initial ballot than were successful, with most events -- especially glamour dates such as the men's 100-meters final and opening/closing ceremonies -- being massively oversubscribed.

The Guardian newspaper reported that only 30,000 of the 80,000 seats available for that 100m race were on offer to the British public anyway -- 1.3 million applied.

But one of the main criticisms was a system that meant money was taken out of your bank account before you knew what you had been allocated, the details of which which you found out up to a month later.

SECURITY

The day after London was awarded the 2012 Olympics, the capital was rocked by bomb blasts which killed 52 train and bus commuters, injuring more than 700. While the so-called "7/7" attacks were not proved to be linked to the IOC's decision, it brought home how the city might be targeted during the Games.

Organizers have worked with the government, police and other essential support services to put in place measures to prevent any repeat of that dark day.

"We have a robust safety and security strategy," Home Secretary Theresa May said this month when announcing a set of exercises to simulate possible problem scenarios.

"The testing of our plans, structures and responses to ensure they can deal with any incident is vital. It is important we learn lessons ahead of the Games."

THE VENUES

London 2012 will be a mixture of old and new. A 2.5 square-kilometer area of industrial wasteland in the eastern borough of Stratford is being regenerated to form the new Olympic Park.

It houses the main Olympic Stadium, where the opening and closing ceremonies take place along with the track and field events. Also on the site are the aquatics center and arenas for basketball, hockey, cycling, water polo, handball, BMX and wheelchair tennis.

Visitors can experience iconic London landmarks, with several events starting and finishing at The Mall near Buckingham Palace, beach volleyball at Horse Guards' Parade near No. 10 Downing St, a cycling time-trial at Hampton Court Palace, triathlon in Hyde Park and equestrian events in historic Greenwich.

The new Wembley Stadium will host men's and women's football, Wimbledon will again welcome the world's top tennis players and Lord's -- the home of cricket -- stages archery.

Watersports such as sailing, rowing and canoeing will be held outside London, as will some football matches.

-cnn

Wen Jiabao to punish those to blame for crash

Wen Jiabao
China's premier Wen Jiabao pledged Thursday to "severely punish" those responsible for a deadly train crash that has sparked public fury and triggered fears over the safety of high-speed rail.

At least 39 people were killed and nearly 200 injured in Saturday's collision on the outskirts of the eastern city of Wenzhou, the worst accident ever to hit China's rapidly expanding high-speed network.

Wen, a popular figure with China's masses, vsited the scene of the crash as the government tries to assuage mounting anger which has dominated the media and the blogosphere in recent days.

"We will severely punish those responsible for the accident and those who hold responsibilities of leadership in accordance with the country's laws," he told reporters at the accident site.

"The high-speed railway construction of China should integrate speed, quality, efficiency and safety. And safety should be put in the first place," said Wen, who has ordered an "open and transparent" probe into the incident.

The accident has raised questions over whether safety concerns may have been overlooked in China's rush to build the world's biggest high-speed rail system, a feat it has achieved in just four years.

China's state-controlled media has been unusually outspoken in its coverage of the accident, defying directives not to question the official line.

A comment piece on the front page of the People's Daily said Thursday that China "needs development, but does not need blood-smeared GDP."

"Development is of overriding importance. But development should not be pursued at all cost," said the article, which was attributed to "the newspaper's commentator".

"While developing, (we) must... put human safety as the top priority and... balance speed, quality and benefits. We must never solely pursue speed or sacrifice life for money."

Wen, who typically makes highly publicised visits to disaster sites, will meet with the injured as well as relatives of the victims during his trip to Wenzhou, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

He also urged efforts to "make China's high-speed railway exports really safe" -- after observers said that the accident could scuttle Beijing's ambitions to sell the technology overseas.

Officials with the Shanghai Railway Bureau told investigators that "design flaws" in signalling equipment were to blame for Saturday's crash, Xinhua said Thursday, the first public admission that the Chinese-made system was at fault.

The system "failed to turn the green light into red" after being struck by lightning, it quoted Shanghai Railway Bureau head An Lusheng as saying.

Three senior railway officials have already been fired over the disaster, and Beijing has ordered an "urgent overhaul" of national rail safety.

But that has done little to calm the furious response from the public and the media.

Anger has been compounded by allegations that authorities tried to cover up evidence by burying the wreckage, although officials said this was to help rescuers access the crash site.

Thousands of people have posted on China's hugely popular micro-blogs, demanding to know why the driver of the second train, who was killed in the accident, was not told to stop in time.

China has ploughed huge sums of money into its high-speed rail network, which covered 8,358 kilometres (5,193 miles) by the end of 2010 and is expected to exceed 13,000 kilometres by 2012 and 16,000 kilometres by 2020.

A new $33 billion high-speed link between Beijing and Shanghai opened to passengers amid much fanfare on June 30 -- a year ahead of schedule -- but has suffered power cuts and delays.

