Tag - iwate

 
 

IWATE

CULTURE / TV & Streaming / CHANNEL SURF
Feb 20, 2015
Temporary housing; famous siblings; CM of the week: Meiji
The temporary housing built for the survivors of the 2011 earthquake and tsunami is usually depicted as being dark and cold, inhabited by sad people. But according to the NHK regional documentary, “Egao no Kasetsu Jutaku” (“Temporary Housing of Smiling Faces“; NHK-G, Mon., 12:40 a.m.), at least one community...
JAPAN
Nov 17, 2014
Iwate taps Google’s ‘Ingress’ to boost tourism
Since it was introduced, Google’s location-based game “Ingress” has engrossed many Japanese smartphone users, and officials in Iwate Prefecture have found it to be a great tool to boost tourism.
JAPAN / Politics
Jul 25, 2014
Governors tell Abe to get real on fixing economy — outside Tokyo
A long-sought response from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who is finally listening to the problems faced by the other Japan — the one outside Tokyo — or a cynical attempt to rally the Liberal Democratic Party before key local elections next April?
BUSINESS / Companies
Jul 1, 2014
Banks OK multibillion-yen loans for Oita and Iwate biomass plant projects
Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp. and partners will provide a ¥6.3 billion loan for a biomass plant developed by a unit of First Energy Service Co.
EDITORIALS
Nov 23, 2013
Tohoku’s Great Forest Wall Project
A project to plant nearly 300 km of trees along the northeast coast from Iwate to Miyagi to Fukushima will help to protect people and their way of life.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / WEEK 3
Mar 17, 2013
How an American collector brought Jakuchu to Tohoku
Including loans from each of Japan’s six national museums as well as the Imperial Household Agency, ‘Jakuchu’s Here!’ represents to a gift from Japan’s art establishment to an audience that it has neglected for decades.
Japan Times
LIFE / Travel
Nov 23, 2007
Guided through Japan’s deep north by the holy spirit of Basho
Tohoku is Japan’s “deep north,” through which the famous Zen monk and haiku poet Matsuo Basho walked in 1689, writing one of the most famous travelogues in world literature, “Oku no Hosomichi (The Narrow Road to the Deep North).”

Longform

The Terasaka Rice Terraces are seen with Mount Buko in the background.
What Yokoze can teach Japan about rural revival