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Interfaith memorial event in N.Y.

Interfaith memorial event in N.Y.

NEW YORK, United States - Rev. T. Kenjitsu Nakagaki (3rd from L), a Japanese Buddhist priest based in New York, and other leaders from major religions including Shintoism, Christianity, Judaism and Islam, offer silent prayers on March 11, 2012, at a park in New York, at 2:46 p.m., the local time in Japan when the magnitude-9.0 quake hit the northeastern part of the country a year earlier, at a memorial event for the first anniversary of the devastating earthquake and tsunami disaster.

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Interfaith memorial event in N.Y.

Interfaith memorial event in N.Y.

NEW YORK, United States - Rev. T. Kenjitsu Nakagaki (R front), a Japanese Buddhist priest based in New York, and other leaders from major religions including Shintoism, Christianity, Judaism and Islam, walk in a procession with Japanese residents and New Yorkers from a park to a church in New York at a memorial event on March 11, 2012, the first anniversary of the devastating earthquake and tsunami disaster in northeastern Japan.

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Buddhist priest trying to help quake victims, drawing from 9/11

Buddhist priest trying to help quake victims, drawing from 9/11

NEW YORK, United States - New York-based Buddhist priest T. Kenjitsu Nakagaki takes part in a preparatory meeting at the Riverside Church in the city on March 24, 2011 for a memorial service for the victims of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami disaster in Japan.

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Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki (C), professor at Future University Hakodate, jointly receives the Ig Nobel Prize at Harvard University's Sanders Theatre on Sept. 30, 2010, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The professor, along with Atsushi Tero, researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, and Ryo Kobayashi, professor at Hiroshima University, and two British scholars, won the prize for using slime molds to determine optimal routes for railroad tracks.

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Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki, professor at Future University Hakodate, waves from the podium after jointly receiving the Ig Nobel Prize at Harvard University's Sanders Theatre on Sept. 30, 2010, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The professor, along with Atsushi Tero, researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, and Ryo Kobayashi, professor at Hiroshima University, and two British scholars, won the prize for using slime molds for determining optimal routes for railroad tracks.

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Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki (L), professor at Future University Hakodate, jointly receives the Ig Nobel Prize at Harvard University's Sanders Theatre on Sept. 30, 2010, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The professor, along with Atsushi Tero, researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, and Ryo Kobayashi, professor at Hiroshima University, and two British scholars, won the prize for using slime molds to determine optimal routes for railroad tracks.

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Japanese win Ig Nobel Prize for for Cognitive Science Prize

Japanese win Ig Nobel Prize for for Cognitive Science Prize

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki (2nd from L), associate professor at Hokkaido University, Ryo Kobayashi (2nd from R), professor at Hiroshima University, and Atsushi Tero (L), a researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, pose after they were awarded the Ig Nobel Prize for Cognitive Science at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Oct. 2. They discovered that a unicellular amoeboid organism can work out the shortest distance in a maze.

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All TCI proposals to J-Power dismissed at shareholders meeting

All TCI proposals to J-Power dismissed at shareholders meeting

TOKYO, Japan - Electric Power Development Co. President Yoshihiko Nakagaki speaks at a news conference after the company's general shareholders meeting in Tokyo on June 26, in which J-Power shareholders voted down a dividend hike and all other proposals by the top shareholder, The Children's Investment Fund.

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All TCI proposals to J-Power dismissed at shareholders meeting

All TCI proposals to J-Power dismissed at shareholders meeting

TOKYO, Japan - Electric Power Development Co. President Yoshihiko Nakagaki speaks at a news conference after the company's general shareholders meeting in Tokyo on June 26, in which J-Power shareholders voted down a dividend hike and all other proposals by the top shareholder, The Children's Investment Fund. (Kyodo)

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Japanese engineer among group recognized in Academy sci-tech awards

Japanese engineer among group recognized in Academy sci-tech awards

Software engineer Kiyoyuki Nakagaki of Japan (2nd from R) and his colleagues pose for a photo at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' Scientific and Technical Achievement Awards on Feb. 13, 2016 in Beverly Hills, California. They received one of two Scientific and Engineering Awards presented this year, for their design and engineering of the MARI 3D texture painting system which has been broadly adopted in the visual effects industry. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Kaketsuken's operations suspended over irregular blood products

Kaketsuken's operations suspended over irregular blood products

Seiji Miyamoto (L), head of Japanese blood products and vaccine maker Kaketsuken, receives from health ministry official Hideaki Nakagaki a document ordering the company to suspend business for 110 days, the longest penalty ever handed down under Japan's pharmaceutical law, on Jan. 8, 2016. Kaketsuken was found to have been adding unauthorized ingredients to its products and falsifying records. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Japanese win Ig Nobel Prize for for Cognitive Science Prize

