1,381,967 research outputs found

    Letter from Eiko Fujii to Fred S. Farr, 1942

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    Letter from Eiko Fujii to Fred S. Farr written from Jerome incarceration camp, mentioning responses to newspaper articles covering Japanese American incarceration, anti-Japanese racism among white people in Arkansas, the shooting of a Japanese American Soldier by a white man, and food poisoning.The collection contains seven letters to Farr from Japanese American friends from California incarcerated during World War II. Most of the letters are from Eiko Fujii, beginning shortly after her arrival at Santa Anita Assembly Center in 1942, continuing through her transfer to Denson, Ark., at Jerome incarceration camp, and ending after she left the camps and held a teaching position the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. The letters discuss daily life in the camps and her family's physical, psychological, and emotional adjustment to life there; as well as references to Farr's personal and professional life. Also included are photographs collected by Fred S. Farr, depicting Japanese Americans traveling by train and an unidentified incarceration camp

    Letter from Eiko Fujii to Fred S. Farr, February 16, 1943

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    Letter from Eiko Fujii to Fred S. Farr written from Jerome incarceration camp, referencing a separate letter (chs_685_008) which Fujii says she had hesitated to send.The collection contains seven letters to Farr from Japanese American friends from California incarcerated during World War II. Most of the letters are from Eiko Fujii, beginning shortly after her arrival at Santa Anita Assembly Center in 1942, continuing through her transfer to Denson, Ark., at Jerome incarceration camp, and ending after she left the camps and held a teaching position the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. The letters discuss daily life in the camps and her family's physical, psychological, and emotional adjustment to life there; as well as references to Farr's personal and professional life. Also included are photographs collected by Fred S. Farr, depicting Japanese Americans traveling by train and an unidentified incarceration camp

    Letter from Eiko Fujii to Fred S. Farr, June 15, 1942

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    Letter from Eiko Fujii to Fred S. Farr written from Santa Anita Assembly Center, describing arrival and adjustment to life inside the camp. Fujii mentions washing, typhoid shots, children, meals, church services, work.The collection contains seven letters to Farr from Japanese American friends from California incarcerated during World War II. Most of the letters are from Eiko Fujii, beginning shortly after her arrival at Santa Anita Assembly Center in 1942, continuing through her transfer to Denson, Ark., at Jerome incarceration camp, and ending after she left the camps and held a teaching position the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. The letters discuss daily life in the camps and her family's physical, psychological, and emotional adjustment to life there; as well as references to Farr's personal and professional life. Also included are photographs collected by Fred S. Farr, depicting Japanese Americans traveling by train and an unidentified incarceration camp

    Letter from Eiko Fujii to Fred S. Farr, August 24, 1942

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    Letter from Eiko Fujii to Fred S. Farr written from Santa Anita Assembly Center, describing life inside the camp. Fujii mentions Farr's recent promotion, voting rights, housing in the stables and barracks, illness caused by living in stables, children, food, work and pay. She writes about poor media coverage of a "disturbance," and a camouflage strike.The collection contains seven letters to Farr from Japanese American friends from California incarcerated during World War II. Most of the letters are from Eiko Fujii, beginning shortly after her arrival at Santa Anita Assembly Center in 1942, continuing through her transfer to Denson, Ark., at Jerome incarceration camp, and ending after she left the camps and held a teaching position the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. The letters discuss daily life in the camps and her family's physical, psychological, and emotional adjustment to life there; as well as references to Farr's personal and professional life. Also included are photographs collected by Fred S. Farr, depicting Japanese Americans traveling by train and an unidentified incarceration camp

    Typed Transcript of Letter to Tomoyoshi Fujii, Handwritten Letters from Katherine Komae Fujii to Yost

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    Correspondence between Tomoyoshi Fujii, Katherine Komae Fujii, and Yost regarding the death of Yutaka Fuji

    Letter from Eiko Fujii to Fred S. Farr, February 3, 1943

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    Letter from Eiko Fujii to Fred S. Farr written from Jerome incarceration camp, responding to questions from an earlier letter from Farr. Fujii discusses Issei and Nisei national allegiance, the quality of education at Jerome, the U.S. military's establishment of an all-Nisei combat troop, and discriminatory restrictions on work, travel, and residence options for Japanese Americans.The collection contains seven letters to Farr from Japanese American friends from California incarcerated during World War II. Most of the letters are from Eiko Fujii, beginning shortly after her arrival at Santa Anita Assembly Center in 1942, continuing through her transfer to Denson, Ark., at Jerome incarceration camp, and ending after she left the camps and held a teaching position the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. The letters discuss daily life in the camps and her family's physical, psychological, and emotional adjustment to life there; as well as references to Farr's personal and professional life. Also included are photographs collected by Fred S. Farr, depicting Japanese Americans traveling by train and an unidentified incarceration camp

