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BREAKING NEWS / Japan factory output has biggest monthly fall
« on: December 25, 2008, 11:59:45 PM »
TOKYO – Japan's contracting economy got more bad news Friday when the government said industrial production plunged by its biggest margin since records were started in 1953, the jobless rate jumped and household spending fell.

Output at the nation's vital manufacturers fell 8.1 percent from October as Japan's automakers and others slashed output to cope with slowing global demand. The drop was worse than analysts' forecasts, and a survey predicted a similar 8 percent decline in December.

"Exports and industrial production are falling so extraordinarily quickly that it almost defies analysis," said Richard Jerram, chief economist at Macquarie Securities in Tokyo.

The monthly drop in factory production is nearly double the previous record fall of 4.3 percent in January 2001, according to the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry. Earlier this week, trade data showed that Japanese exports plunged a record 26.7 percent in November.

Many companies, including big names like Toyota Motor Corp. and Sony Corp., have announced plans to cut production and workers. The yen's recent strength against the dollar and euro has also dealt a huge blow to this export-oriented economy — the world's second-largest — by eroding overseas earnings.

The job cuts are already being reflected in a higher unemployment rate, which rose to 3.9 percent in November from 3.7 percent in October, the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare said. The figure does not include those who have given up looking for work and exited the labor market entirely.

The ministry said 2.56 million people were unemployed in Japan in November, an increase of 100,000 from a year earlier.

Consumers are also holding back. Retail sales fell 0.9 percent in November from last year, the third straight monthly decline.

And average monthly household spending dipped 0.5 percent in November from a year earlier, for the ninth straight monthly decline. Still, the drop was smaller than expected, beating the 3.6 percent decline forecast by a Kyodo News survey. Household spending is a key indicator of consumer spending, which makes up more than half of Japan's gross domestic product.

Inflation, meanwhile, eased. Core consumer prices — which excludes volatile fresh food prices — rose 1 percent after a 1.9 increase in October.

Stock investors seemed to brush off the bevy of negative numbers. The benchmark Nikkei 225 stock average rose 1.6 percent to 8,739.52.

In the third quarter, Japan's economy shrank 1.8 percent at an annual pace, worst that first thought.

The outlook for manufacturers is particularly grim. If dire forecasts for the next two months of industrial production hold, factory output will have fallen 20 percent during the four months of October through January 2009.

Output by automakers fell 15 percent from October and 25 percent from a year earlier. Electronic manufacturers cut output 12 percent compared the previous month and 25 percent from the same month last year.

Economists say that while the outlook for the near-term remains bleak, a modest recovery in demand and production may begin to surface in mid-2009, as governments around the world begin to implement stimulus measures announced in recent months.

"We haven't see the light at the end of the tunnel yet, but we should be seeing it in a few months," said Takuji Okubo, an economist at Merrill Lynch.

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BREAKING NEWS / China Earthquake
« on: December 25, 2008, 11:57:07 PM »
In quake aftermath, China says many schools unsafe

BEIJING (Reuters) – China said Friday many of its schools were structurally unsafe more than seven months after a devastating earthquake, centered on southwestern Sichuan province, killed thousands of children under collapsed school buildings.

About 33.58 million square meters, or 13 square miles, of primary and middle schools had safety problems, state media quoted Lu Yongxiang, vice-chairman of the National People's Congress (NPC) Standing Committee, as saying.

This was 2.5 percent of the country's total school buildings, or the equivalent to 134 Bird's Nest stadiums in floorspace, he said, referring to the showcase stadium at the Beijing Summer Olympics.

"About 90 percent of the dilapidated houses are in the country's central and western parts," Lu was quoted by China Daily as saying.

In Yunnan, neighboring Sichuan and on the edge of the quake zone, 20 percent of primary schools and 11 percent of middle schools were "not totally safe," according to the Ministry of Education.

And 85 percent of those were of "D" category, the most dangerous level.

An earthquake measuring 4.9 on the Richter Scale injured nine people early Friday in Ruili, a city in southwestern Yunnan, when at least one old building collapsed, Xinhua news agency said.

The government estimates collapsed schools killed more than 19,000 children and teachers in the May 12 quake, nearly a quarter of the total deaths.

The deaths of children, many buried while nearby buildings withstood the tremors, have been the most controversial aspect of the disaster.

Beijing rapidly clamped down on reporting of the deaths and has been trying to silence grieving parents looking for redress in the court system.

"Most of the school buildings were built in the 1980s, when saving money was the priority and we didn't really give much thought to safety standards," Wang Zhiren, a school representative in Nanba, one of the worst-hit townships, was quoted by the China Daily as saying.

Reconstruction of 3,340 schools in the quake zone is expected to be finished by September 2010. A local official told the newspaper a supervision mechanism has been set up to ensure quality.

