#Calumpit
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PERFORMANCE TASK IN TLE
I am proud to blog my hometown CALUMPIT, BULACAN! Did you know that Calumpit is known for its rich history and cultural heritage. In fact, Calumpit was once the capital of Bulacan during the Spanish colonial period. The town is also home to several historical landmarks, such as the St. John the Baptist Parish Church and Meyto Shrine. Calumpit is also famous for making delicious LONGGANISA. The LGU of Calumpit recently held a festival called Longganisa Calumpit as part of town founding anniversary. The festival featured the local longganisa (sausage) during a boodle fight in a 514- meter long table. Another of the most anticipated festivals in Calumpit is the Calumpit Libad Festival, an annual celebration held in Calumpit, Bulacan every twenty-third of June. The festival is celebrated one day before the actual town festival in honor of St. John the Baptist. Residents sing and dance happily. There is also a ritual of reading to passers-by as a symbol of baptism. The water may be placed in a plastic bag or scooped from the river by hand by the pagoda porters. No one goes home dry. Come and visit Calumpit, Bulacan! You will surely enjoy too.
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to my fellow filipinos,
may we all be safe from typhoon marce
Thunderstorm Advisory No. 13 #NCR_PRSD Issued at: 7:05 PM, 05 November 2024(Tuesday) Moderate to heavy rainshowers with lightning and strong winds are expected over Rizal, Laguna, Nueva Ecija, Cavite and Batangas within the next 2 hours. Heavy to intense rainshowers with lightning and strong winds are being experienced in Zambales(Palauig, Botolan, Iba), Tarlac(San Jose, Mayantoc, Camiling, Santa Ignacia), Quezon(Tagkawayan, Buenavista, Guinayangan, San Narciso, Mulanay, Catanauan, Lopez, General Luna, Calauag, Macalelon, Gumaca, Unisan, Pitogo, Pagbilao, Atimonan, Padre Burgos, Agdangan, Plaridel, Real, Infanta), Metro Manila(Navotas, Malabon), Bataan(Hermosa, Orani, Samal, Abucay, Balanga, Morong), Pampanga(Lubao, Sasmuan, Macabebe) and Bulacan(Paombong, Calumpit, Malolos, Plaridel, Baliuag, Pulilan, Bustos, Pandi, Guiguinto, Angat, Obando) which may persist within 2 hours and may affect nearby areas. All are advised to take precautionary measures against the impacts associated with these hazards which include flash floods and landslides. Keep monitoring for updates.
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St. Niño Parish, Calumpit, Bulacan, Philippines
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What Defines a Hero?written by CBerzuela
written: september 19, 2023; 21:38
concluded: september 20, 2023; 00:18
We have to stop seeing our heroes flawlessly. They may embody greatness, but that doesn't mean that they are the epitome of perfectness. Our heroes are also humans like us; they make mistakes, they have their own flaws and they are no exception to death. What's extraordinary about them is their notable love for our country along with their reamarkable actions and their undying commitment to protect it, no matter what.
But does a flaw enough to overshadow their greatness and disregard their sacrifices?
General Gregorio Del Pilar is one of our most controversial heroes with lots of conspiracies and misconceptions surrounding his name.
"arogante"
"tuta ni aguinaldo"
"vain"
---as they call him.
While it's true that Goyo's death in Tirad Pass isn't as heroic and valorous as we deemed it to be, does it automatically means that he didn't die for his beloved country?
Contrary to what most people think, Goyo didn't actually die gloriously riding his white horse and bravely shouting encouragements to his soldiers, that's the romanticized version of the Americans. What actually happened is that the general's rashness to discern the enemy and his order for a ceasefire is what gave the americans an opportunity to shoot him, according to the accounts of Vicente Enriquez, his aide-de-camp and Telesforo Carrasco who were with him during the "battle". It's kind of tragic and devastating that he died that way. His life (along with the 52 out of his 60 troop) ended due to a major fault; a consequence to lack of military planning and strategy. It is equally unfortunate that the humiliating disaster at Pasong Tirad became the reason why some or most people perceive him as an incompetent general and an ineffective military leader.
