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Silliman University

Silliman University (also referred to as Silliman or SU) is a private research university in Dumaguete City, Negros Oriental, the Philippines.[6] Established in 1901 as Silliman Institute by the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions, it is the first American and Protestant founded institution of higher learning in the Philippines and in Asia.[7][8][9]

Silliman University
Pamantasang Silliman
The University Seal
Latin: Universitas Sillimaniensis
Former names
Silliman Institute
(1901–1938)
MottoVia, Veritas, Vita (Latin)
Motto in English
The Way, the Truth, and the Life
TypePrivate, nonsectarian, research university, coeducational
EstablishedAugust 28, 1901
FounderDavid S. Hibbard
Religious affiliation
In covenant with the United Church of Christ in the Philippines, but neither owned nor governed by the UCCP or any religious organization.[1]
Academic affiliations
ACUCA, UBCHEA, ACSCU, ASAIHL, PAASCU, ATESEA
ChairmanRicardo A. Balbido Jr.
PresidentBetty Cernol McCann
Academic staff
490 (faculty)[2]
Administrative staff
290
Studentsapprox. 11,000
Address
Hibbard Avenue
, ,
Philippines

9°18′46″N 123°18′24″E / 9.31278°N 123.30667°E / 9.31278; 123.30667Coordinates: 9°18′46″N 123°18′24″E / 9.31278°N 123.30667°E / 9.31278; 123.30667
CampusUrban
Alma Mater songSilliman Song
Colors  and   Red and white
NicknameSillimanian
Sporting affiliations
PRISAA, UNIGAMES[3]
MascotStallions and Mares
Websitewww.su.edu.ph
University rankings
Regional – Overall
QS Asia[4]501-550 (2022)
National – Overall
QS National[5]5 (2022)

The university was named after Dr. Horace Brinsmade Silliman, a former businessman and philanthropist from Cohoes, New York who provided the initial sum of $10,000 for the establishment of the school. Starting as an elementary school for boys, the school expanded to become a college in 1910, acquiring university status in 1938. Silliman University was run and operated by Americans during the first half of the 20th century. After the Second World War, Filipinos began to assume more administrative positions, resulting in the appointment of the university's first Filipino president in 1952.[10]

In terms of accreditation, Silliman is one of top five universities in the Philippines with "Institutional Accreditation" by the Federation of Accrediting Agencies of the Philippines (FAAP). The Institutional Accreditation is the highest accreditation that can be granted to an educational institution after an assessment of its number of accredited programs, its facilities, its services, and its faculty is conducted on a whole.[11][12] Incidentally, Silliman also has the highest number of accredited programs in the country, twenty of which are on Level IV accreditation status, the highest level that can be granted to individual programs.[13][14]

Over 10,000 students attending the university from the Philippines and at least 56 other countries are enrolled in ten colleges, five schools, and three institutes.[15][16] It is registered as a National Landmark by the National Historical Institute and is one of few private higher education institutions in the Philippines that have been granted full autonomous status by the Commission on Higher Education.[7][17][18] It is also a founding member of the Association of Christian Universities and Colleges in Asia (ACUCA) and one of the recognized institutions in the U.S. Veterans Administration's list of approved educational institutions.[19][20]

In spite of the fact that it was established by a religious organization, Silliman is independent in legal and juridical governance. It maintains a link with Central Philippine University (CPU) and historically regards it as a sister school. CPU was founded by the Protestant Baptist Americans in 1905 in Iloilo City.

The university offers programs in the fields of early childhood education, elementary education, secondary education, undergraduate education, as well as graduate education. Programs in the undergraduate and graduate levels cover disciplines such as arts, accountancy, agriculture, architecture, business administration, engineering, English, Filipino, information technology, law, medicine, nursing, anthropology, biology, chemistry, clinical sciences, pharmacy education, teacher education, economics, environmental science, fine arts, theater and performing arts, foreign languages, geology, journalism, library science, marine sciences, nutrition and dietetics, music, physics, theology, philosophy, psychology, public administration and social work. In addition to its academic undertakings, the university is involved in research and community extension projects.[21][22] Silliman's stature in the fields of environmental and marine sciences has led to its being designated by the USAID as a 'Center of Excellence in Coastal Resources Management.'[23]

History

 
Silliman Hall is the oldest standing American structure in the Philippines. The design of the building is reminiscent of the Stick style architecture that characterize American buildings in the late 19th century. Some of the materials used to build it were salvaged from an old theater in New York.[24][25] The present structure was built in 1909 as an addition to the original structure built in 1902, now demolished. It presently houses the university's Heritage Museum.[26]

Establishment

Silliman University was founded on August 28, 1901, as Silliman Institute by Protestant missionaries under the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the United States. Originally established as an elementary school for boys, operations for the institute started through an initial $10,000 donation given by a businessman and Christian philanthropist of Cohoes, New York named Dr. Horace Brinsmade Silliman, who wanted to establish an industrial school using the Hampton Institute of Virginia model.[27]

The person tasked by the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions to establish the school was Dr. David Sutherland Hibbard, a man from Lyndon, Kansas who, after serving as a pastor in a Presbyterian church in that locality, offered his services to the Presbyterian Board as missionary. Upon his arrival in the Philippines, he was commissioned, with his wife Laura, to scout the southern part of the islands to determine the best location for the school. His original points of destination were Cebu, Zamboanga and Iloilo. While in Cebu, a suggestion came to him to make a side-trip to Dumaguete.[27] On his arrival, he was met by a Rev. Captain John Anthony Randolph, chaplain of the sixth U.S. Infantry Regiment stationed at that time in Dumaguete, who later introduced him to Don Meliton Larena, the town's local presidente and to his brother Demetrio Larena, then the vice-governor of the province. Hibbard got attracted to the place and decided to establish the school in the locality. He would later on write that the "beauty of Dumaguete and the friendliness of the people" helped in bringing about his decision.[27]

The institute had a modest beginning: Dr. and Mrs. Hibbard held classes in a rented house beside the sea until the institute's first building, Silliman Hall, was completed in 1903.[28] Recalling how the university started half a century later, Dr. Hibbard described:[27]

There were fifteen boys that first morning. The equipment consisted of four desks about ten feet long, two tables and two chairs, a few McGuffey’s Readers, a few geographies, arithmetics and ninth-grade grammars. I was President; Mrs. Hibbard was the faculty.

Expansion and World War II

 
Dr. David S. Hibbard's statue, facing the Rizal Boulevard in Dumaguete City

Enrollment in the school grew attracting students from other Asian countries.[29] In 1910, Silliman was awarded government recognition and the right to grant a degree. In the same year, it was incorporated under the laws of the Philippines. Women started to be admitted in 1912, and in 1921, the Silliman Bible School (later to become the Divinity School) was established in cooperation with the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, largely representing the Congregational Churches of the United States. As enrollment in the institution grew further, a corresponding increase in faculty followed. These developments were accompanied with the use of a more developed curriculum and the construction and acquisition of more permanent buildings and equipment. By 1925, Silliman was already recognized as "the most influential Protestant institution of higher learning" in the Philippines, based on a report submitted by the Board of Educational Survey, which was created by the Philippine Legislature to conduct a study on all educational institutions in the country.[30] The institute was re-incorporated in 1935, and in 1938 became the first school outside of Manila to be granted university status.[29]

 
Guy Hall, built in 1918, was one of the buildings occupied by Japanese troops during World War II

After its recognition as a university, Silliman continued to receive from the Presbyterian Board and the American Board (now the United Church Board for World Ministries) grants for land, buildings and equipment. In addition, these boards provided the university with American faculty and staff personnel. Two other American boards have contributed personnel and funds: the Board of Missions of the United Methodist Church and the United Christian Missionary Society of the Christian Churches (Disciples of Christ).[31][32][33]

Life in the university was interrupted when World War II came. On May 26, 1942, some three weeks after the fall of Corregidor, two Japanese transports anchored in Dumaguete. Silliman was occupied by the Japanese forces and was converted into a garrison. One of its buildings, Channon Hall, became the headquarters of the dreaded Japanese kempeitai or military police where many Filipinos were tortured and killed. During the occupation, many members of the faculty and the student body were forced to evacuate to four localities within the province. Under the leadership of Dr. Arthur Carson, then president of Silliman, the remaining members of the faculty continued the operations of the university in the mountains of Negros Oriental. This led to the formation of what was then called the "Jungle University" in Malabo, Valencia, one of the localities in the province.[34][35] University Professor Roy Bell became a major in the Negros Island guerrilla forces, established a Free Government, printed the Victory News, and used his radio transmitter to establish contact with the South West Pacific Area (command).[36] Many students, alumni, faculty members and ROTC officers joined the resistance forces, while theology professors Alvin Scaff, Proculo Rodriguez, Paul Lindholm and James McKinley "carried on pastoral and teaching duties for the resistance soldiers and civilians in guerrilla-dominated territory."[37] The Carson and Bell families, plus other faculty members, were evacuated by the USS Narwhal (SS-167) on February 7, 1944.[38]

American and Filipino forces liberated Dumaguete on April 26, 1945. A few days later, the Faculty Emergency Committee took charge over the campus and began preparations for the resumption of classes and the challenge of reconstruction.[citation needed]

Post-war years

 
The western side of the Gate of Knowledge is one of the iconic portals of Silliman University. Built in the 1950s, this landmark now serves as the main entrance to the main campus. The original portal, called the Gate of Opportunity (built circa 1901–1905), is on the southeastern side of the campus facing the Rizal Boulevard. Silliman's portals have become the de facto symbol for the university and the City of Dumaguete. It has also been incorporated into the provincial seal of the Province of Negros Oriental.

For the first half of the century, Silliman was run and operated by Americans. After the Second World War and until the early 1950s, moves for the Filipinization of the university administration began to come closer to the surface. Filipino faculty members began to assume more important positions and, as more of these faculty members took administrative roles, the board of trustees elected the university's first Filipino president, Dr. Leopoldo T. Ruiz, on August 26, 1952, officially taking office in April 1953. A Silliman alumnus (A.B. 1916) and the University of California at Berkeley alumnus (B.A. 1920), Ruiz had a long experience in higher education and in the foreign service. Before his appointment, he took up graduate studies in sociology at Columbia and Yale, with an M.A. (1924) from the former institution, as well as a Ph.D. (1942) from the University of Southern California.[34][page needed][non-primary source needed][39]

In the same decade of Ruiz's appointment, the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia (UBCHEA) in New York, an interdenominational group, assumed responsibility for channeling all church aid to Silliman. The United Board is an international organization supported by ten Protestant mission boards.[40][non-primary source needed][page needed] Long after Ruiz's appointment, however, Americans and other nationals still constituted a considerable portion of the faculty.[34][non-primary source needed][page needed] Up to the present, American and foreign visiting professors are still regularly assigned in specialized areas.[41][42][43]

In the early 1960s and toward the beginning of the Martial Law years, the university embarked on a "Build a Greater Silliman" program in response to the growing student population and the corresponding need for more facilities. With much help from many donors, mostly alumni and entities from abroad, the program saw the construction of more academic buildings, dormitories, housing units for the faculty and other facilities. These constructions included the now famous Luce Auditorium which was funded largely by the , the Science Complex, equipped with an observatory on top of the third floor, the Engineering Complex, and the Silliman University Medical Center.[34][page needed]

Martial law era

When Martial Law was declared in 1972, Silliman became one of the first two universities ordered by the government to be closed and one of the last to be opened. On the morning of September 23, 1972 some faculty members and many students were rounded up by the local Philippine Constabulary (now the Philippine National Police), some of whom were detained for one to six months. Many offices of the university, including the Weekly Sillimanian, the student paper, were raided by the PC.[34][page needed][44] Journalist Crispin Maslog, who was teaching in the university at the time, recalls that Marcos himself had complained about instances where members of the political opposition such as Senator Jovito Salonga and Senator Juan Liwag were invited to speak at the university.[44]

The year 1979 became a landmark year for Silliman when its Van Houweling Research Laboratory, then headed by Dr. George Beran,[45] produced a dog vaccine that gave a three-year immunity from rabies, making it the first and only laboratory to produce a rabies vaccine with long-term immunity in the whole of Southeast Asia.[46] The development of the vaccine resulted in the elimination of rabies in many parts of the Visayas and Mindanao Islands and was later on used by other countries in their fight against rabies conducted in collaboration with the World Health Organization.[47]

1980s to recent history

The 1980s saw the restoration of the university's Student Government and the approval of its constitution. After years of suppression by the Marcos regime, students were again allowed to self-organize in 1981. The decade also witnessed the 100% board exam ratings of the Electrical Engineering, Nursing and Accountancy programs and the installation of solar-powered light posts in the campus in the years 1986 and 1989 respectively.[46]

 
Portal West Building.

In the 1990s the university shifted its grading system from alphabetical to numerical. In 1994, eleven Sillimanians landed in the top ten of that year's nursing board exam, with twenty two other Sillimanian takers occupying the top twenty posts. In that same year, Silliman alumnus Gonzalo O. Catan Jr. was awarded Most Outstanding Inventor in the fifth National Technology Fair. The decade also witnessed Silliman being cited as the university with the best published scientific paper in the Dr. Elvira O. Tan Awards; and in 1995, the university hosted the first ever International Conference on Biology and Conservation of Small Cetaceans of Southeast Asia, as well as the International Coral Reef Initiative Workshop.[46]

Toward the end of the decade, Silliman prepared for its centennial celebrations. To strengthen its local area network technology, the university installed fiber-optic cables that span the entire 62 hectare campus in 1999. In 2000, the Silliman Accountancy program ranked first in the country, culminating in its Physical Therapy program ranking first in 2001.[46]

Silliman University continues to draw support from the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia (UBCHEA), as well as from its alumni and other benefactors. The university has adopted a policy of providing education to the surrounding regions without depending much on tuition and other fees to meet its operational expenses. Recently, Silliman constructed the Portal West Building, a five-storey commercial building on campus, to help augment its operational expenses. In line with the same policy, it has leased portions of its properties to business entities to further raise its financial base.[citation needed]

Because significant portion of the student population ride on motorbikes and scooters, the university has also aggressively adopted a "No Helmet-No Entry" policy. Silliman has likewise adopted a "No-Smoking Policy" on campus.[48]

Silliman is one of few private higher educational institutions in the country that have been granted full autonomous status by the Commission on Higher Education (CHED), the same government agency that recognized some of its programs as Centers of Excellence and Centers of Development.[49] To date, the university has the highest number of accredited programs, fourteen of which have been granted Level IV accreditation status, the highest level that can be granted to individual programs.[citation needed]

Campus

 
An early morning photograph of the Silliman University Church. Construction for the church building began in 1941. Due to interruptions brought by World War II, it was completed only in 1949.[50]

Silliman is located in Dumaguete City, a quiet, peaceful seaside community with a population of 116,392.[51][52] The university campus has a total land area of 62 hectares composed of the main campus along Hibbard Avenue, and the campus for the College of Agriculture and the Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences to the north. Dotted by large acacia trees, the main campus is home to most of the colleges and schools of the university and is adjacent to the city's downtown district. Occupying almost one-third of the downtown area, the campus faces the sea to the east, flanked by its portals which are now considered symbols of the school and city. The three most prominent portals are the Gates of Knowledge, Opportunity and Service. The Gate of Knowledge is the current and main entrance; it is the starting point of the two-kilometer-long Hibbard Avenue which was named after Dr. David Sutherland Hibbard, one of the founders of the institution. The other prominent landmarks on the main campus are the Silliman Hall, which now houses the Anthropology Museum; the Silliman University Church; the Robert B. and Metta J. Silliman Library; and the Claire Isabel McGill Luce Auditorium, the largest theater outside Metro Manila.[53] It is frequented by tourists so the university maintains a campus cruiser, a 15-seater golf cart or tram-like vehicle, to ferry visitors around the campus. It is used to transport students during regular days.[54]

 
The Claire Isabel McGill Luce Auditorium (built 1973–75) is named after the wife of Henry Luce III, elder son of Henry Luce who is the founder and editor-in-chief of Time magazine.[55][56] Its construction was mainly funded by the Henry Luce Foundation.[57]

Two kilometers to the north (the other end of Hibbard Avenue) is the campus for the College of Agriculture and the Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences. It has a land area of 29 hectares, and houses the College of Agriculture Complex, the Silliman Farm, a number of dormitories (known as the Cocofed Dormitories) and the Marine Laboratories of the Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences. Adjacent to it is the Silliman Beach.[citation needed]

