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Silliman Hall (Anthropology museum) is considered the oldest wooden structure of Eastern Stick Style of American architecture in the Philippines. The ground floor, popularly known as the Assembly Hall, has cast iron columns and ornate metal pan ceiling salvaged from the debris of a theater in New York. was built in the early 1900’s. It used to be an assembly hall before it was converted to a museum in 1970. It is located in Dumaguete Negros Oriental Philippines.

History
The Silliman Hall, where the anthropology museum is located, was built in the early 1900’s in the American Eastern Stick Style. Parts of the structure, like its metal pan ceiling and cast iron columns, are reclaimed from a New York theater. And was founded by a Christian Philanthropist, Horace B. Silliman, of Cohoes, New York. It is used to be an assembly hall before it was converted to a museum in 1970 by Dr. Hubert I. Reynolds, an American Presbyterian missionary and former faculty member of the Sociology-Anthropology Department of Silliman University to house the collection of the Cultural Research Center that started in 1964.

Exhibits
The collections are divided into two categories and seven galleries. It includes artifacts from the indigenous Negritos and the Islamic period. Which date back as early as 200 BC.

History
The museum is the ancestral house of Raymundo Dizon and Hermelinda Ramos built sometime in 1950’s. In 2007, the house of Ramos and Dizon was converted into a museum, thus the name Dizon-Ramos Museum, a year after Hermelinda meet her creator. The museum was blessed and inaugurated on August 15, 2007.

Exhibits
The first floor of the museum comprises of the Main Exhibit Hall which boasts a collection of a hundred pictorial reproductions which tried to captivate the rich history of Bacolod City and the prominent family, the Dizon-Ramos and collections of naff ceramics, glassware, and religious knick-knacks.

The second floor reflects the family’s way of living. The bedrooms, study room, living area and dining area reflect how the family actually lived. The furniture are mostly twentieth century with a few antique pieces. The collections of crystals, porcelain paintings and jewelry came mostly from the extensive travels of the family, especially Roly, the son, whose work as a prominent national educator brought him to a lot of conferences abroad.

History
It was in 1997 that the museum was officially named Museo Negrense de La Salle. The Administration decided to fuse the University Research Institute with the repository and the addition of artifacts and relics donated by the Vega Family under the care of Cecile Nava, PhD. Through the former University President, Br. Gus Boquer, FSC, offered to be a repository of the diocesan ecclesiastical objects of the Sacred Heart Seminary. The collection of the University Research Institute was then fused with it, and then came the religious antique collection donated by the Vega Family. It was in 1997 that this repository was officially named Museo Negrense de La Salle.

The museum grew with the generous donations from patrons and donors who are mostly Negrense (i.e. from the Island of Negros, where Bacolod City lies) and whose families had been in one way or another, connected with the University of St. La Salle.

In 2011, University President and Chancellor, Br. Raymundo Suplido, FSC, led the inauguration of the Jose Garcia Montelibano Textile Arts Center, the biggest international folk textile collection in the Philippines. Named after the father of the donor, Miss Mara Montelibano has painstakingly collected the artifacts from the sources themselves. This collection includes over 1000 handmade textiles and other articles from 54 countries.

Collections

 * The Ledesma Collection, illustrating Visayan piety and devotion to the Child Jesus, with images of the Sto. Nino enshrined in “urnas” or traditional mini-altars from the island of Bohol, among others.


 * The Vega Collection, which highlights periods of history focused on Negros and Western Visayas, including the porcelain from Chinese traders, images of saints made by Filipino, books in Spanish and Latin, etc.


 * The Esteban Collection, which includes antique and contemporary religious art, including ivory and wooden pieces from different periods.


 * The Velayo-Javelosa Collection, including Lladro pieces, and artworks depicting the styles of the Orthodox Church with items from Eastern Europe and Turkey.


 * The Puentevella Collection, which depicts part of the interior of a house from the Golden Age of Negros, with strong emphasis on the private family altar, a common setting found in most houses during that period.

History
Hacienda Rosalia is a ancestral home of Jose Gaston, one of the sons of Yves Leopold Germain Gaston a sugar barons of Negros and he is credited as the first to commercially produce cane sugar, the primary product of the province and his wife Consuelo Ascona, was built in the 1930s. They had 8 children. It is set in lush, verdant and gorgeous garden of flowers, shrubs, trees, potted palms and herbs. Within the grounds are a now-disused swimming pool (used as hiding place during World War II), a Victorian fountain, a pond and a time-worn shoe house (which was used before as a playground).

Media
Hacienda Rosalia is also been used as a setting and location shoot for films most notable of which is the 1981 epic Oro, Plata, Mata.

House of Gaston
The house of Gaston's eldest son is now has a museum open to the public and is fondly called the Balay Negrense (Hiligaynon, "The Negrense House"). and was originally the ancestral house of Victor F. Gaston.

