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  1. Michio Suzuki (鈴木 道雄, Suzuki Michio) was a Japanese businessman and inventor, known primarily for founding the Suzuki Motor Corporation, as well as several innovations in the design of looms.

  2. May 31, 1998 · Professor Michio Suzuki had a great influence in group theory over the last 50 years. We believe that his work in the 1950 's ignited work on the classification of finite simple groups, and in the 1960 's and 70 's he led its development.

  3. projecteuclid.org › ebooks › advanced-studies-inMichio Suzuki

    Michio Suzuki. § Biographical Sketch. 1926, October 2. Born in Chiba, Japan. 1942, April. Entered the Third High School of Japan located at Kyoto (Noboru Ito, Katsumi Nomizu, Hidehiko Yamabe were his seniors by one year and Singo Murakami was in the same class). 1945, April. Entered the University of Tokyo. Majored in mathematics.

  4. Michio Suzuki, an early leader in the effort to classify finite simple groups, died May 31, 1998, in Tokyo at the age of seventy-one. Born October 2, 1926, in Japan, he obtained his Ph.D. from the University of Tokyo in 1952, with Shoukichi Iyanaga as official advisor. Suzuki’s teachers included also Yasuo Akizuki and Kenkichi Iwasawa. Suzuki

  5. Michio Suzuki Japanese-Canadian mathematician whose work on sporadic simple groups helped to advance this part of group theory significantly. Simple groups are those with no normal subgroups and are the building blocks for all groups.

  6. Michio Suzuki is a Japanese businessman and inventor known for founding the Suzuki Motor Corporation. Born in a small Japanese village in 1887, he started a loom manufacturing business that eventually became Suzuki.

  7. Word soon got around and with orders pouring in; the young inventor established Suzuki Loom Manufacturing in October 1909. One of his strengths was that Michio always listened to his customers in order to improve the quality of his products: