Members Of Library Committee Fac. of Education, Professor, sato eisaku, April 1, 2000 sato eisaku.KAWAI Ei-ichiroi. KIDA Kaichi. SHIRAKATA Sho. HIKIDA Yoshio. Associate Director http://www.lib.ehime-u.ac.jp/GAIYO/xgaiyo2002/gaiyo2002_e/ep19.html
Extractions: Contents Director Professor KASHIWADANI Masuo April 1, 2001- Director, Medical Library Professor KIDA Kaichi March 1, 2001- Director, Agricultural Library Professor ABE Takemi November 1, 2000- Fac. of Law and Letters Professor SUNOUCHI Katsuhiko April 1, 2000- Fac. of Law and Letters Professor TAMURA Kenji April 1, 2001- Fac. of Education Professor SATO Eisaku April 1, 2000- Fac. of Education Associate Professor YAMASAKI Hiroshi April 1, 2001- Fac. of Science Professor HIRAIDE Koichi April 1, 2000- Fac. of Science Associate Professor KAWAI Ei-ichiro April 1, 2001- Fac. of Medicine Professor KOHARA Katsuhiko April 1, 2001- Fac. of Engineering Professor WATANABE Yutaka April 1, 2000- Fac. of Engineering Associate Professor SHIRAKATA Sho April 1, 2001- Fac. of Agriculture Associate Professor HIKIDA Yoshio May 1, 2001- Secretary General SHIOYA Ikuo January 6, 2001- Chairman KASHIWADANI Masuo TAMURA Kenji YAMASAKI Hiroshi HIRAIDE Koichi KIDA Kaichi WATANABE Yutaka ABE Takemi Associate Director Head, Information Processing and Management Division
LA CORRUPCIÓN POLÍTICA EN JAPÓN Translate this page Conviene destacar particularmente el hecho de que sato eisaku, Tanaka Kakuei yFukuda Takeo 1948, No se le conoce escándalos pero perdonó a sato eisaku http://www.unesco.org/issj/rics149/reed149.htm
Extractions: Yoshida Shigeru Abril 1946, Nov. 1948 Katayama Tetsu Mayo 1947 Ashida Hitoshi Enero 1948 Hatoyama Ichiro Diciembre 1954 Ishibashi Tanzan Diciembre 1956 Kishi Nobusuke Febrero 1957 Implicado en el caso Niebla Negra Ikeda Hayato Junio 1960 Sato Eisaku Octubre 1964 Tanaka Kakuei Septiembre 1972 Miki Takeo Noviembre 1974 Fukuda Takeo Diciembre 1976 Detenido en el caso Showa Denko Ohira Masoyoshi Noviembre 1978 Suzuki Zenko Julio 1980 Nakasone Yasuhiro Noviembre 1982 Takeshita Noboru Octubre 1986 Implicado en el caso Recruit Uno Sosuke Junio 1989 Kaifu Toshiki Octubre 1989 Miyazawa Kiichi Octubre 1991 Hosokawa Morihiro Agosto 1993 Hata Tsutomu April 1994 Muruyama Tomoichi Junio 1994 laissez-faire Punto Patrocinio moderno POE Frecuente Las autoridades aceptan obsequios como muestra generalizada de buena voluntad POE POE Frecuente Los clientes comprometen el voto de acuerdo con las directrices del patrocinador Frecuente Inusual Inusual Inusual Las autoridades toleran el crimen organizado a cambio de compensaciones Inusual Los militantes cambian repentinamente su fidelidad al partido por razones pecuniarias Inusual Inusual Fuente: Adaptada de Heidenheimer, 1993, pp. 156-7.
