Monday, July 25, 2011

ROXAS CITY CAPIZ!


Roxas City is a medium-sized city in the province of CapizPhilippines. It is the provincial capital and a component city. As of 2010, the city mayor is former city vice mayor Angel Alan Celino who was elected during the 2010 election.
The city is a center of copra and aquaculture production. The surrounding area growssugarcanericecoconutfruithemp, and tobacco. The language spoken in Roxas City areCapiznon and Hiligaynon, otherwise known as Ilonggo.
According to the 2007 census, the city has a population of 147,738 people with a density of 1,449/km2 (3,752.8/sq mi)
The abundance of marine life makes Roxas City the "Seafood Capital of the Philippines." This environment-friendly city is home to one of the richest fishing grounds in the country.[citation needed] Roxas City's Baybay Beach is just over 7 kilometers long. The tallest sea cliffs in Western Visayas can be found on the city's north side. Roxas City has been a Hall of Famer of the Regional Cleanest and Greenest Component City in Western Visayas Award of the Gawad Pangulo sa Kapaligiran Program of the national government.[citation needed]
The City of Roxas, once known as the municipality of Capiz is the capital of the province of Capiz.
In 1569, Captain Diego de Artieda who was sent by Miguel Lopez de Legazpi from Cebu, landed on the town of Pan-ay and proclaimed it as the capital. Later the capital was moved to its present site upon discovering that the town of Capiz was near the sea where they can have better docking facilities. The Spaniards saw the long coastal cover and envisioned a trading and shipping center. Ports were constructed in Libas and later in Culasi.
A river meanders across the town, cuts it at the heart and divides it almost equally into two. Tributaries from the mountains flowed into the head of Panay River through settlements formed along its shores, irrigating and fertilizing the land to provide food to the people. Following its course into the sea, it provides water to fishponds during high tide.
In 1590, the Navy of Acapulco, Mexico made Capiz port its arsenal (naval yard) where they can seek shelter when the sea was rough. Capiz then eventually grew into a bustling port and several houses of stones were built. The social and political status enjoyed by the native chieftains of Capiz often resulted in mixed marriages with the Spaniards. The mestizo descendants became the base of the principalia or influential citizens. Their privileged positions allowed them to build houses around the favored square of the poblacion - around the church and the government complex.
Their children became the beneficiaries of the Augustinian mission in 1593.
In 1746, Capiz was made the seat of the politico-military government, although it was ecclesiastically controlled by the Bishopric of Cebu. In the latter part of 1795, under Gobernadorcillo Miguel Bautista, the old road to Baybay Beach was built as an extension of San Roque Street.
The town of Capiz was frequently attacked by Muslims that in 1814, stone forts at Baybay Beach (Baluarte) were built through the initiative of Gobernadorcillo Jose Consolacion.
In 1870, the ground was broken for the foundation of the Cathedral of Capiz under the guidance of Reverend Apolonio Alvarez. It was built by sturdy hands, sweat and blood of Capizeños who were victims of forced labor.
In 1876, the diocese of Jaro in Iloilo was erected and Capiz came under its jurisdiction. In 1877, the cathedral was finally finished. Prior to its construction, a chapel was built in Burgos Street beside the municipal building.
In August 1899, the Spanish colonial government represented by Governor Juan Herrero formally surrendered to General Ananias Diokno in Baybay Beach.
Economic debacle hit the town of Capiz in 1914 when the Ayala Distillery grounded to a halt. What could have been an ambitious forerunner of nationalized industrialization became the victim of the Internal Revenue Law under American control.
In 1917, Division Superintendent of Schools F.E. Hemingway founded Capiz Trade School for intermediate pupils and offered woodworking as the only vocational course. The next division superintendent opened Capiz High School.
In 1926, Division Superintendent Arthur Wittman authorized teaching of complete secondary curriculum in the Capiz Trade School. In the same year, Culasi Port was built to accommodate inter-island ships.
On February 15, 1951 the diocese of Capiz became a separate ecclesiastical jurisdiction from Jaro. Its first bishop was Msgr. Manuel Yap. In the same year, former Vice Mayor Libertad Conlu became the first female mayor of Capiz.
Capiz became a chartered city on May 12, 1951 through House Bill 1528 sponsored by Ramon Acuña Arnaldo, the representative of the First District of Capiz. It was approved by President Elpidio Quirino on April 11, 1951 as Republic Act 603.[1] Consequently, the town was named Roxas City after her greatest son, President Manuel Acuña Roxas, the last president of the Commonwealth and the first president of the Philippine Republic.
The first appointed mayor was Lorenzo Acuña Arnaldo followed by Ramon Berjamin Blanco, Jose Dorado and Juliano Alovera Alba. In 1959, Lorenzo Acuña Arnaldo again became the head of the city as the first elected mayor. The next mayor was Teodoro Roxas Arcenas who was succeeded by Juliano Alovera Alba who was also the representative of the First District of Capiz at the House of Congress when Martial Law was declared.
Hon. Antonio A. Del Rosario, who is now the Congressman of the 1st District of Capiz, was elected to three terms as mayor of Roxas City, serving from 1998 to 2007.
Hon. Vicente B. Bermejo, who is the former governor of the province of Capiz, was elected mayor and served for three years, from 2007 to 2010.
The incumbent mayor of Roxas City is Hon. Angel Alan B. Celino, who also served as Vice Mayor of the city from 2004 to 2007. [2
SOURCE:GOOGLE.COM

