Monday, May 18, 2015

Ichinomiya Woman Commits Suicide After Killing Her Children

Investigators cover balcony of murder scene
 
The bodies of a woman and her four children were found in their apartment in the Nagoya suburb of Ichinomiya, on Friday. Police said they are investigating the case as one of murder-suicide. 

The bodies were found by a police officer at around 2 p.m. The woman, identified as Maiko Matsubayashi, 35, and the four children—three girls aged 15, 12 and 10, and a boy aged 9—were lying on futons, Tokai TV reported. There were no external injuries on the bodies, but a barbecue gas range with traces of charcoal in it was near the bodies.

An acquaintance of the woman was quoted by police as saying that he had spoken with her on the phone on Thursday night and that she had hinted at committing suicide. She also told him that it would be terrible to leave her children behind. The man contacted police who visited the apartment and found the bodies. 

Jiji Press

Friday, May 15, 2015

Nagoya DJ's Passion For Japan

 
Chris Glenn’s participation in relief efforts in the disaster-hit Tohoku region made the news in 2011, when as a member of a group of pilots he flew a helicopter to deliver food, water and medicines for evacuees.

His voice may also be known by a wide audience as the Australian-born bilingual radio DJ who hosts one of the top three radio shows in central Japan, while frequently appearing on television and in commercials.

But what has made Glenn’s name well known across Japan is his passion for the country’s culture and his dedication to preserving its heritage and history, some of which he says remains unknown overseas.

Appointed earlier this year as tourism ambassador of the town of Sekigahara, Gifu Prefecture, the 47-year-old seems to be the right man in the right place.

Having studied the history of the Battle of Sekigahara for about 18 years and visited the site more than a dozen times, Glenn wants to spark people’s interest in the nation’s heritage. The battle “was the turning point in Japan’s history,” he said.

In a recent interview with The Japan Times in Tokyo, Glenn lamented, “Everyone knows (the Battles) of Waterloo or Gettysburg but though more exciting, there are few people who have heard or know why the Battle of Sekigahara took place.”

He decided to share his knowledge and compiled the results of his study in one of his latest books, “The Battle of Sekigahara: The Greatest Samurai Battle in History,” to challenge the lack of information, especially in English, around the historical event.

The book, written in English, is an in-depth study of the Oct. 21, 1600, battle that led to the end of the warring period and cleared the path for the Tokugawa shogunate under which Japanese culture flourished.

Glenn’s interest in Japanese history was sparked by his grandfather, a school teacher who despite having fought against Japanese forces during World War II would always praise the value of Japan’s rich culture and its achievements.

As a young boy in Adelaide, South Australia, Glenn dreamed of becoming a radio DJ or a helicopter pilot, dreams he later realized. But he always wanted to visit Japan and see its historical sites with his own eyes.

He arrived in Japan for the first time in 1985, in his high school years, as a Rotary youth exchange student sent to Sapporo for a year.

“My then-teacher recommended me a book about the accounts of Miyamoto Musashi (1584-1645),” who is believed to have been one of Japan’s greatest swordsmen, Glenn said.
He returned to Australia after the Rotary program ended, and attended a broadcast school that prepared him to start his career as a radio DJ in his home country.

But his interest brought him back to Japan in 1992, hoping to seize a chance to work in Japanese media. He was soon offered a job at a small radio station in Tokyo to be eventually dispatched to Nagoya, where, he says, “every place, every site has a historical value.”

While working for Nagoya radio stations ZIP-FM and 79.5FM Radio-i, he met Nobuo Ogawa, one of just 10 samurai armor craftsmen remaining in Japan.

“I remember when I left the Nagoya Zoo one day, there he was, an old man wearing the samurai armor,” Glenn recalled. Glenn took a flyer from Ogawa offering participation in a photo shoot where families can dress up as former warriors, and was asked if he wanted to take part.

“Why don’t you try to make a kabuto, a helmet worn by ancient warriors,” Glenn quoted Ogawa as saying after the craftsman noticed Glenn’s avid interest in the history of warriors.
Glenn spent one year learning the craft as well as the history of armor and warriors from Ogawa.