Silliman has off-campus facilities located in Camp Lookout, Valencia and on Ticao Island, in the Province of Masbate. The Camp Lookout facility houses the university's Creative Writing Center which now serves as the venue and permanent home of the Silliman National Writers Workshop. The center has a two-storey main function hall and five duplex cottages.[58][non-primary source needed]

The university's Ticao Island facility, on the other hand, is a 465-hectare property in the Province of Masbate, another island in Bicol Region. Donated by the family of Elizabeth How, the facility is a combination of a working ranch, agricultural plantations, and patches of secondary forests. A framework for a long-term development plan has been made and is now the subject for validation by local stakeholders. The plan includes programs for agriculture, Christian ministry, coastal resource management and public health.[59][non-primary source needed][60][non-primary source needed]

Dumaguete has been called a "center of learning in the south" or a "university town" due to the presence of Silliman and other universities that have made their mark nationally and abroad.[61][62] The city has become a melting pot of students, professionals, artists, scholars and the literati coming from the country and the world.[63][64]

Museums

 
Ground floor terrace of the Anthropology Museum

Silliman maintains six museums: the SU Anthropology Museum, the SU Heritage Museum, the Gonzales Museum of Natural History, the SU Marine Mammal Museum of the Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences (IEMS), the Ariniego Art Gallery, and the SU-ROTC Museum.[citation needed]

The Anthropology Museum was relocated from Silliman Hall to Hibbard Hall in 2015. Established in 1973, it was opened to bring the importance of the Filipino's cultural heritage to the attention of the public. The bulk of the artifacts displayed came from fieldworks, excavations, purchases and donations. The museum has seven galleries. The first three, contain exhibits which have been collected from known cultural or ethnic groups all over the country. These items or artifacts include simple tools and instruments such as basketry, agricultural and aquatic tools, weapons, clothing and ornaments as well as musical instruments. The display is based on two general criteria: the type of social organization (incipient, tribal or sultanate) and the type of economic subsistence (hunting, and gathering, marginal agriculture or farming) under which ethnic group is categorized. The exhibit on the last four galleries are artifacts excavated from different parts of Negros Island and in the mountain areas of Cotabato. A number of excavations done by Sillimanian anthropologists in the 1970s yielded ancient artifacts, like burial urns, and porcelain pieces which date back to the Sung period in the twelfth century.[34][non-primary source needed][page needed][65]

The SU Heritage Museum which was opened in August 2020 and housed at the Silliman Hall, is a repository with exhibits on the university's history since it was founded in 1901 by the Americans. Collections such as memorabilia and set-ups (e.g. classrooms) on what the life the founders had during the institution's infancy are showcased in the various sections the museum has.[citation needed]

The other two museums are the Gonzales Museum of Natural History and the Marine Mammal Museum. The Gonzales Museum of Natural History is located at the first floor of the Science Complex. It showcases a collection of preserved animals traditionally found in the tropics such as different kinds of fishes, crustaceans, snakes, eagles, birds, flying lemurs, etc. The museum was named in honor Prof. Rodolfo Gonzales, a former biology teacher of the university.[66] The Marine Mammal Museum on the other hand contains a large collection of whale and dolphin bones. It is located at a facility of the Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences two kilometers north of the main campus. In 2015, the university opened its SU-ROTC Museum located on the first floor of Roman Yap Hall which houses the rare artifacts and equipment used in the Second World War and military uniforms of high-ranking Sillimanian military officials over the years.[67][non-primary source needed][68][69]

Zoo

The A.Y. Reyes Zoological and Botanical Gardens or the Silliman University Zoo is the university zoo. It is also the home for the Center for Tropical Conservation Studies. The garden started in the 1960s as a tree planting project and field laboratory studies facility by the Silliman University Biology Department.[citation needed] In 1990, it became the country's first captive breeding center for the Philippine Spotted Deer (Rusa alfredi). Since then, the garden's captive breeding program has expanded to include other endangered wildlife unique to the Philippines such as the Critically Endangered Visayan Warty Pig (Sus cebifrons) and the Negros Bleeding-Heart Dove (Gallicolumba keayi).[citation needed] By 1996, the garden had grown to include over twenty animals and twenty-four plant species. The place was named the A.Y. Reyes Zoological and Botanical Garden after the late botanist, Prof. Alfredo Y. Reyes who helped start and develop the garden.[citation needed]

Beach

Silliman University has its own beach. It is situated at the front of the university's marine laboratory building. Extension programs like local fishing has been a project to the university and to the local fishermen in Dumaguete City.[citation needed]

Administration

Presidents of
Silliman University
David S. Hibbard, 1901–1930
Roy H. Brown, 1932–1936
Arthur L. Carson, 1939–1953
Leopoldo T. Ruiz, 1953–1961
Cicero D. Calderon, 1962–1971
Quintin S. Doromal, 1973–1982
Venancio D. Aldecoa Jr., 1983–1986
Pedro V. Flores, 1987–1989
Angel C. Alcala, 1991–1992
Mervyn J. Misajon, 1994–1996
Agustin A. Pulido, 1996–2006
Ben S. Malayang III, 2006–2018[a]
Betty Cernol-McCann, 2018–Present

Silliman is governed by an independent Board of Trustees composed of fifteen members. Five of its members come from the Silliman University Foundation Incorporated (SUFI), five from the UCCP, and another five from the alumni. The president of the university sits as an ex-officio member. Under the board are the administrators composed of the University President, the Vice President for Academic Affairs, Vice President for Finance & Operations, Vice President for Development, Enterprise and External Affairs, the University Registrar, Treasurer, Director for Human Resource Management, University General Counsel and Senior Minister. Assisting the vice-presidents are the deans, directors, department chairpersons, coordinators, officers and unit heads of the various colleges, schools, institutes, units, research centers, offices, programs and extension projects of the university.[70] Though historically Protestant, the university is academically nonsectarian.

Its learning environment has remained generally liberal and its religious orientation has in no way discouraged the expression or exercise of other beliefs.[51][71] A majority of the university's student and faculty population are Roman Catholics, with a significant portion of Muslims from Mindanao and the Middle East.[72][73]

Academics

 
Uytengsu Foundation Computer Studies Hall

Rankings

University rankings
Regional – Overall
QS Asia[4]501-550 (2022)
National – Overall
QS National[74]5 (2022)

In a 2007 report released by the Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) and the Commission on Higher Education (CHED), Silliman University was ranked fourth in the country, following three schools of the University of the Philippines (UP) namely, UP-Diliman, UP-Los Baños, and UP-Manila, which ranked first, second and third respectively. The survey was based on average passing rates in Board examinations from 1991 to 2001 in all courses of all universities and colleges in the Philippines. The study is conducted every ten years.[75]

In other board or licensure examination-related reports released by the CHED in the year 2009, Silliman was ranked first in the country in the field of Nursing Education[76] and second in the fields of Accountancy[77] and Mechanical Engineering.[78][79]

Internationally, Silliman is ranked among the top 150 universities in Asia based on International Students' Review by the QS Quacquarelli Symonds, an institution that ranks the world's top universities.[80]

Recognition

The Commission on Higher Education (CHED) designated Silliman as a Center of Excellence in Information Technology, Marine Science, Nursing Education and Teacher Education, and a Center of Development in Anthropology, Biology, Medical Technology and Accountancy Education.[72][59] Aside from these, the university was also named by the United States Agency for International Development as a Center of Excellence in Coastal Resource Management, and by the Haribon Foundation as an Academic Center of Excellence in Biodiversity Conservation.[81][82][83][84] Due to the university's community-based coastal resource management program, Apo Island, a small island off the coast of Dauin, was recognized as one of the best diving spots in the world.[72][85][86]

International linkages

On top of its strong affiliation with the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia (UBCHEA) and other international development organizations, Silliman maintains linkages on collaborative research as well as on faculty and student exchange, with universities in the United States, Asia, and Europe. Its longest running student exchange programs are with three Japanese universities: International Christian University, Ferris University and Shikoku Gakuin University.[72][87][88] Silliman also maintains research and academic linkages with the University of Washington (USA), California State University, East Bay (USA), Gordon College (USA), the Smithsonian Institution (USA), Texas Tech University (USA), Old Dominion University (USA), Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University (Japan), Chonbuk National University (South Korea), Hanshin University (South Korea), Sookmyung Women's University (South Korea), Soongsil University (South Korea), Hanyang University (South Korea), Sam Ratulangi University (Indonesia), the Asian College of Nursing and Health (Malaysia), Hannam University (South Korea), Madras Christian College (India), Kinki University (Japan), and Ingolstadt University of Applied Sciences (Germany).[89][90][91][92][93][94][95][96][97][98][99][100][101][102][103][104][105][106][107]

Accreditation

Silliman University confers bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees accredited by different bodies and agencies such as the ACSCU-AAI, PAASCU (a member of FAAP), and the ATESEA among others.

Colleges

 
The Dr. Luz Ausejo Hall is named after one of the longest serving deans of the College of Arts and Sciences.[108]
 
The Mary Marquis Smith Hall is part of the new three-building complex of the College of Nursing
 
The Uytengsu Foundation Computer Studies Hall of the College of Computer Studies.
 
The Medical School Building.
  • The College of Agriculture provides undergraduate programs in Agribusiness, Agronomy and Animal Science. The college is located in a 29-hectare agricultural complex, two kilometers north of the main campus. Its beginnings can be traced to as early as 1913, when Dr. David S. Hibbard, first president of Silliman Institute, was instructed to make provisions for a “school garden and a farm”. In 1950, it was formalized and established as a department, and in 1976, was constituted into what was then known as the School of Agriculture. The years 1977 to 1980 saw the construction of modern classrooms, a laboratory complex, eight dormitories and a library, and the renaming of the school into what is now known as the “College of Agriculture”.[59][109]
  • The College of Arts and Sciences has 18 major courses leading to several degree programs. At present, it is composed of the departments of Anthropology and Sociology, Biology, Chemistry, English and Literature, History and Political Science, Filipino and Foreign Languages, Mathematics, Philosophy and Religion, Physics, Psychology, Social Work Department. During its early years (1902 up to the war years), the College of Arts and Sciences was composed of the College of Liberal Arts and the College of Sciences. In 1947, both colleges were merged to become the College of Arts and Sciences.[59][109]
  • The College of Business Administration offers five undergraduate courses in Business Administration (majors in General Business, Management and Economics), Accountancy, Entrepreneurship, Business Computer Applications, and Office Management. It also has one graduate program in Business Administration namely Master in Business Administration. Established as a college in 1938, it is now composed of the departments of Management, Economics, Accountancy, Business Computer Applications, Entrepreneurship, and Commercial Science. Due to its consistently high performance in accountancy board examinations, the college has been designated by CHED as a Center of Development in Accountancy Education.[59][109] In the October 2009 CPA Licensure Examinations (10–25 examinees category), Silliman ranked second in the country.[77]
  • The College of Computer Studies provides undergraduate courses in Computer Science, Information Technology, and Information Systems. The college was designated by CHED as a Center of Excellence in Information Technology Education. In 1997, Silliman is one of only two universities in the Philippines that has an extensive fiber-optic backbone and the only school in the country that owns its fiber-optic system. Costing US $2.5 million in 1997, this backbone connects all buildings in the campus. Silliman was also the first school in the country to use wireless Wi-Fi B2B LAN technology.[110] Recently, the college opened its master's degree in Information Systems,[111][112] and pilot tested the Silliman Online University Learning (SOUL) website, a virtual classroom for students.[59][109] It has also formed partnerships with Microsoft and IBM. The Microsoft Developer Network Academic Alliance has given the college a 3-year complimentary MSDNAA subscription which allows it to download available software in MSDNAA for free to all students and faculty for teaching and learning purposes, while the college's partnership with IBM resulted in the introduction of the IBM Academic Exchange Offering. Electives under the program are developed for junior and graduating students majoring in Information Technology, Information Systems and Computer Science.[111][113]
  • The College of Engineering and Design started as a Department of Engineering in June 1932, offering an undergraduate program in civil engineering. In March 1935, the board of trustees authorized the change in status of Silliman from an institute to a university. With government approval of this change, Silliman proceeded to adopt additional undergraduate programs in mining engineering, chemical engineering and industrial engineering. Today, the college offers five undergraduate courses in: architecture, civil engineering; computer engineering; electrical engineering; and mechanical engineering.[59][109] In the October 2009 Mechanical Engineering Licensure Examinations (Category A), Silliman was ranked second in the country.[79][114][115]
  • The College of Education has been designated by CHED as Center of Excellence in Teacher Education. The college has three departments: Physical Education, Teacher Education, and Nutrition and Dietetics. Its beginnings can be traced way back in 1924 when it first offered diplomas in Bachelor of Science in education. From then on, the Teacher Education Program grew and developed into what is now known as the College of Education.[59][109]
  • The College of Law was established in 1935, starting with a freshman class of 22 members. Guided by its motto "Law with a Conscience", the college seeks to teach its students not just the correct understanding of legal provisions and principles but their ethical implementation to society and people.[59][109] It is also home to the .[116] Starting SY 2009–2010, the college shifted its course offering from Bachelor of Laws (LLB) to Juris Doctor (JD).[117] Silliman is the first law school to offer the JD program in the Visayas and Mindanao area.[118]
  • The College of Mass Communication was established in 1966 as the first school outside of metropolitan Manila to offer a degree program in Journalism.[119] Its founding director was D. Wayne Rowland, Ph.D., a visiting professor in journalism from Texas Christian University. In 1976, the college (then known as the School of Communication) changed its course offering from a bachelor's degree in Journalism to that of Mass Communication to cover the ever-expanding field of mass communication.[120]
  • The College of Nursing was designated by CHED as a Center of Excellence in Nursing Education. The college offers one undergraduate course in Nursing and three graduate courses namely: (1) Master in Nursing [non-thesis] Majors in Family Nursing Practice, Administration, Public Health Nursing, Adult Health and Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing; (2) Master of Science in Nursing Majors in Parent-Child Nursing, Nursing School Administration, Nursing Service Administration, Public Health Nursing, Medical Surgical Nursing, Psychiatric-Mental Nursing, Family Nursing Practice, Community Health Nursing and Adult Health; and (3) Ph.D. in Nursing. Founded in 1947, the college is known for its ratings in the professional licensure exams which have been consistently higher than the national average.[59][109] In a 2009 report handed down by CHED, Silliman was ranked first in the country.[76][121]
  • The College of Performing and Visual Arts provides programs in Fine Arts, Music, and Speech & Theater Arts. The college started in 1912 as a music department in the College of Arts and Sciences. With the arrival of American missionary Geraldine Kate in 1934, it was renamed as the Conservatory of Music, with Kate as its founding director. In 1941, it became known as the School of Music, and with the addition of the Fine Arts Department in 1969, was recast as the School of Music and Fine Arts. Another transformation came in 2001 when its name was changed to the College of Performing Arts.[59][109]

Schools

  • The Divinity School provides undergraduate and graduate programs in Divinity, Ministry and Theology. It started in 1921 as the Silliman Bible School, serving as a Congregationalist-Presbyterian training school for Visayan-speaking candidates in pastoral ministry. Its students and alumni are a diverse group of local and international students.[59][109]
  • The Medical School is a relatively new unit in the university. Established in 2004, it has a faculty of 50 medical doctors specializing in Rheumatology, Anesthesiology, Cardiology, Endocrinology, Eye-Ear-Nose-Throat, Family Medicine Gastroenterology, General Surgery, Hematology, Infectious Diseases, Internal Medicine, Nephrology, Neurology, Neuro-Surgery, Nuclear Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Oncology, Orthopedic Surgery, Pediatrics, Psychiatry, Public Health Administration, Pulmonary Medicine, Rehabilitation Medicine, and Urology.[59][109]
  • The School of Public Affairs and Governance started in June 2007, with Dr. Reynaldo Y. Rivera as the first dean, to provide formal training in the management of local government affairs. It specializes in three areas: Fiscal Administration, Local Governance, and Criminal Justice System; and offers two degree programs, Public Administration (BSPA) and Foreign Affairs (BSFA). The School aims to beef up the expertise of public servants to become more efficient administrators who can discharge their duties in the most economical way with maximum results. A distinguished panel of guest lecturers from Manila and abroad join the resident faculty of Silliman in teaching the courses.[59][109]
  • The School of Basic Education is home to three departments: Early Childhood, Elementary, and High School. When Silliman Institute (former name of Silliman University) was founded in 1901, it started as an elementary school; thus, making the Elementary Department the oldest unit in the university. In 1916, the first high school diplomas were awarded, and in 1957–58, funding for an Early Childhood School building was secured. Historically, the Early Childhood, Elementary and High School departments operated separately. Due to developments within the university in 2001, however, and to facilitate better coordination between these departments, the early childhood, elementary, and high schools, were merged as one unit, forming what is now known as the School of Basic Education.[59][109]
  • The School of Agro-Industrial and Technical Education provides short TESDA-accredited technical-vocational certificate courses. These courses are generally sponsored through scholarship grants from government agencies such as TESDA and DepEd.

