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2011年9月14日水曜日

Number of centenarians in Japan tops 47000 - The Associated Press

Number of centenarians in Japan tops 47,000(AP) – 4 hours ago 

TOKYO (AP) — Quickly graying Japan said it has a record 47,756 people aged 100 or older — most of them women.

The Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare said Tuesday that was an increase of 3,307 from last year and four times more than a dozen years ago.

Some 87.1 percent are women. The oldest is 114-year-old Chiyono Hasegawa, who was born on Nov. 20, 1896. The oldest man is 114-year-old Jirouemon Kimura, whose birthday is April 19, 1897.

Japan, with 128 million people, is one of the world's most rapidly aging societies. It has one of the lowest birthrates and one of the longest life expectancies — fueling concerns about its shrinking tax base and overburdened public pension and medical care systems.

Twelve years ago, in 1999, Japan had 11,346 citizens in the century club.

The ministry said that as of Sept. 1, 24,952 people had turned 100 in the previous 12 months. Each new centenarian will receive a letter from the prime minister and a silver cup.

The credibility of these statistics was questioned last year after it became clear that some people included in the tally were dead or missing. The ministry relies on residential registration records to compile the statistics. An official said this year's data may include some who are missing after the March 11 tsunami disaster.

However, the ministry did confirm that all new centenarians in its tally are alive.

The report was released ahead of Respect for the Aged Day, a national holiday that falls this year on Sept. 19.

Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


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2011年9月13日火曜日

Nissan develops cheaper, smaller charger for EVs - The Associated Press

Nissan develops cheaper, smaller charger for EVs(AP) – 6 hours ago 

TOKYO (AP) — Nissan has developed a charger for electric vehicles that's smaller, about half the price, and easier to install.

Nissan Motor Co., Japan's No. 2 automaker, said Monday the new charger will go on sale in November in Japan and is planned later for the U.S. and Europe, although dates are not set.

The basic model of the revamped charger will cost about half the price of the current model, which is stockier and has more parts, and costs 1.47 million yen ($19,000). The higher-grade model for outdoors will also be cheaper and cost under 1 million yen ($13,000), according to Nissan.

Yokohama-based Nissan, which makes the Leaf electric vehicle, is targeting sales of 5,000 of the new chargers in Japan by the end of March 2016.

Zero-emission electric vehicles are drawing attention amid concerns about global warming and the environment. The Leaf is among the pioneering models in the technology.

But electric vehicles still make up a niche market. They have to be recharged, and recharging stations aren't that plentiful. Owners generally have to go through the trouble of installing a recharger in their homes.

Right now, Leafs are being sold to mostly local governments rather than regular consumers.

The difficulty of installing chargers, which look like the filling machines at gas stations, is another reason.

Nissan is hoping to sell the new chargers to highways, airports, shopping centers, convenience stores and gas stations, it said.

Nissan has sold more than 13,600 Leaf cars around the world since they went on sale in December 2010. There are now 619 chargers throughout Japan, 32 percent, or 196, in the Nissan group, while the rest are with local governments, highways and other companies that promote EVs.

Competition in electric vehicles is likely to intensify in coming years as others, such as Japanese rival Toyota Motor Corp., enter the sector.

Toyota already offers plug-in hybrid cars, which run partly as EVs but switch to become regular hybrids with gas engines when they run out of the electric charge.

Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


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UN nuke agency meets on Iran, Syria, NKorea, Japan - The Associated Press

UN nuke agency meets on Iran, Syria, NKorea, JapanBy GEORGE JAHN, Associated Press – 5 hours ago 

VIENNA (AP) — The head of the U.N. nuclear agency on Monday announced plans to publish new information backing up his belief that Iran may be working on a nuclear warhead — developments that leave his organization "increasingly concerned."

The comments by International Atomic Energy Agency chief Yukiya Amano were significant because it was the first time he revealed plans to release some of the most recent knowledge available to the IAEA leading to such worries. Such new intelligence would likely be detailed in the next report on Iran's nuclear activities in November.

