Authors: Robert Whiting
White Landrace hogs
202
women, Japanese:
ideal
160
Wong, ‘Crazy’
218–25
,
226
,
247
,
248
,
249
,
251–2
World War II
ix
,
1
,
3–4
,
8–9
,
14
,
24
,
25
,
26
,
28
,
29
,
32
,
35
,
243
wrestling
x
,
38–47
,
67
,
74–5
,
79
,
88
,
89–91
anti-American sentiment expressed through
39–47
,
74
first Japanese star in
see
Rikidozan
governing body of
see
Japan Professional Wrestling Association
‘rules’ of
44
television industry boosted by
39
,
40
,
41
,
67
,
74
underworld ownership of
96
see also
sumo
Wright, Frank Lloyd
47
Wu, Sam
63–5
yakiniku-ya
106
civil disputes ‘settled’ by
147–8
drug trade and
190–1
keizai
204–11
,
214–15
,
218
,
245
,
257
,
259
meaning of term
9
motto of
83
movies about
114
self-amputation of pinkies by
114–15
,
205
self-image of
76–7
status in
203
Yakuza
(film)
114
‘Yakuza Express’
209
‘Yakuza recession’
256
Yamaguchi-gumi
96
,
106
,
205
,
258
,
263
Yamate Line
4
Yami Shakai
(newspaper)
x
yasahii
155
Yasuda
196
Yawata Steel
12
exchange rates of
17–18
,
187
,
193–4
postwar ban on reconversion of
8
,
32
Yep, Chester
142
Yokota Air Force Base
81
Yokota Nicola’s
81–2
,
112
,
137
,
236
Yomiuri Shimbun
163
Yoshida, Shigeru
33
Yoshida cabinet
58
You Only Live Twice
(film)
99
Yozawa River Project
126–30
zaibatsu
27
,
28
,
29
,
45
,
72
,
196
,
215
Zaimoku
109
Zappetti, Nicola
106
,
108
,
109
,
122–23
,
125–36
,
181–82
,
183
,
185
,
186–87
,
204
,
205
,
235
,
297
ailments and heart attacks of
220
,
226
,
227–31
,
251
anti-Japanese resentment of
195
,
239–45
,
248–9
background of
13–14
‘black rider’ vision of
227
custody of children awarded to
133–4
dairy farm of
111–12
death and funeral of
251
debauched lifestyle led by
15–16
,
112
,
131–2
deportation and return of
15–16
drug arrest of
190
embittered final years of
220–52
employees’ relationship with
184–5
final visit to Hokkaido made by
249–50
financial ups and downs of
101
,
132
,
140–6
,
149–54
,
236
,
244
,
246
,
249
first black market dealings of
13
,
14–15
first restaurant opened by
see
Nicola’s
Fujita’s lawsuit brought against
184
,
186–7
,
201
,
226
gold scam and
218–25
hog farm of
201–4
Imperial Hotel diamond robbery and
47–50
Japanese citizenship of
182–4
,
187–9
Japanese language and
132
,
182
,
187–8
at
kabu
game
79–81
Lansco black market operation and
13
,
17–22
,
36–8
last near-fistfight of
241
lawsuit over Hokkaido farmland of
187
,
201
,
226
,
247
as ‘Mafia boss of Tokyo’
80–4
,
87
,
108–12
,
113
,
117
,
119
,
132
,
146
Nihon Kotsu’s lawsuit against
144–6
,
149–54
,
184
,
187
,
226
,
228
,
232
,
235
,
236
,
247
,
249
,
265–6
own lawyers’ lawsuits brought against
228–9
,
231–2
,
247
,
249
physical appearance of
65–6
,
136–7
revenge fantasy of
238–9
second and fourth marriages of
see
Koizumi, Yae
as soft touch
184
third wife of
see
Miyoko
in US occupation of Japan
14
Wong’s lawsuit brought against
218–25
,
226
,
247
,
248
,
249
,
251–2
Zappetti, Patti
140
Zappetti, Vincent
134
,
140
,
228
,
241–2
Zia pizzeria
267
Outdoor markets in Tokyo were up and running almost from the moment hostilities ceased, and well before the conquering Americans had set foot on Japanese soil. Operated by gangsters, the black markets – like the one shown here in Shinjuku (which belonged to the mob boss Kinosuke Ozu and peddled supplies stolen from the Japanese Imperial Army) – were for a time the only thing that kept the war-ravaged, impoverished populace from starvation.
(Mainichi Shimbun)
It didn’t take long for the initially wary American soldier to start relaxing and enjoying what Japan had to offer. In addition to rickshaw rides and government-sponsored hostesses supplied by the Japanese Recreation and Amusement Association to satisfy the Yankee libido, this could also mean highly lucrative participation in the underground markets.
(Mainichi Shimbun)
Post-war economic hardship forced many Japanese to find new ways of making a living. A top-ranked but financially strapped sumo wrestler named Rikidozan, shown here in 1950 in formal sumo garb that dates back centuries, turned to the crass imported American ‘sport’ of professional wrestling and, in the process, ignited an extraordinary craze.
(Mainichi Shimbun)