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Word: miyamoto (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...been building for three years to race. "It's a hobby, a very time-consuming one," Jozwiak admits, in what is a frequent refrain among a culture of diehards with day jobs. The crowd was about 70% male, even more so in the droid builders group. But Nikki Miyamoto, a costume designer from L.A., brought the R2 she's been working on for two years, with brushed copper plates...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World's Biggest Star Wars Party | 5/25/2007 | See Source »

...little before 7:30 p.m., Kunihiko Miyamoto was busy dealing with the day's crisis - helping a housewife who'd lost the key to her bicycle lock. It was the standard dramatic police work for the 53-year-old Miyamoto, who manned a station on a commuter train line in Tokiwadai in northern Tokyo. Miyamoto was the sort of police officer who helped elderly pedestrians pass the train crossing, and kept an eye out for the drunken salarymen who, buzzed from a night of office imbibing, threatened to take headers off the platform. "He held the safety of the people...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mourning a Humble Hero | 2/20/2007 | See Source »

...That February evening, however, Miyamoto was called upon to do something extraordinary. As he helped unlock the bicycle, a passerby rushed into his one-man koban to tell him that a woman was standing on the nearby train tracks. Miyamoto jogged over to the tracks and escorted the woman back to his police box, as she pulled against him and screamed that she wanted to die. When they made it back to the koban, the woman broke free and ran toward the rail crossing. With a train less than a quarter-mile away, Miyamoto leapt onto the tracks and tried...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mourning a Humble Hero | 2/20/2007 | See Source »

...Miyamoto's death was mourned and his sacrifice celebrated in tiny Tokiwadai and throughout Tokyo. His koban was stuffed with flowers and cards from well wishers, and his colleagues lost track of the number of people who signed Miyamoto's condolence book. While Miyamoto was still in the hospital, students at a nearby elementary school delivered hundreds of folded cranes, a traditional get-well gift. "He was a stout man with caring eyes," remembers a tearful 73-year-old Yoshie Ikeda. "He always called out to me, saying 'Take care!'" Prime Minister Shinzo Abe visited Miyamoto's police station...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mourning a Humble Hero | 2/20/2007 | See Source »

...people who live and work around Tokiwadai will have to get by without Miyamoto looking out for them - and as the city closes down the kobans, omawari like him will become a vanishing breed in Tokyo. The government needs to cut its budget, but it will be a shame if cops like Miyamoto are lost in the process. "Police officers are always in uniform so there's usually some distance from us," says Kawano the grocer. "But he wasn't like that. He was more like a pal." He was also a hero. Reported by Yuki Oda/Tokyo

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mourning a Humble Hero | 2/20/2007 | See Source »

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