The high cost of the network has sparked fears over corruption, and China's state auditor has said construction companies and individuals last year siphoned off 187 million yuan ($29 million) from the Beijing-Shanghai project.

The revelation followed the sacking of former railway minister Liu Zhijun in February, who allegedly took more than 800 million yuan in kickbacks over several years on contracts linked to China's high-speed network.

Shortly after his sacking, the railway ministry said trains would run between 250 and 300 kilometres per hour on the new Beijing-Shanghai link, which is designed for a maximum speed of 380 kph, for safety reasons.

-cna

Handset makers get Windows Phone update 'Mango'

Microsoft on Tuesday made the latest version of its mobile phone software available to handset partners as it seeks to claw back market share from Apple and Google.

The Redmond, Washington-based personal computer software powerhouse said the update to its Windows Phone operating system, code-named "Mango," features over 500 new features and faster browsing with Internet Explorer 9 (IE9).

"This marks the point in the development process where we hand code to our handset and mobile operator partners to optimize Mango for their specific phone and network configurations," Windows Phone corporate vice president Terry Myerson said in a blog post.

Microsoft unveiled Mango in May, promising it will be available by year's end for free to existing Windows Phone 7 customers and will ship on new phones from Samsung, LG and HTC and new partners Acer, Fujitsu and ZTE.

Microsoft said it is also working on a Mango handset in its labs with new partner Nokia, the Finnish mobile phone titan which announced in February it would begin using Microsoft's platform as its smartphone operating system.

When Mango-powered phones hit stores, they will likely be facing competition from a new iPhone from Apple and the latest versions of handsets running Google's Android software.

According to Gartner, Android will power nearly half of the smartphones worldwide by the end of next year with a 49.2 per cent market share.

The market share for the iPhone's was forecast to remain relatively stable at 18.9 per cent in 2012.

Windows will account for 5.6 per cent of the smartphone market at the end of 2011 but will rise to 10.8 per cent in 2012, according to Gartner.

Ryan Lochte wins men's 200m IM in world record time

Ryan Lochte
America's Ryan Lochte shattered Michael Phelps and his own world record Thursday as he won a thrilling 200m individual medley at the world championships in Shanghai.

Lochte out-duelled the Olympic champion to win in 1min 54.00sec, shaving one tenth of a second off his 2009 world record, with his team-mate taking silver and Hungary's Laszlo Cseh third.

With the win, the 26-year-old Lochte retained his world title and earned further bragging rights over his long-time rival, who is yet to show the form that has earned him 14 Olympic gold medals.

Phelps enjoyed a slim early lead over the butterfly leg but Lochte, swimming in the adjacent lane, edged it over the backstroke, breaststroke and freestyle sections to win by 0.16sec.

Lochte had already beaten Phelps to win the 200m freestyle title, deepening Phelps's season of woe after he was part of the United States' relay team that lost its six-year grip on the 4x100m relay on day one.

But Phelps stormed back with a dominant win in the 200m butterfly, which is not one of Lochte's events, sealing the 23rd world title of his record-breaking career as the clock ticks down to his retirement next year.

Earlier, Olympic title-holder Britta Steffen pulled out of the world championships after struggling in the women's 100m freestyle heats, depriving the competition of one of its brightest stars.

The double world and Olympic champion withdrew after scraping into the semi-finals with the lowest qualifying time of 54.86sec, nearly two seconds off her 2009 world record of 52.07.

Steffen, who claimed the 50m and 100m freestyle double at the Beijing Olympics and repeated the feat at the 2009 world championships, was at a loss to explain her poor performance.

"I gave everything -- I had no more to give," she said. "I can't explain it. I was in great shape and very optimistic. I'm in good health.

"I would give you answers if I had them."

Steffen, 27, led Germany to bronze in the 4x100m freestyle relay in her only other performance in Shanghai. She had been due to take part in the 50m freestyle on Saturday.

-cna

Monday, July 25, 2011

Petronas Towers In Kuala Lumpur of Malaysia

Strategically located in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Its exact location is The junction of Jalan P. Ramlee and Jalan Ampang.

The Petronas Towers are the worlds “tallest freestanding” towers in the world housing an assortment of office buildings, a contemporary concert hall and the Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra in the Petronas Malaysia Philharmonic Hall.

At a staggering 452 meters in height the Petronas Towers dominate the skyline in Kuala Lumpur. The geometric impressions on both towers are often found in Islamic architecture. Two overlaid and rotated squares each encompass small, rounded in fillings adorned on the Petronas Towers. Many architects describe this special pattern as symbolizing stability, unity, harmony and rationale which are all important Islamic principles. Special highlights of the Petronas Towers include high-speed double deck elevators and an exciting double deck Sky Bridge.

