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Australian plane plot may have involved bomb or gas – reports

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SYDNEY: Four men accused of plotting to bring down a plane planned to use poisonous gas or a crude bomb disguised as a meat mincer, reports said Monday, with Australian officials calling preparations “advanced”.

The men — reportedly two Lebanese-Australian fathers and their sons — were arrested in raids across Sydney on Saturday evening.

The Sydney Daily Telegraph said they allegedly planned to carry the device on board a commercial flight from Sydney to a Middle East destination as hand luggage.

It said the idea was to use wood scrapings and explosive material inside a piece of kitchen equipment such as a mincing machine.

The Sydney Morning Herald also reported that a mincer was being examined, while The Australian newspaper cited multiple sources as saying it was a “non-traditional” device that could have emitted a toxic sulphur-based gas.

This, it said, would have killed or immobilised everyone on the aircraft.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said the plans were “advanced” but refused to comment on the conflicting claims over the method of attack.

“I have to respect the integrity of the investigations,” he said.

“But I can say that certainly the police will allege they had the intent and were developing the capability.

“There will obviously be more to say over coming days. It will be alleged that this was an Islamist, extremist terrorist motivation.”

Australian Federal Police Commissioner Andrew Colvin on Sunday said the aviation industry was potentially a target and that an improvised explosive device was involved.

Justice Minister Michael Keenan on Monday called the plans “quite sophisticated”.

“It was a plot to bring down an aircraft with the idea of smuggling a device on to it to enable them to do that,” he said.

A magistrate late Sunday gave police an additional seven days to detain the men, who have not been officially named, without charge.

Police continued to gather evidence Monday at the five homes raided, warning the investigation would be “very long and protracted”.

TV footage on Saturday showed riot police moving on a terraced house in the inner-city suburb of Surry Hills, with a man with a bandage on his head being led away by authorities, draped in a blanket.

A woman at the address denied they had any link to terrorism.

Security has been strengthened at major domestic and international airports across Australia since the raids, with passengers asked to arrive early and to limit their baggage.

Australia’s national terror alert level was raised on September 2014 amid concerns over attacks by individuals inspired by organizations such as Islamic State.

A total of 12 attacks, before the latest one, have been prevented in the past few years, while 70 people have been charged.

Several terror attacks have taken place in Australia in recent years, including a Sydney cafe siege in 2014 that saw two hostages killed. AFP

AFP/CC


Parojinog planned to make Ozamiz a trading hub

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Like a house made of glass, the dream of Ozamiz City Mayor Reynaldo “Aldong” Parojinog Sr. to transform the city into a competitive city in Mindanao was shattered when he was killed on Sunday.

Parojinog, who was first elected in 2001, was on his fifth term when he met his death.

Last year, during the launching of Ozamiz as a tourism destination, Parojinog shared his dream of turning the city into a trading hub in Northwestern Mindanao.

He said that the construction of the Ozamiz coastal highway has started with an initial budget of P100 million. The coastal highway would connect the city to the Panguil Bay Bridge, a P4.9-billion project that would connect the municipal town of Tubod in Lanao Del Norte to the City of Tangub in Misamis Occidental.

The Department of Public Works and Highway (DPWH) said the construction of the 3.6 kilometer, two-lane bridge would take three to four years. Once completed, travel time from Tubod to Tangub City would only take seven minutes from the usual 2 hours and a half.

“The coastal highway would make it easier to transport goods and agricultural products from Northern Mindanao to Western Mindanao area,” Parojinog had said.

The coastal highway was one of his administration’s flagship programs designed to perk the city’s economy.

“I will run as provincial governor in the next election to pursue my dream,” Parojinog said.

Parojinog, his wife and brother Octavio were killed in a police raid early Sunday.

Parojinog siblings detained in Crame

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Ozamiz City Vice Mayor Nova Princess Parojinog-Echavez and her brother, Reynaldo Parojinog Jr., were flown to Manila on Monday, hours after the raids in their hometown that killed their parents, uncle and several others.

From the Ninoy Aquino International Airport, the siblings were whisked off to Camp Crame under heavy guard. They were detained at the Philippine National Police’s (PNP) Custodial Center.

The Parojinog’s legal counsel, Lawrence Carin, accompanied the siblings to Manila but was barred from seeing his clients at the Custodial Center.

FROM OZAMIZ TO MANILA Ozamiz City Vice Mayor Princess Nova Parojinog Eschavez (center) and her brother Reynaldo Jr. (in red cap) are escorted upon arrival at the airport Monday. PHOTO BY RUSSELL PALMA

“There were several personnel who stopped me. I was with my clients all the way from Ozamiz. I was with them on board the plane and on the way here but I was stopped from going inside [the Custodial Center],” he told reporters.

CIDG chief Roel Obusan, said the Parojinogs had to be moved to Manila because the search warrants served to their family were issued by the Quezon City Regional Trial Court Branch 89.

Obusan said the CIDG is considering asking the court to hear the Parojinogs’ cases in Metro Manila.

“It would be very expensive for us and their security too might be at risk,” he explained.

On Sunday, police operatives conducted a series of raids in Ozamiz City, leading to the killing of Ozamiz Mayor Reynaldo Parojinog Sr., his wife Susan and his brother Octavio, a member of the provincial board.

Authorities have yet to release the identities of the other casualties.

New mayor
With the killing of Ozamiz mayor and detention of its vice mayor, second councilor Girlet Luansing assumed the post of acting mayor on Monday.

First councillor Ricardo “Ardot,’ one of the subjects of the search warrants served by the police, is missing. He should have been the acting mayor.

The third councillor, Michael Tagal, is the city’s acting vice mayor and will preside during the regular session of the city council every Monday.

Under the law “if a permanent vacancy occurs in the office of mayor or vice mayor, the highest-ranking member of the Sanggunian or the second highest ranking Sanggunian member shall become the mayor or vice mayor.”

CRIS DIAZ

More narco-politicians to fall, PNP chief warns

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Philippine National Police (PNP) chief Ronald de la Rosa on Monday warned that the police will also go after the other “narco-politicians” on President Rodrigo Duterte’s drug matrix.

He issued the warning after the police raided several areas in Ozamiz City early on Sunday, resulting in the killing of 15 persons, including Mayor Reynaldo Parohinog and his wife.

“There are more, you just have to wait for it. Again, to be fair with these people, that should serve [as]a warning to everyone that the PNP will not be considering anyone when it comes to law enforcement,” de la Rosa said.

“As far as law enforcement is concerned, we have no fear or favor. If you will be operated, then you will have to face it,” he added.

Parojinog was the third local chief executive killed in connection with the intensified war on drugs under President Rodrigo Duterte.

PNP chief Ronald de la Rosa. PHOTO BY RUY L. MARTINEZ

His daughter Nova Princess, who was arrested with brother Reynaldo Jr., had reportedly been in a relationship with high-profile Bilibid inmate Herbert Colangco.

The Parojinogs have denied any links to drugs.

The police, who were serving search warrants for illegal firearms in six Parojinog properties in Ozamiz City at 2:30 a.m on Sunday, claimed clan members opened fired on them, prompting them to shoot back.

Last year, the President said Parojinog was included in his list of local officials involved in illegal drugs.

The first mayor to be killed was Samsudin Dimaukom of Saudi Ampatuan town. He was shot dead at a checkpoint for allegedly squirreling illegal drugs out of his town in October last year.

In November, Albuera mayor Rolando Espinosa Sr. was killed inside his cell at the Baybay City Jail during the serving of a search warrant by the police. Espinosa was arrested for alleged possession of illegal drugs.

Supt. Marvin Marcos, who led the police operation in Albuera, was briefly suspended but was assigned to head the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group in Central Visayas upon the order of the President.

De la Rosa justified the serving of search warrants at the Parojinog residence at 2:30 a.m., saying warrants can be served anytime.

“Every time is a legal time to serve search warrants. There is nothing indicated in the search warrants that you should serve it only during office hours,” he told reporters.

CIDG director Roel Obusan said his unit in Northern Mindanao followed the law in the conduct of the Ozamiz operations.

“We planned these [Parojinog] operations for a long time. In fact, we followed all the procedures of the PNP as well as the law. We followed court legal processes, we applied for a search warrant,” Obusan told reporters in a news briefing.

“We followed all circulars of the courts to obtain a search warrant so I believe this is totally different [from happened in Espinosa’s slay case],” he added.

Obusan said the police did not mean to kill the mayor.

“We arrested eight others, especially armed members who surrendered so it erases the doubt or claim of their lawyer that [the family]was meant to be liquidated, because if that’s really our intention, all of them would have died,” he stressed.

“We really intended to bring them to justice alive but their private army fought us, which sometimes happen [during our operations),” he added.

Obosan urged those who will be subjected to drug operations to surrender to avoid being killed.

“Do not fight us. Heed the President’s order, surrender,” he said.

‘Regular’
Malacañang on Monday said it was assuming “regularity” in the Ozamiz raids.

Senior Deputy Executive Secretary Menardo Guevarra said the police operations should be deemed aboveboard unless an investigation proved otherwise.

“What should be investigated? The incident. There’s a presumption of regularity in all of these. If there’s anyone who will complain that something irregular happened, then, an investigation will have to be done. For now, we presume regularity,” Guevarra said.

The Palace official maintained that Duterte was not involved in any way in the deadly raid, apart from his “general” orders to security forces on catching drug suspects.

“The President need not be involved in things like this. These are police matters and the police will have to take care of that. They have their own internal procedures for dealing with matters like this,” Guevarra said.

Guevarra also said he saw no need for the Palace to form a special task force to probe the Ozamiz incident.

“There’s no need because existing structures are operating anyway. So we don’t find any need to create any ad-hoc or task force to investigate these matters because the structures are in place,” he said.

‘Death warrant’
Sen. Francis Escudero on Monday said Parojinog’s links to drugs did not merit him a “death warrant” amid speculations he was murdered by policemen.

He said he would not be surprised if one of his colleagues would file a resolution to investigate the incident, noting similarities between Parojinog’s and Espinosa’s deaths.

“They were both suspected of having drug links. But that often by itself does not merit a death warrant. Search warrant, yes. Arrest warrant, yes. But not a death warrant,” Escudero said.

He reminded policemen not to abuse their authority in pursuing Duterte’s war on drugs, warning them they would not enjoy the President’s protection forever.

“This will all be shortlived. The term of the incumbent administration is only for six years.”

“So, whatever it is they’re enjoying right now, if they violate any of our existing laws, they would have to face it anyway after six years, in this case after five years,” the senator said in a television interview.

“So, huwag sila masyadong mag-isip na protektado sila habambuhay [They should not entertain the idea that they will be protected for life],” he said.

Escudero however said that the deaths of Parojinog and two other former mayors during police operations “shows the seriousness of the administration” to pursue its war on drugs.

“I am sure President Duterte and Mayor Aldong (Parojinog) knew each other. I mean they’re both in Mindanao. In fact, in one of the speeches of the President, he admitted that he knew the mayor but he was in the (drug) list. He called them out to surrender and to report to the police otherwise he will issue a warrant for his arrest through the courts,” he said.

Rep. Gary Alejano of Magdalo party-list said the police operation in Ozamiz was “suspicious” and could result in more senseless killings.

“On one hand, the once considered untouchables in Ozamiz were made to account for the countless crimes that they have committed in the past. This is one I count as big fish in the war on drugs of this administration. On the other hand, the raid was highly suspicious. Reminiscent of what happened to Albuera, Leyte Mayor [Rolando] Espinosa some months back,” Alejano said.

