Mindanao Times

DAVAO Ca. 1950-1960

(Part 3)

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Let me recall how life was lived during the prudish 50's to the swinging 60's, during our high school years 1956 to 60 at the all-boys school, Ateneo in Matina. FASHION "Androgynou­s" - the girls and women tried their best to look like males, favoring the shape-less: H-line, long-hemmed dresses buoyed up at times with petticoats; definitely no CLEAVAGES seen (makes you wonder now if women had boobs then). No short-shorts or tight fitting jeans or pants (maybe they didn't have LEGS either). PWC girls wore "BLOOMERS" (my mom would be SCANDALIZE­D(!) if she saw what women tracksters or volleyball players wore today).

What did the GUYS wear then? From the HIGHwaiste­d, double-pleated front of the pants of Sinatra the style evolved to the pants-style of the LOW-waist gang (Zaldy Zhormack, Benting Labra, and Romeo Vasquez). Many guys had their shirts and pants custom-tailored at shops like CHIEW's, Raymundo's, Paramount (still around) Tailoring ("saan ang kargada mo?").

The mid 50s and 60s REVOLUTION­IZED the fashion for gals and guys. the MINI-skirt of Twiggy and BELLBOTTOM­S of the Beatles arrived from the U.K. Elvis the king was coup d 'tad by the Beatles and other British invaders, Chad & Jeremy, Mick Jagger, Peter & Gordon.

SHOES - no Nike, no Adidas or Puma, but Converse Chuck Taylor high-cut was there but hardly affordable so we wove the "CUSTOM BUILT" look-alike. Gilmore (a shop in MLA) made available a local Beatle boots.

MUSIC- In the 50s, American music dominated he radio-waves: Elvis, Ricky Nelson, Fabian, Fats Domino, Sinatra, Como, Mathis, Jerry Lee Lewis, the Everly Bros., Ventures Beach Boys, Connie Francis, Julie London, ATBP. The BRITISH Invasion took over: Beatles, Dave Clark 5, Mati Monro, Cliff Richard & the Shadows, and many more European musicians.

ATENEO HS (1956-1960)

One of the 1ST programs I attended as a HS freshman featured Assandas Balchand (now an S.J. and Pribhu's older brother) delivering his winning speech in the VOICE of DEMOCRACY contest, then the most prestigiou­s speech contest. AdD's other national V.O.D. winner was NICK SOLANA (Joe's younger brod; both R.I.P. now). Sonny Dominguez placed 2ND to my AdM classmate, Rufo Gonzalez (now R.I.P).

A de D HS was a barn-like building with a basketball gym in the center (also a program venue) with classrooms on the sides and on the 2ND floor. There was a chapel and Jesuit priests quarters on the 2ND floor. One grade level had about 3 sections of 30-35 students. To be a campus figure, one had to be a VARSITY, basketball player, and HONOR ROLL student, and a winner in SPEECH or DRAMATICS. And one had good at mano-a-mano fighting like Biliong Luna and Jimmy Ventosa (now R.I.P.); SAMMY LUTZ (now a retired Dr.). Every afternoon, our friends boxing (w/ oversized leather gloves) in our Juna garden, so we could take melty good care of ourselves. DISCIPLINA­RY MEASURES

There was a "DEAN OF DISCIPLINE" usually the TOUGHEST Jesuit who'd call you to office - and asked you to pull down your pants for an ass-beating;or if you preferred, BOXED with him. Kids today have gotten soft thus discipline is lacking: "SPARE THE ROD THUS, SPOIL THE CHILD". Teachers were allowed to exact corporal punishment - and relished this power. But the boys will always be boys. For example, DUT (as he was known then) was EXPELLED during 2ND years for shooting at the white-suited Jesuit with a water-gun he loaded with BLACK INK! And if you failed one subject - you were made to REPEAT the year. Thus, many opted to transfer to Holy Cross. PROFESSION­AL BOXERS

There were 3: Jimmy Johnson who fought as "CLAVLAZ"; Butch Togle as "BARNEY ROSS Jr." and Paquito Cabonce as himself. Of the 3, Paquit had the SHORTEST career - 1 round! Paquit's foe who was a heavily-muscled pro who threw 1 punch, knocked him down, threw up the pancit canton, so he QUIT for good. FUN TIMES

1. CLASS NIGHTS- the class would spend the evening at school playing basketball, having dinner together

- and staying the night in one classroom.

2. PICNICS- we went to trek to Times Beach a lot - one had to make a trail thru Talahib, Maisan, and Trees. But what a beach - isolated, clean, and pristine (sadly now a CESSPOOL!). The Jesuits also had a retreat house near Penaplata that we went to on week-ends. We took a motorized banca - then as we neared, we would jump off and swim ashore. Again, the sea-water was plastic-free then.

SOCIAL LIFE

Parties were called "JAM-SESSIONS" and many were held at the Munda residence because it was easy for the girls to ask permission from their parents since my mom was with PWC. And most - if not all - the girls were from PWC and let me see if I can recall some: Baby Abella, Carmen & Emily Uy, the Carriedo sisters and cousins, de la Serna sisters; the Rosellos, the Garridos.

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