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         Sato Eisaku:     more books (21)
  1. Sato Eisaku nikki (Japanese Edition) by Eisaku Sato, 1997
  2. Sato Naikaku kaiso (Chuko shinsho) (Japanese Edition) by Hisashi Senda,
  3. Address by Prime Minister Eisaku Sato at public hearing on national administration: Matsue City, Shimane Prefecture, September 25, 1969 by Eisaku Satō, 1969
  4. Seiden Sato Eisaku (Japanese Edition) by Eizo Yamada, 1988
  5. Toward Greater Responsibility, Two speeches by Mr. Eisaku Sato, Prime Minister of Japan (December, 1967, Japan Reference Series 6 - 67,) by Eisaku Sato, 1968
  6. The Emperor's new clothes: can Japan live without the bomb?: An article from: World Policy Journal by Masaru Tamamoto, 2009-09-22

21. Sato Eisaku - Wikipédia
More results from fr.wikipedia.org MSN Encarta sato eisaku - Translate this page sato eisaku. sato eisaku (1901-1975), político japonés, premio Nobel de la Pazy primer ministro de su país (1964-1972). Buscar en Encarta sato eisaku.
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sato_Eisaku
Sato Eisaku
Un article de Wikip©dia, l'encyclop©die libre.
Sat´ Eisaku 27 mars 3 juin ) ©tait le 61 e e et 63 e premier ministre du Japon , respectivement entre le 9 novembre et le 17 f©vrier , entre le 17 f©vrier et le 14 janvier , et entre le 14 janvier et le 7 juillet Il est n©   Tabuse dans la pr©fecture de Yamaguchi . Il ©tudia   l'Universit© imp©riale de T´ky´ qui deviendra l'Universit© de T´ky´. Il travailla en tant que fonctionnaire au minist¨re du chemin de fer. Il entra en   la Di¨te et gravit progressivement les ©chelons en occupant diff©rants postes ministeriels. Il re§ut le Prix Nobel de la paix en pour la politique ©trang¨re pacifique men©e par son pays. Il se maria en avec Hiroko modifier
Voir aussi
Histoire du Japon Japon Politique du Japon Views Outils personnels Navigation Rechercher Bo®te   outils Autres langues
  • English Derni¨re modification de cette page : 22 d©c 2003   18:04.

22. The Pocket Guide To World History - Sarmations To Sato Eisaku
Read more Google. sato eisaku. 190175. Japanese Prime Minister1964-72. Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Read more Google.
http://www.benlo.com/history/ph698.html
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23. Nobel Laureate In 1974
sato eisaku. (1901 1975) In 1974 sato eisaku was awarded the nobelprice for his life activities in world peace. Prime minister
http://www.freewebs.com/nobelprize/S_Eisaku.htm
Sato Eisaku
In 1974 Sato Eisaku was awarded the nobel price for his life activities in world peace. Prime minister of Japan between 1964 and 1972, who presided over Japan's post-World War II reemergence as a major world power. For his policies on nuclear weapons, which led to Japan's signing of the Treaty on the Non-proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, he was awarded (with cowinner Sean MacBride) the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1974.
After graduating with a degree in law from Tokyo Imperial University (now University of Tokyo) in 1924, Sato joined the Ministry of Railways, becoming the chief of its bureau of control in 1941 and vice-minister for transportation in 1948. That same year he joined the Liberal Party and was elected in 1949 to the lower house of the Diet (parliament). Becoming minister of construction in 1952, he resigned his post the following year to become chief secretary of the Liberal Party. When the Liberal Party was merged with the Democratic Party, Sato became one of the leading members of the new coalition called the Liberal-Democratic Party. During the late 1950s he served as minister of finance in the cabinet of his older brother and political mentor, Kishi Nobusuke. Kishi was succeeded in 1960 by Ikeda Hayato, in whose cabinet Sato also served.
After Ikeda resigned because of ill health, the Diet in November 1964 chose Sato as his successor. As prime minister Sato presided over the continued growth of the Japanese economy and the improvement of Japanese relations with other Asian countries. Although Sato increased Japanese trade with mainland China to some extent, China distrusted his policies toward Taiwan and his support of the United States cause in the Vietnam War. In 1969 Sato reached an agreement with U.S. President Richard M. Nixon for future return of the Ryukyu Islands to Japan, the removal of all nuclear weapons from the area, and the continued maintenance of the U.S.-Japanese Mutual Security Treaty. Sato came under heavy criticism for provisions in the agreement that allowed U.S. military forces to remain on Okinawa Island after its return to Japan.

