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2014 Ford F-150 Natural-Gas Readiness Package For Half-Ton Pickup

2014 Ford F-150 fitted with natural-gas readiness package

2014 Ford F-150 fitted with natural-gas readiness package

GreenCarReports

Ford is the latest automaker to offer a natural gas fuel option for its best-selling pickup truck range.

The 2014 Ford F-150 will be offered with a natural gas (CNG) and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) preparation option aiding installation of a suitable fuel system at qualified third-party installers.

Available for the 3.7-liter V-6 engine, the 2014 F-150 will be the first half-ton pickup to gain such an option--although natural gas versions of larger heavy-duty pickups are sold by Chevrolet, GMC and Ram.

While the package costs only $315 and consists of?hardened valves, valve seats, pistons and rings, installation of a full CNG or LPG package at a Ford Qualified Vehicle Modifier can cost between $7,500 and $9,500 depending on fuel tank capacity.

That's a fair chunk of money, but owing to the low price of CNG--currently the equivalent of $2.11 per gallon on average and as low as $1 per gallon equivalent in some places--payback could be sooner than many buyers think.

"Businesses and fleet customers have been asking Ford to make F-150 available with CNG capability to take advantage of the fuel?s low price and clean emissions,? said Jon Coleman, Ford fleet sustainability and technology manager. ?...customers could start to see payback on their investment in as little as 24 to 36 months.?

Natural gas is also cleaner, as well as cheaper. The EPA estimates natural gas emissions to be 30 percent lower than that of equivalent gasoline engines in the same vehicle.

Ford's natural gas and LPG options won't stop with the F-150 either.

Over the next few years, the automaker will offer natural gas readiness packages on seven other commercial vehicles, including the Transit and Transit Connect, F-Series models up to the F-650 medium-duty truck, and two stripped-chassis trucks.

The company expects to sell more than 15,000 CNG and LPG-equipped vehicles this year, 25 percent greater than in 2012.

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Source: http://www.greencarreports.com/news/1085910_2014-ford-f-150-natural-gas-readiness-package-for-half-ton-pickup

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Buck up: Obama offers uplifting words to wary Dems

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama sought to calm jittery Democrats Wednesday as they prepared to head home to face voters, assuring them they're "on the right side of history" despite problems with the launch of his massive health care overhaul and an immigration fight with Republicans.

In back-to-back closed sessions with House and Senate Democrats, Obama delivered his broad message about economic prosperity and expanding the middle class. But in return he was confronted with questions from Democrats who are nervous about implementation of the health care law as they look ahead to town hall meetings during the August recess ? and to midterm elections next year.

The meetings at the Capitol offered a rare chance for the party's rank and file to press the president about budget talks with Republicans, the next chairman of the Federal Reserve and local jobs projects, as well as to appeal to him for help in next year's campaigns. In a lighter moment, House Democrats presented Obama with a birthday cake. He turns 52 on Sunday.

The White House is seeking to keep up enthusiasm among Democrats following a rough start to Obama's second term.

He has gained an agreement in the Senate to get at least some long-blocked nominees confirmed, and the Senate has passed its version of sweeping immigration legislation. But the immigration overhaul faces a deeply uncertain future in the Republican-led House, where many in the GOP oppose a path to citizenship for the estimated 11 million immigrants in the country illegally.

Obama's landmark health care law continues to baffle many Americans, and the administration failed to assuage the public when it abruptly announced this month that it would delay a major provision requiring employers to provide coverage due to concerns about complexity.

While major provisions of the overall bill kick in Jan. 1, uninsured people will be able to start shopping for health plans on Oct. 1, and some Democrats are wary about the system being ready. Rep. Carol Shea-Porter of New Hampshire said that in her state there is not enough competition because only one company had entered into the health care exchange.

In response, Obama told House Democrats as they head back to their districts that they "are on the right side of these issues and the right side of history in terms of providing health care to Americans and to ultimately finding comprehensive immigration reform," said Rep. Janice Hahn of California.

Said Rep. John Yarmuth of Kentucky: "I just think he was trying to bolster the courage of the group."

Obama spoke at length about his administration's roll-out plans for the health care exchanges, which could be critical to the health care law's success or failure.

Sen. Angus King, an independent from Maine who caucuses with the Democrats, said Obama told senators not to be defensive when discussing the law.

"Basically he said we have to remind people that a lot of good things are happening," King told reporters after the senators-only meeting. King listed several of what he said are the law's accomplishments, such as children being able to use their parent's insurance policies until age 26 and reduced costs for drugs.

King also said there needs to be more emphasis on explaining what the health care law "really means" to Americans because of repeated attempts by House Republicans "to essentially sabotage it and frighten people."

The sessions came just days before lawmakers leave the capital for a six-week recess and the prospect of facing constituents back home at town halls at a time when polls show Congress being held in low regard.

"We have a positive, forceful message, and the Republicans, all they can talk about is repealing Obamacare as if that is the answer to our prayers," said Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate. "They're just wrong."

Durbin made clear that Democrats had no intention of allowing a repeat of the congressional recess in August 2010 when loud opposition to the Affordable Care Act powered the tea party and propelled the GOP takeover of the House in that year's elections.

"We're not going to leave a void here," Durbin told reporters. "We're going to fill this (recess) with our message, and we're going to do it in a very forceful, positive way."

In the Senate session, Obama declared that he would not negotiate with Republicans on raising the nation's borrowing authority and risk a repeat of the August 2011 budget showdown that rattled financial markets.

"He also made clear that we need to sit down and work together on these issues and that there's certain points that he will insist upon," said Sen. Ben Cardin of Maryland.

White House chief of staff Denis McDonough has been holding regular meetings on budget matters with a small group of Senate Republicans and was planning to do so again later Wednesday. Among the GOP lawmakers who meet with him are Tennessee Sen. Bob Corker, North Dakota Sen. John Hoeven and Georgia Sen. Johnny Isakson.

During Obama's meeting with House Democrats, the president was pressed by Rep. Ed Perlmutter of Colorado about his controversial consideration of former aide Lawrence Summers to run the Federal Reserve. Obama strongly defended Summers as a valuable economic adviser, though White House officials said his words should not be seen as an endorsement for the Fed post.

Summers, who served Obama in his first term as chairman of the National Economic Council, is an unpopular choice in some quarters on Capitol Hill. Liberals remain unhappy with Summers who pushed to deregulate financial markets when he served as Treasury secretary from 1999-2001, and women bristle over his comments denigrating their abilities in math and science during his tenure as Harvard president.

Summers and Janet Yellen, the Fed's current vice chair, are among the leading candidates to replace Ben Bernanke when he leaves the post.

"The president of course, as I would and others would, defended Larry's tenure here at the White House and his service to the country and the president in extraordinarily trying financial and economic times," said spokesman Jay Carney.

The White House, seeking to lower expectations for an imminent announcement, has said Obama will not name a new Fed chair until the fall.

Carney also disputed reports that the president was curt during his exchange with Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney of New York, who asked about a jobs program in his district. The White House spokesman, who did not personally attend the meeting, said that characterization of the meeting was "not my understanding at all."

In a statement, Maloney said, "I am the youngest of five brothers - I've been in a headlock before and it's all in good fun. I asked the president for a commitment to prioritize a local jobs project, and I got it. I appreciate the president's responsiveness."

Rep. Mike Quigley of Illinois said Democrats asked the president for his assistance in next year's midterm elections, traditionally a rough ride for the party controlling the White House.

Leaving the meeting, Obama said his message was about "jobs, middle class, growth."

____

Associated Press writers Jim Abrams, Erica Werner, Richard Lardner and Henry C. Jackson contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/buck-obama-offers-uplifting-words-wary-dems-195538661.html

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Who knew? Denzel Washington reveals comedic flair in '2 Guns'

By Patricia Reaney

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Denzel Washington was looking for something light after his role as an alcoholic airline pilot in "Flight" and found it in "2 Guns," an action buddy film that showcases the two-time Academy Award winner's flair for comedy.

The film, which opens in U.S. theaters on Friday, is new territory for Washington, who was nominated for his sixth Oscar for "Flight" and took home golden statuettes for the 2001 crime drama "Training Day" and the 1989 Civil War film "Glory."

Based on a 2008 BOOM! Studios graphic novel by Steven Grant, "2 Guns" pairs Washington, 58, with Mark Wahlberg, 42, who is fresh from his success with the 2012 talking teddy bear comedy "Ted," which earned nearly $550 million at the global box office.

"I was looking to do something to have more fun, so when I read the script and heard Mark was involved I was like, ?Oh I could be safe because Mark is not just funny, he has a warmth and heart about him,'" Washington said.

"We're buddies. It's a buddy movie, so it was a chance to do that and to have fun."

It's the first time the pair has worked together and they emit an easy rapport, like Paul Newman and Robert Redford in "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" and Mel Gibson and Danny Glover in the "Lethal Weapon" films.

Washington plays the smooth, gold-toothed, undercover narcotics cop Robert "Bobby" Trench, who with Wahlberg's by-the-code, sharpshooter U.S. Navy intelligence officer Marcus "Stig" Stigman, is trying to infiltrate a Mexican drug cartel run by Papi Greco, played by Edward James Olmos.

Although partners, the unlikely duo don't trust each other and neither realizes that the other is an undercover agent until a bank robbery goes wrong and they are left to fend for themselves by their government superiors.

With explosions, car chases, shoot-outs and a pent-up bull with his eyes fixed on the pair suspended by their ankles, there is plenty of action and drama. But the relationship between the duo is the core of the film.

"It's about two guys. Usually they'll take the comedy guy, the really out there comedy guy, and the straight guy and put them together," said Wahlberg.

"We didn't want to do that. I felt like you had to have two really formidable opponents and to earn that camaraderie and to earn that trust in one another - that was really the movie."

PRESSURE TO BE FUNNY

Washington said he knew he had timing and had been told he was funny, but it was Wahlberg, a screenplay by Blake Masters with early 1970s action movies in mind, and some improvisation that freed him to try anything.

