Thanks to your hard work, Music for Relief has raised more than $246,000 for earthquake & tsunami relief in Japan. We're less than $4,000 from our goal and I know you can help us reach and exceed it. The more money we raise for Japan the more aid we can send to kids in need, and that means more of you get to see Linkin Park and B'z up close on August 31. Tickets are in short supply and going fast, so CLICK HERE TO RETURN TO YOUR PAGE and continue raising money for Japan. Now is the time to hit your goal if you want to get tickets. Think about other people you know who may want to help. Have you asked your neighbors? Your friends? Your relatives? What about your co-workers? Lets see how high we can get the total raised for Japan in the next 12 days. - music for relief...
"Gembaku Domu" - The Atomic Bomb Dome
It will go down as one of the most inspiring survival stories ever to emerge from a horrific war. Tsutomu Yamaguchi was in his twenties when he found himself in Hiroshima on the morning of 6 August 1945, as a single B-29 US bomber droned overhead. The "Little Boy" bomb that it dropped from its payload would kill or injure 160,000 people by the day's end. Among them was the young engineer – who was in town on a business trip for Mitsubishi Heavy Industries – who stepped off a tram as the bomb exploded. Despite being 3km (just under two miles) from Ground Zero, the blast temporarily blinded him, destroyed his left eardrum and inflicted horrific burns over much of the top half of his body. The following morning, he braved another dose of radiation as he ventured into Hiroshima city centre, determined to catch a train home, away from the nightmare. But home for Mr Yamaguchi was Nagasaki, where two days later the "Fat Man" bomb was dropped, killing 70,000 people and creating a city where, in the words of its mayor, "not even the sound of insects could be heard". In a bitter twist of fate, Yamaguchi was again 3km from the centre of the second explosion. In fact, he was in the office explaining to his boss how he had almost been killed days before, when suddenly the same white light filled the room. "I thought the mushroom cloud had followed me from Hiroshima," Mr Yamaguchi said....
Ishinomaki Coast Road
Today is the one-month anniversary of the Tohoku quake and tsunami disaster, but my flat is still rattling from aftershocks (I counted three today, but I’m sure there were more). Last weekend was actually the first I’ve spent at home in Tokyo since March 11, when the big one hit. Much of the last month I’ve been up north, looking for my in-laws, ferrying supplies to relief organizations, and being a guide for foreign television crews looking to get close to ground zero in the first days after the disaster....