Institutes

  • The Institute of Clinical Laboratory Sciences offers one undergraduate course in Medical Technology. The Institute started as a program under the Biology Department of the College of Arts and Sciences in 1970. Due to its growing population, exemplary performance in licensure examinations and need for autonomy, it was separated and converted into a department under the same college in 1987, making it into a Department of Medical Technology. In 1995, the university reorganized some of its programs and transferred the Medical Technology department to the College of Nursing, creating a new college named College of Nursing and Allied Health Sciences. Starting SY 2009–2010 however, in a bid to give the department more autonomy in crafting its own academic direction, it was separated from the College of Nursing as an entirely autonomous institute.[59][109]
  • The Institute of Rehabilitative Sciences offers one undergraduate course in Physical Therapy. Like the Medical Technology Department, the institute started as a program under the College of Arts and Sciences. It was subsequently transferred to the College of Nursing together with the Medical Technology Department, forming a new college, the College of Nursing and Allied Health Sciences. For over a decade, the Physical Therapy program was attached to the College of Nursing and Allied Health Sciences. However, to give it more autonomy the program was separated from the college in SY 2009–2010 and reorganized as the Institute of Rehabilitative Sciences.[59][109]

Library system

 
 
The Robert B. and Metta J. Silliman Library[b]

The Silliman Library System is composed of the Robert B. and Metta J. Silliman Library, which serves as the university library, and the local libraries of the College of Agriculture, College of Business Administration, College of Law, the Divinity School, the Allied Health Sciences, High School, Elementary and Early Childhood Schools. Among these libraries the Robert B. and Metta J. Silliman Library (university library) serves as the largest repository of books, periodicals and other reading materials. Built in 1978, the university library is a four-story structure with a seating capacity of 490 readers. It holds over 250,000 volumes,[72] with enough space to accommodate 400,000 more. It also subscribes to 500 periodicals. Some courses provide instruction in the location of books and publications for research and other school work. Students can search for library materials using the On-Line Public Access Catalogue. Instructions on how to use it are posted on the stations were the system is installed. Research can also be done using the Internet through the Cyberlibrary. Students pay a semestral fee to avail of this service.[122][123]

Aside from the main section of the library which contains the bulk of its book and periodical collection, other notable sections of the facility include the Filipiniana section, containing books and materials published by famous Filipino authors during the Spanish and pre-war periods of the country, and the Sillimaniana section, containing Silliman memorabilia from 1901 up to the present (e.g. trophies, plaques of recognition, portraits of past presidents, etc.), and an archive of past publications and documents.

The university library is likewise home to two notable centers: the American Studies Resource Center (ASRC) and a World Bank Knowledge for Development Center (WB-KDC). The American Studies Resource Center is a result of a memorandum of agreement between the United States Embassy in Manila and Silliman University. It is the only ASRC in Region VII hosted by an academic institution. The ASRC provides a variety of materials: books, periodicals, CD-ROMS, DVDs, VCDs, VHS tapes, electronic materials for those interested in studies and issues related to the United States.[124]

The World Bank Knowledge for Development Center is a result of a partnership between the university and the World Bank. It contains an extensive collection of development publications and World Bank project documents to people involved in the academe, researchers, NGOs, media, government agencies and the business sector. The section is open to the public.[125]

To date, the Silliman Library remains as one of the biggest libraries in the Philippines.[126][127] In 2008, the Silliman University Library System was given the "Outstanding Library Award" by the Philippine Association of Academic and Research Librarians (PAARL) for its growing collection and ongoing computerization program.[72][128][129]

Medical Center

 
Medical Arts Building of the Silliman University Medical Center.

The Silliman University Medical Center is a university-owned hospital that is currently being operated and managed by the Silliman University Medical Center Foundation Inc. (SUMCFI), a separate and distinct foundation with its own Board of Directors. The hospital supports the academic institution by serving as the university's base facility for the internship programs of the College of Nursing, School of Medicine, the Institutes of Clinical Laboratory and Rehabilitative Sciences, the Divinity School (for its chaplaincy program), and the Nutrition and Dietetics Department.

It is a 140-bed hospital located on campus with comprehensive medical services available to both the university and the community in general. The SU Medical Center started as an infirmary in 1901 and later became a hospital in 1923.[130] In 1974, the cornerstone for a New Medical Center was laid down by the Netherlands Ambassador to the Philippines to commence the building of a four-storey structure with passenger elevators (the first in Negros Oriental).[34][non-primary source needed][page needed] Inaugurated in 1976, it is considered[by whom?] as one of the most modern hospitals outside Metro Manila and Cebu.[131] In 1979, the Medical Center made history when its Van Houweling Research Laboratory discovered and produced a dog vaccine that gave a three-year immunity from rabies. The development of the vaccine was later used by other countries, in collaboration with the World Health Organization, on their fight against rabies.[47] Recently, a new Medical Arts Building was added[132] to the main structure of the hospital to further address the growing needs of the surrounding community. The SU Medical Center has collaborative ties with St. Luke's Medical Center.[133]

Research and extension

 
Silliman's Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences (IEMS) has been designated by the USAID as a Center of Excellence in Coastal Resource Management,[83] and recognized by the CHED as the best research program in the country.[21]

Concurrent with its academic undertakings, the university is engaged in collaborative research and community extension programs. From 2000 to 2011, it has been designated as a CHED Zonal Research Center for Region VII,[134] and in 2011, was chosen by the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) as one of few academic institutions to comprise a national research network which entitles the university to receive an annual allocation of P10 million for a three-year period.[135]

Selected researches are published in the Silliman Journal, the university's research publication. Foremost among the university's research outputs are those that have been undertaken in the field of Environmental and Marine Sciences, historically spearheaded by the Silliman University Marine Laboratory (SUML) now the (IEMS). IEMS is a research institute in the field of marine sciences located at Silliman Beach, two kilometers north of the main campus. Established in 1974 through a modest grant from the United Church of Canada, it has produced notable research that are presently being applied in various cooperative projects in different local communities, such as the conservation programs in Sumilon and Apo Island.[40][non-primary source needed][page needed][85] This research institute also led in the establishment of 20 marine protected areas (MPAs) and has provided assistance to 61 others in the Visayas and Mindanao. For its research and biodiversity conservation efforts, it was recognized by the Commission on Higher Education as the best in research program in the country.[21] In July 2013, Greenpeace an international environmental organization partnered with Silliman University in conducting a reef check at Apo Island to determine the damage on the reef caused by climate change.[136][137][138]

Other units engaged in either research or extension include the Center for Gender Studies and Development; the (CENTROP); the ; and the (SUAKCREM).

Extension projects of the university also include the SU-Affiliated Non-Conventional Energy Center (SU-ANEC); the SU-KNH Kaugmaran Child Development Center (SUKCDC); the Alternative Lifestyle for Women in Negros Project; H. Capability Program (CBP) for the Province of Negros Oriental; HIV-AIDS Prevention Project; the , Rural Development and Credit Program (On Monitoring); and the SU-AADC Integrated Agro-Forestry Participatory Program for Negros Oriental (On Monitoring).[59][139]

Culture and traditions

 
Stained glass window of Silliman University Church depicting Jesus Christ and his apostles

Via, Veritas, Vita

"Via, Veritas, Vita" is a Latin phrase which means “The Way, The Truth, and The Life.” Chosen by the university as its motto, this phrase is attributed to Jesus Christ and is found in the Gospel of John chapter 14, verse 6, which reads “5Thomas said to him, "Lord, we don't know where you are going, so how can we know the way?" 6Jesus answered, "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. 7If you really knew me, you would know my Father as well. From now on, you do know him and have seen him." (New International Version) The choice of the motto is firmly rooted in the university's belief that religious instruction, particularly in the teachings of Jesus Christ, is essential to the moral development of every young person.[34][non-primary source needed][page needed] Incidentally, the motto has been adopted by the Province of Negros Oriental by incorporating it in its provincial seal.

Galilean Fellowships

Once every semester, the Silliman academic community celebrates the University Christian Life Emphasis Week (UCLEW). In this week-long celebration, the university encourages all students to participate in the different Bible study or fellowship activities held in the homes and cottages of assigned members of the Silliman academic or religious community. Conducted after classes, these sessions are called the Galilean Fellowships. Galilean fellowships are brief devotional sessions where participants are given the opportunity to reflect on the teachings of the Bible, relax, share their thoughts and experiences, and have fellowship with other members of the academic community.[140][non-primary source needed][needs update]

Founders Week

Founders Week is part of a two-week-long event conducted by the Silliman community to commemorate the founding of the university. This event is held in the last week of August. The celebration is characterized by class reunions, alumni, fraternity and organizational gatherings, concerts, exhibits, booth-building, awarding ceremonies (e.g. the Outstanding Sillimanian Awards), and invitational games with other schools.[132][non-primary source needed][141][non-primary source needed] The week-long celebration is traditionally commenced by an early morning worship service called Sunrise Service at the Silliman University Church and culminated with a citywide parade held on the anniversary of the university's founding, August 28. The parade is referred to as the "Parada Sillimaniana" and August 28 is referred to as the "Founders Day" in honor of the pioneers. For the past few years, however, the university moved the parades to August 27. Traditionally, the parade is characterized by the use of floats, with each representing a particular college, department, or school.[142][non-primary source needed]

Silliman Song

Before the end of an important event or ceremony the Silliman Song is sung by the attendees. The lyrics were written in 1918 by Dr. Paul Doltz, then the vice-president of Silliman Institute and pastor of Silliman Church. The tune of the song is an adaptation or modification of "The Orange and the Black" of Princeton University, Dr. Doltz's alma mater.[34][non-primary source needed][page needed] The melody is based on the original song "Sadie Ray" composed by J. Tannenbaum late in the 19th century. The Silliman Song briefly describes Silliman's tranquil location; the student's college or university experience; the student's victories, whether it be in the classroom, the court, the track, or the field; the highs and lows in life; and the principles that the graduate brings as the latter leaves the halls of the university.[143][unreliable source?] Sang by the Silliman community for almost a hundred years, the Silliman Song has popularized the phrases "Dear old Silliman" and "Silliman beside the sea".[144][145]

Student life

Athletics

Silliman has several athletic facilities. The university Gymnasium is a multipurpose facility used for basketball, volleyball, badminton, rock-climbing, table-tennis, cheering, and other indoor activities. The Cimafranca Ballfield is primarily used for football, and for track and field events. Other athletic facilities include an Olympic-sized swimming pool, tennis courts, pelota courts, and an archery ranges.[123]

Silliman has varsity teams for almost every major sport. A regular participant of the Philippine University Games (UniGames) and the Private Schools Athletic Association (PRISAA), Silliman is represented by a red and white Stallion or Mare.[146][147] In the recent Beijing Olympics, Mark Javier, a Sillimanian, represented the Philippines in the field of Archery. He was the lone male archer that represented the country.[148] Other notable Philippine Olympians that came from Silliman include Jennifer Chan, who recently won a gold medal in the 25th SEA Games, Lisa Ygnalaga, and long jumper Simeon Toribio.[72][149][150]

Student government

 
Built in 1932, the Hibbard Hall houses the Office of the University Registrar.

The coordination of student activities and student organizations are handled by the Silliman University Student Government (SUSG), established in 1912 and interrupted during World War II and briefly suspended during Martial Law. Under the present set-up, the Student Government is divided into three branches: the executive, the legislative, and the judicial departments. The executive power is exercised by the President with the assistance of the Cabinet. The Cabinet is composed of the President, Vice President and the respective heads of the executive committee who are appointed by the President. The legislative power of the SUSG is vested in the Student Assembly. It is composed of elected representatives of the different schools and colleges. The Judiciary exercises judicial power. It is composed of the Prime Justice, who must be a junior Law student, and six other justices appointed by the President upon the recommendation of the Committee on Appointments. Election of Student Government officers are held before the close of the academic year.[151] Political campaigns or rallies may be held after securing the necessary permits. Political campaigns in the university are characterized by rallies in the Amphitheater, classroom-to-classroom speaking engagements, and dorm-to-dorm campaigns.

Currently, there are two student political parties in the university, the Students' Union for Reforms (SURE) Party and the Concerted Action for the Upliftment of Student Endeavors (CAUSE) Party, established in 1980 and 1981, respectively.

The Student Government is under the supervision and oversight of the Student Organizations and Activities Division (SOAD).[40]

Organizations

 
Built in 1921, the Amphitheater is a common meeting place for students and student organizations

Numerous student organizations are registered in the university. Some are regional societies organized to promote fellowship among students from particular geographical areas. There are service clubs such as fraternities and sororities which carry out, as part of their activities, projects on campus and in the community. Others are identified with particular academic disciplines such as physics, chemistry, and mathematics known as course-related organizations, and still others belong to the special or interest groups. The supervision and coordination of student organizations are undertaken by the Student Organizations and Activities Division (SOAD) together with the Silliman University Student Government (SUSG).[40][non-primary source needed][page needed]

Student publications

Student publications include the Weekly Sillimanian, one of the first weekly student newspaper in the country, with its existence dating back as early as 1903; the Portal, official yearbook, first published in 1913; the Dark Blue Southern Seas, a literary journal published in cooperation with the Department of English; the Junior Sillimanian, a publication of students from the High School Department; and the Stones and Pebbles, a publication of students from the Elementary School.[152][non-primary source needed] In addition to the Silliman Law Journal, the College of Law in partnership with the Salonga Law Center maintains its own publication called the Purple Map, a legal discussion platform for law students which was started in 2010.[153]

Most of these publications, particularly the Weekly Sillimanian, the Portal, Junior Sillimanian and the Stones and Pebbles are supported by the students through a publication fee;[40][non-primary source needed][page needed] the Purple Map is maintained by way of endowments from law alumni.[153]

Dormitories and faculty housing

 
Vernon Hall, one of the men's dormitories on campus.

Silliman operates regular and cooperative dormitories which can provide space for approximately 800 students. These dormitories are named after Philippine trees, flowers, and significant historical figures of the university. The university categorizes these dormitories as either regular or cooperative. Of the first type, housekeeping is generally maintained by a dorm staff and meals are supervised by the university's Food Services. There are six regular dormitories (four for women and two for men) and seven cooperative dormitories (four for women and three for men). The regular dormitories for women are Edith Carson, Ethel Chapman, Larena and the Woodward Hall. For men, the regular dormitories are the Vernon Hall (formerly New Men's Dormitory) and Doltz Hall.[citation needed]

The second type of dormitories are the cooperative dormitories. In these dormitories, residents undertake the housekeeping and planning of the food. With the exception of Channon Hall, cooperative dormitories for women are named after flowers like Azucena, Rosal, and Sampaguita. For men, the dormitories are named after trees like Ipil, Molave, and Narra.[citation needed]

In addition to the foregoing, the university maintains a number of cottages for members of its faculty and staff as well as for guests and visiting alumni.[40][non-primary source needed][page needed]

Alumni

There are currently forty alumni chapters throughout the world that are duly organized and recognized. Five of these are based in the U.S. and Canada.[154] Notable alumni of the university include Carlos P. Garcia, eighth President of the Philippines;,[155] Senators Robert Barbers, Lorenzo Teves, and the Great Filibuster Roseller Lim;,[156] House Speaker Cornelio Villareal;,[157] John Gokongwei Sr., a Philippine business magnate;,[158] Frederick Dael, former CEO and President of Pepsi Cola Asia Pacific, and former CEO of Islacom;,[159] William Torres, "Father of Philippine Internet" and co-founder of Mozaic Corporation;,[160][161] Vicente Sinco, one of the signatories of the UN Charter in 1945, the eighth President of the University of the Philippines, and founder of Foundation University;,[162] MacArthur Corsino, former Philippine Ambassador to the Republic of Cuba;,[163][164] , Philippine Ambassador to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia;,[165][166] Juanita Amatong, former Secretary of the Department of Finance and first woman executive director in the World Bank Group from the Philippines;,[167] Angel Alcala, Ramon Magsaysay Awardee for Public Service and former Secretary of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, Leonor M. Briones, former National Treasurer of the Republic of the Philippines;,[168][169] Emilio Macias II, former Governor of Negros Oriental;,[170] Efren N. Padilla, executive director, Center for Filipino Studies California State University, East Bay;,[171][172] Jose Andrada, first commanding officer of the Philippine Navy (formerly Off Shore Patrol) under the Philippine Commonwealth in 1939 and after whom the Headquarters of the Philippine Navy is now named;,[173][174][175] Edith L. Tiempo, National Artist for Literature (1999);,[176] Edilberto K. Tiempo, Filipino writer, professor and founder of the Silliman National Writers Workshop.,[177] Eddie S. Romero, National Artist for Cinema and Broadcast Arts (2003);,[178][179] Leoncio P. Deriada, Palanca Awards Hall of Famer;,[180] César Ruiz Aquino, Filipino poet and fictionist;,[181][182] Simeon Toribio, one of few Filipinos who won medals in the history of world Olympics.[183]

Sillimanians have also excelled in the field of journalism such as Claire Delfin of GMA Network[184][185] and Ina Reformina of ABS-CBN;[186] while there are those who entered showbusiness such as Bret Jackson,[187][188] Beauty Gonzalez,[189] and Theodore Boborol.[190]

References

Notes

a. ^ References for the Presidents of Silliman: David S. Hibbard,[193] Roy H. Brown;[194] Arthur L. Carson;[195] Leopoldo T. Ruiz;[34] Cicero D. Calderon;[196] Quintin S. Doromal;[197][198] Venancio D. Aldecoa;[199] Pedro V. Flores; Angel C. Alcala;[200] Mervyn J. Misajon;[201] Agustin A. Pulido;[202] and Ben S. Malayang.[203]
b. ^ The main library was renamed as the Robert B. and Metta J. Silliman Library. Robert B. Silliman served as the University's Vice-President during the Presidency of Dr. Leopoldo Ruiz.

