I wonder if the most frequent lunch in Ginza is the Rotary meeting at the hotel.
Must attend at least once a week.
Dinner is from 12:30 to 13:00.
From 13:00 to 13:30, speeches by guests.
This guest, Ginza, has many celebrities.
Doctors and company presidents who are famous in the media appear.
In fact, every town and village in Japan has a Rotary, and a lunch meeting is held once a week.
Have lunch with friends, have guests give speeches, and deepen friendships with guests from afar.
Indeed, it is a culture of friendship that seems to have originated in America.
When I go on a business trip to a rural area, if there is a rotary at the hotel I stay at, I try to participate.
This is because most of the members are directors of local medical associations.
In the old days, it was customary to bring your own Rotary flag and exchange it for the Rotary flag you attended, called a banner exchange.
It seems to have disappeared recently.
That kind of leeway seems to have disappeared even in the rotary.
There is also a Rotary badge.
But Rotary still has the feel of America’s Ivy League.
Come to think of it, each of Koyama G’s corporations independently produces its own marks, T-shirts, ties, and so on.
It might be interesting to design your own corporate flag.
There are no flag poles in the facility, but at the General Inauguration Ceremony, each corporation can enter with a flag.
It’s like baseball field.
Koyama G hates formality and pretentiousness, so this will not be implemented.
Even if there is no physical flag, my heart always carries the flag of Koyama fluttering in the wind.
Gather under this banner.
Comrades I haven’t seen yet, my comrades-in-arms.
A storm is near.
Pulse oximeter 99/98/98
Body temperature 36.0 Blood sugar 126
Yesterdays lunch pizza party
CEO Yasunari Koyama