Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Brazilian boy's custody granted to U.S. father

RIO DE JANEIRO, June 1 (Xinhua) -- A Brazilian court ruled Monday evening that the boy Sean Goldman, whose custody is being disputed by his American father and Brazilian stepfather, is to return to the United States.

The court ruling said the child's stepfather Joao Paulo Lins e Silva with whom Sean has been living so far, must return the boy in 48 hours. The Federal Police will monitor the family to avoid an escape attempt.

Nine-year-old Sean have lived in the U.S. with his parents, David Goldman and Bruna Bianchi, until he was four. After the parents divorced in 2004, the mother was granted full custody and moved back to Brazil.

Since then, a fierce court battle has been occurring with the father alleging that Bianchi kidnapped his son. Last year, the case took a new direction when Bianchi died of complications from the birth of her daughter.

The Goldman case became famous over the years after David Goldman appeared in several U.S. talk shows. In March, when Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva visited Washington D.C., he discussed the case with his U.S. counterpart Barack Obama, saying Sean's case was to be decided by the courts only.

Sean's stepfather Lins e Silva said he will appeal against the judge's decision. According to his lawyer Sergio Tostes, the judge did not take into consideration Sean's repeated statements that he wished to stay in Brazil with his sister and stepfather.

"It is a violence never seen before in the Brazilian courts," Tostes said.

Man stands trial for murdering wife in New Zealand

WELLINGTON, June 2 (Xinhua) -- A man stood trial on Tuesday in Auckland on charges of murdering his wife and abandoning his young daughter at a railway station in Melbourne.

Nai Yin Xue, 55, of Chinese origin, was charged with murdering his wife An An Liu, 28, in September 2007.

When asked to enter a plea in the High Court in Auckland on Tuesday, Xue denied that he was guilty, saying that he was innocent, Radio New Zealand reported.

The jury has been selected and is made up of 12 women.

Qian Xun Xue, 3, was found alone in Melbourne a few days before her mother's body was discovered in the boot of a car in Auckland, according to the report, which did not tell when the body was found.

Xue was arrested months later in the United States.

No further reports about the case are available.

Priest dismissed for beating drug patients

BEIJING, May 29 (Xinhuanet) -- A Serbian Orthodox priest -- who headed a drug addiction treatment centre -- was fired by the Serbian Orthodox Church after a video showed him beating and punching patients with a shovel.


Bishop Artemije announced Wednesday dismissal of priest Branislav Peranovic at the Crna Reka center, about 300km southwest of Belgrade,Wednesday.


Artemije saidan investigation has been ordered into Peranovic's activities and the centermay be shut down if investigators determine violence occurs there.


It is open for the time being, after numerous pleadings by the patients -- there are around 200 people currently receiving treatment at the centre -- and their parents, the Bishop said.


"We are also asking state authorities to investigate the matter and punish those responsible," hesaid.


(Agencies)

Panda Lin Hui in Thailand delivers first baby

BANGKOK, April 27 (Xinhua) -- Lin Hui, the female panda in a zoo of Thailand's northern province of Chiang Mai delivered her first baby on Wednesday morning, Thailand's Zoological Park Organization Director Sophon Damnui said.

Earlier, local media reported that Lin Hui delivered twin babies, but later the zoo officially announced that it was not the twin pandas, but it was only a baby panda.

Shortly after shaking and pushing, Lin Hui delivered her baby at 10:39 a.m., local time, Prasertsak Boontrakulpoonthawee, head of the zoo's panda section, said.

The newly-born panda is estimated to weight 200 grams, according to Sophon.

However, the zoo could not identify the gender of the newly-born panda since Lin Hui does not let zoo officials to get close to it, Sophon said.

In February 2009, Lin Hui was impregnated with artificial insemination.

Lin Hui's delivery was already reported to China's government and has asked China to send baby panda experts to Chiang Mai, said Prasertsak.

On Thursday at 2.0 p.m. Thailand's time, two experts of baby pandas from China will arrive at Thailand to take care of the newly-born pandas in Chiang Mai, said Sophon.

Female panda Lin Hui and male panda Xuang Xuang have been on loan from China to Chiang Mai zoo since 2003, as part of a panda research program.

The loan agreement will see the two pandas and their offspring returned to China after 10 years.

Hero horse recommended for bravery medal in Australia

SYDNEY May 27 (Xinhua) -- A retired police horse which saved four sheep and two goats from being burned to death during a fierce bushfire in Australia in February has been recommended for a bravery medal on Wednesday.


The big Clydesdale horse named Paddy rounded up the smaller animals and had them stand under his massive frame as the bushfire raged through their paddock on February 7 in Victoria.

The terrible bushfires killed 173 people and countless livestock, making it the deadliest bushfire in Australian history, but the heartwarming story of Paddy the hero horse is one bit of good news.

Paddy served in police parades as a drum horse and was retired to the farm of former police officer Mike Salmon at Happy Valley north of Melbourne.

Salmon said he released the sheep and goats from their pens into Paddy's paddock, hoping they would evade the fire.

He watched in amazement as the big horse rounded up the animals and sheltered them under his great frame.

Salmon hosed the horse down every half hour or so but Paddy never moved as embers fell from the sky.

"If the sheep moved Paddy rounded them up and brought them back to the corner where they waited under him," Salmon told Australian Broadcasting Corporation radio network.

The horse has been recommended for a bravery award with the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

Canadian governor eats seal heart raw to support hunters

BEIJING, May 27 (Xinhuanet) -- Canada's Governor General Michalle Jeancut out the heart of a seal and ate it rawto show her support for the country's seal hunters.


Jean, the representative of Queen Elizabeth II as Canada's head of state, gutted the seal and swallowed a slice of the mammal's heart lateMonday during an official Arctic trip.AEU vote earlier this month banned seal products on grounds that the seal hunt is cruel.


Sheknelt over the carcass of a freshly slaughtered seal and used a traditional ulu blade to cut through the flesh and slice off some meat. She then asked one of her hosts: "Could I try the heart?"


Jean said it was "absolutely delicious" and tasted "like sushi," according to images broadcast by a television channel.

"And it's very rich in protein," she added.

As she wiped the blood off her fingers with a tissue, Jean explained her support for Canada's traditional Inuit seal hunt and trade, which some fear will be devastated by a European ban on seal products.

Jean expressed dismay that people would call the traditional hunting practices inhumane.

(Agencies)

Zookeeper killed in tiger attack in New Zealand

WELLINGTON, May 27 (Xinhua) -- A zookeeper died on Wednesday after being attacked by a white tiger at a wildlife park near New Zealand's North Island city of Whangarei, Radio New Zealand reported on Wednesday.


