A friend who is into public relations recently asked me for a list of Batangas papers. She was exploring the possibility of promoting her client’s product in Batangas publications.
Sure, I said. Armed with a list of Batangas papers that I culled from the Web, I go to the nearest newsstand in the neighboring barangay and find out that they do not carry Batangas papers. Nor do four newspaper vendors at the public market in the city proper. One newspaper vendor on the same road as the weekly “Sun.Star People’s Courier” tells me they ran out of stock. “They don’t print a lot,” he explains.
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Thursday, August 29, 2013
In the Tagalog hot seat
I like being open to new things and I sometimes pay the price for it.
Just recently, I found myself serving as a judge for what I thought was a singing contest in a public elementary school. Except that it wasn’t just a singing contest. It was also a poetry recital contest, a group oration and had the teachers not anticipated the lack of time and held them earlier, it would also have been a story-reading and story-telling contest - all in Pilipino.
I had unwittingly said yes to all these contests that were part of the school’s Buwan ng Wika culminating activity. The principal had visited us while we were helping serve some of their students under the feeding program conducted by the Shell Tabangao Ladies Circle (STLC) and asked us to judge a singing contest in August.
Just recently, I found myself serving as a judge for what I thought was a singing contest in a public elementary school. Except that it wasn’t just a singing contest. It was also a poetry recital contest, a group oration and had the teachers not anticipated the lack of time and held them earlier, it would also have been a story-reading and story-telling contest - all in Pilipino.
This trio of Grade 5 students was amazing while doing a Balagtasan (debate in poetic verse). |
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Family photos
Take them while you can.
Maybe this isn’t really relevant today since everyone takes
pictures of just about anything with the advent of camera phones, tablets and low-cost
digital cameras.
But in my time, not all families had cameras. And those that
had were not so free in its use because (and I am dating myself here) it was
the type that used rolled photographic film which had a limited number of
exposures. I remember that it was a luxury to get a roll of film with 36
exposures.
So when I looked for a picture of our basic family unit (before
everyone upped and got married), the only one I found was taken decades ago.
The most recent one I could find was missing a family member because it was
taken when all five siblings came together --- to bury our father.
The last time all five of us sisters were together was when everyone came home for Daddy's burial. |
Just recently, my daughter asked for a family picture for a school project. Easy enough, I thought until I found myself looking through several folders before I found one of all three of us. That’s because her Dad and I take turns taking shots.
Monday, August 5, 2013
A pharmaceutical post (of sorts)
I didn’t know what I was in for when I volunteered to
serve at Shell’s medical and dental mission in Tabangao, Batangas City last August 3.
Sure, I’d been at medical and dental missions before, but
always as part of a coverage team.
The full breakfast spread for the volunteers should have
set off warning bells in my head. After all, why were we being treated to so
much good food if we weren’t expected to burn it off – fried rice, daing, tapa, itlog, manok and all?
One of the doctors of the Batangas Medical Society attends to a young patient at Shell's medical and dental mission. |
They did ring faintly in my head at the reaction of some
of the other volunteers when I told them I had volunteered at the pharmacy. “Kayong pinakahuling matatapos (You’ll
be among the last done),” said one. “Magulo diyan (It’s a riot there),” said another.
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Making do, but not without
The next time your child complains
about his allowance, tell him that children in public elementary schools are allotted only
P15 per meal under the Department of Education’s (DepEd) school-based feeding
program (SBFP).
Milet Esguerra, who heads the STLC feeding program, interacts with the kids. |
“We’re giving a little more per
child at the Tabangao Elementary School,” says Milet Esguerra, who heads the
feeding program of the Shell Tabangao Ladies Circle (STLC) in Batangas City. She smiles when I appear shocked, but she’s
done her research.
The DepEd’s SBFP allocates a total
of P16 per child (P15 per meal; P1 for logistics like cooking utensils, office
supplies for reports, minimal transportation expenses, water, LPG, charcoal, firewood, and kerosene) for 120 days.
Even privately-funded feeding programs like Jollibee’s “Busog, Lusog, Talino (BLT)” and Ateneo de Manila University’s “Blueplate”
allot P11 and P11.50 per child respectively.
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