His hands were also tainted with blood, because apparently he tortured and killed the Bernal Brothers who were Luna's aide-de-camp and loyal soldiers under Aguinaldo's command. As Filipino National Artist for Literature, Nick Joaquin put it, he is "Aguinaldo's hatchetman."
All of his dedication and victories seem to be forgotten and overshadowed by his flaws. People may question his integrity as a hero, if he really deserves to be recognized as one. Some might say that he died to protect his "idol" in the form of Aguinaldo and not for the sake of the Philippines. Well, it's not really the case because even before serving Aguinaldo, he's already part of the revolution, doing his part to show his defiance against the Spanish conquerors. He first showed his prowess in the battlefield when he fought on Kakarong De Sili under Maestrong Sebio against the Spanish forces. He was so determined to defeat them that he didn't backed out eventhough Maestrong Sebio had already escaped leaving the battle to the ten of them (including Goyo's brother, Julian.) There, he was hit by a bullet in the forehead that he luckily survived. You see, the AGILA is already capable of great things even before his prestige as a general.
I hope that we don't only think of that disastrous battle in Tirad whenever we hear his name; i hope that we also look back to the Battle of Kakarong De Sili, the raid at Paombong, Battle of Pasong Balite, Battle of Quingua and Battle Of Calumpit. His flaws and shortcomings as a general is not what defines him as a hero. It is his love for the country that makes him a true hero. For the love to our country, always.
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© Paolo Dala
Sa Dagat At Bundok Na Simoy, At Sa Langit Mong Bughaw
I am a Filipino-inheritor of a glorious past, hostage to the uncertain future. As such I must prove equal to a two-fold task–the task of meeting my responsibility to the past, and the task of performing my obligation to the future.
I sprung from a hardy race, child many generations removed of ancient Malayan pioneers. Across the centuries the memory comes rushing back to me: of brown-skinned men putting out to sea in ships that were as frail as their hearts were stout. Over the sea I see them come, borne upon the billowing wave and the whistling wind, carried upon the mighty swell of hope-hope in the free abundance of new land that was to be their home and their children’s forever.
This is the land they sought and found. Every inch of shore that their eyes first set upon, every hill and mountain that beckoned to them with a green-and-purple invitation, every mile of rolling plain that their view encompassed, every river and lake that promised a plentiful living and the fruitfulness of commerce, is a hallowed spot to me.
By the strength of their hearts and hands, by every right of law, human and divine, this land and all the appurtenances thereof-the black and fertile soil, the seas and lakes and rivers teeming with fish, the forests with their inexhaustible wealth in wild life and timber, the mountains with their bowels swollen with minerals-the whole of this rich and happy land has been, for centuries without number, the land of my fathers. This land I received in trust from them and in trust will pass it to my children, and so on until the world is no more.
I am a Filipino. In my blood runs the immortal seed of heroes-seed that flowered down the centuries in deeds of courage and defiance. In my veins yet pulses the same hot blood that sent Lapulapu to battle against the first invader of this land, that nerved Lakandula in the combat against the alien foe, that drove Diego Silang and Dagohoy into rebellion against the foreign oppressor.
That seed is immortal. It is the self-same seed that flowered in the heart of Jose Rizal that morning in Bagumbayan when a volley of shots put an end to all that was mortal of him and made his spirit deathless forever, the same that flowered in the hearts of Bonifacio in Balintawak, of Gergorio del Pilar at Tirad Pass, of Antonio Luna at Calumpit; that bloomed in flowers of frustration in the sad heart of Emilio Aguinaldo at Palanan, and yet burst forth royally again in the proud heart of Manuel L. Quezon when he stood at last on the threshold of ancient Malacañan Palace, in the symbolic act of possession and racial vindication.
The seed I bear within me is an immortal seed. It is the mark of my manhood, the symbol of dignity as a human being. Like the seeds that were once buried in the tomb of Tutankhamen many thousand years ago, it shall grow and flower and bear fruit again. It is the insignia of my race, and my generation is but a stage in the unending search of my people for freedom and happiness.
I am a Filipino, child of the marriage of the East and the West. The East, with its languor and mysticism, its passivity and endurance, was my mother, and my sire was the West that came thundering across the seas with the Cross and Sword and the Machine. I am of the East, an eager participant in its spirit, and in its struggles for liberation from the imperialist yoke. But I also know that the East must awake from its centuried sleep, shake off the lethargy that has bound his limbs, and start moving where destiny awaits.
