“REMEMBER why you started: Service is beyond the finish line.”
Around 8,000 Thomasians participated in a run for a cause last January 26 in the University grounds for the victims in the Visayas area ravaged by Typhoon Yolanda. All of them have proven that a few hours of exercise and a day of healthy living can help families of our fellow Visayans.
“This is a fun run, not a race. There is no reward for the first one to finish. We are running for Visayas, not for a prize,” said Marie Antonette Quan, one of the project heads of the event.
Quan and her fellow project head and NSTP Faculty member Heiden Anorico kept on reminding their students that the fun-run was not a race, but rather an activity to be enjoyed.
“We want to teach Thomasians that service is beyond the finish line. After the race is done, the helping doesn’t end,” Anorico added.
Who said donating was the only way of helping Typhoon Yolanda victims?
This year’s Unending Race, with the full theme, Unending Race: Service beyond the finish line 2013-2014, Tulong Tomasino: Takbo para sa Visayas, was the second in the Unending Race series that was first started in 2011 during the Quadricentennial celebration of the University’s 400 years of existence. The event, consisting of a fun run and a zumba session, aims to impart the benefits of exercise with the spirit of helping others.
Participants included NSTP students from the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps, the Civic Welfare Training Service, and the Literacy Training Service, garnering an approximate total of 8,000. These numbers did not include the non-NSTP students, alumni, and the University Faculty and staff who also participated in the event.
This time it is for the livelihood
As part of the University’s Tulong Tomasino program, this project is primarily an initiative to help victims of the recent Typhoon Yolanda in the Visayas region, seeing that much of the help given by the University was for the Luzon area.
With the registration fee of Php 250, the event will use the allocated funds to buy “taba” sets costing Php 50,000 each to be donated to Yolanda victims in Visayas. “Each ‘taba’ set will consist of nets, fish cages and boats, and will also be able to support the livelihood of 10 families,” Quan explained.
The Php 250 registration fee will also consist of the race singlet and bib, the whistle souvenir, and the other expenses in running the event.
The souvenir – the whistle – itself has meaning. “The whistle is important for DRRM (Disaster Risk Reduction Management). [Students could use them] to call attention when there is an emergency,” Anorico explained.
Having fun so early in the morning
The program started by 6 a.m. and ended around 8 a.m. It was hosted by Eva Ronda of My Only Radio For Life! (MOR 101.9) radio station and Kenneth Jimenez, an alumnus of the Faculty of Arts and Letters. Participants enjoyed the program because of Ronda’s humor and energetic hosting style.
The Unending Race featured two activities that participants could join – Zumba and the fun run. In the Zumba dancing session led by the IPEA instructors, participants were given a routine that they would follow. The session allowed them not just to show off their dancing skills, but also to stretch and exercise their bodies.
The second, and the highlight of the event, was the fun run around the campus. The track spanned the inside and the outside of UST. The presence of Metropolitan Manila Development Authority officers, the police, and barangay officers ensured safety especially on the part of the fun run occurring on the road around the University.
University’s Red Cross Youth Council members were stationed on strategically placed water-refilling stations and assigned to first-aid.
The UST Yellow Jackets also provided the drumbeat during the run on the four sides of the campus. The Salinggawi Dance Troupe also performed.
Thomasian spirits united
The Project Heads, themselves, were glad with how the event transpired. “Nakakatuwa. Nag-enjoy sila [participants] sa run. Everybody was happy. Masaya, happy para sa amin. Nag-benefit sila [runners] sa health tapos nakatulong pa sila,” Anorico said.
The NSTP Culminating Activity that would serve as one of the final requirements of their students was cancelled for this event. Students, however, felt happy in the midst of exhaustion after the event.
“Fulfilling kasi nakakatulong ka. Fun, tiring, worth it,” said Diana Bugay from the College of Accountancy.
Other students shared their sentiments on the pacing of the event.
“Mabagal yung pacing, di masyado makita yung mga marshalls,” said Chelda Endozo from College of Science.
A group effort
The success of the event can be attributed not only to the participants who joined but also to everyone that had helped in the organization of the event.
Anorico said Joar Calvadores, a UST Alumni and former Track and Field varsity player, served as the race consultant for the event.
“He knows how long an average runner goes, how many kilometers they can run, and how long the race should be. He knows all the details,” she added.
Calvadores together with his family, is one of the many Thomasian alumni returning to their alma mater and giving something back to their fellow Filipinos.
Help from the entire student community was not left unsaid. “[They are] too many to mention,” Anorico said. “We have asked almost all of the offices that could help with the event. We also sought help from student councils to assist with the registration [of the participants].”
Sponsors of the event included Pocari Sweat, Milcu, Sunlife Financial Inc., Crystal Clear, Chooga Juice, El Lobo, Active Feet Event & Sport Management, and Men’s Health/Women’s Health magazine.
By Rhenn Anthony S. Taguiam, James Gideon A. Tinsay
Photo taken by Chealsy Allen G. Dale