There is a tour of the Sky Bridge available at Petronas Malaysia where you can enjoy a panoramic city view below. The tour is a short 10 minutes and leads up to the bridge. The best time to go is early in the morning to beat the long lines that can develop. Tickets are handed out on a first-come-first-served basis and you can choose the tour time when you get tickets. The Sky Bridge is open from 9:00am to 5:00pm from Tuesday through Sunday and is free.

Inside the Petronas Twin Tower Kuala Lumpur merchants line the first few floors. There are also arcades, and an assortment of restaurants. There is an interesting Science Museum you can visit that’s great when on a family-oriented Malaysia holiday. Kuala Lumpur attractions nearby are easily visited after a climb to the top of the Petronas Twin Tower during a Malaysia vacation. When visiting the Petronas Twin Tower Kuala Lumpurs city center will surround you with many more beautiful buildings. Often called a “city within a city” the area is large and stretches in every direction.

Situated between the Petronas Towers is one of the best shopping destinations in Kuala Lumpur, Suria KLCC, containing a huge array of merchandise to peruse. With six levels to explore a trip here can easily eat up an entire day if you like to shop! The Mandarin Oriental is due south of Suria KLCC and is considered to be the most affluent of Kuala Lumpur hotels. Though many can’t afford the high costs to stay, if you really wish to see the elegant interior try one of their restaurants for a five star dining experience.

In the immediate vicinity, the Kuala Lumpur Convention Center can also be found. In addition to hosting many international events and trade shows The Aquaria Oceanarium is also inside. This is said to be the biggest aquarium in the world. It features more than 5,000 marine and aquatic animals with exhibits highlighting 150 native and international species. The Batu Cave is a major attraction in the city and not to be missed when in the area.

The KLCC Park is a wonder in itself, a massive green space in the middle of a huge and bustling city, much like Lumphini Park in Thailand. Don’t miss it after visiting Petronas Malaysia. The park is an attraction for the many things to do among the beautifully landscaped areas.

With breathtaking views of Petronas Twin Tower, Kuala Lumpur shines in all her glory. Relaxing rest areas, a child’s pool, jogging track, Symphony Lake Fountains and more can all be found on the grounds. Many locals frequent the area during lunch time and visitors from all over the world walk the grounds admiring the beautiful pairing of nature with man’s creation.

Did you know? That the Malaysia Petronas Tower is sprawling over 50-acres, the tropical gardens and lush foliage offer a haven of serenity and a respite from the dynamic and ever-busy inner city. The Petronas Towers are joined only at the 41st and the 42nd floor where the Sky Bridge is. Walking along the Sky Bridge is one of the main events when on a Malaysia tour of this captivating development. The bridge spans an astonishing 192 feet.

-fd

Chief Mohamed bin Hammam has been Banned Asian football Games

Add caption
Banned Asian football chief Mohamed bin Hammam likened FIFA president Sepp Blatter to a "dictator" on Monday, and said bribery claims against him were the result of cultural misunderstandings.

The 62-year-old former Asian Football Confederation (AFC) president was banned from the game for life on Saturday following a two-day FIFA ethics committee hearing at the organisation's Zurich headquarters.

Hammam had been accused of seeking to buy votes in the FIFA presidential election by offering cash gifts of US$40,000 each to delegates at a Caribbean Football Union (CFU) get-together in May.

He has pledged to appeal the decision.

The Qatari reacted to his ban on Saturday by publishing a scanned copy of a personal letter sent to him by Blatter in 2008 on his personal blog, demonstrating the extent to which he felt betrayed by the 75-year-old Swiss.

He returned to the theme in an interview carried out in Doha with Britain's Sky News, broadcast on Monday, in which he compared Blatter to a tyrant.

"When you are in a position to lead, the leader usually doesn't revenge," he said.

"This is actually the act of the dictators, and you have witnessed through history the dictators, when they think this or that person is a prominent one to replace him, the first thing they do is execute him.

"And they try to fabricate any allegation against him, to jail him or something like that.

"So I mean usually -- I don't know whether Mr Blatter considers himself a leader or not -- but the leader doesn't revenge."

Hammam also said that gift-giving was a routine practice in FIFA and that exchanging presents with other members of the organisation should not be regarded as attempted bribery.

"This is a normal, normal, normal practice," he said. "I'm telling you again, I did not give any cash gifts to anybody but these are normal."

Pointing to his wrist watch, he added: "This watch is a gift."

Despite his claims, Hammam insisted "he had nothing to do with" the cash-filled envelopes allegedly distributed to the CFU officials.

Hammam's suspension by FIFA on May 29 led to his withdrawal from the presidential election, thereby handing Blatter a fourth consecutive term in office.

In a statement to the media published on his blog late on Sunday evening, Hammam reiterated his earlier claim that FIFA had no concrete evidence that he was guilty of bribery.

"I believe FIFA alleged that I used cash to obtain votes," he wrote. "That is for them to prove and I can tell you categorically that I did not.

"I was astonished to hear that the Ethics Committee was very unsure what the charges were and could not agree between themselves.