“It is just right that the long arm of the law caught on them [Parojinogs], but what is crucial here is following the law. There should be sensitivity in executing operations. While it may look like a success on the surface like the thousands killed under the war on drugs, its impact to the due process of law, human rights, and professionalism of the police can’t be underestimated,” the lawmaker added.

CATHERINE VALENTE AND LLANESCA PANTI

‘More drugs could have entered PH’

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SOME members of the Senate Blue Ribbon committee suspect that there could have been other shipments of illegal drugs from China that breezed through the green lane of the Bureau of Customs (BOC) aside from the more than 600 kilos of shabu (methamphetamine hydrochloride) seized by Customs agents in May.

At the hearing of the Senate blue ribbon committee on the recent seizure of the P6.4 billion worth of shabu in Valenzuela City, Sen. Panfilo Lacson quizzed officials of the BOC why they did not pursue the other three shipments that arrived together with the merchandise that contained the illegal substance.

Lacson noted that the supplier, broker and trading company of the illegal drug shipment had three other entries.

“Why did you not follow the other shipments? Did it not raise red flags? I don’t think you need to be an intelligence expert or law enforcement expert to realize that,” Lacson said.

DRUG PROBE Sen. Richard Gordon grills Cstoms officials as Sen. Panfilo Lacson listens during the Senate hearing on the release of shabu shipments that passed through the bureau’s “green lane.” PHOTO BY RENE DILAN

The senator said it is possible that the three other shipments may have also contained shabu.

Sen. Richard Gordon, chairman of the committee, shared Lacson’s concern, saying he received information that a bigger shipment of shabu was released from the BOC.

“I have heard that there is a much bigger shipment that came out,” Gordon said in an interview but he did not elaborate.

Green lane
Customs officials led by Commissioner Nicanor Faeldon could not explain why EMT Trading, the consignee of the huge drug shipment, was able to have most of its shipments pass through the “green lane” despite its being a new importer.

The green lane is one of the four lanes of the BOC’s selectivity system where imported products pass through. The other three are blue or “super green lane,” yellow and red lanes.

The BOC introduced the green lane system in 2013 to expedite the shipping of products.

Shipments that pass the green lane no longer need to undergo inspection and document verification.

According to Lacson, of the 534 importations of EMT Trading from March 21 to May 29, 484 entries went through the green lane; 36 were yellow and only four passed through the red lane.

“How did EMT manage to access the green lane? This is for Customs to explain to us. It should have been a red flag if it came from China. That’s included in your criteria, selectivity system. ‘Pag China, (if it is from China) that’s automatic red,” Lacson said.

Deputy Commissioner Gerardo Gambala said the head of their risk management office (RMO) failed to input the name of EMT Trading in the list of new importers, that is why it was able to access the green lane.

Gambala was referring to Larribert Hilario, who was suspended by Faeldon on May 30.

Hilario was not present in the Senate hearing because Faeldon claimed that they had lost contact with him.

Protective custody
Meanwhile, the blue ribbon committee granted Mark Ruben Taguba 2nd, who provided senators more information about the drug shipments, protective custody.

Customs Intelligence and Investigation Service director Neil Anthony Estrella one of those grilled at the Senate. PHOTO BY RENE H. DILAN

Taguba admitted that he facilitated the delivery of the 40-foot container van that contained five metal cylinders but he denied that the cylinders contained shabu.

A team led by the BOC raided two warehouses in Valenzuela City in May and seized 604 kilos of shabu hidden in five cylindrical roller printing machines from China.

Taguba requested for an executive session to disclose more information about the shipment and to discuss further the Customs officials’ alleged knowledge on the drug shipment. He also implicated some customs officials during the executive session.

The customs broker claimed that a Taiwanese, Richard Tan, ordered the shipping of 604 kilos of shabu from China to Manila.

According to him, Tan, who owns Hongfei Philippines, knew about the shipment of shabu even before authorities raided his warehouse.

A photo of Tan with Faeldon was shown during the hearing. The Customs chief said the photo was taken after the Valenzuela raid.

Gordon described Taguba a “willing witness” who listed the names of officials allegedly involved in the illegal shipment.

“I made him write it. I did not want him to just say it,” the senator said.

Gordon refused to discuss what transpired during the executive session, but hinted that liability in the BOC goes from “up and down.”

23 juveniles escape DSWD jail in Malolos; 7 rearrested — police

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TWENTY-three juveniles escaped from the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) in Malolos Monday night although seven were rearrested, police said on Tuesday.

Police said the juveniles passed through a comfort room that was under renovation at the DSWD’s “Bahay Tanglaw Pag-asa” in Barangay Guinhawa.

The Bulacan Police Provincial Public Safety Company (PPSC) and Provincial Capitol-Civil Security, which conducted pursuit operations, transferred the seven to the Bulacan Provincial Jail.

The escapees broke the bars of the comfort room on second floor and tied blankets to get down.

A manhunt for the remaining escapees is ongoing.

US actor, playwright Sam Shepard dead at 73

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NEW YORK: Sam Shepard, the preeminent US playwright of his generation celebrated for depicting a darkness to contemporary American life and Oscar-nominated actor, has died. He was 73.

The actor, director and writer passed away Thursday at home in Kentucky of complications from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig’s disease, a family spokesman confirmed to Agence France-Presse on Monday.

Shepard, who wrote nearly 50 plays, won the Pulitzer Prize in Drama in 1979 for his play “Buried Child” and was nominated for an Academy Award in 1984 for best actor in a supporting role for “The Right Stuff.”

He went on to star in dozens of films with acting credits on the likes of “Steel Magnolias” with Dolly Parton and Julia Roberts, 2001 war drama “Black Hawk Down,” and 2013 family saga “August: Osage County” with Meryl Streep.

His writing career extended to cinema and he wrote the screenplay for “Paris, Texas,” which won the Palme D’Or at the 1984 Cannes Film Festival.

On television, his most recent work was in the first two seasons of Netflix series “Bloodline” in 2015 and 2016, which marked his final on-camera appearance.

“Time will sort him out as one of America’s most significant voices who told the American tale with a profound insight and with an ear for the expression of our deepest hopes and fears,” Gary Grant, theater professor at Bucknell University in Pennsylvania, said in paying tribute to his contribution to drama.

The characters he portrayed and the plays he wrote often depicted lost souls struggling to find their place in contemporary society.

“‘You don’t have to look very far to see that the American male is on a very bad trip,'” Shepard told The New York Times in a 1984 interview.

“There’s some hidden, deeply rooted thing in the Anglo male American that has to do with inferiority, that has to do with not being a man, and always, continually having to act out some idea of manhood that invariably is violent,” he said.

‘American themes’

After winning the Pulitzer in 1979, Shepard was twice more a finalist for the prestigious prize for US drama — for “True West” in 1983 and “Fool for Love” in 1984.

“He has devoted himself to American themes — perhaps more self-consciously than any of his colleagues,” wrote the Pulitzer nominating judges in 1979.

Born Samuel Shepard Rogers in Fort Sheridan, Illinois in 1943, he was the son of a teacher and of an Army officer who was a bomber pilot during World War II.

His father struggled with alcoholism, and Shepard had a nomadic childhood, moving from base to base around the country before the family relocated to an avocado farm in California and he graduated from high school in Duarte.

After school, he studied agriculture for a year before joining a traveling theater company and moving to New York, aged 19, and began writing plays.

His first New York productions, “Cowboys” and “The Rock Garden,” were produced in 1963. Since then, his work has won numerous awards, and been performed on and off Broadway and in theaters across the United States.

He lived in London for several years in the early 1970s.

Shepard played the drums with bands such as the Holy Modal Rounders and collaborated with Bob Dylan in writing the 11-minute song “Brownsville Girl,” which appeared on Dylan’s 1986 album “Knocked Out Loaded.”

Shepard was in a long-term relationship with the actress Jessica Lange for many years. The couple had two children. Shepard is also survived by a son he shared with actress O-Lan Jones, to whom he was previously married.

His final play, “A Particle of Dread” premiered in 2014 and his novel, “The One Inside” was published in February this year by Knopf.

The family spokesman said funeral arrangements were private, and that plans for a public memorial had not yet been determined.

In 1986, he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and in 1994, he was inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame.

In 2009, he received the PEN/Laura Pels International Foundation for Theater Award as a master American dramatist.AFP

AFP/CC

Veteran talent manager Alfie Lorenzo dies at 78

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SHOWBIZ stalwart and veteran talent manager Alfie Lorenzo died early morning Tuesday after suffering a heart attack at the Solaire Resorts and Casino. He was 78.

Lorenzo was rushed to San Juan De Dios Hospital in Pasay City where doctors failed to revive him, according to reports.

In a Twitter post from colleague Mario Dumaual of ABS-CBN, the time of Lorenzo’s death was at 2:14 a.m.

Lorenzo’s most famous and long-time ward Judy Ann Santos—who announced in April that she and Lorenzo had parted ways as talent and manager— would be taking care of the service and funeral arrangements, and would issue a statement in the afternoon, according to another colleague, Lolit Solis, over dzBB.

While Santos said that she and Lorenzo “talked amicably” as early as August 2016 when she asked permission to move on after over three decades under his management, Lorenzo’s statement bore the opposite. He cited disagreements in finances as the cause of Santos’ decision to leave him, an issue the actress decided to let go, saying, “Tito Alfie is not just my manager. He is family.”

It is unclear whether Santos and Lorenzo were in speaking terms at the time of the manager’s death.

Lorenzo will be remembered as a very colorful personality in Philippine showbiz.

Permanently sporting a beard and long hair, Lorenzo had a penchant for wearing hats and lots of jewelry.

Despite having gotten into countless word wars with his own wards, actors, producers and other feisty personalities in showbiz like him, Lorenzo was also known to be kind-hearted and generous, often giving delicacies from his hometown of Pampanga to long-time friends.

Lorenzo was also a showbiz columnist for several tabloids up to the time of his death, and had hosted several talk shows throughout his 60 years in the business. TESSA MAURICIO ARRIOLA


Scaramucci out as Trump’s new chief of staff takes reins

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WASHINGTON: Foul-mouthed spin doctor Anthony Scaramucci was axed as White House communications director Monday, just 10 days after being named to the post and hours after Donald Trump installed a new chief of staff.

The 53-year-old New Yorker — whose profanity-laden rant against colleagues gained him global notoriety — was fired as four-star general John Kelly began his quest to impose order on an administration careening out of control.

During its first six months in office, Trump’s White House has been beset by scandal, investigations, infighting, leaks, sackings, resignations, stinging legislative defeats and historically low approval ratings.

Scaramucci was brought in a little over a week ago to get the White House back on message, but quickly prompted negative headlines of his own.

He publicly called then colleague and chief of staff Reince Priebus — who was forced out last week — a “paranoid schizophrenic” and denounced chief White House strategist Steve Bannon in lurid sexual terms.

The White House refused to say whether it was Trump or Kelly who precipitated Scaramucci’s shock departure, but it seems clear that both were unhappy with his presence.

“The president firmly felt that Anthony’s comments were inappropriate for a person in that position,” said White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders.

Sanders added that everyone in the West Wing — including Scaramucci — reported to Kelly, a return to tradition for a White House that has been anything but.

