
UPAANC Berkeley : Headlines : 2007 UPAAA Convention A Success
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(Editor's note: Click on the above thumbnails for getter viewing! L-R: Photo 1:
Senator Eduardo Angara delivers his keynote speech; Photo 2: UP President Emer Roman; Photo 3: Gawad
Kalinga's Dylan Wilks; Photo 4: UPAAA Pres. Ted Aquino, Sen. Angara, UPAASF
Pres. Manny Gaspay, UP Pres. Roman; Photo 5: May and Manny Gaspay flank Maria
and Dado Banatao; Photo 6: The gala dinner presidential table w/ College of Music Dean Ramon Acoymo in
the center. Photos courtesy of Faith Cabanilla.)
2007 UPAAA Convention A Success
The 2007 University of the Philippines Alumni Association in America (UPAAA)
San Francisco Convention held last Labor Day week-end Sept. 1 - 3
(Saturday-Monday) at the San Francisco Hilton Hotel was a rousing success based on the amount of money it raised, camaraderie it fostered and networking it promoted among UP alumni.
With the theme, "Celebrating The Legacy....Forging The Next Century," the UPAA
San Francisco chapter led by its hardworking President Manny Gaspay
hosted UPians from all over the United States as well as the Philippines.
Philippine Senator and former UP President Eduardo Angara and current UP
President Emerlinda Roman delivered the keynote speeches at the plenary
session held Sunday morning. The two keynote speakers spoke at length on
the state of Philippine education in general as well as the University of the
Philippines in particular. Six simultaneous workshop sessions were held
after the plenary session and featured noted personalities such as Gawad Kalinga
proponent Dylan Wilks, Philippine Trade Commissioner Nini Alvero
and Philippine Tourism Attaché Rene de los Santos.
While UP alumni touted their credentials and accomplishments, it was a Mapua
alumnus, Diosdado "Dado" Banatao, who stole the show at
the Sunday dinner-dance gala by announcing a $500,000 donation to the university.
Dado Banatao, one of Silicon Valley's visionaries and most successful
entrepreneurs, is a member of the UP Centennial Commission and a strong supporter
of public education (he has previously given a multi-million donation to
University of California @ Berkeley). Event
organizers also announced to the congregation matching grants previously offered by two UP alumni,
Dr. Mag Albarracin and Sid Consunji. The two alumni had each
pledged last June a $400,000 matching grant for a raffle drive being done
by alumni for the College of
Engineering.
One of the pleasant surprises of the convention was College of Music Dean Ramon Acoymo,
who provided entertaining song numbers for the convention delegates at the
Saturday welcome reception as well as the Sunday gala night. Our very own
music committee chair Henry Torres and his Sincerity Girls Ensemble
likewise provided a wonderful performance during the Sunday gala dinner.
Chapter president Alexis Zulueta led a strong delegation from our chapter
that included Joe Aliling, Frank Batara, Romi Beza, Henrie Boyd, Andet Las
Pinas, Caloy Rabuy, Rose Ramos, Daisy Rodriquez, the spouses Cherry and Lito Utleg
and Edna Victorino.
The UPAAA also held its elections for the 2007-2009 officers during the
convention. 2005-2007 UPAAA President Ted Aquino from the San
Francisco chapter formally turned over the leadership of the association to
Francisco Sy of the Maryland chapter in simple ceremonies on Monday Sept. 3.
The next UPAAA convention is slated for Labor Day weekend of 2009 in Washington,
D.C.
The UPAANC Berkeley chapter extends its warmest congratulations to the San
Francisco chapter for hosting the successful 2007 UPAAA convention!
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Speech for the General Convention and Alumni Reunion
UP Alumni Association in America
September 1- 3, 2007
San Francisco, California
by Emerlinda R. Roman
President, University of the Philippines
Good morning, Ladies and Gentlemen
Thank you for this opportunity to address you, our dear alumni, and thank you
for going out of your way to come here to San Francisco to join other alumni in
showing support for the institution that has made a difference in your lives.
I refer to the University of the Philippines, our University of the Philippines!
I also wish to express my thanks, admiration and esteem for the organizers of
this event. Organizing a reunion and convention is not easy but I know that
people behind this affair believe in the saying: Nothing is impossible!
Ladies and gentlemen: the University of the Philippines is alive and well. It is
99 years old today, and next year, it will celebrate its centenary. UP's first
century has produced hundreds of thousands of graduates many of whom have stayed
to serve the country, and some of whom have set their hearts and minds into
motion in different parts of the world such as you have.
Your Alma Mater has not been spared the changes time has brought political
and social transformations that have rendered it different from the one you left
as a young graduate. I wish to assure you, however, that the spirit of UP as a
dynamic, responsive and democratic institution of learning has not diminished
through the years. UP continues to be a standard and model for public higher
education in the country and will continue to break new paths on the frontiers
of knowledge and education.
