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Tokyo stocks rebound on strong Asian markets, weaker yen

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Tokyo stocks rebounded Wednesday as investors were heartened by strength in other Asian markets and a pause in the appreciation of the yen, but gains were limited ahead of extended holidays in Japan from Thursday. (Mainichi)

3 million middle-aged 'parasite singles' in Japan: gov't statistics

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There are about 3 million unmarried people aged between 35 and 44 in Japan who live with their parents, and 11.5 percent of the so-called middle-aged "parasite singles" don't have jobs, according to data released by the Statistical Research and Training Institute at the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications. (Mainichi)

Pee-rless research: Japan scientists discover biological clock regulates bladder capacity

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A team of Japanese scientists has discovered that our biological clock controls bladder capacity such that we don't have to wake up in the middle of the night for a pee -- a finding that could help treat bedwetting in children and the need for nocturnal trips to the washroom among the elderly. (Mainichi)

3 piranhas caught in Kanagawa river

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Three piranhas were found and caught in a river in Atsugi, Kanagawa Prefecture, in late April and city officials combed the area and set a water playground stream for children off limits nearby on Tuesday. (Mainichi)

Pet parakeet returned to Japanese owner after telling police his address

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A pet parakeet was returned to its Japanese owner Wednesday after the brainy bird told police its home address near Tokyo. The male bird, called Piko-chan, escaped early Sunday morning from his home in the city of Sagamihara and remained at large before being coaxed into perching on the shoulder of a guest at a nearby hotel. (myfoxdfw.com)

One-third of married Japanese women are victims of domestic abuse

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A recent Cabinet Office survey in Japan shows that 32.9 percent of married women or women who have been married in the past have experienced domestic abuse, such as physical harm or psychological harassment. (standard.net)

Japan urges Israel 'patience' on Iran sanctions

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apan's Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba has urged Israel to exercise "patience" on Iran's nuclear programme and give sanctions a chance to work, his spokesman said on Wednesday. (AFP)

Driver 'didn't know names of interchanges'

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The driver of the bus that crashed on the Kanetsu Expressway, killing seven people, said he was asleep at the time of the crash and that he did not know the names of interchanges and service areas, according to police. (Yomiuri)

Donations roll in for Senkaku purchase plan

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The Tokyo metropolitan government said Wednesday donations are pouring in to help finance its planned purchase of some of the Senkaku Islands, also claimed by China, from a private owner. The metropolitan government received a total of 76,007,211 yen over five days starting from Friday, when it started soliciting donations, officials said. (Yomiuri)

MPD to set area-wide speed limit of 30 kph

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Amid a spate of fatal car accidents across the nation involving children walking to school, the Metropolitan Police Department has decided to impose a speed limit of 30 kph on all roads in 37 residential areas of Tokyo beginning this fiscal year. (Yomiuri)

More Japanese seeking ova in Thailand

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The number of Japanese who received ova donations as part of fertility treatments in Thailand has increased more than 10-fold in recent years, a recent Yomiuri Shimbun investigation has found. According to the research, the number of Japanese who traveled to Thailand for such treatment had been about 20 a year from 2007 to 2009, but surged to 133 in 2010 and to 231 in 2011. (Yomiuri)

Bank lending growing fast in Tohoku region

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Bank lending is growing faster in the Tohoku region than in other parts of the country, according to data released by the Bank of Japan. At the end of March, the lending balance in the Tohoku region was 4 percent higher than a year earlier, against the national average increase of 0.9 percent, the central bank said Wednesday. (Yomiuri)

Economy, prestige at stake in Kyoto-Nara maglev battle

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By the middle of the century, if all goes according to plan, a maglev shinkansen will be in operation between Tokyo and Osaka, reducing a 100-minute trip to just over an hour. (Japan Times)

Famed Buddhist nun in antinuclear hunger strike

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Novelist and Buddhist nun Jakucho Setouchi joined a hunger strike Wednesday in front of the industry ministry in Tokyo in protest the government's moves to restart idled reactors at the Oi nuclear power plant in Fukui Prefecture. (Japan Times)

Japanese man claims motorcycle that washed up in Canada

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A Harley-Davidson motorcycle believed to have traversed the Pacific Ocean to western Canada after being swept from coastal Japan during a March 2011 tsunami has been claimed by a Japanese man. (CNN)

Japan must lock door against China: Tokyo governor

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Tokyo's controversial nationalist governor said Tuesday his plan to buy islands at the centre of a festering territorial row with China was akin to locking the doors to keep a burglar out. (Bangkok Post)

Olympics: Match-fixing claim rejected by volleyball world body

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Volleyball's world governing body has rejected claims by Thailand that Japan's women threw their Olympic qualifying match against Serbia at the weekend. Thailand had complained after Japan's full-set loss to Serbia denied them a first ever berth in Olympic women's volleyball on the final day of the eight-nation qualifying tournament in Tokyo on Sunday. (AFP)

Japanese fifth-generation fighter, Mitsubishi's 'Divine spirit'

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Japan may become the fourth country after the U.S., Russia and China to possess its own fighter of the fifth generation. The new fighter, relatively small in size and weight, will become the first battle plane, constructed without assistance in Japan over the past seven decades. (Voice of Russia)

Sightings of poisonous octopuses on the rise

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Poisonous hyomon-dako or blue-ringed octopuses, which inhabit mainly tropical and semitropical zones in the Western Pacific, have been recently found in increasing numbers in the Kumano-nada area off the coast of southern Mie Prefecture. (Yomiuri)

Panasonic 'to reduce workers at HQ by 50%'

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Panasonic Corp. has begun discussions on a plan to halve the number of workers at its headquarters in Kadoma, Osaka Prefecture, by the end of next March to streamline its operations and speed up decision making, sources close to the matter said Tuesday. (Yomiuri)
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