Family feud what is japan famous for
The instant replays of the contestants getting hurt are sinfully funny. What can I say? If you like lame voice dubbing, weird names, and people getting hurt, MXC is for you. Grade: A- Indeed, Ken. Lady-of-Rohan Apr 8, Details Edit. Release date April 13, United States. United States Japan. RC Entertainment Inc. Technical specs Edit. Runtime 30 minutes. Related news. Apr 30 The Playlist. Apr 14 Obsessed with Film.
Contribute to this page Suggest an edit or add missing content. Top Gap. See more gaps Learn more about contributing. If not they got 1 point. Continue until each group had a chance or all three TOP answers were uncovered. Also I noticed when I exited the activity then started it again the questions I'd already checked where still checked as done. None of my activities can do that. Did you use a micro or is there a way of doing that with powerpoint so it remembers stuff?
I m still new to PowerPoint animation so I m not sure why it s doing that, sorry My school only has Japanese PowerPoint so it can be a little hard to read and navigate.
Maybe somebody formatted it that. I can barely read anything so figuring things out is kind of a search and click adventure. The original file is absolutely huge. I was able to trim it down massively to only kb! I runs smoothly and and simply with no loss of functionality. If anyone wants that file please contact me. The idea was further fostered by Japanese propaganda radio whose theme song taunted the defenders. The tall, emaciated General the defenders of Bataan called "Skinny" promised that he would do just that.
Douglas MacArthur had chosen his replacement in the Philippines. His Academy brother would assume command of all the Philippine troops upon MacArthur's departure. As darkness fell over the South China Sea, Lieutenant Bulkeley slipped out of Corregidor in PT to make the dangerous journey through waters controlled by the Japanese.
It was a daring mission to ferry an American legend and hero out of harm's way. Through miles of dangerous ocean and a near brush with a Japanese destroyer, General MacArthur arrived safely on the southern island of Mindanao on the morning of Friday, the 13th of March. Four days later the General arrived in Australia. It was there that he issued the statement that contained one of his two most famous lines: "The President of the United States ordered me to break through the Japanese lines for the purpose, as I understand it, of organizing the American offensive against Japan, a primary object of which is the relief of the Philippines.
I came through and I shall return. To the Filipino people, MacArthur was a hero. Through the dark years ahead they believed that, as he had promised, he would return.
But the enemy powers sought to portray MacArthur differently. From Germany and Italy to Japan he was labeled in the media as a coward, a deserter, and the "fleeing general". MacArthur had been ordered out of Corregidor because the President was concerned about the negative impact his death or capture would have on the American public during the critical first year of the war. To counter the propaganda of the enemy, General George C. Marshall suggested awarding MacArthur the Medal of Honor.
The President agreed, and the same award his father had received 80 years earlier was presented to General Douglas MacArthur in Australia on June 30, Arthur and Douglas MacArthur became the only father and son in history to both receive the Medal of Honor.
It is difficult to argue with those who point out that Douglas MacArthur's Medal of Honor was a political move. It is far less difficult to argue the point that it was not deserved. Since his first engagement with Philippine Outlaws after graduating from West Point, MacArthur had proved himself a man of courage.
Those historians who would negate his World War II award because it was a political award must also realize that the fact he had not previously been awarded the Medal for other actions was, in MacArthur's mind, political as well. Back on the Philippine Island of Luzon, the situation continued to deteriorate. The Japanese, despite isolated pockets of resistance by Philippine Scouts scattered throughout the jungles, controlled the island.
Their massive army, consisting of two full divisions of well-trained combat soldiers supported by two tank regiments, three engineer regiments, and several powerful artillery and anti-aircraft batteries, were virtually invincible.
The Philippine defenders at Bataan were surrounded and without any support other than artillery fire from Corregidor. General King and his men were combat weary, demoralized by broken promises of resupply, and weakened by malnutrition and disease. Food was so short that the soldiers have reduced to one-fourth the recommended combat ration. Malnutrition made the soldiers even more susceptible to disease, and General King's medical units had virtually no medicines to treat the dying.
