Showing 1-10 of 27 results
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Flushing out the potty mouths
B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 12/02/2012
» Wanpen was away from work yesterday but today she is back. Frail but animated.
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It was the breast of times ... sorry, Where was I?
B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 24/06/2012
» Back when I was a kid there was a night-time soap opera in Australia called Number 96.
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Just as nice, At ten times the price
B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 26/08/2012
» In Australia when I was growing up, we were taught we were all the same. Equals. As a kid I kinda liked that idea, though it didn't stop me shouting out ''Cattle Ticks'' to the kids at the Catholic school across the creek, or ''dirty wogs'' to the new Australians from Athens or Rome. Children can be cruel, dear reader.
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The awful truth? Certainly not on this kingdom's airwaves!
B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 13/01/2013
» Here are four scenarios. I wonder if you can guess what is similar about them all:
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Temples of temptation
B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 30/03/2014
» Thailand reels over the latest scandal to hit the local media, but strangely hardly touched by the English news, part of which you are holding in your hand right now. The Bangkok Post, I mean, not the croissant!
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March to a different beat
B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 13/04/2014
» Dear students of the Satriwitthaya 2 School marching band,
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I salute you, scout's honour
B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 08/06/2014
» Back when I was a little boy growing up in Sunnybank, my parents, having exhausted all other attempts at roping in my behaviour, decided that scouts might be a good idea.
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Declaring dependence
B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 06/07/2014
» In light of last Friday’s American Independence Day celebrations, I am closing my eyes right now and imagining a Thailand devoid of all things American.
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Sinister Railways of Thailand
B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 13/07/2014
» Two years ago I caught a train from Bangkok to Chiang Mai.
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The watered-down version of corruption in schools
B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 14/06/2015
» We begin our journey in a little village in the far northern province of Chiang Rai. We’re going to pop into a school called Bahn Daen Sala, a rural primary school run on a shoestring budget, where the education of its students rests more on the resourcefulness of its teachers than anything found in the curriculum.
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