"I'm quick, but being funny on purpose, take after take, for me it was new territory," he said. "It's not easy, there's a pressure to be funny."

The movie was directed by Icelandic former actor Baltasar Kormakur, who said he was drawn to the film by the characters and the modern Western feel of the script. "2 Guns" is his second film with Wahlberg, having working with the actor on his American directorial debut, the 2012 crime thriller "Contraband."

Bill Paxton, who plays a ruthless, southern CIA operative who pries information from suspects about the missing money through games of Russian roulette, described Washington as "a great comedic actor."

"It's unfortunate that people don't get to see him in more comedy," he added.

But audiences may not have to wait too long.

"We have a couple of other pieces of material from the publisher that we are looking at," Wahlberg said.

(Reporting by Patricia Reaney; Editing by Mary Milliken and Vicki Allen)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/knew-denzel-washington-reveals-comedic-flair-2-guns-183852353.html

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San Diego mayor wants city to pay legal fees in sex harassment suit ...

Fred Greaves / REUTERS

San Diego mayor Bob Filner speaks at a news conference in San Diego, California July 26, 2013.

By Sarah Grieco, NBCSanDiego.com

San Diego Mayor Bob Filner has asked the city to cover his legal fees for a sexual harassment lawsuit, according to an agenda released by the city council.

The city council will convene in a special closed session on Tuesday night to discuss whether or not to pay for legal fees in a sexual harassment claim filed by Filner?s former employee Irene McCormack Jackson.

More on NBCSanDiego.com

Jackson publicly came forward last week and alleged that Filner told her to ?work without panties? and detailed other alleged acts of sexual harassment. Jackson called her experience working for the mayor ?the worst time of my entire working life.?

Prominent San Diego attorney Gloria Allred is representing Jackson, and filed the lawsuit last week. Read the complaint here

Filner has been accused of sexually harassing multiple women -- a total of seven women have publicly come forward claiming he acted inappropriately toward them.

The mayor has since apologized for "offending" women, and will enter intensive therapy for two weeks to "begin the process of addressing [his] behavior."

Filner has made the request that he should be defended under the city?s expense through a letter from his lawyer Harvey Berger.

The letter stated that Filner should have the city pay for representation under California Government codes 825 and 995 ? which deal with compensation and defense of public employees.

The San Diego City Attorney?s Office is advising the council during Tuesday night?s meeting.

City Attorney Jan Goldsmith has said his office will not represent Filner, but he has not said whether or not the city will be responsible for his legal fees. It is not clear at this time how the council will act.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/07/30/19778969-san-diego-mayor-wants-city-to-pay-legal-fees-in-sex-harassment-suit

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The Joplin Recycling Center is now accepting cooking oil for recycling. Is that...

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University-Backed Businesses That Put Students in the Driver's Seat ...

Today?s aspiring-student entrepreneurs don?t just want to read a textbook about entrepreneurialism, they want to get their hands dirty. Fortunately for them, universities across the U.S. are now giving them a plot to dig in. To augment the concepts and skills students pick up in the classroom ? and meet the rising demand from aspiring college entrepreneurs ? institutions of higher education are giving ambitious students a taste of entrepreneurialism by allowing them to run their own campus businesses. There?s the University of Colorado?s Trep Caf?, which was started by undergraduate students in 2005. Georgetown University?s credit union is completely student run. The University of Massachusetts has a total of eight student-run businesses on campus including a copy shop and snack bar. Further, at Chicago?s Loyola University, for example, students can choose to operate one of three campus businesses. There?s the campus-based hotel The Flats at Loyola Station , a bike-rental and repair business called ChainLinks and Felice?s Roman Style Pizza are comprised strictly of undergraduate students seeking to gain practical knowledge of running a small business. Related: Tune in, Turn on and Drop out: A Look at the Popular Thiel Fellowship? Vincenzo Sposito, 21, started out flipping pizzas in Felice?s Roman Style Pizza before becoming the student-run company?s president. From hiring and firing to making long-term marketing plans and running the day-to-day operations, students shoulder much of the business?s responsibilities. ?We really try to make [the students] make all of the decisions,? says Jonathan Ferrera, assistant director of Loyola Limited, the property-management firm that supports Loyola?s undergraduate student-run and managed businesses. The university provides a supportive role to these student-run enterprises, providing financial backing and access to professionals who can help them make strategic decisions. Students go through an interview process with Loyola Limited and are hired to work in paid positions with one of the three companies. Vincenzo Sposito started out flipping pizzas in Felice?s Roman Style Pizza before working on the administration team as a finance associate and now heading into his senior year is the company?s president at 21-years old. ?You read about this stuff in textbooks, but it?s a completely different experience when you?re making those decisions about an actual business,? he says. ?Making those decisions, feeling the consequences of every decision you make; that?s something that can?t be taught. You have to experience it.? Sposito also credits his time at Felice?s with influencing his course selection. A student of finance, Sposito says he added information systems to his studies to his course load. ?I realized our databases needed some cleaning up and in doing that it helped me streamline what I wanted to study,? he says. Related: Students Funding Students: A Look at Campus-Based Investment Funds? Though the experience has been fruitful for many students, the businesses themselves often struggle under their revolving cast of owners. ?If you?re a small-business owner who has been working in the business for three years every day, you know your business up, down, left and right,? says Ferrera. ?Once these students [reach that point], they turn around and graduate, so it takes the businesses a lot longer to reach a point of profitability.? Loyola has attempted to address the high turnover issue by rolling students through various positions in the companies to allow for knowledge to be passed down from predecessors. ?The program?s ultimate goal is to have a student join us freshman year as a pizza artist at Felice?s and work themselves all the way to the president of the company their senior year,? says Ferrera. Plus, the university is helping students avoid time-management issues by insuring students have clear job descriptions. At Felice?s, Sposito has an inventory manager, brand manager, store operations manager and customer relations manager. ?Being able to spread tasks amongst everybody and making sure their responsibilities remain clear really helps out in the long run,? he says. Related: Dropbox CEO Gives Graduates His Cheat Sheet for Success While Loyola has yet to see any students open their own business upon graduation, Ferrera says the experience gained in the program has resulted in greater job seeking success. ?Our employment rate upon graduation is 100 percent,? he says. With most Loyola Limited alumni now only 25 years old, Ferrera thinks an entrepreneur success story isn?t far away. Do you think programs like this help create entrepreneurs in the long run? Let us know why or why not in the comments below.

[via YoungEntrepreneur.com]

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Source: http://www.entrepreneurheat.com/2013/07/30/university-backed-businesses-that-put-students-in-the-drivers-seat/

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Dan Shipper On Firefly - Business Insider

firefly justin meltzer dan shipper

Firefly/Dan Shipper

Justin Meltzer (L) and Dan Shipper (R) run a profitable startup, Firefly.

Dan Shipper, 22, is going into his final semester at University of Pennsylvania.

Unlike most seniors, Shipper doesn't spend his nights fretting about finding a job or endlessly partying. He is already self-employed.

Much of his spare time is spent running a tech business that's more or less bootstrapped: Firefly. He and his partner, Justin Meltzer, raised $20,000 from First Round Capital's Dorm Room Fund.

This isn't their first startup either. The pair met at a coffee shop during Shipper's sophomore year (Meltzer is one year older), where a group of students interested in tech entrepreneurship gathered on Fridays. Their first joint venture was Airtime, a company they've since discontinued. Both are technical; Shipper has been coding since he was in fifth grade. Meltzer taught himself five years ago.

Firefly is a 2-person startup (three if you count the intern) that has only been around for 10 months. It enables customer service reps to share their screens with customers and co-browse without requiring them to download any software. Its 6,000 customers either pay $25-99 per customer service rep or a fixed monthly rate if it's a large organization. Today Firefly announced a partnership with chat company Olark that accounts for 5,000 of its 6,000 clients.

Despite Shipper splitting time between class and "real" work, Firefly is profitable. It's "well into the 6-figures in annual revenue," says Shipper.

Most college kids in that position would be throwing keggers and buying friends rounds at the bar. We asked Shipper what he does with all the money he earns, how he manages his time, and what his plans are when he graduates in December.

The following is a lightly edited Q&A.

BUSINESS INSIDER: Firefly generates 6-figures per year. What does a college kid ? sorry, "young adult" ? do with all that extra cash?

DAN SHIPPER: Yes, well into the 6-figures. But I can't tell you exactly where in the six figures. We just plow the money right back into the business. We pay ourselves a little bit of a salary but most of it goes toward expenses. Lawyer bills when you run a company like ours can get high. It's not like all of this is profit. We are pretty frugal with our money.

BI: So Firefly is profitable?

DS: Definitely profitable. It's just the two of us and an intern.

BI: What do your friends and classmates think of all this?

DS: They think it's cool, especially when we tell them the number of customers we have. Before we were successful they stopped listening when we said "customer support software."

BI: What is your typical day like?

DS: I go to classes during the day, which start between 10 and 1. After that I'm in the office [First Round Capital's in Philadelphia] until midnight. I have a full course load and I'm graduating early; I took more classes than I had to so I could graduate in December.

BI: Do you have a social life?

DS: Yah, I go out some.

BI: Do your friends see the fruits of your labor? AKA do you buy them rounds of drinks??

DS:?[Laughs] Maybe when we get to 7 figures in revenue we'll do that.

BI: But you're a college kid making tons of money. Even if you paid yourself $30,000 a year that'd be a fortune for a college student. You never share the financial love with any friends?

DS:?We're not paying ourselves even close to $30,000.?

BI: Justin, what was your schedule like?

JUSTIN MELTZER: I had the same schedule as Dan. I graduated early but after class we'd meet and work on the business.

DS: We'd meet in my lounge in the dorm. People were running around; chairs were uncomfortable. Now at First Round we have things like free snacks and a skeeball machine. Our office is closer to my house than any of my classes.

