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 Rob Gilhooly

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Rob Gilhooly
Rob Gilhooly is an award-winning British photographer and writer whose work has appeared in publications around the globe, including the Guardian and New Scientist. He was formerly a staff writer at the Japan Times and has contributed as a freelance since 2002. In 2004, he obtained an MA in journalism. His website can be found at www.japanphotojournalist.com
COMMUNITY
Apr 21, 2002
Abode of the gods
An indentation on the peak of Sri Pada, a mountain in central Sri Lanka, is reputed by some to have been made when Buddha first set foot on Earth. The mountain is also said to be the place where butterflies go to die. Another legend has it that the world's highest mountains, the Himalayas, are inhabited...
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Mar 17, 2002
The tower and the story
On Christmas Eve, 1958, thousands of people poured through Hamamatsucho Station in Tokyo's Minato Ward to take in Japan's first postwar shot at a "public attraction." There was nothing particularly cute about it; no fearsome rides, or cuddly characters to have your photo taken with. What's more, visitors...
COMMUNITY
Mar 10, 2002
Shall we sizzle?
At first glance, Koji Kanazawa looks like any other desk-beagle: neatly pressed gray pants, white shirt and bland tie topped off with a bashful, almost apologetic bow.
COMMUNITY
Feb 24, 2002
So you think stress is all in the mind?
It's as inevitable and, in most cases, as unwelcome as that overcrowded rush-hour train. Stress: We're all its victims to some degree. But do we know what causes it, and what its long-term effects on the body can be?
COMMUNITY
Feb 10, 2002
The street beat goes on -- but for how long?
Come 8 p.m., the nationalist black vans blaring polemics around Hachiko square outside JR Shibuya Station give way to an equally noisy, but far more friendly soundtrack.
COMMUNITY
Feb 3, 2002
Of nationhood and identity
Writer Ian Buruma was born in the Netherlands in 1951. He attended university in Japan and has spent a large part of his adult life in Asia. His nonfiction works include "The Wages of Guilt: Memories of War in Germany and Japan," "Behind the Mask," "A Japanese Mirror" and "Voltaire's Coconuts." Buruma...
COMMUNITY
Feb 3, 2002
Sake brewed with a feminine touch
SHIBATA, Niigata Pref. -- Orderly chaos might be a good way to describe the Ichishima Sake Brewery on this bone-chilling January morning.
JAPAN
Jan 22, 2002
Sapporo soccer hooligans face police-fired dragnet
Just as previews of the movie "Spiderman" have started to appear in Japan, police in Hokkaido have come up with their own web-spouting device to combat hooliganism during this year's soccer World Cup, to be cohosted by Japan and South Korea.
COMMUNITY
Jan 13, 2002
Fishy facts and figures
* The global fish harvest topped 120 million tons in 1998, a threefold increase over 1960.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art
Dec 26, 2001
Still F.A.B. after all these years
Almost four decades after taking off on the TV screen, "Thunderbirds are go" once more.
COMMUNITY
Dec 16, 2001
From 'shashin' to snapshots
Shashin, the Japanese word that came to mean "photograph," was used quite differently when it first entered everyday language here. Derived from the two characters for "reflect" and "true," it arrived in the early Edo Period from China, where it was used to refer to portraits that were thought to express...
COMMUNITY
Dec 16, 2001
From pinholes to pixels, photgraphy keeps evolving
The camera on a tripod outside Edward Levinson's countryside home in Chiba Prefecture is deceptive in its simplicity. It has no lens or viewfinder, no focusing dial, and no shutter-release button.
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Nov 18, 2001
Hell on four wheels
It is a bad, humiliating start to the day. Usually, I can get from my office to the platform of JR Tamachi Station in about 10 minutes. Today it has taken just under 50 minutes.
COMMUNITY
Nov 11, 2001
Trepanners open their minds with a hole in the head
Amanda Feilding spent four years searching for a surgeon to perform the operation. Several agreed, then backed out at the last minute, fearing the consequences if anything went wrong.
COMMUNITY
Nov 11, 2001
Japan's trepanning history is full of holes
In his 1967 study, "Prehistoric and Early History of Trepanation," Professor F.P. Lisowski of the University of Tasmania, Australia, cites the work of two anthropologists who suggested that trepanation might have been practiced in Japan.
COMMUNITY
Oct 28, 2001
Kazuo Ishiguro: In praise of nostalgia as idealism
Kazuo Ishiguro was born in Nagasaki in 1954, and at age 5 he moved with his parents to London, where he has lived ever since. In 1986, his second novel, "An Artist of the Floating World," was nominated for Britain's leading award for fiction, the Booker Prize. Three years later, his next and arguably...
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Oct 7, 2001
10,000 views of Mount Fuji, rising through the steam
The view from the bath is picture-perfect. Through the thick steam rising from the piping hot water, foothills dotted with lush pines and rolling fields of greens and gold give way to a turquoise-blue ocean. From the center rises Mount Fuji, its snow-dusted peak circled in a halo of marshmallow-like...
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Sep 30, 2001
Love, love them do
Ask Kyoshi Matsushita about "Beatlemania" and he's far more likely to wax lyrical about Lucanidae, Silphidae, Scarabaedae and Dorcus titanus than John, Paul, George and Ringo.
Japan Times
COMMUNITY
Sep 23, 2001
Dream weavers of a bygone era
When made up for work, Norie is perhaps as close to the classic image of Japan as you could wish. Clad in a colorful yet demure kimono, wooden sandals and a jet-black wig that provides a striking contrast to the white makeup lavished on her fine features, she looks like a doll.
COMMUNITY
Sep 16, 2001
Divination business thriving, for the foreseeable future
Head bowed, eyes closed, silently intoning my birth date and a prayer-like plea for good fortune; I feel a little silly, but I'm doing as I've been told.

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