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Topic: Yasujiro Niwa


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In the News (Wed 9 Dec 09)

  
  Great Japanese inventors in History
Yasujiro Niwa was born in year 26 of the Meiji Era (1893) in Chie prefecture.
He graduated from the Department of Electronic Engineering at the Faculty of Sciences of the Tokyo University in year 5 of the Taisho Era and then worked at the Research Institute for Electronics of the Ministry of Communications.
After perfecting the cable phototelegraphic transmission method, Yasujiro Niwa turned his attention to research of transmission of images through radio and in year 4 of the Showa Era, he successfully tested wireless transmission of images over large distances in Tokyo.
www.batfa.com /greatjapanese.html   (3377 words)

  
 Photo-telegraph service introduced (NE-type)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
The system was invented by Koln (Germany) and Belan (France) and operated over a telegraph line.
In Japan, the NE-type invented by Niwa Yasujiro was introduced first.
A picture of the Emperor Showa's enthronement ceremony in Kyoto in 1928 (Showa 3) sent by a newspaper company was the first photo-telegraph to be sent using a leased line.
park.org /Japan/NTT/MUSEUM/html_ht/HT930010_e.html   (80 words)

  
 TDU / SIE English   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
The school grew and expanded, and in 1949, Tokyo Denki University was established as an engineering college with an emphasis on electrical engineering.
The first president, Dr. Yasujiro Niwa, is well-known for inventing the first successful fax machine and summed up many of his philosophies on life and education with the motto, "Fine technology comes from fine personalities."
TDU was one of the first colleges in Japan to establish an evening Master's program, thereby enabling ambitious students working in the daytime to enrich their educational backgrounds at night by pursuing advanced studies.
www.sie.dendai.ac.jp /2002/e/page4.html   (139 words)

  
 ozuyasujiro.com - style
From “Yasujiro Ozu by Chishu Ryu”, Sight & Sound, Spring 1964.
Ryu continues, “Ozu was always ready to go location-hunting and walked the narrow lanes and back streets all day long in search of the places which would best fit his images.
Ozu himself thought the height of his camera rose slightly in his later films, something he put down to the Westernization of Japanese homes: more chairs and higher tables, less tatami mats.
www.ozuyasujiro.com /style.htm   (1297 words)

  
 Academic Biography
During the first year I lived in Chicago, my 8th grade year, I was part of an experiment in reverse desegregation of the Chicago public school system.
The Fall of 1987, the first semester of my senior year, was spent in Machida City, near Tokyo, on the campus of Obirin College, near Tokyo.
It was becoming quite evident to me that to understand the processes going on at the recipient end of Japanese ODA, one had to understand the role of media in the protest process.
astro.temple.edu /~lwpowell/vanthro/acbio.html   (3832 words)

  
 Niwa - Welcome to NIWA   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Yasujiro Niwa and Masatsugu Kobayashi invented a new type of Without further time for development, newspapers bought Niwa and Kobayashi's machines,
Niwa Nagahide Niwa Nagahide (丹羽長秀; October 16, 1535 - May 15, 1585) was a retainer of Oda clan and a daimyo.
Located adjacent to the new Stingray Bay exhibit, the new NIWA Interactive Room lets children To find out more interesting facts visit: www.niwa.co.nz
dbarea.com /?q=niwa   (205 words)

  
 Patentee Index
Nagaoka, Yasutaka; and Suzuki, Norihito, to Yazaki Corporation Structure for mounting steering angle sensor for steering 06983647 Cl. 73-118.1.
Taguchi, Yasujiro; Kaneko, Yoshio; Tokura, Yoshinori; and Nagaosa, Naoto 06985276 Cl. 359-280.
Kobayashi, Kazuki; Sakono, Ikuo; Shiraki, Shinji; Sasaki, Hirofumi; and Niwa, Kazuaki 06984476 Cl. 430-7.
www.uspto.gov /web/patents/patog/week02/OG/patentee/alphaN_Utility.htm   (5271 words)

  
 Yasujiro Ozu
The films of Yasujiro Ozu examine the basic struggles that we all face in life: the cycles of birth and death, the transition from childhood to adulthood, and the tension between tradition and modernity.
Their titles often emphasise the changing of seasons, a symbolic backdrop for the evolving transitions of human experience.
Very informative text by Ken Sakamura about the recent Yasujiro Ozu exhibition in Tokyo, and Ozu's style in general.
www.sensesofcinema.com /contents/directors/03/ozu.html   (4373 words)

  
 MoMA.org | Exhibitions Schedule | Film & Media | 2005 | Early Autumn: Masterworks of Japanese Cinema from the ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Every print screened in the series is in 35mm and is newly struck from archival negatives; in addition, new English subtitles have been created by the National Film Center for each film.
Familiar and not-so-familiar works by well-known Japanese directors will be screened, among them films by Kon Ichikawa, Keisuke Kinoshita, Teinosuke Kinugasa, Akira Kurosawa, Kenji Mizoguchi, Mikio Naruse, Nagisa Oshima, and Yasujiro Ozu.
Many lesser-known but no less interesting films by such directors as Heinosuke Gosho, Ishirô Honda, Koreyoshi Kurahara, Hiroshi Shimizu, and Sadao Yamanaka will also be showcased.
www.moma.org /exhibitions/film_media/2005/japanese_cinema.html   (2729 words)

  
 Asian Canadian - news:events:arts:culture:& more!: 07/01/2005 - 07/31/2005   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Sometimes they start slowly, where metal meets earth in the flying dirt of new construction.
That may have been what Japanese department store magnate Yasujiro Tsutsumi was thinking on that warm October day 45 years ago in Los Angeles where he broke ground on Seibu, a multilevel monument to Asian retailing just a short throw from Beverly Hills.
These were the days when U.S.-built iron bullied the highways, Ken and Barbie ruled in toyland, and chow mein conveyed wild exoticism.
www.asiancanadian.net /archives/2005_07_01_archive.html   (13333 words)

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