{"total":163,"limit":25,"offset":150,"prev_offset":125,"next_offset":null,"page_size":25,"this_page":7,"num_this_page":13,"prev_api":"https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/search/?fulltext=Korea&limit=25&offset=125","next_api":"","objects":[{"id":"ddr-csujad-38-456","model":"entity","index":"0 150/{'value': 163, 'relation': 'eq'}","links":{"html":"https://ddr.densho.org/ddr-csujad-38-456/","json":"https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/ddr-csujad-38-456/","img":"https://ddr.densho.org/media/ddr-csujad-38/ddr-csujad-38-456-mezzanine-930883cc17-a.jpg","thumb":"http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-csujad-38/ddr-csujad-38-456-mezzanine-930883cc17-a.jpg"},"title":"I.P.W. Team","description":"A group photograph of I.P.W. [= Interrogation of Prisoner of War] Team members. The English caption reads: As days went by, we are already reached near Yalu-river where between North Korea and China solders stay. No body got sick yet. how lucky. Translation of the Japanese caption: All 14 people survived. None of them got killed. ____. It looked like a hotel, and we took a group photo in front of the two story building. These members were English, Japanese, Korean, and Chinese language specialists and interrogated POWs. Item from: George Naohara scrapbook: Korean War and before leaving Japan (csudh_nao_0600). See this object in the California State Universities Japanese American Digitization project site: <a href=\"http://cdm16855.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16855coll4/id/35210\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">nao_04_033_005</a>","extent":"black and white, 4 x 4 inches","links_children":"ddr-csujad-38-456","topics":[{"term":"Identity and values -- Kibei","id":"45"},{"term":"Korean War","id":"466"},{"term":"Military service","id":"296"}],"format":"img","contributor":"CSU Dominguez Hills Department of Archives and Special Collections","rights":"nocc","genre":"misc_document","location":"North Korea","creation":"1950-1951","status":"completed","search_hidden":"","download_large":"ddr-csujad-38-456-mezzanine-930883cc17-a.jpg"},{"id":"ddr-densho-1000-200","model":"entity","index":"1 151/{'value': 163, 'relation': 'eq'}","links":{"html":"https://ddr.densho.org/ddr-densho-1000-200/","json":"https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/ddr-densho-1000-200/","img":"https://ddr.densho.org/media/ddr-densho-1000/denshovh-wehren-01-a.jpg","thumb":"http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-densho-1000/denshovh-wehren-01-a.jpg"},"title":"Ehren Watada Interview","description":"Male of Japanese and Chinese American descent. Born 1978 in Honolulu, Hawaii. Graduated from Hawaii Pacific University in 2003, and enlisted in the U.S. Army. Received his officer's commission, and served in Korea in 2004 and 2005. While stationed in Fort Lewis, Washington, in 2006, asked for permission to resign his commission based on his understanding that the war in Iraq was illegal, and refused to deploy to Iraq with his unit. Was court-martialed by the Army, and his first court-martial trial in February 2007 ended in a mistrial. A second trial was scheduled but stayed in October 2007. A judge ruled in 2008 that Watada could not be retried on three of the five counts against him. The Army appealed, but the case was dismissed on May 6, 2009.","extent":"01:57:52","links_children":"ddr-densho-1000-200","creators":[{"role":"narrator","oh_id":243,"namepart":"Ehren Watada"},{"role":"interviewer","namepart":"Tom Ikeda"},{"role":"videographer","namepart":"Don Sellers"}],"format":"vh","language":["eng"],"contributor":"Densho","rights":"cc","genre":"interview","location":"Seattle, Washington","creation":"December 22, 2006","status":"completed","search_hidden":"Ehren Watada narrator \nTom Ikeda interviewer \nDon Sellers videographer","download_large":"denshovh-wehren-01-a.jpg"},{"id":"967","model":"narrator","index":"2 152/{'value': 163, 'relation': 'eq'}","links":{"html":"https://ddr.densho.org/narrators/967/","json":"https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/narrator/967/","img":"https://ddr.densho.org/media/narrators/ddr-densho-1021-5_narr.jpg","thumb":"https://ddr.densho.org/media/narrators/ddr-densho-1021-5_narr.jpg","interviews":"https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/narrator/967/interviews/"},"display_name":"Junji Sarashina","bio":"Junji Sarashina was born in 1929 in Lahaina, Hawai'i, the son of a minister of a Buddhist Temple Nishihongan-ji and a teacher of Japanese-style flower arrangement, music, sewing, and cooking. The youngest of five children, Sarashina grew up surrounded by temple members (mostly plantation workers) and their families who enjoyed community picnics and samurai films. When his mother took her children to her hometown of Hiroshima in 1936, Sarashina struggled with Japanese at first. But soon, he got used to things Japanese thanks to the accommodations made by his mother, siblings, and schoolteachers. His older sisters baked Western style cakes and cookies and offered them to Sarashina's schoolmates, helping him to become better accepted. After the Pacific War began, Sarashina's family lost touch with his father who was still in Hawai'i. Later, he learned that his father had been taken by the FBI immediately after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. He was sent to the US mainland, then to a number of different incarceration camps. Sarashina as a junior high school student was mobilized to work at an ammunition factory when the nuclear bomb struck Hiroshima. Although he was not injured, he was irradiated as he entered the city to return home. Sarashina suffered diarrhea and could not eat afterward. When he went back to Hawai'i in 1949, he attended high school again to relearn English. Soon, he found a job at a local radio station in Honolulu. During the Korean War, he volunteered to serve as a military intelligence officer. When he was sent to Korea, he was assigned to a unit led by a judo teacher he knew from Sawtelle, California. The teacher had been his older brother's schoolmate in Hiroshima, and so he took Sarashina under his wing throughout Sarashina's stay in Korea. Although Sarashina says that the American government could do more to support US hibakusha, he also says that he supports the medical checkups offered to American survivors by the Japanese government. In fact, he assisted the establishment of the checkup system in the early 1970s and continued to help the US hibakusha's organization called the American Society of Hiroshima-Nagasaki A-bomb Survivors. He takes pride in assisting many US survivors to obtain Japanese hibakusha techo (certificate of survivorhood) and to receive benefits."},{"id":"ddr-pc-29-14","model":"entity","index":"3 153/{'value': 163, 'relation': 'eq'}","links":{"html":"https://ddr.densho.org/ddr-pc-29-14/","json":"https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/ddr-pc-29-14/","img":"https://ddr.densho.org/media/ddr-pc-29/ddr-pc-29-14-mezzanine-db72daed60-a.jpg","thumb":"http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-pc-29/ddr-pc-29-14-mezzanine-db72daed60-a.jpg"},"title":"Pacific Citizen, Vol. 44, No. 14 (April 5, 1957)","description":"Select article titles:\"Video Stations Agree With JACL Suggestions\" (p. 1); \"Nisei Victimized by Bandit Curious For Robbery by Daylight\" (p. 1); \"Street names for Japanese American to stay, despite objections\" (p. 1); \"Anti-trust suit to prevent block-booking of films for TV welcomed by JACL; may lift excuse to show anti-Nisei films\" (p. 1); \"Actor Haswgawa arrives for 3-week U.S. visit\" (p. 1); \"Buffalo, N.Y., press warms up to naturalization story of Tokyo-born but Salt Lake City-bred resident, Dr. Kaneko\" (p. 3); \"Nisei wife escapes from No. Korea by cutting hair as men\" (p. 3); \"Chicago Cubs equitment manger's bother holds same job with Hollywood\" (p. 6); \"CBS Radio Workshop adapts Noh plays, Nisei composes original score in show\" (p. 7); \"Dan Aoki urges statehood for Hawaii in address before D.C. JACL chapterl would enhance U.S. forign policy in Far East\" (p. 8).","extent":"11W x 17H","links_children":"ddr-pc-29-14","creators":[{"role":"publisher","namepart":"Japanese American Citizens League"}],"topics":[{"term":"Activism and involvement -- Civil liberties","id":"233"},{"term":"Arts and literature -- Performing arts -- Film","id":"249"},{"term":"Arts and literature -- Performing arts -- Theater -- Noh","id":"435"},{"term":"Geographic communities -- California -- Los Angeles","id":"272"},{"term":"Community activities -- Associations and organizations -- The Japanese American Citizens League","id":"20"},{"term":"Community activities -- Sports -- Baseball","id":"314"},{"term":"Identity and values -- Nisei","id":"44"},{"term":"Journalism and media -- Community publications -- Pacific