"COMMITMEN TO DEVELOPMEN " Sixth and Seventh A ,n ...
"COMMITMEN
TO
DEVELOPMEN "
Sixth and Seventh A ,n
Report
.I
MOUNTAIN STATE AGRICULTURAL .OLLEGE
La Trinidad, Benguet
School Years 1975.. 916 and 1976 .. 1977
BRUNO MI. SANTOS
President

II COr![JIilI TrlliNT TO DEVELOP!:illNT:;
BIXTlI AND SEVENTH ANNU J\\L REPORT
MOUNTAIN STATE AGillCULTURJ\\L COLLEGE
La Trinidad. Benguet '
School Years 1975-1976 and 1976-1977
BHUNO r,l. SANTOS
President

HD~JLtblic of tho Philippincs
I/IOUNT ~lIN ST ATE AGRICUL1'URi,L COLLEGE
La Trinidad, Den~Ltct
JLt1y 15, 1977
His Excellency
President Ferdinand E. I.2arcos
Malae anang, H[Cniln
S i r
I have tllU honor to subui t hcrowi th pursuant to
Section 7 of HepLtblic Jict 5923, thu Sixth and Seventh
Anrwal Report of the President, [,Iount2,in state Agricul­
turnl Col1e~e, La Trinidad. B8nc~ut. covoring the school
yoars 1975-1976 and 1976-1977.
Very trLtly yours,
~if'/C'
V'-
....
J
M.-'!"1
.APUN 11. SANTOS
/
~ Presidont

Copy fLtrnished:
1. The Honorable Secretory of ~dLtC3tion
and CultLtre
2. r~unb<.rs of' the Boo-reI of 'rru3tees

R-Jpu")lic of tho l'hililJlJinGs
MOUNTAIN ST ATE J,GlUCULTUllAL COLLiEGE
LQ Trinidnd, Denr,uct
JOJuID
OJ? l'lmSTEES
=================~
JU hIT L. r; iliivEL
SecrctQoy of ~ducntion end Culturc
Chniru=
'l';JWSIIOHO N. DOQUIHEN
.H !HiCISO liJ:JDluuL]jCIN
He(';ional Director
Undersocret~ry of Educntion & Culture
DJC Hcgion I
Alternntc ChQin~=
,\\ct in{; Chaiul'J.:tl
LOlillrlZO Gk. CESJut
AND,iES ~1. ASISTIN
Dire ctor
Dircctor
Burcnu of ,,;_cLlcntnry Educntion
Burcnu of Secondary Dduc2tion
r:lembor
Hcubcr
IlHSBllI 0 1'. LillilI(,,! U,jD
JOSEFi1 lJ. JLiJJ,\\NZA
I'rcsidcnt
EX8cutive Dirc:ctor, H::::DA He,ioll I
L1SilC J,lw"mi Ilssocintiori
lVicm1)cr
HCE1'.;)or
DRUliU Lt. ~ .lJ'TTOS
Prosidcnt
....
LountQin Stt:tG f\\c,ricu1turnl Col10:;e
FieljllJer
S'JiO,,'ILO H. liiONTELlAYO~{
Coordinator
Stnte Coll",,()s n.nd Uni v3rsi tics
,
,O"Ui"u '2. AJ?OLONIO
Doard =d Col1c~e Secretary

TABLE OF CONTENTS
lUGlllJIGHTS
It
I . "
.
I
INSTRUCTION
"
..
5

.A. studant Populnti on ••.••.•••••••••••••
5
1. Distribution of Studunts ••.•••••••
5
2 • .Erwolinent • e ..
.
6
0
3. Graduates Q
a
.
7
4. Scholarship Grants ••••••••••••••••
7
4.1 College Scholarships ••••••••••
7
4.2 State and Veterans Scholar­
, .
SlUpS
..
8
B. The Curricular Programs ••••••••••••••
8
1. AchiGvGr:lonts by Acadomic Divisions.
9
1.1 Technic31 l\\gricu1ture •••••••••
9
1.2 ~ric~turQ1 Education
Division •••••••••••••••• ~.....
9
1.3 Bachelor of Agri-busincss
I~IanagOl'.lunt
10
1.4 Bachelor of Science in Animal
T0chn.ology' .... "................................
10
1.5 Bachelor of SciGnce in
Forestry "" 0........ ..
1.0
1.6 Bilche10r of Science in P.gric~-
tural Engincoring
11
1.7 Bachelor of Science in Hor,le
T~ clmolo~~
~ .. .. .. .. .. .. •
11
1.8 A,grico.1turnl Extension ••••••••
11
1.9 Secondary Division ••••••••••••
12
1.10 On-goine Projocts ••••••••••••
12
2. Graduate Stwiies Progran ••••••••••
12
2.1 CurricDJ.ura Huviuw
"""
1.2
.2.2 Graduate School FOITJS •••••••••
13
2.3 Grad~at8 Fac~lty and Staff ••••
13
2.4 Enrolmont and Graduatos ••••••.•
14
2.5 Some IL~ediate Needs ••••••••••
15
c. Studont Services and Instructional
Facili tie s """
"""
""""""""
15
:1-. Guidance and Counseling Services..
15
1.1 Accomplishments
15
1.2 St~tisticnl Roport ••••••••••••
~6
1.3 RocoOQondations •••••••••••••••
17
i

TABLE OF CONTENTS
P.A.9'1i
2. Library Service . . . • . . DO
17
• • • • • o ' D ' .
2.1 Library Collection ••••••••••
17
2.2 Library Clientele •••••••••••
17
2.3 Library Staff Output of' Work.
18

2. !~
IleoolJOond a ti on •••• • D •••••••
18
0
3. Dental and Medical Services' ••••••
18
3.1 Dant3J. Services •••.••
18
It • • • • • •
3.2 He cOI:rruend Fl.tion ••••••••••••••
19
3.3 Medical Services ••••••••••••
20
3.~
Abnormal Findings ••.•.••••••
20
4. Housing Sorvices •.•
21
0 0 • • • • • • • • • • • •
4.1 Number of Rcsidents •••••••••
2l
4.2 Dormitory Activities ••••••••
22
5. Co-Curricular ProGrillJ1S and Activi­
tics .••. D
~
O.....
22
5.1 Homeroom, FFP-FAHP, YCAP and
ROTC-CIVAC Organizations ••••
22
5.2 KONT AD 0 0 ...... 0 ••••••••••••••
23
5.3 MSAC Glee Club •••.•.••••••••
23
5.4 MSAC Judo Club ••••••••••••••
23
5.5 MSAC Boy and Girl Scouts ••••
23
5.6 r.,~s AC 4-H Clllb •••••••• 0 ••••••
24
D. .AlUEUri .Aft' ai rs . 0 II
Q

24


I I
IlliSE .lilleR
~
25
0
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Ii, Research Projects ••••.•••.••.•.• 0...
25
1. AccornplishLllJnts .0 •••••••• ill. ••• •••
25
1.1 Completed Researches ••••••••
25
1.2 On-going Researches •••••••••
26
1.3 Hesearch Proposals ••••••••••
26
2. Research Linkage Projects ••••••••
27
B. Future Plans of the Research Program.
23
1. Main Thrust of nese~rch ••••••••••
23
1.1 Researches on Traditional
Crops ••••••••.••••••••••••••
28
1.2 Researches on Non-Traditional
Crops •••
29
0 • • • • • •
0
• • • • •
0






1.3 Researches(onPoultr,y and
Swineo •. o ••••••••••••••••••••
29
1.4 Socio-economic Researches •••
29
C. Resenrch Publications of the College.
30
1. Periodicals, Pamphlets, and Hand­
'books •••• 0.......................
30
ii

TABLE OF CONTENTS
.PJf}Ji
2. MSAC Rese~rch Journal
30
••••••••••••
III
EXTENSION
" ~ ~
32
Q
"
D
"
"
.
A. Extension Program
"......
32
1. Spocific Objectives ••••••••••••••
32
2. FUl1ctions
" ••• " 6
'to
32
3. Extension strategies
32
B. l.lSJ,C-SEAACA Soci3.1 Laboratory.......
33
1. Specific Objectives ••••••••••••••
33
2. AccomplishI:J.onts
33
2.1 Crops and Projocts
33
202 New Crops •••••• 0.•..... 0....
35
2.3 Information Materials •••••••
35
3e ~going Researches ••••••••••••••
35
C. MSAG-NMYC National Agric~lt~ral
Skills.Tr::J.ining Progran ••••••••••
36
1. AccomplisIDonts
". ~.. ••
36
2. TerrainGtion of Training Program ••
37
D. MSAC-PCARR Project
37
E. Prod~ction Projects and Incomes •••••
37
ilDlYJINISTRllTION AND SUJ?ERVISIONS
.
39
IV
A. Fisc21 Support •••••••••••••••• "'0 ••,..
39
B. Facilitative ServicGs •••••••••••••••
40
1. Clericnl Force •••••••• 0..........
40
2. Budget, Finance and Accounting
SGrvicos ••••••• ~...............
41
3. Internal A~diting Service ••••••••
41
3.1 Share of Net Incom8s From
Prod~ction Projects •••••••••
41
3.2 Top Net Income Producers .. e.
42
4. Sec uri ty Dni t •• 0 •• 0 ••• 0 • 0 • • • • • • •
42
0
C. Personnel Developnont •••••• ~........
44
1. Catogories of Personnel..........
44

i i i


TJillLE OF CONTENTS
PAGE
..........­
1.1 Strength as of December 31,
1976 •.
44
0
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
1.2 Stren~h as of Jwrre 30, 1977 ••
44
2. Faculty Scholarships ••••••••••••••
44
2.1 On-going Scholarships ••••••••
44
2.2 Studies Coopletod Abroad •••••
45
3. Self-initiated Professional Growth.
45
4. In-Service Educntion Programs •••••
46
4.1 Participants From General
Adruinistrntion •••••••••••••••
46
4.2 Participants From tho AcaderJic
Depnrtffionts ••••••••••••••••••
46
4.3 Participants From Non-Academic
Divisions and Offices ••••••••
47
D. PhysioGl Plant ••••• ~.................
47
1. Tho School Sitos ••••••••••••••••••
47
1.1 Propo sed Land Swap With
Benguet Province •••••••••••
48
1.2 TerQinated Court Cases InVOl­
ving the Scpool Sites ••••••
48
1.3 Pending Court Cases ••••••••••
50
2. School Buildings ••••••••••••••••••
50
3. Equipment •••••••••••••••••••••••••
51
E. Doard Resolutions Appro~ed •••••••••••
51
V
ST1\\TUS OF FIVE-YEAR DEVBLOPTiENT PLAN !lND
PROG1{l~ ••••••••
0....
56
0
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
.A. Curricullun •••.•......•.•....• .....•••
56
1. Laboratory Schools ••••••••••••••••
56
2. Science Curricu.lum ••••••••••••••••
56
3. Reducing Length of Degree Programs.
56
4. ChanGe of Course Nomenclature •••••
57
5. Mditional Major Fields of Study...
57
6. Gr8du~to Programs •••••••••••••••••
53
B. Personnel Hequiremcnt ••••••••••••••••
58
1. Needed Teaching Positions •••••••••
58
2. Needed Non-To8ching Positions •••••
59
iv

TiillLE OF CONTENTS
- - -
CHAPTER
C. Building Projocts •••.••..•.••.•.•.•••
59
D. Funding of Development Plans and
Pror:;r.:uns ••••• "••••• 0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
61
1. capi t a1 Outlays ••.
61
0













• •
2. F~culty Dovelopmont Pro~r~u •••••••
61
E. Problems and Recommendations •••••••••
62
APPENDIX j}. Hoso2rch Abstracts •••••••••••••••••••
63

v

"COMMITMENT TO DEVELOPMENT"
ANNUAL REPORT OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE MOUNT AIN ST llTE
llGRICUDfURAL COLLEGE SCHOOL YEARS 1975-1976
llND 1976-1977
HIGHLIGHTS
This report covers two academic years, 1975-1976
and 1976-1977. The latter ended the second year of the
implementation of the second Five-Year Development Pro­
gram of the oollege.
~~hlights of ll~m~lishmcnts
Within the framework of the development goals of
the second Five-Year Development Program of the college,
the school years under review yielded notable achievements:
1. Bui1~i~Q.onstruction.-
Despite the non­
release of 60 per cent of the allotment for capital out­
lays, construction of three of the seven buildings sche­
duled for 1975-1977 was undertaken.
Two were completed
as of this writing, while the third is 75 per cent finished.
The three buildings represent 43 per cent of the target.
The completed edifices, already being used, are
the two-storey soils-chemistry building and the one~storey
agricultural meteorology building.
- 1 ­

2 ­
The soils-chemistry building, with a book value of
~652,082.04, is made of reinforced concrete. It occupies
a 475-square-meter site of the main campus.
The agri cultural met.eorology building is sel!li-con­
crete, with a floor area 6f 108 square meters and a book
value of Pl02,855.48.
It is situated at Banig, Balili.
\\.
,
Nearing completion is the three-storey agricultural
enginp~rine building, for which was already spent the sum
of P2,459,237.35 as of June 30, 1977. It is made of rein­
:
forced concrete, and is situatod on a 3,358 square-meter
si te at the main campus.
2. Instruction. -- Consonant with the objectives
_._..---.... -..
of the college and the national development goals, the
seven undergraduate degree programs and the graduate de­
gree program carried out instruction through student-cen­
tered teaching-learning activity methods.
Emphasis shif­
ted from theoretical or lecture method to tho labo~atory
and field methods in an effort to balancc academic and
practical experiences and effectively translate theory
to practice.
Course syllabi were constantly revised and
updated.
Teaching aids continued to be locally improvised
by the faculty and students.
The socio-cultural programs included Mond~ con­
vocations for students and thos~ shown to the public

- 3
during municipal, provinciE'J., and/or national c0lebrations
of important 8vents. These were revitalized to pcrLut the
participation of a maximWTI number of students as principal
actors or performers, thereby making them effective chan­
nels of personality development and citizenship training.
The graduate program underwent a one-year review
in content as well as policy.
As approved by the Board of
Trustees, the aroas of specialization included M.S., major
in agricultural education, agriculturul extension, animal
science, horticulture, ngrononw, and social science, and
M. A. in Teaching Practieal Arts.
3. - - -
Research. -- Most of the rcaearchcs completed
during the acadeLuc years under review were done by gra­
duatc and undergraduate stu~cnts of the college in fullfil­
ment of degree rcq~reDents. On-going resoarches being
undertaken by fnculty cleubers arc f'unded by PCARR, SEARCA,
IPB. and private agqncios, like San Miguel Corporation,
RAMCAR, etc.
4. Extension. --
_._..-
The outreach activities of ~he
college through the I,ISAC-PC4RR Social Laboratory and IilS.ilC­
NMYC Na1jional JlgricLli.tural Skills Training ProgJ;am con­
tinued to havu' direct ond beneficLtl impact on tr.e quality
of life of the faJ:'lilers in Region I.