“General Kelly has the full authority to operate within the White House, and all staff will report to him,” said Sanders. “That includes everybody at the White House.”

Kelly inherits the day-to-day running of an administration that — far from marching in lockstep — looks like a regiment pinned down by heavy fire, getting conflicting orders from their commander and squabbling over the way forward.

In previous administrations, the chief of staff has acted as a chief operating officer: organizing staff, managing the president’s schedule and deciding who gets access to him when.

In Trump’s White House, a rotating cast of family and staff with unclear roles and opaque job titles seemed to be able to walk into the Oval Office at will or get the president’s ear.

Despite Kelly’s apparent empowerment, many question whether anyone can rein in the mercurial, Twitter-happy Trump, who has appeared to encourage the infighting among various factions vying for influence in his administration.

All the president’s generals

After an Oval Office swearing-in ceremony before the afternoon theatrics, Trump confidently predicted Kelly, a 67-year-old combat veteran, would do a “spectacular job.”

“I predict that General Kelly will go down as, in terms of the position of chief of staff, one of the great(est) ever,” Trump said.

“What he has done in terms of homeland security is record-shattering, if you look at the border, if you look at the tremendous results we’ve had.”

Kelly replaces Priebus, a Republican Party operative who was ousted last week after the spectacular failure of Trump’s bid to repeal Obamacare and as his ugly feud with Scaramucci spilled into the open.

It was not immediately clear who would replace Scaramucci.

Former spokesman Sean Spicer, who resigned a little over a week ago, refused to comment on whether he will now remain in the White House beyond his planned August departure.

No chaos

Earlier in the day, Trump — ever determined to project success — insisted Monday that there was no “chaos” at the White House, which he said was running as a finely tuned machine.

“I think we’re doing incredibly well. The economy is doing incredibly well, and many other things. So we’re starting from a really good base,” he told a cabinet meeting.

But aside from the economy, there has been little reason for Trump to cheer.

Under pressure from a widening probe into his campaign’s contacts with Russia last year, Trump last week publicly shamed his own attorney general Jeff Sessions for disloyalty, alarming his conservative base, before turning on Priebus.

In another tweet Monday, Trump hinted that Congress’s own health insurance plan should be replaced for its failure to repeal Obamacare, his predecessor’s signature reform of the US health care system.

“If Obamacare is hurting people & it is, why shouldn’t it hurt the insurance companies and why should Congress not be paying what public pays?” he wrote.

The billionaire Republican has parted ways with a number of top officials beyond Priebus and Scaramucci, including his national security advisor, deputy national security advisor and FBI director, among others — an unparalleled turnover for such a young presidency.

On the global stage, Trump faces the stark challenge of a North Korea that could be on the verge of marrying nuclear and ballistic missile technology.

“We’ll handle North Korea. We’re going to be able to handle them. It will be handled. We handle everything. Thank you very much,” Trump said. AFP

AFP/CC

Cloudy skies, rains in parts of Luzon Tuesday — Pagasa

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A SOUTHWEST monsoon affecting the western part of Northern and Central Luzon will bring rains over these areas on Tuesday, according to the state-run weather bureau.

The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) said cloudy skies with light to moderate rains and thunderstorms would prevail over the provinces of Ilocos, Cordillera, Zambales and Bataan.

Metro Manila and the rest of the country will experience partly cloudy to cloudy skies with isolated rains and thunderstorms, said Pagasa.

Moderate to strong winds will blow from southwest over Luzon and the western section of Visayas, Pagasa added.

Meanwhile, the coastal waters along these areas will be moderate to rough, as winds will be light to moderate coming from the southwest to west with slight to moderate seas, Pagasa said. ELSHAMAE ROBLES

 

House hears anti-narcotics chief’s ‘sensitive’ testimony without Faeldon

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CUSTOMS Commissioner Nicanor Faeldon has been excluded in the executive session between the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) and lawmakers at the House of Representatives investigating the illegal entry of P6.4 billion worth of illegal drugs (shabu) in the country, which bypassed Customs’ scrutiny.

It was anti-Narcotics Chief Isidro Lapeña who asked for an executive session or closed-door meeting with members of the committee on dangerous drugs during the hearing at the House on Tuesday.

Lapeña made the request when Rep. Ace Barbers of Surigao del Norte, committee chairman, asked him about the May 26 raid in Valenzuela City that yielded P6.4 billion worth of shabu (methamphetamine hydrochloride).

Right after telling the panel that it was Customs Commissioner Faeldon who called him on May 26 in connection with the planned raid, Lapeña approached Barbers who announced after that Lapeña’s testimony would be heard in an executive session “due to the sensitive issues” he had raised.

Faeldon and the rest of Customs officials and employees were excluded from the executive session.

In his opening statement, Barbers slammed Faeldon and the rest of the Customs officials over what he described as gross incompetence that led to the entry of the P6.4 billion worth of shabu.

“Those drugs entered the country under their (Customs officials) very noses, undetected. If this happened in other countries, Customs officials would have been resigning [by now]for delicadeza’s sake,” Barbers said.

 

Today’s Front Page August 02, 2017

Classes suspended in parts of Rizal due to bad weather

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CLASSES in all levels in public and private schools in parts of Rizal were suspended due to bad weather, according to their respective local officials.

Below is the list:

All levels, public and private
Baras
Cainta
Morong
Taytay
Teresa
Pre-school to Senior Highschool, public and private
Angono
Antipolo

Meno Mendoza, forecaster of the Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) said a southwest monsoon or “habagat” is causing cloudy skies and light to moderate rains and thunderstorms over Metro Manila, Ilocos, Cordillera, Cagayan Valley, Central Luzon, Bicol and Eastern and Central Visayas, Caraga and Zamboanga peninsula regions.

The weather state bureau also issued a gale warning over the northern seaboard of Luzon, warning fisher folks not to venture out into the seas.

All fishing boats and small sea craft are warned against moderate to rough sea conditions.

Moreover, cloudy skies with isolated rainshowers and thunderstorms will be expected over the rest of the country. GEIAN ESPANOL

 

Knee-deep floods in Rizal due to monsoon rain

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ANTIPOLO CITY — Rains caused by the southwest monsoon flooded parts of Rizal province early Wednesday, forcing local officials to suspend classes in all levels in public and private schools.

READ: Classes suspended in parts of Rizal due to bad weather

As of posting time, several villages in Antipolo and Cainta were reported to be knee-deep in floods, making roads in these areas not passable to all vehicles.

In Antipolo City, the local government, in its Facebook page, said affected were the Provincial Road near Dalig National High School and Sitio Parugan Block 2.

It also said that Olalia Road was temporarily closed to give way to the clearing of a fallen tree.

Earlier in the day, the city government said that Marcos Highway near Piedra Blanca and Puting Bato were not passable to light vehicles due to floods.

In Cainta, flooded were Park Place Village and Country Homes Cypress Village. Bulao River near Cypress village is threatening to overflow if the rain persists. LIAN SILLADA

798 examinees pass the Master Plumber Licensure exams

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The Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) announces that 798 out of 3,141 passed the Master Plumber Licensure Examination given by the Board for Master Plumbers in Manila, Baguio, Cagayan De Oro, Cebu, Davao, Iloilo, Legazpi and Tacloban this July 2017.

