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・ Mel Tormé live at the Maisonette
・ Mel Tormé Live at the Playboy Jazz Festival
・ Mel Tormé Sings Fred Astaire
・ Mel Tormé Sings Sunday in New York & Other Songs About New York
・ Mel Tormé Swings Shubert Alley
・ Mel Tormé's California Suite
・ Mel Tormé, Rob McConnell and the Boss Brass
・ Mel Tottoh
・ Mel Triplett
・ Mel Trotter
・ Mel Tucker
・ Mel Vanjiyur
・ Mel Villena
・ Mel Vogel
・ Mel Vojvodich
Mel Wakabayashi
・ Mel Walker
・ Mel Wasserman
・ Mel Watkins
・ Mel Watkins (author)
・ Mel Watt
・ Mel Weinberg
・ Mel Weitsman
・ Mel Welles
・ Mel Wesson
・ Mel Whedbee
・ Mel Whinnen
・ Mel White
・ Mel Williams
・ Mel Wilson


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Mel Wakabayashi : ウィキペディア英語版
Mel Wakabayashi

Hitoshi "Mel" Wakabayashi (born April 23, 1943, in Slocan City, British Columbia) is a former All-American ice hockey player, a right-handed center, who played for the 1964 NCAA champion Michigan Wolverines hockey team. He was also named Player of the Year in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association in 1966. He went on to play 11 season in the Japan Ice Hockey League and to coach the Japan men's national ice hockey team at international competitions, including the 1980 Winter Olympics. After his hockey career ended, Wakabayashi became the President of Seibu Canada. In 2001, Wakabayashi was selected by the WCHA as one of the Top 50 Players in 50-year history of the conference. He was also inducted into the University of Michigan Athletic Hall of Honor in 2006.
==Youth in Canada==
Wakabayashi was the son of Japanese-born parents who lived in Vancouver, British Columbia. During World War II, his parents were placed in a Japanese-Canadian internment camp at Slocan City, British Columbia. It was at the barren internment camp at Slocan City that Mel was born.〔 Along with thousands of other Japanese-Canadian families, the Wakabayashi family was moved to a second internment camp in Northern Ontario shortly after Mel was born.〔(【引用サイトリンク】publisher=Chatham Sports Hall of Fame )〕 When Mel's brother, Osamu "Herb" Wakabayashi, was born in December 1944, the family was living in the Neys, Ontario internment camp on the northern shore of Lake Superior.〔〔(【引用サイトリンク】publisher=Society for International Hockey Research )〕 In 1950, the family moved to Chatham, Ontario, where Mel grew up with his seven siblings. He excelled in both hockey and baseball, playing junior hockey with the Chatham Maroons and baseball for the Ontario Baseball Association championship team.〔 As a youth, Wakabayashi was a baseball teammate of Chatham native and future Baseball Hall of Famer Ferguson Jenkins.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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