-
4 ­
5. !7.-'?d,'y.c.t.i.oE_1'.!..o.i9~t.s
__ap..d..:J;!1-c_o~. -- The agro­
."~
.~, "
business gctivitiGS of the college eontinued to progress.
The total net inc one share of the college from production
projects of vocational instructors/managers for the fiscal
year ending June 30, 1977 wns P97,733.l7, compared to
P90,375.26 of the preceding year. The increase ~10unted
to P7,357.9l •
.
,
. ..l. ;

CHAPTEJ1 I
INSTHUCTION
students fron 24 provinccs ~d one city of the
country and Thnil~d were enrolled in the different curri­
cuiar progrmJs of the college during tho two academic years
under review.
The provinces ~U city fall under six 0f the
13 regions of tho country.
1. ~t.FJ:-.2.1;.i2.n.2..:£2.!.l::.~YE..~~. -- In tho terti ary
level, oore than 80 per cent of the studonts C60e from
Region I, as detoITJinod from the annual enro~ent by region,
to wit:
p"esiW,!CJti_0E.
1975-76
1976-77
.!i.212-.:lll No.
--_...--­
1
Iloeoo
1,255
1,762
2
Cngayan
156
305
3
Contrnl Luzon
21
30
4-a
Southern Tagalog & Palawnn
12
18
6
"'estern Visayas
2
21
7
Eastern Vi sayas
2
0
Foreign
Thailand
24
_....15_....-_.

T 0 t a 1 s •••• ~~~1&
&,,15.4­
The distribution of tho college students by annual
enroluent in the provinces of Region I is as follows:
- 5 ­

- 6 -
1975-76
1:21.6...-.7.1
Province
-
~_._--'"
.
23
37
Abra
H5
119
BElguio City
462
50l
Benguet
8
15
110cos Norte
176
224
110cos Sur
185
?~,
La Union
39
Mountain Province
J,~J
315
pcmgasinan
-~---~.
Totals •••••.
2. Enr~1J~q£!. The annual enroloent figures in the
different curric~ar progrm~s fer the two sehoo1 years un­
der review are presented hereunder.
Curricular ProgrmJs
1975-1~
- -
_._­
-.....-........
Secondary Level:
389
362
Vocational J\\erieulturQ
AgricUltural Homooaking
229
231
,
Non-Degree post-Secondary Progr~1s:
6
15
1-Year' FaIT) Mechanics
, ,­
2_Year For8s1i Ranger Course
187
273
Undergraduate Progrmls:
632
902
BS1\\
402
504
BsAE
150
165
BSHT
37
46
BAB
---
68
BSAT"
106
BSF"
Grad uat e Progrm.1:
__63
__~_71.
MS
Total •••••
h~l§
§!o~21
...--..--- _----­
...
"Offered fi:rst SCLlester, 1976-1977.

.
7 ­
,
Not included in the annual enrolLlonts for sohool
years 1975-1976 and 1976-1977 arc the enroll;1(,nts for the
SUlilfJer terus.
As notod, howover, tho SULlLlGr cnrolLJents in
the undergradu8te progrqos are less thml tho senester terr.ls.
But the SunDer enrollJ.ents in the graduate progr~J.s have so
r '
far boen on the upward trend.
This is partly attributed to
the registration of teaphers pursuing grQduate studios.
3. iir~.u.qte.s... -- Below are the nUl:;ber of graduates
fron the different curricular progrruas during the two
school years under roview.
.'lqTJ.1..c..ul ar.f'.r.o.gL~
1975-76
1976-77
-_.-~
Sooondary Progrm.ls:
Vocational Agriculture
45
48
AgriCUltural Honeuaking
36
36
I-Year Post-Secondary F'an:l r,lechanics
4
13
2-Yoar Forest Rangcr Oourse
7
23
B.S. in Agriculture
22
29
B.S. in Agricultural Education
13
22
B.S. in HOrJe Toclmology
12
30
Bachelor of l~ri-BusincGs
2
3
Master of Science
6
8
Totals •••• It •.
J.41
~;j,~
4. Scholars~~~ Grants.--Two hundred and sixty-nine
~ .
• _ • •
~



-'0
. .
- - . .
students enjoyed various scholarships during thc school
year 1976-1977 under report.
4.1 .C.o.J,JeF.o_.§.c~(lrs~i:PE.. -- Granted college
scholarships Were students who oxcelled in their aeadenic

8 ­
studies or extra-curricular activities, like proDoting
socio-cultural devolopount. Their nw~bcr is distributed as
follows:
AcndeDic Scholars (President's
and De an '13 Li st s) • . . . . . . " . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
22
KONTAD Cultural Troupe •••••••••••••••••••
35
Gloe Clu.b •••...... G • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • •
57
Barld. r.lor~1bcrs
6
ROTC/~Vl~TC
6
School Paper (College and Secondary)......
6
Stu.dont Assistanships •••.•••••.•.••••••••
-62
To t c::J.. •••••••• to • • •
~~:1
Gover=ent
and veterans scholarships granted to students were:
National Integration Study Grant •••••••••
61
P .Ari1 JUVIIN
II



..







6
study-Now-pay-Later F;J.an t,............ ....
17
Philippine Veterans Adoinistration •••••••
15
Aroed Forces of the Philippines ••••••••••
1
United states Veterans AdlIlnistration ••••
12
Total. •.•
•••
112
===
B. ~ Curricul.~·LP;..?grar.ls
The c~rricular prog~~~~:qf,~~q'co~iqee carried out
the statutory'obj~ctiyes of,provi4i~:~r6fe~~ional, tech­
nical, and special trilining, and pr66ot~rie- '~ssearch, ex­
tension servicus, and progressive leadership'in tho field
of aGriculture and hOl:le tochnology'wit1Uu'tho frenework of
a strong~r COEJI:U tuent to tho goaLs of natio!!-aJ. ,.dovelopJ:letlt.
.. .

9 ­
The objectives wera attainccl throllgh lactllres,
lectllre-denonstrations, practical expcriencc~ in the lab­
oratory, ficld trips and observations in the differcnt dis­
ciplinos,instrllctional self-discovary Dothods throllgh stu­
dont activities, anQ student-centorud taQching-learning
activity nethocls, which were ~roup paced.
1. ~~'0E2~t.s._~L..!leado::lic. Divill..toEJ,§'
1.1 .~te.cJJE;i....cpl .Ag~i_~u.~t.llre.• --
Thu technical agri­
cultllre division collocted and prepared teaching aids, pre-
L. i~
t
pared and set IlP aericul turQl exhibi to, organizpd review
r '.:
clasBGs outside of rc{';ulQr schodulQs,' conclllcted educational
trips, coachcd a~d chopJrorred athletes during provincial
and Ilocos Regional Athletic Asso~iation Doets, assisted
students durinrs Mondcy convocatiops, and aclvisecl thesis
stllclents in their respective fields.
1. 2 AP...,r.i.c.u,l_t.u:r_::L~u;c.0t.i.o.n. D,iY..i_s1-.0,E.;. -- The ngri­
cultllral education clivision advisod thesis studcmts in their
respoctive fields of speciGlization, jnv~ted resource speak­
ers on special celebrntiens, nssistecl students dllring Mon­
dB¥ convocations, oonducted research en psychology through
ranclOD sanpling, conohad and trainad athletcs dllring the
prOVincial and IHAi\\ l:leots, gu:'.dcd stlldents during intra- and
extra-ellrricular activities, prepared and used audio-visllal
aids and syllabi.

-
10 ­
Bachelor
_ •. .. - . . . . .
of
_-.._0- 4
l~ri-business
0,0. _~~ • • • •- .
, . . . . . . ~
• • " •

_ . Managcoent.

:J,; _ ....... __
The
BAEM prograo ioprovcd and rovised prescribed syllabi, per­
forrJed actual field practice, and participated in confcrences
-
and sor.rinar-workshops relGted to tho S}J8dalization of ins­
tructors and prolessors.
Five graduates of the BiillM division found eoploy­
oen~ as a result of the on-going research con~ucted with
the PC.ARll on agricultural Llnrkotin{;.
The NI:IYG Nntion::(L Agricultural Skills Training
Progr~~, which W8B conducted under the auspices of the BAH~
division, ::(Lso Dade possible the eoployoen~ of eight train­
ing instructors.
1.4 J3acJ1.o}..o.r_o.f. .S.o.tc:1.2..8• .i.n_ ..:.~~l_!.G_c}!Q()}.OJ!;.l'
The BS.!lT proe;rcJ;] undertook spocirwn collection on eDbry­
ology, parasitology, pathology, and skeletons. It ::(Lso
undertook anioal innoculation in Bonguot Province.
1. 5 ~qg]1g.1.'2.r_ of..§..<j.el'l;.c.e, .ip. _F..oEes~. -
The BSF
progr~] accoLlplishcd projects through student voluntary
services, restocked SODe portions of the rJSAC forest re­
sorvation with different treG species with the aid of the

RP-GenlQU Training Center, Mel helped sponsor seDinars on
reforest ation Mel forest Lmn3g0j;lGnt with the Studcnt j\\ction
COLliJitteos and'tho Bureau cf Forest Developoent.

-11­
1. 6 ,B,qc,h,c.l~o.r. ,0.( .3.c.:!:.,q"n.e.c..i!1,Ag.:r:.is..I~l.t.U!'.cQ!!?.!.7",iE,c.o..rJ:!:t.£.
Thc BSAEnglg progr~~ trained about 800 students on fan~ shop
practice, irrigation and drainage, fan~ structurcs, electri­
fication, and Detoorology; constructed five teuporary quar­
tcrs for faculty and orIployeGs i provided 14 tables for 14
faculty DeDbers; and cCDentod 200 Dcters of floor walks
through voluntary services.
1.7 .B.e;cp,e,l.oF. .0.:1:..3.si_e.n.c,e..i:n, por..:..o__'te_9.~..9}·.?..i3.Y.. -
The
BSHT progro.u purchasod addi tion:'l1 i tons for tho division;
undertook FAHP projects and activities; conductecl research
activities; participated in conventions and se.uinar-work­
shops; attended grocluate courses fer profcssional growth;
revisod the four-yem' hone technology curriculUI:l; prepared
,.'
exhi bi ts for Cor.u:lOncenent Week; ancl provicled opportunities
for student socio-cultw'Ql developnent through active par~
ticipation in socio-cultural presentations, sports. and
athletic activities.
1.8 AGricultural Extension Division. -- The divi­
. . . . . . . . . . . _-4
~_.&-.• . . . . . .-__
~ ..... • _
_ _
sion produced and disseLlinotod .inforLlotion natorials to tho
nural fan~ers, conductod short-ton~ courses r0lovant to the
dovolopLlental needs of the region, and introduced now crops

in tho rural areas of tho rc~ion.

- 12 -
The soeondary division
assisted stuclents in all intrn- ctrld oxtra-cLUTicul::u- activi­
ties on different oec Clsions; lqcl[lto'~, le eson plDns bnsGd on
the new and Graded prototype "uides of the EDPITAF; accoo­
plished BPS FeTI3S 1, 2, l8-~, 137-£ nnd 138; published two
issues of "The Nountc1in Breezu"; "rlit proclucud veGotQblos
wi th coufort able profits froi~l thu faITJ business pro jucts
of the stuLents.
1.10 .0p,-E,0?-!J1LJ?£.o .i~c.t.s.. -
The B8 ,lEng 'g progran
is currentlJ' engnE;url in hollow-bloc;. Lw.kint:;, nanufactlU'e
of fnculty tnbles an<l blackbonrcl for tho new agricultural.
enGineering building, ond cUDonting tho cmlpus walks.
The EilEl![ prot;r~1Ll SUbL:i t ted n propo sal on "Econonics
of ProducinG Tri ticalc" throu,:;h thu Bureau of Plant Indus..
try .ath Q proposed budget of Y75,OOO.OO for a three-year
duration.
The BSilE progroD hns been ;Jnking audio-visual mels
for the differont fiolels of study.
It has boen also revi­
talizing and intensifyinG thu proGr~ls and activitios of
the Future FarJ~ors of the Philippines Collegiate Chapter.
2. Graduate
_ I .
~
_ _
Stuclius
"'.'
Progroo
4
_ _
~.
~
,::::>_.__ ..
2.1 ~urF?-~~~~~_~~~~2YY.. -- Tho presont curricular
,
offerinbs and Gr~~uate bulletin underwent a one-yoar re­

- 13 ­
viow and rovision.
Certain policies rO:;Qr,ling oporntions
of tho grudQQto proGr~~ wore n~10 in written foro.
These
were ~loptod in Q l~eetinG of the BocIQ of TrQstccs on May
30, 1977.
In that Board !:loeting, tho cQrricular prOr;rc1Ds =d
areas of spocinlizntion, 8.S upprovccl, nrc c\\s follows:
Q. NQstor Ol Science, unjclr in c1{;rieQl turQl oduc,],..
tion, a"ricultur::u oxt;;nsion, aninal scicnco,
horticultQro, and soil sciencc; and
b. HQstor of )'\\rts in Tonchinr; l'riJcticQJ. ilr'ts.
I
school bullotin spolled out cort::lin IJrocodQros to bo fo1­
lowod both by fc.culty uO::lb;;rs cm:l studonts.
Forns rloviscd to focili t2tc proccdQral wltters nre
as follows:

Q. BSi,C-·GS Forn 01
f,plllication for lldnission;
b. 11SllC-GS 1"orn 10
I'ron;rou of Study;
c. 11SLC-GS I"orn 15
lloport 011 Hosults of
~x~~ination; and
Unntmberod -
Thesis l'anol Foe.
Now forDs ::11'0 beine; plnnncci to L1provc tho rocorcs
2.3 Q.rpfl,Q.o:t.o._Fc:c~tL.Cl!l:'l
..S.t.~!. -
The p:'esent
graduate faeQlty included nino for ngrieultQral extension
and educationy and throe ouch for hcrticultQrc, anioal

scicnce, and practical arto.
Only ano was available for
soils. In viow of this, thoro is c. felt neue for nore
gr2duate faculty Llenbors with the appropri ntc f.1Qstcral and
doctoral degreos.
Needed for tho erJduntc faCUlty for the next two
years are:
a. Two (IiI.S. or Ph.D.) in agriculturel extension
educo.tion;
b. Three (U.S. or Ph.D.) in aninal science; anu
c. Two (n.s. or Ph.D.) in plant scicnce related
fields, including soils and crop production.
Othor neodod personnel r~e n secreto.ry and n clerk
to nan the Gr3C1ur,te school office.
2. 4 ~n,r.o.=4~~op.t__~.GE.-~~liO:t.o_~ .• -
Thore WClS a
slight incroaso in tho onro~~cnt and nlso in tho nilllbor
of Llo.storal ,c,r::x1 uo.te s for the ClC i1C1cnlic yo CU' 1976-1977.
Most of thG graduates werc faculty nonbers of
other sto.te-chnrtorod oducntionnl institutions of Regions
I and II, GovernDcmt offices, like tho J3urG3U of Agr10uJ.­
turaJ. Extension, Bureo.u of Plant Irillustry, and Bureau of
Soils, forui[7l stuc'.ents (ThD.ilrmd), =u sono fron tho
eloLlentary' and high schools.

