Proud PINOY does not claims any credit for any articles, news and/or photos posted here. All visual content is copyright to its respectful owners. All info's are not accurate and may contains errors. If you are the owner to any photos or articles, and does not want us to post it here, please contact us by e-mail

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Pinoy gymnast Carlo Yulo makes history, bags bronze in Qatar

Source:https://sports.abs-cbn.com

Filipino gymnast Carlos Edriel Yulo made history after claiming bronze in the Men's Floor Exercisce Final of the Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Doha, Qatar Friday evening (PHI time).

The 18-year-old Yulo finished with a score of 14.600 to secure the Philippines’ first-ever medal in the international meet.
Artur Dalaloyan of Russia garnered 14.900 to reign supreme, while former world champion Kenzo Shirai of Japan was close behind with 14.866 to settle for silver.
Yulo placed fourth in the initial qualifying round for the Floor event Final. 
Prior to Yulo's win, the Phiippines has never won a medal, nor reached the final of the World Gymnastics Championship.





***************************************************************************************************


Monday, October 22, 2018

Dalawang apps na gawang-Pinoy lalahok sa kompetisyon ng NASA

Source: https://newsprod.abs-cbnnews.com

MAYNILA -- Dalawang gawang-Pinoy na app ang sasabak sa pandaigdigang kompetisyon ng NASA, ang primerong space agency ng Estados Unidos.

Kabilang dito ang ISDApp na gawa ng ilang Filipino IT professionals kabilang na sina Revbrain Martin at Jeddah Legaspi na empleyado ng ABS-CBN Creative Communications Management.
Ginawa ang ISDApp para mabigyan ng mga lokal na pamahalaan ng text alert ang mga mangingisda ukol sa sitwasyon ng panahon at ng karagatan.


Isa pang sasabak sa patimpalak ng NASA ang Vita app, isang disaster-preparedness app na gumagawa ng paraan para magkaroon ng komunikasyon sa cellphone kahit walang signal.
Ang app na ito, na merong ding mga mapa at checklist, ay gawa ng magkakaibigang estudyante na kumukuha ng mga kursong computer science, IT, at engineering.
Ang dalawang app na nabanggit ay nagwagi sa isang hackathon na isinagawa ng US Embassy at De La Salle University sa Maynila nitong weekend. Binigyan ng tig-P5,000 ang mga nanalong grupo.
Pipili lamang ang NASA ng anim na pinakamahusay na konsepto mula sa mga nanalo sa hackathon sa 200 pang ibang lugar sa daigdig.
Ikatlong taon na ito ng kompetisyon ng NASA Space Apps sa Pilipinas. Isinagawa ngayong taon sa tulong ng US Embassy, De La Salle University, PLDT, at Idea Space Foundation.




**************************************************************************************************************


Anyana Bel Air Tanza Cavite Offers Lot only for only 7,597 monthly (100sqm)

Anyana Bel Air, Tanza Cavite




Own a LOT in an Exclusive Subdivision in Tanza Cavite and build your OWN Home for as low as 7,597 per month (100 sqm). What are you waiting for? Reserve now for only 10,000 (Limited Offer Only)
7500‼️LANG PER MONTH! May 100 sqm lot kana sa isang exclusive and highend sa subdivision sa tanza
19,000‼️monthly MAY HOUSE AND LOT KA NA 🏡 3 bedrooms pa!
AVAIL NOW‼️🏘our new project here in tanza.
LOCATION : Tanza, Cavite near Manila thru Cavitex.
“ANYANA” Now on preselling period. “mas pinagandang antel grand village.”
PROMO‼️10% discount on TCP, up to 35 Mo’s to pay ang downpayment WITHOUT INTEREST 😱😍
LOT ONLY As low as 7.5k per month❗️
HOUSE AND LOT As low as 19k per month❗️
COMMERCIAL LOTS - 24,750 per sqm❗️
The newest and luxurious village in tanza, Cavite.
For more details, Tripping and inquiries please call or text
Ms. Debbie
Whatsapp; Viber +63917-790-8775
Globe: +63917-790-8775 / 0906-346-8424
Smart +63919-263-4101

