VOLUME IV | NO 3 - Loyola Schools
Transcription
VOLUME IV | NO 3 - Loyola Schools
INSIDE Tanghalang Ateneo takes home Aliw Awards page 7 t Former dean rises from Chevalier to Officier page 5 s s t s History classes stage the Battle of Bellarmine Field page 10 Waste trade market turns trash into cash page 4 s Volleyball teams surge, struggle page 16 Remembering Doreen in an exhibit and lecture page 9 loyolaschoolsbulletin VOLUME IV | no 3 | february 2009 we build community we nurture hope Honoring the best of the best T ASPAC awards for outstanding teachers SY 2008–2009 by erlinda eileen G. Lolarga Council (ASPAC), held its eighteenth Gabi ng Parangal at Pasasalamat in December 2008. Recognized as outstanding teachers for schoolyear 2008–2009 were Vicente P. Reventar III (Outstanding Part-time Teacher) of the John Gokongwei School of Management, Michael Ner E. Mariano (Outstanding Junior Teacher) of the School of Humanities, and Dr. Emilyn Q. Espiritu (Outstanding Senior Teacher) of the School of Science and Engineering. The ASPAC is headed this year by Marietta M. Zee Se Ki. Its academics committee, which screens and selects outstanding teacher awardees, is chaired by Daisy E. Mendoza. The awardees each received a cash prize as well as a specially crafted glass sculpture by acclaimed sculptor Ramon Orlina, who was also present during the affair. Members of the university community were invited to the celeReventar, who comes from bration, and festivities included a family of teachers, says a short program, “Teaching is in my blood.” the customary Tree of Excellence ceremony, song numbers by the Ateneo Glee Club, and dinner. In keeping with the heartwarming spirit of the Christmas season, ASPAC officers and other parents game- Joanna Ruiz To honor and give thanks to “the best among the best” teachers of the Loyola Schools who have made a significant difference in the lives of their students, colleagues, and the university community as a whole, the Ateneo Schools Parents Daisy E. Mendoza; Ma. Assunta C. Cuyegkeng; awardees Michael Ner E. Mariano, Emilyn Q. Espiritu, and Vicente P. Reventar III; Marietta M. Zee Se Ki, and Fr Bienvenido F. Nebres ly performed choreographed song numbers and Christmas carols to the delight of the awardees and their special guests. Vicente P. Reventar III, Outstanding Part-time Teacher Vicente P. Reventar III, lecturer and chairperson of the JGSOM’s Department of Quantitative Methods and Information Technology, belongs to the fifth batch of Management Engineering graduates (1973) and comes from a family of teachers. “Teaching is in my blood,” he says. He cites mathematics professor Dr. Mari-Jo Ruiz as his role model for effective teaching, having enjoyed the beauty continued on page 2 A Day of Remembrance for the dear departed Fr. Bobby Buenconsejo, SJ blesses candles offered by friends and family of the departed. The Campus Ministry Office held a Day of Remembrance on November 18, 2008, to remember and pray for departed members of the Loyola Schools community. Especially remembered were Lorenz Tan, Joey Carlos, Gabby Doller, Angelo Brillantes, and Ruth “Scarlet” Ferrer, who passed away under unexpected and tragic circumstances during the first semester. Candles were lit during the day at the college quadrangle. The rosary was prayed and mass followed in the early evening at the College chapel. Excerpts from the homily delivered by Fr. Bobby Buenconsejo, SJ: The reality of death, with all its pain and sense of loss, still confronts us at this moment. Whatever reasons we think of, there seems to be no sufficient explanation that can make death intelligible; much less, no amount of healing words can assuage our pain once and for all. Laging kulang and mga salita at hindi maibsan ang kalungkutan, lalo na sa mga namatayan. Sa katunayan nakaranas ang ibat-ibang guro, mag-aaral, at mga kasapi ng komunidad na ito ng malalim na kalungkutan at nagkaroon ng mga katanungang hindi madaling masagot. I for one went through a dark night of sorrow and doubt: may personal akong mga katanungan: “Nasaan ako nuon . . . bakit hindi man lang ako nakatulong?” One of the parents expressed his feeling as an “endless falling in a tunnel of darkness.” He said “It would have been better if I finally hit rock bottom because I could move on from there.” The endless falling and drifting in a sea of turbulent thoughts is unimaginably grueling. The passing on of people close to us, especially those in the prime of youth, is a mystery. Questions breed further questions. The anguish of grieving is never taken away in the manner that medicine relieves physical aches. You who were close to departed kin and friends have to shed your tears during the long dark nights when God seems to be so cold, continued on page 2 2 L A Day of Remembrance O Y O L A S C H O O L S B U L L E T I N continued from page 1 distant, and aloof, although he is truly near. It is so difficult to trust a God who seems absent or too quiet. And yet in the morning his tender hands wipe our tears dry. We have to wait quietly, painfully, trustingly. God’s time heals. The Book of Ecclesiastes speaks of the various times and seasons of contrasting images which depict the lights and shadows, the flow and ebb of life. For many of us, in this interim season of absence, it is the time to grieve, the time to mourn, the time to be far from embrace, the time to be angry even at loved ones and God. But even as Honoring the best of the best we grieve, we believe that there awaits a season of we ought to carry the torch of our dear Scarlet, gladness: the time to heal, the time to rejoice, the Lorenz, Gelo, Gabby, and Joey. They would time to dance. have lived in vain if we ourselves give up and In a paradoxical way, during these past months abandon our stations, as it were. We have to or weeks, you have experienced a generous outpour- complete the tasks unaccomplished, symphoing of care, concern, and comfort from relatives and nies unfinished, stories unwritten. Hindi tayo friends. The friends of Gelo from Tanghalang Ateneo, the friends of Our faith assures us that all that is good Joey all the way back from grade and godly becomes eternal. All that love school and high school, Scarlet’s friends from Philo and the Ateneo does not go to waste but is elevated Law School, Lorenz’s friends, also and perfected by the mighty and eternal from the Philo circle, Gabby’s hands of the Creator, the Lover of us all. fans from ASLA and friends from Youth for Christ—they are all constantly with you hihinto sa kalungkutan. Tinatawag tayo sa hain their prayers and their current projects in mem- mong ipagpatuloy ang buhay. ory of their departed comrades. Our hearts need to We who loved them can only ask the Father be receptive to this sincere offer of love. that he receive them into his everlasting abode. When Jesus ascended to his everlasting glory, It is our solid faith that happy memories do not he breathed His Spirit on his apostles. He be- die and end in our earthly journey. Because of queathed not only his divine mission but also his the power of the Resurrection, our love for them, values, his attributes, his dreams. People who die our love for each other, every memory of goodbequeath a wealth of memories to those who are ness, indeed, every good thing, does not die in left behind. I am very sure that everyone in this vain. Our faith assures us that all that is good and chapel has his own memorable story, one that ap- godly becomes eternal. All that love does not go to propriately describes Gabby, Gelo, Scarlet, Joey, waste but is elevated and perfected by the mighty and Lorenz. The common thread that binds and eternal hands of the Creator, the Lover of us our stories is the heart of gold that each of them all. The great Lord and giver of life will receive Scarlet, Gabby, Gelo, Lorenz, and Joey and welshowed through in everything they did. Each one of us has a mission to accomplish; come them to Paradise. Science and chair of the Department of Biology. Espiritu began teaching at the Ateneo continued from page 1 shortly after completing her doctoral degree in Belgium in 1994. She helped establish the of mathematics, linear algebra, and operations reEnvironmental Science Program together with search under her tutelage. Upon the invitation of Dr. Fabian Dayrit, dean of the School of Science Fr. William Kreutz, SJ, he began teaching part- Michael Ner E. Mariano, Outstanding Junior Teacher time after graduation and kept up this academic Michael Ner E. Mariano is an instructor of the and Engineering. Her training in the field of commitment despite a heavy work schedule with Department of Philosophy. Born and bred in near- environmental science began as a student at the such organizations as Meralco, the Development by San Roque, Marikina, he proudly acknowledges University of the Philippines–Diliman where Academy of the Philippines, and the Home Mutual his parents’ steadfast diligence and humility in rais- she obtained a bachelor of science degree in maDevelopment Fund (PAG-IBIG). Angelo Ramon ing their family despite life’s hardships such as run- rine science (1982). She completed her masters and doctoral degree, magna cum laude, at the University From his Ateneo high school teachers Mariano learned that a good teacher should always love two things: the subject that you teach and the people you are teaching. of Ghent, Belgium, specializing in environmental saniTanchoco, tasked to introduce Reventar, quipped, ning a sari-sari store and doing household tasks to- tation (MS 1990) and applied biological sci“perhaps if the Americans had taken their lessons gether: “Laba, linis, luto, at leksyon ng mga anak.” ence (PhD 1994). Prior to the Ateneo, she in the Philippines and learned the ways of love High school, college (AB Philosophy 1995) and taught at the University of Santo Tomas. [referring to PAG-IBIG], we would not have seen graduate studies (MA Philosophy 2001; and doc- Her recent research activities and publications the mortgage crisis and the financial debacles that toral studies in Philosophy at present) were all at involve studies on integrated water resources the whole world is suffering from.” the Ateneo. He credits the Tulong Dunong pro- management, environmental assessment, and Currently Reventar is also an independent con- gram of Fr. James O’Brien, SJ for bringing him to an interdisciplinary team study on the envisultant, using his modeling and computational the University: “I miss Fr. OB. Sana’y narito siya ronment, among many others. The National skills to help local and international clients in de- ngayon para maipaabot ko sa kanya ang taos-pusong Academy of Science and Engineering has recogcision-making and problem-solving. His practice pasasalamat.” A scholar in the honors section of the nized her excellent research activities by awardcomplements his classroom teaching, keeping him Ateneo High School, he learned from O’Brien nev- ing her twice in the best poster category. abreast of developments in information and com- er to envy his well-off classmates. From O’Brien he As a teacher, the soft-spoken and petite Espiritu munication technologies, as well as their appli- also learned the sacredness of human dignity and is highly regarded and well-liked by both students the importance of setting priorities in life. and fellow teachers. She reveals that when she first He shares a number of lessons he learned started teaching, she vowed to treat her students about the value of education and the art of teach- the way she hoped her own children’s teachers volume 4, number 3 ing from his own mentors. From his San Roque would treat them—with patience, perseverance, Office of the Vice President for the Loyola Schools Elementary School mentors in science and mathe- and love. She says her growth and development in matics: “Tinuruan nila akong maging makapal ang the university was nurtured by the intense dediEditor Joanna Ruiz Art and layout Exie Abola Contributing writers Ricardo Abad, Enrico Paolo C. Bugarin, balat, nang hindi isuko ang paninindigan na may cation and excellence she saw in her fellow facJonathan O. Chua, Gary C. Devilles, Chay Hofileña, Maitel Ladrido, halaga ang pag-aaral bagaman minsan malupit at ulty members, as well as by the administration Michael Liberatore, Erlinda Eileen G. Lolarga, Jozon Lorenzana, magulo ang mundo.” From his Ateneo high school and support staff ’s commitment to providing the Sri Mulyani, Rick Olivares, Joanna Ruiz, J. Sedfrey S. Santiago teachers he learned that a good teacher should al- best possible environment for learning and spiriPhotos courtesy of Exie Abola, Frances Alcaraz, Ateneo Library of Women’s Writing, Bianca Benavidez, Leovino Ma. Garcia, ways love two things: the subject that you