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  • Travel & Food

    Korea National Park Service to offer themed eco-tours this summer

    The Korea National Park Service (KNPS) said Monday it will run a series of themed ecological tours across the country's national parks from July 4 through Nov. 30, offering activities designed around valleys, coastal waters and local culture. The program, called "National Park Themed Ecological Tourism," groups excursions under four categories: ecological travel, historical and cultural travel, scenic travel and family travel. Eight parks are participating, including Juwangsan, Dadohaehaesang, Sokrisan, Gyeongju, Hallyeohaesang, Seoraksan, Woraksan and Wolchulsan. Two tours stand out for summer. At Juwangsan National Park, the "Jeolgol Valley Splash Walk" — a first for KNPS programs — allows visitors to wade through the valley's stream while observing freshwater ecosystems among the park's gorges and cliffs. The program runs July through August; starting in September, it transitions to fall foliage walks and local apple-picking. At Hallyeohaesang National Park, the "Seasonal Hallyeo Journey" takes participants island-hopping among the park's scenic islands — Bijindo, Manjido and Yeon

    1 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Korea National Park Service to offer themed eco-tours this summer
  • Trends

    Rare Pokémon cards fetch premium prices among Gen Z, sparking thefts

    2 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    Rare Pokémon cards fetch premium prices among Gen Z, sparking thefts
  • Arts & Theater

    'Amazing Thailand' art exhibition makes Korean debut

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    'Amazing Thailand' art exhibition makes Korean debut
  • Lifestyle

    Try these simple habits for fewer mosquito bites

    2 MIN READBy Kormedi.com
    Try these simple habits for fewer mosquito bites
  • People & Events

    Busan to host 21st International Magic Festival with competition, gala shows

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Busan to host 21st International Magic Festival with competition, gala shows
  • Trends

    Changing face of lunch hour in Seoul’s office districts

    2 MIN READBy Park Jin-hai
    Changing face of lunch hour in Seoul’s office districts
  • People & Events

    BTS' RM named first global ambassador of Nat'l Museum of Korea

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    BTS' RM named first global ambassador of Nat'l Museum of Korea
  • People & Events

    Why Koreans are pouring their hearts out to a blunt TV grandmother

    7 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    Why Koreans are pouring their hearts out to a blunt TV grandmother
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CEO & Publisher: Oh Young-jinDigital News Email: webmaster@koreatimes.co.krTel: 02-724-2114Online newspaper registration No: 서울,아52844Date of registration: 2020.02.05Masthead: The Korea TimesCopyright © koreatimes.co.kr. All rights reserved.

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Travel & Food

Saipan resort accommodates families, young golfers and partygoers

Travelers enjoy the evening pool party at Coral Ocean Resort Saipan's Beach Club in this undated provided photo. Courtesy of MRIBy Lee Hae-rinCoral Ocean Resort Saipan seeks to expand the island's traveler target from families to young golfers and partygoers with a wide range of sports and entertainment facilities to revitalize its pandemic-hit tourism.Established in 1988, the resort was acquired by the E-land group's overseas corporation MRI in 2011. Since its reopening in 2013, it went through another round of renovation when the super typhoon Yutu devastated most of its infrastructure in 2018.Before the second renovation, the resort was “an ordinary old-fashioned golf resort” that offered little originality, according to the resort's general manager Park Eun-pyung. Thus, the resort took the chance to differentiate itself from other resorts by expanding its target market to include visitors younger than traditionally associated with traveling to the island, which according to Park and his colleagues, “choose to stay unmarried and childless and have heavy interests

Jan 31, 2023By Lee Hae-rin
Saipan resort accommodates families, young golfers and partygoers
  • Saipanese people pin hopes on tourism boom again
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - FEBRUARY 01, 2023

Jan 31, 2023
DAILY FORTUNE - FEBRUARY 01, 2023
People & Events

Yonsei University global forum

Yonsei University to hold GEEF 2023, Feb. 2-3By Jeon Yae-woolYonsei University will hold its fifth annual Global Engagement & Empowerment Forum (GEEF) under the theme of “Turning Point: From Crisis Into Opportunity” on Feb. 2 and 3 at the school's Sinchon Campus in Seoul.Among the participants are former U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Austrian former President Heinz Fischer, U.N. Deputy Secretary-General Amina J. Mohammed, Foreign Affairs Minister Park Jin and Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon.The 5th GEEF is an annual event for experts from Korea and around the world to discuss diverse global issues and come up with ideas for sustainable global growth.Graca Machel, deputy chair of the Elders and former first lady of South Africa, will make a keynote speech, and a group of panelists will take on issues such as post-pandemic digital health, smart cities, women in leadership and climate change. “We are facing a critical juncture this year as the U.N.'s 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development (2015-2030) is past the halfway mark,” Yonsei University President Suh Se

