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Hayakawa and Ken
Ken Hayakawa ( played by veteran Hiroshi Miyauchi ), a private detective dressed in black & red gringo cowboy attire, actually just puts on his red & black " Zvasuit " ( hidden in his white guitar, which is opened with the push of a button ), which looks no different from that of a Sentai hero:
This series would also be parodied by Daicon Films ( now Gainax ) in 1982, in a series of short films starring the superhero Swift Hero Noutenki ( who also has the same alter-ego, Ken Hayakawa ).
A parody of the 1977 Toei superhero show Swift Hero Zubat ( created by Shotaro Ishinomori ), the title hero of this series has the same exact alter-ego, Ken Hayakawa, only he is comically fat fanboyish young man wearing the same exact gringo cowboy attire!
As Noutenki, Ken Hayakawa is decked out in a pink & red jumpsuit ( with a " no "/ の on the chest ), fixed navy blue galoshes, blue gloves, white hood and yellow crash helmet fixed with a diddlybopper.
Ken Hayakawa / Noutenki is played by Yasuhiro Takeda, who also produced this series, and went on to produce many of Daicon / Gainax's projects.

Hayakawa and would
Due to anti-miscegenation laws that existed at the time, Hayakawa would be unable to become a citizen or marry someone of another race.
This meant that unless Hayakawa played opposite an authentic Asian actress, he would not be able to portray a romance with her.
This left Hayakawa to constantly be typecast as a villain or forbidden lover and unable to play parts that would be given to fellow white actors such as Douglas Fairbanks.
In more than 20 films for Famous Players, Hayakawa was typecast as either the villain or the exotic lover who in the end would turn his lover over to the proper man of her race.

Hayakawa and which
He said that Dianetics " forms a bridge between " cybernetics and General Semantics ( a set of ideas about education originated by Alfred Korzybski, which received much attention in the science fiction world in the 1940s ) — a claim denied by scholars of General Semantics, including S. I. Hayakawa, who expressed strong criticism of Dianetics as early as 1951.
In 1985, Hayakawa gave this defense to an interviewer: " I wanted to treat general semantics as a subject, in the same sense that there's a scientific concept known as gravitation, which is independent of Isaac Newton.
Actor Sessue Hayakawa famously drove a custom ordered gold plated Pierce-Arrow as a status symbol which angered American families and instilled disdain towards Asian males due to his extravagant lifestyle and romances, which resulted in negative stereotypes of Asian men.
Hayakawa founded the political lobbying organization U. S. English, which is dedicated to making the English language the official language of the United States.
Sometimes in his lectures on semantics, he was joined by the respected traditional jazz pianist, Don Ewell, whom Hayakawa employed to demonstrate various points in which he analyzed semantic and musical principles.
Hayakawa and others, which attempted to make language more precise and objective.
Of his English-language films, Hayakawa is probably best known for his role as Colonel Saito in the film The Bridge on the River Kwai, for which he received a nomination for Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor in 1957.
In 1918 Hayakawa personally chose the highly popular American serial actress Marin Sais to appear opposite him in a series of films, the first being the 1918 racial drama The City of Dim Faces followed by His Birthright, which also starred his wife.
Hayakawa followed Tokyo Joe with Three Came Home, in which he played real-life POW camp commander Lieutenant-Colonel Suga, before returning to France.
She died in 1961 at which time Hayakawa moved back to Japan and became a Zen master.
At the same time as she was working on these films, she worked on The Devil's Claim with Sessue Hayakawa, in which she played a Persian woman, When Dawn Came, and His Nibs with Chic Sales.
While comparing the homologous genes of human SIGLEC11 and its pseudogene in chimpanzee, bonobo, gorilla and orangutan, it came to know about the event of gene conversion of the sequence of 5 ’ upstream regions and the exons that encodes the sialic acid recognition domain which counts approximately 2kb by the closely flanking hSIGLECP16 pseudogene ( Hayakawa et al., 2005 ).
Hayakawa is a Japanese surname, which may refer to:
In some cities such as San Francisco, opposition was organized ; the opposition group in San Francisco was called the Anti Digit Dialing League, of which S. I. Hayakawa was a notable member.
Some of his ideas were popularized by Stuart Chase in The Tyranny of Words in 1938, and by Samuel Ichiye Hayakawa, in Language in Action in 1941 ( which later became Language in Thought and Action ).

Hayakawa and lead
At the time, the major male star was Wallace Reid, with a fair complexion, light eyes, and an All American look, with Valentino the opposite, eventually supplanting Sessue Hayakawa as Hollywood's most popular " exotic " male lead.
In the introduction to his own Language in Action, a 1941 Book of the Month Club selection, Hayakawa wrote, " principles have in one way or another influenced almost every page of this book ...." But, Hayakawa followed Chase's lead in interpreting general semantics as making communication its defining concern.
In 1929 Lortel played the female lead in The Man Who Laughed Last with star Sessue Hayakawa.

Hayakawa and only
Given Hollywood's reluctance to hire Asian actors for substantial roles during that period ( with only a few reluctant exceptions, such as Anna May Wong, Sessue Hayakawa, and Philip Ahn ), he portrayed a variety of Asian characters in several movies before being offered the leading role in the 1929 film, The Mysterious Dr. Fu Manchu as the first onscreen portrayal of the title character.

Hayakawa and for
Hayakawa ( 1906 – 1992 ), speech professor Wendell Johnson, speech professor Irving J. Lee, and others assembled elements of general semantics into a package suitable for incorporation into mainstream communications curricula.
Language considerations figure prominently in general semantics, and three language and communications specialists who embraced general semantics, university professors and authors Hayakawa, Wendell Johnson and Neil Postman, played major roles in framing general semantics, especially for non-readers of Science and Sanity.
When Hayakawa co-founded the Society for General Semantics and its publication ETC.
When she loses the money, she turns to a wealthy Burmese man ( Sessue Hayakawa ) for a loan.
These include the American Ruth Hayakawa ( who substituted for Iva on weekends ), Canadian June Suyama (" The Nightingale of Nanking "), who also broadcast on Radio Tokyo, and Myrtle Lipton (" Little Margie ") who broadcast from Japanese-controlled Radio Manila.
Iva, Cousens and Ince never worked Sundays ; Ruth Hayakawa substituted for Iva and Lieutenant Reyes substituted for Cousens and Ince under the supervision of Kenkichi Oki.
U. S. English is the umbrella name for two American political advocacy groups founded in 1983 by Senator S. I. Hayakawa and Dr. John Tanton to advocate the adoption of the English language as the official language of the United States of America.
Hayakawa wrote a column for the Register & Tribune Syndicate from 1970 to 1976.
From early on Hayakawa was groomed for a career as a naval officer.
Following the success of The Cheat Hayakawa became a top leading man for romantic dramas in the 1910s and early 1920s.
Hayakawa was nominated for Best Supporting Actor but lost to Red Buttons.
Hayakawa was known for his discipline and martial arts skills.
* 1973 – Samuel I. Hayakawa, three years before running for the U. S. Senate from California
The British interests were bought out by 1921, and the company was renamed, for its plan to divert water from the Ōi River to the Hayakawa River in Yamanashi Prefecture through a system of penstocks, and thus generate electricity.
* With Delicate Mad Hands ( 1981, winner of the Hayakawa Award for foreign short story in 1993 )
* " Come Live with Me " ( 1988, winner of the Hayakawa Award for foreign short story in 1997 )

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