Australian Lingerie's Relaxed Image. [Australia]
Australia, women dress
the body rather than wear the clothes and we are very advanced with intimate
apparel that
shows the body in a relaxed way," says Sue Morphett, managing director
of Bonds, the
biggest selling underwear brand in Australia. "European
lingerie displays the body more in a boudoir sense. We
talk bodies." Renowned for
generations
for its ubiquitous men's undershirts and dowdy women's briefs, Bonds transformed its image
when it became a major sponsor of the Sydney Olympics in 2000. The company that had not sold a bra before the turn
of the 21st century is now a market leader in the women's and youth market with colorful,
sporty, mix-and-match bras, camisoles, hipster briefs, lady boxers and even
women's
undershirts, or chesty singlets as they are known in Australia. |
Cervical Cancer Vaccine Proves Effective: Test Results. [Australia] Final-stage
clinical trials of a cervical cancer vaccine developed by University of Queensland (UQ)
scientists, have shown the drug to be 100 per cent effective. The vaccine is called Gardasil
and it is
expected to be submitted for approval by the United States Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) within the next two months. |
China
Simplifies Procedures for Marriage, Divorce.
[China] Chinese couples planning to get married may soon
do so without
a letter from their employers testifying to their unmarried status and without first
having a health examination, according to a new regulation issued by the State Council
Monday. The regulation, to take
effect Oct. 1,
consists of six chapters, or 22 items, which will annul the old version that
was in effect
for nine years. An adult male and female will
be able to marry each other legally by only providing their ID cards and residence
documents, and by signing a statement that they are single and not related,
the new
regulation said. |
Losing the Gift of Tongues. [China] Sept. 20 last year, the news went round the world of the death
of Yang Huan-yi, a resident of Jiangyong district in China's Hunan
province. She was in her 90's.
She had acquired fame, and not merely with a few academic linguists, as the
last surviving woman who practiced from childhood in the Nushu system of writing. Nushu is not a language, but a recently discovered
script developed over centuries by women in that remote provincial area as means of
sharing thoughts and feelings between close friends. It
emerged from a long oral tradition of women's storytelling and performance. Fortunately, enough academic ink has
been spent on
the subject of Nushu to ensure a record survives of its 1,000 or so graphs and their
phonetic relationship to local Chinese dialect. "Nushu
country" has even become a tourist attraction, heightened by the misleading portrayal
of Nushu as a "secret women's code" unreadable by men.
|
Most Japanese Support Female Royal Succession Poll. [Japan<
span
style="font-family:Arial">] A record number of Japanese want a law on imperial succession
changed to allow a woman to succeed to the throne, an opinion poll showed. The Tokyo Shimbun newspaper said on Sunday the poll
showed 84 percent of respondents approved of the idea that an Empress could
rule Japan,
which the paper said was the highest proportion it had ever recorded in such
a survey. The question of succession to the thr
one now
occupied by 71-year-old Emperor Akihito is gaining urgency because no boys have been born
into the Imperial household for four decades.
The
poll comes weeks before an advisory panel to Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi is expected
to issue recommendations on whether to revise the 1947 law limiting accession to males and
their descendants. |
Throne Should Be Open to Women, Panel to Say
. [Japan] A government advisory panel will recommend allowing women and
their descendants to succeed to the Japanese throne, one of the world's oldest monarchies,
the head of the panel said Tuesday. If the
recommendation becomes law, it would resolve a looming succession crisis. Emperor Akihito, 71, has two sons, but
no boys have
been born into the royal family in 40 years.
Only
males can ascend the throne. If
succession
rules are changed, Princess Aiko, Akihito's 3-year-old granddaughter, could
one day become
Japan's
first reigning empress since the 18th century. The
move might, however, spread discontent among conservatives. |
Sick
of Their Husbands in Graying Japan.
[Japan] In Japan, retirement has
become a risky business for many wives, who are finding the stress of their
husband's
presence at home unendurable. Though
after-retirement stress is a common problem in most developed countries as husbands and
wives try to balance relationships in their twilight years, analysts say Japan has become
extraordinary for myriad reasons -- including the fact that one-fifth of Japanese are now
over 65, the highest percentage in the world.
Even
as gender roles have changed for younger people here, with women entering the workforce in
record numbers, older Japanese have remained far more rigid.
Part of the problem is that the nature of Japanese family life
has changed
dramatically over the past two decades. The
tradition of retired parents living with their married adult children is rapidly
disappearing, with new generations remaining single well into their forties
and modern
young couples choosing greater privacy. As
older couples are forced to spend more time alone together, the divorce rate
among those
married more than 20 years -- a group that includes most of Japan's married
senior
citizens -- is now the fastest-growing in the country, more than doubling to
41,958
divorces in 2000 compared with 20,435 cases in 1985, according to government
statistics. |
Obituary:
Endon Mahmood, Wife of Malay Leader. [Malaysia]
Endon Mahmood, the wife of Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, died Thursday after a
nearly four-year battle with breast cancer. She
was 64. Endon, a publicly beloved figure who
recently underwent intensive chemotherapy, passed away surrounded by her family at their
official residence Thursday morning in Putrajaya, Malaysia's administrative
capital, said
Endon's son, Kamaluddin Abdullah. Endon, whose
mother was Japanese and father was among Malaysia's first successful modern
businessmen
from the Malay Muslim majority, discovered she had cancer in 2002 after her
twin sister,
Noraini, was earlier diagnosed with the disease. Noraini
died in 2003. Endon had been deeply involved
in awareness programs for breast cancer, the main cause of illness-related death for
Malaysian women. She has said she refused to
feel sorry for herself, and felt fortunate she could obtain the best medical
treatment. |