For I, too, am of the West, and the vigorous peoples of the West have destroyed forever the peace and quiet that once were ours. I can no longer live, a being apart from those whose world now trembles to the roar of bomb and cannon-shot. I cannot say of a matter of universal life-and-death, of freedom and slavery for all mankind, that it concerns me not. For no man and no nation is an island, but a part of the main, there is no longer any East and West–only individuals and nations making those momentous choices which are the hinges upon which history resolves.
At the vanguard of progress in this part of the world I stand–a forlorn figure in the eyes of some, but not one defeated and lost. For, through the thick, interlacing branches of habit and custom above me, I have seen the light of the sun, and I know that it is good. I have seen the light of justice and equality and freedom, my heart has been lifted by the vision of democracy, and I shall not rest until my land and my people shall have been blessed by these, beyond the power of any man or nation to subvert or destroy.
I am a Filipino, and this is my inheritance. What pledge shall I give that I may prove worthy of my inheritance? I shall give the pledge that has come ringing down the corridors of the centuries, and it shall be compounded of the joyous cries of my Malayan forebears when first they saw the contours of this land loom before their eyes, of the battle cries that have resounded in every field of combat from Mactan to Tirad Pass, of the voices of my people when they sing:
Land of the morning, Child of the sun returning– Ne’er shall invaders Trample thy sacred shore.
Out of the lush green of these seven thousand isles, out of the heartstrings of sixteen million people all vibrating to one song, I shall weave the mighty fabric of my pledge. Out of the songs of the farmers at sunrise when they go to labor in the fields, out of the sweat of the hard-bitten pioneers in Mal-lig and Koronadal, out of the silent endurance of stevedores at the piers and the ominous grumbling of peasants in Pampanga, out of the first cries of babies newly born and the lullabies that mothers sing, out of the crashing of gears and the whine of turbines in the factories, out of the crunch of plough-shares upturning the earth, out of the limitless patience of teachers in the classrooms and doctors in the clinics, out of the tramp of soldiers marching, I shall make the pattern of my pledge:
“I am a Filipino born to freedom, and I shall not rest until freedom shall have been added unto my inheritance-for myself and my children and my children’s children-forever.”
Carlos P. Romulo I am a Filipino
#Carlos P. Romulo#I am a Filipino#Independence Day#People#Soldier#Military#Filipino#Marawi City#Lanao del Sur#Philippines
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#bnh2023 #hs2023 (at Calumpit, Bulacan) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cp652hmvvSqQrFDIofSd0k0ri9WwWzYceSog4Q0/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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Cupid struck
LANA DEL REY photographed by NADIA LEE COHEN for SKIMS (2024)
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Bully List
Armela Pamilosa - CEU Nursing Teacher - about 50s in age (2007)
Whenever I am around she keeps telling that only those who have high IQ can play instruments because there are some that plays instrument in class.
She also said that only good-looking students and have no pimples are accepted at UST.
She also said at review in the last semester of my course that she supposedly will attend Born-again Church and did not because Pondang is gay as what SRG is also telling and I am assuming that she knew about Word of Hope, my religion and my UST entrance exam.
On our clinical duty at NCMH Psychiatric Hospital. I was dumbfounded because she shouted at me. I really do not know the reason because she is like that only to me. She maltreated me just like what the other teachers at CEU Nursing and Dentistry and yet to other students, they have cordial relationship unlike mine. I do not know why. I am thinking that maybe because I gave burger, lighter and cigarette to one of the caretakers (Extra) of the hospital and other stuffs they requested like towels, shorts, shirts and toiletries, shampoo, soap and toothbrush and toothpaste. She also said that Piolo and Butch are gay and doing oral sex in the hospital and have teeth that is why it is easier for them to have oral sex. She said that on the van service.
I have good intentions because I am thinking of providing dental service since hospital dentistry is also done in CEU while studying. Maybe they need dentures or restorations of teeth or cleaning just before I entered Nursing at CEU. CEU Dentistry have no Psychiatric Affiliations.
