THE ROTARY-NO
Transcription
THE ROTARY-NO
P- )l1) -O);t(::YaM& l;fm~ -'¥1lX14~11FjJB ~~TPJi P-)l')-0)bi:4}fAPJi THE ROTARY-NOROTARY IN JAPAN *R:.ffll1l!IR;L~rnil2-6-3 a bc~1!fi81\l1i ::J-FISSN0385 -0242 TO o The 50th Anniversary of The Rotary-No-Tomo Changing from assign to create 50 years of the Yoneyama Scholarship project NO.57 J DNP strives to contribute to a rich, intellectually active society that is undergoing an emergent evolution in the 21st century_ Dai Nippon Printing (DNP) is one of the world's largest comprehensive printing companies, and conducts a wide range of businesses, from printing, information processing, network solutions, and electronic components. DNP also provides leading edge products, such as smart cards and Ie tags, for this ubiquitous era. We plan to consistently provide the best solutions by applying our core printing and information technologies, and strive to contribute to a rich society that is undergoing an emergent evolution. DNP OPERATIONS Information Media Lifestyle Products Electronic Components & Information Media Supplies • Books and Magazines • Commercial Printing • Business Forms • Packaging • Decorative Materials • Electronic Components • Information Media Supplies Dai Nippon Printing Co.,Ltd. 1-1, Ichigaya Kagacho 1-chome, Shinjuku-ku,Tokyo 162-8001, Japan www.dnp.co.jp Winter Edition 2002 OMO THE ROTARY-NO ROTARY IN JAPAN The English Version of the Rotary's Regional Magazine in Japan published semi-annually in April and November No.57 2002 Many of the articles carried in this semi-annual publication are intended for presentation of the activiUes, opinions and views of Japanese Rotarians, mostly drawn from The Rotary-IVo-Tomo, a monthly official regional Rotary magazine in Japan. This magazine as well as the official regional magazine in Japan, The Rotary-No-Tomo is published by The Rotary-No-Tomo Editorial Committee for Rotary International Districts 2500 through 2840 under the direction of the district governors. COVER REPORT Try! RC of Aizu-Wakamatsu th The 15 Aizu-Wakamatsu RC Cup of Junior Rugby Tournament was held for the purpose of encouraging the sound growth of young people. Participants from elementary schools all over Fukushima were divided into 18 teams including boy and girl mixed teams. They competed for the championship. (D-2530, Fukushima, May 26) 6 Belief is Strength 2750 Toshio Sakamoto (Tokyo Hachioji South) 2760 Hideo Sugimoto (Nagoya Osu) 2770 Yutaka Hayashi (Ageo-West) 2780 Dai Yamauchi (Sagamihara Naka) 2790 Yoshishige Suzuki (Funabashi West) 2800 Rinnosuke Takahashi (Yamagata) The Rotary-No-Tomo Editorial Committee 2810 Kanji Iwai (Tagajo) Chairman: 2820 Takashi Tsukamoto (Tsuchiura South) Yoshiyuki Nakayama (Yokohama South), 2830 Takashi Kodate (Aomori) past district governor 2840 Yasuo Koiso (Tatebayashi Millennium) Vice-Chairman: Takashi Watanabe (Narashino), contents p age 2 2740 Masami Obama (Nagasaki South) past district governor Advisors (Past District Governors): Hirotsugu Ito (Mizusawa East) Eisuke Koike (Gyoda) Yoshiharu Yamaguchi Older Guys from the Community Speak about Their Work Members of Editorial COllunittee Takashi Uyeno (Yokohama) (Governor's Representatives): Kodo Maeda (Wakayama Southeast) 2500 Giyu Fukuda (Kushiro) Sunao Fukui (Nagasaki South) 2510 Takashi Sato (Sapporo-North) Chikahide Kawamoto (Oiso) 2520 Takeo Ito (Mizusawa-Isawa) Bringing the Workplace to School 8 9 Keizo Kunitomi Rotary gave me the chance to visit Alaska Cambodian Recovery Through Education Taichi Arakawa Takeshi Iwamoto 10 Changing from assign to create 50 years of the Yoneyama Scholarship project 2530 Chiaki Murai (Fukushima) Executive Committee: 2540 Jiro Kagobayashi (Yokote South) Toshihiko Minoda (Yokohama) 2550 Yoshiaki Kezuka (Utsunomiya North) Kazuo Hoshino (Urawa Northeast) 2560 Hiroichi Abe (Kashiwazaki Chuo) Yoshifumi Yokoyama (Tokyo-North) 2570 Masao Ogawa (Kawagoe) Mitsuru Endo (Tokyo-Mukojima) 2580 Masato Mizuno (Tokyo) Soichiro Kobayashi (Kofu-Jyohoku) 2590 Toru Kaneko (Yokohama-Hodogaya) 14 The 50th Anniversary of The Rotary- No-Torno 2600 Masashi Asakawa (Matsumoto East) 16 Rotary at Work 19 New Generations in Action 22 ROTARY CLUBS IN JAPAN 29 FRIENDSHIP PLAZA 34 Elementary School Kids Experience a Day in the Life of a Shop-worker 36 *%O)?? f'--71/ Jonosuke Hatta The opinions and viewpoints presented in this magazine are those of writers and do not always represent those of The Rotary-No-Tomo Editorial Committee. WINTER EDITION 2002 Past Chairmen (Past District Governors): 2610 Kazuo Kawara (Tonami) Yutaka Uyeno (Yokohama) 2620 Keisuke Fukui (Hamamatsu) Magozaemon Takano (Kofu) 2630 Kazuo Tanaka (Gifu) Toshio Itabashi (Ashikaga East) 2640 Yasunori Nakano (Izumiotsu) Hajime Akiyama (Tokyo Chofu) 2650 Keisuke Sawai (Nara) Saburo Mori (Yorii) 2660 Toshihiko Kamimae (Senri) Shohei Nakamura (Tokyo-North) 2670 Takashi Katsuki (Dogo) 2680 Yasuro Miwa (Himeji) 2690 Hiromichi Takahashi (Kurashiki South) Editor: Noriko Futagami 2700 Takayuki Morizane (Kokura East) Rotary-No-Tomo: 2710 Koji Shirai (Hiroshima South) 8th Floor, abc Kaikan, 2-6-3 Shibakoen, 2720 Junro Narumi (Beppu-Chuo) Minato-ku, Tokyo 105-0011, 2730 Isao Masukane (Kagoshima North) JAPAN Belief is bigger or stronger. It was just that I no longer avoided re Yoshiharu Yamaguchi General Manager, Rugby Team of Fushimi Technical High School You can endure anything when you realize there are other guys worse off than you factors , including several setbacks , resulted in my At that time Fushimi Technical High School was quite a what had I learned in that instant I became aware of those wild place. Everything the students saw, everything they other faces, the faces of the upperclassmen, all those faces heard, they greeted with filthy language. The first time I wearing the same painful expression as me? In truth, actually met with the rugby team the reaction was, "What's anything at all becomes possible depending on one's this all star crap? It's a bunch of bullshit. What we do is attitude. And it is this strength that enables us to live our lives. none of your business!" And who decides this? Is it the manager or the coach? I What was I doing at a school like this? What could I do to help these kids? The saying" one for all and all for one" tell you it is decided by the power of one's sensitivity, the most definitely applies to rugby. It's when you want to power of one's feelings. When a person thinks he is all get out therefore the sake of the team and for the sake of alone he is small and weak. If I hadn't felt anything when your buddies who can't play in the game, that's when your I saw the faces of my teammates, I might have turned out inner reserves come gushing forth. to be the sort of person who runs away from everything. Kids left to do whatever they please, who are never It's hard to be alone. But when you realize there are other guys worse off than you, you can endure anything. And given a warning and who never receive a scolding, must be very lonely indeed. Now everyone knows what this realization becomes a tremendous strength. I have shouldn't be done. But in Japan today teachers simply spent my life trying to help kids understand this, not close their eyes, while parents remain silent and adults through words, but through their own inner strength. around town don't really care. What grows out of such transferring to the Nippon Sport Science University my sophomore year. There were 116 guys out for rugby however, and it was arranged in teams one to four. I they didn't even have rugby goal posts. doing what had to be done, but forged straight ahead. So an attitude? Nothing but distrust. Young people distrust Kids who never receive a scolding must be lonely indeed My youth I spent playing rugby, and I don't regret started out way down on the fourth team. Some guys the having devoted my life to sports. Yes, but it's only rugby, same year as me started out as first team regulars, and I In my case it was nothing more than rugby. But in you say. It's only sports! But of all the wonderful things the middle of otherwise uneventful rugby practice I it has taught me! What does it matter if you win or lose? decided to give it all I had, and did. I was beautiful to see. Have you ever found yourself like discovered a great strength which has helped me live So what if you make a mistake or don't become a regular that? Before training camp I was running along this beach my life. Because of this I want to hold in respect those player? I saw a rugby ball for the first time when I started that I really hated. I turned to the sea and cried out, "I am strengths that my students determine for themselves of going to make first team regular!" their own free will. adults, they distrust their teachers. How often have you heard a lonely child cry, "I can do anything and no one really cares!" If the rugby team could make number one in Kyoto everyone would be pleased It's true that Fushimi Technical High School had many high school. The rugby team was out on the field, and Training camp was held up in Hakodate in Hokkaido, passing by I noticed three oblong shaped balls lying and it rough. In spite of the vow I'd made, all of my so I went on to become a Japanese all star rugby player. This was no easy thing. I received numerous injuries. I their school, so that even after graduation they could say, there. I thought to myself, now who would ever dream up called spirit was gone. After crossing the goal line I have had 30 stitches on my face alone. But because of "That's the school I went to! My high school!" I figured it something like that? I had no notion of playing rugby, but couldn't go another step and started to sit down. Of all the the fact that I have experienced pain myself, I am able wouldn't matter what, just so long as they could be tops in the sight of the rugby balls excited me. It was then that other 116 teammates I couldn't make out a single face. I to understand the pain of others as well. This is very something worthwhile. a senior, who looked like a young man, called out to me. "Hey you, sophomore! Come over here!" And I, the weak imagined I was alone in my suffering and pain. Just then important. Such understanding is different from words the face of a certain senior I disliked caught my eye, and it or logic. It comes from personal experience. And I am that if the rugby team could make number one in Kyoto spirited person that I am, signed up for the rugby team, was a face in agony. This made me happy, this expression thankful to rugby for giving me a chance to learn this. I everyone would be pleased. With this thought, the even though I didn't know the first thing about rugby. I of pain on the face of the hateful senior. And then I wish I could present more and more children with this athletic field before me suddenly transformed itself into didn't even know that you aren't supposed to pass the ball became aware of the faces of my teammates all around same experience. forward. me. "I've had it!" "I can't move!" "I can't take another After retiring as an all star player I started as a teacher saw the players of both teams crying and embracing one Practice consisted entirely of running. I had no idea we step!" It was then I made a wonderful discovery. I wasn't at Fushimi Technical High School. I learned they had a another the instant the whistle signaled the end of the had to practice on rainy days as well. I was glad that day alone in my misery. All of us all together were undergoing rugby team, and I figured the whole team would be lined game. In the stands I could see students embracing one it was pouring rain because I thought we could go home the same training! up to greet the Japanese all star player, Yamaguchi. When another and crying. A couple of students were shouting, "We were on TV!" Yes! This is how it's got to be! problems, but I wanted my students to have pride in Now the thing that I could do was rugby. I decided the grounds of Nishikyogoku Stadium, and I imagined I early. But one of the guys called out to me to get a move With this slight change in attitude I went from fourth I got to the club house there was nobody around. I was on. Strange thing about rugby though. The more you get team to third team, from third team to second team, and supposed to report immediately to the principal's office OK, I told myself. I'm going to make this vision reality into it, the more enthusiastic you become. by the end of training camp had been selected as a regular but I wanted to meet the students, so I went out to the no matter how many years it takes. And so saying I walked on the first team. It wasn't that I had suddenly gotten athletic field. There was no one out there either. I noticed out onto the athletic field, but it was empty. I went looking Originally I entered the Nihon University, but various 2 THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO WINTER EDITION 2002 3 voice shouting, "Can't you get guys anything right?" There was always me the all star player , me the teacher. Seeing myself in that light, I began telling them The most important thing is to have a goal. Next comes perseverance. Perseverance never lets you down. how sorry I was in my heart. I It was a goal that staggered the imagination. There wanted to hug them and tell them hadn't been a team to defeat Hanazono in ten years. Why I understood. couldn't anyone defeat them? Because no one thought But from the boys themselves there was nothing. "Hey, don't you they could. No one really tried. If a private school decided it wanted to win the feel angry being clobbered 112 championship, it would gather outstanding players from to 0 by a bunch of high school all over Japan. But Fushimi Technical High School was a students no different from you!" public school and there was no way it could attract such Gradually I lost my patience. players. Even the athletic field was used for baseball and Ranting and raving I cried, "Their soccer as well as rugby, and so it was always in full use. practice conditions are the same as yours! I mean, they 're just a Practice was done on a rotation system, so that when 5:30 bunch of high school kids. Are Assembling outstanding personnel may be the quick you guys men or what? Doesn't cut approach. But the first and most important thing is to it make you angry?" The team have a goal. Next comes perseverance. Perseverance never captain at that time was Michihiro lets you down. No one else is to blame for the outcome. Kohata. I can still see him as he sat right down and after a while Everything is your own responsibility. The game on November 25, 1979 where we defeated cried out, "I'm angry, goddamn Hanazono, Nishikyogoku Stadium, the game itself, and the it!" "It's only natural to get angry," came around