The Carolinian

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Part of The Carolinian

Title
The Carolinian
Issue Date
Volume XIV (Issue No. 7) Summer 1950
Year
1950
Language
English
Rights
In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted
extracted text
1- e S'ummet • 1950 Catolinian Tl/A' YF.ATtS BIGGEST b'l'EXTS - pofe 2 T."P FROJI THE Rl11.\'S - page 6 CAROLl.\'IA.\' PLACES .<th /.\' Cff//, FJNGIVFJFJT!l.\'1; EXAMS - page 22 1fte 'lJea'L1 s f?i99est ioeu.ts (1949-50) The C<1rnlinim1s se11secl a 1>ersoual loss ove1· the trnnsfer of FJ·. Dfog. man to a 1ww desiymtfion but 11:c1·c {I/cul to have <ts competent and aJ able a 11ew he<1d, Rev. Fr. Albert vo11 Ga11scu·inkel, S.V.D. I'.cr. Fr. ArtJrn1· F. Dingma:n, SVD. 2:; !JC(ffS i1• the miiiisfr!J of Chri.<1! t flore1do fa,iordo With the elm•~ of the school year 191!)~50, l"SC invites everyone to look back and vie .v the Jong vista of events that the school yea1· has left behind. Within the pa::.t ten mon.ths n thous:i.nd and one thing's happened w1t~­ in the university folds. But from the big bundl~ •>f events we are i-inglin~ out U1.! most significant because we feel that thesP. events mm•t be 1·emcmberec1. Heading the long list is the Silver Jubilee celebration of the Vel'y Rev. Fr. Arthur F. Dingmim, erstwhile 1'~ather Rector cf USC. June 14, 1949 marked the OCC<l· ~ion and from ~:-:at clay a quarter of <1 ce11 turr has l;e~n spent by the celebrant in hi • rrnsade with the Divine Wol'ld. It must lir> known that a pretty big portion of ·his rdii:dons cnreel' has been spent with the l'SC. For fifteen solid year~ to be defi1. ite, he had ably headed the university Hll(l within this fifteen yenrs time he hml rcntlered n '"orldful of merit(1rious service worthy of emulation. Shortly nfter his Silver J ubilee celebralion, Fr. Dingman reccive(l a new a.ssig11ment so thnt he wus to clo one painful thin~ - to h!a\·c San Carlo:-;. And h<' did... Thus '.he school .\·ear m:tunll~· opened with a new Rector in tl:e ret ,;on of l\c\'. Fr. Albert Va1. C<in~ewinkel SVD. Oki Carolinians will well l'(,member that Fr. Gansewinkd is the )lr<!war Secretary General of San Carlos. How{'\ er when World War II broke out he w;is .··.,·a~· from Cebu and short!}' after Jiber'.l:ion he was made a Director of Saint Paul's ('ollcge in Tacloban, Leyte. From there he cr:me b;u:k to assume the nobler and greater tnsk of Rcctorship. (Cont. on page 21) Absence makes the heurt grow fonder. Ju loug ro1md·t.he1uo1·ld trek, Fr. Hoerclemmm rncets his brothers in America after 25 years. Above: Ccbu 1 p G1 and Old Man imposes hood on Ba· chelo1· Of Laws son, 1-lamon Osm_dict. 111 Ffe, Jlfonching is 1io I a~hclor fa thret: ?/ears m;ooried; 1dll take 11e:i:t bm· exa-mincttions. Right: Sj)eaker Eugemo Perez (llld Rev. Fr. Recto1, Al'Jert 1:an Gci11se1d11kel. Wh(lt wused that spreadou ~ grh1 011 Speake1· Pe1ez' /<tee? 'lite /Jig Look is focused on 1950's big harvest-over 600 /Jl"Ofexsiomtls, 01i sti.ige during the commenee11/Ctlt c.urcises ate (see /)ictm·e below): Govenwr C11e11co, E.l:-Pres. Osme·i1a, A 1·chMshoJJ RoSales, :•:'prnkcr Perez, Father Recto1· mul As.-;emblyman Zosa. Page 4 Atty. Juan Merca<ler One-time CAROLINIAN editor. Four Carolinians Pass CPA Examinations Fou r ou t "' fin.• C 1roli 11i:u1, ,u,.,.,. ~, fully pa.-set[ the l:1s1 Cl'.\ t·xa111i 11:oti••t1.• n•n<l11t·1. eel by 1hc l:o:.r<I of :\n·<>uut am·y .. i th,· Bureau of Civil Sen ·i,·c l:ist llcn·111l1t·r T he four m·w ,·,·rtific<I 1•nhlic a,·,·••1111· tauts and 1licir rcs1wdi1·e ra1i11;:.< f<,Jlow: ,\mpar" I'. l<o•l il. ;; .. n'/.: 1.ilia T. Ca hatin;::w. ;6•/,; l·:•piritn I'. T:111. 7.'i.C'7'"k; an.J Vcuki" :\rriola. ;,:;'/, . :'.li.•s no.iii. :'.li~s C;1hati11;:an :11111 ;\] r Arriola ~r:uh1 ah"<I fron1 th,· L"11i ,·er,ity oi San Ca rlo ~ in 1•1.N. whi le ;\Ir. Tan oh1ai11· eel his H.S.C. •ki.: re,· from tlw CSC i11 1•1~:-:. :\II of them took llH' wh"lt• lenglh .,f their <"••mmrrrial ,·our.;e in the C11i1· ,· r ~ i ty < •i S:on Ca rlos. :\r1·or<li11i.: '" n,·an J o~c Ir. T n·•o11 oi 1hr ((' .. nt. 011 page .!.!) Mr. Espiritu Tan William Lines Accountant Atty. William Buquid 111 his time, USC Law College Prezy Atty. Gaudioso Villagonzalo Detf'rmined amt stuclio11s Miss Lilia Cabatint?an Serious aml conscientious ?neel the ?'lew .faw~e'Ls by eugeuio j. < dvm·ado \\" it h a rati o~ vi 89.1'/t, ,\kjamlro .\ . Aban1ut·1. topj>nl the list of IJ Carol'iui;111~ who s11c,·essf11lly hurdlecl th..: bar cx:1111in;,1io11s la~t Aui:ust \')~'). :\ total of 15 ca ndidat<·.~ irom the L'nin•rsity oi San Carlo,;. took the cxami11atio11s. These who ar..: now full-vlcdi:ccl lawp·rs arc as f••llow: :\lcj;111dro .\harqm·z. X9. 1• 1;: I<amon Henitcz. R;.1%; Fra nci~C"o Van111cz .. fl:?.(1%; \\"illi:un 8u<111id. X.i.5't.: Juan :'.!er· •:a1kr, ~.i.4%: Gamlioso Villai.:0111.alo. R1/15'/,: :\<lalherto Balhm·11a. R1.15't.; l'<•dro T. Ga rcia. ;R45'/..; Eufrodno lbmos. (Cont. on page 16) Miss Amparo Rodi! From a bntiny fcimily free. Mr. Venecio Arriola Guts a11d study The CAROLINIAN Published ·.by the·Students of the University of San Carlos Cebu City, Philippines Summer 1950 'volume :iqv Number 7 E'DITORS * *ADVISERS C. l'aigao X;i1>0leon G. Rama "'MODERATOR Page 5 En1erf!d as second class mail maltcr j{c., Fr. Ernest lloc1dcma11n, SYD at the Post OHi~·c of Cebu Ci1y, :\larch .ro, 1950. -----------------'!Ebiforial Str01tffe>· t~an the ve1"i~able th'1'st fo1· water provoked to intensity by the summer heat is the education these days. No ban"ier is too great, no odds too overwhelming, for the eageT and the detennined. Education is the obsession of all. It is the all-consuming passion which finds no adve>·sa.·y in cold wm·n 01· inip01·t controls. But what is education foJ'? If one 1·ecognizes the th1·eat that hanr1s inauspiciously ove1· om· heads, then one should conclude thaf education today should not be for the f/im.