DAGUPAN CITY—The Sunday Punch marked a milestone in
Pangasinan community journalism as it quietly celebrated Saturday its 50th anniversary sans fanfare.

Founded in 1956 by the late Ermin Garcia Sr,, The Sunday Punch has gone through several ups and downs and continued its niche as Pangasinan’s Leading Newspaper.

Ermin Garcia Jr, the papers’ publisher-editor and son of the late Ermin, recalled in his column Punchline that “many thought (and believed) the irreverent PUNCH finally wrote 30” with the gun slaying of his father in his office by Rodolfo Soriano, a Lingayen councilor, in 1966. The elder Garcia was murdered due to a payroll padding expose he wrote in the paper.

“Wallowing deep in debt and left with a completely shocked editorial staff, the PUNCH was literally laid inside the ICU room of community journalism,” Garcia recalled.

But there were believers and friends who refused to give up on the vision and idealism of my father, he said.

Garcia said the Martial era was a very difficult period for The PUNCH. After being ordered closed for publishing a special issue about a suspected but “undeclared martial law”, on the very same day the media establishments were already under heavy guard to prevent them from continuing publication,
he said they thought it was the end for The PUNCH.

But after a clearance from Camp Crame arrived for the paper to continue to publish, he said they were torn between closing the paper and deprive editorial staff a regular source of livelihood or keep it open to keep the information flowing and provide livelihood for the staff.

He chose the latter and suspended writing editorials. He lifted the Socratic motto “No man is to be reverenced more than the Truth” from the paper’s masthead and substituted it with “In Service to the People of Pangasinan”.

Now, the paper’s masthead contains the original motto.

“It was a time when The PUNCH’s brand of journalism was continuously taunted by the military and there was nothing that I could do about it. It was a tortuous existence but in hindsight, I am glad I chose to make the PUNCH live through it because if I didn’t, The PUNCH would not be here, and what it is today, stronger and vibrant”,” Garcia said.

He admitted that the paper lived down its humiliation in those times to be recognized later as one of the most successful community newspapers in Asia in a UNESCO study.

The PUNCH also became the first Filipino community newspaper to publish online in 1997 in partnership with Bitstop Inc.

The prestigious Philippine Press Institute and the Konrad Adenauer Foundation have acknowledged the paper as the most outstanding community newspaper in business and economic reporting, science technology and environmental issues reporting and best in editorial page.

“All these citations became our vindication knowing that two years before my father was killed in his editorial office, The PUNCH was recognized the Most Outstanding Provincial Newspaper in the Philippines,” Garcia said.

Fifty years after it was founded, Garcia gathered his team of editors, reporters, correspondents and columnists in a simple luncheon celebration at Star Plaza Hotel in this city last Saturday.

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July 4, 2006

Pangasinan hosts Children's Summit

LINGAYEN, Pangasinan—The first North Luzon Legislative Summit on Children which brings together vice governors, vice mayors, provincial board members, councilors will be held at the Narciso Ramos Sports and Civic Center here today until July 6.

With a theme “Empowering Children, Assuring the Future”, Vice Governor Oscar Lambino of this province said that this is in partnership with the United Nations International Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the Department of Interior and Local Government.

Lambino, secretary-general of the Vice Governors’ League of the Philippines (VGLP), said the series of legislative summits on children aim to convince local stakeholders of the important role of children in nation-building and to open their minds to the different opportunities and challenges besetting them.

It is envisioned that the activities will encourage open discussions on the state of children in the different provinces as well as to determine their order of priority in the development plan of local government unit.

Lambino said the discussions/workshops during the summit will facilitate a dynamic and grassroots based assessment on the actual figures/data that will indicate whether children’s causes/concerns had been properly addressed by the community or the local government.

He added that it will also help determine the areas that need to be improved to forge ahead in the child-friendly movement.

During the summit, there will be a proper assessment of the state of children in north Luzon. It is also expected that a timetable for the completion/refinement of the three gifts for children, namely: the Local Code for Children, Investment Code for Children and the Local Development Plan for Children will be made. These will also serve as work plan that an LGU will pursue to become child-friendly.

Guests of honor during the summit will be Dr. Nicholas Alipui, country representative of UNICEF, Social Welfare and Development Secretary Esperanza Cabral, Vice Gov. Julius Caesar Herrera, national president of VGLP and Vice Mayor Jessie Cruz, national president of the Vice Mayors’ League of the
Philippines.

