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Saturday, April 13, 2013

PE Coated Papers for paper cup productions.


Dear Our Clients Worldwide,
We would like to sincerely express many thanks for our clients worldwide who have been using our quality PE coated papers for paper cup productions.

Due to the continuous demand increase from our overseas clients, we are pleased to announce that our production capacity will be increased gradually to meet our clients’ full requirement and satisfaction.

If you have any urgent inquiry on the one or double sided PE coated papers (Roll or Sheet types), please promptly contact us so that we can do supply you faster than ever with more upgraded service.

For our possible & new customers, we are ready to promptly dispatch you with the following excellent quality samples for quality test and approval

SAMPLE

Please note that our PE paper is one type of Grade A and White for paper cup.
In regard to your test sample, our factory retains one standard (A4 size) type of 200 gsm + 18 microns only for our worldwide clients.

Our paper mill profile :

Our paper mill, one of the largest in Korea and publically enlisted in Korean Stock Market, has been producing and exporting approx. monthly 5,000 MTS of quality PE papers for about 40 years for worldwide market as well as domestic market.. Therefore, you can rest assured of our product quality.

If you have any question, please feel free to contact us directly at any time.

Assuring you of our upgraded service in the near future and appreciating your continued support and cooperation.

Best regards,

Edward E.S. Tark
Managing Director
International Division

AIMHIGH INTERNATIONAL INC., Korea

Head office : No.108, ILSHIN B/D., 332-3 Dangsan-Dong 6 Ga,
Youngdungpo-Gu, Seoul, Republic of Korea (Zip Code : 150-810)

Direct Tel. : +82-070-7578-6674
Fax. : +82-2-2677-0130
Mobile : +82-010-2206-6674

Skype ID : Edward.Eunsung.Tark

Facebook.com/edwardtark



'Sirius,' Steven Greer's Film, Claims To Unveil Tiny 'Alien' Humanoid

'Sirius,' Steven Greer's Film, Claims To Unveil Tiny 'Alien' Humanoid



An upcoming documentary promises to show an alleged, tiny "alien" being that was found a few years ago in Chile's Atacama Desert. And when we say tiny, we're talking six inches from head to ET toe.

The film, called "Sirius," will also depict how readily available forms of alternative energy technology are what extraterrestrials may be using to travel here from the cosmically improbable distances between their home world and ours.

If this is all true, and that's a very big IF, it will certainly answer the ages-old question of whether or not humans are alone in the universe.

The force behind "Sirius" is Steven Greer, a former emergency medical physician. He's actively pursued avenues to get the U.S. government to reveal information about alien reality -- information that the powers-that-be have always maintained doesn't exist.

"Sirius" includes graphic footage of the supposedly humanoid entity of "unknown classification" by DNA sequencing.

A side view X-ray of the miniscule creature was also released to reveal its internal structure.

The film is Greer's latest effort to shine a light on the supposed cover-up about visitors from other planets.

In 1993, Greer created The Disclosure Project with the goal of getting the government to fess up its alleged UFO and ET knowledge as well as information about advanced energy and propulsion methods.

"What people need to understand is the secrecy around UFOs and extraterrestrial intelligence really has nothing to do with ETs. It has to do with humans and the power that is resting in large corporations and financial interests that do not want you to know the truth," Greer said in a video statement.

More details on the possible ET specimen will be forthcoming when "Sirius" has its Hollywood premiere on April 22, followed by a limited theatrical release and simultaneous video on demand launch.

Greer further claims that, for the past 100 years, advanced science and technology have been known about that can be used by the whole world.

"This really is the greatest story never told," Greer said. "Once people understand that classified projects have figured out how UFOs operate, they will realize we no longer need oil, coal and nuclear power. This is the truth that has driven the secrecy."

Whether or not the little humanoid turns out to be from another planet or is a previously undiscovered species from good old Earth or is simply a hoax has yet to be determined.

Psy's "Gentleman" sweeps iTunes chart

South Korean rapper Psy's newsingle swept the iTunes Chart Saturday, just one day after the much-anticipated release of the strong-beat song.

