+ Follow BENG CALMA Tag
Array
(
[results] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 48643
[Title] => Drip’s indentity theft
[Summary] => There’s something that most self-help manuals advise their readers to do every morning. It’s to write down all the things that they’re grateful for. No matter how depressed one is feeling they guarantee that after jotting down a few things — no matter how prosaic it may seem — it’s guaranteed to make one feel a whole lot better.
[DatePublished] => 2008-03-07 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 135989
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1308998
[AuthorName] => Erwin T. Romulo
[SectionName] => Young Star
[SectionUrl] => young-star
[URL] =>
)
[1] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 265096
[Title] => The shape (and sound) of things to come
[Summary] => Ever since watching Metropolis as a teenager, I have wanted to commission Fritz Lang to design my room. Watching it from a fuzzy Betamax copy on a screen much smaller than the one installed in the offices of Joh Frederson at the Tower of Babel, Langs singular vision of the future never lost any of its awful grandeur even when pared down to a small TV set.
[DatePublished] => 2004-09-17 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 135989
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1308998
[AuthorName] => Erwin T. Romulo
[SectionName] => Young Star
[SectionUrl] => young-star
[URL] =>
)
[2] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 241402
[Title] => Are you in?
[Summary] => Perhaps the most significant thing that ever happened to rock n roll in the 90s was the assimilation of the turntable into the traditional band setup of guitar, bass, drums and vocals. (Really, the keyboard has never been readily accepted by the rock mainstream although there was a glorious time in the 80s
)
[DatePublished] => 2004-03-05 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 135989
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1308998
[AuthorName] => Erwin T. Romulo
[SectionName] => Young Star
[SectionUrl] => young-star
[URL] =>
)
)
)
BENG CALMA
Array
(
[results] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 48643
[Title] => Drip’s indentity theft
[Summary] => There’s something that most self-help manuals advise their readers to do every morning. It’s to write down all the things that they’re grateful for. No matter how depressed one is feeling they guarantee that after jotting down a few things — no matter how prosaic it may seem — it’s guaranteed to make one feel a whole lot better.
[DatePublished] => 2008-03-07 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 135989
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1308998
[AuthorName] => Erwin T. Romulo
[SectionName] => Young Star
[SectionUrl] => young-star
[URL] =>
)
[1] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 265096
[Title] => The shape (and sound) of things to come
[Summary] => Ever since watching Metropolis as a teenager, I have wanted to commission Fritz Lang to design my room. Watching it from a fuzzy Betamax copy on a screen much smaller than the one installed in the offices of Joh Frederson at the Tower of Babel, Langs singular vision of the future never lost any of its awful grandeur even when pared down to a small TV set.
[DatePublished] => 2004-09-17 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 135989
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1308998
[AuthorName] => Erwin T. Romulo
[SectionName] => Young Star
[SectionUrl] => young-star
[URL] =>
)
[2] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 241402
[Title] => Are you in?
[Summary] => Perhaps the most significant thing that ever happened to rock n roll in the 90s was the assimilation of the turntable into the traditional band setup of guitar, bass, drums and vocals. (Really, the keyboard has never been readily accepted by the rock mainstream although there was a glorious time in the 80s
)
[DatePublished] => 2004-03-05 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 135989
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1308998
[AuthorName] => Erwin T. Romulo
[SectionName] => Young Star
[SectionUrl] => young-star
[URL] =>
)
)
)
abtest