25 items
25 items
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Paul Satoh Interview (ddr-densho-1021-9)
Born in Osaka, Japan, in 1936, Paul Satoh spent a happy childhood as the only child of a chemist and a homemaker. Satoh's extended family included an uncle who had studied at the University of California, Los Angeles, and his wife, a US-born Nikkei from Hawai'i who occasionally had received a "care pack from the United …
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Paul Satoh Interview Segment 9 (ddr-densho-1021-9-9)
Description of uncle and aunt who were not affected by the bombing
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Paul Satoh Interview Segment 22 (ddr-densho-1021-9-22)
The work of the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission in Japan
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Paul Satoh Interview Segment 4 (ddr-densho-1021-9-4)
Joining family in Hiroshima just before the atomic bombing
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Paul Satoh Interview Segment 3 (ddr-densho-1021-9-3)
Memories of the war in Osaka: air raids, losing home
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Paul Satoh Interview Segment 6 (ddr-densho-1021-9-6)
A few memories of the atomic bomb: "a real big sound"
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Paul Satoh Interview Segment 17 (ddr-densho-1021-9-17)
Atomic bomb survivors groups in the United States
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Paul Satoh Interview Segment 15 (ddr-densho-1021-9-15)
Differences in Japanese and American ideologies
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Paul Satoh Interview Segment 5 (ddr-densho-1021-9-5)
Little discussion of the atomic bombing in the aftermath
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Paul Satoh Interview Segment 18 (ddr-densho-1021-9-18)
Lack of recognition of atomic bomb survivors by the U.S. government
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Paul Satoh Interview Segment 12 (ddr-densho-1021-9-12)
Not understanding the ramifications of the atomic bombing as a young person
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Paul Satoh Interview Segment 10 (ddr-densho-1021-9-10)
Hearing about the experiences of Japanese Americans during World War II
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Paul Satoh Interview Segment 21 (ddr-densho-1021-9-21)
Perspectives on the atomic bombing as a scientist
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Paul Satoh Interview Segment 14 (ddr-densho-1021-9-14)
Adjusting to life in the United States a graduate student
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Paul Satoh Interview Segment 13 (ddr-densho-1021-9-13)
Moving to the United States and getting married
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Paul Satoh Interview Segment 23 (ddr-densho-1021-9-23)
The importance of the atomic bombing to historians