+ Follow DR. CASAS Tag
Array
(
[results] => Array
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[0] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 617855
[Title] => Postscript for the "Mini": A great zarzuela
[Summary] => Just when things was getting boring in this town, then came something straight from the past (I won't use that often misused phrase 'blast from the past' because that meant something from the 60s). By this I mean, during the time of our great grandparents or grandparents before the turn of the 20th century.
[DatePublished] => 2010-10-05 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 135522
[Focus] => 1
[AuthorID] => 1805274
[AuthorName] => Bobit S. Avila
[SectionName] => Headlines
[SectionUrl] => headlines
[URL] =>
)
[1] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 298531
[Title] => History and The Cebuano Body
[Summary] => Richard Field, a constant British visitor to Cebu who has written a novel on Lapulapu and Magellan, was wondering why the statues of Lapulapu bear no tattoos even if the history books say that body painting was a mark of the Bisayan warrior of old. There seems to be no excuse for this amnesia, but I should have told him that our notions of beauty and body beautiful have undergone change under the two colonial masters and the smooth untextured body as sculpture model is now taken for granted.
[DatePublished] => 2005-09-25 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 134012
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1272891
[AuthorName] => DIYANDI By Linda Kintanar-Alburo
[SectionName] => Freeman Cebu Lifestyle
[SectionUrl] => cebu-lifestyle
[URL] =>
)
)
)
DR. CASAS
Array
(
[results] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 617855
[Title] => Postscript for the "Mini": A great zarzuela
[Summary] => Just when things was getting boring in this town, then came something straight from the past (I won't use that often misused phrase 'blast from the past' because that meant something from the 60s). By this I mean, during the time of our great grandparents or grandparents before the turn of the 20th century.
[DatePublished] => 2010-10-05 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 135522
[Focus] => 1
[AuthorID] => 1805274
[AuthorName] => Bobit S. Avila
[SectionName] => Headlines
[SectionUrl] => headlines
[URL] =>
)
[1] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 298531
[Title] => History and The Cebuano Body
[Summary] => Richard Field, a constant British visitor to Cebu who has written a novel on Lapulapu and Magellan, was wondering why the statues of Lapulapu bear no tattoos even if the history books say that body painting was a mark of the Bisayan warrior of old. There seems to be no excuse for this amnesia, but I should have told him that our notions of beauty and body beautiful have undergone change under the two colonial masters and the smooth untextured body as sculpture model is now taken for granted.
[DatePublished] => 2005-09-25 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 134012
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1272891
[AuthorName] => DIYANDI By Linda Kintanar-Alburo
[SectionName] => Freeman Cebu Lifestyle
[SectionUrl] => cebu-lifestyle
[URL] =>
)
)
)
abtest