More than two decades into his arrival in Japan, Glenn, now a member of the Japan Armor and Weapons Research and Preservation Society, holds a black belt in the sword discipline of kendo and a second-degree black belt in chanbara sword fighting.

He also heads several groups dedicated to swordsmanship and history that share his particular interest in the history of the Sengoku Period, from the late 15th century to the late 16th century of the warring period prior to the Edo Period (1603 to 1868).

In weekly columns in Japanese newspapers and magazines as well as on websites dedicated to areas of his interest, Glenn writes about the Battle of Sekigahara and other historical events. He also shares trivia such as the warriors’ diet or warriors’ personal stories.
“Japan’s culture developed during the Edo Period and that was due to the Tokugawa clan winning at Sekigahara,” Glenn said, explaining why he places emphasis on the importance of the battle in Japan’s history.

“I’ve always been puzzled as to why so little is known about the battle (of Sekigahara),” in which fighting between Japan’s west army and the east army claimed the lives of up to 30,000 samurai in a single day.

“It’s a very, very complicated story, but it’s a fascinating story. There is the political side to it, there’s the actual battle itself, with the lead-up and the aftermath,” Glenn said, adding he wanted people to learn about what really happened during that time and how it affected modern Japan.

“If Tokugawa had lost at Sekigahara, I think that modern Japan would be more like the Philippines or Vietnam, countries that had a long history and their own culture but were contaminated by foreign influence and foreign control,” he said.

“If that battle had not occurred, Japan would have been changed into a more Westernized country.”

Recently, he has also published a book in Japanese on a selection of the nation’s castles, where he explains the architecture of medieval residences of landlords and interesting trivia related to the heroic tales.

“Many people confuse the castle’s keep or donjon with the entire infrastructure,” he said.
Glenn said that Nagoya Castle, situated within walking distance from his home, is one of his favorites.

“I have been to the castle more than 100 times so far. It has the largest keep and the largest number of windows of all Japan’s castles,” he explained.

He added that when exploring the history of castles, one can learn that Gifu Castle, the first built with a keep, was rebuilt by Oda Nobunaga to resemble Kyoto’s Kinkakuji.

“A lot of Japanese historical items, Japanese swords, armor and castles, they have aesthetic beauty,” Glenn said, giving an example of Japanese swords used not only to protect warriors but also as a demonstration of their bravery.

“The castles, each one is unique but they’re also highly functional,” he said. “That’s, I think, what I like about Japan: Everything has that beautiful design but at the same time, high functionality.”

In his book Glenn explains the architecture of particular castles, with information on how they could have been attacked or what weapons could have been used to invade them.

“I hope to increase interest in Japan’s history not only among foreigners but also Japanese people, as I believe that as a foreigner my message may sound more convincing compared to stories told and explained by fellow Japanese,” he said.

“I’ve been to about 400 castles and their sites across the country and I find new information on Sekigahara or about castles every day,” he said. “I want to encourage people to value their heritage and help preserve it.”

Japan Times

Thursday, May 14, 2015

Bear Attemps Escape At Higashiyama Zoo

Martin attempting his escape

 A curious sun bear's attempted escape at Nagoya's Higashiyama Zoo and Botanical Gardens was caught on camera by a park visitor on May 8.
 
The sun bear, named Martin, was seen peeking over the wall separating his enclosure from the public recently at the zoo in Kyoto and keepers used long poles to poke, prod and lightly whack the Southeast Asian bear when he climbed atop the wall.

The foiled escape attempt was recorded by a park visitor, who posted the footage to YouTube.

Zookeepers said climbing is Martin's favorite hobby and he can often be seen scaling walls and other surfaces.

The zoo director said that wire mesh will be installed today to keep Martin in his enclosure.

Dallas Brincrest

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Token-Homemate Cup Opens



The Japan Golf Tour begins its 2015 schedule this week when the traditional season opener – the Token Homemate Cup – is played at the Token Tado Country Club in Nagoya.

