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・ Toshio Sugie
・ Toshio Suzuki
・ Toshio Suzuki (producer)
・ Toshio Suzuki (racing driver)
・ Toshio Takabayashi
・ Toshio Takahashi
・ Toshio Tamogami
・ Toshio Udō
・ Toshio Ukishima
・ Toshio Usami
・ Toshio Yamada
・ Toshio Yamane
・ Toshio Yamauchi
・ Toshio Yanagida
・ Toshio Yodoi
Toshio Ōta
・ Toshiro Akamatsu
・ Toshiro Fujita
・ Toshiro Kageyama
・ Toshiro Kandagawa
・ Toshiro Mayuzumi
・ Toshiro Mifune
・ Toshiro Nomura
・ Toshiro Sakai
・ Toshiro Sasaki
・ Toshiro Suga
・ Toshiro Tsuchida
・ Toshiro Yabuki
・ Toshiro Yamabe
・ Toshirō


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Toshio Ōta : ウィキペディア英語版
Toshio Ōta

was a World War II Japanese fighter ace. In early 1942, at the age of 22, he flew a Mitsubishi A6M Zero with the Lae based Tainan Air Group. There the young petty officer, 1st class became one of the so-called "Clean-up Trio" of Japanese aces, along with his squadron mates Saburo Sakai and Hiroyoshi Nishizawa.
Ōta's first confirmed kill, of a U.S. Army Air Force P-40E Warhawk, was over New Guinea on April 11, 1942. Transferred to Rabaul in August, Ōta was killed in a dogfight with U.S. Marine Corps F4F Wildcats over Guadalcanal on October 21, shortly after shooting down a Wildcat himself. His victorious opponent is believed to be 1st Lt. Frank C. Drury of the VMF-212 squadron. Ōta is credited with 34 victories, making him the Imperial Japanese Navy's sixth-ranking ace.
In his autobiography, Sakai described Ōta as outgoing and amiable, in contrast to the more reserved Nishizawa, and said he would have been "more at home in a nightclub" than in Lae.
==References==

*''"(Winged Samurai ) - Saburo Sakai and the Zero Fighter Pilots"'' by Henry Sakaida, Champlin Fighter Museum, 1985, ISBN 0-912173-05-X


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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