Police said Dalu Mncube was killed by a white tiger while cleaning an enclosure with another keeper at the Zion Wildlife Gardens.

Despite the best efforts of the other staff members who rushed to his aid, the male tiger would not let Mncube go and he died at the scene from "tearing" injuries to his head, torso and lower leg, the radio reported.

The white tiger, one of only 120 in the world, has been put down and the park has been closed, while police and Department of Labor staff investigate further.

Eight foreign tourists on a tour of the park have witnessed the attack. The park is home to 42 rare lions and tigers.


Ugandan police investigates man forcing wife breast-feed dogs

KAMPALA, May 26 (Xinhua) -- The police in eastern Uganda is investigating a case in Pallisa district where a woman was forced by her husband to breast-feed his dogs, a police spokesperson said here on Tuesday.


Judith Nabakooba, Uganda Police Force spokesperson told Xinhua by telephone that Nathan Amoloi forced his wife Jennifer Alupot to breast-feed his five puppies since his cows were taken by her family as bride price.

"Investigations are still going on, the man was arrested but later released on police bond," Nabakooba said.

Police arrested Amoloi on May 4 but released him the following day and label his wife an insane woman.

Matia Kasaija, minister of state for internal affairs said that a team of investigators from the Criminal Investigation Department headquartered in Kampala will be sent to Pallisa to bring the case to a logical conclusion.

"This is a serious matter. I will ensure that this woman gets justice," Kasaija was quoted as saying by the state-owned New Vision daily on Tuesday.

"How can a man force his wife to breast-feed dogs? How can such a thing happen in this modern world where we have Police?" he wondered, promising to hold accountable the police officers in the district if investigations show they mishandled the case.

The couple, now 11 years in marriage, lost its third-born-child, who was sharing his mother's breasts with the puppies, to suspected rabies early last year. Rabies is a fatal viral disease that causes acute inflammation of the brain in humans and other mammals.

"I produced four children but one of them died last year. I now have a three-month-old baby but my husband has been forcing me to share the breast milk with his five puppies," Alupot was quoted assaying by the New Vision.

Alupot's case has caused angry reactions especially from women activists calling for the hanging of Amoloi.

The Association of Female Lawyers in Uganda has offered free legal services to Alupot to ensure she gets justice.

Man sucks snake venom to save his dog


BEIJING, May 26 (Xinhuanet)-- A farmer saved his
dog's life without caring for his ownafter sucking rattlesnake venom out
of his canine'snose.


Bobby Jenkins began feeling ill after he sucked the venom. Hedidn't bother to go to a hospital until he took
his dog, Tank,to the vet.


Jenkinsreceived four vials of antivenin.
Hehasrecovered now and sohis dog.


Tank had been bitten after running under some
equipment on the family ranch.


(Agencies)

Migrant worker gets jail term for setting time bomb on city bus

GUANGZHOU, May 27 (Xinhua) -- A local court in south China's Guangdong Province Tuesday convicted a migrant worker who set a time bomb on a city bus last August of jeopardizing public security and sentenced him to six years in prison.

When contacted by Xinhua Wednesday, Haizhu District Court in Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong, confirmed that after the verdict was read out, Huang Xin, the convict, told them he believed the penalty was too heavy and would appeal his case.

The court was told that Huang Xin, 25 and a native of Binyang County, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, worked as a transient worker with a factory in Huadu District of Guangzhou. He had also developed a hobby playing a lottery game called "mark six".

Around 3 p.m. Aug.21, Huang got onto a city bus No.125 with a homemade time bomb which was attached to a letter for Guangzhou City Mayor Zhang Guangning demanding Zhang and Guangzhou Nanfang Metropolis Daily, a local newspaper, to text message the winning lottery numbers to his cell phone. He placed the bomb beneath a seat close to the rear tires on the left before he got off, said the prosecutors.

The bomb went off around 4 p.m. on the same day when the bus was passing through Haizhu District, a downtown area in Guangzhou, blowing a hole in the bus deck.

The accident didn't cause any death or injuries as there was only one passenger and the bus driver onboard when the explosion occurred.

Huang was detained from his factory dorm the next day. He was formally arrested in September.

The Haizhu District Court opened its first hearing on Huang's case in January, but didn't produce a ruling because Huang's lawyer insisted his client's behavior was weird -- asking for the lottery's winning numbers by issuing a threat to the mayor and even the newspaper -- and demanded an assessment of Huang's mental fitness.

Tuesday's hearing was focused on Huang's mental health.

The prosecutors Tuesday presented a certificate produced by Guangzhou Mental Illness Hospital claiming Huang had not suffered a history of mental illness and was fully capable of controlling his actions when he was committing the crime. The certificate was signed and sealed by three medical doctors.

The prosecutors theorized that Huang planted the time bomb on the city bus in order to get the lottery's winning numbers. "Though he alerted the police about the bomb, Huang asked the police for the winning numbers with a new threat saying there would be an explosion on the bus," said one prosecutor, who blamed poor education for Huang's strange behavior.

The court ruled that Huang had committed a crime that endangered the safety of lives and the health of the public, and of corporate property.

On hearing the penalty, Huang expressed remorse and demanded lenient treatment by the court.

According to Chinese laws, Huang should submit a written document within ten working days from Tuesday if he intends to appeal his case to a higher court.


Girl: not all roads lead to romance


BEIJING, May 25 -- A young man tried to impress his
girlfriend by swimming to the middle of a river using one hand while holding a
bunch of red roses with the other.

Yang, 27, of Zhejiang province, was hoping to keep
the girl after they've been together for four months.

On Tuesday morning, he swam 40 m and then climbed up
a contrete island in the middle of the river posing as The Thinker, a famous
work by French sculptor Auguste Rodin, for at least 30 minutes. He asked police
to bring his girlfriend to see him otherwise he wouldn't leave.

The girl, Wang, 23, of Jilin province, showed up but
wasn't flattered with Yang's scheme.

(Source: China Daily/Modern Jinbao)

Village told to change name or it won't exist

BEIJING, May 25 -- A village had to change its name, or character, because
the name includes two rarely used Chinese characters that can't be found in a
new police computer system.

The characters for "Tang" and "Lu" have been used for decades but Tanglu
residents who tried to get a marriage certificate had trouble since the
computers didn't recognize their hometown marked on their ID cards.

The system also became a problem for those seeking employment, travelers
and those doing real estate transactions.

Some villagers and experts said changing the village's name is damaging to
their culture and customs but police said it would be too expensive to change
the computer programs.