Central Park

                                                                           Club House
                                                                 
                                                                                  Church

                                                                        Swimming Pool



Thursday, October 18, 2018

College grad is proud of her father for seeing her education through with earnings as a garbage collector

Source: GMA News

Every day, Tatay Cristito wakes up at 3 a.m. to get to work at 4 a.m., where he is exposed to all sorts of risks and health hazards.
He is a garbage collector, a job most unglamorous and hardly well compensated, but it doesn’t matter. He wants his kids to finish their studies and he will do everything he can for them to do so.
It’s not always easy. “Mahirap, kasi marami akong anak. Pero kahit mahirap, kinakaya ko. Minsan wala kaming makain.”

Last April, he witnessed one of his kids graduate college. Jenny Rose Quimado successfully graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in Nutrition and Food Technology.
She echoes her father, saying their situation is difficult. “Minsan, pumapasok akong walang baon...pero nagpapasalamat ako sa Diyos na siya ang tatay ko kasi marangal ang trabaho niya. Wala siyang ginagawang iligal.”
Her pride of her dad amuses her Tatay Cristito. “Pagtinatanong ng tao, ‘Anong ginagawa ng tatay mo?’ Sumasagot yan, ‘Basurero!’ Hindi siya nahihiya,” Tatay Cristito smiles.
Jenny says she wants to be able to bring her father to good restaurants, buy him nice  clothes. “Gusto kong ako na ang magta-trabaho[para] ako na lang ang magpapa-aral sa mga kapatid ko,” she finishes her litany of plans of how to show gratitude to her father for his hardwork. — LA, GMA News

Pinoy scholars can attend this prestigious US college

Source: GMA News

Studying in one of United States’ Ivy League schools is not as unattainable as it seems for students in the Philippines.
In fact, Dartmouth College in New Hampshire is actively seeking Filipino applicants who display potential.

Zholl Tablante, Senior Assistant Director of Admissions at Dartmouth — and proudly 100 percent Pinoy — said that the college offers generous financial aid to accepted applicants who need it.
“No matter if the student is rich or poor, or somewhere in between, getting into an Ivy League school is not impossible, and getting the aid to go to an Ivy League school is definitely something that’s very attainable,” Tablante told GMA News Online.
“Dartmouth is one of the handful of institutions that cover 100 percent of your demonstrated financial need, meaning that if you need aid, you apply for it, during your application if you apply for it, we will cover whatever cost is needed for you to attend there,” he added.
Having grown up in the province of Pampanga and consistently visiting the country despite having migrated to US, Tablante believes that Filipinos will be a good fit in Dartmouth.
“When you think about Filipinos, you think about generosity, you think about family values, you think about community, and undying work ethic. And that is all the qualities that we want to be able to bring to Dartmouth in full force,” he said.
Pretty much any high school student is qualified to apply, Tablante said.
Recognizing that not all schools are the same, the college only compares students within the same school to check their performance.
"Each place has its own different curriculum. We don’t compare students in that way. We only compare them to the students in their school to see how they’re performing," he said.
Tablante added that having students from a wide selection of schools in the Philippines would result to a full representation of the Filipino culture.
"We want to make sure we’re getting diversity within that diversity, where we’re getting people from international schools, local schools, religious schools, so that when you bring them to Dartmouth, you’re really representing the full picture of the Filipino life," he said.
Need-based aid
Once accepted, the costs of going to school in Dartmouth, and even other Ivy League schools, should not be an issue.
"It’s need-based financial aid. If you apply and if we feel like you fit, and you need $70,000, then we’ll give you $70,000," Tablante said.
"It’s all about whatever you need. If the student is amazing and we want them there, we’re going to get them there," he added.
Tablante said that they are funding students that have potential for impact in the community, who will utilize their education in Dartmouth to make a difference in the country.
“[We’re] now trying to build stories of students from different places in the Philippines and showcasing that there are amazing students in this country that are going to do great things when they come back from their education," he said.
How to apply
Go to admissions.dartmouth.edu and click "Apply now." All applicants will need to fill out an online form to apply.
Take note of the deadlines for admission applications and financial aid applications as well as schedules for enrollment. The dates are available for viewing in Dartmouth's website.
To complete your application, you will also need the following:
  • application fee or fee waiver
  • Dartmouth Writing Supplement
  • Secondary School report with transcript, school profile, and counselor evaluation
  • two teacher evaluations
  • SAT or ACT
For international students, you will also need to complete a TOEFL or IELTS exam.
Dartmouth also recommends to include peer recommendations, and two SAT subject tests. —JST, GMA News