Footnotes

  1. ^ The University is a separate corporation predating what is now known as the UCCP. It is governed by an independent Board of Trustees with the UCCP being merely one of three sectors represented in the Board. Pursuant to its Articles of Incorporation, five of the fifteen members of the Board come from the UCCP. Though Protestant in origin and to some extent in orientation, its academic policies are generally non-sectarian and is neither owned nor governed by UCCP or any religious organization.
  2. ^ "University Conference Achieves High Participation Turnout". SU NetNews. Retrieved July 2, 2011.
  3. ^ Maricar Aranas. "SU to host UNIGAMES" August 16, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. Visayan Daily Star. Retrieved June 7, 2012.
  4. ^ a b "QS Asia University Rankings 2021". Top Universities. Quacquarelli Symonds. November 26, 2020. Retrieved November 26, 2020.
  5. ^ "QS Asia University Rankings 2021". December 13, 2020. Retrieved December 13, 2020.
  6. ^ "CHED Taps SU for Research Network" October 20, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Visayan Daily Star. Retrieved June 5, 2012.
  7. ^ a b "NHI Resolution No.7, Series 2002". National Historical Commission of the Philippines. Retrieved June 8, 2012.
  8. ^ "Siliman University rocked by bomb threat; suspends classes". ph. news.yahoo.com. Retrieved November 12, 2019.
  9. ^ spot.ph/arts-culture/the-latest-arts-culture/79241/silliman-university-dumaguete-a4329-20190928-lfrm "This School By the Sea Has Front-Row Seats to a Poetic Dumaguete Morning". SPOT.PH. Retrieved November 12, 2019. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  10. ^ Tiempo, Maslog & Sitoy 1977, pp. 49–52
  11. ^ cebudailynews/community/view/ 20101217-309444/Silliman-University-granted-institutional-accreditation "Silliman University granted institutional accreditation" July 7, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved December 19, 2010.
  12. ^ "FAAP grants Institutional accreditation to Silliman University ". Philippine Information Agency. Retrieved December 19, 2010.
  13. ^ "14 Academic Programs Granted Highest Accreditation Status.". Silliman University. Retrieved April 22, 2012.
  14. ^ Silliman University. Retrieved April 21, 2015
  15. ^ "Enrollment up by 6%; 56 countries represented". Silliman University. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
  16. ^ Silliman University. Retrieved August 11, 2014.
  17. ^ Atty. Ignacio Bunye. "CSF program up in Dumaguete City" July 19, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. Manila Bulletin. Retrieved October 31, 2009.
  18. ^ "CHED Grants Silliman Autonomous Status" April 27, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. SU Net News. Retrieved July 31, 2009.
  19. ^ "Past and Future". ACUCA. Retrieved September 4, 2009.
  20. ^ "WEAMS Institution Search.". US Veterans Affairs. Retrieved October 27, 2020.
  21. ^ a b c "Silliman U wins CHEd best research". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved April 19, 2010.
  22. ^ "Extension program receives national award" July 14, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. SU Net News. Retrieved December 9, 2009.
  23. ^ "Philippines – Communication for Coastal Management". Center for Environmental Strategies. Retrieved March 22, 2011.
  24. ^ "Silliman Hall". Society for the Conservation of Philippine Wetlands, Inc. Retrieved November 22, 2009.
  25. ^ "Panublion: Silliman University Main Building" July 22, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. Ateneo de Manila University. Retrieved November 25, 2009.
  26. ^ "Anthropology Museum" January 17, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. Silliman University. Retrieved March 5, 2010.
  27. ^ a b c d "Silliman University marks 117th year". The Negros Chronicle. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  28. ^ "Silliman University:118". Negros Chronicle. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  29. ^ a b "Falling in love with Silliman". By: Mark Raygan Garcia. The Manila Bulletin. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  30. ^ The Monroe Survey of 1925, submitted by the Board of Educational Survey of the Philippine Legislature, expressed concern over profit-making "private adventure schools" in the country. But on Silliman, the report read: "The most influential Protestant institution of higher learning is Silliman Institute at Dumaguete on Negros Island. In location, acreage, buildings, equipment and sanitary arrangements, this institution is a most attractive contrast to the private universities described above. A library of 8,000 volumes administered by a trained librarian has been wisely selected. Its finest building is devoted to the teaching of the sciences. The recitations heard by the Commission's representative were most ably conducted and the spirit that pervaded the place was one of the finest he experienced anywhere. Moreover, the Commission heard only words of praise throughout the Islands for graduates of Silliman Institute, particularly of those who entered the public schools as teachers."(Monroe, Paul (1926). Educational System of the Philippine Islands. Manila: Philippine Bureau of Printing. p. 512.)
  31. ^ "Guide to the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. Commission on Ecumenical Mission and Relations Secretaries' Files: Philippine Mission". Presbyterian Historical Society. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  32. ^ "American Colonial Missionaries in the Philippines". By: Jennifer Hallock. JenniferHallock.com. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  33. ^ "A Missiological Study of the United Church of Christ in the Philippines in its Constitution and General Assembly Documents". VEM. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  34. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Tiempo, Maslog & Sitoy 1977.
  35. ^ "SUMCFI Donates To Malabo School". Dumaguete MetroPost. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  36. ^ Mills 2009, pp. 76, 78–80, 127.
  37. ^ Mills 2009, p. 166.
  38. ^ Mills 2009, pp. 155–160.
  39. ^ "Directory of Filipino Students in the United States". United States Bureau of Insular Affairs. Page 64. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  40. ^ a b c d e f "Silliman University General Catalog 2003–2004". SU Office of Information and Publications.
  41. ^ "A Fulbright Scholar, A Human Rights Educator". George Washington University Law School. Retrieved June 22, 2010.
  42. ^ "Mission Connections" Archived October 27, 2004, at the Library of Congress Web Archives. Presbyterian Church (USA). Retrieved June 22, 2010.
  43. ^ "Editorial Board: David Arthur" July 26, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. International Journal of Caring Sciences. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  44. ^ a b Maslog, Crispin (April 15, 2021). "'Probinsyano' remembers Martial Law". Rappler. Retrieved October 4, 2021.
  45. ^ "Dr. George W. Beran's Biography" April 15, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. World Rabies Day. Retrieved April 23, 2010.
  46. ^ a b c d Timeline 1901–2001. By: Earl Jude Paul L. Cleope. Midtown Printing Co., Inc.
  47. ^ a b "One World, One Health Rabies" July 24, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. OneHealthInitiative.com. Retrieved April 23, 2010.
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References

  • Carson, Arthur, L. (1965), Silliman University, 1901–1959, United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia.
  • Mills, Scott A. (2009). Stranded in the Philippines : Professor Bell's private war against the Japanese. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 9781591144977.
  • Tiempo, Edilberto K.; Maslog, Crispin C.; Sitoy, T. Valentino Jr. (1977), Silliman University, 1901–1976, Silliman University Press., ISBN 9780313267888, OCLC 6019774

