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Today, the five-story building holds the classrooms for grades 7 and 8 including rooms of laboratories. Since school year 1978-1979, female students were accepted to enroll in the school. [3] In 2015, the school celebrated its 60th founding anniversary. On this year, the construction of the Blessed Jose Maria de Manila Courtyard was completed.
St. Theresa's College of Quezon City, also called by its acronym STC, is a private Catholic basic education institution for girls (formerly also a higher education institution) run by the Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines. It was officially established on January 7, 1947, by the ICM ...
National Federation of Women's Club in the Philippines Established on February 5, 1921. More than 300 women's clubs all around the Philippines gathered for the occasion. Manila Hotel Filipino June 19, 2002 National Historical Institute: Building Government Office Established as Historical Research and Markers Committee on October 23, 1993.
The pioneers of photography in the Philippines were Western photographers, mostly from Europe.The practice of taking photographs and the opening of the first photo studios in Spanish Philippines, from the 1840s to the 1890s, were driven by the following reasons: photographs were used as a medium of news and information about the colony, as a tool for tourism, as an fork anthropology, as a ...
Initially, when the school was created in 1969; it only had a number of 512 students. Expansion of the school grounds and the urbanization of Metro Manila helped swell the numbers up to approximately 10,000 by the mid-1980s. Since then, the number of students studying in the school is slowly rising at a steady rate.
Dr. Jose Fabella, the Father of Public Health and Social Welfare in the Philippines. The Jose Fabella Memorial School (Filipino: Pang-alaalang Paaralang Jose Fabella; abbreviated as JFMS and commonly known as Fabella) is a public integrated special school located in Welfareville Compound, Mandaluyong in Metro Manila, Philippines. [1]
A slum in Manila, circa pre-2009. The phenomenon of street children in the Philippines was first attested in the 1980s. As of 2021 the number of street children in the Philippines is estimated at around 250,000. [1]
The De La Salle Grade School – Manila was phased-out in 1984, after which its grade school graduates were given an option to study either at LSGH (for northern and central Metro Manila residents) or at De La Salle Zobel in Ayala Alabang Village (for southern Metro Manila residents). [11]