- 15 ­
The stmlent population for school year 1976-1977
was:
Term
Enrolr.18nt
..
._.a. .. ..a._-. ..
...--~ ",,--,
1st Semester
71
5
2nd Seraester
58
3
Sumr:ler, 1977
•.?2.
Totals ••••••
2. 5 §.o!'1}3•.Ip;].e~l!.a.tg.),,-e.o9-}l,. -
Needed by the (iraduate
office are:
a.- Office equipment, sUPl'lies and materials,
amonG which are- a. typewriter, staple Elaehine,
fili~~ cabinets, staple remover, adequate
wri tin,; iJaterials, stencils, and coupon bonds.
b. il defini te amount should be set aside for the
operation of the Graduate school.
This is
estimated at P350,OOO.OO for 1978.
Justifi­
e~tion was earlier submitted to the President
and discussed v~th the CO~ffirissioner of the
Budget.
This ~lount was included with the
item on hicher education.
C. Student Services and Instructional Facili tios
. . . . . _... _
. . ~ ....._.,~_.,• • • • • . • ~
• • . ._~
. ' 0 -
• • .._ '
• • • • . ~
_ _~. __ •
• " _
. . . . . . . _
1. .GYLd.~.9.o...~:J.__C.o.lX£l.sfL1.J.N..L,S.c.rv,i.o.G:i!.
1.1
Accomplisru~ents. -- Balow arc the accomplish­
ments for the school year 1976-1977:
a. ildi:1inistration of T!jontal ilbili ty Tests to
first year hi,r;h school and colleGe stUdents;
b. Visitation of honos of students referred
to tho GuidaneG Office and conference
wi th parents in school and at horne;

16
e. Sendinc letters to parents of Gt~dents ro­
ferred to thc G~idance Offiee;

d. UpdatinG thc data of st~dcnts.
e. Cond~ctin,; individ~al' end r;ro~p cOMsolin{~ of
ro-entorine drop-o~ts, fail~res, ffild identified
potential delinq~ents of tho previous yoars;
f. COM8clinG st~donto with health problems Inth
tho clSsistanoo of the health porsormel; and
g. Assistinr; stu.dents 'IIi th cIJotion~11 and fanily
problolJs for adjustmonts.

-\\
1.2 St[:ti,sticn,l Report. -- 1i totCll of 2,130 cascs
•..
.~
,
-
~~._~
"""'
...
was hanQlcd by tho Guidancc services, to wit:

.F_eE::,.al:.,(),
..Total
_.. -",
",
Drop-o~ts
Hi"h School
6
0
6
College
10 .
15
25
Marriwgos
High Sohool
1
l(couple)l
College
6
6co~ples 6
Psychologic 81 Tests e!':lcmtal Ability)
High School
304
130
434
Collage
189
121
310
Excuse Slips Issued
Hi,:;h Sehool
267
107
374
Cello(;e
317
238
555
HaDe Visitations
Follow-up Cresus
12
18
30
Hospital 'Visitations
7
6
13
Referred Cases
Hoalth .ProbleEls
6
10
16
Goiter Control
o
54
54
COMsoling Se!yices
High <3chool
52
4
56
Colle(;c
Indu.i[_~inc in prc--rJ2ri t:Q sex
4
7
11.
.!"alsifiod ID and peru;lanship
17
10
27
Conferenco with Pnn.nts
23
25
48
Conference wi tIl l'c"'cll0rs
3
15
18
Special Cases
. 19
........
15
. 34
-,-
----..­
~
----..

Totals ••• e ••
hJH
820
==:::
,§~~~

- 17
1.3 Bp~?E~~pQa~i~E.' -- There is a felt need for
the reeruituent of one Qale guidanee personnel to take carc
of Qale students who aro drunk and to frisk thoD for bladed
weapons and possible drugs.
This would strengthen the guid­
anee staff r.1eubers and roduce their load to enable theu to
devote r.lOre tiDo in takinc; aetion on students with problems.
2•.L~i_bE.ary.Se.:r:v.i.o.o.
2.1 f..i.b.r.u:rJ. .Q.q))",e.e.t;i.og. -- The total nW:1bcr of
library collection D.8 of Nay, 1977 roached 12,234 references,
classified as folloVis:
Bo oks
0
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
11,264
Parnplllots
.
676
Serial Ti tIcs (Local and ForGiCJl) •••
166
Thesis Collection •••••••••••••••••• -..-
128
.4-'~
Total ••••••••••
2. 2 .:L_i.b.r.c:r;v..C.l.t()EJ.~l.o.• -- Tl1G nl.lr.lber of persons
who Dade usc of the libr8Ty is elassified as follows:
Seetion
2nd Ser.lOster
Sur.lE1er
- ' - 0 -.... _.>_.00_ •
• ->. •,,_ . . . . . ~.,-.. _. . . . '.--0 ,
,.- 00.-.-0
~. . . . . . _ ,
UndGrgraduate Library
28;787
5,188
Graduate Library
13,673
. 385
Periodieal Libr2Ty
10;269
2,532
Vooational Librm'Y
20 660
Closed
••.J • • • .
L.'~" __ "_'
Total .... ., ...
ThG total nuraber of books eircula~Gd is 49,061,
while thG total nw~bor of unavailablG books is 4,003.

- 18 ­
2.3 .L.i.b.r:8:l'Y..S.t.D!.f. .o.Ll.t'p.Llt. ,of. ,W.oF.!'.. -
The work
OLltPLlt of the library staff is e12ssificd into teelll1ieul
sorvicc and bLlSinQss service to wit:
Title classified •••• 00 •••••••••••••••••
5; 778
Books nccussionocl ••••••••••••••••••••••
5,792
Books lnbclod ••••• 0 •• II
.
5,733
Books pnstec1 vii th book Ilockuts, date
due aliI} •••.• "
.
5.704
CDJ:'cls tY1JGcl •• 0" 0
0
o • • • • • • • • • • • • •
10,755
Books wi thclrawn (transfcrrud to Hi,C;h
Scllool) • "'
0
"
.
55
Nunbor of poriodicals indoxed •••••••••••
101
IhCOi:1in(_; cOrrC~jlJonc1cncG
27
OutGoing correspondenco ••••.••••• 0.....
19
m.m~loranc1Ll. issued •••• " •••• 0
II .. 0'........
28
Book titles rccoranonc1 for purchase •••••
94
2.4 A~~of~1~n~~~i~A. -- The neqLlisition of nora
books and uudio-visLlnl aids Llllcl tho o;:lployuent of ruldi tion­
al porsonn81 aro n8cc1od to noot thu dorlo,l'ld of tho otondily
iner'easing acnc1Gnie popLllCltion of tho collo[';o.
3. Dontal nne rrocieal Services
... .-_
..-
'."
..
-""~ ._-~
3.1 P.e.l'l;t.O;1. ,S.o.ry}_c~oE.• -- 'rho accouplisJ1L1onts of
the dental clinie for school year 197G-1977 aro as follows:
1) HunlJor of patients inspocted
Fi l'st "ti s-i t ••••• " •••• ""
560
0

"
"
.
Follow-up
267


- 19 ­
806
2) NW!lbor of studont3 with defeets •••••••
• • 0 • • 0 • • • • • •
629
students tro atocl
3) Nunber of
(caries) ••
2
4) NW:lber of stllClents eorrocted
5) NW.lber of students given oral prophy­
.... .......................... 130
laxis
"
6) NWJber of extractions nac1e
231
• • • • 0 • • . 0 . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Peruanent
25




0


0


0
0 0 '
0 0 .










l'oLlporary
7) Fillin,;s LF1Cle
85
Silvor
"
.
CC1:1cnt ••••• 0 •• 0 • "
"
0

"
"
.
75
48
Silico.tc •... "... 0
0
0 0 • • • 9 ' • • • 0 ' • • •
502
'Zinc oxi('lc pCtste ••• 0 ". " " ••• 0 ••••••••
8) D.11. F. Survey (J?erucnont Teoth)
3,061
NWlbGr of tooth lleenyod (D) ••••••••• 1,008
NW.lber of toeth [Jissing (N) •••••••••
302
NWJuor of teoth filled (F)
•••••••••
S~Je3.ker - Hi{~h School l'ro,-;rEln on "DentaJ.
1)
COJ..'"'O;1 ;
Conference - Philippine DcntaJ. Association,
2)
Scm Sebastian Colle[;o, rUanila;
Y'lcrlwhop ... First He(;ion&l Health Workshop,
3)
Vie an , Ilocos Sur; and
Individual chair-side instruction.
, .
4)
3. 2 .~o.c.O!:1!J'O!1.C''-[lti.0E:. -- The eLlploynont of a pnrt­
j ~ii:lO dentist is proposol} for stuLonts of the HSliC EleFlOn­
j ;ary Lc:.boratory School and lilSllC General Secondary Labora.­
i lory Sehool.

-
20 .•
3.3
l:lOnts of tho medical clinic for the acruloDic yo ar 1976-1977:
a. Nw~bGr of students trontcd •••••••••••••• 1,238
b. NW:lber of teachers/ enployu es trc ated ••••
358
c. NWJbor of Qependents treatod ••••••••.•••
40
d. NW.lbcr of stl,ldents~achcrs single year
transforrod to outside Q{;oncics •••••••
62
3.4 J\\bnornal FindinGs. -- Tho defects and I1ilJ:1onts
of tho patients arc clns8if2.od as follows:
n. HCCl[1 nnd Neck (El':NT)
He Cl.d. ache .... "." •
298
0 •
II •
"
• •
0
• • • • • • • • •
0
• • •
Conjunctivi tis
0" • •• •
" • • • • " • • • • • • • •
44
Tonsilitis ".0 0.0'.
.000 • • • • • • • • • •
15
Soroth.t'oat
""
••••••••••••••
24
Goi tor to, •• 0 • 0
0 0
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
60
(I
0

..
Sty •
30
0 CI
. . . 0
. . . 0 0
0
. . . .
0 "
0 II e I
• • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Otitis [lcdla o •• o~
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
7
b. ,1bdoLlinal lJi 3e C!SC:G
AbdOl:d.no.l pain 0.,. •••• "
0
0
• • • • •
23
Gastro enteritis • c • O ••••••••• C1 •••••••
115
DY.8r:':lGllOrrhe~ ••
28
G •
&
0 • • 0 . " o.
0
• • • • • • • • • •
Hypero.cidi ty •
o. 0

• •
• • • • • •
37
CI
• •
• • • •
0


Epigastric pnin ••• o ••••••••••••••••
7
c. Gcnito-Urinary Disons2s
AL1cnorrhoG 0" ••
•••••
6
d. Uppcr Extro'li ti"s
CnrblUlclo (l. • ~
0
• 0 • • • u •• 0 • 0 • • • • 0 0 CI • • • • •
33
Sprc.in •••• " •• CI • CI 1I • 0 •••••••• " •• 0 •••••
2
0
AlurLlntitis ••
11
0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
c. Lower ExtrOlu tics
Durn
...
......


4



0



<I
0


• ••
16
Dogbito
...

• •
0
o
• •
• • • • •
2
'Scabies
...
•• • • •
G o . •
• •


• •

• •


5

-21­
f. Skin DiseaseD
Allergy ".
45
0

• •
·....
Tine
18
0. f1,::rvn
• •
• ••
·.
. . . . . . . . . . 0." • • • • • • • • 0 • • •
Influc)llZQ
22
6
. o • • • • o~o.o
.
HylJOrpyreli Cl
HypGrtension
25
j. Nervous elise asJS '0'00'0""""'"
334
TotQ1
;kg~g
NLlnber of .I'.o,G.i.d.,ep;t,s. Tho nLlJ:1bor of resi­
dents per L10nth in the Lo.c1ieG DorLlitory for the school
year 1976-1977 is shovm as follows:
102
Ju.n.o • •
• •
• •
• • •• • • • •
·.
July •• ·. .. ·.
·. • • 104
Au{~u.st • • •
·..
·.
• •
102

"

0
• •
..
3cptenbor
.
• •• •
• ·. ·.. " • •
102
o • 0 It •
'102
o
October ·.... • • .... • • ·..
• •
Second SOllCi ster
.....----~....- ..
.... .. ,
,,"
-
..
0
0
0
98

GO • •
NOVGl:lber • • •
·. • • • • •
DOCOhlDor .00 • • • ·.• • •
• • • •
• •
97
JonUQry • • •• ·. ·... • • • • • • • •
94
Febru'Ty • •
• ·.• • • • • It ••• 0 • • •
95

• • • 0 • • It • • •
98
I!iareh • 0 • 0 .. • •• • • •
SlZlJ:18r
.._'-.......-....-.
62
• • • • • • • • 0 0 0 • • • • • • • • • •
AI'ri1
• •
60
• •
o • • It • • • • • " 0 • • • " • • • • • •
Meiy ••

-
22 ­
4.2 Dor'.ii tory- llctivitios. --
Daily and r;oll(,ral
..........
.... .. ...._
...
-'-"
.... ..
.......
,
~
~
,,-_.,.~
~.---
rJonthly cleaning and socials werc thc Clcti vi tics curing tho
acDdcnic year wador review.
Foll01QnG were tho social activitios:
a. Juno -
Orientation of new studonts on houso
ru~os and reGulations;
b. July - \\'IelcoJ;Ju party end ind.uction of offieers i
c. October -
AcqLFunton,pu party;
d. ])ee0r.,ber
Christu2s pw:'ty;
e. February
ValonUnc t S party; QY1d
f. March -
F3J'ewQll pnrty in honor of graduating
residents.
HOl;1QrOOn FFP-F iiHP
YCl!P and ROTC-ClV 1)G
_-0.-.,
-,,_ .••
'.~._ •.• .J-.~_ .. • oA- ,
",,'-,a._,,-, • • • • . ,
_ _ . _.
..~~
~E~~j_~~~~p~. --
For tho school year 1976-1977, the
secondnry hOLlOroon "mel FFP-PAHP orr:DnizQtions and. tho
ColloGe YCM' and ROTC-ClVAG orGanizations woro activoly
engqgod during Saturd(lys :::md off-school hours in tho fol­
lowinG:
[I. GQJilP'J.S 'illd nntional superhighway cleanlinoss
and food IJroduction;
b. Hemline and filling up of 200 Doters of tho
fOLU1:lation of couentod wcJ.k on the cDnpus
wi th r;ravol emd o8nd froi~l tho rivor;
c. CollG{~e and couuLU1i t;jr socio-cul tur::l progrOlT
duril1;3 the ChrifJtuas season, provincial Gleot,
tOlJ!1 fiestc:, end cO[]J;lencor.:ont exorcises;

-
23 ­
d. Roforest2tion 2nd flood control activities,
such as l)l~).ntinG ::lbout 10,000 pin" tree secd­
lines Clt the coller;e forest rosar" cltion QUu
reinforcinr; the colle,,,,e bcmCl.r:l::l [;rOVe with
about 500 ba~=a suckers betwoen the flori­
culture project and the B::llili river; and
e. IntrCll'.1url11 physic ell fi tna ss "ne[ sports pro­
lOrans, provincial QUe. rcc;ion3.l [loets, rnd
other collece-coLuunity ~thlotic ~@"os held
froD tine to tine in the lTSilC plaYGround.
5.2 .~Op.T.~~. -
The LISLC ClllturDl Troupe, known ::lS
KONTilD, perforLled hiGhland culturnl c1~il1c()s Oil the CLlUPUS,
in tho coruJunity, and BDeuio City.
They were 111so invited
to pcrforn before audiences in the Province of BenQ,et and
elsey/hero in tho country.
5.3 .r~SAC. Gl.eg. Cly.b.. -
The l,lSilC Glee Club provided
frcc choral sonGs for vClrious occ Qsions in the COl.Kluni ty.
In uany instances, the club won aVlill'ds and prizcs in con­
nunity choral sin~inG contcstG hold durinG tho year.
5.4 1.ISi,C Judo Club. -
Slxmsoreu by the Bnguio YmCA,
the neubers of thc Judo Club dGDOnstrated personal discipline
on the C~JpUS and in the co~)unity as u result of their
training in ilsian i.1Qrtial arts.
5. 5 ~:I.S. i~C..D.oJ._~d.. 2_i.r.l..S.c.o.u.t.s.. -- As in provious
years, thc I1S;,C boy c:nd C:irl scout troop lCCII:ler c:nd lilOubcrs
were activc.
Souo worD se18ctud to rop~osent tho Province

-24 ­
of Bcnsuut and/or tho reGion in cOl.1porcos md j3Dborecs
held outside thc province.
5.6 !j.SAC. :~:-!l..C.~t.<.~. -- The le ::lClors mld Lh.JLlDOrS of
tho club wero aotive. DurinG the school year 1976-1977,
two r,lSAC 4-H t ors woro <1wardod two··ye'U' feern tr3inil'l{'; pro­
grm~s in Pennsylvania and New York.
One was a secondary
ac;riculture e:rnr1u<1te, and tho other was <1 college aGri­
businoss 3radUQtOa
11 sinilnr Qr;riculturnl trcd.ninu; r;rmlt in ~he United
Stutes was nwarc~Gd to Q BS.8 crncluQte for the acadeuic year
1977-1978.
D. Al.l.lf.~~i..P!.fp-?!:,.s,
Two years Uc-;o tho r.lS.iiC A..llEmi Assoeiation launched
a fund drive anon::; its nenbers to rm.s 0 r.lone~· for tho cons­
truction of a new Alw.1l'li HOrle.
TIlG buildinc; plans weru pre­
pared by the IiSAC d8velopuent office.
For effective n3nac;ecent of alw.1l'li affairs, a tokon
Secretariat wus housed on the C[1I.lpus.
The present Alw.1l'li Hall, v~1ich h3s boen occupied
for nD~ost three years as a warehouse by the National Grains
Authori ty (NGil) , was erected by the !':lS,~C lillli:mi Association.

