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  • ADVANCED NEWS

    Missing MH370: Debris sighting, new sat images raise hopes

    Terry Fredrickson, Published on 23/03/2014

    » There were two, possibly related, events yesterday (Saturday) that have put the hunt for the missing Malaysian Flight MH370 back on the front pages. First new satellite images were released and later unidentified but actual debris was sighted.

  • LIFE

    Stealing our Songkran?

    B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 23/03/2014

    » This Songkran there is no need to come to Thailand. Singapore is holding it instead.

  • LIFE

    The Morning Comedown

    B Magazine, Chanun Poomsawai, Published on 23/03/2014

    » With 'Morning Phase', the seasoned singer-songwriter puts his penchant for musical collages aside and revisits the downbeat vibe of an earlier release

  • LIFE

    The canvas is his world

    B Magazine, Michael Ruffles, Published on 23/03/2014

    » His mouth is a river of phrases and run-on sentences flowing over tongue and teeth. His eyes, below straggly brown curls, bristle with energy and ideas. For Henri Lamy, art is all about the face. So when his palette knife plops white into blue and smears the new shade across the canvas, he leaves an impression of a nose to explain a point.

  • LIFE

    Making the most of everything

    B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 23/03/2014

    » One quality that good cooks share is a determination to economise by getting full value for the money they spend. This economising does not mean penny pinching to cut expenses or using cheap ingredients, and then preparing only small amounts of food so that there is none left over. Real cooks do not think that way.

  • LIFE

    Blooming heralds a new colourful time of year

    B Magazine, Normita Thongtham, Published on 23/03/2014

    » Flowers, flowers, flowers everywhere! My house is surrounded by foliage plants, mostly ferns, philodendrons, dracaena, palms and fig trees, but everywhere I look I see flowers. From my bedroom window I can see a Tabebuia rosea, or pink tabebuia (chompoo panthip in Thai), in full bloom behind my neighbour’s house. Tabebuia is deciduous and sheds its leaves before it is blanketed by flowers, and for some reason this particular tree bloomed a second time immediately after the first flush of flowers dropped. There are four pink tabebuia trees in my immediate neighbourhood and those familiar with this tree can imagine just how beautiful they are when their leaves are replaced by trumpet-shaped, mauve-pink crinkly flowers. Pink tabebuia blooms twice a year around this time and in late August or early September, hence I am treated to a spectacular view twice a year without having to plant my own tree.

  • LIFE

    The Heat is ON

    B Magazine, Usnisa Sukhsvasti, Published on 23/03/2014

    » Sea, sand and the setting sun provided a most suitable backdrop for the launch of Triumph’s latest 2014 Swimwear Collection under the concept “Turn on Summer”. Guests headed out east to Pattaya where an outdoor catwalk had been created at the Glass House Restaurant, Na Jomtien.

  • THAILAND

    Songs in the key of death

    Spectrum, Jim Algie, Published on 23/03/2014

    » Black metal musicians are more infamous for wreaking havoc than they are for making music. That legacy includes arson attacks on historic churches, murders, suicides and a police investigation into a Norwegian band called Gorgoroth who staged a Satanic black mass in Poland in 2004, complete with dozens of severed sheep heads on stakes, 80 litres of sheep blood and four nude models tied to crosses.

  • THAILAND

    Truth buried under the trash

    Spectrum, Published on 23/03/2014

    » If a fire hadn’t started at a Samut Prakan rubbish dump last Sunday sending a toxic cloud billowing across the province, the questionable practices at the fenced-off site would have continued as they had for decades.

  • THAILAND

    The danger could lurk for years

    Spectrum, Chaiyot Yongcharoenchai, Published on 23/03/2014

    » The spectre of death and suffering from cancers and other chronic illnesses could haunt Samut Prakan residents for many years to come, for it is a reality of major environmental disasters that the after-effects are often worse than the immediate consequences.

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