allthecoolnamesaregone

Wednesday, October 27, 2004

Lunars Eclipse

A total lunar eclipse expected to create views of a blood-red moon will be visible tonight throughout most of North America, weather permitting.

Such an ideal viewing opportunity will not occur again until 2008, astronomers said. The only area in North America that won't be able to see the eclipse in its entirety will be western Alaska.

In the Pacific time zone, the total eclipse phase will occur from 7:23 p.m. until 8:45 p.m. The faint beginnings of the show, which will start at 6:14 p.m., will not be visible from the West Coast because the moon will not have risen yet. The eclipse will be over by 9:54 p.m.

Thursday, October 21, 2004

That's a Bad Hamster!

My hamster has been very very very bad lately.
Bad Hammy...Bad Bad Hammy !!!
 
He's very hyper and doesn't want to stay in his 3 level home.  He's running up and down and climbing all over the place.  He also chew up the wire and injured both his mouth and feet :(  I know he's been hyper since the day we got him but usually, he just runs his wheel all night long.  Only lately that he started to climb and chew.
 
To calm him down from the big wire cage, I moved him back to the glass tank.  Yeah...chew if you can, climb the glass wall as you wish.  He doesn't have a wheel either. 
 

Flu Shot Lotto

God Damn!  Just heard on the news that Montgomery county will be doing FLU SHOT LOTTO for those who need them.  I'm so glad my grandma got the last batch at Giant (Super G) last weekend.
 
 

Tuesday, October 19, 2004

4 Seasons

season structure:
Summer: June through September (4 months),
Fall: October and November (2 months),
Winter: December through March (4 months) and
Spring: April and May (2 months).

http://www.theweatherprediction.com/habyhints/145/

Thursday, October 14, 2004

Name? Why?

Just checking my stat from Sitemeter...
Someone used the search term "Why Are Thai Names So Long" to get to my blog.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=why+are+thai+names+so+long

I don't think the answer can be found here though. My name is over 20 characters long but I don't really know ... why.

Wednesday, October 13, 2004

Suicide Pact

9 dead in Japanese 'suicide pacts'
Tuesday, October 12, 2004 Posted: 0915 GMT (1715 HKT)

TOKYO, Japan (AP) -- Police found seven young people dead in a deserted van outside Tokyo in what was believed to be Japan's biggest-ever group suicide, while also finding two women dead in an apparent suicide pact in a car at a temple.

The cases -- involving young people in their teens and 20s -- raised alarm over suicide agreements, many of which are made by people who meet over the Internet.

They have claimed dozens of lives and shocked Japan over the past several years.

Tuesday's suicide of four young men and three women in the van would be the largest group suicide yet, the National Police Agency said.

Authorities found the rented van in a deserted mountain lot after a friend of one of the seven who had received an e-mail hinting at suicide called the police.

But officers failed to reach the van in time, a police spokesman in Saitama prefecture, just outside Tokyo, said on condition of anonymity.

The van windows were sealed with vinyl tape from the inside and the seven were found slumped over in their seats, the spokesman said. A woman sat in the driver's seat, while the six others sat in two rows behind her.

Investigators found four charcoal stoves in the car that they believe the group used to poison themselves. No external wounds or signs of a struggle were found.

The Saitama police said they believed the seven died of carbon monoxide poisoning, and ordered autopsies.

In a separate incident, two women were found dead in a car parked outside an isolated temple in Yokosuka, about 60 miles to the southeast, a Kanagawa prefecture police spokesman said.

They were in the car's back seat, with two charcoal stoves on the floor. The car windows were sealed with a black plastic tarp.

Police said it was not immediately known whether the two cases were related. They were still trying to determine the identities of the men and women.

Internet pacts
Officials say suicide pacts have been made over the Internet since at least the late 1990s, and have been reported everywhere from Guam to the Netherlands.

But they've been happening in Japan in especially large numbers, where suicide in general is at record highs.

According to the National Police Agency, 45 people committed suicide in groups after meeting each other over the Internet between January 2003 and June 2004.

An official at the agency, also demanding anonymity, said seven was the largest known group to commit suicide together.

Suicide sites, often designed with an ominous, pitch-black background, post disclaimers about the dangers of their content.

Delving further into the sites leads to chat rooms spilling over with death wishes and exchanges of ideas on how best to take your own life.

Some sites offer "shopping lists" detailing materials necessary for self-asphyxiation as well as ready-made packages available for a price.

The spate of Internet-linked group suicides have led to calls for the government to close suicide message boards down, but experts say the problem lies more with a lack of suicide prevention efforts, not with people discussing death over the Web.

Shinji Shimizu, professor at Nara Women's University, said group suicides could be on the rise because young Japanese are not exposed to death as much as in previous generations as fewer relatives die around them.

"Young people today don't have a sense of reality about death," Shimizu said. "They are approaching it as an extension of a game in cyberworld."

Japan's suicide rates are among the highest in the world. The number of Japanese committing suicide last year exceeded 32,000 to mark the record high.

Officials have blamed a decade-long economic slump for an increasing number of people killing themselves, a trend particularly strong among middle-aged men. Younger people have cited concerns about bullying, romantic breakups or abusive family members for wanting to kill themselves.

Jisatsu Sakuru Off Screen


Posted on Wed, Oct. 13, 2004

9 dead in Japan; suicide possibly arranged online

By James Brooke, New York Times

TOKYO - Nine people were found dead in two rented cars on Tuesday, with the windows sealed from the inside and charcoal burners at their feet, in what Japanese police are calling modern Japan's largest suicide pact.

The police said that in one minivan, which had been rented for the day, they found seven bodies, including teenagers and a 33-year-old woman who had left a note for her children. Parked on a mountain road in a Tokyo suburb, the gray van had been wrapped in blue plastic sheets with the windows taped closed. Inside, the woman's body was in the driver's seat, and there were three bodies on each of the van bench seats. All were believed to have died of carbon monoxide poisoning.

``Mother is going to die, but I was happy that I could give birth to you,'' said a note found next to the driver, according to Kyodo. An empty package of sleeping pills was found near the van.

The group may have come together through a suicide message board on the Internet, Japanese news media quoted the police as saying. Although Japan has a suicide rate about twice the rate of the United States, the government tolerates ``suicide'' Web sites where people discuss suicide and suicide techniques. Some Web sites even sell kits for ``painless'' suicide.

Using a Web-capable cell phone, one of the seven in the van e-mailed a friend in northern Japan on Monday evening, giving the exact location of the van, a police official for Saitama, the Tokyo suburb, told Agence France-Presse. All the van's occupants were dead by the time the police arrived, just after dawn.

At virtually the same time Tuesday morning, outside a temple in Yokusuka, about 75 miles to the south, the police found a rented car containing the bodies of two women, ages 21 and 27. They apparently had also asphyxiated themselves by burning charcoal in two stoves in the car. The police told Kyodo news that the two lived about 25 miles apart and had also apparently met through the Internet, police told Kyodo News.

``This is not murder. We planned this,'' read a message found in the women's car, according to Agence France-Presse.

The police have asked Internet service providers to report information about chat group participants who post suicide plans on the Web, but the directive is believed to be largely ignored.

Last year, Japan reported a record 34,427 cases of suicide, a slight increase over previous years. From January 2003 to June 2004, 45 people committed suicide in groups after meeting over the Internet, according to the National Police Agency. In one case last month, four young people were found dead after burning charcoal in a car parked only three miles from where the van was found Tuesday.