Descendants of Romualdez ROOT Generation No. 1 1. Romualdez 1
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CLASSIFICATION of the FUNCTIONS of GOVERNMENT) Fys 2014- 2016 (In Thousand Pesos)
Table ftS.c DETAILS OF SECTORAL ALLOCATION of NATIONAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES (CLASSIFICATION of the FUNCTIONS OF GOVERNMENT) FYs 2014- 2016 (In thousand pesos) PARTICULARS GENERAL PUBLIC SERVICES 934,096,034 1,146,455,888 1,250,564,700 Foreign economic aid 731 2,815,142 223,037 Department of Finance (DOE) 0 0 220,000 Office of the Secretary 0 0 220,000 Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) 731 3,275 3,037 Technical Cooperation Council of the Philippines 731 3,275 3,037 International Commitments Fund 0 2,811,867 0 General services 212,055,939 234,292,665 258,305,783 Congress of the Philippines 4,622820 5,988,440 5,943,302 Senate 1,554,242 1,652,771 1,711,162 Senate Electoral Tribunal 38,991 50,188 108,191 Commission on Appointments 278,048 332,429 372,094 House of Representatives 2,714,280 3,889,127 3,680,886 House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal 37,259 63,925 70,969 Office of the President (OP) 678,655 581,772 840,676 The Presidents Offices 678,655 581,772 840,676 Office of the Vice-President (OVP) 41,519 46,097 48,405 Office of the Vice-President (OVP) 41,519 46,097 48,405 Department of Agrarian Reform (OAR) 3,765,754 2,181,610 2,345,292 Office of the Secretary 3,765,754 2,161,610 2,345,292 Department of Agriculture (DA) 6,018,203 1,976,918 2,640,506 Office of the Secretary 5,196823 1,071,444 1,454,669 Agricultural Credit Policy Council 9,886 8,197 10,508 Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources 400,321 673,090 929,731 Cotton Development Administration 56,040 0 0 Fiber Industry Development Authority 148,642 0 0 Livestock Development -
Quantifying the Impacts of Water Environment and Conservation for Sustainability in Northern Philippines
Quantifying the Impacts of Water Environment and Conservation for Sustainability in Northern Philippines C.M. Pascual1 ,W. D. Balizon2, J. M. Caraang2, L. A. Castro2, M. O. Ganda2, and S.N. dela Cruz2 1) Professor, Department of Agricultural Engineering, College of Agriculture and Forestry, Mariano Marcos State University, Batac 2906, Ilocos Norte, Philippines; Email: [email protected] 2)Agricultural Engineers, Department of Agricultural Engineering, College of Agriculture and Forestry, Mariano Marcos State University, Batac 2906, Ilocos Norte, Philippines; Email: [email protected] Abstract Water scarcity and water pollution are some of the crucial issues in the world. One of the ways to reduce the impact of water scarcity and pollution is to expand water and wastewater reuse. This paper presents two case studies to quantify impacts on water environment and conservation for sustainability, such as (1) using a low-cost gravity-type drip irrigation system (LCDIS) for lettuce (Lactuca sativa) and tomato (Licopersicum esculentum) during two dry seasons; and (2) re-use of greywater (such as kitchen and laundry wastewater from households) for swamp cabbage (Ipomea aquatica).The case study 1 aimed to evaluate the performance of the low-cost gravity-type drip irrigation system under field conditions. Specifically, the study aimed to: a) determine the irrigation efficiency using gravity-type drip irrigation and furrow methods of irrigation; b) assess the growth and yield of lettuce and tomato as affected by different irrigation methods; and c) compare the economic feasibility of LCDIS with the farmer’s practice on lettuce and tomato. Field plot experiments were laid out separately for each crop to compare LCDIS and furrow irrigation method (as farmer’s practice). -
UNIVERSITY of CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE Naming