The new single, "Gentleman," entered top 10 iTunes Single Chart in many Asian, European and South American countries, including topping the Vietnamese chart.

As the follow-up to the South Korean star's previous global smash hit "Gangnam Style," Gentleman satirizes a tacky man who calls himself a gentleman.

The new single is similar to Gangnam Style in its fast tempo and the use of electronic sound as well as its more addictive chorus led by the would-be catchphrase, "I'm a mother, father, gentleman."

The new song employed more English words and toned down the Korean-language elements compared with Gangnam Style, in its apparent bid to draw more foreign audiences.

Psy plans to hold a concert titled "HAPPENING" at a football stadium in western Seoul later in the day where he will also showcase his new music video, according to Psy's agency YG Entertainment.

The music video, along with his new dance moves, then will be unveiled on YouTube, YG Entertainment said, which is expected to help the song climb up the charts.

Psy became an international household name last year after Gangnam Style went on to become the most watched video on YouTube, and the first one to receive over a billion views.

(Yonhap News)

U.S., global economy likely to weigh on Korea

Korea is expected to face an uphill recovery toward the trend of 4 percent growth on lower economic prospects of the U.S., one of Korea’s top trading partners.

The U.S. is expected to grow 1.7 percent this year, down from the International Monetary Fund’s initial forecast of 2 percent, according to the fund’s draft on the global economic outlook obtained by Bloomberg.

The report, due to be released next week, said that the across-the-board spending cuts in the U.S., also known as the sequester, will add downward pressure on consumption, thus to weigh on the country’s gross domestic product.

The Bank of Korea, meanwhile, revised downward its growth projection for Korea to 2.6 percent from the previous 2.8 percent projected early this year on a growth forecast of 1.8 percent in the U.S., down from 2.2 percent in 2012.

A report by the central bank showed that the global economy is expected to grow 3.3 percent, below the IMF’s expected revision of 3.4 percent and down from 3.5 percent initially projected early this year.

The central bank’s growth forecast comes after the Ministry of Strategy and Finance’s revision to 2.3 percent from 3 percent.

The Fund is expected to keep the eurozone’s growth forecast the same at minus 0.2 percent, while the BOK projected a contraction of 0.4 percent.

“The road to recovery in the advanced economies will remain bumpy,” the Fund’s draft reported as quoted by Bloomberg. “The weak ending to economic activity in 2012 and the sluggish beginning in 2013 highlight that important brakes remain in place.”

Despite further slowdown projections both at home and abroad and persistent external pressure for a rate cut, the central bank left its benchmark interest rate unchanged for the sixth straight month.

BOK Governor Kim Choong-soo said that the central bank will abide by its main responsibility by law of maintaining stable consumer prices through monetary policy, while noting of a recovery in Korea and abroad toward the latter half of this year as its reason for freezing the key rate.

Its policy decision signified its independence from outside pressure, analysts said which has been gaining traction following the Finance Ministry’s low-growth forecast.

Analysts said monetary-easing expectations may continue on low inflation, but inflation could rise driven by global recovery in the second half of this year.

“The world economy will also be on a more solid footing by the end of this year as the U.S. fiscal drag starts to ease and Europe makes progress on its debt crisis,” Moody’s Investors Service said in a report.

“These factors would prompt the BOK to look towards tightening policy to anchor inflation expectations.” 

By Park Hyong-ki (hkp@heraldcorp.com)

Cyprus bailout swells to $30b

BRUSSELS (AP) ― The cost of bailing out Cyprus has swollen to 23 billion euros ($30 billion), with the crisis-hit country having to take on the lion’s share of the measures needed to avoid bankruptcy, according to a draft document by the country’s international creditors. 

The draft document, obtained by The Associated Press on Thursday, says the country will have to find 13 billion euros ($17 billion) ― an increase on the 7 billion euro contribution agreed during the country’s chaotic bailout talks last month. The money will be raised by imposing heavy losses on large bank deposits, levying additional taxes, privatizations and a part-sale of the central bank’s gold reserves. 