"I believe that there was not a single piece of evidence FIFA had offered to show that I gave money to any delegates for votes."

Hammam also refuted allegations that he had not co-operated with the ethics committee's investigation and said he had "made my bank account statements available" to them.

Hammam has confirmed that he will appeal in the first instance to FIFA's appeal committee, but he holds little faith that the organisation that banned him will find in his favour.

In the event that an appeal to FIFA fails, he has vowed to take his case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) -- the highest sporting judicial authority in the world -- in Lausanne.

"The civil court in Switzerland, CAS, that is where we believe we will get the necessary justice," he told the BBC on Sunday.

As a last resort, Hammam could pursue legal redress through the Federal Court of Switzerland, but a verdict could take months -- if not years -- to be handed down.

Blackberry's PlayBook Electronic Tablet - Approved for use in all US FGA

Blackberry's PlayBook Tablet
Blackberry's PlayBook electronic tablet has been approved for use in all US federal government agencies, becoming the first tablet to get certified, developer Research in Motion said Thursday.

The Waterloo, Canada-based RIM said its PlayBook, which has an 18-centimeter (seven-inch) high definition screen, received Federal Information Processing Standard certification, which is delivered by the National Institute of Standards and Technology.

Under the Federal Information Security Management Act, which was passed shortly after the September 11 attacks, all computer tools used by the federal government must meet federal certification standards.

"This certification demonstrates our continued commitment to meeting the needs of security-conscious organizations and enables the US federal government to buy with confidence knowing that the PlayBook meets their computing policy requirements for protecting sensitive information," said Scott Totzke, who runs Blackberry's security division at RIM.

The Playbook, which has a camera on the front and back, is an alternative to Apple's iPad.

It has been sold in the United States and Canada since mid-April.

The certification provides a needed lift to the company, which announced in June that it would face an unspecified downsizing during the current quarter.

RIM's most famous product, the Blackberry, is already well-established in the US government. President Barack Obama is a big fan, and uses a version modified to meet his security requirements.

-cna

Nguyen Tan Dung as the New President of Vietnam

Nguyen Tan Dung
New President of Vietnam
Truong Tan Sang, 62, was confirmed for the job by a vote of the one-party National Assembly, after he was formally nominated as the sole candidate over the weekend.

"He has been voted president," with more than 97 percent of 496 votes, said an official from the Assembly's press centre, asking not to be named.

Sang, the country's ninth president, will take on a post first held by revered founding father Ho Chi Minh.

Sang had been the ruling Communist Party's de facto number two since 2006 and mounted an aggressive challenge for the prime minister's job before the party's January congress, which determined top leadership posts.

Those positions are being confirmed this week, and Dung is expected to be elected to another term as prime minister in a National Assembly vote on Tuesday, cementing his place as the Vietnam's most powerful politician.

Despite their rivalry, the relationship between Dung and Sang is expected to be cordial as the prime minister focuses on trying to bring stability to a troubled economy, said an Asian diplomat.

"He's not about to pick a fight with his rival," said the diplomat, requesting anonymity.

Addressing the Assembly after his election, Sang said the country faced "huge opportunities and challenges" on its path to development.

"I believe that under the leadership of the Party the Vietnamese people... will overcome all challenges, successfully building a rich, civilised country and successfully protecting the socialist regime," he was quoted as saying by the Dan Tri online newspaper.

Like Dung, Sang is a native of southern Vietnam. A student militant imprisoned by the then US-backed South Vietnam regime, Sang later became mayor of Ho Chi Minh City.

Sang replaces Nguyen Minh Triet, who served one term.

-cna

Miss World Philippines 2011 is coming this August!

Ms. Cory Quirino and Ms. Tan Beverly
"The Official Turnover of the Crown"
Let's hear from Ms. Cory Quirino, Director of Miss World Philippines.

It is with honor and privilege that I have  accepted the Exclusive License awarded to me by Mrs. Julia Morley, Chair and CEO of Miss World Limited last January 25, 2011 . This acceptance marks my commitment to the cause of Miss World and the high expectations that come with the title. I am determined to rise up to the challenge of excellence, a tradition of the highest standards set by Miss World for over 60 years .

2011 marks the beginning of a new history for Miss World in our country simply  because,  for the very first time a Miss World Philippines will be crowned. She will become our Ambassadress of Goodwill to all nations the moment she steps onto the stage of the World Pageant. The Filipina who wins this coveted crown will be a shining example of the heart and soul of  Filipino womanhood.

Ms. Beverly and Ms. Quirino
Inspired by the slogan of Miss World Limited - "Beauty with a Purpose," we are adopting in the Philippines the theme "Beauty in Giving." And this is why, our winner and her court will put her beauty to good use by caring for  the marginalized women and children of the Philippines through various charities, namely, Tuloy Streetchildren Village and the PGH Medical Foundation.