With the loss of next week’s Tsuruya Open from the schedule, the second event of the season will be the Crowns also in Nagoya but with a gap of one week between events.

There is then another one week gap before the Japan PGA Championship although from that point on there is a run of several consecutive events over the following two months or so.

24 domestic events will be played throughout the season along with jointly sanctioned events in Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand.

This week’s opening event sees 12 Australasians currently entered, one of the larger contingents of Australasians in recent times.

Brendan Jones, Brad Kennedy, Kurt Barnes, Matthew Guyatt, Scott Strange, Matthew Griffin, Steve Conran, Adam Bland, Peter Wilson, Won Joon Lee and New Zealanders Mike Hendry and David Smail will tee it up, Jones having won this event in 2012.

For all it will be their first start since the BMW New Zealand Open a month ago.


The leading three money winners on last year’s money list Koumei Oda, Hiroyuki Fujita and Tomohiro Kondo are scheduled to tee it up.

Bruce Young
iseekgolf.com

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Nagoya Lab Tried To Develop B-29 Interceptors

B-29 Interceptor Prototype

 A Japanese aeronautics laboratory conducted research on making fighters that could intercept U.S. B-29 bombers and using wooden aircraft to deal with material shortages during the war, Jiji Press has learned.
 
The lab was established by the government in 1943 in Nagoya, the heartland of military aircraft production at the time. Little was known about it, however, because many related documents were disposed of or scattered and lost after aircraft research, design and manufacture were banned during the Allied Occupation when Japan lost the war.

According to a classified document kept at the Defense Ministry’s National Institute for Defense Studies, the lab was established in July 1943 to “contribute to a dramatic improvement in the performance and production of aircraft.” It was placed under the jurisdiction of Gijutsuin, a wartime government agency charged with science and technology administration.

According to minutes of meetings at the agency drawn up by Tadashiro Inoue, the founding head of the agency, the lab had 16 research themes for fiscal 1943, the first of which was the structure of a pressurized fuselage for high-altitude flights.

Another document from the agency said the lab “plans to focus its research on equipment for high-altitude aircraft in fiscal 1944.” It also said, “Research on this area is currently the most urgent challenge.”

In June 1944, U.S. forces carried out the first air raid on the Japanese mainland using B-29 bombers that had pressurized sections and an engine capable of maintaining high power output at thin-air altitudes of 10,000 meters. The B-29 raids got into full swing in November that year.

By the time the Nagoya lab was established in summer 1943, Japan had acquired a lot of information on the B-29, which was still under development. With little headway on technological development, however, Japan had not produced an interceptor fighter to use against the B-29.

“Intercepting the B-29 required a pressurized chamber and a fuselage structure that could accommodate such a section,” aviation historian Shigeru Nohara said. “Japan did not have a fighter equipped with such components and needed to carry out intensive research (for development).”

According to documents, including ones left by Inoue, the lab received ¥500,000 in subsidies from the agency in fiscal 1943 and ¥1 million in fiscal 1944. The lab had a fiscal 1944 budget of ¥2.33 million, equivalent to more than ¥700 million at current value.

According to documents stored at the Nagoya Industrial Science Research Institute, which succeeded the lab after the war ended, and an alumni reunion report for Nagoya University’s School of Engineering, the lab was staffed with researchers from the military, industry and academia.

Companies that sent engineers to the lab included Kawasaki Aircraft Industries, now part of Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd., Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd.’s Nagoya aircraft plant, Aichi Kokuki Co., now Aichi Machine Industry Co., and Nakajima Aircraft Co.

In a document from the Nagoya Industrial Science Research Institute, Ukichi Shinohara, then-professor of Nagoya Imperial University, who joined the lab as a researcher, wrote that he and his colleagues were ordered to conduct research on quick adhesion processing for wooden aircraft.

The lab is believed to have conducted research on using substitutes for duralumin, a strong, lightweight aluminum-based alloy that was in short supply, in aircraft manufacturing.

From Jiji Press

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