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Search Result for “Rogers”

Showing 1 - 9 of 9

OPINION

The trials and tribulations of Melania Trump

News, Maureen Dowd, Published on 23/04/2024

» Outside my office, there is a picture of the Slovenian Sphinx visiting the Egyptian Sphinx, taken during a 2018 photo shoot in Giza nine months after Melania Trump was blindsided by the steamy news about her husband and Stormy Daniels.

OPINION

What Modi has figured out that Trump never has

News, Mihir Sharma, Published on 21/03/2024

» Excitement and uncertainty used to accompany general elections in India. Polls swung back and forth, coalitions formed and reformed, analysts dissected policy platforms and assessed the prospects of hundreds of individual candidates. As India embarked on its 18th general election campaign on Tuesday, there is no electricity in the air. It is hard to find anyone who believes Prime Minister Narendra Modi will lose his bid for a third term in office.

OPINION

Financing childhood growth

News, Joel E Cohen & John E Rogers, Published on 18/07/2023

» In 2020, chronic undernutrition stunted the growth of nearly a quarter of the world's children under five years old. Being too short for one's age, as a result of chronic undernutrition, can cause irreversible physical and cognitive damage and increases the risk of dying from common infections.

OPINION

The soggy socks and sandbags month

News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 02/10/2022

» Judging from the pervading sense of dampness experienced during the past week we are entering the annual soggy socks season so beloved by the populace. The meteorological office has been getting into the spirit of things with forecasts of heavy rains brought by what began as Typhoon Noru.

OPINION

Shake hands on it… on second thoughts

News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 15/03/2020

» I was at a recent gathering with friends in Bangkok where the customary handshakes were replaced by a variety of awkward fist bumps, elbow nudges, foot-shakes, waving of arms and other silly ways of saying "hello". But there were definitely no nose-to-nose greetings. Not shaking hands with your closest friends is probably the most noticeable example of how the Covid-19 crisis has affected everyday life. Even Britain's Queen Elizabeth has let it be known that she will not be shaking hands with anyone "for the foreseeable future".

OPINION

The Cisco Kid was a friend of mine

News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 03/11/2019

» Every now and again in Bangkok something triggers memories of childhood days in England. Not far from my current residence a condominium is going up called the Glendale, which was the name of my local cinema back home in Reading.

OPINION

Food systems hurting the planet

News, Kathleen Rogers & Shenggen Fan, Published on 12/08/2019

» The way we produce, consume and discard food is no longer sustainable. That much is clear from the newly released UN climate change report which warns that we must rethink how we produce our food -- and quickly -- to avoid the most devastating impacts of global food production, including massive deforestation, staggering biodiversity loss and accelerating climate change.

THAILAND

Romance scammers busted

News, Post Reporters, Published on 05/07/2018

» Surat Thani: Two men from Uganda and a Thai woman have been arrested in Koh Samui on suspicion of involvement in a "romance scam", deputy tourist police chief Surachate Hakparn said.

OPINION

Taking a strong stance on doughnuts

News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 22/04/2018

» It was Oscar Wilde who famously observed "the only way to get rid of temptation is to yield to it," which is my excuse for munching on a free doughnut proffered by staffers at a bakery in Bangkok last week. It was only a little one and wasn't that tasty -- too much sugar -- but I still scoffed it down, quietly cursing Mr Wilde's seductive bon mot.