NOUN
- Japanese army officer who initiated the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and who assumed dictatorial control of Japan during World War II; he was subsequently tried and executed as a war criminal (1884-1948)
How To Use Tojo In A Sentence
- The summer internship at the News Desk at Getty Images New York follows, where he will receive first hand experience in photojournalism in a working news agency.
- Try to think like a photojournalist who thinks in advance about the images wanted.
- But it's a long journey, and before he confronts the renegade colonel, Willard must first face all manner of trippy imagery, including the American Air Cavalry strafing a Vietnamese village to the sound of amplified Wagner, Robert Duvall declaring that he loves "the smell of napalm in the morning", a riot triggered by frugging bunny-girls, a Californian surfer on LSD and Dennis Hopper as a madly babbling photojournalist. Apocalypse Now: No 1
- All photojournalists who respect their subjects find that victimized people are very willing to show the world their lot.
- The cameraphone has transformed photography and photojournalism. Times, Sunday Times
- If your camera is disturbing the peace in court, on the golf course or any other venue where silence is golden, photojournalist Sam Cranston's US$125 Camera Muzzle sound blimp for pro film and digital SLR cameras may be for you.
- He was a photojournalist for Life; mainstay at the Magnum Photo agency (where one can view dozens of images from his ouvre); mentor and booster to scores of photographers; founder of the Fund for Concerned Photography (a phrase Capa himself conceived); chief champion, along with his friend Richard Whelan (who passed away last year), of the legacy of war photographer Robert Capa, Cornell’s older brother. David Friend: VF Daily
- A high-ranking economic planner named Nobusuke Kishi worked closely with then commander of the occupying Kanto division, known to the Chinese as the Kwantung Army, General Hideki Tojo.
- And as tolerance for the suits increased, a new-to-the-scene French star, the seventeen-year-old Brigitte Bardot, created a sensation in 1953 posing for photojournalists in her strapless floral bikini on the beach in the ritzy capital of European cinema, Cannes. The English Is Coming!
- Print and broadcasting, broadsheet and tabloid newspapers, photojournalism, TV, and radio are all different.