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Today's Contents:

1. Airport Pickups, October 2006, Okazaki Summer Housing, Sapporo Housing, Private lesson schedule, CALL seminar room, Summer weekend trips, Coming Events...
2. Course and accommodation information: Summer 2006 Applications, Discovery Tours
3. Things Japanese: "Golden Week" - May holiday madness
4. Student Interview: Louise Evans (Canada, AIJP)
5. Japan Guide: Meijimura Open Air Museum (Aichi) & Hokkaido Brown Bears (Hokkaido)
6. About The Yamasa Institute


132 yen per liter and rising
Fuel prices are steadily rising, with most prices now above 130 yen per litre. In addition to fuel costs, the increase in road tolls (from 3000 to 4100 yen) associated with the new Nagoya Airport and greater flexibility in start dates is putting enormous pressure on our airport pickup services. Changes are on the way. In fact the changes are explained in...

(1) The first bits:

(a) Airport Pickup Services: Due to the increased fuel prices, expressway tolls (now 4100 yen), as well as the higher parking and time costs associated with the new airport, we are going to need to switch to a new system at some stage in the next 3-6 months. Instead of providing 3 airport pickups a day (10am, 3pm & 9pm) on the 2 days immediately prior to start dates, we intend to offer hourly transfers (free) using the limousine bus service to JR Okazaki station, and for a small fee, an on-demand pickup service. The limousine bus service will be free, with the 1700 yen fare reimbursed in full. The on-demand pickup service will involve a small fee - not enough to cover the actual costs (to provide 1 person with an airport pickup costs Yamasa 11,400 yen - not including labor), but enough to reduce the current deficit. The English language site will be completed shortly, but out of concern for fairness the switch will not be made until the information is available in all languages. Maybe September?

(b) AIJP/AJSP/Acceleration Format 1: The deadline for the Summer 2006 academic quarter may be brought forward by 2 weeks from May 25th to May 11th as we are close to full capacity. If you have applied but have not yet paid you need to do so immediately.

(c) October 2006 Student Visas: The first deadline for applications for student visas for the October intake closed today, and the second deadline is approaching (June 8th). Language quotas are going to be tight in October due to the large April intake (see selection process). There are only 105 1K apartments with no new apartments currently under construction, so if you want a single apartment as your first preference you are advised to apply as early as possible. Please note that Student Accommodation will be allocated to successful applicants in the same order that the applications were received. Once all of the single apartments are full the only way to obtain a single would be via local real estate agents - paying market prices instead of the student rate - so don't delay.

(d) Okazaki Summer Housing - Yamamoto & Villa 2: Some applications are rolling in and about half are being approved at this stage. The majority of applications are asking for single accommodation. Normally once the student village is full we need to reject all new applicants unless we are able to obtain low cost hotel rooms (from about 5250 yen per night). In order to make better use of our resources, a decision has been made to allow short term female students to live in Yamamoto House and from late May, for short term male students to use Yamasa Villa 2. To keep prices down the rent will be the same as the single rooms in the student village (17500 yen per week, no deposit), even though the rooms are larger and include personal refrigerators. Both are also closer to the campus than the Student Village, so it should assist those students who prefer not to obtain bicycles.

(e) Sapporo Summer Housing: The new Sapporo Japanese Summer Program is full and all applications have been closed. Final notifications are being sent out this week. We will be increasing our capacity in Sapporo before applications for the 2007 winter and summer sessions open. A number of new Ski & Snowboarding in Hokkaido options will be added to the HCJS programs and we will be changing the format of the winter Discovery tours so that the study component can be in either Okazaki or the Hokkaido Center from 2007 onwards. Applications for winter 2007 in Sapporo will open in about 4 weeks.

(f) August Discovery Tour: The Japan Discovery Tour commencing August 18th is now fully booked. There are a handful of vacancies left in the July 7th - 18th tour option (includes the Horyuji and Chuguji temples in Nara, the Grand Shrines of Ise, the Fire Festival at Nachi in Wakayama and Gion Festival in Kyoto) and early applications are advised.

(g) Private Lessons Crunch: We have an extreme shortage of classroom and teaching capacity for private lessons at the moment, so we advise those planning to do private lessons options including Options B & C of the Acceleration program to apply and pay at least 3 months prior to your proposed start date.