24. Sato Eisaku
Article on sato eisaku from WorldHistory.com, licensed from Wikipedia, the freeencyclopedia. Return to World History (home) Main Article Index sato eisaku.
http://www.worldhistory.com/wiki/S/Sato-Eisaku.htm
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Sato Eisaku
Sato Eisaku in the news March 27 June 3 ) was a Japanese politician and the 61st, 62nd and 63rd Prime Minister , elected on November 9 , and re-elected on February 17 and January 14 , serving until July 7 He was born in Tabuse in Yamaguchi prefecture , and studied law at Tokyo Imperial University , becoming a civil servant in the Ministry of Railways. In , he was named vice-minister for transportation. He entered the Diet in as a member of the Liberal Party , and gradually rose through the ranks of Japanese politics, becoming Chief Cabinet Secretary to Yoshida Shigeru , and in , minister of construction. After the Liberal Party merged with the Democratic Party to form the Liberal Democratic Party , Sato became Minister of Finance in the governments of Kishi Nobusuke (his brother) and Ikeda Hayato Sato succeeded Ikeda after the latter resigned due to ill health. His government was one of the longest-lived in Japanese history, and by the late 1960's he appeared to have single-handed control over the entire Japanese government. He was a popular prime minister due to the growing economy; his foreign policy, which was a balancing act between the interests of the United States and China , was more tenuous. In

25. Www.worldhistory.com/wiki/E/Sato-Eisaku.htm
More results from www.worldhistory.com MSN Encarta sato eisaku Sign in above. sato eisaku. sato eisaku (1901-1975), Japanese statesmanand Nobel laureate, born in Tabuse. Find more about sato eisaku from,
http://www.worldhistory.com/wiki/E/Sato-Eisaku.htm

26. Encyclopedia4U - Sato Eisaku - Encyclopedia Article
sato eisaku. This article is licensed under the GNU Free DocumentationLicense. It uses material from the Wikipedia article sato eisaku .
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Sato Eisaku
March 27 June 3 ) was a Japanese politician and the 61st, 62nd and 63rd Prime Minister from November 9 to February 17 , from February 17 to January 14 and from January 14 to July 7 respectively. He was born in Tabuse in Yamaguchi prefecture , and studied at what was then known as Tokyo Imperial University (now Tokyo University ), becoming a civil servant in the Ministry of Railways. He entered the Diet in 1949 and gradually rose through the ranks of Japanese politics in typical fashion, holding a succession of ministerial posts and organizational posts in the LDP. He received the Nobel Peace Prize in , in recognition of Japan's pacifist foriegn policy, though why he was singled out is somewhat unclear. He married Hiroko in 1926 and had two children, Ryutaro and Shinji.
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License . It uses material from the Wikipedia article " Sato Eisaku

27. Lexikon - Eisaku Sato Definition Erklärung Bedeutung
Translate this page Lexikon. Google News zum Stichwort. Eisaku Sato. Definition, Bedeutung,Erklärung im Lexikon. Artikel auf Englisch sato eisaku. Eisaku
http://www.net-lexikon.de/Eisaku-Sato.html