we always had to leave. players crying and embracing one another-everything came to be as I first imagined it. I told him. "Anyone would." Another of the players named Pay more attention to the young people! Woe be to the Yoshio Mori spoke up. "I want to win!" society that doesn't extend a helping hand to the weak and "Against whom?" I asked. and found three tenth graders standing around talking. there. I cried on the way home. "Try a little bit, guys! If I asked them why they weren't at practice and they said you did you could be a great team!" I beg of you, think of our children's future, and imagine "But Hanazono is the team you just lost to 112 to for them a society that is exciting. Then send them on someone had told them not to go. So for the first practice I told them how I felt when I got back. and after that after I became the new rugby coach I took those three a few of the boys started showing up for practice. Then to beat them you'd have to become number one. Can you boys running on Mt. Inari. came the spring rugby tournament and we faced the make the sacrifice it would take?" champion, Hanazono Senior High School. spirit, the spirit of courage, the spirit in wanting to do something. I hope to be the sort of adult with a presence team. "So you're the new coach," he said to me. "Why "Go, team go!" Fushimi kicked off. "Make that tackle! don't you bring your boys over?" So I made plans to do Make that tackle!" But in a matter of seconds Hanazono definite answer here." just that. On the scheduled day, however, there was no had scored a goal. And they kept on scoring one goal after one around. Everyone had disappeared. Well, I couldn't another. Tears came to my eyes. What those boys must having practiced. They must be feeling terrible. Yoshio Mori twisted up his face and looked me in the eye. "I want to win, whatever sacrifice it takes." cry in earnest, "We want to win!" Thinking that, I began to blame myself. What had I "OK. then. All join hands! Nobody's going to do this for made a world of difference in .the way the boys practiced. ever really done for these kids? When you think about you, you know. I'll help in any way I can." Tears welled up But that was no consolation because my team wasn 't it, I never really did anything at all. Behind that cold in my eyes as I shook their hands. THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO about him that causes those he meets to feel that spirit, the sort of adult that can give to kids a goal. Then Araki, Uchida and the rest of the team began to someone there who had been a Japanese all star player 4 go to school early to watch practice. I hope to continue at national championship games. Last but not least comes made any sacrifice. "So what's it going to be then?" I asked. "Give me a feel standing out there on that field! It's a bitter blow after At present, as general manager of the rugby team, I still this so that everyone can watch our team at the new years' I sent my boys out onto the field with a sock it to them. referee. My friend praised me saying that just having their way with a shout of encouragement. He didn't answer me because as of yet they really hadn't me was coach at a school where they had a veteran rugby do anything about that, so I went on alone and helped point of an adult. Love is a sentiment that requires courage. "Against Hanazono!" nothing. They're the number one team in Japan. In order A guy I knew who had been a rugby player ahead of less fortunate. Kids are always weaker from the vantage WINTER EDITION 2002 Transcript of Lecture Number 15 in the Tarumi Citizens Lecture Series Sponsored by the Rotary Club of Kobe Tarumi of District 2680 5 Information Systems and Aerial Surveying," "Victory * I learned many things I never knew before, and there Your Mind?" "Your Qualifications and Your Future," were parts I could sympathize with. We were told about "Sacred Trust- Saving Lives with a Vacuum Cleaner," and the spirit of Florence Nightingale, what a responsibility "God Exists, and So Does Buddha." it is to wear a nurse's cap, and how to perform heart The lectures were directed at 165 ninth graders and formed an important part of their guidance counseling, the kind of work I feel I want to do someday, is to help and students could choose which of the lectures they others. Therefore it would be wonderful if I could apply wished to attend. Moreover, the day of the lectures was designated as an open house day, and parents and other and choice of occupation. members of the community were also free to attend. For * most of the club members who acted as speakers it was Older Guys from the Community Speak about Their Work Bringing the Workplace to School A new approach to Visit-a-Workplace Week massage and artificial respiration. My dream, or at least these things in everyday life and in my course of study What remains most in my mind are the words, "You're born with a wail and you die." Once again I realized that we all must someday die. It's a bit their first time to get up in front of a classroom to talk. Some handed out summaries which they had prepared in complicated, because from the time you are born you advance, while others made use of video or slides. Face begin to die. to face with the students and watching their expressions, * People live by supporting one another. This is true of they spoke earnestly about their work and about any all of nature as well. The lecture has slightly altered the specialized areas in which they had experience. Students, way I look at things. as well as parents and other persons attending the lecture, listened attentively and fervently took down notes. Keizo Kunitomi would do it again. Through the Internet," "Does Drinking Coffee Improve Himeji West We made a difference! -students' reactions work out some sort of arrangement. This was the first time for both the school and our club to engage in such a project. In review we could perhaps say that the contents of the lectures at times became a bit too technical and difficult for junior high school students. The idea we came up with was, instead of having the Students were afterwards asked to write what they However I definitely believe that we did get across our kids go out into these companies, to have someone from thought of the lectures , and the following are a few concern as adults for the growth and development of our On june 12th a group of "Bringing the Workplace to each company visit the school and talk to the children excerpts from these: about their work. Our hope was to create something that * I learned many things today that I never knew before. children. For their sake I hope we will be able to continue School" lectures entitled "Older Guys from the Community Speak about Their Work" was held at Aboshi junior High would help kids when deciding their own future course, The talk was very informative and enjoyable. I wish they School (Hyogo Prefecture) . Rotary club members got up and perhaps serve as sort of a guide to life in general. in front of the classroom and addressed the students To this end we formed a joint Committee on Vocational concerning the pleasures and pains of their various occupations, as well as the meaning of work itself. Service, Community Service and New Generations which A few years ago , in an attempt to provide children with a well-rounded education not just at school but in and exchanged views with the local junior high school principal. The fruit of these labors was the creation of the community at large, Hyogo Prefecture began a new a group of lectures entitled "Bringing the Workplace to School." program called "Visit-a-Workplace Week," whereby local businesses and public offices accepted eighth grade students. Our club was among the supporters of this to come. reviewed business goals, content, consumer base, etc., Creative lectures speak directly to the kids program. For some occupations, however, the workplace The group of lectures consisted of nineteen speakers is too dangerous an environment for kids, while in other giving eight different talks in the areas of manufacturing, cases the work itself deals with people 's lives or their information services, food processing, specialized sales, medical care, construction, insurance and religion. Some possessions, and it is not feasible for kids to help out. But our "Bringing the Workplace to School" lectures in years our desire that children should have every educational of the titles included "japanese Manufacturing-From opportunity remained unchanged, and so our club tried to Aibo (name of a toy robot dog) to Rockets," "Geographical VocauonaISerwce ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ 6 THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO WINTER EDITION 2002 7 Rotary %::: t~~i:~:i~~~~~g::r~g:~it Alaska between D-2650 & D-50 1 0 Taichi Arakawa Cambodian Recovery Through Education Takeshi Iwamoto Kyoto-Fushimi Tokyo-West The Friendship Exchange Program between District The American journalist, Mr. Bernard Krisher, gave a Consideration was given so that Rotaract and Interact 2650 (Japan) and 5010 (Alaska, USA), under the talk to a regular meeting at the end of the 1999-2000 could visit the place where the school building was to cooperation of the sister club relationship between the Rotary Club of Kyoto-Fushimi (D-2650) and the Rotary fiscal year as part of his campaign to promote the building be constructed. A site was selected by a native non of an elementary school in Cambodia. Three-thousand governmental organization (NGO) in the Konponsu Club of Homer-Kachemak Bay (D-5010), gave me the big villages in Cambodia have no school building at all and Byuu region about 80 kilometers from Phnom Penh. We opportunity to finally visit Alaska in the beginning of even if they do the buildings are so old and dilapidated discussed the site with Krisher and two of the committee summer 2002. that any use during the rainy season was impossible. members went to observe for the final decision. For the past thirty to forty years, I had a lot of Krisher was campaigning on behalf of the removal of land experience to fly over the North Pole and land at mines and the building of 200 schools. Anchorage when I went to Europe. But as a transit caught by them. Served were salmon either barbecued, passenger, I was able to get a view of Alaska only through smoked or raw, crab meat, and others. A magnificent school building was completed in August, 2001. In January, 2002, five representatives of the I had been appOinted chairman of the World Community club, attended the ceremony for transfer of ownership Service (WCS) Committee and one month after Krisher's ceremony and at the same time presented each of the 400 In general, most Japanese tourists going abroad talk I proposed a joint project with the International children sports equipment, bicycles and school supplies. To me then, Alaska looks entirely like a wild nature are escorted by tour guides. Our Friendship Exchange Service Committee in which we would set up a plan for A visit is scheduled for November of this year to country where no human being could have possibly delegation, however, did not have any tour leader. building schools in Cambodia. I also attended committee observe school use and teacher working conditions. existed. It always makes me curious whenever I saw Everyone among us was expected to manage by himself meetings in the district conferring with them about a We've gone to regular meetings of other clubs and asked ~ whether one liked it or not, and had matching grant from the Rotary Foundation, but found their cooperation and assistance in building many more IiWiIU to stay with one's host family who is out that such a grant could be used neither for real estate schools. Those young children bear the future of their :I~ an American. It was amazing how we nor human investment. We did find out, fortunately that country on their shoulders and the picture of those bright, understood each other and achieved programs for aiding developing countries were available smiling faces remains etched in my memory. the degree of friendship, the exchange through the World Bank. my airport windows. passengers boarding at Anchorage. I wonder how their way of life is compared to other people. This curiosity leads to my desire to really see and stay in Alaska. A desire which was not easy to realize because of the non- stop flight to I, -l~' . j'" f.~' Europe for the past ten years. ~ wanted to foster given the broken Well, the planned Friendship Exchange Program gave English we used. The most important event for this time for the fellow me the good chance to finally visit Alaska. Upon arrival at Rotarians from the Rotary Club of Kyoto-Fushimi was Anchorage, we were received warmly by the Rotarians in planting the memorial trees in Homer City in order to Alaska. I felt very emotional about the whole experience celebrate the Thirtieth Anniversary of the Rotary Club because I was able to tell myself that "Now, I am really in Alaska." of Kyoto-Fushimi. The ceremony was held on July 25, The delegates from District 2650, including the fellows presence of the Mayor of Homer City. An apple tree was 2002 in front of the Homer Chamber of Commerce in the of the Rotary Club of Kyoto-Fushimi, stayed for five nights, planted there and the rest will be planted in the Skate but we were looked after by our host families for four board Park in Homer City which will be opened soon. nights. The Rotarians made it a point to extend to us a When the time came to leave Alaska for Osaka, wonderfully warm reception wherever we visited. This did departure time of our flight was scheduled at four o'clock not fail to amaze us all. in the morning. We thought it would be very inconvenient One evening, Japanese Consul General Obinta joined for our host families to take us to the airport at such time, us in a party and spent nice time with everybody, almost so we refused their offer to see us off. But they strongly forgetting the time when he needed to go back home. disagreed saying that "I serve, that's a Rotarian." At one time, a seafood party was hosted by the local We extend our thanks, to the fellows of the Rotary Clubs Rotarians which was so remarkable because the seafoods of Anchorage East, Anchorage Hillside, Anchorage and did not come from the supermarket but were directly Homer-Kachemak Bay. 8 Raising the national flag to sing the national anthem of Cambodia together Receiving a warm welcome in front of the school Presenting bicycles donated by a Rotarian _ _~_~_ _-..t~_~......._ THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO WINTER EDITION 2002 9 Data of the Rotary Yoneyama Memorial Foundation Changing from assign to create 50 years of the Yoneyama Scholarship project Donation and Scholarship Project Expenses (1992 - 200 1) (million yen) Magozaemon Takano 2, 500 Director, The Rotary Yoneyama Memorial Foundation, Inc. 2,000 of the fund as the provision of economic Birth of the Yoneyama system support to exchange students who wanted to contribute to the development of their In 1952, the Rotary Club of Tokyo motherland and to the development of Asia, established a scholarship program with its inauguration of the Yoneyama Foundation As the scholarship fund continued, reforms to commemorate the achievements of Umekichi Yoneyama, founder of Rotary Japan and a pioneer in fostering the Rotary spirit. By 1958, the scholarship organization had grown to cover the entire country and had become the Rotary Yoneyama Scholarship Committee. By 1967, the Rotary Yoneyama Memorial Foundation, Inc. was established as ,550~ ...... 