March 15, 1944
Things have quieted down again and we are living a normal life in the city, with the exception of the high prices. Every once in… Read More »March 15, 1944
Things have quieted down again and we are living a normal life in the city, with the exception of the high prices. Every once in… Read More »March 15, 1944
First blackout.
Five months have gone by since I last wrote, and so many things have taken place – too numerous for me to remember. On June… Read More »March 9, 1944
The Military Police continue to arrest big fish. Some are being suspected of coddling guerillas, others of listening to short wave broadcasts. Private houses are… Read More »March 2, 1944
The worries, distress and school problems, aggravated by lack of food, have drained my strength, and I had to go to Laguna to recover some… Read More »February 15-29, 1944
Damn the enemy. Even Germany permits bags and letters from home. I don’t want these officers killed, I want them isolated and incommunicado in a… Read More »Feb. 14, 1944
“If you want to be free from the yoke of the military police, then sign the Constitution,” President Laurel told his constitutional assembly. All the… Read More »February 8, 1944
Vargas was named Ambassador to Tokyo more than three months ago, but he has not yet moved from Manila. The press reminds us periodically that… Read More »February 6, 1944
Explosive news spread like wildfire yesterday, causing a great furor throughout the city: that the Americans have landed at the Marshall and Wake Islands and… Read More »February 5, 1944