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Rice planted in former no-go zone

National

Rice planted in former no-go zone

Farmers in the city of Tamura, Fukushima Prefecture, have begun planting rice in a district once designated a no-go zone because of radioactive fallout ejected by the disaster-hit Fukushima No. 1 power plant.

  • U.S. shale gas alters Japan's energy plans
  • The rifleman: behind assault weapons' rise
  • Utility, ubiquity playing key roles in corrupting policymakers' thinking
  • Sri Lanka sexes up Ceylon tea's image
  • Syria accused of 'disappearing' thousands
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Tsuruga reactor's active fault

The identification of a geological fracture zone beneath a Tsuruga nuclear plant reactor as an active fault may force the decommissioning of the reactor in Fukui Prefecture.

  • Avoiding food allergy tragedies
  • For a more 'friendly' Japan
  • France must lead breakuup of euro
  • E-cigarettes blow fog into ban on D.C. Metro
  • Immigration reform: Could this be Abe's new growth strategy?
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Product names show language creativity at work

Language | BILINGUAL

Product names show language creativity at work

by Mark Schreiber

Recently I was asked to write a blurb for a new liquid plant-nutrient. As soon as I saw the name of the product, 早根早起 (Hayane Hayaoki), I smiled at this example of linguistic creativity.

  • Fukushima photos focus on what can't be seen
  • Learning to live with your death
  • The other costs of concrete
  • Dwarf bamboo's no pushover whatever the season
  • Where to find brunch in Tokyo, and just the way you like it
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Foreign-born professional strives to reconnect Japanese with koto music

Our Lives

Foreign-born professional strives to reconnect Japanese with koto music

by Louise George Kittaka

Life in Japan just seems tailor-made for certain foreign residents, who slip into the fabric of this society as smoothly as a hand slides into a glove. American Curtis Patterson, a professional koto player and music teacher, is a case in point. Not only ...

  • Taking care of an aging smartphone — until the end
  • Tokyo: What do you make of Gov. Naoki Inose's comments about Muslims and Istanbul's Olympic bid?
  • Turks in Kansai fear Inose gaffe indicative of wider ignorance about culture
  • Inose's slurs anger, bemuse Turks in Tokyo but may boost Istanbul's Olympic bid
  • Czech promoter sings way to cultural identity
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Danish singer wins Eurovision

Entertainment

Danish singer wins Eurovision

Denmark’s Emmelie de Forest won this year’s Eurovision Song Contest on Saturday night with her ethno-inspired flute and drum tune “Only Teardrops,” despite tough competition from spectacular stage shows by performers from Azerbaijan and Ukraine. Juries and television viewers across Europe awarded the barefoot, ...

  • Authorized life of Thatcher is clear-eyed, rich in details
  • At Cannes, Watson revels in post-'Potter' freedom
  • Surviving dangerous encounters
  • Ranpo's novella of a desecrated grave continues to send shivers
  • Private tutor as crime solver; inner workings of the human body, dramatized; CM of the week: Acom
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Yokohama captures first-ever bj-league title

BJ-League

Yokohama captures first-ever bj-league title

One team’s quest for a first title has ended. The other team’s fight will continue next season. The Yokohama B-Corsairs outplayed the Rizing Fukuoka in Sunday’s bj-league championship game, controlling the tempo for larger stretches and making enough timely baskets to fill an instructional ...

  • Captain Kabaya picks up MVP award
  • Hakuho flattens Aran to kick off second week
  • Federer, Nadal win to set up Italian Open final showdown
  • Red Wings dominate to even playoff series
  • Pacers knock out Knicks in six
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Exploring, rediscovering fine arts

National | IMF-WORLD BANK IN TOKYO Oct 12, 2012

Exploring, rediscovering fine arts

by Chiho Iuchi

While much has changed since Japan last hosted the Annual Meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank Group in 1964 — a year that symbolized the nation’s achievement of reconstruction after World War II through the hosting of the meeting and the ...

A pair in dire need of a reality check

National | IMF-WORLD BANK IN TOKYO Oct 12, 2012

A pair in dire need of a reality check

by Noriko Hama

Japan is hosting an annual meeting of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank for the first time since 1964. A lot has happened in the intervening very nearly half a century — to both Japan and the IMF. Yet both Japan and ...

National | IMF-WORLD BANK IN TOKYO Oct 12, 2012

Nearly 50 years ago, Tokyo meetings focused on liquidity

by Minoru Matsutani

For Tokyo, 1964 was definitely one of the biggest years. In October, Japan’s volleyball team, dubbed the “Oriental Witches,” won a gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics, heating up Japanese spirits. Shinkansen bullet trains began operating that same month. A month earlier, Tokyo hosted ...

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National | IMF-WORLD BANK IN TOKYO Oct 12, 2012

Sovereign debt, strong yen among tough topics at meetings

by Jun Hongo

When Japan last hosted the Annual Meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank Group in September 1964, Tokyo was in the midst of preparing for the Summer Olympic Games which were to kick off a month later. The country had overcome ...

National | IMF-WORLD BANK IN TOKYO Oct 12, 2012

National budgets must take climate into account

by Ajay Chhibber

It’s the extreme weather season in Asia again. Deadly cyclones, blinding rains, ensuing floods and mudslides are becoming the norm from Nepal to Fiji. During this same time, the world’s finance ministers are preparing for their IMF-World Bank meetings in Tokyo. While their discussions ...

National | IMF-WORLD BANK IN TOKYO Oct 12, 2012

Daishichi Sake Brewery makes tradition modern

The Daishichi Sake Brewery Co., located in the castle town of Nihonmatsu, Fukushima Prefecture, sits at the foot of majestic Mount Adatara. Daishichi was founded in 1752 by Saburoemon Ohta, who hailed originally from a samurai family. Since then, 10 generations of the Ohta ...

National | IMF-WORLD BANK IN TOKYO Oct 12, 2012

Kajima develops technologies to cope with disasters

by Keisuke Okada

As a way to demonstrate its commitment to the growing corporate and social requirements for business continuity plans (BCP), Kajima Corp., Japan’s leading general contractor, conducted a large-scale anti-disaster drill on Aug. 30. It was conducted on the assumption that a magnitude 7.3 earthquake ...

National | IMF-WORLD BANK IN TOKYO Oct 12, 2012

KKE starts consultations for evacuation planning

by Keisuke Okada

One lesson learned from the tragic Great East Japan Earthquake disaster on March 11, 2011, is that hardware alone does not suffice to save the lives of so many people in affected areas. Technically, higher breakwaters and higher seawalls could be built, using taxpayers’ ...

National | IMF-WORLD BANK IN TOKYO Oct 12, 2012

Project lends helping hand to industry, small brewers

Sake, like Japanese fashion, anime or even sushi, can be an acquired taste. Just like those other cultural exports from Japan, sake comes in a wide variety of different styles and flavors, and while your first taste may not be precisely what you’re looking ...

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