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  <title>University of the Philippines System's topics - tribe.net</title>
  <link rel="alternate" href="http://univ-of-the-philippines.tribe.net/threads/atom" />
  <subtitle>Tribe.net. Local Connections</subtitle>
  <entry>
    <title>Tai Chi sa UP</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://Univ-of-the-Philippines.tribe.net/thread/377c67c6-7cc9-4253-9e02-371edfde2021" />
    <author>
      <name />
    </author>
    <id>http://Univ-of-the-Philippines.tribe.net/thread/377c67c6-7cc9-4253-9e02-371edfde2021</id>
    <updated>2007-01-14T02:56:44Z</updated>
    <published>2007-01-14T02:56:44Z</published>
    <summary type="html">&lt;div&gt;Every Sunday, beginning at 6:30AM, a small group gathers at the back of the UP Administration Bulding for a free tai chi session. You may want to join us there. Just 'walk in'. The venue is the partking lot at your right when you are facing east. Beginners or new batch start at 7:30AM. See you!&lt;/div&gt;
				&lt;div&gt;
			posted in
			&lt;a href="http://Univ-of-the-Philippines.tribe.net"&gt;University of the Philippines System&lt;/a&gt;
			- 0 replies
		&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
    <dc:creator />
    <dc:date>2007-01-14T02:56:44Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>UP students</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://Univ-of-the-Philippines.tribe.net/thread/81afba67-0e20-4ab3-bfae-f79259aec07e" />
    <author>
      <name>Tina</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://Univ-of-the-Philippines.tribe.net/thread/81afba67-0e20-4ab3-bfae-f79259aec07e</id>
    <updated>2005-08-16T14:42:12Z</updated>
    <published>2005-08-16T14:42:12Z</published>
    <summary type="html">&lt;div&gt;http://news.inq7.net/nation/index.php?index=1&amp;amp;story_id=45468&lt;/div&gt;
				&lt;div&gt;
			posted in
			&lt;a href="http://Univ-of-the-Philippines.tribe.net"&gt;University of the Philippines System&lt;/a&gt;
			- 0 replies
		&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
    <dc:creator>Tina</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2005-08-16T14:42:12Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Blaming U.P.</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://Univ-of-the-Philippines.tribe.net/thread/33e74f84-30cc-45b5-b0b3-4b1e6698a8c3" />
    <author>
      <name>Tina</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://Univ-of-the-Philippines.tribe.net/thread/33e74f84-30cc-45b5-b0b3-4b1e6698a8c3</id>
    <updated>2004-10-25T04:52:52Z</updated>
    <published>2004-10-25T04:52:52Z</published>
    <summary type="html">&lt;div&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;BLAMING U.P.
&lt;br/&gt;  By Luis V. Teodoro
&lt;br/&gt;16 October 2004
&lt;br/&gt;TODAY
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;THE University of the Philippines is in the middle of choosing its 
&lt;br/&gt;next 
&lt;br/&gt;president. If you're the kind of newspaper reader who reads 
&lt;br/&gt;everything from 
&lt;br/&gt;the op-ed pages to the lifestyles sections, you might have noticed 
&lt;br/&gt;those 
&lt;br/&gt;"column feeds" and "personality sketches" extolling one of the women 
&lt;br/&gt;candidates that have suddenly materialized in the pages of certain 
&lt;br/&gt;Manila 
&lt;br/&gt;broadsheets.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The subject is a UP professor who's also a media personality. She 
&lt;br/&gt;once ran 
&lt;br/&gt;for senator but lost, and for this "campaign" she's also using her 
&lt;br/&gt;media 
&lt;br/&gt;connections to the fullest.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;To do PR work she also seems to have hired this former broadsheet 
&lt;br/&gt;editor 
&lt;br/&gt;whose staff quit on her in 1999. In behalf of her client, the former 
&lt;br/&gt;editor 
&lt;br/&gt;has been grinding out these puff-and-boost pieces that
&lt;br/&gt;have seen publication in several newspapers -- and which, in the 
&lt;br/&gt;worst PR 
&lt;br/&gt;tradition, take considerable liberties with the facts.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The pieces don't mention that her client was booed during a forum in 
&lt;br/&gt;UP's 
&lt;br/&gt;main campus in Diliman, for example. They claim instead that she was 
