Most Popular
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Yoon, Lee end first talks with differences, agree to meet more
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What is Hybe’s next move?
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[Grace Kao] Hybe vs. Ador: Inspiration, imitation and plagiarism
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China outpaces Korea in smaller OLED shipments for 1st time
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[Herald Interview] Mom’s Touch seeks to replicate success in Japan
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Police to open alleged stalking probe over pastor over Dior bag scandal
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'Queen of Tears' finale sets record viewership ratings as tvN's most-watched series ending
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[News Focus] Lee tells Yoon that he has governed without political dialogue
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Seoul to deploy more military doctors to fill med prof void
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Liberal bloc moves to rewrite student rights ordinance
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SNS saves lives
A man planning to commit suicide decided not to die thanks to Twitter. On April 16, a man wrote that he was leaving a will on Twitter because he didn’t have paper. The message was directed to his parents and friends, as well as his brother serving in the military.Twitter users, shocked by the message, started retweeting the message along with a note saying that the man should be stopped from commi
April 18, 2011
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College graduates outside labor force near 3 mln
The number of South Korean college graduates outside the labor force was close to 3 million in the first quarter due to the country's sluggish job market, a government report showed Monday.According to the report by Statistics Korea, 2.95 million people with two-year college degrees or higher were not in the labor force during the January-March period. The number accounted for roughly 18 percent o
April 18, 2011
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Lee calls for removing prejudices about disabled
President Lee Myung-bak on Monday called for tearing down prejudices about the disabled, saying that their physical challenges never mean they cannot be as competitive as the non-disabled. "I believe that the disabled can be competitive workers as much as they want, depending on the types of work and duties," Lee said in his biweekly radio address ahead of the April 20 Day for the Disabled, c
April 18, 2011
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Seoul, Washington agree to start joint study on nuclear fuel reprocessing
South Korea and the U.S. have agreed to carry out a joint study on safe ways to store spent nuclear fuel, including exploring the feasibility of pyroprocessing technology, the government said Sunday.The Ministry of Education, Science and Technology said the two sides agreed to conduct two years of preliminary storage-related research up till 2012 that is technologically and economically viable, an
April 17, 2011
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Rhee’s son to apologize to April 19 victims
The family members of the deceased former President Syngman Rhee are to make their first official apology to students killed in the April 19 revolution in 1960.Rhee In-soo, the foster son of the late president, will visit the graves Tuesday morning, the 51st anniversary of the revolution, and pay respect to the victims who died under police fire, according to the Syngman Rhee Committee on Sunday.T
April 17, 2011
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Rights watchdog starts inspection of KAIST tuition system
The state human rights watchdog said Sunday that it has started an investigation into the punitive tuition system at Korea Institute of Science and Technology following recent student suicides at the school. The minority New Progress Party filed a petition with the National Human Rights Commission on April 8, claiming that the tuition system, under which students pay different amounts of fees base
April 17, 2011
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Lawmaker claims reactor rules ignored
The government resorted to expedience and bypassed set inspection rules to extend the operational life of South Korea’s oldest nuclear reactor, an opposition lawmaker claimed Saturday.Rep. Kim Young-hwan of the main opposition Democratic Party said when engineers tested the pressure vessel of the Gori-1 reactor in 2005, the critical system did not meet minimum safety requirements.He also argued th
April 17, 2011
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Seoul offers free medical checkup for expatriates
Seoul City on Sunday launched a mobile clinic to offer free medical checkups for foreign residents here, officials said. The traveling clinic provides medical inspections including for blood sugar, liver and kidney functions and hepatitis.People who are found to suffer from any illness will be guided on medical institutions where they can receive treatment free of charge.Starting with Itaewon on A
April 17, 2011
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S. Korea finds trace levels of radioactive particles in air
Traces of radioactive materials have been discovered across South Korea due to the inflow of contaminants from Japan's stricken nuclear power station, a state nuclear safety body said Saturday.The Korea Institute of Nuclear Safety confirmed diminishing traces of iodine-131, cesium-137 and cesium-134 have been detected by the country's 12 detection centers.It, however, stressed that concentration l