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE Naming the Artist, Composing the Philippines: Listening for the Nation in the National Artist Award A Dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Music by Neal D. Matherne June 2014 Dissertation Committee: Dr. Deborah Wong, Chairperson Dr. René T.A. Lysloff Dr. Sally Ann Ness Dr. Jonathan Ritter Dr. Christina Schwenkel Copyright by Neal D. Matherne 2014 The Dissertation of Neal D. Matherne is approved: Committee Chairperson University of California, Riverside Acknowledgements This work is the result of four years spent in two countries (the U.S. and the Philippines). A small army of people believed in this project and I am eternally grateful. Thank you to my committee members: Rene Lysloff, Sally Ness, Jonathan Ritter, Christina Schwenkel. It is an honor to receive your expert commentary on my research. And to my mentor and chair, Deborah Wong: although we may see this dissertation as the end of a long journey together, I will forever benefit from your words and your example. You taught me that a scholar is not simply an expert, but a responsible citizen of the university, the community, the nation, and the world. I am truly grateful for your time, patience, and efforts during the application, research, and writing phases of this work. This dissertation would not have been possible without a year-long research grant (2011-2012) from the IIE Graduate Fellowship for International Study with funding from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. I was one of eighty fortunate scholars who received this fellowship after the Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad Program was cancelled by the U.S. -
University of Hawai'i System Testimony
UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI‘I SYSTEM TESTIMONY H.B. 3258 RELATING TO THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI‘I Testimony Presented Before the House Committee on Finance February 27, 2006 By Jenny S. Samaan System Director, Office of International Education University of Hawai‘i TESTIMONY PRESENTED BEFORE THE HOUSE COMMITTEE ON FINANCE FEBRUARY 27, 2006 by Jenny S. Samaan System Director, Office of International Education University of Hawai‘i HB 3258 RELATING TO EDUCATION- EXCHANGE STUDENT AND FACULTY PROGRAM WITH PHILIPPINES Chair: Rep. Dwight Y. Takamine, Vice Chair: Rep. Bertha C. Kawakami and Members of the Committee: TESTIMONY IN SUPPORT OF H.B. 3258 The University of Hawai‘i agrees that student and faculty educational exchanges between Hawai‘i and the State’s sister provinces in the Philippines can serve to strengthen cultural, social, and economic ties. The University of Hawai‘i has had long-standing and a wide array of relationships with various academic institutions in the Philippines that include language teaching, agricultural research, student exchange, business school collaboration, distance education learning, among other activities. The complete list of relationships across the UH system is attached to this testimony for reference. The University of Hawai‘i system-wide Office of International Education (OIE) assists UH to achieve Goal 3, of the University's Strategic Plan, which strives for the University to be a “Model Local, Regional, and Global University” with unique strengths in Hawaiian, Asian and Pacific Affairs. In part, his goal is achieved by establishing and maintaining international exchange agreements that facilitate the mobility of UH students, faculty, and researchers and assist incoming exchange students and scholars. -
Jan 1 B 2017
~. ; . ··~·~ '-: '~'! ·~ [/" . , .... ''.'I •·-·t l •• .·•.1; otft/' ~. -..TIJ"'·, I ·~ 0j ..........".11' .•. .. •. I I I I r• I •"'~ ,. flL"•· ' l, . ' •'.~.· . .•'· • ·•1. "''-I{', r ,,.;'· - U1 ;• ••• '• l...u...!L' !JJ~" ~I\ ,1: FEB 10 20l7.. t H\ ) ,"!' ,-~-: : ... ,.... .. J' t,1: f' ··'·~·-·t'::-_·-~rr-.J . V'~' ..._. ".~v;::.fJ I l\epubltc of tlJe f}IJiltppines •. t;. -...t-:;;/ ....... ___ i~~(% :_ ~upreme <!Court ,iflllmtiln FIRST DIVISION ESTATE OF FERDINAND E. G.R. No. 213027 MARCOS, Petitioner, - versus - REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, Respondent. x -- -------------------------x IMELDA ROMUALDEZ MARCOS G.R. No. 213253 and IRENE MARCOS ARANETA, Petitioners, Present: SERENO, CJ, Chairperson, - versus - DEL CASTILLO, REYES,* PERLAS-BERNABE, and REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES,' CAGUIOA,JJ Respondent. Promulgated: JAN 1 B 2017 .. x ----------------------------------------- -./- ------- x RESOLUTION SERENO, CJ: Before us are Petitions for Review on CertiorarP assailing the Partial Summary Judgment3 dated 13 January 2014 and the Resolution4 dated 1 The Sandiganbayan was initially impleaded as a party, but is being deleted pursuant to Sec. 4, Ruic 45 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure, as amended, in the Resolution dated 17 August 2015. * In lieu of Associate Justice Teresita J. Leonardo-De Castro per Raffle dated 16 January 2017. 2 Rollo (G.R. No. 213253), pp. 52-77; rollo (G.R. No. 213027), pp. 3-12. 3 Rollo (G.R. No. 213253 ), pp. 11-48; penned by Associate Justice Efren N. de la Cruz and concurred in by Associate Justices Teresita V. Diaz-Baldos and Alex L. Quiroz. 4 Id. at 128-131. f Resolution 2 G.R. Nos. 213027 and 213253 I l June 2014 rendered by the Sandiganbayan, Special Division,5 in Civil Case No. -
