- Source: Philippine Collegian
The Philippine Collegian is the official weekly student publication of the University of the Philippines Diliman. It is also commonly known to the university's students as Kulê (Tagalog: [kʊˈleʔ]). It is known for its radical, national democratic, often anti-administration views, and gives critical views on the policies of the UP administration and the Philippine government.
History
First known as the College Folio (1910) and Varsity News (1917). As the College Folio, it was one of the first undergraduate journals in the Philippines. The Philippine Collegian was officially established in 1922. Since then, it has become a symbol for academic freedom, critical thinking, and journalistic integrity and excellence. In 1935, the Collegian published Teodoro Agoncillo's review of Ricardo Pascual's book Dr. Jose Rizal beyond the Grave, despite threats of excommunication from the Catholic Church. And in 1951, editor in chief (EIC) Elmer Ordoñez exposed the government's intervention in UP affairs, particularly in the aftermath of UP President Bienvenido Gonzalez's resignation. That period also saw the accommodation of the Filipino language in its content. During the post-war years, the Collegian became increasingly progressive in tackling university-based issues, particularly on "sectarianism" and favoritism in the administration. Despite the widespread conservatism, which equated nationalist sentiments with "communist threats", the Collegian continued publishing articles from socialism to the Hukbalahap movement.
During the Japanese Occupation, the Collegian was largely silent, since many of the university's units were shut down. In 1946, the Collegian resumed publishing, maintaining an anti-colonialist perspective.
The 1950s brought to fore issues of academic freedom in the university, heightening the clash of beliefs between the Collegian, the university administration, and the national government. Then EIC Homobono Adaza, for example, was expelled for an editorial criticizing the UP administration.
Articles on the emergent revolutionary movement gained ground in the 1960s, complementing the rise of the student movement against the dictatorship of then President Ferdinand Marcos. During Martial Law, the Collegian defied the media blackout by going underground. The publication formed the radical press together with the other student publications such as the Ang Malaya of the Philippine College of Commerce, now Polytechnic University of the Philippines and Pandayan of Ateneo de Manila University and the publications of various national democratic groups. By the time Martial Law as declared in 1972, the Collegian's nationalist orientation was already established. The publication continued to operate underground, exposing realities that were vastly different from what was presented by government-controlled media. Subsequently, several Collegian staff, including Enrique Voltaire Garcia and Antonio Tagamolila, faced imprisonment and death. While the regular Collegian headed by EIC Oscar Yabes in 1973 headlined UP President Salvador P. Lopez's campus beautification project and weekly UAAP updates, the Rebel Collegian decried the 20-percent tuition hike and the dissolution of student institutions like the Office of Student Regent and the UP Student Council. The Rebel Collegian issues brought to the fore the students' demand for lower tuition and dorm rates, among others, while "taking up the oppressed masses cause in exposing the corruption, servility, and violence of our semi-colonial and semi-feudal society". Meanwhile, the regular Collegian of then EIC Oscar Yabes served as a diversionary propaganda tool with its emphasis on counter-revolutionary literary pieces, with nary a critique of the atrocities under the US-Marcos regime. Yabes would also later come under fire due to his alleged malversation of the newspaper's funds.
The paper remained vigilant even after the collapse of the Marcos regime. In the 1989 editorial "EDSA and UP—Three Years After", EIC Ruben Carranza, Jr. noted that "social injustice and foreign domination" remained entrenched in Philippine society. In the euphoria following the end of People Power, this viewpoint was decidedly unpopular.
The conflicts experienced by the Collegian, however, were not entirely external. Power struggles and challenges in editorship roused many controversies in the past. For instance, the Rebel Collegian came into existence in 1996 after the battle between Voltaire Veneracion and Richard Gappi, rivals for the EIC post that year. The UP community saw two contending Collegians—Gappi's Rebel Collegian and the regular Collegian under Veneracion. The articles in the Rebel Collegian in 1996 bore no byline, although it was an open secret that Gappi led the publication's operations. The newsprint became an arena of the opposing camps from the ideological rift that characterized the Left movement then. On the one hand, Veneracion and the editor before him, Ibarra Gutierrez, espoused social democratic politics, Gappi and most of his colleagues from former EIC Michael John Ac-Ac's staff embraced national democracy. The 1980s and 1990s spurred additional internal disputes as staffers and editors fought to assert competing philosophies.
To the tune of new media’s rising popularity, the editors of the Collegian created kule.upd.edu.ph in the early 2000s, which would later evolve into philippinecollegian.net, and then philippinecollegian.org. The publication posted its issues through DeviantArt until 2013, and later migrated to Issuu. The Collegian introduced real-time news coverage in 2009, when the circulation of live updates on pressing campus goings-on like the student council elections became an exigency.
At the height of the campaign against the 300 percent tuition hike, then UP President Emerlinda Roman insisted on a public bidding for the Collegian's printing press, based on the administration's interpretation of Republic Act 9184 or the Government Procurement Act, and thus withheld funds for four months—the publication's longest hiatus since World War II.