28. Definition Of Sato Eisaku - WordIQ Dictionary & Encyclopedia
sato eisaku. frsato eisaku ja sato eisaku DocumentationLicense. It uses material from the Wikipedia article sato eisaku .
http://www.wordiq.com/definition/Eisaku_Sato
Encyclopedia Dictionary Thesaurus The Web eBooks loadkeyword("Sato Eisaku");
Sato Eisaku
Encyclopedia Definition: Eisaku Sato
fr:Sato Eisaku
March 27 June 3 ) was a Japanese politician and the 61st, 62nd and 63rd Prime Minister , elected on November 9 , and re-elected on February 17 and January 14 , serving until July 7 He was born in Tabuse in Yamaguchi prefecture , and studied law at Tokyo Imperial University , becoming a civil servant in the Ministry of Railways. In , he was named vice-minister for transportation. He entered the Diet in as a member of the Liberal Party , and gradually rose through the ranks of Japanese politics, becoming Chief Cabinet Secretary to Yoshida Shigeru , and in , minister of construction. After the Liberal Party merged with the Democratic Party to form the Liberal Democratic Party , Sato became Minister of Finance in the governments of Kishi Nobusuke (his brother) and Ikeda Hayato Sato succeeded Ikeda after the latter resigned due to ill health. His government was one of the longest-lived in Japanese history, and by the late 1960's he appeared to have single-handed control over the entire Japanese government. He was a popular prime minister due to the growing economy; his foreign policy, which was a balancing act between the interests of the

29. Epo@
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30. Mailing List "MLEPO"
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  • 31. Book Sato Eisaku To Kodo Seicho (Unknown Binding)
    media service info. sato eisaku to kodo seicho. authors. Isamu Togawa.data. ISBN/ASIN 4061427768 Kåodansha Unknown Binding. order. ISBN no.
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    32. Eisaku Sato - Wikipedia
    Translate this page Eisaku Sato. Die Texte stammen aus der Wikipedia - Dies ist nicht die Wikipedia.Eisaku Kyokushinkaikan. ensato eisaku frsato eisaku ja.
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    Die Texte stammen aus der Wikipedia - Dies ist nicht die Wikipedia
    Eisaku Sato war ein japanischer Politiker (Liberaldemokrat). Er war von Finanzminister und von japanischer Ministerpräsident. Sato Erhielt den Friedensnobelpreis war er Präsident der International Karate Organization Kyokushinkaikan.
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    33. Sato Eisaku
    Translate this page sato eisaku, (1901-1975). Político japonés y premio Nobel de la Paz. Nació enTabuse, se licenció en Derecho por la Universidad Imperial de Tokio en 1924.
    http://www.mujeresdeltercermilenio.hpg.ig.com.br/sato.htm
    Sato Eisaku INFORMACION GENERAL FECHAS DESTACADAS PERSONAJES DE JAPON MENU GALERIA DE FOTOS

    34. National Museum Of Ethnology : Academic Staff
    Integral Tenet of the United Nations Conflict Prevention and Resolution StrategyA Central Asian Perspective. Former Prime Minister sato eisaku Grand Prize
    http://www.minpaku.ac.jp/staff/short_stay/timur_dadabaev_english.html
    Academic Staff Timur Dadabaev
    Short Stay Staff ( 1 Oct. 2002 - 31 Mar. 2004 )
    page in Japanese>>

    Academic Background : 2001 Ritsumeikan University, Kyoto, Japan, Ph.D. in International Relations 1998 Ritsumeikan University, Kyoto, Japan, MA in International Relations 1996 Osaka University of Foreign Studies, Research in Japanese Studies, Japan 1995 State University of World Languages, Degree in English (Education) Uzbekistan* 1995 The University of World Economy and Diplomacy, BA in Int'l Relations, Uzbekistan (*from 1993 - evening course)
    Research Experience : 2004 The United Nations University-Akino Research Fellow, UNU, Tokyo. 2003 Visiting Fellow, UK Central and Inner-Asia Committee, Cambridge University (February) 2002 Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, National Museum of Ethnology, Department of Social Research, Osaka, Japan (2002 - 2004) 2001 UNESCO-Obuchi Fellow, Study on Conflict Prevention in Central Asia 2000 The United Nations University Training Fellow, International Courses (UNU/IC), Tokyo 1999 SIDA Fellow, Advanced Conflict Resolution Program, Uppsala University Center for Conflict Research, Sweden

