A saucer-shaped Nasa vehicle testing new technology for Mars landings made a successful rocket ride over the Pacific on Saturday, but its massive descent parachute only partially unfurled.
 
The Low Density Supersonic Decelerator was lifted by balloon 120,000 feet into the air from the Hawaiian island of Kauai. The vehicle then rocketed even higher before deploying a novel inflatable braking system.
 
But cheers rapidly died as a gigantic chute designed to slow its fall to splashdown in the ocean emerged tangled.
 
NASA officials were nonetheless satisfied with the test of technology that might one day be used to deliver heavy spacecraft – and eventually astronauts – to Mars.
 
Since the twin Viking spacecraft landed on the red planet in 1976, Nasa has relied on the same parachute design to slow landers and rovers after piercing through the thin Martian atmosphere.

The $150 million experimental flight tested a novel vehicle and a giant parachute designed to deliver heavier spacecraft and eventually astronauts.

Despite small problems like the giant parachute not deploying fully, Nasa deemed the mission a success.

"What we just saw was a really good test," said NASA engineer Dan Coatta with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.

Viewers around the world with an Internet connection followed portions of the mission in real time thanks to cameras on board the vehicle that beamed back low-resolution footage.

After taking off at 11:40am from the Pacific Missile Range Facility on the Hawaiian island of Kauai, the balloon boosted the disc-shaped vehicle over the Pacific. Its rocket motor then ignited, carrying the vehicle to 34 miles high at supersonic speeds.

The environment that high up is similar to the thin Martian atmosphere. As the vehicle prepared to drop back the Earth, a tube around it expanded like a Hawaiian puffer fish, creating atmospheric drag to dramatically slow it down from Mach 4, or four times the speed of sound.

Then the parachute unfurled and guided the vehicle to an ocean splashdown about three hours later. At 110 feet in diameter, the parachute is twice as big as the one that carried the 1-ton Curiosity rover through the Martian atmosphere in 2011.

The test was postponed six times because of high winds. Winds need to be calm so that the balloon doesn't stray into no-fly zones.

Engineers planned to analyse the data and conduct several more flights next year before deciding whether to fly the vehicle and parachute on a future Mars mission.

"We want to test them here where it's cheaper before we send it to Mars to make sure that it's going to work there," project manager Mark Adler of the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory said during a pre-launch news conference in Kauai in early June.

The technology envelope needs to be pushed or else humanity won't be able to fly beyond the International Space Station in low-Earth orbit, said Michael Gazarik, head of space technology at Nasa headquarters.

Technology development "is the surest path to Mars," Mr Gazarik said at the briefing.
Source: telegraph.co.uk/science/space

MANILA - Senator Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr. is keeping his options open in the 2016 elections, saying he will be a candidate in the coming polls.

Marcos, son and namesake of the late President Ferdinand Marcos, said r
unning for higher office is still far from his mind.

"Hindi pa panahon para pag-isipan ang mga ganyan. There are two years left in this term. There is so much work to be done. Siguro saka na muna ‘yun because that is an individual personal thing e. Saka na muna ‘yung mga tungkol sa sarili namin. Tapusin muna namin ang mga kailangan gawin. There is a lot that needs to be done for the remainder of the year… There is no time or there is no space in our working lives to be, at least in mine, to be discussing that or to be planning that or to be campaigning,” he said.

Marcos' term will expire in 2016 and is eligible to run for reelection.

For now, he said, he is keeping his options open.

"Of course, when 2016 comes, I will be a candidate. The obvious thing for me to do is to run for reelection. Nababanggit ang higher office but as I said, hindi pa naman panahon para pag-usapan ‘yan because as I said, masyado pang maraming kailangan gawin."

MOTHER'S THOUGHTS

Former First Lady and now Ilocos Norte Congresswoman Imelda Marcos earlier revealed she wants her son to run for president in 2016.

"As his mother, I sent him to the best schools. He has an impressive track record and and a good vision for the country. What I like most about my children is that they love this country so much,” she said in an interview on ABS-CBN's "Tapatan Ni Tunying."

