WELCOME TO CHATEAU DU MER BEACH RESORT

If this is your first time in my site, welcome! Chateau Du Mer is a beach house and a Conference Hall. The beach house could now accommodate 10 guests, six in the main floor and four in the first floor( air conditioned room). In addition, you can now reserve your vacation dates ahead and pay the rental fees via PayPal. I hope to see you soon in Marinduque- Home of the Morions and Heart of the Philippines. The photo above was taken during our first Garden Wedding ceremony at The Chateau Du Mer Gardens. I have also posted my favorite Filipino and American dishes and recipes in this site. Some of the photos and videos on this site, I do not own, but I have no intention on the infringement of your copyrights!

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands
View of Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands-Click on photo to link to Marinduque Awaits You

Friday, January 2, 2026

The Life Story of Isabel Rosario Cooper and Douglas MacArthur

The general's hands shook as he signed the check. Fifteen thousand dollars. Enough to make her disappear.

She was sixteen when they met. A Manila stage star with a smile that stopped traffic, famous for delivering the first kiss ever filmed in Philippine cinema. Her stage name was Dimples. Her real name was Isabel Rosario Cooper, and she was at the height of her fame when General Douglas MacArthur walked into her life.
He was fifty. Commander of all U.S. troops in the Philippines. Recently divorced. Decorated. Ambitious. Destined, he believed, for the presidency. And completely captivated.

Five months after they met, MacArthur returned to Washington. He arranged for Isabel to follow. But not with him. Never with him. She traveled on a different ship, arriving weeks later, smuggled into the capital like contraband.
Secret. A gilded cage. For four years, she barely left that apartment.
MacArthur was hiding her from everyone. From Washington society. From the press. From the Army brass who were already whispering about his presidential ambitions.

Most of all, from his eighty-year-old mother. Isabel waited. She wore the tea gowns and kimonos and black-lace lingerie he bought her. She read magazines. She stared out windows at a city she couldn't explore. She was young and beautiful and trapped, kept like a secret the general couldn't afford to tell.

Then in 1932, everything unraveled. Two journalists—Drew Pearson and Robert S. Allen—got their hands on six love letters MacArthur had written to Isabel. Passionate. Compromising. Political poison. MacArthur sued them for libel. Big mistake.

Pearson's response was surgical. He added Isabel Cooper to his witness list.
Imagine it. The mistress. On the stand. Under oath. Detailing every expensive gift, every secret visit, every promise whispered in the dark.

MacArthur dropped the lawsuit immediately.
But the damage was done. The affair was about to explode into headlines. MacArthur's presidential dreams were circling the drain.
So he made her an offer. Fifteen thousand dollars. A ticket back to Manila. And his eternal gratitude for her silence.

The money was delivered, allegedly, by his aide—a young officer named Dwight Eisenhower. Isabel took the check. But she didn't take the ticket.
She stayed in America. Moved to the Midwest. Opened a hairdressing salon with MacArthur's hush money. Started over.

A few years later, she tried again. Moved to Los Angeles. Changed her stage name to Chabing. Auditioned for everything. Hollywood gave her nothing.
Thirteen bit parts. Sixteen and a half minutes of screen time total. That's all she got in two decades of trying. She played geishas. Thai concubines. Filipina nurses. An uncredited Native American. Always in the background. Always exotic. Always erased.

In Anna and the King of Siam, she was one of the king's nameless wives. In a Charlie Chan film, she had a few lines as Lillie Mae Wong. In I Was an American Spy, a movie set in her own homeland, she played "Lolita," a bit part. The girl who'd been a star at twelve. The woman who'd once had a general obsessed with her. Reduced to this.

Meanwhile, MacArthur remarried. Had a son. Became Supreme Commander in the Pacific. Returned to the Philippines as a liberator in 1944, wading ashore at Leyte with photographers capturing his triumphant return. "I have returned," he declared.
Isabel never did.

On June 29, 1960, she was found dead in her Los Angeles apartment. Barbiturate overdose. Age forty-six. No headlines. No obituaries in the major papers. No general sending flowers. She was buried on July 5, 1960, at Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City.

MacArthur died five years later. His funeral was a state affair. Dignitaries. Military honors. A nation mourning. Isabel's name appeared in his biographies as a footnote. A scandal. A mistake. The mistress who almost derailed his career.

But here's what the footnotes don't say: She wasn't just a mistress. She was a child when they met. A teenager given expensive gifts by a powerful man three times her age. A girl who followed him to a foreign country and spent four years locked in a hotel room waiting for him to choose her over his ambition. He never did.
He paid her to vanish. She took the money and tried to build a life anyway.