CHAPTER II
R B S E iJ R C H
Th0 functions of the Husoarch Division were cClrriocl
Ollt by C\\ nine-J:lClU st Clff, to wit:
fOllr rese arch assist ClUts
wi th Llwjor fielcls in entoi.l010C;y, soil science, ClUiLlCll h1I8­
bClUdry, an(l hO(lO technology; one stettisticCll elido, n,"jor' in
l,Hl.thoLlCltics; one l:lllshroon teclmicicn; cmd three letborers.
The rOG08rch ~ssiStrunt3 and tho sis advisers Dot
sever31 tiLlOS to disClISS 1)rob1eus on thesis Cldvisinc ond on
the research procrQJ of the co1101;0.
1. ilo cornlishuent s
.0 .....>\\~.••.•.••.
Despite staIf shortaGes duo to the assiGmJent of
research wssistClUts to full-tine tUQehi~~ 10Clds, soue r0­
searches were Qceouplishod.
1.1 P.oT])'.l.o.t.c~1. Re_s.e.,¥"cg.efl.' -- lio st of the ro se Clrche s
werc conducted by stuQents for tho fulfilDJont of deGree re­
quireuents, viz;
six GrCldu~te thoses ClUd 16 und8r2roduette
theses.
All thuse theses were Q:)plicd rescarehes on ve{~e­
table cro"JO cn.~ Qniu8.1 science.
Sulected rJseareh 2.bstretets
appear in Jippen(lix A of this jJn"lUCll nGport •
. - 25 ­

26 ­
The rosu.lts of fou.r fetcu.lty r0se,lrchos nre being
st8tisticQIJ,y G..'1~llyzod for intorprct :Jtion, t,' wit:
Q. RQte of Tu.bor Produ.ction of Three Snito PotQto
Vetrioties Un(::'er Hi"hland Conc'i tiens, by Lu.cio
D. Victor uncl JUno O. SmlO;
b. liclvDllC()cl Yielc1 TriC1l of Six Vnlite I'otato Varie­
ties, by Lu.cio D. Victor and EILlO O. Sano;
c. Effect of Liqu.icl Fortilizer on the Yield of
\\Ihite Poto.to, CClbbet,;e, Garden Poa, enel TOf.JQto,
by 1\\11:10 0, Seno i and
d. Effect of Cu.t and Uncu.t Sceclpiocos on the Yield
of Whi tc Potato, by JUno O. Sana.
researches fundod by 2G8ncios aro~
a. VnrietcQ EvCllu.:1tion of ChrysanthcL1Uf.1 Under
Hi,C;hlQnd Conch tions, a PC"iIIR fu.n,'od projocf,
unc!er Firs. .AraeQli G. Llli1i18d;
b. Sweet Potato as C1 Su.bstrnte for Nata Produ.ction,
a PC AM fu.ncloel pro j 0 c t, u.ncl or Pro f. no saC.
;JbQstil~ ;
c. Collection Ql1c1 Bvnlu.ntion of Strawberry Ve.rie- '
tics in the ?hili:'pinos, Q PCARR iu.nded projoct,
under 1'1'01:'. Fnu.ctino G. HerLJD.Do; ond
d. Ev~luntion of JG-OEI (InsQcticido) .AGainst Dia­
LlOne, .3lCt~ki.1oth, f'~l;l.t.o;ll.C~ xy.l.o.stGl.:l:.a Linn., fu.nded
by ,1GCllcI"J, u.nC:8r tJ~ss Lito. P. lfoLito.s,
-
were SUbi:li ttod to PCiJRIl for fu.ndini';:
a. Dust R2,t;:; and Tir;o of AjJplyinr; llcrtilizor to
Irish PotQto, ?y COnrcllo J. Oliveros;

27 ­
b. Inventory of Soil Characteristics anJ Land
Use PI=ing of Eiighland Areas, b:r Conrado
J. Oliveros and a03elio D. Colting;
c. Root Crop Production in Hi,;hland Areas, by
En1"', F. KaYffil, Ror;elio D. Coltinr,;, and
Conr3Cl0 J. Olivero s;
d. CroppinG Pattern for Highland Vegetable Crops,
by Lucio B. Victor;
e. Procluction of \\Jhite Potato Seedpieces in the
Farder'S FClrtl for COi.lilcrcial Plantine;, by
Lucie B. Victor and EliJO O. Sano i
f. Cost and 112turn of a \\Jhi to Pot ato-based Crop­
ing Syston, by Lucio B. Victor and Elno O.
Sano;
g. Bi olo,:y and Control of Pot ato Tubor Hoth,
Phthoril:lQe operculella 201100, by Li ta P.
MOlHas';" .
h. COJ;lp::lrativo Test of Six Droilor Cor,u:lcrcial
Str2ins, by Sonwri,;ht B. I.13Clcllll;
i . I,10ntification emd I,lllantification of Physical
Variables in the Scicnc~s of l"arl:1ing Systef.ls
in Hi,cshland !;re::ls, by 1:I~thodia B. I:Icrcrulo
and Cipriano C. ConsolClcion; and
j. Tho Socio-Econonic Factors Affoct.Lng Farning
SystGL1 of Potatoos in Donguut, by EIDO O.
Sano, r.Iuthodia B. l!jercoclo, and Conrado J.
Olivoros.
Research )rojocts of tho colloga jointly undertaken
wi th goverru:10nt aml private agGncics are:
a. Uplz.nd VcgGtable Rosearch (IiIS AC-IPB Project);
b. Rese::Jrch Projuct on Ilarketinr: of Vegetables

- 28 ­
(IilSJiC-PCARR) ;
c. Str8wbe~ry HcseQrch Project (rJSAC-PCAHH);
d. Floriculture Hesearch Project (!'iISAC-PCA11R);
e. Resec:rch Project on Sweet PotQto (rIIS""C-PCARR) i
and
f. Barley Oat Research Project (I:lSAC-SGJl lliguel
CorporQtion) •
Thu r"soQrch L18chinJry of thu collage: nuec1s stranlsth­
eninG with Llora Qdequ2te funcls fon.iOru tl-chnic=tl staff
L101:1bers, rLJsoarch oporations bu.il(·~inCs9 ucro COL1putinr~
l;wchines, and Dare rafcrcnco books, :lnd technical journals.
1. MQin_Tp.ru.st. o.f. E.E.~Q.rS}l.0.s.
The r.win thrust of th" research activities of the
college froQ 1978 onword will be on the following:
a. Applied I'eseaI'ch"s on traditional and non­
traditionQl crops, includinh QUShrOODsi
b. Applied rusa8rchcs on poultry and swine feeding;
ane.
c. Socio-8conouic r0search~s to ioprove the quality
of life of the paople in tho countryside.
1.1 .R.o.8u..':r,9Jl.S.S•.9£.,1£a,d;i.t.i.o?a.l. .,9r0J2.8.' -- Appli cd
rese arches on tracE tional crops ·.vill bo on the following
areas:

-
29 ­
a. Fertilizer studios on lec~y, fruit, and root
vCl'jctoblcs,i
b. Soad production experilaent on beans, swoet pens,
pechQlf, radish, and Chinese cabbage;
c. CrOlJping systeD or pattern for hiGhland vegetables;
d. Crop protoction;
e. Seed piecos proc1uction and stor2(;e of Irish
potato;
f. Spacing studies on carrot and green onion;
g. Variety ccllection and trial of sweet potato; and
h. MushrooD production 2nd rice culture.
1.2 l'e~e::l::l:'_Cl1.o~'2!1 N2E::".~.r.,!1.i:t.i_op.Ql C:r:oPf!!. -
The
researche~ will be on the cultural studies of asparagus,
coffee, apple, pewr, wheat, and trftiDnlQ~
1. 3 .!iep_o:c::r:c..~e_~ on .!'.9.u.l.t!y. _c:nil Swine. -- The re­
searches will bo on foeds and feeding.
The use of feed
8uppleuonts and substitutes to r0,luco procIl: ~tion cost and
increase profit will bo the wain target of researches on
poultry and swine fJr a start. Other areas of study, like
breecling ancl f~enetics and stocking ratG, will be explored
later.
nent of rural life, socio-econol.lic researches on Darketing
and applied nutrition will be conducted.

- 30 ­
To be used in this socio-econouic study will be the
oethod of the UNICEF-assisted Philippine Applied Nutrition
Progr8J"J, nov" the NFAC.
SpecificQlly, the study will cover
food proriuction, nutrition -education, trQininIC, he al th Md
sMlllation.
J.. Periodicals
.. ....-__
_
..._c-
.. _ ..... ~
..-_~~.. P81:Jphlets
. . _<~,._
..J. Md
,..-... _ HMdbooks
..
- _ _
The rasearch division disseuinated to f",roers the
following publications:
a. A Handbook on Potato, by E1Llo O. Sano;
b. New Monay-nuking InQustry: French I;]ushroor.l, a
pamphlet, by 1\\1auricio B. Cadaweng and Faustino
G. Hen:1ano;
c. 1.1S11C FQrn Nows Bulletin;
d. Harve st ;
o. Ae;riscopo i an:l
f. AgriculturZll HeviGw.
Also diss(JIJinatGd to farJiGrs wero issues of The
!,.h.i.:L.!..P.PJE~_ ..'.1B.!.i:P.u.ltU!J-.Et... a j 0 urn~11 of tho Collo ge of
Ae;ricul ture and Central Exporirhcnt Station, D.P. at Los
Bailos. Laguna.
2. l.lS ilC ..E£..f?!.O:T.c.h. ..J.~uEllal
The collo{So will print the rwiden issue of the
f

- 31 ­
quarterly, it will dual on tochnicaL and ~ocial researches.
The journal will supploI:1ont and, in SO[lO ways, super­
sede three sarliur publications, nru~ely, AGriscope, j~ricul-
tural Review, and Harvest.


.
CHAPTER
III
EXTENSION

A. .E3!.eEl~.op. 'p.r.o.r;r ~~
The extension division of t~J cOlle~ is involved in
the introduction of new agricultural skills and trnnsfar of
agro-technolor3Y in the rural areas.
objectives of the Gxtunsion pro,',r:'1:l:
a. Prod u.ce cOElprehcnsive, re ad ablo and useful in­
fornation I:Jateri als;
b. Condu.ct short-terr~ couroes relevant to the neads
of tho reGion;
c. Offal' specitl1ist sU.i:port to agencies of change;
and
d. Ceneluct action prO(;r8Ll CUJ-:J research.
2.
!-~P.~~2P~. -- Tho functions of the extonsion
pro{;rarJ includu extension inforlJation, training, specialist
report, nncl &eti on prOi;rar.l CW:1 rese arch.
elJploys the following strato:-;ie s:
duployoent 'of personnel,
personalized assistance, tearJ approach, linkaces, involve­
Dent of cor.nuni ty people, anel insti tutionnl approach.
- 32 ­

- 33 ­
The extension propr~~ of the collehe is involved in
the operation of a social laboratory in the rural areas, a
joint project with the Southeast Asian ReGional Center for
Grachlate Study and Rese/arch in Ar;riculturc (SEJ\\RCA).
[,I
1. i3EJ_c,i.f,i.c,.O,b,j.9_c.:~.i.'~.e~
I
The sp<Jcific objectivQs of the social laboratory
i
are the following:
a. AccolerClte the flow 21111 use of science and
technology;
b. Maxinize the systenatic application of social
science knowledge and developnont;'
c. Develop a nodel far the developnent of a
l'ural COLlJ:1uni ty with science and technology
as its J:1Elin source of nanipulatecl variables;
d. Introduce scientifio and butter practice in
fQrr~ing operations; and
c. Devulop credit consciousness and uarketing
f acili ti (JS.
Extension projects and aotivities were tied ~p and
integr3ted with other ohange Q(;encies. IJSAC facili tics
and resouroos were also used.
2.1 .c.r.op.s.•~A1'!,_o..:i.u.c.t.'!.. -
Hereunder are the
aohicvewents for tho sohool year 1976-1977:

- 34 ­
a. Rice ProJect. -- Twelve hectares were planted,
"W11n'a yJ.clc[' of 89 cowans per hect:1re. Tho
nillJber of cooperators was 23 farQers.
b. Vegetcble projilit. -- Thirty-six hectares were
cQltI"vaioQ~-wJ. -44 farDers as cooperators. The
yield W2S 19 tons of assorted vegetables.
c. Fish CQltQre. - .. A tot al of 2.5 hectares was
us'uel ',' I"ii*tn--:n cooperators.
No fi"Qre was avail­
able as to yield.
d. Broiler ProdQction. -- Two cooporators were'in-'
I
vol;':G(.f~'· "T'h""CY sold 1,156 broilers worth PH,OOO,
;
realizinc thereby a net {;ain of P751.40.
e. ~~1fC%B;s~~2jOCt. -- EiCht cooperators prodQceu

f • .Q!.cll.a,r;:1./.F.r.Q.tt-T.ro.e .p~o.j eo.!.. -- Twcnty-foQr
oooperntors 1~an1ea 6,4j! frQit trees~
r;. ILll.'unization Drive. -- InnocQlateu were 2,059
Goat's",' iJ1',s~-c-Qttlo, and cClrabaos.
'
h. IrrigQtion Project. -- Two irrigation projects,
costIil,z" Y~(f,'ObO-:Li15, wcre cOLlpleted with the
assistance of thc National Irrigation Authority.
Also cOQpleted were personal irrigation projects
worth P5,000.00.
AbOQt 50 heetares are benefited
by the cOLJpletion of those irrication projects.
i. TailorinBLSewin~roieet.-- Twenty out-of-school
yoLi't'li' 'g"radti'mcCllr"oil tne' tailoring anc1 handicraft
clQssos.
The H.E. tailoring project netted
P2,756.00 that wont to tho trainoe graduates.
A net profit of P589.00
projects uQrinG the
-
k. Loan Assistance. -- A total aLlOunt of P94,000.00
~i bor"rOY/Qd!5Y fan:1or coopurators to establish
their ar;ricQltQral projects.
1. r.~Q1ti-F!J.rming. -
Twelve farrllOr cooperators under­
·:ro·o1( r.iLi:rh-farElinc; projects.

