Friday, February 18, 2011

article summary #3

(CNN) -- Japan has canceled the rest of its winter whaling season, with a top official reasoning that environmentalists' obstructive efforts made it dangerous for whalers to stay on the high seas.
Japanese Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Michihiko Kano told reporters Friday that the country's government halted whaling because of actions taken by the animal rights group, Sea Shepherd. He stressed that Japan did not want to do so, but felt its hand was forced.
"From the viewpoint of our crew's safety, we have decided to cut short the research whaling at this time, against our will," he said.
The decision marks the first time Japan has canceled its whale hunt in the waters of the Antarctic since it started the practice in 1987. In 2005, Sea Shepherd began its bitter battle with Japanese whalers, monitoring them and occasionally getting into altercations. What Japan calls its winter whaling season typically extends into mid-March.
On Thursday, Hiroshi Kawamura, a government official in charge of research whaling, said Japan had decided to a temporary halt while it determined its next step -- one that it later ended up taking .
Japan has left its fleet of four whaling vessels in the Antarctic, as it decides what to do about the winter hunt, according to the ministry.
Capt. Paul Watson, who is helming a Sea Shepherd vessel called the Steve Erwin off the coast of Antarctica, said early Friday that at least some of those whalers were still in the Antarctic region.
"If it's true, this is great news," said Watson, who heads Sea Shepherd's operations in the Antarctic. "But we'll keep tailing them until they leave these international waters."
Watson said he and his colleagues have gained momentum and numbers steadily in recent years, while Japanese whalers have become less of a force -- especially economically. He suggested that his group was able to "bankrupt" the fleet so that it wasn't economically feasible to keep going..
He said it was wrong for the Japanese minister to label him and others as dangerous, adding that no one has ever been hurt in their efforts.
"We're getting more support every year, so it's working out that we're wearing them down," Watson said. "We've found a way where, once we're on them, they can't kill whales."
"We're very stubborn and very persistent. We've clearly frustrated them," he added.
Japan annually hunts whales, despite a worldwide moratorium on whaling, under the auspices it is conducting scientific research. The moratorium allows the culling of whales for purposes of scientific research.
Critics call Japan's hunt a cover for commercial whaling, since the whale meat ends up in supermarkets and restaurants. Animal rights groups, from Greenpeace to Sea Shepherd, and the governments of Australia and New Zealand, have publicly condemned Japan's hunts.
"I hope this is the end of whale hunting by Japan," said Watson. "But if they return next year, we'll be here."

who: Japanese fishermen and Japan's government!
what: Cancel whaling season!
where: Sea of Japan and Pacifc ocean! 
when: This year year, the rest of the winter season!
why: Whales are dieing off and there is enoughwhale meat for the year!
how: By the power of Japan's governmet and stating that is killing has to stop!

Summary:  This story is about whales dieing and how the japanese is effrot the animals....and that the governmat is stop the hunt for the rest of the year!

Friday, February 4, 2011

Article summary!

A girl drops a glob of black paint on her hand, tries to wipe it off with a piece of paper and only succeeds in making a mess. “Paper won’t fully clean it,” she explains to the camera, matter-of-factly. “It’s the same with your bottom.”

When a TV commercial for a strange device from Toto Ltd. called the “Washlet” first aired in Japan in 1982, its manufacturer was flooded with angry calls from viewers offended and disgusted by the mere notion of a spray wash replacing toilet paper. But 30 years later, few things are more quintessentially Japanese than the automated bidet, giving the country the reputation for having the sparkliest state-of-the-art toilets, bar none.
Toto, the leading manufacturer of the device, announced Wednesday on its website that it has sold 30 million Washlets since 1980. The Kitakyushu-based company, a 1917 spinoff of the “hygienic porcelain” department of Nihon Toki (now Noritake Co., maker of the Noritake chinaware), virtually single-handedly changed the way a nation conducts its private business when it decided to move from importing American medical toilet equipment in 1964 to manufacturing the apparatus domestically for general use.


 A little Japanese girl is telling the news reporter about her toilet and what her family is thinking about it! Japanese automatic toilets saleing out to at least 72% in Japan by 2009 and people feel like it is weird but will replace toilet paper and make it easier and so the manufacturing is now also making heated sits for the toilets and water that cleans your own bottom!

Friday, January 14, 2011

sweet home!

I want to live in japan and a house in france and to go around the world and see it all! Being a performer and learning new languages and being a power tumbling coach and maybe just settle in United Kindom and try to have my own power tumbling gym! While being a language teacher..... etc.

Friday, January 7, 2011

2011 New year's resolutions!

SCHOOL RESOLUTION: In years of school I have been trying my best but getting more and more lazy to do anymore. In the new year of 2011 I would want to change alot in school and get better. I will try to bring each and everyone of my classes grade up at least one letter grade more and get more involed in my own school activity's. I will push myself to the max. to study and to do great on my test's. I will find a great book that I like and read more even over breaks and weekends. Also all in time not to get in trouble with anything or any body! ;)

PERSONAL RESOLUTION: For my personal life this year I would like to change my hobbies and do more actititve stuff like so I just quit gymnastics a mouth in-half ago and I am regreting it! I will try to convince my aunt and my mother to put me back into gymnastics/power tumbling. Another thing I want to change is my sleeping skill I will try to get more more sleep at night so I get be ready for the next moring or day. Each day I will try to listen to my mother more and think before I act!

SOCIAL RESOLUTION: In this new year I would like to meet more people maybe even go on vaction and meet someone very new. My social life is boring but I would like to change that by showing people for who I am for real and show how exciting it is to be a good friend of mine.

WILD CARD RESOLUTION: One least thing I would like to say is that I will never give up on something, I will push thought anything that comes at me and will try to be better than any of my year's before!