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Elections to decide direction of Philippine shares next week (3:15 p.m.)
Candidate tries to bomb own rally for sympathy vote (3:12 p.m.)
Actor beats bowler in 'Battle of the Bongs' (2:31 p.m.)
Arroyo inches ahead in poll, coup rumors swirl (12:35 p.m.)
Poor vote crucial for presidential race (10:30 a.m.)
Friday, May 07, 2004
Actor beats bowler in 'Battle of the Bongs' (2:31 p.m.)

MANILA -- What's in a nickname? Quite a lot in the Philippines, where two candidates standing for parliament have fought a bitter legal battle over the right to be called "Bong".

Voters can choose their favoured candidate by nickname alone, and bowling champion Olivia "Bong" Coo feared losing vital votes to movie star Ramon "Bong" Revilla in the race for a Senate seat in Monday's polls.

However, the Supreme Court Thursday rejected a petition from Coo and ruled that Revilla also had right to use the nickname. It ruled that neither of the candidates should be credited if the voter only writes "Bong".

Virtually every Filipino has a nickname usually decided shortly after birth and even the country's leaders rarely refer to each other by their given names. AFP



ENETWORK HEADLINE
Iglesia backs Gloria, Noli

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