•y end of 1·ecognition no1· fo1· the the disto1·ted pattem of 1·ec1·eation. With Communism th'reateniny to sf1'a11gle om· thoughts with the jean and evil vrejudices invented against De11ioc1·acy, then education should be a pon•e1·ful weapr.n agai1v1t it. Our education should be a "David's stone'' against this impending "Goliath." It should be a towe>· of 1·ock a1"1ned to mock a singing blast of .•and . .. As C01nmunism has been conceived of the intellect, let our education sharpen our own, so that ou1· ·mind.~ may ·be eve?' wide awake to its dange1·s, eve1· conscious of its sho1·tcomings, ever c1·itical of its folly. Our education should frain us to discriminate against the de8tructive. Big as tile 01·der is, education must mold us into worthy citizmu~ of . democmci1, f01· in the folds of d.,,,ocmcy we are st1·ong in tlie g1·ace of God. In the folds of Comnt!rnism whe1·e shall man de1·ive his sfrength? I FICTION I by teresita p. frinidCfd HANDS OF CARLOS :'llind;t w:1s ~i11ing in ;1 corner with thc ho~1. ~Ir. l.ope1., trying h;inl nut W y;nv:1 on·cr his l<)fl!;•drall"n·ont recital of his b.le:>t busin(>ss triumphs. when Carlos c;1mc <>l'cr to 1h1·m. Carlos was :\Ji111l;i's fa,·oritc hrother-i11· law. hut at that momcnt s he coultl cln:erfnlly ha\''-' choked him. If it hadn't hc·~•l him. ~he wo11l(l11'1 h1· friu1:ri11g away a perfo,·tly good 1 ·,·e11ini.:: at this dull party. Jr ~v:is < ·x;icll}' like all !he o tlwr rlnll par1i1•-. 1.h1· Lo pez1·s "·ere ;ilways i.:il-ini.t H l tin·:. woni•ln't h.ino to ~p<!nll a ni:,.:h\ with n n\y ,·;1d1 01l•cr ior company. '.\lin< ia l!:itln't wanted w (ul111· in th; iir't 1•l;H"I': sh1· w;1s pr<·Lty sur1· i.1 wotil<! turn htlt this w;1r. llul C:1rlo". c;:_i::.-.1 on \>~· her y<•11u;.:cr , ;,qer. Hila. ha;\ , . .,;,x<·d her " ' h;,r<l it h;ul "''<'Ill\'<\ ea;i.-r to ;::in· iu th;1n 1n argn<". Shi· coul•l jn~I h,·ar them 1:•ll.:i11;: it onT to;:,·tlwr. "Yuu talk w ith hl"T. C!rl .. -."" Rita 11rn~1 hai·c ' '"''· "She li<t•·n~ '" yo>u more lh;rn 10 1\w fl•<! oi u.•. Yon n•·•·l·r •·an 1dl. th•·f<• mi;.:hl he some 11cw 111<·11 ;it the 1 ):trt )". au•\. lH·an·u k11ows. it"; time she ;.:o; 111a rri•·•t "• .-\s though. '.\[in1la thou;:ht r,·st·ntfull r . :i girl was a11 old maid if she <liclu·1 m ;.rr;; as ~0011 :i.s she ;:rnd11:01cd from rom11er•. 1he w ;1y Hit:i h :i<l clone. :\ fLer ;ill. ~he 1i·:"1;: n 11ly twe11tr- fo11r- 111ayhe nnL so yo11u;: '·' an unm;irrit·<I ;.:irl wnnlcl lik<· 1<> lw. lu:: 11.:i1hcr wa~ she rc;u\y for a wh~cl chair yl'l. Thnu;:-h. 10 h<·ar h~r. mother :.n<l thrl'c · m;orr ied sister talk. you'•\ think ; he .,.,.,. Gooducs.< knows. shc wa;: n-a1ly. willi11;:. ;u1<I c:o;.::t-r t" ,·xd1ang-e her t )"('Cwriter ;11ul s ku .. ;:r:o11lwr"s p:Hliorawnl<li11;: rini:i:an.\ ~'.~.,'.'•',:~i·::: ~;::.r 1:11~~1 ~;':~11~1,11:"1•~= ~·1•: ... rc~~'.;~,:.1; wi1h- :i11d tha1 w;is th<: hi1t·h: 1·,,uhl ~l"" hl'lp i 1 ii sh···(1 11<"\"l"T fallen in 1""'-'~ \lind;1 idt like ~hnulini.:: the 'l''l''tiou iu Carlns· c:.r ;,~ lw :o<lroitly n ·,;cu('r] h•·T i rn1•1 ) Ir. l.opl"l' a1Hl rarr ie<l her nfi \ <> :1unth, ~ •·onwr nf th<' rt)("lll\, 1 n fart. '-hC w:1s ju~• a hn11t 10 <In it whl'n Car\n~ a~\;.·•\, h.·r ahrnptly. "'.\limb. conlfln't you \·~ a lilt.· oir<'r to Ramon?" \fi11Cb lonkcd al him hl;111\d\". Ram<•;? "'·'s C:u los' hrothcr. am\ ~he eo11\<ln·t r~111en1her had11;:::- d011c anythinF! to nffrm\ him. "X'icl'r to Ramnn~.. sh l' rchoe<l. (Cont. on \):li:!t' 10) 'I his is the story of an institution founded and built for the seeki::!· of knowledge and truth. The seeker is the Carolinian and the institution is USC. On the morrow r>f Liberation, the Carolinian trekked. back into 11. ghost of a city. Rut for him the most heart-rending scene was on P. del Rosario St.: the ruins of his Alma Mater. Wilhi11 llH'Xi! !Jutted wol/.~ he stmlie< I, p/a!Jetl, mul spent the l>e.<:f !JCttrs of hi.~ yt11dli 11ml farth er tou·<ir< ls the cr1m1mtt ... is the tower Jl•om lf'hae once as a yo1t11g boy, he got the thrill of his life seei-11g the vast. city under Mm, beside it m·e the hollow 1·em~i~s of the school chapel. Many a quiet moment he s1mit he1·e. Now it is solemn with the solemnity of the t emete1·y ... And then cic1·oss the stl'eet another buildiilg began to take sha11e, ,the USC SCIENCE BUILDING. A prnud gleani on the' Cm·olinfrm's fn~e-the old unbeatable school svfrit had risen! I I I~ i Page 7 "But there a,·e depths that bombs cannot 1·each •• . " The1·e 1·s the det~rmination to rise. As the yea.rs roll<ul on, n sfunly structm·e rose from the debris. It bm·e tt 1n-ouci j(llnili<ff name- UNIVERSITY OF SAN CARLOS BOY'S HIGH'. . . The SCIENCE BUILDING finishecl- n gleaming structure tom1ed off with a 1·00/ garden. Page 8 He remembered this view of the SCIENCE BUILDING from behind and ••• ...,. hcmlly months after: he sC1w a lHwur.i.ful I.king, 1l'ithout scu!folding a.nd with a fresh coat. of ])(tint. " Ii this ·is only the SCIENCE: BUILDING," he said, "I h(ft'c11't Rctn cmything yet." ~ Soon the i·eal thing wa~ in the making-an am'·it:ous big affair, the MAIN BUILDING. The wo1·k completed p1·esents an eye-filling, imposing stntctm·e~ Prom the street cor11er, he lakes th~ whole· s1n-ectd of the M Af!'.J BUILDING under co11st1·uction and behind it . . . •. he sees as im1wessh·e a structm·e tlutf lo1ws 11othing of its fJ'Ont gnnulem·. Awl this is it! To<lay the Caroliufon 1r afk.s clou:11 P. cl.,f Rosario St .. loof,;s 111i at this mmn11ne11tc1I job, towerin:1 ,.,,., J'f'SJ1lewle11t. f/1rndi11g e1·<'rythin.<1 <trmtwl it. He 1111dffC.<; thn: fpllow next him ""'l nofoh ot I.he builtliJl. q n·ith a swell of /)l'i,le: "Thfo is ti111 .