Papal Visit Philippines 2014 and 2015 2014
This event is dedicated to the Filipino People on the occasion of the five- day pastoral and state visit of Pope Francis here in the Philippines on October 23 to 27, 2014 part of 22- day Asian and Oceanian tour from October 22 to November 13, 2014. Papal Visit Philippines 2014 and 2015 ―Mercy and Compassion‖ a Papal Visit Philippines 2014 and 2015 2014 Contents About the project ............................................................................................... 2 About the Theme of the Apostolic Visit: ‗Mercy and Compassion‘.................................. 4 History of Jesus is Lord Church Worldwide.............................................................................. 6 Executive Branch of the Philippines ....................................................................... 15 Presidents of the Republic of the Philippines ....................................................................... 15 Vice Presidents of the Republic of the Philippines .............................................................. 16 Speaker of the House of Representatives of the Philippines ............................................ 16 Presidents of the Senate of the Philippines .......................................................................... 17 Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines ...................................................... 17 Leaders of the Roman Catholic Church ................................................................ 18 Pope (Roman Catholic Bishop of Rome and Worldwide Leader of Roman -
MMSU Adopts English As Medium of Communication
Vol. 4 No. 2, February 2020 MMSU adopts English as medium of communication Members of the University Academic Council convene for their 129th meeting at the mini-theater of the College of Medicine. One of the their topics during the meeting is the improvement of English proficiency among faculty, staff, and students. our Language Center, Center for Ilokano he Mariano Marcos State (UAC) in their meeting last February 18 and Amianan Studies, Center for Human University (MMSU) will now as the whole council aims to develop Movement Studies, and Sentro ng Wika T use English as a medium of competent professionals who are at Kultura. “We continue to offer courses instruction and official committed to provide “our students on Ilokano, Filipino, and foreign communication in the university with the right tools to succeed in an languages”, she added. system. increasingly diverse, knowledge-driven, and competitive global environment.” “At the basic education levels, we will MMSU President Shirley C. Agrupis continue to observe the principles and said this academic stand will attain its “That is why we have integrated an practices of Mother Tongue Based- ultimate goal of developing the intensive English course, focused on Multilingual Education (MTB-MLE), in proficiency of the faculty, staff, and developing English proficiency for accordance with Republic Act 10533 and students in the English language. academic and communicative purposes, Dep Ed Order No. 74, s. 2009. in all our curricular programs,” Dr. Moreover, we continue to look for ways “This is the University’s response to Agrupis said, emphasizing that the to more effectively and beneficially results of recent surveys and studies enhancement of courses in science and implement multilingual education and which show a decline in the English mathematics are also being developed conduct research in the field in aid of proficiency of Filipino students,” Dr. -