Speaking at the start of a five-day meeting of the IAEA's 35-nation board, Amano also reiterated that — despite Syrian denials — a target hit in 2007 by Israeli warplanes was a nearly completed nuclear reactor meant to produce plutonium, which can be used to arm nuclear warheads.

At the same time, he announced that his staff would meet with Syrian officials next month to work out an "action plan" allowing Damascus to make good on promises to present new information on the site in its attempts to prove that the structure was a non-nuclear military facility.

He also had some positive words for Iran, saying it had demonstrated "greater transparency" than usual, in allowing a senior IAEA official to tour previously restricted nuclear sites last month.

At the same time, Amano urged the Islamic Republic to show more openness on other nuclear issues of concern. The agency, he said, "continues to receive new information" about Iranian attempts to develop a nuclear warhead, adding that he hoped "to set out in greater details the basis for the agency's concerns" in the near future.

Amano had already said he was "increasingly concerned" about possible warhead experiments by Iran in a report made available to The Associated Press earlier this month, when it was also shared with board members and the U.N. Security Council.

The phrase "increasingly concerned" — was also used by Amano in his remarks to the board Monday. It has not appeared in previous reports discussing Iran's alleged nuclear weapons work and reflects the frustration felt by him over the lack of progress in his investigations.

In its report, the International Atomic Energy Agency said "many member states" are providing evidence for that assessment, describing the information it is receiving as credible, "extensive and comprehensive."

The report also said Tehran had started installing equipment to enrich uranium at a new location — an underground bunker that is better protected from air attack than its present enrichment facilities.

Enrichment can produce both nuclear fuel and fissile warhead material, and Tehran — which says it wants only to produce fuel with the technology — is under four sets of U.N. Security Council sanctions for refusing to freeze enrichment.

It also denies secretly experimenting with a nuclear weapons program and has blocked a four-year attempt by the IAEA to follow up on intelligence that it secretly designed blueprints linked to a nuclear payload on a missile, experimented with exploding a nuclear charge, and conducted work on other components of a weapons program.

In a 2007 estimate, the U.S. intelligence community said that while Iran had worked on a weapons program such activities appeared to have ceased in 2003. But diplomats say a later intelligence summary avoided such specifics, and recent IAEA reports on the topic have expressed growing unease that such activities may be continuing.

Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


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2011年9月8日木曜日

Ex-PM feared for Japan's survival in nuke crisis - The Associated Press

Ex-PM feared for Japan's survival in nuke crisis(AP) – 3 hours ago 

TOKYO (AP) — Japan's former prime minister says he feared early in the March nuclear crisis that it might become many times worse than the Chernobyl disaster and threaten the nation's survival.

Naoto Kan says he imagined "deserted scenes of Tokyo without a single man" and the need to evacuate tens of millions of people.

"It was truly a spine-chilling thought," Kan said in an interview with the Tokyo Shimbun daily published Tuesday.

Kan said those images flashed in his mind during the first week of the crisis, when information coming from the radiation-leaking Fukushima Dai-ichi plant was sketchy and he was told that its operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., was considering pulling out its staff. TEPCO has since said that it never planned to withdraw from the plant.

Kan, who resigned last week amid criticism over his administration's handling of the disaster, said when he heard that cooling systems had failed at the nuclear plant soon after it was damaged by a March 11 tsunami, he understood the gravity of the situation.

"The power was totally lost and there was no cooling capacity. I knew what that meant. So I thought, 'This is going to be a disaster.'"

Kan said crisis management at the plant failed because the emergency plans included no scenario for a total power failure.

Authorities have since said that the cores of three of the six reactors melted down — much worse than they said initially — spewing about one-sixth the radiation emitted by the accident at Chernobyl.

After a series of hydrogen explosions, Kan said he heard from then-Trade Minister Banri Kaieda that TEPCO was considering pulling out staff from the nuclear plant.

Without staff to cool the overheated reactors, Kan said he knew the reactors and spent nuclear fuel stored in pools would "rapidly melt down and release massive amounts of radiation."

He said he summoned then-TEPCO President Masataka Shimizu for an explanation, but he "never told me anything clearly."