CQGlobal Quest Inc., will manage the Miss World Philippines Pageant and through its activities, earmark funds for the betterment of the lives of countless streetchildren as well as the medical care of thousands of charity patients in the Indigent Wing of the Philippine General Hospital.

It is time for the world to see and to behold the beauty, the goodness and the brilliance of the Filipina and through her, the wondrous beauty that is the Philippines.

You can become a part of this noble crusade by seeking her out, this outstanding candidate - she who will become Miss World - Philippines. And by God's grace, possibly win the title of Miss World.

Beyond words of gratitude, I thank and bless you all.

Here are the schedules of the said pageant: 

August 10 to
September 5
Training, Accessorizing & Beauty Program Schedules
August 15Video Shoot of the Miss World Philippines 2011 OpeningBillboard at Clark Air Base
August 17 & 24Cocktails for Banco de Oro, Makati Shangri-la Manila
August 18Press presentation of the 25 Finalists at the Sea Residences
August 21Miss World Philippines Theme Song Launching and Presentation of Finalists in Party Pilipinas
August 30Talent Night Competition, Midas Hotel
September 7 to 10Swimsuit Competition in Puerto Princesa City
September 13Pre-Pageant Gala Charity Night - Manila Hotel
September 12 & 13CSR Visit to Tuloy sa Don Bosco & PGH
September 12 & 13TV & Radio Guestings
September 25MWP Pageant Night – Philippine International Convention Center (PICC)Telecast over GMA 7 & GMA Pinoy TV

Images in this article are copyrighted by Roberts Photography.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Tan Cheng Bock - Singaporeans need a president they can trust

The President is the only Singaporean leader voted by all Singaporeans and as such, they need a president whom they can trust and who will put the nation above politics, said Dr Tan Cheng Bock.

Dr Tan made the point at a news conference on Friday after submitting his papers for a Certificate of Eligibility to contest the upcoming Presidential Election, due by end-August.

During his press conference at the Bayview Hotel, the former PAP MP said he believes that Singaporeans also want to know whether their president empathises with them and will make decisions without external influences.

"They want to know if they can trust him to put the nation above politics, to look after their money, to make special appointments of top civil servants whose policies will affect their lives.

"He must make good and wise decisions, without fear, without favour," said Dr Tan.

He said he understands the powers of the president are bounded by what is in the constitution.

"We should not comment on issues because the president must be above all these discussions, all these issues, but that does not preclude me from holding private discussions with, let's say, the ministers and so on because at the end, what is our motive? (It's) to make everybody happy."

He added: "If I become the president, although I am not able to change the issues I cannot change ... at least my two cents worth maybe to the ministers could have changed some of the policies. So we are not there to rock the boat, must remember, we are there to make the whole country very, very happy.

"So the president plays a very, very important role ... I'm not going to interfere on how Temasek runs the company or how GIC runs its company, but I want to know the processes, I want to know the procedures that are going on there."

When asked if he is politically independent from the PAP, Dr Tan said: "In the eyes of some, I am not independent because of my past PAP link. But if Singaporeans do look deeper into my past Parliamentary debates, I hope they see a man who will stand up for what he believes is the right thing to do."

He pointed out that while in Parliament, he had stood up against some PAP policies.

"I stood up for Singaporeans against streaming of students in the '80s because I feared it would create class divisions in our society and divide Singapore."

"I went to the Parliament to ask the government to 'Think Singaporeans First'. I took their pain when I was publicly scolded for taking this stand," said Dr Tan of the time when he spoke out against the foreign talent policy.

When asked if his political links to the PAP will affect his chances at this year's Presidential Election, Dr Tan said it is unfair to discredit the party as it has helped him to become what he is today.

"I have to be fair to the party. I have to let Singaporeans know that if they want to label me as not independent, I can't help it. I prefer them to judge me on my performance, based on the way I've done things and stood up for Singaporeans."

Dr Tan declined to reveal his plans if elected as president, adding that he was doing so out of respect for the other contestants.

Together with his wife, Dr Tan turned up at the Elections Department at Prinsep Street around 1.40pm Friday to hand in his papers for a Certificate of Eligibility to contest the Presidential Election.

"I think the forms, they were all well-received," said Dr Tan to crowds of journalists and well-wishers.

Dr Tan, who then walked to the nearby Bayview hotel for his news conference, later said that he is confident he will be awarded the certificate as he had checked with his lawyers, who said he has the qualifications to meet the stringent criteria laid out in the Presidential Election Act.

Dr Tan is the third presidential hopeful to have submitted his forms.

The other two are former NTUC Income chief Tan Kin Lian and former deputy prime minister Dr Tony Tan.

-cna

Explosion rocks Oslo Gov. Buildings

A powerful explosion rocked government and media buildings in Norway's capital Oslo on Friday, dealing heavy damage and leaving at least several people injured, police and local media said.

"A powerful explosion has taken place in the government quarter," Norwegian police said in a statement.