-;"h'lCll-r f)elong he1·e." But the sto1·y iu pictures does not end he1·e and tl~e gro1cth of this institutiou has 11ot stoppecl. The ccw11ms 1s still c1buz:; 1dth the sound of hammers and cement-mixers . cu the ccnst1·uaiou for a 1irw wing of the ~lfain Buildinu mul the a::nex for the clmptl and libra1·y 11ears cmnpletio:1 (right). Page 10 1HE HAND OF CARLOS. · (Cont. from page 6 J \\'hat h:l\·e I done that w;1sn"t nice?., .. Ifs not unything you'n.· done, ~lind.!. but. ....... I-l e sel.'med a 1:1:k emb:1rnS$ed. ••\\"di. lo<Jk, (!(·ar. you·rc a girl, 1,nd yo.: know ]:o.-; tho;e thing:s ::n·. \\"hen a fc!low"s .-razy ahmu you. e\·cu if you d~n·t F'.:::.::~~::.:~~::::;·::::.~: .. ::;\·~::';:::~:::.::;:~: :~ ,In•· ju~t hecau;e yon hanwned w sm' 1·! ::t him:· lh t~1c time C1r]o; finished. ~limla wa-.. i11 ;om:·wh:" of :1 •!:ii:;· h•·r; df. '"llut I nc1·,·r <lreaml.'d of ' 1:d1 a thini.:.'' ~he 11rot c~t ed. •·He 1H·1·er l!a1·e 1he , Jii:ht cst ,;g:n. y.,11 kuow 1 wouldn"t •klilwr:11dy h ~•n :111yo11l·. e; pt·dally yom hrother. \Vhy, 1l"n- :,Jw:1~·~ lwen very fond of Ramon ... C;irlo; "sig:hed. ••J"t"; fmlll)' h<iw ~01nc ·,,; the'e i.;uy' who make ~:1ch a '11cctss fr, hu,in ·:,;, :ore a ; ' hy ,., ki<I< in tlll'ir pri1·:11« li»l'S. Ile ;, li11lr nic<' 10 him, Mimla:• E1"l'l1 a; Carlos S))Okl.'. her Cyl.'S weri': rirding the ro01n in M 0 nrc h of Ra111011. I-le w:,sn"t :1ard 10 local<". not whl.'n hl' w:1~ being mad<' sn cons1,icun1s hy the shrill\"oked i.; ro11;> o i g:irls who '1\"ar111 ;irouw! ~1·ery eligihk hachdor at a party. \"011 co111da"1 hlume th1·m mud1. come w think of it. Bc~i<l("s h,·i11i;i: c\igihlt. ~lonw chini.: ha d the homely masn1linl.' i:;oo<I looks that w•J111cn iind irresist ihk. Il l' h:1<1 a del.'p. 11leasa111 1·oin'. too. She watd1<·d him. liking lhl· way h,· thr.·1\· hack hi s head wlw11 ht.' laughed. and thinking how qutcr it was that she'd never 11otke•l :111 1hes1· t hini:::~ ahoul him b1•fore. Hamon c<1 ught her (•ye. :11111 hi.' 1.'XC11Sl.'d from thl.' other girls a11d hurric<l ;icross llw f<l0111 10 her so cai:::1·rly thut ~hi' realizl.'11 C:1rlo,; mn ,;1 he riJ:IH. llow cnuld slH h:1\"c lwen so hlind? •·.-\wful pany. isn't it?.. ~ h i.' a;ke1l l>rig:htly. l<:.mon m1ikcl down :11 her in u way 1h;11 mad.., ln·r ied e1·e11 sm;ilkr than h"'r fn11r feet (•len·n . .. It wa,;-umil now:· he saitl so poin1edly that ,h,· couldu"t ':1·cn 1•r..teml to mi ~n 11t] .·r ,; t ;111d .. \ml ~he fou:1•! hl.'r he;1rt sldppin;: around rollh<:r sHani.:cl;;·. ••\\"hal clo you .•ay we 1\111·k out of here: · Ramon a':<ked ··1 ... :"s! .. Tlwy found themsdn·s hri<ling the ~·c:or~ 1•r.-tty <1uickly. ~!ouch in g was an <·:1:<y person to 1alk with-eusy un<I in1ere<ti11:;: .. \ n hour b kr. in the li1tlc sidl.! 1·,·rand;1 th:11 1hey0d H<H•·d themseh·es ;,,, 01·er if,_. aeam and frosted cookies. ~i:(' found IH'rseH 1ellin~ him things s_ he"•l 11<.'l"l"r tol1I to anyo11~ hdor('. anti listl'Pini;i: to confi<lcnee~ from him. \Vhl.'n th<'y took hu home. sl1e 5at he. sidl.' him and all through the way he he ~ I (Cont·. on page 11) l y jose t. villanea The Green Cross I am a provinciano studying in the gre&t Univeri;ity of San Carlos. Having no relatives in the city, I live in a small boarding house. Through a window in my room, I can see the upper story of the new University building. At one end of the roof gar· den there is a bellfry-Jike structure on the dome of which standz a cross. During the day this cross, symmetrically framed with· in the parallelogram that is my window, is yellow. At night it is a green cross. As I lie on my bed at night, I see this cross aglow with a green flourescent light. Its strange hue makes me gaz~ at 1t intently. There is something sout.saustying about i~. lt seems so light, so airy, so ethereal a thing. I see it amid the glitter of stars, smouldering pale in then· ba·illiance, yet -.;hining in brave competition with these heavenly bodies. 1 see it bi:tthed in moonlight, its green light persisting. On stormy nights, when the heavens are racked by earsplitting thunder, when the sky seems ripped wide op.m by lightning, when there seems to be chaos tnrougnout tne up· per regions, J see the green cross behind a curtain ot' raindrops, sending of its light to a rain--soaked city, its _light undiminished by the streaks of lightning. This green cross :;erves ai my beacon. l shall meat storms in my College life, but I shall struggle through them as the green cross glows in the storm. And I shall emerg~ refreshed and eager to start all over again as the gree11 cross comes out of a storm, resplendent and ethereal.. Then too, when the radiance of the moon makes this turbulent world seem peaceful, the green cross is a thing of beauty. It stirs my emotion. !'feel the power of the One Who is symbolized by this cross. I see the moon a,nd the moonlight - His creations - and the cross and its greP.n Jight ......; man's works. No more vivid symbol of the affinit.y between God and man. If \ jl ) ~I l Fr. Hoerdemann al communion during the Holy Retre~l. flat S'to1111 But S'pitit... f "A unitei·sity is rot built of stone / And sand and gravel a11d slabs of wood, But of the spirit a"d an attitude. It is implanted in the mind alone I And in the /iea,.t and in the human soul. It is a congregation of m.inds i'nibued1 . , 1 : 1 , A kind of unive,.sal b1'othei·hoodj1:~ With what is tnie and good and beautiful. ~ Our spires may 1·ise to heaven's azure dome, : . . 1~ But our fowulation is the hea1·t of man, 1; And ov.r desi,qn the universal plan {' T/iat sprin11s fl'Gm God awl in God finds a liome. j We build on these 01· we but build in vain i t And 1niss the horizon beyond the plain. ·~ ) -F1'om COMMEMORATION ODE ) ) by C. Faigao 1 1 ""'"""~""""""''"""'""""""'"""~""""""'"""'""""""'""'"""'""""""'"""''""' ' Page 11 THE HAND OF CARLOS .. . (Cont. from page 10) her ham!. It sccme<l 1hc most natur;. l thin:,: in the world, as though thi s w H wh<:re sh.., hdonged. T hl.'y s:1w (•;1c h othl·r almost e\·cry clot,v ior w,.,cks, :\nd before the e11d of the fir''0 :1c. she \l,'.a :> in lo1·e with R;11u o11, '°"· She 11,ml to 1hi11k of falling in lon• ·· ; "om ethin~ tremendous and forceful that comes with the roll of dru111s and th•: d ;1sh of l·pnbals. But it wasn't at all. It was ;i sim1>le joy that cre11t up 011 her unThe night Roman aske1l her lo marry him. :\liud:t was the h;q1piest girl in tlw w ~ rlll. hnt not the least suri•riscd. .