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Albert Einstein visiting Tohoku Imperial University in 1922 Tohoku University (Katahira campus Main Gate). On 22 June 1907 (Mēji 40), Tohoku Imperial University (東北帝國大學, Tōhoku teikoku daigaku) was established by the Meiji government as the third Imperial University of Japan, after Tokyo Imperial University (1877) and Kyoto Imperial University (1897).
Following the Great Tohoku Earthquake on March 11, 2011, Daub decided to take his experience reporting for NHK World's Tokyo Eye program [2] to YouTube to help promote Japan after the misunderstandings about the country caused by incorrect portrayals in Western media, especially regarding Fukushima and Tohoku. [3]
Also, each university or college is listed in the prefecture in which its headquarters is located, not the location of their satellite campuses, etc. or that of some of its departments or divisions. For the list of universities that existed in the past or merged into another school, see List of historical universities in Japan.
Since 2004, each national university has been incorporated as a National University Corporation (国立大学法人, kokuritsu daigaku hōjin) and given limited autonomy in its operations. [3] Faculty and staff are no longer government employees ( 国家公務員 , kokka kōmuin ) working for the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science ...
The Botanical Garden of Tohoku University (東北大学植物園, Tōhoku Daigaku Shokubutsuen, 490,000 m 2) is a botanical garden operated by Tohoku University at Kawauchi 12-2, Aoba-ku, Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan. It is open daily. The garden was established in 1958.
Tohoku Medical and Pharmaceutical University (東北医科薬科大学, Tōhoku ika yakka daigaku) is a private university in Aoba-ku, Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan.The Tohoku Pharmaceutical University (東北薬科大学, Tōhoku yakka daigaku) was established in 1949, based on the Tohoku Pharmaceutical College, which was established in 1939.
Koeki University (The Tohoku University of Community Service and Science) was established in 2001 by the prefectural government of Yamagata Prefecture, and 14 municipalities in the Shonai region of northwestern Yamagata, with the assistance of Keio University in Tokyo. A graduate program was established in 2005 and a research institute in 2006.
American TV dramas and music programs for young audiences were scheduled for 7:00 pm, American TV series at 8:00 pm, and TBS's self-produced TV series at 9:00 pm This new arrangement boosted TBS's ratings and prompted other stations to adopt similar schedules, making the one-hour program format a standard in the Japanese TV industry. [4]: 189