1252 items
1252 items
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Mary Okazaki Kozu Interview Segment 9 (ddr-densho-1000-511-9)
Being the youngest of seven children
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Mary Okazaki Kozu Interview Segment 7 (ddr-densho-1000-511-7)
Memories of living in family's prewar boarding house
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Mary Okazaki Kozu Interview Segment 21 (ddr-densho-1000-511-21)
Attending college, meeting future husband and getting married
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Stanley N. Shikuma Interview II Segment 13 (ddr-densho-1000-520-13)
Activist activities and the formation of Tsuru for Solidarity
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Stanley N. Shikuma Interview II Segment 7 (ddr-densho-1000-520-7)
Mako Nakagawa and the Power of Words
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Stanley N. Shikuma Interview II Segment 5 (ddr-densho-1000-520-5)
Taiko's connection to Japanese Americans
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Stanley N. Shikuma Interview II Segment 4 (ddr-densho-1000-520-4)
Expression of taiko as an art form
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Stanley N. Shikuma Interview II Segment 9 (ddr-densho-1000-520-9)
Evolving themes of the Tule Lake pilgrimages
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Stanley N. Shikuma Interview II Segment 6 (ddr-densho-1000-520-6)
Joining the Seattle chapter of the Japanese American Citizens League
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Stanley N. Shikuma Interview II Segment 11 (ddr-densho-1000-520-11)
Helping create From Hiroshima to Hope
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Stanley N. Shikuma Interview II Segment 10 (ddr-densho-1000-520-10)
Getting involved with the Seattle Nisei Veterans Committee
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Stanley N. Shikuma Interview II Segment 8 (ddr-densho-1000-520-8)
Involvement with the Tule Lake Committee
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Stanley N. Shikuma Interview II Segment 2 (ddr-densho-1000-520-2)
Receiving help during the war from an Italian family friend
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Stanley N. Shikuma Interview II Segment 15 (ddr-densho-1000-520-15)
Considering the concept of intergenerational trauma
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Stanley N. Shikuma Interview II Segment 1 (ddr-densho-1000-520-1)
A frightening incident in the community right after World War II
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Stanley N. Shikuma Interview II Segment 16 (ddr-densho-1000-520-16)
Harmful effects of the "model minority" myth
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Stanley N. Shikuma Interview II Segment 12 (ddr-densho-1000-520-12)
Work with the Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance (APALA)
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Stanley N. Shikuma Interview II Segment 14 (ddr-densho-1000-520-14)
Influence of upbringing on life of activism
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Pacific Citizen, Vol. 52, No. 6 (February 10, 1961) (ddr-pc-33-6)
Selected article titles: "Colorado Aliens Barred From Work at Bars: Or in Any Place Licensed to Sell Liquor, Says Yasui" (p. 1), "Nisei Acceptance Not Permanent, Enomoto Tells Sacramento JACL" (p. 2), and "Five Chapters Reach All-Time High Membership: First Official 1961 Report Shows National Total of 6,125 CLers" (p. 4).
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Japanese home (ddr-densho-259-359)
Caption by Homer Yasui: "A very substantial Japanese house There are cylindrical bales wrapped in rice straw, and they must surely contain rice, because that's the way they did it in the old days. This picture may very well have been taken somewhere in rural Japan at around the turn of the century."
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Family portrait of Issei and Nisei (ddr-densho-259-371)
Caption by Homer Yasui: "Family portrait of the Karasawa family. Some time in the late 19 teens, the Karasawa family moved to Hood River, where they opened a laundry, on Oak Street, I think. They were one of the few Japanese families who lived permanently in town, although there had been other sojourners."