Ask a question. Get a source-grounded answer with citations.
Based on 7 verified sources covering Myanmar, Thailand:
BANGKOK -- Kasikornbank, Thailand's fourth largest bank by assets, has appointed Kattiya Indaravijaya, 50, as its new president as of Jan. 1. [1]
SEOUL -- When Cho Hee-sook started as a hotel cook in South Korea in the early 1980s, fine dining was the last thing on her mind. "I remember having to prepare large quantities of food," she says. "We'd eat a lot, to fill our stomachs. [2]
CHIANG MAI, Thailand — It’s the culmination of Victoria Vorreiter’s 10 years documenting ethnic minority music and culture in the region where Burma, Thailand, China and Laos meet—a new exhibition titled “Cultural Crossroads of the Golden Triangle,” ... [3]
TOKYO — A Japanese city’s plan to seek UNESCO recognition for its collection of documents related to its role as a launching base for “kamikaze” suicide attacks in the desperate last months of World War II is raising questions over how such memories ... [4]
mainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstrema... (translated from es) [5]
By Punnisa Nimmanahaeminda Friday, September 10, 2004 [6]
Note: This briefing is based on limited source coverage. The evidence may be incomplete or outdated.
BANGKOK -- Kasikornbank, Thailand's fourth largest bank by assets, has appointed Kattiya Indaravijaya, 50, as its new president as of Jan. 1.
SEOUL -- When Cho Hee-sook started as a hotel cook in South Korea in the early 1980s, fine dining was the last thing on her mind. "I remember having to prepare large quantities of food," she says. "We'd eat a lot, to fill our stomachs.
CHIANG MAI, Thailand — It’s the culmination of Victoria Vorreiter’s 10 years documenting ethnic minority music and culture in the region where Burma, Thailand, China and Laos meet—a new exhibition titled “Cultural Crossroads of the Golden Triangle,”
TOKYO — A Japanese city’s plan to seek UNESCO recognition for its collection of documents related to its role as a launching base for “kamikaze” suicide attacks in the desperate last months of World War II is raising questions over how such memories
mainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstremainstrema
Original source in es · View original →
By Punnisa Nimmanahaeminda Friday, September 10, 2004