Citizen","id":"389"}],"format":"doc","language":["eng"],"contributor":"Densho","rights":"cc","genre":"periodical","location":"Los Angeles, California","creation":"04/05/1957","status":"completed","search_hidden":"Japanese American Citizens League publisher","download_large":"ddr-pc-29-14-mezzanine-db72daed60-a.jpg"},{"id":"ddr-densho-1000-100","model":"entity","index":"4 154/{'value': 163, 'relation': 'eq'}","links":{"html":"https://ddr.densho.org/ddr-densho-1000-100/","json":"https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/ddr-densho-1000-100/","img":"https://ddr.densho.org/media/ddr-densho-1000/denshovh-uben-01-a.jpg","thumb":"http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-densho-1000/denshovh-uben-01-a.jpg"},"title":"Ben Uyeno Interview","description":"Nisei male. Born November 30, 1918, in Yakima, Washington. Spent two years of childhood in Japan. Returned to Seattle and became an active participant in Japanese American community life. Was attending the University of Washington when World War II started. Avoided incarceration with the help of the Friends (a Quaker organization), which hid him and helped him enroll in another university. He eventually entered medical school. Later he became a captain in the U.S. Army and served as a MASH doctor in Korea, where he was trained on one of the first kidney machines. Returned to Seattle and helped pioneer the first kidney dialysis program in the United States. Became the first Japanese American Chief of Staff at Providence Hospital in Seattle. Established a private practice that faithfully served the area's Japanese American community for thirty-two years. Helped establish and develop the Keiro nursing home (later operated as part of Nikkei Concerns).","extent":"01:55:31","links_children":"ddr-densho-1000-100","creators":[{"role":"narrator","oh_id":101,"namepart":"Ben Uyeno"},{"role":"interviewer","namepart":"Dee Goto"},{"role":"videographer","namepart":"Matt Emery"}],"format":"vh","language":["eng"],"contributor":"Densho","rights":"cc","genre":"interview","location":"Seattle, Washington","creation":"June 1, 1998","status":"completed","search_hidden":"Ben Uyeno narrator \nDee Goto interviewer \nMatt Emery videographer","download_large":"denshovh-uben-01-a.jpg"},{"id":"ddr-densho-1000-363","model":"entity","index":"5 155/{'value': 163, 'relation': 'eq'}","links":{"html":"https://ddr.densho.org/ddr-densho-1000-363/","json":"https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/ddr-densho-1000-363/","img":"https://ddr.densho.org/media/ddr-densho-1000/denshovh-iart_2-01-a.jpg","thumb":"http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-densho-1000/denshovh-iart_2-01-a.jpg"},"title":"Art Ishida Interview","description":"Nisei male. Born June 2, 1921, in Fresno, California. Grew up in the Gardena area of Los Angeles, California, before moving to Japan with parents in 1929 and returning to California in the 1930s. During World War II, removed to the Santa Anita Assembly Center, California, and the Jerome concentration camp, Arkansas. Gave a qualified answer on the so-called \"loyalty questionnaire and was transferred to the Tule Lake concentration camp, California. Moved briefly to the Minidoka concentration camp, Idaho, before being released from camp and living in Chicago, Illinois. Drafted into the military and served in Korea as an interpreter for the Military Intelligence Service. Eventually returned to California.<p>(This material is based upon work assisted by a grant from the Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Any opinions, finding, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of the Interior.)","extent":"02:43:02","links_children":"ddr-densho-1000-363","creators":[{"role":"narrator","oh_id":594,"namepart":"Art Ishida"},{"role":"interviewer","namepart":"Martha Nakagawa"},{"role":"videographer","namepart":"Tani Ikeda"}],"format":"vh","language":["eng"],"persons":[{"nr_id":"88922/nr014dm7c","namepart":"Ishida, Atsushi"}],"contributor":"Densho","rights":"cc","genre":"interview","location":"Los Angeles, California","creation":"August 24, 2011","status":"completed","search_hidden":"Art Ishida narrator \nMartha Nakagawa interviewer \nTani Ikeda videographer Ishida, Atsushi 88922nr014dm7c","download_large":"denshovh-iart_2-01-a.jpg"},{"id":"ddr-pc-29-23","model":"entity","index":"6 156/{'value': 163, 'relation': 