She earlier told Kyodo News that Bongbong has great potential to become president because his record in Ilocos is very good.

Between 1998 and 2007, the younger Marcos served three consecutive terms as governor of the northern province of Ilocos Norte, his father's birthplace, now led by Bongbong's elder sister Imee. He also represented the Marcos stronghold in the House of Representatives before becoming a senator in 2010.

The younger Marcos was only 8 years old when his father, a former senator himself, became the Philippines' 10th president on Dec. 30, 1965.

Over the next two decades of his father's rule, he completed his secondary education in Britain, graduated from Oxford University with a degree in philosophy, politics and economics, earned a master's degree in business administration from the Wharton School of Business in the United States, and became vice governor of Ilocos Norte in 1980 at the very young age of 23.

MARTIAL LAW

It was during his many years abroad that his father placed the Philippines under martial law to suppress civil strife and the threat of armed rebellion, a period which lasted from 1972 to 1981.

"My father was always one to comment on current events and history, and the conversations I had with him cumulatively over the years gave me a more complete, if not complex, picture of the context in which martial law was declared," Bongbong said on Sept. 21, 2012, the 40th anniversary of the martial law declaration.

"On a more personal level, I remember people saying how thankful they were for the relative peace and order that followed martial law, the positive image of the Philippines worldwide, the emergence of a tourism industry, the cleaner streets," he added, countering critics' claims that it was the darkest period in Philippine history.

Even so, Bongbong asked the public to "move on and move forward," saying the past cannot be changed, and that "blaming others and finding scapegoats are not solutions" to the many problems the country faces at present.

He also categorically dismissed martial law as an option in the present time, and went on to say that his actions and decisions as a public servant "are consistent with democratic principles and participatory governance."

POLITICS OF DESTINY

While he admits he is aspiring for the top post, it being the ultimate dream of any ambitious politician, Bongbong has yet to definitely commit to contesting the 2016 presidential election.

"That depends on destiny," his mother said. "As they say, man proposes, God disposes."

However, "success is made up of preparedness and opportunity," both of which Bongbong has, she was quick to add.

Amid the lingering criticisms, the Marcos matriarch said she remains strong and active "because I'm at peace with myself and my God."

"Maybe the Lord is keeping me still alive to show to the world that if we are with the side of the truth, nobody can touch you, even superpowers in government," she declared. -- With a report by Kyodo News (Source: abs-cbnnews.com/nation)

Cauayan City Campus offers the following academic programs
  • MS in Information Technology
  • Bachelor of Laws and Letters
  • Bachelor of Arts (Pol Sci, English, Legal Mgt)
  • Bachelor of Secondary Education
  • BS in Criminology
  • BS in Information Technology
  • BS in Information Technology - Ladderized
  • BS in Entrepreneurship
  • BS in Hotel and Restaurant Management
  • BS in Business Administration (Mktg. Mgt./ Banking and Finance)
  • BS in Industrial Technology (Automotive Technology/ Electronic Technology)
  • Bachelor of Agricultural Technology
  • Bachelor of Elementary Education
  • Diploma in Agricultural Technology - Bachelor of Agricultural Technology (DAT-BAT)
  • Mechanical Technology
  • Assoc. Computer Technology
  • Ass. Hotel and Restaurant Management
  • Automotive Technology
  • Electronics Technology
  • Electrical Technology
Cabagan Campus offers the following academic programs
  • Ed. D. in Educational Management
  • Ph.D. in Occupational Education
  • Ph. D. in Resource Management (Environmental Management/ Forest Resource Management)
  • MA in Education (English/ Filipino/ Mathematics/ Science/ Social Science)
  • MS in Forestry
  • MS in Environmental Studies
  • MS in Agriculture
  • MA in Teaching
  • Bachelor of Elementary Education
  • Bachelor of Secondary Education (MAPEH/ Social Science/ Home Economics/ Mathematics/ Engligh/ General Science/ Filipino)
  • Bachelor of Agricultural Technology
  • BS in Forestry
  • BS in Environmental Science
  • BS in Development Communication
  • BS in Biology
  • Bachelor of Arts (Sociology)
  • BS in Agriculture (Animal Science/ Crop Science)
  • BS in Agri-business
  • BS in Information Technology
  • BS in Information Technology - Ladderized
  • Bachelor of Agricultural Technology
  • BS in Criminology
  • BS in Hotel & Restaurant Management
  • Forestry Technician Certificate
  • Ass. in Hotel and Restaurant Management
  • Diploma in Agricultural Technology
 
