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(1)Gov't eyes IC tags for better food distribution

(1)Gov't eyes IC tags for better food distribution

TOKYO, Japan - Photo shows an integrated circuit (IC) shipping tag which Japan's farm ministry plans to out to nationwide use in a bid to improve the distribution and freshness of perishable foods. A data recording and recognition system based on the chip will be designed to cut distribution costs, facilitate the reading of data on perishables, speed up distribution and ensure food is fresher, officials said on Aug 15.

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(2)Gov't eyes IC tags for better food distribution

(2)Gov't eyes IC tags for better food distribution

TOKYO, Japan - A woman holds an integrated circuit (IC) shipping tag which Japan's farm ministry plans to out to nationwide use in a bid to improve the distribution and freshness of perishable foods. A data recording and recognition system based on the chip will be designed to cut distribution costs, facilitate the reading of data on perishables, speed up distribution and ensure food is fresher, officials said on Aug 15.

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Female Japanese hurler debuts in Tokyo Big-Six baseball

Female Japanese hurler debuts in Tokyo Big-Six baseball

TOKYO, Japan - Megumi Takemoto, the first female Japanese player in the history of the Tokyo Big-Six Collegiate Baseball League and a fresher at the University of Tokyo, makes her debut in a rookie tournament game at Tokyo's Jingu Stadium on Nov. 4.

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Takemoto 1st female Japanese in Tokyo Big-Six baseball

Takemoto 1st female Japanese in Tokyo Big-Six baseball

TOKYO, Japan - Hurler Megumi Takemoto, the first female Japanese player in the history of the Tokyo Big-Six Collegiate Baseball League and a fresher at the University of Tokyo, smiles Nov. 3 while warming up in a bullpen at the city's Jingu Stadium. The university's rookies beat Waseda University rookies 4-0 during the day although Takemoto, 18, did not get a chance to pitch. The other Big Six teams are Keio, Hosei, Meiji and Rikkyo universities.

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Mongolia holds ice festival to promote winter tourism

STORY: Mongolia holds ice festival to promote winter tourism DATELINE: March 4, 2022 LENGTH: 00:01:12 LOCATION: KHATGAL, Mongolia CATEGORY: SOCIETY SHOTLIST: 1. various of the ice festival STORYLINE: Mongolia kicked off an annual ice festival in its Khatgal village of the northern province of Khuvsgul on Thursday. The annual festival called "Blue Pearl" was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021. The two-day tourism event has been co-organized by the Ministry of Environment and Tourism and the provincial governor's office since 2000. "The tourism event aims to revive the country's pandemic-hit tourism sector, promote winter tourism, better protect Khuvsgul Lake's ecosystem and increase the income of local residents through tourism. This year's event is expected to attract at least 30,000 domestic and foreign tourists," Sharavdorj Iderbayasgalan, governor of Khuvsgul province, told reporters during the event. Under the motto of "Fresher, Purer," the festival included many activi

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A cargo carrier

A cargo carrier

Three thousand ryo a day falls where it must. This senryu poem means that everyday people spend three thousand ryo (monetary unit in the Edo Period), one thousand in the fish market in the morning, one thousand in the theatres during the daytime, and one thousand in the Yoshiwara pleasure quarter in the evening. There was a fish market on the east side of the northern edge of Nihonbashi Bridge during the Edo Period. The man in this photograph is selling fish he just bought at the fish market. Probably taken near Nihonbashi. Since there was no refrigeration then, fish had to be sold within a day and people ate fresher fish than today. This stereograph is dated 1904.==Date:1904, Place:Tokyo, Photo:Underwood, (Credit:Nagasaki University Library/Kyodo News Images) [Cabinet Number97‐77‐0]

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(2)Gov't eyes IC tags for better food distribution

(2)Gov't eyes IC tags for better food distribution

TOKYO, Japan - A woman holds an integrated circuit (IC) shipping tag which Japan's farm ministry plans to out to nationwide use in a bid to improve the distribution and freshness of perishable foods. A data recording and recognition system based on the chip will be designed to cut distribution costs, facilitate the reading of data on perishables, speed up distribution and ensure food is fresher, officials said on Aug 15. (Kyodo)

  •  
(1)Gov't eyes IC tags for better food distribution

(1)Gov't eyes IC tags for better food distribution

TOKYO, Japan - Photo shows an integrated circuit (IC) shipping tag which Japan's farm ministry plans to out to nationwide use in a bid to improve the distribution and freshness of perishable foods. A data recording and recognition system based on the chip will be designed to cut distribution costs, facilitate the reading of data on perishables, speed up distribution and ensure food is fresher, officials said on Aug 15. (Kyodo)

  •  
(2)Gov't eyes IC tags for better food distribution

(2)Gov't eyes IC tags for better food distribution

TOKYO, Japan - A woman holds an integrated circuit (IC) shipping tag which Japan's farm ministry plans to out to nationwide use in a bid to improve the distribution and freshness of perishable foods. A data recording and recognition system based on the chip will be designed to cut distribution costs, facilitate the reading of data on perishables, speed up distribution and ensure food is fresher, officials said on Aug 15. (Kyodo)

  •  
(1)Gov't eyes IC tags for better food distribution

(1)Gov't eyes IC tags for better food distribution

TOKYO, Japan - Photo shows an integrated circuit (IC) shipping tag which Japan's farm ministry plans to out to nationwide use in a bid to improve the distribution and freshness of perishable foods. A data recording and recognition system based on the chip will be designed to cut distribution costs, facilitate the reading of data on perishables, speed up distribution and ensure food is fresher, officials said on Aug 15. (Kyodo)

  •  
Female Japanese hurler debuts in Tokyo Big-Six baseball

Female Japanese hurler debuts in Tokyo Big-Six baseball

TOKYO, Japan - Megumi Takemoto, the first female Japanese player in the history of the Tokyo Big-Six Collegiate Baseball League and a fresher at the University of Tokyo, makes her debut in a rookie tournament game at Tokyo's Jingu Stadium on Nov. 4.

  •  
Takemoto 1st female Japanese in Tokyo Big-Six baseball

Takemoto 1st female Japanese in Tokyo Big-Six baseball

TOKYO, Japan - Hurler Megumi Takemoto, the first female Japanese player in the history of the Tokyo Big-Six Collegiate Baseball League and a fresher at the University of Tokyo, smiles Nov. 3 while warming up in a bullpen at the city's Jingu Stadium. The university's rookies beat Waseda University rookies 4-0 during the day although Takemoto, 18, did not get a chance to pitch. The other Big Six teams are Keio, Hosei, Meiji and Rikkyo universities.

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