Sabban is new Marine chief;at the PNP, Barias may push out Verzosa next month

sabbanFinally, Maj. General Juancho Sabban has been named commandant of the Philippine Marines.

A long delayed appointment.

We can imagine that Malacañang weighed the pros and cons of approving the recommendation of the Board of Generals of Sabban against the demoralization that it would cause among the Marines if Gloria Arroyo had given in to the lobbying of her favored Marine, Maj. Gen. Jonathan Martir, whose second star remains unconfirmed by the Commission on Appointments.

Martir has a pending case of AWOL (absence without leave for more than a year) which is the basis of the malversation of funds charge before the Ombudsman.

Although PMA Class ’78 has adopted Gloria Arroyo and a number of them are now in strategic positions, Sabban is more associated with officials who are now in detention and charged with mutiny in connection with the alleged plan to withdraw support from Arroyo in February 2006.

Sabban participated in the 1989 coup, the bloodiest military rebellion against President Aquino. He escaped from detention and resumed his career when the Ramos government granted amnesty to all military rebels.

(AFP Spokesman Romeo Brawner said, “There might have been instances in his career where he went against the rules and regulations…but everybody is given the chance to prove himself.”)

It’s probably this aspect of his military record that made Arroyo delay his appointment as Marines chief despite the fact that he was the most senior in rank for that position next to Lt. Gen. Ben Dolorfino, who replaced the retiring Lt. Gen Nelson Allaga as commander of the Western Mindanao command.

The 8,000-strong Marines has a history of militancy and Malacañang initially had wanted them under Martir, whose dogged loyalty to Arroyo was shown in the November 2007 Manila Peninsula incident when he stomped on the rebel Magdalo officers who were down on the floor handcuffed.

In the 1987 and 1989 coups, Martir has submitted affidavits against the alleged “coup plotters” especially Col. Ariel Querubin. He also stood as a prosecution witness in the ongoing trail against officers implicated in the 2006 non-event.

Martir losing out to Sabban simply proves that servility can only get one so far. It does not guarantee the highest prize.

But the other Manila Pen bully who will be rewarded the highest position is Deputy Director Geary Barias of the Philippine National Police.

It has been talked about that PNP Chief Jesus Verzosa, who will be retiring in December 2010, will be prematurely retired in October this year to give way to another Class ’78 member, Deputy Director Roberto “Boysie” Rosales.

But the latest info we got was that Verzosa, who is identified with Local Government Secretary Ronaldo Puno, will be going out next month in favor of Barias, whose patrons are the all powerful Arroyo brothers, Mike and Iggy.

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Perf de Castro will be in Manila this August!

This is great news! Perf de Castro, one of the most admired Filipino guitarists will be here on August. Most of us have probably heard of Perf de Castro during the early days of Rivermaya. Perf collaborated with established artists such as Francis M., Wolfgang, Mike Hanopol, Gary Valenciano and more.

Check out his gig schedules below:

August 5, 2009 05:00 PM - Sor Catalina Ledesma Hall, Santa Isabel College Music Department 210 Taft Ave., Manila, 1002

August 7, 2009 04:00 PM - SM City Marikina CYBERZONE Riverbanks Center, Marcos Highway (Radial Road-6/R6), Brgy. Calumpang, Marikina City, 1802

August, 8 2009 07:00 PM - ILCC Auditorium, Insular Life Corporate Center - Alabang Insular Life Drive, Alabang, 1780

August, 9 2009 04:00 PM - SM City Taytay Event Center Manila East Road, Taytay, Rizal, 1920

Kultura Filipino Shows this Juy

The Department of Tourism (DOT) is calling on foreign and local culture aficionados to experience Kultura Filipino, which features the Philippines’ traditional songs and dances as presented by the country’s top performing groups. Launched early this year by DOT, in partnership with the National Commission on Culture and Arts (NCCA), Kultura Filipino is held every Tuesday and Thursday at Barbara’s Restaurant at the Plaza San Luis Complex, History Town Intramuros, Manila.