\ftcr she had ;:h·eu Ra111011 her rm swer wit h a ki.•s. she curled 11p in his ;irms in 1l·e sob "~wtttlwart." he askc<I her \111111My, with his tips against her hair. ';how cl id an yom· as wom1erfn1 as you h;i,p\'('11 I•> fa ll in Jo n.> with inc'"' So shl· told i1im all :d1out it, confrssin,.: how .•he'd 11en• r gi\·en a sc riou ~ 1houg:l:: to him till Carlos told her how he felt. '';\nd 10 1hi11k." she saicl, sit1inj.:: ui•rh::lu and looking: :11 R;i111011 in awe. "that ii Carlo• h;uln°t do1:e 1ho11. \I'<. ' wonhl 11c1·er ha1·1 · known how right 11·c were for l'ach othH. l)arl 'ni.:. the han1l of F;tte was wnr!;iuµ: 01·er1 ime for us." 1{;1111011 k1<I the i111111iest look ou hi ~ ia,·(· ··:<ion· U.:,· the hancl oi C1 r\os. I'd :<ay:· h ;:ri1;11Ld ' \'<\11 .•n·. ,\Ji1Hla. < k a1·e•t."' he , x11'.:iinc:l ;:1.>nlly. "I 11en·r µan' ynu ;, 11111 ~­ hle till 1h,· nigh t .,( 1he l.opczc• p.1r:·.: when Car].,, :1 ~ kccl m,· 10 he ni ,·~· 1,, )""t: hec;ousc you were maclly in Ion· 1111h n;::' ' Abf'Oad for months on an educatioual tour in US cmli Em·ope Fr. Hoe1·dema.nn comes homP, warmly welcomd by use faculty and students at the airport. View of the tower cmd lighted cross tC1krn f1·om thr Eme1·ald Room on the t·oof.gardeu. Beside the Emenlld Room is « fountain. Page 12 Framl'fl hi f1elw1'<'1/ m:ncia lrtT "I, comfi iuiuy q111ct· 1u1d clif111i:·1 r nr: <ata:s ·uf(;H scuoo1. B11ildi11 fl stmul.<; of tlie two rcr!I IJ11sy .<:lrl'dS. The High Schools of The University In these building!>, the Carolinian spends fow· gay, ebullient memoral>le, adolescent years . .. l.1111ki11y stolid cwt! .<;1i1wr, nwssy with <1ge, rlie Hl<;H oC/100/, 1/i.41.\"/X(; nF:PANTMf,'NT 1ii1s ,, c«11i111 a11 tii•l!I f fl.-:itio,1 "' .lfuf1i11i Street. 16!0 (dl'I' lun .'" /i CI(' /i/('(1 1/S BOY'S HIGH SCl/Qf)f, c<t g Ca.. S'cuam, Ca1t't U? by vnl Alex, my friend, Do you know that every start of a school term, et'ery em·olm.ent, every 1·egistration day is like a .rebirth, a relieving of pleasant but hectic watchama('allit, a reenactm.ent of a chaotic experience-a merry chase of ·regisfrars and clerks and cashie1· .and advisers? Eve1·y term a fresh batch of students, mostly half-baked and overcha1·ged with the energy and eagerness of youth face to face with the exciting, dazzling thrill of ente1in,q the college wo1·ld, is hurled from high school into this "advanced stage of lea1'1ting" called college. And Alex they're getting younger all the time. So I'm taking the Summe1· com·se. I found niyself one day 1·egiste1ing fo1· e1'1'olme1't and entangling myself in the usual hodgepodge of 1·egistmtion. Brother, it wasn't easi/. Especially when l liad an account to settle·before being accepted fo1· registration. Me, owing Uncle San Carle a hunk of money and obliged to settle that before I could em·ol in it and subsequently owe m01·e 11ione11 to it! So I had to pay my account and eme1·ge from the valley of debt into the jaws of ei'1'olment and registration. E11e1·y te?'nt I always come up against some who insfructo1· indubitably inspires me to raise a howl. This time the gri/Je is because one of m1/ p1·ofs talks like a speeding Shooting Star in the ultrasonic 1·egion. This prof must hm•e been 1·aised among die· taphones and othe1· rec01-dinr1 machines. I beliei•e he has strong muscles in his windpipe and a deuice in his i•ocal cavity for supenwnic speed which will make a jet nlane turn over in its assembl11 line with envy. Yes, he talks thatfssssst. You ou.r1ht to see the 1·esulting hierogl11phics on our notebooks in om· attempt to catch up with the p1·of's 1·apid-fire blitz. k1"ieg lect-m·e. 0, were it possifJle, I'd b1'ing a dicta11hone to school and turn it on when. ow· good 'P1'0f •tarts whizzin[f off. Then I'd be free to just sit back a;1rJ concentrate on that new gfrl with the smooth. white shat•ed nape of the neck and tilted nose. Yak yak. Who believes in coincidences? A 1-athe1· astonishing coincidence befell m.e in the audit01·ium at the Camival one night. The night a luck11 .afrl was c1·owned "llliss Visa11as," an 1tnluck11 boy waR cmwned with an empty Coke bottle. Even then, I was lucky-no split skull; only pai·ted hail'. The Red C1·0RS ought to do something about ca1·eless people, eh. Yom·pal, Herbie Page rn by J.N.L. What are vacations for? There :ire those who will contend that, aa one has to go on consuming good.; r.nd buying them, then one has to go on earning. This is a faUacious 8yllogism implying that man he to go on working. Even machines have their moments of resting from clacking, buzzing, booming, roaring, hissing, thumping. And who wiJI say tha.t man is not above any machine? No doubt Rev. Father Reetvr Albert van Gansewinkel and Rev. Father Luis E. Schonfeld will be bringing back the memory of the fragrancP of nine and sod for their stay in Baguio is spent in the lushly verdant environment of the hills!de retrE'~t of tht! SVD. Then too, back from a couple of weeks' sojourn in the summer capital of the Philinpines. NG« of thP. erudite editorial chair, brings back not only the 8cent -1f ninr rind sod but also photos of fri@nclshins nPw and old, scenes of narks and .l!"ardens. and he brinl?