1,500 ,45~ ,44<:: 500 o shape that it is today, A 1999 questionnaire entitled "Let's ~I ~ I 92 v-~ 8~ ,560 ,570- 477 I 93 ,----- - ,34<:: ,38E ~ 499 I 94 - 512 I 95 rethink the Yoneyama Scholarship project," 523 I 96 515 I 97 l - ,30c Special reserve fund ------+-- Scholarship project expenses Special giving General giving 1 476 487 I 99 c=J c=J c=J - -221 499 I 98 ~ I--- .502 - 1,000 were made to expand and fulfill it in the I 00 I 01 (year) Number of Scholars clarified the type of young person Japanese Rotarians would select and support for Yoneyama scholarships. The scholarship student is expected to be a person who will contribute to the peace and prosperity of the an incorporated foundation. A half century has passed world of tomorrow. The first step in selecting that person since Nai Somchard, a scholar from Thailand, was selected would be to request that colleges recommend qualified for the very first scholarship based on a framework of support that has continued to expand every year. During students. The Rotarians in each district would then make that half century, Japan Rotarians have continued to r- ;--- ;--- 240 r- 400 the final decision on selecting a scholarship recipient of superior ability. Through counselor and club action, the provide Yoneyama scholarships to more than 10,000 exchange students from 95 countries who are studying in Rotarians would then take care of the student. SpeCial Japan. Six years after Umekichi Yoneyama died and three years Yoneyama program in the developing of international mention should be made of the great expectations on the service activities, and conveying the Rotarian spirit to Nation (or region) Year 2002 Cum. total Korea Taiwan China Malaysia Vietnam Indonesia Thailand Bangladesh Sri Lanka Hong Kong* Others 218 107 459 26 28 24 22 17 18 3,044 2,875 2,211 693 260 228 178 172 155 114 924 10,854 Total ---81 1,000 * before the return to China * Europe &NIS Afr i ca , 107 (6) Oceania 41 (1) .,\ \ r nations .! 110 (17) the Americans 206 (7) j Other As i an nat ions State less 2 (1) Korea 3, 044 (218) 1,077 (106) / /7~._. __ Indonesia 228 (24) - / n l Vietnam ----.! / 260 (28) . / MalaYSia 693 (26) Ch i na 2.211 (459) * Soviet 12 newly independent states of former Union except the Baltic States after Japan Rotary returned to the Rotary International the student. At the inception of the Yoneyama program, fold, Japanese Rotarians were well aware of the bitter pain and suffering Japan had inflicted on the people of Asia in World War II. The productive vision of the Rotary the objective was supporting impoverished exchange of support you get from Rotary far exceeds the monetary interaction with universities as exceedingly important. students, but that has changed into a new Yoneyama value of the stipend." We must also renew our awareness of the importance of Prayers for tomorrow changes, one of those being how to stop the decline in contributions for project support. Yoneyama Memorial Scholarship was seen as an ideal means of announcing our pledge to build a Japan newly dedicated to peace. Moving exchange students from life support to growth support system that supports and develops the superior exchange student who will build the world of tomorrow. A Korean exchange student in Toyama who had the counselor's role. Many tasks confront us as Yoneyama completed the Yoneyama scholarship term said something Rotary International is nearing its lOath anniversary, Reinhold Niebuhr, the American theologian, gave the wonderful: "Yoneyama is different from other scholarship the Yoneyama Scholarship project is heading toward following prayer at a service at a Massachusetts church systems; you can see it in the faces of the people receiving its half-century mark, and we stand at a point where in 1934, "God grant me the Serenity to accept the things I that support." A female exchange student in Tokyo we can determine the steps needed to move forward cannot change, the Courage to change the things I can and who was accepted for both Yoneyama and the national in dealing with changing times and changing Japanese the Wisdom to know the difference." As the Yoneyama In the beginning, Japanese Rotarians contributed scholarships, forfeited the national scholarship with its and world environments. Along with its newly instituted Scholarship Foundation moves toward its future, that is a resources to the Yoneyama Fund and saw the significance higher stipend and went for Yoneyama "Because the value college recommendation system Rotary must consider its prayer that I commend to all of us. The 10 Yoneyama THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO WINTER EDITION 2002 11 Yoneyama A/umn i The 50 YearsI Footstep of The Rotary Yoneyama Memorial Foundation, Inc in the world Dr. Sang-Yong Choi December 1952 The Rotary Club (RC) of Tokyo initiated a scholarship project. _ 5" e» c: \Q Professor ofKourai University / Former Ambassador of the Republic of Korea to Japan (Republic ofKorea,1969---7 L University offokyo. RC ofTokyoNihonbashi &RC ofTokyo-Josai RC) September 1954 Mr. Somchard Ratana chata. the first scholar of the project. came to Japan from Thailand. Dr. Choi was Ambassador to Japan for 2 years from February 2000. When President Dae-J ung Kim visited Japan in February 1998, he participated there as a scholar of polities and contributed for making a joint declaration between Japan and the Republic of Korea, playing a great role for a new partnership between the two countries. !:; e» ~ o· In 1952, the Rotary Club of Tokyo estabUshed a scholarship system to commemorate a great contribution of Mr. Umekichi Yoneyama. Fundraising was initiated by members of the RC of Tokyo and their related firms in 1953. Its fund was called the Yoneyama Fund. The purpose of the Yoneyama Fund was: to accept undergraduate students from overseas, to grant scholarships to them, and to support them to study and promote international understandings. __=----.....,; April 1958 The Yoneyama Foundation De vel 0 p men t Com mit tee was established as a nationwide oraanization The Committee selected 8 ~cholars from among foreign students in Japanese universities. Yoneyama Foundation Students' friendship party (1958) In February 1967, the Executive Committee enacted the Constitution, appointed charter executives and named one director from respective districts. This resulted in making the Yoneyama Foundation a nationwide organization both in name and reality. An initial capital was 30 million yen at that time. July 1967 The Rotary Yoneyama Memorial Foundation. Inc. was authorized by the Ministry of Education (now the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology) to establish. Number of Scholars: 59 I year Amount of Scholarship: 25 ,000 yen I month :::I 120 ." e» ~ ~ ~ o ~ ~ to "TI o c: :::I c.. e» g. :::I - The first class students from abroad were accepted through recommendation of foreign Rotary clubs. From the second selection, foreign students in Japanese universities are supposed to be selected because of intricate procedures for invitation from overseas. Mr. Chung-J en Hsu First President. RC of Taipei Tokai / President of President Chain Store Corp. (Taiwan, 1976, Waseda University, RC of Hiratsuka) February 1959 Host club system was established. Mr. Hsu is one of founders of 7-ELEVEN stores in Taiwan and the former president of Taiwan Alumni Association. When 921-Taiwan earthquake attacked Taiwan in September 1999, he took a leadership to supply necessaries from 7-ELEVEN stores to victims and rescuers. A Yoneyama Memorial Foundation Student making a speech at a meeting of the RC of Tochigi West (1969) to <~- February 1971 o Counselor s y stem was established. to "3 ::J ~ o Dr. Andrew Chi Wan Wong Member, RC of Tokyo-Josai / Director of Andy's Clinic (Hong Kong, 1976 ~ 77, Gifu University, RC of Kakamigahara) Yoneyama Counselors, who are responsible for taking care of scholars, were formally selected from among host club members, which led to better communication between Rotarians and scholars. As a Rotarian, also a medical doctor, Dr. Wong has been involved with many volunteer activities. He was bestowed a 1998-99 Rotary Service Above Self Award. He is the third Yoneyama Foundation Distinguished Contributor. ';;;1 Board of Directors (December 1969) December 1972 ~ - Recognition system of contributors was established. S' m to S, ~ 2.. ; z ~ '3 November 2001 As distinguished organization for foreign - ~ students exchanges, the Yoneyama Memorial ~ Foundation received an award from the Ministry ~ of Education, Science and Technology. ;:- if _ As of August 2002 Number of Scholars: 1,000 ! year Amount of Scholarship: 150,000 y en for undergraduate student Imonth 120,000 yen for graduate student Imonth Ms. Busakorn Hongsyok Former stafffor international exchange in Yokotacho town office, Shimane (Thailand, 1997, Shimane University, RC ofIzumo-Chuo) Kanto General Assembly of Yomeyama Alumni Association (1992) As a translator and coordinator, Ms. Hongsyok worked for a soroban (Japanese abacus) education program for Thai people. This program is promoted in Yokotacho that manufactures the soroban most in Japan. Now she is in Thailand. Q ...e» Mr. Chowdhury, first president of Yoneyama Alumni Association (Kanto area) 12 Nai Somchard at a meeting of the RC of Tokyo. Back to Thailand, he went to work for the .. . ~ Bureau of Silk Yarn and contributed to r~~i'.. Thai silk production. He died in 1990. :5 _ November 1985 Yoneyama Alumni Association (Kanto), organized by former Yoneyama scholars, was established. The (nationality, year, university in Japan, sponsor RC) ~ ,*. ~ October 1998 The Yoneyama Memorial Foundation started accepting any students from any country, regardless of whether there is a Rotary club in their home country or not. October 2001 Application for the Scholarship Program through universities' internal recommendation started. In 1983, the government of Japan presented a plan for accepting 100 thousand foreign students. Under a situation that the number of foreign students in Japan went over 50 thousand and the number of applicants for the Program multiplied. it was urgent to make a system of fair application procedures for inviting excellent students. In 1999 , some districts adapted Universities' Internal Recommendation System in which designated universities can recommend students for their application. Since 2001 the System has been implemented in nationwide scale. Recommendation by Rotarians has not been available any longer since 1999. Mr. Galbadrah Janchiv President of Shine Mongol High School (Mongolia, 1998, Yamagata University, RC of Yamagata North) Mr. Janchiv founded Shin Mongol High School in Ulaanbaatar, which is the first high school with three years in Mongolia. Supported mainly by members of the RC of Yamagata North, this school initially introduced three-year curriculum in the international standard and club activities that had never been in Mongolian schools. Yoneyama THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO WINTER EDITION 2002 13 The 50th Anniversary of .. D.'J.'li 't::' _ "0 l. 1 . ,.n .. 0., P-S>!I-o>-,: ~ • o l'lfl£-~~~~P~!P.\IO The Rotary-No-Tomo ". March,1976 1/ !' []-'?1J-01Z nil, ROTARY-NO~ rOMO ~~!""::: rr' ·~I" W [)-'9IJ-01Z ·1l·IE ROTAll'I' NO TCMO ITJ..-~-. ~~ December, 1985 July'" November, 2002 (The format has been enlarged.) January, 1953 (the first issue) f ,~~., J ~ , p~m(l r i", ... ..,. I I I: I· January, 1987 January, 1972 ((overs have been given on both sides from this issue.) =::: . ,•:~ :::==- r ~ . June, 1984 October, 1988 May, 1965 February, 1970 April,2001 The Rotary-No-Tomo will celebrate its 50th anniversary No-Torno became an official Rotary regional magazine July issu e (the first issue of the new fiscal year. 2002) . known as "TV kids" when they were little, and they in January 2003. The history of the Rotary-No -Tomo dates from 1953 when Japan was divided into two Rotary through a revision in the rules of Rotary International, Improvements included changes in format and typeface, prefer a visual presentation with lots of pictures to one and to date its circulation has grown to over 120,000. as well as in content and editing. comprised mostly of the printed word. To accommodate such readers, the Rotary-No-Tomo has increased its visual Presently in the office of the Rotary-No-Tomo, there is In the first place the format has been enlarged from During World WarII, Japanese Rotary Clubs which one editor and 6 editorial staff members. Also there is the 182 x 257mm to 210 x 280mm. The reason for this existed from before the war were either closed down or Rotary-No-Tomo Editorial Committee (members listed on change is that most magazines dealing with economics or Another potential problem for younger Rotarians is districts. impact with many more color photographs. forced to change their names (for example "Wednesday p.1), which conducts a monthly meeting for discussing management appear in roughly the larger format. Since the many special Rotary terms and abbreviations such Club" ) in accordance with national policy at that time. editorial matters of the Rotary-No-Tomo and management most Rotarians are business persons, we felt the new size as RYLA. If they were written out in full they would be of the office as a whole. would be more comfortable for them. When Japanese Rotary Clubs were resurrected in March more understandable for a person encountering them 1949, there was just one district (twenty clubs) over all The Rotary-No-Tomo has cha nged and grown during the The method of binding the magazine has also been for the first time. Therefore we have decided to use full of Japan. But after a few years. the number of the Rotary 50 years since its birth in accordance with the needs of changed, and the reason for this is to reduce costs. The names for such terms (in Japanese of course), at least clubs in Japan suddenly increased and in the fiscal year of Rotarians and improvements in printing technology. In for their first appearance in an article. At the same time 1952 the single district was divided into two. addition to the monthly Japanese edition, a semi-annual size of the type has also been enlarged. The average age of Japanese Rotarians has been increasing yearly and At this time Japanese Rotarians began to think that they (November and April) English edition has been published is now past the 60-year mark. Consequently it becomes articles to explain important terms and their background . should have some means for keeping in touch with th e since 1975 so that Rotarians overseas can acquaint increasingly difficult to read smaller print, even with This idea is pleaSing to the veteran members as well. news of the other district, and the first issue of the Rotary themselves with the activities of Japanese Rotarians. corrective eyeglasses. The problem is not only size, but who would otherwise find it embarrassing to have to ask As a means of celebrating our 50th anniversary in print shape as well. Kanji characters are more complex someone what a particular term means. No-Torno was published in January 1953. Circulation at that time was only 3,000. January 2003 while at the same time looking ahead to than alphabet letters, and thus we have selected a style At this time the Rotary-No-Tomo was edited like a our next 50 years, as well as producing a magaZine more that is more suited to the elderly. Rotary Club weekly bulletin by a few Rotarians and a in tune with the 21 st century, we have come out with a Not only elderly Rotarians, the Rotary-No -Tomo has couple of editorial staff members . In 1980 the Rotary new and improved Rotary-No-Tomo beginning with the to target younger Rotarians as well. These people were 14 THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO WINTER EDITION 2002 an "Annotations " note has also been added at the end of The response to the improved the Rotary-No-Tomo has so far been favorable after only a few issues, and this gives us confidence to continue improving our magazine in the future. 