External links

  • Official website

silliman, university, confused, with, silliman, college, also, referred, silliman, private, research, university, dumaguete, city, negros, oriental, philippines, established, 1901, silliman, institute, presbyterian, board, foreign, missions, first, american, p. Not to be confused with Silliman College Silliman University also referred to as Silliman or SU is a private research university in Dumaguete City Negros Oriental the Philippines 6 Established in 1901 as Silliman Institute by the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions it is the first American and Protestant founded institution of higher learning in the Philippines and in Asia 7 8 9 Silliman UniversityPamantasang SillimanThe University SealLatin Universitas SillimaniensisFormer namesSilliman Institute 1901 1938 MottoVia Veritas Vita Latin Motto in EnglishThe Way the Truth and the LifeTypePrivate nonsectarian research university coeducationalEstablishedAugust 28 1901FounderDavid S HibbardReligious affiliationIn covenant with the United Church of Christ in the Philippines but neither owned nor governed by the UCCP or any religious organization 1 Academic affiliationsACUCA UBCHEA ACSCU ASAIHL PAASCU ATESEAChairmanRicardo A Balbido Jr PresidentBetty Cernol McCannAcademic staff490 faculty 2 Administrative staff290Studentsapprox 11 000AddressHibbard Avenue Dumaguete Negros Oriental Philippines9 18 46 N 123 18 24 E 9 31278 N 123 30667 E 9 31278 123 30667 Coordinates 9 18 46 N 123 18 24 E 9 31278 N 123 30667 E 9 31278 123 30667CampusUrban Main Campus Hibbard Avenue Dumaguete City 33 ha 82 acres Agriculture and Marine Biology Campus 29 ha 72 acres Escano Road Dumaguete City Negros Oriental Ticao Island Facility 465 ha 1 150 acres Ticao Island Masbate Alma Mater songSilliman SongColors and Red and whiteNicknameSillimanianSporting affiliationsPRISAA UNIGAMES 3 MascotStallions and MaresWebsitewww wbr su wbr edu wbr phUniversity rankingsRegional OverallQS Asia 4 501 550 2022 National OverallQS National 5 5 2022 The university was named after Dr Horace Brinsmade Silliman a former businessman and philanthropist from Cohoes New York who provided the initial sum of 10 000 for the establishment of the school Starting as an elementary school for boys the school expanded to become a college in 1910 acquiring university status in 1938 Silliman University was run and operated by Americans during the first half of the 20th century After the Second World War Filipinos began to assume more administrative positions resulting in the appointment of the university s first Filipino president in 1952 10 In terms of accreditation Silliman is one of top five universities in the Philippines with Institutional Accreditation by the Federation of Accrediting Agencies of the Philippines FAAP The Institutional Accreditation is the highest accreditation that can be granted to an educational institution after an assessment of its number of accredited programs its facilities its services and its faculty is conducted on a whole 11 12 Incidentally Silliman also has the highest number of accredited programs in the country twenty of which are on Level IV accreditation status the highest level that can be granted to individual programs 13 14 Over 10 000 students attending the university from the Philippines and at least 56 other countries are enrolled in ten colleges five schools and three institutes 15 16 It is registered as a National Landmark by the National Historical Institute and is one of few private higher education institutions in the Philippines that have been granted full autonomous status by the Commission on Higher Education 7 17 18 It is also a founding member of the Association of Christian Universities and Colleges in Asia ACUCA and one of the recognized institutions in the U S Veterans Administration s list of approved educational institutions 19 20 In spite of the fact that it was established by a religious organization Silliman is independent in legal and juridical governance It maintains a link with Central Philippine University CPU and historically regards it as a sister school CPU was founded by the Protestant Baptist Americans in 1905 in Iloilo City The university offers programs in the fields of early childhood education elementary education secondary education undergraduate education as well as graduate education Programs in the undergraduate and graduate levels cover disciplines such as arts accountancy agriculture architecture business administration engineering English Filipino information technology law medicine nursing anthropology biology chemistry clinical sciences pharmacy education teacher education economics environmental science fine arts theater and performing arts foreign languages geology journalism library science marine sciences nutrition and dietetics music physics theology philosophy psychology public administration and social work In addition to its academic undertakings the university is involved in research and community extension projects 21 22 Silliman s stature in the fields of environmental and marine sciences has led to its being designated by the USAID as a Center of Excellence in Coastal Resources Management 23 Contents 1 History 1 1 Establishment 1 2 Expansion and World War II 1 3 Post war years 1 4 Martial law era 1 5 1980s to recent history 2 Campus 2 1 Museums 2 2 Zoo 2 3 Beach 3 Administration 4 Academics 4 1 Rankings 4 2 Recognition 4 3 International linkages 4 4 Accreditation 4 5 Colleges 4 6 Schools 4 7 Institutes 4 8 Library system 4 9 Medical Center 4 10 Research and extension 5 Culture and traditions 5 1 Via Veritas Vita 5 2 Galilean Fellowships 5 3 Founders Week 5 4 Silliman Song 6 Student life 6 1 Athletics 6 2 Student government 6 3 Organizations 6 4 Student publications 6 5 Dormitories and faculty housing 7 Alumni 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Footnotes 8 3 References 9 External linksHistory Edit Silliman Hall is the oldest standing American structure in the Philippines The design of the building is reminiscent of the Stick style architecture that characterize American buildings in the late 19th century Some of the materials used to build it were salvaged from an old theater in New York 24 25 The present structure was built in 1909 as an addition to the original structure built in 1902 now demolished It presently houses the university s Heritage Museum 26 Establishment Edit Silliman University was founded on August 28 1901 as Silliman Institute by Protestant missionaries under the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the United States Originally established as an elementary school for boys operations for the institute started through an initial 10 000 donation given by a businessman and Christian philanthropist of Cohoes New York named Dr Horace Brinsmade Silliman who wanted to establish an industrial school using the Hampton Institute of Virginia model 27 The person tasked by the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions to establish the school was Dr David Sutherland Hibbard a man from Lyndon Kansas who after serving as a pastor in a Presbyterian church in that locality offered his services to the Presbyterian Board as missionary Upon his arrival in the Philippines he was commissioned with his wife Laura to scout the southern part of the islands to determine the best location for the school His original points of destination were Cebu Zamboanga and Iloilo While in Cebu a suggestion came to him to make a side trip to Dumaguete 27 On his arrival he was met by a Rev Captain John Anthony Randolph chaplain of the sixth U S Infantry Regiment stationed at that time in Dumaguete who later introduced him to Don Meliton Larena the town s local presidente and to his brother Demetrio Larena then the vice governor of the province Hibbard got attracted to the place and decided to establish the school in the locality He would later on write that the beauty of Dumaguete and the friendliness of the people helped in bringing about his decision 27 The institute had a modest beginning Dr and Mrs Hibbard held classes in a rented house beside the sea until the institute s first building Silliman Hall was completed in 1903 28 Recalling how the university started half a century later Dr Hibbard described 27 There were fifteen boys that first morning The equipment consisted of four desks about ten feet long two tables and two chairs a few McGuffey s Readers a few geographies arithmetics and ninth grade grammars I was President Mrs Hibbard was the faculty Expansion and World War II Edit Dr David S Hibbard s statue facing the Rizal Boulevard in Dumaguete City Enrollment in the school grew attracting students from other Asian countries 29 In 1910 Silliman was awarded government recognition and the right to grant a degree In the same year it was incorporated under the laws of the Philippines Women started to be admitted in 1912 and in 1921 the Silliman Bible School later to become the Divinity School was established in cooperation with the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions largely representing the Congregational Churches of the United States As enrollment in the institution grew further a corresponding increase in faculty followed These developments were accompanied with the use of a more developed curriculum and the construction and acquisition of more permanent buildings and equipment By 1925 Silliman was already recognized as the most influential Protestant institution of higher learning in the Philippines based on a report submitted by the Board of Educational Survey which was created by the Philippine Legislature to conduct a study on all educational institutions in the country 30 The institute was re incorporated in 1935 and in 1938 became the first school outside of Manila to be granted university status 29 Guy Hall built in 1918 was one of the buildings occupied by Japanese troops during World War II After its recognition as a university Silliman continued to receive from the Presbyterian Board and the American Board now the United Church Board for World Ministries grants for land buildings and equipment In addition these boards provided the university with American faculty and staff personnel Two other American boards have contributed personnel and funds the Board of Missions of the United Methodist Church and the United Christian Missionary Society of the Christian Churches Disciples of Christ 31 32 33 Life in the university was interrupted when World War II came On May 26 1942 some three weeks after the fall of Corregidor two Japanese transports anchored in Dumaguete Silliman was occupied by the Japanese forces and was converted into a garrison One of its buildings Channon Hall became the headquarters of the dreaded Japanese kempeitai or military police where many Filipinos were tortured and killed During the occupation many members of the faculty and the student body were forced to evacuate to four localities within the province Under the leadership of Dr Arthur Carson then president of Silliman the remaining members of the faculty continued the operations of the university in the mountains of Negros Oriental This led to the formation of what was then called the Jungle University in Malabo Valencia one of the localities in the province 34 35 University Professor Roy Bell became a major in the Negros Island guerrilla forces established a Free Government printed the Victory News and used his radio transmitter to establish contact with the South West Pacific Area command 36 Many students alumni faculty members and ROTC officers joined the resistance forces while theology professors Alvin Scaff Proculo Rodriguez Paul Lindholm and James McKinley carried on pastoral and teaching duties for the resistance soldiers and civilians in guerrilla dominated territory 37 The Carson and Bell families plus other faculty members were evacuated by the USS Narwhal SS 167 on February 7 1944 38 American and Filipino forces liberated Dumaguete on April 26 1945 A few days later the Faculty Emergency Committee took charge over the campus and began preparations for the resumption of classes and the challenge of reconstruction citation needed Post war years Edit The western side of the Gate of Knowledge is one of the iconic portals of Silliman University Built in the 1950s this landmark now serves as the main entrance to the main campus The original portal called the Gate of Opportunity built circa 1901 1905 is on the southeastern side of the campus facing the Rizal Boulevard Silliman s portals have become the de facto symbol for the university and the City of Dumaguete It has also been incorporated into the provincial seal of the Province of Negros Oriental For the first half of the century Silliman was run and operated by Americans After the Second World War and until the early 1950s moves for the Filipinization of the university administration began to come closer to the surface Filipino faculty members began to assume more important positions and as more of these faculty members took administrative roles the board of trustees elected the university s first Filipino president Dr Leopoldo T Ruiz on August 26 1952 officially taking office in April 1953 A Silliman alumnus A B 1916 and the University of California at Berkeley alumnus B A 1920 Ruiz had a long experience in higher education and in the foreign service Before his appointment he took up graduate studies in sociology at Columbia and Yale with an M A 1924 from the former institution as well as a Ph D 1942 from the University of Southern California 34 page needed non primary source needed 39 In the same decade of Ruiz s appointment the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia UBCHEA in New York an interdenominational group assumed responsibility for channeling all church aid to Silliman The United Board is an international organization supported by ten Protestant mission boards 40 non primary source needed page needed Long after Ruiz s appointment however Americans and other nationals still constituted a considerable portion of the faculty 34 non primary source needed page needed Up to the present American and foreign visiting professors are still regularly assigned in specialized areas 41 42 43 In the early 1960s and toward the beginning of the Martial Law years the university embarked on a Build a Greater Silliman program in response to the growing student population and the corresponding need for more facilities With much help from many donors mostly alumni and entities from abroad the program saw the construction of more academic buildings dormitories housing units for the faculty and other facilities These constructions included the now famous Luce Auditorium which was funded largely by the Henry Luce Foundation the Science Complex equipped with an observatory on top of the third floor the Engineering Complex and the Silliman University Medical Center 34 page needed Martial law era Edit When Martial Law was declared in 1972 Silliman became one of the first two universities ordered by the government to be closed and one of the last to be opened On the morning of September 23 1972 some faculty members and many students were rounded up by the local Philippine Constabulary now the Philippine National Police some of whom were detained for one to six months Many offices of the university including the Weekly Sillimanian the student paper were raided by the PC 34 page needed 44 Journalist Crispin Maslog who was teaching in the university at the time recalls that Marcos himself had complained about instances where members of the political opposition such as Senator Jovito Salonga and Senator Juan Liwag were invited to speak at the university 44 The year 1979 became a landmark year for Silliman when its Van Houweling Research Laboratory then headed by Dr George Beran 45 produced a dog vaccine that gave a three year immunity from rabies making it the first and only laboratory to produce a rabies vaccine with long term immunity in the whole of Southeast Asia 46 The development of the vaccine resulted in the elimination of rabies in many parts of the Visayas and Mindanao Islands and was later on used by other countries in their fight against rabies conducted in collaboration with the World Health Organization 47 1980s to recent history Edit The 1980s saw the restoration of the university s Student Government and the approval of its constitution After years of suppression by the Marcos regime students were again allowed to self organize in 1981 The decade also witnessed the 100 board exam ratings of the Electrical Engineering Nursing and Accountancy programs and the installation of solar powered light posts in the campus in the years 1986 and 1989 respectively 46 Portal West Building In the 1990s the university shifted its grading system from alphabetical to numerical In 1994 eleven Sillimanians landed in the top ten of that year s nursing board exam with twenty two other Sillimanian takers occupying the top twenty posts In that same year Silliman alumnus Gonzalo O Catan Jr was awarded Most Outstanding Inventor in the fifth National Technology Fair The decade also witnessed Silliman being cited as the university with the best published scientific paper in the Dr Elvira O Tan Awards and in 1995 the university hosted the first ever International Conference on Biology and Conservation of Small Cetaceans of Southeast Asia as well as the International Coral Reef Initiative Workshop 46 Toward the end of the decade Silliman prepared for its centennial celebrations To strengthen its local area network technology the university installed fiber optic cables that span the entire 62 hectare campus in 1999 In 2000 the Silliman Accountancy program ranked first in the country culminating in its Physical Therapy program ranking first in 2001 46 Silliman University continues to draw support from the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia UBCHEA as well as from its alumni and other benefactors The university has adopted a policy of providing education to the surrounding regions without depending much on tuition and other fees to meet its operational expenses Recently Silliman constructed the Portal West Building a five storey commercial building on campus to help augment its operational expenses In line with the same policy it has leased portions of its properties to business entities to further raise its financial base citation needed Because significant portion of the student population ride on motorbikes and scooters the university has also aggressively adopted a No Helmet No Entry policy Silliman has likewise adopted a No Smoking Policy on campus 48 Silliman is one of few private higher educational institutions in the country that have been granted full autonomous status by the Commission on Higher Education CHED the same government agency that recognized some of its programs as Centers of Excellence and Centers of Development 49 To date the university has the highest number of accredited programs fourteen of which have been granted Level IV accreditation status the highest level that can be granted to individual programs citation needed Campus Edit An early morning photograph of the Silliman University Church Construction for the church building began in 1941 Due to interruptions brought by World War II it was completed only in 1949 50 Silliman is located in Dumaguete City a quiet peaceful seaside community with a population of 116 392 51 52 The university campus has a total land area of 62 hectares composed of the main campus along Hibbard Avenue and the campus for the College of Agriculture and the Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences to the north Dotted by large acacia trees the main campus is home to most of the colleges and schools of the university and is adjacent to the city s downtown district Occupying almost one third of the downtown area the campus faces the sea to the east flanked by its portals which are now considered symbols of the school and city The three most prominent portals are the Gates of Knowledge Opportunity and Service The Gate of Knowledge is the current and main entrance it is the starting point of the two kilometer long Hibbard Avenue which was named after Dr David Sutherland Hibbard one of the founders of the institution The other prominent landmarks on the main campus are the Silliman Hall which now houses the Anthropology Museum the Silliman University Church the Robert B and Metta J Silliman Library and the Claire Isabel McGill Luce Auditorium the largest theater outside Metro Manila 53 It is frequented by tourists so the university maintains a campus cruiser a 15 seater golf cart or tram like vehicle to ferry visitors around the campus It is used to transport students during regular days 54 The Claire Isabel McGill Luce Auditorium built 1973 75 is named after the wife of Henry Luce III elder son of Henry Luce who is the founder and editor in chief of Time magazine 55 56 Its construction was mainly funded by the Henry Luce Foundation 57 Two kilometers to the north the other end of Hibbard Avenue is the campus for the College of Agriculture and the Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences It has a land area of 29 hectares and houses the College of Agriculture Complex the Silliman Farm a number of dormitories known as the Cocofed Dormitories and the Marine Laboratories of the Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences Adjacent to it is the Silliman Beach citation needed Silliman has off campus facilities located in Camp Lookout Valencia and on Ticao Island in the Province of Masbate The Camp Lookout facility houses the university s Creative Writing Center which now serves as the venue and permanent home of the Silliman National Writers Workshop The center has a two storey main function hall and five duplex cottages 58 non primary source needed The university s Ticao Island facility on the other hand is a 465 hectare property in the Province of Masbate another island in Bicol Region Donated by the family of Elizabeth How the facility is a combination of a working ranch agricultural plantations and patches of secondary forests A framework for a long term development plan has been made and is now the subject for validation by local stakeholders The plan includes programs for agriculture Christian ministry coastal resource management and public health 59 non primary source needed 60 non primary source needed Wikimedia Commons has media related to Silliman University Dumaguete has been called a center of learning in the south or a university town due to the presence of Silliman and other universities that have made