(Source: China Daily/Yangcheng Evening News)

Grateful dog helps master collect and guard bottles





A dog is showing his appreciation to his new master by collecting empty bottles for him in Dalian city, Liaoning province.


A dog is showing his appreciation to his new master by collecting empty bottles for him in Dalian city, Liaoning province.(Xinhua Photo)
Photo Gallery


BEIJING, May 24 -- A dog is showing his appreciation to his new master by collecting empty bottles for him in Dalian city, Liaoning province.

Wang, who makes a living by collecting and selling empty bottles, saw the small dog sobbing outside his house one morning in April.

After Wang gave the dog some food and water, it refused to leave and struck with him.

The dog is also a good guard. If anyone takes a bottle from his truck, the dog chases after them and barks until the bottle is retrieved.


(Source: China Daily)

Bad environment makes birds good singers

BEIJING, May 24 -- A hostile environment and inconsistent weather may explain why some birds become better singers than others, and also likely have superior learning and mating skills, a study said Thursday.

The research is based on a large-scale study of mockingbirds in different habitats carried out by researchers at the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent) in Durham, North Carolina, the Cornell University Lab of Ornithology and McGill University.

"As environments become more variable or unpredictable, song displays become more elaborate," said Carlos Botero, a post-doctoral researcher at NESCent.

"Survival and reproduction become more complicated when weather patterns are unpredictable because you don't know when food will be available or how long it will be around."

And for female birds, "the consequences of picking a mediocre mate are magnified in harsher climes," he said.

Male mockingbirds sing mainly to impress mates, so superior singing skills suggest that a male is a good catch, according to Botero. But males that sing more complex songs also "tend to carry fewer parasites, and have offspring that are more likely to survive," Botero said.

Songbirds are not born knowing how to sing, and have to learn their songs over time. Botero and colleagues believe that this song-learning ability is a sign of broader learning ability.

"Birds that sing better are telling others, at least indirectly: Hey, I'm a good learner," said Botero.

Botero searched sound archives around the world and traveled the southern hemisphere to tape bird songs in the wild, recording nearly 100 tracks from 29 mockingbird species.

He later used computer programs to convert each sound recording into a sound graph, then compared the patterns to a database of temperature and precipitation records.

The study appeared in the US journal Current Biology.

(Source: China Daily)

Angry passerby pushes a "suicide jumper" off a bridge in S China

GUANGZHOU, May 23 (Xinhua) -- A passerby pushed off a
would-be "suicide jumper" off a bridge in Guangzhou city, southern China's
Guangdong province, for he was "too angry about the jumper's selfish activity,"
Saturday's China Daily reported.






Passerby Lai Jiansheng (L) pushes off a
would-be "suicide jumper", Chen Fuchao,off Haizhu bridge in
Guangzhou city, southern China's Guangdong province, May 21, 2009. (Photo:
Guangzhou Daily)
Photo
Gallery


The jumper, Chen Fuchao, attempted to become the
twelfth "suicide jumper" of the Haizhu bridge which has gained a reputation as a
macabre tourist destination after attracting 11 would-be suicide jumpers since
the start of April.








Chen Fuchao falls off a
bridgeafter being pushed by Lai Jiansheng in Guangzhou city,
southern China's Guangdong province, May 21, 2009.(Photo: Guangzhou
Daily)
Photo
Gallery


Lai Jiansheng, the 66-year-old man happened to pass
by the Haizhu bridge on Thursday morning when he found Chen sit at the bridge
threatening to jump off and had held up traffic around the bridge for almost
five hours.

Chen wanted to kill himself because he was in 2
million yuan of debt following a failed construction project.

After knowing the situation, Lai volunteered to talk
with the Chen to persuade him. After denied by the police, he broken through a
police cordon and climbed up to where Chen sat.

Lai first greeted Chen with a handshake, and then he
pushed him off the bridge. Chen fell 8 meters onto a partially-inflated
emergency air cushion, damaging his spine and elbow in the fall.

"I pushed him off because jumpers like Chen are very
selfish. Their action violates a lot of public interest," Lai said.








Lai Jiansheng greets the crowd after he
pushed off would-be "suicide jumper" Chen Fuchaoon Haizhu bridge in
Guangzhou city, southern China's Guangdong province, May 21,
2009.(Photo: Guangzhou Daily)
Photo
Gallery


"They do not really dare to kill themselves. Instead,
they just want to raise the relevant government authorities' attention to their
appeals," he added.

Lai was taken away by police after the incident. Chen
is now recovering in hospital.

Police sources said many suicidal people had
financial troubles, such as unpaid wages and some suffered from medical
conditions and injuries from workplace accidents.

"Traffic across the Haizhu Bridge, which is widely
regarded as an important scenic attraction, become worse," said a spokesman with
the Guangzhou public security bureau.

He said the situation caused chaos to residents,
adding that the city had to send a rescue vessel, an ambulance, several police
cars and fire engines each time when there was a "jumper."

Nepali Sherpa scales Qomolangma for historic 19th time

BEIJING,May 22 (Xinhuanet) -- Nepalese Apa
Sherpa climbed Mount Qomolangma for a record 19th time, breaking his own record
set last year.


The 49-year-oldSherpa reached to the top
ofthe world's highest peakThursday morning, officials said.


ASalt Lake City resident since 2006, Sherpa has
made it to the summit of Everest 19 of the past 20 years and completed the
amazing task for eight straight years. The next closest total was 16 going into
this spring's climbing season.


The 5-foot-4, 120-pound Sherpa from the village of
Thame said: "Up to the 17th time in 2007 I climbed as a professional, as part of
my occupation," according to the Web site tracking the progress of his most
recent expedition.


"But last year I climbed to raise funds for a school
in Thame. In addition to raising money for Nepali school kids." Apa also plans
to remove more than two tons of garbage from Mount
Qomolangma.


The summit season on Everest begins in late April and
May when a small window between the spring and summer monsoon offers the best
conditions for making the ascent.

More than 100 climbers have already made it to the
top this spring season, in which 29 expedition teams are in action.