teach tual growth. Having been educated outside of the Interdisciplinary Studies Department, Michael Liberatore, David Ateneo, she admits that she did not know what and the people you are teaching. Lozada, Office of Admission and Aid, Rick Olivares, Ed Ortega, magis, cura personalis, or AMDG meant at the Mike’s secret for being such a good teacher? Psychology Department, Joanna Ruiz, Alyson Yap According to Philosophy Department chair Dr. start of her teaching career in the University. By With the assistance of Liane Alampay, Faiva Cimatu, Tim Gabuna and Residence Halls staff, David Lozada, Jolly Morata, Remmon Barbaza, it is his insatiable desire to now, however, she has imbibed all of these and is Gemma Roces, Edgar Samar, School of Humanities Office of the learn, fueled by Jesuit mentor Fr. Roque Ferriols, grateful for how the school has helped her mature Dean, Milet Tendero, Racky Tizon, Brian Velasco SJ’s exhortation: “Huwag kailanman hayaang both professionally and spiritually. Now she can mabansot ang isipan.” At work, he is doggedly se- truly say, “Atenista ako!” Loyola Schools Bulletin © 2009 is published bimonthly by the Office of Research and Publications, 2F Gonzaga Hall, Loyola Beyond being a teacher and scientist, she is a rious and efficient but can always be counted on Schools, Ateneo de Manila University, Katipunan Avenue, Loyola to be there for his students and fellow teachers. mosaic artist in her spare time. She is also a deHeights, Quezon City As Barbaza says: “Hayan si Mike. Modelong guro. voted mother of four children and wife to Lloyd, Kaibigan. Katuwang. Seryoso sa gawain, habang a professor at De La Salle University. She happily Telephone (632) 4266001 ext 5002 Fax (632) 4266096 Mailing address P.O. Box 154, Manila 0917, Philippines declares that her family has been fully supportive hindi siniseryoso ang sarili.” Email <lsbulletin@admu.edu.ph> Web <http://ls.ateneo.edu> of her work. She singled out her mother, Flora, a Contributions To contribute stories, photographs, or ideas to grade school teacher of 43 years, for setting her Dr. Emilyn Q. Espiritu, Outstanding Senior Teacher the Loyola Schools Bulletin, please get in touch with Joanna Ruiz on the path of teaching—the path of service and Dr. Emilyn Q. Espiritu is an associate proat <jruiz@ateneo.edu> or (632)4266001 ext 5002. fessor of the Department of Environmental excellence. LSB loyolaschoolsbulletin cations in various industries. Invaluable insights from the world of work are certainly a handy edge he gives to his students to better bridge the gap between the academe and the real world. V O L U M E I V n o 3 f e b r u a r y 2 0 0 3 9 SESQUI 500@150 NEWS Law office donates P2.5M endowment to Loyola Schools erty laws and who is willing to consider employment with the SVBB Law Offices, may apply for the SVBB Scholarship. The SOSE plans to conduct talks and seminars for its students to introduce and expand their knowledge on licensing, patent law, and intellectual property rights, among others. The SOSE and SVBB are already actively working together as the former engages in research and development on many emerging technologies. Off i ce o f Adm i ss i o n a n d A i d On October 13, 2008, Sapalo Velez Bundang & Bulilan (SVBB) Law Office, a top intellectual property law firm in the country, donated P2.5 million pesos to the Ateneo de Manila University to establish the SVBB Endowment in the Loyola Schools. A week earlier, SVBB Law Office and the Ateneo had a memorandum-of-agreement signing at Xavier Hall. SVBB was represented by its managing partner, Atty. Ignacio S. Sapalo (Ateneo BS ’63 LLB ’67) and by Atty. Neptali L. Bulilan. The Ateneo was represented by President Fr. Bienvenido F. Nebres, SJ and Dr. Ma. Assunta C. Cuyegkeng, vice president for the Loyola Schools. Also present during the MOA signing were Dr. Fabian M. Dayrit, dean of the School of Science and Engineering (SOSE), Fr. Nemesio S. Que, SJ, director of the Office of Admission and Aid, and Atty. Anna Mariae Celeste V. Jumadla, an Ateneo BS Chemistry ’98 alumni scholar and SVBB lawyer. The SVBB Endowment will support a minimum of two undergraduate or graduate students in the SOSE beginning schoolyear 2009–2010. Any junior, senior, or fifth-year undergraduate, or graduate science or engineering major with above-average grades, proven leadership skills and integrity, who agrees to pursue his or her thesis or research paper on an area or topic selected by SVBB, who is inclined to pursue law studies and to specialize, among others, in intellectual prop- seated Atty. Neptali L. Bulilan, Fr. Bienvenido F. Nebres, SJ, and Atty. Ignacio L. Sapalo Dr. Fabian M. Dayrit, Dr. Ma. Assunta C. Cuyegkeng, and Atty. Anna Mariae Celeste V. Jumadla standing An iconic structure rises: the new Rizal Library A groundbreaking ceremony was held in November 2008 for the new Rizal Library. Dubbed an “iconic structure,” the new library will be located behind the Leong and De La Costa Halls, and across Quad 3 from the original Rizal Library. When completed, the five-story structure designed by Rchitects Inc., led by Arch. Bong Recio, will be the tallest building on campus. Present at the rites were Rizal Library Director Lourdes T. David with the library’s board members, professionals and staff, Rizal Library project consultants, members of the Ateneo Board of Trustees, other Ateneo administrators, professionals, and staff, and special guests Manuel V Pangilinan of PLDT and First Pacific (and Ateneo chairman of the board as well) and Benny Santoso of the Salim Group and First Pacific. In their remarks, Cuyegkeng called the new library a “cathedral of learning,” and David described it as a “temple of knowledge.” Pangilinan and Santoso hailed it as an enduring symbol of Ateneo’s pursuit of knowledge and an inspiration in educating future leaders. The structure, composed of north and south blocks each five stories high, took three years to plan. It will house books, electronic resources, reserve collections, periodicals, and multimedia materials. There will be study areas for graduate students and faculty, multimedia viewing areas, and the so-called information commons, a new concept in learning. Water elements both inside and outside the building will enhance the scholarly atmosphere and give library users a feeling of tranquility and intellectual space, according to David. Below A perspective of the new Rizal Library 4 L O Y O L A S C H O O L S B U L L E New university dormitory inaugurated The University Dormitory was formally inaugurated on December 6, 2008. The new dormitory, which opened its doors to students in May 2008, accommodates 600 residents, with male residents quartered in the north wing and female residents in the south wing. With the new dormitory in operation, the Residence Halls can now house 1,000 students, with Cervini and Eliazo Halls taking in 200 residents each. right Vice President for the Loyola Schools Ma. Assunta C. Cuyegkeng, Residence Halls Director Tim Gabuna, and Dr. Mari-Jo P. Ruiz below President Bienvenido F. Nebres, SJ and Vice President for Finance and Treasurer Jose M. Santos Photos by Joanna Ruiz Cash for trash at the Waste Trade Market The Ateneo Environmental Management Coalition, in partnership with the Ateneo Environmental Science Society, held a Waste Trade Market in November 2008. Buyers of used paper, ink cartridges, e-waste, scrap metal and plastic, and used batteries were present on campus to purchase waste materials from students, faculty members, parents, and offices. Photos by Bianca Benavidez T I N V O L U M E I V n o 3 f e b r u a r y 2 0 0 9 5 notable achievements A gentleman, and now an officer too By Jonathan O. Chua Dr. Leovino Ma. Garcia, an associate professor of the Department of Philosophy and former dean of the School of Humanities, recently received double honors. The Republic of France, through its Ministry of Culture, named him Officier of l’Ordre des Arts et Letres. (Garcia had been previously named Chevalier, the lowest of the three ranks in the order.) He was also elected president of the Conference Mondiale des Institutions Universitaires Catholiques de Philosophie (COMIUNCAP) at the association’s third world congress held at the Ateneo. 1989 and met five great philosophers, all in the space of one week: Levinas, Ricouer, Claude LeviStrauss, Jacques Derrida, and Maurice Godelier. The visit with Levinas (“in his apartment, an entire afternoon”) was particularly memorable. Levinas’s son, a pianist, was playing in the background, as Levinas questioned him about teaching philosophy in Filipino. Leaving the apartment, and obviously still entranced, he missed a step, and “I fell flat on the pavement.” And the perks of being a member of l’Ordre? “It’s easier to get a visa.” ship to Belgium,” he explains. He continues to do the same for the junior faculty members of the department. Europe, Asia, Africa At the last world congress, held in September 2008, Garcia was elected president, replacing Philippe Capelle of the Catholic Institute of Paris. (Garcia had been vice-president of the association.) He formally assumed the office the following month after the COMIUNCAP conference in Rome. There, he was introduced to the A weakness for things French The Order of Arts and Letters recognizes individuals who have made significant contributions in culture and the arts. In his acceptance speech during the ceremony held at the residence of the French ambassador on September 17, 2008, Dr. Garcia humorously credited Fate for his award, for his name, he said, is derived from that of a French saint (St. Lubin), once bishop of Chartres and now patron saint of wine growers. “I profess a weakness for French wine,” he said, “a weakness which can sometimes lead to more fluency in French and the shedding of inhibition.” But Garcia began learning French, when he was still too young legally to drink, by listening to the records of Edith Piaf, which his Jesuit mentor, Fr. Roque Ferriols, had given him. He later took French lessons at the Alliance Francaise, then in Intramuros (at that time Ateneo was offering only informal French and German lessons, held in the high school, with volunteer teachers). Then, there was French cinema. (His love for things French began, in fact, through cinema, when he watched Leslie Caron playing a governess teaching her wards French pronunciation.) Bringing many worlds together What has Garcia done to merit the advance to Officier? He knows and speaks French, of course. He delights in things French: the cuisine, the cheese, the perfume, the cinema, the literature, and always, of course, the wine. He specializes in contemporary French thought, teaching courses in the philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas and Paul Ricouer. He has served on the board of the Alliance Francaise. He has brought diplomats, academics, and artists together—this he sees as his role, “bringing many worlds together.” He has organized conferences, the most recent being one held at the Ateneo on the anniversary of the formal establishment of Philippine–French relations and periodically lectures on antique maps—ac- Dr Leo Garcia with Pope Benedict XVI Pope. What was supposed to be a simple and quick meet-and-greet, he recounts, turned out to “Creating spaces” in philosophy One need not have a visa to be part of the be a breach of protocol. He lingered in the Pope’s COMIUNCAP, established nineteen years ago presence, stopping to give him a copy of his catain Rome. As its name implies, the association is logue of Lao Lianben titled Passion & Compassion: a network of Catholic universities or institutions A Collector’s View and of Vicente B. Valdepeñas with a philosophy department or faculty. At pres- Jr.’s Ateneo de Tuguegarao: The Jesuit School Up ent it has 80 members from 35 countries. The North—A History of Generosity, and stalling the line in the process. Garcia is unapologetic as he tells the story. He knows and speaks French. He delights in things French: the cuisine, His plans as president of the asthe cheese, the perfume, the cinema, the literature, and, of course, the sociation include making Asian wine. He specializes in contemporary French thought, teaching courses in philosophy more visible. The study and teaching of philosophy is althe philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas and Paul Ricouer. He has brought most always focused on Western diplomats, academics, and artists together—this he sees as his role, “bringing philosophy. “The West,” he remarks, “needs to learn from us and many worlds together.” He has organized conferences, the most recent also from Africa.” It was Garcia, in being one held at the Ateneo on the anniversary of the formal establish fact, who had