cross_trainer
08-03-2007, 11:14 AM
[Only registered and activated users can see links]
Yukio Tani, a diminutive Jiu-Jitsu competitor from the late 19th century who faced literally hundreds (if not thousands) of boxers, wrestlers, strongmen, and other opponents in his career wrote a Jiu-Jitsu manual. For more information about him: [Only registered and activated users can see links]
Below is the information you'll need if you want to order it via interlibrary loan:
The game of ju-jitsu : for the use of schools and colleges
by Taro Miyake ([Only registered and activated users can see links]); Yukio Tani ([Only registered and activated users can see links]); Japanese School of Ju-jitsu. ([Only registered and activated users can see links])
Language: English Type: [Only registered and activated users can see links] Book
Publisher: London : Hazell, Watson and Viney, [1906]
OCLC: 8920589
I can vouch for its technical competence...the man knows his stuff, and it's a nice look back to "the way things used to be".
Yukio Tani, a diminutive Jiu-Jitsu competitor from the late 19th century who faced literally hundreds (if not thousands) of boxers, wrestlers, strongmen, and other opponents in his career wrote a Jiu-Jitsu manual. For more information about him: [Only registered and activated users can see links]
Below is the information you'll need if you want to order it via interlibrary loan:
The game of ju-jitsu : for the use of schools and colleges
by Taro Miyake ([Only registered and activated users can see links]); Yukio Tani ([Only registered and activated users can see links]); Japanese School of Ju-jitsu. ([Only registered and activated users can see links])
Language: English Type: [Only registered and activated users can see links] Book
Publisher: London : Hazell, Watson and Viney, [1906]
OCLC: 8920589
I can vouch for its technical competence...the man knows his stuff, and it's a nice look back to "the way things used to be".