their mark nationally and abroad 61 62 The city has become a melting pot of students professionals artists scholars and the literati coming from the country and the world 63 64 Museums Edit Ground floor terrace of the Anthropology Museum Silliman maintains six museums the SU Anthropology Museum the SU Heritage Museum the Gonzales Museum of Natural History the SU Marine Mammal Museum of the Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences IEMS the Ariniego Art Gallery and the SU ROTC Museum citation needed The Anthropology Museum was relocated from Silliman Hall to Hibbard Hall in 2015 Established in 1973 it was opened to bring the importance of the Filipino s cultural heritage to the attention of the public The bulk of the artifacts displayed came from fieldworks excavations purchases and donations The museum has seven galleries The first three contain exhibits which have been collected from known cultural or ethnic groups all over the country These items or artifacts include simple tools and instruments such as basketry agricultural and aquatic tools weapons clothing and ornaments as well as musical instruments The display is based on two general criteria the type of social organization incipient tribal or sultanate and the type of economic subsistence hunting and gathering marginal agriculture or farming under which ethnic group is categorized The exhibit on the last four galleries are artifacts excavated from different parts of Negros Island and in the mountain areas of Cotabato A number of excavations done by Sillimanian anthropologists in the 1970s yielded ancient artifacts like burial urns and porcelain pieces which date back to the Sung period in the twelfth century 34 non primary source needed page needed 65 The SU Heritage Museum which was opened in August 2020 and housed at the Silliman Hall is a repository with exhibits on the university s history since it was founded in 1901 by the Americans Collections such as memorabilia and set ups e g classrooms on what the life the founders had during the institution s infancy are showcased in the various sections the museum has citation needed The other two museums are the Gonzales Museum of Natural History and the Marine Mammal Museum The Gonzales Museum of Natural History is located at the first floor of the Science Complex It showcases a collection of preserved animals traditionally found in the tropics such as different kinds of fishes crustaceans snakes eagles birds flying lemurs etc The museum was named in honor Prof Rodolfo Gonzales a former biology teacher of the university 66 The Marine Mammal Museum on the other hand contains a large collection of whale and dolphin bones It is located at a facility of the Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences two kilometers north of the main campus In 2015 the university opened its SU ROTC Museum located on the first floor of Roman Yap Hall which houses the rare artifacts and equipment used in the Second World War and military uniforms of high ranking Sillimanian military officials over the years 67 non primary source needed 68 69 Zoo Edit The A Y Reyes Zoological and Botanical Gardens or the Silliman University Zoo is the university zoo It is also the home for the Center for Tropical Conservation Studies The garden started in the 1960s as a tree planting project and field laboratory studies facility by the Silliman University Biology Department citation needed In 1990 it became the country s first captive breeding center for the Philippine Spotted Deer Rusa alfredi Since then the garden s captive breeding program has expanded to include other endangered wildlife unique to the Philippines such as the Critically Endangered Visayan Warty Pig Sus cebifrons and the Negros Bleeding Heart Dove Gallicolumba keayi citation needed By 1996 the garden had grown to include over twenty animals and twenty four plant species The place was named the A Y Reyes Zoological and Botanical Garden after the late botanist Prof Alfredo Y Reyes who helped start and develop the garden citation needed Beach Edit Silliman University has its own beach It is situated at the front of the university s marine laboratory building Extension programs like local fishing has been a project to the university and to the local fishermen in Dumaguete City citation needed Administration EditPresidents of Silliman UniversityDavid S Hibbard 1901 1930Roy H Brown 1932 1936Arthur L Carson 1939 1953Leopoldo T Ruiz 1953 1961Cicero D Calderon 1962 1971Quintin S Doromal 1973 1982Venancio D Aldecoa Jr 1983 1986Pedro V Flores 1987 1989Angel C Alcala 1991 1992Mervyn J Misajon 1994 1996Agustin A Pulido 1996 2006Ben S Malayang III 2006 2018 a Betty Cernol McCann 2018 PresentSilliman is governed by an independent Board of Trustees composed of fifteen members Five of its members come from the Silliman University Foundation Incorporated SUFI five from the UCCP and another five from the alumni The president of the university sits as an ex officio member Under the board are the administrators composed of the University President the Vice President for Academic Affairs Vice President for Finance amp Operations Vice President for Development Enterprise and External Affairs the University Registrar Treasurer Director for Human Resource Management University General Counsel and Senior Minister Assisting the vice presidents are the deans directors department chairpersons coordinators officers and unit heads of the various colleges schools institutes units research centers offices programs and extension projects of the university 70 Though historically Protestant the university is academically nonsectarian Its learning environment has remained generally liberal and its religious orientation has in no way discouraged the expression or exercise of other beliefs 51 71 A majority of the university s student and faculty population are Roman Catholics with a significant portion of Muslims from Mindanao and the Middle East 72 73 Academics Edit Uytengsu Foundation Computer Studies Hall Rankings Edit University rankingsRegional OverallQS Asia 4 501 550 2022 National OverallQS National 74 5 2022 In a 2007 report released by the Professional Regulation Commission PRC and the Commission on Higher Education CHED Silliman University was ranked fourth in the country following three schools of the University of the Philippines UP namely UP Diliman UP Los Banos and UP Manila which ranked first second and third respectively The survey was based on average passing rates in Board examinations from 1991 to 2001 in all courses of all universities and colleges in the Philippines The study is conducted every ten years 75 In other board or licensure examination related reports released by the CHED in the year 2009 Silliman was ranked first in the country in the field of Nursing Education 76 and second in the fields of Accountancy 77 and Mechanical Engineering 78 79 Internationally Silliman is ranked among the top 150 universities in Asia based on International Students Review by the QS Quacquarelli Symonds an institution that ranks the world s top universities 80 Recognition Edit The Commission on Higher Education CHED designated Silliman as a Center of Excellence in Information Technology Marine Science Nursing Education and Teacher Education and a Center of Development in Anthropology Biology Medical Technology and Accountancy Education 72 59 Aside from these the university was also named by the United States Agency for International Development as a Center of Excellence in Coastal Resource Management and by the Haribon Foundation as an Academic Center of Excellence in Biodiversity Conservation 81 82 83 84 Due to the university s community based coastal resource management program Apo Island a small island off the coast of Dauin was recognized as one of the best diving spots in the world 72 85 86 International linkages Edit On top of its strong affiliation with the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia UBCHEA and other international development organizations Silliman maintains linkages on collaborative research as well as on faculty and student exchange with universities in the United States Asia and Europe Its longest running student exchange programs are with three Japanese universities International Christian University Ferris University and Shikoku Gakuin University 72 87 88 Silliman also maintains research and academic linkages with the University of Washington USA California State University East Bay USA Gordon College USA the Smithsonian Institution USA Texas Tech University USA Old Dominion University USA Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University Japan Chonbuk National University South Korea Hanshin University South Korea Sookmyung Women s University South Korea Soongsil University South Korea Hanyang University South Korea Sam Ratulangi University Indonesia the Asian College of Nursing and Health Malaysia Hannam University South Korea Madras Christian College India Kinki University Japan and Ingolstadt University of Applied Sciences Germany 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 Accreditation Edit Silliman University confers bachelor s master s and doctoral degrees accredited by different bodies and agencies such as the ACSCU AAI PAASCU a member of FAAP and the ATESEA among others Colleges Edit The Dr Luz Ausejo Hall is named after one of the longest serving deans of the College of Arts and Sciences 108 The College of Business Administration Building The Mary Marquis Smith Hall is part of the new three building complex of the College of Nursing The Uytengsu Foundation Computer Studies Hall of the College of Computer Studies The Medical School Building The College of Agriculture provides undergraduate programs in Agribusiness Agronomy and Animal Science The college is located in a 29 hectare agricultural complex two kilometers north of the main campus Its beginnings can be traced to as early as 1913 when Dr David S Hibbard first president of Silliman Institute was instructed to make provisions for a school garden and a farm In 1950 it was formalized and established as a department and in 1976 was constituted into what was then known as the School of Agriculture The years 1977 to 1980 saw the construction of modern classrooms a laboratory complex eight dormitories and a library and the renaming of the school into what is now known as the College of Agriculture 59 109 The College of Arts and Sciences has 18 major courses leading to several degree programs At present it is composed of the departments of Anthropology and Sociology Biology Chemistry English and Literature History and Political Science Filipino and Foreign Languages Mathematics Philosophy and Religion Physics Psychology Social Work Department During its early years 1902 up to the war years the College of Arts and Sciences was composed of the College of Liberal Arts and the College of Sciences In 1947 both colleges were merged to become the College of Arts and Sciences 59 109 The College of Business Administration offers five undergraduate courses in Business Administration majors in General Business Management and Economics Accountancy Entrepreneurship Business Computer Applications and Office Management It also has one graduate program in Business Administration namely Master in Business Administration Established as a college in 1938 it is now composed of the departments of Management Economics Accountancy Business Computer Applications Entrepreneurship and Commercial Science Due to its consistently high performance in accountancy board examinations the college has been designated by CHED as a Center of Development in Accountancy Education 59 109 In the October 2009 CPA Licensure Examinations 10 25 examinees category Silliman ranked second in the country 77 The College of Computer Studies provides undergraduate courses in Computer Science Information Technology and Information Systems The college was designated by CHED as a Center of Excellence in Information Technology Education In 1997 Silliman is one of only two universities in the Philippines that has an extensive fiber optic backbone and the only school in the country that owns its fiber optic system Costing US 2 5 million in 1997 this backbone connects all buildings in the campus Silliman was also the first school in the country to use wireless Wi Fi B2B LAN technology 110 Recently the college opened its master s degree in Information Systems 111 112 and pilot tested the Silliman Online University Learning SOUL website a virtual classroom for students 59 109 It has also formed partnerships with Microsoft and IBM The Microsoft Developer Network Academic Alliance has given the college a 3 year complimentary MSDNAA subscription which allows it to download available software in MSDNAA for free to all students and faculty for teaching and learning purposes while the college s partnership with IBM resulted in the introduction of the IBM Academic Exchange Offering Electives under the program are developed for junior and graduating students majoring in Information Technology Information Systems and Computer Science 111 113 The College of Engineering and Design started as a Department of Engineering in June 1932 offering an undergraduate program in civil engineering In March 1935 the board of trustees authorized the change in status of Silliman from an institute to a university With government approval of this change Silliman proceeded to adopt additional undergraduate programs in mining engineering chemical engineering and industrial engineering Today the college offers five undergraduate courses in architecture civil engineering computer engineering electrical engineering and mechanical engineering 59 109 In the October 2009 Mechanical Engineering Licensure Examinations Category A Silliman was ranked second in the country 79 114 115 The College of Education has been designated by CHED as Center of Excellence in Teacher Education The college has three departments Physical Education Teacher Education and Nutrition and Dietetics Its beginnings can be traced way back in 1924 when it first offered diplomas in Bachelor of Science in education From then on the Teacher Education Program grew and developed into what is now known as the College of Education 59 109 The College of Law was established in 1935 starting with a freshman class of 22 members Guided by its motto Law with a Conscience the college seeks to teach its students not just the correct understanding of legal provisions and principles but their ethical implementation to society and people 59 109 It is also home to the Dr Jovito R Salonga Center for Law and Development 116 Starting SY 2009 2010 the college shifted its course offering from Bachelor of Laws LLB to Juris Doctor JD 117 Silliman is the first law school to offer the JD program in the Visayas and Mindanao area 118 The College of Mass Communication was established in 1966 as the first school outside of metropolitan Manila to offer a degree program in Journalism 119 Its founding director was D Wayne Rowland Ph D a visiting professor in journalism from Texas Christian University In 1976 the college then known as the School of Communication changed its course offering from a bachelor s degree in Journalism to that of Mass Communication to cover the ever expanding field of mass communication 120 The College of Nursing was designated by CHED as a Center of Excellence in Nursing Education The college offers one undergraduate course in Nursing and three graduate courses namely 1 Master in Nursing non thesis Majors in Family Nursing Practice Administration Public Health Nursing Adult Health and Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing 2 Master of Science in Nursing Majors in Parent Child Nursing Nursing School Administration Nursing Service Administration Public Health Nursing Medical Surgical Nursing Psychiatric Mental Nursing Family Nursing Practice Community Health Nursing and Adult Health and 3 Ph D in Nursing Founded in 1947 the college is known for its ratings in the professional licensure exams which have been consistently higher than the national average 59 109 In a 2009 report handed down by CHED Silliman was ranked first in the country 76 121 The College of Performing and Visual Arts provides programs in Fine Arts Music and Speech amp Theater Arts The college started in 1912 as a music department in the College of Arts and Sciences With the arrival of American missionary Geraldine Kate in 1934 it was renamed as the Conservatory of Music with Kate as its founding director In 1941 it became known as the School of Music and with the addition of the Fine Arts Department in 1969 was recast as the School of Music and Fine Arts Another transformation came in 2001 when its name was changed to the College of Performing Arts 59 109 Schools Edit The Divinity School provides undergraduate and graduate programs in Divinity Ministry and Theology It started in 1921 as the Silliman Bible School serving as a Congregationalist Presbyterian training school for Visayan speaking candidates in pastoral ministry Its students and alumni are a diverse group of local and international students 59 109 The Medical School is a relatively new unit in the university Established in 2004 it has a faculty of 50 medical doctors specializing in Rheumatology Anesthesiology Cardiology Endocrinology Eye Ear Nose Throat Family Medicine Gastroenterology General Surgery Hematology Infectious Diseases Internal Medicine Nephrology Neurology Neuro Surgery Nuclear Medicine Obstetrics and Gynecology Oncology Orthopedic Surgery Pediatrics Psychiatry Public Health Administration Pulmonary Medicine Rehabilitation Medicine and Urology 59 109 The School of Public Affairs and Governance started in June 2007 with Dr Reynaldo Y Rivera as the first dean to provide formal training in the management of local government affairs It specializes in three areas Fiscal Administration Local Governance and Criminal Justice System and offers two degree programs Public Administration BSPA and Foreign Affairs BSFA The School aims to beef up the expertise of public servants to become more efficient administrators who can discharge their duties in the most economical way with maximum results A distinguished panel of guest lecturers from Manila and abroad join the resident faculty of Silliman in teaching the courses 59 109 The School of Basic Education is home to three departments Early Childhood Elementary and High School When Silliman Institute former name of Silliman University was founded in 1901 it started as an elementary school thus making the Elementary Department the oldest unit in the university In 1916 the first high school diplomas were awarded and in 1957 58 funding for an Early Childhood School building was secured Historically the Early Childhood Elementary and High School departments operated separately Due to developments within the university in 2001 however and to facilitate better coordination between these departments the early childhood elementary and high schools were merged as one unit forming what is now known as the School of Basic Education 59 109 TheSchool of Agro Industrial and Technical Education provides short TESDA accredited technical vocational certificate courses These courses are generally sponsored through scholarship grants from government agencies such as TESDA and DepEd Institutes Edit The Institute of Clinical Laboratory Sciences offers one undergraduate course in Medical Technology The Institute started as a program under the Biology Department of the College of Arts and Sciences in 1970 Due to its growing population exemplary performance in licensure examinations and need for autonomy it was separated and converted into a department under the same college in 1987 making it into a Department of Medical Technology In 1995 the university reorganized some of its programs and transferred the Medical Technology department to the College of Nursing creating a new college named College of Nursing and Allied Health Sciences Starting SY 2009 2010 however in a bid to give the department more autonomy in crafting its own academic direction it was separated from the College of Nursing as an entirely autonomous institute 59 109 The Institute of Rehabilitative Sciences offers one undergraduate course in Physical Therapy Like the Medical Technology Department the institute started as a program under the College of Arts and Sciences It was subsequently transferred to the College of Nursing together with the Medical Technology Department forming a new college the College of Nursing and Allied Health Sciences For over a decade the Physical Therapy program was attached to the College of Nursing and Allied Health Sciences However to give it more autonomy the program was separated from the college in SY 2009 2010 and reorganized as the Institute of Rehabilitative Sciences 59 109 Library system Edit The Robert B and Metta J Silliman Library b The Silliman Library System is composed of the Robert B and Metta J Silliman Library which serves as the university library and the local libraries of the College of Agriculture College of Business Administration College of Law the Divinity School the Allied Health Sciences High School Elementary and Early Childhood Schools Among these libraries the Robert B and Metta J Silliman Library university library serves as the largest repository of books periodicals and other reading materials Built in 1978 the university library is a four story structure with a seating capacity of 490 readers It holds over 250 000 volumes 72 with enough space to accommodate 400 000 more It also subscribes to 500 periodicals Some courses provide instruction in the location of books and publications for research and other school work Students can search for library materials using the On Line Public Access Catalogue Instructions on how to use it are posted on the stations were the system is installed Research can also be done using the Internet through the Cyberlibrary Students pay a semestral fee to avail of this service 122 123 Aside from the main section of the library which contains the bulk of its book and periodical collection other notable sections of the facility include the Filipiniana section containing books and materials published by famous Filipino authors during the Spanish and pre war periods of the country and the Sillimaniana section containing Silliman memorabilia from 1901 up to the present e g trophies plaques of recognition portraits of past presidents etc and an archive of past publications and documents The university library is likewise home to two notable centers the American Studies Resource Center ASRC