Win-Loss-Draw (NC) Title Fights Name (Division Champion) (World Titles):

 * 22-4-2 Manny Pacquiao (8-Division Champion) (13 World Titles)
 * 17-1-2 Donnie Nietes (4-Division Champion) (5 World Titles)
 * 17-5-0 Nonito Donaire (4-Division Champion) (10 World Titles)
 * 11-4-0 Flash Elorde (1-Division Champion) (3 World Titles)
 * 11-3-0 Luisito Espinosa (2-Division Champion) (2 World Titles)
 * 9-2-1 Jerwin Ancajas (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 8-6-0 (1) Brian Viloria (2-Division Champion) (4 World Titles)
 * 8-2-0 Johnriel Casimero (3-Division Champion) (3 World Titles)
 * 5-2-3 Ben Villaflor (1-Division Champion) (3 World Titles)
 * 5-6-1 Gerry Peñalosa (2-Division Champion) (2 World Titles)
 * 5-3-0 Dodie Boy Peñalosa (2-Division Champion) (2 World Titles)
 * 4-2-1 Erbito Salavarria (1-Division Champion) (3 World Titles)
 * 4-0-0 Francisco Guilledo (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 3-3-0 Vic Saludar (1-Division Champion) (2 World Titles)
 * 2-1-0 Marvin Sonsona (2-Division Champion) (3 World Titles)
 * 2-0-0 Rene Mark Cuarto (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 2-4-0 Milan Melindo (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 2-2-0 Rolando Navarrete (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 2-2-0 Rolando Bohol (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 2-2-0 Dado Marino (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 2-1-0 Small Montana/Benjamin Gan (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-5-2 Rodel Mayol (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-2-2 Pedro Taduran (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-2-1 Malcolm Tuñacao (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-2-1 René Barrientos (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-1-1 Merlito Sabillo (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-6-0 Joma Gamboa(1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-5-0 Jesus Salud (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-3-0 Sonny Boy Jaro (1-Division Champion) (2 World Titles)
 * 1-3-0 Ceferino Garcia (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-3-0 Eric Jamili (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-3-0 Eric Chavez (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-3-0 Manny Melchor (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-3-0 Rolando Pascua (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-3-0 Tacy Macalos (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-3-0 Bobby Berna (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-2-0	Frank Cedeno (1-Division Champion) (2 World Titles)
 * 1-2-0	Bernabe Villacampo (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-1-0	Morris East (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-1-0	Pedro Adigue (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-1-0	Roberto Cruz (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-1-0 Florante Condes (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-0-0 Marlon Tapales (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-0-0 Little Dado (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-1-0 Mark Masayo (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)
 * 1-0-0 Melvin jerusalem (1-Division Champion) (1 World Titles)

The Ruins is a ancestral home mansion of Don Mariano Ledesma Lacson and Maria Braga Lacson family.It is situated in Talisay City, Negros Occidental Philippines. The mansion was built in early 1900s.

History
The mansion was built in the early 1900’s by the sugar baron, Don Mariano Ledesma Lacson (1865-1948) and was home to his unmarried children with his first wife, Maria Braga Lacson (+1911), a Portuguese from Macau. The mansion was the largest residential structure ever built at that time and had in it one of the finest furniture, chinaware, and decorative items, as the father of Maria Braga was a captain of a ship that sailed across Europe and Asia and would cart with him these items. One of their daughters maintained a beautiful garden of lilies in and around the 4-tiered fountain fronting the mansion, all brought in from abroad. The Ruins is of Italianate architecture with neo-Romanesque twin columns. The couple’s initials M and M are molded onto the mansion’s posts.

The mansion met its sad fate in the early part of World War II when the USAFFE (United States Armed Forces in the Far East), then guerilla fighters in the Philippines, burnt the mansion to prevent the Japanese forces from utilizing it as their headquarters. It took days of inferno to bring down the roof and the two-inch wooden floors. But the foundations remained standing, thanks to its oversized steelbars and the meticulous way of pouring the A-grade mixture of concrete.

Simborio
Outside the mansion is the ‘Simborio,’ the chimney for the muscovado sugar mill of the family’s sugar farm. It is in the mill where the juice of the sugarcane is extracted before transferring them in large vats where juice is heated and then cooled to produce the sugar crystals.

Biography
Honorio was born in Benguet on September 9, 1989. Honorio Banario is a member of Team Lakay MMA in Baguio City which is also home to URCC pinweight champion Rey Docyogen, URCC flyweight champion Kevin Belingon and One Lightweight champion Eduard Folayang.

URCC
On February 19, 2010, Banario made his professional debut in the Universal Reality Combat Championship (URCC), the biggest mixed martial arts promotion in the Philippines. He fought undefeated Rommel Del-Is and defeated him by Submission (Kimura) in round 1.

On April 2,2011, Banario defeated Angelito "The Saint" Manguray in the second round via submission (Rear-Naked Choke) and claim the Universal Reality Combat Championship (URCC) Lightweight Champion.

ONE Championship
After 5 wins, Banario suffered his first defeat at the hands of South Koreans Bae Yong Kwon via submission in first round on February 11, 2012. This was his first bout in the promotion ONE CHampionship.

On August 31, 2012, Banario defeated Andrew Benibe via TKO (Kicks to the Body and Punches) in third round of the fight.

On February 2, 2013, Banario faced fellow filipino fighter Eric Kelly for the One Championship Featherweight Championship on Singapore and the fight was stop via TKO(Eye Injury) for Eric Kelly and Banario claim the One Championship Featherweight Champion title.

In his next fight, Banario faced Japanese Koji Oishi on May 31, 2013 at ONE FC 9: Rise to Power. He lost the title by knockout (Punches) in second round.

On December 6, 2013, Banario and Koji Oishi rematch on Mall of Asia Arena Philippines for the title, but Banario lost via KO (Punches) on third round of the fight.