While we have reason to be proud, we must confront the reality that we have a
long way to go. In recent years, the University has faced formidable challenges:
globalization, unprecedented scientific and technological achievements, new
imperatives for national development, and the worldwide trend to reduce
government spending for higher education. My predecessors have done their part,
guiding the University toward social transformation, toward recapturing a sense
of national purpose, toward modernization. It is time to take the next step.
I. UP as the National University
If UP is to continue to fulfill its mandate, it must do so as the national
university of the Philippines. I use the term "national" to mean four
things:
First, there is the geographic meaning of the word. We now have seven campuses
in twelve different locations. UP is literally present all over the archipelago.
The second meaning has to do with the depth and breadth of the UP education. No
other university in the country can boast of the scope and range of our course
offerings. We now have 644 degree programs in all disciplines, therefore,
embracing all interests and inclinations.
Third, like the National University of Singapore, the University of Indonesia,
Chulalongkorn University of Thailand, Tokyo University or Seoul National
University of South Korea, UP is the leading university in the country,
spearheading the country's quest for knowledge and keeping abreast of advances
in different fields of knowledge worldwide.
Fourth, UP's orientation remains firmly nationalist: everything we do in UP we
do in the service of the nation.
II. UP as a Center of Excellence and as a Center of Culture and Languages
UP will face the next century by securing its place as a distinguished Filipino
university in a highly complex, technologically advanced and globally
competitive world. Our resources will be devoted to building UP into a Center of
Excellence and Center of Culture and Languages. As a Center of Excellence, UP
shall concentrate on particular fields for which it has the advantage of trained
manpower and a proven track record. The constituent universities will be
encouraged to concentrate and further develop their expertise in particular
fields: UP Diliman in the liberal arts, the social sciences, the sciences and
the professions; UP Manila in the health sciences; UP Los Banos in agriculture
and forestry; UP Visayas in fisheries and ocean sciences; the UP Open University
in distance education, and UP Baguio and UP Mindanao will take the lead in
understanding the culture, language and people of their respective regions. Our
wish is for all campuses to be recognized nationally and internationally, that
they must only be unequal in terms of size, age and experience but equal to one
another in the quality of their faculty, students and program offerings. At the
same time, our campuses are uniquely placed to serve as Centers of Culture and
Languages in their respective regions, thus part of UP's resources will be
devoted to enriching our understanding of our national heritage, culture and
identity.
III. UP as the Leading Research and Development University in the Country and
the Region
We shall strengthen UP's position as the leading research and development
university in the country and the region. As the national university, UP shall
use its research, not only for breaking new scientific ground but also for
finding practical ways to help solve the country's problems.
We have put in place our agenda for the Emerging Fields in Science and
Technology Program, to develop cutting-edge fields that need to be advanced at
the highest possible level of inquiry in order to generate new knowledge,
building on our existing resources. We are determined to provide the necessary
working environment and financial support needed for the implementation of this
agenda.
However, given our limited financial resources, we have decided to focus our
research thrusts and directions on some priority projects, selected on the basis
of the following criteria: emerging fields that have high
scientific/technological and social impact; the possibility of
inter-/multidisciplinary involvement of different departments/colleges/or
constituent universities; the presence of existing and potential expertise and
facilities; financial sustainability; competitive advantage in human resources
and raw materials; and potential economic value.
Thus the program is focusing on the development of emerging technologies on (1)
materials (like biomaterials, bio-fuels, nano materials, pharmaceuticals and
molecular medicines); (2)biotechnology (like nano technology, food sufficiency,
bio-informatics, and biodiversity); (3) pervasive computing (advanced
microelectronics and computational algorithmics, "systems on a chip," and
environmental monitoring); and (4) measurement and instrumentation in support of
the first three.
We shall also strengthen our science and technology programs in all UP campuses.
Our student enrollment profile is quite unlike the national enrollment profile
wherein 41% of the country's college students are enrolled in business,
commerce, and education courses. At present 48% of our students are enrolled in
science and engineering courses, a profile we would like to maintain if not
improve, because we want to help the country build up its scientific manpower
base, an ingredient so very crucial for a country's progress and development.
Many countries have achieved economic prosperity because they have invested
heavily in the sciences and their applications. UP will follow the same path.
And here I have some good news: Last year, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo
allocated P500 Million on top of the regular UP budget for the establishment of
the National Science Complex. This, with the support of Congressman Luis
Villafuerte and Senator Franklin Drilon, Senator Edgardo Angara and our science
and engineering alumni from the Philippines and abroad. This year, the
Senate, with the aggressive support of Senators Angara and Drilon, inserted in
the UP budget another P412 Million to further support our engineering program
and other programs. This was approved by President Arroyo. Next year, in 2008
and I heard this from the Budget Secretary himself, in the presence of President
Arroyo, Senator Angara and Dr. Magdaleno Albarracin, Jr. that another P1.3
billion will be given to UP -- P500 Million for the National Science
Complex and P800 Million for the Engineering Research and Development for
Technology project. As you will note, government has come to realize two things:
First, that science and technology development is crucial and therefore needs
support, and second, that UP is in the best position to help build up the
country's scientific knowledge and know-how. The challenge is before us and we
will stand up to that challenge!