"Withdrawing from the plant was out of the question. If that had happened, Tokyo would have been deserted by now. It was a critical moment for Japan's survival. It could have been a disaster leaking dozens of times more radiation than Chernobyl," he said.

"Japan was facing the possibility of a collapse" at that time, he said in a separate interview published Wednesday by the Mainichi newspaper. "I was under an enormous sense of crisis."

The Fukushima complex is about 140 miles (225 kilometers) northeast of Tokyo. The greater Tokyo area has more than 30 million people.

Some 100,000 people from around the plant have been evacuated. While the amount of radiation leaking from the plant has dropped significantly, authorities say accumulated radiation in the soil and vegetation may make it difficult for residents to return to their homes for some time, perhaps years.

Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


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2011年9月6日火曜日

AP-GfK Poll: Japanese support for US bases grows - The Associated Press

AP-GfK Poll: Japanese support for US bases growsBy MALCOLM FOSTER, Associated Press – 5 hours ago 

TOKYO (AP) — Japanese have become more welcoming to the U.S. military presence in their country over the past six years as fears spread that neighboring China and North Korea are threats to peace, an Associated Press-GfK poll has found.

The survey released Monday on Japanese views of other countries, security and the imperial family also showed that while about half of Japanese are positive about the U.S. and Germany, they are overwhelmingly negative or neutral toward immediate Asian neighbors China, Russia and North Korea. Opinions about South Korea are mixed.

Those attitudes, as well as results showing Japanese are reluctant to allow more foreign workers into the country, suggest a general wariness of outsiders. Some 46 percent are opposed to increasing the number of immigrants — more than double the share in favor of boosting their numbers — even though doing so would help offset the shrinking labor force as the population ages.

And while they gave their own elected leaders low marks, most Japanese think highly of the emperor and military.

Tokyo has cast a cautious eye toward China's increased military spending and more assertive stance on disputed islands in the region. Ties between the two countries deteriorated to their worst point in years last autumn when a Chinese fishing trawler and Japanese patrol vessels collided near islands controlled by Japan but claimed by both in the East China Sea.

China's state-run media have already issued warnings to new Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda for past statements suggesting that Beijing's military buildup is a regional security threat.

For protection, Japan relies on its own military and nearly 50,000 U.S. troops based in the country under a 51-year-old joint security pact. That arrangement received extra scrutiny last year when former Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama sought — and ultimately failed — to move a controversial U.S. Marine base off the southern island of Okinawa.

American forces were also actively involved in humanitarian relief efforts after March's tsunami disaster.

Amid public alarm about China's assertiveness, support for the American military bases in Japan has grown to 57 percent, while 34 percent want them withdrawn. In a similar 2005 poll, Japanese were evenly divided on the issue at 47 percent.

"The U.S. military presence has received a greater acceptance, apparently because people think this region has grown more unstable than before," Foreign Minister Koichiro Genba said Monday in response to the results.

China is viewed as a threat to world peace by nearly three-quarters of respondents, and about as many have a negative impression of the country — which is also Japan's largest trading partner. Unfavorable views of Chinese leader Hu Jintao outweigh favorable views by more than 11-to-1, the AP-GfK poll showed.

North Korea, meanwhile, is viewed as a threat by even more Japanese — 80 percent, up from 59 percent in 2005. The country, which fired missiles into waters between the Korean peninsula and Japan in 2005 and again in 2006, is viewed negatively by 94 percent. Its leader, Kim Jong Il, is disliked by nine in 10.

Many Japanese are supportive of their own military, called the Self-Defense Forces, with 74 percent trusting it to do the right thing all or most of the time.

But people were mixed over changing the constitution to give the military a greater international role, although more favored such a change — 38 percent — than opposed — 28 percent. About a third were neutral.

The Japanese Constitution, drawn up by a U.S. occupation force after World War II, prohibits the creation of an armed force that can be maintained for offensive purposes. But under pressure from the U.S. to play a larger role in regional security, Japan has become more involved in peacekeeping operations abroad. It also sent refueling ships to the Indian Ocean to help with the Afghan war.