and a World Bank Knowledge for Development Center WB KDC The American Studies Resource Center is a result of a memorandum of agreement between the United States Embassy in Manila and Silliman University It is the only ASRC in Region VII hosted by an academic institution The ASRC provides a variety of materials books periodicals CD ROMS DVDs VCDs VHS tapes electronic materials for those interested in studies and issues related to the United States 124 The World Bank Knowledge for Development Center is a result of a partnership between the university and the World Bank It contains an extensive collection of development publications and World Bank project documents to people involved in the academe researchers NGOs media government agencies and the business sector The section is open to the public 125 To date the Silliman Library remains as one of the biggest libraries in the Philippines 126 127 In 2008 the Silliman University Library System was given the Outstanding Library Award by the Philippine Association of Academic and Research Librarians PAARL for its growing collection and ongoing computerization program 72 128 129 Medical Center Edit Main article Silliman University Medical Center Medical Arts Building of the Silliman University Medical Center The Silliman University Medical Center is a university owned hospital that is currently being operated and managed by the Silliman University Medical Center Foundation Inc SUMCFI a separate and distinct foundation with its own Board of Directors The hospital supports the academic institution by serving as the university s base facility for the internship programs of the College of Nursing School of Medicine the Institutes of Clinical Laboratory and Rehabilitative Sciences the Divinity School for its chaplaincy program and the Nutrition and Dietetics Department It is a 140 bed hospital located on campus with comprehensive medical services available to both the university and the community in general The SU Medical Center started as an infirmary in 1901 and later became a hospital in 1923 130 In 1974 the cornerstone for a New Medical Center was laid down by the Netherlands Ambassador to the Philippines to commence the building of a four storey structure with passenger elevators the first in Negros Oriental 34 non primary source needed page needed Inaugurated in 1976 it is considered by whom as one of the most modern hospitals outside Metro Manila and Cebu 131 In 1979 the Medical Center made history when its Van Houweling Research Laboratory discovered and produced a dog vaccine that gave a three year immunity from rabies The development of the vaccine was later used by other countries in collaboration with the World Health Organization on their fight against rabies 47 Recently a new Medical Arts Building was added 132 to the main structure of the hospital to further address the growing needs of the surrounding community The SU Medical Center has collaborative ties with St Luke s Medical Center 133 Research and extension Edit Silliman s Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences IEMS has been designated by the USAID as a Center of Excellence in Coastal Resource Management 83 and recognized by the CHED as the best research program in the country 21 Concurrent with its academic undertakings the university is engaged in collaborative research and community extension programs From 2000 to 2011 it has been designated as a CHED Zonal Research Center for Region VII 134 and in 2011 was chosen by the Commission on Higher Education CHED as one of few academic institutions to comprise a national research network which entitles the university to receive an annual allocation of P10 million for a three year period 135 Selected researches are published in the Silliman Journal the university s research publication Foremost among the university s research outputs are those that have been undertaken in the field of Environmental and Marine Sciences historically spearheaded by the Silliman University Marine Laboratory SUML now the Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences IEMS IEMS is a research institute in the field of marine sciences located at Silliman Beach two kilometers north of the main campus Established in 1974 through a modest grant from the United Church of Canada it has produced notable research that are presently being applied in various cooperative projects in different local communities such as the conservation programs in Sumilon and Apo Island 40 non primary source needed page needed 85 This research institute also led in the establishment of 20 marine protected areas MPAs and has provided assistance to 61 others in the Visayas and Mindanao For its research and biodiversity conservation efforts it was recognized by the Commission on Higher Education as the best in research program in the country 21 In July 2013 Greenpeace an international environmental organization partnered with Silliman University in conducting a reef check at Apo Island to determine the damage on the reef caused by climate change 136 137 138 Other units engaged in either research or extension include the Center for Gender Studies and Development the Center for Tropical Conservation Studies CENTROP the Salonga Center for Law and Development and the SU Angelo King Center for Research and Environmental Management SUAKCREM Extension projects of the university also include the SU Affiliated Non Conventional Energy Center SU ANEC the SU KNH Kaugmaran Child Development Center SUKCDC the Alternative Lifestyle for Women in Negros Project H Capability Program CBP for the Province of Negros Oriental HIV AIDS Prevention Project the Marina Clinic Outreach Program Rural Development and Credit Program On Monitoring and the SU AADC Integrated Agro Forestry Participatory Program for Negros Oriental On Monitoring 59 139 Culture and traditions Edit Stained glass window of Silliman University Church depicting Jesus Christ and his apostles Via Veritas Vita Edit Via Veritas Vita is a Latin phrase which means The Way The Truth and The Life Chosen by the university as its motto this phrase is attributed to Jesus Christ and is found in the Gospel of John chapter 14 verse 6 which reads 5Thomas said to him Lord we don t know where you are going so how can we know the way 6Jesus answered I am the way and the truth and the life No one comes to the Father except through me 7If you really knew me you would know my Father as well From now on you do know him and have seen him New International Version The choice of the motto is firmly rooted in the university s belief that religious instruction particularly in the teachings of Jesus Christ is essential to the moral development of every young person 34 non primary source needed page needed Incidentally the motto has been adopted by the Province of Negros Oriental by incorporating it in its provincial seal Galilean Fellowships Edit Once every semester the Silliman academic community celebrates the University Christian Life Emphasis Week UCLEW In this week long celebration the university encourages all students to participate in the different Bible study or fellowship activities held in the homes and cottages of assigned members of the Silliman academic or religious community Conducted after classes these sessions are called the Galilean Fellowships Galilean fellowships are brief devotional sessions where participants are given the opportunity to reflect on the teachings of the Bible relax share their thoughts and experiences and have fellowship with other members of the academic community 140 non primary source needed needs update Founders Week Edit Founders Week is part of a two week long event conducted by the Silliman community to commemorate the founding of the university This event is held in the last week of August The celebration is characterized by class reunions alumni fraternity and organizational gatherings concerts exhibits booth building awarding ceremonies e g the Outstanding Sillimanian Awards and invitational games with other schools 132 non primary source needed 141 non primary source needed The week long celebration is traditionally commenced by an early morning worship service called Sunrise Service at the Silliman University Church and culminated with a citywide parade held on the anniversary of the university s founding August 28 The parade is referred to as the Parada Sillimaniana and August 28 is referred to as the Founders Day in honor of the pioneers For the past few years however the university moved the parades to August 27 Traditionally the parade is characterized by the use of floats with each representing a particular college department or school 142 non primary source needed Silliman Song Edit Before the end of an important event or ceremony the Silliman Song is sung by the attendees The lyrics were written in 1918 by Dr Paul Doltz then the vice president of Silliman Institute and pastor of Silliman Church The tune of the song is an adaptation or modification of The Orange and the Black of Princeton University Dr Doltz s alma mater 34 non primary source needed page needed The melody is based on the original song Sadie Ray composed by J Tannenbaum late in the 19th century The Silliman Song briefly describes Silliman s tranquil location the student s college or university experience the student s victories whether it be in the classroom the court the track or the field the highs and lows in life and the principles that the graduate brings as the latter leaves the halls of the university 143 unreliable source Sang by the Silliman community for almost a hundred years the Silliman Song has popularized the phrases Dear old Silliman and Silliman beside the sea 144 145 Student life EditAthletics Edit Silliman has several athletic facilities The university Gymnasium is a multipurpose facility used for basketball volleyball badminton rock climbing table tennis cheering and other indoor activities The Cimafranca Ballfield is primarily used for football and for track and field events Other athletic facilities include an Olympic sized swimming pool tennis courts pelota courts and an archery ranges 123 Silliman has varsity teams for almost every major sport A regular participant of the Philippine University Games UniGames and the Private Schools Athletic Association PRISAA Silliman is represented by a red and white Stallion or Mare 146 147 In the recent Beijing Olympics Mark Javier a Sillimanian represented the Philippines in the field of Archery He was the lone male archer that represented the country 148 Other notable Philippine Olympians that came from Silliman include Jennifer Chan who recently won a gold medal in the 25th SEA Games Lisa Ygnalaga and long jumper Simeon Toribio 72 149 150 Student government Edit Built in 1932 the Hibbard Hall houses the Office of the University Registrar The coordination of student activities and student organizations are handled by the Silliman University Student Government SUSG established in 1912 and interrupted during World War II and briefly suspended during Martial Law Under the present set up the Student Government is divided into three branches the executive the legislative and the judicial departments The executive power is exercised by the President with the assistance of the Cabinet The Cabinet is composed of the President Vice President and the respective heads of the executive committee who are appointed by the President The legislative power of the SUSG is vested in the Student Assembly It is composed of elected representatives of the different schools and colleges The Judiciary exercises judicial power It is composed of the Prime Justice who must be a junior Law student and six other justices appointed by the President upon the recommendation of the Committee on Appointments Election of Student Government officers are held before the close of the academic year 151 Political campaigns or rallies may be held after securing the necessary permits Political campaigns in the university are characterized by rallies in the Amphitheater classroom to classroom speaking engagements and dorm to dorm campaigns Currently there are two student political parties in the university the Students Union for Reforms SURE Party and the Concerted Action for the Upliftment of Student Endeavors CAUSE Party established in 1980 and 1981 respectively The Student Government is under the supervision and oversight of the Student Organizations and Activities Division SOAD 40 Organizations Edit Built in 1921 the Amphitheater is a common meeting place for students and student organizations Numerous student organizations are registered in the university Some are regional societies organized to promote fellowship among students from particular geographical areas There are service clubs such as fraternities and sororities which carry out as part of their activities projects on campus and in the community Others are identified with particular academic disciplines such as physics chemistry and mathematics known as course related organizations and still others belong to the special or interest groups The supervision and coordination of student organizations are undertaken by the Student Organizations and Activities Division SOAD together with the Silliman University Student Government SUSG 40 non primary source needed page needed Student publications Edit Student publications include the Weekly Sillimanian one of the first weekly student newspaper in the country with its existence dating back as early as 1903 the Portal official yearbook first published in 1913 the Dark Blue Southern Seas a literary journal published in cooperation with the Department of English the Junior Sillimanian a publication of students from the High School Department and the Stones and Pebbles a publication of students from the Elementary School 152 non primary source needed In addition to the Silliman Law Journal the College of Law in partnership with the Salonga Law Center maintains its own publication called the Purple Map a legal discussion platform for law students which was started in 2010 153 Most of these publications particularly the Weekly Sillimanian the Portal Junior Sillimanian and the Stones and Pebbles are supported by the students through a publication fee 40 non primary source needed page needed the Purple Map is maintained by way of endowments from law alumni 153 Dormitories and faculty housing Edit Vernon Hall one of the men s dormitories on campus Silliman operates regular and cooperative dormitories which can provide space for approximately 800 students These dormitories are named after Philippine trees flowers and significant historical figures of the university The university categorizes these dormitories as either regular or cooperative Of the first type housekeeping is generally maintained by a dorm staff and meals are supervised by the university s Food Services There are six regular dormitories four for women and two for men and seven cooperative dormitories four for women and three for men The regular dormitories for women are Edith Carson Ethel Chapman Larena and the Woodward Hall For men the regular dormitories are the Vernon Hall formerly New Men s Dormitory and Doltz Hall citation needed The second type of dormitories are the cooperative dormitories In these dormitories residents undertake the housekeeping and planning of the food With the exception of Channon Hall cooperative dormitories for women are named after flowers like Azucena Rosal and Sampaguita For men the dormitories are named after trees like Ipil Molave and Narra citation needed In addition to the foregoing the university maintains a number of cottages for members of its faculty and staff as well as for guests and visiting alumni 40 non primary source needed page needed Alumni EditMain article List of Silliman University people There are currently forty alumni chapters throughout the world that are duly organized and recognized Five of these are based in the U S and Canada 154 Notable alumni of the university include Carlos P Garcia eighth President of the Philippines 155 Senators Robert Barbers Lorenzo Teves and the Great Filibuster Roseller Lim 156 House Speaker Cornelio Villareal 157 John Gokongwei Sr a Philippine business magnate 158 Frederick Dael former CEO and President of Pepsi Cola Asia Pacific and former CEO of Islacom 159 William Torres Father of Philippine Internet and co founder of Mozaic Corporation 160 161 Vicente Sinco one of the signatories of the UN Charter in 1945 the eighth President of the University of the Philippines and founder of Foundation University 162 MacArthur Corsino former Philippine Ambassador to the Republic of Cuba 163 164 Antonio P Villamor Philippine Ambassador to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia 165 166 Juanita Amatong former Secretary of the Department of Finance and first woman executive director in the World Bank Group from the Philippines 167 Angel Alcala Ramon Magsaysay Awardee for Public Service and former Secretary of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources Leonor M Briones former National Treasurer of the Republic of the Philippines 168 169 Emilio Macias II former Governor of Negros Oriental 170 Efren N Padilla executive director Center for Filipino Studies California State University East Bay 171 172 Jose Andrada first commanding officer of the Philippine Navy formerly Off Shore Patrol under the Philippine Commonwealth in 1939 and after whom the Headquarters of the Philippine Navy is now named 173 174 175 Edith L Tiempo National Artist for Literature 1999 176 Edilberto K Tiempo Filipino writer professor and founder of the Silliman National Writers Workshop 177 Eddie S Romero National Artist for Cinema and Broadcast Arts 2003 178 179 Leoncio P Deriada Palanca Awards Hall of Famer 180 Cesar Ruiz Aquino Filipino poet and fictionist 181 182 Simeon Toribio one of few Filipinos who won medals in the history of world Olympics 183 Sillimanians have also excelled in the field of journalism such as Claire Delfin of GMA Network 184 185 and Ina Reformina of ABS CBN 186 while there are those who entered showbusiness such as Bret Jackson 187 188 Beauty Gonzalez 189 and Theodore Boborol 190 Carlos P Garcia eighth President of the Philippines and author of the Filipino First Policy 191 Leonor Briones Secretary of Education of the Philippines Rowena Guanzon Commissioner Commission on Elections Republic of the Philippines Angel Alcala National Scientist Edith Tiempo National Artist for Literature Ernesto Abella Presidential Spokesperson for Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte Simeon Toribio Filipino athlete who won a bronze medal at the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles California Eddie Romero Film director and National Artist Fidel Ramos 12th President of the Philippines honoris causa 192 Cornelio Villareal Speaker of the House of Representatives of the Philippines Roseller Lim Senator of the Philippines Jose E Romero first Philippine Ambassador to the Court of St James s United Kingdom References EditNotes Edit a References for the Presidents of Silliman David S Hibbard 193 Roy H Brown 194 Arthur L Carson 195 Leopoldo T Ruiz 34 Cicero D Calderon 196 Quintin S Doromal 197 198 Venancio D Aldecoa 199 Pedro V Flores Angel C Alcala 200 Mervyn J Misajon 201 Agustin A Pulido 202 and Ben S Malayang 203 b The main library was renamed as the Robert B and Metta J Silliman Library Robert B Silliman served as the University s Vice President during the Presidency of Dr Leopoldo Ruiz Footnotes Edit The University is a separate corporation predating what is now known as the UCCP It is governed by an independent Board of Trustees with the UCCP being merely one of three sectors represented in the Board Pursuant to its Articles of Incorporation five of the fifteen members of the Board come from the UCCP Though Protestant in origin and to some extent in orientation its academic policies are generally non sectarian and is neither owned nor governed by UCCP or any religious organization University Conference Achieves High Participation Turnout SU NetNews Retrieved July 2 2011 Maricar Aranas SU to host UNIGAMES Archived August 16 2010 at the Wayback Machine Visayan Daily Star Retrieved June 7 2012 a b QS Asia University Rankings 2021 Top Universities Quacquarelli Symonds November 26 2020 Retrieved November 26 2020 QS Asia University Rankings 2021 December 13 2020 Retrieved December 13 2020 CHED Taps SU for Research Network Archived October 20 2012 at the Wayback Machine Visayan Daily Star Retrieved June 5 2012 a b NHI Resolution No 7 Series 2002 National Historical Commission of the Philippines Retrieved June 8 2012 Siliman University rocked by bomb threat suspends classes ph news yahoo com Retrieved November 12 2019 spot ph arts culture the latest arts culture 79241 silliman university dumaguete a4329 20190928 lfrm This School By the Sea Has Front Row Seats to a Poetic Dumaguete Morning SPOT PH Retrieved November 12 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Check url value help Tiempo Maslog amp Sitoy 1977 pp 49 52 cebudailynews community view 20101217 309444 Silliman University granted institutional accreditation Silliman University granted institutional accreditation Archived July 7 2009 at the Wayback Machine Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved December 19 2010 FAAP grants Institutional accreditation to Silliman University Philippine Information Agency Retrieved December 19 2010 14 Academic Programs Granted Highest Accreditation Status Silliman University Retrieved April 22 2012 page 12 Accredited Programs Accredited Programs Silliman University Retrieved April 21 2015 Enrollment up by 6 56 countries represented Silliman University Retrieved August 28 2020 Silliman University Retrieved August 11 2014 Atty Ignacio Bunye CSF program up in Dumaguete City Archived July 19 2009 at the Wayback Machine Manila Bulletin Retrieved October 31 2009 CHED Grants Silliman Autonomous Status Archived April 27 2009 at the Wayback Machine SU Net News Retrieved July 31 2009 Past and Future ACUCA Retrieved September 4 2009 WEAMS Institution Search US Veterans Affairs Retrieved October 27 2020 a b c Silliman U wins CHEd best research Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved April 19 2010 Extension program receives national award Archived July 14 2010 at the Wayback Machine SU Net News Retrieved December 9 2009 Philippines Communication for Coastal Management Center for Environmental Strategies Retrieved March 22 2011 Silliman Hall Society for the Conservation of Philippine Wetlands Inc Retrieved November 22 2009 Panublion Silliman University Main Building