Seq. No.  N a m e

1 ABALOS, EUNICE  SARADAT
2 ABANDO, CARL LOUIE  DEL ROSARIO
3 ABANGAN, ASHLEY  VILLARICO
4 ABANGAN, JADE FRANZ  TIBOR
5 ABAS, JOHAMIN  MAMASALABO
6 ABELLO, PABLO  FETALCURIN
7 ABERGAS, MARK GUILLER  SALVADOR
8 ABRERA, MARCELO JR  TANGPUZ
9 ABROGINA, PATRICIA YSABELLE  ESPORLAS
10 ACANTILADO, DENNIS CLYDE  GAMIAO
11 ACIDO, TERENCIO JR  LOPEZ
12 ACLAN, ANGELICA  SORIANO
13 ACOSTA, HENRY  OLAYRES
14 ACUÑA, ANNA TRICIA  LEE
15 ADAN, MEA ADELINE  DIMAALA
16 ADLAO, JEREMIAH CYRUS  SOLEDAD
17 ADVINCULA, LIONEL  GARCIA
18 AGCOPRA, JONATHAN  PAGARAN
19 AGGASID, ANGELICO  MANGUBAT
20 AGLANAO, REINALYN  MEJIA
21 AGOJO, MARK DAVE  BOA
22 AGUSTIN, JEROME  MANAHAN
23 AKUTSU, AINYR  FERNANDEZ
24 ALEJANDRO, GERARD  SILVESTRE
25 ALESNA, HEALTHENE JOY  FAMILARA
26 ALFANTE, KENT  CAÑADA
27 ALFONSO, FERNANDO DOMINIC  CUNANAN
28 ALIB, RENZ DOMINIC  CLAVERIA
29 ALIGORA, JEFFREY  MACATANGAY
30 ALMENDRAL, FELIX FRANCISCO  POTENCIANO
31 ALVAREZ, JOHN CEEDEE  MORONG
32 ALVAREZ, KLINT PAUL  CAGOMOC
33 ALVARO, TIM JOSEPH  DAVID
34 ALZAGA, AARON  MARICUELO
35 AMADOR, ADRIAN  AQUINO
36 AMANTILLO, OLIVER  POCDOL
37 AMBROY, RIO JAIRUS  FERNANDEZ
38 ANDIANO, ROMUALDO  LIMBASAN
39 ANDRADE, FERDINAND  DELGADO
40 ANDRES, JANINE JOY  FERNANDEZ
41 ANGELES, ALYSSA ROSE  SOLIS
42 ANONUEVO, ERNESTINE JOB  REYES
43 ANTIPUESTO, MARISTER  RAMIREZ
44 APIGO, ANGELICA FELIZ  DE ALVA
45 APUSEN, SHEILA MAE  CAMANO
46 AQUINO, KENNETH JOHN  ANCHETA
47 AQUINO, MARVIN  BUENO
48 AQUINO, MICKO ANGELO  RAMIREZ
49 AQUINO, MON ALDRIN  ESPIRITU
50 AQUINO, SARAH CHELL  AGUAS
51 AQUINO, STEFFANIE  NOGRALES
52 ARADA, JOAO ANTONIO  HUERTAS
53 ARADO, CARL SHERWIN  LICAYAN
54 ARANAS, RODOLFO III  DANDUAN
55 ARANDIA, ERWIN  VALENCIA
56 ARBUTANTE, JASPER JESS  RAMIL
57 ARDIENTE, FRANCIS IAN  MAÑUS
58 ARELLANO, ALYSSA ASHRA  REA
59 ARELLANO, FRANCIS  AGUEDAN
60 ARGANA, MARK EDWARD  BALEDA
61 ARMENIO, RANDELL  CASTRENCE
62 ARZADON, MARK JOSEPH  LANUZA
63 ASEDILLO, KIM BERNADETH  TADIQUE
64 ASON, LOUISE MICHELLINE GILLE
65 ATAJAR, LORENZ  MAGALLANES
66 ATANACIO, NORMAN JR  FUNTALBA
67 ATIAN, LYSA JANE  DOCOT
68 ATIVO, CRIS CEZAR  PABILONA
69 AUSTRIA, JERIC  TORIO
70 AUSTRIA, MARVIN JAY  DELA CRUZ
71 AVANCEÑA, AUGUSTO  ALANO
72 AVILA, KEITH DOMINICK  ARAÑAS
73 AYSON, JANNE KEVIN  PANGILINAN
74 BACANI, MARK JHON LLOYD III  BUENAOBRA
75 BACQUEL, AMERODDIN  ISIK
76 BAGAY, JURIEVE  ROSLIN
77 BAGNOL, RAQUEL ANGELICA  RESURRECCION
78 BAGUIO, MARY FAITH  BLANCO
79 BALANE, RALPH EMMERSON  BUENSALIDA
80 BALANQUIT, JULIA NICOLE  PANGANIBAN
81 BALCE, RICKY  DASCO
82 BALIOLA, DONNA VIDA  JUMAWID
83 BALIQUIA, JEREME  DUQUE
84 BALMACEDA, REY  TUAZON
85 BALUYOT, JUAN CARLO  RABINO
86 BAMBICO, PAOLO RICCI  RANAY
87 BANAC, JAYFLORD  ABUCAY
88 BANDIGAN, ALJID  MAGDOBOY
89 BANGOY, JAYLOR  ANZURES
90 BARBOSA, NOVAE SHEEN  PELONGCO
91 BARCENA, CHARLES  GATAN
92 BARDON, ORLANDO  BURO
93 BARLISO, LORETO JR  LANGOMEZ
94 BARREDO, MICHELLE ANTHEA  CORTEZ
95 BARRION, PATRICIA ROWENDA  DE LA ROSA
96 BASAN, ROEL JOHN EDRICK  TORRICO
97 BATINGAL, MARIANNE  LIGAN
98 BATUAMPAR, SOMAYYAH  SARIGIDAN
99 BAUTISTA, ALEXANDER JORDAN  DORIA
100 BAUTISTA, JOHN RAPH LUIGI  SABIDURIA
101 BAUTISTA, ULYSSES DAKILA  MABALOT
102 BAYOGO, JULIVEN  TIGLEY
103 BAÑAGA, MICHAEL  HERNANDEZ
104 BEBANCO, JEMAR  BORJA
105 BEBANIA, MARK ANTHONY  BAUTISTA
106 BEHIK, ARIS  SUNGA
107 BELEN, PAUL ZYMON  SABATER
108 BELMES, ERNESTO  BEJARIN
109 BELOTINDOS, ALDEAH MAE  BULAONG
110 BELOY, RENIE JAY  SANCHEZ
111 BELTRAN, JULIUS CEASAR  GULANG
112 BENEDICTO, MARTIN YMANOL GRANT  RICAFRENTE
113 BENITO, EMEL KEN  DY
114 BENTULAN, KIMWEL JOHN  HURBODA
115 BERNAL, ROLANDO JR  RECALDE
116 BERNIL, EMMAN RUEL  CASAS
117 BIEN, KRIZEL  CASTELO
118 BIGTAS, MATTHEW  ADAWAG
119 BINGABING, LAURICE ANN  OBUSAN
120 BISNAR, WILFREDO  NUEVAS
121 BONA, DANIEL  NEPOMUCENO
122 BONGOLAN, MICHAEL LOUIS  LABAGNOY
123 BONZA, ERRYL  ALAY
124 BRILLANTE, RALPH KENNETH  VILLANUEVA
125 BRILLANTES, MARK LYNDON  DERLA
126 BRIOL, RICARTE  BOLON
127 BRITO, MARY JOYCE  ONG
128 BUCAG, MARIA VERONICA  ISMA
129 BUENAAGUA, JUAN PAULO  PONAYA
130 BUKAS, SANUEL  QUEJANO
131 BUNOLNA, SENEN  BUHWILON
132 BURIGSAY, NELSON JR  CRISTOBAL
133 BUSAL, MITRA  AGGAL
134 BUSTAMANTE, NATHAN PAUL  UMIPIG
135 CAADAN, MOISES JR  BAZARTE
136 CAAYON, ALEX  ORNOPIA
137 CABAHUG, LYNDON JOHN  BALDERAMA
138 CABALLERO, MA STEPHANIE  BUARAO
139 CABALLERO, VINCENT ARDNIE  BACUS
140 CABALQUINTO, RAS ASLIY  CAMPOSANO
141 CABANGANGAN, JOWELL  TORONON
142 CABANILLA, ROGELIO  TOMAS
143 CABERO, PAUL VINCY  ANTONIO
144 CABIGON, FROILAN  ALQUEZA
145 CABILLANES, ROGER  PAÑA
146 CABORNAY, AARON CHRISTIAN  BUCUD
147 CABRAS, ADONIS  CABRERA
148 CABUGOS, JULIE FE  ADVINCULA
149 CACHO, MARC FERDINAND  JABONETE
150 CADELINIA, LUKE DONALD  GARCIA
151 CADIGAL, JOVITO ANNE V  YAP
152 CADUNGOG, NIEL  CADILIG
153 CAGUIOA, MARK ANTHONY  GUIRALDO
154 CAHANAP, NEIL  PARATE
155 CAHATIAN, JOSEPH JOHN  ORODIO
156 CAINGCOY, ALEXANDER  PINILI
157 CAJA, HIPOLITO ERICSON  YULO
158 CAJAYON, EMMALYN  FORNOLES
159 CALANOG, JOHN LEX  ORDEZ
160 CALINAWAN, ALDRICH  BATOMALAQUE
161 CALOZA, JOHN CARLO  SALIVIO
162 CALSIYAO, FAITHE  SAD-ANG
163 CAMINO, RAYMART  ANOS
164 CAMORA, SEAN VICTOR  GLOBIO
165 CAMPANO, JESRIEL  ABAD
166 CANAPI, CHRISTOPHER LANCE  ESPINOSA
167 CANCINO, JEFFERSON  MONDERO
168 CANDELARIA, RACHELL ANN
169 CANOPIN, KEVIN GERARD  CUBOL
170 CANOVAS, JONNEL DAVID  ESTEBAN
171 CANTILA, KENNY  BACARA
172 CANULLAS, ENRICO  BAES
173 CAONG, KLAUS NIKO  BARBARONA
174 CAPAL, ANNABELLE  SINOGBA
175 CAPUYO, MICHAEL  DUMANGENG
176 CARBONILLA, MARK EZEKIEL  SUPATAN
177 CARODAN, JONNEL  TORREMILLANO
178 CARPIO, PRUDY LYN  PRESBITERO
179 CARUDIN, AR-RASHID CLEVEN  DADOR
180 CASALME, JESSE  LANDAGAN
181 CASEÑAS, JORGE  RANA
182 CASTAÑEDA, RICA JALYSSA  GOMEZ
183 CASTAÑEDA, WILJOREL  RESQUER
184 CASTILLO, AGNES  EVASCO
185 CASTILLO, ALLEAH  DEL ROSARIO
186 CASTILLO, EMMANUEL  SELICIA
187 CASTILLO, MELCHOR  ALMORADIE
188 CASTILLON, BONIFACIO JR  FUENTES
189 CASTILLON, GLODIL  MAAMBONG
190 CASTRO, JAN CARLO  MARCELO
191 CASTRO, PATRICK JAZE  QUIAMBAO
192 CASULLA, KRIZZEL FAITH  MORADA
193 CASULLA, RALFE CEDRIC  GUAZON
194 CATALAN, EVAN  UNDALOK
195 CATAMA, JOSE JR  PADLAN
196 CATANGHAL, JOHN ACE  BAUTISTA
197 CATARAJA, JIMBO  TAUTOAN
198 CATUBAG, JEE GUILLER  BADILLA