lobbied for the last world congress to be held in the ment of Philippine–French relations and periodically lectures on antique Philippines (the first two had been maps—activities which promote interest in arts and culture. held in Paris and Mexico). The next tivities which promote interest in arts and culture COMIUNCAP promotes teaching and research world congress, in 2012, will be held in Africa. among members of the Loyola Schools commu- among professors of philosophy, holds regional He is also working to attract more institutions in nity and those beyond. conferences, and holds a world congress once ev- the Philippines, which has only three representatives, into the association (Ateneo, De La Salle But all this was done spontaneously, without ery four years. the eye on the prize, which came, at the moment What does it take, if not a visa, to be its presi- University, and the University of Santo Tomas). An advance in rank in l’Ordre and the preswhen it did, as a surprise and in hindsight, when it dent? Garcia likes to think that he has “created was received, as natural conclusion. “The irony,” spaces” in philosophy for young people, which idency of COMIUNCAP—Garcia is an officer Garcia notes, is that “I never studied in France. I simply put is networking on their behalf. “I helped indeed, and given his efforts at giving voice to the studied in Belgium.” Tonette [Dr. Antonette Palma-Angeles, academic voiceless (philosophy in Filipino, an Asian perThrough a grant, Garcia did go to France in vice-president of the university] obtain a scholar- spective in philosophy), a gentleman as well. LSB 6 L O Y O L A S C H O O L S B U L L E T I N notable achievements Bulatao one of Quezon City’s Most Outstanding Citizens Fr. Jaime C. Bulatao, SJ, Psychology Department professor and one of the founding fathers of Philippine psychology, was honored as one of Quezon City’s Most Outstanding Citizens for 2008 in a ceremony held at Crowne Plaza Galleria in October 2008. He was recognized for his outstanding achievements in the field of psychology in the Philippines. Bulatao, an expert in clinical psychology, is co-founder of the Psychological Association of the Philippines (PAP) and the Philippine Guidance Counseling Association (PGCA). He was one of the first Filipinos to explore the phenomena of human consciousness in the local setting. Bulatao is also a National Social Scientist, an honor conferred upon him by the Philippine Social Science Council (PSSC). The book Phenomena and Their Interpretation: Landmark Essays 1957–1989, published by the Ateneo de Manila University Press, showcases several of his notable and popular contributions to the field. In 2006, he received a President Emeritus Award from the PGCA for his “invaluable contributions to the organization . . . and for his sustained efforts in upgrading the competencies, credibility, and integrity of guidance professionals.” Bulatao, who turned 86 last year, continues to actively teach psychology courses and counsel the poor and the disabled. Psychology Department faculty members and students celebrate his passion for psychology by annually sponsoring the “Bu Eagle” series of talks (on its fifth round in Fr Bulatao celebrating his 86th birthday with colleagues from the Psychology Department 2008) which showcases faculty research. The talks are held in September, Bulatao’s birth month. Psychology students also celebrated Psychology Week 2008, titled “Think Psych!”, in September 2008. Erlinda Eileen G. Lolarga English teacher cops Free Press award exie abola By Jonathan O. Chua The annual literary awards of the Philippines Free Press, one of the country’s oldest and most lucrative literary prizes, are not unfamiliar territory to members of the English Department. The latest to receive one is Lawrence Ypil. His essay “Impermanent Residencies” won second prize at last year’s contest. The ceremonies were held on August 27, 2008 at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel. In this essay, published in the January 27, 2007 issue of Philippines Free Press, Ypil recounts his experiences growing up in Cebu, dramatizing and reflecting on the process of self-differentiation. Larry Ypil In its river-like run of images and the easy sliding of the imagined into the real, the past into the present, and the self into the external world, the essay might remind readers of Virginia Woolf, who transformed thinking aloud into an art form. Sensory impressions, memories, reflections, and disjointed facts are woven together into flowing, lyrical, languid prose. For instance, after describing the crash-andburn games in the boy’s play room, from which he could derive no pleasure, Ypil envisions “always, the house. There. At the corner of the room. The dollhouse, with its teeming flock of guests at a party, and the napkins folded, and the food served, and everyone waiting for the host to arrive. Only the host couldn’t get in. He, who owned this pink two-storied doll-house. Because it was locked; the windows closed. And no one was allowed to approach its porch, not especially that young boy in the corner holding the trucks with such dainty fingers, thinking the point of the game was to have the wheels as clean as they had started, and the bumpers flawless, and the cars arranged in neat lines to form a village. In play time. On a bright Wednesday morning. For the boys.” In awarding the essay second prize, the judges (Dean Francis Alfar, Vince Groyon, and Katrina Tuvera) observe that the essay “resonates with the pain of exile. In it, we meet an outcast, a child many times removed from the world he is in: alienated, first, from his playmates, boys who ‘presume pleasure from destruction’; from his family, with whom trips to the zoo feel like a badly acted ‘re- staging of a play,’ and finally, even from his own body that in speech and movement betrays his ‘inherent sense of otherness.’ ” Ypil is better known for his poetry (he is firstprize winner at the 2006 Carlos Palanca Awards), but teaching a freshman class on the essay and reading Geoff Dyer’s book on D. H. Lawrence, In its river-like run of images and the easy sliding of the imagined into the real, the past into the present, and the self into the external world, the essay might remind readers of Virginia Woolf, who transformed thinking aloud into an art form. Sensory impressions, memories, reflections, and disjointed facts are woven together into flowing, lyrical, languid prose. Out of Sheer Range, made him want to try his hand at the personal essay. An essay, Ypil says, “really meant to ‘essay forth,’ to discover. [It is] very different from the usual way we’re expected to write (or teach) the essay, which is: ‘Write a thesis statement.’ ‘Support your main thesis.’ ” While lyric poetry moves more inwardly (“the voice that speaks to itself ”), the essay allows him more room to be discursive (“the self in a more social/historical frame”). In the personal essay, “image and sense meet exposition and discussion.” The image in this case is a room with flowered wallpaper; the exposition, “what it means when we say ‘family.’ Or what it is when we consider a place ‘home.’ Or really, what it means when we say that we have come to love the place, the space, and the time from which we come from. What it means when we say ‘we belong,’ or ‘we don’t belong.’ ” But all that is a paraphrase of the essay, which like all paraphrases falls short of the original expression: “And although nothing here belongs to you in their proper names, you know them all too well: the red roof, its high beams, the door’s edges. The room at the corner where the sun at dawn hit it brightest. The house. This one.” V O L U M E I V n o 3 f e b r u a r y 2 0 0 7 9 notable achievements Tanghalang Ateneo wins at Aliw Awards Awards that one theater group won awards for best production and best direction at the same time. “I am elated,” Abad said, adding that “it affirms what Ateneo students have done all these years to create a theater of substance. It’s a wonderful gift for our thirtieth season. It’s also a fine example of creative collaboration between students and faculty of the Fine Arts/Theater Arts program.” The Death of Memory centers on four people trapped in a purgatorial prison seeking to free themselves from their paralyzing pasts. Dennis Teodisio Dr. Ricardo Abad, artistic director of Tanghalang Ateneo (TA) and theater arts coordinator of the Fine Arts Program, and Glenn Mas, playwright and faculty member of the Fine Arts Program, won major theater awards from the Aliw Awards Foundation during ceremonies held at the Manila Hotel in November 2008. TA earned two trophies: one for Best Production of the Year for its staging of The Death of Memory by Mas, and another for Abad who was named Best Director for his work on the same play. It was the first time in the 31-year history of the Aliw ABOVE BJ Crisostomo, BFA Theater Arts major and TA company manager, Dr. Ricardo Abad, and Glenn Mas at the Aliw Awards ceremonies brandishing their trophies Left A scene from ‘The Death of Memory’ Alum becomes first Filipino to win Man Asian Literary Prize Filipino author and Ateneo alum Miguel Syjuco became the first Filipino to receive the Man Asian Literary Prize for the novel. His novel Ilustrado, a story about a young Filipino caught up in a notorious scandal spanning many decades in Philippine history, won the 2008 prize. The prize is a double win for Syjuco. Ilustrado also won the grand prize for the novel category in last year’s Don Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards for Literature. In their citation, the panel of judges for the Man Asian Literary Prize wrote: “The shortlist for the Man Asian prize testifies to the great vitality of the novel in Asian societies undergoing hectic and unexpected transformations. In the end, we had to choose; and Ilustrado seems to us to possess formal ambition, linguistic inventiveness and sociopolitical insight in the most satisfying measure. Brilliantly conceived, and stylishly executed, it covers a large and tumultuous historical period with seemingly effortless skill. It is also ceaselessly entertaining, frequently raunchy, and effervescent with humour.” Syjuco graduated with a degree in English Literature from the Ateneo. In 2001, he went to the United States to pursue a degree in MA Creative Writing at Columbia University. He is presently based in Montreal where he works as a copy editor at the Gazette newspaper. The Man Asian Literary Prize was established in 2006 to bring greater worldwide attention to Asian writing and authors. The inaugural prize was awarded in November 2007 to Wolf Totem by Jiang Rong, which was published in English to great acclaim in early 2008. Several works shortlisted and longlisted for the 2007 Prize have since been published. This year’s judges include Adrienne Clarkson, former governor general of Canada; Nicolas Jose, writer, scholar and former cultural counselor at the Australian Embassy in China; and Pankaj Mishra, acclaimed Indian writer and thinker. During the recently concluded celebratory dinner at The Peninsula Hong Kong, Syjuco was awarded a $10,000 prize. Miguel Syjuco, a literature graduate, with his trophy Ateneo takes 2nd place at finance competition The Ateneo team garnered second place in the recent tenth Inter-Collegiate Finance Competition (10-ICFC) organized jointly by the Financial Executives Institute of the Philippines (FINEX), Citi Foundation, CFA Institute Philippines, and the Asian Institute of Management. The questions are based on the Level 1 body of knowledge for the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) accreditation, with topics covering financial statement analysis, quantitative methods, equity, debt, economics, derivatives, and ethics. For the first time since this competition was held, questions on ethics were included in the Final round. More than 80 col- leges and universities competed in the elimination round held simultaneously in five cities in September 2008—Quezon City, Cebu, Baguio, Iloilo, and Davao. The elimination round for Metro Manila and Southern Luzon schools was held at UP–Diliman. Ateneo de Manila and UP–Diliman tied for first place on a nationwide basis in the elimination round. The Ateneo team is made up of Leonard Chua (IV BS ME), Charles Ang (IV BS ME), Carlos Esquerra (IV BS Mgt-H), Jon Ma (IV BS ME), and Lester Yee (IV BS AMF). Only the first three participated in the Final round of the competition, held in October 2008 at the BSP Auditorium, Pasay City. The top twenty local schools from the elimination round competed with four schools from the Southeast Asian region: the Assumption University of Thailand, Chulalongkorn University, National University of Singapore, and Singapore