(Agencies)

Wow! a giant shoe

A girl looks at a giant shoe, which is 140cm long, 66cm wide, 50cm tall and weighs 60kg, at a shoe shop in Lianyungang, a coastal city in east China's Jiangsu province, May 21, 2009. This shoe was made of high-quality pure leather and is displayed for promotional purpose. (Xinhua/Wang Chun)


A girl looks at a giant shoe, which is 140cm long, 66cm wide, 50cm tall and weighs 60kg, at a shoe shop in Lianyungang, a coastal city in east China's Jiangsu province, May 21, 2009. This shoe was made of high-quality pure leather and is displayed for promotional purpose. (Xinhua/Wang Chun)
Photo Gallery








A kid views a giant shoe, which is 140cm long, 66cm wide, 50cm tall and weighs 60kg, at a shoe shop in Lianyungang, a coastal city in east China's Jiangsu province, May 21, 2009. This shoe was made of high-quality pure leather and is displayed for promotional purpose. (Xinhua/Wang Chun)


A kid views a giant shoe, which is 140cm long, 66cm wide, 50cm tall and weighs 60kg, at a shoe shop in Lianyungang, a coastal city in east China's Jiangsu province, May 21, 2009. This shoe was made of high-quality pure leather and is displayed for promotional purpose. (Xinhua/Wang Chun)
Photo Gallery



Russian woman to challenge ban on female train drivers

BEIJING, May 22 (Xinhuanet) -- Her appeal to drive metro trains was turned down by the Supreme Court, but 22-year-old Anna Klevets will challengeRussian lawthat prohibits womenfrom driving.


The Supreme Court Thursday rejected a St. Petersburg woman's appeal on the grounds that women cannot work with dangerous heavy equipment, Itar-Tass news agency reported.


Klevets will now appeal to a St Petersburg court to challenge the working conditions on the city's metro and make it acceptable for women, newspaper Izvestia said, quoting lawyer Galina Yenyutina at the Centre for Social and Labour Rights.


"We need to create equal, safe working conditions, so that men as well as women can work in safety," she said.

Klevets applied to work as an assistant driver on the chandeliered underground system in Russia's second city, St Petersburg, last November. But she was turned down following the ban on women driving trains.

(Agencies)

Pet tortoise grows up to 40kg in S China

Two kids frolick with a giant tortoise weighing over 20 kg, at Jiaji Township, Qionghai City, south China's Hainan Province, May 21, 2009. A local citizen surnamed Huang purchased the then a quarter-kg-weight African spurred tortoise, or the Geochelone sulcata in Latin, and brought it back to breed as a pet some 4 years ago. Now it has grown up to over 40 kg. (Xinhua/Meng Zhongde)


Two kids frolick with a giant
tortoise weighing over 20 kg, at Jiaji Township, Qionghai City, south
China's Hainan Province, May 21, 2009. A local citizen surnamed Huang
purchased then a quarter-kg-weight African spurred tortoise, or the Geochelone
sulcata in Latin, and brought it back to breed as a pet some 4 years ago.
Now it has grown up to over 40 kg. (Xinhua/Meng Zhongde)
Photo Gallery








A giant tortoise weighing over 20 kg grazes on the grass, at Jiaji Township, Qionghai City, south China's Hainan Province, May 21, 2009. (Xinhua/Meng Zhongde)


A giant tortoise weighing over 20 kg
grazes on the grass, at Jiaji Township, Qionghai City, south China's
Hainan Province, May 21, 2009.(Xinhua/Meng Zhongde)
Photo Gallery


Utah boy beats record for most snails on face


BEIJING, May 21 (Xinhuanet) -- An 11-year-old Utah boy covered his face with 43 live snails to break a world record of putting the most snails onface.


Fin Keheler from Sandy allowed 43 of the slimy mollusks to be put on his face Saturday. He wants the Guinness World Records to verify his effort.


Keleher had to keep 37 snails on his face for ten seconds. It took him two tries before he was successful and when he counted them, 43 of the slimy creatures had stayed on his face.


The snails were gathered from neighbors' gardens and Keleher'sfamily helped put them onhis face.


(Agencies)

Woman abandons high heels to chase thieves








(Photo:China Daily)
Photo Gallery


 BEIJING, May 21 -- A young woman rescued her notebook computer from
two thieves after she jumped out of her high-heels and chased the suspects in
Wuchang, Hubei province, on Sunday.

Feng, 27, sprinted into action after her bag was grabbed. It contained her
computer, bankcards and cash.

Feng chased the men and shouted for help at the same time. After they ran
for 400 meters, they dropped the bag and fled.


(Source: China Daily)

NZ police hunt couple after 10 mln NZ dollar banking error

WELLINGTON, May 21 (Xinhua) -- The New Zealand police were hunting a couple who were thought to have fled with millions of dollars after a banking error, New Zealand media reported on Thursday.

The couple, who ran a service station in the North Island city of Rotorua, are understood to have applied to Westpac Bank for a 10,000 NZ dollar (6,000 U.S. dollars) overdraft and mistakenly had10 million NZ dollars paid into their account.

Police said that some of the money had been withdrawn.

The bank account owners had since disappeared and the Interpol had been called in to help find them.

Police were currently conducting an investigation into the individuals that may have been involved in the withdrawal of that sum of money.

The service station has since closed its doors after going intoreceivership.

The Westpac said court action had begun to recover the money but refused to comment further.


Tiger and lion get up close and personal

BEIJING, May 20 -- A 4-year-old tiger and a lion
were doing well after workers at the Badaling Wildlife Park encouraged them to
live together on Monday.

Over the years, they took walks
and often kissed, Zookeepers said, and they moved to the zoo last week.

Zookeepers hope they would mate sometime this year
and produce the first hybrid.

(Source: China Daily/Beijing Evening
News)

Forbidden to see girl, boy locks parents in room








(Photo:China Daily)
Photo Gallery


BEIJING, May 20 -- A teenager in Changle, Fujian province, locked his
parents in their bedroom after they ordered him to stay away from a girl he
liked.

Lin and his wife felt the boy, 19, was too young to be in love and locked
him in his room. They released him after he vowed not to meet the girl.

However, after his parents went to bed one night last week, the boy locked
them inside their room and went to see the girl.

They had to call police to open the door. They told police that their son
fell in love with the girl and purchased a gift for the girl's birthday.

((Source: China Daily/ Strait News)

Chinese "Forrest Gump" to run marathon from Hohhot to Lhasa

HOHHOT, North China, May 20 (Xinhua) -- A Chinese
marathon lover decided to run from north China's Hohhot, capital of Inner
Mongolia Autonomous Region, all the way to Lhasa, Tibet Autonomous Region this
summer.

Ren Weidong, nicknamed Chinese Forrest Gump, who
participated in all the 12 international marathons held in China last year, said
he will spend two months to run from his hometown Hohhot to Lhasa, where he will
cap his bold plan with a following plateau marathon.

The 50-year-old has made his name early this year by
running from Hohhot to Chinese capital Beijing within six days.

Ren said he is about to leave Hohhot on June 6 and
finish the run on August 15 before taking part in the Lhasa international
marathon on August 22.

The awe-inspiring run, covering 3,974 km, starts from
Inner Mongolia and go through northwest China's Shannxi, Ningxia Hui Autonomous
Region, Gansu and Qinghai, and ends in Tibet.

The marathon will definitely become a hard test while
Ren is entering Qinghai and Tibet, which form the main body of the lofty
Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.

Ren said he has to make much prep work for this stage
where the oxygen level is only half of that on plain and the altitude is at
least 4,000 meters above sea level, some part even above 6,000 meters.



Tibet to hold 4th Int'l Halfway Marathon Tournament

BEIJING, May 12 (Xinhuanet) -- Tibet's capital of Lhasa will hold the fourth International Halfway Marathon Challenge Tournament on Aug. 22, which is during the Shoton Festival (yogurt banquet in the Tibetan language).









Participants in the first International Halfway Marathon Challenge Tournament start to race on the square of the Potala Palace on Sep. 12, 2004. (Source: People's Daily)
Photo Gallery


Launched in 2004, the competition will be held in Lhasa, which is known to be at the highest altitude of over 3,000 m above sea level in the world. Full story

Indian man finishes 90th marathon in U.S.

NEW DELHI, May 18 (Xinhua) -- India's grand old marathon man Ashis Roy has completed his 90th marathon, finishing the Delaware Marathon in Wilmington, the United States, in a time of six hours and 32 minutes, reported the Indo-Asian News Service Monday.

The 76-year-old Roy was the oldest of 600 participants in the match. It took him nine minutes more to finish the 26-mile run Sunday than he did in the Potomac River Run Marathon in Alexandria two weeks ago, said the report. Full story

Woman charged with beating husband

BEIJING, May 19 (Xinhuanet) -- A 78-year-old woman
has been charged with beating her 84-year-old husband because she believed he
wasunfaithful several times during the marriage.


Prosecutors said the Lynnwood womanhit her
husbandwith a bowl, pipe and carpet sweeper. He suffered broken ribs,
pelvis and a wrist.


The womanwas chargedThursday with
second-degree assault after her arrest late last month. She willremain in
jail on $70,000 bail.

"I beat him again," the woman
wrote in the diary, which was recovered by police. "I told him it would be worth
going to jail just to watch him bleed to death," she wrote.


A witness told police the woman believed her husband
had an affair 35 years ago, according to court documents.

(Agencies)

£¨Ð»ªÍøËزģ©German woman attacked for "overpriced asparagus"

BEIJING, May 19 (Xinhuanet) -- A German man beat up a 24-year-old
womanbecause he felther pricingofasparagus sounded like
an overpriced,according to police Monday.


They said the vegetable vendor was beaten by the motorist because he was
angry at her asking price for asparaguswhich fluctuates wildly during the
short springtime season.


The springtime vegetable is sold for 10 euros per kilo--the highest in the
spring--early in the season.


According to the woman, the man screamed at the woman that her asparagus
was overpriced. He then punched her in the face and threatened to unleash his
attack dog at her. She fled and called police.


(Agencies)

Nepali 80-year-old former minister to scale Mt. Qomolangma

KATHMANDU, May 17 (Xinhua) -- Nepal's former foreign minister Shailendra Kumar Upadhyaya, aged 80, is set to embark on an adventurous expedition of scaling Mt. Qomolangma, the world's highest mountain.








A golfer hits a shot against the background of Mount Qomolangma, the world's highest peak at 8,848 metres (29,029 ft), near Namche Bazar, Nepal,March 5, 2009. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
Photo Gallery




Upadhyaya announced his ambitious plan at a press
conference held in Kathmandu Sunday.

Speaking at the press conference, Tourism Minister
Hisila Yami said Upadhyay's bid should bean encouragement to
youths.



3 Nepali celebrities to ride to north Mt. Qomolangma base camp

KATHMANDU, May 17 (Xinhua) -- Three Nepali celebrities are riding motorcycles to Mt. Qomolangma base camp.


Olympian Deepak Bista, pop singer Nima Rumba and TV presenter and model Suraj Singh Thakuri are going to climb the north Mt. Qomolangma Base Camp in China by riding motorcycle from Kathmandu, from July 18.

Morang Auto Works, the sole authorized dealer of YAMAHA motorcycles for Nepal, is providing the opportunity for the riding enthusiasts of FZ 16 to be a part of "Road Trip to Mt. Qomolangma". Full story

Bicycle burglar leaves ID outside victim's house

An electric bicycle burglar was nabbed after he left his identification
card outside the home of one of his victims in Shandong province.

Lao Sun, a villager in Linqu county, returned home one morning last month
and realized his new electric bicycle, which he parked in the courtyard, had
vanished.

Police found an ID card outside Sun's home and traced it back to the thief
who apparently stole 20 bicycles.

The suspect surnamed Wang said he became addicted to the Internet and
needed money to support his addiction. He targeted farmers because they seldom
locked up their bicycles.

((Source: China Daily/Qilu Evening News)

New bird found in eastern Nepal

KATHMANDU, May 15 (Xinhua) -- Ornithologists have
found yet another species of bird in Koshi Tappu Wildlife Reserve area in
Sunsari district in eastern Nepal, local media reported on Friday.

According to myrepublica.com, the new bird has been
identified as Daurian Redstart (Phoenicurus auroreus).

According to a press statement issued by Bird
Conservation Nepal, two ornithologists found the bird for the first time in the
country in one of the islands of Koshi River on Dec. 25, 2008.

Since then the ornithologists have seen this bird at
least three times again. They have recorded around 750 bird species in the
country -- more than any other ornithologists' total for this country -- so far.

The bird forms part of a large bird family known as
Muscicapidae. This species is known to be found in India, China, Myanmar,
Russia, Japan and few South East Asian countries during winter.

Experts believe that this species may be a migratory
species to Nepal. The habitat of the bird may not have been surveyed properly in
the past. Further surveys are recommended in the area. With this find, Nepal now
has 864 species of birds.

The bird is believed to be a regular winter visitor
to eastern Nepal, said the report.

Over 500 twins in one Indian village: report

NEW DELHI, May 14 (Xinhua) -- Doctors are studying a unique village in the southern Indian state of Kerela that has over 500 twins in just 2,000 households, the local Hindi daily Danik Bhaskar said Thursday.

While twin births in the village has been observed for at least three generations, the number of twins born in village Kodinhi is increasing every year, said the report.

Dr. Krishan Sribhuj, who has been studying the village for the last two years, said while number of registered twins stood at 500,the actual number of twins exceeded 600.

The doctor has ruled out environmental causes or pollution as a factor, saying all twins are healthy and without any disorders.