'eq'}","links":{"html":"https://ddr.densho.org/ddr-pc-29-23/","json":"https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/ddr-pc-29-23/","img":"https://ddr.densho.org/media/ddr-pc-29/ddr-pc-29-23-mezzanine-6c9014c804-a.jpg","thumb":"http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-pc-29/ddr-pc-29-23-mezzanine-6c9014c804-a.jpg"},"title":"Pacific Citizen, Vol. 44, No. 23 (June 7, 1957)","description":"Select article titles: \"26,000 Japanese War Brides in U.S. Group Told\" (p. 1); \"Senate Committee Amends Claims Supplemental Appropriation Bill\" (p.1 ); \"Non-profit groups listed for 1st time as claim awardees\" (p. 1); \"JACL participates in Memorial Day Rites at Arlington Cemetery; sagging Nisei interest in war dead scored by D.C. JACLers\" (p. 1); \"Rep Judd's tribute to JACL-Nisei reprinted in Japan Times supplement comes to attention of Japanese for 1st time\" (p. 3);  \"Japanese war bride fights for estate\" (p. 3); \"Japanese Heritage Asset in Business World, Sequoia Jr. CLers Told\" (p. 4); \"Japan-born costume designer featured by 'Look' mag set for EDC-MDC fashion show\" (p. 5); \"8-yr. hold on skeet title relinquished by Denver physician\" (p. 6); \"Nisei insurancemen in safety campaign\" (p. 6); \"Eminent sport editor praises Nisei as worthy competitors in spite of little size\" (p. 6); \"Japanese KP imprisoned with American GIs in Korea wins top civilian medal\" (p. 7); \"Military Rites For MacFadyen, Friend of Nisei\" (p. 8); \"Issei Woman, 76, Wins Garden Society's Top Recognition For Work\" (p. 8).","extent":"11W x 17H","links_children":"ddr-pc-29-23","topics":[{"term":"Activism and involvement -- Politics","id":"235"},{"term":"Geographic communities -- California -- Los Angeles","id":"272"},{"term":"Geographic communities -- Colorado -- Denver","id":"276"},{"term":"Community activities -- Associations and organizations -- The Japanese American Citizens League","id":"20"},{"term":"Community activities -- Sports","id":"24"},{"term":"Education","id":"31"},{"term":"Identity and values -- Issei","id":"43"},{"term":"Identity and values -- Japanese American identity","id":"47"},{"term":"Identity and values -- Nisei","id":"44"},{"term":"Immigration and citizenship -- Law and legislation","id":"340"},{"term":"Immigration and citizenship -- Naturalization","id":"176"},{"term":"Japan -- Government and politics","id":"376"},{"term":"Journalism and media -- Community publications -- Pacific Citizen","id":"389"},{"term":"Race and racism -- Discrimination","id":"37"},{"term":"Race and racism -- Stereotypes","id":"161"},{"term":"Redress and reparations -- Receiving redress checks and apology","id":"117"}],"format":"doc","language":["eng"],"contributor":"Densho","rights":"cc","genre":"periodical","location":"Los Angeles, California","creation":"06/07/1957","status":"completed","search_hidden":"","download_large":"ddr-pc-29-23-mezzanine-6c9014c804-a.jpg"},{"id":"ddr-njpa-1-764","model":"entity","index":"7 157/{'value': 163, 'relation': 'eq'}","links":{"html":"https://ddr.densho.org/ddr-njpa-1-764/","json":"https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/ddr-njpa-1-764/","img":"https://ddr.densho.org/media/ddr-njpa-1/ddr-njpa-1-764-mezzanine-a33d51c244-a.jpg","thumb":"http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-njpa-1/ddr-njpa-1-764-mezzanine-a33d51c244-a.jpg"},"title":"Signed note from Helen Keller","description":"Caption on front: \"We differ, blind and seeing, not so much in the number of sense we have as in the way we meet limitations with lifted head and smiling face. Sincerely, Helen Keller.\"\r\n\r\nCaption on reverse [translation]: Helen Keller Finally Comes to Japan - Introducing the 'Talking Book' - (Tokyo) April 2, 1937. Helen Keller, the 'saint of three burdens,' departed San Francisco at noon on the 1st aboard the Yusen Asama Maru headed for Japan with her secretary Polly Thomson and Pastor Komuro Tokuji of the New York Methodist Church and his wife. She will arrive at Yokohama on April 15 and will speak in about 20 cities stretching from Hokkaido in the north to Kyushu in the south as well as in Korea and Manchuria until early July. She will introduce the 'talking book' that she has devised and soothe her comrades in other countries suffering from 'physical deficiencies'. Photographs: 1. A message from Helen Keller to Japan that she typed and signed personally [translation of message omitted].