SMALL BUT CUTE

Animal19 up13 down
Scaly, feathery or furry living things in the world. Animals like cats, bird, lizards and fish.

They fly, swim and/or walk on all four feet. They make cute sounds too.

Animals may not be people but they need to be treated with respect. (that means no killing for sports, and no meaness and no neglect.) People who do kill animals for any stupid reason make the human race look inhuman and they should be in jail forever.

Animal abuse should not happen, not in real life, not in movies, books and Definitely not in anime, cartoons, manga, comics and in other things.

If there is any animal abuse and deaths in those, it should be fixed right away.

Animals can be your best friends if you treat them right.

Also, if there's a thing that greatly revive dead people and animals, use it for animals used in illegal fights and whatever the situtaton was. Even time machines will help.

No animal deserves to die at all. They can make the world we live in beautiful.

Besides, they ARE GOD'S CREATION!!
Animals are so cute!
The sight of something so effing cute, such as a beagle puppy playing, or any cute puppy, or baby dressed in a onesie that makes them look like a bear or some other fuzzy cute animal. Take an already cute baby, add theonesie multiplier effect and it is too much for most passionate, feeling people to take. Once the cute-rage has occurred, this energy must be dissipated by punching something, typically a large pillow which provides enough resistance for the blows to feel satisfying or hugging the kid/dog so hard their eyes pop out; as this is not an option, you hit the pillow and run around swearing about the cuteness. Cute-rage CANNOT and does not occur with inanimate objects. The DSM only defines cute-rage to occur after seeing a living thing that is off-the-charts cute, or doing something similarly cute.
Holy fawking shit, did you see that four-year-old dressed up as a lion? He had a tail, the hood with ears a la Max from Where the Wild Things Are, whiskers painted on his chubby little cheeks! When he trick-or-treated my house I almost punched a hole in the door from the cute-rage; I was so overtaken by his off-the-charts cuteness! He even growled at me with this little kid voice before the "trick-or-treat".

SOURCE:GOOGLE.COM

TOP MILLIONAIRE IN THE PHIL!

