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Burritt Sabin
For Burritt Sabin's latest contributions to The Japan Times, see below:
Japan Times
LIFE / Travel
Apr 9, 2004
International Street Performers Festival: Hit the streets and party!
The International Street Performers Festival was hatched in Papa John. In 1984, Ikuo Mitsuhashi -- a mime artist just back in Yokohama from a decade-long French sojourn -- dropped by the venerable jazz shot bar and listened to the proprietor describe the Association for Fostering Noge Culture. He was smitten.
Japan Times
LIFE / Travel
Apr 9, 2004
Savor a city's soul
A rusted observation platform on the eastern edge of Nogeyama Hill commands views across central Yokohama -- from the Western houses on the Bluff to the Landmark Tower in the Minato Mirai district. At the hill's foot, behind the up-slope march of buildings, lies Noge, its inconspicuousness emblematic.
Japan Times
LIFE / Travel
Feb 13, 2004
New subway signals start of a new era
At 4:57 on the morning of Feb. 1, a navy-blue and yellow train pulled out of Motomachi-Chukagai Station bound for Yokohama Station, connecting with through services from there to Shibuya via the Tokyu Toyoko Line.
Japan Times
Features
Feb 8, 2004
Horror on the high seas
Russia held out one hope for turning the tide of the war against Japan -- that a mighty armada, under Adm. Zinovii Rozhestvensky, would relieve the siege of Port Arthur and wrest command of Far Eastern waters from Adm. Heihachiro Togo's fleet.
Japan Times
Features
Feb 8, 2004
Dawn of a tragic era
Across a waterfront park in the Shirahama district of Yokosuka, beyond a bronze statue of Admiral Heihachiro Togo, the 15,000-ton Mikasa, his flagship in the Battle of Tsushima (1905), is anchored in concrete -- its chrysanthemum figurehead golden in the winter light, the Rising Sun snapping at the stern.
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Jul 6, 2003
For the visiting guests of honor
Togo Heihachiro, fleet admiral in the Imperial Japanese Navy, dealt a huge blow to the Russian armed forces when he sent the czar's Baltic Fleet to the bottom of the Tsushima Strait in May 1905. It was a stunning victory for Japan in the Russo-Japanese war: A bamboo land had vanquished a Western power. The world sat up and took note. Intrigued by the new David, people wanted to visit Japan.
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Jun 1, 2003
Shame and the pious pioneer
Commodore Matthew Perry pried open the door to Japan, and the first American to pass through it was Townsend Harris.
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Mar 2, 2003
GIs occupied 'paradise'
Landing craft from U.S. warships arrived in Otaru Bay under a pallid sky in the early morning of Oct. 5, 1945.
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Nov 3, 2002
Where the moon's 'pure light' shines
Three narrow valleys indent the pine-tufted Honmoku headland. Around 1887, Hara Zenzaburo, Yokohama's leading silk merchant, built a villa atop the lip of San-no-tani, the third valley from the west. While father drank in the view of Tokyo Bay, the Tanzawa and Hakone ranges, and Mount Fuji, his adopted son and heir, Tomitaro (1868-1939), spun from silk his own vision in the valley.
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Nov 3, 2002
Yokohama: city of wide horizons
Yokohama owes its rise to political compromise and a natural harbor. The Tokugawa shogunate and Commodore Perry, on the occasion of his return in 1854, could not agree on a parley site to discuss the opening of Japan to trade. The shogunate insisted on Uraga; Perry demanded entrance to Edo. The two sides struck a compromise -- the miserable village of Yokohama.
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Apr 28, 2002
They came, they saw, they democratized
"Bataan," the C-54 transport carrying Gen. Douglas MacArthur, the Supreme Commander of Allied Powers (SCAP), landed at Atsugi, Kanagawa Prefecture, at 2:05 p.m. on Aug. 30. The general, wearing sunglasses and puffing on a corncob pipe, struck a dramatic pose near the top of the ladder for the more than 200 reporters and photographers.
COMMUNITY
Mar 17, 2002
Twelve heavenly stories of wonder
On a visit to Yokohama's "Theater Street" (Isezakicho) in the early 1890s, Henry Finck, the music critic of the New York Evening Post from 1881-1924, watched "the wonders of electric light, telephone, [and] phonograph . . . [demonstrated] to gaping natives."
COMMUNITY
Mar 17, 2002
Yokohoma vs. Kobe: bright lights, big beacons
Yokohama and Kobe have much in common. Busy ports, both have swanky shopping streets named Motomachi, Chinatowns, Western-style houses on the hill and monument-dotted former foreign settlements. Tweedledum and Tweedledee? Some think so.
COMMUNITY
Jan 20, 2002
When something Western this way came
Like a Yankee daimyo, on Nov. 23, 1857, Townsend Harris made a progress to Edo (now Tokyo) from his residence in Shimoda on the Izu Peninsula. Proceeded by an American flag made of Japanese crepe, Harris, on horseback, was escorted by a guard of six whose costumes bore the coat-of-arms of the United States. The same blazon adorned the dark-blue uniforms of the 12 men who followed, shouldering his palanquin. Bringing up the rear were coolies bearing his clothes and furniture, and his cook.

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