\"","extent":"5.75W x 2.5H","links_children":"ddr-njpa-1-764","format":"img","language":["eng","jpn"],"persons":[{"namepart":"Keller, Helen"}],"contributor":"Hawai'i Times Photo Archives Foundation","rights":"pcc","genre":"photograph","location":"Tokyo, Japan","creation":"April 2, 1937","status":"completed","search_hidden":"Keller, Helen","download_large":"ddr-njpa-1-764-mezzanine-a33d51c244-a.jpg"},{"id":"ddr-densho-1021-5","model":"entity","index":"8 158/{'value': 163, 'relation': 'eq'}","links":{"html":"https://ddr.densho.org/ddr-densho-1021-5/","json":"https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/ddr-densho-1021-5/","img":"https://ddr.densho.org/media/ddr-densho-1021/ddr-densho-1021-5-1-mezzanine-ec9df4a5e1-a.jpg","thumb":"http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-densho-1021/ddr-densho-1021-5-1-mezzanine-ec9df4a5e1-a.jpg"},"title":"Junji Sarashina Interview","description":"Junji Sarashina was born in 1929 in Lahaina, Hawai'i, the son of a minister of a Buddhist Temple Nishihongan-ji and a teacher of Japanese-style flower arrangement, music, sewing, and cooking. The youngest of five children, Sarashina grew up surrounded by temple members (mostly plantation workers) and their families who enjoyed community picnics and samurai films. When his mother took her children to her hometown of Hiroshima in 1936, Sarashina struggled with Japanese at first. But soon, he got used to things Japanese thanks to the accommodations made by his mother, siblings, and schoolteachers. His older sisters baked Western style cakes and cookies and offered them to Sarashina's schoolmates, helping him to become better accepted. After the Pacific War began, Sarashina's family lost touch with his father who was still in Hawai'i. Later, he learned that his father had been taken by the FBI immediately after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. He was sent to the US mainland, then to a number of different incarceration camps. Sarashina as a junior high school student was mobilized to work at an ammunition factory when the nuclear bomb struck Hiroshima. Although he was not injured, he was irradiated as he entered the city to return home. Sarashina suffered diarrhea and could not eat afterward. When he went back to Hawai'i in 1949, he attended high school again to relearn English. Soon, he found a job at a local radio station in Honolulu. During the Korean War, he volunteered to serve as a military intelligence officer. When he was sent to Korea, he was assigned to a unit led by a judo teacher he knew from Sawtelle, California. The teacher had been his older brother's schoolmate in Hiroshima, and so he took Sarashina under his wing throughout Sarashina's stay in Korea. Although Sarashina says that the American government could do more to support US hibakusha, he also says that he supports the medical checkups offered to American survivors by the Japanese government. In fact, he assisted the establishment of the checkup system in the early 1970s and continued to help the US hibakusha's organization called the American Society of Hiroshima-Nagasaki A-bomb Survivors. He takes pride in assisting many US survivors to obtain Japanese hibakusha techo (certificate of survivorhood) and to receive benefits.","extent":"2:42:23","links_children":"ddr-densho-1021-5","creators":[{"role":"narrator","oh_id":967,"namepart":"Junji Sarashina"},{"role":"interviewer","namepart":"Naoko Wake"}],"format":"vh","language":["eng"],"contributor":"Densho","rights":"cc","genre":"interview","location":"San Jose, California","creation":"6-Jun-12","status":"completed","search_hidden":"Junji Sarashina narrator \nNaoko Wake interviewer","download_large":"ddr-densho-1021-5-1-mezzanine-ec9df4a5e1-a.jpg"},{"id":"ddr-pc-29-17","model":"entity","index":"9 159/{'value': 163, 'relation': 'eq'}","links":{"html":"https://ddr.densho.org/ddr-pc-29-17/","json":"https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/ddr-pc-29-17/","img":"https://ddr.densho.org/media/ddr-pc-29/ddr-pc-29-17-mezzanine-575913c0df-a.jpg","thumb":"http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-pc-29/ddr-pc-29-17-mezzanine-575913c0df-a.jpg"},"title":"Pacific Citizen, Vol. 44, No. 17 (April 26, 1957)","description":"Select article titles: \"'Red' smear over Hawaii statehood refuted by CL; anti-Nisei editorial in Oklahoma slammed by senator\" (p. 1); \"Anti-Japanese bigotry injected by Tulsa editorial fighting Hawaiian statehood\" (p. 1); \"House surveying Japanese Labor Program in Cal.