Japan accounted for about one-third of the $123-billion trade deficit that the United States ran
Japanese college football coaches will receive a firsthand look at American coaching techniques when two Claremont-Mudd-Scripps coaches visit the Orient from April 19 through May 8.
A U.S.
Hiromi Taniguchi of Japan won the men's division in the London Marathon, and Ingrid Kristiansen won
The personal representative of Japan's prime minister, taking his country's case for relief from U.S. economic sanctions to President Reagan, said today that "it is Japan's responsibility to discharge what is expected of it."
Yomiuri: We think that U.S.-Japan relations are facing a crucial period.
Japan held $180.3 billion in net foreign assets at the end of 1986, surpassing the highest U.S
Toshihiko Seko of Japan left a pack of world class runners on Heartbreak Hill today and went on to
Japan Travel-Phone offers direct telephone service to anyone in need of English-speaking help in
Takuya Muguruma of Japan knocked out Azael Moran of Panama in the fifth round to win the vacant
stage of the Japan America Theatre with orders to make ensemble music.
Japan's minister of international trade and industry said Wednesday that he and U.S.
Japan's looming economic discomfiture and the possibility of the need for major retrenchment and restructuring are bringing with it an age-old Western bane and poison: anti-Semitism.
Nihon Keizai Shimbun Inc., Japan's leading economic daily newspaper, will begin publishing a U.S. edition via satellite transmission from Tokyo on May 1, officials said today.
Four Japanese fishing boats were fired on by a warship of an unidentified country Monday in the Yellow Sea, the Japanese Maritime Safety Agency said Tuesday.
Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone today left open the possibility of providing Japanese money for international efforts to ensure the safety of Persian Gulf shipping.
Japan's trade ministry has given the go-ahead for Japanese makers of computer memory chips to increase production levels, a move that is eliciting sighs of relief from customers in the United States.
Business leaders here say they are giving more than lip-service to the government's new campaign to get them to purchase more supplies abroad.
Preston Martin, vice chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, said Wednesday that an end to the flow of "tens of billions of dollars" in Japanese capital that finances American budget deficits would force higher interest rates in the United States.
The first ferryboat to sail from China to Japan since World War II arrived in the western port city