US envoy figures out suggested golf wear
>> Monday, January 20, 2014
By Ramon
Dacawi
BAGUIO CITY - Four
photographs hanging on the wall of the city mayor’s office have become
conversation pieces, an ice-breaker when his honor receives dignitaries,
among them newly installed US Ambassador Philip Goldberg who
called on him at city hall last Monday morning.
One photo has
Mayor Mauricio Domogan swinging his wooden club at the tee off area
of Camp John Hay. Another has him standing erect with his driver propping
him up, like as would a spear. In both, he’s barefooted and in his native
G-string. Two other photos show the mayor also in G-string, in the company of
tribal elders and alone in his office.
Domogan swore to
Goldberg he had offered his immediate predecessor, Ambassador Harry Thomas, a
handicap at the Camp John Hay fairways provided the dignitary would play in the
same outfit, a set of which the mayor said he would provide as gift.
During his own
courtesy on July 15, 2010. Thomas studied the pictures and bantered: “When I
play golf, I’ll bring my own outfit.”
Taking the drift, the
mayor explained he donned his ethnic regalia on the course so “they would see
the Cordillera size”. He then offered to gift Thomas with a set so “they can
also see the American size”.
“What would Washington
say?,” Goldberg wondered in amusement when it was his turn to be offered the
outfit and with it negotiate the 5,330-yard, par 68 course which, together with
the nearby Baguio Country Club, is the coldest in the country.
The mayor explained
the two G-string-cum-golf-club photographs were taken when he made the
ceremonial tee off in the annual Fil-Am Golf Tournament that the former US
military officers launched when they were managing the Camp John
Hay. Drawing players from all over, it has become the world’s
biggest amateur golf competition.
While here, Goldberg
stayed at the historic U.S. Ambassador’s Residence inside John Hay where
Gen.Tomoyuki Yamashita, then the commander of the Japanese Imperial Army,
formally surrendered on Sept. 3, 1945.
The mayor recalled
that when he served as the city’s representative to Congress, he filed a bill
for the annual observance of the date as Victory Day for the Philippines and
the Allied Forces.
“We commemorate the
Fall of Bataan on April 9, yet there’s more reason for us to celebrate the end
of the Philippine side of the second world war. He recalled the war also began
at Camp John Hay when Japanese planes bombed it morning of Dec. 8, 1941.
Goldberg said he
visited other scenic and historical spots of Baguio, among them the Good
Shepherd Convent which, he noted was where American Governor-General William
Cameron Forbes built Topside, his palatial residence, in 1906.
The ambassador
added he learned of Baguio’s strength as an educational center when he visited
Texas Instruments and Moog Controls, two of the multi-national companies based
at the Export Processing Z|one near the Loakan Airport.
In briefings for the
ambassador, the managers of the two companies said TI and Moog found Baguio
attractive as it provides the skilled human resources they needed.
While here,
Goldberg also visited the Philippine Military Academy, the Burnham Park and the
BenCab art museum and read a story for young wards of the Child and
Family Services Philippines.
The mayor handed to
the ambassador a wooden key to the city that the American colonial government
built and reiterated his invitation for a round of golf at Camp John Hay,
preferably in the suggested outfit the dignitary never donned before.
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