199 CELIS, MATTHEW LOUISE  CALALANG
200 CELIZ, JOHN CHRISTIAN REY  FABOR
201 CEREZO, IVAN JUDE  ELLA
202 CHACON, VHAN ALLAN  LARGO
203 CHAVEZ, JERVIC CHRISTOPHER  AYA-AY
204 CHUA, CRIS CHRISTOPHERSON  UY
205 CIRIACO, DENNIS  LLENA
206 CLARK, MEE MARIE  TAVERA
207 CODON, DAVE ALDRIN  MENDOZA
208 COLARDO, JABES JAMES  DUNGCA
209 COLLADO, JOSHUA AMBROSIO  MANALANG
210 COLUMNA, SUSAN  GUZMAN
211 COMANDAO, CHARMAINE ANNE  LACAP
212 COMISO, REBIE  VILLANUEVA
213 CORDOVA, RANILE  ESPINA
214 CORPUZ, ANGELIQUE  CORTEZ
215 CORPUZ, MONIQUE  CORTEZ
216 CORTEZ, JADE  BENEDICTO
217 CRISOSTOMO, BRYAN  TRINIDAD
218 CRISTOBAL, ERNESTO JR  MIGUEL
219 CRITICA, JOHN CARLOS  MORALIDAD
220 CRUZ, FLORA MAE  TAYO
221 CRUZ, RUPERT RUSSELL  SAN PEDRO
222 CRUZAT, JULIUS BRYAN  OXALES
223 CRUZEM, JAZEL  FORTEZA
224 CUADRILLERO, JURIES  SUMINGUIT
225 CUÑADO, JOYMEE ROSE  SINOGBA
226 DADIA, LAUREEN YSABEL  BIÑAS
227 DAGOTDOT, JUNIL  AURE
228 DALANGIN, APRIL MAE  DEL MUNDO
229 DAMPIOS, BUNNY  LAPINID
230 DANILA, MARK REY  BAYOCBOC
231 DANSILAY, TESSA  UGAY
232 DATANAGAN, JAYDEE
233 DAVE, FRANCISCO JR  LERIAS
234 DAVID, CHRISTINE  DE LA CRUZ
235 DAVID, JAKE MARK  PIGA
236 DAVID, KRIZZEL  OCAMPO
237 DAVID, VINZON PAUL  SAPLALA
238 DE GUZMAN, CLYDE LOUIE  BEREÑA
239 DE GUZMAN, ELINOEL  VILLANUEVA
240 DE GUZMAN, JONATHAN  TAMAYO
241 DE GUZMAN, ROVIEL  SANTIAGO
242 DE JESUS, JIM ALDWIN  LARA
243 DE LA ROSA, EDUARDO JR  CIMACIO
244 DE LEON, REY MARK  ALFARO
245 DE LOS REYES, KATE MARCELYNE  ELTAGUNDE
246 DE PALMA, KATHERINE  DIO
247 DE PERALTA, RONEL  DOCTOLERO
248 DE SAN JOSE, JENZEL RAY  BALANI
249 DE VILLA, GINA  DUMDUM
250 DE VILLA, MARC ANTHONY  BICO
251 DECIN, JOHN CEDRIC  GRULLA
252 DECINAL, MARK ELMER  LUMICAY
253 DEDORO, SHAIRA MAE  BARTIDO
254 DEJELO, ARVIN GERON  DE SAN ANDRES
255 DEL ROSARIO, JONATHAN  GAZMIN
256 DELA CERNA, MALOU  NIPAYA
257 DELA CRUZ, ASER  JAVATE
258 DELA CRUZ, MELANIE  TURIAGA
259 DELA CRUZ, PRINCESS  JAVIER
260 DELA CRUZ, RALP JUSTIN  CORTEZ
261 DELA CRUZ, ROMULO JR  LABUTAP
262 DELA SERNA, GILBERT II  MEDIO
263 DELGADO, RENZ ERICK  REVECHE
264 DELOS SANTOS, MICHAEL JOHN  SADE
265 DENILA, MARK PHILIP  NOLASCO
266 DENOFRA, CYRIL  REGALA
267 DEOPANTE, JOYMEE  LAODINIO
268 DEPAO, GLENN  CATALINO
269 DEPOSO, JOHN MARC  BACOMO
270 DEQUIÑA, NICOLAS JHON  CASTILLANO
271 DERILO, REGINE MAE  DEMATERA
272 DEXIMO, REGINE JOYCE  LAVILLA
273 DIAZ, KATHRINE JOYCE  ANCIADO
274 DILAO, JOEMAR  LIBA
275 DIMALANTA, BRICK  DIVINA
276 DINGLAS, JEHOSHUA  GENOTIVA
277 DIONISIO, JOHN ALVIN  MARASIGAN
278 DISING, MAUREEN JOY
279 DIZON, KIMBERLY ANNE  MUDLONG
280 DOCENA, JESSE  RASONABLE
281 DOCOT, MA ELLA  SARZA
282 DOLORES, KEVIN  SAN JOSE
283 DOMINGO, CESAR  FLORENTINO
284 DOMINGO, GEL ALDWIN  SAN PEDRO
285 DOMINGO, LAURENCE BRYAN  CRISPIN
286 DOMINGO, WILFREDO  CERVANTES
287 DORAO, DONNA  ONA
288 DORIA, MITCHELLE IAN  COLON
289 DOROMAL, CHARLIE  DE LOS REYES
290 DUAZO, EDWIN  FURAQUE
291 DULALAS, KIMJAY  BABUYO
292 DULAY, GEOVANI  SEBALDA
293 DULAY, JESSICA PAULA  MENDOZA
294 DUMALABA, REY  PANOGALINOG
295 DUMARAN, JAYBERT  VARGA
296 DUMAUG, GEBE  PADING
297 DUQUE, JOREZZA  DIAZ
298 EBANGA, PABLITO JR  OLANGO
299 EBINA, JONATHAN  COMEDERO
300 ECHALAS, ACERON  NONESA
301 ECHIPARE, DANIEL  ALIPOPO
302 EIMAN, MAR DIONALD  NALAZON
303 ELAMPARO, ADRIAN  PEREZ
304 ELENTO, GRACE  CASTRO
305 EMBALZADO, ENRIQUE REY  BALONGCAS
306 ENALES, MARY ANGELICA  SANCHEZ
307 ENCORPORADO, KATHLEEN  CANLAS
308 ENO, JOHN NICOLO  LICMOAN
309 ERRY, ISHMAEL JR  ANDO
310 ESCLAMADO, DONNA  DUNGOG
311 ESGANA, QUIMHEN  RELANES
312 ESPINA, HARRISON  MANZANO
313 ESTAN, RAIL PATRICK  ENCABO
314 ESTARES, LOUIE ANTHONY  PETINGCO
315 ESTEPA, LEANDRO MIGUEL  MUNGCAL
316 ESTEVES, LOUIE MEL  PETILLA
317 ESTRABO, NIEVEN  JACOB
318 ESTRADA, JOEL  FRIANEZA
319 EUPEÑA, RICKY BOY  GUERRA
320 EUSTAQUIO, SONNY  DELA CRUZ
321 EVANGELISTA, NATHANIEL  LUMPAS
322 EVE, ROBERTO JR  ESTRELLADO
323 FABAY, JOHN MARK  CARANTO
324 FABILANE, JOMAR  GADING
325 FACUN, GLEN  SABADO
326 FADROGANE, RODELO  LLABORE
327 FAJARDO, NOEL  ESPINEDA
328 FALLURIN, JASON  YAP
329 FAN, JOHN CARLO  PAGAR
330 FANTIN, SHEBA MARIE  ORCULLO
331 FAUSTINO, AARON GLENN  CARGO
332 FEBRA, MARC LEO  ARGAYOSO
333 FELIX, ARMANDO RAFAEL  CRUZ
334 FENOMENO, BETTINA MONIQUE  DY
335 FERMO, LYNDON JR  ABARQUEZ
336 FERMO, MARK ANTHONY  ADLAWAN
337 FERNANDEZ, JAYSON  SANTOS
338 FERNANDEZ, ROSE ANN  CABATINGAN
339 FERRANCO, JAPHET BRYLLE  MINGO
340 FERRER, JOHN PAUL  DE VERA
341 FLORENCIO, KEN ANDREW  ALIMON
342 FONTANILLA, MICHAEL  BULAGAO
343 FORTU, FREDY  MAGRACIA
344 FRANCISCO, FRENZIE RENSAELLER  RIVERA
345 FRUELDA, JUDITH ANNE MARIE  DEL PRADO
346 FUENSALIDA, NELSON JOHN  SAMSON
347 GADIANA, SARAH ANDREA  FABRESIS
348 GALANG, DAVE  RICAFORT
349 GALIMA, SHERWYL ULYZZES  ELIMANCO
350 GALIT, KEVIN JOHN  VALDEZ
351 GALLESTRE, JAZMYNE NICOLE  MARQUEZ
352 GALOLO, RYAN ONEIL  TIMARIO
353 GALOS, MIKE ULYSSES  TELEN
354 GALUPO, ARVIN JOHN  POQUITA
355 GALVEZ, JOHN POL  ADECIR
356 GANACIA, JEMICA  GEROLAGA
357 GANGCUANGCO, DAVE JOSEPH  VALENCIA
358 GAPPI, KIEL  ISIP
359 GARCELAZO, ROSALINDA  DELA CRUZ
360 GARCIA, ARNOLD  CATARATA
361 GARCIA, CAMILLE ANGELICA  PANGILINAN
362 GARCIA, CARLO NOWELL  CLIMACOSA
363 GARCIA, DAVID  ABREA
364 GARCIA, KRIS KERNEL  FLORES
365 GARCIA, NICOLE AIKA  ARRUBIO
366 GARCIA, PAULINE GAILE  DE LEON
367 GARCIA, RICHARD  SAN LUIS
368 GARCIANO, JOSEPH IAN  COJAMCO
369 GASTONES, JAY MARK  MANCHA
370 GATBONTON, ATHENA  BASCOS
371 GATCHALIAN, DYANN  ESMAEL
372 GATUS, ROME MARK  PUNZALAN
373 GAY, NIÑA KATRINA  MONSALUD
374 GAYAO, HARRIET  CONG-O
375 GEORPE, JAN VINCENT  ALQUISALAS
376 GERNALE, RONELIO  ENTERA
377 GILAPON, ROBELIE MAY
378 GIME, MELANIE  CRISOSTOMO
379 GODORNES, MARK ALJON  HERMOSO
380 GOMEZ, ISAIAH  AMORIN
381 GONGON, BERNARDINO  MENDOZA
382 GONZALES, CARL JOSEPH
383 GONZALES, JOHN MARK  GUIFAYA
384 GONZALES, LLOYD MARION  TAN
385 GONZALES, MARK EDMINE  RAGO
386 GONZALES, RUENA  MAHINAY
387 GRAGANTA, JOHN CHRISTIAN CLART  CARLOS
388 GUEVARRA, ABNER JR  MAGTOTO
389 GUINGAB, HARLEY  VINARAO
390 GUINTO, MARK LOUIE  VINUYA
391 GUINTU, GOMEL HAMILTON  SANTIAGO
392 GUMPIC, DARYL JOY  PADUA
393 GUZMAN, DONALYN  VILLAFLORES
394 GUZMAN, JOMARI PATRICK  MEÑOZA
395 HERNANDEZ, ADRIEL  CASTILLO
396 HILARIO, ORLANDO JR  PUNZALAN