Ilagan Campus offers the following academic programs
  • MA in Industrial Education
  • BS in Nursing
  • BS in Architecture
  • BS in Industrial Technology
  • BS in Electrical Engineering
  • BS in Civil Engineering
  • BS in Industrial Education
  • Bach. of Technical Teacher Education  (Automotive, Electrical, Electronics, Food & Service Mgt)
  • BS in Information Technology
  • BS Information Technology - Ladderized
  • Bachelor of Secondary Education
  • Midwifery
 
Angadanan Campus offers the following academic programs
  • Bachelor of Secondary Education (Physical Science/ Technology & Livelihood Education)
  • Bachelor of Elementary Education
  • BS in Industrial Education
  • BS in Industrial Technology
  • BS in Criminology
  • Assoc. Computer Technology
  • Ass. in Hotel and Restaurant Management
  • Electrical Technology
  • Electronics Technology
  • Automotive Technology
 
Jones Campus offers the following academic programs
  • BS in Agriculture (Animal Science/ Crop Science)
  • BS in Agriculture - Ladderized
  • Bachelor of Secondary Education
  • Bachelor of Elementary Education
  • BS in Information Technology
  • BS in Information Technology - Ladderized
  • BS in Criminology
 
Santiago City Campus offers the following academic programs
  • BS in Information Technology - Ladderized
  • BS in Agriculture - Ladderized
 
Roxas Campus offers the following academic programs
  • BS in Agriculture (Crop Science/ Animal Science)
  • BS in Information Technology
  • Bachelor in Secondary Education (Filipino/ Mathematics)
  • BS in Inland Fisheries
  • BS in Agri-business
  • BS in Criminology
 
San Mateo Campus offers the following academic programs
  • BS Information Technology - Ladderized
  • Bachelor of Secondary Education (Mathematics/ Technology & Livelihood Education)
  • Bachelor of Technical Teacher Education
 
San Mariano Campus offers the following academic programs
  • Bachelor of Agricultural Technology
  • Bachelor of Secondary Education (Physical Science/ Technology & Livelihood Education)
  • Bachelor of Food Technology
  • BS in Forestry (Agro-Forestry)
  • BS in Hotel and Restaurant Management
  • BS in Agriculture
  • BS in Information Technology
 
Palanan Campus offers the following academic programs
  • Bachelor of Secondary Education
  • Bachelor of Elementary Education
  • BS in Agriculture
  • BS in Information Technology

An expedition has revealed the unique underwater treasures of the Pitcairn Islands. The discovery increases the pressure on the UK government
t to create the world’s largest marine protection area around the Pacific sea.

The islands are one of the most remote places on Earth, thousands of miles from any continent, and have escaped overfishing and pollution that has damaged many regions of the world’s oceans. Just 53 people live on the islands, many descendents of the sailors behind the famous mutiny on the Bounty in 1790, but it is the marine life that attracted National Geographic’s Pristine Seas expedition. Its results, including new species of fish, were published in the journal Plos One on Friday.

“The remoteness means it has been preserved as pristine as possible,” expedition leader Enric Sala told the Guardian. “As soon as you jump in the water and the bubbles clear you are surrounded by sharks.” Top-predators like sharks are virtually fished-out in many parts of the seas but the expedition found they dominated the marine ecosystems around the four Pitcairn Islands. Grey reef sharks were the most common predator, followed by whitetip reef sharks and black trevally, while the plant-eating fish were dominated by chubs, unicornfish and whitebar surgeonfish.