He suspected that the phenomenon is related with the feeding habits of the villagers, who have 45 twins for every 1,000 people, six times higher than average.

In 2008 alone, 30 twins were born in the village.



Report: over 500 twins in one Indian village

NEW DELHI, May 14 (Xinhua) -- Doctors are studying a unique village in the
southern Indian state of Kerela that has over 500 twins in just 2,000
households, the local Hindi daily Danik Bhaskar said Thursday.

While twin births in the village has been observed for at least three
generations, the number of twins born in village Kodinhi is increasing every
year, said the report.

Dr. Krishan Sribhuj, who has been studying the village for the last two
years, said while number of registered twins stood at 500,the actual number of
twins exceeded 600.

The doctor has ruled out environmental causes or pollution as a factor,
saying all twins are healthy and without any disorders.

He suspected that the phenomenon is related with the feeding habits of the
villagers, who have 45 twins for every 1,000 people, six times higher than
average.

In 2008 alone, 30 twins were born in the village.

Flu delayed Spanish woman from learning of record lottery prize

BEIJING, May 14 (Xinhuanet) --The Spanish winner of the world¡¯s biggest ever-single lottery prize worth 126 million eurosawarded Friday, turned out to be awoman whodiscovered about the jackpotMonday becauseshe wasbed-ridden with flu, officials said.


A 25-year-old Spanish woman from the island of
Majorca was tracked downby officials Monday, online lottery seller
Serviapuestas said in a statement Tuesday.


"I was still sick on Monday so I decided to go to
work out of fear of losing my job given the economic crisis we are going
through," she was quoted as saying in the statement.

The woman was the only one to tick the five correct
numbers (4, 23, 24, 29, 31) and two stars (8, 9) and win the huge jackpot drawn
in Paris in a ticket which she bought through Serviapuestas.

"When she learned the news she was frightened and at
the same time very, very moved. Logically she asked us many questions," the
company said in the statement.

She also told Serviapuestas that when they first
contacted her "I thought they were pulling my leg.... I thought it was some
publicity."

The woman said she now plans to buy a country house
in Majorca and raise horses.

(Agencies)

Cute long-eared Jerboa on edge of extinction in desert








Photo taken on May 13, 2009 shows a
Long-eared Jerboa at the scenic spot of the Mountain of Flames
(Huoyanshan) in Turpan City, northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous
Region. The Long-eared Jerboa, a species on the edge of extinction living
in desert habitat, is a mouse-like rodent with a long tail, long hind
legs, and exceptionally large ears. (Xinhua/Liu Jian)
Photo Gallery










A tourist takes photo of a Long-eared
Jerboa at the scenic spot of the Mountain of Flames (Huoyanshan) in Turpan
City, northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, May 13, 2009.
The Long-eared Jerboa, a species on the edge of extinction living in
desert habitat, is a mouse-like rodent with a long tail, long hind legs,
and exceptionally large ears. (Xinhua/Liu Jian)
Photo
Gallery


Diamond sells for record 6.2 million pounds

BEIJING, May 13 (Xinhuanet) -- A rare blue diamond weighing 7.03 carats sold for a record 10.5 million Swiss francs (6.2 million pounds) at auction in Geneva Tuesday.


The rectangular-shaped blue stone, the rarest to enter the international market this year, was the centerpiece of its semi-annual sale in Geneva, conducted by David Bennett, chairman of Sotheby's jewellery department in Europe and the Middle East, who said the results showed the market's resilience despite the economic downturn.

The internally flawless gemstone went to an anonymous telephone buyer after a 15-minute bidding battle between two callers.

"It is fantastic in this market and shows that these rare things are very much in demand," he said.

The new owner will have the right to name the stone, which is mounted in a platinum ring.

(Agencies)

127-year-old man casts vote in India

NEW DELHI, May 13 (Xinhua) -- A 127-year-old man, who voted in the
country's first general election in 1952, Wednesday became the oldest person in
the country to vote, said an Election Commission official.


"Bhadaru voted in a polling booth in Kasumpti under hill station Shimla's
parliamentary constituency, the capital of the northern Indian state of Himachal
Pradesh. He came on a horse to exercise his francaise. This is history in our
democracy," the official told the media.

Responding to media questions after voting, Bhadaru, who voted for India's
first modern time Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru in 1952, expressed
dissatisfaction over the repeated inquires about his age.

"Why are you asking me again and again about my age? I am not getting
pension," he said.

Some 107 million voters in India were eligible to vote in the fifth and
last phase of the marathon month-long general elections.

18-yr-old kills brother in Guatemala shootout

BEIJING, May 13 (Xinhuanet) -- A teenage boy killed his 13-year-old brother
in Guatemala because he belonged to a rival group, according to police.


Eighteen-year-old Hector Mazariegos of the Mara 18 gang, shot dead his
brother Cesar, a member of the rival Mara Salvatrucha, outside their house.

"The brothers had been arguing for a few days when it built up to a
fire-fight in the street," police spokesman Marco Trejo told Reuters Friday.

Hector Mazariegos, who was also wounded in the shooting incident, was
captured a few blocks from the scene. He was treated for bullet wounds in
hospital.

The Mara Salvatrucha and the Mara 18 are the two largest gangs, with
members often tattooing their faces with gang signs and killing rivals with
gruesome beheadings or execution-style shootings.

(Agencies)

Kangaroo survives arrow through head

BEIJING, May 12 (Xinhuanet)-- The Eastern Grey
kangaroo survived for nearly a week after being shot in the head with an arrow
in parkland near Melbourne's outer suburbs last Thursday. He is now recovering
after the surgery.


Melbourne Zoo vet Dr Michael Lynch, who performed the
surgery to remove the arrow, said he will monitor the kangaroo for the next
three weeks but is cautiously optimistic.

"This was a big injury, but because the arrow didn't
seem to have been in there for a long time, and the injury was fresh, hopefully
he'll be okay," Dr Lynch said.

"I'm cautiously optimistic about the kangaroo's
prospects for a full recovery."

Wildlife Australia has posted a 10,000- Australian
dollar (7,600 U.S. dollars) reward to find the people responsible for shooting
the kangaroo.

(Agencies)

Woman kept her mother's body to collect benefits

BEIJING, May 12 (Xinhuanet) -- A Florida woman kept
her dead mother's body in a bedroom for six years in order to receive more than
200,000 U.S. dollars in pension benefits, according to U.S. prosecutors.


Penelope Jordan, 61, was indicted by a grand jury
last week and formally charged in a federal court Thursday with Social Security
fraud and theft of U.S. funds, officials with the Department of Justice said.