Management University. It was a close fight, with the final outcome determined only in the very last question, the 50th, of the whole day competition. UP–Diliman came out first, Ateneo second, and DLSU– Manila third. The scores of the three teams were separated by only one question. For the past three years, Ateneo de Manila has been in the first or second place in this prestigious finance competition. The team is coached by Dr. Darwin Yu assisted by Dr. Dennis Sandoval, both from the Finance and Accounting Department of the John Gokongwei School of Management. Darwin D. Yu 8 L O Y O L A S C H O O L S B U L L E T I N notable achievements Metrobank recognizes Ateneo educators anew The Metrobank Foundation Inc. (MBFI) recognized the Ateneo de Manila University and three Loyola Schools faculty members for continuing excellence at a ceremony held on January 22, 2009 at the Metrobank Plaza Auditorium in Makati City. The Metrobank Foundation Award for Continuing Excellence and Service (ACES) was given to past Metrobank OutstandingTeacher awardees Ricardo G. Abad (2001), Ma. Assunta C. Cuyegkeng (1997), and Queena Lee-Chua (2004). The Metrobank Aces, first given in 2004, is a distinction bestowed on past winners who have continued to stand out in their respective fields after having been honored by the foundation for their achievements. Joanna Ruiz from left Awardees Cuyegkeng, Lee-Chua, and Abad with ADMU trustee Mari-Jo Ruiz (herself a Metrobank Outstanding Teacher in 1992) and ACES (2004) awardee, who received the Ateneo’s PEACE award on behalf of Fr. Bienvenido Nebres research Embodying a lifelong commitment to the pursuit of excellence, the awardees continue to make substantial contributions to their chosen discipline and have bequeathed a legacy of achievement to the peers and community as a whole. This year’s 30 honorees were selected from among the foundation’s roster of awardees in the Search for Outstanding Teachers; Metrobank Art and Design Excellence (Made) national competition; the Search for Outstanding Journalist; and the recognition program for members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines from 1984 to 2004. According to MBFI President Aniceto Sobrepeña, “These individuals represent the best of what Filipinos can become, symbolizing the heights of personal and professional excellence that we all can strive for.” The Ateneo de Manila University was also honored as a Metrobank Partner in Empowering and Advocating Excellence (PEACE). The PEACE awards recognize Metrobank’s institutional partners from the government, civil society, business, and academe. Joanna Ruiz • • • School of Humanities Oppression and Liberation in the Discourse of Family in South East Asian Women’s Writings by Sri Mulyani The new PhD School of Social Sciences Tabloids, Elections, and Democracy: News Frames and Frame Building by Chay Hofileña, Maitel Ladrido, Anjo Lorenzana English Language and Literature (PhD ELL) program of the Ateneo de Manila English Department has attracted scholars from various universities in the Asian region. Of the first group of eight students, three were from overseas and I am one of them. My decision to study at the Ateneo de Manila was largely influenced by the relevance of the PhD ELL courses to my research interests. The ELL program allows me to widen my worldview, while acquiring a critical knowledge of both the Eastern and Western worlds. Such perspective is essential to my dissertation research about the discourse of family in Malaysian, Philippine, and Singaporean literature by selected ethnic Chinese women writers of English. In South East Asia, the family plays a very important role in cultural, social, and religious lives and rituals, not only in the private spheres, but also in the larger public sphere such as in the national interest. My study is an attempt to foreground the articulation of the female voices in general and the marginalization and oppression of women in the Chinese family under the large patriarchal Chinese culture and tradition. In essence, my study employs the feminist perspective that, in the words of renowned feminist Myra Marx Ferree, views the family as “a site of gender and generational struggles, crucibles of caring and conflict, where claims for an identity are rooted, and separateness and solidarity are continually created and contested.” Thus, in this notion, the family becomes significant and central to both the oppression and liberation of women. Accordingly, the family is also important and central to the feminist theory. Such notion of family as oppressive and liberating is pervasive in the literature of Chinese women writers in Malaysia, the Philippines, and Singapore. In my study of the Southeast Asian family and of ethnic Chinese women writers, I argue that as female writers, ethnic Chinese women use and appropriate ‘family’ with its patriarchal discourse as the very weapon to challenge the domination of the ‘phallogocentrism,’ or the practice of male domination in any culture or society. Chinese women writers use the family as an arena of contestation and representation to rethink the concept of the family. This family discourse allows the women writers to articulate their voices and rewrite the history of the family and the nation through the female perspective. Thus, as a result, they also redefine ‘the family’ and produce, not history, but ‘herstory’ to voice out the experiences and lives of Sri Mulyani the muted groups of varying ethnicity, class, and gender in Malaysia, the Philippines, and Singapore of the past and present. During my PhD study of English language and literature at the Ateneo de Manila, I was very fortunate to have been provided relevant knowledge and criticism, as well as supportive guidance and suggestions concerning my study by competent professors and kind classmates. To them, I am the smiling lady from Sanata Dharma University who loves to pamper her friends with good cooking and generous laughter. I try to be optimistic even in the midst of difficult and trying graduate school studies. Taking Ph.D. courses at the Ateneo de Manila University may be a challenging task, but it is also an opportunity to return to my Asian roots and acquire a critical understanding of the family as re-presented in Chinese women’s writings. Media has the power to educate the electorate about issues and shape or sway public opinion. Our study sought to establish whether mass circulated tabloids—long neglected in academic research—provided information and framed election issues in such a way that voters were equipped to vote wisely in the 2007 elections. We asked whether or not tabloids could be regarded as instruments of democracy. Our specific research questions were (1) what kinds of news frames were used by top-selling Philippine tabloids in their coverage of the 2007 senatorial elections, and to what extent were they used; and (2) what factors influenced tabloid journalists in the construction and use of news frames during the 2007 senatorial elections. We looked at three top-selling tabloids: Bulgar, which was tagged as nonpartisan; Abante, which was tagged as opposition; and People’s Tonight, which was tagged as administration-friendly. We employed the theory of framing which Entman defines as: “(selecting) aspects of a perceived reality and (making) them more salient in a communication text.” Framing thus provides the news media with the ability to direct how audiences should think about issues. We limited ourselves to the construction of frames and the interplay between organizational pressures, ideologies, attitudes, etc., and the resulting frames that emerged. This was accomplished through quantitative and qualitative means. First we content analyzed headlines and news stories published by the three tabloids from February to May 2008. To discover the factors that influence framebuilding, we interviewed twelve journalists—two reporters, one editor or publisher per tabloid, and one former publisher. The dominant frames that emerged in the stories and headlines were: issues, human interest, strategy, horse-race, conflict, wrongdoing exposed, reaction, economic, finger-pointing, and straight news. We discovered eight factors that influence how headlines and stories are framed during elections: the political position or orientation of tabloids, journalistic practices, journalistic values, news values, institutional values, ownership and personal ties of journalists, economics, and individual biases or personal values. Further, we found that in the case of each tabloid, of the eight influential factors, some were more influential than others, leading to the the dominance of certain frames in election reportage. Our results showed that tabloids could be regarded as instruments of democracy when they are financially secure and stable as in the case of Bulgar, and if, as in the case of all three, there is a recognition of their responsibility to educate voters about candidates and issues during elections. It is less likely when the tabloid is on survival mode and needs to maintain political and personal relations to survive. Further, we found that tabloids cannot be stereotyped as scandal-driven papers that peddle only sex, crime and entertainment. In reporting election-related events, tabloid editors and reporters alike regard their audience as voters who deserve and need information to make intelligent choices. Chay Hofileña, Maitel Ladrido, and Anjo Lorenzana are faculty members of the Department of Communication. The research reported here was supported by the Institute of Philippine Culture (IPC) Merit Research Awards Program. john gokongwei school of management Artists’ Economic and Other Rights: A Triptych by J. Sedfrey S. Santiago This article discusses the three basic rights of the artist under the Intellectual Property Code of the Philippines, namely copyright, moral rights, and rights to proceeds in subsequent transfers. Originally written as three separate papers for the forthcoming issue of the Loyols Schools Review, the papers were put together to form a triptych akin to a painting consisting of three panels. “Originality” is one essential requirement for the copyrightability of a literary or artistic work, the other being fixation or expression. To expound on this concept, I borrow significantly from American jurisprudence continued on page 14 V O L U M E I V n o 3 f e b r u a r y 2 0 0 9 9 Doreen G. Fernandez remembered schools Doreen’s feast: an exhibit and lecture By Jonathan O. Chua Six years since her passing in New York, the papers of Doreen G. Fernandez, former chair of the Department of Communication, are finally deposited at the Ateneo Library of Women’s Writings (ALiWW). The donation was marked by a ceremony (the 14th Paz Marquez Benitez Memorial Lecture) held last November 24, 2008 at the Escaler Hall and an exhibition of memorabilia titled “Doreen’s Feast” at the Pardo de Tavera Room of the Rizal Library. The family of the late professor, through her sister, concert pianist Della Besa, turned in the papers in July 2008. The materials consisted of 1,220 personal and professional documents, 331 photographs, 68 cassette tapes, and 10 books. Among the documents are letters to and from her, clippings of her columns and articles, drafts of her writings (including those of her dissertation The Iloilo Zarzuela: 1903–1930, later published by the Ateneo de Manila University Press), instructional materials (syllabi, exams, course notes), conference papers, invitations, and notes. Items of special interest to literary historians are her correspondence with other writers, including Carlos Angeles, NVM Gonzalez, Alfrredo Navarro Salangga, Bienvenido Santos, and Jose Garcia Villa. Exhibited at the Pardo de Tavera Room were a small sample of this vast collection, which showed Fernandez’ various interests (Philippine culture, food history, literature, theater, and teaching). Her passion for her work and her joie de vivre were evident in such documents as her personal “teacher’s prayer,” handwritten on a page of Cattleya booklet, the multiple drafts of her dissertation, and the binders containing her columns on food, for which she was best known by the public and which continued to be published even for some time after her death. The appreciation of colleagues, students, friends, and even the medical staff of the Makati Medical Hospital, is equally manifest in the various awards and citations (the Gawad CCP para sa Sining, the CCP Centennial Honors for the Arts, the Metrobank Outstanding Teacher Award), the letters of condolence sent to her relatives, and the spate of eulogies published both here and abroad shortly after her death, all describing a woman most loving and much beloved. On