Japanese win Ig Nobel Prize for for Cognitive Science Prize

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki (2nd from L), associate professor at Hokkaido University, Ryo Kobayashi (2nd from R), professor at Hiroshima University, and Atsushi Tero (L), a researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, pose after they were awarded the Ig Nobel Prize for Cognitive Science at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Oct. 2. They discovered that a unicellular amoeboid organism can work out the shortest distance in a maze. (Kyodo)

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Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki (C), professor at Future University Hakodate, jointly receives the Ig Nobel Prize at Harvard University's Sanders Theatre on Sept. 30, 2010, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The professor, along with Atsushi Tero, researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, and Ryo Kobayashi, professor at Hiroshima University, and two British scholars, won the prize for using slime molds to determine optimal routes for railroad tracks. (Kyodo)

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Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki, professor at Future University Hakodate, waves from the podium after jointly receiving the Ig Nobel Prize at Harvard University's Sanders Theatre on Sept. 30, 2010, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The professor, along with Atsushi Tero, researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, and Ryo Kobayashi, professor at Hiroshima University, and two British scholars, won the prize for using slime molds for determining optimal routes for railroad tracks. (Kyodo)

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Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki (L), professor at Future University Hakodate, jointly receives the Ig Nobel Prize at Harvard University's Sanders Theatre on Sept. 30, 2010, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The professor, along with Atsushi Tero, researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, and Ryo Kobayashi, professor at Hiroshima University, and two British scholars, won the prize for using slime molds to determine optimal routes for railroad tracks. (Kyodo)

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Decade later, 4 New York lives forever transformed by 9/11

Decade later, 4 New York lives forever transformed by 9/11

NEW YORK, United States - Rev. T. Kenjitsu Nakagaki (L) is pictured in Central Park with Judy Kuriansky, a prominent New York psychologist, on Aug. 8, 2011 after a meeting to discuss plans for a 9/11 lantern floating ceremony, which includes remembering Japan's March 11 tsunami victims. The annual event includes setting 108 paper lanterns down the Hudson River. (Kyodo)

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Buddhist priest trying to help quake victims, drawing from 9/11

Buddhist priest trying to help quake victims, drawing from 9/11

NEW YORK, United States - New York-based Buddhist priest T. Kenjitsu Nakagaki takes part in a preparatory meeting at the Riverside Church in the city on March 24, 2011 for a memorial service for the victims of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami disaster in Japan. (Kyodo)

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Interfaith memorial event in N.Y.

Interfaith memorial event in N.Y.

NEW YORK, United States - Rev. T. Kenjitsu Nakagaki (3rd from L), a Japanese Buddhist priest based in New York, and other leaders from major religions including Shintoism, Christianity, Judaism and Islam, offer silent prayers on March 11, 2012, at a park in New York, at 2:46 p.m., the local time in Japan when the magnitude-9.0 quake hit the northeastern part of the country a year earlier, at a memorial event for the first anniversary of the devastating earthquake and tsunami disaster. (Kyodo)

  •  
Interfaith memorial event in N.Y.

Interfaith memorial event in N.Y.

NEW YORK, United States - Rev. T. Kenjitsu Nakagaki (R front), a Japanese Buddhist priest based in New York, and other leaders from major religions including Shintoism, Christianity, Judaism and Islam, walk in a procession with Japanese residents and New Yorkers from a park to a church in New York at a memorial event on March 11, 2012, the first anniversary of the devastating earthquake and tsunami disaster in northeastern Japan. (Kyodo)

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Japanese monk Rev. Kenjitsu Nakagaki, Rabbi Alan Brill

Japanese monk Rev. Kenjitsu Nakagaki, Rabbi Alan Brill

Japanese monk Rev. Kenjitsu Nakagaki (R) poses with Rabbi Alan Brill at the latter's home in New Jersey on Nov. 19, 2018. Nakagaki holds his new book, which is aimed at educating the Western world about the swastika's Eastern roots. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Japanese monk Rev. Kenjitsu Nakagaki, Rabbi Alan Brill

Japanese monk Rev. Kenjitsu Nakagaki, Rabbi Alan Brill

Japanese monk Rev. Kenjitsu Nakagaki (L) poses with Rabbi Alan Brill at the latter's home in New Jersey on Nov. 19, 2018. Nakagaki holds his new book, which is aimed at educating the Western world about the swastika's Eastern roots. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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