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Downtown Seattle Brazil: Honorary Consulate 4250 24th Ave. West Interbay, Seattle Bulgaria: Honorary Consulate Canada: Consulate-General 1501 4th Avenue #600 Downtown Seattle Chile: Honorary Consulate 1705 NE Pacific St. HSB H-405 University of Washington, Seattle Croatia: Honorary Consulate 7547 S. Laurel Street Lakeridge, Seattle Cyprus
The Embassy of Japan in Washington, D.C. (在アメリカ合衆国日本国大使館, Zai Amerika Gasshūkoku Nihonkoku Taishikan) is the diplomatic mission of Japan to the United States. It is located at 2520 Massachusetts Avenue NW , Washington, D.C., in the Embassy Row neighborhood. [ 1 ]
The Tomodachi Initiative is a public–private partnership between the U.S.-Japan Council and the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo, with support from the Government of Japan.Born out of support for Japan’s recovery from the Great Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in 2011, Tomodachi invests in the next generation of Japanese and American leaders through educational and cultural exchanges as well as ...
Phone number: 06-6208-8181: Website: city.osaka.lg.jp: ... The Ad Council Japan was founded in 1971 is based in Osaka, ... Seattle, United States; Business partner cities
U.S.-Japan Council, an educational nonprofit that contributes to strengthening U.S.-Japan Relations Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title USJC .
In 1929, several already-established Nisei organizations merged to form the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL), most prominent among them Fresno's American Loyalty League (アメリカ忠誠協会, Amerika Chūsei Kyōkai) (headed by Nisei UC educated dentist Dr. Thomas T. Yatabe, 1897–1977), the Seattle Progressive Citizens League (シアトル革新市民連盟, Siatoru Kakushin ...
When the telephone system was devised, Okinawa was still under U.S. occupation, so when it was returned to Japan in 1972, its telephone numbers were squeezed between Miyazaki (98x) and Kagoshima (99x) and begin with 988, 989, and 980.
In 1896, when the Nippon Yusen Kaisha steamers began traveling between Japan and Seattle, there were about 200 ethnic Japanese living in Seattle. By 1910, that population had grown to 5,000. [ 5 ] The Japanese Consulate, which had established an office in Tacoma in 1895, moved to Seattle in 1901.