Details were scarce, but images shown on Norwegian television showed the prime minister's office and other buildings heavily damaged, sidewalks covered in broken glass and smoke rising from the area.

Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg was not believed to have been in his office at the time of the blast.

Police had sealed off the area, which houses the offices of the prime minister, the finance ministry and the country's biggest tabloid newspaper Verdens Gang (VG).

Two cabinet ministers told AFP that Stoltenberg had been scheduled to be visiting areas far outside Oslo on Friday. News agency NTB also reported that Stoltenberg was "safe".

Witnesses said the damage was extensive and that injured victims could be seen.

"I see that some windows of the VG building and the government headquarters have been broken. Some people covered with blood are lying in the street," a journalist with public radio NRK said from the scene.

"There is glass everywhere. It is total chaos. The windows of all the surrounding buildings have been blown out," said NRK journalist Ingunn Andersen.

The radio reported that the explosion seemed to happen near the finance ministry, which is near the Norwegian prime minister's office and the VG editorial offices.

Photos posted on the NRK website also showed shattered glass in front of the devastated facade of the VG building, soldiers closing off the area and people surrounding someone apparently injured in the blast.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Atlantis has landed, ending NASA's shuttle era

The space shuttle Atlantis glided home through a clear moonlit sky on Thursday to complete a 13-day cargo run to the International Space Station and a 30-year odyssey for NASA's shuttle program.

Commander Chris Ferguson gently steered the 100-tonne spaceship high overhead, then nose-dived toward the swamp-surrounded landing strip at the Kennedy Space Center, a few miles (kilometers) from where Atlantis will go on display as a museum piece.

Double sonic booms shattered the predawn silence around the space center, the last time residents will hear the distinctive sound of a shuttle coming home.

Ferguson eased Atlantis onto the runway at 5:57 a.m. EDT, ending a 5.2 million-mile (8.4 million-km) journey and closing a key chapter in human space flight history.
"Mission complete, Houston," Ferguson radioed to Mission Control.

Astronaut Barry Wilmore from Mission Control answered back, "We'll take this opportunity to congratulate you Atlantis, as well as the thousands of passionate individuals across this great space-faring nation who truly empowered this incredible spacecraft, which for three decades has inspired millions around the globe."

Atlantis' return from the 135th shuttle mission capped a 30-year program that made spaceflight appear routine, despite two fatal accidents that killed 14 astronauts and destroyed two of NASA's five spaceships.

The last accident investigation board recommended the shuttles be retired after construction was finished on the space station, a $100 billion project of 16 nations. That milestone was reached this year, leaving the orbiting research station as the shuttle program's crowning legacy.

Details of a follow-on program are still pending, but the objective is to build new spaceships that can travel beyond the station's 250-mile (400-km) orbit and send astronauts to the moon, asteroids and other destinations in deep space.

BACK-UP PLAN

The final shuttle crew included just four astronauts -- Ferguson, pilot Doug Hurley, flight engineer Rex Walheim and mission specialist Sandy Magnus -- rather than the typical six or seven astronauts, a precaution in case Atlantis was too damaged to safely attempt the return to Earth. With no more shuttles available for a rescue, NASA's backup plan was to rely on the smaller Russian Soyuz capsules.

At Cape Canaveral, 2,000 workers, journalists and VIPs waited by the runway to cheer the shuttle landing and greet the "final four" astronauts as they emerged from their ship.

"The things that you've done will set us up for exploration of the future," NASA Administrator Charles Bolden told them.

Spratly islanders fight boredom, not China worries

This speck of a sun-splashed island in the turquoise South China Sea has little sign of the tensions that have consumed politicians and diplomats in distant Asian capitals.

Six different nations are pressing their stake to all or part of these potentially oil- and gas-rich waters teeming with fish. Most recently, the Philippines and Vietnam have been wrangling with China in a noisy territorial dispute that is dominating this week's Asian security forum in Bali.

And yet, here on Pag-asa, the only sounds are the waves slapping the shore and the wind whistling in the ears. At high noon, fighting off sleep is a struggle.

There are no cars, newspapers, Internet connections or shopping malls on an island that mostly consists of a single gravel airstrip and some structures. This, one of the nine islands, reefs and shoals occupied by Philippine troops, is also claimed by China, whose looming presence and rising military power is a worry for outgunned neighbors.

Two Filipino police officers, looking bored, say there hasn't been a single crime for years.
"One big problem really is how to kill time," said Mayor Eugenio Bito-onon Jr. of Kalayaan town, which includes far-flung Pag-asa.

"After fishing, walking around, playing billiards and cards, what else can one do next?" wondered the bespectacled mayor.

The tadpole-shaped, 91-acre (37-hectare) Pag-asa, or 'hope' in the Tagalog language, is the biggest of the Philippine-held islands in the South China Sea's Spratlys archipelago. Taiwan, Brunei, Malaysia and Vietnam also claim the islands.