*****************************************************************************************************
Please Click Here for more Details

Tuesday, October 16, 2018

13 Filipino war veterans honored in California

Source: https://news.abs-cbn.com

Thirteen veterans and 47 surviving families joined Sacramento Filipino veterans for a special congressional medal of honor ceremony at the California state capitol building.
 
Some veterans shared their stories like 95-year-old Alberto Acaya, who fought in both World War II and the Korean War.


 
"We were ordered by the president of the United States to serve the United States armed forces. Filipinos and American soldiers suffered the same humiliation and defeat and we suffered hardships, diseases and maltreatment by the enemy in the concentration camp, I suffered 10 months as a prisoner of war," he said.
 
The moment was marked with a series of high profile Filipinos like retired US Major General and Filipino veteran advocate Antonio Taguba, who stressed that these ceremonies are a chance for the legacies of veterans to continue.
 
"We now have the opportunity and commitment to extend the word of the soldiers stories to raise awareness of their lifelong quest for recognition because this medal symbolizes thousands of personal stories," Taguba said.
 
State Supreme Court Chief Justice Tani Cantil Sakauye also spoke to the veterans. Her father was living in Hawaii when Pearl Harbor was bombed in 1941.
 
"The 13 veterans that are here today we are in debt to your service because you served and faced death on behalf of liberty for us and for generations that you knew not. But you faced that early on as young men to ensure liberty for a country that hadn’t promised you anything and then when it did promise you, waited so many years, to deliver justice," she said.
 
This is the 45th ceremony since the medal was revealed last year at a ceremony in Washington DC.
 
The bronze replicas have been part of nationwide fundraising efforts, from the community.
 
Taguba said he is hoping that the efforts continue so they can hold more ceremonies giving these Filipino war heroes their long overdue recognition.














***************************************************************************************************************





Friday, April 20, 2018

Filipino students to work in Japan hotel, nursing care industries

Source: http://news.abs-cbn.com/
Philippine university students will be allowed to work as interns in various industries in the southern Japanese prefecture of Okinawa under a program approved Friday, to address labor shortages there in certain industries.
The first students are expected to begin internships in the hotel and nursing care industries as soon as next month, with the number of interns predicted to reach around 100 by year-end and possibly include other industries.
The internship program was agreed in a deal between five private universities in Manila and two Naha-based groups supporting foreign workers in Okinawa. The scheme is also aimed at recruiting people to work in Okinawa in the future.
"There is a demand for Filipino workers from various in
dustries as they can speak English and are hospitable," said an official of the secretariat of the cooperative for foreign nationals working in nursing care services in Okinawa.
"I hope they will consider Okinawa as a career choice after internship," the official added.
The five participating schools are Mapua University, University of the East, Jose Rizal University, the Philippine Women's University and Lyceum of the Philippines University.
The support center for foreign nationals including those of Japanese descent, and the cooperative for foreign nationals working in nursing care services in Okinawa, both located in the Okinawa capital Naha, will act as brokers between the universities and the hotel and nursing care industries in Okinawa.











Thursday, April 19, 2018

Lists of Pinoys who have won Pulitzer prize

Source: http://news.abs-cbn.com

MANILA - Reuters journalist Manuel Mogato on Tuesday joined a handful of Filipinos who have a Pulitzer prize, the most prestigious award in journalism.