Most Japanese continue to hold Emperor Akihito, who lacks any political power, in high esteem: 70 percent view him favorably and 65 percent feel the Imperial family still fits well with modern Japanese society.

Still, just 22 percent would favor giving the emperor power to set government policy, while 43 percent oppose such an expansion of imperial power. About a third are neutral.

President Barack Obama is seen positively by 41 percent of respondents, with the same number viewing him in a neutral way. Some 16 percent see him unfavorably. As a country, the United States is seen favorably by 49 percent, neutrally by 36 percent and unfavorably by 14 percent.

Germany garnered the smallest unfavorable rating — just 4 percent — with 48 percent giving the country a thumbs up. Chancellor Angela Merkel garnered a neutral rating from just over half the respondents, while 28 percent view her positively and 7 percent negatively.

Neighboring South Korea, whose television dramas and "K-pop" singers have become increasingly popular in Japan, isn't so popular itself, with 31 percent viewing the country positively and 27 percent negatively.

Russia, meanwhile, is viewed positively by just 11 percent and negatively by 44 percent.

Japan has come under fire internationally for its whale hunting, but the Japanese public narrowly favors whaling for commercial purposes, the survey showed. Fifty-two percent favor it, 35 percent are neutral and 13 percent are opposed. Far more men are in favor than women.

However, few — 12 percent — are deeply interested in eating whale meat themselves. Most — 66 percent— have little or no interest in dining on whale.

Commercial whaling is banned under a 1986 moratorium but various exceptions have allowed Japan, as well as Iceland and Norway, to hunt whales anyway. Japan claims its hunts are for research purposes, though the meat from the killed whales mostly ends up in restaurants, stores and school lunches.

The AP-GfK telephone poll conducted by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications surveyed 1,000 adults across Japan by landline telephone between July 29 and Aug. 10, and has a margin of error of 3.8 percentage points.

Associated Press writer Mari Yamaguchi contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


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2011年9月4日日曜日

New Japan PM gets approval rating of 63 percent - The Associated Press

New Japan PM gets approval rating of 63 percentBy MALCOLM FOSTER, Associated Press – 6 hours ago 

TOKYO (AP) — Japan's new Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda and his Cabinet received an initial support rating of 62.8 percent, a Kyodo News agency poll showed Saturday, a day after he announced his Cabinet and promised to guide the nation through its disaster recovery.

New prime ministers typically start out with relatively high approval ratings, but usually see them decline steadily after an initial honeymoon as the public grows impatient.

Noda's predecessor, Naoto Kan, started out with an approval rating of just over 60 percent, but that had fallen to below 20 percent near the end of his 15-month tenure amid widespread criticism of his administration's handling of the tsunami disaster and nuclear crisis.

The poll also found that respondents were divided over a possible hike in Japan's 5 percent sales tax, with 49.7 percent favoring the idea and 47 percent saying they opposed it.

A fiscal conservative, Noda is viewed as a supporter of raising the tax to help rein in Japan's bloated national debt and pay for disaster reconstruction, although he has made no specific commitments about tax policy so far.

Noda chose two relatively young, unknown lawmakers for key posts in his Cabinet: 49-year-old Jun Azumi as finance minister and 47-year-old Koichiro Gemba as foreign minister.

Azumi will have little time to settle into his new office. He travels to France next week to represent Japan at a Group of Seven meeting of finance ministers and central bank governors.

The ruling Democratic Party of Japan received far from a ringing endorsement in the poll, with just 27.2 percent backing Noda's party. The main opposition, the conservative-leaning Liberal Democratic Party, which had led Japan for most of the post-war period until it was toppled by the Democrats in 2009, won approval from 23.6 percent, the Kyodo poll showed.

Japanese closely watch public opinion surveys, which are compiled regularly by the Japanese press. Some experts argue that such polls — and by extension the media — wield too much influence in determining a prime minister's longevity. Many say that once a leader's approval rating falls below 30 percent, it seldom recovers and it is only a matter of time before the leader resigns.