Jan 31, 2023
Yonsei University global forum
Arts & Theater

AmorePacific Museum of Art brings Joseon-era folding screens to center stage

“Beyond Folding Screens 2,” a survey of 51 pre-and early-modern decorative folding screens, is offered at the AmorePacific Museum of Art (APMA) in Yongsan District, Seoul. Courtesy of APMABy Park Han-solDecorative folding screens that once embellished the interiors of the royal palaces and working-class households during the 1392-1910 Joseon Kingdom have been brought to the fore at the ongoing exhibition hosted by the AmorePacific Museum of Art (APMA) in Seoul's Yongsan District.“Beyond Folding Screens 2,” which comes five years after the museum's initial showcase of centuries-old relics, is a survey of 51 rare screens produced between the late Joseon period and the early modern era.“Since folding screens are often placed at the rear of a room, the term 'byeongpung' (folding screen) is sometimes used in Korea to refer to an object that has no major presence or impact,” the museum said in its statement. “This exhibition, however, aims to shed light on the value and meaning of folding screens as a visual medium.”The 19th-century “Th

Jan 31, 2023By Park Han-sol
AmorePacific Museum of Art brings Joseon-era folding screens to center stage
Trends

Korean Lunar New Year vs. Chinese Lunar New Year

Danielle, a Korean-Australian member of K-pop girl group NewJeans / Courtesy of ADOR'Culture has no nationality' By Dong Sun-hwaOn Jan. 21, Danielle, a Korean-Australian member of K-pop girl group NewJeans, apologized soon after sending a message to her fans that read: “What r u bunnies (the name of the quintet's global fandom) doing for Chinese new year?” What raised the eyebrows of numerous Korean fans was her use of the phrase, “Chinese New Year.” They insisted the 17-year-old's word choice was inappropriate, as the Lunar New Year is a major holiday celebrated in many countries other than China, including Korea, Vietnam, Singapore and Indonesia. Thus, the K-pop star had to issue an apology, promising she would be more careful with her words and actions in the future.Just one day later, the British Museum ― which shared a Twitter post introducing its special performances celebrating “Korean Lunar New Year” on Jan. 12 ― deleted it and uploaded a new post with the hashtag, “#ChineseNewYear.” The first national public museum of the world

Jan 31, 2023By Dong Sun-hwa
Korean Lunar New Year vs. Chinese Lunar New Year
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - JANUARY 31, 2023

Jan 30, 2023
DAILY FORTUNE - JANUARY 31, 2023
Arts & Theater

Smiling flower, mushroom bomb, zombie: What do Takashi Murakami's grotesquely 'kawaii' creatures tell us?

Japanese art star Takashi Murakami poses for a photo during a press preview held to mark the opening of his largest retrospective to date in Korea, “Takashi Murakami: MurakamiZombie,” at the Busan Museum of Art, Jan. 26. YonhapArt star delves into Japan's 'otaku' cultural mindset, transience of human lifeBy Park Han-solBUSAN ― What completed Japanese art star Takashi Murakami's already colorful look of the day on Jan. 26 as he appeared in the southern port city of Busan was his comically large headdress.A pink plush toy in the shape of Kurage-bo ― a creepily endearing jellyfish boy designed by the artist for his directorial debut “Jellyfish Eyes” ― resting atop his graying head already offered a hint of what was about to unfold inside his largest retrospective to date in Korea.“Takashi Murakami: MurakamiZombie,” mounted at the Busan Museum of Art, spans over 30 years of the artist's career, better defined as a merry mix of the grotesque and the “kawaii” (“lovable” or “cute” in Japanese). The survey brings in some

Jan 30, 2023By Park Han-sol
Smiling flower, mushroom bomb, zombie: What do Takashi Murakami's grotesquely 'kawaii' creatures tell us?
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - JANUARY 30, 2023

Jan 29, 2023
DAILY FORTUNE - JANUARY 30, 2023
Travel & Food

Incheon-bound Jeju Air plane returns to Hokkaido airport due to engine noise

This photo, provided by Jeju Air on Nov. 19, 2021, shows a passenger aircraft run by the low-cost carrier. Korea Times fileAn airplane belonging to Jeju Air Co., South Korea's biggest low-cost carrier, returned to the airport that it had departed from in Hokkaido, Japan, due to an unusual noise from its engine. The Boeing 737-800 carrying 187 passengers and six crew members returned to New Chitose Airport at 2:45 p.m. after taking off at 1:06 p.m.Jeju Air said the Incheon-bound aircraft circled in the sky to spend fuel in order to meet the required landing weight at which a plane is permitted to land. The passengers were taken to hotels while a safety inspection was conducted, the company said, adding that a substitute plane will depart at noon on Friday. (Yonhap)

Jan 26, 2023
Incheon-bound Jeju Air plane returns to Hokkaido airport due to engine noise
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - JANUARY 27, 2023

Jan 26, 2023
DAILY FORTUNE - JANUARY 27, 2023
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