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Rugby School Japan, nicknamed RSJ, is a British-private boarding school in Kashiwa city, Chiba Prefecture, Japan. Opened in September 2023, RSJ is in a designated education, innovation, and entrepreneurship hub within the Greater Tokyo Area .
"Every year, high school students from all over the Kanto Plain region compete to become members of the prestigious Tokyo International Honor Choir." Students accepted are required to practice singing in a specific school with the other international students in the Kanto Plains area.
The school is served by the Futako-Tamagawa Station (Tōkyū Den-en-toshi Line) and Kami-noge Station (Tōkyū Ōimachi Line) train stations. A fleet of 11 buses owned by the school moves students throughout Tokyo. Seisen International School, a Catholic girls' school, also allows their students to ride on St. Mary's school bus system.
Koji Horaguchi (洞口孝治, Horaguchi Kōji), (3 November 1953 in Iwate – 27 June 1999) was a Japanese former rugby union player who played an active role as one of the main players of Nippon Steel Kamaishi, achieving the seven consecutive titles for the first time in the history of the Japanese championship.
In 2023, Tokyo Sankyu Phoenix signed a partnership with Australian Super Rugby Women's side the Western Force. [1] [2] The agreement would allow for pre-season trial games, the sharing of knowledge, exchange of players, management, coaches, training staff and media staff, co-creation branding and academy planning.
Tokyo West International School; Y. Yohan International Christian School This page was last edited on 11 February 2024, at 23:45 (UTC). ...
The international tournament was incorporated into IRB Sevens World Series as the Tokyo International Sevens in 2000 and 2001. A further cup win each to Fiji and New Zealand, respectively, was recorded in those two years. [1] [2] The Tokyo Sevens was then effectively replaced by the Singapore Sevens on the world circuit for the 2002 season.
The National High School Rugby Tournament is held annually since 1917 at Higashi Osaka Hanazono Rugby Stadium in Higashi Osaka, Japan, from the end of December to early January. [1] All 47 Prefectures of Japan are represented, with four extra teams (one from Hokkaidō, one from Tokyo, and two from Osaka prefecture) to make up the numbers.