\" (p. 1); \"1st Nisei 'reported killed' in Korea very healthy, re-enlists for 6 years\" (p. 1); \"Sponsors seek CL advice at CCDC meet on refugees joining U.S. armed forces\" (p. 1); \"Two top honors in music won by Pasadena piano virtuoso inside one week\" (p. 2); \"Illinois assembly acts on four civil rights legislation\" (p. 3); \"Chinese American Moves into Lily-white Area, Harrassed\" (p. 3); \"Nisei selected for summer tour of U.N.\" (p. 3); \"Livingston-Merced JACL slates 3 events to mark Yamato Colony founding in 1907\" (p. 3); \"Southwest L.A. community center idea materializes as three groups in parley\" (p. 4); \"Promise no punch to be spared at Sansei life panel\" (p. 5); \"14-year-old Margie Iwasaki of Canada competes in U.S. nat'l AAU swimfest\" (p. 6); Nisei bowls 300 twice in series for 858-but in practice\" (p. 6); \"House votes $220,000 requested for evacuation claims administrative costs\" (p. 8); \"Seattle Nisei named Washington's best high school student\" (p. 8).","extent":"11W x 17H","links_children":"ddr-pc-29-17","creators":[{"role":"publisher","namepart":"Japanese American Citizens League"}],"topics":[{"term":"Activism and involvement -- Civil rights","id":"234"},{"term":"Activism and involvement -- Politics -- Hawaiian statehood","id":"236"},{"term":"Activism and involvement -- Politics -- Political systems and ideologies","id":"448"},{"term":"Arts and literature -- Performing arts -- Music","id":"183"},{"term":"Geographic communities -- California","id":"271"},{"term":"Geographic communities -- California -- Los Angeles","id":"272"},{"term":"Geographic communities -- Hawai'i","id":"277"},{"term":"Geographic communities -- Washington -- Seattle","id":"293"},{"term":"Community activities -- Associations and organizations -- The Japanese American Citizens League","id":"20"},{"term":"Community activities -- Conventions and conferences","id":"299"},{"term":"Community activities -- Sports -- Bowling","id":"316"},{"term":"Community activities -- Sports -- Swimming","id":"328"},{"term":"Education -- Public schools","id":"32"},{"term":"Identity and values -- Chinese American identity","id":"455"},{"term":"Identity and values -- Sansei","id":"338"},{"term":"Japanese Canadians","id":"200"},{"term":"Race and racism -- Discrimination","id":"37"},{"term":"Redress and reparations -- Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians (CWRIC) -- Lobbying and implementation of findings and recommendations","id":"115"}],"format":"doc","language":["eng"],"contributor":"Densho","rights":"cc","genre":"periodical","location":"Los Angeles, California","creation":"04/26/1957","status":"completed","search_hidden":"Japanese American Citizens League publisher","download_large":"ddr-pc-29-17-mezzanine-575913c0df-a.jpg"},{"id":"124","model":"narrator","index":"10 160/{'value': 163, 'relation': 'eq'}","links":{"html":"https://ddr.densho.org/narrators/124/","json":"https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/narrator/124/","img":"https://ddr.densho.org/media/narrators/hbill.jpg","thumb":"https://ddr.densho.org/media/narrators/hbill.jpg","interviews":"https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/narrator/124/interviews/"},"display_name":"Bill Hosokawa","bio":"Nisei male. Born in Seattle on January 30, 1915, and attended Washington grade school, Garfield High School and the University of Washington. He grew up as a typical Nisei, working summers in Alaska salmon canneries and Western Avenue produce brokerages to pay for his education. He became interested in writing at Garfield where he was sports editor of the school paper. While attending the University he worked at the weekly Japanese American Courier published by the late Jimmie Sakamoto. A faculty adviser at the University urged Hosokawa to drop out of the journalism school \"because no newspaper in the country would hire a Japanese boy.