^
+ Follow WINGED MIGRATION Tag
Array
(
    [results] => Array
        (
            [0] => Array
                (
                    [ArticleID] => 216542
                    [Title] => Good things come in small cinematic packages
                    [Summary] => Last year’s mega hit My Big Fat Greek Wedding broke box office records as the highest grossing romantic-comedy, and most importantly, was the fifth highest grossing movie of 2002; just behind such giants as Spider-Man, Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones and Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. The film, which was budgeted at just $5 million, earned a staggering $240 million in the US alone.
                    [DatePublished] => 2003-08-08 00:00:00
                    [ColumnID] => 133164
                    [Focus] => 0
                    [AuthorID] => 1447883
                    [AuthorName] => Lanz Leviste
                    [SectionName] => Young Star
                    [SectionUrl] => young-star
                    [URL] => 
                )

            [1] => Array
                (
                    [ArticleID] => 212334
                    [Title] => Windswept notes
                    [Summary] => Imagine this view from space – delicate gray-scale lace swirling around a blue planet, swept by winds and powered within by an ingrained habit to move in order to survive, to persist. It was like your cursor assuming some magical little bird and leaving a trail when you swirl it around a blue spherical "screen." This is what it seemed to me viewing bird migration from space when I recently saw a movie called Winged Migration, a film by Jacques Perrin, a no-special-effects release by Sony Pictures.
                    [DatePublished] => 2003-07-03 00:00:00
                    [ColumnID] => 133961
                    [Focus] => 0
                    [AuthorID] => 1249681
                    [AuthorName] => DE RERUM NATURA By Maria Isabel Garcia
                    [SectionName] => Science and Environment
                    [SectionUrl] => science-and-environment
                    [URL] => 
                )

        )

)
WINGED MIGRATION
Array
(
    [results] => Array
        (
            [0] => Array
                (
                    [ArticleID] => 216542
                    [Title] => Good things come in small cinematic packages
                    [Summary] => Last year’s mega hit My Big Fat Greek Wedding broke box office records as the highest grossing romantic-comedy, and most importantly, was the fifth highest grossing movie of 2002; just behind such giants as Spider-Man, Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones and Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. The film, which was budgeted at just $5 million, earned a staggering $240 million in the US alone.
                    [DatePublished] => 2003-08-08 00:00:00
                    [ColumnID] => 133164
                    [Focus] => 0
                    [AuthorID] => 1447883
                    [AuthorName] => Lanz Leviste
                    [SectionName] => Young Star
                    [SectionUrl] => young-star
                    [URL] => 
                )

            [1] => Array
                (
                    [ArticleID] => 212334
                    [Title] => Windswept notes
                    [Summary] => Imagine this view from space – delicate gray-scale lace swirling around a blue planet, swept by winds and powered within by an ingrained habit to move in order to survive, to persist. It was like your cursor assuming some magical little bird and leaving a trail when you swirl it around a blue spherical "screen." This is what it seemed to me viewing bird migration from space when I recently saw a movie called Winged Migration, a film by Jacques Perrin, a no-special-effects release by Sony Pictures.
                    [DatePublished] => 2003-07-03 00:00:00
                    [ColumnID] => 133961
                    [Focus] => 0
                    [AuthorID] => 1249681
                    [AuthorName] => DE RERUM NATURA By Maria Isabel Garcia
                    [SectionName] => Science and Environment
                    [SectionUrl] => science-and-environment
                    [URL] => 
                )

        )

)
abtest
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