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/ 15 March 2005

From race queen to racing queen

Move over Michael. Here comes a former Japanese race queen raring to become a ”racing” queen in the man’s, man’s world of formula one. Keiko Ihara, who swapped the model’s leotard and make-up for a racing suit and helmet in 1999 at the age of 26, declares her goal to be Germany’s seven-time formula-one champion Michael Schumacher.

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/ 9 March 2005

Mummified body of 107-year-old found at home

Japanese police have found the mummified body of a 107-year-old man, who died up to a decade ago, wearing a clean kimono at his house near Osaka, an official said on Wednesday. An official with the Itami city hall said the city is considering asking the man’s family to return gifts it has received since 1999 as a token of the man’s longevity.

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/ 25 February 2005

Now you can warm up your dinner in the fridge

The Japanese will soon have a refrigerator which can keep meals hot as well as cold to accommodate families who dine apart most of the time with husbands working late and children studying into the night. Billed as a world first, the fridge, made by electronics firm Sharp, has a space of 20 litres in the middle that can be kept at 55C, just next to a box for ice cubes.

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/ 7 February 2005

Tennis star Sharapova parts with Tokyo

Wimbledon champion Maria Sharapova can’t wait to be back in Tokyo, where she won her first professional title, first WTA titles and this weekend triumphed at the Pan Pacific Open. But success has caught up with her and it will be at least one year before the skyrocketing Russian starlet is eligible to play again in her favourite city.

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/ 3 February 2005

Davenport, Dementieva advance in Tokyo

World number one Lindsay Davenport and Russia’s Elena Dementieva advanced to the quarterfinals of the Pan Pacific Open tennis tournament with victories over Japanese opponents in Tokyo on Thursday. American top seed Davenport faced a tougher-than-expected challenge before beating Saori Obata 6-4, 6-3 in 64 minutes.

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/ 31 January 2005

New cellphones are all shook up

Tired of pushing all those buttons on your cellphone? Japanese handsets slated to hit stores next month are designed to solve that problem: they respond to shakes, tilts and jiggles. The cellphones come equipped with a tiny motion-control sensor, a computer chip that recognises and responds to movement.

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/ 26 January 2005

Buy a bean plant and express your love

Japanese people who are too shy to work up the courage to say "I love you", or at least want a little surprise, have a new option: a bean plant that sprouts to read a special message. Japan’s second-largest toymaker will soon start marketing of the gift cans, which hold soil and the small plant bearing a message that sprouts up in about five days.

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/ 20 January 2005

Sony grows up

Sony missed out on potential sales from MP3 players and other gadgets based on widespread formats because it was overly proprietary about music and entertainment content, the head of Sony’s video-game unit acknowledged on Thursday.

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/ 18 January 2005

Two quakes shake Japan

An earthquake registering 6,3 on the Richter scale shook the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido on Tuesday night, Kyodo news agency reported, citing the Japan Meteorological Agency. Earlier, a moderate earthquake measuring 4,6 on the Richter scale shook the central region of Niigata.

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/ 14 January 2005

Giant zeppelin completes maiden flight

An enormous white zeppelin described as the world’s largest successfully completed its maiden flight on Friday in Japan. The German-made, 75m-long airship wafted into blue skies above the western port city of Kobe on Friday morning for half an hour before embarking on a five-hour flight to Nagoya in central Japan.

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/ 12 January 2005

A cut-and-toasted solution

For all those concerned about the texture of their toast, a Japanese manufacturer said on Wednesday it has created a ”super toaster” that heats the bread a split-second after slicing it. Billed as a first, the super toaster can hold two loaves of bread and slice them with internal blades before making them crispy with infrared light.

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/ 5 January 2005

Death is no easy matter in Japan

Hidenobu Murakawa stops his tour for a moment and apologises for the interruption. It’s the midday crunch, and he doesn’t want to disturb the bereaved.
The crematorium is his pride and joy, and performs 15 000 cremations each year. With precious little space left in Japan for traditional graves, innovation has become important.

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/ 3 January 2005

Cult in hot water after bathtub death

The Japanese cult behind a deadly 1995 gas attack on the Tokyo subway will end a ritual in which followers spend long hours in scalding water after a sect member died in a bathtub, officials said on Monday. Wakashio Togashi (45), who had been a senior member of the Aum Supreme Truth cult, was found dead in the bathtub at another Aum follower’s house.