\" Hosokawa rejected the advice, but when he graduated in 1937 he found the professor was right. After working as a male secretary writing letters, Hosokawa and his bride, the former Alice Miyake of Portland, Oregon, went to Singapore in 1938 to help launch an English language daily. A year and a half later Hosokawa moved to Shanghai to work on an American-owned monthly magazine, the Far Eastern Review. Then, sensing the inevitability of war, he returned to Seattle in 1941 just five weeks before the attack on Pearl Harbor. When war came, Hosokawa served as executive director of Seattle JACL's Emergency Defense Council helping people in the community to cope. He and his family were removed to the Puyallup Assembly Center, Washington. When other Seattleites were moved to Minidoka concentration camp, Idaho, Hosokawa and his wife and infant son were sent to Heart Mountain, Wyoming. Later, he learned he had been separated from his Seattle friends because he was considered a potential troublemaker. He was in Heart Mountain for 14 months, working as editor of the camp newspaper, the Heart Mountain Sentinel, before being released to join the Des Moines, Iowa Register in 1943. In 1946 he moved to Denver to work on the Denver Post. In 38 years at The Post he held such assignments as executive news editor, assistant managing editor and Sunday editor. He covered the Japanese peace treaty in San Francisco in 1951, the Summit meeting in Paris in 1960 and the Zengakuren student riots in Japan that same year. He also had assignments as war correspondent in Korea and Vietnam, and for 17 years was editor of Empire, the Post's prize-winning Sunday magazine. For his last seven years at the Post Hosokawa was editor of the editorial page -- a Japanese American imprisoned during World War II as a potential security risk who now directed the opinion section of a major American newspaper. After retiring from the Post in 1984 he served the Rocky Mountain News as ombudsman columnist for seven years. Hosokawa has taught journalism classes at the University of Colorado, University of Northern Colorado and University of Wyoming. He wrote a weekly comment column called \"From the Frying Pan\" in JACL's weekly Pacific Citizen from 1942 until 1999. Among other honors, Hosokawa is a former president of the American Association of Sunday and Feature Editors and a member of that organization's Hall of Fame, a charter member of the Denver Press Club Hall of Fame. He was named JACL's Nisei of the Biennium in 1958, and has published 12 books. Hosokawa and his wife Alice, who died in 1998, had four children."},{"id":"ddr-densho-1000-129","model":"entity","index":"11 161/{'value': 163, 'relation': 'eq'}","links":{"html":"https://ddr.densho.org/ddr-densho-1000-129/","json":"https://ddr.densho.org/api/0.2/ddr-densho-1000-129/","img":"https://ddr.densho.org/media/ddr-densho-1000/denshovh-hbill-01-a.jpg","thumb":"http://ddrmedia.local/media/ddr-densho-1000/denshovh-hbill-01-a.jpg"},"title":"Bill Hosokawa Interview","description":"Nisei male. Born in Seattle on January 30, 1915, and attended Washington grade school, Garfield High School and the University of Washington. He grew up as a typical Nisei, working summers in Alaska salmon canneries and Western Avenue produce brokerages to pay for his education. He became interested in writing at Garfield where he was sports editor of the school paper. While attending the University he worked at the weekly Japanese American Courier published by the late Jimmie Sakamoto. A faculty adviser at the University urged Hosokawa to drop out of the journalism school \"because no newspaper in the country would hire a Japanese boy.\" Hosokawa rejected the advice, but when he graduated in 1937 he found the professor was right. After working as a male secretary writing letters, Hosokawa and his bride, the former Alice Miyake of Portland, Oregon, went to Singapore in 1938 to help launch an English language daily. A year and a half later Hosokawa moved to Shanghai to work on an American-owned monthly magazine, the Far Eastern Review. Then, sensing the inevitability of war, he returned to Seattle in 1941 just five weeks before the attack on Pearl Harbor. When war came, Hosokawa served as executive director of Seattle JACL's Emergency Defense Council helping people in the community to cope. He and his family were removed to the Puyallup Assembly Center, Washington. When other Seattleites were moved to Minidoka concentration camp, Idaho, Hosokawa and his wife and infant son were sent to Heart Mountain, Wyoming. Later, he learned he had been separated from his Seattle friends because he was considered a potential troublemaker. He was in Heart Mountain for 14 months, working as editor of the camp newspaper, the Heart Mountain Sentinel, before being released to join the Des Moines, Iowa Register in 1943. In 1946 he moved to Denver to work on the Denver Post. In 38 years at The Post he held such assignments as executive news editor, assistant managing editor and Sunday editor. He covered the Japanese