Hollywood wouldn't let her. America wouldn't let her. History barely remembered her name. Isabel Rosario Cooper. Born in Manila, 1914. Died in Los Angeles, 1960.
The first kiss in Philippine cinema. The last secret of an American general.
Buried in a plot that no one visits, in a cemetery most people have never heard of.
She deserved better.

Meanwhile,
The U.S. Senate has passed a bill authorizing up to $2.5 billion in military grant assistance to the Philippines over five years, with about $500 million annually set aside to help strengthen defense capabilities and cooperation as part of the Philippines Enhanced Resilience Act

Finally, My Photos of the Day- Sunset Over Manila Bay- From the FaceBook Page of the US Embassy to the Philippines, Mary Carlson, US Ambassador


A Cosmic Moment of Perihelion -January 2. 2026

January 2, 2026: Earth’s Closest Approach to the Sun – A Cosmic Moment of Perihelion
🌌
On January 2, 2026, Earth will experience a cosmic moment as it reaches perihelion, the point in its orbit when it is closest to the Sun. 🌞 This annual event marks a fascinating moment in Earth’s journey through the solar system, where our planet comes a bit closer to the life-giving rays of our star. 🌍✨
At perihelion, the Sun’s light shines a little more intensely on Earth, increasing the solar energy we receive, though it doesn’t directly affect our seasons. 🌞🌍 Our seasons are determined by Earth's axial tilt, not our proximity to the Sun, but this moment serves as a beautiful reminder of the vast and intricate workings of our solar system. 🌌💫
As Earth approaches the Sun, it's a great time to reflect on the immense forces that shape our world forces that allow life to thrive. 🌱🌍 The Sun’s energy is the foundation of all life, and perihelion gives us an opportunity to appreciate just how perfectly aligned our planet is within the cosmos. 🌠
Mark January 2, 2026, as the day Earth comes closest to the Sun and celebrate the interconnectedness of the planet, the Sun, and the vast universe we’re all part of. 

Close to the Sun
A "Cosmic Moment of Perihelion" refers to Earth reaching its closest point to the Sun in its elliptical orbit, an annual event occurring in early January (like January 2, 2026) when Earth travels fastest, but seasons are dictated by axial tilt, not distance, with the Northern Hemisphere experiencing winter while being closest to the Sun. This event highlights celestial mechanics, with the sun appearing slightly larger and Earth's speed increasing due to gravity, yet its impact is subtle to daily life, reminding us of our planet's precise orbital dance. 
What is Perihelion?
  • Definition: From Greek roots ("peri" near, "helios" sun), it's the point in Earth's orbit where it's nearest the Sun.
  • Timing: Occurs yearly in early January, about two weeks after the December solstice, with the exact date shifting slightly.
  • Distance: Earth is about 91.5 million miles (147 million km) from the Sun at this point, roughly 3 million miles closer than its farthest point (aphelion) in July. 
Key Characteristics & Effects:
  • Increased Speed: Earth moves fastest in its orbit at perihelion.
  • Seasons: Perihelion doesn't cause summer; Earth's 23.5-degree axial tilt determines seasons, with the Northern Hemisphere tilted away from the Sun in January.
  • Appearance: The Sun looks about 3% larger in the sky, though this difference isn't easily noticeable. 
Why It Matters:
  • It's a demonstration of orbital mechanics and the elliptical nature of planetary paths.
  • It offers a chance to reflect on the universe's elegant, precise movements. 
Perihelion in 2026:
  • Earth's perihelion for 2026 is set for January 2, 2026, at 12:15 p.m. EST (17:15 UTC).
  • This event in 2026 coincides with the first full moon of the year, creating a rare super moon alignment, notes EarthSky. 
  • My Food for Thought for Today:
  • My Photo of the Day: Bougainvilla in My Patio Still Blooming
  • as Of Today- January 2, 2026
  • A Rainy Day on Years Day of 2026 in Walnut Creek, California, USA 
  • Finally here are the top five News of the Day

    🗞️ 1. New NYC Mayor Acts on Housing

    Newly sworn-in New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani has taken swift action on his first full day, signing executive orders aimed at landlords and announcing a plan for the city to intervene in a major private landlord bankruptcy case tied to 93 buildings. Fox News

    🌎 2. Venezuela Offers Talks with U.S.

    Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro says his government is “ready” to negotiate a drug-trafficking and oil cooperation agreement with the United States after sustained U.S. military pressure targeting trafficking networks. Fox News

    🇨🇳 3. U.S. Issues Statement on China Military Drills

    The U.S. State Department criticized China’s recent military exercises near Taiwan, calling them unnecessary and urging Beijing to exercise restraint — a move underscoring rising regional tensions. State Department

    💧 4. Calgary Water Main Break & Conservation Push

    In Calgary, Canada, officials urge residents to conserve water as crews work to fix a major water main break that has repeatedly failed, though overall usage hasn’t dropped yet. Global News

    🚓 5. Homicides Under Investigation in Ohio

    Police in Columbus, Ohio, are searching for a suspect after a dentist and his wife were found murdered in their home — a story drawing local and national attention. YouTube

Thursday, January 1, 2026

Tournament of the Roses Parade-Dodie and Ruth

Dodie and Ruth are in these Crowds of Spectators 

From the FaceBook Page of Dodie Katague

Bucket list item - Working on a float at the Rose Parade in Pasadena.
Here is Ruth glueing straw bits on the underside of the South Dakota float.

I did the same. But it’s not all glamorous. Here I am cutting roses and putting them into vials. 
Hundreds of them. Here are the short videos of Ruth and Dodie, helping on the decoration of one of the Floats-Mount Rushmore.


The Tournament of Roses Parade: A Century of Beauty, Community, and Renewal

Every New Year’s Day for more than a century, the Tournament of Roses Parade has unfolded down Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena, offering a promise of beauty, color, and continuity. I have watched the parade for many years now, and like countless others, I’ve come to associate it with fresh beginnings, winter sunshine, and the quiet comfort of tradition.

This year, however, was different.

Despite the steady rain, a rarity for Southern California, the parade felt especially alive and deeply personal. My oldest son, Dodie, and his wife Ruth were part of the story, not as spectators along the curb, but as participants behind the scenes. Through a three-day vacation package in Pasadena, they joined hundreds of volunteers who help decorate the floats, applying flowers, seeds, leaves, and natural materials by hand, just as the tradition demands. Their reward: front-row seats on parade day and the satisfaction of knowing they helped bring one of the floats to life.

That personal connection brought me back to the origins of the Tournament of Roses itself.

How It All Began

The Tournament of Roses Parade began in 1890, when members of Pasadena’s Valley Hunt Club wanted to show off California’s mild winter climate to friends back East. While much of the country was buried under snow, Pasadena was blooming with flowers. Their solution was both simple and inspired: a parade of horse-drawn carriages covered in roses and other flowers, followed by outdoor games like polo and tug-of-war.

The idea caught on quickly.

By the early 1900s, the parade had grown into a civic event, complete with elaborate floral floats and national attention. The Tournament of Roses Association was formally established to oversee the event, ensuring it would remain noncommercial, community-centered, and rooted in volunteerism, values that still define it today.

The Art and Labor Behind the Floats

What many viewers don’t realize is that every float must be entirely covered with natural materials. No paint is allowed. Every color, every texture, every detail is created using flowers, petals, seeds, bark, grains, and leaves. This requirement transforms float decoration into an act of collective artistry and patience.

In the days leading up to the parade, thousands of volunteers, locals and visitors alike—gather in decorating barns across Pasadena. Families, friends, retirees, students, and travelers work side by side, often through the night, placing flowers one by one. In that sense, Dodie and Ruth’s experience places them squarely within the heart of the parade’s tradition: ordinary people creating something extraordinary together.

A Parade That Endures

The Tournament of Roses Parade has survived world wars, economic depressions, pandemics, and now another rainy New Year’s Day. Rain may dampen the street, but it never diminishes the spirit of the event. If anything, it highlights the resilience of those marching, riding, playing music, and yes—those who labored quietly beforehand to make it all possible.

For me, watching the parade this year carried a new layer of meaning. Knowing that my son and daughter-in-law helped bring one of those floats to life reminded me that traditions endure not just because they are beautiful, but because each generation finds its own way to participate.

A New Year’s Reflection

The Tournament of Roses Parade is often described as a celebration of hope and renewal. This year, I felt that more deeply than ever. In the rain-washed streets of Pasadena, amid flowers carefully placed by many hands, including those of my own family—I saw a living reminder that history is not something we only watch. Sometimes, it’s something our children help build.

And that, to me, makes this year’s parade unforgettable.

Here are some of the photos, I took from My TV this morning:









    






















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