In this quarantine season, one of the places reeling from the effects of the pandemic is the Museo Pambata, the...
Look at the positive effect of the lockdown on two sisters who realized they couldn’t do without having their own...
Two new children’s books relevant to the times have been released and are downloadable in digital format, available to everyone....
International School Manila (ISM) recently commemorated its 100th year, bringing back to its Bonifacio Global City (BGC) campus its alumni...
When my son Roel and his fiancée Agnes Agcaoili were planning what they wanted to be a small, intimate...
My Scholastican schoolmates (GS ’59, HS ’63, College ’67) had vowed we would keep on traveling near and far, for as long as our legs could carry us—and with what we anticipated may be a limited time left, we did so with such a frenzy this past year.
A year ago, on Oct. 5, Joker Arroyo left us. All too characteristic of him, he had left strict instructions that he did not want any public announcements, no memorial ceremonies from Congress and the Senate, or the usual ninth-day or 40th-day commemorations, not even the traditional farewell ceremony of his fraternity, the Upsilon Sigma Phi.
Two days before the Nov. 26 launch of “The Aquino Legacy: An Enduring Narrative” (Imprint Publishing) that my husband Elfren and I authored, we were having a dry run of the program at the venue, the Writers Bar of Raffles Makati.
The news that Amy Gary, editor of the Margaret Wise Brown Estate, found hundreds of pages of unpublished manuscripts in a cedar trunk in the attic of Margaret’s sister, is significant.
The annual conference of Wendy Kopp’s Teach for All global network of chapters from 32 countries, held this year in Tengchong, Yunnan province in China, began with a more exclusive retreat in Shanghai.