The waters are also extremely clear. “We couldn’t believe it. The water was so clear we could see for 75 metres,” said Sala. That clarity meant coral reefs thrived far deeper than usual, down to 100 metres, a world record. Another light-dependent organism, crustose coralline algae, was seen at 382m depth. Over 80 species of fish, coral and algae were recorded at Pitcairn for the first time.

The team also did the first surveys of the deep habitats around the Pitcairn Islands by dropping cameras down to 1,600 metres, revealing rare species such as the false catshark and several species never seen before.

“This is one of the most intact marine ecosystems on the planet and right now it is in danger,” said Sala, adding it provides an irreplaceable view of how coral reefs function without extensive human interference.

The Pitcairn islanders have backed a plan to declare a protected zone of over 830,000 sq km around the islands, which if created today would be the biggest in the world. Sala points out that while about 15% of land has some kind of protection, only 3% of the oceans have any environmental rules.

The Pitcairns are a British overseas territory and campaigners are optimistic that the UK Foreign Office’s current assessment of the proposal will see the marine park approved, particularly after US president Barack Obama pledged on 17 June to protect 780,000 km2 of ocean around uninhabited south Pacific Islands. “The arguments are pretty clear and there seems to be momentum now, so it makes sense for the UK to lead the way,” said Sala.

However, the Environment Audit select committee of MPs criticised the government in January for failing protect the exotic species living on the string of isolated islands that make up the last vestiges of the British empire. It noted that there are more endangered species living in the Pitcairns than people. Source: theguardian.com/environment

Isabela State University : Echague Isabela Campus offers the following academic programs.

The updated list of all academic programs, including prospect us, for the entire university system.

Graduate Studies
•Ph.D. in Agricultural Sciences
◦Major in: Crop Science and Animal Science

•Ph.D. in Community (Rural) Development
•Ph.D. in Institutional Development and Management

•Doctor of Public Administration
•Ph.D. in Occupational Education

•Master of Science in Agricultural Sciences
◦Major in: Crop Science and Animal Science

•Master of Science
◦Major in: Mathematics Education, Biology Education,
and Chemistry Education

•Master of Arts in Teaching / MAEd
◦Major in: Chemistry, Biology, Mathematics and English

•Master of Arts in Psychology

•Master in Biology
•Master in Chemistry

•Master in English
•Master in Mathematics
•Master in Psychology
•Master of Science in Science Education
•Master in Public Administration
•Master in Business Administration

•Master of Arts / Science in Development Management Education

•Master of Science in Agricultural Engineering

•Master of Arts in Teaching / MAEd
◦Major in: Filipino, English, Home Technology, and Social Science

•Doctor of Veterinary Medicine

Undergraduate Courses
•Bachelor of Science in Hotel, Restaurant and Tourism Management
•Bachelor of Science in Agricultural Engineering
•Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering
•Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering
•Bachelor of Science in Food Engineering
•Bachelor of Science in Information Technology
•Bachelor of Science in Information Technology – Ladderized
•Bachelor of Science in Animal Husbandry
•Bachelor of Science in Agriculture
◦Major in: Crop Science, Soils, Farming Systems, Animal
Science, Crop Protection, Post Harvest Technology, and
Horticulture, Bachelor of Science in Agri-Business

•Major in: Agri-Business Management, Economics and Cooperative
Development
•Bachelor of Science in Forestry (first 2 years)
•Bachelor of Science in Rural Development
•Bachelor of Science in Biology
•Bachelor of Science in Criminology
•Bachelor of Science in Nursing
•Bachelor of Science in Mathematics
•Bachelor of Arts
◦Major in: English, Psychology,  Political Science, Peace
and Security, English, and Mass Communication

•Bachelor of Science in Business Administration
◦Major in: Human Resource Development & Management,
Marketing Management, Management Accounting, and
Business Computer Application

•Bachelor of Arts in Public Administration
•Bachelor of Science in Accountancy
•Bachelor of Science in Entrepreneurship

•Bachelor of Elementary Education
•Bachelor of Secondary Education
◦Major in: English, Filipino, Technology & Livelihood
Education, Mathematics, Practical Arts, MAPE, Social
Science, Library & Information Management

 Non-degree Courses
•Two Years Computer Programming
•Two Years Computer Secretarial
•Associate in Agriculture

BATANES, Philippines—Storms have become a shy visitor in Batanes province in the past decade—an oddity believed to be due to climate change, which I
s slowly transforming the face of this island chain and its people.

