Learn ‘the ropes’ to get in shape
Always aim to be stronger, not skinnier. After all, strong is the new skinny, says Ole Eugenio, co-designer of Core Suspend. Your body weight, he said, will eventually drop.
Always aim to be stronger, not skinnier. After all, strong is the new skinny, says Ole Eugenio, co-designer of Core Suspend. Your body weight, he said, will eventually drop.
Throughout the 25 years that I have been writing this column in the Inquirer and anchoring a radio program on DZMM, I have been asked numerous questions, which I believe I have been able to answer satisfactorily.
Once again, my column today is dedicated to numerous questions and answers you seek.
Without a doubt, the most popular and most widespread Catholic devotion in the Philippines is the Santo Niño, the devotion to the Holy Infant of Jesus. Proof of this is that while having originated from the Visayas, it has fanned out to all the ends of the archipelago.
This year’s National Heritage Month celebration will focus on the traditional Santacruzan and Flores de Maria.
Prima ballerina Lisa Macuja-Elizalde is a firm believer that local audiences should be exposed not just to the wealth of ballet talents here, but also those abroad.
The exhibit “Pioneers of Philippine Art” at Ayala Museum features the works of Filipino masters Juan Luna, Fernando Amorsolo and Fernando Zobel.
“Everyday Things” dwells, it is true, on daily rhythms of living in California and Manila. The routine is “stronger than us and more durable,” its title poem affirms.
Like any would-be symbologists, readers encountering the cover of Dan Brown’s newest novel “Inferno: A Novel” (Doubleday, New York, 2013, 463 pages) for the first time should examine its elements.
The latest in global fashion, beauty, and culture through a contemporary Filipino perspective.