display, too, were pages of her girlhood slumbook and yearbook, as well as various photographs, showing her in her various roles (and sporting different hairstyles), as wife to designer Wili Fernandez, teacher, scholar, and friend—a feast of memories indeed. Present at the ceremony were members of Fernandez’s family, ALiWW honorees Gilda Cordero Fernando and Eugenia Apostol (also Dr. Fernandez’s “best friend bar none”), Patricia B. Licuanan, granddaughter of Paz Marquez Benitez, and ALiWW co-founders Edna Z. Manlapaz and Soledad S. Reyes, among others. After the invocation by Dr. Carolina Nuñez, assistant professor at the English Department, Dr. Leovino Ma. Garcia, former dean of the School of Humanities, introduced the mission of ALiWW and enjoined the audience to donate memorabilia of women artists in their possession. Ambeth Ocampo, associate professor at the Department of History, delivered the lecture. Mark Escaler was the master of ceremonies. In his lecture, Ocampo emphasized the value of keeping records and the lack of them in the Philippines, citing the case of Asuncion Lopez Bantug, grandniece of Jose Rizal, whose diaries of fifty years were unceremoniously thrown into the refuse heap by an overzealous helper (the help, it must be said in her defense, was merely doing her job); hence, the value of such a collection as there is at the ALiWW. Ocampo also recounted memories of Fernandez as teacher and later as colleague. As her student, he was encouraged to write, even if his knowledge of grammar was far from expert, and more importantly to be open. “You have to try everything at least once,” he recalls her saying. And that meant, for example, tasting an “exotic” dish in a remote barrio, with Fernandez clicking away with her camera, documenting every stage of the cooking and eating process. In her response, Besa remarked that the lingering effect of the shock of her sister’s death prevented her initially from responding to ALiWW’s invitation to have the effects and papers deposited. “All I knew was that we were “Doreen’s Feast,” an exhibition of memorabilia of the late Doreen going to see Broadway plays. I did not expect to G. Fernandez at the Pardo de Tavera Room of the Rizal Library come home carrying an urn,” she recalls. Having to part with her sister so unexpectedly, she was reluctant to part with what her sister left behind. Further, the family believed in “keeping what is private, private.” After consulting with family and close friends, however, she was eventually convinced that she would be doing right by her sister if she were to deposit the papers in ALiWW. Donating her sister’s papers to the Ateneo, she also brings her sister “home.” Rica Bolipata Santos, director of ALiWW, finds much value in the donation. “There’s so much researchers can work on with the materials given,” she says. “Materials given also reveal a complex woman who was gifted not just with an excellent mind but a truly generous heart.” Dr. Fernandez was the author (or co-author) of over ten books: The Iloilo Zarzuela, 1903–1930, Sarap: Essays on Philippine Food, Lasa (three volumes), Writers and their Milieu (two volumes), Kinilaw: A Philippine Cuisine of Freshness, Tikim: Essays on Philippine Food and Culture, Fruits of the Philippines, Face to Face: The Craft of Interviewing, Palabas: Essays on Philippine Theater History, and Palayok: Philippine Food through Time, on Site, in the Pot. She was a faculty member of several units of the Ateneo: English, Japanese Studies, Interdisciplinary Studies, and Communication, where she was also chair. In 2000, a festschrift in her honor was published by the Office of Research and Publications of the Ateneo de Manila University titled Feasts and Feats, with contributions by Nick Joaquin, Francisco Arcellana, Salvador F. Bernal, Resil B. Mojares, and Nicanor G. Tiongson, among other writers. The Paz Marquez Benitez Memorial Lecture/ Exhibit, named after a woman whose story “Dead Stars” is considered the first Filipino short story in English, is held every year in honor of a woman writer. Past honorees include National Artist Edith Tiempo, Ophelia Dimalanta, and Virginia Moreno. LSB 10 L O Y O L A S C H O O L S B U L L E T I N schools IS Dept breaks into song for Puccini’s 150th birthday A year to the 150th foundation day of the Ateneo de Manila, the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies celebrated another sesquicentennial. “Puccini al dente,” as the celebration was called, marked the 150th birth anniversary of Italian composer Giacomo Puccini (1858–1924), famous for his operas Madama Butterfly, La Boheme, Tosca, and Turandot, among others works. “Puccini al dente” consisted of a lecture and two concerts. Antonio Hila, contributor to the Philippine Daily Inquirer and now music columnist of the Philippine Star, delivered the lecture at the Natividad Galang Fajardo Conference Room on September 8, 2008 to inaugurate the celebrations. Showing excerpts from the operas, he noted the symphonic quality of Puccini’s operas, which distinguished them from those of his predecessors. The dramatic quality of his operas, he said, comes from an integration of music and text to a degree that, say, Verdi did not achieve. The two concerts were held at the Escaler Hall. The first, on September 15, featured tenors Glenn Gaerlan and Randy Gilongo and sopranos Camille Lopez Molina and Naomi Paz Sison. They performed arias and duets from Tosca, La Boheme, Madama Butterfly, Turandot, La Rondine, and Gianni Schicchi—a standard Puccini program. The encore was “Nessun dorma” rearranged for four voices. Peter Porticos, who teaches an introductory course on the opera at the IS Department, was the collaborating artist. The second concert, held a week later, aimed to show continuities between the opera and modern musical theater. La Boheme and Madama Butterfly have been reincarnated as Rent and Miss Saigon, and the afternoon’s program highlighted the correspondences. This concert featured Sison again and Seattle-based tenor Gary del Rosario singing the arias and the duets; and The White Coats, a group of medical practitioners (Rebecca Feliciano, Frederick Hawson, Maria Lourdes Berioso, Rodney Jimenez, Monique Yabyabin, and Joanne Bravante) from St. Luke’s Medical Center, singing the songs from the musicals. Farley Asuncion was the collaborating artist, and the Broadway segment directed by Rhea Rosales. As an extra, Del Rosario and Sison sang the arias from La Boheme in Tagalog, following the translation of National Artist Rolando S. Tinio, founder of the school’s Filipino Department. For the encore, Del Rosario sang “ ’Sang Patak ng Hamog” from Ang Palabas Bukas, a musical by National Artists Lucio San Pedro and Bienvenido Lumbera, who was in the audience. The number also anticipates what, according to department chair Concepcion Rosales, the IS Department is planning for next year: a concert of Philippine music. Both Gaerlan and Del Rosario were to sing the part of Rodolfo (on alternate nights) at the Philippine Opera Company production of La Boheme at the Cultural Center of the Philippines (CCP). The IS Department has been hosting music events since 2005, when it hosted “Mostly Mozart,” commemorating Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s 250th birth anniversary, with the Department of Modern Languages. Last year, it produced “Music and Poetry,” which featured mostly German lieder performed by Gilongo and Porticos and hosted the “Romantic Piano Concerto” of Ingrid Sala Santamaria and Reynaldo Reyes. These events, says Rosales, “bring the classics closer to the Ateneo community.” And apparently, they bring the community at large closer to the Ateneo. In the audience were not only students and faculty of the Loyola Schools but also alumni like writer Greogrio Brillantes and visitors, including music critic Pablo Tariman and singer Irma P. E. Potenciano. “Puccini al dente” is the Department’s most ambitious and also most difficult musical event to orchestrate, involving as it did various parties (artists, sponsors, students, office staff, and administration) and tasks. Recounts Rosales, “We got help from our IS alumni and the dean’s office [of the School of Humanities] to raise funds. . . . Peter [Porticos] got the artists together, Dr. Hila managed to get Gary del Rosario, who was going to perform at the CCP, to sing for us. But then there were the souvenir program to be designed and written, the invitations, . . . making sure there’s an audience. . . .” That it was done in the teeth of such financial and logistical constraints? “That makes it al dente, indeed.” Jonathan O. Chua The Battle of A biannual activity, the Battle of Bellarmine Field is participated in by sophomore students and teachers from the Western History and Ancient and Medieval History classes of the History Department. It simulates weapons, armor, tactics, and military strategies of armies from the ancient, classical, and medieval worlds. This page The Theban Sacred Band Opposite page The Spartan army inset, left The inset, right The Carthaginian army Photos by David Lozada Athenian army V O L U M E I V n o 3 f e b r u a r y 2 0 0 11 9 schools Theology Dept keeps teachers refreshed Dy-Liacco, MAR; Pagtuturo Ng Hen 1 Gamit Ang Paghahambing Nito Sa Enuma Elish: Ang Diyos Na Lumikha And Siyang Magliligtas Sa Atin, Rachel Joyce Marie O. Sanchez; Paglikha At Pagkakasala: Ang Pagturo Ng Hen 2–3 Batay Sa Mga Palaisipan ni Jean Louis Ska, SJ, Roberto O. Guevara, PhD Human Person and Community: Creation and Church Social Teaching, Michael J. Liberatore, MA; Imaginative Silence: Employing Ignatian Contemplation as a Pedagogical Tool, Sch. Ulysses S. Cabayao, SJ; Worshipping the Lord in and through His Creation, Joseph L. Roche, SJ; and Creation and (Cand.); Creation and Relationality in Genesis 1:27, Arnella Francis D.Clamor, PhD; Creation and Evolution, Edilberto C. Jimenez, MA; God as Sustainer: Teaching Creation through Video Games, Raymond B. Aguas, PhD; Male And Female: Two Modes of Reflecting God, Michael D.H. Asis, PhD; Theological Foundation for Ecological Stewardship, Amalia Teresita B. Rosana, PhD; Creating a New Liturgy, Ma. Lucia C Natividad, PhD. By the end of the course, each attendee had participated in four different sessions. The Eucharist celebrated by Fr. Dacanay capped the two-day program. Based on participant evaluations and feedback shared with faculty, the refresher course was once again a success, not only for the participants but for the faculty of the Theology Department as well. The Department looks forward to offering the third refresher course next year. Michael Liberatore B u dsk i P h o t o gr a phers In October 2008, the Theology Department sponsored a two-day refresher course for Christian life education (CLE)/theology/religion teachers to update their knowledge and skills. The two-day series of talks and discussions was designed to meet the need for ongoing teacher formation, especially for those who are unable to take advanced theological studies. This was the second consecutive year that the refresher course was offered, and the theme this year was Theology of Creation. The course’s objectives are to provide ongoing education and development to primary, secondary, and tertiary teachers of CLE/theology/religion; allow faculty to share the fruits of their research and expertise; continue the development of the Theology Department as a resource for the Philippine Church; and to develop and expand networks for education and knowledge dissemination and communication. Participants traveled from Cagayan de Oro, Davao, Cebu, Bicol, and the Northern Visayas, in addition to Metro Manila, representing secondary and tertiary institutions. More than 80 participants in all took part in the course, manifesting a real desire on the part of the nation’s CLE/theology/religion teachers to expand their knowledge and capacity to bring young people to a deeper awareness of and engagement with the faith. Opening and welcoming remarks were given by Ateneo President Fr. Bienvenido F. Nebres, SJ and Theology Department Chair Fr. Adolfo N. Dacanay, SJ, respectively. Nebres reminded the participants that all religious education begins with a relationship with Christ. The participants chose from among the following sessions: Jesus Christ and the Meaning of Creation: The New Testament Creation Passages, Rafael S. Bellarmine Field 12 L O Y O L A S C H O O L S B U L L E T I N schools Ballet Manila’s ‘Lola Basyang’ visits Ateneo By Jonathan O. Chua The Department of Interdisciplinary Studies, Ballet Manila, and Anvil Publishing held twin events in November 2008 in anticipation of Ballet Manila production Tatlong Kuwento ni Lola Basyang: “Pages to Pirouettes: Exploring Visual