List of Hibiya High School people
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This is a list of people associated with Tokyo, Japan's Hibiya High School or its predecessor, the First Tokyo Middle School.
[edit] Students
- Natsume Sōseki, author[1]
- Yokoyama Taikan, painter
- Kōda Rohan, author
- Ozaki Kōyō, author
- Kidō Okamoto, author
- Junichirou Tanizaki, author
- Jirō Osaragi, author
- Choe Nam-seon, Poet
- Kunio Maekawa, architect[2]
- Hideo Kobayashi, author and literary critic
- Nobuyuki Abe, 36th Prime Minister of Japan, General in the Imperial Japanese Army
- Jiro Minami, General in the Imperial Japanese Army
- Shunroku Hata, Field Marshal in the Imperial Japanese Army
- Yukio Kasahara, Lieutenant General in the Imperial Japanese Army
- Kiyohide Shima, Vice Admiral in the Imperial Japanese Navy
- Nishi Takeichi, Lieutenant Colonel in the Imperial Japanese Army, killed in action during World War II
- Junichi Sasai, Lieutenant JG in the Imperial Japanese Army, Fighter ace during World War II
- Hisatsune Sakomizu, Chief Cabinet Secretary of Japan in 1945
- Toshikazu Kase, Japan's first Ambassador to the United Nations
- Nobuhiko Ushiba, Foreign, economic charge Minister in 1977, Ambassador of Japan to U.S.A in 1970, Administrative Vice-Minister of Ministry of Foreign Affairs
- Takeshi Watanabe, Chairman of Trilateral Commission in 1976, Founder Governor of Asian Development Bank in 1966, Vice-Minister of Finance for International Affairs in 1949
- Koichiro Matsuura, the current Director-General of UNESCO
- Sadayuki Hayashi, Ambassador of Japan to United Kingdom in 1997, Administrative Vice-Minister of Ministry of Foreign Affairs
- Michiji Tajima, Chief of Imperial Household Agency in 1949
- toshio Yuasa, Chief of Imperial Household Agency in 2001, Administrative Vice-Minister of Ministry of Home Affairs
- Hisanori Fujita, Grand Chamberlain in 1944, General in the Imperial Japanese Army
- Satoru Yamamoto, Grand chamberlain in 1988, Head of Local Finance Bureau of Ministry of Home Affairs
- Makoto Watanabe, Grand chamberlain in 1996, Chief of Protocol of Ministry of Foreign Affairs
- Yutaka Kawashima, the current Grand chamberlain, Ambassador of Japan to Israel in 1996, Administrative Vice-Minister of Ministry of Foreign Affairs
- Yoshiji Nogami, the current Ambassador of Japan to United Kingdom, Administrative Vice-Minister of Ministry of Foreign Affairs
- Suehiko Shiono, Minister of Justice in 1937, Minister of Communications in 1939
- Yasumaro Shimojo, Minister of Education in 1948
- Saburo Okita, Minister of Foreign Affairs in 1979
- Yūji Tsushima, Minister of Health in 1990 and 2000
- Kōichi Katō, Chief Cabinet Secretary of Japan in 1991, Secretary of Defense in 1994
- Yukihiko Ikeda, Minister of Foreign Affairs in 1996
- Okiharu Yasuoka, Minister of Justice in 2000
- Nobutaka Machimura、 Minister of Foreign Affairs in 2004 in 2007, Chief Cabinet Secretary of Japan in 2007
- Kazuo Aichi, Secretary of Defense in 1993, Secretary of Environment in 1990
- Shitagau Noguchi, Founder of Chisso and Asahi Kasei
- Taizō Ishizaka, President of Toshiba in 1949, Chief of Nippon Keidanren in 1956
- Kōgorō Uemura, Chief of Nippon Keidanren in 1968
- Shōichirō Toyoda, President of Toyota Motor Corporation in 1982, Chief of Nippon Keidanren in 1992
- Tatsurō Toyoda, President of Toyota Motor Corporation in 1992
- Kei Imai, President of Nippon Steel Corporation in 1993, Chief of Nippon Keidanren in 1998
- Koichiro Ejiri, President of Mitsui in 1985
- Shigeji Kamishima, President of Mitsui in 1996
- Yorihiko Kojima, President and CEO of Mitsubishi Corporation in 2004
- Hirofumi Uzawa, economist
- Masao Maruyama, political scientist and political theorist
- Shūichi Katō, literary critic
- Toshikazu Wakatsuki, a medical doctor (List of Magsaysay awardees)
- Susumu Tonegawa, molecular biologist, 1987 Nobel Prize winner in Physiology / Medicine[3]
- Shigeo Hirose, robotics expert[4]
- Jun Etō, literary critic
- Nanami Shiono, female author
- Yūko Andō, female TV newscaster
[edit] References
- ^ Takahashi, Akio (2006). 新書で入門 漱石と鴎外 (A pocket paperback introduction: Soseki and Ogai). Shinchosha. ISBN 4106101793.
- ^ Reynolds, Jonathan M. (2001). Maekawa Kunio and the Emergence of Japanese Modernist Architecture. University of California Press, p. 41. ISBN 0520214951.
- ^ Tonegawa, Susumu (1988). "Autobiography". Odelberg, Wilhelm (editor) Les Prix Nobel 1987, Stockholm, Sweden: The Nobel Foundation. Retrieved on 2007-04-12.
- ^ Hirose, Shigeo. Staff profile. Tokyo Institute of Technology. Retrieved on 2007-04-12.