15 Rotary A vignette ofJapanese Rotary clubs and Rotarians in action at Work Greeted with Bright Smiles / Hitachi North Four members of the RC of Hitachi North visited the Philippines to attend a ceremony commemorating the 10 11l anniversary of its sister club, the RC of Panday Pira. They visited a street children's home as well, and exchanged friendship with the children. (D-2820, Ibaraki, June 5-7) Seeking Children's Smiles / Masuda West With the cooperation of Group 5 of D-2690, three Masuda West Rotarians visited Pakistan. They were shown around an educational institution for handicapped children and had a significant time with the children. They also met with Pakistani welfare officials to discuss support for educational facilities . Both sides then agreed on how to select and provide necessary materials and supplies for the institution. (D-2690, Shimane, March 18-22) Youth Kendo (Japanese Swordsmanship) / Matsuura Baseball Lessons by Professional Players / Kanuma The RC of Matsuura held its 10 th Matsuura Rotary Cup of Youth Kendo Competition, in which 125 local youngsters participated. The youngsters put everything they had into the matches and caused great. Matsuura Rotarians worked hard at preparing for the event. (D-2 7 40, Nagasaki, April 14) Kanuma Rotarians held a day of baseball lessons for youngsters as part of a nationwide event held annually on Children's Day and sponsored by the Japan Professional Baseball OB Club. Eight former professional baseball players, including Kanuma Rotarian, Yutaka Saotome as chief instructor, gave lessons to about 500 youngsters. (D -2550, Tochigi, May 5) 16 Pre World Cup? / Numata Blessing Water from New Hand Pumps /Shizunai As part of the International Youth Friendship Exchange, Numata Rotarians took 60 school students from Numata to the German School Tokyo-Yokohama in Yokohama. Numata and Yokohama students then played soccer as part of their friendship exchange. All four matches were packed with excitement. After matches, 30 of the Numata school children remained for home stays at the homes of Yokohama students. (D-2840, Gunma, May 11) The RC of Shizunai has donated four hand pumps to Angkor Kurau, a village in Cambodia. Three Shizunai Rotatirans visited the village to make sure the pumps were correctly installed. They then visited a support center for handicapped children and orphans, and investigated conditions in the Village. Aware that villagers lack clothing, the RC of Shizunai is also preparing to collect clothing to send to them. (D-2510, Hokkaido, January 9) THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO WINTER EDITION 2002 17 New Generations In ction Protecting a Precious Island / Ako On the island of Ikushima, a Japanese national monument, Mube trees have multiplied abnormally in recent years. Mube is a type of vine which often causes the withering broad-leaf evergreen trees. Under leadership of Prof. Tamotsu Hattori of Himeji Institute of Technology, Ako Rotarians together with about 230 volunteers cut down Mube trees in order to protect the evergreen forest. (D-2680, Hyogo, February 16) ~~ ) j Counseling Provided I Funabashi West At this year's Funabashi Industry Festival, a free counseling booth was set up as in the past. There visitors to the festival could seek advise about health, taxes, pensions and so on. The counselors comprised various professionals who were members of Funabashi West, and who contributed much to the local area on this occasion. (D-2790, Chiba, July 20) Very Japanese Samurai I Nakajo Wish for a Rich Forest / Odawara Johoku In fiscal year 2001-02, the RC of Nakajo accepted Katrina Schmidt from the U.s. and Paula Celinski from Brazil as exchange students. As an environmental preservation project, the RC of Odawara J ohoku donated 100 s ee dlings for a mountain near South Ashigara City. The mountain was selected as one of Japan's "100 Important Headwater Mountains." Club Rotarians and local volunteers planted seedlings and had a meaningful experience. (D-2780, Kanagawa, April 20) Yoneyama Scholars Enjoy Japanese Culture / During their stay in Japan, they enjoyed many aspects of Japanese culture, such as participating in the Musha Gyoretsu (Samurai parade) of Nakajo city in hand-made costumes. (D-2S60, Niigata) Groups 1 and 2 ofTokushima Staying in Tokushima city, six Yoneyama Foundation students from Korea, China and Malaysia were invited by Tokushima Rotarians to a Japanese tea party for cherry blossom viewing in a room of the Tokushima Castle Museum. During the party, ) the students had a good time and enjoyed the company of the other participants. J (D-2670, Tokushima, March 31) See What I Made! / Atsugi The RC of Atsugi invited Mr. Sokei Ando, an Atsugi Rotarian , to teach a class in dyeing in which 160 5 th grade students of Mita Elementary School partiCipated. As a class, students collected chestnut burs to use as dyestuff and enjoyed dyeing colorful silk handkerchiefs, each student creating his own unique design. (D-2780, Kanagawa) 18 THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO WINTER EDITION 2002 19 Heave, Ho! / Tottori North Expanding a Volunteer Network / Willard Wayne , an exchange student from the U.S ., goes to Tottori Commercial High School. On the school sports day, he joined in tug of war, clenching his teeth as he pulled the rope together with other students. (0-2690, Tottori) lAC of Takasaki University of Commerce Interactors of Takasaki University of Commerce have been actively participating in clean up drives on their campus and at Kitatakasaki railroad station, nursing home visits , Community Chest drives, and so on. They are appealing to other students on campus to help take part in their activities. (0-2840, Cunma) Amazing Skills! / IAC of Nishiwaki High School Interactors of Nishiwaki High School invited two leading wheelchair basketball teams for invitation games held at their school. Spectators were moved by the grace of the players and their amazing technical skill, which expressed their love of life. (0-2680, Hyogo, January 27 / sponsored by Nishiwaki) Repair from Heart I Happy to See People Glad /IAC of Matsuenishi High School Interactors of Matsuenishi High School have been active in welfare home visits, the Community Chest and clean up drives. In June and July, they visited a local welfare center in order to take apart and clean the wheelchairs. This warm service could make people of the center glad. (0-2690, Shimane / sponsored by Matsue South) IAC of Tochigi Technical High School In cooperation with a NCO in Thailand , Interactor volunteers from Tochigi Technical High School repaired used wheelchairs collected from welfare institutions. The Interactors received a shield as a token of thanks from Thai government. The same Interactors have also visited children at schools for the handicapped and other welfare institutions in their community, and helped repair nursing beds for solitary elderly persons. (D-2550, Tochigi / sponsored by Tochigi West) Assisting the WOTld Cup / D-2770 A Cheerful Texan Girl/Kumamoto Southeast Valerie Jones, an exchange student from the U.S., enjoyed life in Japan. She visited to Osaka and Kyoto with her host family. Wearing a kimono, she had her picture taken at Kyoto Studio, famous for the production of samurai dramas. (0-2720, Kumamoto) Ouring the World Cup so ccer games, excha nge students hosted by 0-2770 volunteered to help hand out guide maps of Saitama City in the festival plaza next to Saitama Stadium. They did this three different times during the tournament and assisted in helping to introduce the city. (0-2770, Saitama) Clean-up at Mannyoshu Memorial/RAC of Takaoka West Takaoka West Rotaractors joined with Takaoka West Rotarians in conducting clean-up activities around Mt. Futakami near Takaoka City. They also helped clean up the statue of Otomo-no-Yakamochi on the top of the mountain. Yakamochi compiled Mannyoshu, or "Myriad Leaves," the oldest collection of Japanese poems from the 8th century. (0-2610, Toyama, March 31 / sponsored by Takaoka West) Among Many Friends / Kyoto-Rakusai Yusuke Seki, an exchange student, went to Argentina . Having a hard time learning Spanish, he made friends with many Argentine young people by participating in outings with them. (D-2650, Kyoto) 20 THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO WINTER EDITION 2002 21 (2830) ROTARY Rebun~ Q R ishiri CLUBS IN JAPAN (2500) Hachinohe. (2510) (2540) This map is purely an artistic rendition and is not intended to • Asahigawa (2520) be exact representation of location of the cities and towns. • Morioka Because of limited space, only the locations where Rotary (AKITA) clubs exist are shown with a number of exceptions. A .Otaru OWATE) complete list is given from the following page. Notes: Only • Sapporo Yokote. in terms of Rotary, Guam, Northern Marianas , Micronesia • Mizusawa • Ichinoseki and Republic of Palau are within the Districts 2750, Japan. • Chitose Nemuro • Muroran. (MIYAGr) • Furukawa Yamagata. (2620) [;]Oki (2690) gSUShi"L:JIki (2740) .·,"n.41 1\• H"~ Kacatsu (SAGA) Shiog~ma . / ~81 0 Sendal. / ~ Yonezawa. Hakodate I • Izumo. • Matsue YAMAGUCHI ~ (2710) Fukuoka ~ \: - • I. Tottori. Yonago CSHIMANE) . I(2530) • Koriyama CTonORI) (FUKUI) Yamaguchi • • • Fukushima Aizu-Wakamatsu (HIROSHIMA) I(OKAYAMA), (2820) Shimonoseki • Matsuyama (EHIME) • Uwajima ~'" (KOCHI) Marugame I • . Nara ~ShOdoshi~a • Takamatsul· Awaji (KAGAWA) Naruto. Tokushima. I. e Yamatokoriyama (2660) Toyonaka • • Suita • Osaka (NARA) Yokkaichi • Yamanashi • Kofu (YAMANASHi) (SHIZUOKA) • Kishiwada (CHIBA) • • Fuji • Wakayama (2670) (2580) ~ Ishigaki (AICHI) w~ Hirara Kumejima ~KINAWA) (2760) (2640)"'. Arida (2630) Shizuoka ' Tateyama • (2780) (2620) • (2750) Shingu ~~~ Pohnpei Guam Saipan ~ ROTARY CLUBS IN JAPAN Rotarians: 111,813 ; Clubs: 2,323 ; Districts: 35 as of 31 July 2002 2500 = District HOKKAIDO = Region A bashiri = Club (T u) = Mee ting Day ESI = English Simultaneous Interpreter Available 2500 HOKKA I OO Abashiri (Tu) Abashiri West (Th) Akanko (M) Akkeshi (M) Asahigawa (F) Asahigawa-East (Th) Asahigawa-North (W) Asahigawa-Northeast (Th) Asahigawa South (M) Asahigawa-West (Tu) Asahikawa A irport (Tu) Asahikawa Morning (Th) Ashoro (Th) Betsukai (W) Biei (M ) Bifuka ( Th) Bihoro (Th) Engaru ( Th) Esashi (W) Furano ( Th) Hamanaka (Tu) Hiroo (M) Kamikawa (Th) Kamishihoro (W) Kitami (W) Kitami East (F) Kitami West (Th) Kiyosato (Th) Kushiro (Th) Kushiro Bay (Tu) Kushiro East (Tu) Kushiro-North (W) Kushiro-South (F) Kushiro-West eM) Memuro (Tu) Monbetsu (F) Monbetsu Minato (Tu) Nakagawa (F) Nakashibetsu (Th) Nakatonbetsu (M) Nakayubetsu (W) Nayoro ( Tu) Nemuro (Tu) Nemuro West (F) Oblhiro (W) Obihiro East (Tu) Obihiro North (F) Obihiro South (M) Oblhiro West (Th) Ohmu (W) Okoppe (Th) Ombetsu (M) Otofuke (W) Rebun (W) Rishiri (Tu) Rishirito (W) Rubeshibe (Tu) Saroma (W) Shari (W) Shibetsu (M) Shimizu (Th) Shimokawa (W) Shiranuka (F) T akinoue (M) T eshikaga (W) Teshio (W) T oyotomi (M) Wakkanai (Th) Wakkanai South (M ) 24 251 0 HOKKAIDO A kabira (Tu) Ashibetsu (F) Bibai (Th) Chitose (Th) Chitose Central (Tu) Date ( Tu) Ebetsu (Th) Ebetsu West (Tu) Enlwa (W) Erimo (Th) Esashi (Tu) Fukagawa (Tu) Haboro (Th) Hakodate (Th) Hakodate-East (Tu) Hakodate-Goryokaku (F) Hakodate Kameda (M) Hakodate North (W) Iwamizawa (F) Iwamizawa East (Tu) Iwanai (Th) Kamiiso (Th) Kitahiroshima (Tu) Kurisawa (W) Kuriyama (Tu) Kutchan (W) Matsumae (Sa) Mi tsu ishi (M) Mori (W) M oseushi (W) Muroran (Th) Muroran East (W) Muroran-North (Tu) Naganuma eM) Nanae (Tu) Noboribetsu (W) Obira (F) Oshamanbe (Tu) Otaru (Tu) Otaru South (F) Otaru Zenibako (Th) Rankoshi (Tu) Rumoi (W) Samani (Tu) Sapporo (W) Sapporo Akebono (F) Sapporo Central (Tu) Sapporo East ( Th) Sapporo Hamanasu (Tu) Sapporo Kiyota (Tu) Sapporo-Konan (F) Sapporo-Makomanai (W) Sapporo Morning (W) Sapporo-North (M ) Sapporo Odori Park (M ) Sapporo Seihoku (Th) Sapporo-South (M) Sapporo-Teine (Sa) Sapporo West (Tu) Shin-Sapporo (W) Shiraoi (W) Shizunai (W) Sunagawa (W) T akikaw a (Th) Tobetsu (Tu) T omakomai (F) T omakomai-East (Th) T omakomai-North (Tu) Toyako (F) Urakawa (Tu) Yoichi (W) Yuni (Th) 2520 lWATE Hanaizumi (F) Hanamaki ( T u) Hanamaki-North (W) Hanamaki-South ( Th) Hiraizumi (T u) Ichinohe (Tu) Ichinoseki (Th) Ichinoseki Chuo (W) Ichlnoseki Iwai (M) Ichinoseki West (Tu) Iwate Daito (Sa) Iw ayado (W) Kamaishi ( Tu) Kamaishi East (Th) Karumai (W) Kitakami (Tu) Kitakami Wag a (W) Kitakami West (Th) Kuji (Th) Kuji East (F) Maesawa (W) Miyako (F) Miyako East (Tu) Miyako West (W) Mizusawa (Th) Mizusawa East (Tu) Mizusawa-Isawa (W) Morioka (F) Morioka Chuo (T