Posted: 03 May 2020 02:01 PM PDT
Focus Taiwan
Date: 05/03/2020 By: Chang Ming-hsuan, Hsieh Ching-wen and Joseph Yeh According to CECC Deputy Commander Chen Tsung-yen (陳宗彥), the local Chinese Professional Baseball League (CPBL) has proposed allowing a maximum 500 people attend each game, a proposal the CECC is expected to approve as part of measures to gradually loosen restrictions, as Taiwan's efforts to prevent the spread of COVID-19 have been relatively successful so far. Deducting players, coaches, cheerleaders of both teams as well as CPBL staffers, referees and broadcasting crew, who are already allowed to attend, a maximum 250 fans will soon be allowed to buy tickets to watch CPBL games, according to Chen. The maximum attendance cap may soon be expanded if the country continues its success in containing the virus, he added. [FULL STORY] |
Posted: 03 May 2020 01:58 PM PDT
Forbes
Date: May 3, 2020 By: Russell Flannery, Forbes Staff Yageo, which makes electronic components such as capacitors and resistors, said on April 29 China’s Anti-Monopoly Bureau of the State Administration for Market Regulation had given a go-ahead to the Kemet deal. That follows a similar approval from the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. on April 23. The two clearances complete all international antitrust approvals needed for the transaction, which is expected to wrap-up in the third quarter, Yageo said. The Kemet acquisition, announced last November, is one of the largest in the U.S. by a Taiwan company. It follows Yageo’s purchase of Pulse Electronics of San Diego in 2019 for $740 million, and will bring Yageo’s combined U.S. transactions to $2.5 billion in two years. Kemet is headquartered in Florida. [FULL STORY] |
Posted: 03 May 2020 01:52 PM PDT
SECOND WEEKEND: A crew producing the tourney’s livestream were briefly put at risk when FCC Formosans’ Anthony Liu put one of his five sixes onto the roof of their tent
Taipei Times Date: May 04, 2020 By: Grant Dexter / Staff reporter The FCC Formosans opener cracked the first half-century of the tournament, although Vishwajit Tawar of the Chiayi Swingers later in the day bettered Liu’s innings of 51 against the ICCT Smashers. However, the crew who are producing the livestream for the tournament — which was put together to serve cricket-starved fans worldwide amid the COVID-19 pandemic — were momentarily put at risk when Liu put one of his five sixes onto the roof of a tent covering them and their equipment. His next maximum produced no such danger, easily clearing the long-off fence. [FULL STORY] |
Posted: 03 May 2020 01:47 PM PDT
Ching Sheng Hotel at Sun Moon Lake in Nantou County and Tayih Landis Hotel in Tainan City to shutter in May and June
Taiwan News Date: 2020/05/03 By: George Liao, Taiwan News, Staff Writer According to the report, Ching Sheng Hotel, run by Wenwu Temple, will close on May 26 and lay off 24 employees. Wen Wu Temple Chairman Chang De-lin (張德林) said on Sunday the hotel has lost more than NT$10 million (US$330,000) over the past four years. He added the situation had been exacerbated by a big decline in the number of Chinese coming to Taiwan. The hotel will be closed to prevent further losses, CNA quoted Chang as saying. An employee said the hotel is set to shutter on May 26. Meanwhile, Tayih Landis Hotel, the first five-star hotel in Tainan, has reportedly decided to shutter on June 30. Hotel owner Tayih Group rented the building from the building owner, Cathay Life Insurance, and opened the hotel in 2002. [FULL STORY] |
Posted: 03 May 2020 01:43 PM PDT
Focus Taiwan
Date: 05/03/2020 By: Pan Tzu-yu and Kay Liu Taipei, May 3 (CNA) Changes are expected in the post-globalization world created by trade friction between the United States and China, especially after the fragility of supply chains has been exposed by the COVID-19 conoravirus pandemic, experts have said. The globalized world that saw the rise of China and relative decline of the U.S. is set to change because of trade disputes between the two largest economies in the world and the outbreak of COVID-19, said Darson Chiu (邱達生), a research fellow at the Taiwan Institute of Economic Research, in a recent interview with CNA. China's lack of transparency regarding the COVID-19 outbreak is likely to hurt other countries' confidence in Beijing, and affect the progress of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) trade negotiations, Chiu said. According to the most recent joint declaration made last November by the 10 ASEAN countries, China, Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand and India, most were preparing to sign the RCEP pact except India, which had outstanding issues to be resolved. [FULL STORY] |
Posted: 03 May 2020 01:40 PM PDT
PANDEMIC AID: Seventy-one percent of non-government relief were approved by state-run banks, for an average of NT$13 million per application, FSC data showed
Taipei Times Date: May 04, 2020 By: Kao Shih-ching / Staff reporter Seventy-two percent of the loans, or NT$89.9 billion, were provided to 7,778 companies under a Ministry of Economic Affairs assistance program for the nation’s manufacturers and small and medium-sized enterprises, commission data showed. The ministry last month announced that it would subsidize interest payments for companies whose revenue dropped by at least 15 percent from last year’s average, on condition that the companies do not reduce their employees’ working hours or salaries. Another 27.5 percent of the loans, or NT$34.1 billion, were offered to 473 tourism agencies, airlines, hotels and transportation firms. The Ministry of Transportation and Communications is to help subsidize those firms with interest payments and handling fees. [FULL STORY] |
Posted: 03 May 2020 01:21 PM PDT
How coronavirus is accelerating the emergence of a new geopolitical formation.