I am thinking that Armela Pamilosa is related to Ana Carla Bernardo Cortes and Ferdinand Abon because the had a corny joke that Ibon becomes Ebon in Pampanga Apalit Calumpit.
I am disheartened because I remembered that she always have her laptop connected to HDMI or projector. I am wondering why, looking now that I am endangered because I do not know her classes or who are her students since 1999 happened.
They are also telling in the service that some of the patients in the mental hospital are strangled to lose consciousness. Thinking now since 2019 happened that they are threatening me. I got strangled at NCMH. I am thinking that I am sane and mentally capable, just depressed and fatigued and I want to sue NCMD and DOH and CEU. I am suing NCMH for medical malpractice, negligence, malevolence, battery and assault and battery by lack of consent.
2. Cristine Reyes
She gaslighted that those who cannot be trusted in small things cannot be trusted for bigger things. (She might learned that I will study and continue my Pre-Medicine course to Dentistry.)(I always laughed at the back of my mind because she has the same name as the bold star, Eva Fonda was shown then in 2009.)(She said it because I failed to buy seedlings and pot at a store in Plaridel which will be needed tomorrow morning and due to time constraints, it is already nearing evening, I attempted to look at the shop that she said near Padilla Hospital and I failed to buy it because I cannot find the shop and thinking it is already close, I used my resources at our home like some of our plastic pots and seeds and I think 100 Pesos is not enough for jeepney fare alone from Malolos to Plaridel.) I was 18 then.
3. Amelia Valencia
She told her students that they honor their professors, just take for an example, the Japanese students bowed at their teacher as their honorific.
The Japanese are disciplined citizens because their environment is clean. (They saw before that I never threw trash and I put the candy wrapper in my pants and not on the streets)
The Muslims like the Catholics pray at 3 pm at ABS-CBN after It's Showtime. The Muslims bowed and close their shops at 3 pm.
She got angry at me because I failed at playing Memoirs of Geisha with subtitles using my laptop in school. The term subtitle or additional title for Books and Movies like subchapters became an issue at schools in .srt.
She told their trip at China, the Chinese cannot speak English. (I know it because I went to Hong Kong and even the Japanese can't speak English)
She let me report Buddhism although she knows about my religion and about the country of Japan (thinking that she maybe know about Padilla, a hostess in Japan)
Her daughter Eamor introduced me at 17 years old at Sodom and Gomorrah and the bad rape jokes that for me are just silly jokes. I also learned that she is paranoid that some knew her and called her at church due to Friendster although they are unknown. I just got a hunch that maybe she is related to Pasia Tores due to her looks and true enough seeing the BSN passer now 2024, her surname was Tores.
They also had malice because for me only doctors should wear Blazers due to conduct and medical ethics and not due to personal attacks.
Baka "pinapaasa mo lang"
nakakita ng unang Esthetics Dentistry na karatula sa amin 2007 2005
I just look who is less uglier in the class.
I'm just sick of the pikot system. I have high grades, line of 9's and 92. I should be in A.
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Walang Pasok: Classes are suspended in the following areas on Friday, Sept. 6, due to the enhanced Southwest Monsoon or habagat and after effects of Typhoon Yagi (Enteng) as of Sept 5, 7pm.
• Metro Manila (Muntinlupa)
• Bulacan (Bocaue, Bulakan, Calumpit, Hagonoy, Malolos, Pulilan, Santa Maria)
• Cavite Province
• Dagupan City
• Pampanga (Candaba, San Simon)
• Pangasinan (Aguilar, Balungao, Bautista, Binmaley, Bugallon, Calasiao, Dasol, Infanta, Lingayen, Mabini, Mangaldan, Natividad, Pozorrubio, Rosales, San Carlos, San Quintin, Santa Barbara, San Jacinto, Santo Tomas, Umingan, Urbiztondo, Urdaneta)
• Tarlac (Bamban, Concepcion, La Paz, Paniqui)
• Zambales (Botolan)
• Nueva Ecija (Talugtug)
#Philippines#walang pasok#class suspension#September 6#Southwest Monsoon#Habagat#Typhoon#Typhoon Yagi#Enteng PH
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Farm-to-market-road kaagapay sa tagumpay ng magsasaka
SAN ILDEFONSO, BULACAN: Farm-to-market-road. Nang una kong marinig `yan, napaisip ako kung anong klaseng kalsada kaya ito e nariyan na ang mga barangay road papunta sa national highway saka sa town proper kung saan nandoon ang pamilihang bayan.