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT MERRILL LYNCH, PIERCE, FENNER AND SMITH, INCORPORATED, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Delaware with its principal place of business in New York, New York, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. ENC CORPORATION; SUNTRUST INVESTMENT CO., S.A., a corporation organized and existing under the laws of Switzerland with No. 04-16401 an address at rue de Jargonnant 2, P.O. Box 76, 1211 Geneva 6, D.C. No. Switzerland; JOHN K. BURNS, a CV-00-00595-MLR citizen of the United States, with an address at 300 Wacker Drive, Suite, 900, Chicago, Illinois, 60606; THE ESTATE OF FERDINAND E. MARCOS; IMELDA R. MARCOS; FERDINAND R. MARCOS, JR.; MARIA IMELDA MARCOS; IRENE MARCOS ARANETA; FRONTIER RISK CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, L.C.C., a limited liability company organized and existing under the laws of the State of Nevada, with a registered office at 6100 Neil Road, Suite 18101 18102 MERRILL LYNCH v. ARELMA, INC. 500, Reno, NV. 89511 and an address at 300 Wacker Drive, Suite 900, Chicago, IL 60606; GROSVENOR CAPITAL LTD., a company organized and existing under the law of the United Kingdom, with an address at Grosvenor Gardens House, Suite 117, 35-37 Grosvenor Gardens, London SW1 W OBS, United Kingdom; THE ESTATE OF ROGER ROXAS; GOLDEN BUDHA CORPORATION, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Georgia, with a registered office at 710 West First Street, Blue Ridge, Georgia 30513, and a mailing address at 260 Carrollton St., Buchanan, GA 30113, Defendants, and ARELMA, INC., a corporation organized and existing under the laws of Panama with a permanent address at Ave. -
D:\MMSU Chronicle 2021\3. March
Vol. 5 No. 3, March 2021 Let’s ACHIEVE! By SHIRLEY C. AGRUPIS “We continue to improve and move forward.” MSU has proven its to note our conformances to the resilience in this time of international standards as well as our best M COVID-19 pandemic as practices in meeting the needs of our evidenced by its continued efforts to stakeholders. implement a Quality Management —o0o— May we continue to lead the way System that is customer-focused and forward and make a lasting impact excellence-driven. Indeed, we have I am pleased to greet you as we join on everyone. gone through a lot of learning the celebration of Women’s History experiences in 2020 that application Month in the United States, and National —o0o— of these in our own Quality Women’s Month here in the Philippines. Management System is a continuous These month-long celebrations testify to In this time of the pandemic, and ongoing process. This month, the crucial role and contribution of where media has played a key role in we continue learning and women in the history of both nations, keeping us informed and guided of reconstructing our collective and indeed, around the world. We what is happening in the various areas experiences in relation to our QMS celebrate the innate strength and power of the country and the world, we all through the Surveillance audit by of women as they make significant saw the importance of information Socotec Auditors, virtually this time impact and change in their own dissemination to aid us in developing due to the current situation. -
CONSTITUTION of the REPUBLIC of the PHILIPPINES Document Date: 1986
Date Printed: 01/14/2009 JTS Box Number: 1FES 29 Tab Number: 37 Document Title: THE CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES Document Date: 1986 Document Country: PHI Document Language: ENG IFES 10: CON00159 Republic of the Philippines The Constitutional Commission of 1986 The- Constitution ,- of.the- -Republic of tile Philippines Adopted by , - . THE CONSTITIJTIONAL COMMISSION OF 1986 At the National Government-Center, Quezon City, Philjppincs, on the fifteenth day of October, Nineteen hundred and eighty-six 198(j THE CONSTITUTION· OF THE REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES P REAM B LE. We; toe sovereign Filipino people, imploring the aid of Almighty Cod, in order to build a just and humane society and establish a Government that shall embody our ideals and aspirations, promotl' the common good, conserve and. develop· our patrimony, and secure- to ourselves and our posterity the blessings of independence and democracy under the rule of law"and a regime of truth, justice, free dom, love, equality, and peace, do ordain and piomulgatethis Consti tution. ARTICLE I NATIONAL TERRITORY The national