-
35 ­
m. Nutrition and Fru~ily PlanninG. -- Sixteen fan]
1'",;"u;iiJ.Y· 'c'o'o'perntor's'nacftYe:'up pro;' Jcts with other
agoncios:!
n. Buautification 'and Clc~mliness. -- The drive
ros'uYtou' Tnl;nec'or~}:):Lu'tlon "or14 water-se aled
toilets, 26 pit toilets, 89 blind drainaGe,
and in the plonting of ornClLlCntal plonts.
2.2 ~y~.~r?r~. -- Introducc~ for cultivation or
propagation wore bulb onions, e;lrlic, Innzones, grapes,
water nelon, Giant peper, persh,un, and black pepper.
. •
2.3 ;r:.n!.op\\2.t.i.o.n.L!.':lt.eTip.l,s. -- Produceel and distri­
buted were: (a) 1,020 copie8 of two issues of .T_h.o...<2-h.1lAG.o
.A.E-...eE-~' a n8wsletter; (b) 500 cOllj"s of ,1 bulletin on r.mlti­
ple cropping; Cl'le1 (c) 500 copius of LlOnOr,ro.ph on coconut
culture.
other bulletins slatud for listribution are still
being odi'tod.
On-gain!; rosGarches bcoin,-; Clllduetcod unel uxpected to
be completod before December 31, ~~ 77 are:
a. Pror;r~,j.l lL]plei~ontation 0: GovcrnLlent Agencies
in Dureos, 110cos Sur;
b. Kaifigin SystOLJ of F::trL1in,~ i.n I3agulin, L11 Union;
c. Culture'.l Prc,cticos of Soc.. 1 Laboratory
COO)8rators;

36 ­
d. Co~"on Posts and DisOQSGS of Vegetables in the
Social Laboratory Projoc'G;
e. Co["~on Posts and Disoasos of Rico;
f. Progrru" IopleDontation of tho B~roa~ vf Agric~l­
t~al Extension in KalinCa-Apqvao; an&
g. Credit RoquirOilents of Social Lnboratory
Cooperators.
Aside froD the extension division of tho colle GO,
the ngri-b~sinoss division h~1 also boon engaged in oxton­
sion work.
It hnd jointly cond~cted with the National
Manpower and Yo~th Co~cil (NMYC) a national agric~tural
skills training pro0r~" in throo selected sitos in the
Province of Bcnguet.
Live-in instructors froD the colleGo conductod
classes for fan~ors actually enCa~ed in aero-business
activi ties concerning crops and aniDals.
1. JlC 0 OElpH shri:.e~
Below arc the nw~ber of gr~1~atcs and drop-outs in
the co~ses offered in the tllrec training sites:
Course
........~ .. -...-,
Atok
,\\r;ron ouy
66
4
Aninal Husbandry
64
5
AgronQl;1Y
40
12
AniT.1a1 Husbandry
36
19
Agronomy
39
5
Aniual Husbanclry ...iQ.
- 8
TotCll
0
&§~
~J
,

. -
37 ­
Of tho 285 graduQtoc1 fnrncr-tr3.ineos, 145 (51 por
cent) had trainin~ on crop production and 140 (49 per cant)
on anirJal production.
2.
TOrT.1ination of TrQinin~ Prop'r~1

. . .
• •
"
-
• • - . . . . . . , " • • _ _.~ • . . . -
_ _ . . . . . . . ,
' 0 , - '
The NT/1YC tio-up with th" collego was torl;linated on
January 31, 1977, in view of the distances of tho now
training sitos.
It was arraneod that tho Buguias-Loo Aero­
.Industrial School of Loa, Buguias, Bunguot will take ovor
tho Nl~YC National ~~rioultural Skills Trainin~ Progra1 that
will conduct olassus for rural faruors in tho north.
,
Tho agri-businoss.fti~ision of tho collogo through
linkaeG with tho peARn has boon conJucting a resoaroh on
agricultural narkotine;.
,
With n bUdgot of P73,36l,OO, tho rus,Jaroh was
..
stnrted on DUCULlbor 1, 1975.
Five ;"ursons have boon (31:1­
)loy"l'9. :\\;0 h~lp oondllct tho stuc'Y. which will torminQto on
Juno 30. 1978.
,
:
E. !2'.2.~t i.o,n]!;-0.1o_c_t.s_~op,.c1. ..I!1.G_O!;!9..P.
The production 2nd solf-liquidating projocts of tho
,
. collG/3.o wore: ~1nintainod for incomo purposes,
Tho projects
0lso sorved as labor:ltory for stu.l.unts 2nd as dcmonstrDtion

38 ­
farms of the different extonsion pror;r'iYJ,s.
:.~. '
Sone f m~ders 1'1'0;;1 the countryside vioited the p1'o­
r "
dLlcti on 1JrO je cts :::s ])Qses for the ~ stilblishi,1ent or improve­
"
'
Llent of their own pro0.Llction enterprises.
BeloVY nrc the {',ross inCO!::8S ::mel. shn.rcs therafro:i:1 of
..... •
the collec,'e in the> cli?fc:c'unt proCLlction projects :for tho
school Y02r 1976-1977 •

-"
~.
-"

.....
,'"
" '. -
~~ ~ ~ ..
Pro jc c t; J." 2n[l..-
Gross
School Sharo
:i~e:r!Ins:t:"':~c:to.r
I'riC'O'lilC
'Of' if,'-'!;' Irlcoru

.
,
.
...
.. -.', .. . . .
~
~
~
, ..... ~
~
Ve~et[nJJ.e Crops
2'luo o. S eno
F 96,023.50
F 29,047.05
(at Dolili)
H.,S. Ccnteen
Vietoric, D.
'1' ui:lbar: (l
-
12,978.98
LCtdie s Dordi tory Esther H. Hu.fanD.
11,140.00

Ve,c'etQble Crops
Dario D. Drn~~i18G
36,008.77
10,802.63
'( at the SWElL1p)
., do -
n81~"lon I.,.. :Lloc alan
26,864.33
8,059.30
- do .-
Ju.on ~j. L2l'teG
24,950.00
7,485.24
-
do ~-
GTio'10rio G.
Bilmrso
2'+,672.20
7,401.66
l"lori C Lllt Lil'e,
Arocoli C. Ladilcd 14,579.67
4;373.99
0011e"o Conteen
Of eli ;:"\\ N. EstE~PCl
4,,199.17
Pom01~QT
Ben j 81Jin JJ. Diu-:ls
5,438.03
1,631.41
RSDe GLlost HOLlse
Isic:.ro D. Viwlo
428.00
Acri-bu.siness
C8rl08 T. Buasen
. . . . . ,1.0.5.•,2.1
T o t l' 1 s •••• ~§JQ~Q~f!~lQ f=~1f:1JJ!oH
=========== =~~========


CHAPTER IV
ADlIIlUSTIIATIOil AND SUPlmVI3ION
For the period July 1, 1975 to Dcceubcr 31, 1976,
the N8'cional Govcrnucntallocatecc ?5,106,639.5D for the
principal speciGl bucl,c:et of the collc';c.
The SW.l WGS ,1110te,1 for the following:
~ersonal Services
}
Salnl"i e c """"" .. "" .. "" .. " .. """""""""""""""" .. ". ?2, 143, 351, 63
Waces (stultent assistants, a.gricu'ltural
and chlcrgency le.1Jorers)"" .. """"""" .. """"
l(J4,746.97
Honornriwil and living cllowanc88 ••..•••.•
177,410.30
Retire~,lent c;r2tui ty """"""" ~ .... " " " " " " " " "" " ..
12,180.48
Medicnre and GSIS life aDc reti~lcnt
prGLliLUl.1S
0" • • • • • • • • •
l(J3 366.81
. .... . , -,_., ,,. ..
Maintanance and Opcratin:; ;'JX11enscs
TravelinG expense s """""""""",,""""",,""""""
68;866.60
SUIJplies a..nd Llateriols """""""" .. """
759,682.74
co" " "" .. "
SW1clry .. """"""" .. """".,,,,,,, .. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .. ,, 0
240 297.23
• • • , • ..1 • • • • '., •
{h~gg!ggg!~i
capital Outlay
Con3truction ... ""
1,207,438.03
<I
"
"
..
"
"
"
"
"
" "
"
"
, , " .
"
• •
"

"
" " 0
Eq u.iprnent •
127 059.02
0
"
"
" "
"
" "
_
"
• •
• • • • • • .J . . . . . ~._.
'i.e l 334 497.05
. . . . . . . ..1. " " _ '
Total ••••••••••• ~~~~Qg~J~~~§~
:::.:=============
- 39 ­

-
40 ­
An unexpended balance of 1'2,239 .. 75 Wets rv'lJ<zed at
of the fiscal year.
Facilitative Services
..
_ ...... . . . . a
' . • • ~ ... _
. . . . .
-.-
• • • . -,-,
General ru:1r.linistration, auxiliary, and su.p lOrtive
carried out by tho faeili tative Geri'iees.
servicos V.,7orc oJ'~~ffi"ri~;..Jcd into line ["meL staff l~~d ts
the folloYling depClrtLlents:
(a) offi ce of the1. Presi­
,dent, (b) bUd,;et, finance, and aceountinz ser'lices, (c)

general sorvices, and (d) sccurity unit •

The clerieal force were not only confined wi thin
thc different departuunts carrying out the Qctivi ties of
General adL1inistration, but \\/Cre £1lso distributed in the
different offices of the supervisors of the different cu~
rieular proc;rar.ls, rese"rch and extension Gcrvices.
Conferences hncl been held to acquaint the elerice.1.
personnel with the policies and latest trends on procedure
and fOrLl in the preparation of reports and correspondence.
These sessions also served as oecasions for oVClluatinr,
their pcrfOrJ,li1nCes.
The seninnrs, con:i'crences, =<1 workshops attenu.ed
by selected cicriecu personnel were on less control nanage­

- 41 - .
ffiemt, safoty adr.linistration, pUblic perso=el adllinistra­
tion, personnel action, recorcls nancv,ement, {zoverrment
Lledi a COL1Uuni c 2.t ors, and supply uanaC;O:;lGnt.
Profcssional growth was also {,ivon impotus by cn­
couraging clerical euployuos to pursuo furthor stu:lius in
the oVEJrunc in Bn,:(uio City, and in taking civil sorvice
exaoinations.
Budp,et
Finance
and Accounting Services
••••.•. .1• • • ", •.• _.1 • • • • . . .. " ' " _ • • • __ •• , .• _ • .
Tho bUdc;et director and throc clmployoGs participa­
\\ ted in ru{;ional and nation,"l confcrences, suuinars, and
workshops aiEled at upgr8C1.inc; their cOElpetoncios.
Topics taken up in those activitios wore budgot
preparation, exocution, anQ accountability; colloction and
disburscdont; and fiscill [)[luinistrQtion.
Pursuant to r,iSJ\\C AlLlinistr2tivo I.!()flor and UIl No.2,
dated July 16, 1976, the internal audit unit 'NilS reor[',anized
into an internal ciudit co;"r.littce huaded by the adl:linistra­
ti ve officer as chief.
The reorganization inerco.sod the
nW:lber of pursonnel involvucl in internal audit.
Share of Not Income from Production Projects.-­
.. -".ro.... .
.
~
. • . . . . . _• . . • . . . . • , . . . . • -~,
.--.

-
42 ­
. The total shGre of the! colle;o from tho net incorJo fror.1 the
production projects of voc.::tiona1 G(;ricl.llture instrLlCtors
and/or J:!L1XlC)DCJrs for thu fiscal ycnr cnding June 30, 1977 ms
.
P97,733.17 cOI:lpared to 290,375.26 of the SClT,IO period last
yoar.
Tho increase af1ountoc1 to ~,357.91.
I

,
comparison, tho top five proullcors who contributed to the
school share of the net incomes frow the difforont projocts
for tho fiscal yoars 1975-1976 and 1976-1977 arc listed
horOWldor:
.F:.i.so,~, Y,0.~.}-.9}.5.-gtJ.i
l'LU[.I.c .of. ,p/1ro".j.oE.t_J.n.s.-
School Share of
trl.lctors
.. ~ ..
_ _ •
, ' __

__ •
• •
rHanagors
No't' pr:6a·uc·t"i'6·n' .
'0.-
. . . . . _
.... _ - ...
_', .... ~ .........
_ - ~
........~
,
ElLlO o. Sano
P 23,526.89
Juan D. martos
18,334.83
Gregorio G. Dilango
9;209.70
RQl:]on I:1. Bocalan
8,077.31
Dario D. Dm~pilag
7,019.26
E1Ll0 O. Sane
? 29,047.05
Dario D. DWJpil~~
10,802.63
Rar,lOn B. Docalan
8;059.30
Juan D. rlartus
7,485.24
GreGorio G. Bi1ango
7,401.66
4.
Socuri ty Unit
"-4 .... ".,'_0- ~ • ..-_& ... eo'
Poace and ordor was satisfactory on tho C~lPUS during
the .schoo1 yoar 01976-1977.
This was mnde possible through

- 43
the vi."'ilance of collu,,,;o Quthorftic.:s. .Sc.:curi ty and lJrotec-
'_J
J.:
tion of lifo and property were provi~ed by the college se­
curity personnel and sec~Iity guards of the Vcterans Intel­
l.igcncu SecQri ty A(;ency (VISA), I,ianil8..
A perinoter barbed-rare fenco was put QP at the
southern pOl'tion of the site of the IIS,~C Elenent ary Labora.-­
tory School to present trespassers froD couini': in and pas­
sing throu(;h tI1G Cdll1J.JUS.
In front of the il;:'.r,C EloElontary LClbor3tory School
and I:1S/iC GenorCll Seconcl.'1ry LQboratory School, a concrete
fence ViClS constrQctoc1 to IJrCvent intrLldurs.
The sites oi the two laborCltory schools together
wi th thu i1Clj::lC,mt 1win C,~JJpUS to the north were Lll1cLer a
24-hour [';Qard shift.
To help Llaint:tin disciplinc, all st~_('cnts cntcr-­
ing tho CCU:lpUS Here rcr1uircll to pin ID c3l'ds on thcir
Inpcls.
Thor() was no evicccnce of stLlClent activisr.l.
The
BETl! 3l1d .!\\PO wore not flLlthorized to organizo 3l1i' operate.
Knovm rlenbers were Lll1c'_er surveillance by tho stuClent po­
lico thcLlselves who subr,Jittecl periodic reports to the
security officer.