Due to its location in the overlapping waters of the South China Sea and the Pacific Ocean, the Batanes island group is often on the flight path of big storms and typhoons, around 20 of which arrive in the country every year.

Until recently, it was considered to be the province most visited by tropical cyclones.

But the arrival of strong storms on the islands, which used to be an annual affair, has become less and less frequent over the years, striking instead in parts of the country that rarely experience them, such as Mindanao in December 2011 and 2012 with Tropical Storm “Sendong” and Typhoon “Pablo,” respectively.

For provincial environment and natural resources officer George R. Reyes, the scarcity of tropical cyclones in the country’s northern tip is both a blessing and a curse.

On the one hand, commerce, agriculture and tourism have flourished, he said.

More flights and ferry trips have opened to and from the province, access to education and business opportunities has improved, and the Ivatan people now regularly enjoy rice and mangoes, which used to be luxuries 10 years ago.

On the other hand, residents have become complacent in the face of changing weather, more dependent on modern amenities and less appreciative of their cultural treasures, Reyes added.

Landscape shaping
New housing structures now use weaker materials shipped from mainland Luzon, which is changing the landscape that used to be dotted with sturdy Ivatan houses made of thick limestone walls and thatched roofs against a backdrop of island greenery, grassland and beach forest.

Cultural values have eroded and the upward mobility of residents has led to slow birth rates and a declining population.

“I’d say the advantages are about equal to the disadvantages,” Reyes said when asked to assess the impact of climate change on Batanes.

The province is located at the northern tip of Luzon, composed of a chain of 10 islands with both the smallest land area (219 square kilometers) and population (16,604 as of May 2010) in the Philippines.

The last storm to hit Batanes was Category 5 Supertyphoon “Odette” in September last year but it only lightly grazed the province.

No big storms
No other big storm has directly hit Batanes since Typhoon “Neneng” in 1987, said Juan Redondo, chair of Barangay Kaichanarianan, the financial hub in this capital town.

Reyes said another strong storm struck the islands in 1995 but the effects were blunted by the preparations of the weather-beaten residents. “Nobody dies of storms in Batanes,” he said.

In the 10 years since, he said, “there were no more storms that actually hit us.”
That storm-free decade led to dramatic changes in Batanes and its people.

Setbacks
“In the past, the residents could only plant root crops, like ube and sweet potato. But now, they could actually plant rice and corn, as well as fruit trees, like mango and banana,” Reyes said.

There was also an influx of tourists with more airlines opening flights as well as more regular trips by ship to and from the mainland, he said.

But Redondo said that with progress came certain setbacks.

“Because goods shipped from the mainland are now readily available, people have stopped planting root crops,” he said.

Before, residents temporarily survived with these crops whenever strong storms came lashing at the islands—at times, for a whole week, Redondo said.

Innate resiliency
“Now, there’s dependence on what they can buy elsewhere. I think that’s a negative [effect],” he said.
But Redondo said he believed that the Ivatan people’s resiliency to disasters was already innate in them and that they would be prepared, even if monthly storms began to batter them again.
Reyes said the people of Batanes should not be complacent.

“Ten years [of being storm-free] is not a long period of time,” he said. “The storms may still come back.”
Source: lifestyle.inquirer.net

Isabela , Philippines — Robinsons Land Corporation (RLC) is building its first mall in Cagayan Valley Region — with the aim of solidifying its network in the north which will be the 34thin its nationwide chain.

