[Hyunjun Go's News Bulletin]

<Anchor>

It is time for the current critic Gohyun Joon's news bulldog. What is your first news today (7th)?

<Hyun-Jun Goh/Critic Criticism> When an

international animal protection organization uncovered that monkeys were being abused at a coconut plantation in Thailand, a boycott of coconut products in Thailand also began. The Thai government started to evolve.


The monkey is suffering from being tied to a string. This is a video released by Peta, an international animal protection organization on the 3rd.

Peta revealed that these monkeys were caught in nature when they were young, and then used to pick up fruit by forcing them to climb into coconut trees while living in chains.

He said that many monkeys also develop mental illness because of the stress of abuse.

It also included a farm official's remark that if you remove a canine, you can keep a monkey until it dies.

When this was released, distributors such as Europe and the United States decided not to sell Thai coconut products related to forced monkey labor.

However, the Thai government says the international animal protection group's claim of abusing and exploiting monkeys is different from the facts. I'm sweating.

<Anchor>

I think we should find out what's true. I think we need to clarify whether it is the level of utilization of livestock or the real abuse when farming because of lack of skills.

<Go Hyun-jun/Critic critic>

I could use animals, but it would be a problem if there was abuse in the process.

<Anchor> It is

. Please tell me the next news.

<Go Hyun-jun/Critic critic>

Next news. With Corona 19, there is a growing demand for students to return tuition fees to colleges, especially in domestic universities where face-to-face classes have disappeared.

Some colleges have decided to return some, but most haven't even decided how to teach in the second semester. American universities look at the situation.

It's a prestigious American Ivy League. It is said that Harvard University and Princeton University have only allowed half of undergraduate students to live on campus during the fall semester.


You can only apply for campus residence if you have insufficient equipment for distance learning at home or if you have a problem with your home environment.

It is said that these students are required to undergo a corona19 diagnostic test once every three days, a single bedroom is assigned, and the library is closed.

All classes are conducted online, and it is said that there is no discount for tuition fees ranging from $49,653 to approximately 59 million won in Korean money.

It is said that Princeton University only allows half of the students to stay on campus and ban parties altogether. Princeton University is said to cut tuition by 10% unlike Harvard.

It's a familiar expression of college life in the Corona period. The'Romance of the Campus' may disappear.

<Anchor>

I think Korean college students are very poor now. I can't even go to school properly. Please tell me the next news.

<Hyunjun Go/Critic Review>

This is the next news. Recently, as the cicada moths appeared in the center of the central and northern regions of Korea, they were disgusting and causing discomfort to the residents.


A cicada moth and cicada moth eggs cling to the iron pillars in the park.

The tree is attached to the larvae of the cicada moth, which is only a finger thick.


In particular, it appears intensively in the metropolitan areas such as Incheon, and in the central and northern parts of Gangwon, Chungbuk, etc. It looks gruesome, but the caterpillars gnaw on the leaves, causing great damage to the forest and causing hives and dermatitis to people.

Experts say that the hair of cicada moth larvae can cause inflammatory reactions when it touches human skin, causing itching. To explain.

To prevent the damage, the forest authorities and the local governments came to control. Controlling flying adults is not easy, but instead of controlling drugs, we are focusing on lowering the density by using insecticides and pheromone traps.

<Anchor>

Yes, I saw it a while ago, but it was quite big when I actually saw it. It was scary.