-~ hnmp P !'lt1nset seen while rowing ,\ TJR Armv !'lt1rnlu!'l nontoon 1?lamouri?.Pd rind mnke-believP.d into n gonclnh> {1 la Venice. His experiences will hear retellin.I?" for the rest of the vear until next summer when again. he will go, he wiU see, and he will conquer another place in the Ramanner. By the wav, he sa:vs the new-new roQf garden atop the USC: Science buildimr is most striki>urh- noticPnble as the ship enters Cebu harbor. l)nwn Snnth tn thE' orchid land of Mindnnsio I.ih- Zos11 and JLim hied themselves off. <Sighs of relief frqm M!rb\in quarters werf' noted ) Lily's choice was the eroti(' envil'OM nf Lake Lanno while the latter'8 itinerary took in the snrawlimr ereen-clad coasts of Zamhnan1?;1. taking in such progressive towns 't<i Din .... Joa and the picturesque hamlet of Dapitan where the lore and legend of the national hero Jose Ri(Continue page 16) Page 14 Qll Wo'Llz a .. ~ ?10 Pla~ On off-hours the 1n-ofeSSOl'S go lt[J the roof-garden to b1·eathe fo yo o d clean air and enjoy bfrdS-C!Je vic11· ,"), Cebu City. :l/AliES THE PllOFESSOI!'S HAIR TURN GRAY. Fi·. llfwillf/U/'filf!I', use I.ilirctl'irlll , blrrn:s the IH'''' ojf 1dth a f luf(' at .1/ in1mr1r, T<ilis<tyl:SC S1M1111er /frso1·t. Fi·. Hot-l'<h:mmw ({lld tli f! />(Ir/Jell. Mimi ove.;· urnttcr 01· 111c1Uer over mind? Left: US Ambassador MY· nm Co1i:e11 drop.<; fo ttt USC oml strolls ·with Fr. Law1·c11cc B1111zcl on the roojrumlcn of fhc Mttin r:uil<ling. A[[f NI ~N ~[lfN[f A big slice of the Univ~rsity expe11ses goes to th< electrical tmd 11wchi11ery dc11<fftmc11t. Above 1·1:i X-my apparatus. Gadgets and more gadgets. Page Hi lw;ic/e the USC Pou.:er Pfont, heavy 11wchines like these slll>f'l!f the lm·ge electricity demands of the mliversity. B;a11'1'-11cw mirroscopes recently <oTivcd frotn lh'! lhdcd States swell the laboratory equipment. Page 16 ii p IJEJ JlY j~'!-__________ , by eug~nio j. alvarado, jr. With but the gleam of stars, with but their glow, The transient midnight vanished like a pair Of lovely danCers gliding, swaying to The ending measw·e of the music fair. Up in the heavens faded is the moon Behind· the saffron-veil of clouds in the west; The bright stars a.,--& but shi11rniers now; they soon Shall take ihe co1i1fo1·t of a well-earned rest. Out of the solenui stillness breaks a note Like that of a sweet angel's mellow horn; I think the tune is front a rooster's throat To herald forth: another dawn is born. Then all f1;01;i sleep awake; and lo! Behold! The sweet, ei:ch'lnting beauty of the world! by florencio fajardo These tears that well and icet the eyes, 1-/i,;::;e tears that ooze and drop down cold, Those tear.:; that spring from heavy sighs, Are gems to me, sweet to behold. But there are tears far sweeter still, Yet heavier than a load of lead - Thoi:;e tears that pain and stab and .kill, Those tem·s, my love, I leave unshed. CAROLINIAN A ... (Com. irom page 13) zai were retold by the townsfolk, ffom the tots to the toothless ancients who will willingly lead the visibr to the famed Rizal Park b-, the sea, grand with towering trees, cultivated shrubs, and majestic •_n its solitude and silence broken onlv by the twitter of birds and th'e call of cicadas. On vacation too is Mrs. Crispin Tan, she of the demure deportment and the music department. Mr. Higinio Libron's vacation is the most climactic. He covered a lot of distance, from as far as Masbate ·10 Negros. His mission;·change of shht3.. I-iis memory: the re~d of we:!dimr bells. Net results of these vacations: .'\ ~afeguarded inner fold for newborn faith in God and a feeling of exhilaration when one gets down back to work. The season's sight for sore eyes; three smart and pretty debutantes .l!l'acing the bright halls of USC - Tita Espina, Zoraida Solano, and Asuncion Muafia, the pulchritudi· nous daughters of civic-spirited -fa· thers. Speaking of wedding bells, ·The MA class in .English is decimated by one - (Paring Bunagan)-to the relief of some and the grief of the Misses Garcia and Lim, both of whom answer to the devout name of Josefina. Professor Consunji, be· fore the event, was heard to declare that it gives an instructor satisfaction to see any of his students safe· ly settled in the hereditary status. It is generally that this is the wise m~n's strategy to box the chatter out of a woman's tongue - to the satisfaction of both parties. iViEE1' IHE·NEW ... (Cont. from page 4) j(q'/,; Ceo;ir Cabahug, 76.6%; Emilio 'i"i:e surn:~,,ft:J lawyers took -their ];11, C'l\:1·-e ; nd har re,·iew in the L'nh·ersily of '."an C- r"~J5 1·11der the able guidance •;~n·l ,.,,mpe:<11t tutor,hip of onr law profe~~or, .\tty. Emilio ;\Jatheu has heen ,,·orkinc: "-' a d;y dclectin~. "·hile Alty. William n:i ;1:id. <'1''-' time p~ed,knt of the I.ex Cir. c'e ;>nd 1·icc··pre;ident of the student coun· ,·'I 1~ rt prc,:(•nt conneclcd with the Ph~l­ ippine \V<•r D;1111age Commission. :\tty. Ram~n lknitez is currently with rhe Phi:. i ,. in<: Vc·crans Bo:irrl. Th·· re··t c[ 1he new ahogaclos h~vc ~i;!1~ifi,·d t!,cir pbns nf opening 11p their law rfficc~ in the city or in their respective home towns. ?noaies attd D'z.amalics l>?J luis lmw "The n:an was raving. His hai1· <Usheveled, his tie awry, he thi-e•,>." Nmself c3relessly into a chair, fishd out a packaq-e of Chesterfields r one peso a rack age from the roa:lr;!de stand), s:-·oked, an-1 raved a!?'ain: "What will happen to us? Foreign films will be affected by the import controls! That means goodbye, Viveca Lindfo,.io; !" We start this article with an imaginary 1:assage from a book (als(l imaginary) by Luis Luna {as Wt· imagine ourself capable of doing). The time is 1960 but the story is of 1950. That passage, we should hav~ started to say, is impossible. (That would make the book impossible, too, of course.) The man does not mind paying one peso for his package of Chesterfields but think the world is going to pieces l.:e ~ ause foreign pictures will te affe:ted by the impoi·t control! Local culture handled at the wrong end! coming to this country, an_nn1y. A few weeks after the latest tren:l in milady's boundoir has be:: n seen in a display window in Breadwar. rou c·an sec it higl:Jigh!d at a E >· colta show window or recogriize it on the ji;lossr page,; of a .Metropolitan newspaper's Sunda\· sunplement. But not the latest best:selle"r fro~ :.1 New York hook,;tand. And certain· Iv. not the latest ,;tage hit from a Little Theater in Rrooklrn ! It was bad enough. Now it i~ wN.s<, with the controls clamped down on t~1e <.uantit.