Robinsons Malls is one of the largest shopping malls and retail operator in the Philippines. It was incorporated on September 9, 1997 by Chinese Filipino entrepreneur John Gokongwei, Jr. to develop, conduct, operate and maintain the Robinsons commercial shopping centers and all businesses related thereto, such as the lease of commercial spaces within the compound of shopping centers. Its main competitor is SM Prime Holdings, Inc and Shangri-la Plaza Mall. It has 33 operating branches as of September 2012.

The firm said Robinsons Place Isabela will be a three-story mall featuring a vibrant, modern design. It will have a gross floor area of 38,725 square meters and a gross leasable area of about 26,200 sqm.

The full-service mall will be built on a 4.2-hectare lot in Barangay Mabini and is strategically located along the Maharlika Highway.

According to Arlene G. Magtibay, RLC General Manager for Commercial Centers Division, Robinsons Place Isabela will house a two-level Robinsons Department Store and a Robinsons Supermarket at the ground level as its anchor tenants.

It will likewise feature Robinsons Appliance Center and Handyman as well as an Amusement Center and four all-digital cinemas with a combined seating capacity of more than 1,000.
Robinsons Place Isabela will also have the most popular fashion and specialty shops, quick service restaurants, casual dining outlets, a food court and service shops.

With accessibility as a primary design consideration, the development provides for a tricycle terminal, a jeepney terminal and a bus lay-by. It also has parking slots that can accommodate 640 cars as well as 900 motorcycles.

Santiago City is considered the center of commerce and trade in Isabela. It is home to thousands of business enterprises, and numerous banks, educational institutions and manufacturing companies.

The city also houses some of the biggest and highly equipped hospitals in the region.

Agriculture is the main source of livelihood and the main crops are palay, corn, high value fruits, and vegetables.

The city is the trading station for grains and other agricultural crops coming from Ifugao, Kalinga, Quirino, Nueva Viscaya and other parts of Isabela.  Robinsons Land Corporation is currently operating 32 shopping malls nationwide.

This year, the company opened three malls in Pangasinan, Palawan and Quezon City and is poised to open five malls in 2013.