&lt;br/&gt;the 
&lt;br/&gt;most applauded in all the six forums (only five of which
&lt;br/&gt;she attended) in UP's various campuses where the candidates for UP 
&lt;br/&gt;president were supposed to present and explain their visions for UP, 
&lt;br/&gt;which 
&lt;br/&gt;will be celebrating its 100th anniversary in 2008.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The search for UP president is supposed to be serious business, but 
&lt;br/&gt;obviously even some UP alumni look at it as no more serious than a 
&lt;br/&gt;campaign 
&lt;br/&gt;for some small-town elective post. Unfortunately, like most UP 
&lt;br/&gt;students who 
&lt;br/&gt;couldn't care less, the public is not overly interested in who's 
&lt;br/&gt;going to 
&lt;br/&gt;run UP for the next six years, primarily because they can't see what 
&lt;br/&gt;relevance UP has to them.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;True, some parents still think a UP education's the surest way to 
&lt;br/&gt;riches, 
&lt;br/&gt;mostly through a UP College of Law or College of Medicine degree. But 
&lt;br/&gt;even 
&lt;br/&gt;that's giving way to the thought that sending Junior to STI or AMA 
&lt;br/&gt;instead 
&lt;br/&gt;for a caregiver's course so he can learn how to scour bedpans in a US 
&lt;br/&gt;nursing home could be simpler and even better.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;This is UP's current tragedy. Its relevance to Filipinos during the 
&lt;br/&gt;last 
&lt;br/&gt;several decades has become limited to how much more a UP degree can 
&lt;br/&gt;guarantee a good job than other universities -- and even that belief 
&lt;br/&gt;is 
&lt;br/&gt;fading. What's worse is that the more discerning, including some UP 
&lt;br/&gt;alumni 
&lt;br/&gt;themselves, tend to see UP as an institution that at the very least 
&lt;br/&gt;owes 
&lt;br/&gt;the Filipino people an explanation.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;As Conrado de Quiros of the Inquirer said during an informal 
&lt;br/&gt;consultation 
&lt;br/&gt;with UP alumni and the media called by another woman candidate for UP 
&lt;br/&gt;President, UP has not so much served the nation in the last 96 years 
&lt;br/&gt;as 
&lt;br/&gt;done it a disservice. UP alumni are all over the government, 
&lt;br/&gt;business, the 
&lt;br/&gt;sciences, the media, the arts and the professions, but seem not to 
&lt;br/&gt;have 
&lt;br/&gt;made any difference on how the country has turned out -- or, as the 
&lt;br/&gt;less 
&lt;br/&gt;charitable might put it, have actually ran the country into the 
&lt;br/&gt;ground.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;UP alumni have been in government since the second decade of the 20th 
&lt;br/&gt;century. They have been senators, congressmen, judges, and 
&lt;br/&gt;presidents. 
&lt;br/&gt;Ferdinand Marcos, arguably the worst president the
&lt;br/&gt;Philippines has ever had (with Mrs. Arroyo in Malacanang Marcos may 
&lt;br/&gt;lose 
&lt;br/&gt;his franchise to that previously uncontested distinction), was an 
&lt;br/&gt;alumnus 
&lt;br/&gt;of the UP College of Law.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo is herself an alumna of the UP 
&lt;br/&gt;School of 
&lt;br/&gt;Economics, eleven of whose faculty members recently predicted the 
&lt;br/&gt;collapse 
&lt;br/&gt;of the economy within two years unless the
&lt;br/&gt;fiscal crisis is resolved (but who apparently did nothing to prevent 
&lt;br/&gt;it, 
&lt;br/&gt;some of them having served in NEDA and the Department of Budget and 
&lt;br/&gt;Management in several administrations).
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Considering the state of the country, and the pre-eminence of UP 
&lt;br/&gt;alumni in 
&lt;br/&gt;keeping it firmly on the road to economic, political and judicial 
&lt;br/&gt;perdition, shouldn't UP be actually apologizing to the country rather 
&lt;br/&gt;than 
&lt;br/&gt;crowing about how many senators, justices, congressmen, presidents 
&lt;br/&gt;and 
&lt;br/&gt;secretaries of economic development and planning it has contributed 
&lt;br/&gt;to the 
&lt;br/&gt;government - not to mention the hordes of crooked lawyers, operators 
&lt;br/&gt;and 
&lt;br/&gt;corrupt businessmen it's graduated?