u) Morioka East (M) Morioka North (W) Morioka Northwest (W) Morioka South (Tu) Morioka Takinosawa (Th) Morioka West (Th) Ninohe (F) Ofunato (W) Of unato West ( Th) Otsuchi (W) Rikuzen- Takata (Tu) Senmaya (W) T aneichi (F) Tono (W) Yamada (Th) Yumoto (M) 2530 F UK U SHI MA Aizubange (Th) Aizu-Wakamatsu (W) Aizuwakamatsu-Chuo (Th) Aizuwakamatsu Jonan (Tu) Aizu-Wakamatsu South (M) A izu-Wakamatsu West (F) Date West (Th) Fukushima (Th) Fukushima 21 (Th) Fukushima Chuo (W) Fukushima East (F) Fukushima North ( Tu) Fukushima South (W) Fukushima West (M ) Funehlki (Tu) Haramac hi (Th) Haramachi Chuo (W) Higashi-Shirakawa (Tu) Hobara (W) lizaka (Th) Inawashiro (Th) Ishikawa (Th) Iwaki-Joban (Tu) Iwaki Kashima (Th) Iwaki-Nakoso (W) Iwaki-Onahama (Tu) Iwaki-Taira (Th) Iwaki-Taira Chuo (T u) Iwaki-Taira East (W) Iw aki-Uchigo (Tu) Iwaki-Yotsukura (Th) Kawamata (W) Ki takata (T u) Ki takata Chuo (W) Koriyama (Th) Koriyama Asaka ( T u) Koriyama East ( T u) Koriyama Nor th (M) Koriyama Northwest (F) Koriyama South ( Th) Koriyama Urban (W) Koriyama West (W) M iharu (Th) Motomiya (W) Namie (Th) Nihonmatsu (W) Nihonmatsu Adatara ( Th) Odaka (Tu) Ono (W) Shirakaw a (Tu) Shirakawa South (W) Shirakawa West (Th) Soma (Tu) Soma-East (Th) Sukagawa (M) Sukagawa-Botan (W) Sukagawa South (Th) Tajima (M) Takine (Tu) Tokiwa (W) Tomioka (W) Yabuki (W) Yanagawa (Tu) 2540 AK[ TA Akita (W) Akita Chuo (F) A kita East (M) Akita-Minato (F) Akita North (Tu) Akita-South (Th) Akita West (Tu) Futatsui (W) Gojome (Th) Hanawa (Tu) Honjo (F) Honjo-East (M) Honjo South (Tu) Inakawa (F) Kakunodate (W) Kisakata (W) Nikaho (Th) Nishimonai (W) Noshiro (F) Noshiro Shirakami (Th) Noshiro-South (Tu) Odate (W) Odate Chuo (M) Odate North (Th) Odate South (Tu) Oga (Th) Oga North (F) Omagari (T u) Omagari Chuo (W) Omagari Senboku (M ) Omagari-South ( Th) Showa-litagaw a (T u) T akanosu (Th) T azawako (T u) Tow ada Akita (Th) Yamamoto (W) Yashima (Tu) Yokote (W) Yokote East (Th) Yokote South (Tu) Yonaizawa (Tu) Yuzawa (Th) Yuzawa South (Tu) 2550 TOCH 1 G I Ashikaga (F) Ashikaga East (Tu) Ashikaga Watarase (Th) Ashikaga West (Th) Awano Nishikata (Th) Bato-Ogawa (W) Imaichi (W) Imaichi Kinu (T u) Ishibashi (W) Iwafune (Tu) Kanuma (Th) Kanuma Chuo (Tu) Kanuma East (W) Karasuyama (T u) Kurobane (F) Kuroiso (W) Kuzuu ( Tu) Mashiko (W) Mibu (W) Moka (Th) Moka West (Tu) Nasu (Th) Nikko (Th) Nishinasuno (Tu) Otawara (Th) Otawara Chuo (W) Oyama (Th) Oyama Chuo (M) Oyama-East (F) Oyama-North (W) Oyama-South (T u) Sano (M) Sano East (W) Shiobaranishinasu (W) T akanezawa (W) Tanuma ( Th) Tochigi (W) T ochigi South (Th) Tochigi West (Tu) Ujlie (Th) Utsunomlya (F) Utsunomlya East (Tu) Utsunomlya 90 (M) Utsunomiya North (Th) Utsunomiya South (W) Utsunomiya West (Th) Utsunomiya Yohoku (Tu) Utsunomiya Yonan (Th) Utsunomlya Y oto (W) Yaita (W) Yaita-Yashio (Tu) 2 5 60 N IIGATA Aganogawa Line (Th) A rai (W) Bunsui (Tu) Echigo Kasugayama (Th) Echigo Uonuma (Th) Gosen (F) Itoigawa (Th) Itoigawa Chuo (F) Kamo (Th) Kashiwazaki (W) Kashiwazaki Chuo (Tu) Kashiwazaki East (M) Keihoku (W) Maki (Th) Mitsuke (Th) Murakami (Th) Murakami Iw afune (M) Muramatsu (Tu) M yokokogen (Th) Nagaoka (Tu) Nagaoka Higashi (W) Nagaoka Nishi (Th) Nakajo (W) Nakajotainai (F) Naoetsu (T u) Niigata (T u) Niigata Bandai (M) Niigata-Chuo (Tu) Niigata-Higashi (F) Nligata Kita (M) Niigata Minami (W) Niigata Nishi (Th) Niitsu (W) Niitsu Chuo (Tu) Ojiya (Th) Sado (Th) Sado M inami (F) Sanjo (W) Sanjo North (Tu) Sanjo South (M ) Shibata eM) Shibata Chuo (Tu) Shibata Jonan (Th) Shirone (Th) Suibara (W) Tagami Ajisai (Tu) Takada (F) T akada East (M) Tochio (M) T okamachi (Th) T okamachi North (W) Toyosaka (Tu) T subame (Th) Tsunan (M) Yoshida (F) Yukiguni Uonuma (W) 2570 S AITAMA Asaka (Tu) Asaka-Carrot (M) Chichibu (Tu) Fujimi (F) Fukaya (Tu) Fukaya East (F) Fukaya North (M) Fukiage (Tu) Gyoda (Th) Gyoda Sakura (Tu) Hanno (W) Hanyu (Tu) Hidaka (Tu) Higashi Matsuyama (W) Higashimatsuyama Musashi (Th) Honjo (Th) Honj o South (Tu) Iruma (Th) Iruma South (Tu) Kamifukuoka (W) Kamisato (W) Kaw agoe (T u) Kawagoe Chuo (M) Kawagoe East (F) Kawagoe South (Th) Kawagoe West (W) Kawamoto (Tu) Kazo (W) Kodama (Tu) Kumagaya (F) Kumagaya East (W) Kumagaya Kagohara (W) Kumagaya South (W) Kumagaya West (M) Menuma (Th) Minano Nagatoro (Th) Niiza (Th) Niiza Kobushi (W) Ogawa (Th) Ogose Moro (Tu) Okabe (W) Sakado (Th) Sakado Satsuki (W) Sayama (F) Sayama Chuo (Tu) Shiki (W) Shiki Yanasegawa (Th) Shinsayama (M) Shin Tokorozawa (M) T okorozawa (Tu) T okorozawa Chuo (M) T okorozawa East (Th) T okorozawa West (W) T surugashima (W) Wako (F) Yorii (W) 2580 TOKYO Tokyo (W) ESI Tokyo Adachi (F) Tokyo Akigaw a (Th) Tokyo -Arakaw a (Tu) THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO Tokyo Asakusa (M) Tokyo Asakusa-Chuo (W) Tokyo Asuka (T u) Tokyo Bay (Th) Tokyo-East (F) Tokyo-Edogawa (M) Tokyo Edogaw a Chuo(Th) Tokyo Fussa (T u) Tokyo Fussa Chuo (W) Tokyo-Higashi-Edogaw a (Tu) Tokyo Higashi-Kurume (Tu) T okyo-Higashimurayama (Th) Tokyo-Higashiyamato (Tu) Tokyo Hongo (W) Tokyo Hoya (Th) Tokyo Ikebukuro (Th) Tokyo Ikebukuro West (M) Tokyo Itabashi (Tu) Tokyo Itabashi Central (F) Tokyo-Johoku (F) Tokyo-Jyoto (M) Tokyo Kanda (Th) Tokyo-Katsushika (F) Tokyo Katsushika Chuo (Tu) T okyo-Katsushika Higashi (W) Tokyo Kioicho (Th) Tokyo-Ki yose (W) Tokyo Kodaira (W) Tokyo Kohoku (Th) Tokyo Koishikawa (F) Tokyo-Kojimachi (M) Tokyo Koraku (Tu) Tokyo Koto (Tu) Tokyo-Mukojima (Th) Tokyo Musashimurayama (W) Tokyo Musashino (Tu) Tokyo Musashino-Chuo (Th) Tokyo Nakano (Tu) Tokyo Nerima-Chuo (W) Tokyo Nerima West (M) Tokyo-Nort h (Tu) Tokyo Ochanomizu (W) Tokyo Oj l (W) Tokyo Ome (Tu) Tokyo Rinkai (W) Tokyo Rinkai Higashi (Tu) Tokyo Riverside (Th) Tokyo Seihoku (M) Tokyo Shinjuku (F) Tokyo Shintoshin (W) Tokyo Tanashi (Th) Tokyo T anashi Keyakl (M) Tokyo T oshima-East (W) Tokyo Ueno (M) Tokyo Waseda (W) Tokyo Yotsuya (Th) Kawasaki -Naka (Tu) Kawasaki Nakahara (Th) Kawasaki North (W) Kawasaki Saginuma (W) Kawasaki-Saiw ai (F) Kawasaki South (Tu) Kawasaki Takatsu (Th) Kawasaki T akatsu South (M ) Kawasaki Tama (Th) Kawasaki T odoroki (M) Kawasaki West (F) Kawasaki Yurigao ka (Tu) Shinkawasaki (W) Shinyokohama (F) Yokohama (Tu) Yokohama Asahi (W) Yokohama Azami (W) Yokohama Bay (W) Yokohama Denyen (Tu) Yokohama East (F) Yokohama Himaw ari (Tu) Yokohama Hiyoshi (W) Yokohama-Hocogaya (Tu) Yokohama-Hongo (Tu) Yokohama Honmoku (Th) Yokohama-Isogo (Th) Yokohama Izumi (F) Yokohama Kakuho (Sa) Yokohama-Kanazaw a (M) Yokohama Kanazawa East (W) Yokohama Kanazawa Green (F) Yokohama Kohoku (Th) Yokohama Konan (W) Y okohama-Konandai (F) Yokohama Midori (W) Yokohama MM21 (M) Yokohama Naka (F) Yokohama Nan-o (Tu) Yokohama Nanryo (Th) Yokohama North (Tu) Yokohama Seya (F) Yokohama South (Sa) Yokohama Tama ( Tu) Yokohama-Totsuka ( Th) Yokohama T otsuka Chuo (F) Yokohama Totsuka East (M) Yokohama Totsuka West (W) Yokohama Tsurumi North (Th) Yokohama Tsurumi West (W) Yokohama-Tsuzuki (W) Yokohama West (W) Yokohama Yamate (W) 2600 OKINAWA NAGANO Ginowan (W) Ishigaki (W) Koza (Th) Kumejima (T h) Miyakojima (M) Nago (W) Naha ( Tu) Naha East (Th) Naha South (M) Naha West (W) Okinawa Tohbu (F) Urasoe (Th) Azumino (W) Chikumagawa (W) Chino (W) Fujimi (Th) Hakuba (Tu) lida (W) lida East (Tu) lida South (F) Iljima (Tu) Ina (Th) Ina Chuo (Tu) Karuizawa (M) Kiso (Tu) Kita-Shinano (Tu) Komagane (M) Komoro (F) Komoro Asama (Tu) Koshoku (Tu) Maruko (Th) Matsukawa (Th) Matsumoto (Th) Matsumoto A irport (M) Matsumoto East (F) Matsumo to Oshiro (Tu) Matsumoto South eM) Matsumoto Southwest (Tu) Minamisaku (Tu) Minowa (F) 2590 KANAGAWA Kanagawa (M) Kanagawa East (F) Kanagawa West ( Th) Kawasaki (Th) Kawasaki Asao (F) Kawasaki Chuo (M) Kawasaki Daishi (W) Kaw asaki Hiyoshi ( Th) Kaw asaki Inao (F) Kaw asaki Marine (Th) Kawasaki Miyamae (Tu) WINTER EDITION 2002 Miyukino-liyama (W) Nagano (Tu) Nagano East (W) Nagano North ( Th) Nagano Northeast (M) Nagano South (M) Nagano West (F) Nakano (Th) Nozaw a On sen (Tu) Okaya (Tu) Okaya Echo (M) Omachi (W) Saku (Th) Saku Cosmos (M) Shiga Kogen (W) Shiojiri (F) Shiojiri Kita (Th) Suwa (F) Suwako (Th) Suwataisha (Tu) Suzaka (F) Suzaka Gogaku (W) T ateshina (W) Tatsuno (W) T enryugaw a (M) T ogura-Kamlyamada (F) Ueda (M) Ueda East (W) Ueda-Rokumonsen (Tu) Ueda West (Th) 261 0 TOYAMA Asahi (W) Etchu Yatsuo (W) Himi (Th) Himi-Chuo (T u) Imizu (Tu) Inami Shogawa (W) Kamiichi (W) Kurobe (Tu) Kurobe Chuo (Th) Namerikaw a ( Th) Nyuzen ( Th) Oyabe (Tu) Oyabe Naka (Th) Shinminato (F) Shinminato Chuo (M) Takaoka (Th) T akaoka-Manyo (F) Takaoka-North (M) T akaoka West (W) T ateyama (Th) Tonami (M) T onami South (T u) Toyama (Tu) Toyama City (M) T oyama-Mirai (Tu) Toyama Naka (W) Toyama South (F) Toyama West (Th) Unazuki (W) Uozu (F) Uozu West (Tu) ISHIKAWA A namizu (F) Hakui (Th) Ishikawa-Kashima (W) Kaga (Th) Kaga Chuo (W) Kaga Hakusan (T u) Kahoku (W) Kahoku South (M ) Kanazawa (W) Kanazawa-East (M ) Kanazawa Hyakumangoku (Th) Kanazawa Kohrinbo (M ) Kanazawa Minato (Tu) Kanazawa North (Th) Kanazawa South (Tu) Kanazawa West (F) Komatsu (Th) Komatsu City (M) Komatsu East (Tu) Matto (Tu) Matto Ishi kawa (Th) Monzen (F) Nakajima (Th) Nanao (F) Nanao-Minato (T u) Nomi (F) Nonoichi (W) Noto (Th) Shika ( Tu) Suzu (Th) Togi (W) Uchiura (W) Wajima ( Tu) Yamanaka (T u) Shizuoka-Sout h (Tu) Shizuoka West (W) Suruga (Th) Susono (F) Yaizu (Th) Yaizu South (Tu) Yoshiw ara ( Th) YAMANASHI Enzan (W) Fuji-Yoshida (W) Fuj iyoshida West (F) Ichikawa Daimom (W) Isawa (F) Kai (M) Kajikazawa Aoyag i (T u) Kaw aguchi-Ko (Tu) Kofu (M) Kofu-City (W) Kofu-East (F) Kofu-Jyohoku (Tu) Kofu-North (W) Kofu South (Tu) Kofu West (Th) Kyotoh (Tu) Minobu (Th) Nagasaka (W) Nirasaki (F) Ogasawara (Tu) Otsuki (M) Ryuo (W) Tsuru (Th) Uenohara (Tu) Yamanakako (M) Yamanashi ( Th) Yamanashi Chuo (Tu) S ]-fIZUOK A Ajiro Taga (Tu) Atami (Th) Atami South (F) Fuji (W) Fujieda (W) Fujieda South (F) Fujinomi ya (M) Fujinomi ya West (F) Fukuroi (Tu) Gotemba (Th) Hainan (M) Hamakita (M) Hamakita Kibe (Tu) Hamamatsu (Tu) Hamamatsu-East (F) Hamamatsu-Harmony (W) Hamamatsu Naka (F) Hamamatsu-North (W) Hamamatsu South (Th) Hamamatsu West (F) Hamanako (Tu) Ito (Tu) Ito West (F) Iwata (W) Iwata T ombonosato (Th) Izu East (W) Izu-Nagaoka (Sa) Kakegawa (Th) Kakegawa Green (W) M ishima (W) Mishima South (F) M ishima West (Th) Nagaizumi (W) Numazu (F) Numazu East (M) Numazu North ( T u) Numazu West ( Th) Shimada (Th) Shimizu (Tu) Shimizu Chuo (Th) Shimizu North (F) ShimiZU West (W) Shimoda (Tu) Shin Fuji (Tu) Shlzuoka eM) Shlzuoka Chuo (M) Shlzuoka East (Th) Shlzuoka Nihondaira (F) Shlzuoka North (Tu) 2640 WAKAYAMA 2630 CTFU 2620 Yokkaichi North (Tu) Y okkaichi South (W) Yokkaichi West (F) Ena (Tu) Fuwa (Th) Fuwanoseki (W) Gero (F) Gifu (F) Gi f u Castle (W) Gifu East (Tu) Gif u Ethos (M) Gif u Kanoh (F) Gif u Nagaragawa (Sa) Gif u Naka (Tu) Gifu Nakasendoh ( Tu) Gifu North (W) Gifu South ( Th) Gifu Southeast (F) Gifu Sun River (M) Gifu Usuzumi (Th) Gifu West (M) GujyO Hachir'lan (Th) Gujyo Shirotori (W) Hashima (Tu) Kakamigahara (W) Kakamigahara Chuo (Th) Kakamigahara Kakamino (W) Kamo (W) Kamo East (Th) Kani (Th) Mino (Sa) Minokamo (F) Mizunami (F) Motosu ( Tu) Nakatsugawa ( Th) Nakatsugawa Cen ter (M) Ogaki (W) Ogaki Century (M) Ogaki Naka (F) Ogaki West (Tu) Seki (Tu) Seki Chuo (Th) Tajimi (W) T ajimi Riverside (F) T ajimi West (Th) Takayama (Th) Takayama Chuo (M ) Takayama West (F) Toki (Tu) Toki Chuo (M) MI E Hisai (M) Ise (Tu) Ise Chuo (F) Ise South (Th) Ise Watarai (M) Kameyama (M) Kumano (Th) Kuwana (M) Kuwana Chuo (F) Kuwana-North (Th) Kuwana West (W) Matsusaka (W) Matsusaka East (M) Matsusaka Yamazakura (Th) Nabari (M ) Nabari Chuoh (W) Owase (W) Shima (Tu) Suzuka (W) Suzuka Bay (Th) Suzuka-Ci ty (W) Suzuka West (Tu) Toba (W) Tsu (W) Tsu North (Th) Tsu-South (Tu) Ueno (Tu) Ueno East (Th) Yokkaichi (Th) Yokkaichi-East (M) Arida (Th) A rida 2000 (W) A rida South (Tu) Gobo (F) Gobo East (W) Gobo South (Tu) Hashimoto (Th) Hashimoto Kinokawa (Tu) Iwade (Th) Kainan (W) Kainan East (M ) Kainan West ( Th) Kokawa (W) Koyasan (F) Kushimoto (Tu) Nachikatsuura ( Th) Shingu (W) Shirahama (F) Tanabe (Th) Tanabe-East (W) Tanabe Hamayu (Tu) Uchita (Th) Wakayama (Tu) Wakayama Azalea (M) Wakayama East (Th) Wakayama-Jonan (Th) Wakayama Naka (F) Wakayama-North (M) Wakayama South (F) Wakayama Southeast (W) Wakayama West (W) OSAKA Fujiidera (Tu) Fujiidera Shura (Th) Habikino (W) Hagoromo (Th) Hannan (W) Izumi (W) lzumiotsu (F) lzumisano (Th) Izumi South (Th) Kaizuka (Tu) Kaizuka Cosmos (W) Kansai International Air-port (T u) Kawachinagano (F) Kawachinagano East (W) Kishiwada (W) Kishiwada East (F) Kishiwada North (Tu) Kishiwada South ( Th) Matsubara ( T u) Matsubara Naka (W) Mihara (F) Osaka-SaYama (Th) Rinku lzumisano (W) Sakai (Th) Sakai East (Tu) Sakai Izumigaoka (Tu) Sakai Naka (W) Sakai North (F) Sakai Northwest (Tu) Sakai Ooi zumi (W) Sakai Phoenix (Th) Sakai Seiryo (Th) Sakai Senboku (Th) Sakai South (M) Sakai Southeast (Th) Sakai Southwest ( Th) Sakai West ( Th) Sennan (F) T adaoka (Th) Taishi ( Th) T akaishi (Tu) Takashinohama (Th) T ondabayashi (Th) T ondabayashi-Minami (Th) 25 2650 rUKU I Fukui (Th) Fukui-A jisai (F) Fukui East (M) Fukui North (W) Fukui-Phoenix (Tu) Fukui South (Tu) Fukui West (F) Katsuyama (Tu) Maruoka (W) M ikuni (F) Oono (F) Sabae (F) Sabae-North (W) Takefu (Tu) Takefu Fuchu (Th) Tsuruga (W) Wakasa (Tu) SilIC A Biwako Hachiman (Th) Gokasho Notogawa (M) Hikone (Th) Hlkone South (Tu) Kosei Ishibe (Th) Kusatsu (Th) Minakuchi (Tu) Moriyama (F) Nagahama (M) Nagahama East (F) Omi-Hachiman (W) Otsu (Tu) Otsu Chuo (F) Otsu East (W) Otsu-Karahashi (Th) Otsu West (Th) Ritto (W) Shiga-Kohoku (Tu) Takashima (W) Yasu (Tu) Yokaichi (F) Yokaichi South (W) KYOTO Ayabe (F) Fukuchiyama ( Th) Fukuchiyama-Seinan (Tu) Kameoka (Tu) Kameoka Chuoh (F) Kyoto (W) ESI Kyoto-East (F) Kyoto-Fushimi (F) Kyoto-Heian (M) Kyoto-Joyo (F) Kyoto-Katsuragawa (Th) Kyoto Morning (F) Kyoto-Murasakino (M) Kyoto-Naka (M) Kyoto-Nishiyama (Th) Kyoto-North (Sa) Kyoto Northeast (W) Kyoto-Northw est (W) Kyoto-Otokuni (F) Kyoto-Rakuchu (Tu) Kyoto-Rakuhoku (Th) Kyoto Rakunan (Tu) Kyoto-Rakusai (F) Kyoto-Rakuto (Th) Kyoto-Sagano (W) Kyoto Shichiku (F) Kyoto-South (Th) Kyoto-Southwest (Tu) Kyoto-Suzaku (W) Kyoto Tanabe (Th) Kyoto-West (M) Kyoto-Yamashina (Tu) Kyoto-Yamashiro (W) Kyoto Yawata (Tu) Maizuru (Tu) Maizuru East (Th) Mineyama (Th) Miyazu (Tu) Sonobe (W) Uji (Tu) Uji Ho-o (Th) NAR A Goj o (W) 26 Heijokyo (Th) Ikoma (W) Kashi hara (F) Kashihara Chuo (Th) Nara (Th) Nara-East (W) Nara Oomiya (Tu) Nara-West (Th) Oji (Tu) Sakurai (W) Yamatokoriyama (M) Yamatotakada (Tu) Takatsuki East (F) Takatsuki West (Th) Toyonaka (Tu) T oyonaka-Osaka Inter national Airport (F) T oyonaka Senri (W) Toyonaka -South (Th) Yao (W) Yao Central (Tu) Yao East (F) 2670 2660 OSAK A Daito (Tu) Daito