JOSEPH H. CALATA, chairman and CEO of Calata Corp., made history by becoming the youngest business tycoon in the country and by proving once and for all that there’s money in agriculture.
How he did it? By turning his family-owned agribusiness into the Philippines’s largest distributor of agrochemicals, feeds, fertilizers and seeds and get it listed with the Philippine Stock Exchange.
Many enterprising individuals, especially young people like Joseph or Josh, who started in the business in his early 30s, venture into various businesses like franchising, financing, investments, products and services or information technology. But Josh chose agriculture.
“The Philippines is an agricultural country. I want to help our farmers,” he told the BusinessMirror.
The empowerment of the agricultural sector, he said, is a good investment.
“While it may not be the most alluring of sectors for businessmen, I believe agriculture holds great potential to boost the Philippine economy,” he said.
At first glance, you would have mistaken Calata for a fashion/ramp model or showbiz celebrity with his striking resemblance to Twilight superstar Robert Pattinson who played the role of Edward Cullen in the popular movie.
But beneath that striking visual appeal is youthful aggressiveness, business acumen and determination to succeed.
P1.6-billion agriculture deal
IN November 2012 Calata Corp. signed a contract with Siembra Directa Corp., an affiliate of a big Argentinian firm. The deal is worth P1.6 billion, considered one the biggest deals in the agriculture sector. Calata said its exclusive supply agreement with Siembra Directa Corp. will cover 20 years of seeds supplies, agrochemicals, fertilizers and other farm inputs as part of the company’s aim to become the “top distributor of farm inputs in the Philippines.”
As part of the agreement, Calata and his Argentinean partners put their mechanical planters and fumigators to work in Echague, Isabela, to demonstrate how the machinery can significantly improve productivity.
With Siembra Directa machinery, planting corn does not require plowing because the machinery cuts slots into the ground so that seeds and fertilizer are deposited at the same time.
Direct planting minimizes soil erosion, prevents soil compaction, significantly reduces the time required for land preparation, and lowers fertilizer and irrigation costs while increasing harvest and profit yields, said Siembra head Nico Bolzico.  
The corn-harvesting machinery also effectively separates corn kernels from stalks and cobs so that organic waste materials can be left in the fields to help fertilize the land. Bolzico said mechanization can lower the cost of farmland preparation from the usual average of P7,000 per hectare to around P4,000 per hectare, and the manpower requirement can be drastically reduced because two people can adequately manage a spread of 1,000 hectares with the right machinery.
From ‘mom-and-pop’ store to corporation
INCORPORATED in 1999, Calata is a combined distributor of agro-chemicals, feeds, fertilizers, veterinary medicines and other agricultural products coming from manufacturers or business partners. 
At the start, Calata was able to gain the confidence of one of the biggest corporations in the country—the San Miguel Corp.—to be a distributor of B-MEG feeds in Pampanga, Nueva Ecija and other provinces in Luzon. Today the corporation is also a business partner of Bayer Crop Science Jardine, Dupont and Sinochem, Syngenta, Monsanto, Planters Products, East West Seeds, Swire and Viking, among others.
High-efficiency poultry farming, private- airplane leasing, and trucking are the other industries ventured into by the corporation. At present, it employs 500 workers.
Business challenges
CALATA took a Bachelor’s Degree in Commerce at De La Salle University. His mother offered him to work in their provincial agriculture store in Bulacan after graduation. “My mother told me, ‘Dito ka na lang babayaran kita ng P8,000 kada buwan.’”
Having studied the family business, Calata decided to modernize the system through computerization. He bought software on accounting and little by little applied the system in their business.
He installed a computer inside the store and put everything on record. He thought of expanding so he put there three chairs at the back of the store where farmers paid him for their purchase.
The store definitely improved but his parents were not so happy about the modernization and almost wanted him out of the business. The farmers complained because they did not want to fall in line and wait for their receipt nor wait for the encoding of their purchases. But the young Calata persisted on his new-found system.
And the rest, as they say, is history. With Joseph Calata at the helm, the corporation became a P1.8-billion company in 2008.
Getting listed
CALATA was able to increase his company’s revenue all right but he was still searching and calling for people to help him get listed. “I made so many calls; some ignored me and many never called back.”
 It was in 2006 when Calata made his first inquiry on how to enlist his company at the Philippine Stock Exchange. “It was as if nothing would happen after that inquiry. For the PSE people, I might not have looked so serious at all, with my hairstyle na tayo-tayong buhok [a hairstyle reminiscent of the main character of that Japanese animated television series Dragon Ball Z]. Who would think I was?”
This was until a financial adviser was referred to him and guided him. Then he got a bunch of people to help him with the company’s prospectus. It took Calata two years to complete the requirements. In March 2012 he submitted his prospectus. He aimed to be the agenda so he submitted everything earlier than the others. Unfortunately, his company was declined. But Calata just wouldn’t give up and stop there. So just before his application expired, he did what was required.
On May 23, 2012, Calata Corp. was finally listed for initial public offering (IPO) and its stocks  gained a market capitalization of P4.3 billion, one of the best performances on an IPO.
With the earnings from the initial offering, Calata branched out and diversified into Agri, the first agricultural retail store in the mold of global giant 7-Eleven. With 116 Agri stores in Luzon, the company targets the establishment of up to 1,000  stores nationwide and the possibility of introducing the “Agri” brand to the international market.
Business controversy
SUCCESS did not come Calata’s way without controversy. Newly listed,  Calata Corp. gained a market capitalization of P4 billion. However, during the trading days, the stock prices underwent a fluctuation where the shares reached P24 per share but declined to as low as 32 percent along the way. This movement alarmed the young Calata who immediately called the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
For four months, the SEC worked carefully and quietly and was able to determine those involved in the manipulation and finally cleared Calata Corp.’s involvement in the stock price manipulation charges.
With lessons learned and the issue “put to rest,” the corporation has since then focused on its expansion program.
More partnerships
THE most recent development for Calata Corp. was its partnership with the New Hope Group (NHG) of China to introduce a new animal-feed line under its company-owned brand Golden Bean. The firm disclosed in October that the board of directors gave the green light to bring Golden Bean feeds to all its dealers nationwide.
Calata expects Golden Bean Feeds will soon become the leading feed brand in the country’s P150-billion feed industry. NHG claims to be China’s leader in agribusiness, with annual sales of around $8.8 billion. The Chinese firm is one of the largest feed producers in China with an annual production capacity of 26.6 million tons.
 Immediately after, Calata Corp. announced acquiring a controlling stake in the meat business of the Galicia Group, a company that supplies pork, beef and chicken meat to SM Supermarket and other supermarket chains.
In its disclosure to the PSE, Calata Corp. said the deal includes all the existing facilities of  Galicia, which supplies SM supermarket its meat requirements under the SM Bonus brand for the last 10 years. Galicia also supplies other grocery chains such as Puregold Price Club Inc.
“This acquisition, along with the company’s existing animal farming and animal-feeds business, is a major component of the company’s completion of its ‘farm-to-plate’ business model, solidifying its position as an integrated and leading agribusiness player in the Philippines,” it said.
Calata said he would continue integrating technology and research in agriculture to help the Filipino farmers and the agriculture sector.  
“My plans include expansion and innovation. I intend to improve technology in farming to aid the farmers. Bibilhin ko ang mga ani nila and we’ll take care of the rest. We will improve our mills and provide dryers for them.  With technology we can help them improve their lives as well,” Calata said.Source: businessmirror.com.ph