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;But of even greater interest is how UP can change all that in the 
&lt;br/&gt;future, 
&lt;br/&gt;in terms of how the training it provides can actually make people 
&lt;br/&gt;ethical 
&lt;br/&gt;as well as skilled-in the arts of governance, for example, or in the 
&lt;br/&gt;practice of law, or, for that matter, in the mass media - so that, if 
&lt;br/&gt;they 
&lt;br/&gt;do end up in government, they can help end corruption rather than 
&lt;br/&gt;contribute to it.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In addition, it was asked during the same consultation, can't UP 
&lt;br/&gt;training 
&lt;br/&gt;do something about the "departure-lounge syndrome" -- meaning the 
&lt;br/&gt;widespread desire to leave the country to make money abroad the 
&lt;br/&gt;minute one 
&lt;br/&gt;gets a diploma? It's not only the graduates of Fatima College of 
&lt;br/&gt;Medicine 
&lt;br/&gt;who make for the airport upon passing the Medical Board exams, after 
&lt;br/&gt;all. 
&lt;br/&gt;Entire UP College of Medicine classes have also been known to leave 
&lt;br/&gt;for the 
&lt;br/&gt;US within months of graduation.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Both can of course be done, even if some of those in UP's current 
&lt;br/&gt;central 
&lt;br/&gt;leadership passionately and cynically believe otherwise. But it will 
&lt;br/&gt;require UP's re-engagement with the public first of all, so that it 
&lt;br/&gt;will be 
&lt;br/&gt;perceived as it really is -- an intellectual resource for the nation, 
&lt;br/&gt;rather than, at best, a path to riches very much like Ali Baba's 
&lt;br/&gt;password 
&lt;br/&gt;to the fabled cave of the Forty Thieves - or, at worst, as a clutch 
&lt;br/&gt;of 
&lt;br/&gt;aliens living on another planet they call "Excellence" while the 
&lt;br/&gt;country 
&lt;br/&gt;goes to hell.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Re-engagement would mean UP's talking to the public by, among other 
&lt;br/&gt;means, 
&lt;br/&gt;making its position known on the issues that concern Filipinos, 
&lt;br/&gt;whether it 
&lt;br/&gt;be hunger or the state of local TV, amending
&lt;br/&gt;the Constitution or the encouragement of arts and letters, human 
&lt;br/&gt;rights 
&lt;br/&gt;violations or foreign policy.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Individual faculty members do make the results of their research and 
&lt;br/&gt;their 
&lt;br/&gt;views on these and other issues known now and then, just like the 
&lt;br/&gt;School of 
&lt;br/&gt;Economics 11 did. But these have been few and far
&lt;br/&gt;between, and far from an institutional effort.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Beyond a sustained effort to talk to the people, UP should also be 
&lt;br/&gt;listening to what the people are saying, in a continuing national 
&lt;br/&gt;dialogue 
&lt;br/&gt;that should make it an institution the citizenry can rely on
&lt;br/&gt;to make sense of the complexities of this society, and what can be 
&lt;br/&gt;done to 
&lt;br/&gt;address its many problems.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Meanwhile, within UP itself, training in the various disciplines 
&lt;br/&gt;should 
&lt;br/&gt;include a strong ethical component (in only a handful of disciplines 
&lt;br/&gt;are 
&lt;br/&gt;there now courses in ethics) as well as an emphasis on this country's 
&lt;br/&gt;history, how Philippine society works, how it can be changed for the 
&lt;br/&gt;better, and what values should guide it - the classical tasks of the 
&lt;br/&gt;social 
&lt;br/&gt;sciences as well as of the humanities.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The cynical -- and some are at the very top of the UP administration -
&lt;br/&gt;- 
&lt;br/&gt;will say it won't work, however. It's a view that would leave things 
&lt;br/&gt;the 
&lt;br/&gt;way they are in both the University of the Philippines as well as 
&lt;br/&gt;government and society at large. It's also violently at odds with 
&lt;br/&gt;that most 
&lt;br/&gt;fundamental assumption of all that should inform all educational 
&lt;br/&gt;institutions: that people can learn, and in learning, make a 
&lt;br/&gt;difference 
&lt;br/&gt;even in a society as hopelessly mired in its own corruption and 
&lt;br/&gt;deceit as 
&lt;br/&gt;Philippine society is.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;UP has no other recourse but to find the road that would lead to 
&lt;br/&gt;something 