Rank 1: Henry Sy & family (click here for their story)

Founder of the Largest Retailer in the Philippines, SM Prime Holdings
Net Worth 2008: US$ 3.1 billion
Age: 83

Rank 2: Lucio Tan & family (click here for their story)
Conrols Eton Properties Philippines, Philippine National Bank, Fortune Tobacco, Asia Brewery, Tanduay Holdings, Philippine Airlines, Allied Bank, the Philippines, University of the East and more
Net Worth 2008: US$ 1.5 billion
Age: 74

Rank 3: Jaime Zobel de Ayala & familyFrom 1984 to 1994, he is the president and chairman of Ayala Corporation. Currently, his son, Fernando Zobel, is president of the corporation and his eldest son, Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala II, holds chairman and CEO
Net Worth 2008: US$ 1.2 billion
Age: 74

Rank 4: Andrew Tan
He runs companies such as Alliance Global Group Inc, Megaworld Corporation, Emperador Distillers Incorporation and Golden Arches Development Corporation
Net Worth 2008: US$ 700 million
Age: 57

Rank 5: Tony Tan Caktiong & family (click here for his story)
Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Jollibee
Net Worth 2008: US$ 690 million
Age: 58

Rank 6: John Gokongwei Jr. & family (click here for their story)

Chairman of JG Summit Holdings and controls companies such as Cebu Pacific Air and Universal Robina Corporation
Net Worth 2008: US$ 680 million
Age: 81

Rank 7: Eduardo Cojuangco Jr.CEO of San Miguel Corporation
Net Worth 2008: US$ 610 million
Age: 73

Rank 8: Enrique Razon Jr.
President and Chairman of ICTSI (International Container Terminal Services)
Net Worth 2008: US$ 525 million
Age: 48

Rank 9: George Ty & family (click here for the story)
Founder of Metropolitan Bank and Trust Company (Metrobank) who also hold shares from Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) and Philippine Savings Bank(PSB)
Net Worth 2008: US$ 435 million
Age: 75

Rank 10: Inigo & Mercedes ZobelHe is the chairman of Business World Publishing, chairman and president of E. Zobel, Inc., director of Mermac, Inc., president of Ayala International España, and president of Diamond Star Agro Products, Inc.
Net Worth 2008: US$ 430 million

Rank 11: Manuel Villar. (click here for the story)
He is currently Senate President of the Philippines who established Palmera and Camella Homes.
Net Worth 2008: US$ 425 million
Age: 58

Rank 12: Emilio Yap & familyHolds and runs Manila Hotel Corporation, USAUTOCO, Inc., Philtrust Realty Corporation, Philtrust Bank, Manila Bulletin Publishing Corporation, U.S. Automotive Co., Inc., Philippine President Lines Inc. and Centro Escolar University (CEU)
Net Worth 2008: US$ 420 million
Age: 82

Rank 13: Vivian Que Azcona & familyPresident of Mercury Drug, the Philippines’leading drugstore
Net Worth 2008: US$ 360 million

Rank 14: Beatrice Campos & familyWidow of Jose Campos who is one of the co-founders of United Laboratories (Unilab)
Net Worth 2008: US$ 325 million

Rank 15: Luis VirataChairman of CLSA Exchange Capital Inc. and owns half of Nickel Asia.
Net Worth 2008: US$ 270 million
Age: 54

Rank 16: Oscar Lopez. (Click here for the story)
Controls a stake at ABS-CBN Broadcasting
Net Worth 2008: US$ 240 million
Age: 78

Rank 17: Andrew GotianunRuns Filinvest Development Corporation and East West Bank
Net Worth 2008: US$ 235 million
Age: 80

Rank 18: Alfonso Yuchengco & family (click here for the story)
Chairs of Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation, Mapua Institute of Technology and the Yuchengco Group of Companies
Net Worth 2008: US$ 200 million
Age: 85

Rank 19: Mariano Tan & familyHolds stakes at UNILAB
Net Worth 2008: US$ 195 million
Rank 20: Manuel ZamoraNickel Asia Chairman
Net Worth 2008: US$ 130 million
Age: 69