Police found the decaying body of her mother, Timmie
Jordan, on a bed in a spare bedroom at the mother's home in late March, when
they were called to investigate a report of nuisance cats.

Penelope Jordan told police her mother had died in
2003.

Jordan collected 61,415 dollars from Social Security
and 176,461 dollars from the military pension during the six years, prosecutors
said.

She could face up to 15 years in prison.

(Agencies)

Spaniard wins 126 million-euro in lottery

BEIJING, May 12 (Xinhuanet) -- A Spaniard has become
one of the richest people in Europe after winning the world¡¯s biggest
ever-single lottery prize worth 126 million euros (171.5 million U.S. dollars),
lottery organizer EuroMillions said Saturday.


The winner has not yet come forward, said the
organizer.

Paloma Cateleiro, owner of the Madrid lottery shop
that sold the ticket, said she had no idea who had bought the ticket but
suspected the chit might be lying at the bottom of a tourist¡¯s suitcase in some
part of Europe.

"A lot of people come through here," she said. "We
might never find out who has won it."

EuroMillions is a pan-European lottery, launched in
2004. Initially only the United Kingdom, France and Spain were involved, but
lotteries from Austria, Belgium, Ireland, Luxembourg, Portugal and Switzerland
joined the draw in October 2007.

Draws are held every Friday night, and take place in
Paris. A standard EuroMillions ticket costs 2 euros per line played. All prizes,
including the jackpot, are tax exempt, except in Switzerland, and are paid in a
lump sum.

(Agencies)

German slapped with 900 euros fine for beheading Hitler's wax figure

BEIJING, May 13 (Xinhuanet) -- A German court Tuesday fined a former cop 900 euros ($1,600) for knocking off the head of a wax figure of Adolf Hitler in a Berlin museum last year.


The 42-year-old Frank Lachner decapitated the likeness of the Nazi dictator on the opening day of the Madame Tussauds museum last July.

The man said the move followed a bet he took with friends a day before the museum's opening and was carried out "to save face." He said he and his friends had all thought the exhibition with the controversial Hitler waxwork was "completely inappropriate."

The man said he strongly objected to the Nazi leader being on display just 500 metres away from the German capital's Holocaust memorial.

Madame Tussauds said the museum avoided politics, arguing Hitler stood for a significant part of German history and his waxwork therefore had a legitimate part in the exhibition.

The court said the man had to pay 15 euros every day for the next 60 days and that the fine had been halved because of his financial circumstances.

(Agencies)

India breaks Guinness Record in choir singing

NEW DELHI, May 12 (Xinhua) -- Over 160,000 people in twin cities of Hyderabad and Secunderabad in West India gathered to sing in one voice and made it to the Guinness Book of World Records, local tabloid Mail Today said Tuesday.

The mammoth gathering paid a tribute to the 15th century South Indian Telugu composer Tallapaka Annamayya by singing seven classical songs composed by him at the Secunderabad Parade Grounds in the twin cities Sunday evening, according to the report.

The previous record was set more than seven decades ago by a German choir on Aug. 2, 1937, when 60,000 people sang the German national anthem in chorus under Nazi orchestration.

In the twin cities, the sprawling ground was packed with people of all age groups and from all walks of life. They joined a team of classical singers led by Carnatic -- a south Indian form of music -- vocalist Garimella Balakrishna Prasad. The event marked the Telugu composer's 601st birth anniversary, said the report.

The composer wrote over 35,000 songs in praise of Hindu Lord Venkateswara.

A Guinness representative, Raymond Marshal, announced after the choir finished its performance that a new record had been set. 


Indian man detained for allegedly threatening to kill Obama

NEW DELHI, May 10 (Xinhua) -- Indian police have detained a man in the northern state of Bihar for allegedly calling up the U.S. embassy in New Delhi and threatening to kill U.S. President Barack Obama, reported the Indo-Asian News Service on Sunday.


Ranjan Kumar, in his 30's is now being quizzed and his mental state checked, said the report quoting police sources.

Kumar, a resident of Darbhanga village in Aurangabad district, about 150 km from the Bihar state capital Patna, made a phone call to the U.S. embassy in New Delhi, spoke to an official and said he wanted to kill Obama, said police.

He was taken away by police on Saturday on information provided by the state intelligence, after the U.S. embassy passed the threat message to the Indian government, according to the report.

A team of U.S. embassy "is reaching to quiz him," said the report quoting police sources.

Kumar, the son of a retired railway official, graduated from Gaya College under Magadh University in Bihar. Till a few months ago, he was staying in New Delhi to prepare for various competitive examinations, said the report.

Australian zoo evacuated after notorious Orangutan's escape

BEIJING, May 11 (Xinhuanet) -- An Australian zoo was evacuated Sunday when a notorious Orangutan escaped her enclosure by short-circuiting an electric fence.


Adelaide zoo officials said patrons were evacuated as a precaution hours after the 26-year-old Karta escaped.

Karta gained access to a side garden-bed, where she caught hold of a stick and used it to short-circuit the electric wires around her enclosure before piling up some more sticks to climb out.

The incident comes three weeks after the death of her former mate Pusung, but keepers do not believe that sparked this escape attempt.

Staff will now carry out an extensive review of the enclosure's security to ensure Karta, or her current mate Kluet, do not outsmart the system again.

(Agencies)

Man drives Chery into BMW for saving little girl

BEIJING, May 10 -- A young man drove his Chery car into a BMW that was
sliding down a slope towards a six-year-old girl. The Youth Times reports.

On Friday, a businesswoman surnamed Huang was in a rush when she drove her
brown BMW to a business talk in Wenzhou, in Eastern China's Zhejiang Province.
Huang's BMW scraped a motorcycle on a sloped road, and she left her car to ask
the motorcyclist about the injury, forgetting to put her car into parking gear.
As bystanders paid attention to the injured motorcyclist, her car began to slide
down the slope.

While this was happening, a young man surnamed Chen,driving his friend's
Chery car, saw the BMW sliding down the road towards a little girl who was
unaware of the looming danger.

After honking many times in vain, Chen made his decision and drove his car
to block the BMW's way.

The traffic police said after the incident that Chen's car was not badly
damaged. The severity of the situation was highlighted by the fact that the
height of the BMW's front is the same as the girl's height. Without Chen's help,
the girl's head could have been hit by the BMW.

(Source: CRIENGLISH. com)

Rare bird flies back from the dead

BEIJING,May 9-- The future of a rare species of bird that was once thought to be extinct got a huge lift this month when a chick was born at a zoo in south China's Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region.