In 2018, the fourth iteration of the Rebel Collegian (Rebel Kulê) was released. The controversy began when the Board of Judges of the Philippine Collegian Editorial Examinations, headed by UP College of Mass Communication Dean Elena Pernia, released the list of qualified takers but excluded two Collegian writers, Marvin Ang and Richard Cornelio, on the grounds of their graduating statuses. Law student Jayson Edward San Juan topped the four-part test and the decision was upheld despite appeals from the Collegian and student councils in UP to hold another examination. Sheila Ann Abarra, the managing editor of the past editorial term, served as Rebel Kulê's EIC.
In March 2020, in the wake of pandemic, restraints foisted both on writers and the Collegian’s printing capacity. Thus, the publication transitioned into a fully online one. The exclusively online arrangement made way for long, broad-gauged writing—in June 2020, the Collegian published a 48-page special online issue on the first three months of the lockdown. Now, the publication continues to publish content and news updates on its Facebook, Instagram, and X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, pages, as well as its official website, phkule.org.
After a two-year print hiatus, the Collegian, in its centennial year, published a physical magazine in May 2022, in time for the presidential elections that led to Marcoses's return to Malacañang. The magazine format highlighted the Collegian’s slow journalism thrust–a means for the paper to offer incisive commentary for the readership amid the breakneck pace of the pandemic news cycle. Released monthly, a premium was put on long-form pieces with expository analyses. Just this year, the publication has since returned to its traditional weekly tabloid format.
Since the ouster of Marcos during the EDSA Revolution, the Collegian has regularly undergone changes in format and withstood controversies regarding the selection of its editors.
Collegian Editors-in-Chief
Francisco Capistrano, 1923–1924
Emerito M. Ramos, 1930–1931
Wenceslao Q. Vinzons, 1931–1932
Ambrosio Padilla, 1932–1933
Arturo M. Tolentino, 1933–1934
Armando de J. Malay, 1934–1935
Sinai C. Hamada, 1936-1937
Romeno S. Busuego, 1937–1938
Renato Constantino, 1939–1940
Angel G. Baking, 1940–1941
Delfin R. Garcia, 1941–1942
Juan M. Hagad, 1946–1947
Mariano V. Ampil, Jr., 1947–1948
Leonardo B. Perez, 1948–1949
Augusto Caesar Espiritu, 1949–1950
Elmer A. Ordonez, 1950–1951
Francisco D. Villanueva, 1951–1952
Ignacio Debuque, 1952–1953
Crispulo J. Icban, Jr., 1953–1954
Luis Q. U. Uranza, Jr., 1954–1955
Sabino Padilla, Jr., 1955–1956
Homobono A. Adaza, 1956
Jose H. Y. Masakayan, 1956–1957
Homobono Adaza, 1957–1958
Pacifico Agabin, 1958
Caesar Agnir, 1958–1959
Andres G. Gatmaitan, 1959-1960
Leonardo Quisumbing, 1961–1962
Angelito Imperio, 1962–1963
Tristan Catindig, 1964
Salvador T. Carlota, 1964
Enrique Voltaire Garcia II, 1965
Ancheta K. Tan, 1965
Agustin Que, 1966
Jaime J. Yambao, 1966
Temario Rivera, 1967
Nelson A. Navarro, 1967
Miriam P. Defensor, 1968
José Y. Arcellana, 1968
Victor H. Manarang, 1969
Ernesto M. Valencia, 1970
Antonio S. Tagamolila, 1970
Reynaldo B. Vea, 1971
Eduardo T. Gonzalez, 1971
Teodoro D. Yabut, Jr., 1972
Oscar G. Yabes, 1972
Emmanuel F. Esguerra, 1974–1975
Diwa C. Guinigundo, 1975
Abraham Sarmiento, Jr., 1975–1976
Cosme Diaz Rosell, 1976–1977
Alexander Poblador, 1977–1978
Diwata A. Reyes, 1978–1979
Malou Mangahas, 1979–1980
Roberto Z. Coloma, 1980–1981
Roan I. Libarios, 1981–1982
Napoleon J. Poblador, 1982–1983
Raphael P. Lotilla, 1983–1984
Benjamin Pimentel, Jr., 1984–1985
Noel Pangilinan, 1985–1986
Dean Karlo La Vina, 1986–1987
Ma. Cristina Godinez, 1987–1988
Patrocinio Jude H. Esguerra III, 1988–1989
Ruben Carranza, Jr., 1989–1990
Francis Ronald Perez, 1990–1991
Alexander Pabico, 1991–1992
Pablo John Garcia, Jr., 1992–1993
Bernard Cobarrubias, 1993–1994
Michael John C. Ac-ac, 1994–1995
Ibarra M. Gutierrez, 1995–1996
Voltaire Veneracion, 1996–1997
Lourdes C. Gordolan, 1997–1998
Jeanie Rose Bacong, 1998–1999
Seymour Barros-Sanchez, 1999–2000
Herbert V. Docena, 2000–2001
Duke M. Bajenting, 2001–2002
Ellaine Rose A. Beronio, 2002–2003
Sherwin A. Mapanoo, 2003–2004
Jayson DP. Fajarda, 2004–2005