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/ 22 December 2004

Jealousy makes you nasty

A Japanese man kept his 21-year-old girlfriend confined in handcuffs for 11 days in his apartment because he worried she may date other men, police said on Wednesday. Police said he told investigators: ”I was afraid that she may date other men if I left her by herself.”

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/ 21 December 2004

Japan welcomes knife-proof kids’ clothes

Protective fibres woven into bulletproof vests for United States troops in Iraq are being put to the test outside the battlefield — by Japanese schoolchildren. Madre, a Japanese security firm, said internet orders in Japan have been trickling in for knife-resistant sweatshirts and windbreakers it makes for children.

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/ 14 December 2004

Now repeat after me: ‘Ho, ho, ho’

Every Christmas, Seiji Makino used to dread facing up to his three children whose questions about Santa Claus would leave him tongue-tied. But this year Makino and other Japanese who want to be able to bellow out a perfect ”Ho, ho, ho” are getting help in the form of professional training by the country’s only ”certified” Santa Claus.

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/ 13 December 2004

Japanese men rest heads on laps of foam

Japanese men who want to rest their weary heads this Christmas season are finding comfort in the lap of a woman — made of foam. The torso-less ”lap pillow” stands upright like a small cushion and resembles a woman’s legs in a miniskirt. ”Single men find this soothing,” said Mitsuo Takahashi of the seven-employee manufacturer Trane KK.

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/ 8 December 2004

‘Beautiful’ robot can look after pets

A Japanese firm said on Wednesday it has created a jellyfish-shaped robot that can alert homeowners to burglars or housesit for their pets — and, when not at work, lounge about and be ”beautiful”. Roborior, a transparent robot that can glow blue or red, is equipped with a camera, speaker and hi-tech sensor.

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/ 8 December 2004

Godzilla, the old-fashioned monster

The delicate, human side of Godzilla played by a real actor has drawn crowds for 50 years and shows that high-tech Hollywood doesn’t have all the answers, the creators of the Japanese monster’s latest instalment said on Wednesday. True to tradition, the film was shot almost entirely with a man dressed up as the fire-breathing giant reptile.

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/ 1 December 2004

Japanese firm unveils robotic companion

Japan’s growing elderly population from Wednesday will be able to buy companionship in the form of a 45cm robot, programmed to provide just enough small talk to keep them from going senile. Snuggling Ifbot, who is dressed in an astronaut suit with a glowing face, has the conversation ability of a five-year-old, the language level needed to stimulate the brains of senior citizens.

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/ 1 December 2004

Swallow this, it won’t hurt a bit

The world’s top endoscope maker Olympus has joined the race to develop a capsule camera, a disposable device the size of a fingertip that can be easily swallowed to scan the body from the inside. The Olympus group’s medical products arm said it had developed key technologies for the capsule endoscope, which would navigate through the body without batteries to take images and directly administer drugs.

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/ 19 November 2004

Crows take the bait

Police said on Friday they recovered a wallet that disappeared at one of Japan’s most isolated points by luring the culprit with bait — literally. The suspects, it turned out, were the birds. Standing on a quiet, oceanside vista in Hateruma island of Okinawa, a 30-year-old Japanese visitor noticed her wallet had vanished from the basket of her rental bicycle when she looked away for only a few seconds.

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/ 18 November 2004

High-tech grandpas for elderly business owners

A team of tech-savvy but patient experts in their fifties and sixties has been set up to offer consultancy for Japan’s growing number of elderly small-business owners on their computer needs, the Japanese arm of IBM said on Thursday. The group includes 20 veterans of the information-technology industry between 52 and 67 years old.

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/ 10 November 2004

High-sea chase after Japan spots Chinese sub

Japan was on alert on Wednesday after a suspected Chinese nuclear submarine entered its territorial waters, setting off a chase on the high sea amid mounting disputes between the Asian powers. The incident comes amid a series of disputes between Japan and China, including friction over gas-exploration rights in the East China Sea.

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/ 8 November 2004

Heavy tremors strike quake-hit Japan

A series of powerful tremors on Monday rattled a central Japanese region still reeling from last month’s earthquake, slightly injuring 13 people just as the last schools shut by the tragedy reopened. Nineteen tremors, with the strongest measuring 5,9 on the Richter scale and felt in Tokyo, struck in Niigata prefecture.