Monthly Archives: August 2008

Ballers in Beijing: Taking outreach global

Basketball is everywhere. From the United States to Japan to South America and beyond, the game has been adopted by virtually every country. Knowing this, International Christian University student Jason Hutson started a program called Ballers in Beijing, the first program run through his non-profit organization Good Global Games.

According to this article by Masami Ito in the Japan Times, Ballers in Beijing encouraged street players to get together through basketball and help collect used or new clothing for Beijing youths. The ultimate goal was to travel to the Olympics, present the clothes in person and, of course, play some basketball.

Hutson can mark the program “mission accomplished.” While he wasn’t able to find corporate funding to bring seven youths to China, he is in Beijing right now with a pair of basketball-playing g3 members. Along with them are 400 items of clothes – the product of the 50-person volunteer effort.

Beijing won’t be Hutson and g3′s final destination, either. He has plans to visit the Philippines, where g3 will team up with Habitat for Humanity Japan and help build houses. After that, the goal is to take the organization as global as the sport of basketball.

Says Hutson:

“With young Japanese people struggling to find their career path, g3 provides community service experience for these individuals, and hopefully, in effect, this serves to help Japan (better) deal with global concerns such as poverty, climate change and HIV,” Hutson said.

“On the one hand, we are helping young people develop leadership skills here at home, and at the same time, we are addressing global issues across borders.”

Tuesday bullets

  • It’s never too late to go to college or to start learning English. In some cases, it’s never too late to do both, even if you are in your 70s. Says Elizabeth Davies from the Rockford Register Star:

The Japanese retirees have been coming to Rockford every summer since 2000 for intensive English lessons at Rockford College. Unlike many who enroll in English as a Second Language courses, the Toyoshimas aren’t trying to advance their careers or fit in with the American culture. Rather, they simply appreciate the challenge.

  • If you are a Japanese Delegate from Awaji, there’s nothing better than spending some time at a hog farm in St. Marys, OH. Or is there?
  • The Anti-Defamation League has started a new online curriculum designed to teach the problems associated with stereotyping, racial profiling and prejudice. The curriculum centers around the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II.
  • Heather Knight from the San Francisco Chronicle describes a gathering of Japanese Americans this weekend, who celebrated the 20th anniversary of President Ronald Reagan’s internment apology.

A fish twice a week keeps coronary heart disease away

Following up on a previous post, eating fish is good for you, says this article in The New Straits Times.

The issue in question: Why are Japanese men half as likely to suffer from coronary heart disease than Americans?

Assistant professor of epidemiology Akira Sekikawa from the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health conducted an experiment with 868 men aged between 40 and 49 – about 281 of the subjects were from Japan, 306 were Caucasian men from Pennsylvania and 281 were Japanese-American men living in Hawaii. Sekikawa took blood tests from the patients and measured the total number of fatty acids and omega-3 fatty acids. Sekikawa also took various tests evaluating the arteries.

The results?

Dr Sekikawa’s team found that although total fatty acid levels were similar among all subjects, the percentage of fish-based omega-3 fatty acids was twice as high among Japanese men compared with Americans of both European and Japanese descent.

Japanese men had significantly less atherosclerosis, as indicated by lower average intima-media thickness and coronary artery calcification.

Among Japanese men, intima-media thickness values declined with rising omega-3 fatty acid levels, a phenomenon that was not observed in either American group.

For a more detailed account of what all that means you will have to read the article, but the gist of it is that the health of the Japanese is not related to genetics, it has to do with diet – particularly fish intake. Want to be more like the Japanese? The study recommends eating fish twice a week.

Fortunately for us in Hawaii, having access to fish isn’t a problem. Lucky we live Hawaii.

Friday Feature: Gina Hiraizumi

Gina Hiraizumi is this week’s Friday Feature. The 27-year-old Japanese American actress, in addition to her singing career, has also appear in movies and on TV. You may have seen her as the beauty queen in the movie Only the Brave, starring Jason Scott Lee, about the 100th Infantry Battalion/442nd Regimental Combat Team.

Hiraizumi trained at the Julliard School in New York, is a classically trained pianist and has sung the national anthem at the Staples Center and Madison Square Garden. In 2008, she released her single “Unmei no Ai” (Destiny) which featured Jason Scott Lee in the music video. She is currently negotiating a record deal in Japan.

Here’s Gina starring in a few commercials:

And here she is again performing at the Nikkei International Concert:

Wednesday bullets

Today marks the 63rd anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima. Let’s all do our best to ensure that there is peace in this world and that tragedies like the one in 1945 never happen again.

  • Speaking of which, a ceremony in Oak Ridge held a ceremony for that very purpose. Be sure to check out the next issue of the Hawaii Herald to read about the Hiroshima Commemoration and Peace Service at the Izumo Taishakyo Mission here in Honolulu.
  • High school students from Ohio and Japan blend their cultures as part of the Saitama-Ohio sister-state relationship. Click here to find out how Bruce Springsteen was involved.
  • Haley Ishimatsu is a fourth-generation Japanese-American who’s grandparents were interned during World War II. On August 12, she will compete for America in the Olympics. David Woods of the Indy Star writes this interesting story.

Photos: From today’s Hiroshima Commemoration and Peace Service at the Izumo Taishakyo Mission in Honolulu.

Friday Feature: Kina Grannis

Today’s Friday Feature is the lovely Kina Grannis, a 22-year-old half-Japanese singer-songwriter. The USC graduate found a national audience after becoming a finalist in the Doritos Crash The Super Bowl Contest, which eventually led to a deal with Interscope Records. Since then she’s had her music appear on General Hospital, sang the national anthem at a Nascar race and is currently working on her new album.

Here’s Grannis playing the song “Strong Enough,” which will appear on her upcoming album: