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Akebono Brake Industry Co., Ltd. (曙ブレーキ工業, Akebono Burēki Kōgyō) is a Japanese manufacturer of brake components for automobiles, motorcycles, trains, and industrial machinery. The company was founded by Sanji Osame in 1929 as Akebono Sekimen Kogyosho as a response to the demand by the Japan Army Authority for ground transport ...
Akebono: October 27, 2013: Anniversary Tour: Tokyo, Japan: 1 215: 4 — Vacated: May 30, 2014 — — — — — Vacated due to Akebono being sidelined with health issues. 48 Takao Omori: June 15, 2014: 2014 Dynamite Series: Tokyo, Japan: 1 14: 0 Defeated Jun Akiyama to win the vacant title. 49 Suwama: June 29, 2014: 2014 Dynamite Series ...
This is a list of foreign-born professional sumo wrestlers by country and/or ethnicity of origin, along with original name, years active in sumo wrestling, and highest rank attained.
After being eliminated from the tournament on September 16 by Akebono, Low Ki was sidelined for the rest of his AJPW tour with an abdominal injury. [ 18 ] [ 19 ] The injury eventually led to Low Ki announcing his retirement from professional wrestling on October 14 due to AJPW supposedly not honoring their contractual obligation of medical care ...
Azur Lane: Slow Ahead! (アズールレーン びそくぜんしんっ!, Azūru Rēn Bisoku Zenshin!) is a Japanese yonkoma comic series written and illustrated by Hori. It is based on the Chinese side-scrolling shoot 'em up video game Azur Lane by Shanghai Manjuu and Xiamen Yongshi.
Akebono is a Japanese word meaning dawn or the color of the sky at dawn. It may refer to: Science. Akebono, a fly genus in the family Sciomyzidae or Phaeomyiidae;
Akebono, who had a fighting record of 1-9 entering the fight, fiercely attacked Ologun in the first and second rounds. However, Ologun steadily fought his way to another three-round decision. His next fight was a kickboxing match in Sapporo at K-1 Revenge on July 30, 2006, where he fought Asian GP champion Yusuke Fujimoto .
The ZU-23-2 was developed in the late 1950s. It was designed to engage low-flying targets at a range of 2.5 km as well as armoured vehicles at a range of two kilometres and for direct defence of troops and strategic locations against air assault usually conducted by helicopters and low-flying airplanes. [7]