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・ Otto G. Foelker
・ Otto G. Obermaier
・ Otto G. Weyse
・ Otto Gaiser
・ Otto Garlepp
・ Otto Gebühr
・ Otto Geigenberger
・ Otto Cimrman
・ Otto Claussen Iberri
・ Otto Cordes
・ Otto Cornelis Adriaan van Lidth de Jeude
・ Otto Creutzmann
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・ Otto Crusius (1857–1918)
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Otto D. Tolischus
・ Otto D. Unruh
・ Otto Dahl
・ Otto Dahl (engineer)
・ Otto Danieli
・ Otto de Bonvillano
・ Otto de la Rocha
・ Otto Decker
・ Otto Degener
・ Otto Deiters
・ Otto Delphin Amundsen
・ Otto Dempwolff
・ Otto Demus
・ Otto Denning
・ Otto Depenheuer


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Otto D. Tolischus : ウィキペディア英語版
Otto D. Tolischus

Otto David Tolischus (November 20, 1890 – February 24, 1967) was a Prussian-Lithuanian-born journalist for the ''New York Times'' and winner of the 1940 Pulitzer Prize for Correspondence for his writing in Berlin during World War II.
Born in Russ, East Prussia, German Empire (after 1919 Memel Territory), he emigrated in 1907 to the United States. After working in factories, he attended the Columbia School of Journalism and joined the ''Cleveland Press'' after graduating, working his way up to managing editor.
In 1923 he returned to Europe, working for ''Universal Service'' in Berlin until 1931 and for International News Service in London from 1931 to 1932 as chief correspondent. After some time back in the US, he joined the Berlin bureau of the ''New York Times'' in 1933, where he chronicled the rise of Nazi Germany until he was expelled in March 1940.
Tolischus was assigned to Tokyo in January 1941. A few hours after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor that December, Tolischus was arrested and imprisoned for five months, where he was regularly beaten and tortured. During this period of imprisonment, the Japanese manager of the ''Times'' Tokyo Bureau, Junnosuke Ofusa, took food and clothes to Tolischus. This on-going contact continued until Tolischus was sent to the United States as part of a prisoner exchange in 1942.〔(Sanger, David. "Junnosuke Ofusa, Long the Manager For Times in Tokyo" ), ''New York Times,'' March 30, 1994.〕
Based on his experience as a journalist, Tolischus wrote three books on World War II:
* 1940 -- ''They Wanted War''. New York: Reynal and Hitchcock.
* 1943 -- ''Tokyo Record''. New York: Reynald and Hitchcock.
* 1945 -- ''Through Japanese Eyes''. New York: Reynald and Hitchcock.
Tolischus was a member of the ''Times'' editorial board until his retirement in 1964. He died of cancer in 1967.
==Notes==


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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