-
/f4 ­
C.
!,-e.r_3.0!J:D.O~.p'ovol.0J'!i~0!1.t.
1. CntoRories of Porsonnol
.. ..--- _.. -
'
--~. . . . . . .-. .-...
The nUIJbor of personnel by categories coverinc the
I
poriods undor roview follows:
Stronrth
_____ ••,
as of Docouber
• " • • • 31
• • oJ
1976
•• _ •• '
a. T8C1.chi~ stLtff
D
..
99
b. Classified ffi"d non-teaching •••••••••
65
c. Supporti vo •• I»
..
40
-.­
Total .......................
a. Toaching staff
0 .. 0."",,,".0.. •••
173
b. Classified and non-teaching •••••••••-,
80
c .. Supportive
'. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. •
_~O
Totnl •• 0 ••••••••••
~~~
. Dotorving teachors were rocoDrJondedto avail of
soholarships and trmning gr;mts offorcd in thq country
and abroGd.
The colle(;e has a poliey of allowing a uaxi­
DUIJ of four instructors to bo on study leaves, subject to
the availability of scholarship grants.
Bolow aro tho n~!bor
of recipients of on-coiN'; scholarships by Cllrricu.lnr levels
and spociQIizations:

- 45 ­
a. Masteral Levol
T',lS Aeronony, UPLD •••••••• " •••••••••••••
2
MA Food TechnoloGY, UP-DiliQan ••••••••• 1
MA Practic2tl Arts, peAT •••• e"
.
1
ri.IS Soils. - UPLD •• "
" •• "" •••••••••
1
MS Dot c:my£ 'UPLB •••• o
" " • " • • "
.
-1
Tot 0.1 ••••••••••••
Ph.D. Soils Science, UPLB ..... 0 •••••••••
Ph. D. AgronouyI UPLB •••••• '" ••• " • " ••••••
Total •••••••••••• =~=
1,IS ,Anir,1al Husbondry. Scotlond.
Unitod Kingdo8 ••••••••••••••••••••••
1
Two faculty
QeQbors on scholarship abro~l returned to duty, following
coopletion of their studies, viz:
a. llr. Franco Bawang - Diploma in H01~ticulture
Sciencc, under the' COlOE1bo Plan, \\lellinGton
Univorsity. NeVI Zealand; and
b. Mr. Alfredo Tipayno -
'I'rnining PrOr;rDr.l on
POilloloGieal TechnoloGY, Prefectural Scholar­
ship Grant. Koehi, Japan.
3. Self-initiated Professional Growth
_
. . . ~

4
• • • 4 _
. . . ._
. . . . .~
• •
,
,
,
,

,
. . . . . . . .-
. .
_ • • _ . . . .
Eleven f:J.culty j;]ol.1bcrs and cnployees had pursued
studies leadinc, to undcr{;rac1uatc and c;rlliluc.tc degrees at
their own cxp~nso in LSAC and in other private universities

- 46 ­
in BN,uio City, to wit;
a. Ph •.D. E11{sli 811 • 0
2
• • • •
0
"
"
"
"
"
"
..
"
..
..
..
..
..
..

b. Ph.D. Pilipino "
0.. "
6..............
1
c. lIS 1 :bTS l1C
"
"
"
" . . . . .
5
c1~ BSP.Ap LyccuIa of Ba,~uio •• "
"...............
1
o~ rJISP A, LyceurJ' of BC1tjuio ••• "
II
..

1


..
f. MS ChOl~listry; SLU
1
0 0
To t 21
".... =~~=
Sono officiQls, teFlchers, and eLlployc;es participated
in professional conventions, confurences, seLlinLlrs, and work­
shops sponsored by tho DepQrtncnt of BducQtion and Cu~ture,

Devolopl,lent Acadomy of thu Philil~pines, Associ ation of Col­
loges of ~~riculturo in tho Philippines, Philippine COilllCil
for A,';riculture ant''. llosourcus Roso cU'ch, and other ,c;overn­
mont anr.~ privuto Gnti tius"
Theso conventions, souinnY'S, Dnll wor':shol's were re­
echoed by the particip;nts in c;cncral an<'. spclcial Doetine;s
of the colleGo personncl.
4.1 R.a!.t}.c.ip,Q,nt.s ,F!0!;], ,Gy?.cF_al..~lE~iJ1:i,s:c,r.r>.tJ..oE.
The nunber of particip;:mts' fron (;enoral adninistr'1tion is
seven (7) headed by the eolleGe president.
Participants .:Prom the ';0 ~dCLjic DepartLlents •
~
k>_

,..
• • • •
• . • • r
_ . •
0-
, . ,_• • • • • A
• • • • • • • • . . . . . . . "~
The nULlber of particip=ts frou the ~:fferent nCEK.ler,lic

- 47 ­
dcpnrtoents is distributed 8S follows:
a. P181lt Scienco
0
• • • • • • • •
2
i
b~ 11nthcuutics nnd Ph.vsics
1
I.
c. Languafies and Social Sciencus •••••••
3
d. Agriculturo.l Education ••.•.•..•.• •~..
1
c. Agri-bttsincss and EconoLucs •••••••••
1
f. HODe To chna logy •.. "." ..... ~ .. 01 • • • • • • •
3
g. Physical Eclucation 3llcl Athletics ••••
5
h. Vocational and 1,,,ricultur2.l Sci:mee
Education
".
. . ..•• ••
0-.'.7 .
4.3 !.<::t:t.i.cip,O!l.t,s, Fro!_~ ,~o.n.-, ilc.a.d.u.1;:i.c. pi.v,ip,i.o?s..8E,,~
Offices. -- The nlliJbur of particip<~~ts from thu non-academic
_--_
...
..
divisions and offices is brokun do~m, to wi~:
0.. Gu.id once Offi co ••• "
" •••••••••
1
b.• Hcalth S('rvicus •.••••..•••.• "••.••••
2
c. Personnel and lwcords •••.••••.•.••••
2
c1. J?i rlBl1C C
.
6
c.' Property
.
2
f. Extension and Continuing Education ••
1
..... ..-..
Total •••••••• 1' ••• =~4:=:
The school situs, builQinc;s, und equipLlent nrc being
used to carry out the i.Iission and statutory objectivGs of
tho col1,,[:;e CIS a state educ:,ational institution.
Tho school situs fall under three cateGorios, namely:
(a) reservation, 575.2802 hectares; (b) recistered or titled

48 -
Innd, 46.4536 hectares; unu (c) unreGistered or untitled
Innd, 78.5478 hoctares.
The aeGreeate is 700.2816 hectares.
1.1 PP.?Jl_o_~d..L.8p,d..S.w.<lJU,:i.tp__B..ell£:...u_e.t. f'.r.oy.i~S<:"
The colleGe has Uf;reed to c xchan,'"iG 54~ 0421 hcctlli'CS of its
stock farrJ for six (6) school sitos rGcistered in tho n81:1e
of Ben{~uGt Provincc, with a total area of 46.4485 hoctares.
\\Vhen the exchm'Go will bc effocted, Benguot Province
will r.lakc US8 of the 54.0421 hectnres as 'Q gov8rnnont C8n­
ter, providine sitos for offioes of the national and pro­
vincial govcrru'lents.
The stock fanJ is identified as Lot I, plan Swo-l­
02-00003, shee t 1 (portion of Lot 1, In-66), eovor8d by
Executive Ordor No. 99, d8ted Novenber 11, 1914, as amended
by ProclWJation No. 209, dated October 20, 1955.
A subdivision survey of tho stock fanl had been
und8rtaken by tho Province of Benguot.
The survey returns
arc now boin,z processed by District Lund Office No. I-2.
1. 2 _T.o..r!.'lip.~t.c.d..C.o.U!.t._C!.q,s,e.s..JE-.v.o.lY.iPfi..t.h.o..S.c£12..0),
§.i~.o_~.
Of the teroinntoQ court easos, the eollcGc lost
eiGht (8) cases involving 12.5678 hcct~es. und won 11
cases coverinG a total ,trOD of 88.8574 hectares, S~_rr.1arized

- 19 -
hereunder:
Casos Lost by the Colle~e
_____ 0-._-. .... 0­ • • ,. ~_ . . . . . . '" •..••• _ .. ~ .... ~.
Total Area
Itf€(t:€ci:s}
a. Unrogi stered Bohoo~ si tOB
3
1.5721
b. UnrlJ{~istorod school sito (Tho Court •
doniod the application lor rocistra­
tion, b~t tho applicant succlJoded in
gGttinc titlo by froo }Jntont.)
1
0.5340
o. Roleased lands sOLlf;ht to' be, retainod
as school sites
2
5.4683
d. Recovery of possession of registered
land, Hhich was disnitt,sud but without
pro judice to rofilin~.
1
Tot als •.•.••••.•

As will bu notoil in trw~10 lost casos, p8rticularly
_~, E and E., tho parculs of lanll subject thereof wore either
unrecisterud (unti tlod) or rolu asod trncts o:? land scuc;ht
to bo recovered by tho collogo.
Pre-war c'locUI1c,:ltS of ormorship of thG unru/'ii:sterecl
parcels of land wore (i1i thor los t in World War II or in tho
fire that razed thu:clninistration building on Allril 23,
1965.
The ease of a eRn still bG rGfilod, and rocovGry
'. ­
of tho propGrty st c:rJiLs a r;ood cl;lcnee.

- 50 ­
Total Area
N a t u . r e
~
~.~.4."'''''' .-.
'(!{§'I'KC:s)
a. ReGistered school sitvs
4
41.8097
b. unreGistered land
1
0.0371
c. l1eserved school sites
5
46.6306
d. Released 12nd sou.eht to be retained
1
0.3800
TotGls ..... U
.
--
§§ ---
§.21,1
1.3 Peneling Court Co-sus. -- A totnl of 18 cases
0.- . . . . _
. . . . ~
• •
,
. . .
,



~ __ . . . . . . ._ . .
are still penclin/; rosolution, five (5) in tho Court of
Appeals an<:l 13 in tho Court of First Instonce, nora parti­
cularly described ~s follows:

No. of
Total .Area
N [l t u r e
(JD.iic's~·
_ _ . " . . . . . ._'O
. . . . .
Or<-.
.. ......... '
{f-£C:cy3.t<sJ
a. Co urt of ]Ippc als c ClSOS
5
120.4196
b. Petitions for jUdicial confiroation
of title
7
20.0417
c. Reoovery of possession
6
21.lJ.05
,-._" -_ .. -..
Totals •••••• II
18
==
The colloge as of this v~itinG h8s 40 uuildings
bcing used for instruction, of whicll 27 are for agri-sciences
instruction ~l 13.aro for social sciences instruotion.

- 51
The 27 buildincs for ~sri-scioncos instruction
contain 39 cla-saroons 3l'ld 33 laboratory room).
Six af
these buildin{;s with 34 clnssroons nrc also usetl for social

scioncos instruction.
/; total of 4f, Cl~_lssrooDs arc contain(Jd in thu 13
buildin0 s that nre used solely for social sciences ins truc-
I,
tion.
Thoro nrc 31 other school buildings, of which 28 arc
cott a(ses for ro sic'ontiQ.l purposes, onEl C1) girls ' uorr.li torY,
one (1) infirj,lary, am1 on0 (1), [dninistration buildinG.
3 • ll.c1.u;i'pp.a.n.t .
Tho equipment are, classified as (a) offica, (b)
classrooD, (0) home eoonowics, Cd) nedical-dontal, (c) shop,
(f) heavy oquipncnt 3l'ld motor vehicles, (g) athletics, and
(11) books ..
E. AO.a.:.d. .r~c.s..o.l..~~.i.oAs..irJ'p.r.oy.op.
The Board of Trustees passed and approved 77 reso­
lutions in seven Dcoti~s held ,ntJrin tho period Juno, 1976
to may, 1977.
AnoU(>; tho I;lOSt ir1]Jortcmt rosollltions passed md
approved were the following:

-
52 ­
\\
!t_o.s.•. ,N,o.
.S, ,Ll, ,bj 0,0 ,t,
28
ApprovinG in principle the llgrc<JLlent botweon MSAC
ond tho Provinoe of Den,-;uet whereby Denr:;l.wt Pro­
vince would tu.rn over SOLlO 46.4494 heotoros of
school sitos that are in its n~~e to MSnC, and
wSAC would rolcQso SOLle 50 heotares of its resor­
vC\\tion at the stookfClI'r.J to the Provinoo.
29
ApprovinG tho inteGration of tho Ilcmg EioDEmtary
Sohool and the Donc;uct Provinoial HiGh School to
MS~C as laboratory sohools of sJid ColloGo.
30
ilpprovinS the 1~<JnorcmdLlLl of ,,(;reemont botwoon
MSAC and tho FlunioipGl Govornuont of La Trinidad
whoreby tho latter was allowod to lot its wator­
works pipos pass throl.Lsh tho Collugo OOdpl.LS =10.1'
oortain torms and oonditions.
31
Approving tho Grant of P300.00 r.1Onthly stiped to
four (4) soholars of tho Collogo for lIS and Mil
at tho UPL13 and ill' DilirclOn.
38
l\\pprovin:; tho 'trip of tho Collo(iO Prosident to
Seoul, South Korea in oormootion 'Ni th tho 2nd
Biennial Conferenoo of tho Assooiation of Asian
Ac;riculturnl Collegos nnd Universities' (MlilCU) ,
hold in Suwon, Koroa, on October 11-16, 1976.
42
Grantin~ authority to the Collego President to
si!~n for and in bohalf of the Collo,;o r}ocu;;lents
relativo to tho oonveyance of portions of purcol'
1 of TCT No. 140 to the Bongl.let Goneral Hospi t o.l,
Municipal Govorlli~ent of La Trinidud, tho Boy and
Girl Scouts of the Philippines, nne, other r;ovcrn­
l:':lGnt agcnciGs.
46
hpprovinc tho position of the Bouro to sumJit a
list of nOLuneos to tho Prosident of tho Philip­
pines froD whioh tho Prosiclont Lmy appoint one
more r.Jeubcr of the Boan1 of Trustees of t'10
ColleGe purSUilllt to PD No. 982.

- 53
.S.o.rio.s..o.f. }-.9.7.f'.
!to s •. .N.o,.
,S.U.J3.J.B.C.T.
52
llpproving nnel subni ttini' four (4) nominu8s:
/;ttys.
G.p. Koith, D., Suanding, S. DnnGwa, nnd h. Cosalan
to tlw Presidont of tho Philippin8s fro~,l which the
Prusident Day 8ppoint one as ueubor of the Board of
Trustoes of the Coller;o pursunnt to I'D No. 982.
4
.!\\pprovinc; th0 fjr2l1ucction of 230 cMdid.nte frOla the
various curricular offerinGs of the ColleGe, school
'JTO ar 1976-1977.
11
Approving tho revised Organizational Structuro of
MSAC as an milendment to Ros. No. 49, s. 1971.
12
ApprovinG the 2ctu81 implementation of the integra­
tion of the llonC; Eleuontm'y School and the Benguet
Provinci"l High School to IdSi;C, and rocoLlr,lCnding
the issuance by tho Secretary, DEC of a pertinent
Office Qrrler to this effect.
13
Approving the chanGO in the position-desi[~ation
of all officials, teachers, nnu eDpleyeos of tho
Eland Elementary School and tho BonGuot Provincial
HiGh School as a result of the intcrrntion of the
two schools to U3iiC.
14 ' Approvine the croation of two vico~prCBident posi­
tiClns: . , VP';for Devclopuilnt 81'ld VI' for /loadeDic
l~fairs effective July 1, 1976 and January 1, 1977,
respectively.
15
Jipproving the (lesi{,nntion and appointnent of Dr.
Saturnino Ll. OCClDpO, Jr. as Vice-PrcsiG.emt for
Development effective July 1, 1977.
17
/lpprovinc; the Principll Spw:ial Buel,:;et of MS1.C for
calendar year' 1977, in the totcQ. amount of
P5,168,000.00, available for expenditures.
19
llpprovinc; the oponill{; of a new prograrJ lc3ding to
the) deGree of Bachelor vf Sci....nce in :,c;riculturaJ.
EnGineering, effective the first SOfilGster, SY 1976­
1977.

- 54
.S,e.r}-.8.s..0.f_}971
.s..u. ~o_ .;L.o••c_.t.
20
lJpproving the' suspension of the t'.:o-yo o.r Forost
Ranger Couroe, affactive the first seLlester, SY
1976-1977.
28
~uthorizinG the Collogo to conduct Saturday/even­
ing classes for Vlorlcinc people umi.er certm.n 13uide­
1inos pror,mlr;ated by the Co11e,:;8.
33
ConfirElinc; the proDotiona1 appointJ;1Gnt of 34 pro­
fessors/instructors, 10 new instructors,'and 13
substitute instructors, effective Jwao 1. 1977,
35
Approving the appropriation for and poyJlent df
P40,OOO.OO for the house of lilr. cmd rr.rs. Federico
E. Castro, as earlier decided cmd approve~ by tho
Board.
38
Approving the revision and/or shorteninc of all
degree proGrams of the Co11e(ie froLl five to four··
year ceurses only, except BS ~Cricu1turnl EnGineer­