Chuo (W) Higashi Osaka (W) Higashi-Osaka East (Th) Higashi Osaka-Nishi (M) Higashiosaka Central (M) Higashiosaka Midori (Th) Hirakata (Tu) Hirakata-Kuzuha (W) Ibaraki (W) Ibaraki -East (Th) Ibaraki-West (W) Ikeda (W) Ikeda Kureha (M) Kadoma (Th) Katano (Th) Mino-o (Th) Mino-o Central (F) Moriguchi (W) Moriguchi-Evening (Th) Neyagawa (F) Neyagawa East (W) Osaka (F) ESI Osaka-Abeno (W) Osaka Central (Th) Osaka Chayamachi (M) Osaka DOJima (M) Osaka-East (Th) Osaka Evening (Th) Osaka Friend (W) Osaka-Hannan (Tu) Osaka-Higashiyodo (M) Osaka Hirano (Th) Osaka Honmachi (Tu) Osakajo (W) Osaka-Jonan (F) Osaka-Joto (F) Osaka-Kashiwara (Tu) Osaka Kita-Umeda (M) Osaka-Midosuji (Th) Osaka-Nakanoshima (Th) Osaka-Namba (Th) Osaka-Naniwa (Th) Osaka-Nansei (M) Osaka-North (W) Osaka -Northwest (Tu) Osaka-Otemae (F) Osaka-Oyodo (Th) Osaka-Riverside (Th) Osaka Sakishima (W) Osaka Semba (M) Osaka-Shinsaibashi (F) Osaka-Shirokita (W) Osaka Sonezaki (W) Osaka-South (Tu) Osaka Southeast (Tu) Osaka-Southwest (W) Osaka Suminoe (M) Osaka-Sumiyoshi (F) Osaka-T emmabashi (Th) Osaka Tennoji (F) Osaka T surumi (T u) Osaka Umeda (T u) Osaka-Umeda East (F) Osaka Universal Ci ty (F) Osaka Utsubo (F) Osaka-West (M) Osaka-Yodogawa (F) Senri (Tu) Senri Maple (Th) Settsu (F) Shijonawate (W) Shin-Osaka (W) Suita (Th) Suita Esaka (Tu) Suita-West (M) Takatsuki (W) TOKUSIIJMA Anan (Tu) Anan South (Th) Awaikeda (Tu) Gosho (F) Kaifu (F) Kamojima (Tu) Komatsushima (F) Komatsushima South (W) Naruto (M) Naruto Chuo (Tu) Tokushima (W) T okushima-Chuo (W) T okushima-East (Th) Tokushima North (M) T okushima Prince (F) T okushima South (F) T okushima West (Tu) Wakimachi (Th) KOCHI Ak i (W) Chugei (Th) Kacho (Tu) Kochi (Tu) Kochi Chuo (Sa) Kochi East (W) Kochi North (M) Kochi South (Th) Kochi West (F) Nakamura (W) Nakamura Sou th (Tu) Niyodo ( Th) Sukumo (Th) Susaki (Tu) E HIME Dogo (F) Hojyo (Tu) Imabari (Th) Imabari North (M) Imabari South (Tu) Iyo (W) Iyo-Mishima (F) Kawanoe (Tu) Matsuyama ( T u) Matsuyama East (W) Matsuyama North (M) Matsuyama South ( Th) Matsuyama West (Tu) Niihama (Th) Niihama South (Tu) Oozu (W) Saijo (Th) Toyo (W) Uwajima ( Tu) Uwajima South (M) Yawatahama (F) KAGAWA Kanonji (Th) Kanonji East (Tu) Kotohira (F) Marugame (Th) Marugame East (T u) Sakaide (Tu) Sakaide East (W) Sanuki (F) Shirotori (M) Shodoshima (F) T akamatsu (Th) Takamatsu Chuo (Sa) T akamatsu East (Tu) T akamatsu Green (Th) T akamatsu North (M) T akamatsu Sou th (W) Takamatsu West (F) Zentsuji (W) 2680 IlYOC O Aioi (W) Akashi (W) Akashl Kita (Tu) Akashi South (F) Akashi West (Th) Ako (Th) Amagasaki (M) Amag asaki East (W) A magasaki Naka (W) Amagasaki North (F) Amagasaki South (Th) Amagasaki West (Tu) Ashiya (W) Ashi yagawa (M) Awaji Chuo (W) Awaji Mihara (Th) Awaji North (M) Hamasaka (W) Himeji (Tu) Himeji Chuo (Th) Himeji East (M) Himeji-South (M) Himeji West (W) Hojo (Tu) Ikuno (W) Itami (Th) Itami Ariake (Sa) Itami Koyaike (Th) Kaibara (F) Kakogawa (Tu) Kakogawa Center (Th) Kakogawa-Heisei (W) Kamigori (F) Kanzaki (Th) Kasumi (Tu) Kawanishi (F) Kawanishi Inagawa (Tu) Kobe (Th) Kobe Arima (Th) Kobe Bay (Tu) Kobe East (Tu) Kobe Harbor (W) Kobe Higashinada (M) Kobe Naka (Tu) Kobe North (F) Kobe Rokko (Tu) Kobe Seishin (Th) Kobe South (M) Kobe-Suma (W) Kobe Tarumi (Th) Kobe West (F) Miki (F) Miki Midori (M) Minami Awaji (F) Nishinomiya (Tu) Nishinomiya-Ebisu (Th) Nishinomiya-Koshien (W) Nishinomiya Shukugawa (F) Nishiwaki (M) Ono (W) Sanda (Tu) Sanda-South (Th) Sasayama (W) Sumoto (Tu) T akarazuka (M) T akarazuka Mukogawa (Th) T akarazuka-Naka (W) T akasago (F) Takasago Seisho (W) T atsuno (Th) Toyooka (F) Toyooka Maruyamagawa (Tu) Tsuna (W) Wadayama ( Th) 26 9 0 OKAYAMA Akaiwa (Tu) Bizen (F) Ibara (W) Kasaoka (Tu) Kasaoka-East (F) Kojima (Tu) KOjima East (M) Kurashiki (Th) Kurashiki East (M) Kurashiki Mizushima (W) Kurashiki South (F) Maniwa (Tu) Mimasaka (Tu) Niimi (Th) Okayama (W) Okayama-Asahigawa (W) Okayama Binan (W) Okayama Chuo (F) Okayama East (Th) Okayamajo (Tu) Okayama-Kohnan (Tu) Okayama-Korakuen (Th) Okayama Marunouchi (W) Okayama North (Tu) Okayama Northwest (M) Okayama Setouchi (Tu) Okayama-South (Tu) Okayama Southwest (F) Okayama West (M) Soja (Th) Soja Kibiji (Tu) Takahashi (W) Tamano (F) Tamashima (W) Tsuyama (F) T suyama Chuo (Th) Tsuyama West (W) Ushimado (M) Kokura-South (Tu) Koku ra West (Th) Kurume (F) Kurume Chuo (Tu) Kurume East (M) Kurume North (Th) Maebaru (F) Moji (Tu) Moji West (Th) Munakata (W) Noogata (Th) Noogata Chuo (M) Ogori (M) Okawa (Th) Okawa East (Tu) Omuta (Tu) Omuta-North (Th) Omuta-South (F) Onga (Tu) Tagawa (W) Tobata (Th) Tobata-Higashi (Tu) Ukiha (W) Wakamatsu (M) Wakamatsu Chuo (W) Yahata (Tu) Yahata-Chuo (M) Yahata South (Th) Yahata West (F) Yame (Tu) Yanagawa (W) Yukuhashi ( T u) Yukuhashi Miyako (W) T OTTORI NACASAKI Chizu (W) Kurayoshi (Tu) Kurayoshi-Chuo (W) Kurayoshi East (Th) Sakaiminato (Tu) Tottori (Th) Tottori Chuo (M) Tottori North (Tu) Tottori West (F) Yonago (F) Yonago-Chuo (Th) Y onago East (W) Y onago South (M) Iki (Tu) Iki Chuo (W) Tsushima (W) SHIMANE Gotsu (W) Hamada (Th) Hirata (Th) lzumo (Tu) lzumo-Chuo (M) lzumo South (F) Masuda (F) Masuda West (W) Matsue (W) Matsue East (Th) Matsue Shinjiko (Tu) Matsue South (M) Oda (Th) Saigo (Oki) (Tu) Taisha (W) 2700 I; UKU OKA Amagi (Tu) Buzen (Th) Buzen West (F) Chikugo ( Th) Dazaifu (Tu) Fukuoka (W) Fukuoka Chuo (M) Fukuoka Heisei (M) Fukuoka Higashi (Th) Fukuoka-Johtoh (Sa) Fukuoka-Jonan (W) Fukuoka-Josei (Tu) Fukuaka North (F) Fukuoka-South (Th) Fukuoka-Southeast (F) Fukuoka-West (M) Hakata (Tu) lizuka (Tu) Kanda (Th) Kokura (F) Kokura Chuo (M) Kokura East (W) SAGA Tosu (W) 271 0 HIROSHIMA Fuchu (Tu) Fukuyama (M) Fukuyama Akasaka (Tu) Fukuyama-East (W) Fukuyama Marunouchi (F) Fukuyama North (F) Fukuyama-South (Th) Fukuyama West (Tu) Higashi Hiroshima (Tu) Higashi Hiroshima 21 (M) Hiroshima (Tu) Hiroshima Aki (Tu) Hiroshima Asa (Th) Hiroshima Center (M) Hiroshima East (W) Hiroshima Eno (F) Hiroshima Hatsukaichi (M) Hiroshima-Jounan (F) Hiroshima-Kuko (W) Hiroshima North (Th) Hiroshima Ryohoku (W) Hiroshima South (F) Hiroshima Southeast (M) Hiroshima Southwest (Tu) Hiroshima West (Th) Innoshima (Th) Kisa (Tu) Kure (Th) Kure East (W) Kure South (Tu) Matsunaga (M) Mihara (Tu) Miyoshi (Th) Miyoshi Chuo (M) Onomichi (F) Onomichi East (Tu) Otake (Tu) Saijo (Th) Setoda (W) Shobara (Tu) Takehara (Th) Toj o (W) T omonoura (T u) THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO YAMAGUCH I Hagi (Th) Hagi East (Tu) Hikari (M) Hofu (Tu) Hofu North (M) Hofu South (Th) Iwakuni (Th) Iwakuni Chuo (W) Iwakuni West (F) Mine (Tu) Nagato (F) Onoda (W) Shimonoseki (M) Shimonoseki Chuo (F) Shlmonoseki East (Th) Shimonoseki-North (Tu) Shimonoseki-West (W) T okuyama (Th) Tokuyama Central (M) T okuyama East (W) Tokuyama-West (Tu) Ube (Th) Ube Higashi (W) Ube Nishi (Tu) Yamaguchi (W) Yamaguchi Chuou (Tu) Yamaguchi Ken-Oh (Tu) Yamaguchi South (F) Yanai (Tu) Yanai-West (Th) Yuya Bay (W) 2720 or TA Beppu (F) Beppu-Chuo (Tu) Beppu East (Th) Beppu North (W) Bungo-Takada (Tu) Hiji (Tu) Hita (W) Hita Chuo (Tu) Kitsuki (Th) Kunisaki (W) Kusu (Th) Mie (W) Nakatsu (W) Nakatsu Chuo (Tu) Nakatsu Heisei (Th) Oita (Tu) Oita 1985 (M) Oita Capital (W) Oita Chua (W) Oita-East ( Th) Oita Josai (W) Oita Minami (F) Oita Rinkai (M) Saiki (W) Saiki Marine (F) Taketa (Tu) Tsukumi (Tu) Usa ( Th) Usa 2001 (W) Usa Hachiman (F) Usuki (Th) Usuki Chuo (W) Yufuin (W) KUMAMOTO Amakusa Pearl Line (W) Arao (W) Ashi kita (M) Aso (W) Higo Oguni (F) Higo Ozu (Tu) Hitoyoshi (F) Hitoyoshi Chuo (W) Hondo (Tu) Hondo Chuo (Th) Kikuchi ( Th) Kumamoto (F) Kumamoto Chuo (F) Kumamoto East (Tu) Kumamoto Green (M) Kumamoto Heisei (Th) Kumamoto Joto (M) Kumamoto Kikunan (W) Kumamoto Kikuyo (Th) WINTER EDITION 2002 Kumamoto Konan (W) Kumamoto North (Th) Kumamoto Seinan (Th) Kumamoto Seiryo (M) Kumamoto South (M) Kumamoto Southeast (W) Kumamoto Suizenji Park (W) Kumamoto West (Tu) Matsubase (Th) Minamata (Tu) Nishi Amakusa (W) Tamana (M) Tamana Chuo (F) Taragi (Th) Ushibuka (W) Uto (W) Yamaga (W) Yamaga Chuo (Tu) Yatsushiro (W) Yatsushiro Higashi (Th) Yatsushiro-Kita (F) Yatsushiro Minami (Tu) 2730 M\YA7AKI Ebino (Th) Hyuga (M) Hyuga Chuo (W) Hyuga Higashi ( T u) Kadogawa (Th) Kobayashi (W) Kobayashi Chuo ( Tu) Kushima (Th) Miyakonojo (F) Miyakonojo Chuo (Th) Miyakonojo North (Tu) Miyakonojo West (W) Miyazaki (Tu) Miyazaki-Chuo (Th) Miyazaki-Higashi (M) Miyazaki-Kita (W) Miyazaki-Minami (M) Miyazaki-Nishi (F) Nichinan (W) Nichinan-Chuo (Tu) Nobeoka (W) Nobeoka Chuo (Th) Nobeoka East (M) Sadowara (F) Saito (Tu) T akanabe (Th) KAGOSIIJMA Aira (W) Akune (M) Amami Setouchi (W) Ei (Th) Ibusuki (Tu) Ijuin (W) Izumi (Th) Kagoshima (F) Kagoshima Chuo (M) Kagoshima East (Th) Kagoshima Josei (Tu) Kagoshima North (Th) Kagoshima South (W) Kagoshlma Southeast (Tu) Kagoshima Southern Wind (Th) Kagoshima Southwest (W) Kagoshima West (W) Kajiki (W) Kanoya (W) Kanoya East (Th) Kanoya West (M) Kaseda (W) Kirishima (Th) Kokubu (Th) Kokubu Chuo (W) Koyama (Tu) Kushikino (Tu) Kushira (M) Makurazaki (M) Minami Kyushu Osaki ( Th) Miyanojo (W) Naze (Th) Naze Chuo (Tu) Ookuchi (M) Sendai (Tu) Sendai Chuo (W) Shibushi (Tu) Shibushi-Minato (W) 2740 SAGA Arita (Tu) Imari (W) Imari West (Th) Kanzaki (Tu) Karatsu (Tu) Karatsu-Chuo (F) Karatsu East (Th) Karatsu-West (W) Kashima (Tu) Ogi (W) Ohmachi (Th) Saga (Th) Saga A irport (W) Saga North (W) Saga South (Tu) Saga West (M) Saga Yamato (Tu) Shiroishi (W) Takeo (M) Taku (Th) Tara (Th) Ureshino (F) Ushizu (F) NAGASAK I Fukue (F) Fukue Chuo (Tu) Higashi Nagasaki (Tu) Hirado (Th) Huis Ten Bosch Sasebo (Tu) Ikitsuki (W) Isahaya (F) Isahaya North (Th) Isahaya South (M) Isahaya T arami (Tu) Isahaya West (W) Kitamatsuura (Tu) Matsuura (F) Nagasaki (Th) Nagasaki Chuo (M) Nagasaki Dejima (F) Nagasaki East (F) Nagasaki Kinkai (Th) Nagasaki North (M) Nagasaki Northeast (W) Nagasaki South (W) Nagasaki West (Tu) Omura (Tu) Omura East (M) Omura North (W) Sasebo (W) Sasebo Chuo (Th) Sasebo East (Th) Sasebo North (M) Sasebo South (F) Sasebo Southeast (W) Sasebo West (Tu) Shimabara (Tu) Shimabara-Minami (W) Unzen (Sa) 2750 Tokyo Hachioji East ( Tu) Tokyo Hachiojl North (M) Tokyo Hachioji South ( W) Tokyo Hachioji West (F) Tokyo Haneda (W) Tokyo Harajuku (Tu) Tokyo Hino (W) Tokyo Hiroo (Th) Tokyo Inagi (Th) Tokyo Inokashira (M) Tokyo Jingu (W) Tokyo Jiyugaoka (Th) Tokyo Jonan (Th) Tokyo-Josai (W) Tokyo Kamata (M) Tokyo Keihin (Tu) Tokyo Koganei (Th) Tokyo Koganel -Sakura (W) Tokyo Kokubunji (T u) Tokyo Komaba (Tu) T okyo-Komae (F) Tokyo Komae Tamagawa (W) Tokyo Konan (W) Tokyo Kunitachi (W) Tokyo Kunitachi Shiroume (M) Tokyo Machida (F) Tokyo Machida East (W) Tokyo Machida-Naka (Tu) Tokyo Machida-Salvia (Th) Tokyo Marine (T u) T okyo-Meguro (Th) Tokyo-Minato (T u) Tokyo Mitaka (F) Tokyo Musashi Fuchu (F) Tokyo Musashi Kokubunji (M) Tokyo-New South (F) Tokyo Nihonbashi (Tu ) ESI Tokyo Nihonbashi East(M) Tokyo Nihonbashl West (W) Tokyo Oi (Tu) Tokyo-Omori (Th) Tokyo Osaki (F) Tokyo Rainbcw (M) Tokyo Seijo (Tu) Tokyo Seijo Shin (Th) Tokyo Seinan (Tu) T okyo-Setagaya (W) Tokyo Setagaya Central (Tu) Tokyo Setagaya South (Tu) T okyo-Siba (W) Tokyo Shibuya Chuo (M) Tokyo Shimbashi (Tu) Tokyo Shinagawa (Th) Tokyo-South (Th) ESI Tokyo Suginami (Th) Tokyo T achikawa (F) Tokyo Tachikawa Kobushi (Tu) Tokyo T akanawa (Tu) Tokyo T ama (Tu) Tokyo T ama Green (W) Tokyo Tobihino (Tu) Tokyo T sukiji (M) Tokyo-West (F) Tokyo Yamanote (Th) TOKYO GUAM Tokyo Akishima (Th) Tokyo Akishima Chuo (W) Tokyo Chofu (M) Tokyo Chofu Murasaki (Th) Tokyo Chuo ( Th) Tokyo Chuo Shin (M) Tokyo City Nihonbashi (F) Tokyo-Denenchofu (F) Tokyo-Denenchofu Midori (Tu) Tokyo Ebara (W) Tokyo-Ebara Camellia (F) Tokyo Ebisu (Tu) Tokyo Fuchu (W) Tokyo Ginza (W) ESI Tokyo Ginza New (F) Tokyo Gotanda (M) Tokyo Hachioji (Th) Guam (Th) Guam Sunrise (Tu) Northern Guam (W) Tumon Bay (Tu) MICRONESIA 2760 AfClI1 Aichi-Nagakute (Tu) Ama (M) Anjo (F) Atsumi (W) Bisai (M) Chiryu (W) Chita (M) Gamagori (F) Handa (Th) Handa South (Tu) Hekinan (W) Higashichita (Sa) Ichinomiya ( Th) Ichinomiya Central (W) Ichinomiya North (F) Inazawa (W) Inuyama (T u) Ishiki (Th) Iwakura (Tu) Kariya (M) Kasugai (F) Komaki (W) Konan (Th) Mikawa Anjo (W) Nagoya (Tu) Nagoya Airport (M) Nagoya Chikusa (Tu) Nagoya-East (M) Nagoya Higashiyama (Th) Nagoya Meieki (W) Nagoya Meihoku (W) Nagoya Meinan ( Tu) Nagoya Meito (Tu) Nagoya Mizuho (Th) Nagoya-Moriyama (W) Nagoya-Naka (M) Nagoya Nishiki (Tu) Nagoya-North (F) Nagoya Osu (Th) Nagoya Sakae (M) Nagoya Seinan (Th) Nagoya Showa (M) Nagoya-South (W) Nagoya Southeast (W) Nagoya Wago (W) Nagoya-West (Th) Nishikasugai (Tu) Nishio (Tu) Nishio KIRARA (F) Okazaki (W) Okazaki-East (Th) Okazaki-Jonan (Tu) Okazaki-South (F) Okumikawa (Sa) Owari-Asahi (F) Owari Chuo (W) Port Nagoya (F) Seto (W) Seto North (Tu) Shinshiro (F) Tahara (F) Tahara Pacific (Tu) Takahama (Tu) Tokai (W) T okoname (F) T oyohashi ( Th) T oyohashi East (W) T oyohashi Golden (F) T oyohashi-North (T u) T oyohashi-South (M) T oyokawa (W) T oyokawa Hoi (Tu) Toyota (Th) Toyota East (W) Toyota Miyoshi (M) Toyota Naka (F) Toyota West (M) Toyoyama-Jyohoku (Tu) Tsushima (F) Pohnpei (F) T ruk Lagoon (Tu) ~ ORTIIER\ M,\RJAHS 2770 SAITAMA Saipan ( Tu) REP~BLIC Palau (F) OF P~ l AU Ageo (Th) Ageo-East (Tu) Ageo-North (F) Ageo-West (W) Hasuda (W) Hatogaya (Th) Hatogaya City (Tu) Iwatsuki (Th) Iwatsuki Chuo (W) Iwatsuki East (Tu) Kasukabe (Tu) Kasukabe Ev ening (Tu) Kasukabe South (W) Kasukabe West (Th) Kawaguchi (Th) Kawaguchi Chuo (M) Kawaguchi-East (Tu) Kawaguchi/ Hatogaya Bunan (W) Kawaguchi Morning (Sa) Kawaguchi Musashino (W) Kawaguchi North (W) Kawaguchi Northeast (Tu) Kawaguchi South (W) Kawaguchi West (T u) Kitamoto (Th) Koshigaya (Tu) Koshigaya Higashi (Th) Koshigaya Naka (Tu) Koshigaya North (W) Koshigaya South (Th) Koshigaya West (W) Kounosu (Tu) Kounosu Suiyo (W) Kuki Shobu (Th) Kurihashi (Th) Matsubushi (Tu) Misato (F) Misato Chuo (Tu) Misato Wednesday (W) Miyashiro (W) Okegawa (W) Okegawa Evening (W) Omiya (W) Omiya-Chuo (Tu) Omiya City (W) Omiya-East (W) Omiya-North (Tu) Omiya Northeast (Tu) Omiya South (Tu) Omiya Southeast (Th) Omiya-Southwest (Th) Omiya-West (M) Satte (W) Satte Chuo (Tu) Shiraoka (W) Showa (W) Soka (W) Soka21 (W) Soka Central (Th) Soka Evening (Tu) Soka South (Th) Sugito (Tu) Sugito Chuo (Th) Toda (W) T oda West (Th) Urawa (F) Urawa-Diamondo (W) Urawa East (Th) Urawa Evening (W) Urawa Naka (Th) Urawa North (W) Urawa Northeast (Tu) Urawa South (M) Urawa West (Tu) Warabi (Tu) Yashio (Tu) Yashio Chuoh (Th) Yashio City (Th) Yashio-Evening (W) Yono (Th) Yono West eM) Yoshikawa (Th) Yoshikawa Evening (W) 2780 KANAGAWA Ashigara (F) Atsug i (Tu) Atsugikeno (F) Atsugi Naka (W) Ayase (Tu) Ayase-Kasuga (W) Chigasaki (Th) Chigasaki Chuo (F) Chigasaki Nagisa (Tu) Chigasaki-Shonan (W) 27 Ebina (M) Ebina Keyaki (Th) Fujisawa (W) Fujisawa East (Tu) Fujisawa Hokusei (Th) Fujisawa North (F) Fujisawa Shonan (M) Fujisawa South (M ) FUJisawa West (Th) Hadano (Tu) Hadano Meisui (Th) Hadano Naka (F) Hakone (Tu) Hayama (W) Hiratsuka (Th) Hiratsuka North ( Tu) Hiratsuka Shonan (M ) Hiratsuka South (F) Hiratsuka West (W) lsehara (W). lsehara Chuo (M) !sehara Heisei (T u) Kamakura (Tu) Kamakura Chuo (M) Kamakura North (W) Kamakura-Of una (Th) Kamakura South (M) Kamakura West (F) Miura (Th) Ninomiy a (W) Odawara (M) Odawara Johoku (T u) Odawara Naka (Th) Odaw ara North (W) Oiso (Th) Sagamihara (Th) Sagamihara-East (M ) Sagamihara Green (F) Sagamihara Naka (Tu) Sagamihara North (W) Sagamihara Oono (W) Sagamihara-South (Tu) Sagamihara West (F) Samukawa (F) Tsukui (F) T sukui Chuo (Th) Yamato (M) Yamatodenen (F) Yamato Naka (Th) Yokosuka (F) Yokosuka North (Tu) Y okosuka South (W) Yokosuka Southwest (M) Yokosuka West (Th) Yugawara (F) Yugawara South (Tu) Zam a (W) Zama Chuo (Th) Zushi (Th) Inba Chuo (F) Inzai (W) Kamagaya (Th) Kamogawa (T u) Kashiwa (W) Kashiwa Minami (Tu) Kashiwa Nishi (F) Katsuura (F) Kazusa (Th) Kimitsu (M) Kisarazu (Th) Kisarazu East (W) Kyonan (Th) Matsudo (W) Matsudo Chuoh ( Th) Matsudo East (F) Matsudo Nishi (W) Matsudo North (T u) Mobara (Th) Mobara Chuo (T u) Mobara-Higashi (W) Nagareyama (Th) Nagareyama-Chuo (T u) Narashino (W) Narashino-Chuo ( Th) Nari ta (F) Narita Cosmopolitan (W) Noda (M) Noda Central (W) Noda East (F) Oami (W) Odaki (Tu) Ohara (Th) Omigawa (W) Sakura (Th) Sakura Nishi (T u) Sawara (Th) Sawara Katori (M) Shin-Chiba (W) Shiroi (Tu) Shonan (Th) Sodegaura (M) Tako (Tu) T ateyama (W) T ateyama Bay (Th) Togane (Tu) Togane-View (Th) Tomisato (Tu) Urayasu (F) Yachimata (W) Yachiyo (F) Yachiyo Chuo (Tu) Yokaichiba (T u) Yokoshiba (M) Yotsukaido (Tu) 2800 YAMAGATA 2790 CHI BA Abiko (Tu) Asahi (F) Chiba (M) Chiba Chuo (Th) Chiba-Higashi (M) Chiba Ki ta (W) Chiba Makuhari (Tu) Chiba Midori (Tu) Chiba M inato (Th) Chiba South (F) Chiba Wakashio (Th) Chiba West (Tu) Chikura (F) Choshi (W) Choshi East (T u) Funabashi (Tu) Funabashi East (Th) Funabashi-Minato (Tu) Funabashi North (M) Funabashi South (W) Funabashi West (F) Futtsu (Tu) Futtsu-Chuo (Th) Futtsu City (W) Ichihara (W) Ichihara Chuo (Tu) Ichikawa (Th) Ichikawa Civic (M) Ichikawa East (Tu) Ichikawa South (W) 28 Amarume (Tu) Asahi (W) A tsumi (M) Higashine (F) Higashine Chuo (M) Hirata Misumi (W) Kahoku (M ) Kaminoyama (W) Kaminoyama ZAO (M ) Kawanishi Dahlia (Th) Mogami (Tu) M urayama (Tu) Murayama Rose (W) Nagai ( Tu) Nagai Chuo (W) Nakayama (M) Nanyo (W) Nanyo-Higashi (Tu) Nanyo Rin-Un (M) Nishikawa Gassan (M) Obanazawa (Th) Obanazawa Central (W) Oguni (W) Ohe (Tu) Sagae (Th) Sagae Sakuranbo (Tu) Sakata (W) Sakat a Chuo (F) Sakata East (Th) Sakata Minato (W) Sakata Suwan (Tu) Shinjo (Th) Shinjo Ajisai (W) Shira taka (Th) Tachikawa (Th) Takahata (Th) Tendo (F) Tendo Higashi (W) Tendo West (M) Tsuruoka (Tu) Tsuruoka East (W) Tsuruoka South (Th) Tsuruoka West (F) Yam agata (W) Yamagata Chuo (Tu) Yamagata East (F) Yamagata Evening (M) Yamagata North (Th) Yamagata South (Tu) Yamagata West (M ) Yamanobe ( Tu) Yawata (W) Yonezawa (Th) Yonezawa Chuo (W) Yonezawa Oshoshina (F) Yonezawa Uesugi (Tu) Yuza (Tu) 281 0 MIYAGI Furukawa (F) Furukawa East (Tu) Ishinomaki (Th) Ishinomaki East (F) Ishinomaki South (W) Ishinomaki West (Tu) Iwadeyama (Th) Iw anuma (Tu) Kakuda (T u) Kesennuma (Tu) Kesennuma South (Th) Kurikoma (W) Marumori (Th) Matsushima (T u) Murata (W) Nakaniida (W) Narugo (Tu) Natori (Th) Ogawara (Th) Rifu (M) Sanuma (Th) Sendai (Tu) Sendai Aoba (W) Sendai-East (M) Sendai-Heisei (Tu) Sendai Izumi (Th) Sendai Miyagino (Th) Sendai North (W) Sendai Park (Tu) Sendai Rainbow (F) Sendai-South (Th) Sendai West (F) Sendaikamuri (W) Shibata (W) Shichigahama (M ) Shiogama (F) Shiogama East (W) Shiroishi (F) Shiroishi-North ( Tu) Tagajo ( Th) Tai wa (W) Tsukidate (T u) Wakayanagi (M ) Wakuya ( Tu) Watari (Th) 2820 IBARAKI Ami (Th) Daigo (W) Edosaki (Th) Fuj ishiro (M ) Hasaki (Th) Hitachi (T u) Hitachi Chuo (M) Hitachi-Ko (Th) Hitachinaka (T u) Hitachi North (W) Hitachi-Omiya (Th) Hitachi-Ota (W) Hitachi South (Tu) Hitachi-Yamagata (Tu) Hokota (Tu) Ishioka (W) Ishioka 87 (Th) Itako (W) Iwai (W) Iwase (W) Kasama (Th) Kashima Chuo (Th) Kashima Rinkai (F) Katsuta (F) Ki ta Ibaraki (T u) Koga (F) Koga-East (Tu) Makabe ( Tu) Mito (Tu) Mito-Higashi (Th) Mito-Minami (F) Mito Nishi (W) Mito-Sakura (M) Mitsukaido (W) Moriya (F) Nakaminato (M) Oarai (Th) Ryugasaki (Tu) Ryugasaki Chuo (F) Sakai ( Th) Sekijo (Th) Shimodate (W) Shimodat e Shisui (Tu) Shimotsuma (Th) Sowa (W) Takahagi (W) T amatsukuri (F) Tokai (W) Tomobe ( Tu) Toride (Th) Tsuchiura (Th) Tsuchiura Chuo (W) Tsuchiura Shihou (Th) Tsuchiura South (Tu) Tsukuba City (W) Tsukuba Gakuen (Th) Ushiku (M) Yuki (W) 2830 A OMOR I Aomori (Th) Aomori Chuo (M) Aomori-East (F) Aomori Morning (F) Aomori Northeast (W) Aomori South (Tu) Azigasawa (Th) Gonohe (W) Goshogawara (W) Goshogawara Chuo (Th) Hachino he (W) Hachinohe Chuo (F) Hachinohe East (F) Hachinohe-Nor th ( Tu) Hachinohe South (Th) Hashikami (M) Hiraka-Onoe ( Tu) Hirosaki (F) Hirosaki East (W) Hirosaki West ( Th) Itayanagi (Tu) Kamikita (Tu) Kanagi (Tu) Kizukuri (Tu) Kuroishi (Th) Misawa ( Tu) Misawa East (F) Momoishi-Shimoda (W) Mutsu (Tu) Mutsu Chuo (W) Nagawa (M) Noheji (Tu) Ohata (Th) Owani (Tu) Rokkasho (Th) Rokunohe ( Th) Sannohe ( Th) Shichinohe (Th) Tohoku (W) Towada (Tu) Towada East ( Th) Towada Hakko (W) Tsugaru Hokusei (M) Tsuruta (F) 2840 GUNMA Annaka (Tu) Fujioka (Th) Fujioka Ki ta (T u) Fujioka South (F) Gunma Sakai (F) Isesaki (W) Isesaki Chuo (Th) Isesaki Higashi (M ) Isesaki South (Tu) Kiryu (M) Kiryu Akagi (Tu) Kiryu Chuo (Th) Kiryu South ( W) Kiryu West (F) Kusatsu (Th) Maebashi (Tu) Maebashi Chuo (T u) Maebashi Eas t (Th) Maebashi North (M) Maebashi South (W) Maebashi West (F) Minakami ( Tu) Nakanojo (T u) Nitta (W) Numata (Tu) Numata Chuo (Th) Ohizumi (W) Ota ( Th) Ota Chuo (F) Ota South (T u) Ota West (W) Shibukawa (Th) Shibukawa Midori (Tu) T akasaki (M) T akasaki Central (Tu) T akasaki East (Th) T akasaki North (W) T akasaki-South (Tu) T akasaki Symphony (F) Tatebayashi (F) T atebayashi East (W) T atebayashi Millennium (Th) T atebayashi West (Tu) Tomioka (W) T omioka Chuo ( Th) Usuiannaka (Th) Number of Clubs and Members FRIENDSHIP PLAZA as of31 July 2002 District Club Member 2500 69 2 ,962 25 10 71 3,497 2520 45 1,559 253 0 63 2 ,80 1 2540 43 1,446 2550 51 2 ,267 2560 56 2.358 2 570 56 2.3 4 2 : 2580 72 3,950 2590 63 2 ,899 26 00 58 2, 727 26 10 65 3 . 189 2620 83 3.983 2630 80 4 .3 48 2640 75 3 . 135 2650 93 5,687 Presented here are views and opinions by Rotarians on life in general as well as on Rotary. The selections are mostly dra wn from articles published in the recent issues of the Rotary's official regional magazine in japan, The Rotary -No-Tomo. The Club Meeting That Began with a Requiem Kiyoshi Nagatomo Fujisawa North The name New York calls to ROTARY fRIENDS & h Mrs Simpson Mrs Logan to t e WELCOME of FUJISAWA - NORTl mind visions of last year's tragic Owl Collection events, but Mrs. Logan's slides 2660 86 4 .673 2670 71 3 .522 2680 74 3,649 of lush green countryside, with yea rs ago. Now I have over 220 owls. I have been collecting owl goods for the most part showed scenes since I bought one as a souvenir at Edinburgh in U.K. more than 10 2690 66 3 ,743 the smiling faces of her and her 2 700 59 3.535 compatriots looking ahead to 2 710 74 3,982 tomorrow. Was I the only one 2720 74 2 ,929 who felt that it is exactly that 2730 64 2. 84 2 On Friday June 21st the Fujisawa sort of surroundings that infuses 2740 58 2.850 North Club began its meeting with one's entire being with a spirit alive 2750 89 5,440 the song" America the Beautiful. " to the ideals of service? For all of 2760 79 5,794 Actually this requiem has been sung us it was a time well spent, crossing in Japan, a place like Canandaigua 2 770 83 3,256 at services in churches throughout language barriers and international where a pure body and mind ca n 2780 69 2 ,857 the Unit e d States ever since the 85 3 ,550 boundarie s to speak together of grow and prosper. For me it was a 2790 2800 57 2.292 awful terrorist attack last yea r in coming glories and a future. New York, and it was to we lcome brigh ~ new 28 10 45 1.542 2820 58 2,477 some ve ry special guests that all Toda y, with the number of 2830 43 1.361 members of our club joined in the Rotarians growing fewer each 2840 46 2.369 song. 2,323 111 .8 13 Hirotoshi Suzuki (RC of Fujieda D-2620 Shizuoka) passing year, there still must be, even valuable experience which served to unbury my half-forgotten passion and the solid faith needed to live my life. The special guests were Mrs. Jean Logan and her companion Mrs. Ann Simpson, both of Ne w York. Mrs . Logan, who serve d as the 1998-99 Tea Ceremony Club Meeting president of the Rotar y Club of Muneko Yanagizawa Canandaigua (District 7120) , gave THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO Kishiwada East a lun cheon address in which she The Rotary Club of Kishiwada East meeting, created at the wish of club described the town of Canandaigua, held its tea ceremony club meeting president Oyama, turned out to be its festivals and the service activities on April 16th amidst the new spring an important event and a fitting her club is engaged in , and which greenery of the old gardens of close to the year's activities. she illustrated with 52 color slides. Gofuso at Kishiwada J onan. This WINTER EDITION 2002 Members of the Fellowship 29 FRIENDSHIP PLAZA seventy some people breathing as our ship arrived safely back in Kisarazu Port. them to tell us about themselves. and a hanging scroll one, proved to be a truly rich and At the initial stage, our plan called Quite happily, all of the clubs gladly painting representing rewarding time, a unique meeting for meeting with members of a club the simplicity of nature, that was extended one hour longer in each region, but many of our President Ito presented the banner club president and than usual. members came to Kisarazu after of the club we visited and talked As chairperson of the Fellowship transferring from jobs elsewhere about its special characteristics at the other participants, Committee, it is my hope that and they wanted us to visit the club our regular meetings . We always looked on as club this meeting was a meaningful they used to belong to. As a result, had a map of Japan handing in the My Dog member Nishimura experience for all the club members we eventually visited 17 clubs. regular meeting hall that showed Committee gathered early to prepared the first bowl of tea. Wives who donated their valuable Friday prepare for the regular club meeting as well attended this occasion, In my family we have five females, 4 daughters and my wife . They are more powerful than only two males , me and our dog named Ron. Two of us alone take a walk everyday. an alcove decorated tea ceremony club meeting, with with spring flowers secretary, together with data about the club. We also asked My Treasure accepted us. We would do an advance sending the port we arrived in the location of afternoon and, for the sake of of our club banner along with a the club we visited. We also put this and the elegance of their lovely service, have dedicated their hearts general overview of the city and information on the club's web site. ceremony. The regular meeting kimonos, so different from everyday as one toward the enlightenment of went off smoothly. Following a attire, together with club members the community through the Rotary relationships with many demonstration of how to properly and shrine attendants, helped to clubs , but this attempt drink tea from a bowl by assistant create a peaceful and harmonious spirit. This meeting also served as a to go around Japan on Fellowship Committee chairman atmosphere. thank you to all members for their a dream voyage to meet cooperation throughout the previous with so many wonderful graduation project. Anti-Japanese year. club members was an feelings in Guam were strong at that held in conjunction with the tea Tsujibayashi, people in attendance Club members were all earnest were divided into two groups and in their attempt to learn how to the tea ceremony was conducted drink tea properly, and thus the '-' *All posts are given as of that time. one group at a time. Dressed in kimono and formal , skirt-like hakama and sitting before A Dream Voyage Circumnavigating] apan o , We've built sister Hisao Tsuchiyama (RC of Ashibetsu D-2510 Hokkaido) extremely original and time and he had received permission rewarding idea. for the trip from the Guam Tourist *All posts are give n as 200l - 2 002if:!II' *1!;lBiJm-91)-~5:;1' of that time. Bureau, one of the employees of which was James Shintaku, a member of the Rotary Club of Guam. My son was camping out not far Meeting with other Rotarians throughout Japan Shuhei Yamada Kisarazu East from a local church, when the parish Son Born Thick Friendships priest came by and told him that he had better break up his camp and My Thoroughbred Its name is "Can Not Lose, " but it lost many times. It presented two wins for me, though. Yasuhiko Mori (RC ofTokyo Machida East D-2750Tokyo) 30 The slogan we adopted for the active by meeting with members of club at the beginning of last fiscal other clubs in port cities and towns year was "Refresh the Club, Let's along the entire Japan coast. Yozo Adachi Atami South come to stay in the church with him because it was on that very site that On February 15, 2001, six Float Along." We made the decision We named the ship the "Kisarazu Rotarians headed for Guam, that that everyone in the club would East Rotarian Maru" and launched green -covered coral isle in the be part of the ship's crew and that it on July 4, 2001 at the first regular the president would be the captain. meeting of the new fiscal year. The Everyone would pitch in and put ship would leave Kisarazu Port and their strengths together as we in one year circumnavigate Japan. Sister-Club Committee, myself and Japanese soldiers had massacred six members of the committee. a number of native Guamanians The opportunity for the Roary and it was too dangerous for him, South Pacific, to which we had been Clubs of Atami South and Tumon a Japanese, to stay there. It was on invited to attend the ceremonies for Bay to form a sister club affiliation that spot that a memorial to the the 30th anniversary of the Rotary came about when my son was massacre was being built. Club of Tumon Bay , a club that visiting Guam. At the time, he was Because of this episode my son embarked on a dream voyage. This Then on June 26 , 2002, the last Atami South has sister-club relations studying art in college and was there began participating in