&lt;br/&gt;other than collective perdition. Otherwise the Filipino people might 
&lt;br/&gt;as 
&lt;br/&gt;well save their money and shut down UP, or else just
&lt;br/&gt;keep it hobbling along in slow decay. Its sole consolation would then 
&lt;br/&gt;be 
&lt;br/&gt;only the fact that, at least, Maj. Gen. Carlos F. Garcia and all 
&lt;br/&gt;those 
&lt;br/&gt;stalwarts of Philippine Military Academy class 1971 now under 
&lt;br/&gt;investigation 
&lt;br/&gt;for corruption and various other offenses are not its alumni, and 
&lt;br/&gt;that 
&lt;br/&gt;there's actually a school other than UP Filipinos can blame for the 
&lt;br/&gt;country's woes.
&lt;br/&gt;&lt;/div&gt;
				&lt;div&gt;
			posted in
			&lt;a href="http://Univ-of-the-Philippines.tribe.net"&gt;University of the Philippines System&lt;/a&gt;
			- 0 replies
		&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
    <dc:creator>Tina</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2004-10-25T04:52:52Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Pinat wins it big in London</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://Univ-of-the-Philippines.tribe.net/thread/75a3dfcf-5c5c-4b14-a7c6-a65554b711e7" />
    <author>
      <name>Tina</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://Univ-of-the-Philippines.tribe.net/thread/75a3dfcf-5c5c-4b14-a7c6-a65554b711e7</id>
    <updated>2004-05-25T16:34:18Z</updated>
    <published>2004-05-25T16:34:18Z</published>
    <summary type="html">&lt;div&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Pinay wins it big in London
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;By Alfred Yuson
&lt;br/&gt;The Philippine Star 05/16/2004
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Patricia Evangelista, a 19-year-old, Mass Communications
&lt;br/&gt;sophomore of University of the Philippines (UP)-Diliman, did the
&lt;br/&gt;country proud Friday night by besting 59 other student contestants from 37 countries in the 2004 International Public Speaking
&lt;br/&gt;competition conducted by the English Speaking Union (ESU)
&lt;br/&gt;in London.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;She triumphed over a field of exactly 60 speakers from all
&lt;br/&gt;over the English-speaking world, including the United States,
&lt;br/&gt;United Kingdom and Australia, reported Maranan.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;The board of judges' decision was unanimous, according to
&lt;br/&gt;contest chairman Brian Hanharan of the British Broadcasting Corp.
&lt;br/&gt;(BBC).
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;         PATRICIA'S SHORT SPEECH WORTH READING....
&lt;br/&gt;        ========================================
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;         BLONDE AND BLUE EYES
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;"When I was little, I wanted what many Filipino children all
&lt;br/&gt;over the country wanted. I wanted to be blond, blue-eyed, and white.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;I thought -- if I just wished hard enough and was good
&lt;br/&gt;enough, I'd  wake up on Christmas morning with snow outside my window
&lt;br/&gt;and  freckles across my nose!
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;More than four centuries under western domination does
&lt;br/&gt;that to you. I have sixteen cousins. In a couple of years, there will
&lt;br/&gt;just be five of us left in the Philippines, the rest will have
&lt;br/&gt;gone abroad in search of "greener pastures." It's not just an
&lt;br/&gt;anomaly; it's a trend; the Filipino diaspora. Today, about eight 
&lt;br/&gt;million
&lt;br/&gt;Filipinos are scattered around the world.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;There are those who disapprove of Filipinos who choose to
&lt;br/&gt;leave. I used to. Maybe this is a natural reaction of someone who
&lt;br/&gt;was left behind, smiling for family pictures that get emptier with
&lt;br/&gt;each succeeding year. Desertion, I called it.  My country is a
&lt;br/&gt;land  that has perpetually fought for the freedom to be itself. Our
&lt;br/&gt;heroes offered their lives in the struggle against the Spanish,
&lt;br/&gt;the Japanese, the Americans. To pack up and deny that
&lt;br/&gt;identity is tantamount to spitting on that sacrifice.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Or is it? I don't think so, not anymore. True, there is
&lt;br/&gt;no denying this phenomenon, aided by the fact that what was once
&lt;br/&gt;the other side of the world is now a twelve-hour plane ride away.