Archived July 22 2009 at the Wayback Machine Ateneo de Manila University Retrieved November 25 2009 Anthropology Museum Archived January 17 2010 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved March 5 2010 a b c d Silliman University marks 117th year The Negros Chronicle Retrieved October 30 2020 Silliman University 118 Negros Chronicle Retrieved October 30 2020 a b Falling in love with Silliman By Mark Raygan Garcia The Manila Bulletin Retrieved October 30 2020 The Monroe Survey of 1925 submitted by the Board of Educational Survey of the Philippine Legislature expressed concern over profit making private adventure schools in the country But on Silliman the report read The most influential Protestant institution of higher learning is Silliman Institute at Dumaguete on Negros Island In location acreage buildings equipment and sanitary arrangements this institution is a most attractive contrast to the private universities described above A library of 8 000 volumes administered by a trained librarian has been wisely selected Its finest building is devoted to the teaching of the sciences The recitations heard by the Commission s representative were most ably conducted and the spirit that pervaded the place was one of the finest he experienced anywhere Moreover the Commission heard only words of praise throughout the Islands for graduates of Silliman Institute particularly of those who entered the public schools as teachers Monroe Paul 1926 Educational System of the Philippine Islands Manila Philippine Bureau of Printing p 512 Guide to the United Presbyterian Church in the U S A Commission on Ecumenical Mission and Relations Secretaries Files Philippine Mission Presbyterian Historical Society Retrieved October 30 2020 American Colonial Missionaries in the Philippines By Jennifer Hallock JenniferHallock com Retrieved October 30 2020 A Missiological Study of the United Church of Christ in the Philippines in its Constitution and General Assembly Documents VEM Retrieved October 30 2020 a b c d e f g h i j Tiempo Maslog amp Sitoy 1977 SUMCFI Donates To Malabo School Dumaguete MetroPost Retrieved October 30 2020 Mills 2009 pp 76 78 80 127 Mills 2009 p 166 Mills 2009 pp 155 160 Directory of Filipino Students in the United States United States Bureau of Insular Affairs Page 64 Retrieved October 30 2020 a b c d e f Silliman University General Catalog 2003 2004 SU Office of Information and Publications A Fulbright Scholar A Human Rights Educator George Washington University Law School Retrieved June 22 2010 Mission Connections Archived October 27 2004 at the Library of Congress Web Archives Presbyterian Church USA Retrieved June 22 2010 Editorial Board David Arthur Archived July 26 2011 at the Wayback Machine International Journal of Caring Sciences Retrieved June 24 2010 a b Maslog Crispin April 15 2021 Probinsyano remembers Martial Law Rappler Retrieved October 4 2021 Dr George W Beran s Biography Archived April 15 2010 at the Wayback Machine World Rabies Day Retrieved April 23 2010 a b c d Timeline 1901 2001 By Earl Jude Paul L Cleope Midtown Printing Co Inc a b One World One Health Rabies Archived July 24 2011 at the Wayback Machine OneHealthInitiative com Retrieved April 23 2010 Silliman celebrates 107 years permanent dead link Negros Chronicle Retrieved December 26 2009 Statistics CHED s Center of Excellence and Development Archived September 6 2002 at the Wayback Machine Commission on Higher Education Retrieved October 25 2009 General Buildings SU Church Silliman University Archived from the original on September 27 2011 Retrieved November 11 2009 a b Service Learning Asia Network Member Directory Archived November 25 2010 at the Wayback Machine SLAN Retrieved September 5 2009 Dumaguete s population as of August 1 2007 Archived November 13 2009 at the Wayback Machine National Statistical Coordination Board Retrieved October 25 2009 http www localphilippines com attractions 7921 claire isabel mcgill luce auditorium Archived January 5 2010 at the Wayback Machine Local Philippines Retrieved April 24 2010 SUAASC Update Archived March 7 2012 at the Wayback Machine Asian Journal Retrieved August 22 2010 Travel Philippines New York Times Retrieved November 27 2009 Douglas Martin Henry Luce III 80 Publisher of Time and Philanthropist Dies New York Times Retrieved November 27 2009 Home of Dumaguete s Performing Arts permanent dead link Negros Chronicle Retrieved November 27 2009 Writers Village Groundbreaking Set Nov 15 Archived July 14 2010 at the Wayback Machine SU Net News Retrieved November 17 2009 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Annual Report SY 2007 2008 Archived August 7 2011 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved July 1 2009 Silliman signs Deed of Donation for Ticao Archived April 23 2009 at the Wayback Machine SU Net News Retrieved November 13 2009 Why Not Visit Dumaguete In The Philippines Archived October 16 2009 at the Wayback Machine Cebu News Retrieved October 19 2009 Ma Ceres P Doyo Tempest in Tanon Archived February 26 2012 at the Wayback Machine Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved October 19 2009 The City of Gentle People Dumaguete Info Retrieved May 25 2009 Veneeth Iyengar and Danah Fortunato University Town Archived October 7 2008 at the Wayback Machine Philippine Business Retrieved May 25 2009 Anthropology Museum Archived February 20 2009 at the Wayback Machine Dumaguete UniTown A Community Driven Web Portal Retrieved June 26 2009 Silliman at 108 Opens Landmarks Archived July 24 2011 at the Wayback Machine Negros Chronicle Retrieved October 19 2009 Country s First ROTC Museum Inaugurated Archived January 8 2016 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved August 13 2015 Domini M Torrevillas At Silliman s 111th birthday Archived September 25 2015 at the Wayback Machine Philippine Star Retrieved August 13 2015 Silliman opens first ROTC museum Archived July 26 2015 at the Wayback Machine Visayan Daily Star Retrieved August 13 2015 Administrators Archived August 7 2009 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved September 3 2009 Code of Christian Collegiality Archived September 9 2009 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved September 3 2009 a b c d e f g University History Archived January 30 2009 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved February 11 2009 Iranian Deputy Minister Visit Archived July 14 2010 at the Wayback Machine SU NetNews Retrieved April 21 2010 QS Asia University Rankings 2021 December 13 2020 Retrieved December 13 2020 UP is No 1 based on PRC exams permanent dead link UP Newsletter Vol XXVIII No 09 September 1 2007 Retrieved May 26 2009 a b Angelo G Garcia 152 nursing schools told Improve or else Archived November 29 2009 at the Wayback Machine Manila Bulletin Retrieved December 18 2009 a b Top CPA Schools October 2009 Board Exam Results Philippines Retrieved November 1 2009 Silliman second in Mechanical Engineers Exam Visayan Daily Star Retrieved November 1 2009 dead link a b Top Mechanical Engineering Schools 2009 Board Exam Results Philippines Retrieved November 1 2009 QS Asian University Rankings International Student Review Archived March 14 2010 at the Wayback Machine QS Quacquarelli Symonds Retrieved June 8 2010 Jennifer Catan Tilos US Ambassador Kenney visits Negros Oriental Philippine Information Agency Daily News Retrieved June 23 2009 Environmental Programs Net Retrieved June 23 2009 a b USAID Mission Director We are all connected Archived April 23 2009 at the Wayback Machine SU Net News Retrieved June 23 2009 The Haribon Biodiversity Information Center Haribon Foundation Retrieved November 2 2009 a b Gerry Marten Apo Island Philippines Eco Tipping Point Case Study EcoTippingPoint Archived July 16 2011 at the Wayback Machine Coral Reef Alliance Retrieved October 27 2009 Ronnel Domingo 2 RP sites make it to must dive list Archived January 31 2009 at the Wayback Machine Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved June 22 2009 Study Abroad Program Archived July 24 2009 at the Wayback Machine Ferris University Retrieved 2009 06 2009 Study Abroad Programs Archived May 31 2009 at the Wayback Machine International Christian University Retrieved June 29 2009 International Linkages Archived August 7 2011 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved July 5 2009 SMA Funded Research Projects Archived September 5 2008 at the Wayback Machine University of Washington School of Marine Affairs Retrieved July 5 2009 Undergraduate Programs California State University Hayward Retrieved July 5 2009 Bat Conservation International Retrieved July 10 2009 Introduction to the forum proceedings PhilippineCrocodile com Retrieved July 5 2009 MOU with Texas Tech University Archived July 14 2010 at the Wayback Machine SU NetNews Retrieved April 21 2010 Project Examines Phils Extraordinarily High Marine Biodiversity SU NetNews Retrieved July 29 2011 Korean University Partners with SU on Water Treatment Project Silliman University Retrieved May 29 2012 Soongsil University President Visits Silliman Signs MoA Archived August 7 2011 at the Wayback Machine SU NetNews Retrieved July 29 2011 Silliman Signs Agreement with Korean University Archived July 15 2009 at the Wayback Machine SU Net News Retrieved August 29 2009 Research Agreement with Japanese University Signed Archived July 14 2010 at the Wayback Machine SU Net News Retrieved October 17 2009 MOU Signing Archived September 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine SU NetNews Retrieved April 11 2010 Silliman Inks MOU with Malaysian Institution Agreement to Meet Growing Demand for Nurses in ASEAN Archived March 20 2012 at the Wayback Machine SU Net News Retrieved August 27 2010 Silliman Inks MoU with Hanshin University Silliman University Retrieved July 12 2012 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 7 2014 Retrieved February 23 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Welcome to MCC www mcc edu in Retrieved April 9 2018 International Collaborations Partnership mcc edu in Archived from the original on June 30 2014 Retrieved June 6 2022 German Embassy Manila Home www manila diplo de Archived from the original on October 14 2012 Retrieved April 9 2018 Exchange Program Application Opens for Japan Korea Silliman University Retrieved April 9 2018 New names for 3 Silliman facilities Negros Chronicle Retrieved November 25 2009 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Schools and Colleges Archived June 9 2009 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved July 2 2009 Silliman University Archived May 13 2008 at the Wayback Machine ONe IPC Retrieved December 11 2009 a b SU Annual Report SY 2008 2009 Archived August 7 2011 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved July 30 2009 CCS Offers Master in Information Systems Archived July 14 2010 at the Wayback Machine SU Net News Retrieved September 2 2009 IBM SU Renew Partnership Archived July 14 2010 at the Wayback Machine SU Net News Retrieved January 21 2010 Silliman second mechanical engineers exam Retrieved May 25 2017 Silliman is Top 2 in Mechanical Engineer Board Exam Archived November 5 2009 at the Wayback Machine SU Net News Retrieved November 1 2009 About the Center Archived April 16 2009 at the Wayback Machine Salonga Center for Law and Development Retrieved October 26 2009 College of Law Course Offering Archived August 30 2009 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved December 29 2009 The Weekly Sillimanian Vol LXXXII No 4 Published July 15 2009 Princess Dianne Kris S Decierdo SU Law adopts Juris Doctor Program Dumaguete City Philippines Archived copies of the article may be viewed at the Sillimaniana Section of the SU Main Library Media Museum Timeline Archived August 10 2009 at the Wayback Machine Asian Institute of Journalism and Communication AIJC Retrieved December 18 2009 College of Mass Communication Archived September 1 2010 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved July 27 2010 Ched monitors performance of 152 nursing schools Archived February 6 2010 at the Wayback Machine Sun Star Retrieved December 1 2009 Library System Archived March 2 2009 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved May 26 2009 a b Silliman University Services Archived February 20 2009 at the Wayback Machine Dumaguete UniTown Retrieved May 26 2009 American Studies Resource Center Archived February 8 2009 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved June 25 2009 World Bank Knowledge for Development Center Archived March 12 2009 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved June 25 2009 SU joins Clinton forum Archived November 17 2010 at the Wayback Machine Negros Chronicle Retrieved December 21 2009 Dumaguete City The City of Gentle People Archived December 8 2020 at the Wayback Machine Department of Tourism Retrieved September 2 2010 PAARL Awardees for 2007 Archived June 24 2011 at the Wayback Machine De La Salle University Retrieved May 26 2009 Librarians Slate Assembly Awards Archived May 25 2010 at the Wayback Machine Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved May 26 2009 International Health Ministries Silliman University Medical Center Archived February 16 2009 at the Wayback Machine Presbyterian Church U S A Retrieved May 28 2009 SU Online Tour General Buildings SUMC Main Building Archived September 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved May 28 2009 a b SU 107th Founder s Day Year 2008 Archived July 28 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved May 28 2009 St Luke s inks MOA with Silliman Medical Center Philstar com Retrieved April 28 2010 CHED Zonal Research Center Archived September 13 2009 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved April 12 2012 CHED Taps Silliman for National Research Network Silliman University Retrieved April 12 2012 Climate change to devastate Philippine Seas Greenpeace proposes Roadmap to Recovery Greenpeace Retrieved July 15 2013 Judith Flores Partlow Environmental campaign tour Greenpeace team visits Apo Island Dumaguete Archived June 11 2015 at the Wayback Machine Philippine Star Retrieved July 15 2013 Greenpeace Sails to Dgte on Largest Ship Partners with SU Silliman University Retrieved July 15 2013 Liling Magtolis Briones Spotting the spotted deer ABS CBNnews com Retrieved September 8 2009 UCLEW Celebrates Triad of Human Existence Archived August 3 2009 at the Wayback Machine SU Net News Retrieved July 22 2009 106th Founders Day Calendar of Activities permanent dead link Silliman University Retrieved July 22 2009 Parada Sillimaniana 2011 Silliman University Retrieved September 8 2011 Silliman Song Retrieved May 15 2010 Metro Manila Sillimanians Celebrate 108th SU Founders Day Archived November 2 2009 at the Wayback Machine Metro Manila Sillimanians Retrieved January 2 2010 Alex Pal and Andrea Trinidad Echavez Silliman beside the sea observes 100th year today Philippine Daily Inquirer August 28 2001 Vol 16 No 261 Retrieved May 15 2010 Jade S Violeta Region 7 gets 8 more golds Archived September 8 2005 at the Wayback Machine Sun Star Cebu Retrieved October 25 2009 About the UniGames UNIGAMES Inc Retrieved October 27 2010 Eirrol D Manalo Archer Javier looks forward to Beijing Olympics stint Archived December 5 2008 at the Wayback Machine Manila Times Retrieved June 22 2009 Archer Chan hits target in SEAG swan song GMA News Retrieved January 15 2010 Ramon J Farolan War Torn Afghanistan wins Olympic bronze Archived August 29 2012 at the Wayback Machine Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved June 29 2009 SU Student Handbook SY 2004 2005 SU Office of Information and Publications Office of Information and Publications Portal 2008 Silliman University 2008 pp 442 443 a b Salonga Center launches the Purple Map Archived January 8 2016 at the Wayback Machine Dr Jovito R Salonga Center for Law and Development Retrieved June 10 2012 History Archived November 23 2009 at the Wayback Machine Silliman Alumni Association Inc Retrieved October 27 2009 Carlos P Garcia Archived February 24 2012 at the Wayback Machine National Historical Institute Retrieved August 28 2009 City honors Roseller Lim Archived June 9 2011 at the Wayback Machine Sun Star Retrieved May 18 2010 Cornelio T Villareal Sr Philippine Trivia Retrieved May 18 2010 Mr Lance Gokongwei s Commencement Speech Archived October 7 2011 at the Wayback Machine SU Net News Retrieved November 15 2009 BPOs schools propel Dumaguete economy Archived November 21 2009 at the Wayback Machine Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved July 28 2010 Alora Uy and Elijah Mendoza Father of Philippine Internet receives CyberPress Lifetime Achievement Award Techie com ph Retrieved December 2 2010 2 Alumni Named Outstanding Negrense Archived October 7 2011 at the Wayback Machine SU NetNews Retrieved December 2 2010 Vicente G Sinco Archived July 21 2011 at the Wayback Machine National Historical Institute Retrieved November 7 2009 2009 Outstanding Sillimanian Awardees Archived September 9 2009 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved July 28 2010 Philippine Embassies Archived July 24 2010 at the Wayback Machine Department of Foreign Affairs Retrieved July 28 2010 Meet the Ambassador in Kingdom of Saudi Arabia His Excellency Ambassador Antonio P Villamor Archived October 3 2011 at the Wayback Machine Pinoy Global Online News Retrieved April 22 2011 Filipinos in Saudi Want Ambassador Antonio P Villamor s Tenure Extended Archived March 14 2011 at the Wayback Machine Pinoy OFW com Retrieved April 22 2011 Juanita Amatong Archived February 26 2011 at the Wayback Machine CITI FT Financial Education Summit 2008 Retrieved July 28 2010 Speaker Joins Graduation Rites Fresh from Netherlands Archived March 25 2009 at the Wayback Machine SU Net News Retrieved September 10 2009 Past Treasurers of the Philippines Archived May 29 2009 at the Wayback Machine Bureau of the Treasury Retrieved September 2 2009 Gov Emilio Macias II Archived July 20 2011 at the Wayback Machine League of Provinces of the Philippines Retrieved June 18 2010 Index of Photos SUACONA Retrieved September 10 2009 Center for Filipino Studies California State University East Bay Retrieved July 16 2009 The Philippine Navy De La Salle University Retrieved August 28 2009 SU Net News Photos Archived September 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 28 2009 Lieutenant Colonel Edgard A Arevalo PN M Director Naval Public Affairs Office Navy Renames Bases and Stations After Predecessors The Philippine Navy Today Retrieved August 28 2009 National Artists of the Philippines Edith L Tiempo Archived January 18 2012 at the Wayback Machine National Commission for Culture and Arts Retrieved August 22 2009 E K Tiempo Bear Alley Retrieved September 2 2010 Outstanding Sillimanian Awardees Archived June 22 2009 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved September 13 2009 National Artists of the Philippines Eddie S Romero Archived August 14 2009 at the Wayback Machine National Commission for Culture and Arts Retrieved August 22 2009 Palanca Hall of Fame Archived March 5 2010 at the Wayback Machine Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards Retrieved April 11 2010 Metro Post Sillimanians Nab Top Prizes In Lit Awards BUGLAS Retrieved December 20 2009 Sillimanians nab top prizes in Free Press Literary Awards Negros Chronicle Retrieved December 20 2009 Simeon Toribio Archived September 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine SU NetNews Retrieved May 28 2010 GMA reporter Claire Delfin receives Global Media Award GMA News Retrieved January 1 2011 Strange and Familiar Archived July 24 2011 at the Wayback Machine Negros Chronicle Retrieved January 1 2011 ABS CBN and GMA news anchors receive awards from COMGUILD Center for Journalism Archived August 17 2010 at the Wayback Machine Manila Bulletin Retrieved January 1 2011 The Freeman Former PBB teen Bret Jackson is pinoy at heart Philippine Star Retrieved January 3 2011 Pinoy Big Brother teen housemate Bret Jackson looks forward to establishing a music career in the Philippines Archived March 3 2011 at the Wayback Machine ABS CBN Retrieved January 3 2011 PBB Retains Beauty permanent dead link Negros Chronicle January 3 2011 Iska draws the resilience of a woman from reality to the reels Filipino First Policy Archived 2012 03 16 at the Wayback Machine President Carlos P Garcia Foundation Retrieved 2011 01 01 Former President Ramos Opens Reading Center at Luce Silliman University Archived from the original on June 17 2016 Retrieved December 10 2016 Jomao as Regan P The Foundation of God Standeth Sure The Silliman Church Story 1901 2003 Silliman University p 3 Carson 1965 p 183 David Shavit The United States in Asia a historical dictionary Google Books Retrieved November 2 2009 Guide to the Yale Law School Student Records Yale University Retrieved November 2 2009 Cecile Lopez Lilles What makes a Harvard graduate different Archived December 1 2008 at the Wayback Machine The Philippine Star Retrieved November 2 2009 Florangel Rosario Braid Quintin S Doromal 80 Archived January 8 2016 at the Wayback Machine BNET Retrieved March 28 2010 Justice Venancio D Aldecoa Archived September 8 2010 at the Wayback Machine Silliman University Retrieved February 12 2010 1992 Ramon Magsaysay Awards Angel Alcala Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation Archived from the original on August 22 2009 Retrieved November 2 2009 Misajon Mervyn Archived May 16 2011 at the Wayback Machine CPU School of Graduate Studies Retrieved April 7 2011 President Pulido receives honorary doctorate from CPU permanent dead link Digital Sillimanian Retrieved February 10 2011 Dr Ben Malayang III is new Silliman president Archived September 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine SU Net News Retrieved October 16 2009 References Edit Carson Arthur L 1965 Silliman University 1901 1959 United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia Mills Scott A 2009 Stranded in the Philippines Professor Bell s private war against the Japanese Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press ISBN 9781591144977 Tiempo Edilberto K Maslog Crispin C Sitoy T Valentino Jr 1977 Silliman University 1901 1976 Silliman University Press ISBN 9780313267888 OCLC 6019774External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Silliman University Wikiquote has quotations related to Silliman University Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Silliman University amp oldid 1128454617, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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