The Luzon summit is the second major island conference after the successful holding of the first Visayas Legislative Summit on Children on Nov. 7-9, 2005 in Tagbilaran, Bohol.

The third major conference will be held in the province of Saranggani on August 9 to 10, 2006.

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DAGUPAN CITY–Lingayen-Dagupan
Archbishop Oscar Cruz advised the government to leave sex education to the parents of the students.

Cruz said "Sex education especially with its human dimension and moral
consideration are better left to the parents of the students-the father and
the mother themselves giving formational sex education to their boy and girl
children respectively".

He added that it is incongruous to expect a lady teacher to handle sex
education for boy and girl students in the same classroom at the same time.
This is especially true for gentlemen teachers, he said.

The prelate said that if the government really wants sex education for the
school children, it should give its modules instead to their parents, and let
them do the task which is proper of them.

"After all they should be the first and best teachers of their own children
in such fundamental matter as human sexuality," he said.

Cruz said the present administration appears to have a twisted sense of
priorities, citing in particular in the field of education.

He noted that contrary to the enchanted view of the national leadership, the
educational condition in the country is appalling.

He cited the dire lack of classrooms where he said libraries and laboratories, bodegas and even comfort rooms are converted into classrooms.

Yet, he said, still, such pitiful conversions are not enough to accommodate
students and make them learn. The result is disturbing: functional illiteracy
of students by the millions, he said.

Cruz also noted that there is lack of teachers with their lack of incentives
and lack of updating.He added to the list the lack of books, the lack of
school equipment, the lack of teaching materials.

"The over-all result of this pitiful situation is predictable: a fast
deteriorating education in the Philippines as already noted by foreign
agencies," he said.

Cruz said,"But lo and behold the response of the government to all the above
negative educational factors in the country: sex education for the school
children!"

"One wonders where the administration gets its distorted ideas. The problem:
the school children are not learning. The solution: give them sex
education!," Cruz said.

He said that there is a whale of a difference between pure and bare sex and
properly human sexuality. Sex per se does not even need to be taught, he
said.

He said that even animals know the “what” and the “how” of sex. Human
sexuality however is definitely much more than a matter of sex organs and
functions, sex engagements and its results, he said.

The humanity of sex already enters the sphere of values and morals which are
beyond sex drawings and physical demonstrations no matter how detailed and
concrete these be, he said.–Eva Visperas

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DAGUPAN CITY—Philantropist and “Patroness of the Arts” Rosemarie “Baby” Arenas made a sentimental comeback to her second home here after she was conferred for the first time Doctorate in Humanities honoris causa by the Lyceum Northwestern University (LNU) last week in recognition of her
charity works to uplift the lives of the poor in the country.

In her sentimental commencement speech, Arenas, who joined 648 other graduates, traced her tender moments spent in this city as a young girl in the company of her Auntie Celing Calimlim-Reyna, a cousin of Arenas’ late mother, Remedios Bosch Jimenez. Reyna was the wife of former Dagupan City Mayor Liberato Reyna who ruled here for long years, making himself referred to as “the mayor for life”.

Arenas said her family loved this place where they had their
vacations in the Reynas’ mansion which they fondly called as “the White House”.

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DAGUPAN CITY–The regional trial court (RTC) here has granted the petition of the Philippine Association of Colleges and Universities (PACU) to stop the implementation of Commission on Higher Education’s (CHED) two resolutions that would phase out programs of higher educational institutions which have
low passing percentage in licensure examinations.

RTC Judge Rolando Mislang of branch made this move in his 15-page decision dated March 29 regarding the petition for certiorari, prohibition and damages with prayer for temporary restraining order and/or preliminary injunction by
the University of Luzon (UL) as petitioner and PACU as well as Lyceum Northwestern University (LNU) as petitioners-intervenors.

Both UL and LNU are based in this city.

Mislang said “public respondents (CHED through Dr. Carlito Puno, Dr. Saturnino Ocampo Jr, Dr. Ma. Cristina Padolina, Dr. Hadja Luningning Umar, Fr. Rolando de la Rosa, Dr. Willima Medrano and Dr. Catherine Castañeda) and all or any of their agents are hereby enjoined from implementing Resolution No. 475-2004 and Resolution No. 120-2005 and from issuing further statement
in media print or radio or television or through internet or in any forum that is derogatory or damaging to the petitioner/intervenors”.

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