Here's a quick look at four Pinoys who have won a Pulitzer Prize. 



CARLOS P. ROMULO
1942 Pulitzer Prize Winner in Correspondence




Carlos P. Romulo received the award for his "observations and forecasts of Far Eastern developments" at the height of the second World War. 
Romulo's winning piece was a "a series of articles, after a tour of the Far East, about Japanese imperialism, and predicted an attack on the United States," according to carlosromulo.org
He wrote the stories while he was an aide-de-camp to American General Douglas MacArthur. 

CHERYL DIAZ MEYER
2004 Pulitzer Prize Winner in Breaking News Photography

Cheryl Diaz Meyer received the distinction after she and David Leeson, her colleague from The Dallas Morning News, published a series of photographs "depicting both the violence and poignancy of the war with Iraq."
In January 2018, Meyer, born in Quezon City, achieved another feat after she brought home all the awards at the International Category of the White House News Photographers Association's "Eyes of History" Still Contest.
Meyer, who now works as a freelancer, was conferred with first, second, and third place as well as 2 awards of excellence for a set of photos depicting the plight of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar.

JOSE ANTONIO VARGAS
2008 Pulitzer Prize Winner in Breaking News Reporting

Jose Antonio Vargas was part of the Washington Post team that covered the 2008 Virginia Tech shooting. 
He has championed immigration rights in the U.S. after he admitted in 2011 that he came to the U.S. when he was 12 years old in 1993 using a fake passport.
Vargas' book about undocumented immigrants, entitled "Dear America: Notes of an Undocumented Citizen," is set for release in September 2018.

ALEX TIZON 
1997 Pulitzer Prize Winner in Investigative Reporting


Alex Tizon was part of the Seattle Times team (with Eric Nalder and Deborah) which investigated "widespread corruption and inequities in the federally-sponsored housing program for Native Americans, which inspired much-needed reforms," according to pulitzer.org
His article, "My Family's Slave," published in The Atlantic after Alex passed away last year, went viral in May 2017. His article describes the life of Eudocia Tomas Pulido, a distant relative who came to live with the author’s family in the U.S to work as a household helper without pay for decades.
MANUEL MOGATO
2018 Pulitzer Prize Winner in International Reporting


Manuel Mogato won the international reporting Pulitzer with Reuters colleagues Clare Baldwin and Andrew R.C. Marshall for their "relentless" reporting on deaths allegedly linked to President Rodrigo Duterte's war on drugs.
Pulitzer.org said the work by Reuters "exposed the brutal killing campaign behind Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs." 
Mogato has been at the front row of the country's most turbulent events, including the end of Ferdinand Marcos' dictatorship, the ouster of former President Joseph Estrada in 2001, and the onslaught of Super Typhoon Yolanda in 2013. 












Pink Beach in Zamboanga, one of the worlds best says National Geographic

By:  Source: http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/291230/zamboangas-pink-beach-one-worlds-21-best-national-geographic-says/





The moment you set foot in Zamboanga City, won’t you want to stop wandering, and just head straight to the beautiful island facing its coasts?
In plain view from the city, Great Sta. Cruz Island’s clean sand looks white. But take a closer look, and you’ll see that the sand actually has a pinkish hue.
Last year, this pink-sand beach made it to the list of National Geographic’s 21 best beaches in the world. The crushed red organ pipe corals create the sand’s unique color.

Sta. Cruz Island is 4 km from the city’s Paseo del Mar, where bookings can be done by chance passengers and where visitors are reminded of the rules. The fare is at least P1,000—good for 10 persons. Advanced bookings are encouraged by management.
The boat trip takes 15-20 minutes from the city to the island. The crew, who are also residents of the island, occasionally turn off the engine in the middle of the trip while the boat passes over one or two huge, dark-blue waves.
Great Sta. Cruz is 251 hectares, while Little Sta. Cruz is about 21 hectares. The recreational area and the pink sand beach in Great Sta. Cruz stretches 350 meters long.
The Great and Little Sta. Cruz Islands were declared protected landscapes and seascapes in 2000 under Presidential Proclamation 271. The surrounding areas were also declared buffer zones.
Critically endangered
Little Sta. Cruz is a strict protection zone. It is not open to the public. There are critically endangered marine turtles on both islands—hawksbill, green and olive ridley turtles.
Just like several barangay in Zamboanga named after saints, the island got its name during the Spanish colonial period.
Visitors are allowed on Great Sta. Cruz only from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Visitors are limited to 500 persons per day. The city government and island keepers practice risk-reduction management and encourage visitors to be responsible ecotourists.

