Archives for the month of: March, 2002

DatelineMSNBC: Crash Tests
First up is the Subaru Impreza on its maiden voyage down this runway.
‘¯?This is what we want to see ‘¯? the safety cage remaining intact, all of the crash damage confined to the front end of the vehicle,‘¯? says Brian O‘¯?Neill, president of the Insurance Institute, after viewing the crash test video.
O‘¯?Neill and his staff send the Subaru Impreza to the head of its class. Not only do they give it a ‘¯?good‘¯? rating, they make it a ‘¯?best pick.‘¯?

I’m a little skeptical of their methodology but I’m happy to hear it’s a very safe car.
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Fortune: Samsung’s Golden Touch
This is Japan’s worst nightmare. Fujitsu, Hitachi, Matsushita, NEC, and Toshiba are all losing money. Sony has been limping along, barely profitable. Meanwhile, Samsung Electronics, which started out in 1970 making cheap 12-inch, black-and-white televisions under the Sanyo label, is entering the top tier of the world’s technology companies. It’s no longer a copycat, making stuff designed by others. And it’s no longer emulating the Japanese corporate model by promoting and rewarding employees on the basis of seniority alone, or by propping up losers.
Instead, Samsung Electronics has become a truly innovative company, creating cutting-edge technology across a spectrum of product lines, including combined cellphone and handheld devices, flat-screen TVs, and ultrathin laptops. Last year it ranked fifth in the world in patents, behind IBM, NEC, Canon, and Micron Technology–but ahead of Matsushita, Sony, Hitachi, Mitsubishi Electric, and Fujitsu. The company “can’t be classified as a replicator of other people’s technology” anymore, says Jonathan Dutton, head of equity research for UBS Warburg in Seoul.
Samsung Electronics made $2.2 billion in 2001, on sales of $24.7 billion–not its best year by a long shot, but not bad considering the times. It has built strong positions in memory chips (the world leader), thin-film displays (first, again), and wireless communications (fourth in handset production). At home it is the strongest of the four major chaebol. Hyundai (No. 2) is being split up among the sons and relatives of founder Chung Ju-Yung. LG (No. 3), the former Lucky Goldstar, has fumbled major investments and is losing money. Daewoo, the smallest, has suffered a spectacular meltdown, and founder Kim Woo Choong is in hiding abroad. With more than $100 billion in revenues, the Samsung Group is by far the largest corporate presence in South Korea, the equivalent of what a combined IBM-Intel-Citigroup-Caterpillar-Aetna would be in the U.S. And of the 25 companies that make up the chaebol, by far the most important is Samsung Electronics, which accounts for a quarter of the group’s total revenues and three-quarters of its total net income.

Bruce Rutledge of Japaninc.com writes:
++ VIEWPOINT: A Contrarian Economist Says Koizumi Just Doesn’t Get It
For those of you cheering on Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi in his
fight to reduce the size of government spending, Gregory Clark, the
chairman of Tama University, has a message for you: You’re dead wrong.
“There are large areas in the structure of the Japanese economy which
badly do need reform,” the professor says. “Unfortunately, that’s not
what Koizumi and his friends are really looking at. They’re more
interested in an economic policy of fiscal restraint and, until
recently at least, letting the weak go to the wolves, which in a
normal, healthy economy is quite reasonable. But when you have an
economy as weak as Japan’s is at the moment, it’s highly dangerous.”
Clark wades through the 700 trillion yen in public sector debt and the
several trillion yen more in bad bank loans to point to what he says
is a tremendously important figure: Japan has 1,500 trillion yen in
personal financial assets. That’s about $90,000 for every man, woman
and child. That is not a typo — a nine followed by four zeros for
every person in Japan. In US dollars.

“You could have the most efficient enterprises in the world, but
without demand, you’re finished. This should be obvious,” Clark says.
The Japanese are happy to sock their yen away in postal savings
accounts, bank time-deposits and other low-interest vehicles like
government bonds. In other words, Japan is starved for demand.
It’s not that the Japanese are cheapskates. Just ask the people at
Luis Vuitton or NTT DoCoMo. But Clark says the Japanese consumer just
doesn’t want the things Westerners want. “The thing is that us
Westerners, particularly the Anglo Saxons, just want everything and we
want it now — round-the-world trips, yachts, second houses, the
latest electronic gadgetry, second cars, third cars; you name it.”
He calls excessive demand a “tremendous aphrodisiac” for an economy.
But it’s rare in Japan. And while the West often chides itself for not
saving more, Clark points out that savings and economic health do not
go hand in hand. “We have this situation today where there is an
absolutely clear inverse correlation between economic health and
savings rates,” Clark says. “America is at the top of the health scale
and zero savings. Australia is very close behind. Some European
economies are lower because they save 8-10 percent. And there’s Japan
at the top of the savings scale, even during the bubble, and it’s the
weakest economy.”