“The sheer size of the increase has underlined the extent of the enormous challenges facing Cyprus itself,” Jonathan Loynes of Capital Economics said in an analyst note.

The so-called troika of international creditors ― the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund ― are set to grant the Mediterranean island nation 10 billion euros ($13 billion) in rescue loans to recapitalize its shaky banking system and keep the government afloat. For its side of the deal, Cyprus was supposed to contribute 7 billion euros to the rescue.

In the latest draft document, however, the troika has revised the overall cost of bailing out Cyprus amid a gloomier economic outlook for the country, adding an extra 6 billion euros to the bill. 

The Cypriot government blamed the gulf between the original total and the new 23 billion euro bill on the previous leftwing administration and the time it took to properly negotiate a bailout ― delays which pushed the cost of recapitalizing its banks much higher.

Government spokesman Christos Stylianides accused former President Dimitris Christofias of failing to “take responsibility and complete indecisiveness” in promptly negotiating a bailout.

As part of the original deal, Cyprus agreed to raise the 7 billion euros mostly by overhauling its bloated banking industry and tax increases. This would involve breaking up its second-largest bank, Laiki, and imposing losses on savers who have more than 100,000 euros there and in another lender, the Bank of Cyprus. 

The draft creditor document now shows that the troika now expects the break-up of Laiki to raise 10.6 billion euros, which will be used to prop up the Bank of Cyprus.

The document also says Cyprus will have to sell off parts of its gold reserves ― raising another 400 million euros in the process ― a first for a bailed-out European country. 

However, Cyprus Central Bank spokeswoman Aliki Stylianou said that the Central Bank Governing Board “is not considering any such gold sale at this time.”

Garcia, Leishman tied for lead

AUGUSTA, Georgia (AP) ― Sergio Garcia might have written himself off too quickly at the Masters. 

When last seen walking off the course at Augusta National, the impetuous Spaniard was moping about his bad luck at this tournament and said last year it was increasingly evident he would never be fitted for a green jacket. 

Garcia matched his best score at the Masters on Thursday, a 6-under 66 with no bogeys on his card, to share the lead with Marc Leishman of Australia. And he still wasn’t entirely happy, although this time with good reason. He hit the ball so well his score could have been so much better. 

“To tell you the truth, if I manage to make a couple of the putts that kind of stayed around the lip, I could have been probably 7- or 8-under par through 10,” Garcia said. “It was that good. And it wasn’t like I was hitting pitching wedge every single time. I was hitting 4-irons and 5-irons and 6-irons, so it wasn’t that easy.” 

It sure felt easy for several players in a gentle opening round ― even for a high school student. 
Guan Tianlang, the 14-year-old from China and youngest to compete in a major in 148 years, played well beyond his age and holed a 15-foot putt from just off the 18th green for a respectable round of 73 and a reasonable chance of making the cut. 

Tiger Woods wasn’t far off as he began his quest for a fifth green jacket. Wild at the start, including a tee shot that knocked a cup of beer out of a spectator’s hand, Woods settled into a groove and opened with a 70 as his girlfriend, Olympic ski champion Lindsey Vonn, watched on a few holes. 

In his four Masters wins, Woods has never opened with a score lower than 70. His key is not to shoot himself out of the tournament. 
“It’s a good start,” he said. “Some years, some guys shot 65 starting out here. But right now, I’m only four back and I’m right there.” 

Garcia and Leishman had a one-shot lead over Dustin Johnson, who has a game that fits perfectly for Augusta and he finally brought it. Johnson hit a 9-iron for his second shot on the par-5 13th and made a 15-foot eagle putt, and he smashed his drive on the par-5 15th and hit pitching wedge just through the green for an easy birdie. 

Fred Couples, the 53-year-old wonder at his favorite major, made bogey on the 18th and still was in the large group at 68. There were a dozen rounds in the 60s, and nearly half the field shot par or better. Three-time Masters champion Phil Mickelson recovered from a rough start by running off four birdies in a five-hole stretch on the back nine to salvage a 71, while Rory McIlroy had a 72. 
Woods said he struggled with the slower pace of the greens, and so did defending champion Bubba Watson, who opened with a 75. 