The Nobel Peace Prize: Eisaku Sato Eisaku Sato *1901, 1975. External links. The Nobel Prize Eisaku Sato The Nobel Foundation powered by xago.org - The World Heritage Sites http://www.nobelpreis.org/english/frieden/sato.html
MSN Encarta - Sato Eisaku Translate this page sato eisaku (1901-1975), político japonés, premio Nobel de la Paz y primer ministrode su país Otras funciones de Encarta. Buscar en Encarta sato eisaku http://es.encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761561959/Sato_Eisaku.html
"Will Japan Keep Renouncing Nuclear Weapons In The Next Century 8287; Eisaku Sato, sato eisaku Nikki, vol.3 (Asahi Shinbunsya, 1998), pp. 346-347.33 State Department Incoming Telegram from Tokyo, Secret 8026, May 6, http://www.bsos.umd.edu/pgsd/publications/issbrief2PGSD.htm
Extractions: PROGRAM ON GLOBAL SECURITY DISARMAMENT Issue Brief 2 WILL JAPAN KEEP RENOUNCING NUCLEAR WEAPONS IN THE COMING CENTURY? LESSONS FROM THE 1960S TO DETER THE DECISION TO GO NUCLEAR August 2000 Version This issue brief was written by Masakatsu Ota , Fulbright Research Fellow. Will Japan continue to renounce nuclear weapons and hold fast to its unique but ambiguous three non-nuclear principles not to produce , not to possess and not to allow entry of nuclear weapons into its territory in the twenty-first century? Historical analyses of the 1960s, when military-sensitive Japan faced its most tumultuous period and suffered from serious political division about nuclear and security issues, suggest that the answer, most likely, is yes. Recently discovered documents have shed light upon one particularly symbolic event during that era the failure of Japan's most influential politician to overcome his nations unique phenomenon, the so-called nuclear allergy. The allergy has its origins in the memory of Hiroshima and Nagasaki more than half a century ago, but its lingering power was still strong enough to deprive a Japanese cabinet member of his post in the 1990s. Even with its high standards in science, technology and its global economic power, the social trauma caused by the tragedies of the past makes it almost impossible for this nation to "go nuclear" without a fundamental change in its nature. And it is also true that this nuclear allergy has been functioning as an effective deterrent to any Japanese military resurrection.
E-ASPAC A biography of sato eisaku, based on his detailed diary, tells the true reason for Yamada Eizo, Seiden sato eisaku (Orthodox Biography of sato eisaku), http://mcel.pacificu.edu/easpac/2003/itoh.php3
Extractions: home current issue archives about ... ASPAC (Avecedo, Pamela E. and Emily Cabanda) An Empirical Analysis of TFP Gains in the Philippine Food Processing Industry: A Multi-criteria Approach (Chiu, Candy Lim and Emilyn Cabanda) Motivational and Environmental Factors Influencing Family Business: Evidence from a Study of Chinese-Filipino Entrepreneurs in the Philippines (Chiu, Tzu-hsiu) Hero (Cunningham, Eric) Ecstatic Treks in the Demon Regions: Zen and the Satori of the Psychedelic Experience (Karanth, Dileep) The Indian Oboe Reexamined (Magno, Augustus and Emilyn Cabanda) Asian Development Bank Assistance after the Asian Financial Crisis: An Empirical Analysis of Its Financial Resources and Operational Activities (Moro, Pamela) Defining the Classical in Studies of South and Southeast Asian Music: A Review and Evaluation of Pertinent Scholarship (Nguyen, Keaton) The Agency of Keitai (Sinclair, Paul) The Modern Chinese Language and its Changing Status in the Japanese University (Tillack, Peter) Esterline Winners:
Extractions: See also China and Korea Culturally, Japanese art parallels the country's historical experience during this century. On one hand, interest in traditional art forms, including woodblock prints , kabuki theater, ceramics, and native crafts, continues and is sometimes coupled with nationalistic motivations and identification. On the other hand, not only do Japanese artists and the public continue to study and be influenced by foreign art techniques, forms, and trends, such as oil painting, sculpture, psychologically probing novels, modern dance , and Western-style architecture, but many Japanese artists gain worldwide renown. Japanese artists also master and use expressively and innovatively such new art forms as cinema, animation, photography, and fashion Japan officially annexes Korea, which remains a Japanese colony until 1945. On August 23, Japan declares war against Germany, entering World War I on the side of the allies Great Britain, France, and Russia. Japan is primarily motivated by a desire to expand its territorial interests, especially in China and the Pacific Islands. Although the Treaty of Versailles, which ends the war in 1919, focuses on European concerns, Japan maintains economic influence in China's Shandong Peninsula, gains control over Pacific islands formerly dominated by Germany, and joins the League of Nations. A major earthquake, followed by firestorms, devastates the greater Tokyo region. After the resulting social uprisings and disorder are quelled, there is an enormous need for new architecture and urban restructuring.