Way back one decade ago, ang mga pananim na gulay sa bukid ay halos lanta na kung mai-deliver sa public market sa tagal ng biyahe dahil lubak-lubak o sira ang ibang parte ng kalsadang dinadaanan.
Ngunit nitong mga nakalipas na taon lamang ay nagsimula nang gumanda ang ani at napabilis na ang pagbiyahe sa pamilihang bayan dahil sa mga diversion road project na naipagawa ng national government sa pangangasiwa ng local government.
“Hindi na mahihirapan ang ating mga kababayan na iahon mula sa gitnang bukid ang kanilang aning gulay upang ihatid sa pamilihang bayan dahil nariyan na ang mga farm-to-market-road na halos ating nailagay sa mga barangay na ang pangunahing kabuhayan ay pagtatanim ng gulay,” buong pagmamalaki na naikuwento iyan sa atin ni Mayor Gazo Galvez.
Sana ay mabigyan din ng solar-powered water pump project (katulad sa Brgy. Umpucan na nai-feature natin noong nakaraang column) ang iba pang barangay na pangunahing pagtatanim din ng gulay ang ikinabubuhay lalo na ang mga malalayo sa sapa o ilog ang lupain.
LGU Sector
Congratulations sa 137 na mga alkalde matapos pumasa ang kanilang LGU sa 2023 Good Financial Housekeeping ng Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) dahil sa maayos, malinis, at responsableng pamamahala sa pondo ng taumbayan.
Kinilala at pinarangalan ang 137 na alkalde mula sa ibat ibang panig ng bansa nito lang Enero 25, 2024.
Ilan sa kanila ay mga ipinagmamalaki nating alkalde sa Bulacan.
Sina Mayor Cholo Violago ng San Rafael, Mayor Gazo Galvez ng San Ildefonso, Mayor Roderick Tiongson ng San Miguel, Mayor Ronaldo Flores ng Doña Remedios Trinidad, Mayor Ferdinand Estrella ng Baliwag, Mayor Enrico Roque ng Pandi, Mayor Christian Natividad ng Malolos, Mayor Henry Villarica ng Meycauayan, Mayor Agatha Cruz ng Guiguinto, Mayor Eduardo Villanueva Jr. ng Bocaue, Mayor Art Robes ng San Jose Del Monte, Mayor Reynante Bautista ng Angat, Mayor Eladio Gonzales Jr. ng Balagtas, Mayor Flordeliza Manlapaz ng Hagonoy, Mayor Henry Lutao ng Marilao, Mayor Leonardo Valeda ng Obando, Mayor Vergel Meneses ng Bulakan at retired PBA superstar player, Mayor Bartolome Ramos ng Santa Maria, Mayor Glorime Faustino ng Calumpit, Mayor Maryanne Marcos ng Paombong, Mayor Jocell Aimee Vistan ng Plaridel at Mayor Maria Rosario Montejo ng Pulilan.
Ipagpatuloy pa po ninyo ang mabuting pamamahala! Mabuhay po kayong lahat!
Real Estate Sector
Isang taon na ang nakalipas mula nang simulan ng Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development (DHSUD) ang Pambansang Pabahay Para sa Pilipino Program o 4PH ni Pangulong BBM.
Sa pamumuno ni Secretary Jose Rizalino Acuzar, ito ang proyekto na pinakamagandang naganap sa buhay ng mga tinatawag na informal settler families o iyong mga walang sariling bahay, mga nangungupahan lamang o nakikitira sa kamag-anak.
Ngayon ay marami nang informal settler families na may matatawag na sariling bahay sa tulong din ng Pag-IBIG Fund. Huhulugan lang nila ito buwan-buwan sa mababang halaga sa loob ng halos 24 taon.