Literature in Ballets,” a forum with the creative team behind the production at Janolo. Macuja-Elizalde recounts that she had been thinking of mounting a local production of The Nutcracker. But when she discovered the Lola Basyang books, authored by Christine Bellen (faculty member of the Kagawaran ng Filipino, director of the Ateneo Institute of Literary Arts and Practices (AILAP), and an authority on Severino about staging a Filipino ballet?” Macuja-Elizalde thinks she has found the right material in the stories of Lola Basyang—which are “iconic and very Filipino”—and is contemplating adapting more stories in the future. She also hopes that children who watch the show will recognize the figures in the books and be encouraged to read. For illustrator Alcaraz, it has been an enriching experience working with Ballet Manila. “I hope,” she says, “that people will be excited to see the actual ballet. It’s rare that a dance company has really tried to be faithful to the visual source material.” From picture books to ballets Lisa Macuja-Elizalde, Jonathan Janolo, Frances Alcaraz, Luz Fernandez, Michael Albay, and Concepcion Rosales the Natividad Galang Fajardo Conference Room, and “From Picture Books to Ballets,” an exhibition of the costume and set designs for the production, at the basement lobby of the Manuel V. Pangilinan Center for Student Leadership. Pages to pirouettes The speakers at the forum were illustrator Frances Alcaraz, faculty member of the Interdisciplinary Studies Department, choreographer and Ballet Manila artistic director Lisa Macuja-Elizalde, and choreographer, and set designer Jonathan new books • • • Filipino Family Surviving by Ma. Lourdes “Honey” Carandang and Queena Lee-Chua The Filipino family today faces many changes, both within itself and in the larger society. Carandang and Lee-Chua place the family at the moral center of society—as the place where values are learned and role models emulated. They posit that in order to rebuild the nation, we must first take care of the family. Parents, teachers, and counselors today have a great responsibility—to develop children’s potential, and to ensure that children become emotionally, socially, and morally healthy. The impact of such developments as failing grades, giftedness, household violence, stress, miscommunication, excessive TV, and negative media portrayals on parents, teens, and children, is discussed, and coping methods are suggested. The authors point out that in any situation, the bottom line is respect and self-worth. Parents must respect each other and their children as well, and treat everyone with dignity. the World Walong Diwata ng Pagkahulog by Edgar Samar Binubuksan ng nobelang ito ang panibagong yugto sa pagsusulat ng nobela. Malayo na ito sa tradisyon ng mga romantisista at modernista, na laging mabigat sa dibdib ang paglalahad ng naratibo. Sa akdang ito wala nang imposible sa materyal at maging sa pamamaraan ng paglalahad nito . . . Tinatangka nitong lampasan ang wika ng isipang malay, at nagtatangkang isulong na posibleng ikuwento ang wala o hindi nangyari . . . Ikinakatuwa ko ang mga akdang tulad nito na nangangahas magpakilala ng pagbabago sa paglalahad ng naratibo. Jun Cruz Reyes Reyes) which adapted the originals by Severino Reyes and which were illustrated by Alcaraz, she thought of adapting these instead. Since she could not possibly adapt all the stories (some were “utterly un-danceable,” she remarks), she selected three: Ang Prinsipe ng mga Ibon, Ang Kapatid ng Tatlong Maria, and Ang Mahiwagang Biyulin. The result is an ambitious three-part ballet, each part with its own team of musicians and choreographer. Such a production, of course, was bound to be fraught with difficulties. The burden of making three separate but related sets and costumes landed on the shoulders of designer Janolo. It was an exercise in patience and friendly negotiation, he recounts, as each part of the ballet has a look and feel of its own. Adding to the challenge was that Macuja-Elizalde insisted on reproducing the illustrations in the books as much as possible. (The set for one story consists of a giant reproduction of the book from which it came.) Adjustments, of course, had to be made; the long native skirts depicted in the books, for instance, had to have slits to allow the dancers more leg room. What does such a production hope to accomplish? “We have the classics,” says MacujaElizalde, “like Giselle and Swan Lake, but what Meanwhile, the exhibition “From Picture Books to Ballet” documented the process of adaptation. Explains Alcaraz, “The exhibit aims to help students and professionals catch an educational glimpse into the production of a picture book and a ballet.” On display were the original illustrations by Alcaraz, sketches of sets, rehearsal photos, and costumes. At the opening ceremony, Concepcion Rosales, chair of the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies, remarked how the production was in line with the department’s mission, as it was a collaborative endeavor involving artists from different fields and translating a vision from book to dance. Bellen then gave a brief history of the Lola Basyang stories. The Lola Basyang stories first appeared in 1925 in Liwayway magazine. Since then, they have been adapted for stage and the television screen, and Lola Basyang herself has become synonymous with storytelling. With radio and television personality Luz Fernandez, who played Lola Basyang on television, Macuja-Elizalde invited guests to the show, reminding them that telling stories was the oldest form of amusement, practiced long before the days of computer games, iPods, and other electronic gadgets. It was fitting, then, that Ray Escasinas of the Alitaptap Storytellers should assume the role of storyteller. He read Ang Mahiwagang Biyulin very much as a real-life Lola Basyang, had there been one, would have, impersonating the characters and interacting with his listeners. After the reading, Ma. Luz Vilches, dean of the School of Humanities, Gwenn Galvez, marketing manager of Anvil Publishing, and Macuja-Elizalde formally opened the exhibition. The exhibition, remarks Alcaraz, “highlights the role of the illustrator in making stories come to life. I hope that it inspires young artists to become illustrators.” Present in both events was Robbie Reyes, teacher at the Department of Theology and great grandson of Severino Reyes. Pioneer batch of University for Peace Dual Campus Program graduates The University for Peace’s Masters of Arts Dual Campus Program in International Peace Studies graduated its first batch in October 2008. The commencement ceremonies were held at the Ricardo and Dr. Rosita Leong Hall auditorium at the Ateneo de Manila University. On hand for the rites were University of Peace Rector John Maresca, Ateneo de Manila University President Bienvenido F. Nebres, SJ, Yohei Sasakawa of the Nippon Foundation, Undersecretary Franklin M. Ebdalin of the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), and Victor Valle, head of the University for Peace’s Department of Peace and Conflict Studies. Twenty-eight students from ten countries— Bangladesh, the People’s Republic of China, Indonesia, Japan, Kyrgyzstan, Nepal, the Philippines, the Republic of Korea, Sri Lanka, and Vietnam—made up the pioneer batch of graduates of the innovative masters degree program aimed at developing young Asian leaders in the field of international peace and conflict studies. The program was a collaboration between the University of Peace, based in Costa Rica, and the Ateneo. Over the course of the intensive 19-month program, the students took courses at the University of Peace headquarters in San Jose, Costa Rica, and at the Ateneo. They also worked as interns in various parts of Asia. The program was accomplished in three terms. Each student was generously given a full scholarship by the Nippon Foundation, which allowed them to devote themselves on a full-time basis to their studies. The program is designed primarily for students from Asian countries where English is not widely used, such as Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam, although students from other Asian countries may also apply. It is hosted by the Department of Political Science, School of Social Sciences, Ateneo de Manila University. For more information, visit the University for Peace website at <www.upeace. org/academic/masters/SIPS.cfm>. V O L U M E I V n o 3 f e b r u a r y 2 0 0 13 9 schools Ateneo hosts conference on Southeast Asian cinema In November 2008 the School of Humanities hosted the fifth Annual Southeast Asian Cinemas Conference (ASEACC). Scholars, film producers, directors, and students from the Philippnes, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Switzerland, England, and the United States participated in the conference. Renowned filmmaker Kidlat Tahimik gave the keynote address, and closing remarks were given by scholar Benedict Anderson. Anderson shared his thoughts on the direction of film scholarship and the future of independent film. Dubbed “States of Inde pendence,” the conference sought to address the specific aesthetics of independent films, the role of technology in the creation of an alternative mediascape in the region, and the historical aspects of dependence and independence, eg, the colonial legacies of some European countries in Southeast Asia. The first ASEACC was held in 2004 at the Asia Research Institute–National University of Singapore. An organizing committee composed of young scholars and film practitioners was formed shortly thereafter and a decision made to make it an annual event that would be hosted throughout the region. Since that first conference in Singapore, the ASEACC has been held in Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, and Jakarta. From Manila, the conference will move to Saigon in 2009. ASEACC aims to raise the level of film discourse in the region as well as to promote global awareness about Southeast Asian cinema as a diverse field of study within film studies and area studies. The unique feature of the ASEACC is its interdisciplinarity and combination of theory and practice: it is a place where film scholars, anthropologists and sociologists and cultural activists mingle with filmmakers, critics, programmers, archivists, and other film practitioners. The conference usually includes academic panels focusing on issues facing contemporary filmmakers, history, genre, gender and other identities, among others. Also on the agenda are film screenings and dialogue with film practitioners. Past conference themes have focused on curriculum building (how to teach a field as diverse as sorship. With studio systems faltering, the introduction of digital technology, and the emergence of new cinemas, defining “independent” film becomes a complex and interesting undertaking. Three faculty members from the Filipino Department of the Ateneo read their papers at the conference. Aristotle Atienza discussed the queering of cinema space, Alvin Yapan talked about the effect of a meandering camera in independent films’ aesthetics, and Gary Devilles shared his views about the pornography of poverty in some independent films. Dr. Rolando B. Benedick Anderson gives the closing remarks. above Conference participants pose for a group shot. left Kidlat Tahimik speaks during an open forum. far left Southeast Asian cinemas), national, transnational and diasporic Southeast Asian cinemas, queer representations, the ethics of film making, and cen- Tolentino, Dr. Sophia Harvey, Dr. Gaik Cheng Khoo, Dr. Tilman Baumgärtel, and Bono Olgado were among the main organizers of ASEACC, together with the Loyola Film Circle, the Society of Filipino Archivists for Film, the National Commission for Culture and the Arts, and the Tisch School for Arts Asia in New York University. Gary C. Devilles AtSCA asks, what is the state of the urban poor? In a country beset by crisis upon crisis, the Ateneo Student Catholic Action (AtSCA) stressed the importance of listening to those who are hit the hardest by these difficult times with the State of the Urban Poor Addresses held in December 2008 at the Leong Hall Auditorium. The event featured speakers who have actively worked to better the plight of the urban poor. The first speaker was Dr. Anna Marie Karaos, executive director of the John Carroll Institute on Church and Social Issues (ICSI), who discussed the definition of the “urban poor” as those who have incomes which cannot fully sustain their families’ needs, as well as those who have no tenure of residence. Counted among the urban poor are household helpers, drivers, maintenance and security personnel, and the like whose labor may be poorly compensated and whose efforts contribute