BI: With such hectic schedules, how did you manage to close a big partnership like Olark? You said that deal alone increased your customer base from 1,000 to 6,000.

JM: Dan got an intro to them. We've been working really hard on it over the last year to get it done. We thought Olark would be a natural fit.

DS: I realized Olark was a Y Combinator [a Silicon Valley startup accelerator] company. I asked another Y Combinator grad, Jason Freedman of 42Floors, for an intro. He set it up.

BI: What's the plan when you graduate? To join Justin full time? Will you relocate Firefly to New York?

DS: The plan is to keep working on Firefly full time. We're not sure where we'll be located. We both really, really like Philly.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/dan-shipper-on-firefly-2013-7

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Video: Baseball Bat Hole In One At Sanctuary Lakes

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Source: http://www.geoffshackelford.com/homepage/2013/7/30/video-baseball-bat-hole-in-one-at-sanctuary-lakes.html

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Why the return of the wolf is good news for the bear

New research shows that the reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone National Park has brought a berry boon to bears, a find that suggests the far-flung, often unexpected impacts a top predator can have on its ecosystem.?

By Elizabeth Barber,?Contributor / July 29, 2013

The reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone National Park after a 70 year disappearance has brought a berry boon to bears, scientists have found.

Yellowstone National Park

Enlarge

The reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone National Park has delivered a boon of berries to the area?s grizzly bears, according to new research that highlights the vast ecological reaches of an ecosystem?s top predators.

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Researchers at Oregon State University have found that a surge in the wolf population in the northwestern United States over the past 19 years has set off an ecological chain reaction that?s in the end good news for bears: more wolves has cut into elk numbers, thus raising the amount of available berries, thereby providing a juicy supply of food for bears. The new research joins mounting studies pinpointing how a food chain?s top animal ? from Spain?s lynx to the Pacific Ocean?s shark ? is critical to an ecosystem?s success, emphasizing the importance of programs aimed at protecting some of nature?s most ferocious predators.?

?Scientists from all over the world are finding that top predators have strong ecological effects,? says William Ripple, a professor of forest ecosystems at Oregon State University and lead author on the paper, published in the Journal of Animal Ecology. ?The top predator can influence the biodiversity of an entire ecosystem.?

The grey wolf, with its confident, yellow-eyed gaze and strong-featured face rimmed in thick hair, has been a focal point of environmentalist debates dating back some 100 years. The drama begins around 1900, when the US government backed sweeping ?predator control? programs that tore into the wolf populations in Yellowstone, the geyser-studded park established in 1872 in Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho.

The programs ? or, organized hunts ? were effective: as of about 1970, all the wolves had been removed from the park. And, in the predator?s absence, other populations exploded: the elk, a massive mammal with antlers fanning like pterodactyl wings, boomed in number.

But in 1995, the US acted on years-in-the-making plans to reintroduce wolves to the park, responding to accumulating evidence that the original program had been shortsighted and that the ecosystem was now reeling from the loss of a keystone species. That endeavor that has been successful enough for the government to this year make the controversial statement that the wolf no longer needs endangered species protection.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/PJ5Kw4wZG-s/Why-the-return-of-the-wolf-is-good-news-for-the-bear

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This Guy Turned Himself in for Child Porn Because Malware Told Him To

This Guy Turned Himself in for Child Porn Because Malware Told Him To

We're already well aware of the damage malware can do to your machine, but apparently, guilty consciences don't fare all that well, either. At least not for one 21-year-old man who, after getting a fake pop-up demanding a fine for the child pornography on his computer, decided to take his laptop straight to the police?and was then promptly arrested on three counts of possession of child pornography.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/zFgSRWVN8W0/this-guy-turned-himself-in-for-child-porn-because-malwa-949053934

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Iran president's inner circle has Western accent

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) ? Just days after Hasan Rouhani's election victory in Iran, his top advisers and allies gathered for a closed-door strategy session at a think tank run by the new president. The group, lugging spread sheets, notes and policy papers, also carried something new into the mix ? an array of degrees from Western universities.

Soon after Rouhani's swearing-in Sunday, he is expected to unveil key members of his government and give more clarity about his behind-the-scenes brain trust. In all likelihood, the core of his team will include figures whose academic pedigrees run through places such as California, Washington and London.

The Western-looking credentials of Rouhani's inner circle are no surprise. Rouhani himself studied in Scotland. What remains unclear, however, is how much they could actually influence Iranian policies and foster potential outreach diplomacy such as direct talks with the U.S. or possible breakthroughs in wider negotiations over Tehran's nuclear program.

"Studying in the West doesn't mean you would make concessions to the West," said Rasool Nafisi, an Iranian affairs analyst at Strayer University in Virginia. "What it does mean is that the level of understanding and ability to pick up nuances are much higher. The next step is seeing how much of that can translate into changes at the top with the ruling clerics, where it really counts."

On many levels, this is the fundamental question as the clock starts on Rouhani's presidency after eight years of the hectoring style of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

There is little doubt that Rouhani will bring a far calmer and more measured approach. That alone may help with efforts to rebuild strained ties with Europe and open new possibilities for deal-making after the expected restart of nuclear talks with world powers.

But Rouhani's Western-educated political entourage is not about to steer Iran in a completely new direction after his election victory last month.

Rouhani, a cleric and former top nuclear negotiator, does not stand against the Islamic system or the firm controls at the top: Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the Revolutionary Guard. Khamenei has final say in all key matters, including Rouhani's selections for key Cabinet posts such as the foreign and intelligence ministers.

That leaves Rouhani ? effectively the international face of Iran ? with the task of projecting a new image of dialogue rather than diatribes on the world stage. Inside Iran, Rouhani has to adopt the role of salesman: trying to get Khamenei and the ruling clerics to buy into his views that interaction with Washington and its allies could bring dividends such as steps to ease tightening economic sanctions.

Many of those being considered for Cabinet posts share Rouhani's approach, including a former deputy foreign minister, Mahmoud Vaezi, who holds degrees in electrical engineering from California State University, Sacramento and San Jose State University. He began his doctorate in foreign relations at Louisiana State University but finished the degree in Poland.

Vaezi was head of the foreign ministry's European and American affairs section from 1990-97 under reformist President Mohammad Khatami. In recent years, Vaezi has been a senior figure at Rowhani's Center for Strategic Research.

"The potential candidates ... are those who understand international relations and understand the language of the West," said Tehran-based political analyst Behrouz Shojaei. "This shows Rouhani is serious in seeking to ease tensions with the outside world and improve Iran's economy."

Another potential contender for foreign minister is Mohammad Javad Zarif, who did postgraduate studies at San Francisco State University and obtained a doctorate in international law and policy at the University of Denver.

Zarif also raised his profile in the U.S. as a diplomat at Iran's U.N. Mission in New York during a five-year posting that ended in 2007. In one of his last public events, Zarif was a headline speaker at a conference in New Brunswick, New Jersey, on conflict resolution whose participants included the current U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel.

Meanwhile, Hossein Mousavian, currently a research scholar at Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, is likely to hold a key foreign policy adviser role. Mousavian also graduated from Sacramento State.

Officials with academic roots in the West are nothing new in the Middle East. Many Gulf Arab leaders and top officials studied in Europe or the U.S. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu went to high school outside Philadelphia and returned to study at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Jordan's King Abdullah II attended boarding schools in England and Massachusetts and then moved on to Britain's royal military academy Sandhurst.

But Iran's elected leadership ? the presidency and top parliamentary posts ? has had far fewer Western-educated figures. In the years after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, Western credentials were viewed with suspicion. Ahmadinejad, who studied in Iran, has strongly favored advisers who also have homegrown academic backgrounds.

Rouhani's administration could mark a strong break and include advisers whose connections with the West straddle before and after the Islamic Revolution.

Among them is Rouhani's younger brother, Hossein Fereidoun, who is helping the president-elect put together his Cabinet list.

Fereidoun was a member of the security team when the Islamic Revolution's leaders, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, returned from exile in France in 1979. He later served in Iran's U.N. Mission. Rouhani previously went by the family name Fereidoun, but dropped it in an apparent attempt to hide from authorities before the Islamic Revolution.

The review of potential candidates for economic roles includes Chamber of Commerce president Mohammad Nahavandian, who holds a doctorate in economics from George Washington University, and Mohammad Bagher Nobakht, who holds an economics doctorate from Paisley in Britain, and was spokesman of Rouhani's campaign office.

A possible candidate for the critical oil ministry post is Mohammad Reza Nematzadeh, a former deputy oil minister and president of Iran's state oil company, who has an engineering degree from California State Polytechnic University.

But speculation was growing that Rouhani could look to a former oil minister, Bijan Zanganeh, who was ousted when Ahmadinejad took office in 2005.

Some semiofficial Iranian news agencies, including ISNA, cited sources saying that Rouhani will tap a former defense minister, Mohammed Forouzandeh, as the chief nuclear negotiator. Such a choice would bring a relative novice in international dialogue into a critical role. Rouhani's aides have not commented on the report, and other names such as former foreign minister Ali Akbar Velayati have been raised in the Iranian media.

Other noteworthy possibilities include Ali Jannati as head of the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance, where the wide-ranging mandate includes oversight of foreign media in Iran. Jannati is considered a moderate, but his father, Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, is an ultra hard-line cleric who often leads the nationally broadcast Friday prayers from Tehran University.

___

Murphy reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

Source: http://www.seattlepi.com/news/world/article/Iran-president-s-inner-circle-has-Western-accent-4695627.php

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মঙ্গলবার, ৩০ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Report: Bus on Bieber tour in border pot bust

DETROIT (AP) ? U.S. border agents found marijuana on a bus with singer Justin Bieber's tour as it crossed into Detroit from Windsor, Canada.

The Detroit Free Press reports (http://on.freep.com/18O0eS3) that U.S. Customs and Border Protection spokesman Ken Hammond confirms that the bus was stopped Sunday as it attempted to enter the U.S. on the Ambassador Bridge.

