It is a real-time e-news that looks at the news that became hot topics on the Internet overnight.



I have read many articles that Israel, the world's No. 1 corona vaccine vaccination rate, will be the first country to take off a mask.



In Israel, which started vaccinating against coronavirus in December last year, 48.6% of all citizens have completed the second vaccination.



By next month, 75% of the total population will be vaccinated. As the vaccination was done quickly, the number of new confirmed cases per day from over 10,000 just two months ago has recently decreased to 200.



As the number of new confirmed cases is rapidly declining, recovery to everyday life is also accelerating. Local media reports that Israeli health authorities are preparing to end measures requiring the wearing of outdoor masks.



This measure is expected to be implemented as early as next month.



Israeli health authorities are also planning to allow travel to some countries only to holders of the'Green Pass', a government-issued certificate to those who have been vaccinated.



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was also a lot of interest in the article about a collective road kill while trying to lay eggs and the rescue operation of Mt.



Residents striking a long net of 300 to 400 meters along the roadside safety fence, followed by burying a bucket in the ground outside the road.



In this way, frogs and toads trying to go to the puddle across the road are rushing to the bucket and trapped. Residents release hundreds of them every day into the spawning pond.



It started when I saw frogs hibernating in the mountains across the village in spring, moving across roads to village puddles and rice paddies, hitting thousands of cars each year.



It's been eight years since we started to rescue, and over 40,000 animals have been safely cross the road.



Residents are helping to spawn amphibians by re-watering the paddy fields that had been neglected to grow rice.



Last year, the survival rate of frogs increased by widening the drainage channel under the road to create an ecological pathway. In the situation where the valleys and puddles are rapidly decreasing, the small efforts of village residents are helping to maintain the ecosystem.



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celebration of the 20th anniversary of the late Chung Ju-young, the honorary chairman of Hyundai Group, the appearance of the home of the Cheong Undong in Jongno-gu, Seoul, which had not been disclosed to the outside, was also disclosed.



"My house is located under Inwangsan Mountain in Cheongundong, and the sound of the flowing water in the mountains and the sound of the wind going up and down while sweeping the foot of the mountain is good."

The Cheongundong home is a symbolic place where Honorary Chairman Chung lived for 38 years and built the Hyundai Group.



Every morning, they call their families living around to eat breakfast together and go to work. The home, which was opened after 20 years, was not gorgeous and had a calm atmosphere.



On the first floor, old-looking pianos and faded books stood out, and on one side of the living room wall, Honorary Chairman Chung and his wife Jung-seok Byeon were hung side by side.



This place was inherited by Hyundai Motor Group Honorary Chairman Chung Mong-koo in 2001 and then transferred ownership to Chairman Eui-sun Eui-sun in March 2019.