397 HILVANO, RAUL  SABERON
398 HINAMPAS, DIOCRIS MARLON  CUPAL
399 IBARRA, TONNI ANNE  PEREZ
400 IBO, BRYAN  ABAÑO
401 IGNA, ALDRIANE GILBERT  DELA CRUZ
402 IGROS, JANREY CARLO  ARAGONES
403 IRAL, JENNIFER  BENEDICTO
404 ISON, EDGARDO  GALANG
405 JABINES, ALPHA  ORIOQUE
406 JACOB, ALFRED GENE  ANCENO
407 JACOB, VANESSA MAE  SOMCIO
408 JAGAPE, ROWEL  ENGLATERA
409 JAGNA, NATHALIE ROSE  SERAFIN
410 JALIMAO, JOHN PRIMO  JEREZ
411 JARILLO, DARWIN JAY  TUAZON
412 JATICO, JERVIS  SAGAYNO
413 JAVIER, TED MICHAEL  VELEZ
414 JAYME, NELSON JR  TEJANO
415 JIMENEZ, JUSTINIEL KRIS  ORTIZ
416 JUANICO, ANDREW  MAYOL
417 JUANILLO, RODAVIC  GUAPE
418 JUESNA, PAOLO  SAYSON
419 JUSI, CHESTER LENNARD  GONDA
420 KHAN, KIM SHOGEL  SANTIZAS
421 KOO, CHARLES JANSSEN  YAP
422 KRIEG, BRYAN CALVIN  BARCESA
423 LABESORES, JIO AMOR  DIGAUM
424 LABRADOR, HAZELLE ANN  DICE
425 LABUCA, ARIEL  GARCIA
426 LACAMBRA, RUEL  ELIZAN
427 LACHICA, NEIL HUMPHREY  FAR
428 LAGASCA, JOSHUA EDWARD  RAMOS
429 LAILO, JAYVEE  ELARDO
430 LAJARA, SULPICIO  VERGARA
431 LALUSIS, JOHN VINCENT  MERCADO
432 LAMBERTE, CAMILLE  CORDOVA
433 LANTACA, JHON RHOY  BAYHON
434 LANUZA, GARY  ARATIA
435 LAODENIO, DENIEL  SANCHEZ
436 LAPIRA, ANNA DOMINIQUE  MOSLARES
437 LAPITAN, DONN ALDREN  LASIG
438 LAPUS, RUSTY  VILLADOLID
439 LAPUT, JAYWARD  TEOLOGO
440 LAROYA, REYVIN  GABATIN
441 LAUDE, DON EMMANUEL  BINAY
442 LAWAGAN, VINCENT JOEL  FIYAO
443 LAYNO, CRISVEN DALE  VENEZUELA
444 LAYNO, KENNETH  VALLEJO
445 LAYUGAN, IRENEO JR  PALIGAN
446 LEA, MARK VINCENT  BALBUENA
447 LEGASPI, ALVIN JOHN  MOJICA
448 LEJARSO, FRITZ  ABEJAR
449 LEONOR, JASMINE ELLA  DELIGENTE
450 LESIGUES, REDANTE JR  TERENCIO
451 LIBRES, LEONARDO  PALMIS
452 LIM, EDWARD JANZEN  PO
453 LIMBOY, MICHAEL  SISON
454 LINGAD, RECRISTINE  PADERON
455 LINGAD, RHYS RYAN  PLANAS
456 LLAMAS, MICHAEL LOUIS  CALPOTURA
457 LLANDA, MYTHYL ROSE  BAÑARIA
458 LLANOS, LEONARDO JR  MUNINIO
459 LOBRIO, VINCENT RENZ  GOZUM
460 LOGRONIO, REX  ROXAS
461 LOLO, JEFREY  JUANITE
462 LOMIBAO, MICHAEL ERVIN  CARIÑO
463 LOPEZ, ALEJANDRO GRAYSON JR  BOWAT
464 LOPEZ, HOMER  DACANAY
465 LOPEZ, JOHN PAUL  GUILAS
466 LOPEZ, KRISTIAN WILLI  DEL ROSARIO
467 LUCERO, ELMER  APDAL
468 LUCERO, KATREENA LUZ  ZERRUDO
469 LUCHAVEZ, LUCH  FORMENTERA
470 LUCINDO, ALLYSON  ANG
471 LUMANTA, ALLEN OLIVER  AMANONCE
472 MACABUDBUD, ALBERTO JR  BALAGTAS
473 MACADAT, REGINE  NUÑEZ
474 MACATULA, EMMANUEL  CRUZ
475 MADRIAGA, REYMIL  CALIMLIM
476 MAGAOAY, MICHAEL  CAFIRMA
477 MAGDAEL, CESAR RYAN  CALMA
478 MAGDAY, BRYAN  CAMPOS
479 MAGHINANG, MARVIN  VERGARA
480 MAGISTRADO, ALVIN  OGAYON
481 MAIGUE, MARICRIS  RAGILES
482 MALIT, JASON  NAVA
483 MALLARI, JOSHUA  MONTEMAYOR
484 MAMBULAO, GILBERT JR  GONO
485 MANALANSAN, ABIGAEL  SANTOS
486 MANALILI, JOSE JESSON  VALLEDOR
487 MANALO, ROJEN RICK  ABANILLA
488 MANALOTO, ERWIN  DE GUZMAN
489 MANIPON, JONATHAN  BALAGTAS
490 MANLICLIC, FROILYNE MARIA  SACRAMENTO
491 MANUEL, NICOLE JOHN  LERON
492 MARASIGAN, MELVIN  MATIENZO
493 MARAVILLAS, VINCE  ILAGAN
494 MARQUEZ, KIMBERLY  SAYAGO
495 MARTINEZ, MARVIN  DALIVA
496 MARTINEZ, TEODY  REMOQUILLO
497 MASULA, GERARD  TENORIO
498 MATALA, GENEVIEVE MAE
499 MATANGUIHAN, JOYCE  DIMAANO
500 MATEO, CARLO  MUSNI
501 MATURAN, RUTCHIE  GOC-ONG
502 MAYO, JOHN RHEYNOR  MATEO
503 MAZAREDO, REDHEL  CALIBO
504 MEDES, LYNDON  MONTEJO
505 MEJIA, ADOR JR  CLAVIS
506 MEJIA, HANZEL  NAVAL
507 MEJIA, JERICO  LUDO
508 MEJIA, KIM ALDRIN  SARRA
509 MEJIAS, RYAN MIGUEL  DELA TORRE
510 MELENDEZ, JOHN ISRAEL  VARIAS
511 MENDIZABAL, JUSTIN CARL  RECAÑA
512 MENDOZA, ALLEN DALE  AGUSTIN
513 MENDOZA, ALVIN  ESPAÑOL
514 MENDOZA, ARGLE  DULFO
515 MENDOZA, JOEM  ADIAN
516 MERACAP, PAT JASON  LEONES
517 MERAFUENTES, BLESSING  CABEROS
518 MERCADO, JEREMY ANNE  CARASIG
519 MERCADO, JOHN MICHAEL  ATAAT
520 MERCADO, JOHN PAUL  SALINGA
521 MERCADO, PAULO JAMES  TONGOL
522 MERCULLO, JOHN MICHAEL  UDJAJI
523 MERENCILLO, JENNY BABE  MINGUILLAN
524 METIN, HARNIEL  CRUZADO
525 MILAN, ELFREDO  TOBOSO
526 MIRANDA, CLARK LENARD  SARCOS
527 MISTULA, JUDEL  MONDARES
528 MOLANO, LOU ADRIAN  TUAZON
529 MONTAJES, JOEMARK  TYMICO
530 MONTALBAN, JOSEPH  TANGAL
531 MONTES, JHUN DIEGO  JOSE
532 MORTA, LARRY  RODRIGUEZ
533 MOSATALLA, FREDDIE  MAYHAY
534 MOSQUERA, RIZAL  MANIBA
535 MOSTOLES, ENRICO  LAYOSA
536 MOTEA, JOHN ALBERT  BERINA
537 MUERTIGUE, GRACE  CABALONGA
538 MUGOT, GEM ERIKA  TUMANDA
539 MUSA, MOHAMAD SHAIDE  ESPADILA
540 MUTOC, COLLEEN VYNE  OBARRA
541 NABOR, MIGUEL NIÑO  TALEON
542 NACAYTUNA, ALFRED JR  LOGRONIO
543 NAGAS, RODEL  EVALE
544 NANTIZA, JESSA  PANGANIBAN
545 NARAG, FRANCISCO JR  BASSIG
546 NATIONAL, DENNIS  MAANAD
547 NAVARRO, ERVYNE HENRIKSON  DY
548 NAVIDAD, PHILIP CEZAR  FAJARDO
549 NEGRETE, JERRYSON  SANTOS
550 NEGUS, DAMIE  HERRERA
551 NERI, AIME CLAUDINE  AMPLOQUIO
552 NILLO, KING RAYMUND  VELARDE
553 NOBLE, CHRISTOPHER  AGUILAR
554 NOBLEZA, PAOLO ANTONIO  SINOY
555 NONOL, PRECIOUS EDZIL  VELORIA
556 NOSTRATIS, JOHNRY  LOPEZ
557 NUÑEZ, JUNEL  GULTIANO
558 OBEJA, ROQUE  NAVAJA
559 OBORDO, JHON EDUARD  CAMILION
560 OCAMPO, MAEANDRA  PALADIN
561 OCAMPO, RICKY  ACOSTA
562 OGBAC, VERNON JOHN  SALVADOR
563 OLIANO, DEVEREUX KHYLE HEINRICH  ABALOS
564 OLIVAS, ANA CLAUDINNE  EPISCOPE
565 OLMILLO, HUBERT  ENRIQUEZ
566 OLPINDO, IGEM  PANDOYOS
567 OMAQUE, VINCE DOMINIQUE  MAIT
568 OPILAS, WILLIAM  GALO
569 OROFINO, ARCHER  RIOCA
570 ORRO, JEREMIAH CHRISTOPHER  ABUYUAN
571 OSIAS, SHAWNAMEH  BALIERBARE
572 OSORIO, EZRA  DAASIN
573 PAALA, ROWENA CASANDRA  GUTIERREZ
574 PACHO, MARIE ABIGAIL  CRISTOBAL
575 PADILLA, JAYRON  SOSA
576 PADILLA, RENATO JR  PIÑERO
577 PADIT, ANA FATIMA  DIAZ
578 PADULLA, MARK ANDREW  TABIEROS
579 PAJUAYAN, PETER  PALLES
580 PALABRICA, PATRICK URIEL  BROZO
581 PALIMA, ARNEL  TOBEO
582 PALMARES, MARICRIS  BORROMEO
583 PALMON, SHEILA MARIE  ALMIRANTE
584 PANGANIBAN, JAMES MCHENRY  BATIQUIN
585 PANGILINAN, JEMUEL  BAES
586 PANIBIO, LARRY ANTHONY  SORIANO
587 PANISALES, TEODORO  POSTRADO
588 PANTINOPLE, JOSEPH ALLAN  ABELLA
589 PANTON, MIELVIC  ALBOR
590 PARAMBITA, ANTONIO  ODULLO
591 PARANAS, JOSEPH  TAJOLOSA
592 PARANGUE, EMILYN KRISTIA  JUAN
593 PARAS, LAREDO ANGELO JR  DILLERA
594 PARAYNO, SHERDAN  PRADO
595 PASCASIO, JAN KEVIN  DELMO
596 PASCUAL, JONATHAN  MACLANG
597 PASCULADO, JUDAN  BALDEVINO