New Statesman Date: 3 May 2020 By: Jeremy Cliffe The link is summed up in a recently published book, Indo-Pacific Empire. It came out in early March, so was written before the Covid-19 pandemic struck. But it is impressively prescient. In it Rory Medcalf, Head of the National Security College at the Australian National University, highlights an emerging formation on the geopolitical map: the Indo-Pacific, a growing web of alliances centred on the “Quad” of India, Japan, Australia and the US, but also taking in a crescent of maritime states in eastern, south-eastern and southern Asia. Looser and more multipolar than other such formations, it is unified by the quest to balance, dilute and absorb Chinese power. “The Indo-Pacific is both a region and an idea: a metaphor for collective action, self-help combined with mutual help,” writes Medcalf. Two months on from its publication, virtually all of the trends that his book draws together have advanced. Scepticism towards China is mounting. In an escalating war of words, Australia has called for an investigation into the origins of the Covid-19 outbreak. Japan’s economic rescue package included almost 250bn yen (some $2.2bn) to support Japanese firms in moving production out of China. India has tightened investment restrictions in a move clearly aimed at shielding domestic firms from Chinese takeovers; Modi’s meeting illustrating the country's new willingness to style itself as a rival manufacturing hub. [FULL STORY] |
Posted: 03 May 2020 01:11 PM PDT
FARS News Agency
May 03, 2020 4:15 “One of the most important applications of this bio ceramic is orthopaedic surgery in mass or coating shape at the implant surface, spinal surgery and drug or protein carrier with controlled release capability,” Shahrou Savand, one of the Iranian researchers, said. The researcher added that the materials produced from the Caspian Sea seashells can also be used in bone composites for the preparation of tissue engineering scaffolds and treatment of bone defects. Musculoskeletal disorders in the elderly have significantly increased due to the increase in an ageing population. The treatment of these diseases necessitates surgical procedures, including total joint replacements such as hip and knee joints. [FULL STORY] |
Posted: 03 May 2020 01:05 PM PDT
Expert says he looks forward to seeing virus less potent as temperatures warm
Taiwan News Date: 2020/05/03 By: George Liao, Taiwan News, Staff Writer In the past, influenza has typically broken out during the fall and winter seasons, with a comparatively low chance of it happening in summer, Chang said at the CECC daily press briefing. Therefore, he added, it's likely that the epidemic will taper off in the coming months, continuing that there is theoretical basis for the speculation. Chang qualified his remarks by clarifying that although the above-mentioned view is valid for the temperate region, things may be different in the tropics. [FULL STORY] |
Posted: 03 May 2020 01:02 PM PDT
Focus Taiwan
Date: 05/03/2020 By: Wang Shu-fen and Evelyn Kao Under the influence of foehn winds, the mercury in Jinlun soared to 37.9 Celsius degrees at 2:10 p.m. Sunday, the highest level recorded anywhere in Taiwan this year, according to the CWB. A foehn wind is a type of dry, warm, down-slope wind that occurs on the lee (downwind side) of a mountain range. The other highest weather station temperatures of the year were 37.6 degrees in Jialan Village, Jinfeng Township at 15:30 p.m. and 37.3 degrees in Dawu at 12:49 p.m. [FULL STORY] |
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