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  2. Kogan.com - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kogan.com

    Kogan.com is an Australian portfolio of retail and services businesses including Kogan Retail, Kogan Marketplace, Kogan Mobile, Kogan Internet, Kogan Insurance, Kogan Travel, Kogan Money, Kogan Cars, Kogan Energy, Dick Smith, Matt Blatt and Mighty Ape.

  3. Ruslan Kogan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruslan_Kogan

    Ruslan Kogan was born to Belarusian parents, [23] [24] and moved with his sister Svetlana and parents to Melbourne, Victoria, Australia in 1989. [25] Kogan grew up in the Elsternwick Housing Commission flats, and started his first business at the age of ten by finding lost golf balls, cleaning them and selling them for $0.50/each [25] to golfers at Elsternwick Golf Course on Saturday mornings ...

  4. Michael Kogan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Kogan

    Kogan was born in Odesa on January 1, 1920 to Riva and Kalman Kogan. [1] His family moved to Harbin, Manchuria to escape the Russian Revolution, where he later met Colonel Norihiro Yasue, a member of the Japanese Army's intelligence services and one of the architects of the Fugu Plan, a plan to settle European Jewish refugees in Japanese-occupied Manchuria.

  5. Nova (eikaiwa) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nova_(eikaiwa)

    A Nova branch. The Nova Group was founded in August 1981 and was led by CEO Nozomu Sahashi. [11] Nova's corporate headquarters were in Osaka. The company was the largest employer of foreign nationals in Japan, [12] employing 7,000 foreign workers, [13] 5,000 of whom were employed as language instructors. [14]

  6. Gaba Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaba_Corporation

    Gaba Corporation (株式会社 GABA, Kabushikigaisha Gaba) is a chain of eikaiwa schools (English conversation schools) in Japan.The company was founded in July 1995 [2] [3] and is currently headquartered in Shinjuku Ward in Tokyo with learning studios in the Tokyo, Chiba, Yokohama, Nagoya, Osaka, Kyoto, Kobe, and Fukuoka areas.

  7. List of hoshū jugyō kō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hoshū_jugyō_kō

    In 1998 the school adopted the name Japanese Language School of Chennai (チェンナイ日本語補習校 Chennai Nihongo Hoshū Jugyō Kō) since Madras took the name Chennai. The school moved to AIS Chennai in 2003. It adopted its current name in 2005 so it could register as a trust, as per the Trust Act. [8]

  8. Nihon Go Gakko (Seattle) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nihon_Go_Gakko_(Seattle)

    The front of the Japanese Cultural and Community Center Complex, formerly the Nihon Go Gakko. Nihon Go Gakko (シアトル日本語学校, Shiatoru Nihongo Gakko), also known as the Japanese Language School (JLS), is a National Register of Historic Places in King County based at the Japanese Cultural and Community Center of Washington located on the periphery of the Seattle International District.

  9. Yamasa Institute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamasa_Institute

    YAMASA II, the campus center. The Yamasa Institute (Japanese: YAMASA言語文化学院) is a private Japanese Language school located in Okazaki, Aichi Prefecture.. The Institute began language instruction in 1989, [1] and was founded through the Hattori Foundation, [2] a philanthropic educational organization established in 1919.