Juan Paolo E. Colet, 2005–2006
Karl Fredrick M. Castro, 2006–2007
Jerrie M. Abella, 2007–2008
Larissa Mae R. Suarez, 2008–2009
Om Narayan A. Velasco, 2009–2010
Pauline Gidget R. Estella, 2010–2011
Marjohara S. Tucay, 2011–2012
Ma. Katherine H. Elona, 2012–2013
Julian Inah G. Anunciacion, 2013–2014
Mary Joy T. Capistrano, 2014–2016
Karen Ann A. Macalalad, 2016–2017
Sanny Boy D. Afable, 2017–2018
Jayson Edward B. San Juan, 2018–2019
Beatrice P. Puente, 2019–2020
Kimberly Anne P. Yutuc, 2020–2021
Polynne E. Dira, 2021–2022
Daniel Sebastianne B. Daiz, 2022–2023
Rona Q. Pizarro, 2023–2024
Ryan Jericho F. Maltezo, 2024–present
Notable alumni
Ambrosio Padilla, elected member of the Senate of the Philippines.
Jose Maria Sison, scholar, revolutionary, and founder of the Communist Party of the Philippines.
Franklin Drilon, Senate of the Philippines President.
Miriam Defensor Santiago, first woman editor-in-chief of the Philippine Collegian; elected member of the Senate of the Philippines.
Edcel C. Lagman, eight term Representative of the First District of Albay; Author of the Reproductive Health Law, and the triumvirate of human rights laws, namely: the Anti-Enforced Disappearance Law, Anti-Torture Act, and Human Rights Victims Reparation and Recognition Act.
Wenceslao Vinzons, student leader, former governor and representative of Camarines Norte.
Ninotchka Rosca, author of the English language novels State of War and Twice Blessed.
Renato Constantino, historian, author of the Filipino novels A Past Revisited and The Continuing Past.
Leonardo Quisumbing, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines.
Abraham Sarmiento, Jr., student leader.
Reynato Puno, Supreme Court of the Philippines Chief Justice.
Temario Rivera, Former professor of political science at the University of the Philippines Diliman; author of Landlords and Capitalists: Class, Family and State in Philippine Manufacturing.
Sheila Coronel, journalist, founder of Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism.
Ma. Lourdes C. Mangahas, founder of Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism.
Michael Purugganan, Professor of Biology and Dean for Science at the New York University.
Joker Arroyo, elected member of the Senate of the Philippines.
Arturo Tolentino, representative, elected member of the Senate of the Philippines, Minister of Foreign Affairs, and Vice President of the Philippines.
Benigno Aquino Jr., elected member of the Senate of the Philippines; martyr; namesake of Ninoy Aquino International Airport.
Jovito Salonga, Senate of the Philippines President.
Homobono Adaza, former Governor of Misamis Oriental, Assemblyman, Commissioner of Immigration; author of 12 published books and former columnist of the Manila Times.
Pacifico Agabin, former dean of the University of the Philippines College of Law, leading constitutional lawyer.
Emmanuel F. Esguerra, former Deputy Director-General of NEDA and a UP Professor of Economics.
Salvador Carlota, former dean of the University of the Philippines College of Law.
Nelson A. Navarro, leading biographer and author.
Luis V. Teodoro, former dean of the UP College of Mass Communication, writer and author, founding chairman of Altermidya.
Jaime C. Yambao, retired Philippine ambassador to Pakistan.
Glenn L. Diaz, 2017 Palanca Grand Nobela Winner for The Quiet Ones.
Kenneth Roland A. Guda, editor of progressive newspaper Pinoy Weekly.
Joseph Thaddeus Morong, GMA Network Correspondent.
Wendell Gumban, activist and slain New People's Army militia.
References
External links
Official website
Facebook page
Twitter page
Issuu page
Instagram page
TikTok page
Philippine Collegian 2011-2012 on DeviantArt - downloadable issues in PDF format
Philippine Collegian 2008-2009 on DeviantArt - downloadable issues in PDF format
Philippine Collegian 2007-2008 on DeviantArt - downloadable issues in PDF format
Philippine Collegian 2006-2007 on DeviantArt - downloadable issues in PDF format
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Lorenzo Tañada
- Philippine Collegian
- Alpha Phi Beta
- Aklanon language
- Renato Constantino
- Philippine Society and Revolution
- Maria Lorena Barros
- Alfie Anido
- Abraham Sarmiento Jr.
- Arturo Tolentino
- United States bases in the Philippines