IV. UP as a Community of Scholars with Academic Credentials Comparable to their
Counterparts in the Best Universities in the World
To maintain our position and leadership in the national and international
academic community, we shall develop a community of scholars with academic
credentials comparable to their counterparts in the best universities in the
world. We are targeting an all PhD faculty in UP. In his time President Nemenzo
allocated P100 Million to support the doctoral studies of our faculty. To this
amount we have added another P108 Million to fast-track faculty development. But
there is a serious deterrent to our goal of upgrading our faculty profile and
that is the sad fact that UP cannot offer a compensation package that encourages
our faculty members to stay in UP. We regularly bemoan the exodus of some of our
most gifted faculty to the corporate world, to other universities, not to
mention other lands. And the most affected are our science and engineering
colleges. This is why we have embarked on an aggressive fundraising campaign.
V. Fundraising for UP
For our centennial fundraising campaign we hope to raise P5 Billion. Half of
this amount we hope to raise from the national government. Based on what I have
already mentioned, we are almost sure of getting that amount from government.
The other half we hope to raise ourselves and the breakdown is this: P1.8
Billion from development projects of UP and other sources and P.7 Billion or
P700 Million from the alumni.
On the P1.8 Billion from development projects of UP, we have recently signed a
contract with Ayala Land. It is a contract of lease where we have made
available to Ayala Land 38.6 hectares of UP land along Commonwealth Avenue for
Ayala Land to develop the place not into a commercial area but into a Science
and Technology Park. Ayala is investing P6 Billion into the project and we are
hoping to earn more over the 25 years that the contract is in effect as the
contract provides that we get a share of the rent that Ayala will charge its
office tenants and locators.
UP is probably one of the biggest landowners in the country. We own about
24,000 hectares, 4000 hectares of which are campus sites. Our goal is to
transform these landholdings which at present are idle and are therefore expense
items, into revenue generating assets.
We have also increased tuition and here we hope to generate revenues that will
be used for scholarships as well as for modernizing our facilities and
libraries. Thus we believe that raising the P1.8 billion is doable.
From the alumni, we are targeting to get P700 Million. The response has been
encouraging. This amount has been allocated by campus as follows:
Diliman P250 M
Manila 200 M
Los Banos 150 M
Visayas 70 M
Baguio, Open 30 M
University and
Mindanao
From the alumni abroad, we are targeting a minimum of $ 2.0 Million.
VI. The UP Charter
We almost got our UP Charter amended. Indeed we thought we were finally going to
get it during the 13th Congress but it was not meant to be. It looks like 13 is
not UP's lucky number. UP never got so close to getting it. For the first time
in all the 14 years that we were working on the Charter amendment, the bill went
through the first, second and third readings. It successfully went through the
bicameral assembly. Immediately after, the Senate ratified it. All that was
needed before President Arroyo signs it into law was the ratification by the
House. That we did not get. While there were attempts to have it ratified by the
House during the last three days of the Congress, these attempts were
unsuccessful. There was no quorum.
Now the senators and congressmen have assured us that we will have the amendment
before UP's 100th birthday. That remains to be seen. We have hosted dinner for
alumni in Congress. Forty of the congressmen and 14 of the senators of the 14th
Congress are UP alumni. From those who attended the dinner we got the assurance
that we will get it this time. Speaker Jose de Venecia, in a forum
organized by the Manila Overseas Press Club announced that UP will get its
Charter amendment in 75 days! I certainly hope so! Senate President Villar also
assured us that UP will get it this time under his leadership.
The amendment will free UP from the Salary Standardization Law which has pegged
the UP faculty's salary to about a fifth of the salaries of our counterparts in
private universities. It will exempt us from taxes on imports. It will
officially declare UP as the national university.
Ladies and gentlemen: the University needs your support and help. UP's future is
our collective responsibility. This is an exciting time in the life of UP and an
extraordinary time for all of us because we have the rare opportunity of
witnessing the turn of the century of the University. I believe UP is uniquely
poised to be a university of the 21st century. We are counting on that one
unique element that has remained constant -- a quality difficult to define but
is recognized by all who have spent either a season or an entire lifetime in the
university. For lack of a better term, we might call it the UP spirit, the force
that serves as bond across generations and even across continents. We can build
on this UP spirit and we will. Ladies and gentlemen: Come and join us as we
imagine UP's next century.
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