•-. if nc. on the quality, of books and 1m1g-11 - zines and films that we are able to bring int.o this t'.Ountry. And so we have to fall back cu our own, con,;truct our own nctu•:;' a11d actresses. write our o·,n1 stork~~ I I Ve.-;til wul Khn'1> clrnrniu9 in a hit play lH"o11ght the roof dow1! lay the foun~!ation:• of a trulr native culture! Which is not bid at all! This controls t.usin€s:; rr.ay \·et be co:-i1e a blessing in disguise." · And so we have Cebu-Vi!~anrn ;· ictures, and we hn\"e native artfsts The change seems all too sudden, like ::wmething- that hit us plump between the eyes and left ns all in a (Cont. on i;a<.!e 22) U11<! of the happy and unsung effects so far oI the important con trols is the boo.;t that has been ghen to Tagalog movies in genera!. and in rarticular, the incentive that it has given Visayan pictures. It seems difficult to believe, but thP. limits on the importation of foreiRn pk:tures (c.incl on bpoks, too, mind vou) is OH<! i:ha-,;e of the import controls of which there has been no complaining, no grumbling. We still have to see the young movie fan who raves because the latest rr:asterpie::e of Walter Wanger may never be l:ooked for release in our Jowl theaters. Our need for culture, for those c-ivilized .embellishments thHt draw the line between the rustic and the rivilized man, is r.ot so insistent as our craving for Chesterfields or Camels. Culture has always been late in Vy, Dorotheo, cw·l Eonumeo did cvmpetc11t stage acting during USC Day cclcbratio11, Page IS With Scie1tcc ocwpyi11g major a~tc11tion in the cu'l'riculum, the University has e1ectecl a Scie11ce Building. Above pictm'(! shows F1·. Hoeppe11~r iu his Chemistry LCtborntMy class. There's 110 more hectic time than the last few minutes befo1·e the paper goes to v1·ess. Then the stciffcrs 1·eully know the mecming of that "vause which refreshes". Jn above 1>ictm·e the Carolinian st<1ffmen huddle with Fi·. Recto1· just before the deadline. i\ Fo1· a less morbid wcty of breaking up· the insides of ct -cadaver pre-med students tear up an<ttomfoal models. Who says bed-making is not an art? Jn ab'JVe photo student.'f of the Home Economics department .show the finer side of the simple home aJ't. All work and no play makes a boy a dull Jack, and to this the Carolinian is no ex· ception. When studying, the brain cer<'brates and too much of brain work and le:;s - maybe none - of deviations results in rdrogression, ill health, perhaps onward t•J insanity if you don't die in betwe~n. Be:::use this is so v€Ty true, games of dif:~:erent sorts are being part and parcel in our everyd~y educational approach. Sa?1 Carlos has much on this side of the edu(';i.tional hemisphere. No Carolinian breath.::> th name of San Carlos without breathing st the same time the joys of triumphs anrl of course, also th:- defeats eiat its athletes f>:<perience in the field of athletics, wh~­ iher in national tourne)•s or locais. No stud~nt lives his school life without sharin,r C'Xcitement and happiness during the Intramurals. The Carolinian goes to play during his Physical Education hours and on week1,~:ds. While the boys are busy with their EWTC instructions we find the girls at \'olleyball or badminton or calisthenics. The school has an athletic director (Rev. Fr. Bunzel) who is charged of all the aff mrs which concerns the Carolinians' physique and provides for those needs such as :1t hletic equipments and aids relative to the 1 ··uilding of good athletes, if not champion:;. First mention among our Philippine sports is basketball. The school provides !he students with three standard size bashtball courts and pays a good coach for this matter. It is not surprising when our <lailies print in big black headlines the viehries of our teams. Soccer football is another sport om· p:ayers excel in. San Carlos is possessed of n fine footbalJ ground of its· own and a team 0f first hand athletes always in A-1 condi1 ion. Then there is the Miramar resort at Ta· li~ay, where on week-ends the students may J!v to relax, to escape the heat of the city. The site was purchased by the administration to supply the Carolinian with a ph1c0 free of charge where only his library card is "ooen sesame" to the manifold games found in the place. From early morning till sundown of Sunday the universitv recreation grounds at Miramar i~ rich with activity and laughter. Ping-pong, archery, volleyball, badminton, basketball, horsehoes, and' (Cont. on page 20) The USC Weight-lifting Club Girls <tt the bnt11d-11e11. · S1cimpool at Mfro.nrnr Summe1· Resort The Carnliuian coeds u:ho would Show-off the 11ew sports d1·ess take Robin Hood's game. Page 20 CAROLINIANS AT PLAY ... (Cont. from page 19) the extremely delightful and interesting tame of "croquet" are always in chooseyour-while readiness. Many dass organization excursions and parties are held there. And it one likes a good splash of cool water, he can jump into the pool anytime he likes, or be can ask anybody to throw or J.1Ush him. .Many will be glad to oblige. The resort has two large-sized swimming pools, one for the ladies and another, a bigger one, for the men. Both are provided with (>Very fixture that a modern swimming vool requires. It is here that swimming competitions are held for the new pool hap)Jens to be the largest swimming pool in Cebu. It is here, too, that USC's Mermen train for the Nationals. Olympicker Am· brosio Sambiao Basanung is USC's swim:ning coach. If one desires to be a Samson or chooses to be like one, where many a USC Delilah maybe watchin)! there are the barbe1ls and chinning bar. Narciso Aliiio ,Tr. can teach you the know-how on the irons. Rev. Fr. Hoerdemann, too, who can carry a heav:r load. • But if one is afraid he might break his ~Jones on thes~ sevi:!ral games which require much energy and muscle control, or does not know how to swim either, or maybe has the hereditary traits of a goat, chc~s and card games are in order. Just ask for therr:. from the Rev. Fathers. W~<tt's. the 11ext. IJ~st thing to winning a game? It's losing tt well. Pictm·c sllon·s intramurnl teams lined up to shake hands. The illtmmtll'al games opening is a 1·ed-lettel' day am! stm·ts with a bang. 