Sa kasalukuyan, mayroon nang nasa 20 proyekto more or less ang nasa iba’t ibang stages ng development. Kamakailan nga ay nag-groundbreaking na rin sa San Rafael, Bulacan na dinaluhan mismo nina Pagulong BBM, Sec. Jose Acuzar, Gob. Daniel Fernando at ang host Mayor na si Honorable Cholo Violago.
Patuloy ang pagpupursige ng DHSUD kasama ang mga partner organization nito sa private at public sectors upang matupad ang layon ng 4PH.
***
MAGDAMAYAN TAYO! Kung may nais pong ibalita na makabuluhan at magbibigay inspirasyon sa ating mga kababayan, send lang po sa [email protected] ang detalye at pag-usapan po natin.
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PERFORMANCE TASK in TLE
I am proud to blog my hometown CALUMPIT, BULACAN!
Did you know that Calumpit is known for its rich history and cultural heritage. In fact, Calumpit was once the capital of Bulacan during the Spanish colonial period. The town is also home to several historical landmarks, such as the St. John the Baptist Parish Church and Meyto Shrine. Calumpit is also famous for making delicious LONGGANISA. The LGU of Calumpit recently held a festival called Longganisa Calumpit as part of town founding anniversary. The festival featured the local longganisa (sausage) during a boodle fight in a 514- meter long table. Another of the most anticipated festivals in Calumpit is the Calumpit Libad Festival, an annual celebration held in Calumpit, Bulacan every twenty-third of June. The festival is celebrated one day before the actual town festival in honor of St. John the Baptist. Residents sing and dance happily. There is also a ritual of reading to passers-by as a symbol of baptism. The water may be placed in a plastic bag or scooped from the river by hand by the pagoda porters. No one goes home dry. Come and visit Calumpit, Bulacan! You will surely enjoy too.
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Discover Pulilan: A Gem in Bulacan’s Real Estate and Cultural Tapestry
Pulilan stands out as a premier municipality in Bulacan, Philippines, nestled in the vibrant Central Luzon region. It’s flanked by the towns of Apalit and Calumpit in Pampanga to the northwest and Plaridel and Baliuag to the south and east, respectively. Covering a terrain of 39.89 square kilometers, this bustling town is home to a diverse population of 108,836 as of the 2020 census.
Cultural Pulse: The Carabao Festival
The heart of Pulilan’s culture beats with its famed Carabao Festival, an annual homage to the town’s patron, San Isidro Labrador. During this festival, the revered carabaos kneel in a procession past the San Isidro Labrador Parish Church, symbolizing the town’s agrarian roots and the profound relationship between the farmers and their indispensable companions, the carabaos.
Economic Vibrancy: A Blend of Industries
Pulilan’s economic landscape is a dynamic mix, fueled by sectors ranging from agriculture and trade to manufacturing and tourism. It’s home to notable industrial hubs like the First Bulacan Industrial City and Pulilan Industrial Park, which are pivotal in generating local employment and bolstering the town’s economic profile.
Retail and Leisure: Shopping Hubs
The town is also a retail haven, boasting shopping destinations such as Robinsons Townville Pulilan and SM Center Pulilan, which offer a plethora of options for shopping, dining, and entertainment, ensuring a lifestyle of convenience and pleasure for both residents and visitors.
Education Excellence: Foundations for the Future
Educational excellence is at the forefront with institutions like Saint Bernadette Christian School and La Consolacion Montessori School, which stand as beacons of holistic learning, preparing the youth of Pulilan for a promising future.
Connectivity: Roads to Everywhere
Accessibility is key in Pulilan, with the Pan-Philippine Highway piercing through the town, linking it to the wider Luzon network. Proximity to the NLEX and the upcoming PNR North-South Commuter Railway further enhance its connectivity, promising shorter travel times and improved mobility to and from the capital and neighboring provinces.
Real Estate Opportunities: Your Dream Home Awaits
For those considering a move to Pulilan, the real estate market is ripe with opportunities. Developments like Casa Buena de Pulilan by Asian Land offer Spanish-inspired living with resort-like amenities, presenting various house models to suit diverse needs and budgets. Alternatively, Avida Parkfield Settings Pulilan by Avida Land brings an Ayala Land quality community to your doorstep, featuring spacious homes amidst a landscape of pocket parks and open spaces.