The singer was not on the bus at the time and performed later that night at Joe Louis Arena.

Hammond says a police dog indicated the presence of drugs on the bus and that drug paraphernalia and a small amount of marijuana were found. He says the bus driver was cited and that the bus and its passengers were allowed to go.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/report-bus-bieber-tour-border-pot-bust-033624743.html

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Microsoft Money Bill Reminder

Hello
I have been using Microsoft Money 98 (I know it old but its just fine for me) for many years
I have always had a bill reminder pop up in the Notification when a bill is due This has stopped happening
Strangely I also use Comodo Fire wall and when i boot up there is no icon for this either although the program has started
If I clip on the program the icon appears
I also us PC tools antivirus and the icon for this appears each time .
Is there some connection?
I am running winXP
Grumps

Source: http://forums.computeractive.co.uk/showthread.php?t=234723&goto=newpost

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McCain: We don't need more border agents

The surge of 20,000 new enforcement agents that would be deployed as part of the Senate immigration bill that passed earlier this year is unnecessary to secure the border, Arizona Sen. John McCain, one of the lead Republicans on the bipartisan immigration task force that co-authored the bill, said Tuesday.

Speaking at a forum sponsored by the AFL-CIO in Washington, D.C., McCain said he voted for the bill that included the provision of additional agents so that those skeptical about the bill?s effectiveness ?would have comfort? that the border would be secured.

?I?ll give you a little straight talk. We don?t need 20,000 additional border enforcement agents,? McCain said at the union forum, where he joined California Democratic Rep. Xavier Becerra. ?But what we do need is to use the technology that has been developed where we can surveil the border more effectively."

The Senate bill would effectively double the number of border agents and increase funding for enforcement. The bill passed the Senate in June with bipartisan support, and lawmakers are currently debating a version of immigration reform in the Republican-majority House.

At issue in the lower chamber is whether immigration reform should be handled comprehensively, as it was in the Senate, or in a piecemeal approach that separates border security from a plan that offers a pathway to citizenship for immigrants living in the United States illegally. President Barack Obama, Senate Democrats and some Republicans have said they will not support a bill that does not include a pathway to legality.

The debate in the House over immigration reform includes a vocal minority of conservative members who say they will refuse to support any bill that allows unauthorized immigrants to achieve legal status without first returning to their home country.

Last week, House Speaker John Boehner rebuked comments about immigrants from Iowa Republican Rep. Steve King, who caused an uproar when he said that many children of illegal immigrants grow up to be drug smugglers. "For every one who is a valedictorian, there's another 100 out there that weigh 130 pounds, and they have calves the size of cantaloupes because they're hauling 75 pounds of marijuana across the desert,? King said.

McCain also condemned King?s comments at the forum, calling them ?despicable,? and he predicted that the House would pass a bill that includes a pathway to legality.

?I believe that at the end of the day, we?re going to do the right thing. We?re not going to talk about people with cantaloupe calves,? McCain said. ?We?re not going to engage that kind of despicable rhetoric.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/john-mccain-says-surge-of-enforcement-agents-is-unnecessary-to-secure-borders-171016705.html

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Evan Rachel Wood & Jamie Bell Welcome Baby Boy!

Evan Rachel Wood & Jamie Bell Welcome Baby Boy!

Evan Rachel Wood a new motherEvan Rachel Wood and husband Jamie Bell have welcomed their first child. The acting couple are excited to be parents to a baby boy, after the actress gave birth au naturel. Ouch! Wood’s rep confirmed the happy news, stating, “Evan Rachel Wood and her husband Jamie Bell are parents to a beautiful boy. Parents and ...

Evan Rachel Wood & Jamie Bell Welcome Baby Boy! Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/07/evan-rachel-wood-jamie-bell-welcome-baby-boy/

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Watch Chevy's Iconic Bowtie Logo Evolve Over 100 Years

Watch Chevy's Iconic Bowtie Logo Evolve Over 100 Years

To mark the 100th anniversary of Chevy's logo this year, the car company has created this graphic charting the evolution of the iconic bowtie. But did you know that the origins of the slanted cross are vague at best?

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/YGnhWf2k6Do/watch-chevys-iconic-bowtie-logo-evolve-over-100-years-961324803

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Explosions rock Fla. gas plant, workers missing

TAVARES, Fla. (AP) ? A series of major explosions at a Florida gas plant has injured several workers and left others missing.

John Herrell of the Lake County Sheriff's Office said early Tuesday that 15 people who worked at the Blue Rhino propane plant were still unaccounted for. Herrell's news conference was carried live by WNET.

The Blue Rhino plant refilled propane tanks typically used for barbecues and other uses.

He said a crew of 24 to 26 people were working at the plant on an overnight shift when the explosions occurred late Monday. He said seven people were injured and transported to a local hospital and two employees escaped unharmed.

Video footage on WESH-TV in Orlando showed fires burning through trucks used to transport propane tanks, which were parked at the plant. The fire was sending plumes of smoke into the air nearly two hours after the blast. Emergency crews could also be seen massing nearby.

Herrell said an evacuation zone was initially a one-mile radius but had been reduced to a half-mile radius. No injuries have been reported from residents in the neighborhood.

Herrell said officials believe the fire is contained and won't spread to another part of the plant but they cannot guarantee that.

Bryan Koon, director of the Florida Division of Emergency Management, said he was still getting "preliminary information" from local authorities.

The blasts began about 11 p.m.

Herrell said the plant usually has 53,000 20-pound propane tanks.

According to the Leesburg Daily Commercial, the plant was built in 2004 and employs fewer than 50 people.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/explosions-rock-fla-gas-plant-workers-missing-052521874.html

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Weiner falls to fourth in new NYC mayoral poll

NEW YORK (AP) ? New York City mayoral hopeful Anthony Weiner plunged to fourth place among Democrats in the first poll taken since he admitted to having illicit online exchanges with women even after he resigned from Congress amid a sexting scandal.

The poll ? which Weiner led just five days ago ? also showed about half of likely Democratic voters saying Weiner should abandon his mayoral bid.

Weiner's support fell from 26 percent last week to 16 percent in Monday's Quinnipiac University poll. Last week's survey was taken largely before Weiner's latest scandal was revealed.

"He's in a free-fall," said poll director Maurice Carroll. "He can't win. He simply can't win."

Standing side by side with his wife, Weiner admitted last week that he had tawdry online exchanges ? including X-rated photos ? with a then-22 year-old Indiana woman after he stepped down from Congress in 2011 over similar behavior. He later said he had similar exchanges with two other women after his resignation.

Forty percent of voters said his behavior disqualified him from consideration as a candidate, up from 23 percent last week.

The poll of 446 likely Democratic voters shows Weiner trailing City Council Speaker Christine Quinn (27 percent), Public Advocate Bill de Blasio (21 percent) and ex-city comptroller Bill Thompson (20 percent). The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.6 percent.

In a statement, Weiner said "polls don't change anything."

But last week's revelation has seemingly derailed his once-surging mayoral bid, sending him from political punch line to comeback story and back again.

Weiner forged ahead Monday in the face of countless calls ? including from pundits and powerful members of his own party ? to step aside.

"I'm going to keep talking about the things important to this city," he said at a campaign stop in Queens. "I don't really care if a lot of pundits or politicians are offended by that. I'm going to keep doing those things and I think New Yorkers deserve that choice. I'm going to let New Yorkers decide."

Gov. Andrew Cuomo, the head of the state's Democratic party, declined Monday to weigh in on whether Weiner should abandon his mayoral bid, but his scandal-scarred predecessor, Eliot Spitzer, allowed that he would fire an employee who engaged in Weiner's behavior.

The former governor, himself staging a comeback bid in the race for New York City comptroller, told MSNBC's Chris Matthews in a televised appearance that Matthews was correct in suggesting Spitzer would not vote for Weiner.

Spitzer stepped down from office in 2008 after admitting he paid for sex with prostitutes.

Several of Weiner's mayoral rivals have called for him to quit, including de Blasio, who benefited the most in the Quinnipiac poll from Weiner's tumble. De Blasio's campaign has targeted the same progressive and outer-borough base wooed by Weiner but was previously eclipsed by the former congressman's star power and campaign skills.

"Today's poll shows a wide open race," said de Blasio spokesman Dan Levitan. "It's no surprise that as the race heats up, more and more New Yorkers are supporting Bill de Blasio's campaign to bring real progressive change to City Hall."

If none of the Democratic candidates reach 40 percent of the vote in the Sept. 10 primary, the top two advance to a run-off election two weeks later. The winner would then face the Republican nominee in November.

The state's top Democrat continued to shy away from discussing Weiner's bid.

"This is summer political theater in New York," Cuomo said Monday. "We laugh because if we didn't laugh, we would cry, right?"

"People run, that's the way our system works," said Cuomo, who controls the state Democratic committee. "I'm not going to say who should run and shouldn't run because that's the system."

___

Associated Press writer Michael Gormley contributed to this report from Albany.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/weiner-falls-fourth-nyc-mayoral-poll-225200458.html

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A Guide to New York City's Urban Landscapes with Francis Morrone ...

Francis Morrone MAS tour

?The original Battery Park City design was about as banal as could be imagined?bland modernist towers in a Corbusian park-like setting,? architecture critic Francis Morrone is saying to his audience of some 25 attentive New Yorkers, who?ve signed up for one of his renowned?Municipal Art Society tours. ?Fate in the form of the 1975 fiscal crisis saved us, decreeing this could not be built. By the time it started up again, a whole new generation of architects?Young Turks?had replaced the old.? How lucky for New York, because the Battery Park City we?re about to see with Morrone is by universal assent superior to what would have been.?

PS 234

Travel and Leisure named?Morrone one of the ten best guides in the world. Scholarly, charming, funny, and efficient, he rounds us up and directs us to march across Chambers towards the Hudson, with the intention of walking the full-length of the waterfront down to the Battery.

