•
Shigeyoshi Matsumae was a Japanese electrical engineer, inventor of the non-loaded cable carrier system, the top of the Ministry of Communications (Teishin-in, between August 30, 1945 and April 8, 1946), politician and the founder of
Tokai University. Matsumae was involved in
Taisei Yokusankai and was the head of the Ministry of Communications. The border of the latter was the date of signing of surrender. •
Kan Kikuchi also known as Hiroshi Kikuchi, was a Japanese author who established the publishing company
Bungeishunju, the monthly magazine of the same name, the Japan Writer's Association and both the Akutagawa and Naoki Prize for popular literature. He was also the head of Daiei Motion Picture Company (currently Kadokawa Pictures). •
Matsutarō Shōriki was a "Class A" war criminal after the Second World War. He is also known as the father of Japanese professional baseball. He was a
media mogul, owned the
Yomiuri Shimbun, one of Japan's major daily newspapers, and founded Japan's first commercial television station,
Nippon Television Network Corporation. He was also elected to the House of Representatives, appointed to the House of Peers and was one of the most successful judo masters. •
Tokutomi Sohō was the pen-name of a journalist and historian active from late Meiji period through mid-Showa period Japan. His real name was Tokutomi Iichiro. •
Tetsuzō Iwamoto was one of the top scoring fighter aces of the Empire of Japan, during World War II. •
Eiji Tsuburaya was the Japanese special effects director responsible for many Japanese science fiction movies, including the
Godzilla series. In the United States, he is also remembered as the creator of
Ultraman. •
Masahiro Yasuoka was a Japanese scholar of
yangmingism who, through his philosophy, reportedly influenced many Japanese politicians, including postwar prime ministers of Japan. He has been considered to be a backroom power broker or
eminence grise. •
Dairoku Harada was a Japanese
archaeologist and studied in the Fukuoka area. He was drafted into the Army and was sent to China. •
Nisshō Inoue was a radical Buddhist preacher of
Nichirenism who founded the interwar Japanese far-right militant organization Ketsumeidan (血盟団, League of Blood). ==References==