Unidentified employees of Toyo Kogyo Company show Arthur Z. Gardiner (right), Economic Minister for the United States Embassy in Tokyo, the operating room of the company's attached hospital.
Unidentified Toyo Kogyo Company employees and Arthur Z. Gardiner (second from left), Economic Minister for the United States Embassy in Tokyo, tour the company's rotary engine display room.
Unidentified Toyo Kogyo Company employees and Arthur Z. Gardiner (second from left), Economic Minister for the United States Embassy in Tokyo, tour the company's rotary engine display room.
Arthur Z. Gardiner (right), Economic Minister for the United States Embassy in Tokyo, with unidentified employees of Toyo Kogyo Company in the control center of Toyo Kogyo's Automobile Painting and Assembly Plant.
Unidentified employees of Toyo Kogyo Company Mazda plant show the tape reader in the Paint and Assembly Plant control center to Arthur Z. Gardiner (left), Economic Minister for the United States Embassy in Tokyo.
Unidentified employees of the Toyo Kogyo Company give Arthur Z. Gardiner (front row, second from right) a tour of their light alloy plant. Mr. Gardiner is United States Economic Minister to Japan.
A group of visitors in the Toyo Kogyo reception room listen to Tsuneji Matsuda, President of Toyo Kogyo Company, Limited, describe the company. Pictured, counterclockwise: Mrs. Emily Gardiner (left); Arthur Z. Gardiner, Economic Minister for the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo (second from left); and Tsuneji Matsuda (third from right). All others unidentified.
Arthur Z. Gardiner (left), Economic Minister for the United States Embassy in Tokyo, and wife Emily Gardiner (third from left) with unidentified others in the special reception room of the Hiroshima Airport.
Unidentified employees of the Toyo Kogyo Company show the IBM 7074 computer to Arthur Z. Gardiner (center, left), Economic Minister for the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo. Also pictured, Mrs. Emily Gardiner (behind Arthur Gardiner). All others unidentified.
Arthur Z. Gardiner (center), Economic Minister for the United States Embassy in Tokyo, and unidentified others stop to watch shell molds being made during a tour of the Toyo Kogyo shell mold foundry.