Edgar D. Savellano, 55
Posted On Sunday, June 28, 2009 at at 10:07 AM by TAGABUNGTODHe was born July 6, 1953.
He grew up in Mawab but he chose to reside in Nabunturan after he married his tagabungtod college sweetheart, Gilda Dimson. I first met Edgar during the early '70s when he joined DANECO as one of its pioneer employees. Wala pa'y koryente, naa na sya. A good-looking and amiable person, he easily won tagabungtod friends because he always displayed a very affable smile. The kind of person who loved to listen and exchange ideas and jokes with friends. The tennis court was the weekend hangout.
Edgar soon married Gilda, whom he described as his fierce academic rival for the top rank in their class during their college days . According to him, in order to ease the tension that was always brewing between them and to get even because she always excelled, he courted her and they became sweethearts. Both graduated with honors and became certified public accountants in no time. Gilda, who also got employed by DANECO, would later resign and join the municipal government of Nabunturan. She is presently the Municipal Accountant.
Meanwhile, Edgar became the Office Manager of the electric coop where he took the opportunity to finish his Masters in Business Administration. Having served DANECO as a board director, myself, I have seen how competent, hardworking, and even-tempered Edgar was. As soon as the late Atty. Jose Amacio retired as General Manager, it was not unexpected that Edgar would take his place.
At the helm of DANECO, he steered the electric coop to become a model of efficiency in the entire country. For example, in instances of power interruptions or brownouts, he was known to be the kind of manager whom consumers can call directly anytime of the day or night. He himself answers his phone, calls and dispatches his engineers and emergency crew to immediately attend to the problem.
A very bright, funny, and articulate guy who had a great knack for explaining accounting and financial gobbledygooks, Edgar shared his talent, together with Gilda, by teaching at the Assumption College for several years. He was known as a very good teacher and was very popular among students. It was at this time that the school introduced a business course with Accounting as a major. In a few years, ACN started producing its own certified public accountants.
As a resident of Nabunturan he immersed himself in community activities by becoming a member of the board of director of the Nabunturan Integrated Cooperative and the Nabunturan Water District, the latter he served for more than 29 straight years starting from its inception in 1981. He was NWD's chairman at the time of his death. He succeeded the late Dr. Rolando Layug in 1997, also a pioneer director who served as chairman of the board for about 17 years.
DANECO and its consumer-members throughout the provinces of Davao del Norte and Compostela Valley lost a very competent general manager. Likewise, his immense contribution to the growth and development of Nabunturan is immeasurable. In my book, he was a true-blue tagabungtod we can always be proud of.
He is survived by his wife, Gilda, two daughters, Anna (now Meneses) and Jan Angelie and a grandson. In the early '90s they lost their second daughter who had a protracted battle with leukemia. On June 19, 2009 he, himself, would succumb to a tumor in his spinal column .
Our Generation
Posted On Friday, June 19, 2009 at at 11:45 AM by TAGABUNGTOD
(I am reprinting this "forward-forward" nga email because I find it very funny and full of truisms. Maayo pud ni pangtapal sa panahon nga dili ko kapost sa tagabungtod. I am sure the original author, who is apparently Sugbuanon, and whose memory of his and our generation's childhood is full of humor, would not mind. Read on!)
I was born on this era!
