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Hisashi Uno
For Hisashi Uno's latest contributions to The Japan Times, see below:
COMMENTARY / World / GUEST FORUM
Oct 20, 2002
Scarcity not to blame for pain of hunger
In 1945, the year the vicious war ended, there was famine in Italy, Russia, Bengal, Burma and much of China; and yet there were unsellable surpluses of food in the United States, Canada and some Latin American countries. Products could have been shipped, stored and sold in quantities large enough to feed any conceivable population. However, nearly three-quarters of humanity went hungry or were starving. Close to 60 years later, more than 800 million of the 6.3 billion people on Earth -- among them 300 million children -- still suffer the gnawing pain of hunger. Almost every year since the mid-1970s the world community of nations has renewed a call for the eradication of hunger and starvation within a decade.
COMMENTARY / World
Sep 29, 2002
Exactly when does old age really begin?
"Put simply, we are having fewer children and living longer," says Michelle Gunn, an Australian journalist and social-affairs writer. Our time is undeniably the age of longevity.
COMMENTARY / World
May 27, 2002
Learn to write better by reading the experts
"My dear Professor," reads a note I received about two weeks ago, "I've found your Japan Times editorial-page commentary most interesting. You say writing good English is more craft than art -- a craft that anyone can learn. But I don't think it's always the case." In the first place, continues the three-paragraph appraisal written in Japanese by a student, this is a country where many don't write English with ease. "We may write badly because we don't know how to write well. While in school, we usually aren't taught how to write English. I can hardly recall a single Japanese teacher of English who speaks and writes."
COMMENTARY / World / GUEST FORUM
Jan 5, 2002
Writing: A craft that anyone can learn
"Speeches are not magic. A speech is essentially a combination of information and opinion written on paper and spoken. If you can have a thoughtful conversation, you can probably write and give a thoughtful speech."
COMMENTARY / World
May 31, 2001
Smokers' deadly paradise
For Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Hal Boyle, it wasn't too difficult to tell a man from a woman. "If it always offers you a cigar, it's a man," he quipped. "If it always is asking for a cigarette, then waits for a light, it's a woman."
COMMENTARY / World
Dec 23, 2000
Volunteerism: not just a Western idea
Even before global observance of the International Year of Volunteers begins in January, Japanese are deeply involved in a search for the spirit of international volunteerism. Some insist that it is based on the wisdom of Oriental thought.
COMMENTARY / World
Nov 23, 2000
Awakening the spirit of voluntarism in Japanese youth
Seventeen students gathered in their clubhouse at Kansai University of International Studies finish reviewing enlarged photos for an exhibition at their autumn campus festival. Then they move on to the next important task -- who should draft the text to accompany the photos and how it should be worded.
COMMENTARY / World
Jul 17, 1999
Time for women to 'hold up half the sky'
Adrian Cozette Chandler, a U.S. educator and colleague of mine, has come up with a great idea and hopes to see it materialize: the publication of a bilingual book, written in easy-to-understand English and Japanese, in which ordinary American and Japanese women review and candidly discuss issues crucial to human progress and confronted daily by Third World women.

Longform

Historically, kabuki was considered the entertainment of the merchant and peasant classes, a far cry from how it is regarded today.
For Japan's oldest kabuki theater, the show must go on