onoda in A Sentence

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    Now there were only two, Onoda and Kozuka.

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    Onoda Major Taniguchi.

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    Onoda returned to Japan where he was treated like a hero.

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    When Onoda returned to Japan, he was seen as a hero.

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    Onoda was greeted upon his return to Japan as a hero.

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    When Onoda arrived back in Japan, he was received like a triumphant general.

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    He traveled to the island and trekked through the jungle searching for signs of Onoda.

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    The Japanese then sent a search party to try to find Onoda in the jungle.

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    Among his list of things to do on his journey was to find“Onoda, a panda, and the Abominable Snowman”.

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    Suzuki returned to Japan with Onoda's story and the Japanese government located Onoda's commanding officer, Major Yoshimi Taniguchi, who had since become a bookseller.

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    Suzuki traveled back to Japan and summoned Onoda's former commanding officer, who personally flew to the Philippines to issue orders relieving Onoda from duty.

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    Suzuki travelled back to Japan and summoned Onoda's former commanding officer, who personally flew to the Philippines to issue orders relieving Onoda from duty.

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    Finally, a man named Norio Suzuki found and befriended Onada, but despite explaining that the war was long over, Onoda still refused to surrender.

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    Onoda later explained he had believed attempts to coax him out were the work of a puppet regime installed in Tokyo by the United States.

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    But now when they had his body, they began thinking perhaps Onoda was also still alive, even though he had also long since been declared dead.

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    Onoda later explained that he had believed attempts to coax him out were the work of a puppet regime installed in Tokyo by the United States.

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    Hiroo Onoda was an Imperial Japanese Army officer who stayed at his jungle post in the Philippines for 29 years, refusing to believe that WWII was over.

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    Marcos, very unpopularly in the Philippines, but immensely popular in Japan, pardoned Onoda for his crimes, given that Onoda had thought he was still at war the entire time.

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    The man who found him, Norio Suzuki, was traveling around the world to look for(in his own words)“Lieutenant Onoda, a panda, and the Abominable Snowman, in that order.”.

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    Because of this event, Onoda's cell became even more cautious and went into deeper hiding and took fewer risks as they viewed Akatsu leaving as a security threat.

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    On March 10, 1975, Onoda, now 52, marched out of the jungle in full uniform, still in good condition, and surrendered his samurai sword to Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos.

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    Trained as an information officer, Onoda was sent to Lubang in 1944 and ordered never to surrender, never to resort to suicidal attacks and to hold firm until reinforcements arrived.

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    A Japanese soldier named Hiroo Onoda hid in the jungle on the Pacific island of Lubang where he held out for 29 years, refusing to believe that the war was over.

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    Trained as an information officer and guerrilla tactics coach, Onoda was dispatched to Lubang in 1944 and ordered never to surrender, never to resort to suicidal attacks and to hold firm until reinforcements arrived.

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    On March 12th, 1974 at the age of 52, Onoda in full uniform that was somehow still immaculately kept, marched out of the jungle and surrendered his samurai sword to the Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos.

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    Instead, Onoda was isolated on a Philippine island until 1974 and still believed the war was going on, as he distrusted the news and pamphlets he came across over the course of the 29 years.

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    Taniguchi flew to Lubang and relieved Onoda of his duties, much to the relief of the locals who Onoda had been harassing for the last thirty years as part of his misguided effort to help Japan win the war.

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