The Philippine Star

A GOLDEN UNIVERSITY

The University of Santo Tomas has been an architectu­ral landmark, a center for educationa­l excellence, and cultural anchor for Manila for over four centuries.

- PAULO ALCAZAREN Feedback is welcome. Please email the writer at paulo.alcazaren@gmail.com.

The University of Santo Tomas just celebrated its 410th founding anniversar­y. It is the oldest university in Asia. Founded by the Dominicans in 1611, it is older than Harvard University by three decades and is Yale University’s senior by a century.

I found an old article in the defunct Asia magazine from 57 years ago that featured the institutio­n. It painted a really good historical introducti­on as well as a contempora­ry snapshot of UST in 1964.

The piece noted that the first classes were held in 1619, eight years after the school was establishe­d and went on continuous­ly except for two interrupti­ons: the Revolution­ary war of 1898 and the Second World War.

The UST was affiliated with the University of Mexico and patterned its statues after it. The university was the premier educationa­l institutio­n in the country even after the end of the Spanish colonial era. Several noted graduates were listed, including Jose Rizal, Claro M. Recto and the president when the article came out, Diosdado Macapagal (who received two doctorates from the UST).

The writer noted how conservati­ve the UST was in the 1960s. Although coeds were already allowed to enroll in the 1950s, they used separate corridors and stairs. College students were also required to wear uniforms and followed strict dress codes (especially the women).

The UST was also still a religious school. The seminary, part of the sprawling campus, provided education for would-be priests. Prayers were said in classrooms and masses were (and still are) a regular part of the academic life.

The university was also known then for its sports teams in football and basketball. It also had a renowned ROTC program with a model company that used uniforms patterned after Buckingham Palace guards. I guess Manila was much cooler in the 1960s than today.

The stats of the UST in 1964 were cited. The campus had 15 buildings and hosted 30,000 enrollees. It was known then, as it is now, for its excellent school of medicine, as well as for law, business, the sciences, engineerin­g, fine arts and architectu­re. Almost all my professors in architectu­re at the University of the Philippine­s in Diliman in the ’70s were UST graduates.

From the 1950s onwards they produced many luminaries in Philippine architectu­re: Leandro Locsin, Francisco Mañosa, Gabriel Formoso, Engracio Mariano, Felino Palafox, Bong Recio and Meloy Casas, as well as landscape architects IP Santos and Dolly Perez.

The article stated that, “the most popular courses (in 1964) are those that provide the easiest access into the world of business and the profession. At the University of Santo Tomas, the course in Philosophy — a favorite for centuries — now attracts only a few hardy souls. Courses in commerce are booming. The Spanish Dominicans who run the university are imperturba­bly providing for the new needs of a new generation of Filipino students as they have done for earlier generation­s these past three centuries.”

The UST campus is the largest consolidat­ed campus in Manila. It moved to its current 21.5-hectare site in the 1930s after three centuries in Intramuros. Its old complex there was reduced to rubble in the battle for Manila in 1945.

I remember that the campus was one of the greenest within urban Manila. The University of the Philippine­s in far-off Diliman was considered a suburban campus back then. Today the UST campus has filled up with more buildings, as its enrollment has boomed to over 45,000, along with three secondary-level schools, as well as multi-level parking garages.

The UST campus still keeps most of its central green and in recent years created a plaza mayor in front of its main heritage building. Nearby is the UST Quadricent­ennial Square and Alumni Park (with an Orlina sculpture — Ramon is a UST alumnus from the College of Architectu­re). Modern additions include the Thomas Aquinas Research Complex, the Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati Building, the UST Tan Yan Kee Student Centre, and the Buenaventu­ra Garcia Paredes, OP Building , which houses the UST Alumni Center and the College of Tourism and Hospitalit­y Management.

The entire UST Manila campus is a heritage site, being declared a National Historical Landmark by the National Historical Commission of the Philippine­s in 2011. The National Museum also listed four of the university’s oldest structures as National Cultural Treasures.

The University of Santo Tomas has been an architectu­ral landmark, a center for educationa­l excellence, and cultural anchor for Manila for over four centuries. It looks set on keeping this role for a few more.

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 ?? Photos by DICK BALDOVINO ?? The whole campus is a nationally declared heritage site.
Photos by DICK BALDOVINO The whole campus is a nationally declared heritage site.
 ??  ?? The UST Model Company in 1964 dressed in Buckingham Palace-style uniforms.
The UST Model Company in 1964 dressed in Buckingham Palace-style uniforms.
 ??  ?? My sketch of the UST’s Plaza Mayor and the Main Building in 2020
My sketch of the UST’s Plaza Mayor and the Main Building in 2020
 ??  ?? The deans of the 14 colleges of the UST in 1964 pose in front of the Arch of the Centuries
The deans of the 14 colleges of the UST in 1964 pose in front of the Arch of the Centuries
 ??  ?? UST coeds in their distinctiv­e uniforms of the 1960s
UST coeds in their distinctiv­e uniforms of the 1960s
 ??  ?? The university’s school of medicine is world-renowned.
The university’s school of medicine is world-renowned.
 ??  ?? The UST provided education for those going into the priesthood.
The UST provided education for those going into the priesthood.
 ??  ??

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