The organized forces were small, but the influence was tremendous because the student leaders were committed,” he said. “The FQS of 1970 was a big school for my generation where we imbibed a sense of justice for our rebellion. “It was the beginning of what we are now witnessing as a movement against tyranny and dictatorship,” Raymundo said. As lead convener of the “No Erasures, No Revisions” movement, Raymundo has been organizing activities to prevent the Marcoses’ return to power. For Ilagan, the exercise of freedom was very much rooted in UP: A free campus with its own charter.
Source: Philippine Daily Inquirer September 22, 2018 21:44 UTC