Jeric Ross (born July 1, 1991) is a Philippine born Canadian actor, born and raised in Echague, Isabela, Philippines before moving to Vancouver British Columbia, Canada at the age of 6.

Jeric holds a 1st degree black belt in karate and was a member of the British Columbia karate team for five years and a former Canadian junior karate team member. He won silver medals at the Wado International Karate Do Federation (WIKF) world championships in Texas, USA on 2005 and in Braga, Portugal in 2008.

He will be playing as one of the casts of the upcoming Hollywood films Godzilla (2014) and Cheat (2014). It is rumored that Jeric will be speaking in Filipino language on the Godzilla movie and is quite rare that "Tagalog" will be used in a Hollywood film so better wait and see for yourself.

Godzilla (2014) a reboot of the Godzilla film franchise. The film retells the origin of Godzilla in contemporary times as a "terrifying force of nature". The film is directed by British filmmaker Gareth Edwards, written by Max Borenstein and stars Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Elizabeth Olsen, Bryan Cranston, Juliette Binoche, David Strathairn, Sally Hawkins, and Ken Watanabe.

The film is a co-production of Legendary Pictures and Warner Bros. Pictures and will be distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures worldwide, except for Japan where it will be distributed by Toho. It is the second Godzilla film to be fully filmed by an American studio, the first having been the 1998 film of the same name. The film is scheduled to be released on May 16, 2014 in 2D and 3D.


MANILA - The hottest temperature for this year so far -- a sizzling 39.7 degrees Celsius -- was recorded in the town of Echague, Isabela on Thursday.

State weather bureau PAGASA said the temperature was recorded at 3 p.m.

Today's temperature in Isabela is 0.7 degrees Celsius up from the temperature recorded yesterday.
According to Ramil Tuppil, chief meteorologist of PAGASA-Isabela, temperature in the area could still rise.

He noted that in May 1990, temperature in Isabela soared to 41.4 degrees Celsius.

"Posible pang maulit yun lalo na at pinalilibutan ng bundok ang Isabela," Tuppil said.

He advised people to wear lightweight and light-colored clothing, and drink plenty of water.

Meanwhile, in Metro Manila, the hottest temperature recorded today was in Quezon City at 35.9 degrees Celsius. -- Report from Kim Lorenzo, ABS-CBN News Isabela
Source - ABS-CBNnews.com
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