ing VVllich ro"wins as a five-year ceurSG.
42-i, l\\pprovi!l(; tho Grmt of ,full (100%) soholarships
to the enrolees in the special agricultural science
sections or cl2SSCS in'the soeondary vocational
agriculture curricu1ill~, effective June, 1977.
,.
,
DurinG tho,period wader review, the composition of
".t.
the 1,IS1.0 Boarc9. ef Trustees vias bOcfed uP, wi th tho adclition
of ,the Executive Director ef riEDl., H8(;ion I as Ll0Llber pur­
suant to Presidential Docree No. 982, is'succl by the Presi­
dent of the Philippines on ~ucust 18, 1976.

- 55 ­
The nLJpOintl~lOnt of ono Elorc L1GLlbGr pLlrSu.,:mt to the
sar,18 decree ;;18y be fortheonine, with the SU.bLlission by the
Board of a list of four (t,) noninees froLl whieh the Presi­
dent of tl'lG PhilinJincs f,lny select ,~d appoint Qne •


CHAPTER
V
ST llTUS OF :B'IVE-YEflH DEV"LOl')IlENT PLiT!
/JID l'HOGIWH
A. .C.u.I!'.i_c.u.l.U!:~
1. AD:b.o.r.a.t2.rL_s~cIl0.o.l.~
With tho integr8tion of tho fonlor Ilan~ BloDontary
School ~1 tho former Denruot Provinciol High School, plans
are being unde to ro-orient theso two schools to serve as
laboratory of tho to rlcher ec~ucntion :Jro(,rUQs and other in­
nov&tivo educational ideas.
Work-orientuc1 oc1ucational curriculULl is being worked
out for trial in thesu laboratory sohools.
Tlw IJrODunt sGcon'}C'cr<J vocational cducation prograr:1s,
n81ae]y, vocGtional ogriculture and vocotion['l homor.1Dking,
in the othor 1131\\0 hir;h sohuol is also undergoing re-direo­
tion with the opening of tho scienoe clU'ricul2T progran.
This is in rosponse to tho c1eraand of tho tinos as soon in
govornment priority pro(;rar.1s anc} pro j oot s.
Reducin,c Length of DC,',;ru() Progror,lG
... ~ • •
• ,
• ..1, • • o.... J.. ~ ,. ,
, ,
,
. ". • • • -Co .. < •.~ •••• '
Tho Board of Trustees approved the 3hortening of
tho longth of the followi~; degreo proGr81~S from five to
- 56 ­

- 57 -
four yeurs, effective tho first senester of school your
1977-1970 :
a. Dacholer of Sciunce in :~"riculturc,l Ecluc::ltion;
b. Bacholor of Science in :lnimal Technology,
c. Bachelor of 0cicncG in HOLlo Technolor~y;
d. Dncholor of Science in Ac;ri culture i
I
o. Dachelor of ../'1~ri-busincss I!IQ.11.Qr;onent; and
I
f. Bachulor of Science In }'oresty.
iII
Bacholor of SciGnce in iJl2:riculturnl Jmf'ineuriY1"­
.~
, ~
.~)'
however, shall rOLlain a five-year course.
4.
Chanp,o of Course Nomenclature
_
_.~
.•_ ,
• •_ "'_.0-
•.~ _ _
~ .. "
~
"

~
• • _
J\\lso nlJproVec- by the Bourd of Trusteus is the
change in n[ij;le of the Fffi'Ll Liechanies course to N;ricultural
Mcchanics. Dcferrod for further study is the prop~sal to
chance the Home TechnolOGY course to HOD~ Econonics.
Thore is a felt need for thu oponin~ of additional
najor fiolds of study, QLlOn;~( which are plant patholoGY,
botany, entoLloloGY, and horticulturo.
The only constraints,
however, arc the inadequacy of qualified instructors and

professors and instructional facilities.

- 58 ­
Graduate P1'Or;r8J:1S
~
..
~ .. -- ........
.... -.

-'
---. ........-~
Tho present ~aduate prer;r2l-1S have: boon enriehod
wi th tho oponinc of Clccdi tion,11 najor fiolccs of stUdy,
n~~e1y, soils scicncc ~1cl QGricultural extension.
l'r;ronoElY was chan,:;oc1 to horticulturo to Ll2.;;O it
r~ore rolov~t to the prcos<;ucc of oxpurti::;o Mel tho actual
nature of thu pro,~rcn offoroc1 • •
L
Addi tional tonchinr; Md non-teachinc p8rsonnel
are nooded to nod the ,;rowinG popu.lQtion in all thG cur­
ricul~ lovols of instruction.
Needed
.-...
-
Teachin,O' l'osi tions
_
_
-.
~_
-
..
Four new instructor positions aro noeded in thc
eler,lCntary and hi,-:h school p1'o,';1'3[,18.
}<'or thu pro sont I
hewevGr, fQcul t;jr roquireLlonts will be L1Clint ednce1.
In tho collO(;i .:lte IcvaI, instructors are nooded
in the followinr; fio11s of specialization:
NUI,Jbor
.. .. . . ...
Plant P8tholo,-;y
2
Mi cro bi 0 10 {y
1
Anir.lal Scic;rlcO
2
Plant Science
1
"

- 59 ­
2
Nathul;1Qtics emu I'hysics
2
Veterinary Science
2
ll:;ricul turCll l,'nc;inuorine;
1
~hri-businoss nnu Econorucs
1
HOi,10 Technol o r:y
2
Bot:my
2
l~Gri c 111t LU' ,"11 Ch:...: j.~i s t ry
2
Forestry
Tot.::.l •••.
20
oo . . . . .
pursonnol:
Nur.1bc:r
position
-
-~
....- .....
~ . _ ~ . _ _

,
_ _ . . . 0 .
,
5
Securi ty Gw'rc'c
4
Clerk-Typist
1
Legal Officur
2
Socrutary
1
Exucutive llssistQnt
1
r.l2.rillr;ument Analyst
1
SociCll (Scientist) HGse,"xcher
3
JQni tor
Tot,'}l ......
TIT
II • • • • • •
==
l,s nlrendy stilted. in the Hi,,;hli(,ht8 of this =lUccl
....._'
.
rQport, two of s(;vcn bui ldinr;s slcctc;c'c for complution for
1975-1977 were finishoCl.
'rhe se ;lIU thu soils-ehet1i stry
buildinc Qncl the nr;ricll.ltur'l DuteorolG{:;y builc1in{c,.
" third eelific G, the Qc;ricll.l tur:ll enGineerin[~

co - 60 ­
~,
building, is 75 per cent complcted.
It is expected to bo
finished by tho Lliddle of school yeQI' 1977-19713.
Below nre tho four relilQining builL:.incs that were
not constructed within the target dQtes for 1976-1977:
!-Jg:l,..e_c_~fd D~.
•C.o1.~J:e)J..oB
1976-1977
Gyr,rnQsium-Auditorium,
4,200
refinforced ooncrete­
steel with covered
walk
1976-1977
Biologicnl Science
1,000
900 ,000.
Building, reinforced
concrete
1977
Institute of P1Qnt
BreedinG
1,200
1,000,000.
i
I
1977
~ooen's Residence Hall,
I
.. 9 600
_~.-
...:2.t.62_0.J.Q.Q2..
i.·
reinforced concrete
I
Totnls •• l:gLQ~,g
~. II
ThOBe buildings and oth~rs in the five-yenr deve­
I
I
lopment plQn will be funded through Qn increase of tho
national allotr.lent, nllocations from the Public Works funds,
and loans.
Under consicleration is the possibility of obtaining
loans from tho ~orld Bank through the Educational Develop­
ment Projects Ioplooenting Task Force (EDPITAF).

- 61 ­
D. E.~}YI p.f, p'a.v.o.l_'2l?E0P..t].l_~s,_.ap9..I:r,o.. ~r.~~
1 • .C..5P.tt.q1, PU;t,l,"1Y.i'!,
Fundi!l{, will C01;10 f.lOstly frO!,1 tha national covorn-
Dent and reseGrch orgGnizations.
The UPLB Instituto of Plant BreadinG is underwriting
the bulk of tha expenditures for the MSAC-UPLB-IPB project,
situated at the Swru~p, Poblacion.
The Philippine Traininc Cunters for Rural Develop­
l;
ment (PTC-RD), cranted under Prasidential Dccree No. 1145,
I
!
will be fundcd thrOUGh the 4th Vlorld B.mk Loan.
I'IISilC is
i
one of the five training centars.
Prosidential Decree Xo. 1107 also' established the
Northern Philippine Root Crops Research and Training Center
(NPRRTC). situnted at MSAC, with an ini tict1 funding of six
million pesos.
..
During the pori ods under reviow, tho college spent
P140,OOO.OO for tho salarius, stipends, books, ~1 cloth­
ing allowance of faculty l~ember& on scholarships or train­
ing grants hero and abroad.

-
G2­
The followinr; reeor:llilondntions nro D::ldo in connoction
with ~hv probleDs thoy are associated with:
i
I '
1. TIoro funds to construct ac1di tional classrooms
~ .
,~d lnbor~tory buildinGs;
i
2. Construetien of Llulti-storey r0sidonco halla
for studonts;
3. n~tter salarics for faculty and staff to
ir.::prove the attraction and retention power
of' th0 college to qualified personnel;
4. N01~c1 to chanr;o the r:iSAC charter, so that r.lOre
c1,-, v..:10FJent proGrams 8!lcl pro ;locts other than
agriculture rolatuc1 nroas J:Jay also bc served.
,
I


APPENDIX A
============
llES~ lJllGH JillSTRACTS
JULY 1976 -
JIDjE 1977
ALAY_AY, GODFHEY.
1977.
Tho offccts of difforont lcJve1s
of L101nssos on broiler production undur 1'1SAC condi­
tion.
Ulll:'crgrnc'.unte thusis.
Thu hi{';hcJst ,;:1in in wair;ht and the Dost efficient
birds in the conversion ef feec1s were those fuel v;ith
broi1ur c~sh Luxod with 3 pOl' cont molasses.
Birds
C;i ven I"li th broilcr r;1C!sh without Ho1r,sses ha.c1 tho
hi{;host t'.verr:,";o food consumption.
ARCELL lIN A, S Lf:l\\J.2L s.
1977.
The effuct of different kinds
of onti biotics on tho growth of r;rowinp; and fattoDoo
in~ piGs under !d3ilC ccndi tion.
Unc1erfirctdunte thesis.
It W'lS found thnt "here; was no si:;nificant difforence
in the tot"l fcod consumption, Gelin in wei@1t, foed
ufficiency, finn1 wui,~ht ,md cost of producin,; [:
ki10grClr.1 Gain in weiGht of tho pi"s ns ::lffoctcd by
the r;uxturG of o.fsillin, Dayo-N-ox and Ful'a.-vim
Llixed wi th :;rowinr( and fnttening unsh.
It vms
noted ful'thur th .:t thuro WIlS no c,iff\\Jrence botwoen
tho uso of plain Growinr; and fatteninr: mnsh.
BilLAGTliS, IillRI1",I/DO N.
1977.
The couparati"G cffects of
five Qiffercnt insecticides on corn G8rWOrffi.
UnQcr­
{~r8dunto th0Sis.
In terns of 1C1rv81 populntien count and l:wrkctQb10
yield Thio(:,~n ,me. FoUdol m-45 ware hir;hly sir;ni­
ficont over the othol' troCltncmts, l'USIlGctive1y.
Fo1ic:01 N-'~5 Vias 111so found si,o;nifie,:mt in tCt'E1S
of !JrJ.rl-ectflblc oars.
Ci,BRAL, GR£GOl:IO P.
1976.
The fnruinC; pro'cror.l of voea­
tiuna1 a~rieu1turu stuLents in 110eos Norte, 1975­
1976.
JC:lster thesis.
Th0 findin{, inelurlcd the fo'llovling:
L1Cljori ty of
the SLlporvisud. laming· :flrogrEO students· conducted
- 63 =
- - _ . -
­

64
their projuets inside the sehool er:rpus and lessGs
nW:lber of off-eQnpus located 2t on aVOl.a[;e distance
of 1.5 krJs. a\\VClY frou tho school.
All the student
respondonts consulted thGir voc,.;tionol £1t,riculture
teachcr in pl=ing their projoctli3.
Nost of the
projocts wore visited everyday.
h gruQtur nWJber
of supervised fnrnillG prograr.l students wore in
groups.
The prevailinc; nW.Jbi-,r in each group was
four, 21thOUGh, DOSt of thCl:l chose to be alone
when givon thcJ opportunity.
:Crojuct records \\iere
kept by abJost all of the students concerned.
A
nW"lbar of students. above first ye ~;r wen:- ·£1ssi[;nod
I
,
to directed projects.
,
There Viero varied crop enterprisas the supar­
i
vised farLUni; pro,;rDD students were enCoged in,
i
although j:lOSt of the areus us ad did not come up
to the recor.lDended standard.
Thero WGre sevaral
aninal enterprises n:mar(ad by the students, but
r
i
thu scope did. not neat the j:UniDUTJ requireJ:]cmt.
However, the supervisee\\, f:JrrJin!; pror;rarJ students
were willin{~ to incre ase the SCOpG of their
projoets if there is 8 possibility.
The SOLlrees of capi t:ll eODe nostly fron
parents, while tho rest OCUJe froLl banks, other
persons, the sehool concerned, and tho student
theDselves.
Gonerally, supervised farr.ung prograJ
students do not pay rent on lond use in the super­
vised fnruin,; pro(,;rou.
Only n few fron llocos
Norta k(ricultLlrcll Colle(;e, were on rc J.t::l1 bnsis.
A Dajority divided their incono nt a sharing
rote of 30-70, tha student getting bii';Ger percent­
age.
The anount of invostr.lents, Gross income end
net incone were vrithin the r2ll~c of PI to P500.00.
The tl~eo ngriculturalsch001s appoar to have
probloE1S in counon, although, thu intansi ty onc1
uagnitude of such problous in oaeh school differed
nuch.
Tho linuted aroa, inadequata water supply,
tiCht fin::mcial rasoLlrcQs, ane. l·'"lek of ir,lplcmen1:s
and work aninal were tha nost serious problaus
encountaI'odby the suporvisad far~lin{; progrElr.l stu··
dent.
Ncvartheless, tha studonts-raspondents.
tried thuir bLst to abato the; probloDs by uuployinC
various solutions within thGir DUonS.

65 ­
CARANTES, JAI1ffi C.
1977. Effoct of tho uurrtion of woed
cOrJpotition on the growth and yiold of ohineso
cabbago.
UnclorgrnduClto thosis.
Plants noocl.:;d fronplantinc' to hcu'vostin,g hnd tho
highost yielu por unit CLrO a,
lCLr,;ost <linmoter Of
honds, tho widost loaf orOel and the heaviest woic;ht
of tot2l vec;et Clti 'Ie pCLrts •
However, IJlcmt weedad
froD plantin{; to harvesting, pl<:mts' weodod after 20
doys Dnd plcnts weoded 30 days attar pl=1;incf, to
harvestinG die not Nako any significant differunoe
in the Growth and yiold,
Tho wuod spacios, cmtsed
55.2 per cunt to 70.5 per cunt yield roduction.
Galinso{;a plaviflora was very i:'bunc1c:nt followed by
!1euaino indi'c"a-- -.~,
.
-~
..-"'-

."
... ,-~-
Sinco tho nost critical period of cOE1peti tion
is froD 20 to 30 days aftor plLmtinG, control l:lea­
suros shuuld bo applied wi thin this stac;e of crowth.
DATUD, FELIX S. 1977.
,; conparntive study of six diffor­
ent insocticides cl,;m.nst loaf minor of sweot pea.
Unrler"rnduate thesis.
Rosults ruv8aled th~,:t Hostathion was found to be. the
most effective as eonpnrod to tho other test cheni­

cals in tUTL1S of rate of r;rowth,' yiold and lo.rval
population count was significant. However, its
effect on the lnrval population count was not signi­
ficru~t.
Other insocticides thnt c~1ibitod sicnifi­
cant differeneos as conparccl with tho control in
rate of ,:;rowth were Azoc1rin 163, Thiodan, Furaclan
and r.letasystox.
futhou{;hno sicnificant differences
were notud iroQ the different traatoents in ton~s
of larvnl population count, Hostnthion liad the
lowe,st nann which showed t11c1t it t:ave Cl better
control th2n tho other insecticides.
JIMES, JUAN J. 1977.
A cooparative study of five diffo~
ont insocticiues on tOl.lCltO frui twortJ.~
UndergrruJ. unto
thesis.
