Mr morita kensaku biography
- Profile.
- In the show, Morita played a high-school student who, like Amy and Uncle Ken, is a kendo enthusiast.
- Masakazu Morita.
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HCM City leader hosts Governor of Chiba, Japan
HCM City(VNA) – Ho Chi Minh City wants to step up economic cooperation and culturalexchange with Japan’s prefecture of Chiba, said Chairman of the city’s People’sCommittee Nguyen Thanh Phong on November 20.
He made the remarkswhile meeting with Governor of Chiba Kensaku Morita, who was on a visit to thecity.
Phong told theJapanese governor that he highly values the growing relations between HCM Cityand Chiba, and that the city welcomes all Japanese delegations, including thosefrom Chiba, to visit and explore opportunities for cooperation and investment.
He suggested that thetwo localities enhance economic and cultural exchanges and discuss cooperationin urban planning and management, innovative urban development, and humanresources. The two sides should also consider setting up a partnership similar
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And in the Japanese corner is . . . Morita-san
Christina Morimoto is sitting in the office of the Tokyo modeling agency she works for, answering questions about her first acting job in the new movie "I Am Nipponjin."
In the film, the 20-year-old Sophia University student plays Amy Watanabe, a young woman much like herself except for some details. Like Amy, Christina has one American parent and one Japanese parent, but in her case her father is the American (Morimoto is not her real name). Like Amy her late Japanese grandfather was a practitioner of the martial art of kendo, but unlike Amy she didn't grow up at his knee absorbing the niceties of Japanese culture because when she was younger she couldn't understand Japanese well enough, and he didn't speak English.
Most importantly, she didn't come to Japan to teach the natives what it really means to be Japanese. Amy, as Christina is quick to admit, is a bit of an exaggeration: a foreigner who is so enamored of Yamato-damashii (the spirit of Japan) that during her first day as an exchange student at a Japanese university she s
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Ikeda Terumasa (池田 輝政, January 31, 1565 – March 16, 1613) was a Japanese daimyō of the early Edo period. His court title was Musashi no Kami. Terumasa was also known by the nickname saigoku no shōgun, or, "The Shōgun of Western Japan". Terumasa fought in many of the battles of the late Azuchi–Momoyama period, and due to his service at the Battle of Sekigahara, received a fief at Himeji. His childhood name was Araokojimaru (荒尾古新丸).The 2nd son and heir of Ikeda Nobuteru, Terumasa held Ikejiri Castle (Mino Province) and joined his father in fighting for Hideyoshi in the Komaki Campaign (1584). He led troops at Nagakute (1584), the battle in which his father was killed. In 1590, following the transfer of Tokugawa Ieyasu to the Kanto, Terumasa was established at Yoshida in Mikawa, a 152,000-koku fief. In 1594 Terumasa married one of Tokugawa's daughters, and after Hideyoshi's death in 1598, the Ikeda drifted into Ieyasu's camp. When the Sekigahara Campaign began in the fall of 1600, Terumasa immediately sided with Tokugawa; on 28 September he competed with Fukushima Masanori to be the
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