peace treaty in San Francisco in 1951, the Summit meeting in Paris in 1960 and the Zengakuren student riots in Japan that same year. He also had assignments as war correspondent in Korea and Vietnam, and for 17 years was editor of Empire, the Post's prize-winning Sunday magazine. For his last seven years at the Post Hosokawa was editor of the editorial page -- a Japanese American imprisoned during World War II as a potential security risk who now directed the opinion section of a major American newspaper. After retiring from the Post in 1984 he served the Rocky Mountain News as ombudsman columnist for seven years. Hosokawa has taught journalism classes at the University of Colorado, University of Northern Colorado and University of Wyoming. He wrote a weekly comment column called \\\"From the Frying Pan\\\" in JACL's weekly Pacific Citizen from 1942 until 1999. Among other honors, Hosokawa is a former president of the American Association of Sunday and Feature Editors and a member of that organization's Hall of Fame, a charter member of the Denver Press Club Hall of Fame. He was named JACL's Nisei of the Biennium in 1958, and has published 12 books. 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Born in Seattle on January 30, 1915, and attended Washington grade school, Garfield High School and the University of Washington. He grew up as a typical Nisei, working summers in Alaska salmon canneries and Western Avenue produce brokerages to pay for his education. He became interested in writing at Garfield where he was sports editor of the school paper. While attending the University he worked at the weekly Japanese American Courier published by the late Jimmie Sakamoto. A faculty adviser at the University urged Hosokawa to drop out of the journalism school \"because no newspaper in the country would hire a Japanese boy.\" Hosokawa rejected the advice, but when he graduated in 1937 he found the professor was right. After working as a male secretary writing letters, Hosokawa and his bride, the former Alice Miyake of Portland, Oregon, went to Singapore in 1938 to help launch an English language daily. A year and a half later Hosokawa moved to Shanghai to work on an American-owned monthly magazine, the Far Eastern Review. Then, sensing the inevitability of war, he returned to Seattle in 1941 just five weeks before the attack on Pearl Harbor. When war came, Hosokawa served as executive director of Seattle JACL's Emergency Defense Council helping people in the community to cope. He and his family were removed to the Puyallup Assembly Center, Washington. When other Seattleites were moved to Minidoka concentration camp, Idaho, Hosokawa and his wife and infant son were sent to Heart Mountain, Wyoming. Later, he learned he had been separated from his Seattle friends because he was considered a potential troublemaker. He was in Heart Mountain for 14 months, working as editor of the camp newspaper, the Heart Mountain Sentinel, before being released to join the Des Moines, Iowa Register in 1943. In 1946 he moved to Denver to work on the Denver Post. In 38 years at The Post he held such assignments as executive news editor, assistant managing editor and Sunday editor. He covered the Japanese peace treaty in San Francisco in 1951, the Summit meeting in Paris in 1960 and the Zengakuren student riots in Japan that same year. He also had assignments as war correspondent in Korea and Vietnam, and for 17 years was editor of Empire, the Post's prize-winning Sunday magazine. For his last seven years at the Post Hosokawa was editor of the editorial page -- a Japanese American imprisoned during World War II as a potential security risk who now directed the opinion section of a major American newspaper. After retiring from the Post in 1984 he served the Rocky Mountain News as ombudsman columnist for seven years. Hosokawa has taught journalism classes at the University of Colorado, University of Northern Colorado and University of Wyoming. He wrote a weekly comment column called \"From the Frying Pan\" in JACL's weekly Pacific Citizen from 1942 until 1999. Among other honors, Hosokawa is a former president of the American Association of Sunday and Feature Editors and a member of that organization's Hall of Fame, a charter member of the Denver Press Club Hall of Fame. He was named JACL's Nisei of the Biennium in 1958, and has published 12 books. 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