“They’re soft and they are slow, and consequently we have 45 people at par or better,” Mickelson said. “But that means I’ve got to change my whole mindset and just get after these pins, because the ball’s not running like it used to and I’m giving this course way too much respect because of my past knowledge.” 

It’s not about respect for Garcia. Augusta National is the ultimate love-hate relationship, and Thursday was a rarity. He loved it. 

Garcia began his round with an approach that danced by the hole and left him a tap-in birdie. He rolled in a 20-foot birdie on the par-3 sixth, and then shot up the leaderboard with a pair of tough, downhill putts from 8 feet on the ninth and 15 feet on the 10th. 

“It’s obviously not my most favorite place,” he said. “But you know, we try to enjoy it as much as we can each time we come here. Sometimes it comes out better than others, but today it was one of those good days. Let’s enjoy it while it lasts.” 

That was a far different attitude than last year on the weekend, when he went from one shot out of the lead going into the third round to back in the pack with a 75. He told Spanish reporters that day he had been trying his entire career to win a major and “I don’t feel capable of winning. ... After 13 years, my chances are over. I’m not good enough for the majors. That’s it.” 
Not so fast. 

Garcia struggled off the tee on the back nine, and he three-putted for par at the 13th. He also made tough par saves on the 11th and 17th for his first bogey-free round at the Masters since 2002. 

“The last eight holes mean a lot that I kept my composure, even though I didn’t hit it as well as I did the first 10 holes,” he said. 

Composure is everything to Garcia, a 33-year-old who still acts like a kid. Only three weeks ago, he hit a tee shot at Bay Hill that settled on a large branch in a tree. Garcia climbed the tree, played a remarkable backhanded shot to the fairway and then jumped some 10 feet to the ground. He withdrew a few holes later when the rain arrived. 

He smiles. He sulks. And he always says what he’s thinking, which sometimes get him trouble. Garcia doesn’t regret his comments at Augusta last year, only that he didn’t choose his words carefully. He chalked it up to frustration, but says he is trying just as hard as he did when he was 19 and challenged Woods at Medinah in the 1999 PGA. 

“Every time I tee it off, I try to play as well as I can, hope that my best that week is really, really good,” Garcia said. “And if I manage to do that, I will have a chance at winning. If my best is not that good, then, I’ll struggle a little bit. Today, my best was pretty good. And I’m looking forward to doing the same thing the next three days.” 

Guan only wants to enjoy himself, and as he sat in Butler Cabin for an interview, the Chinese teen looked composed. Guan said his goal for the week was to enjoy himself, and even a score two shots better than the defending champion didn’t change that. 

“I think I’m pretty focused on golf,” Guan said. “It’s made me do pretty good so far.”

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Controversy over Korean spy agency’s alleged election intervention

http://stratrisks.com/geostrat/9833


The ruling Saenuri party and main opposition Democratic United Party remain at loggerheads over whether state-run intelligence agency tried to illegally intervene in the presidential election slated for Dec. 19.
On Tuesday, the DUP claimed that a National Intelligence Service employee was posting slanderous comments about the party’s presidential candidate Moon Jae-in on the Internet.
“Recently we received a tip-off that NIS-affiliated psychosomatic information team had been reorganized into psychosomatic information bureau, and the members of the bureau had been working to make sure Moon loses in the upcoming election,” said DUP spokesman Jin Seong-jun.
Jin claimed a 29-year-old female employee surnamed Kim had been working for the past three months to “slander opposition candidates and manipulate public opinion” from a studio apartment in Yeoksam-dong, southern Seoul.
DUP officials visited Kim’s studio around 7 p.m. Tuesday, accompanied by police and the National Election Committee, but failed to secure any evidence in the initial search. When police later attempted to investigate Kim’s laptop and smartphone, she refused to let them back in, leading to an eight-hour standoff with the police.
A police official said they plan to request a search warrant later in the day.
Kim claimed that she had never posted any opinion online concerning the presidential election.
“As an NIS employee, I have always remained politically neutral. I have never posted a malicious post about a presidential candidate,” she said in an interview with Yonhap News Agency.
The DUP’s allegation was fiercely criticized by the NIS and the ruling Saenuri Party on Wednesday.
“The Yeoksam-dong studio is a personal residence of the NIS employee, and the DUP trespassed onto it without evidence. To bring a state-run institute into an election is a negative propaganda,” an NIS official said.
The Saenuri Party bashed the opposition party for attempting to carry out what it called “black propaganda.”
“Is this the ‘new politics’ Moon Jae-in and DUP keeps talking about?” Saenuri spokesman Lee Sang-il said. “We will watch what excuses DUP will come up with next, and what cover-up it will use to conceal its faults.”
By Yoon Min-sik
(minsikyoon@heraldcorp.com)

