yoshikawa in A Sentence

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    Says Yoshikawa:“They even blamed me for the atomic bomb.”.

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    Yoshikawa was the only Japanese spy in Honolulu before the outbreak of war;

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    In August 1940, Yoshikawa was ordered to begin preparing for a spy mission in Pearl Harbor.

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    Animal studies suggest that the herbal A. elata is a potent inhibitor of alcohol absorption(Yoshikawa 1996).

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    An experienced long-distance swimmer, Yoshikawa also made many swims around the harbor to study its defenses.

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    Yoshikawa rarely took photographs, and he never drew diagrams or wrote anything down while making his rounds.

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    The candy business failed, and Yoshikawa, now a pariah in his own land, had trouble even finding a job.

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    Yoshikawa quickly discovered that he could accomplish much of his spying without attracting attention, and without even breaking any laws.

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    Not a single internee was ever charged with espionage, and no one understood better than Yoshikawa that they were innocent.

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    When they asked Yoshikawa which day of the weekend the most ships were likely to be in the harbor, he replied simply:“Sunday.”.

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    If Yoshikawa thought the exposure would bring him fame, fortune, or the gratitude of his countrymen, he was wrong on all counts.

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    Yoshikawa had been feeding the war planners in Japan a steady stream of information for eight months, and his efforts had paid off.

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    On the evening of Saturday, December 6, 1941, Yoshikawa sent what would turn out to be the last of his coded messages to Tokyo:.

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    On the evening of Saturday, December 6, 1941, Yoshikawa sent what would turn out to be his the last of his coded messages to Tokyo:.

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    (Soldiers who were tight-lipped around male foreigners often happily spilled the beans to the geishas at Shuncho-ro, so Yoshikawa made sure to question them, too.).

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    Though Yoshikawa provided much of the intelligence used to plan the attack on Pearl Harbor, he did not know when- or even if- it would occur.

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    (Soldiers who were tight-lipped around male foreigners often happily spilled the beans to the geishas at the Shuncho-ro, so Yoshikawa made sure to question them, too.).

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    The FBI raided the Japanese consulate within hours, but by then Yoshikawa had burned his code books and any other materials that would have identified him as a spy.

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    The Managing Director of Pioneer India, Mr. Toshiyuki Yoshikawa as the chief guest was given a warm welcome with many distinguished personalities and industry experts at the launch event.

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    By that time Yoshikawa's role in the war had become widely known, thanks to an Imperial Navy officer who identified him by name in a 1953 interview with the newspaper Ehime Shimbin.

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    By that time Yoshikawa's role in the war had become widely known, thanks to an Imperial Navy officer who identified him by name in a 1953 interview with the newspaper Ehime Shimbun.

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    When Yoshikawa told them that the ships along"Battleship Row" were moored in pairs to protect the inboard ships from torpedo attacks, the planners decided to attack those ships with armor-piercing bombs dropped from dive-bombers.

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    It also happened to be owned by a woman who came from the same prefecture in Japan as Yoshikawa, and she happily made the private dining room(and telescope) available to the up-and-coming young diplomat whenever he requested it.

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    Yoshikawa had received very little guidance on how to go about his job, but his worries ended when the consul-general, Nagao Kita, took him to dinner at Shuncho-ro, a Japanese restaurant on a hill overlooking Pearl Harbor.

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    If Japan had planned its attack on Pearl Harbor without the data Yoshikawa gathered, it's quite possible it would have been a mere glancing blow, one that damaged the Pacific Fleet but did not knock it out of commission.

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    If Japan had planned its attack on Pearl Harbor without the data Yoshikawa gathered, it's quite possible that it would have been merely a glancing blow, one that damaged the Pacific Fleet but did not knock it out of commission.

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    27

    After a long day of spying on land or in the water, Yoshikawa passed many an evening picking up hitchhiking U.S. soldiers or buying drinks for servicemen in bars, prying as much information out of them as he could without arousing suspicion.

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