This tour is especially well-timed, because the Norton Architecture & Design series has just published A Guide to New York City Urban Landscapes, co-authored by Robin Lynn and Morrone, with photos by Edward A. Toran. The book covers the five boroughs, but begins the way New York itself began, at the water?s edge. So do we, on the recent tour.?Here are a few stops that were surprising even to the highly knowledgeable and seriously demanding MAS crowd.

Nelson A Rockefeller Park

Heading towards the water, we walk briskly through the relatively open Nelson A. Rockefeller Park, which has a great deal of ?active recreation,? as opposed to the contemplation promoted by Olmsted and Vaux in Central Park. We pause at The Pavilion whose ?proportions and details,? says Morrone, make it the most perfect thing of its kind since Stanford White?s 1904 peristyle in Prospect Park. Gesturing towards the surrounding landscape, Morrone notes that it pioneered what is now the dominant form of urban landscape?wild grasses and blanketing perennials.

Teardrop Park

When we reach Teardrop Park, most of us look around in hopes of spotting the actual park. Maestro that he is, Morrone waits quietly, before announcing, ?You are about to enter a Hall of Shame.? The Project for Public Spaces has so designated Teardrop, calling it a ?$17 million public park that serves primarily as a private courtyard arboretum to the surrounding high-rise development.? PPS admonishes that the ?decidedly private? Teardrop ?is not a park that you go to to participate constructively in public.?

But do we all have to participate constructively all the time? Can?t we sometimes try Olmsted and Vaux?s contemplation instead? Teardrop?s tiny two-acre space bordered by towering apartment buildings is certainly a lovely refuge for reading and thinking. What?s more, children clearly adore its slide and cascading water. Morrone, who especially likes its dramatically shifting sight-lines and lush vegetation, finds nothing objectionable about Teardrop?s return to an old idea?the park as a retreat from the city.

Next, we stop at the Irish Hunger Memorial. Classicist that Morrone is, he seems to admire it intellectually (?a memorial in the form of a landscape?) while not embracing it emotionally. ?Everything you see is literal,? he notes?sixty-two species of plants and grasses, as well as stones, from Ireland?s thirty-two counties. ?Nothing is metaphorical.?

We make our way down the open esplanade, walking by the North Cove?s yacht-filled marina. Morrone discusses the 3.5-acre World Financial Plaza, which he admires for its ?utterly relaxed quality.? He gestures towards an elegant metal fence, which displays rather defiant quotations from his two favorite poets, Walt Whitman (?mettlesome, mad, extravagant city!?) and Frank O?Hara (?I can?t even enjoy a blade of grass unless I know there?s a subway handy.?).

Winter Garden, World Financial Center

We enter the cool, totally over-the-top palm-filled Winter Garden, whose space roughly equals that of Grand Central Terminal?s main concourse. The huge glass shell allows in tremendous sunlight for the sixteen 45-foot-tall Washingtonia robusta palm trees from Florida, which, despite the light, must be regularly replaced. Utterly destroyed by the 9/11 attacks, the Winter Garden was completely rebuilt with astonishing speed by its owner Brookfield Properties, reopening in 2002. A quiet triumph for New York, its grand staircase leads to a viewing platform that overlooks the World Trade Center site.

There?s so much more, of course, both on the tour and in?A Guide to New York City Urban Landscapes , which gallops exuberantly through the five boroughs of New York. One of my favorite little-known sites is the Brooklyn Grange, at 37-18 Northern Boulevard in Queens. Not only can you see Manhattan in the distance, but the Grange?s use of the immense 2.5-acre roof as an organic garden is significant both ecologically and architecturally.

Brooklyn Grange, Queens 1

Manhattan?s constant search for more intensive land use has inevitably moved upwards. And now Queens and Brooklyn are moving upward as well, but in their own way, converting once-vacant roofs to productive uses. Co-author Robin Lynn writes that ?plants and soil catch and absorb rainwater, so there is less runoff into the city?s sewer system, and less heat is reflected off the roofs.? He also provides a brief history of green roofs, starting with Rockefeller Center in the 1930s.

My other favorite less well-known site?the 478-acre Green-Wood Cemetery?is featured on the book?s cover, and is its oldest open space, having been established in 1838. Green-Wood president Richard Moylan urges New Yorkers to come meander through the grounds, taking in panoramic views of Manhattan, New York Harbor, the Statue of Liberty, and the hills of New Jersey. He concludes by exhorting: ?Now get outside and renew your spirit.??Which is pretty much the motto of the?book.

Julia Vitullo-Martin is a Senior Fellow at?Regional Plan Association?and director of the?Center for Urban Innovation. Get in touch with her @JuliaManhattan.

A Guide to New York City Urban Landscapes?is available on Amazon. Read more about NYC?s green roofs, blue roofs and cool roofs.

Source: http://untappedcities.com/2013/07/29/a-guide-to-new-york-citys-urban-landscapes-with-francis-morrone/

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Japan win East Asian Cup

State of Japan

???
Nippon-koku
Nihon-koku

Anthem:?
Kimigayo
(???)
Government Seal of Japan
Seal of the Office of the Prime Minister and the Government of Japan
??? (Go-Shichi no Kiri?)
Capital
(and largest city)
Tokyo (de facto)
35?41?N 139?46?E? / ?35.683?N 139.767?E? / 35.683; 139.767
Official language(s) None[1]
Recognised regional?languages Aynu itak, Ryukyuan languages, Eastern Japanese, Western Japanese, and several other Japanese dialects
National language Japanese
Ethnic groups? 98.5%?Japanese, 0.5%?Korean, 0.4%?Chinese, 0.6%?other[2]
Demonym Japanese
Government Unitary parliamentary democracy and constitutional monarchy
?-? Emperor Akihito
?-? Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda
Legislature Diet
?-? Upper house House of Councillors
?-? Lower house House of Representatives
Formation
?-? National Foundation Day 11 February 660?BC[3]?
?-? Meiji Constitution 29 November 1890?
?-? Current constitution 3 May 1947?
?-? Treaty of
San Francisco

28 April 1952?
Area
?-? Total 377,944?km2?[4](62nd)
145,925?sq?mi?
?-? Water?(%) 0.8
Population
?-? 2011?estimate 127,799,000[5]?(10th)
?-? 2010?census 128,056,026[6]?
?-? Density 337.1/km2?(36th)
873.1/sq?mi
GDP?(PPP) 2011?estimate
?-? Total $4.440 trillion[7]?(4th)
?-? Per capita $34,739[7]?(25th)
GDP (nominal) 2011?estimate
?-? Total $5.869 trillion[7]?(3rd)
?-? Per capita $45,920[7]?(18th)
Gini? 37.6 (2008)[8]?
HDI?(2011) increase 0.901[9]?(very high)?(12th)
Currency Yen (?)?/ En (??or??) (JPY)
Time zone JST (UTC+9)
?-? Summer?(DST) not observed?(UTC+9)
Date formats yyyy-mm-dd
yyyy?m?d?
Era?yy?m?d? (CE?1988)
Drives on the left
ISO?3166?code JP
Internet TLD .jp
Calling code 81

Japan Listeni/d???p?n/ (Japanese: ?? Nihon or Nippon; formally ??? About this sound?Nippon-koku or Nihon-koku, literally the State of Japan) is an island nation in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south. The characters that make up Japan's name mean "sun-origin", which is why Japan is sometimes referred to as the "Land of the Rising Sun".

Japan is an archipelago of 6,852 islands. The four largest islands are Honsh?, Hokkaid?, Ky?sh? and Shikoku, together accounting for ninety-seven percent of Japan's land area. Japan has the world's tenth-largest population, with over 127?million people. The Greater Tokyo Area, which includes the de facto capital city of Tokyo and several surrounding prefectures, is the largest metropolitan area in the world, with over 30 million residents.

Archaeological research indicates that people lived in Japan as early as the Upper Paleolithic period. The first written mention of Japan is in Chinese history texts from the 1st century?AD. Influence from other nations followed by long periods of isolation has characterized Japan's history. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, victory in the First Sino-Japanese War, the Russo-Japanese War and World War I allowed Japan to expand its empire during a period of increasing militarism. The Second Sino-Japanese War of 1937 expanded into part of World War II in 1941, which came to an end in 1945 following the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Since adopting its revised constitution in 1947, Japan has maintained a unitary constitutional monarchy with an emperor and an elected parliament called the Diet.

A major economic power,[2] Japan has the world's third-largest economy by nominal GDP and fourth-largest economy by purchasing power parity. It is also the world's fourth-largest exporter and fourth-largest importer. Although Japan has officially renounced its right to declare war, it maintains a modern military force in self-defense and peacekeeping roles. After Singapore, Japan has the lowest homicide rate (including attempted homicide) in the world.[10] According to both UN and WHO estimates, Japan has the longest life expectancy of any country in the world. According to the UN, it has the third lowest infant mortality rate.[11][12]

Main article: Names of Japan

The English word Japan is an exonym. The Japanese names for Japan are Nippon (?????) About this sound?listen and Nihon (????) About this sound?listen ; both names are written using the kanji ??. The Japanese name Nippon is used for most official purposes, including on Japanese yen, postage stamps, and for many international sporting events. Nihon is a more casual term and is used in contemporary speech.

