The GUIDON - September 2013

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The GUIDON

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1929

The GUIDON T h e o f f i c i a l s t u d e n t p u b l i c a t i o n o f t h e At e n e o d e M a n i l a U n i v e r s i t y

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Volume LXXXIV, NO. 4 · september 2013 SPORTS

BEYOND LOYOLA

FEATURES

Inquiry

BLUE AND LADY TANKERS

MNLF CRISIS

EXILE ON MAD STREET

A CONTRAST OF DETAIL

Gearing up for Season 76.

Conflict erupts in Zamboanga City.

Looking into the Philippine subconscious.

Investigating IPR violations on campus.

Ateneo marks 40 years of coeducation By Athena A. Batanes and Bianca N. Martinez THE ATENEO is celebrating 40 years of the university’s coeducation with a yearlong program of projects and activities aimed to inspire the Ateneo women. Alumnae from different batches participated in the kickoff program for the coeducation anniversary last September 7 in the New Rizal Library. The event, entitled “40 Years, Half the Sky: Celebrating Coeducation in the Ateneo,” acknowledged the “importance of women’s participation in the development of a free and peaceful society” within and outside the university. Vice President for the Ateneo Professional Schools Antonette Palma-Angeles (AB Philo ‘77) said in her opening remarks that 2013 marks a milestone of achievements for the Ateneo women. “[The] young women [enrolled in the Loyola Schools now make up] 51% of the student popula-

tion. We have come a long way,” she said. Palma-Angeles is one of the first female graduates of the Ateneo. The event also featured an exhibition of coeducation memorabilia in the library. It was opened by Supreme Court Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno (AB Eco ’80) after she delivered a short speech. Women first entered the university as cross-enrollees in 1966. In 1973, the university accepted the first full batch of undergraduate female students into what was then the College of Arts and Sciences. Transitioning to a coeducational system

In the 1960s, the issue of the Ateneo adapting a coeducational system sparked significant debate. Approval for the transition was declined twice prior to 1973. In an interview with The GUIDON, former University President Bienvenido Nebres, SJ

WOMAN FOR OTHERS. In her speech during the event, Supreme Court Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno said that the Atenean woman has a commitment to offer her life for others.

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Photo BY Abram p. Barrameda

Philippine Province Infirmary for Jesuits to rise in the Ateneo By Samantha O. Subida and Mariel L. Zamora

ATENEANS VS. PORK. Several members of the Ateneo community expressed their support of the abolition of the Priority Development Assistance Fund. Photo BY francine A. bharwani

Ateneo leaders weigh new pork reform By Billy B. Poon, Bianca N. Martinez and Tristan B. Gamalinda IN URGING for good governance, several Ateneo leaders expressed mixed sentiments regarding the new line-item budgeting system proposed by President Benigno Aquino III. During an unscheduled press conference last August 23, Aquino stated that a new lineitem budgeting system would replace the current Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) in the 2014 national budget. The PDAF is a single or lumpsum item in the annual General

Appropriation Act (GA A), through which each congressman and senator acquires 70 million pesos and 200 million pesos, respectively. The PDAF gives legislators the freedom to allocate their budget with relative ease to any project they wish to pursue. Meanwhile, the line-item budgeting system will require legislators to enter into the GAA a detailed list of all the projects that they want funded. Only then will the money be taken from their pork barrel allocation. With this national issue at hand, a number of people have already expressed their wish for the government to abolish the PDAF completely due to the

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political patronage it promotes. Meanwhile, others approve of the new systemic reform because it advocates transparency and accountability. University President Jose Ramon Villarin, SJ supports Aquino’s call for a line-item budgeting system. “It’s a first step in the right direction. The point is accountability and location,” he said. Like Villarin, Ateneo School of Government (ASoG) Dean Antonio La Viña agrees with Aquino’s decision. However, La Viña said “I’m open [to the idea of ], but I’m also not going to be giving him (Aquino) a standing ovation right now.”

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He believes that whether or not the line-item budgeting proposal is better than the PDAF and its predecessor, the Countrywide Development Fund (CDF), still “remains to be seen.” The CDF was in place from former President Corazon Aquino’s administration until that of Joseph Estrada in order to aid those who found themselves unemployed as a result of the decline in the global economy. Corruption-prone system

Regardless of the rationale of the line-item budgeting system for transparency accountability, La Viña pointed out that for Ateneans react ›› 4

A NEW Jesuit inf irma r y will be constructed to cater to members of the Ateneo’s Jesuit community. The proposed 38-room infirmary is intended to better address the needs of the aging Jesuits currently staying in the infirmaries in the Jesuit Residences and the Loyola House of Studies. Jesuit Provincial Head Fr. Tony Moreno, SJ clarified that the new infirmary will only be an improved version of the existing ones; it is not meant to be a hospital. The building will provide rehabilitation services and round-the-clock professional assistance. For more serious medical cases, however, Jesuit patients will still be sent to hospitals outside. The new infirmary will be called the Philippine Province Infirmary. It will be located near the Loyola House of Studies, facing the Eliazo Residence Hall. According to Moreno, the infirmary’s groundbreaking is set to take place this December and construction will begin in

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January 2014. It is scheduled to be ready for occupancy by January 2015. University President Jose Ramon Villarin, SJ said that the Philippine Province Infirmary would be a good way to provide the Jesuits with efficient medical services. Exclusive to the Jesuits

Although the Philippine Province Infirmary will be located in the Loyola Heights campus, Moreno clarified that it will be for the exclusive use of the Jesuits. Moreno said that the access is being limited primarily because the Jesuits do not believe that the infirmary can serve the same functions as a conventional hospital. It is not spacious enough to admit the public and it will only be equipped to address the basic health needs of the Jesuits. Moreno made this clarification in response to individuals who assumed that the Ateneo would soon have a hospital when news about the upgrade of the infirmary first surfaced. In particular, there were premedical and medical students who hoped the new institution would be used to enrich their classes. Ang Ospital ›› 3

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