The battle for ownership has settled into an uneasy standoff since the last fighting, involving China and Vietnam, killed more than 70 Vietnamese sailors in 1988.

Tensions flared again this year after the Philippines and Vietnam separately accused China of encroaching into their territorial waters, sabotaging oil exploration and harassing fishermen. China, which claims the entire South China Sea on historical grounds, acknowledges some of the incidents in what it says are its waters, and Beijing has warned other claimants to stop exploring for oil and gas without its permission.

The incidents, accusations and feelings of hurt national pride carried over to Bali and this week's meeting of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations. On Wednesday, China announced it was ready to firm up existing nonbinding guidelines for behavior in the contested waters.

Philippine Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario balked, saying the guidelines have no teeth and that his country plans to take China to a U.N. tribunal that handles maritime border disputes.

And at the opening of Vietnam's National Assembly on Thursday, Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Sinh Hung talked tough too, saying Hanoi will "resolutely and comprehensively ... implement measures to defend the country's sovereignty, protect fishermen, economic and trade activities and protect oil and gas exploration and exploitation activities under its sovereign seas."

Washington says it is ready to play a role to peacefully resolve the row, but China has warned the U.S. to stay away.

On Pag-asa, where about few dozen people live since the Philippine government lured civilians starting in 1978 with free food and other incentives, the worrisome rhetoric has reached through news from satellite TV or by cellphones — although the signal is often cut by bad weather, poor infrastructure or unpaid bills.

It takes days to reach Pag-asa by boat across often-turbulent waters from the nearest Philippine municipality in Palawan province, about 300 miles (480 kilometers) to the east.

One family fled in fear last month but the rest stayed.

A longtime resident, Obnor Lenasic, said the news does not bother villagers. He said nationals from rival claimants have learned to live together in the disputed region. They wave at each other when their fishing boats cross at sea. Filipinos sometimes barter coconut for Chinese cigarettes, he said.

In the past, Chinese and Vietnamese forces would fire warning shots in the air when others get near their islands. Filipinos would raise fish on skewers to signal that they were just fishing. The soldiers would smile and spread their palm to beg for some of the catch, Bito-onon said.

Another resident, Aisa Bilidan, said she named her baby daughter born on Pag-asa last March China-lyn, after the Philippines accused Beijing of being a bully.

Except for a few rusting anti-aircraft guns, their turrets capped by plastic to avoid damage from the salty air, and the presence of troops, Pag-asa resembles a typical Philippine rural village — serene and backward.
Four Filipino lawmakers Wednesday defied protests from the Chinese Embassy in Manila and flew to the island, carrying with them two new Philippine flags to replace a tattered one flapping in the breeze.

The lawmakers asked the villagers about their concerns but nobody mentioned the Spratlys dispute. One wanted a better grass-cutter to clear an airstrip of weeds. Another sought a Jeep to move things around the community, and a soldier appealed for help in repairing a desalinating machine for drinking water.

Bito-onon told the lawmakers that turning Pag-asa into a bustling civilian community, with sustainable livelihood in fishing and tourism, would be the strongest argument for the Philippine territorial claim.

He told The Associated Press on Thursday that he was working on a solution to lure more people and tourists to the remote island: an Internet connection, which he hopes to set up with government help in the near future.

"I think it will help if people know that after a nice swim on the island, they can take a break and connect to their Facebook accounts," Bito-onon said. "I have a feeling that that will work."

Entire Apple stores being faked in China

At first, it looks like a sleek Apple store. Sales assistants in blue T-shirts with the company's logo chat to customers. Signs advertising the iPad 2 hang from the white walls. Outside, the famous logo sits next to the words "Apple Store."

And that's the clue it's fake.

China, long known for producing counterfeit consumer gadgets, software and brand name clothing, has reached a new piracy milestone — fake Apple stores.

An American who lives in Kunming in southern Yunnan province said Thursday that she and her husband stumbled on three shops masquerading as bona fide Apple stores in the city a few days ago. She took photos and posted them on her BirdAbroad blog.

The three stores are not among the authorized resellers listed on Apple Inc.'s website. The maker of the iPhone and other hit gadgets has four company stores in China — two in Beijing and two in Shanghai — and various official resellers. Apple's Beijing office declined to comment.

The proliferation of the fake stores underlines the slow progress that China's government is making in countering a culture of a rampant piracy and widespread production of bogus goods that is a major irritant in relations with trading partners.

China's Commerce Minister promised American executives earlier this year that the latest in a string of crackdowns on product piracy would deliver lasting results.

The 27-year-old blogger, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the set-up of the stores was so convincing that the employees themselves seemed to believe they worked for Apple.

"It looked like an Apple store. It had the classic Apple store winding staircase and weird upstairs sitting area. The employees were even wearing those blue T-shirts with the chunky Apple name tags around their necks," she wrote on her blog.

