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Shinichi Tanaka (田中 信一, Tanaka Shin'ichi, born 15 May 1959) is a Japanese ski jumper. He competed in the normal hill and large hill events at the 1988 Winter Olympics . [ 1 ]
Tanaka was born in Mitaka, Tokyo. [1] Her brother, Shinichi Tanaka , is a professional rugby player. [1] She started playing basketball at Hino Daiichi Junior High School and played in high school at Tokyo Seitoku University . [1] [2] She played college basketball at Waseda University. [3]
Shinichi Tanaka (田中 信一, born 1959), Japanese ski jumper; Shin'ichi Tanaka (photographer) (田中 新一), Japanese photographer; Shinichi Tomii (富井 慎一, born 1980), Japanese modern pentathlete; Shinichi Tsutsumi (真一, born 1964), Japanese stage and screen actor; Shinichi Watanabe (慎一, born 1964), Japanese anime director
Tanaka was born in Issai village, Hyōgo prefecture (now part of the city of Tatsuno) and was the younger son of a large landowner. His family claim descent from Akamatsu Mitsusuke, and served as village heads during the Edo period. Tanaka graduated from the 19th class of the Imperial Japanese Army Academy in 1907.
Shinichi Tanaka:- 18th Division Commander (Burma) Masakazu Kawabe led the (Burma Area Army) Shozo Sakurai Commanded the Twenty-eighth Army; Kōtoku Satō command the 31st Division; Yuzo Matsuyama 56th Division, commanded by Lieutenant General; Masabumi Yamauchi led the 15th Division; Renya Mutaguchi, who had command of the Fifteenth Army
Akihiko Tanaka (田中 明彦, Tanaka Akihiko, born 7 August 1954) is a Japanese academic, author, policy adviser and media commentator and the current president of Japan International Cooperation Agency since 1 April 2022, succeeding Shinichi Kitaoka.
Shinichi Tanaka: Chief, Military Service Section, War Ministry Yoshijirō Umezu : Ordnance Bureau, War Ministry Isamu Yokoyama : Economic Mobilization Bureau, War Ministry; Section Chief, Planning Bureau, Cabinet Resources Board
On 28 March, Lieutenant General Shinichi Tanaka, Kimura's Chief of Staff, conferred with Honda at Thirty-third Army HQ. Honda's staff told him that the army had destroyed about 50 British and Indian tanks, half the number of tanks in Meiktila. In doing so, the army had suffered 2,500 casualties and lost 50 guns, and had only 20 artillery pieces ...