Pulilan, with its perfect blend of tradition and modernity, nature and industry, and cultural richness, stands as an inviting destination for those seeking a harmonious lifestyle. It’s a place where investment translates into a life well-lived, a town that’s waiting to be called “home.”
Source: Lionunion Real Estate
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You need a massage to release all stress and refill your mind.
Book a massage to a legit and certified #massage therapist, NC2 holder.
Lj masseur is available now home/hotel service.
Available din ako sa place ko
Free place in Calumpit, Bulacan
Service offered :
Ventosa massage
Hot pillow massage
Hot stone massage
Body scrub massage
Ear candling
All in one package
W/facial clay mask/hairspa
Cater areas:
#Malabon #Navotas #Valenzuela #Bulacan #Pampanga #North/SouthCaloocan #CaloocanCity #QuezonCity #Manila #Makati #SanjuanCity #PasayCity
Subscribe & watch my massage on youtube chanel }https://youtube.com/channel/UCp5I5xEQWna2lZRgYSBb_oQ
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The Official 21 Lovely Candidates Who Made It to the Final Screening of MCWPh
Last July 16, 2023, at Platform Events Place (Newport World Resorts), 21 candidates from different parts of the country were chosen during the final screening of Miss CosmoWorld Philippines (MCWPh) 2023.
The panel of judges, led by Ms. Meiji Cruz, Miss CosmoWorld 2022 and the chairperson and franchise holder of Miss CosmoWorld Philippines 2023, chose seventeen beauties during the actual physical screening, and an additional four from the provinces who passed the online screening. The girls are now more than eager to start their journey for the national title and eventually grab the chance to win a Php1 million cash prize and wear a crown to be designed by Manny Halasan worth Php2 million. And more importantly, she will have the utmost opportunity to represent our country in the Miss CosmoWorld 2023 to be held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, later this year, and will win US$100,000.00.
The official candidates and the places they represent are, namely, Aliya Clemena Rahman Khan Rohilla (Albay), Amanda-Kay Rhodes (Makati City), Angelli Mae Lim Garcia (Mandaue City, Cebu), Anis Fatima Natividad Azees (Ilocos Sur), Carmella Joy Fontanilla Cuaresma (Aurora Province), Elda Louise Aznar (Davao del Sur), Gezza Ilagan Avila (Quezon Province), Jasmine Orquico Omay (Surigao del Sur), Lara Melissa Gaffud (Santiago City, Isabela), Larsine Grace Orain Jensen (Bohol), Lianne Elizabeth Tabirara Duque (Laguna), Lienel Pena Navidad (Albay), Maribelle Castillo Manalili (Zambales), Mary Josephine Paaske (Lapu-Lapu City, Cebu), Rian Maclyn Ledesma Dela Cruz (Malolos City, Bulacan), Roella Frias Solis (Calumpit, Bulacan), Samantha Dana G. Bug-os (Occidental Mindoro), Sheryl Patalinhog Velez (Mandaluyong City), Thanamae Rojas Cahilig (Minglanilla, Cebu), Valerie Mae Guillermo (Santa Ignacia, Tarlac), and Vivian Vargas Hernandez (Quezon City).
As part of their incessant quest for a transformative and empowered beauty queen, MCWP has lined up a series of workshops and personality development seminars to equip the ladies with a significant change in their lives. From August 9 to August 12, 2023, these activities were made at the KF Camp training center: “How Money Will Work for You” (Financial Literacy Class conducted by Arma Avendano Bacar); “Cultivating Poise and Social Graces (A Masterclass in Visual Poise and Social Graces by Ning Corteza); “Your Best Face Forward” (Makeup Techniques Workshop by Gio Flores); “The Queenly Moves” (Pasarela Training by Rodgil Flores Kuya Enan and Ms. Meiji Cruz); and, “Celebrating You” (A Life Dynamics Workshop on Communication and Confidence by Dr. Jace Chiong).
In the succeeding weeks, more activities and pre-pageant events will be unveiled to celebrate beauty and women empowerment. The candidates will be attending some provincial festivals and visiting historical sites to unleash the improved self of Filipino womanhood and inclusivity. Event director and organizer Rodgil Flores of Kagandahang Flores (KF) Camp is the national director of MCWP. (MBL).
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