services on would make the club more vital and regular meeting of the fiscal year, with . Yamada is chairman of the to create a photo-essay as part of his behalf of the church. Through that, THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO WINTER EDITION 2002 31 FRIENDSHIP PLAZA he got to know many people in the recognition by Rotary International, village and, rather than being upset about him being japanese, they were we both pledged to work for a relationship of mutual benefit and very thankful for what he had been understanding by forming a sister doing. Later, in january, 1972, the gers club relationship. Thirty years have passed since invited my son to a celebration. I then and we have continued with was club president at the time, and our programs for youth, student I had the good fortune of seeing and member exchange. A warm james Shintaku again at a regular friendship exists between the two meeting of the Guam Club. That was clubs and we want to move forward with greater interaction than we wedding of my precious daughter on May 6th, in spite of my vow not have had so far. to cry. the first time that the subject came up of forming a sister relationship between our two clubs. At the but they have the heartwarming My Treasure My Daughter I finally burst into tears at the Cen Nogami wonderful environment built by Mr. Kanamori and all the members that Nagoya-Moriyama came before him. you may get no second chance Now I am totally accustomed to my Rotary surroundings, I hardly in the future. ever miss a meeting, for I enjoy I'm 37 and it's been just three attending everyone. What has given years since I entered Rotary. Mr. Kanamori was a veteran, me this motivation are those words telling me I was a colleague. When one who had once been club I was a new member of Rotary, I president. He was 87 when he had some negative thoughts: I was unsettled, I wouldn't fit in, I didn't died; 50 years older than me. (RC of Atsugikeno D-2780 Kanagawa) Rice Planting junior-senior connection. It's a Misao Yokochi "All posts are given as of that time. meeting to celebrate Tumon Bay's goodness to not emphasize the A Departed Colleague, 50 Years My Senior Not long after I entered know anyone . But thanks to those Rotary, the club held an art kind words, I found the joy of taking how ordinary rubber boots brought The passing in March of this fair. I participated but felt out part. Now when anyone comes in along for the occasion were of year of Shozo Kanamori, an active new, I go over and talk to them. absolutely no use at all. The day's activities also included member of this club, was little of place for I knew no one at the time. Mr. Kanamori came over and He reached his end, and I pray for different to me than the loss of a member of my own immediate talked to me and I told him, "I'm Mr. Kanamori and the peace of his a stint at weeding and insect rather nervous; all of these people eternal soul. illness, or because the parents have extermination, as well as a family. He was a generous and simply left them. In the autumn of last year we magnanimous, a hearty soul in lively are older than my parents." He said, "All people are the same the we have for the past eight years description of how by autumn the seedlings would grow into stalks good spirits at a regular meeting two only difference is they were just been supporting the Boso Futaba held a bowling tournament for the heavy with rice. I am sure this little at this facility are all unable to live kids, and this spring we took all 29 of them for a day of rice planting. weeks before he died. That meeting was his final one, and I remember born earlier than you. They are outing provided the perfect sort of learning experience and adventure him sitting too far away for me to with their parents for a number of Borrowing an approximately 400 for today's children who know so get the chance to talk to him. When respect that he would give someone reasons, including divorce, parental sq. yard rice field belonging to one of our members, children little about how rice is grown. In addition, club members together I later heard the news of his death of the same age even though I was crushed in the extreme shock I was young enough to be his and sadness of grief. granddaughter. From then on, when Yutaka Masuda As an important part of our club's community service program , Children's Home. The children living 32 Chiba Chuo and club members alike sloshed through the tremendous team spirit in working Thinking about it now, seeing I went to a regular meeting, I did so rice paddy in their bare together, and the children too him was like saying, "I'll see you not out of a sense of obligation, but feet and hand planted approximately 15 sensed this, and surely it made a again next week." But we had no with the feeling that I wanted to be good impression on them. Looking final words together and that is as active as I could in as many club seedlings each, becoming eagerly ahead to autumn and the fun something I regret most deeply. I've groups as possible. splattered with mud of harvesting the rice, club members been given a lesson that I will take in the process. It was are busy making plans for the next with me for the rest of my life: Lose Nagoya-Moriyama has a wide range interesting to discover outing. an opportunity in the present and of member ages from 32 to 92 WINTER EDITION 2002 _ ........ all Rotarians and they are all your colleagues." He treated me with the with their families displayed THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO .... ,- My Treasure The Rotary My Daughter A dream I wished to play the piano together with my dear daughter, came true in giving a four-hand performance at a piano presentation. Club of Teruyo Ono (RC of Iwanuma 0-2810 Miyagi) 33 What the Rotaractors did Elementary Schoo Kids Experience a Day in the Life of a Shop-worker Jonosuke Hatta Former President, Rotaract Club of Tokyo-Arakawa Birth of the Children's Merchant Academy On Saturday, May 18, the Rotaract Club of Tokyo Arakawa convened the Children's Merchant Academy covering nine stores at a shopping center in Tokyo's Arakawa ward. The members of the academy are 4th to 6th community. " That led to the creation this year of the to what we were doing. We also advertised on local and joy of working hard at jobs they had never done Children's Merchant Academy and to the preparations for neighborhood bulletin boards and had articles placed in before. Everyone said they enjoyed it and wished they making that plan a reality. several of the big five newspapers. The result was more could do it every week. Rowing the boat to our target We first walked around and talked to several children applying for the program than we had room for. The big day arrives The merchants said that thanks to those poster girls, "We've had more business than we ever imagined we could. I'd like those kids to follow in my footsteps. At graders who attend schools in the ward and the academy shopkeepers in shopping districts of our local Arakawa Lively voices reverberated throughout the shopping seeks to give them one day of shop-work experience, a test ward. We then narrowed our focus to the Minowa street as 18 pupils, covered by TV and other mass with them, the shop owners faces were now glowing with that would let them know the joys and trials of hard work. Ginza Shopping Lane which has many different kinds of media, entered the nine stores: flower , gyoza (Chinese satisfied smiles for all the children. In the previous fiscal year, Tokyo-Arakawa set up a major businesses and an elementary school nearby. Although food) , general goods, and fruit and vegetable shops. The target of "activities rooted in the area" through which the president of the shopping street liked what we were Rotarians wore their homemade dark red aprons and Without the direction that government once provided, today's citizen doesn't realize the need for involvement we seek to increase our contacts with a broad variety of doing, not very many owners, who think of their shops as both the big and small people took instructions from the in community activities and the horizontal connections little kingdoms, were keen on it. shop owners, on how to arrange goods on shelves, how to between the people of Tokyo have grown very weak. On several occasions, all members came out and greet customers, and how to use the cash register. After These children built a bridge between the local elementary went around to each store to negotiate and we received the day's work at each store was over, we, divided into schools and the merchants of the shopping arcades. for 30 years with the Saruyama Branch of elementary promises to cooperate from nine stores. Many of the groups, made ad posters for the stores that had taken care We're members of a social service organization for school in a mountain village in Iwate prefecture. The promises were given grudgingly with a sour and dubious of us, and gave announcements before the entire gathered local community action in the big City. We hold the key expression. group. The children then handed the posters to the shop to getting involved in other people's business, the feeling owners. that our neighbor should not be isolated, something that groups in the area. To that end, we conducted a series of tests to find interactive events we could carry out. One of those was an exchange program we had in place school was scheduled for closing this year. We held nature experience classes for Tokyo elementary kids but with the closing of the school we had to find some alternative. To get the backing of the Arakawa Board of Education , we first asked for cooperation from nearby elementary We then combined "training children through schools. During April, the schools would have two straight exchange" with "the activities rooted in the local days off and a general training program so they consented 34 THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO Ending the Children's Merchant Academy Eyes shining bright, every child learned the difficulty WINTER EDITION 2002 first a bit cold to the idea of having the children work still remains in this "Downtown" area of Tokyo. Sponsored by the Rotary Club of Tokyo-Arakawa. 35 ftffiljJID ~ ~ (J) ,*jllif~1r x p~ ff; ~c ~ ~ *w ~~ *~ (No.57) O)?? i'7.{/ 1j'77, iF~, ~Gtc,I!!W-rrtlfflI9~'7-RfJ:t' , *UJ~ "j€:~~~~Z:-:::>l)'"C ft{':iE5r~p -)z 1) TRY! -777' (tN 2530 tl!!1K . RBh-Ii !JfI-) -rF=fY$(J)f~1::N JJX~ § H"J tz: 1m 15 @J ~t1E6*~Hj,' Why 99 percent polio eradication is never enough $* (J) aJi RJ:], < :biJ) 9 >?9 *Hfr9 ~ o )=1~ ~ [J p -)z 1) -(J)liJl 10 9 $i~o II n The 50th Anniversary of The Rotary-No-Tomo VI $7 ~~i't:' -)(ftJ ~rmf{~ o ~'fW'J~!i!!iJ) G~tJl1iJ'0 9, ,j-.,,¥ 1+' • l%-,jHFtc JiiJ'n l, ~ !;(t~nX~?rU 18 7-"- L. iJ';f~n;l mu~m ~ t=J mL l aJh )it -:J tc ~ft\ . £Hff(J) 1if-Jt£ (J:, ;c (J) u t Il/ClfHfJK If§"'J:}JfJ: 9 J [fp-)z 1) -(J);:tidJ 2002 if ~ 11 Ii -0~ 9 ~iifiXo ~!tl'7-"-L.~-:::> 1t~ ~ (J) (J: ili:J!I-r 9 0 -r t dS :b -1± l mu& L tc. ~, E!l'~M~ - flt* t]JfJ: (J) (J:, § £~t ;c L l 10 12.(J) 'f§'. -1..1 n:l c:: o - u ~ New Generations in Action ./ )z - 7 7 ~, p - )z- 77~, ~~~~~~, ~m~(J)A~(J)m~~II~(J)~ VI QJ C"I n:l E VI n:l 0 f91j ~ J 10 ~iiBI€~f±(J) ~ ~fllJ '/(J)~f±mlli)J~ ~ t i~~lJt~-rWfr 0 J'i -rf.dfr E 0: P-)z 1) 7 )z 1) -(J)1§.dJ 2002 Bringing the Workplace to School -:J iJ'tt t L lE!Jfljo ;c(J)*Bfr~~*J1t VI VI EI*- (J)7-"- L.tc ~ltcfErJR(J)}~l', ;c Older Guys from the Community Speak about Their Work QJ C"I QJ FRIENDSHIP PLAZA (J)'Jfl!lf¥:tz: -:::>l' l1&« l l ' ~ o EI *(J)!lli~iJ) 2 tllilR 0 '0 5j~J!J'7-"-L. -r 0 -:J tdjO~,T~,~ ~1J o ~)J (J:f;fl;l] G fJ:l ~7 3'r:'-#~~, <~ t {=j:: ~tz: n:l tC)-J&IJ~ nt.:(J)~~ Rotary at Work :=I '70 fR Yi I;t I~ H 7 ~f r:' - #I~ *1~ .~ '/q: (J) Belief is Strength )z 1) -(J)/RJl 'J:, 1952 - 53 i~Y!iJ~::}X-r~* ~ }~ -~ J~qn E8 -:J td91j~J - IIn ·~~r~, 10 f]-0-jirRJt *. 1:f3~~ ;fijI] t~ jfFf, I" :~; (J) ~iiif~" -r B -Jl!ijJ 9 Ji -~*~~* . r1IEE1{r~ --qz., * 1}@.. ~iJ)1:lvtiJ'l)ft MJ9fi~~~m·~ft~ = , IrnM~J9fi~~.~*· c:: o N n:l E ~ o "'C n:l C"I r5 VI o n:l '';:::; VI n:l t Ll, It-ful!!j(J) "7'C ~ " fY$~fig~ ! ~~~ ~~I2R~iffip -)z 1) ~ wrrJa{q.E¥.J J tM!Lt.: 1~7 7 77" (5f4 2680 !lli [2( ·~r~!Jj'!.) iJ'r!-IrJ\J (J) Jt'¥:fQ-r~liilio 7 7 7' ~ ~ iJ,~tjtc tL-:Jl, t ;c~l.:c'n(J)~~(Z:-:::>l'lait-:Jt.: o ~1itt.: is (J)~~~*,dft ;c(J)t ~(J)t~~· L t.:o tllif'~ o (C 150 ~ifi1fn(J)~1fntd1f1f1fJJ 9 J=j~1=TJ5~~111 • ~q ;c(J)fliL )=J ~ ~ 9 ~if& o Rotary gave me the chance to visit Alaska 7' ~ ~(J)~:t'f(J:, ~rp~7 JT~ fr~fR 5t 7 7'-rdS ~ * JillJ\-T-{-(J):f&, iJ'1T :b n t.: fK~777"(J) ~IDJrr.l~ 30 rtiJif~~2zLlMWf Cambodian Recovery Through Education )z 1) -7 '7 7 ' (~2750 ~liiJ)~ J. 1) ~ (J)J~ -:J iJ'ttl:\ JPJBTIc· '~t5d~~.Q~lr~, ;%m L t.:o ~C1)ffl! I) G, fWJ <;: t EI *(J)tt!!IRJ.lljP - 5 1) -7 7 (J)~ 4"-' 6 L ~, (m iF~~ ~L~~ -tt!!~:t3 ~ lf1:: P - 5 7'{llJ~ B -~~o ACT NOW. Meeting your club's fundraising goal is essential if we are to eradicate polio. [1'D-9 I) -O)&Jl ~~g~ • fIJfr@)~!{ {=j:: 2 @I (11 • IE filIi 1 €H~ 500 *J?:P -)z 1) -777" iJ\ B*(J)P-)z 1) -(J)BIJ~if -rdS ~*r1lm5 ff;~~2:.t L l, Yt ~ ~lj~~mllJE L, ~*Ill )i • 4 1 0 1,000 P3 $i67'I: tJ-)z in P=J cr~jfif}t}1IJ' ~;jq~Jj.) Oi'if~i~t}}JJ' ~:F}~Jj.) (1 1 f] • 4 f:J ~ 1 ~fl Changing from assign to create 50 years of the (m 2580 tt!HR . *)J~:ffln mJlllRrJ\j(J),j,~ ~777' -(J)RJl 2002 $ 9 J=j -5 ~ 9 ijii~o li p -)z 1) -(J)/R ~ 10 fi -'4 ~ 9 ~iif\l'\to Yoneyama Scholarship project !RJ?,flLJlIP-)z-77 *J?:ill1P hAV'--v-j-l) A a a ~~LltG:f3~t, ~~(J)~mm~I;:~t~A~~ !l!!IR . *J?:ffln 'J:, h /;1{:;7-r Ij\~11(J)~g.Q~im~ll'~ 7 N t,~ki:! I) 0 VI (Ql ~-t~tc, ITli~(J)f*~~im IT' P-)z Gl, zE¥JiO)77 A h 9 iMy TreasureJ N 2580 tililK . *J?:W) -rtJ:, L t.:o tliIl.iJ'\t 'UX L.~iHl l~l\(J) 'i: !to/JJ ~ ..c QJ Elementary School Kids Experience a Day in the Life of rJIf#i L tc o 3 '7 liJJ (J) 5 ,B~t1Zf!fo '7-h7-"I'7~7~~·p-)Z0-77~t(J)~M~~7 p [F a Shop-worker li p -)z 1) -(J)~J 2002 if 10 P-)z 1) -7 7 !t~ffJrft, H 2 ;til) Rotary International's global initiative to eradicate polio is on the threshold of victory. Our new Polio Eradication Fundraising Campaign, designed to raise $80 million, which can be multiplied thanks to generous matching funds from The World Bank and The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. So make your donation now. Though the number of polio cases has fallen 99 percent since 1988, the final one percent poses the toughest challenge. Until we reach the last child, we will never end the suffering. We can't stop now. 1) -oY~ *f%fw T 105-0011 *J?:~W£lRz~~ 2- 6- 3 abc ~~ 8 p{?i TEL 03-3436-6651 FAX 03-3436-5956 a~J ~~~Ll50~~R~L~ o (M)*ili~zm¥ Fulfilling Our Promise: Eradicate pOlio. • www.rotary.org 36 THE ROTARY-NO-TOMO e.1 Rotary International