Japanese people refer to themselves as Nihonjin (????) and to their language as Nihongo (????). Both Nippon and Nihon mean "sun-origin" and are often translated as Land of the Rising Sun. This nomenclature comes from Japanese missions to Imperial China and refers to Japan's eastward position relative to China. Before Nihon came into official use, Japan was known as Wa (??) or Wakoku (???).[13]

The English word for Japan came to the West via early trade routes. The early Mandarin or possibly Wu Chinese (??) word for Japan was recorded by Marco Polo as Cipangu. In modern Shanghainese, a Wu dialect, the pronunciation of characters ?? 'Japan' is Zeppen [z??p?n]. The old Malay word for Japan, Jepang, was borrowed from a Chinese language ? Jih'pen'kuo[14]?, and this Malay word was encountered by Portuguese traders in Malacca in the 16th century. Portuguese traders were the first to bring the word to Europe.[15] It was first recorded in English in a 1565 letter, spelled Giapan.[16]

Prehistory and ancient history[link]

A Paleolithic culture around 30,000?BC constitutes the first known habitation of the Japanese archipelago. This was followed from around 14,000?BC (the start of the J?mon period) by a Mesolithic to Neolithic semi-sedentary hunter-gatherer culture, who include ancestors of both the contemporary Ainu people and Yamato people,[17][18] characterized by pit dwelling and rudimentary agriculture.[19] Decorated clay vessels from this period are some of the oldest surviving examples of pottery in the world. Around 300 BC, the Yayoi people began to enter the Japanese islands, intermingling with the J?mon.[20] The Yayoi period, starting around 500?BC, saw the introduction of practices like wet-rice farming,[21] a new style of pottery,[22] and metallurgy, introduced from China and Korea.[23]

Japan first appears in written history in the Chinese Book of Han.[24] According to the Records of the Three Kingdoms, the most powerful kingdom on the archipelago during the 3rd century was called Yamataikoku. Buddhism was first introduced to Japan from Baekje of Korea, but the subsequent development of Japanese Buddhism was primarily influenced by China.[25] Despite early resistance, Buddhism was promoted by the ruling class and gained widespread acceptance beginning in the Asuka period (592?710).[26]

The Nara period (710?784) of the 8th century marked the emergence of a strong Japanese state, centered on an imperial court in Heij?-ky? (modern Nara). The Nara period is characterized by the appearance of a nascent literature as well as the development of Buddhist-inspired art and architecture.[27] The smallpox epidemic of 735?737 is believed to have killed as much as one-third of Japan's population.[28] In 784, Emperor Kammu moved the capital from Nara to Nagaoka-ky? before relocating it to Heian-ky? (modern Kyoto) in 794.

This marked the beginning of the Heian period (794?1185), during which a distinctly indigenous Japanese culture emerged, noted for its art, poetry and prose. Lady Murasaki's The Tale of Genji and the lyrics of Japan's national anthem Kimigayo were written during this time.[29]

Buddhism began to spread during the Heian era chiefly through two major sects, Tendai by Saich?, and Shingon by K?kai. Pure Land Buddhism greatly becomes popular in the latter half of the 11th century.

Feudal era[link]

Japan's feudal era was characterized by the emergence and dominance of a ruling class of warriors, the samurai. In 1185, following the defeat of the Taira clan, sung in the epic Tale of Heike, samurai Minamoto no Yoritomo was appointed shogun and established a base of power in Kamakura. After his death, the H?j? clan came to power as regents for the shoguns. The Zen school of Buddhism was introduced from China in the Kamakura period (1185?1333) and became popular among the samurai class.[30] The Kamakura shogunate repelled Mongol invasions in 1274 and 1281, but was eventually overthrown by Emperor Go-Daigo. Go-Daigo was himself defeated by Ashikaga Takauji in 1336.

Ashikaga Takauji establishes the shogunate in Muromachi, Kyoto. It is a start of Muromachi Period (1336?1573). The Ashikaga shogunate receives glory in the age of Ashikaga Yoshimitsu, and the culture based on Zen Buddhism (art of Miyabi) has prospered. It evolves to Higashiyama Culture, and has prospered until the 16th century. On the other hand, the succeeding Ashikaga shogunate failed to control the feudal warlords (daimyo), and a civil war (the ?nin War) began in 1467, opening the century-long Sengoku period ("Warring States").[31]

During the 16th century, traders and Jesuit missionaries from Portugal reached Japan for the first time, initiating direct commercial and cultural exchange between Japan and the West. Oda Nobunaga conquered many other daimyo using European technology and firearms; after he was assassinated in 1582, his successor Toyotomi Hideyoshi unified the nation in 1590. Hideyoshi invaded Korea twice, but following defeats by Korean and Ming Chinese forces and Hideyoshi's death, Japanese troops were withdrawn in 1598.[32] This age is called Azuchi-Momoyama Period (1573?1603).

Tokugawa Ieyasu served as regent for Hideyoshi's son and used his position to gain political and military support. When open war broke out, he defeated rival clans in the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600. Ieyasu was appointed shogun in 1603 and established the Tokugawa shogunate at Edo (modern Tokyo).[33] The Tokugawa shogunate enacted measures including buke shohatto, as a code of conduct to control the autonomous daimyo;[34] and in 1639, the isolationist sakoku ("closed country") policy that spanned the two and a half centuries of tenuous political unity known as the Edo period (1603?1868).[35] The study of Western sciences, known as rangaku, continued through contact with the Dutch enclave at Dejima in Nagasaki. The Edo period also gave rise to kokugaku ("national studies"), the study of Japan by the Japanese.[36]

Modern era[link]

On 31 March 1854, Commodore Matthew Perry and the "Black Ships" of the United States Navy forced the opening of Japan to the outside world with the Convention of Kanagawa. Subsequent similar treaties with Western countries in the Bakumatsu period brought economic and political crises. The resignation of the shogun led to the Boshin War and the establishment of a centralized state nominally unified under the Emperor (the Meiji Restoration).[37]

Adopting Western political, judicial and military institutions, the Cabinet organized the Privy Council, introduced the Meiji Constitution, and assembled the Imperial Diet. The Meiji Restoration transformed the Empire of Japan into an industrialized world power that pursued military conflict to expand its sphere of influence. After victories in the First Sino-Japanese War (1894?1895) and the Russo-Japanese War (1904?1905), Japan gained control of Taiwan, Korea, and the southern half of Sakhalin.[38] Japan's population grew from 35 million in 1873 to 70 million in 1935.[39]

The early 20th century saw a brief period of "Taish? democracy" overshadowed by increasing expansionism and militarization. World War?I enabled Japan, on the side of the victorious Allies, to widen its influence and territorial holdings. It continued its expansionist policy by occupying Manchuria in 1931; as a result of international condemnation of this occupation, Japan resigned from the League of Nations two years later. In 1936, Japan signed the Anti-Comintern Pact with Nazi Germany, and the 1940 Tripartite Pact made it one of the Axis Powers.[40] In 1941, Japan negotiated the Soviet?Japanese Neutrality Pact.[41]

The Empire of Japan invaded other parts of China in 1937, precipitating the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937?1945). In 1940, the Empire then invaded French Indochina, after which the United States placed an oil embargo on Japan.[42] On December?7, 1941, Japan attacked the US naval base at Pearl Harbor and declared war, bringing the US into World War II.[43][44] After the Soviet invasion of Manchuria and the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, Japan agreed to an unconditional surrender on 15 August.[45] The war cost Japan and the rest of the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere millions of lives and left much of the nation's industry and infrastructure destroyed. The Allies (led by the US) repatriated millions of ethnic Japanese from colonies and military camps throughout Asia, largely eliminating the Japanese empire and restoring the independence of its conquered territories.[46] The Allies also convened the International Military Tribunal for the Far East on May?3, 1946 to prosecute some Japanese leaders for war crimes. However, the bacteriological research units and members of the imperial family involved in the war were exonerated from criminal prosecutions by the Supreme Allied Commander despite calls for trials for both groups.[47]

In 1947, Japan adopted a new constitution emphasizing liberal democratic practices. The Allied occupation ended with the Treaty of San Francisco in 1952[48] and Japan was granted membership in the United Nations in 1956. Japan later achieved rapid growth to become the second-largest economy in the world, until surpassed by China in 2010. This ended in the mid-1990s when Japan suffered a major recession. In the beginning of the 21st century, positive growth has signaled a gradual economic recovery.[49] On 11 March 2011, Japan suffered the strongest earthquake in its recorded history; this triggered the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster, one of the worst disasters in the history of nuclear power.[50]

Japan is a constitutional monarchy where the power of the Emperor is very limited. As a ceremonial figurehead, he is defined by the constitution as "the symbol of the state and of the unity of the people". Power is held chiefly by the Prime Minister of Japan and other elected members of the Diet, while sovereignty is vested in the Japanese people.[51]Akihito is the current Emperor of Japan; Naruhito, Crown Prince of Japan, stands as next in line to the throne.

Japan's legislative organ is the National Diet, a bicameral parliament. The Diet consists of a House of Representatives with 480 seats, elected by popular vote every four years or when dissolved, and a House of Councillors of 242 seats, whose popularly elected members serve six-year terms. There is universal suffrage for adults over 20 years of age,[2] with a secret ballot for all elected offices.[51] In 2009, the social liberal Democratic Party of Japan took power after 54 years of the liberal conservative Liberal Democratic Party's rule.[52]

The Prime Minister of Japan is the head of government and is appointed by the Emperor after being designated by the Diet from among its members. The Prime Minister is the head of the Cabinet and appoints and dismisses the Ministers of State. Naoto Kan was designated by the Diet to replace Yukio Hatoyama as the Prime Minister of Japan on June 2, 2010.[53] Although the Prime Minister is formally appointed by the Emperor, the Constitution of Japan explicitly requires the Emperor to appoint whoever is designated by the Diet. Emperor Akihito formally appointed Kan as the country's 94th Prime Minister on 8 June.[54]

Historically influenced by Chinese law, the Japanese legal system developed independently during the Edo period through texts such as Kujikata Osadamegaki.[55] However, since the late 19th century the judicial system has been largely based on the civil law of Europe, notably Germany. For example, in 1896, the Japanese government established a civil code based on a draft of the German B?rgerliches Gesetzbuch; with post?World War II modifications, the code remains in effect.[56] Statutory law originates in Japan's legislature and has the rubber stamp of the Emperor. The Constitution requires that the Emperor promulgate legislation passed by the Diet, without specifically giving him the power to oppose legislation.[51] Japan's court system is divided into four basic tiers: the Supreme Court and three levels of lower courts.[57] The main body of Japanese statutory law is called the Six Codes.[58]