MSN Encarta - Sato Eisaku Translate this page sato eisaku (Tabuse 1901 1975), uomo politico giapponese. Laureatosi nel 1924in giurisprudenza Altre risorse di Encarta. Cerca in Encarta sato eisaku http://it.encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_1041500733/Sato_Eisaku.html
A Chronology Of Japanese History ExPrime Minister sato eisaku awarded Nobel Peace Prize. June 1976, Kono Yoheiand other LDP members leave the party to form the New Liberal Club (NLC) in http://users.lac.uic.edu/~dturk/japanhistory/showahistory.html
Extractions: Japan sends troops to the Tientsin International Concession at Shantung to "protect" Japanese residents. June 1927 Seiyuhonto and Kenseikai merge to form the Minseito Party (Minseito is financially supported by the Mitsubishi zaibatsu while the Seiyukai is ssupported by the Mitsui zaibatsu) December 1927 A Manchurian-based Japanese Kwangtung Army staff officer and activist dynamites a bridge on a Manchurian railway line. The damage is attributed to "bandits." This is repeated several more times over the next few months. April 1928 Japanese troops from the Tientsin International Concession (sent to protect Japanese civilians) clash with Nationalist Chinese troops (under Chiang kai-shek) in Tsinan. (Japanese commanders claim more than 300 Japanese were massacred but, in fact, only 13 had died.) May 8, 1928
Today In Asian History: January 30 1968 Japanese Prime Minister sato eisaku (196472) put forward the governmentsthree anti-nuclear principles (hikaku sangensoku). Japan would not possess, http://www.isop.ucla.edu/eas/thisweek/01-30.htm
Extractions: UCLA Center for East Asian Studies Today in Asian History January 30 Japan and Britain formed an alliance to oppose Russian expansionism and to protect Japanese and British privileges in China. The alliance agreement was signed. The agreement provided that Japan and Britain would support the other if either was engaged in a conflict with two or more powers in East Asia. Japan's ambassador to London, Hayashi Tadasu, negotiated the agreement. Wakatsuki Reijiro took over as Japanese prime minister. Mohandas "Mahatma" Gandhi was assassinated. Gandhi was assasinated by a Hindu extremist who opposed his efforts to reconcile Hindus and Muslims in newly independent India. He had only recently ended a fast aimed at ending communal violence. Manas , a site based at UCLA devoted to South Asian history and culture includes a page on Gandhi's life and legacy. Several sites offer quotations from Gandhi's writings and pronouncements. One of these " The Mind of Mahatma Gandhi " (compiled by Prabhu and Rao) is well organized and easy to use.
Extractions: April-June 2001* Apr. 3, 2001: Japanese Education Ministry approves the controversial new junior high school history textbook that contains/omits passages allegedly whitewashing past actions during World War II. Apr. 4, 2001: South Korean FM Han Seung-soo files formal protest over the controversial textbooks. Apr. 5, 2001: Japanese Supreme Court rejects demands by two ROK citizens for wartime disability pensions while fighting for the Japanese Imperial Army during World War II. Apr. 6, 2001: The ROK, China, Russia, and Mongolia agree to invite Japan to join the Tumen River Area Development Project. Apr. 8, 2001: Environment ministers from Japan, South Korea, and China release a joint statement requesting the U.S. positive commitment toward the Kyoto Protocol. Apr., 8, 2001: ASEAN Plus Three vice finance ministers meet in Kuala Lumpur to discuss measures to stabilize Asia's financial markets hit by dollar's rise versus the yen.
Struggle To Restore China S Lawful Seat In The United Nations In addition to putting forward a resolution on the important question with thesato eisaku government of Japan to the 26th UN General Assembly, http://www.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/ziliao/3602/3604/t18013.htm
Asiaweek.com Alumni include four Nobel laureates two for literature, one for physics and apeace prize went to a former PM, the late sato eisaku. http://www.asiaweek.com/asiaweek/97/0523/cs2.html
Extractions: Other News TIME Asia TIME.com CNN Asia FORTUNE.com ... AOL.com 1. UNIVERSITY OF TOKYO Established: 1877 Address: 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113 Phone: 81-3-3812-2111 Fax: 81-3-5689-7344 Website: http://www.u-tokyo.ac.jp No institution in Japan, or perhaps all of Asia, is more associated with power and privilege than the University of Tokyo. Todai, as it is widely known, has produced 10 of Japan's 24 postwar prime ministers, including Nakasone Yasuhiro and Miyazawa Kiichi. Seven of the 21 cabinet ministers are alumni, as are a large number of civil-service mandarins. But if you want to talk of real power, consider that nearly 500 heads of Japan's top corporations are drawn from Todai ranks. Though it was officially founded 120 years ago, the university can be traced back to schools set up in the 18th century. The 40-hectare main campus in Hongo, central Tokyo, lies on the former estate of a feudal lord, and parts of the original gardens have been preserved. The university is best known for its law school a premier breeding ground for future leaders. Other disciplines, such as science, literature, architecture and medicine, also enjoy reputations for excellence. Todai researchers are prominent in fields such as earthquake studies and HIV treatment. Alumni include four Nobel laureates: two for literature, one for physics and a peace prize went to a former PM, the late Sato Eisaku.