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

China runs task force to study Samsung: Lee

Samsung heir apparent Lee Jay-yong said Tuesday that China had a task force within its research institute that focused studies on Samsung.

“The most surprising factor was how much Chinese leader Xi Jinping knows about Korea and Samsung,” he told reporters upon his arrival at Gimpo Airport in Seoul early in the morning. “We must perform better.”

He also said that he felt a lot of responsibility following his two meetings with the new Chinese leader.

Lee met with Xi twice during his trip to China for the Boao Forum for Asia.

The Boao Forum, which is considered to be the Asian version of the Davos Forum, was established in February 2011 as a nonprofit, nongovernmental organization. It was set up by 26 Asian representatives.

At the forum, Lee, who is serving as the vice chairman of Samsung’s flagship electronics arm, was appointed as a board member of the group following SK chairman Chey Tae-won.

He was also invited by Xi to attend a private meeting as the heir apparent of the country’s top conglomerate was among the 15 board members.

Ryu gets 1st MLB win

LOS ANGELES (AP) ― Ryu Hyun-Jin is going to enjoy pitching for a team with the menacing lineup the Los Angeles Dodgers possess, and the hitters have become equally confident with the rotation that’s backing them up.

The South Korean earned his first major league victory, shrugging off a two-run homer in the first inning by Andrew McCutchen and pitching the Dodgers past the Pittsburgh Pirates 6-2 Sunday for a three-game sweep. Adrian Gonzalez drove in four runs with three hits and Justin Sellers homered for Los Angeles.

“Ryu did a good job today,” Dodgers center fielder Matt Kemp said. “The first inning was rough, but after that he shut them down. I told him that was all they were going to get today from him, and he did what we asked him to do. We scored some runs for him and got him the W. We know what our offense is capable of doing. And if we stay within ourselves, we’ll be a very successful team.”
Los Angeles Dodgers starter Ryu Hyun-jin pitches to the Pittsburgh Pirates in the second inning of a baseball game in Los Angeles on Sunday. (AP-Yonhap News)

Ryu (1-1) allowed two runs and three hits in 6 1-3 innings, striking out six and walking two. The 26-year-old lefty signed a $36 million, six-year contract in December after the Dodgers bid $25.7 million to win exclusive rights to negotiate with him.

“The feeling came to me when we were up 4-2. That’s when I actually thought, ‘it could be today,’ Ryu said through a translator. “It absolutely felt great to get the first win at Dodger Stadium in front of the home crowd, but most importantly it felt good to help my team get the win today.”

Jeff Locke (0-1) lost in his season debut, giving up four runs and eight hits over six innings. The 25-year-old left-hander, beginning what he hopes will be his first full season in the majors, is 1-7 with a 6.32 ERA and nine home runs allowed in 11 big league starts over a three-year span.

Locke, Pittsburgh’s minor league pitcher of the year last season, was 3-1 with a 2.63 ERA in six starts and one relief outing this spring. “I feel like I threw the ball really well in the spring, so when you break with this team up here, you’ve got to feel confident,” Locke said. “I felt very confident coming in today, and the results of the game doesn’t change the kind of confidence I have in myself.”

Kemp, who entered the game in a season-opening 1-for-18 slump, gave the Dodgers a 3-2 lead in the third with a sacrifice fly after Carl Crawford led off with a double and advanced on Nick Punto’s sacrifice bunt.

