J,esescientist report
TOKYO.
ーthcjt cdnefflclenUystol^さ的lar ertei^gy has beendeyejopeci by a grヽoひp'of Jcfpqnesesdehttsts qt Kyoto'UnWersltV, the Asahi Sh!hTfbiirt, a隨jor Jo pane站 doUy reportedr)Bcebtly.'-The gr<^(】ーもy.Profまor Zehicfu Y os hida at Kyoto University's '卩acu]Uy ^ of Engineeririg, wiU report on the ,bri^ひkthfouさh to a . nqtional cliemlccilcdngFe,s^ -to 'be: held
atNlhon Univ&sltYIn Tokyら.
,ぞrofessorYoshlcla was not 0N^lkiibぉforcpmnfient on the reported development of then©Ws!L>bstd".
A md(Jor drawfeacjc With solcjrenerるy isIts instability. .Thefefcire,sclen"sU hcr/eも— trying h力rd to develop a 4^b-starKe that cari store sotar energy aJT^cT rel^seIt as the occasion derhanids.
Asahl,s article says that the new sリbstance has not yet b的n na巾ecL But the stpry " Is a —争tk: nhaterial CO nop os edゃf nodboreliene, rriきthylt)qse and cycmobase. ^loぁordlne is, drawn fr<>m cJl<Eyclopentacheneぶontalned IncKjcfeori.,、
'If: the sリbミ的nc:e receives sunlぉht,It changes in f9rm 。s itひbsoi4?s enetgy thき sun, But the t em"さrat鳴of
如きilbstance r印or〖6cUy remains unchanged,
Asdbr reportedthqt the si;bstarice stores 91?ぉlo-cdik!rie多per one kg, whichIs about equalto the calories required to heat on$ ikilogn?m of v^atervfr岡eight degrees Cto100 degrees C•
In order to cJrav/ energy frbm thさslib"cmc» allthat is hおesse I ry isきo tontctct it
with 。' very smaUamogntr of silver* When all onergtoi stor,, ed in thesubst加ce aWfelaasマ ed, th, sijbstcmce r争tufm, to Its 0riglhゃ1shqp^, mcrfUng it possiiblさto "幼1hesub,tcMi沐 0V6广:qnd overogln, the story' said.
It aUo reported that the devielopment canゅn fee i;seti tQ alMbonditlclrv bulW,
A, ,ndゅ晌dentカr9011for CaiWun加,ぇーon柳OHjiitn
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VOL 45 — NO, 31
f=RlDAY, APRIL 24,1981
,薩'
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TORONTO. — Toronto Mayor Art i9glfet0n is卩efsorted to havさ、ntertained a grobp Qf Japanese,siness--men in his office rゅntly and was. delighted to hear they want toゎuild (? hotelright behind Qty Hallin t« parking lot acrossfrom the'c6iJrt building :
"We'dlike to call—it the Warwick,:' said one of the bu$inessmen, "Qh," said .the Toronto mayor, "maybe you should do cilUtle research Qbout the ndme first."
The ViAarwick, of course, is. thらhlstorぉュliotきl6n ^ Jひrvis St" now sia ted for demolition byt made famous, oyer the ゾears as (he home oflac]lies oftheeveiiing.
Patti Scikaki repeaぉqs UBS
f6Dl ad V athlete
VANCOUVER/——Patti Sakald,became the.きst' re-Deat winner of the women's Athlete oftKe^ S^eartrof:^by recenriy cjs tJie University of BXlho no reef its women athletes at the UBC Faculty Club.
、
For the secやnd straight year, the second-yearゅyslcal education stydent won all gyrrmastics events ot both the CcinadianWest and Co nod ion Interuniversity Athletic IMton meさts to win theIndividual titles. Last month, Sdkaにi was namec^ provindaluniversity othletもof the year.
TORONTO.ド"A I Garden Of Serenity ,81"(above)w,s shown at他s /NationaH Hp迈e Sbowゃ0迈Aprilipth to18tti at the (:;oHsauiti, Exhibition ¥1 ace, Toi;ionto. The d"play is an exfifmple of豕iiei /vvprk by ,プ.ざ.3. GafdeiTEtiterprises, Willowdale & Richm(md腿.