Slated to perform in all Tuesdays of July is Sinukwan Kapampangan which will present Pampanga’s folk dances, while Sining Bulakenyo and Lahing Batangan will render Maglalatik, Sayaw sa Bangko, Singkil, La Jota Manileña, and other ethnic and rural dances in all Thursdays of the same month. Wearing sophisticated costumes and elaborate make-up, the members of the groups ease into their different roles effortlessly, amidst a backdrop of dramatic lighting.

Holding these exemplary shows within the walls of Intramuros also adds an atmosphere of historic and old world charm. Performances are held at Barbara’s Restaurant, Intramuros. Packaged at a special introductory rate of P495 per person, the show includes a dinner buffet.

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Kultura Filipino Shows this Juy

Ruining My Eyes

Penman for Monday, July 6, 2009


ONE OF the things I learned to appreciate all over again during my recent period of confinement was TV. When the admitting clerk at the hospital asked me what kind of room I wanted, the first thing I said was, “It has to have a TV!” I would’ve liked wi-fi—and the hospital did have an ultra-pricey presidential suite, with Internet access, on its menu—but I’m old enough to be of a generation that’ll take TV over the Internet, if forced to make a choice.

In fact, I’m old enough to remember the transition from radio to TV. Like the telephone—which, as I noted in last week’s piece, we didn’t have in the house until I was a grown man—the TV was the thing from tomorrow, something that only rich and tech-savvy people had. In our corner of Mandaluyong, in the early ‘60s, that meant our neighbor the airline pilot, on whose TV I awaited and devoured “Highway 54”, following the afternoon news sponsored by Bre-a-col Cough Syrup. On yet another neighbor’s TV—this neighbor had a sister who was a nurse in the US—the fare was decidedly Pinoy: “Oras ng Ligaya,” “Munting Banal,” and “Ang Hiwaga ng Bahay na Bato” (the latter two being the ‘60s versions of today’s telenovelas; I got my kicks not from some silly romantic plot twist, but from Ben David playing a hunchback and cursing, “Ngitngit ng mga pangit!”) Upstairs, where our landlord lived, I could sneak in to watch “The Rifleman,” “The Rebel,” “Tugboat Annie,” and, on Sundays, “Eskwelahang Munti.”

Come to think of it, everyone had a TV but us. We got our first TV in the summer of 1966, only after it had been established that I’d won myself a scholarship to something called a science high school, thereby absolving my parents of the need to slave away so I could keep going to a private school where people didn’t just have TVs, but cars. To celebrate the occasion, they bought a TV, and I can still remember the day they marched it home in its original box (which, like true Pinoys, we never threw away), borne between the arms of two burly men, like a touring monarch.

Never mind that that TV was probably all of 17 inches in screen size—and, of course, in glorious black-and-white (a feature my father enhanced by taping a plastic “filter” on the screen with blue, red, and green bands, mimicking a sky, grass—and red people). Having a TV meant that we had finally arrived in the 20th century, that I no longer had to pester the neighbors to see “Mission: Impossible” or “Lost in Space,” and that I could hold my head high in school and speak sagely about the weekend antics of the Monkees come Monday morning.

Now you must be imagining that I have one of those 60-inch plasma behemoths in my living room or bedroom, to compensate for all those decades in the TV-less desert. I don’t; I wish I did, but I can’t afford them. Or maybe if I put all my pens and Macs together I could get a honking big plasma TV in exchange, but again, maybe because we got into the TV game fairly late in life, Beng and I have been happy for years to have nothing bigger and sexier than a conventional 21-inch TV at home.

Or at least that was the case until a few months ago, when a friend sent me an SM gift certificate worth P10,000, in thanks for a small job. Immediately the words “shopping spree” flashed in my brain; Beng and I spend a third of our lives at SM North, and the GC was like a kid’s ticket to the carnival, never mind that P10,000 doesn’t get you as much these days like it used to.