territorycomprise~ the Philippine archipelago, with all the islands and waters embraced therein,' and all other territories over which the. Philippines has sovereignty or jurisdiction, .consisting of its terrestrial, fluvial, and aerial domains, including its territorial sea, the seabed, the subsoil, the insula~ shelves, and other submarine areas. The waters aroilnd, between, and connecting the islands of the archipelago, regardless of their breadth and. dimensions, form part of the internal waters of the Philippines. ARTICLE II r DECLARATION OF PRINCIPLE15 AND STATE POLICIES PRINCIPLES Section I .. The Philippines is a democratic and· republican State. -
Appendix 5.11 Chavez V
APPENDIX 5.11 CHAVEZ V. PCGG 645 Kasarinlan: Philippine Journal of Third World Studies 2012–13 (27–28): 645–658 APPENDIX 5.11 FRANCISCO I. CHAVEZ, PETITIONER, VS. PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION ON GOOD GOVERNMENT (PCGG) AND MAGTANGGOL GUNIGUNDO, (IN HIS CAPACITY AS CHAIRMAN OF THE PCGG), RESPONDENTS The compromise agreement mentioned by Raissa Robles is reproduced in full in the decision, along with a supplemental agreement. Assailed were procedural and substantive issues regarding the compromise agreement. One procedural issue—the standing of lawyer Francisco Chavez, who filed as a taxpayer and a citizen—was rendered moot and academic because of the inclusion of the petitioners-in-intervention, who were recognized by the Supreme Court as “legitimate claimants of the Marcos wealth.” Among the substantive issues, the agreement was declared in many ways legally infirm, even unconstitutional. One wonders, however, if the agreement was approved by the president at the time, if the Supreme Court would have ruled differently. The Facts Petitioner Francisco I. Chavez, as “taxpayer, citizen and former government official who initiated the prosecution of the Marcoses and their cronies who committed unmitigated plunder of the public treasury and the systematic subjugation of the country’s economy,” alleges that what impelled him to bring this action were several news reports[2] bannered in a number of broadsheets sometime in September 1997. These news items referred to (1) the alleged discovery of billions of dollars of Marcos assets deposited in various coded accounts in Swiss banks; and (2) the reported execution of a compromise, between the government (through PCGG) and the Marcos heirs, on how to split or share these assets. -
Ei\8Tr REPUBLIC of the PHILIPPINES • F F Tt Ftrffflnrp First Regular Session 'I F SEP 11 P 6 23 SENATE S
EIGHTEENTH CONGRESS OF THE #ei\8tr REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES • f f tt ftrffflnrp First Regular Session 'I f SEP 11 P 6 23 SENATE S. B. NO. 1044 H E a iV Z O W ; Introduced by SENATOR IMEE R. MARCOS AN ACT MODERNIZING THE CHARTER OF THE MARIANO MARCOS STATE UNIVERSITY AND RENAMING THE SAME AS THE FERDINAND E. MARCOS STATE UNIVERSITY, AMENDING FOR THIS PURPOSE PRESIDENTIAL DECREE No. 1279, AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES EXPLANATORY NOTE Sectionl, Article XIV of the Constitution ensures the protection and promotion of the right of all citizens to quality education at all levels and shall take appropriate steps to make such education accessible to all. This bill seeks firstly to avoid the confusion with a similarly-named SUC in nearby La Union, called Don Mariano Marcos Memorial State University (DMMMSU) with its numerous campuses and large population. Hence, this Ilocos Norte SUC should instead be named after former Pres. Ferdinand E. Marcos, rather than his father, the Assemblyman, Mariano Marcos. The high academic standard of the Mariano Marcos State University (MMSU), its graduates consistently topping various licensure examinations, also evinced by its pioneering courses such as the first Masters in Renewable Energy Engineering in South East Asia, underlie its excellence. However, its forty-one (41) year old charter is no longer responsive to the present economic and educational landscape of Ilocandia and Ilocano students. Thus, this bill seeks to revisit PD 1279 with the following salient points: a. Broaden the University's mandate to reflect its fourfold functions, namely: advanced education and training; research and innovation; extension & development; resource generation; b.