Asリrvieyl)yJdi^an"きlaぉorきroups employees re,
TOKYO. — According to 。 newsu?vey rーeased rece/itly the Japanese realiy do work harder. マ\
The suiS^ey SvCIS carried out bv the Labor Conference for )ぉ9m0tibn of Pollcy, d grouping 6f m。ior idbor unions throughout the dountry, aiicj hedded byiTosMfunnil^ate* yama, president of thきAll Japan Federation of Electric Machine Workers' Llnfons.
The results of thesurvey, whlcK were released recently, show fhat employees of private firms work an average 2,016 hours each year, excluding overtime.
According to thelatest statistics available from the Ministry of Labor, A m eric on company employees put in an average of"! ,934 hours per year, bv»t this includes overtime.
For West .Giermqns, the figure is1,728 houi;s.
,tIs e印—ed thattiie$e statistics; will.be used ,n the CO mi fig springlabor offensive where unions havemacfゃa rゃdudtion of workingトours a majordemandsゅnd 6nly in importance to a wage rise.
Thelongest hodrs Vvorlced ^~- 2,844 per year — were in むanspo rt-related businesses, while thelow est —1,706 — Were in technologyIntensive Industries.
The $urvey c6vered 902 company -labor unions. Of these, 40 percent worked
00-2,000 hours per year, while a further 23 per cent registered 2,000-2,050.'
-In genefol,it was found that the hours of work were less at ccompanies employing alarge ntmnber of people.
TORONTOiONT*
Se^tiq,4憲多crimhlcj[ti0it charged •••
T纏訓画麵rt
幽薩of画雇hers
TOKYO. — The Tpkyo District Courtィecentlyreiiectさcl requests from _t>yo c6uples of Japanese mothers and American fathers for^ court confirm* at ion of. thさlf offspring as Jaゃanesenationqis.
The requests haci been made by Mrs. Etsuko Sugト yama, 34, of Nagar"eyqma, Chib。 Prefecture, for her 2-yeor-o}d daughter Sqoii, and the p brents ofi Hanoico Sha-pir^o, 3, of Tokyo* T[ie two couples claimecT that theii^ ぶh11cIre n were entはled to obtain Japanese nationalはゾ.
ThecQurt ru"ng said that the N cit ion ality Law , under wMdr t-hデty/ociiiilc)ren have beend^rUed Japanese fiat Ion-cil"y, is. not uncon$tltutional*
Inかe suits, the po(ent$ argued that the. Mationality Lav/, whidv grants Japanese nati。nbllty加Iy t6 children born of J。pqnゃse fothers, constitutes鍵xualdiscrimination one I Is therefore uneon* stltutionol.
Saori nowhqs U.S. natkm-ality becouse her father William Wethera11,40, is an American. But Hcmak6 is legall广srtateless because her father, Owen Shapiro, a natu-raUzed Amedcan, cfoes not meet certain requirements of Americanlaws concerning nationality.
The two couples filed the suits against the government in1977 one I1978 respectively
after their requests tolocal governments for reglstra〜n of their daughters as Japanese nation CI〗s had fceenre-jectecL
In (iQi^cling down the decision, presiホngJudgei Shi— gew Sato said thattheMatlo* nality"w JsIn tendedT to avoid dualn^tioriality and that -thelaw pro^cl,s for mきasures an- jaUow for th& rtaturalはa"on of children born to Jap <ones e rnoth" onや dlien fathers antj, therefore, thelaw doesno t violalt e the Cons"tut!o'n, which pi• ohlb its sexoalcl"crirnlhciti6n,
The (judge, however, noted thatspxuoi dlscrゅlnま6n exists in the present paternal nationalitylavV dnd so id whether or not JapaD shoi)ld adopt a rtatlonalltylowliv corpora ting fcoth the partぉnal 加d maternal theories should be stud led.
iAArs. Suglyanria saicf a I a pre$s conferencelater that the ruHng "played" withlogic by clqlrhihg that the patdHneal nationalitylaw d〖cTれot contravene the provisions concerning sexualequality in the Constitution.
Wether oilsaid that the decision ron controry to th« spirit of the ConstUution.
Referring to the judg" statement that chUdren of Japanese mothers and norv Japanese fathers could apply
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