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It was the summer of 1999 when a group of young and enthusiastic men, the Board of Trustees—Alberto Alaman, Merwina Balagtas, Deogracias Adalem, Ronaldo Bugnot, and Rodelio Limbo—came to Baguio City to search for a building that could function as a school. With much effort, they were able to find one along Bonifacio Street. This location is believed to be a perfect one because it is at the heart of the City.
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The Philippine Women's University – Career Development and Continuing Education Center (PWU–CDCEC) Baguio may be a small university, but like other premiere and bigger ones, it can also boast of several achievement and recognition worthy of note, thanks to the innate talent and skills of its students, who, unmindful of their institution of origin, has added more feathers on its continually growing cap of honors.
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There is something awfully awkward about being caught in that threshold of maturity, when you are just too old to be young and too young to be old. It is a time of contradictions when you have to master the artful balance of naivete and experience; of having fun and working hard; of knowing that you know enough not to know much.
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While ‘travel’ serves as an ‘avenue’ where people stay in places they have never been, tourism serves as the ‘host’ that makes the ‘avenue’ more enjoyable and inviting. For the perfect idler, tourism is nothing but a state of nothingness.
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One of the best nursing schools in the country today with no less than St. Luke’s Medical Center as its base hospital, St. Luke’s College of Nursing (SLCN) – one of the educational units of Trinity College of Quezon City (Trinity College) – has expressed full support for the "campaign" to educate students on what schools would best help them be competent nursing graduates in the future.
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