Washington Post: Oaxaca
Baja Mexico
http://latimes.com/travel/la-111101mexico.story?coll=la%2Dtravel%2Dheadlines
Washington Post: Instant Baja
Todos Santos, Baja
http://latimes.com/travel/la-031702todos.story
Tucson
http://latimes.com/travel/la-000099649dec16.story?coll=la%2Dtravel%2Dheadlines
Southwest in general
http://latimes.com/travel/la-000099649dec16.story?coll=la%2Dtravel%2Dheadlines
Isla Mujeres, near Cancun
http://www.isla-mujeres.net/
Garrafon Reef Park near Isla Mujeres
http://isla-mujeres-mexico.com/
http://www.islamujeresonline.com.mx/
http://www.myislamujeres.com/

AP: Eager for turnaround, Japan looks to former GE chief Jack Welch
The Japanese translation of Welch’s new autobiography, “Jack: Straight From the Gut,” which made The New York Times bestseller list, is a big seller here as well. More than 165,000 copies are out in print since October.
“I learned so much from his book,” said Yasuo Nishiguchi, president of Kyocera Corp., which like other Japanese electronics companies has seen its profits battered by the global slump and competition from Asian rivals.
Emulating Welch, Nishiguchi said he recently started discussion sessions at Kyocera to encourage the exchange of ideas among employee ranks. He also praised Welch’s policy of focusing on No. 1 and No. 2 businesses and discarding less promising undertakings.

Take business lessons from this man, but don’t take any lessons from how he lives his life. 2 failed marriages. The second one recently in that scandal involving the divorcee Harvard Business Review editor who he slept with.
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NYT: Fumes and Visions Were Not a Myth for Oracle at Delphi
Now, however, a geologist, an archaeologist, a chemist and a toxicologist have teamed up to produce a wealth of evidence suggesting the ancients had it exactly right. The region’s underlying rocks turn out to be composed of oily limestone fractured by two hidden faults that cross exactly under the ruined temple, creating a path by which petrochemical fumes could rise to the surface to help induce visions.
In particular, the team found that the oracle probably came under the influence of ethylene Û a sweet-smelling gas once used as an anesthetic. In light doses, it produces feelings of aloof euphoria.

This is very cool! I love it when past history is verified by current science.
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NYT: For a Second Day, Egan Keeps Silent on an Issue Roiling the Church
“I would say the only thing that could justify his not speaking is if he is preparing his letter of resignation,” said Daniel C. Maguire, who teaches moral theology at Marquette University in Milwaukee. “I think he has to explain or resign.”
Wow, this is out of control.

Chanpon.org on Caroline Pover’s book “Being A Broad”
Pover says she woke up one morning in 1997 with the idea to start a magazine for foreign women living in Japan. She placed an ad in the Tokyo Classifieds, a free paper, asking for women to share their experience. In September 1997 she published a 16 page black & white photocopied magazine called “Being A Broad.” “I used to carry it around in my backpack,” Caroline smiles, “and hand it to foreign women on the trains: ‘Here! Read this!’”
“Being A Broad” grew from a black and white photocopied ‘zine into a glossy 56 page distributed magazine. Publishing costs were driving her into debt so she gave it up. In the quiet phase after publishing the magazine, Pover was a hub for Foreign Women coming to Japan, regularly fielding questions over email. She had an immense rolodex of women living in Japan and a large collection of relevant resources. She figured she would pull these together and write a book.


