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Tomorrow

Posted on May 22nd, 2008 in Arts & Humanities, health, house, life by jiajun925

Tomorrow we have a lot of thing to do.

First Honey finally signed me up for driving school.

Second, he has to go to see doctor. This week he went to see doctor and get blood taken. After he came back, he told me that he did not feel so much. And this time it went well. The nurse  poked at him only one time. Lucky for him. And then he told me to get the blood taken. It sounded like that I never got my blood taken.

Third, tomorrow is the closing day for the house. After that, it means that we officially own the house.

team working

Posted on May 22nd, 2008 in Arts & Humanities, Business & Economy by jiajun925

Since our world is becoming a global village, team working is being paid attention to more and more. When you go to interview, definitely every company is going to ask you some questions how much you are good at team working. Normally they ask if you are a team player or not and you have to prove yourself you are. But really not everybody is good at proving themselves. If you worried a little about that, before your next interview, I recommend you to visit San Francisco team building. They have programs that have designed more than 25 years, which will build strong teams and conducted them across the country and around the world.

FL and NY

Posted on May 22nd, 2008 in Arts & Humanities, FL, New York, weather by jiajun925

When it comes to the weather, FL and NY are just like two totally different countries.

There is fire in FL now. It did not rain for a long time. It seems that there is no winter in FL.

But in NY, today in the morning it was 41. I still had to turn on my heater.  It seems to be that there is no summer in NY. Sometime though even it gets a little bit warmer in the afternoon, it is just for some minutes. At night it turns cold again, normally it is better to put on a jacket at night.

Metal Framing Product

Posted on May 22nd, 2008 in Business & Economy by jiajun925

After graduation, one of my classmates owns a factory of supplying iron or steel stuff. You know China is a developing country, which needs to build up many things.
When we were in Japan, we always heard about that some iron or steel stuff was stolen. And they normally doubted that the theft had some relations with Beijing because Beijing needs a lot of iron or steel stuff for Olympics.
I could not justify the truth of that thing, but I can recommend China why not just get Steel & Specialty Metal Framing Product from custom fabrication.
They are the premier stainless steel supplier based in Houston, Texas with experience in specialty steel products for the petrochemical, architectural, construction, agriculture, mining and marine industries. PWS is considered the premier source for steel wire cloth, perforated metal, expanded metal, bar grating and fiberglass grating.

800 Miles Away, Earthquake Rumors Spark Migration Outdoors

Posted on May 22nd, 2008 in Arts & Humanities, my home town -- Loudi city by jiajun925

From (800 Miles Away, Earthquake Rumors Spark Migration Outdoors - iReport.com)

LOUDI, CHINA- Thousands of people migrated to the central square in Loudi, Hunan Province, on Tuesday night amid rumors of a prediction that an earthquake would be striking the city sometime between 11pm and 2am that evening. Cell phone lines were jammed as the rumor spread quickly through the city, located in central Hunan province, west of the provincial capital Changsha, and over 1,400km (870 mi) southeast of the epicenter of last week’s devastating Sichuan quake.

The sidewalks were unusually lively late in the evening, as young and old, families and students made their way to perceived safer ground, some with blankets and bedsheets, expecting to ride out the purported earthquake outdoors.

A family had laid out a blanket to sit on the path near a crosswalk, and in the grass there was a group of teenagers playing cards. One of them opposed being photographed, “you are intruding on my human rights.”

A local university’s nightly 10:30pm curfue was largely ignored by the students, and teachers who encouraged the students to leave the buildings for the relative safety of flat, open spaces.

The city’s central Louxing Square was the chosen meeting place included in the rumor-filled text messages, probably for the location and the enormous television that towers over the square’s southeast corner.

Around midnight, hundreds were gathered in front of the large TV in one corner of the square, reading a message in neon-green Chinese characters telling them: Now there is no earthquake threatening the city, do not believe or spread the rumors, safely make your way home.

A voice came over the sound system, reiterating the TV message, “I am the head of the Loudi Earthquake Bureau, there is no threat, don’t believe the rumors, please return to your homes.”

By 1am, most of the people in Louxing Square had dispersed, but there were still many people talking, sleeping, playing cards, or buying late-night snacks from one of numerous street-food vendors that set up near the square to serve the crowds.

Earlier in the evening, the TV was broadcasting state-media videos from the devastation in Sichuan, broadcasts which for the last week focused on dramatic rescue effors by the army and sorrowful scenes of grief-stricken, teary-eyed survivors trying to find lost loved-ones or struggling to rebuild.

Tuesday’s earthquake rumors played heavily with emotions that were already running high from China’s three-day mourning period, a period of national unity marked by flags at half-staff, donation drives and news broadcasts mainly focused on the suffering in Wenchuan County, Sichuan Province, the heart of the epicenter of last week’s earthquake.

Local residents, most of who lightly felt last week’s earthquake, were already weary of disaster and charged with emotions.

In January and February, the area was battered for weeks by a snowstorm that paralyzed most of China’s southern provinces during the Spring Festival (Chinese New Year), the country’s most important holiday. The foreign protests during the international leg of the Olympic torch relay, which were sparked by the Tibetan riots in March, led to a protest outside the local Walmart store on May 1, a national holiday.