Here is how that March 27 column item should have read:
"Susan Reyes has set up a company that puts to good use what she learned while taking care of Benpres Holdings chairman Eugenio Lopez II the last months before his death at their Alabang home.
The hospice service targets the families of the terminally ill who have decided to take their loved ones out of the hospital so they can die peacefully in their own beds."
As everybody knows, La Suerte Cigar and Cigarette Factory used to have the Philippine license to manufacture the Philip Morris and Marlboro brands.
Even more strange, the sari-sari store owners and buyers call the La Suerte packs the "real" one while they call those made in Batangas as the "fake" one, largely because of the perceived difference in taste. Of course, both are genuine, with La Suerte being old stock and Batangas being new stock.
Philippine National Bank president and chief executive officer Lorenzo Tan and his guys thought of the idea and came up with the funding. Globe Telecom president Gerardo Ablaza Jr. agreed to provide the phones. And Overseas Workers Welfare Administration led by Administrator Virgilio Angelo provided the venue.
The idea which is now being branded as an OWWA-initiated project is to provide overseas Filipino based in Iraq and in nearby Middle East countries with communication lines to assure their families here that they are okay.
These days, Development Bank of the Philippines president and chief executive officer Simon Paterno also has to welcome the senators and congressmen whove decided to meet half way in Makati for their bicameral sessions.