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Bartolome to swim for UP

AFTER a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) against UAAP’s two-year residency rule was issued by former University of Santo Tomas (UST) junior swimmer Mikee Bartolome, the association has decided to allow her to participate in the season 76.

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     AFTER a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) against UAAP’s two-year residency rule was issued by former University of Santo Tomas (UST) junior swimmer Mikee Bartolome, the association has decided to allow her to participate in the season 76.

     “She’s on the UP swim line-up. No choice but again respect the TRO, or else ma-contempt naman kami,” UAAP secretary-treasurer Malou Isip said in a text message to abs-cbnnews.com.

     Bartolome complained against UST and the UAAP after she was barred from swimming with the University of the Philippines (UP) Varsity Swimming Team in effect of the said residency rule.

     Filed last August 28 and issued by the Quezon City Regional Trial Court Branch 226, the complaint stated that the rule is “arbitrary, whimsical, oppressive and high-handed.”

     “It violates plaintiff’s constitutional right to the protection of her physical, moral, intellectual and social well-being,” it added.

     Bartolome was UAAP Season 72’s Rookie of the Year who was awarded ten gold, five silver and four bronze medals in the league’s competition. She had also won the MVP award twice in during the UST Athletes’ Night.

     Amid her victories under UST, she transferred to UP because she wanted to “fulfill her life-long dream of studying and competing for the country’s premiere state university.”

     Prof. Ariel Primo Juliano, UP’s Varsity Sports Office Director, wrote to UST in a letter addressed to Sports Director, Fr. Ermito de Sagun, O.P., requesting the university to “possibly release her so that [they] could provide her scholarship and to ease the burden of tuition payment of her family.” The letter, dated April 23, was allegedly unanswered, leaving Bartolome to sit down for the next two UAAP seasons, and with her family having to pay for her tuition fee for two years.

     With the TRO being in effect for 20 days, starting from the receipt of the order, Judge Manuel Sta. Cruz ordered the UAAP to “cease and desist from imposing the two-year residency rule” and “allow the plaintiff to be eligible in the UP swimming line-up,” just in time for the submission of the final roster on September 4 for the tournament, which is to be held on September 19-22 at the Trace Aquatics Center, Laguna.

     Meanwhile, the UAAP had sent a memorandum to the court which countered that “playing in the league is not a right, but a mere privilege.” Aside from that, the association stated that the residency rule does not violate the Constitution and doesn’t suppress the students’ freedom of choice.

     Last March, the UAAP board decided to increase the years required for a player to sit out from one year to two years, raising criticism from netizens and from Senate Committee on Youth, Women and Family Relations chair Pia Cayetano.

     On May, the UAAP board decided to soften the rule, allowing athletes who transferred to another college to immediately play for them – only if, they have secured a release from their former schools.

By Xavier Allen C. Gregorio

 

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Thomasian innovation bested others in the Metro

A mere escape from summer boredom hailed two Engineering Thomasians victorious in the recent Manila Bay Cleanup competition, launched by the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) in April.

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     A mere escape from summer boredom hailed two Engineering Thomasians victorious in the recent Manila Bay Cleanup competition, launched by the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) in April.

     Fourth year Electronics Communication Engineering (ECE) students John Beljoe Abao and Ariel Manalaysay had outclassed seven other competing schools with their giant dustpan-like entry, which, according to them is based on simple logic and imagination, and practically out of the boredom during the vacation.

     “Nung summer walang magawa, and opportunity din naman ‘yon,” Abao said, referring to the contest.

     With the theme “Innovative Engineering Solutions to the Manila Bay Garbage Problem,” the contest encouraged student participants to devise creative contraptions that may eventually be improved and produced by the MMDA.

     “It (the prototype) is V-shaped and it has a hole in the middle where a concrete storage is placed,” Abao said.

     With big waves in the bay, floating debris and trash will be swept into the chute and into the tank, “just merely collecting the trash into the bin.”

Competition

     The Thomasian duo took three days of brainstorming, a day to formulate the concept paper, and only a span of two hours to construct the model. But despite the short amount of time, they were “confident” about their prototype.

     “One down, one down,” Abao said when asked what did they feel when they saw other participants’ prototype. According to the duo, the edge of their prototype compared to others’ was the “feasibility to implement because of its simplicity.”

     The prototype brought to the defense is made up of only cardboard, masking tape, and illustration board while other participants’ proposals were more technical and even made use of mathematical computations.

     The real inspiration behind the innovation, according to Abao, is the fulfillment of seeing his idea being implemented to help improve the Manila Bay.

     “Kuha lang ng kuha. When the opportunity comes, grab without hesitation,” Abao and Manalaysay said, advising the Thomasian community to be ready when opportunity knocks.

     According to an article in Inquirer, Department of Public Works and Highway (DPWH) Assistant Secretary Maria Catalina Cabral said that in choosing the winning design they looked for “innovation and engineering.”

     “The concept is doable. We saw there was potential for this to be built and developed. MMDA and DOST will make more studies to develop and make more improvements on this proposal,” Cabral added in the said article.

     The duo received P25,000 cash prize along with Certificate of Recognition.

     Other participating schools included Ateneo de Manila University, University of the Philippines-Diliman, Manuel L. Quezon University and Mapua Institute of Technology.

By Mia Mallari and Romhelyn Benipayo
Photo courtesy of John Beljoe Abao

 

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Big News Row 3

UP is only PH school in Times Higher Education rankings

UST last appeared in the list in 2008, when it ranked in the top 500 along with La Salle.

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The University of the Philippines was the only Philippine university that made it in this year’s Times Higher Education world university ranking.

 

UP earned a spot in the 800+ bracket after getting a score of 13.5 based from the following indicators: teaching, research, citations, international outlook and industry income.

 

The University of Santo Tomas, Ateneo de Manila University and De La Salle University did not make the cut.

 

UST last appeared in the list in 2008, when it ranked in the top 500 along with La Salle.

 

United Kingdom’s University of Oxford topped this year’s list.

 

In the 2010 Asian rankings, UST shared the 101st spot with Japan’s Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology and Thailand’s Prince of Songkla University. Meanwhile, Ateneo, UP and La Salle ranked 58th, 78th, and 106th, respectively.

 

Earlier this year, UST and La Salle made it in the 701+ bracket in the Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) world university rankings. State-run UP led the Philippine universities after bagging the 374th spot while Ateneo remained in the 501st to 550th bracket.

 

The Times Higher Education World University Rankings was first published in 2004 in collaboration with QS. In 2010, the annual publication partnered with mass media firm Thomson Reuters.

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