598 PASICOLAN, JOHN FRANCIS  ACEBEDO
599 PASTOR, VAN  MANUCDUC
600 PATALINGHUG, JOHN ANTHONY  DOLORES
601 PATENIO, JESRELLE  ANIÑON
602 PATINDOL, SIASKA MAE  ACEBEDO
603 PECSON, GERALD  GUMANGAN
604 PENAVERDE, ABIGAIL  RECAIDO
605 PEREZ, JAMAICA CHRISTINE  AQUINO
606 PEREZ, JUN JAY  CENABRE
607 PEÑA, MORRIS  HALOG
608 PEÑOSA, ROGIE MAE  GUDACA
609 PILONGO, JAYSON  GONZAGA
610 PILONGO, MARK  LOGAUS
611 PINPIN, GILBERT  NACAR
612 PITLO, MARILOU  AMANDORON
613 PLETADO, JOEJUSTINPETER  OCCIANO
614 PO, MA GLEIZA  SANCHEZ
615 PONCE, TIMOTHY JAMES  BELAMIDE
616 PORTEM, AUGUSTUS  IMPERIAL
617 POSTRADO, JEANNARD  TUTANES
618 PRADIA, ROLANDO JR  BITOON
619 PRING, KRISTUFFER DARCYTH  TAN
620 PUBLICO, AARON ROY  MARZAN
621 QUI, MARY ANNE  GERVACIO
622 QUIAMBAO, ELDRIN  COSTES
623 QUIJANO, REXVHILLE  GENAYAS
624 QUIRANTE, RONALD RENON  SOLIS
625 RABE, FERLAND  MARQUEZ
626 RABE, STEPHEN DOMINIC  RIVA
627 RADAM, RANDY RULF  GACAYAN
628 RAFER, ALAN  SAMAN
629 RAGUDO, CARL CHESTER  QUINTO
630 RAMEL, LAURENCE  RESURECCION
631 RAMOS, BRYAN JASPER  VILLANUEVA
632 RAMOS, MARK ANTHONY  DE BORJA
633 RAMOS, PRINCE JAMES  SANGALANG
634 RANCHEZ, SHARMAINE  QUIRANTE
635 RAVAGO, JEROD  BARIQUIT
636 RAZON, LLOYD BRYAN  BUTRON
637 REA, JOHN EMMANUEL  PASCUAL
638 REGALA, WENDY ANGELA  LOPE
639 REGIDOR, JANELLENE  ABAINZA
640 REGINO, JOEL  MONTEJO
641 RESIDE, XAVIERYVHAN  ALIGUYON
642 REYES, EUNICE KARINA  REYES
643 REYES, FATIMA JOAN  ROMERO
644 REYES, JAN KARLO  EYA
645 REYES, KENNETH IAN  BRUTAS
646 REYES, MARIEL  CACHO
647 REYES, RANDY-BRYAN  CAMBA
648 REYES, SHAIRA  EGUALADA
649 REYNALES, JOHN KEVIN  DADIVAS
650 REÑOSA, ROSHEINA EJIANE  GLORIA
651 RIBLEZA, JULIUS BRYAN  RABE
652 RICO, REGIE  ANTONIO
653 ROCAFORT, JOEL  VILLANUEVA
654 RODRIGUEZ, KENNETH  SALVADOR
655 RODRIGUEZ, MA BEATRIZ  GARZOTA
656 RODRIGUEZ, ROBIN  MANZANO
657 ROMERO, ALVIN JOHN  MARCELO
658 ROMERO, GILBERT  SANTOS
659 ROMERO, HARBIE  DELA ROSA
660 ROMERO, KARLO  SANTELICES
661 ROMERO, RALPH  MANALO
662 ROSALES, RANNIE BOY  ROSALES
663 ROY, JAN MICHAEL  ROSARIO
664 RUELAN, MITCHELLE JANE  ESPINA
665 RULIDA, LUIGI  CANO
666 SAAVEDRA, RALPH ANGELO  PIOL
667 SALAMATIN, AARON HARVEY  ITARALDE
668 SALAZAR, HARRIE JAMES  PENOL
669 SALAZAR, RENATO  LISAY
670 SALES, JOHN CHRISTIAN  PALOMA
671 SALINANA, JOHNNY REY  GEOLAGON
672 SALONGA, PATRICH JOHN  GUTIEREZ
673 SALVADOR, JOHN CHRISTOPHER  PINEDA
674 SAMAR, LAUREANO JR  RAMIREZ
675 SAMSON, RAYMUND  ALMEDA
676 SAN ANTONIO, MARFRED CARL  ANCHETA
677 SAN JUAN, SHERYL  SAN LORENZO
678 SANCHEZ, ANA CHELSI  HANOPOL
679 SANDRINO, JERCIE  AVELINO
680 SANGA, KRIS EMMANUEL  TORRES
681 SANTOS, ALDRIN  HERNANDEZ
682 SANTOS, ALEXANDER JR  FRANCISCO
683 SANTOS, ALLEYNE ERIKA  CRUZ
684 SANTOS, MOTTIE IDASANKA  PROLLAMANTE
685 SAPINOSO, MARVY  ALABASTRO
686 SAPONGAY, MARIO JR  GATUS
687 SARMIENTO, MARVIN  MARCELO
688 SAYNO, CHARLES YVES  MONDIDO
689 SEGARRA, LEO-ANGELO  BORROMEO
690 SERIA, HENRY  VICTORIANO
691 SERRANILLA, MARVIN  REYEG
692 SERRANO, AURORA VICK  ARMAYAN
693 SERVO, DANILO JR  TORRES
694 SESCON, DANNA  APAO
695 SEWANE, ADAM  SAING
696 SIANQUITA, RHYAN JOE  DAVE
697 SIBUCAO, ALEX PINA GREGOR  AVERIA
698 SIMEON, CAMILLE GRACE  BOLAG
699 SIMON, ALDRIN JOHN  ELEAZAR
700 SOLANO, ALBE  CANTOR
701 SOLQUILLO, GERTELL DALE  BORNALES
702 SOMOZA, JAY AR  BENSI
703 SOON, ANDREA KANE  PALMARES
704 SOTTO, DAVE LAWRENCE  BUAN
705 STA ANA, CHRIS HANSEL  DIAZ
706 SUBIJANO, MARY JANE  CASTILLO
707 SUGUE, KELVIN RAE  ESTEBAN
708 SUICO, DEXY JOHN  CENIZA
709 SUMAOANG, JOHN DARREL  IBARRA
710 SURIL, WILVEN  SIMBRE
711 SY, JANN PAOLO  GAW
712 TABINGA, DANTE  CORTON
713 TADEO, MICHAEL RAYE  MISLOS
714 TAGAYA, VICTOR NAZARENE  LAGROSA
715 TALENTO, ALBERT  CASIMIRO
716 TAN, JERICO  DURA
717 TANDA, JODDESON  CAYABYAB
718 TANGALIN, ERICA JOYCE  GARCIA
719 TANGPOS, MEO  AMARILA
720 TARROZA, JIM MARK  MANIPON
721 TARUC, JANICE  ELAIRON
722 TATEL, ROGIENA  VILLARALBO
723 TATING, JAHONRI  JAWILI
724 TAYAG, CHARLES JOHN  SIONGCO
725 TAYAG, KRISCHELLE  SANTOS
726 TAYO, ELJOHN  CATALUÑA
727 TE, KATHLEEN JADE  SULTAN
728 TEGUIHANON, JOEL  BACATO
729 TEJADA, IMMA VIANKA  BORJA
730 TELLANO, GENESIS CARLO  ALEGRIA
731 TENORIO, SHERELYN  DOCTOR
732 TENORIO, SHIMRI JANE  COLOT
733 TEOFILO, JULY  DELA CRUZ
734 TESALONA, MAEREN  CASTILLO
735 TIO, ALSTIN KYLE  TORRANO
736 TOLENTINO, ANDREW  ALIMAGNO
737 TOLENTINO, RODEL  BALGUA
738 TOLENTINO, SAMUEL PAULUS  DARILAG
739 TOMALE, JOMER  JERUSALEM
740 TONDE, JOE NARD  FAJARDO
741 TORRES, ROLANDO JR  JOSUE
742 TRACENA, RUBY  SALCEDA
743 TRINIDAD, JOSEPHINE MARIE  BUENO
744 TRIVIÑO, MARGARITO  VENZON
745 TRIÑANES, VON  VENUS
746 TUASON, RICHEE GENESIS  BALDEO
747 TUAZON, BRIAN  JUMAQUIO
748 TUAZON, JOMAR  GALANG
749 TUGUINAY, MARLON  KIMMAYONG
750 UDANI, FERDINAND  DELA CRUZ
751 UDTOHAN, MIEL ADONIS  LEDON
752 UGHOC, JULIUS CAEZAR  BAYANGAT
753 UMALI, SILVER IAN  AGUILAR
754 UMBAO, ARNOLD JOSEF  HERNANI
755 UMPA, ABRAHAM MARIK  SISON
756 URBANO, RUDITO JR  QUIAZON
757 URIAN, ALLAN JAY  ALCORIZA
758 VALDEZ, CHRISELLE BEATRIZ  DELA PEÑA
759 VALENCIA, RODELIO  PESIMO
760 VALENCIA, RONIELEE  ARANA
761 VALENTON, GENER  DALISAY
762 VALENTOS, MANFRED  VALENCIA
763 VALENZUELA, NEPTUNE  MIEN
764 VALKENBURGH, JEAN-PHILIPPE MAYNARD  OROPILLA
765 VALLEJOS, KROI ANGELO  MALABAYABAS
766 VARGAS, GARY  VILLARE
767 VARGAS, JELICCA ANN  RIEZA
768 VELASQUEZ, JALEN  SERAFICA
769 VELASQUEZ, LUZMARIE
770 VELEZ, UDIELH  CABALUNA
771 VENTURINA, NIÑO RAMON  ESPINO
772 VERIDIANO, KATRINE AIRA  ARGOSINO
773 VICTORIA, REYMAR ANGELO  RAVINA
774 VICTORIANO, NADINE  ATAD
775 VILLA, ALGIE  BALBON
776 VILLA, MIRASOL  PAREDES
777 VILLAHERMOSA, NIÑA SHIELA  PANOPIO
778 VILLAPOL, RAYMOND ALLAN  CARRANCEJA
779 VILLAREAL, LANIE MAE  FERNANDEZ
780 VILLAREAL, MATHEW  LOGNASIN
781 VILLAREN, SHELLEY MAE  DANO
782 VILLASAN, ALFREDO  DE PAZ
783 VILLENO, RUFFA MAY  AVILA
784 VILLOCILLO, KIRVY REGZ  BACO
785 VINLUAN, MA FATIMA  GOTGOTAO
786 VIOS, MYRA BEAU  PIOQUINTO
787 VIOS, NICOLE ALEXIS  KWAN
788 VIRTUDES, JOHN KENNETH  DAVID
789 VISMONTE, KAREN JOY  SAN JOSE
790 VIÑAS, ARTHUR  LOPEZ
791 YANCHA, MARC  OTIVAR
792 YANGA, ALBERT  TURLA
793 YAP, JOSE ARIS  BATOCAEL
794 YEE, KATHERINE SHAYNE  DUMAPIAS
795 ZAMORA, HAROLD  MARBELLA
796 ZAMORA, ZEUS  OROC
797 ZANTUA, APOLLO PABLO  UY
798 ZURETA, FRANCIS  LAGUNDINO