    35. ‘—§–¯‘°Šw”Ž•¨ŠÙFŒ¤‹†Šˆ“®uŠO—ˆŒ¤‹†ˆõvFƒ
    Prime Minister sato eisaku Grand Prize Dissertation Award, sato eisaku Foundationfor Cooperation with the United Nations University, Tokyo, June 24.
    http://www.minpaku.ac.jp/staff/short_stay/timur_dadabaev.html
    ƒf[ƒ^‚Í2004”N‚RŒŽ31“úŽž“_‚Ì‚à‚Ì‚Å‚·B
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    yŒ¤‹†—ðz 2004@‘˜A‘åŠwH–ì–L•å‹àƒtƒFƒ[A‘˜A‘åŠwA“Œ‹ž 2003@’ZŠú‹qˆõŒ¤‹†ˆõA‰p‘’†‰›E“àƒAƒWƒAŒ¤‹†ˆÏˆõ‰ïAƒPƒ“ƒuƒŠƒbƒW‘åŠw 2002@‘—§–¯‘°Šw”Ž•¨ŠÙŠO—ˆŒ¤‹†ˆõ 2000@‘˜A‘åŠw‘ÛuÀ@“Œ‹ž 1999@SIDAƒtƒFƒ[AƒEƒbƒvƒTƒ‰‘åŠw•´‘ˆ‰ðŒˆE•½˜aŠwŒ¤‹†ŠAƒXƒEƒF[ƒfƒ“
    y’˜@‘z Towards Post-Soviet Central Asian Regional Integration: A Scheme for Transitional States –¾Î‘“X , ‚QŒŽ28“úA240•Å
    2004@ "Post-Soviet Realities of Uzbekistani Society", IOC Discussion Paper No. 37 , Institute of Oriental Culture, University of Tokyo, March. 2003@ "Water Politics and Cooperation: Trans-boundary Waters and Challenges of Cooperation in Cenral Asia", Afriche e Orienti , Bolongne: AIEP, n. 3/4, pp. 161-172iƒCƒ^ƒŠƒAŒêj

    36. Japan Today
    Hayato Ikeda succeeded him. Ikeda and sato eisaku were determinate to emphasize Japan’seconomic development and maintained a close relationship with the US
    http://www.empereur.com/DOC/Japan_Pol_Since1954.html
    The Japanese political situation since 1954
    Japanese Primer ministers
    • Yoshida Shigeru (1878-1967)
    Premier Yoshida's policy of close collaboration with the U.S. was subjected to strong criticism by dissidents within the Liberal party during the second half of 1954. In late November the insurgent Liberals formed the Japan Democratic Party. Premier Yoshida, who was removed as head of the Liberal party a few days later, resigned the Premier-ship in early December after failing to muster a majority in the diet.
    • Hatoyama Ichiro (1883-1959)
    Subsequently, by virtue of Socialist party support, the Democratic Party leader Hatoyama was elected. He promised, in exchange for Socialist support, to dissolve the diet in January 1955 and hold national elections.
    The Democratic Party failed to win a majority in the diet in the election held in February 1955, but with Liberal support Hatoyama was returned to the primer ship. The Liberal (conservative) had to reorganize in order to counter the socialists. In November 1955, the liberals (Yoshida’s clan) and Democrats (Hotoyama) formed the Liberal Democratic Party (L.D.P).
    The policy of L.D.P was to concentrate mainly on economic productions. Until the first oil crisis Japan had more than 10% growth annually. At the meantime, the major dilemma was the Foreign policy issue.