April 16, 2011
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10 S. Korean tourists injured in Vietnam in car accident
(Yonhap) -- A tourist bus overturned in Vietnam Friday, leaving 10 South Korean tourists injured, Seoul's foreign ministry said. The accident took place in Uongbi, Quang Ninh Province, in the northeastern region of Vietnam at around 2:30 p.m. (local time), according to the ministry. The injured tourists were moved to nearby hospitals and are not in life-threatening condition, it said. South
April 15, 2011
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Board won’t discuss chief’s fate
Board directors of the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology on Friday chose not to discuss sacking president Suh Nam-pyo despite the controversy over his policies triggered by the recent suicides of four students.The 16-person board received a report from KAIST on the latest suicide cases and the school’s plans to go back to providing scholarships to all of its students and to reduce
April 15, 2011
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KAIST faculty asked to raise grades
Professor dismisses reports of out of control competition at top science collegeA professor at Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology has dismissed claims that competition at the college is out of control, revealing that the then-dean of academic affairs sent a memo to professors last year asking them to bump up the average GPA of freshman.The memo, which was seen by The Korea Herald,
April 15, 2011
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Door-to-door health service ready for N.K. defectors
People who have fled North Korea will be able to receive door-to-door healthcare service in the South from fellow North Korean defectors from this month. They will also be able to receive tailored medical services at local public healthcare centers, the Ministry of Health and Welfare said Friday. The authorities have hired 10 North Korean defectors with counseling licenses here at public healthcar
April 15, 2011
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Ministries at odds over IT for CSAT
The ministries of education and knowledge economy are at odds over the latter’s unilateral decision to make information technology one of the subjects for the College Scholastic Ability Test, a state-administered university admission examination. While the Knowledge Economy Ministry justifies the plan that IT education is essential for enhancing global competitiveness, the education authorities op
April 15, 2011
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KAIST faculty asked to raise grades
Business majors at KAIST attend a meeting amid controversy over competition at the college in Daejeon on Tuesday. (The Korea Herald)Professor rubbishes reports of out of control competition at top science collegeA professor at Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology has rubbished claims that competition at the college is out of control, revealing that the then-dean of academic affairs s
April 15, 2011
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KAIST memo asked professors to raise grades
Lecturer rubbishes reports of out of control competition at top science collegeA professor at Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology has rubbished claims that competition at the college is out of control, revealing that the then-dean of academic affairs sent a memo to lecturers last year asking them to bump up the average GPA of freshman.The memo, which was seen by The Korea Herald, wa
April 15, 2011
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Man arrested for secretly recording women
(MCT)A 40-year-old man was arrested on charges of secretly videoing women over a period of six years, South Gyeongsang Province police said Thursday. Lee took pictures of 1,014 women in showers, bathrooms and changing rooms from 2005 to March this year around Gimhae and Busan, police said. He always carried a digital camera whenever he went outside, sometimes holding it under women’s skirts and re
April 15, 2011
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Korea toughens rules on Japan food
Seoul will call for the Japanese government to provide a safety certificate for food products manufactured from 13 regions near the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant, the Korea Food and Drug Administration said Thursday. The measure will be put into practice in May, officials said. The affected regions, including Tokyo and the prefectures of Miyagi, Yamagata, Niigata, Saitama, Kanagawa and Sh
April 14, 2011
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Stream refurbishment project faces backlash
Criticism is mounting over the government’s plan to pour another 20 trillion won ($19 billion) into redeveloping more than 3,000 tributaries of the country’s four major rivers. While the announcement was perceived by opposition lawmakers and environmentalists as an admission of failure of the original 22.2 trillion won four-river refurbishment plan, some expressed concerns over how to finance the
April 14, 2011
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Prosecutors to summon Kumho Petrochemical chief in slush fund probe
Prosecutors will summon the president of Korea Kumho Petrochemical Co., the petrochemical unit of Kumho Asiana Group, sometime next week for questioning over allegations that his company raised billions of won in slush funds through illicit transactions, officials said Thursday.Park Chan-koo, a younger brother of Kumho Asiana Group Chairman Park Sam-koo, is suspected of having created the slush fu
April 14, 2011