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PACIFIC MISSILE RANGE FACILITY, Hawaii - A Japanese school girl s note in a bottle dropped into the ocean five years ago has been found washed
stanley cup up on Hawaii s shores.Petty Officer Jon Moore stumbled upon the clear glass bottle Thursday during a beach cleanup at the Pacific Missile Range Facility on Kauai.Inside, he found a note from Saki Arikawa, four origami flowers, and a photo of Saki s sixth grade class in Kagoshima. I looked over and saw the bottle; I jokingly thought it would have a treasure map inside, but it actually had
stanley cup a message, Moore told CBS News affiliate KGMB-TV in Honolulu. When I started reading the letter, the Kanji looked familiar since I used to live in Japan, and the name of the student sounded like an average Japanese name to me. I was just glad the letter was in English at the bottom. The note was dated March 25, 2006. It read, I wrote this letter because we ll graduate elementary school so I wanted it to be a graduation memory. A picture found with a message in a bottle is seen in this scanned image released by the U.S. Navy. AP Photo
stanley cup Akira Nakashima, the principal of Kokubu Elementary School in Kagoshima, confirmed that Saki graduated from the school five years ago and that her class tossed the bottle from a nearby bay marking the event. It s just amazing that the bottle was found. I m so delighted by the heartwarming news, Nakashima Pbkm Spy Chief: Qaeda Taps Europe For Recruits
Los Angeles is a big place鈥?00 square miles, 88 separate cities鈥攁nd it rare that what constitutes news in one corner even applies to another. For the first time in its history, the Los Angeles Times is recognizing this fact with an ambitious redesign that allows readers to zero in on what happening down the street. Launching as part of a May 6 rollout that starts late tonight is Neighborhoods, a new feature that pulls hyperlocal, geocoded news for almost 300 neighborhoods around the city. Using the mapping data from the LA Times Mapping L.A. project, which combined city data and user input to draw definitive boundaries for every neighborhood, each of the paper 82
stanley quencher 17 stories are geo-tagged to a particular location within those neighborhoods. Each neighborhood then gets its own front page with all the news across the si
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stanley cup hat area. Also included are those 88 cities within the city, like Beverly Hills and Santa Monica, as their own neighborhoods. Even though readers appreciate the LA Times ; regional focus, they always want to know what going on in their neighborhood, says Ron Parsons, vice president of digital products for the Los Angeles Times. So this is a natural fit for us and a great way for us to coalesce and aggregate some our great local coverage and information鈥攏ews, crime and demographic information, restaurant and food reviews鈥?in one place. The designers plan to