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・ Ngô Trà My
・ Ngô Tuấn Trung
・ Ngô Tự Lập
・ Ngô Viết Thụ
・ Ngô Văn Chiêu
・ Ngô Văn Doanh
・ Ngô Văn Dụ
・ Ngô Ðình
・ Ngô Đình Cẩn
・ Ngô Đình Khả
・ Ngô Đình Luyện
・ Ngô Đình Lệ Quyên
・ Ngô Đình Lệ Thủy
・ Ngô Đình Nhu
・ Ngô Đình Thục
Ngô Đồng
・ Ngô Đức Kế
・ Ngöbe Buglé (disambiguation)
・ Ngöbe–Buglé people
・ Ngöndro
・ Ngükang
・ Ngüxoi
・ Ngā Atua
・ Ngā Kaihanga Uku
・ Ngā Mānawa
・ Ngā Rauru
・ Ngā Ruahine
・ Ngā Ruanui
・ Ngā Tamatoa
・ Ngā Taonga Sound & Vision


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Ngô Đồng : ウィキペディア英語版
Ngô Đồng

Ngô Đồng (born South Vietnam - Died 15 May 2000), known also by the Japanese title O Sensei, was a Vietnam-born naturalised American entomologist and martial arts instructor. He is chiefly known as the founder and grandmaster of the international school of Cuong Nhu Oriental Martial Arts. Having served as a college president in South Vietnam before the fall of Saigon in 1975, he spent time in a re-education camp until escaping in a small boat. He taught entomology at the University of Florida for the remainder of his career, guiding the international Cuong Nhu martial arts community at the same time.
==Biography==
From 1961 to 1971 he was a professor in the Department of Biology of Hue University, South Vietnam, during which time he founded the Cuong Nhu style of martial arts. After the devastating 1968 Tet offensive and the communist Massacre at Hue, Grandmaster Dong organized a civil defense organization, the People's Self-Defense Forces of Hue, to help protect the public from the violence spawned by the war. His organization engaged some 25,000 people in a program of karate, games and friendly competition to rebuild morale and spirit during the Vietnam War.
In 1974, Dong earned his PhD in Entomology from the University of Florida, Gainesville, and during this period (1971–74) founded and incorporated the first Cuong Nhu Karate club in the United States. He then returned to South Vietnam and served as the President of Da Nang College until the fall of Saigon and the communist victory in 1975. An outspoken opponent of communism, Dong was placed under house arrest in 1975, and spent time in a re-education camp. He and his family escaped by boat to Indonesia and eventually reached the United States in 1977. From then until his retirement he served as a professor in the Department of Entomology and Nematology at the University of Florida in Gainesville.
In 1986 Dong took up long-distance running. He soon completed his first two marathons, on consecutive weekends. His first ultra-marathon was the 100-mile Western States run in Squaw Valley, California. In all, he completed 23 marathons, eight 50-mile ultra-marathons and fourteen 100-mile ultra-marathons.
Upon his retirement from the University of Florida, the City of Gainesville and Alachua County, Florida, honored him by declaring August 14, 1994 as Dr. Ngo Dong Day. To commemorate his life, his family commissioned an oriental plant garden to be built and maintained in his honor at Kanapaha Nature Center in Gainesville. This garden contains plants and flowers that he liked as well as a plaque dedicated to his memory.

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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