Recent history bears that out, and, as such, experts say these polls have been a contributing factor in the rapid turnover in Japanese politics.

The absolute nature of the poll's top question — do you approve of the job the prime minister is doing, yes or no — makes it very hard for leaders to stay popular. If people are the least bit dissatisfied with the government, it's easy to respond in the negative.

"Public opinion polls, the way they word questions here, seem more or less designed to discredit whoever is in power," said Jeff Kingston, director of Asian studies at Temple University's Tokyo campus. "I'm not sure it's an accurate reflection of popular opinion. But it becomes self-fulfilling because the questions are designed to elicit strong anti-prime minister views."

The poll surveyed just over 1,000 people on Friday and Saturday. A poll of that size would have a margin of error of 5 percent.

Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


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2011年9月2日金曜日

Japanese whistle-blower wins damages in high court - The Associated Press

Japanese whistle-blower wins damages in high courtBy YURI KAGEYAMA, AP Business Writer – 6 hours ago 

TOKYO (AP) — The still fledgling protection for whistle-blowers in Japan received a boost Wednesday by a high court that reversed an earlier decision and awarded damages to a worker who suffered retaliation through a transfer.

The Tokyo High Court ordered Japanese camera and precision-equipment maker Olympus Corp. to pay 2.2 million yen ($29,000) to Masaharu Hamada for transferring him from a sales division where he had a strong work record to a more solitary assignment.

Hamada sued Olympus in 2008, demanding 10 million yen ($130,000) in damages, saying the transfer was punishment for relaying a supplier's complaint that employees with technological expertise were being lured away by Olympus. According to reports, Hamada first relayed the complaint to his boss, then to the company's compliance unit.

"I thought I did the right thing for my company and for society. Something is wrong when an honest person loses out," the 50-year-old Hamada was quoted saying by the Asahi newspaper after his victory.

Olympus said in a statement the ruling was "regrettable" and it was still considering whether it will appeal to the Supreme Court.

Japan is a conformist society that tends to respect the power of companies and demand unquestioning loyalty. A law to protect whistle-blowers was enacted only in 2006. But critics say it is still inadequate since it does not penalize companies that punish employees who report bad company conduct or actions.

Whistle-blowers still need to file lawsuits if they wish to win damages or draw attention.

Last year, the Tokyo District Court ruled against Hamada, saying a company had the right to dole out assignments. The latest ruling reversed the earlier finding and said the company had violated its own internal laws by not protecting Hamada.

Numerous corporate scandals have been brought to light by whistle-blowers — a systematic cover-up of defects at Mitsubishi Motors Corp., illicit pocketing of government subsidies at Snow Brand Foods, and nuclear plant defects at Tokyo Electric Power Co., the utility behind the nuclear disaster in northeastern Japan.

"Whistle-blowers are still seen in Japan as traitors who go against the system," said Hiroaki Kushioka, who exposed price-rigging at his trucking company 30 years ago, and was confined for years to a closet-like office, denied promotion and pressured to quit. He sued for damages in 2002, and won a landmark victory in 2005.

"In Japan, it is all about the sake of the team, and not about the individual at all," he said.

Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at http://twitter.com/yurikageyama

Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


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2011年8月29日月曜日

Japan faces more confusion amid leadership vote - The Associated Press

Japan faces more confusion amid leadership voteBy YURI KAGEYAMA, Associated Press – 5 hours ago 

TOKYO (AP) — The five candidates vying to become Japan's next prime minister promised Sunday to resolve the country's nuclear crisis and revive its battered economy, amid widespread public cynicism about a revolving door of leaders.

Japan — which is set to see its sixth prime minister in five years — has fumbled recently to find leadership to tackle formidable challenges, including recovery from a massive earthquake and tsunami in March and the battle to bring a nuclear power plant sent into meltdown by the disasters under control.

Even before the disasters hit, the nation was already ailing with serious problems such as an aging population and stagnant economy.

None of the five candidates looking to replace Naoto Kan as prime minister is expected to win the needed majority of 200 votes in balloting among legislators in the ruling Democratic Party in the first round of voting, set for Monday. If no one gets a majority, a run-off between the top two candidates would follow.

The winner of the Democrats' leadership vote is almost certain to become the nation's next prime minister because the party controls the lower house of Parliament, which chooses Japan's chief.

Public interest has been stunningly low, underlining the widespread disenchantment with politics.

A debate Sunday among the candidates was not carried live on any of the major TV networks.

"In Japan these days, a prime minister who lasts even one year is a miracle," said Minoru Morita, who has written several books on Japanese politics.

He predicted more confusion ahead, including a possible split in the ruling party in coming months.

Japanese media reports said Sunday that Economy Minister Banri Kaieda, 62, had a slight lead over other candidates after securing the backing of the ruling party's behind-the-scenes power broker, Ichiro Ozawa.

But that could prove a pitfall in a run-off, as legislators may rally behind a rival to block Ozawa's grip on power, according to Morita.

Facing off against Kaieda are former Foreign Minister Seiji Maehara, Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda, Agriculture Minister Michihiko Kano and former Transport Minister Sumio Mabuchi.

Maehara, 49, was initially considered the favorite until Kaieda won Ozawa's backing.

Maehara has technically violated election laws by accepting donations from foreigners — a problem that could bring him down if the opposition decides to pursue that in parliament. He stepped down as foreign minister earlier this year over that scandal.

Legislators, therefore, may decide to support a relatively safe candidate such as Noda, said Morita.

"Some lawmakers are extremely afraid of Mr. Ozawa's almost dictatorial power," Morita told The Associated Press.

Ozawa, 69, a veteran who began in the long-ruling and now opposition Liberal Democratic Party, is known for savvily engineering elections, sending novices to parliament, as well as dooming candidates to defeat.

Ozawa is embroiled in a political funding scandal, though some say his trial is likely to end in acquittal, and his presence has hung like a shadow over the party leadership campaign.

At Sunday's debate at a Tokyo hotel, candidates appeared in agreement, all promising a revived Japanese economy and a resolution of the nuclear crisis in comments heavy on rhetoric but scant on concrete proposals.

"I would like to use the recovery efforts in northeastern Japan as a springboard to achieve an overall revival of Japan," Kaieda said, after invoking President John F. Kennedy's famous line about asking what you can do for your country, rather than what your country can do for you.

No matter who wins, the new prime minister is expected to last barely a year because he would merely be serving out the term of Kan, who announced Friday that he would resign.

Kan, 64, came to power in 2010 amid high hopes for his liberal and approachable persona. But by the time he stepped down, his popularity had plunged.

Japanese are disappointed and frustrated by the apparent inept rule of the Democrats, who swept to power in 2009, ending a virtually continuous half-century rule by the Liberal Democrats and promising to help consumers, not just big business.

Soichiro Tahara, who hosts TV shows and has authored books, noted that Ozawa remains a powerful shadow shogun and expressed doubts that the next prime minister will get much done.

"Japan certainly isn't headed to any bright future," he said in a recent TV commentary.

Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


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2011年8月28日日曜日

California, Japan advance at Little League WS - The Associated Press

California, Japan advance at Little League WSBy GENARO C. ARMAS, AP Sports Writer – 13 hours ago 

SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) — Hagen Danner homered and struck out 12, and Huntington Beach, Calif., spoiled the Pennsylvania party at the Little League World Series with a 2-0 victory over the hometown heroes from Clinton County on Thursday night.

California will face Billings, Mont., in the U.S. final Saturday. Montana beat California 1-0 in seven innings Wednesday night. Pennsylvania was eliminated.

Danner was the biggest reason why with a stellar night on the mound being leaving in the sixth because of Little League's pitch-count rules. The 12-year-old ace got out of a fifth-inning jam with one out and a runner on third with a grounder and flyout.

Danner homered to right-center in the third.

With the Lamade Stadium stands rocking, Pennsylvania later put the tying run at the plate with one out in the sixth after Alex Garbrick reached on an infield single.

But closer Braydon Salzman ended Clinton County's run with a strikeout and a force play at second.