(h) Aoi Hall CALL Seminar Room: During the Golden Week holidays we relocated the CALL lab from the 2nd to the ground floor of Aoi Hall to enlarge the facilities as part of our efforts to further increase the amount of customized one-to-one instruction at Yamasa. The move creates 2 new classrooms upstairs for SILAC and Acceleration's Option B & C, and increases the number of CALL booths in Aoi Hall to 8. CALL lessons continue to be coordinated by Sugita sensei of the Online Center who also coordinates our enlarged private lesson program.

(i) Upcoming Trips: The next weekend trip is to Kyoto on May 20th. Most trips through to August can now be booked online. If you don't know your Student ID number yet, just use your passport number. If you don't know your accommodation allocation yet (or won't require accommodation) just select "Off-Campus". We can change your details after you arrive.

Shinmei-sha Taisai
Shinmei-sha Taisai
(f) Coming Events: On May 13th & 14th (always on the second Saturday and Sunday of May) go to the Shinmeiguu shrine (take the bus or ride to the Kousei-cho area north of Higashi Okazaki) for the Shinmei-sha Taisai (Shinmei-sha Shrine Festival). Here you can see children parading in colorful costumes, the beating of taiko drums, and flutes, young ladies doing traditional dances, young men pulling a huge mikoshi shrine etc.

Cherry Blossoms on Wakasayama   Conversing hats   New CALL Seminar room   Fuji flowers
Cherry Blossoms on Wakasayama
 
Conversing Hats
 
New CALL Seminar room
 
Wisteria flowers

(j) Other bits:

The Editor
Yamasa News
The Yamasa Institute - Aichi Center for Japanese Studies
1-2-1 Hanehigashimachi Okazaki
Aichi Japan 444-0832

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(2) Course Information

Accommodation

If you are coming to Okazaki City during the next few months, please visit the housing availability file (Opens new window).

Message from Yukiko Iijima (Housing Officer): Please also note that it is extremely important that you rank your accommodation preferences clearly. Upgrades are possible in the event of cancellations - so if your first preference is a single room in the village, select "Village single" as first choice, "Residence U" as your second choice and so on.

Long-term Courses:

Applications for October Student Visa intake: Admissions for long term visas for October 2006 are now open. Early application is advised due to the selection process and the limited number of visas we are allocated by the Immigration Bureau for October. To download application forms click here.

Short-term courses:

All Extension programs have space while accommodation is available. For Academic programs, the next available start date for AIJP, AJSP and Acceleration Format 1 is July 5th 2006. For applicants for 1 academic quarter only, using a short term tankitaizai (tourist) or other appropriate visa, applications close February 22nd.

Discovery Tours all have vacancies - contact Admissions for further information. Tour dates for this year are available at http://www.yamasa.org/acjs/english/programs/discovery_dates.html

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3. THINGS JAPANESE: "Golden Week" - May holiday madness

Golden Week (also occasionally referred to as Oogata renkyuu) occurs at the end of April/early May each year and is one of the stranger events in the Japanese calendar in that unlike New Year or Obon, these holidays have no particular meaning.

The term Golden Week refers to April 29 (midori-no-hi, from 2007 to be called Showa-no-hi), May 3 (kenpou-kinenbi), May 4 (kokumin-no-hi, from 2007 to be called midori-no-hi), and May 5 (kodomo-no-hi). May Day (May 1st) is not a public holiday and never has been in Japan, but some companies, particularly large manufacturing firms include May 1st in a scheduled holiday break.

Explanation of Days:

  • April 29th is Midori-no-hi or "Green Day". The day doesn't have any arboreal connections really, it is just that it was a holiday marking the birthday of the Showa emperor (known as Hirohito outside Japan). As there is an "Emperor's Birthday" in December, midori-no-hi ensured that the ...

    Continued at http://www.yamasa.org/acjs/network/english/newsletter/things_japanese_38.html

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    STUDENT INTERVIEW: Louise Evans (AIJP)

    Louise Evans
    Louise Evans
    Declan: Hello. May I interview you for the newsletter?
    Louise: Yes.

    D: Thank you. When did you come to Japan?
    L: In April last year, so its just over a year now.
    D: Was it your first time in Japan when you arrived?
    L: No I had been here before. I lived in
    Niigata 12 years ago for a year.
    D: What were you doing in Niigata?
    L: I did a working holiday there, teaching English.
    D: Where in Niigata were you? In the countryside or in town.
    L: In Niigata City. Teaching in a school and some private teaching.