"But some things were just not right: the stairs were poorly made. The walls hadn't been painted properly. Apple never writes 'Apple Store' on its signs — it just puts up the glowing, iconic fruit."

A worker at the fake Apple store on Zhengyi Road in Kunming, which most of the photos of the BirdAbroad blog show, told The Associated Press that they are an "Apple store" before hanging up.

The manager of an authorized reseller in Kunming, who gave only his surname, Zhang, said most customers have no idea the stores are fake.

Some of the staff in the stores "can't even operate computers properly or tell you all the functions of the mobile phone," he said.

"There are more and more of these fake stores in Kunming. Although they may sell real Apple products, some of those products were not imported through legal means. And they cost more."

Fake Apple stores are a "particularly egregious example" of brand piracy but their emergence is not surprising given the amount of product counterfeiting faced by corporations such as Apple, said Ted Dean, president of BDA China Ltd., a telecoms market research company.

He said a challenge for mobile phone companies and others selling branded products across a country as big as China is how to manage distribution, especially to smaller cities.

"And then, making sure people aren't copying it, faking it ... is absolutely a challenge," said Dean, who once saw a fake Apple phone in China that had an Apple logo — but with no bite taken out of it.

Apple said this week that China was "very key" to its record earnings and revenue in the quarter that ended in June.

Revenue was up more than six times from a year earlier to $3.8 billion in the area comprising China, Hong Kong and Taiwan, said Apple's Chief Operating Officer Timothy Cook, according to a conference call on Tuesday.

"I firmly believe that we're just scratching the surface right now. I think there is an incredible opportunity for Apple there," Cook said.

The company plans to open two more Apple stores in greater China — one in Shanghai and another in Hong Kong — by the end of the year.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Japan Bans Beef Shipment from Fukushima

Japan announced Tuesday it is banning all shipments of cattle raised in the Fukushima Prefecture amid fears that the meat may have been contaminated from radiation at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi plant.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano made the announcement.

Last week, a Japanese health official downplayed the dangers after cesium contaminated meat from Fukushima cows was delivered to Japanese markets and probably ingested.

"If we were to eat the meat everyday, then it would probably be dangerous," Goshi Hosono, state minister in charge of consumer affairs and food-safety, said at a news conference on July 12.

"But if it is consumed only in small portions, I don't think it would have any long-lasting effects on the human body."

When the Fukushima Prefectural Government investigated the farm that was the source of the meat, it found cesium in cattle feed such as hay, with radiation levels as much as 57 times higher than the ceiling set by the Japanese government.

Up until now, cattle in Fukushima were only subject to a screening test, to inspect for radioactive particles adhering to the skin, and farmers were ordered to self-report how it the cattle feed was being stocked.

Yutaka Kashimura, Fukushima Prefecture's officer in charge of the livestock division, told CNN that the farmer may have given the cows hay that had been exposed to soil containing high levels of radiation. The farm is situated about 30 kilometers (18.6 miles) from the damaged Fukushima nuclear plant.

Four months after Japan's devastating earthquake and tsunami on March 11, operators at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant are still grappling with the crisis the disaster unleashed but say they are making slow progress.

The March 11 quake led to meltdowns at Fukushima Daiichi's three operating reactors when the tsunami knocked out their coolant systems, causing the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl.

Indonesia Urges ASEAN to Harness Twitter, Facebook

ASEAN must maximise the use of Twitter, Facebook and other social media to engage the region's citizens, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said on Tuesday.

Speaking to Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) foreign ministers on the island of Bali, Yudhoyono expressed support for the establishment of an ASEAN blogger community.

"For the first time, and in contrast to just four decades ago, we are facing a reality where the frequency and depth of contacts between our citizens - through cable television, email, Twitter, Facebook - far exceed the formal contacts between government officials," he said.

"Indonesia, being the world's second largest Facebook nation and third largest for Twitter, knows this very well."

ASEAN must "get into the act" and be "creative and open-minded in harnessing the power of technology to promote people-to-people contact," he said.

"The establishment of an ASEAN blogger community is one innovative idea, and more should follow."

ASEAN, with nearly 600 million people, groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

The more developed member-states such as Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand have witnessed explosive growth in the use of social networking and microblogging sites even if overall Internet penetration remains low.

Yudhoyono often sends mixed messages about free expression and social media.

The centrist ex-general has warned that the "Internet frenzy" is destroying traditional values, has backed a crackdown on porn websites and has lashed out at people who "use online media to spread lies" about corruption.

Human rights activists criticise Yudhoyono for approving a 2008 law which sets tough penalties for online defamation, saying it has been used to intimidate critics and whistle-blowers.

A Human Rights Watch report released last year cited the example of Prita Mulyasari, a mother-of-two who was jailed for three weeks and spent a year in litigation for writing emails to friends about poor hospital treatment.

A Facebook support group garnered more than 100,000 members, and a court eventually threw out the case against her. But the supreme court recently reinstated her conviction and she is now serving six months of probation.