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<text id=93TT1852>
<title>
June 07, 1993: From The Publisher
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Jun. 07, 1993 The Incredible Shrinking President
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
</hdr>
<body>
<p> During her six years in our Tokyo bureau, correspondent Kumiko
Makihara has paid close attention to the changing role of women
in Japan, which, as in other countries, is often related to
conflicting demands posed by careers and marriage. She is also
no stranger to stories involving the Japanese royal family,
having contributed to our coverage in 1990 of the wedding of
Prince Akishino and of Emperor Akihito's ascension to the Chrysanthemum
Throne. While all this background proved to be essential grounding
in reporting our story on next week's marriage of Crown Prince
Naruhito and former diplomat Masako Owada, it did not quite
reach into the, er, heart of the matter. "The topic of most
interest to everyone was why a Harvard- and Oxford-educated
upper-middle-class woman decided to give up her career and marry
into the imperial family," says Makihara. "Only Masako Owada
knows the answer to that question, and she wasn't talking."
</p>
<p> With a one-on-one interview ruled out, Makihara, 34, who has
also lived and attended school in Britain and the U.S., searched
out the next-best sources of information: Owada's friends and
acquaintances. "We interviewed more than 20 people who know
her, and tried to piece together a portrait from their anecdotes,"
she says. "Her childhood friends had the most to say, perhaps
because she went to the same school in Japan for nearly seven
years."
</p>
<p> The reporting was made yet more difficult by the tradition of
secrecy surrounding royal events. Tokyo reporter Hiroko Tashiro
pored over stacks of clippings about previous royal matches
for leads on shops and artisans--never publicly identified--that may be called on to provide such ceremonial artifacts
as gowns and symbolic wedding swords. Nor did pictures for the
story come easily. Directing our coverage, which involved a
lot of waiting outside the Owada family home, was Tokyo photo
editor Eiko Reed.
</p>
<p> Yeoman service of a different sort came from bureau driver Kazuo
Tsubaki, a former octopus salesman at the vast Tokyo fish market.
Recalls Makihara: "At my request, Tsubaki-san chatted up several
fishmongers to find out how the imperial household collects
2,700 fresh sea bream for its six wedding banquets." Answer:
it asks fishing ports nationwide to set aside their entire catch
of foot-long bream.
</p>
<p> Elizabeth Valk Long
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>