36 items
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Report on Heart Mountain to Tule Lake transfer Sam Horino, leader of movement to challenge Selective Service for incarcerated Japanese Americans (ddr-csujad-2-45)
Informational report to Willard Schmidt about Sam Horino, an incarceree transferred from Heart Mountain Camp to Tule Lake Camp. Horino was accused of protesting the Selective Service program for incarcerated Japanese Americans and creating bulletins he posted throughout Heart Mountain Camp. See this object in the California State Universities Japanese American Digitization project site: sjs_sch_0045
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Copy of agenda for Fair Play Committee meeting (ddr-densho-122-830)
Re: status of committee and leaders, Okamoto and Horino, written by Minoru Minola Tamesa
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Letter to Frank Emi from Isamu (Sam) Horino (ddr-densho-122-464)
Re: ACLU denied access to speak to Horino
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Letter to Frank Emi from Isamu (Sam) Horino (ddr-densho-122-462)
re: requirement to report for pre-induction physical, with envelope
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Letter to Frank Emi from Isamu (Sam) Horino (ddr-densho-122-463)
re: Horino's hearing about refusal to report
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Letter to Frank Emi from Isamu (Sam) Horino (ddr-densho-122-466)
Re: Horino's desire to see the cases taken to the Supreme Court
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Letter to Frank Emi from Isamu (Sam) Horino (ddr-densho-122-467)
Re: overturning lower court decision on cases
Narrator Sam Horino
Nisei male. Born July 17, 1914, in Gardena, California. Passively resisted "evacuation" in 1942, forcing two soldiers to carry him out of his home. Incarcerated at Heart Mountain concentration camp, Wyoming, and became one of the steering committee leaders of the Fair Play Committee (FPC). Was tried along with the other FPC leaders and was convicted …
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Frank Emi Interview Segment 15 (ddr-densho-1002-9-15)
Description of trial: found guilty and sent to jail
This interview was conducted by sisters Emiko and Chizuko Omori for their 1999 documentary, Rabbit in the Moon, about the Japanese American resisters of conscience in the World War II incarceration camps. As a result, the interviews in this collection are typically not life histories, instead …
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