531 items
531 items
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[Seiichi Okine] (ddr-csujad-5-317)
Photographed is Seiichi Okine standing in front of the family's car which was purchased before the forced removal and incarceration. A photograph from "Dorothy Ai Aoki photo album" (csudh_oki_0300), page 4. See this object in the California State Universities Japanese American Digitization project site: oki_08_004_002a
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Okine's mother (ddr-csujad-5-307)
Photographed is Tomeyo Okine. The handwritten notes on the backside read: Whittier obachan [= Whittier's grandmother], Okine's mother [in Japanese]. A photograph from "Dorothy Ai Aoki photo album" (csudh_oki_0300), page 1. See this object in the California State Universities Japanese American Digitization project site: oki_08_001_001
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[Group photo by the river] (ddr-csujad-56-232)
Natsuki, Dorothy, a non-incarceree woman, and Chiyoko stand in line in front of the Arkansas River near Camp Amache. Page 18 of Kawase Family Photo Album, Book Two. See this object in the California State Universities Japanese American Digitization project site: nbea08-03-041
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[Book signing line] (ddr-csujad-29-291)
Photograph titled: "The Capitol Hill hotel: Goji Tashiro (partly hidden), Dorothy Takahama, several unidentified friends, Yuriko Hohri (holding book), Greg Gundlach (background), Walter Weglyn, Benjamin Zelenko, and Hannah Holmes." See this object in the California State Universities Japanese American Digitization project site: P234
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Letter from Paul Suddes, Deputy Administrator for Redress, Office of Redress Administration to Dorothy Nakamura, October 12, 1990 (ddr-csujad-55-2083)
Correspondence from Paul Suddes to Dorothy Nakamura regarding Nakamura's eligibility for restitution payments as a non-Japanese individual who chose to accompany her spouse to an incarceration camp during World War II. See this object in the California State Universities Japanese American Digitization project site: sac_jaac_2186
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1937 January class (ddr-csujad-55-2265)
Black and white portrait photograph of a group of young women. Most names on verso are cut off, legible names include: Garfunkle, Gloria Barros, Shizuko Koyama, Dorothy Murakami, and Sachiko Higoshi. See this object in the California State Universities Japanese American Digitization project site: sac_jaac_2369
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Letter from E.R. Fryer, Regional Director, War Relocation Authority, to Mrs. George Nakamura, September 8, 1942 (ddr-csujad-55-2122)
Correspondence from E.R. Fryer to Dorothy Nakamura regarding Nakamura's request for her family to return to their home in Military Area No. 1 due to their status as a mixed-marriage family. See this object in the California State Universities Japanese American Digitization project site: sac_jaac_2225
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Letter from Tami (Tomoye) Takahashi to Aki, Fumi, Eiichi, Martha, Dorothy, Jim, Masaji Joe Wayne (ddr-densho-422-156)
Personal letter describing her trip, trouble adapting to the time change, different people she has seen.
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Letter to Dorothy Takechi from Florence Hellman regarding Tolan Committee report and other secondary sources (ddr-densho-356-835)
Letter to Dorothy Takechi, Chairman of the Amache Young Women's Christian Association from Florence Hellman, Chief Bibliography and Librarian at the Library of Congress. The letter is in response to an inquiry about procuring copy(s) of the Tolan Committee report(s). The letter provides full titles and pricing for copies of the hearings and reports and provides …
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James T. Johnston - William R. Johnston - Dorothy J. Whitlock Interview Segment 24 (ddr-manz-1-142-24)
Dorothy's postwar life and teaching career
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James T. Johnston - William R. Johnston - Dorothy J. Whitlock Interview Segment 27 (ddr-manz-1-142-27)
Rosalie Gould's connection to Rohwer
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James T. Johnston - William R. Johnston - Dorothy J. Whitlock Interview Segment 11 (ddr-manz-1-142-11)
Discussion of the quality of teachers and education in camp
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James T. Johnston - William R. Johnston - Dorothy J. Whitlock Interview Segment 6 (ddr-manz-1-142-6)
Living conditions at the Rohwer concentration camp
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James T. Johnston - William R. Johnston - Dorothy J. Whitlock Interview Segment 26 (ddr-manz-1-142-26)
Description of several people who owned land near the Rohwer camp
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James T. Johnston - William R. Johnston - Dorothy J. Whitlock Interview Segment 7 (ddr-manz-1-142-7)
Mother's attempt to bring Japanese American women out of the camp into the local community
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James T. Johnston - William R. Johnston - Dorothy J. Whitlock Interview Segment 12 (ddr-manz-1-142-12)
Japanese Americans' coping mechanisms in camp
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James T. Johnston - William R. Johnston - Dorothy J. Whitlock Interview Segment 3 (ddr-manz-1-142-3)
Attending elementary school in Dyess, Arkansas
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James T. Johnston - William R. Johnston - Dorothy J. Whitlock Interview Segment 15 (ddr-manz-1-142-15)
Remembering Japanese American and non-Japanese American peers in camp
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James T. Johnston - William R. Johnston - Dorothy J. Whitlock Interview Segment 8 (ddr-manz-1-142-8)
Youngest sibling, James's, camp experiences
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James T. Johnston - William R. Johnston - Dorothy J. Whitlock Interview Segment 17 (ddr-manz-1-142-17)
Returning to Rohwer camp site after the war
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James T. Johnston - William R. Johnston - Dorothy J. Whitlock Interview Segment 14 (ddr-manz-1-142-14)
Childhood memories of recreational activities
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James T. Johnston - William R. Johnston - Dorothy J. Whitlock Interview Segment 23 (ddr-manz-1-142-23)
William's postwar life experiences
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James T. Johnston - William R. Johnston - Dorothy J. Whitlock Interview Segment 1 (ddr-manz-1-142-1)
Description of parents and grandparents
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James T. Johnston - William R. Johnston - Dorothy J. Whitlock Interview Segment 22 (ddr-manz-1-142-22)
A special employee at James's dental practice