    D: Was that directly from Canada?
    L: I went to Niigata using my Australian passport. I've been going back and forth to Canada.
    D: Where did you live in Canada?
    L: In British Columbia.
    D: In Vancouver?
    L: On Vancouver island.
    D: In Victoria?
    L: In the middle of the island in a place called Courtney. Its a farming and logging community.
    D: Do many Japanese people pass through?
    L: In Vancouver of course and to some extent in Victoria, but not so many come to Courtney. There is an English language school so there are a few there. I think the school was established by some Canadians who returned from Japan.
    D: Why did you decide to come to Okazaki?
    L: I wanted to learn Japanese. Didn't have the chance to learn much when I was in Niigata and it is difficult to learn outside Japan. And I've been interested in Japanese culture since childhood so wanted to see more than I did before and get the language skills.
    D: How much do you remember of....

    Continued at http://www.yamasa.org/acjs/network/english/newsletter/student_int_70.html

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    5. Japan Guide: Meijimura Open Air Museum (Aichi) & Hokkaido Brown Bears (Hokkaido)

    Meijimura Open Air Museum:

    Meiji Mura
    Meijimura Open Air Museum near Inuyama
    Meiji Mura is an outdoor museum showcasing Meiji period (1868-1912) architecture and culture. The name basically translate as "Meiji Village", and the extensive park (nearly 250 acres) has buildings of architectural note rescued from demolition from all over Japan. Although the name and the majority of the buildings are from the Meiji era, there are a couple of exceptions including several buildings from the Taisho period (1912-1926) and from the early Showa era. A classic example of this is the preserved main entrance and lobby of the Imperial Hotel, moved from Tokyo when demolished in 1967, which was one of the masterpieces designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. Meijimura is easy to get to and makes a good day trip from Okazaki or Nagoya, especially if combined with a visit to Inuyama Castle and the cormorant fishing on the Kiso River.

    Opened in 1965, Meijimura was the brainchild of Taniguchi Yoshiro (an architect and professor at Tokyo University) and Moto Tsuchikawa (an executive of the Meitetsu Company). The two were previously classmates when studying in....

    Continued at http://www.yamasa.org/japan/english/destinations/aichi/meijimura.html

    Hokkaido Brown Bears:

    Hokkaido Brown Bears
    Hokkaido Brown Bears
    Never mess with a big brown bear, especially big brown bears in Hokkaido. Unlike the bears in Honshu and the rest of Japan, the brown bears in Hokkaido are a different species, as are all of the native mammals on the northern side of the Tsugaru strait (the Blakiston line).

    Just as the Tsugaru strait separates Hokkaido from the rest of Japan, it has always provided a barrier. The native mammals of Hokkaido are closely related to those of Sakhalin and the Kurile Islands, as these provided the land bridge between the Asian mainland and what is now Hokkaido. The mammals on the southern side of the strait migrated through the southern land bridges, primarily the Korean peninsula, which is why there are Japanese macaques on Honshu as far north as Aomori, but none in Matsumae or the rest of Hokkaido.

    Sakhalin Island currently has an estimated population of about 1,400 brown bears, and it is less than 10 kilometers (16 miles) from the Asian mainland (part of the Russian Far East) at its closest point. It is.....

    Continued at http://www.yamasa.org/japan/english/destinations/hokkaido/hokkaido_brown_bears.html

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    6. ABOUT THE YAMASA INSTITUTE

    The Yamasa Institute is compromised of three teaching centers:

  • the ACJS in Okazaki City, Aichi Prefecture,
  • the HCJS in Sapporo in Hokkaido and the
  • the OCJS, a complete online center providing affordable Japanese education worldwide.

    The Institute is committed to providing high-quality education in the Japanese language. We are a non-profit organization, a part of the Hattori Group. We are accredited by Association for the Promotion of Japanese Language Education - APJLE, accreditation number B302 - and "the only Institute in the Mikawa region with the appropriate programs, systems, curriculum and facilities required for quality Japanese language education" according to the Ministry of Justice. Further, in recognition of the excellent quality of our programs, we are in the top tier of 'Appropriately Authorized Japanese Language Education Institutes' - in fact, the only school in the Mikawa area with this prestigious recommendation. For full details see the accreditation section on the homepage at http://www.yamasa.org/acjs/english/accreditation.html

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