NOTHING FOLLOWS———————-   


138 examinees pass the Optometrist Licensure exams

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The Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) announces that 138 out of 169 passed the Optometrist Licensure Examination given by the Board of Optometry in Manila last July 2017.
Seq. No.   N a m e

1  ABABAT, LLOVEN DALE  MARBONES
2  ABESAMIS, KEREN  AGAWIN
3  ABLANG, MARIO EMANUEL  TARRIELA
4  ACEBEDO, MAT ABRAM  VISTA
5  ACOBA, RUDY II  LACAR
6  ADO, ERLYN KAYE  PONGOS
7  ADRIATICO, CARYL MAY  SALUDAGA
8  AGUILAR, MARLYN MAY  MENDOZA
9  AGUIRRE, CHRISTIAN JUDE LAURENCE  CUISON
10  ALAGON, CARL ANGELO
11  AMBROSIO, B A BRENT  CAPUCHINO
12  ANCHETA, MA SHARMAINE  GATCHALLAN
13  ANCHETA, MAEDINE  AGUSTIN
14  ANDRES, AILENE MAE  BAUTRO
15  ANDUEZA, HARRIET FAITH  DOLLISON
16  ANIÑON, MONTAZER  TEODORO
17  AOAS, SIGFRED  TARNATE
18  APOLONIO, MICHELLE  CHUNANON
19  ARCELLANA, MARY CLAUDETTE  INSERTO
20  ASCAÑO, RYOLITA JICCA  FRANCO
21  BACULI, CHRISTIAN  MAGPANTAY
22  BACULI, MARIA LOURDES  CALIBUSO
23  BADURIA, MARVIN CHRISTIAN  VILLAROSA
24  BAGARES, FAYE MARIE  SINAGUINAN
25  BALANE, PAULA  PALACIO
26  BANZON, PHILIP LODREAN  ROCABERTE
27  BASILAD, ZYRIAN  CRUZ
28  BORBON, REGIL KENT  CODIZAL
29  BRINQUIS, JELITA  TAMPUS
30  CABRERA, CHARLES  VALLESER
31  CADAOAS, CARLO YVES  MARTINEZ
32  CARANDANG, CECILL CAMILLE  ASIS
33  CASIÑO, JERYL  ANTONIO
34  CAÑETE, JOVELYN  CATARUS
35  CHAVOSO, NAOME COLEEN  TABUNAN
36  CORPUZ, RAZEL MAE  ANYAYA
37  COTIA, HANNAH FAYE  BOOC
38  CRUZ, CHLOE FRANCES  YUSI
39  CRUZ, INGRID VALERIE  GUEVARRA
40  DE JESUS, PORCHIA  SALVACION
41  DE LAS PEÑAS, LADY YVES  ABELLANA
42  DE LEON, JEM CARMILLE  DELOS SANTOS
43  DELA CRUZ, RAMON ANDREW  LEGARZA
44  DETROS, TRIXIE BELLE  BAMUYA
45  DIZON, KARL JUSTINE  HERRERA
46  ESMILLO, PRINCESS RAYEVY  ILANO
47  ESPERO, RITA ROSE  FIGUEROA
48  ESPINOSA, MARIA PATRICIA BIANCA  SARABIA
49  ESPIRITU, DIANE  ALOLOR
50  ESTORE, BERYL JOY  RAMOS
51  FARROFO, JOHANNA PAULA  CRUZ
52  FELIX, MARY MARGARET  ONG
53  FERNANDEZ, JAIME JR  CASTILLON
54  FRANCHE, GAUDIOSO II  DEL AGUA
55  GACUTAN, VINISSE EARL  SERENIO
56  GALANG, CRES MARIE  PEREZ
57  GALLANO, MITCHEL JANE  CUIZON
58  GAN, IVAN DANE  LAGONSIN
59  GANIR, RHEA MAE  CAMPILAN
60  GARCIA, ANN JIMAY  SALVADOR
61  GASPAR, MARY GRACE  CANUTO
62  GREGORIO, COLYN AMOR  LUCENA
63  GUSARIN, DIVINE  OROC
64  HUMILDE, MARY GRACE  MALACAS
65  INGCO, MARY GRACE  OCROMAS
66  LACSAMANA, RACHEL ANNE  GARDUCE
67  LALAGUNA, CHARLENE  IGAMA
68  LEE, JODIE  CONSUL
69  LEONOR, JAMIE  MACABATA
70  LEYSON, GABRIELLE DALLAS  MAGALLANO
71  LIGON, CARLEEN ANGELOU  ROQUE
72  LIM, ALLEN HUBERT  UY
73  LIM, LIZETTE FE  TAN
74  LOZADA, SIDNEY  ONCADA
75  MAGTO, REMKY  BADILLA
76  MAHTANI, SHARMAINE  CURATO
77  MALICDEM, ANALIZA  ZARATAN
78  MANAHAN, LORIELEN MARI  TONGOL
79  MANGILOG, NADINNE JANE  ANDRES
80  MANIWAN, JAN MIKAELA  MALANOG
81  MARQUINA, PATRICIA ELIZABETH  VENTIGAN
82  MASAWAY, EZRA JOSEPH  BETE
83  MELITON, ANNA MARIE  MELITON
84  MENDOZA, CARRISSA  GARCIA
85  MIRAATO, RAZZALEIGH NOURHONEY  GUINAL
86  MONTAÑEZ, CLARENCE  IBO
87  NATIVIDAD, ANGELICA MAE  GAMBOA
88  NAVARRO, FELIS IANA  NUÑEZ
89  OPONG, MAE ISABELLE  ONANAD
90  ORELLANIDA, APPLE MAY  REMEDIOS
91  OSTIQUE, ANTOINE LOIE  ALDE
92  PAGUNALING, MARIAH CARLA  DAWAL
93  PALADO, MA ANDREA  SOLAR
94  PALOMO, KIMBERLY  BELTRAN
95  PARMEROLA, JENNIFER  JUACHON
96  PEDRONIO, JERICHO JAMES  GALACIO
97  PERALTA, LEANNA JESSICA  VILLAREAL
98  PEÑA, JOBELLE  ELERIA
99  PONTILLAS, MARIA LOURDES FATIMA  FABRO
100  PORMIDA, JUSTINE MAE  DE VEYRA
101  PU-OD, KIMBERLY MARIE  VELOSO
102  PULVERA, SHARMAINE IRIS  REDULLA
103  PUNA, MICHELLE  RUFO
104  RECENTES, JACKIELYN JOY  SUSIE
105  REQUILMAN, LORHINE JIL ANNE  ESCOSIO
106  RIVERA, RIA ANNE  CALBAY
107  ROJO, KATHEREN  JIPUS
108  ROSALES, JANMARINELLA ANN  SORIA
109  RUFON, PETER JOHN  TRINIDAD
110  SAMONTE, JASMINE  BUAN
111  SANTIAGO, KEVIN JOHN  LIMPIADO
112  SANTILLAN, AMAZING DIADEM  CALIGDONG
113  SANTOS, MARION CHARISSE  OCAMPO
114  SEBIAL, DENIELLE MAY  VILLAMOR
115  SEGOCIO, GERARD  DE LEON
116  SEMANERO, JOENETH  BELOY
117  SERRANO, GENEVIEVE  CARAMBAS
118  SOLIMAN, KAMILLE GRACIE  VALLE
119  SOLIS, MARY GRACE  LOPEZ
120  SURATOS, MONICA  EVANGELISTA
121  SY, ANDREW JASON  CHAN
122  TADLAS, BRADLEY  BABIERA
123  TAMAYO, KATHELYN ROSE  BALORIO
124  TAN, BRINA SHARLYN  YU
125  TAN, LINETTE LYNN  CHAN
126  TEJADA, ALECS ACE  IRINGAN
127  TENA, GLADYS NOVELLE  TAMAYO
128  TIONG, NIKKI JOY  DELFIN
129  TIONGSON, ROGELIO JEROME  RULONA
130  TRIA TIRONA, JANICA RENEE  EVANGELISTA
131  TUY, SHAIRA MAE  FERNANDEZ
132  VARGAS, CHARMAINE ZULEIKA  DIRA
133  VELASCO, ISELA ANGELA  JALANDONI
134  VELO, CHARLENE OPHEL  ROQUE
135  VERCELES, MARIEL CANDICE  CANA
136  VIRATA, VANESSA JEAN  CRISOSTOMO
137  YAP, ERVIN  ONG
138  ZACARIAS, SHAIRA JEANE  HERNANDEZ

NOTHING FOLLOWS ———————-    

Classes suspended in 4 areas as monsoon rain floods metro, suburbs

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METRO Manila and nearby provinces experienced rain and thunderstorms early Wednesday spawned by a southwest monsoon or “habagat”, the state-run weather bureau said.

Also affected were Ilocos, Cordillera, Cagayan Valley, Central Luzon, Bicol and Eastern and Central Visayas, Caraga and Zamboanga peninsula regions, according to the Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical, Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa).

The downpour early Wednesday prompted the suspension of classes in all levels in public and private schools in Rizal, Laguna, Cavite and Muntinlupa City, according to their local officials.

Rizal was submerged in knee-deep floods as a result of the heavy rain.

Cainta Mayor Johnielle Keith Nieto said Manggahan opened all of its eight floodgates diverting water from the metropolis to the floodway.

Nieto said this has caused flash floods in Karangalan. Gruar Kasibulan and CVS “as we are experiencing a backflow of rainwater”.

Citing data from the local government’s flood sensor, Nieto said the level of water has risen by three feet above normal level.”

Meanwhile, the Antipolo government said that the Provincial Road (National Highway) near Dalig National High School and Sitio Parugan Blk. 2 were now passable to all types of vehicles. LIAN SILLADA, GEIAN ESPANOL

 

Senators ask Duterte economic managers for full subsidy of tuition in state schools

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SENATORS have called on the economic managers of the Duterte administration to reconsider its stand against granting full government subsidy on tuition in State Universities and Colleges (SUCs), noting that the amount needed to implement the program was nothing compared to the benefits this would bring students.

Senator Francis “Chiz” Escudero and  Joseph Victor “JV” Ejercito said the reason why students were enrolling in state schools was because they could not afford tuition in private institutions.

Escudero, who heads the Senate committee on education, arts and culture, noted that free tuition and other fees in SUCs cost only P14 billion, 0.3 percent of the proposed 2018 General Appropriations Act (GAA).

Budget Secretary Benjamin Diokno, during deliberations of the proposed P3.7-trillion 2018 national budget at the House of Representatives, said that the government could not afford to fund the Universal Access to Quality Tertiary Education Act.

The budget secretary said an estimated P100 billion was needed to fund the measure, which President Rodrigo Duterte has yet to sign.

“If the government can spend P70-billion a year for Conditional Cash Transfer, which is a dole out, why can’t we spend P28-billion for higher education? I would rather invest for higher education since this is the best way out of poverty and not through dole outs,” said Ejercito, a vice chairman of the education committee.

Ejercito, one of the authors of the Free Education for All Act, insisted that the government should treat budget for free education as an investment for the future rather than an expense.

“I urge our economic managers to reconsider their position by pushing for free SUC education so we can have a college graduate in every Filipino family,” he added.

 

Palace downplays Aquino’s ’nothing’ comment on Duterte drug war

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MALACANANG has downplayed former president Benigno Aquino 3rd’s comment that it seemed like nothing was happening in the Duterte administration’s war against drugs.

Aquino, in a media interview on Tuesday, questioned the effectiveness of the Duterte’s anti-drug campaign, saying his administration did not launch an all-out war but was able to reduce the number of illegal drug users.

Comparing 2015 and 2016 figures, both recorded 1.8 million users. Aquino said: “Parang wala yatang nangyari [It seems like nothing happened].”

But Palace spokesman Ernesto Abella rejected Aquino’s claims, saying “the results of PRRD’s (President Rodrigo Duterte’s) anti-illegal drug campaign speak for themselves.”

He said Duterte’s war on drugs resulted in the unprecedented voluntary surrender of more than 1.3 million drug personalities.

“Comments like the above from past leaders imply a jaded cynicism borne of a history of political opportunism,” Abella said in a statement.

Abella then cited that 96,703 drug personalities have been arrested in the first year of the Duterte administration’s war on drugs compared to 77,810 drug personalities arrested in the six years of the Aquino administration.

He added that 2,445.80 kilos of shabu (methamphetamine hydrochloride) have been seized in the first year of the present administration’s anti-drug campaign compared to the 3,219.07 kilos of shabu seized in the six years of the previous administration.

“Much ground has been gained in the campaign against hard drug traffickers and violators, but the mission is to end the demand, production, distribution and sale of illegal drugs,” Abella said.

Suspended Customs official to testify in House probe on ‘shabu’ shipment

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AN embattled Customs official linked to the controversy surrounding P6.4-billion worth of illegal drugs will testify at the House of Representatives when it resumes its inquiry on Wednesday, an official said.

Larribert Hilario, who was suspended for allegedly failing to mark the “shabu” shipment that passed through the Bureau of Customs as contraband, will be presented later to “clarify things”, said Majority Leader Rodolfo Fariñas of Ilocos Norte.

Fariñas hinted that Hilario was on the right side of things.

“They say he is under suspension, but there is no such thing as verbal suspension [order]. You issue a preventive suspension when there is a pending investigation. You can’t just tell the person you are suspended,” Fariñas added.

Hilario’s testimony comes a day after lawmakers took turns calling for the resignation of Customs Commissioner Nicanor Faeldon over what legislators claimed was an illegal raid in Valenzuela City last May 26 which led to the seizure of the P6.4 billion worth of illegal drugs.

READ: Faeldon stays

Lawmakers and even the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) accused Faeldon of bungling the raid as it violated the Dangerous Drugs law which mandates PDEA to “take charge and have custody of all dangerous drugs and/or controlled precursors and essential chemicals seized, confiscated or surrendered to any national, provincial or local law enforcement agency, if no longer needed for purposes of evidence in court.”

In his defense. Faeldon invoked the Customs Modernization and Tariff law, which provided that Customs officials “may, at any time, enter, pass through, and search any land, enclosure, warehouse, store, building or structure not principally used as a dwelling house.”

The P6.4 billion “shabu” was shipped by Hongfei Philippines from Guandong, China to EMT Trading. After bypassing Customs, the shipment was temporarily stored in a warehouse in Paso de Blas, Valenzuela before Philippine authorities were tipped by their Chinese counterparts of the contraband that led to its seizure last May 26.

Before his suspension, Hilario served as a risk management officer of the Bureau of Customs. Hongfei Philippines, on the other hand, was able to ship in 600 containers to the country labeled general merchandise or kitchen utensils, the same label that was found on the shipment containing the illegal drugs.  In addition, 90 percent of shipment for EMT Trading had been passing through the “privileged” green lane since March.

 

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