Asiaweek.com | A Question Of Pride | 10/27/2000 (Former Japanese premier sato eisaku had left office in 1974 by the time he waspicked.) This time, the reformer being recognized is in the driver s seat. http://www.asiaweek.com/asiaweek/magazine/2000/1027/nat.noble_award.html
Extractions: In Gao Xingjian's play Bus Stop, frustrated commuters wait ten years for a vehicle that never pulls in. The victory bus finally arrived for Gao himself last week when he was named this year's recipient of the Nobel Prize for literature. The first Chinese writer to win the prestigious award, Paris-based Gao had been on the shortlist for some years, though the dissident writer's selection was still a big surprise. More prominent Chinese figures acceptable to Beijing had been considered better bets. Some of Gao's rivals were positively peeved. Red Sorghum author Mo Yan hung up when Asiaweek phoned for a reaction. He answered a second call with a "no comment." For the first time, Asia is celebrating three Nobel prizes in the same year. The trio was capped on Oct. 13 when the Nobel committee in Oslo announced that after 14 consecutive nominations, South Korean President Kim Dae Jung had finally won the peace prize for his commitment to democracy, human rights and reconciliation with the Communist North. With Gao, that put two anti-establishment figures on the Nobel honor roll, international recognition that reform and the defense of liberty have become Asia's new touchstones. The third laureate from the region was Shirakawa Hideki of Japan's University of Tsukuba who won the chemistry prize for his work on developing conductive plastics.
History News Network One of Japan s few Nobel Prizes was the Peace award to Prime Minister sato eisaku,for his antiNuclear Three Principles that Japan will not develop or http://hnn.us/blogs/entries/11341.html
Extractions: Search HNN: HNN Articles Hot Topics Books Features ... Jonathan Dresner Prehistory : You could almost write Japan's entire modern history as the drive for respect from the rest of the world. Starting with the unequal treaties of the mid 19th century, and the Meiji era drive to modernize and industrialize [Rich Country, Strong Military] was the equation culminating in Japan's evolution into a regional power and full-bore Imperialist state. Japan was a member of the Allies in WWI and participated in the Versailles conferences, which allowed them to shut out Korean and Chinese representatives, and then became an active participant in the Wilsonian diplomacy known as "Shidehara Diplomacy" in Japan, after the man who served as Foreign minister and Ambassador to the US for most of that period of the 1920s, signing several arms control treaties and the Kellog-Briand Pact and participating in the League of Nations. Though Japan was a respected regional power, some in Japan felt that the arms control treaties were intended at least partially to contain Japan's power at the second-tier. This was compounded to some degree by growing American anti-Asian sentiment and legislation, which reinforced the sense that Japan needed to be stronger and more respected in order to be treated fairly in the world. This, along with a myriad of other factors, led Japan into
Eisaku Sato: Awards Won By Eisaku Sato Eisaku Sato Awards won by Eisaku Sato. Awards of Eisaku Sato. OTHERNOBEL 1974, PEACE. Enter Artist/Album. Partner Sites. Stardose.com http://www.123awards.com/artist/1121.asp
Towards Post-profile In June of 2003, Dr. Dadabaev s research findings were awarded the 19th PrimeMinister sato eisaku Grand Prize by the Prime Minister sato eisaku Foundation http://www.akashi.co.jp/menue/English Pages/What's New/Towards Post/towards post
UHM Library : Japan Collection Special Collections N, NOBEL PRIZE, Awards; Japan laureates and aspirants, sato eisaku as Nobelist sato eisaku, NOBEL PRIZE. S, SAVINGS, In Japan, J. FIN, Amounts, http://www.hawaii.edu/asiaref/japan/special/roberts/roberts_index.htm
Extractions: Japan Collection Home Special Collections John Roberts Collection Asia Collection Home ... Home What's New New Acquisitions Online Resources Special Collections John Roberts Collection ... Articles Go to: Code A B C D ... Z Code Category Content See also A-bomb HIROSHIMA A ADB Asian Development Bank A A-ENER Nuclear energy Peace, Arms aerospace industries AIRCRAFT A AFRICA Japan-African trade A AGRIC-FISHERY Includes Forestry, Whaling, Rice Monopoly, Closed Market, GATT A AIDS See (M) AIDS in Medicine file Ainu DISCRIM air SDF A AIRCRAFT Includes aerospace industries Lockheed, R-Lock, Scandal, Arms alternative energy ENERGY Amnesty Int'l INTL Anti-Bomb movements HIROSHIMA anti-semitism ISRAEL A ARMS Japan rearmament SDF, ARMS INDUSTRY A ART Esp. Art market SCANDAL, PRICES art market ART A ASEAN Association of SE Asian Nations and related areas Older files on ASIA A ASIA Contains old files on Asia Asia IMPERIALISM A ASPAC Asia Pacific in general ASEAN Australia OCEANIA A AUTO Auto industry, traffic problems, technology auto industry AUTO awards NOBEL PRIZE Go to: Code A B C D ... Z B banking ECONOMY Belau (Palau) OCEANIA beverages DRINK bluebloods FAMILY B BIB Bibliography, mostly Japan-related (partially card-indexed)