| TO ALL FOLKS WHO WERE BORN IN THE 1950's, 60' s, 70's and early 80's !! First, some of us survived being born to mothers who did not have an OB-Gyne and drank San Miguel Beer or tuba while they carried us. While pregnant, they took cold or cough medicines, balikutsa, bukayo and didn't worry about diabetes.. Then after all that trauma, our baby cribs were made of hard wood covered with lead-based paints, ang uban kay duyan nga habol gihigtan ug pisi nga inigtabyog ug kusog mapakong intawon ta sa bongbong. We had no soft cushy cribs that play music, no disposable diapers (lampin lang sa General Milling nga naa'y faded picture nga nag-salute), and when we rode our bikes, we had no helmets, no kneepads, wala pa gyu'y brake ang bisikleta. As children, we would ride in hot un-airconditioned buses with wooden seats (Bisaya Bus nga pultahan puros ang kilid, Corominas Bus nga senimana ang brake), or cars with no airconditioning & no seat belts (karon kay Minibus o van na nga nindot kaayo ug sounds or Ceres Bus nga bugnaw ug aircon, may dvd pa gyud). Riding on the back of a carabao on a breezy summer day was considered a treat. (karon, ang mga bata wala na kaila ug Kabaw) We drank water from the garden hose and NOT bottled mineral water sa Nature Spring or Viva, or Absolute mineral water (usahay gani, straight from the faucet or poso or Tabay!) We shared one soft drink bottle with four of our friends, and NO ONE actually died from this. Or contracted hepatitis. We ate rice with star margarine, bahaw nga gibutangan ug asin ug mantika sa baboy, drank raw eggs straight from the shell, and drank softdrinks with real sugar in it (dili diet coke or Pepsi Max), but we weren't sick or overweight kay...... WE WERE ALWAYS OUTSIDE PLAYING!! We would leave home in the morning and play all day, and get back when the streetlights came on. Syatong, Bato-Lata, Bagol, Dakop-Dakop, Tago-Tago, Ngita'g Kaka. No one was able to reach us all day ( wala pa'y uso ang cellphone). And yes, we were O.K. We would spend hours building our wooden trolleys (katong bearing ang ligid) or Karitong Kawayan nga karaang tsinilas ang giporma nga ligid and then ride down the street , wala ma'y gidungog nga naligsan atoh! After hitting the sidewalk or falling into a canal (sewage channel) a few times, we learned to solve the problem ourselves with our bare & dirty hands . We did not have Playstations, Nintendo's, X-boxes, no video games at all, no 100 channels on cable, no DVD movies, no surround stereo, no IPOD's, no cell phones, no computers, no Internet, no chat rooms, and no Friendsters. ........ ...WE HAD REAL FRIENDS and we went outside to actually talk and play with them! We fell out of trees, got cut, broke bones and teeth and there were no stupid lawsuits from these accidents. The only rubbing we get is from our friends with the words..sakit bai ? pero kung kontra gani nimo ang imong kadula,,,,singgitan lang dayon ug..Mayra,Gabaan! We played marbles (jolen) in the dirt , washed our hands just a little and ate Pan Bahug-bahug & Bagumbayan (recycled bread man diay to kay wala mahalin!) We were not afraid of getting germs in our stomachs. We had to live with homemade guns (giporma nga kahoy, gihigtan ug garter ug lastiko) , saplong , tirador ug uban pa nga pwedeng magkasakitay. Pero lingaw gihapon kaayo ang tanan. We made up games with sticks ( syatong ), and cans ( Bato-Lata )and although we were told they were dangerous, wala man gyud to'y actual nga nabuta bah, bukol lang nuon sa agtang naa. We walked, rode bikes, or took tricycles to a friend's house and knocked on the door or batoon ug gagmay nga bato ang bungbong, or just yelled for them to jump out the window! Mini basketball teams had tryouts and not everyone made the team. Those who didn't pass had to learn to deal with the disappointment. Wala pa nang mga childhood depression ug damaged self esteem ek-ek ra na. Ang maglagot, pildi. Ang mga Ginikanan naa ra sa daplin para motan-aw ra sa duwa sa mga bata, dili para manghilabot ug makig-away sa ubang parents. That generation of ours has produced some of the best risk-takers, problem solvers, creative thinkers and successful professionals ever! They are the CEO's, Engineers, Lawyers, Doctors and Military Generals of today. The past 50 years have been an explosion of innovation and new ideas. We had failure, success, and responsibility. We learned from our mistakes the hard way. You might want to share this with others who've had the luck to grow up as real kids. We were lucky indeed. And if you like, forward it to your kids too, so they will know how brave their parents were. It kind of makes you wanna go out and climb a tree, doesn't it?! PS - The big letters are because your eyes may not be able to read this if they were typed any smaller (at your age? Duh!). |