'Both players and s1Jeci<tt01·s hm:e (t field dtty c1s the forme1· sweat it out and the hitter furnish the rooting. The. tos~-itp: pr.elude . to snortifig excitem~t •. THE YEAR'S .... (Cont. from page 2) With the new Rector, new buildings '"ere used and new teachers joined the faculty staff and a new department was created for the expansion of the university. This department is the post graduate course in English. The head of this new department is Father Rector himself. The completion of the new swimming pool in the university grounds in Talisay is. another of these great events. The uni''ersity has to its name now two clear-watered swimming pools giving free services tc the student body. The new swimming pool is said to be the biggest in Talisay <1nd it was so constructed so that it would pass the standard specifications of the i'AAF. Then we have Fr. Ernest Hoerdemann's Educational tour which lasted for three i::ionths. He went to the United States to ~­ observe among other things technical and . - ~ financial administration of American Uni-·~~~~~li~I versities and on the latest features of American University constructions. Rev. Fr. Ralph SVD financed Fr. Hoerdemann·3 tour. Incidental to this trip he also visited his kin whom he last saw 27 years ago. Next we have the Father Rector's cleanup campaign. This campaign includes sanitation and silence at the corridors which ~re the crying need of the time. The response to this was highly satisfactory. So there, the subjects just treated are the events, special and great in their own ways which have raised USC to a pedestal. These events will be inscribed in goJd and eventually will form the links into the Jong chain of achievements that join the milestones of the eridless road along which runs the existence of this great institution. Upper : Page 21 ~l J use coeds turn menmdds-and the mere men can't even look on. The Univen;ity has two s11:imming pools, one for the men, cmothe1· /01· the women. Center· Whc1t kid will not remember the 'ole su:immin' 'ole"? In USC the kicls bent the summe1· heat at the .;,OOO-}Jeso swimming pool. l.eft: From the main building ()! the USC one get., a fair view of city's 1·00{tops. Fr. Hoerdemnnn 11.,ed to take the cifl1 sce11e in .from the roof gal'dc11 u'liile still wule1' coustruction. Page 22 VISAYAN MOVIES .. . (Cont. from page 17) daze. and the cook book, that- ·cbnse"nts b making papa~.s. darling :the' object of ogglipg humanity :Only. after thin~: FLASH!!! Even the Visayan ·picture producers seem to have been taken unawares ! Native talent has been caught-with its pants down! ing twice. - What-is the evidence?·Sc> far · the few pictures that .have been a . tendency toward -·.the i:-lump, short heroine who gives: her audience th<! impression that she sQould. be mo"re careful with her calories. .• - . CAROLTNIAN PLACES ~ 5TH IN CIVIL ENt' GINEERINGEXAMS You ask the casting directors and let them tell you.of their headaches in filling the leading roles in their pictures. We mean the female role.•:'. The supply is s::ant; or if not s::aut. rather timid. Just like F ilipino capital for Filipino business, as they have alwnys been telling us. I ALL use EXAMINEES HURDLE BOARD It is not quite a problem with the male t•oles. There is many a young man roaming our streets, with the looks and the talent, who is willing to be cast. Even for a song, perhap.o;, we dal'e say. So the lea.ding man will be a · drug in the market, for some time, a t least. until clircctnrs an1I pi·oducers insist on stricter qualifi· ca lions. : It is not quite the same problem when it comes to the female leads. Here we have to reckon with a rlegree of conservatism, a philosonhy of modesty that is almost Victorian. 1.hat tends to keep mamo:t's little ~fr! consistently at home with the plans But there are .other things. There is the ques~ion of tr~ining. And that is where our' subject en· ters-it has been so· long in coming that you become · rather suspicious, haven't you ? What better place to develop materials for our ·Io ca I pictures than the college little theater? What better person from whom to learn the fundame1;tals of acting ar.d expression than the sympathetic dramatic club coach? What better environment to give the actor in embryo the poise and the self-confiden<:e t than the college classroom and the college audience? What better placP. to get an introduction with the. ch·•\· rna and actors and acting? What. I ~ helter olacP. to ar.:quire that cultural ~ t-ll.ck1!t'ounr1 ner.essarv to every artist I than a college library? Renublic of the P hilipnine8 Department of Public Works and Communications Bl'REAU OF POSTS Manila SWORN STATEMENT (Required by Act No. 2580) The undersign.