SOURCE:GOOGLE.COM

LARGEST ANIMAL


The largest ANIMAL found on Earth can be measured using a variety of methods. It could be defined as the largest by volume, mass, height or length. Some organisms group together to form a superorganism, though this cannot truly be classed as one large organism. (The Great Barrier Reef, the world's largest coral reef, stretching 2,000 km, is a collection of many organisms.)
The Aspen tree (Populus tremuloides) forms large stands of genetically identical trees (technically, stems) connected by a single underground root system. These trees form through root sprouts coming off an original parent tree, though the root system may not remain a single unit in all specimens. The largest known fully connected Aspen is a grove in Utah nicknamed Pando, and some experts call it the largest organism in the world,[1] by mass or volume.[2] It covers 0.43 km2(106 acres) and is estimated to weigh 6,600 short tons (6,000 t).[3]
A giant fungus of the species Armillaria solidipes (honey mushrooms) in the Malheur National Forest in Oregon was found to span 8.9 km2 (2,200 acres),[4] which would make it the largest organism by area. Whether or not this is an actual individual organism, however, is disputed: some tests have indicated that they have the same genetic makeup,[5] but unless its mycelia are fully connected, it is a clonal colony of numerous smaller individuals. Another clonal colony that rivals the Armillaria and the Populus colonies in size is a strand of the giant marine plant, Posidonia oceanica, discovered in the Mediterranean near the Balearic Islands. It covers a band roughly 8 km (5.0 mi) in length.[6]
The world's largest single stem tree, by volume, is the General Sherman tree, a Giant Sequoiawith a volume of 1,487 m3 (52,500 cu ft).[7] This tree stands 83.8 m (275 ft) tall and the trunk alone is estimated to weigh over 2,000 short tons (1,800 t). The largest single-stem tree ever measured was the Lindsey creek tree, a Coast Redwood with a minimum trunk volume of over 2,500 m3(88,000 cu ft) and a mass of over 3,600 short tons (3,300 t). It fell over during a storm in 1905.[8]
The largest known animal ever to have existed is the blue whale, an endangered species whose official record length is 33.58 m (110 ft 2 in), and weight 190 short tons (172 metric tons) (for a pregnant female). The largest living land animals by mass are male (bullAfrican Bush Elephants(Savannah Elephants or Bush Elephants); one known example weighed roughly 27,000 lb (12 t). Some extinct land animals, including many dinosaurs, were much larger still. A 1985 study concluded that the theoretical limit for land-dwelling animals based on known types of body plans was between 100 and 1000 metric tons.

SOURCE:GOOGLE.COM

DISASTER!

 disaster is a natural or man-made hazard that has come to fruition[citation needed], resulting in an event of substantial extent causing significant physical damage or destruction, loss of life, or drastic change to the environment. A disaster can be ostensively defined as any tragic event with great loss stemming from events such as earthquakesfloods, catastrophic accidentsfires, orexplosions.
In contemporary academia, disasters are seen as the consequence of inappropriately managed risk. These risks are the product of hazards and vulnerability. Hazards that strike in areas with low vulnerability are not considered a disaster, as is the case in uninhabited regions.[1]
Developing countries suffer the greatest costs when a disaster hits – more than 95 percent of all deaths caused by disasters occur in developing countries, and losses due to natural disasters are 20 times greater (as a percentage of GDP) in developing countries than in industrialized countries.[2][3]

Natural disaster

A natural disaster is a consequence when a natural calamity affects humans and/or the built environment. Human vulnerability, and often a lack of appropriate emergency management, leads to financial, environmental, or human impact. The resulting loss depends on the capacity of the population to support or resist the disaster: their resilience. This understanding is concentrated in the formulation: "disasters occur when hazards meet vulnerability". A natural hazard will hence never result in a natural disaster in areas without vulnerability.

