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Topic: Takeo Takagi


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In the News (Wed 9 Dec 09)

  
  Albany Bujinkan
Takagi was born 2nd January, in the 2nd year of Kan’ei (1625) although some say the 12th year of Kan'ei (1635).
Takagi left for the neighboring domains of Ushu and Hitachi, and entered the martial gate of one Muto Danuemon, a high level strategist of warlord Yoshihide.
When Takagi received news of his father’s death, he remembered his father’s constant admonition, “a willow (yoboku) is strong and flexible, while a tall tree (takagi) will break” Takagi took this teaching to heart, trained hard, and avenged his father’s murder.
www.albanybujinkan.com /history/takagi.htm   (1269 words)

  
 Takeo Takagi Information
Takeo Takagi (高木武雄 Takagi Takeo, January 25 1892 – July 8 1944) was a Vice Admiral of the Imperial Japanese Navy during World War II.
Takagi commanded forces during the Japanese invasion of the Philippine Islands, at the Battle of the Java Sea, Coral Sea and Midway.
He was reported killed in action after the U.S. invaded Saipan in 1944.
www.bookrags.com /wiki/Takeo_Takagi   (69 words)

  
  JAH Roundtable   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
For Takagi, the point was to learn, not from the declaration itself, but from the American sense of personal dignity that he considered had been derived from Protestantism and had formed the spiritual basis of the declaration.
Takagi had known Konoe, whom he had regarded as the leader of the moderate faction of the Japanese elite in the era of militarism, since the 1930s.
Takagi translated it as "in the development process of humankind." Shirai was not satisfied because that translation gave a positive progressive connotation to the original phrase, which lacks such a connotation.
www.chnm.gmu.edu /declaration/japanese/aruga2.html   (9917 words)

  
 History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
To counter the unexpected threat from Task Force 17, Japanese Vice Admiral Takeo Takagi was sent south from Bougainville with an additional reinforcing force consisting of two heavy carriers, the Zuikaku and the Shokaku, two heavy cruisers and six destroyers.
While Takagi concentrated on these relatively minor targets, a strike force of ninety three planes from the Yorktown and Lexington found the light carrier Shoho and began an intense bomb and torpedo attack.
Takagi had no radar, but his forces had been together as a coordinated division for more than six months.
www.usscoralsea.org /LHist.htm   (5863 words)

  
 SCEAS
Takeo Takagi: [Publications] [Author Rank by year] [Co-authors] [Prefers] [Cites] [Cited by]
Yasuhisa Hirata, Takeo Takagi, Kazuhiro Kosuge, Hajime Asama, Hayato Kaetsu, Kuniaki Kawabata
Map-based Control of Distributed Robot Helpers for Transporting an Object in Cooperation with a Human.
delab.csd.auth.gr /sceas/php/search.php4?author_id=281731   (122 words)

  
 DBLP: Takeo Takagi
Coauthor Index - Ask others: ACM DL - ACM Guide - CiteSeer - CSB - Google
Yasuhisa Hirata, Takeo Takagi, Kazuhiro Kosuge, Hajime Asama, Hayato Kaetsu, Kuniaki Kawabata: Motion Control of Multiple DR Helpers Transporting a Single Object in Cooperation with a Human Based on Map Information.
Yasuhisa Hirata, Takeo Takagi, Kazuhiro Kosuge, Hajime Asama, Hayato Kaetsu, Kuniaki Kawabata: Map-based Control of Distributed Robot Helpers for Transporting an Object in Cooperation with a Human.
www.informatik.uni-trier.de /~ley/db/indices/a-tree/t/Takagi:Takeo.html   (93 words)

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