Without feathers and barely able to walk, the 30-gram pink bird, a white-eared night-heron, is eating four small fish every one and a half hours and making great progress since it broke out of its shell on May 3 at Nanning Zoo, Nanning Evening News reported on Friday.

The bird was hatched in an incubator and is being fed artificially but is 100 per cent real - one of only a handful of the species on the planet.

The bird should be strong enough to walk in 20 days and ready to meet the public three months later.

It is the offspring of two herons that were found in 2003, along with a third that subsequently died, by local people, who sent them to the zoo. The parents laid two eggs last April, which they broke accidentally, and two more on April 4, that they abandoned in the nest. Those eggs were put in an incubator and one hatched.

White-eared night herons, or Gorsachius magnificus, are one of the most endangered species of birds in the world.

They were thought to be extinct until some were found in mountainous areas of Zhejiang, Fujian and Hainan provinces in the 1920s.

(Source: China Daily)

Man pays 36 euro cents bill to debt-collector

BEIJING, May 8 (Xinhuanet) -- An Austrian manpaidhis 36 euro
cents bill as part of his underpaid trash collection amount after adebt
collector was sent to his home by authorities.


According to a local newspaperThursday, the man, from a village in
Lower Austria province, saidhe had accidentally overlooked the 36 cents
after the decimal place on his bill for 236.36 euros ($315).


The slip-up set the bureaucratic ball rolling, said a spokeswoman from the
court which chased the debt.

"We also don't completely understand why the court reacted this way to such
a trifling invoice," she said.

(Agencies)

"Fat" wax shocks London mayor

BEIJING, May 8 -- London mayor Boris Johnson vowed to exercise more to make
him look slimmer after expressing shock at the girth of the new waxwork
sculpture made in his likeness on May 5.


"It's only when you see yourself in 3Ds (three dimensions) you realize just
how fat you are. I have got to get out and start jogging more," he said,
standing next to his wax sculpture at Madame Tussauds in London.

"I have to lose some weight. But it is a brilliant job they have done. It
is amazing," he added.

Johnson, a colorful former journalist who ousted "Red Ken" Livingstone from
London's City Hall a year ago, also got in a dig at the plight of Prime Minister
Gordon Brown's Labor administration.

Brown is struggling as polls suggest the opposition Conservative party will
win in the general elections next June.

He said he hopes the museum will redo the waxwork after he sheds some
pounds.

"I look forward to the figure being remodeled in a few months in keeping
with the more lean and lithe physique I hope will soon emerge," he said.

(Source: CRIENGLISH.com/Agencies)

Tears flow freely at Beijing's Cry Bar

BEIJING,May 8-- Is crying good therapy? Experts say yes. Having
a good weep at the weekend is becoming more and more popular among office
workers in China.


Guo Meng's story


"I need to cry to let my feelings out", said 23-year-old Guo Meng, a
smart-looking young woman who works in marketing for a department store at
Beijing's Zhongguancun.

"I negotiate advertising deals and am constantly on the phone to clients,"
said Guo Meng. "We make regular visits to customers to build up good relations,
and the department store checks the results to evaluate my performance." But
getting customers' trust is not always easy. "I get depressed if I put in a lot
of effort and get no results."

"I remember one day when I got home I felt so down but had no-one to talk
to about it so I just curled up with my teddy bear and cried myself to sleep,"
Guo said. The next day, she said, she felt much better and life seemed not so
bad after all.

Because crying is taken as a sign of weakness, people make a great show of
being strong and not displaying emotion. But Guo Meng advises people not to hold
back their tears. "Crying really relieves the pressure. You feel relaxed after a
good cry."

Wang Sha's story

Wang Sha works for an online games company, but the work isn't as much fun
as playing the games.

"What gets to me most is when I think I¡¯ve created a perfect game, but then
my boss tests it and finds a stupid mistake," said Wang Sha.

He feels under pressure every time he is given a new project. He listens to
mellow music on his earphones to prevent the tension building up but he also
admits to liking a good cry.

"I often cry when I watch a film. If it has a simple, moving story I just
burst into tears," said Wang Sha. "I find crying is a good way to relax, even if
it¡¯s not very manly."

Law of conservation of emotion

Guo Meng says the law of conservation of energy applies to emotions as
well. "Repression leads to emotional imbalance, and that makes you cranky.
Crying restores your emotional equilibrium," she said.

Office workers like Guo Meng and Wang Sha have formed a special therapy
group that encourages its members to express their emotions. They call it the
"cry group".

Psychologist Milulu says urban professionals who keep up a show of
toughness are hiding their softer, sentimental sides and this applies especially
to men, and women in senior positions.

People restrain their emotions for fear that crying in public may damage
their careers. But the same people may tearfully cuddle their dolls at midnight
or sneak off to a quiet place for a weep. Psychologists and medical
practitioners agree that crying is beneficial for mental health but people still
regard it as a sign of failure and bottle up their feelings.

Let the sadness go after the tears
dry

A famous Chinese author once said to cry is normal, and even brave. Those
who display their emotions can deal with their troubles bravely after the tears
dry while those who "soldier on" let problems fester.

The "Cry Bar" in the Chaoyang district of Beijing is a kind of Karaoke bar
for people who want to release their emotions. On the doors of each of its "cry
rooms" is a saying encouraging people let the tears flow freely.

The Cry Bar encourages its customers to look for happiness despite their
loneliness, to mix laughter with tears, and let singing bring a smile to their
faces. The "Cry group" say they feel better after a session here.

"Crying is a kind of therapy, but it needs some direction," said Milulu.
"People should realize the point of crying is to release pressure, but some of
the young people who come here simply sit and weep. The purpose of crying is to
make it easier to improve your life after the tears dry, not to wallow in bad
memories."

Crying is only one way of relieving pressure, and we need to face problems
squarely and solve them once the tears have dried, said Milulu.

(Source: china.org.cn)

Texas dog reunites with family after 8 years

BEIJING, May 7 (Xinhuanet) -- A Texas puppy, who went missing eight years ago, has surprised her owner with unexpected arrival.


Dancer is all grown up now and she no longer recognizes her name and instead responds to the name "Fern".

Owner Alison Murphy of Austin isn't sure where Dancer has been but says obedience school is the next stop for her newly recovered pet.

According to reports the dog was left last week at the Humane Society in New Braunfels, about 45 miles away Humane Society in New Braunfels. A musician in New Braunfels found the dog running around his neighborhood and took her home. He kept her a few days, and then went to the Humane Society to see if the dog had a microchip, and perhaps, an owner.

She had both, though she hadn't seen her owners in eight years.

"She looks the same," Murphy said. "She's just a little more gray."

(Agencies)
.