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<UID>
9201040071
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
920126
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, January 26, 1992
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
COM
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<PAGE>
1G
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<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
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<MEMO>

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<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1992, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
IMPORTING AN ENEMY HURTS U.S., JAPAN
</HEADLINE>
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<BODY>
MINNEAPOLIS --  The Japanese, we are told, don't want our cars. They don't
want our electronics. They don't want our work habits. 

  But they do want our Super Bowl.

  That was pretty clear  this week, when I spotted no less than 30 Japanese
workers from a single Japanese TV station, all here for the big game. I
noticed them racing around the Metrodome, seeking interviews with players. I
noticed them lugging video equipment, often running from one location to the
next, the heavy steel units slamming on their shoulders.
  I also noticed something else: they stayed together, and they  did not
mingle. During the coffee breaks and the often long waits outside the
interview ballrooms, the Japanese collected in a tight group, almost never
speaking with any outside media. 
  Because  of this, I went to speak with them.
  "Where are you guys from?"
  It is the most simple of opening lines, but they seemed to be taken aback.
  "Tokyo. Nippon TV," one of them said.
  He  pulled out a small pin and handed it to me. The others awaited my next
question.
  "Is the Super Bowl a big event in Japan?"
  "Yes. Big. Very popular."
  "What time will it be on there?"
  "At 8 o'clock Monday morning."
  "Eight o'clock? Will anybody actually stay at home to watch it?"
  They looked amongst themselves, mumbled a few things, shook their heads.
  "No," said one,  "everyone go to work."
Recent events fuel bad feelings 
  The sentiment in this country is that workaholic Japan has recovered well
enough from World War II, thank you, it's time America paid attention  to
itself. There was the recent  Asian trip by President Bush and the Big Three
automakers, which fueled anti-Japanese sentiment when a supposed trade
agreement was denied by Japanese officials.
  There was the senior Japanese lawmaker who suggested American workers are
"lazy" and "illiterate"  --  which rightfully angered millions in this
country. There was the recent  Los Angeles county decision  to cancel a $122
million rail-car contract with a Japanese company and award it to an American
firm. 
  There was Lee Iaccoca's combustive speech which blasted Japan for unfair
trade practices. There  are companies now offering substantial cash rewards
for employees who buy American cars.
  Why, even baseball got into the act this week, when a group headed by
Nintendo Co. of Japan tried to buy  the Seattle Mariners. That bid --  despite
the woeful finances of the Mariners --  seems doomed to rejection, because
baseball does not smile on foreign ownership, particularly now.
  In short, we  are just shy of all-out Japan bashing these days --  enough
that visitors from the East can feel it when they arrive.
  "Yes, I have noticed it," said Joe Satomi, the liaison for Nippon TV.
"You  hear it everywhere. In Japan as well. We are told there that America
hates us."
Our cultures have connections 
  And yet, isn't it interesting? A country we accuse of ignoring our
products sure has  a thing for our culture. Tonight's Super Bowl? The Japanese
will tape it and watch it -- and they don't even play football! American
movies are enormous hits over there. Blue jeans, sneakers, baseball  caps,
Madonna -- all  popular exports. A recent TV news report showed a Japanese
rock band whose lead singer wore ripped pants and dyed his hair blond. Who was
he imitating?
  "The people in Japan  like American things very much," Satomi said. "What
is happening between us is the government. It's not right. A lot of Japanese
society is not good, I think. Too much work. But some of American society  is
not good either. It is both our faults."
  And yet, it didn't keep him from talking to me, or me him. It didn't keep
us from liking one another as people. I asked if he planned on taking back any
 souvenirs --  something American reporters almost never do from a Super Bowl
-- and he pointed to a colleague named Tak and laughed. "He brings home whole
sack. He's like Santa Claus."
  Cold Wars  aren't good for anyone. We finally got past Russia and now,
having dominated Iraq, we seem to be in need of an enemy. Is Japan next? We
obviously have shared interests, Americans enjoy traveling there,  Japanese
love coming here, taking home the souvenirs.  And yet a little hatred goes a
long way. I watched the Japanese group go off by itself and wondered if all
this bashing wasn't part of the reason  they didn't mix in.
  A shame. What is going on is an economic thing, it can be handled between
governments and by adjusted buying habits. But starting to see red when we see
Japanese people doesn't  seem necessary or worthy of this country. From the
Super Bowl to the automobile, America can export  many  great things.
  Hatred shouldn't be one of them.
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