^
+ Follow HARLAN ELLISON Tag
Array
(
    [results] => Array
        (
            [0] => Array
                (
                    [ArticleID] => 555176
                    [Title] => Life without television
                    [Summary] => 

“I am sorry.

[DatePublished] => 2010-03-07 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 135989 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => 1308998 [AuthorName] => Erwin T. Romulo [SectionName] => Gadgets [SectionUrl] => gadgets [URL] => ) [1] => Array ( [ArticleID] => 72535 [Title] => Life before Google [Summary] =>

I wrote my college thesis on a typewriter. All 100-plus pages of it, with footnotes and endnotes, with telltale white spots where I’d covered up my typing errors. For my research, I consulted the UP Main Library’s card catalogue, a dusty cabinet of drawers containing yellowing index cards arranged in alphabetical order. I wrote the drafts on sheets of yellow legal pad, with a ballpoint pen. [DatePublished] => 2008-07-13 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 134078 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => 1389712 [AuthorName] => Jessica Zafra [SectionName] => Sunday Lifestyle [SectionUrl] => sunday-life [URL] => ) [2] => Array ( [ArticleID] => 306302 [Title] => The paranoid as prophet [Summary] => Salvador Dali once declared, "After Freud’s explorations within the psyche it is now the outer world which will have to be eroticized and quantified." Like the prophet-jester of surrealism he was, Dali knew that he was opening another can of worms with that statement and it would take all sorts of fools to answer his call, each with his own claim to truth and their own madness. Philip K. Dick (1928-1982) was one such individual and, famously, he wrote science-fiction.
[DatePublished] => 2005-11-11 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 135989 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => 1308998 [AuthorName] => Erwin T. Romulo [SectionName] => Young Star [SectionUrl] => young-star [URL] => ) ) )

HARLAN ELLISON
Array
(
    [results] => Array
        (
            [0] => Array
                (
                    [ArticleID] => 555176
                    [Title] => Life without television
                    [Summary] => 

“I am sorry.

[DatePublished] => 2010-03-07 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 135989 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => 1308998 [AuthorName] => Erwin T. Romulo [SectionName] => Gadgets [SectionUrl] => gadgets [URL] => ) [1] => Array ( [ArticleID] => 72535 [Title] => Life before Google [Summary] =>

I wrote my college thesis on a typewriter. All 100-plus pages of it, with footnotes and endnotes, with telltale white spots where I’d covered up my typing errors. For my research, I consulted the UP Main Library’s card catalogue, a dusty cabinet of drawers containing yellowing index cards arranged in alphabetical order. I wrote the drafts on sheets of yellow legal pad, with a ballpoint pen. [DatePublished] => 2008-07-13 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 134078 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => 1389712 [AuthorName] => Jessica Zafra [SectionName] => Sunday Lifestyle [SectionUrl] => sunday-life [URL] => ) [2] => Array ( [ArticleID] => 306302 [Title] => The paranoid as prophet [Summary] => Salvador Dali once declared, "After Freud’s explorations within the psyche it is now the outer world which will have to be eroticized and quantified." Like the prophet-jester of surrealism he was, Dali knew that he was opening another can of worms with that statement and it would take all sorts of fools to answer his call, each with his own claim to truth and their own madness. Philip K. Dick (1928-1982) was one such individual and, famously, he wrote science-fiction.
[DatePublished] => 2005-11-11 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 135989 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => 1308998 [AuthorName] => Erwin T. Romulo [SectionName] => Young Star [SectionUrl] => young-star [URL] => ) ) )

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