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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.

Non-permanent school workers' protest

A member of the Korean Federation of Trade Unions (KFTU) protests against officials from Jongno District Office and police officers who attempt to tear down a tent set up outside the Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education (SMOE) in central Seoul, Tuesday. Members of the KFTU staged a rally, asking the SMOE to sign employment contracts with non-regular workers in schools.  / Yonhap

May 28, 2013

Korean War vets' visit

U.S. Korean War veterans parade during a ceremony to remember the battle of Nevada Outpost during the Korea War at the 25th Infantry Division in Yangju, Gyeonggi Province, Tuesday. The 5th regiment of the U.S. 1st Marine Division fought Chinese soldiers near the border village of Panmunjom from March 28 to 30, 1953./ Yonhap

May 28, 2013

N. Korea invites S. Korean bizmen, officials to talks

In what appeared to be a conciliatory move, North Korea on Tuesday invited South Korean officials as well as businessmen for talks on reopening a suspended joint industrial complex in its territory.The joint industrial complex in the North's border city of Gaesong remains shut down since early April when the communist country withdrew all of its 53,000 workers hired by 123 small-size South Korean factories operating there.South Korea has since proposed working government-level talks to try to reopen the factory zone but North Korea has turned it down, demanding that Seoul should first address more fundamental issues such as joint military exercises with the U.S.On Tuesday, the Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea, the North's arm for dealing with cross-border affairs with Seoul, said that Pyongyang is willing to start talks on the future of the industrial complex.In a statement issued by its unidentified spokesman, the committee noted that North Korea has already approved a plan by the South Korean business representatives to visit the industrial complex for maintenance

May 28, 2013

Thieves break into home of CJ chairman after forced search

In an interesting turn of events, thieves are believed to have brken into the home of CJ Chairman Lee Jae-hyun after a forced search by prosecutors last weekend.The police have denied the rumors, saying that the house that was targeted is not Lee’s but there are speculations that they are trying to put a lid on the whole incident.The Jungbu Police in downtown Seoul actually booked a 67-year-old Cho on charges of theft. He is charged with breaking into the villa owned by Lee in Jangchung-dong in central Seoul.Cho climbed the wall of the premises and was captured in CCTV (closed circuit television) and was caught by a security personnel, the police said.The thief sustained an injury while climbing over the wall.Lee and his family are currently under intensive investigation for setting up huge secret funds _ estimated at about 350 billion won ($310 million).

May 28, 2013

Massive crowds overrun Gyeongbok Palace

Thousands of visitors formed long queues at the ticket booths in front of Gyeongbok Palace at 7 p.m. on Sunday, the final day of late-night opening. The Cultural Heritage Administration received around 25,000 online bookings for Sunday and limited sales at the site to 10,000. But the handful of ticket inspectors lost control as the stream of visitors surged past them. CHA came under fierce criticism as the royal palace from the Chosun Dynasty quickly became a random picnic site for tens of thousands of people. As more and more people flooded in, there was no way for those already in the palace to appreciate the historic site. Some 100 picnic mats were laid out near the lake in the palace, and people started eating their packed snacks and drinking beer. Some even slept on the lawn. A 27-year-old university student complained, "I just can't understand how they admitted nearly 40,000 visitors. The number should have been limited to 1,000 and the inspectors should have checked visitors' belongings thoroughly. "On a day like today, there was nothing they could do if someone just sneaked i

May 28, 2013

No transmission towers

Officials from the state-run Korea Electric Power Corp. (KEPCO) drag out residents of Miryang, South Gyeongsang Province who staged a sit-in rally on a construction site of high-voltage transmission towers in the southeastern city, Monday. Residents of the area have opposed setting up the towers in the region for the last few years, saying it will pose severe health problems in the villages./ Yonhap

May 27, 2013

For Gaeseong normalization

Rep. Kim Sung-gon of the main opposition Democratic Party, left, who belongs to the National Assembly Foreign Affairs and Unification Committee, gets down on his knees to bow in front of the Assembly with other lawmakers, Monday, in the hope of normalizing operations at the inter-Korean Gaeseong Industrial Complex that has been closed for more than 50 days. They plan to bow 1,000 times over three days. / Yonhap

May 27, 2013

German lawmakers' visit

President Park Geun-hye, left, shakes hands with Winfried Kretschmann, president of the German Bundesrat upper house, in Cheong Wa Dae, Monday. Lawmakers from Germany including Kretschmann are on a visit to Seoul to promote mutual friendship and economic cooperation as this year mark’s the 130th anniversary of establishing diplomatic ties./ Courtesy of Cheong Wa Dae

May 27, 2013

Seoul Mayor Park Won-soon, right,

Seoul Mayor Park Won-soon, right, poses with Kim Jong-kap, chairman and CEO of Siemens Korea, in City Hall on Monday. Park and Kim signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on the establishment of Siemens’s Asia regional headquarters for its energy solutions business in Seoul. The regional headquarters plan, if implemented, is expected to create as many as 500 high-tech jobs in Korea. / Yonhap

May 27, 2013
Seoul Mayor Park Won-soon, right,

Cockroach evolution's rapid pace revealed

For decades, people have been getting rid of cockroaches by setting out bait mixed with poison. But in the late 1980s, in an apartment test kitchen in Florida, a killer product stopped working. Cockroach populations there kept rising. Mystified researchers tested and discarded theory after theory until they finally hit on the explanation: In a remarkably rapid display of evolution at work, many of the cockroaches had lost their sweet tooth, rejecting the corn syrup meant to attract them.In as little as five years, the sugar-rejecting trait had become so widespread that the bait had been rendered useless."Cockroaches are highly adaptive, and they're doing pretty well in the arms race with us," said North Carolina State University entomologist Jules Silverman, discoverer of the glucose aversion in that Florida kitchen during a bait test.The findings illustrate the evolutionary prowess that has helped make cockroaches so hard to stamp out that it is jokingly suggested they could survive nuclear war.In a study published Thursday in the journal Science, Silverman and other researchers exp

May 27, 2013
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