Japan is a member of the G8, APEC, and "ASEAN Plus Three", and is a participant in the East Asia Summit. Japan signed a security pact with Australia in March 2007[59] and with India in October 2008.[60] It is the world's third largest donor of official development assistance after the United States and France, donating US$9.48 billion in 2009.[61]

Japan has close economic and military relations with the United States; the US-Japan security alliance acts as the cornerstone of the nation's foreign policy.[62] A member state of the United Nations since 1956, Japan has served as a non-permanent Security Council member for a total of 19 years, most recently for 2009 and 2010. It is one of the G4 nations seeking permanent membership in the Security Council.[63]

Japan is engaged in several territorial disputes with its neighbors: with Russia over the South Kuril Islands, with South Korea over the Liancourt Rocks, with China and Taiwan over the Senkaku Islands, and with China over the EEZ around Okinotorishima.[64] Japan also faces an ongoing dispute with North Korea over the latter's abduction of Japanese citizens and its nuclear weapons and missile program (see also Six-party talks).[65]

Japan maintains one of the largest military budgets of any country in the world.[66] Japan contributed non-combatant troops to the Iraq War but subsequently withdrew its forces.[67] The Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force is a regular participant in RIMPAC maritime exercises.[68]

Japan's military is restricted by Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution, which renounces Japan's right to declare war or use military force in international disputes. Japan's military is governed by the Ministry of Defense, and primarily consists of the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force (JGSDF), the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) and the Japan Air Self-Defense Force (JASDF). The forces have been recently used in peacekeeping operations; the deployment of troops to Iraq marked the first overseas use of Japan's military since World War II.[67]Nippon Keidanren has called on the government to lift the ban on arms exports so that Japan can join multinational projects such as the Joint Strike Fighter.[69]

Japan consists of forty-seven prefectures, each overseen by an elected governor, legislature and administrative bureaucracy. Each prefecture is further divided into cities, towns and villages.[70] The nation is currently undergoing administrative reorganization by merging many of the cities, towns and villages with each other. This process will reduce the number of sub-prefecture administrative regions and is expected to cut administrative costs.[71]

Japan has a total of 6,852 islands extending along the Pacific coast of East Asia.[72][73] The country, including all of the islands it controls, lies between latitudes 24? and 46?N, and longitudes 122? and 146?E. The main islands, from north to south, are Hokkaid?, Honsh?, Shikoku and Ky?sh?. The Ry?ky? Islands, including Okinawa, are a chain to the south of Ky?sh?. Together they are often known as the Japanese Archipelago.[74]

About 73 percent of Japan is forested, mountainous, and unsuitable for agricultural, industrial, or residential use.[2][75] As a result, the habitable zones, mainly located in coastal areas, have extremely high population densities. Japan is one of the most densely populated countries in the world.[76]

The islands of Japan are located in a volcanic zone on the Pacific Ring of Fire. They are primarily the result of large oceanic movements occurring over hundreds of millions of years from the mid-Silurian to the Pleistocene as a result of the subduction of the Philippine Sea Plate beneath the continental Amurian Plate and Okinawa Plate to the south, and subduction of the Pacific Plate under the Okhotsk Plate to the north. Japan was originally attached to the eastern coast of the Eurasian continent. The subducting plates pulled Japan eastward, opening the Sea of Japan around 15 million years ago.[77]

Japan has 108 active volcanoes. Destructive earthquakes, often resulting in tsunami, occur several times each century.[78] The 1923 Tokyo earthquake killed over 140,000 people.[79] More recent major quakes are the 1995 Great Hanshin earthquake and the 2011 T?hoku earthquake, a 9.0-magnitude[80] quake which hit Japan on 11 March 2011, and triggered a large tsunami.[50] On 24 May 2012, 6.1 magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of northearstern Japan.No tsunami is expected though.[81]

Climate[link]

The climate of Japan is predominantly temperate, but varies greatly from north to south. Japan's geographical features divide it into six principal climatic zones: Hokkaid?, Sea of Japan, Central Highland, Seto Inland Sea, Pacific Ocean, and Ry?ky? Islands. The northernmost zone, Hokkaido, has a humid continental climate with long, cold winters and very warm to cool summers. Precipitation is not heavy, but the islands usually develop deep snowbanks in the winter.[82]

In the Sea of Japan zone on Honsh?'s west coast, northwest winter winds bring heavy snowfall. In the summer, the region is cooler than the Pacific area, though it sometimes experiences extremely hot temperatures because of the foehn wind. The Central Highland has a typical inland humid continental climate, with large temperature differences between summer and winter, and between day and night; precipitation is light, though winters are usually snowy. The mountains of the Ch?goku and Shikoku regions shelter the Seto Inland Sea from seasonal winds, bringing mild weather year-round.[83]

The Pacific coast features a humid subtropical climate that experiences milder winters with occasional snowfall and hot, humid summers because of the southeast seasonal wind. The Ryukyu Islands have a subtropical climate, with warm winters and hot summers. Precipitation is very heavy, especially during the rainy season. The generally humid, temperate climate exhibits marked seasonal variation such as the blooming of the spring cherry blossoms, the calls of the summer cicada and fall foliage colors that are celebrated in art and literature.[84]

The average winter temperature in Japan is 5.1 ?C (41.2??F) and the average summer temperature is 25.2 ?C (77.4??F).[85] The highest temperature ever measured in Japan?40.9 ?C (105.6??F)?was recorded on 16 August 2007.[86] The main rainy season begins in early May in Okinawa, and the rain front gradually moves north until reaching Hokkaid? in late July. In most of Honsh?, the rainy season begins before the middle of June and lasts about six weeks. In late summer and early autumn, typhoons often bring heavy rain.[87]

Biodiversity[link]

Japan has nine forest ecoregions which reflect the climate and geography of the islands. They range from subtropical moist broadleaf forests in the Ry?ky? and Bonin Islands, to temperate broadleaf and mixed forests in the mild climate regions of the main islands, to temperate coniferous forests in the cold, winter portions of the northern islands.[88] Japan has over 90,000 species of wildlife, including the brown bear, the Japanese macaque, the Japanese raccoon dog, and the Japanese giant salamander.[89] A large network of national parks has been established to protect important areas of flora and fauna as well as thirty-seven Ramsar wetland sites.[90][91]

Environment[link]

In the period of rapid economic growth after World War II, environmental policies were downplayed by the government and industrial corporations; as a result, environmental pollution was widespread in the 1950s and 1960s. Responding to rising concern about the problem, the government introduced several environmental protection laws in 1970.[92] The oil crisis in 1973 also encouraged the efficient use of energy due to Japan's lack of natural resources.[93] Current environmental issues include urban air pollution (NOx, suspended particulate matter, and toxics), waste management, water eutrophication, nature conservation, climate change, chemical management and international co-operation for conservation.[94]

Japan is one of the world's leaders in the development of new environment-friendly technologies, and is ranked 20th best in the world in the 2010 Environmental Performance Index.[95] As a signatory of the Kyoto Protocol, and host of the 1997 conference which created it, Japan is under treaty obligation to reduce its carbon dioxide emissions and to take other steps to curb climate change.[96]

Some of the structural features for Japan's economic growth developed in the Edo period, such as the network of transport routes, by road and water, and the futures contracts, banking and insurance of the Osaka rice brokers.[98] During the Meiji period from 1868, Japan expanded economically with the embrace of the market economy.[99] Many of today's enterprises were founded at the time, and Japan emerged as the most developed nation in Asia.[100] The period of overall real economic growth from the 1960s to the 1980s has been called the Japanese post-war economic miracle: it averaged 7.5 percent in the 1960s and 1970s, and 3.2 percent in the 1980s and early 1990s.[101]

Growth slowed markedly in the 1990s during what the Japanese call the Lost Decade, largely because of the after-effects of the Japanese asset price bubble and domestic policies intended to wring speculative excesses from the stock and real estate markets. Government efforts to revive economic growth met with little success and were further hampered by the global slowdown in 2000.[2] The economy showed strong signs of recovery after 2005; GDP growth for that year was 2.8 percent, surpassing the growth rates of the US and European Union during the same period.[102]

As of 2011[update], Japan is the third largest national economy in the world, after the United States and China, in terms of nominal GDP,[103] and the fourth largest national economy in the world, after the United States, China and India in terms of purchasing power parity.[7] As of January 2011[update], Japan's public debt was more than 200 percent of its annual gross domestic product, the largest of any nation in the world. In August 2011, Moody's rating has cut Japan's long-term sovereign debt rating one notch from Aa3 to Aa2 inline with the size of the country's deficit and borrowing level. The large budget deficits and government debt since the 2009 global recession and followed by earthquake and tsunami in March 2011 made the rating downgrade.[104] The service sector accounts for three quarters of the gross domestic product.[105]

Japan has a large industrial capacity, and is home to some of the largest and most technologically advanced producers of motor vehicles, electronics, machine tools, steel and nonferrous metals, ships, chemical substances, textiles, and processed foods. Agricultural businesses in Japan cultivate 13 percent of Japan's land, and Japan accounts for nearly 15 percent of the global fish catch, second only to China.[2] As of 2010, Japan's labor force consisted of some 65.9 million workers.[106] Japan has a low unemployment rate of around four percent. Almost one in six Japanese, or 20 million people, lived in poverty in 2007.[107]Housing in Japan is characterized by limited land supply in urban areas.[108]

Japan's exports amounted to US$4,210 per capita in 2005. Japan's main export markets are China (18.88 percent), the United States (16.42 percent), South Korea (8.13 percent), Taiwan (6.27 percent) and Hong Kong (5.49 percent) as of 2009. Its main exports are transportation equipment, motor vehicles, electronics, electrical machinery and chemicals.[2] Japan's main import markets as of 2009 are China (22.2 percent), the US (10.96 percent), Australia (6.29 percent), Saudi Arabia (5.29 percent), United Arab Emirates (4.12 percent), South Korea (3.98 percent) and Indonesia (3.95 percent).[110]

