The GUIDON - December 2016–January 2017

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Buklod Atenista mulls internal structure revamp

Ateneo Art Gallery launches tribute to Nat’l Artist Arturo Luz

ADMU President bares 2017 plans

Triumph in the making

The calm before the storm

NEWS, 2

NEWS, 3

NEWS, 5

SPORTS, 10

SPORTS, 11

T H E OF F ICI A L ST U DEN T PU BL IC AT ION OF T H E AT EN EO DE M A N I L A U N I V ER SI T Y VOL. LXXXVII, NO. 5 · DECEMBER 2016–JANUARY 2017

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Sectors press for representation in Sanggunian LGBT, TR sectors urge immediate implementation of constitutional provision SPORTS The road back to the top After heartbreaking losses in the finals last Season 78, these three teams are working for a return to glory.

FEATURES Making ripples: 2016 Atenean game-changers Given all its controversies, 2016 was a great time to stand for a cause. Here are some Ateneans who did.

PHOTO BY PATRICK T. ONG

BEYOND LOYOLA Confronting change How will Filipinos confront the changes posed by 2016?

INQUIRY Beyond area visits The Anatomy of Pushing Advocacy: SBC Organizations

OPINION Who watches the watchman?

BY FAITH T. LIM AND LUIS M. MILLARES

AS ONE of the key features in the newly instituted Constitution, the establishment of Sectoral Representation in the Sanggunian has yet to be enacted. Three months after the election of the new Sanggu officials, the inclusion of sector representatives in the Central Assembly is still pending, with various sectors clamoring for its implementation. According to Ateneo Commision on Elections (COMELEC) Chief Commissioner Patrice Gabito, a “public consultation” will first be done to discuss and analyze the guidelines regarding Sectoral Representation. “ This w ill be ca rried out ideally in the first two months of the new semester” said Gabito.

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TRANSFEREE SECTOR

One sector that has voiced a desire for Sectoral Representation in the Sanggunian is the Transferee (TR) community or the students entering Ateneo from different universities. Mikhail Moulic, a member of the TR community, said that their sector experiences issues that go unnoticed and would otherwise be acknowledged

better if sector representatives were present in Sanggu. Moulic shared that members of the TR community often face issues regarding enlistment. “There were times when we [felt] we [weren’t being] taken seriously, or that other students are prioritized over us, which felt unfair because we are students as well,” he said. Moulic said that they had to enlist in almost all of their subjects during their freshman year, with most of them needing to go through manual registration due to the lack of slots. He said that the stigma of being transferees is still present, making it harder for them to fit in with the whole community. Moulic also added that they don’t seek special treatment, but rather equality in terms of how they are treated with regards to the other students. According to him, having a

representative in Sanggu would help address the “disadvantages” that the transferee community experience. FUTURE PLANS OF TR

If the Transferee sector is successful in their objective of representation in the Sanggunian, TR member Mark Trangia says that their main focus would be changing the aforementioned stigma that comes with being a transferee. “It doesn’t make us different and less of an Atenean if we come from a different school” said Trangia, adding that most people expected more from him because of his status as a TR student. “We hope for this stigma to be dissolved and be replaced with a new perspective that like [students who originally started in Ateneo], we were once freshmen too, only that we came from a different

school, and that we are all the same,” he said. Trangia added that their agitation for proper representation is not necessarily just for the current TR batch, but for future transferees as well. He points out that recognizing their advocacy for representation will prevent future TR bbatches from experiencing the same issues previous TR batches have faced. Aside from equality and consideration for f uture batches, Trangia said that the TR sector plans on setting up a TR organization. He said that the plan started out as a joke but as discussions continued, they were able to draft plans for recruitment and have discussions with OSA about establishing a TR org. “It was one of the topics we SECTORS DEMAND › 4

Sanggunian establishes Task Force SIKHAY BY GABY N. BAIZAS AND LOREBEN LL. TUQUERO

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According to Gabito, the majority of the Electoral Code has already been provisionally approved by the Student Judicial Court (SJC). However, the section concerning the sectoral representatives was sent back for clarification and upon further review, COMELEC decided to have the public consultation. The consultation will involve all political parties, the Sanggunian, and other interested individuals or sectors.

FOLLOWING NATIONAL issues that prompted multiple mobilizations of the Ateneo community, Task Force SIKHAY was established as the advocacy arm of the Sanggunian to sustain engagement and participation in mobilization activities. In her statement, Sanggunian President Carmela Vinzon said that the task force was established “as a space for student empowerment, involvement, collaboration, and mobilization.”

“The task force is envisioned to bring together the Ateneo student community to raise its collective awareness on pressing national issues, increase its involvement, and find spaces of collaboration, all towards our call to action,” she said. Vinzon mentioned that discussions regarding the task force took place even before the clamor against the burial of the late President Ferdinand Marcos in the Libingan ng mga Bayani. The plans for the task force were later concretized during the string of rallies against the burial. During the Office of Student Act iv it ies’ (OSA) Ateneo

Student Leaders’ Midyear Summit held on December 10-12, 2016, Sanggunian officers consulted the different clusters under the Council of Organizations of Ateneo (COA) to “see what form of engagement was best for their particular context,” as stated by Vinzon. L ater i n t he Su m m it, Vinzon and other Sanggunian off icers presented t he concept of SIKHAY to several student leaders. “From the original idea of it being just a mobilizing arm of the Sanggunian, the consultation with other groups and students led us to adjust the

idea to make it an open space of collaboration focused on an agenda decided upon by the larger student body as its driving force for the community’s response to the current national situation,” she said. Luis Enriquez was appointed as the Task Force Coordinator, as Vinzon noted his committed participation in past mobilizations to the collective effort towards nation-building. Sign ups for other positions in Task Force SIKHAY were open to all Ateneans and were announced during the release of the task force primer on December 22, 2016. The sign ups were open until January 10.

KILOS K ABATA AN

Union of Students for the Advancement of Democracy (USAD) Premier Lanz Espacio, along with COA Sector-based Cluster Head Katherine Culaba, Development Society of the Ateneo President Alexa Fontanilla, and Ateneo Assembly President Trixie Beato, convened the Kilos Kabataan (KK) movement as a response to the “lack of initiative from the student government to organize the community’s efforts.” The KK was established as an independent student movement ATENEANS RALLY › 4


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