Disease, exhaustion, and malnutrition were beginning to accomplish what tens of thousands of Japanese soldiers had tried for 90 days to achieve. The soldiers on Bataan had survived and resisted far beyond any expectation of human endurance. The situation at Corregidor was no better. Here too, the soldiers were weary, wounded, malnourished, and diseased.
From the Malinta Tunnel, General Wainwright did his best to direct the tactical aspects of the resistance. Unlike MacArthur, who had only once left the tunnel to visit troops on Bataan, "Skinny" made frequent visits to the peninsula to check on the status of his men In the months preceding his promotion to command of all forces in the Philippines, Wainwright had not only commanded the Philippine Scouts in I Corps, he had fought with them.
On more than one occasion he had come under direct fire from enemy soldiers, watched men next to him die, and returned fire on the enemy.
He was a unique kind of commander, perhaps indeed, the "Last of the Fighting Generals". On April 9, , the Japanese landed 50, fresh combat troops on the Island.
Wainwright issued orders to General King to resist by all means. General Wainwright continued to order not only resistance but ordered a counter-attack to repel the new Japanese offensive. It was not to be. With less than two days' rations remaining, his troops paralyzed by exhaustion and disease, further resistance to the fresh Japanese offensive would have resulted in the slaughter of his beleaguered command.
Most of the Philippine defenders were located near the southern Bataan city of Mariveles. Here the Japanese assembled their prisoners for the mile march from Mariveles to the rail town of San Fernando. Here as many as prisoners were loaded into boxcars measuring 8 x 40 feet, and taken 24 miles to Capas, Tarlac.
The deadly trip culminated with the 6-mile march to the infamous Camp O'Donnell. Hands bound, wounds untreated, sick and malnourished to the point where many could not even stand, the trek became known as the "Bataan Death March". More than 76, Philippine defenders, including 12, American soldiers, became prisoners with the surrender on April 9th. On the death march to Camp O'Donnell, the Japanese beheaded many who became too weak to continue the trip. Other prisoners were used for bayonet practice or pushed to their deaths from cliffs to amuse their captors with their screams.
Young Philippine girls were pulled to the side of the road and repeatedly raped. Heartbroken mothers were known to spread human feces on their daughter's faces to make them less desirable to the enemy. Actually, there was not one Death March, but a series of death marches that began with the surrender on April 9th and continued until April 24th.
During the period there was a steady stream of American and Philippine P. Of the 80, defenders of Bataan, it is estimated that as many as 20, In the two months that followed it is estimated that as many as 1, Americans and 25, more Filipinos died at Camp O'Donnell.
With Bataan now under Japanese control, the enemy turned their full attention to "The Rock". General Wainwright and his 26, troops at Corregidor were the last organized resistance on Luzon. In all, more than fighter planes and bombing attacks were launched against the 2 square mile island. For almost a month, while the Japanese continued their wholesale slaughter of Bataan's valiant defenders during their infamous death march, Corregidor held.
By May 6th the Philippine defenders had continued to fight the delaying action called for in Orange No. The defenders had done their part, but now they knew there would be no resupply or reinforcement. For long days and lonely nights, General Jonathan Wainwright had struggled to determine in his mind the best course of action. He was proud of his men and they had come to love, admire, and obey him.
Finally, on the morning of May 6th, he notified them of his decision. He told the President:. Without the prospect of relief, I feel it is my duty to my Country, and to my gallant troops, to end this useless effusion of blood and human sacrifice. With profound regret and continued pride in my gallant troops, I go to meet the Japanese commander.
At exactly noon on May 6, , General Jonathan M. Wainwright surrendered to Japanese General Homma. The defenders from Corregidor were not marched north through Bataan.
Instead, the Japanese shipped them across the bay to Manila where they were paraded in disgrace as a display of Japanese superiority. As a final humiliation for General Wainwright, he was forced to march through his defeated soldiers.
Despite their wounds, their illness, their broken spirit, and shattered bodies, as the General passed among their ranks they struggled to their feet. It was their last show of respect for the last of the fighting generals.
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