Japan moved on as well, to the international final Saturday against Mexico, with a 9-6 victory over Maracay, Venezuela.

Yoshiki Suzuki blasted two homers to lead the mashers from Hamamatsu City trying to defend the crown won by a squad from Tokyo last year.

The late game had all the intensity again of a major league playoff game, thanks in large part to the vocal backers of the Keystone Little League from Clinton County — just 30 miles from South Williamsport.

The first Williamsport-area team to advance to the series since 1969 has captured the attention of central Pennsylvania. Blue "Keystone" T-shirts were being sold at roadside stands around Williamsport, and electronic signboards wished good luck to the "Big Blue Machine."

No such luck Thursday night.

The teams exchanged high-fives and fist-bumps at home plate before Pennsylvania players trotted back to their dugout, still serenaded by chants of "Keystone" by proud friends and family.

Instead, it's California advancing to the U.S. title game for a rematch with undefeated Montana.

Pennsylvania hitters managed just three singles off Danner, who effectively mixed a heater that hit 77 mph with an off-speed pitch that had batters off-balance.

The "Keystone" chants of roared through Lamade Stadium again after Wyatt Koch reached on an infield single and reached third on two wild pitches in the fifth. Danner got a hug from smiling shortstop Trevor Windisch after California jogged back to the dugout in relief without allowing a run in that jam.

Pinch-hitter Ryo Takada tacked on an insurance run with an RBI double in the fourth.

___

Japan 9, Venezuela 6

Seconds after the ball left his bat in the third inning, Suzuki raised his right arm in celebration and admired his opposite-field blast just over the left-field wall.

Then he did it again in the fifth in a game that had the makings of a blowout before Venezuela rallied late.

Venezuela had the tying run at the plate with one out in the sixth after Yonny Hernandez's RBI single, but reliever Gaishi Iguchi struck out the last two hitters to finally allow Japan to celebrate and eliminate Venezuela.

Japan's berth Saturday in the international final is secure thanks in large part to the long ball.

Kazuto Takakura added a three-run homer in the fourth for Japan. It was his first-ever home run for the 12-year-old Takakura, and his teammates toasted him at the plate by raising both his arms in victory as if a prize-fighter following a title-winning bout.

"We are from Japan so we don't have much power. Ask the players," Japan manager Akihiro Suzuki, no relation to Yoshiki, joked with a chuckle. "That's why we reacted like that. We were all very happy for him."

Ken Igeta had an RBI double in the third before Suzuki belted the first of his two homers. Doing his best impression of slugger David Ortiz, the left-handed Suzuki watched in awe at the plate as the ball clear the 225-foot wall.

Hiroyasu Sugiura, 12, was so excited that he bolted out of the dugout and raced toward home, nearly beating the happy Suzuki to the plate.

"Both times, I was just trying to hit the ball to center," Suzuki said.

Not quite, but Japan will gladly take the two shots to left just the same.

After Iguchi's game-ending strikeout, Japan's players briefly exchanged handshakes and pats on the back before lining up on the third-base line to exchange handshakes with Venezuela, a Little League tradition.

Venezuela trailed 8-0 before finally solving Japan pitching in the fifth. Elio Narvaez highlighted a five-run inning with a two-run blast to right with two outs to cut the deficit to three runs.

"Our bats didn't come today. Our rally was too late," manager Gustavo Narvaez said through interpreter Edwardo Caraballo about his nephew "Japan is a very good team, they fouled off a lot of pitches and wore down our pitchers."

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2011年8月25日木曜日

Hawaii considers college football game in Japan - The Associated Press

Hawaii considers college football game in Japan(AP) – 1 hour ago 

TOKYO (AP) — The University of Hawaii is moving forward with plans to play a regular-season football game in Japan within the next few years.

Jim Donovan, the school's athletic director, revealed the prospect while in Osaka over the weekend for a men's basketball game. Hawaii was finishing up a 15-day tour through China and Japan.

The Rainbow Warriors could play a football game in Japan as soon as 2014. Donovan said he met with executives of the Osaka Dome, where the proposed game would take place.