No trash should be left on the island. Washing of utensils in the swimming area is not allowed. Collection of corals and shells is also prohibited, except for the fish catches, souvenirs and trinkets sold by residents of the island.
Once on the beach, visitors can enjoy beach volleyball and take photos in a tree arrangement with Zamboanga City in the background.
Security remains a concern, but visitors need not worry because they will be accompanied by the Coast Guard and armed policemen the whole time.
Sandbars are fleeting, and their formation depends on the northeast and southwest monsoons (amihan and habagat, respectively). They usually appear when it’s habagat season, and disappear when it’s amihan. The length of the sandbars changes with the current.
According to Richard Aliangan, operations officer of the Protected Area Management Unit, the sandbars slowly get separated from Little Sta. Cruz.
The sandbar reflects the sunlight brightly, and waves come from opposite sides, meeting each other on an edge, like the closing of zippers—an unbelievable sight.



There are different species of mangroves on the island. They are even assigned genders. Those with pointed leaves, the size of a bud or coffee bean, are male, while those with blooming broad leaves are female.
Majority of the over 400 people living on the island are fisherfolk with alternative livelihoods, including tourist operations. Most of them also have motorized boats to travel to and from Zamboanga City (still docking at Paseo del Mar).
Stingless jellyfish
There are light-brown stingless jellyfish in the island’s lagoon. The tour guide explains the do’s and don’ts of holding them. The hands should be free of sunblock first, so that the jellyfish skin won’t be affected.
The jellyfish, which also come in gray-to-violet colors, should never be totally taken out of the water.
“Visitors get excited while touching the jellyfish, and their fear lessens,” Aliangan said in a phone interview.
Great Sta. Cruz happens to have a burial ground or heritage tombs for the Badjao tribe. There are artifacts, boat-shaped grave markers that are locally called “sunduk,” and mugs above the grave. This burial ground is part of a reserved national park under Presidential Decree 654.
The island also serves as a venue for Zamboanga’s celebration of Fiesta na Isla, an eight-week festival from April to May with activities like sand sculpture-making, boat racing and mussel-eating competitions. There are cultural performances such as the traditional “Pangalay” dance in which the dancers wear hand accessories, making their nails look unusually longer, imitating the wings of a bird.
Aliangan also said that there is a plan to allow visitors to walk around Great Sta. Cruz through eco-trekking. It will cover 6-8 km.
As the song goes, “Don’t you go to far Zamboanga…” The place can make visitors want to always come back, if not stay.

How to get to the city
Direct flights to Zamboanga City are available in Manila, Cebu and Davao. One-way fare ranges from P2,000-P4,000 depending on the promo and the time the ticket was booked.

Where to stay
Upon arrival, there are a number of hotels to choose from. The nearest one to Paseo del Mar is Lantaka Hotel by the sea, a perfect place to view the sunset. But for travelers who want to be practical, other convenient and budget-friendly hotels in the city proper like Hermosa Hotel and Red Cross Youth Hostel, which is just in front of Lantaka, can be the best choices.


Must-try dishes
Zamboanga is also known for food like curacha (red crab), spicy satti and chicken pianggang. There is also a wide variety of eats in Paseo del Mar. One famous restaurant that offers a seafood platter is Barcode. Zamboanga’s famous dessert called “Knickerbocker” is the ideal healthy finish. It is a mix of melon, apple, mango, pineapple, jelly and condensed milk topped with strawberry ice cream.