Archive for February, 2010
Seoul brothers take to the streets (Japan Times)
Can the term “historical mystery” be applied to works set in the early 1970s? Perhaps not. But Martin Limon’s series, now up to six volumes, reliably and compellingly captures the lives and times of George Sueno and Ernie Bascomb, sergeants assigned to the Criminal Investigation Division of the U.S. Eighth Army in Seoul four decades ago. In this latest episode, Sueno, a hulking…
Source : Japan Times (subscribe)
Explore : Asia, Japan, Music, South Korea, World
With pressures high, South Korean women put off marriage and childbirth (Washington Post)
SEOUL — In a full-page newspaper advertisement headlined “I Am a Bad Woman,” Hwang Myoung-eun explained the trauma of being a working mom in South Korea.
Source : Washington Post (subscribe)
Explore : Asia, South Korea, World
Seoul brothers take to the streets (Japan Times)
Can the term “historical mystery” be applied to works set in the early 1970s? Perhaps not. But Martin Limon’s series, now up to six volumes, reliably and compellingly captures the lives and times of George Sueno and Ernie Bascomb, sergeants assigned to the Criminal Investigation Division of the U.S. Eighth Army in Seoul four decades ago. In this latest episode, Sueno, a hulking…
Source : Japan Times (subscribe)
Explore : Asia, Japan, Music, South Korea, World
South Korea Tackles Vacation Deficit (The Wall Street Journal)
Seoul is twisting arms to get government employees to take at least some time off. But from the top of the initiative on down, leaders are sending mixed messages.
Source : The Wall Street Journal (subscribe)
Explore : Asia, Business, South Korea, World
With pressures high, South Korean women put off marriage and childbirth (Washington Post)
SEOUL — In a full-page newspaper advertisement headlined “I Am a Bad Woman,” Hwang Myoung-eun explained the trauma of being a working mom in South Korea.
Source : Washington Post (subscribe)
Explore : Asia, South Korea, World
South Korea Tackles Vacation Deficit (The Wall Street Journal)
Seoul is twisting arms to get government employees to take at least some time off. But from the top of the initiative on down, leaders are sending mixed messages.
Source : The Wall Street Journal (subscribe)
Explore : Asia, Business, South Korea, World