&lt;br/&gt;But this is a borderless world, where no individual can claim
&lt;br/&gt;to be purely from where he is now. My mother is of Chinese descent,
&lt;br/&gt;my father is a quarter Spanish, and I call myself a pure Filipino-a
&lt;br/&gt;hybrid of sorts resulting from a combination of cultures.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Each square mile anywhere in the world is made up of
&lt;br/&gt;people of different ethnicities, with national identities and
&lt;br/&gt;individual personalities. Because of this, each square mile is
&lt;br/&gt;already a microcosm of the world. In as much as this blessed spot
&lt;br/&gt;that is England is the world, so is my neighbourhood back home.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Seen this way, the Filipino Diaspora, or any sort of
&lt;br/&gt;dispersal of populations, is not as ominous as so many claim. It must
&lt;br/&gt;be understood. I come from a Third World country, one that
&lt;br/&gt;Is still trying mightily to get back on its feet after many years
&lt;br/&gt;of dictatorship. But we shall make it, given more time.
&lt;br/&gt;Especially now, when we have thousands of eager young
&lt;br/&gt;minds who graduate from  college every year. They have skills.
&lt;br/&gt;They need jobs. We cannot absorb them all.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;  A borderless world presents a bigger opportunity, yet one
&lt;br/&gt;that is not so much abandonment but an extension of identity.
&lt;br/&gt;Even as we take, we give back. We are the 40,000 skilled nurses
&lt;br/&gt;who support the UK's National Health Service. We are the
&lt;br/&gt;quarter-of-a-million seafarers manning most of the
&lt;br/&gt;  world's commercial ships. We are your software engineers in
&lt;br/&gt;Ireland, your construction workers in the Middle East, your doctors
&lt;br/&gt;and caregivers in North America, and, your musical artists in
&lt;br/&gt;London's West End. Nationalism isn't bound by time or place.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;People from other nations migrate to create new nations, yet still 
&lt;br/&gt;remain
&lt;br/&gt;essentially who they are. British society is itself an example of a
&lt;br/&gt;multi-cultural nation, a melting pot of races, religions, arts and
&lt;br/&gt;cultures. We are, indeed, in a borderless world!
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;Leaving sometimes isn't a matter of choice. It's coming
&lt;br/&gt;back that is. The Hobbits of the shire travelled all over
&lt;br/&gt;Middle-Earth, but they chose to come home, richer in every sense of 
&lt;br/&gt;the
&lt;br/&gt;word. We call people like these balikbayans or the 'returnees' -- 
&lt;br/&gt;those
&lt;br/&gt;who followed their dream, yet choose to return and share
&lt;br/&gt;their mature talents and good fortune.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;In a few years, I may take advantage of whatever
&lt;br/&gt;opportunities come my way. But I will come home. A borderless
&lt;br/&gt;world doesn't preclude the idea of a home. I'm a Filipino, and I'll 
&lt;br/&gt;always
&lt;br/&gt;be one. It isn't about just geography; it isn't about boundaries. It's
&lt;br/&gt;about giving back to the country that shaped me.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;And that's going to be more important to me than seeing
&lt;br/&gt;snow outside my windows on a bright Christmas morning.
&lt;br/&gt;
&lt;br/&gt;"Mabuhay and Thank you." 
&lt;br/&gt;&lt;/div&gt;
				&lt;div&gt;
			posted in
			&lt;a href="http://Univ-of-the-Philippines.tribe.net"&gt;University of the Philippines System&lt;/a&gt;
			- 0 replies
		&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
    <dc:creator>Tina</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2004-05-25T16:34:18Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
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