Lending a hand: (from left) Boats washed up by the tsunami are still a common sight in Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture; groups of Peace Boat volunteers prepare for the day at Ai-Plaza; Ishinomaki as it now looks from Kashimamiko Shrine. ANDREW LEE PHOTOSMany willing hands in organized groups are aiding in the massive post-March 11 clean-upBy ANDREW LEE
Special to The Japan Times
When the magnitude 9 megaquake hit northeastern Japan in the early afternoon of Friday, March 11, I was at work in The Japan Times office some 250 km to the south in Tokyo.
As the building here shook, I ran down the emergency stairs fearing for my life and then stood outside watching the high-rises around us swaying. I was absolutely terrified — and it didn't get any better when the tsunami warning screeched out of speakers in the neighborhood.
After running back inside — because the JT office is at sea level on Tokyo Bay — I found the newsroom was in chaos, with quake alarms sounding constantly on people's cellphones and the radio as the first aftershocks started to rattle the country, and TVs all showing horrific live images of the tsunami as our reporters scrambled to make sense of what was happening and get the story out.
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/fl20110508x1.html=========================================================================================
Also Check out his link to photos the photos he took..