Gonzalez added a run in the fifth with an RBI single. The Dodgers tacked on two more in the seventh against Chris Leroux with Sellers’ leadoff homer and Gonzalez’s run-scoring single.

“We expect him to do big things for us because he’s one of the best first baseman in baseball,” Kemp said of Gonzalez, who was acquired in a blockbuster nine-player trade with Boston last Aug. 25. “What you see is what you get, and that’s what he’s showing right now. He’s hitting the ball well and driving in runs. He stays in the middle of the field. And when you hit lefties well, that’s what happens.”

The lefty-swinging Gonzalez led the majors last season with a .322 average against left-handed pitching.

“Lefties allow me to simplify things,” Gonzalez said. “I tend to get greedy against righties, and I try to drive the ball and I end up pulling off it. But with lefties, I usually just try to take what they give me. I’m not trying to drive the ball, just take a single. And if the ball’s away then I try to go the other way and not get too quick. There’s a perfect swing, and then there’s a swing that gets results. Right now, I have a swing that gets results.”

Starling Marte opened the game with a single and McCutchen hit a one-out drive about five rows into the left field pavilion for the Pirates’ first home run of the season. They had been the only team in the majrs without one.

Rangers 7, Angels 3

Royals 9, Phillies 8

Reds 6, Nationals 3

Yankees 7, Tigers 0

Mets 4, Marlins 3

Red Sox 13, Blue Jays 0

Braves 5, Cubs 1

D-backs 8, Brewers 7

Twins 4, Orioles 3

Dodgers 6, Pirates 2

Indians 13, Rays 0

Rockies 9, Padres 1

White Sox 4, Mariners 3

Cardinals 14, Giants 3

Athletics 9, Astros 3

[Newsmaker] Park reaching her peak as she wins 2nd major

South Korea’s Park In-bee is building up momentum as an ace pro golfer. 

The 24-year-old finished with a 15-under-par 273 to beat runner-up compatriot Ryu So-yeon to win the Kraft Nabisco Championship by four strokes on Sunday. 

It was Park’s first major title of the season and also her second career major title in addition to her 2008 U.S. Women’s Open. 

The 24-year-old is also the second successive Korean to win the Kraft Nabisco after Yoo Sun-young last year. Park took home $300,000 for her win. 
Park In-bee (Yonhap News)

Last year Park led the LPGA Tour money rankings and scoring average, and already has two victories this season. 

In the Honda LPGA Thailand in February, she edged past Thai teenager Ariya Jutanugarn to win by one stroke. It was largely thanks to Ariya blowing a one-stroke lead on the final hole with a triple bogey.

This time at the Nabisco championship at the Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California, however, Park overwhelmed the field with her stepped-up performance. 

She had a bogey-free round on Saturday to open a three-stroke lead going into the final round. She began her final round with two straight birdies, and had a bogey on the sixth, only her third of the tournament. But she quickly bounced back with birdies on the eighth and ninth holes to end 15-under.

Park celebrated her win by leaping into the pond off the 18th green with her caddie. 

Other Koreans placed high on the scoreboard: Kang Hae-ji tied Karrie Webb for fifth, and Shin Ji-yai and Park Hee-young ended up part of a six-way tie for seventh place.

Born in Seoul in 1988, Park began golfing at age 10. After moving to the U.S., she won the U.S. Girls’ Junior at age 14 in 2002. 

In 2006 after graduating from high school in Las Vegas, she played on the Duramed Futures Tour where the age of entry had been lowered to 17. She finished third on its season-ending money list.

During her rookie season in 2007, she tied for fourth at the U.S. Women’s Open and finished 37th on the money list.

In 2008, she won the U.S. Women’s Open for her first LPGA win. At 19, she was the youngest player to win the title. 

But she struggled in 2009 and 2010 before bouncing back in 2012, when she claimed two wins on the LPGA Tour and topped both in money earned and scoring average.

This year, she got off to a smooth start by grabbing the first major title of the season. For now, Park and world’s No. 1 Stacy Lewis of the U.S. appear to be breaking away from the pack with two wins apiece.