Is there a future in the fitness and wellness industry? Can this be a career choice for graduating students, or even office workers or business owners who want to shift?
WHEN seven millennials decided to set up a nonprofit organization, a consultant warned that they might be perceived as “snot-nosed, spoiled Ateneans,” championing a cause but relying on their affluent parents to finance their initiatives.
The administration of the University of Santo Tomas (UST) administration canceled a forum with senators as guests that was to be held on Friday because of the presence of candidates who supported the reproductive health bill, which has already been signed into law.
North and South Korea have never found dialogue easy, but academics from both sides currently meeting in Pyongyang are trying to steer things in the right direction by at least getting them to speak the same language.
With just a few more months before graduation, anxious of what their future will be like, high school students flocked to the Ateneo campus to check the Ateneo College Entrance Test (Acet) results which were released on Jan. 11. Some of my friends started shouting in joy and celebrating as they saw their names on the list of accepted students; they finally had a college.
Songs and stories celebrating different kinds of love marked the Inquirer’s Valentine’s Day Read-Along session on Saturday which featured GMA-7 teen stars Ruru Madrid and Gabbi Garcia and veteran storyteller Ann Abacan.
Tomas, the official peer-reviewed literary journal of the UST Center for Creative Writing and Literary Studies, is now accepting contributions to the fifth issue of its second volume.
The Silliman University National Writers Workshop is extending its deadline for applications for the 53rd National Writers Workshop to Jan. 31.
We’ve all taken our classrooms for granted at some point in our academic lives. More often than not, we’re guilty...
In the late 1950s, fundraising by a radio station in Manila helped to launch the international career of violinist Carmencita Lozada, then a tiny wisp of a girl from whose dainty fingers would emerge mighty sounds that would thrill audiences in Europe and the United States.