Sunday, March 15, 2009
Mambo Magsaysay
Peace and order was a joke 'til Magsaysay pumasok
That is why, that is why you will hear the people cry
Our democracy will die kung wala si Magsaysay.
Mambo, mambo Magsaysay Mabu-mabu mabuhay
Our democracy will die Kung wala si Magsaysay
Birds they voted in Lanao
At pati Aswang pa daw
Ang election lutong macaw
Till Magsaysay showed them how
Mambo, mambo Magsaysay Mabu-mabu mabuhay
Our democracy will die Kung wala si Magsaysay
Mga Hulagway Kuha ni Michael Rougier
Douglas C-47 Skytrain "Mount Pinatubo"
The 1957 crash of a Douglas C-47 plane named "Mt. Pinatubo" on the slopes of Mount Manunggal,[1] Cebu, Philippines, killed the 7th President of the Philippines, Ramon Magsaysay, and 24 other passengers. The crash is estimated to have occurred at 1:40:00 AM, March 17, 1957, Philippine Standard Time (17:40:00 PM, March 16, 1957, GMT).[2] Several high-ranking Philippine government and military officials, as well as journalists, were also among the dead. A reporter for the Philippine Herald, Nestor Mata, was the sole survivor of the accident.
At the time of his death, President Magsaysay, a Nacionalista, was widely popular and was expected to easily win re-election in the November presidential elections.Read More
Nestor Mata’s story, April 6, 1957
Nestor Mata’s story
April 6, 1957
by Leon O. Ty
The lone survivor of the Mt. Pinatubo airplane crash in which President Magsaysay and 25 other persons perished gives his version of the tragedy. Newsman has second and third degree burns on thighs, arms and legs
PHILIPPINES Herald Reporter Nestor Mata, the lone survivor in the Mt. Pinatubo airplane crash in which President Magsaysay and 25 other persons perished, is still confined in the Veterans Memorial Hospital. He is fast recovering from second and third degree burns all over his body. We visited him last Saturday afternoon. As soon as he saw us, he said in a low voice:
“You are lucky you were not with us.”
Mata said these words because he personally knew that this writer had always been with him and the rest of the MalacaƱang newspapermen who used to accompany the late President on nearly all his trips to Mindanao and Visayas.
“You are the real lucky one,” we replied.
Ramon Magsaysay
When Bataan surrendered in 1942, Magsaysay escaped to the hills, organized the Western Luzon Guerrilla Forces, and was commissioned captain on April 5, 1942. For three years Capt. Magsaysay operated under Col. Merrill's famed guerrilla outfit and saw action at Sawang, San Marcelino, Zambales. Magsaysay was among those instrumental in clearing the Zambales coast of the Japanese prior to the landing of American liberation forces together with the Philippine Commonwealth troops on Jan. 29, 1945.
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