I was all set to make a beeline for the computer shops—a new external hard drive? A new printer? Beng was probably thinking how many grocery carts we could fill up with that budget. Everything stalled when we walked past the Appliance Center and saw a rack of plasma and LCD wide-screen TVs on display. Our P10,000 was good for a few square inches of plasmic real estate, but inside the store were lots of old, cheap box-type TVs made in China and Korea. “Don’t you think,” I told Beng, “that it’s about time we helped our aging eyes and treated ourselves to something bigger?” Beside me stood a Korean-made 29-incher; sure, it had a big butt, but its screen was stylishly flat, and its sale price was a tolerable P15,000. I whipped out my plastic to add to the GCs, and the deed was done.

So today, in the tender clutches of post-operative recovery, I’m enjoying a megadose of cable TV in its infinite variety, from the sublime to the ridiculous, from “Waking the Baby Mammoth” and “Treasure Quest” to “World Poker Tour” and “America’s Next Top Model.” (I should admit that it didn’t help my mood much when I tuned in at the hospital just as I was coming out of my Demerol haze to watch an episode of “Extreme Surgery,” followed by a parade of comestibles on the Asian Food Channel.)

OK, it’s not HDTV, and you can see the lines on the screen if you come close enough, but hey, it’s mine and not my neighbor’s, and it looks awfully sharp from ten feet away. (My mother used to admonish me and my siblings not to sit too close to the TV. “You’ll ruin your eyes!” she’d say. I’ve since wondered why I, indeed, sat with my nose glued to the screen. Now I understand: there was no such thing as a remote control then, and someone had to turn the dial to switch channels.)


SPEAKING OF SM, I remember flying into my annual panic a few weeks ago when Beng’s birthday was about to come up and I was, as usual, clueless about what to give her. Not only am I a guy to begin with; I’m also the world’s worst gift-giver, and long-time readers of this column will recall that episode many years ago when I gifted Beng with a can opener, which didn’t go over too well. (And the rueful couplet I wrote afterwards: “A can opener / Can’t open her.”)

Now here I was again, racking my brain for the ideal gift idea: it had to be cute, it had to be meaningful (whatever that means), and it had to be, uhm, affordable (a criterion I mysteriously forget when it comes to my own purchases). Thankfully, I remembered a previous trip to a pharmacy at the mall, when Beng picked up a bar of imported Spanish soap, brought it to her nose, closed her eyes wistfully, and put it down again.

So who buys birthday gifts in a drugstore? I do. I drove back to SM, scooped up all the varieties of that Spanish soap that I could get my hands on, put them in a nice box, and waited for the receiver.

When she opened it, she broke in tears (Beng, I must remind you, weeps over dead ants), and said, “I feel rich!” I did, too.

(TV photo from www.tvparty.com)

Cebu Pacific Wandering Juan online photo contest

Just got this from the mail a few hours ago. Just goes to prove how top budget airline Cebu Pacific knows their marketing, despite the flight delays, LOL. They have launched the Wandering Juan Photo Contest in time for the lean travelling months of July to October. Get your pics taken in your location of choice, and have a chance to win free round trip tickets for two to Cebu Pacific international destinations, namely Singapore, Bangkok and Kota Kinabalu.

Highlights of the contest mechanics are the following:

1. Local (Filipino) and foreign travellers are eligible to join, for as long as they bought their CebuPac tickets from July 1 to Oct. 31, 2009.

2. Entries should fall under any of these categories:

- Photos of landmarks and other sceneries, with a caption of no more than six sentences.

- Photos of local residents, with a description of the person (including name and occupation) or a memorable quote from the person not exceeding six sentences.

- Travelogue with a series of five photographs that tell a story. It must come with a one-sentence caption.

Entries for all categories should feature a pair of tsinelas (flip-flops or slippers), which may range from Havaianas to Havanas, LOL. For photo samples, view the gallery in the official contest website.

This should be interesting. Hope the contest website doesn’t break down from the weight of all the entries. We know how Filipinos love to take photos during their trips, hehehe. I really don’t know the connection between slippers and Cebu Pacific, but that’s the motif they’ve chosen anyway. In all my recent trips, I’ve worn my favorite, super-soft sandals from Ipanema… so yes, that’s relevant :D