Donovan said Hawaii would consider opponents in its Mountain West Conference, which includes national powerhouse Boise State, and the Pac-12 Conference.

The story was first reported by The Japan Times.

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2011年8月19日金曜日

Japan city declares nuclear Decontamination Month - The Associated Press

Japan city declares nuclear Decontamination MonthBy ERIC TALMADGE, Associated Press – 2 hours ago 

MINAMI-SOMA, Japan (AP) — It is a daunting task. Contamination from the world's worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl has spread far and wide, across fields and farms, rivers and forests. Tens of thousands of residents have been forced to flee their homes.

But, shovelful by shovelful, one half-empty city on the edge of the evacuation zone is fighting to bring its future back.

Feeling forgotten and left largely to fend for themselves by the central government, officials in Minami-Soma, about 12 miles (20 kilometers) away from the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear facility, have designated August as "Decontamination Month" in a campaign to woo spooked residents home.

"We decided that we could not sit by and wait until Tokyo figured out what to do," said town official Yoshiaki Yokota. "It's an enormous task, but we have to start somewhere."

Before the disaster, nearly 70,000 people lived in Minami-Soma. But, nearly six months later and despite relatively low radiation readings in most parts of town, more than 30,000 have left, nearly one-third of them from areas outside the official evacuation zone.

City officials fear that unless action is taken to demonstrate most of the town is safe for habitation, many may never return.

So, for the past week, the city has contracted local crews to hose down its schools, parks and community centers. The goal is to reduce by more than one-half the levels of radioactivity measured at places in the city where people gather.

The campaign has created a buzz of activity in the still-shaken town.

The work crews, clad in hazmat suits, also use bulldozers and powershovels to remove contaminated topsoil from public places, particularly school playgrounds. The washoff from the hosings and the mounds of contaminated topsoil are then moved to less-used areas and buried in huge trenches.

"I'm glad to see them here," Kiyomi Takahashi said as she watched a crew wash down a kindergarten adjacent to the school where her daughters are due to begin the first and sixth grade next week. "I still have my concerns, but it's important that our city is out there showing that it is doing something."

For the time being, a large swath of Minami-Soma remains completely off limits.

That is because it is within a 12-mile (20-kilometer) no-go zone set up by Tokyo days after the March 11 tsunami touched off meltdowns, explosions and fires at the Fukushima plant. All told, nearly 21,000 people were killed or remain missing after the tsunami, which devastated Japan's northeast coast.

But outside the no-go zone, contamination levels vary dramatically, depending on the local terrain. Most of Minami-Soma is registering below government safety limits, meaning residents who evacuated earlier in the crisis may now return home if they so choose.

Still, most have stayed away because they fear for their health.

"We want to show them that it is safe, and that we are doing everything we can to make it even safer," Yokota said. "Part of what we are doing is symbolic. It is intended to reassure our residents. It's also just to show that we will not sit idly by."

Some experts have reservations about the decontamination campaign.

Hiroaki Koide, a radiation specialist and associate professor at Kyoto University's Research Reactor Institute, said simply removing the top three inches (5 centimeters) of soil has been shown to reduce radiation levels by about 90 percent.

But he noted that the trees, roads and farmland near the decontaminated schools cannot be easily cleansed — and radiation from them can spread in the larger environment. Further, babies, children and pregnant women are the most vulnerable to radiation-related illnesses, and are generally advised to avoid exposure whenever possible.

"Any exposure would pose a health risk, no matter how small," Koide said. "There is no dose that we should call safe."

Another problem that has slowed the central government from acting to help is what to do with the irradiated soil, washoff and debris in the long-term.

"We have been trying to find storage and waste-processing plants, but so far we haven't been very successful," acknowledged Goshi Hosono, the minister in charge of the nuclear crisis response. "We are trying to persuade waste-processing plants, but there are local residents who oppose that."

He stressed that Tokyo is not blind to the dilemma of communities like Minami-Soma, however.

"We must try to remove contamination from the residents' daily lives as quickly as possible," he said earlier this week.

Associated Press writer Mari Yamaguchi contributed to this story from Tokyo.

Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


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