~d NAPOLEON G. RAMA, edit()r of ·thr! CAROLINIAN pi.iblished seven times a year in English and · ~:panish at P. del Rosario St., Cebu City after having been duly sworn in accordance with law, hereby submits the followimr, s.tatement of ownership, manaJ?ement. circulation. etc .. which -i~ required by Act 2580, as amended by Commonwealth Act Ne. 201: Name Post-Office Arld"re::is Editor Napoleon G. Rama Cebu City Owner University of San Carlos Cebu City Publisher University of San Carlos Cebu City Printer Barba Pres~: Jones Ave .. Cebu City Office of publication Univ. of San Carlos Cebu City Mr. Victorino L. Gonzales, Jr. T he h ii.:J:'l"S! pin·e of new,. i11·· l;sc Engineering- Dept. recently j,. thl· pa~,.ini;- of ;di ils grad11;11cs ;u t he ci\·;1 engineering hoard <.>Xam. i11ati,,ns lwlll la~t January. Li\·in;.: up in the eiqicct:11ions. Vkcoriuo I.. Gonzak~. Jr.. USC's he~t h•·t copped tile 5th pl;1cc with a gco•·rnl an·rai:C? of 84.25'/c T he 1wo other ~uccess fnl C 1r •l · li11ia11~ W« Tt: :\ngclu~ Dakay :u" I Teodoro Ruiz. Former Caroli11i;p1 Salml Rama who COlllJ>leted her third year at USC al~o made thr hoard with ;2.38'/,. The spcc•:•cnlar :riumph ~el Dean Jose Roolriguez, the engineering faculty am! the ~nccl'ss ful candidates on an impromptu and a hang-up cdehr;~­ tion al a clowutown· n •staurant. Plans arc afoot to honor the m:w FOUR C'~AROLfNIANS . .. (Cont. from page 4.) '· ~ In case of publication other than daily, total numb~r of copies pl'inted and circulated of the last issue dated March 20, 1950. 1. ·Sent tO paid subscribers . 3,475 2. Sent to others than paid subscribers 31)1 Total .............................................. 3,780 (Sgd.) NAPOLEON G. RAMA Editor in ·chief Subscribed and sworn to before me this 12th day of April l!.150 at Cebu City the affiant exhibiting his Residence Certificat~ No. A-1535817 issued at Cebu City, on April 1, 1950. c .,Jkgc ui Con11ucr~e. the f••01t ;ichi\·\·..,,\ hy th l' fuur Carolinians stands 0111 as an 011tsU1ncliug record, co•1sideri111>:" lhc fact that out of a total of 58o candi1\atl>s who took the • examim11io11s, only 11)8 or 3.,% vas~cd, as again>t the 8o chalkl'd lll' by tlw l'SC examinees. DoC. No. 172 Page No. 97 Book No. IV; Serie;s of 1950 FULVIO C. PELAEZ. Until December 31, 1950 Mr. Espiritu P. T an is at prcseut connected wilh the \Villiam Lines Co., Inc He has ser1·ed :is an 1'Ccountant of the said firm for the 1 1ast t wo years. (Photo courtesy of Fr. Rector.) P':.a~e':. to':. ftie Hol~ 4ea't ~ LMIGHTY and etei·nal God, with our whole soul we ~ tiumk Thee fo1' the great gift of the Hol11 Year. Heavenly Father, Thou Who seest all things, Who searchest ancl dost guide the hearts of men, niake them 1·esponsive, in this ti1ne nf grace and salvation, to the voiee of Thy Son. •May the Holy Yea1' be fo" all men a year of purification and sanctificatio1i, of intm·ior life and 1·eparation, the year of the great return ancl of the great parclon. • Be::;tow on those, who are suffe1·inf! 7Jersecution f01· the Faith, Thy spfrit of fortitude, to unite them insepambly with Ch1-ist and His Church. • P1'otect 0 Lord, the Vica·1· of Thy Son on ea1'th togetlie1· with all bishops, priests, religious, and all the faithful. Voud,,afe that all, both p1-iests and laity, the young, the mature, ancl the old, intimately in thought and. affection, may become as a solicl 1·ock1 against u:hich the f111'y of Thy enemies will break in min. • May Thy grace enkindle in all men love for the many nnfortunate peo7Jle, whorn poverty ancl miser!J request to a condition of life unworthi1 of human beinw~. • Arouse in the hearts of those who call Thee "Fathe1·" a hunqer and thirst for social justice ancl for fraternal charity in deeds and in truth. * "Grant 0 Lord, 7Jeace in ow· day~/'-11eace to souls, peace to families, peace to ow· cowlfJ'!f, peace among nations. May the rainbow <Jf peace cover with the R1f'Cep of its sere11e light the Land .~anttifie<l b!J the life and passion of Thy Dfrine Son . .-.:· God of all consolation! Dee/) is ow· misery, fll'al'e are our fault!-;, cmrntlesR 0111· need.... But greate1· .~au is ow· tntst in T/Jee. Conscious of our unwo1·thilless, we lovingly 71/ace our fot in Thy !tands, u.i1ilin9 our 11.·eak prayers to the inte1·cession and the merits of the most gloiirnts l:'frgi1i Mar!J aucl all the Saints. • Grant to the sick, resignation and health; to youn!J men, the strength that is born of faith; to youny yfrls, the gift of pwity; to fathern, prosperity and holiness fo1· their families; to mothers, success in their mission of 1·earin.g their child1-en; to orphans, affectionate protection; to the refu11ees and p1-isoners, thefr fatherland, and to al! men Thy yrace in preparation and in pled.qe of the unending happiness of heaven. Amen-POPE PIUS XII J i I I I I .THE UNIVERSITY OF SAN CARLOS CEBU CITY For The School Opening, use offers the following courses:!. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Pm;tgnicluate Com·sc in Education and English (M.A.) Law ILL.Il.) Liheral Arts Pre-Medicine (A.A.) Pre-Law (A.A.) Gene1·al four year cour~e (A.B.) with any of the- f'ollOwing fields of specialization: Englhh, History, Math~matic.:'i, Biology, Chemistt·y, Philosophy. Commerce, with either Accounting or Management as major subjects (Il.S.C. or B.S.B.A.) Education (B.S.E.) with the following majors: English, Spanish, History, Mathematics, Gc>ncral Science, Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Home Economics. Engineering, Civil Enginee1-, (B.S.C.E.) Mechanical Engineering, (fir:;it to third year) Electrical Engineering, (first to thil'd ye:u·) Phm·macy ( B.S. Phairn.) H. Home Economics (Il.S.H.E.) 9. Junior Normal, both General and Horne Economics Type (E.T.C.) 10. :::::l1 c1·etarial Science, one ~·car comT.C', collegiate level. 11. Iii.Eth Schcol, Acadrmic, General and Home Economic1 Type Or:c High School exclusively for Bovs Another 1-Iigh Schcol exdusivelv for Gil·ls A Third Hig-h School .:1s Trainillg Depa1tment A Four11i'·H;>..i. "'~·h""l .r,..,. l\Y:-.t.~ Students 12. Inte1·mecl!ate, Frimary, and Kinct~rgarten Classes Begin July 5th, 1950 l'nnl,·•l hy !!.\fill.\ l'tn:><>' _,·,.1.,, ('I!; I I! I I _ .. J