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notfTi9k畲theさ,ぉsimぉ' slon. HefractiTr6dさwirlst a feWwe0l(3befoire in a paria-chute jur nip W"h, Bangers ,i^d WasほW up until 9 week before the assault.
B^ck ho me, friends reacted to the 0的th of the popular student a飾te wはh anger and confusion.
"にm shocked and my stO" mach hurts," saW Jeanne Steinberg, 2。, a close friend of Yamane, shortly after learning of his.death."にm thinking f our .letter words at Ronald Reagan and at God," she said.
Unda Brosche, 20, a Un卜 versify of Washington student who had been dating Yamane, said only "にm sad aboutは…"
Friends when asked why Yamane had decided to become a Ranger, answered: "That is one of the mysteries of Hfe.'
'The )^呵Rangers are a highly trainedmiHtary strike force. About100 of them, including Yamane participated in the pre.dawn Oct. 25 invasion of Grenada. Yamane's parents, George
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Sayliig hehsrt^めob:btt, tejrn兮s多tiow咖き:ゃreー(d6int f^的ganfor"ridin(IW"&i1ゆ Grenada George Vfiim9net0rd news reporters at a press confdren6e Oct. 28,"にm pro* ud of my son.It was a choice he made. " asked to doは again, I' m sure he would doは again."
Reporters tried to baはthe Yさnrlane's into criticisms of thedecほlon to invade Grenada, but the Yamane' s refused to let words bきput intp their mouths. In a telephone conversation Charlotte Yamane said "Some of the reporters were rude."
Mark's father turned reporters' leading questions around on them. Askedけhe and his family were bけter about Mai"k's death, George Yamane replied: "Our uはi. mate goal is everlasting peace. Somehow or other in this world we are not reaching that,"
Principal Waller said Yam sine was "one of those young persons we see too Httle of and, in this case, for far too short a time."
-纷效さち;;1遂だ#ぉ:谬熟©ビ^;^^:^溢き;
誦誦國Mil騸國
took niore: th—12 years ahや リnvo(vdd1,300 3chpほr;s frorh 27 countries, wasへpub,lshed by Kodansha on Oot. 20.
"I certainly he"r beard of an either project "keは,"sald Edwin 0. R6lschaUer, former ゅS. ambassador to J柳n who served as chair of the 11-meriiber U.S. advisory CO m mけtee.
"No doubt it is a landmark publication," added David MacEachron, president ofJa-pan society. Scholars say the book is remarkably candid as well as the most comprehensive reference work about one nation 6ver published in another language.
Shoichi Noma, honorary chair of Kodanshaしtd., who inけiated the project, conceived it as a "means of conveying the realけy of the English-speaking world:れ
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sCer aiid 0th,はゃral的II18
Many ot thも化,OOO eritrtes "rid Id'y discuss tip |C3,hきt have oftenbe纟nignofed or gl9ssed over by J9panese, evenamonfi|Jhert\$elve$, including J邻3n's prevVair m川-tarIsm,はs agression in China and Southeast A si a, the bribes and kickbacks that led to the prosecution and conviction of former Prime Minister Ka-kuei Tanaka, the tendency of Japanese to hold foreigners in contempt as "barbarians" andはs mistreatment of its own racial minority popula* tion.
Glen ltasaka, edはor-in-chief of the Kodansha Encyclopedia of Japan, said there were some differences of opinion, and "we declined maybe five or six' artにles that were biased. But overall we think we achieved the balance and scholarship we wanted."
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"~Noma, ironically, had been ousted for severalyears as head of Kodansha by the U.S. Occupation forces because of his company's cooperation wけh Japan's miHtarists prior to WW2.
The $600 encyclopedia consisting Qf almost four million words, would seem to have all the earmarks of a pro pa-
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