(Reporting by Beijing newsroom; Editing by Nick Macfie)

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BREAKING NEWS / Web falls for fake monsters
« on: December 25, 2008, 11:55:00 PM »
Ghost in the Machine: Top Paranormal Searches of 2008


The Internet is great for: 1. Checking mail. 2. Getting stock quotes. 3. Finding proof that ghosts exist.

At least that's how it seems given all the people that click on stories, videos and more claiming to be evidence of encounters with spirits. Ghosts may be dead, but they aren't going away, and in fact emerged as the most sought-after supernatural phenomenon of 2008. Possibly the ghost-with-the-most this year was the weird blue mist at the gas station. Spirit from beyond, or trick of light? No one knows, but it was fun to search about.

Speaking of fun, in a year of serious global troubles and political milestones, the Web has to thank people like Matthew Whitton and Rick Dyer. The two Georgia residents announced to the world that they had a frozen Sasquatch corpse. This claim melted like the ice around the rubber gorilla costume that they present to the public. The elaborate Bigfoot hoax kept the Internet buzzing for days.

The annual "discovery" of an alleged Chupacabra in Texas also provided the online world with a doozy of a diversion. The mythical goatblood-sucking creature of the American Southwest is often subject to supposed sightings, but the existence of an apparent specimen generated hype worthy of a horror film. Sadly, to the horror of many transfixed Web users, the body turned out to be a mangy pit bull.

These two hoaxes were cherries on the proverbial sundae of paranormal enthusiasm. People gravitating to old classics like aliens, the Loch Ness Monster, and vampires kept cryptozoologists busy updating their websites.

One last popular search term may prove that ultimately, the real monsters of the world are as impressive as those we can imagine. Megalodon was a prehistoric shark approximately 40 to 60 feet long. Yes, a shark as big as a truck. Some people believe that this terrifying creature still exists in the deep waters of the world, sparking fear and fascination across the collective cyber-unconscious. Who wouldn't want to see what one would look like?

As the remote corners of the earth vanish, and the few remaining natural secrets of the world are unveiled, the imagination will probably continue to run wild with new mystery beasts (we didn't forget about you, Montauk Monster!) Heck, even our president-elect has a fondness for terrifying fictional creatures.


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BREAKING NEWS / Santa' gunman kills
« on: December 25, 2008, 11:51:49 PM »
COVINA, Calif. – A man dressed as Santa who had been having marital problems opened fire at a Christmas party, leaving more than three people dead in a home that then caught fire, authorities said.

Hours later, police found the body of the suspect, Bruce Jeffrey Pardo, 45, at the home of his brother early Thursday in the Sylmar area of Los Angeles. Police said he killed himself but would not say how.

"He was going through some type of marital problems, and we believe that this residence is a relative's residence," Lt. Pat Buchanan said of the house that burned.

Police initally said three people were dead in the shootings and fire late Wednesday. Ed Winter of the Los Angeles County Coroner's Office said Thursday that investigators sifting through the ashes of the house found "several" more bodies, but would not say how many.

The bodies were too badly burned to immediately determine whether they died in the shootings or the fire, Winter said. "We have multiple bodies inside," Winter said. "They're extremely charred and burned."

The gunman arrived at the party in Covina late Wednesday and immediately opened fire with a handgun, Buchanan said. Witnesses told police that the man took off the Santa suit and left the scene of the burning house in street clothes.

Winter said the search through the destroyed home would take at least until the end of the day.

Jan Gregory, a neighbor, said about 25 people were at the party when the gunshots rang out and people started running by the house.

She said she saw a teenage boy run from the house screaming, "They shot my family."

Buchanan says three other people were injured. A woman in her 20s and an 8-year-old girl had gunshot wounds that were not life-threatening, and a third person had a broken ankle.

Police received several 911 calls with reports of shots fired at 11:30 p.m. Wednesday night, and were still hearing gunshots after they arrived and found the house in flames, Buchanan said.

At first, firefighters were held back by police because shots were still being fired, though it may have been ammunition burning in the blaze, fire Captain Mike Brown said.

Firefighters had extinguished the blaze by about 1:30 a.m. Thursday, fire Captain Mike Brown said.

The two-story home on a cul-de-sac was destroyed in Covina, a quiet suburb 25 miles east of Los Angeles.

"This neighborhood is really quiet," said Jeffrey Barrientos, who lives half a block from the house that burned. Barrientos said the neighborhood's residents were mostly retirees and elderly people

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LET'S TALK LOVE / Is There Any Chances That Phoebe Will Forgive Me?
« on: April 29, 2008, 12:04:07 PM »
From the bottom of my heart, i am asking your forgiveness Phoebe,isara man nako ang akong paninda sa Sutukil, i won't eat a day and drink ,please just forgive me.is there any chances to hear from you again? Ako ni Phoebe ug mao ni karon akong gibati sa imuha,Hope you will forgive me.Don't get wrong,am i hot to you?



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