“The overwhelming majority of foreign women who were single in Japan, or who talked about their experience about being single here, they were not happy about the fact they were single, and they felt that it was very difficult to change that status.”
So how does she advise women who are single? “If she’s a single woman and she finds Japanese men attractive, it’s usually a matter of understanding that that the vibes coming from the Japanese man are not going to be the vibes coming from the Western men that you might be used to dating. You need to understand that a Japanese man is probably very interested in you but probably is not showing it, in a way that you’re used to.” She continues, “You’ll likely have to make the first move, and you might have to do that for quite a long time.”

doh!
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Long, (after-the fact, not so) interesting article on fasion in Japan in the New Yorker.
Other Japanese designers address international affairs, including Kosuke Tsumura, the creator of a line called Final Home. For the past few years, a mainstay of the Final Home collection has been a long coat made from transparent nylon which looks like a quilted down coat with all the down removed. The coat is designed to serve as a final home in the case of a natural or man-made disaster, Tsumura explained to me when I went to his studio, in a far-flung commercial district of Tokyo. For warmth, you can stuff its many pockets with newspapers, or with the floppy nylon teddy bears which Final Home also sells.
“Each customer customizes the number of bears, according to the weather,” Tsumura told me. “In my own coat, I wear maybe ten bears. And if you have children, they can also play with the bears and not be scared of the disaster.” After the Kobe earthquake, Tsumura sent ten of his coats to the disaster-relief efforts. When I saw him in November he was contemplating making a coat-and-bear donation to the Afghan refugees. Another item available from the Final Home store is a peculiar toy machine gun, made from floppy stuffed nylon. “It is a criticism of war, because the gun is not usable,” Tsumura told me. “It is an expression of a yearning for peace.”

That is a bunch of crap.
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Confessions of a former celibate
A former priest, now married, thinks celibacy should no longer be an absolute condition for the priesthood.
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NYTimes: Connecticut Report Revisits Egan’s Role in Settling Abuse Cases
The documents cited by the newspaper appear to support what victims and their lawyers had long publicly maintained: during his tenure as bishop, Cardinal Egan had allowed priests accused of sexually abusing children to continue to work in the Bridgeport diocese by moving them to new assignments, typically after receiving some counseling or treatment. In certain instances, the documents suggest, he removed priests only when lawsuits were filed or new reports of previous abuse were received.

Though there appears to be no evidence to date that the accused priests committed additional acts of child sexual abuse in their new assignments, the documents suggest that Cardinal Egan and his predecessor, Bishop Walter Curtis, failed to aggressively investigate priests who had multiple complaints against them. He even returned some to work that directly involved children.
They also indicate, as had long been all but conceded, that Cardinal Egan never took the allegations of abuse to law enforcement officials, even though there has been a law in Connecticut since at least 1971 requiring members of the clergy to report cases of abuse of minors. Finally, the documents show that he did not believe many of the abuse claims and that he displayed little confidence in, or sympathy for, the people who reported them.

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NYTimes: Former Altar Boy Describes Years of Abuse, Then Years of Silence
“These people, they’ve been able to survive through secrecy,” Mr. Serrano, 37, said. “The truth is so important and secrecy is so damaging. Not just for the people who have experienced abuse, but everyone needs to see this horrific truth for what it truly is.”

Often, though, legal experts say, victims cannot file criminal charges because statutes of limitations, which vary from state to state, have expired by the time victims are able or willing to discuss what occurred.
“That’s the travesty,” said Stephen C. Rubino, a lawyer from Margate City, N.J., who has represented victims in more than 300 cases of sexual abuse in about 50 dioceses.
Over the past week and a half, Mr. Rubino said, he has kept a tally of those who have telephoned his office. “Two hundred callers,” he said. “And not a single one under statute.”
“I’m being crushed,” he said of the volume of calls. “It has broken down psychological barriers, decadeslong shells in people who now say, `I’m going to talk about this.’


“I was talking to someone I know who’s Catholic Û I mean, a dyed-in- the-wool, beat-your-chest Catholic,” he said. “I asked him what he thought about what was happening in Boston. He said, `Isolated incident.’ Then I told him about my situation.
“When I finished, I got up to leave. He took my hand. Said he was sorry,” Mr. Serrano recalled. “I said, `Don’t be sorry. Just be aware. Just be aware.’ “

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MACHINE SOUL: A History Of Techno
If there is one central idea in techno, it is of the harmony between man and machine. As Juan Atkins puts it: “You gotta look at it like, techno is technological. It’s an attitude to making music that sounds futuristic: something that hasn’t been done before.” This idea is commonplace throughout much of avant-garde 20th-century art –early musical examples include Russolo’s 1913 Art of Noises manifesto and ’20s ballets by Erik Satie (“Relâche”) and George Antheil (“Ballet méchanique”). Many of Russolo’s ideas prefigure today’s techno in everything but the available hardware, like the use of nonmusical instruments in his 1914 composition, Awakening of a City.