Its a tribute to the Varsitarian that campus journalists from Baguio and Tuguegarao in the north to Bukidnon and South Cotabato in the south converge at UST every year to participate in the three-day seminar where leading lights in the writing profession share their gems of wisdom with the stars of tomorrow.
The Varsitarians history is richly embellished by the writings of such notables as Jose Villa Panganiban (who co-founded the paper in 1927), Teodoro Valencia, Joe Guevarra, Felix Bautista, Joe Burgos, Tony Siddayao, Jess Sison, Jullie Yap-Daza, Tony Lopez, Neal Cruz, Jake Macasaet, Alice Colet-Villadolid, Eugenia Duran-Apostol, F. Sionil Jose, Celso Al Carunungan, Cirilo Bautista, Arsenio Lacson, Emmanuel Pelaez, Juan Frivaldo, Kit Tatad and Recah Trinidad.
The annual seminar is called "Inkblots," presumably because the Varsitarian hopes to leave indelible traces on the walkway to journalistic prominence for student writers.
"This conference tries to build on the basics of campus press practice while providing a clearing-house for media currents and other issues affecting the student press," said UST student publications adviser Lito Zulueta. "Moreover, the fellowship does not waver in its stress on media ethics and on the formation of a free but responsible press."
Erick David, one of three chairpersons in this years "Inkblots" (the others were Florian Garcia and Paul Jaud), said it is the seminars tradition to pave the way for campus journalists to become future icons of the press.
"Campus journalism is a craft that requires excellent investigative skills," said David. "This is where Inkblots enters the picture. I am glad to say to my fellow journalists that in our venture in perfecting our craft, Inkblots is there to guide us in every way possible."
For my talk at the St. Thomas Research Center, the players from the UST Growling Tigers championship squad were in the audience. They were introduced to the seminar participants to rousing applause.
After my lecture, I called in Ginebra San Miguel assistant coach Siot Tanquingcen a UST alumnus as the man on-the-spot in a mock press conference where the student writers played the role of professional journalists with the assignment of churning out a story.
Tanquingcen gave his opening remarks then was bombarded by questions from the audience.
To spice up the exercise, I asked the students to submit a write-up of their impressions in their style of preference (essay, editorial, news, feature, whatever) within 45 minutes from the end of the mock press conference. I said I would choose the five best entries and give away prizes I brought from The Philippine STAR (writers notebooks), Sonia Trading (belt bags and clutch bags), Emerald Headway (sports magazines), Atlas Publishing (sports magazines) and the PBA (Molten indoor-outdoor basketballs and new season T-shirts).
It was a lively question-and-answer session. Tanquingcen was amazed at the maturity level of the students who threw a lot of provocative questions. He was candid, honest and frank in his answers.
Asked what he thought of himself as a player, Tanquingcen said he was "horrible" because he wasnt only short but also he could hardly jump. And on a scale of 1 to 10, he modestly rated himself a five as a coach because when his team wins, he said its due to the players, not him.
Tomorrow, well publish excerpts from the five best write-ups and reveal who won the prizes.