    37. Sato Eisaku : Eisaku Sato
    sato eisaku Eisaku Sato. Information about sato eisaku Eisaku Sato with usefullinks and basic facts. Info logo Encyclopedia. sato eisaku Eisaku Sato.
    http://www.fastload.org/ei/Eisaku_Sato.html
    Sato Eisaku : Eisaku Sato
    Home Up
    About 'Sato Eisaku : Eisaku Sato'
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    March 27 June 3 ) was a Japanese politician and the 61st, 62nd and 63rd Prime Minister from November 9 to February 17 , from February 17 to January 14 and from January 14 to July 7 respectively.
    He was born in Yamaguchi prefecture
    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License
    You may copy and modify it as long as the entire work (including additions) remains under this license.
    You must provide a link to http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html
    To view or edit this article at Wikipedia, follow this link

    38. JPRI Working Paper No. 34
    involved in one or another scandal reads like a virtual who s who of postwar politicsAshida Hitoshi, Yoshida Shigeru, Ikeda Hayato, sato eisaku, Tanaka Kakuei
    http://www.jpri.org/publications/workingpapers/wp34.html
    JPRI Working Paper No. 34: June 1997
    Why the Wicked Sleep: The Prosecution of Political Corruption in Postwar Japa n
    by David T. Johnson
    We will not let the wicked sleep. favorite prosecutor maxim, popularized by Itoh Shigeki, Japan's 14th postwar Prosecutor General, December 19, 1985 to March 23, 1988. The wicked are sleeping.Prosecutors, wake up! Tachibana Takashi, Japan's premier investigative journalist. Political corruption in Japan is rampant, often implicating the country's most powerful political elites. Prosecutors in Japan claim their main mission is to expose and indict cases of political corruption. Moreover, they receive strong public support to 'not let the wicked sleep.' However, since 1954 few major politicians have been charged with serious crimes. The wicked seem to be sleeping. Though political corruption plagues many nation-states, most observers believe that an especially virulent form of the disease infects Japan, and that the Yamato strain of the malady is especially resistant to treatment. The list of postwar politicians who have been involved in one or another scandal reads like a virtual who's who of postwar politics: Ashida Hitoshi, Yoshida Shigeru, Ikeda Hayato, Sato Eisaku, Tanaka Kakuei, Fukuda Takeo, Nakasone Yasuhiro, Takeshita Noboru, Miyazawa Kiichi, Kanemaru Shin, Ozawa Ichiro, and even Hosokawa Morihiro, whose ascension to the prime-ministership in 1993 ended the Liberal Democratic Party's 38-year era of one-party dominance. In short, political corruption in postwar Japan is not only extensive; it has repeatedly tainted the names of the nation's most prominent politicians.

    39. Towards Post-profile
    In June of 2003, Dr. Dadabaev s research findings were awarded the 19th Prime Ministersato eisaku Grand Prize by the Prime Minister sato eisaku Foundation for
    http://www.akashi.co.jp/menue/English Pages/What's New/Towards Post/towards post
    Dr.Timur Dadabaev
    To order this book at Amazon.co.jp
    Back to Top

    40. Government
    It has given the nation seven prime ministers, including Ito Hirobumi, Japan sfirst Prime Minister, and sato eisaku, who was awarded the Nobel Prize.
    http://www.ca.emb-japan.go.jp/AboutJapan/AudioVisual/VideoCatalogue/govern.htm
    GOVERNMENT
    • The New Emperor of Japan (1990)
      20 minutes, colour, English, VHS

      Presented is a video documentary of the life of Japan's present reigning monarch, Emperor Akihito. Initially, he is seen giving his first audience, followed by chronological vignettes of his life. The Emperor's three children are introduced. Also shown is the Empress, as a mother and a woman of many accomplishments.
      Yamaguchi: The Dawn of Japan (1990)
      15 minutes, colour, English, VHS, Tape 47

      The history of Yamaguchi prefecture, at the tip of Honshu, and the role that it has played in the creation of modern Japan are described. It has given the nation seven prime ministers, including Ito Hirobumi, Japan's first Prime Minister, and Sato Eisaku, who was awarded the Nobel Prize. The history of Yamaguchi prefecture, at the tip of Honshu, and the role that it has played in the creation of modern Japan are described. It has given the nation seven prime ministers, including Ito Hirobumi, Japan's first Prime Minister, and Sato Eisaku, who was awarded the Nobel Prize.
      Facts about the Islands - The Northern Territories (1992)
      35 minutes, colour, English, VHS

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