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OUR DAYS
This day...29 February 2008 PUP Bomb
Threat Fails to Stop Lozada MANILA, Philippines -- A screaming mob of students showered Rodolfo “Jun” Lozada Jr. with confetti at the Polytechnic University of the Philippines (PUP). Elsewhere in Manila, his wife Violeta sobbed before judges, telling them of death threats to her family and pleading for court protection. The Senate star witness touched off riotous scenes at the PUP in Sta. Mesa, Manila, Thursday as dozens of students forced open the campus’ main gate to allow others who had been denied entry to get in, even as school guards fought to keep the steel gate shut because of a purported bomb threat. The bomb threat turned out to be a dud. Security officer Jay Telan said the guards closed the gate at 10 a.m. -- the time Lozada had been expected to arrive -- as part of “standard operating procedure” because classes had already been suspended as a result of the threat. Several hundred students, many of them members of militant youth groups, were already on the campus by that time but scores of others, as well as faculty members, had been locked out. Push-’n-pull motion The closure of the gate angered the students, triggering the commotion. The badly outnumbered guards, about five in all, were no match for the state scholars, who succeeded in prying the gate open. The supposed bomb threat was received by the security office shortly before 10 a.m., causing the cancellation of classes. A student, Jessie Cruz, was seriously injured in the commotion after a steel hook pierced his right foot. Since testifying at the Senate on the $329-million broadband project, Lozada has been touring schools to tell students of the alleged corruption in the deal with China’s ZTE Corp., in which President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and her husband, First Gentleman Jose Miguel Arroyo, had been implicated. Malacañang and ZTE have denied the allegations. Shower of confetti “The administration is desperate. They don’t want to let us in and listen to Lozada!” Rene Boy Abiva shouted in Filipino, holding up his business administration ID. “If there was a bomb why did they close the gate? Do they want us to die here?” said Henry Enaje, a former PUP student regent and secretary general of the National Union of Students of the Philippines. “Lozada is on his way but now they’re suddenly floating that there’s a bomb here. We’re condemning this,” Enaje said. A Manila police bomb squad arrived ahead of Lozada at 11:10 a.m. and a lone male student darted in front to stop it. The police vehicle roared through, forcing the youth to fall back. Yellow confetti rained from the main building as Lozada arrived, closely guarded by the Senate sergeant at arms as both the media and the students mobbed him. “I thank you all for staying despite the bomb threat,” Lozada said in Filipino as the students and some faculty members, altogether numbering about 2,000, cheered. ‘Yes, yes’ Then, speaking again in Filipino, he tossed out questions : “Do you believe there was overprice in the ZTE deal? Do you believe there was a large overprice? Do you believe that FG and GMA (Ms Arroyo) were involved?” To each question, the students shouted “Yes.” Lozada said: “What are we going to do?” A handful shouted back: “Sobra na, tama na, patalsikin si Gloria! (“It’s too much, we’ve had enough, throw out Gloria).” Lozada told the students that if they were to take to the streets, it should not be due to anger, which would dissipate in time. “If it is love of your fellowmen that will move you to act, you will not stop,” he said.
From : www.inquirer.net, 29 February 2008
OUR JOURNEY
Struggle Against Evil
- 2
Evil of Self-Interest
Presenting
Ourselves as a Living Sacrifice Then, speaking again in Filipino, he tossed out questions : “Do you believe there was overprice in the ZTE deal? Do you believe there was a large overprice? Do you believe that FG and GMA (Ms Arroyo) were involved?” To each question, the students shouted “Yes.” Lozada said: “What are we going to do?” A handful shouted back: “Sobra na, tama na, patalsikin si Gloria! (It’s too much, we’ve had enough, throw out Gloria)." Lozada told the students that if they were to take to the streets, it should not be due to anger, which would dissipate in time. “If it is love of your fellowmen that will move you to act, you will not stop,” he said. The Way of Pilgrimage lesson - "Living your Worship Every Day in Every Way" - should help us prepare for a continuing warfare against the Evil One. "As God's chosen ones, holy and beloved...clothe yourselves with love which binds everything together in perfect harmony. And let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, to which indeed you were called in the one body (Col. 3 : 12,14-15). In his letter to the Romans, the apostle Paul says that "worship" involves presenting ourselves as a living offering to God. To worship is to make the whole of your life available for God's purpose, to be aware of God's presence every moment. Every place can become a house of worship; every task can be a sacrifice of praise. - Kyle Dugan and Craig Mitchell, Choosing Pilgrimage, p. 69 To read The Way of Pilgrimage, CLICK HERE and KEY IN YOUR PASSWORD ________________________________________________________________________________
OUR TRIBUTE
"It is easy to separate life from worship, to see worship as the 'spiritual' times and look at regular life as something that we do in between. What if were to see worship and life as overlapping completely?"
als
02/29/08 |