1lll the insucticidos used nonoly:
Host athi on, T81:Ja­
ron, Phsdrin, Dipel and vOi;e tox Vloro eff "cti'10 in
controllinc the fruitworrJ.
The protection of thoso
chODicals ~owovor, varried. Hostathion and Tnwaron
wera ouch effectivo a"ainst fruitwon~ than the rest

- 66
of the chemicals in terms of larval co'mt, number
of fruits damaged and the weiisht of hon-marketable
yield.
Both, however, did not produce significant
result oven' the ref;t of the treatments'based on
marketable yield. The treated plants were found
not to differ significantly with the untreated
plants in terms of marketable fruits.
KHUI:iCHOO, SILAPACHAI.
1977.
A comparative study on the
use of pellet and r,lash feed with some green feeds
for rabbits.
Undergraduate thesis.
The rabbi ts fed ,'Ii th mash feeds had slightly higher
feed conswnption, final body wei,ght, and gain in
l
weight than those Riven pellets.
On the other hand,
feed conversion efficiency was slightly lower among
rabbi t.s feel with mash feeds.
The use' of mash feeds
to produce a kilogram gain showed significantly
lower cost than the use of pellets.
Foed supplements -
oamote with kikuyo, and
camote wi tll Aijeratum -
had similar effects on the
feed consw1ption, final body weight, final, gain in
weight and feed conversion efficiency rf rabbits.
For better profit, however, rabbit raisers should

use mash feeds if the price of I,rash feeds is ex­
pensive.
LEUNG, ALB~RT B.
1976.
A comparative study of the feeel-­
ing values of ground eamote, ground corn, and dried
mungo pulp as feed supplements for brJilers.
Under­
graduate thesis.
Ground corn, ground camote, and dried mungo pulp can
be used as feed supplements.
The results also
shovved that ground corn, and dried mungo pulp can
be profitably used as feed supplemmts.
Birds given
ground corn and dried uungo pulp exhi bi ted lower
cost per kilogram gain in weight.
The different treatments showed significant
effect on thc feed conswuption.
However, no sig­
nificant differences were observed in the final
weight, gain in weight, feed conversion efficiency,
and percentage mortality.

,
)
67
LICDAN, JOSEPH B.
1976.
The effects of the size of Irish
potato seedpieces on the yield.
Undergraduate
\\
th .
'
t - '
esJ.s.
There were significant differences in the height
of the plants, in the total nwnber of tubers, and
in the weight of non-marketable tubers as affected
by the different sizes of potato seedpieces.
The
big-sized seedpieces (equal to or greater than 100
9rmils) produced the tallest plants, the greater
number of tubers, and the greatest weight of non­
"
mar~etable tubers.
Likewise, the marble-sized
seedpieees (loss than 50 grans) gave rise to the
shortest and most of the non-marketatable tllbers.
The mediwTI-sized seedpieces (75 to 99 ~rams)
ranked second to big-sized seedpieces ~50 to 74
grams).
The effect of the different sizes of potato
seedpiec()s on the weight of marketable tubers did
not differ.
MACASIEB, LGURDES Vi.
1977.
Stlldy on self and cross
incompatabili ty and blooming habit of some varie­
ties of the species oleracea and pekincnsis.
Undergraduate thesis.
The varieties and species used were Yoshin Sllmmer
and F, K-K for oleracea and Black Behi and Pak-hoi
for pl!kinensis.
.
It was.folllld that the pereentage 'of self-incompati­
bil~ty of species oleracea and pekinensis were 87~
and 62.4% respuctively.
Likewise, oleracea showed
higher percentage of cross-incompatibility'having
54.05% wlllle pekinensis had only 24.1~%. There
were no significant differences m~ong the varieties
of the two species of both the self and cross in­
compatibili ty.
The nw"ber of seed per pod developed was
directly proportional followeQ with the percentage
of incompatibility.
The higher the percentage of
both self and cross incompatibility, the lower the
nu~mb8r of seeds formed per seed pod developed.
On
the other,hand, the lower the percentage of self
and cross incolilpatibility, the hi~h(Jr the nW21ber
0f seeds forwed per pod.

- 68 ­
The mean number of days froJ,1 planting to the
first flower opening did not differ among varieties
but not betwGen tlw species.· It took 240,12 days
for oleracea to flower from planting and 39.50 days
for pekinensis.
Sinrilarly, oleraeea had more d~s
fror.1 flower opening to seed setting. Oleraeea took
4.33 days to flower while pekinensis took 2.88 days.
There were more flowers that opened per day
in pekinensis that that of 01er2ceoa.
An average
,
of 3.75 opened flolVGrs per day in pekinensis while
an average of 2.5 flowers openod per day in olera­
eea.
The diffGreneGs ~llong
..
the trG3tment combina­
tions wets slight and it was insignific ant among
;the varieties.
At GO to 73.5 F, olGracGa flowGrs opened at
8 to 10 :00 a.m. whilGpekinGnsis flowers opened at
6:30 to 10:30 in thG morning.
ThG pollGn of olGracea flowGrs was viable
frO};1 thG time of dGhiscGnce which occured 30 minutes
to 2 hours fr01a thG tirae of opening and r:emained
viable until 20 to 24 hours after dehiscGnce frora
9:00 a.u. to 5 :00 p.n. during the day.
Pekinensis
showed longer pollen viability than oleracea.
The
tirae of pollGn vi abili ty of pekinensis was from
6 :00 a.l!l. to 5 :00 p .ra. and the pollen viability
was from the time of dehiscence up to 48 to 53
hours after.
The stigmatic receptivity of oleracea was
24 hours or less before flower opening and remained
receptive in 24 hours after opening.
The time of
receptivity was anytirae frOTIl 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.i;].
on the other hand, pekinensis showed stigmatic re­
ceptivity earlier, about 48 hours before the flower
opened which lasted up to 72 hom's after the flowGr
opening.
Receptivity in pekinensis was from 6:00
a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
MEJIA, ALFREDO M.
1976.
The effocts of organic and
inorganic fertilizers on the growth and yield of
weet pepper.
Undergraduate 'thesis.
There Wd~ significant differences m~ong the differ­
ent trOettLlents as regards the nur.1ber of flowers

-
69 ­
formed, nWl1ber of frlli ts devclopod c:cnd the si ?,e of
the frllits uS inflllcnced by the differlnt rates of
organic and inOTf~:J:t:ic fertilizers.
Tho plants
applied with 240-2.,0-40 kilograms of NPK per heeturo
registered the tallest Growth.
They were noro vi­
gorolls and sicnificantly greener as ovidenced by
their appe aranCG,
Howevor. plant applied with
fo= tons ol org!Ulic fertilizers prodlleed the r,lOst
frlJ.i ts in ~,orus of ,'!G ight.
An' incru aS0d in the
amOlJ.nt of ori~anjc fertili zcJr fron two to four tons
per hectare incruased the yield and size of the
fruits of plants.
On th0 othur hand, an increased
in the ratc of organi,c fertili z,or incrGClsod the
growth fror,1 00-30-80 to 240-2LfO-2~TO kilograms NPK'
per hectare.
N AKV ANICH, PAITOON.
1976.
Effect of different spaeing
and rate of fert~lizer application on the e;rowth
and Yield of earrot.
Master thesis.
Of the four distances of planting, the plants with
inteTi;1cdia'l;e spaeine;s of 20 x 9 ems and 15 x 12 ems
grew taller than those plants which were either
widely spaeed (20.x 12 er,1s) or elosoly spaced. (15
.x 9 ems).
They also Grew fastor in terms of root
size based on weii,ht.
Anong the three different rates of fertilizer
applie:,:ti'on, however, theru waG no significant
difference.
Dl<t the 90-90-90 k/SDS of NPK per
heetare rat2 provod to be optir~1un for carrot under
MSAC conch tion over the other two rates of 135-135-­
135 and 100-180-180 kgms of NPK pOl' huctare o
Like­
wise, there was no signifieant cff0et of the intcr­
action 2.1:1011.'; ";he distancos of planting and rates of
fertilizer 2pplication.
OPSNA, 30NIFACIO L.
1977.
A eomparative stlJ.dy of the
differont insGcticides in tho control of snolJ.t
bOetle: in straWberry,
UndergradlJ.ato thcsiG •
. It was notud that the: mest off,,;ctive chei;ucal
in eontrollinr; thu c:dlll t bustle was shell Azodrin
202.
The Bost effective ehemieals ~aong the in­
secticides usod in controllinG th~ grubs (larvae)
wore Temik lOG.
FlJ.rsdan 3G and Cytrol~~e 3G.
, '
.'
- .

-. 70
PALANGDAN, NESTOH T.
1977. PoplllQtion dG;nsity and weed
control stlldy on chinese cabbage.
Undorgradllate
thesis.
The plots plantod with fifteon seedlings spaced at
45 x 60 cms per throe sqllarG J.1eters prodllced thG
hiGhest crovm hei"ht, hQd th" se:cond hir,heet weight
of marketable yield bllt IFld a 18sser cost of weoding
and weGd popillation.
Thoso wi tll twonty sOGdlings
spQced at 30 x 45 cus per threu sqllare meters hoo.
slightly lower huight th~ those with fifteen and
ten seedlings spaced at 60 x 75 CDS per threo
sqllare motors which prodllced the highest weight
of marketable yield, had tho socond tallest crown
heightj bllt had the lGast cost of woeding.
The
interaction betwoen the methods of weed control

on the: popll.lation donsi ty is hi(;hly significant
only on tho woight of markot able yield and cost
of wooding.
P~uAQUED, AGUSTIN O.
1976.
~egre:e of prunning and rate
of fortilizor application on tho growth and yield
of tom"to.
Undergradllate thesis.
Neither prwu,ing nor fertilizer rate significantly
affected tho height althollgh thG furtilizer rate of
150-300-150 kilogr~]s pur hectare of NPK eallsed the
plants to live 10nGor the:reby making possible more
nWJber or pickings.
Plants with a single branch proQllced more
frllits than those with throe branches and the con­
trol. Likewise, fertilized plants _prodllced more
frllits than tho u.ntreated ones.
Plants with a
3in(';le brlC1.rlCh applied with 150-300-150 kgms of
NPK per hectare si;;;nif'icorltly prodllced more yieJd
than any of tho other treatment combinations.
Pru.nning did not prodllce variation in frllit
size.
PASALO, ALEJANDRO fl.
1977.
Effects of boron and calcillli1
on the growth and yield of Irish potato.
Under­
gradllate thesis.

-71­
Plants tro~lted with 14 kilogr8.l'lS of borax per hee­
t are in cor,lbination with 1,5000 kgr.IS of CaGO
out­
yielded th8' rest of the plants thCJ,t received 3 diffeI'­
ent 8.lnO~lts.
Boron and calciw,l gr~3tly ineroased
the nuuhcr of tubers forr.lOd but lessor effect on the
growth of tho plants was observed.
Borax applied at
a rnte of 12 kgms. per he ct are Gave the lowe st nW:lber
of cracked tubers.
Thi s i s in co,clbinntion with 1,000
kgss of CnC0
and without caC0 •
3
3
Liming at a rate of 1,500 k~~s of CaCO
per
hectare increased the soil pH frOLl '~.4 to 6. 3 It is
also incre; u,sed the calci un content of thQ soil froLI
7.25 to 20.25 m.c. per 100tgils of seil but the cal­
cimil content of tho differont plant parts was not
affected.
SRITHONGCHIJl.1, SomNUK•• 1976.
The offocts of differcmt
methods and rates of fertilizer application on tho
growth and yield of two v3rieties of ,garden pea.
I
Mnster thosis.
I
Th" cO';lbin2tio11 01' fertillization through soil and
feliar fertili~atioll wi th a complete fertilizer
producod better yiold in terms of weight of young
pods for vegetable used.
'Jhen fertilizQr was
applied through soil, the; bust l"ate of fGrtilizor
application per hectare was found to be 80-80-00,
100-100-100 if applied through soil and leaf is
best reco~~ended.
VI HMONGPROliI, A':IAT.
1916.
'2he ef::':cots of differont
rates of f~rtilizor Gnd population density on the
growth and yiold of head lecttuco.
Uaster's
thosis.
The two strains, Great Lakes 54 and Groat Lakes
'366, did not di-ffor in all tho chc:racters Observed,
nar..loly~
leaf 8.rGa~ nunbar of lCQvcs
nW~lbor
t
of
both Wr2lJpOrand non-wrappor leavos, core length,
leaf dry v!C,ight, head solidity, and yield.
Plants spnc,:d at 60 x 20 cn yielded I,lore per unit
aroa than plants spaced at either 60 x 30 or 60 x
40 cwo
Tho ~rowth, yield, and solidity of head
incre aSGd. wi th the incre Elsini~ rate of fertilizer

... 72 ­
application frow 0-0-0 to 300-300-300 kg of }wE!ha.
However, it was found th:ct 100-100-100 and 200-200­
200 kg of NPI<lh~ =e Gcononicilll.y the optiLlur.1 rate
for head lettuce in teros of yield and solidity
of hand, respuctively.
liie8JlWhilo, tho nw,lber of
wrappor leaves was possitively correlatud with the
weight and solidity of head.
ALIPIT, P.L::RCIV JlL D.
1976.
Planting density and organic
fertilizer study o~ the growth and yield of potato.
Graduate thesis.
Highest tot21 yield of tubcers wns attained at the
30,000 density of planting; but notable yield of
rnarketablc tubGrs was obtained I"i th 60,000 density
while lowest yield was attainud at th8 40,000 den­
sity of planting. -Groutest quality of tubers was
obtained at the 60,000 planting density.
At the
80, 000 rlansi ty of planting, dcevulopLKmt of sW:lller
tubars W1S cm1l,arntivoly hiC;h.
The applicQtion of [\\ nixturo of 4 and 2 euoic
r.lGters of chicken nanuru 8Jld {,rolSS ash, respceti vc­
ly, per !lact2ro had conparable effoct with higher
treatments of organic fortilizur on both net and
gross Yiolds of potato.
Hauln Growth, le af aro a and nunbor of main steLls
were posi ti vely corralo.ted with tUbCJr dovolopJ:1ent.