[edit]Man-made disaster

Various disasters like earthquake, landslides, volcanic eruptions, flood and cyclones are natural hazards that kill thousands of people and destroy billions of dollars of habitat and property each year. The rapid growth of the world's population and its increased concentration often in hazardous environment has escalated both the frequency and severity of natural disasters. With the tropical climate and unstable land forms, coupled with deforestation, unplanned growth proliferation non-engineered constructions which make the disaster-prone areas more vulnerable, tardy communication, poor or no budgetary allocation for disaster prevention, developing countries suffer more or less chronically by natural disasters. Asia tops the list of casualties due to natural ff disaster.
SOURCES:GOOGLE.COM

MENUDO RECIPE






Every culture has great restorative stew of humble origin and ingredients.
The Hungarians and other Central Europeans have their cabbage soup. The French have their potage St. Germain. The Greeks have their white bean soup and the Mexicans have their menudo.
Menudo is a wonderfully aromatic soup made of tripe, hominy and chili, and is stewed for hours with garlic and other spices. the broth is rich, red, papery, and glistens with fat. It stimulates the senses, arms the insides, and clears the head.
Menudo is served in big open bowls brought to the table steaming and fiery. It is usually eaten in the wee hours after a night out on the town and widely proclaimed to be an antidote for hangovers.
Mexicans brag about menudo's goodness, about how the hot broth with its medicinal condiments, particularly the chili, replenishes vitamins A and C, soothes the stomach, and stimulates the gastric juices to overcome any loss of appetite.
Unfortunately, unlike the enchilada, taco, and tamale, menudo has not become a part of the popular Tex-Mex cuisine.
Wherever there's a Mexican community, there's menudo and San Marcos is no exception.
A hearty tripe soup as it is prepared in the north of Mexico, this is especially recommended as a cure for hangovers. It is always made on New Year's morning.


Pork Menudo Recipe



Estimated preparation & cooking time: 50 minutes

Menudo Ingredients:

  • 1/2 kilo pork (cut into small chunks)
  • 1/4 kilo pork liver (cut into small cubes)
  • 5 pieces chorizo Bilbao (also cut in small pieces)
  • 4 potatoes (peeled, cut in small cubes, fried)
  • 1 green and 1 red bell pepper (diced)
  • 1 cup chickpeas
  • 1/4 cup raisins
  • 1/2 teaspoon paprika
  • 1 cup pork or chicken stock
  • 2 teaspoons of patis (fish sauce)
  • 3 tablespoons oil
  • 1 tablespoon atsuete oil (optional)
  • 3 tomatoes (diced)
  • 1 small head of garlic (minced)
  • 1 medium size onion (diced)

Menudo Cooking Instructions:

  • In a pan or wok, heat cooking oil and atsuete oil.
  • Saute garlic, onion. Then add the pork, liver, chorizo de Bilabo, tomatoes, bell pepper, paprika, patis and the stock.
  • Cover and bring to a boil. Simmer for 20 minutes or until the pork is tender.
  • Add the chickpeas, potatoes and raisins. Boil of another 2 minutes.
  • Salt and pepper to taste.
  • Serve hot with white rice.

    SOURCE:GOOGLE.COM

INSPIRATIONAL QUOTES

Achievement of your happiness is the only moral purpose of your life, and that happiness, not pain or mindless self-indulgence, is the proof of your moral integrity, since it is the proof and the result of your loyalty to the achievement of your values.


Achievement results from work realizing ambition. 
Adam Ant

Four steps to achievement: Plan purposefully. Prepare prayerfully. Proceed positively. Pursue persistently. 

The most complicated achievements of thought are possible without the assistance of consciousness. 
Sigmund Freud 

Great achievement is usually born of great sacrifice, and is never the result of selfishness. 
Napoleon Hill 

Death comes to all, but great achievements build a monument which shall endure until the sun grows cold. 

Our achievements of today are but the sum total of our thoughts of yesterday. You are today where the thoughts of yesterday have brought you and you will be tomorrow where the thoughts of today take you. 
Blaise Pascal 

Cherish your visions and your dreams as they are the children of your soul; the blueprints of your ultimate achievements. 
Napoleon Hill 

You have to learn the rules of the game. And then you have to play better than anyone else. 
 

I'm glad I did it, partly because it was worth it, but mostly because I shall never have to do it again 
Mark Twain 

It is not the mountain we conquer but ourselves. 
Edmund Hillary 


SOURCE:GOOGLE.COM