to the comfortable lifestyle of the upper classes. The second speaker was Dr. Portia FernandezMarcelo, an associate professor at the University of the Philippines–Manila College of Medicine, who shared her experiences in dealing with the health situation of the urban poor. She also suggested ways in which students can respond to urban poverty. The final speaker was Ms. Rosal “Osang” Palma, president of Malayang Tinig ng mga Kababaihan sa Komunidad, a people’s organization based in Tatalon, Quezon City. Using the vernacular, she described the ways in which poverty affects the depressed community in which she lives, in particular the ways in which it impacts the health of many women. Anna Marie Karaos, Portia Fernandez-Marcelo, and Rosal “Osang” Palma answer questions during the open forum of AtSCA’s State of the Urban Poor Addresses. Accenture partners with Ateneo CORD From October 2008 to January 2010, the Ateneo Center for Organization Research and Development (CORD) partners with Accenture to launch the very first human resources (HR) academy in the Philippines. Locally, Accenture employs approximately 16,000 employees and continues to grow. The Accenture HR Academy is a development program directed at developing and advancing the competencies of HR analysts and senior analysts in the areas of: (1) strategic contribution to the organization, (2) flawless delivery of HR service, and (3) strengthening business knowledge. The program is composed of: (1) strategic HR and development courses highlighting the strategic and leadership role of HR in organizations, (2) HR management courses focusing on the maintenance and management aspects of HR, and (3) legal and business courses directed at developing the business acumen of HR professionals in the Philippine context. At the end of the program, participants are expected to review, design, and present required outputs for each course. The diploma program, called the Strategic Human Resource Management & Development Program (SHRMD), is comprised of eight certificate courses: Strategic HR Partnering, CompetencyBased HR, Organization Development, Strategic Training and Development, Talent and Career Management, Workforce Planning and Staffing, and Employee Engagement & Well-Being. The certificate courses are facilitated by a pool of highly qualified professionals from both academic and corporate backgrounds. The program’s courses have been designed specifically to suit BPO environments, and will combine classroom sessions with on-the-job training through the Adult Learning Experience Methodology. The first Accenture HR Academy was launched in India in 2005 and was hugely successful in creating a talent pool for its entire HR business unit. The Manila-based HR Academy is situated in Accenture’s Manila Delivery Center. 14 L O Y O L A S C H O O L S B U L L E T I N athletics Paradigm shift continued from page 16 A singular unit The change in the team has been noticeable. They’ve become more of a singular unit as they’ve found common ground and a goal to aim for. Before their game against UST, they did something they had never done before: scout their opponents. After practice or games this season, they eat together and discuss what they just went through. “It also means a change in attitudes,” adds team captain AJ Pareja, who knows a thing or two about heartbreak. “We’re concentrating on winning games one at a time. Wherever we go from here . . . well, that’s a long way from now.” Even during the Christmas break the team kept up their workouts. In years past, the team would win their games before the break and fall apart at the turn of the new year and the resumption of hostilities. “We’re conscious of our mistakes and shortcomings,” notes Pareja. “We want to break the cycle.” The tournament is a long way from being settled, and the race is still pretty much wide open despite UST being a heavy favorite to repeat. Yet new pickups in Duane Teves, Rey Africa, Vian Seranilla, and Xavier Senoren have provided valuable support to Timmy Sto. Tomas, Pareja, Ed Ortega, and the vastly improved JR Intal. Tyrone Judes Casumpang, Leonard Christian Loo, Phillip Ian Layno, Kyle Matthew Ong, and Justin Tec round out the Blue Spikers. The team would be even stronger had Mike De Joya and Julborg Africa suited up. As it is, both are in the freezer because of academics. “That shows that you cannot take anything for granted,” says Almadro with a touch of regret about the unavailability of the two. These trying times continued from page 16 can be. It’s gut-check time where they cannot afford mistakes or slippage. The Lady Spikers have endured their forever version of the Dark Ages and have gone through a revolving door of coaches in the last couple of years. But they’re out there competing in front of an audience of mom and pop, three cheerlead- ers, members of the men’s volleyball team, and the odd fan or two. Yes, these are trying times fraught with daunting challenges and tough foes, but remember how a wise man once said that the journey is in fact the destination? The willingness to embark on that journey, sometimes, is all we can ask of one another. LSB Making history The Blue Spikers are sailing in previously uncharted waters. In the past, they had to learn how to win. Now that they’ve tasted a little success, it’s a matter of learning how to keep it going. “Take note, kahit hindi pa tapos ’yung season,” says Almadro, “what will make this year historic is not just what they are doing and trying to accomplish, but their newfound winning attitude.” Now it’s time to make some history. LSB Research continued from page 8 because of the dearth of Philippine cases on the topic, although there is a 2005 decision by the Philippine Supreme Court, Ching v. Salinas, which defines the concept of “originality.” The court’s definition of original—something that is not copied—is also derived from American cases. In my paper, I establish the kind of originality laid down by American courts; ie, only an “unmistakable dash of originality” where “high standards of uniqueness in creativity are dispensed with.” To quote the words of Justice Malcolm, copyright extends protection “to the mundane as well as to the works that would find their way into places like the Philadelphia Museum of Art or the libraries of the erudite” (Paul Morelli vs. Tiffany, 2002) for as long as they are original. I also discuss the moral rights of artists which are not transferable to other people, unlike copyright. Using the NPC-commissioned mural controversy as a takeoff point for discussion, I distinguish one moral right from another. The right of integrity, or droit au respect de l’oeuvre, is the right that was violated by the NPC when it asked another artist to make changes on the mural created by the Neo-Angono Artists Collective without the latter’s permission. This right entitles the author “to object to any distortion, mutilation or other modification of, or other derogatory action in relation to, his work which would be prejudicial to his honor or reputation.” According to a number of scholars, the right of integrity is “the oldest as well as the best known” and “most essential” of the artist’s moral rights. I clarify that such right remains with the artist despite payment of his work by the client. Despite this right to integrity, the artist does not have a right, however, to prevent the client from destroying his work as was experienced by the Japanese sculptor Isamu Noguchi and Filipino glass sculptor Ramon Orlina. The reason for the difference is that destroying the work of the artist will not lead to the same prejudice that he suffers when his work is deformed or distorted and presented as the artist’s own. Patry argues just the same that there should be no difference in treatment since “destruction of a work shows the utmost contempt for the artist’s honor or reputation.” “The Third Right” is about the right of artists to collect from the proceeds in subsequent transfer of their works enabling the painter, the sculptor, the writer, and the composer to benefit economically—specifically five percent (5%) of the gross price— from “every disposition of his work after it has left his possession.” Also known as droit de suite, this right is the least known of the artist’s rights and is yet to be meaningfully implemented in the Philippines. It allows the artist “to participate in gains which are really the fruits of his labor and hard-earned fame.” One famous case cited is that of Degas who sold his work Repetition de Ballet to a dealer for only one-hundred US dollars, a work subsequently resold for $401,000. An interesting development is the obligation of Christies, the auction house, under European Union Law to pay royalties to artists whose works are sold through its auction sales. Christies’ website explicitly mentions Filipino artists as among those who have a right to collect royalties from its sales. The catch is that the auction house does not pay directly to the artist but would do so only through an artist’s collecting society. This makes it practical for artists to create such a society, if it does not yet exist, so as to benefit from droite de suite. School of Science and Engineering On Color Groups of Bravais Colorings of Planar Modules with Quasi crystallographic Symmetries by Enrico Paolo C. Bugarin Since the discovery in 1984 of crystals with forbidden symmetries (the icosahedral aluminum manganese quasicrystals), new areas of research have been opened in mathematics as well as in the solid-state sciences. The most important manifestation of quasicrystals is their implicit long-range internal order that makes itself apparent in the beautiful and perfect diffraction patterns associated with them. The mathematics used to model such objects and to study their diffractive and their remarkably self-similar internal structures turns out to be highly interdisciplinary and includes algebraic number theory, theory of lattices, linear algebra, Fourier analysis, tiling theory, the study of self-similar structures and fractal measures, and dynamical systems. More specifically, color symmetries of quasicrystals continue to attract great attention because so little is known about their classification. Particularly interesting are planar cases because, on the one hand, they show up in quasicrystalline T-phases, and, on the other, they are linked to the rather interesting classification of planar Bravais classes with n-fold symmetry. In this work, we study the properties of quasicrystals by looking at algebraic structures in higher dimensional space (called planar modules) through their color symmetries that appear in quasicrystalline T-phases. This is done by projecting some points of the planar module onto the plane, appearing as a discrete set of vertex points of nonperiodic tilings, exhibiting quasicrystallographic symmetries. In particular, the Penrose tiling, Ammann-Beenker tiling, and a tiling generated by Weber, serve as model sets for planar modules possessing egiht-, ten-, and twelve-fold symmetries. The vertices are colored according to how points in the planar modules are partitioned. This partitioning is determined by what we call a “principal ideal” and thus, the colored tilings have characteristics similar to their respective planar modules. The problem of characterizing important algebraic group structures of color symmetries has been solved and studied extensively for the crystallographic cases, and in this work, the same problem is addressed and answered for the more general cases, that is for the quasicrystallographic cases. As a result, we have obtained for each planar module determined by a given principal ideal, the color group structures associated with the colorings. This work answers the important problem of characterizing and classifying color groups associated with planar modules corresponding to lattices in four-dimensions that demonstrate quasicrystalline symmetries. The results in the work provide a springboard to answer the broader question of characterizing color groups of planar modules in general, corresponding to lattices in higher dimensions. Moreover, the approach in this work hopes to generate a general method of studying multiple planar coincidences site lattices and modules, another new area of study in mathematics brought about by the emergence of quasicrystals. Enrico Paolo C. Bugarin teaches mathematics. In 2008, this research received two awards, namely the LS–SOSE Most Outstanding Graduate Student Research Award, and the DOST–PCASTRD Most Outstanding Thesis Award , Mathematics Category. The results discussed in this research were also presented in the 10th International Conference in Quasicrystals held in July 2008 in Zurich, Switzerland; and