Japan's main imports are machinery and equipment, fossil fuels, foodstuffs (in particular beef), chemicals, textiles and raw materials for its industries.[111] By market share measures, domestic markets are the least open of any OECD country.[112]Junichiro Koizumi's administration began some pro-competition reforms, and foreign investment in Japan has soared.[113]

Japan ranks 12th of 178 countries in the 2008 Ease of Doing Business Index and has one of the smallest tax revenues of the developed world. The Japanese variant of capitalism has many distinct features: keiretsu enterprises are influential, and lifetime employment and seniority-based career advancement are relatively common in the Japanese work environment.[112][114] Japanese companies are known for management methods like "The Toyota Way", and shareholder activism is rare.[115]

Some of the largest enterprises in Japan include Toyota, Nintendo, NTT DoCoMo, Canon, Honda, Takeda Pharmaceutical, Sony, Panasonic, Toshiba, Sharp, Nippon Steel, Nippon Oil, and Seven & I Holdings Co.[116] It has some of the world's largest banks, and the Tokyo Stock Exchange (known for its Nikkei 225 and Topix indices) stands as the second largest in the world by market capitalization.[117] Japan is home to 326 companies from the Forbes Global 2000 or 16.3 percent (as of 2006).[118]

Science and technology[link]

Japan is a leading nation in scientific research, particularly technology, machinery and biomedical research. Nearly 700,000 researchers share a US$130 billion research and development budget, the third largest in the world.[119] Japan is a world leader in fundamental scientific research, having produced fifteen Nobel laureates in either physics, chemistry or medicine,[120] three Fields medalists,[121] and one Gauss Prize laureate.[122] Some of Japan's more prominent technological contributions are in the fields of electronics, automobiles, machinery, earthquake engineering, industrial robotics, optics, chemicals, semiconductors and metals. Japan leads the world in robotics production and use, possessing more than half (402,200 of 742,500) of the world's industrial robots.[123]

The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) is Japan's space agency; it conducts space, planetary, and aviation research, and leads development of rockets and satellites. It is a participant in the International Space Station: the Japanese Experiment Module (Kibo) was added to the station during Space Shuttle assembly flights in 2008.[124] Japan's plans in space exploration include: launching a space probe to Venus, Akatsuki;[125][126] developing the Mercury Magnetospheric Orbiter to be launched in 2013;[127][128] and building a moon base by 2030.[129]

On 14 September 2007, it launched lunar explorer "SELENE" (Selenological and Engineering Explorer) on an H-IIA (Model H2A2022) carrier rocket from Tanegashima Space Center. SELENE is also known as Kaguya, after the lunar princess of The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter.[130]Kaguya is the largest lunar mission since the Apollo program. Its purpose is to gather data on the moon's origin and evolution. It entered a lunar orbit on 4 October,[131][132] flying at an altitude of about 100?km (62?mi).[133] The probe's mission was ended when it was deliberately crashed by JAXA into the Moon on 11 June 2009.[134]

Infrastructure[link]

As of 2008, 46.4 percent of energy in Japan is produced from petroleum, 21.4 percent from coal, 16.7 percent from natural gas, 9.7 percent from nuclear power, and 2.9 percent from hydro power. Nuclear power produced 25.1 percent of Japan's electricity, as of 2009.[136] However, as of May 5, 2012, all of the countries nuclear power plants had been taken offline due to ongoing public opposition following the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster, though government officials have been continuing to try to sway public opinion in favor of returning at least some of Japan's 50 nuclear reactors to service.[137] Given its heavy dependence on imported energy,[138] Japan has aimed to diversify its sources and maintain high levels of energy efficiency.[139]

Japan's road spending has been extensive.[140] Its 1.2 million kilometers of paved road are the main means of transportation.[141] A single network of high-speed, divided, limited-access toll roads connects major cities and is operated by toll-collecting enterprises. New and used cars are inexpensive; car ownership fees and fuel levies are used to promote energy efficiency. However, at just 50 percent of all distance traveled, car usage is the lowest of all G8 countries.[142]

Dozens of Japanese railway companies compete in regional and local passenger transportation markets; major companies include seven JR enterprises, Kintetsu Corporation, Seibu Railway and Keio Corporation. Some 250 high-speed Shinkansen trains connect major cities and Japanese trains are known for their safety and punctuality.[143][144] Proposals for a new Maglev route between Tokyo and Osaka are at an advanced stage.[145] There are 173 airports in Japan; the largest domestic airport, Haneda Airport, is Asia's second-busiest airport.[146] The largest international gateways are Narita International Airport, Kansai International Airport and Ch?bu Centrair International Airport.[147]Nagoya Port is the country's largest and busiest port, accounting for 10 percent of Japan's trade value.[148]

Japan's population is estimated at around 127.3 million.[2] Japanese society is linguistically and culturally homogeneous,[149] composed of 98.5% ethnic Japanese,[150] with small populations of foreign workers.[149]Zainichi Koreans,[151]Zainichi Chinese, Filipinos, Brazilians mostly of Japanese descent,[152] and Peruvians mostly of Japanese descent are among the small minority groups in Japan.[153] In 2003, there were about 134,700 non-Latin American Western and 345,500 Latin American expatriates, 274,700 of whom were Brazilians (said to be primarily Japanese descendants, or nikkeijin, along with their spouses),[152] the largest community of Westerners.[154]

The most dominant native ethnic group is the Yamato people; primary minority groups include the indigenous Ainu[155] and Ryukyuan peoples, as well as social minority groups like the burakumin.[156] There are persons of mixed ancestry incorporated among the 'ethnic Japanese' or Yamato, such as those from Ogasawara Archipelago where roughly one-tenth of the Japanese population can have European, American, Micronesian and/or Polynesian backgrounds, with some families going back up to seven generations.[157] In spite of the widespread belief that Japan is ethnically homogeneous (in 2009, foreign-born non-naturalized workers made up only 1.7% of the total population),[158] also due to the absence of ethnicity and/or race statistics for Japanese nationals, at least one analysis describes Japan as a multiethnic society, for example, John Lie.[159]

Japan has the longest overall life expectancy at birth of any country in the world: 83.5 years for persons born in the period 2010?2015.[11][12] The Japanese population is rapidly aging as a result of a post?World War II baby boom followed by a decrease in birth rates. In 2009, about 22.7 percent of the population was over 65, by 2050 almost 40 percent of the population will be aged 65 and over, as projected in December 2006.[160]

The changes in demographic structure have created a number of social issues, particularly a potential decline in workforce population and increase in the cost of social security benefits like the public pension plan. A growing number of younger Japanese are preferring not to marry or have families.[161] In 2011, Japan's population dropped for a fifth year, falling by 204,000 people to 126.24 million people. This is the greatest decline since at least 1947, the first year for which government data is available. The 1.26 million deaths included 15,844 people killed and 3,451 left missing by the tsunami.[162]

Japan's population is expected to drop to 95 million by 2050,[160][163] demographers and government planners are currently in a heated debate over how to cope with this problem.[161] Immigration and birth incentives are sometimes suggested as a solution to provide younger workers to support the nation's aging population.[164][165] Japan accepts a steady flow of 15,000 new Japanese citizens by naturalization (??) per year.[166] According to the UNHCR, in 2007 Japan accepted just 41 refugees for resettlement, while the US took in 50,000.[167]

Japan suffers from a high suicide rate.[168][169] In 2009, the number of suicides exceeded 30,000 for the twelfth straight year.[170] Suicide is the leading cause of death for people under 30.[171]

Largest cities or towns of Japan
2010 Census[172]
Rank City name Prefecture Pop. Rank City name Prefecture Pop.
Tokyo
Tokyo

Yokohama
Yokohama

1 Tokyo Tokyo 8,949,447 11 Hiroshima Hiroshima 1,174,209 Osaka
Osaka

Nagoya
Nagoya

2 Yokohama Kanagawa 3,689,603 12 Sendai Miyagi 1,045,903
3 Osaka Osaka 2,666,371 13 Kitaky?sh? Fukuoka 977,288
4 Nagoya Aichi 2,263,907 14 Chiba Chiba 962,130
5 Sapporo Hokkaid? 1,914,434 15 Sakai Osaka 842,134
6 K?be Hy?go 1,544,873 16 Niigata Niigata 812,192
7 Ky?to Ky?to 1,474,473 17 Hamamatsu Shizuoka 800,912
8 Fukuoka Fukuoka 1,463,826 18 Kumamoto Kumamoto 734,294
9 Kawasaki Kanagawa 1,425,678 19 Sagamihara Kanagawa 717,561
10 Saitama Saitama 1,222,910 20 Shizuoka Shizuoka 716,328

Religion[link]

Upper estimates suggest that 84?96 percent of the Japanese population subscribe to Buddhism or Shinto, including a large number of followers of a syncretism of both religions.[2][173] However, these estimates are based on people affiliated with a temple, rather than the number of true believers. Other studies have suggested that only 30 percent of the population identify themselves as belonging to a religion.[174]

Nevertheless the level of participation remains high, especially during festivals and occasions such as the first shrine visit of the New Year. Taoism and Confucianism from China have also influenced Japanese beliefs and customs.[175] Fewer than one percent of Japanese are Christian.[176] In addition, since the mid-19th century numerous new religious movements have emerged in Japan.[177]

Languages[link]

More than 99 percent of the population speaks Japanese as their first language.[2] It is an agglutinative language distinguished by a system of honorifics reflecting the hierarchical nature of Japanese society, with verb forms and particular vocabulary indicating the relative status of speaker and listener. Japanese writing uses kanji (Chinese characters) and two sets of kana (syllabaries based on simplified Chinese characters), as well as the Latin alphabet and Arabic numerals.[178]

Besides Japanese, the Ryukyuan languages, also part of the Japonic language family, are spoken in Okinawa; however, few chil

Source: http://article.wn.com/view/2013/07/28/Japan_win_East_Asian_Cup/

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