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                    [Title] => A Bohol sojourn
                    [Summary] => I found myself last Sunday afternoon reading the papers on a park bench in front of St. Joseph’s Cathedral in Tagbilaran, Bohol, beneath a tree on which what must have been a thousand birds were roosting and, well, doing what birds do.
                    [DatePublished] => 2003-12-22 00:00:00
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                    [AuthorName] => Butch Dalisay
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                    [Title] => Fasten your seatbelts
                    [Summary] => As long-time Penman readers know, I’m all  for the greater use of Filipino in our national life, even at the cost of a little discomfort. We need a national language aside from English, and it’s way too late to push the clock back and start from scratch. But it doesn’t help Filipino – and Filipinos – to foist Filipino at its clunkiest and most formal on a hapless public that, like it or not, is much more familiar with plain English in most cases, whether they belong to the mousse or the mustasa crowd.

[DatePublished] => 2003-08-11 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 135214 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => 1804847 [AuthorName] => Butch Dalisay [SectionName] => Arts and Culture [SectionUrl] => arts-and-culture [URL] => ) [2] => Array ( [ArticleID] => 198409 [Title] => Looking for a miracle [Summary] => Intellectual property rights" or IPR may not be the first thing you think of in the morning with your coffee, but it’s on a lot of people’s minds these days, now that we’ve finally come to realize that ideas can mean money – loads of money, in many cases – or at least some kind of right over property. [DatePublished] => 2003-03-10 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 135214 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => 1804847 [AuthorName] => Butch Dalisay [SectionName] => Arts and Culture [SectionUrl] => arts-and-culture [URL] => ) ) )
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                    [DatePublished] => 2003-12-22 00:00:00
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abtest
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