a manuscript based on this research is to appear in a special issue of the Zeitschrift fuer Kristallographie, devoted to current developments in the study of quasicrystals. This work is supported by the CHED– COE through the Mathematics Department of the Ateneo de Manila University. V O L U M E I V men’s football n o 3 f e b r u a r y 2 0 0 15 9 athletics When one asks if there is one cial for the system to work,” explained the many-time champion Team, they talk about how their defense won a championship. That is true. And we have to do true great offensive/defensive formation in foot- mentor. ball, let it be known that there is none. As straight For the uninitiated, football simply involves lots of running the same. Of course, we need to score.” He’s gone and true as a Steven Gerrard strike from outside around and trying to blast the ball into the back of the net. Yet per- to school in South America and Asia. He is perthe box, teams win and lose playing their own sys- haps like baseball, it is far more intricate than it seems at first. You haps the coach we need in the national team, but he has chosen to stay with Ateneo. tems that flex and change as the games demand. could almost say there is a science to it. In Euro 2004, Greece won (a pro sports shocker There is a defensive mindset in which a team hopes to steal the Praise be to God. Opponents aren’t as thankful. if there ever was one) playing a combination of an ball up high deep into enemy territory for a quick counterattack. There are few dangerous scorers in the UAAP ultra-defensive 5-3-2 scheme and a looser 4-3-3. But even if they think so, they still want to pass the ball back to that inspire more fear in defenses and goalkeepers Behind their back four, Coach Otto Rehhagel in- create space and form those small and big triangles, find open team- than Gerard Cancio (the others are FEU’s Jovanie stalled either Michalis Kapsis or Traianos Dellas as mates, and thread the ball through defenses. It is a symmetrical and Simpron and UP’s Andoni Santos). Blessed with a sweeper, making it even tougher for opponents logical reason to field four forwards where even the playmaker can good speed, skills to weave and ditch defensive to score. They frustrated foes with their defensive double as a second striker. It is predicated on quick passing before stiffs, and a powerful right foot, Cancio is also a brand of football (that would sometimes morph the defense can adjust. The back four adjusts to the offense; they superb passer who can set up teammates. Except into other formations) then pounce with a swift form a box to augment the offensive or to repel any counterattack Cancio will not be playing upfront but in the counter. Greece surrendered only four goals while by opponents. They are even flexible and can change to a flat 4-4-2 wings where with his speed and strength he can scoring eight of their own. “If you want to win,” formation to protect their side of the pitch. Any coach will tell you do a lot of damage. said the German coach that it would be nice to dominate possession of the ball, but The top striker position goes of the Greek side, to freshman Anton “you must avoid Amistoso, he with monotony and the rare combinconstantly ation of toughsurprise ness, field smarts, opponents.” and a winner’s In Euro attitude. In almost 2008, Spain won using every game before the a 4-2-3-1 formation start of the UAAP seathat would have done son, he scored a the old Brazilian teams goal. Perhaps the true of Vicente Feola proud heir to the three-peat as they played an atteam’s Roger Lastimado tractive brand of passwho, once he got inside ing and attacking footthe box, made a goal ball. “Talento y caracter seem as likely as the sun (talent and character),” rising in the east. as their manager Luis The fearsome four Aragones put it. “It is forwards will be Jolo a system that will make Peralta, Cancio, and the most of my players’ the returning Kurt talents.” Incidentally, it Alvarez in the wings. is the same formation Gab Siojo and Fred that the Netherlands Ozaeta hold the midunder Marco Van field, ready to address Basten, Real Madrid any mistakes in the atunder Fabio Capello, tack. The constants in and Liverpool under the back four are Migs Rafa Benitez employ. Tuason who replaces If that’s the case, Pat Ozaeta at the centhen why don’t more ter and Team Captain teams deploy these sysAlvin Perez. Rookies tems? And if they do, Paul Cheng (Xavier) why don’t they win year and Alejandro Rivera after year? A system (De La Salle- Zobel) in which players are will alternate with aligned like chess piecDerrick Candelaria es on the pitch depends and Luigi Meer in the on the players that man wings. these positions. The Also on the team system helps the playare Gino Tongson (in ers, and the players help the system. There’s the for a coach like Merida, it’s about the quality of their attack and his final playing year with Perez), James Arco, argument that it’s the players and chemistry that overall game. Juan Gabriel Faustino, Cesar Kapunan, Mikhail makes teams win, and there’s truth in that. Merida defies stereotypes. For those who have gone through him Andrei Manglapus (the grandson of the late But the answer is more comsenator and Ateneo cheerleader plex. Teams win because of severThe 4-2-3-1 formation is something that the Ateneo Men’s Raul Manglapus), Kiko Meily, al reasons: the coach, the system, and Benedict Tady. RS Mantos, Football Team has perfected and employed for six years the players, chemistry, general last season’s best goalkeeper, now. It first came as a suggestion from Coach Arnulfo health, and the quality of their remains Ateneo’s last line of opponents. defense. “Ompong” Merida. He had skilled players, for sure, but The 4-2-3-1 formation is The memory of last year’s he didn’t have the thoroughbreds that other schools something that the Ateneo Men’s finals loss to FEU is still fresh. Football Team has perfected and While this year’s Ateneo squad routinely parade onto the pitch. It wasn’t an easy sell. employed for six years now. It is clearly a better unit than the “You need smart players whose speed of thought is crucial one that got into the champifirst came as a suggestion from Coach Arnulfo “Ompong” onship round, there are no clear for the system to work,” explained the champion mentor. Merida who was looking for a favorites this year. There is no way to integrate the players coming up from the in high school Physical Education and as their football coach, he game one can take for granted. Every match will Ateneo Football Center. He had skilled players for is an unlikely poet. Schooled in the Brazilian way of the Beautiful be a grind. sure, but he didn’t have the thoroughbreds that Game, he is every bit a student who tries to hone and perfect his “Playing the system is what got us to four finals schools like FEU and UST routinely parade onto craft. He watches, listens, and soaks in information like a sponge. If appearances in the last five years,” summed up the pitch. you let him talk about football, life, and people, he’ll be your own Merida. “All these years we’ve lost a lot of players. He recalls being sold on it when he saw France sports version of Paolo Coelho. Siyempre meron mga talented na pumapasok. But it use the formation with David Trezeguet atop the He studies and reads not just football but everything. Life. is the belief in what we do and what we run that attack. But even then it wasn’t easy selling it. “You Movies. Books. Magazines. Even basketball. “You can never stop will get us through. Now all we have to do is win need smart players whose speed of thought is cru- learning,” he says. “If you look at the (Ateneo) Men’s Basketball on the field.” LSB By Rick Olivares r i ck o l i v a res A lesson in geometry 16 L O Y O L A S C H O O L S B U L L E T I N For most teams, getting ready for a season begins with training. But for the Ateneo Men’s Volleyball Team, it began with a reminder. Too long have teams taken the court with the mindset that “even if we lose it’s okay, we’re Ateneans anyway,” which is ludicrous and smacks of misplaced arrogance. First-year coach Oliver Almadro, who once played for Letran, is all too aware of Ateneo’s long and rich history. And he isn’t referring to its sports heroes, but those of the nation-building variety. A few weeks before the start of the UAAP season last December, the entire team jogged the Bay Area, from Luneta to By Rick Olivares Baywalk, and all the way to the CCP complex. Before commencing their three-kilometer run, the team stood before the Rizal Monument. “It is fitting that we start our season right at the monument of perhaps your most famous alumnus,” opened Almadro, hoping to inspire his wards who had assembled before six a.m. for the run. The team had that look of wonder and “Oh, yeah.” Little did they know at that time that they were about to embark on something historic. Underachievers no more You have to love volleyball and be a sucker for pain if you want to play for the team. You can’t even hang the “under- achievers” tag on them because they haven’t achieved anything in more than two decades, unless four wins in two seasons counts. At the Blue Eagle Gym, on home turf, supporters of opponents would outnumber the team’s fans twenty to one. It didn’t help that the scores were somewhere in the same lopsided vicinity. They would routinely get trounced, an automatic “W” for opponents. Then strange things happened. Before the start of the Christmas break, the team had won four straight (they beat FEU for the first time in a decade, taking them down in three straight sets) and their streak stopped only when they faced the defending champions UST in a controversial match. Yet with two more matches to go (at press time), the team can go one up on their win total of the past two years just in the first round. continued on page 14 a lys o n y a p Paradigm shift These trying times women’s volleyball ed o rteg a / V i s i t www . f a b i l i o h . c o m , h o me o f the Ate n e o S p o rts S h o o ters , f o r m o re sp o rts ph o t o s men’s volleyball athletics At the end of the first round of play, the Ateneo Women’s Volleyball Team fell to 3–4, with back-toback straight-set defeats to De La Salle and UST. Despite the setbacks, the team is still in good position to grab a Final Four spot. The Ateneo Women’s Volley ball Team is young, yet some think them to be some parts old. It isn’t true because, of the holdovers from last year’s squad, only a couple saw much playing time. So in reality it really is a young team, one laden with potential in spite of a glaring lack of ceiling to battle the statuesque frontlines of opposing teams. The Lady Spikers have shown that they can hang with the best of them. They extended Adamson and FEU to five sets before a lack of experience did them in. Yet at the same time, they’ve surrendered sets to UE and NU when they should have plastered them with brutal finality. And they might have put up more of a fight when they lost badly to DLSU and UST. The team is like a diesel engine: it starts slowly, but once it gets going, it really gets going. At times, the team just takes too long to heat up. In some games opponents pull so far ahead that the deficit is too much to overcome. By Rick Olivares Wanting to win Former football great Marcel Desailly once said that an athlete’s performance is 50% skill and talent and 50% confidence. It’s true. Confidence is born of playing time, which begets consistency and toughness. After all, how do you know how to react to situations when you’re hardly on the court to effect what is taught in practice? Wins make people overlook little details, but losses magnify even the most minute flaw, and nothing is left sacred or deemed trivial. There’s an upside to this because, although the losses sting, the attention shows that people care. The newfound attention that volleyball has re- ceived can only bode well for the Ateneo team in terms of training and support. And you have to like the fact that they so want to win. They have a captain who cares for and values the team deeply and who strives to be an example. They have a squad that has come together after a troubled preseason where they planned their own team-building session and have instituted among themselves ways to improve chemistry and bonding. It’s not a perfect picture, yet even so, they’ve proven themselves good enough to compete for a Final Four spot. They know they have to beat one of the upper-tier teams if they want to make it to the postseason. Gut-check time The losses have been tough and serve as a jarring reminder of the work and sacrifice that are required. Here is where they see what they are made of and how good they continued on page 14