    Letter from Eiko Fujii to Fred S. Farr, November 16, 1942

    No full text
    Letter from Eiko Fujii to Fred S. Farr written from Jerome incarceration camp, describing transfer from Santa Anita Assembly Center to Jerome. Fujii writes about racism among whites in Arkansas, incomplete construction in the camp, and ordering furniture from Sears and Montgomery Ward. She writes about the lack of fresh vegetables and fruits, and sends updates about friends and family, some of whom were transferred to Jerome from Santa Anita, and some to other camps.The collection contains seven letters to Farr from Japanese American friends from California incarcerated during World War II. Most of the letters are from Eiko Fujii, beginning shortly after her arrival at Santa Anita Assembly Center in 1942, continuing through her transfer to Denson, Ark., at Jerome incarceration camp, and ending after she left the camps and held a teaching position the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. The letters discuss daily life in the camps and her family's physical, psychological, and emotional adjustment to life there; as well as references to Farr's personal and professional life. Also included are photographs collected by Fred S. Farr, depicting Japanese Americans traveling by train and an unidentified incarceration camp

    Letter from Eiko Fujii to Fred S. Farr, September 4, 1943

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    Letter from Eiko Fujii to Fred S. Farr, written three months after moving to Ann Arbor Michigan. Fujii writes about her job at the University of Michigan, the lack of night life and vice in Ann Arbor, the cost of housing that prevents her from moving her parents from Jerome Incarceration Camp, and the value she places on her own freedom.The collection contains seven letters to Farr from Japanese American friends from California incarcerated during World War II. Most of the letters are from Eiko Fujii, beginning shortly after her arrival at Santa Anita Assembly Center in 1942, continuing through her transfer to Denson, Ark., at Jerome incarceration camp, and ending after she left the camps and held a teaching position the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. The letters discuss daily life in the camps and her family's physical, psychological, and emotional adjustment to life there; as well as references to Farr's personal and professional life. Also included are photographs collected by Fred S. Farr, depicting Japanese Americans traveling by train and an unidentified incarceration camp

    Evolution of Accounting Standards, Why and How? : An Institutional Perspective

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    This paper is a revised edition of Chapter 7 of 'Accounting in the Era of Institutional Change', 2007, Chuokeizai Publisher (in Japanese), and “An Institutional Theory Perspective on Accounting Evolution: Rulemakers’ Belief and Empirical Evidence, ” in D. Bensadon and N. Praquin (eds.), IFRS in a Global Wold: International and Critical Perspectives on Accounting, 2016, Springer, pp.41-56. It contains a lot of additional analyses and discussions on the original.本編は、藤井秀樹『制度変化の会計学 : 会計基準のコンバージェンスを見すえて』第7章 (中央経済社, 2007) および Hideki Fujii “An Institutional Theory Perspective on Accounting Evolution: Rulemakers’ Belief and Empirical Evidence, ” in D. Bensadon and N. Praquin (eds.), IFRS in a Global Wold: International and Critical Perspectives on Accounting, 2016, Springer, pp.41-56 に加筆訂正を加えた改訂版である

    Letter from Y. Fujii to Mr. and Mrs. S. Okine, May 24, 1947 [in Japanese]

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    A letter from Yosokichi Fujii, a former incarceree in the Heart Mountain incarceration camp, Wyoming, to Seiichi and Tomeyo Okine. He gives an update of his life after leaving the camp in September 1945 and resettling in Nyssa, Oregon until May 1946. He currently works in Penryn, California in fruit production following his friends' suggestion. He intended to go back to Oregon, but has stayed in California. Fujii’s first son and fourth son, Katsumi, in Oregon will join him in California in August or September. They plan to start a new business together. He states that he is not going back to Japan in the future and has decided to stay in the U.S. The backside of the envelope includes the handwritten notes in Japanese.The Okine Collection contains materials collected by Seiichi and Tomeyo Okine who were Issei flower growers in Whittier, California. It includes correspondence, photographs, financial documents, and a photo album. A large portion of the collection consists of family correspondence with Seiichi and Tomeyo Okine, including letters from their Nisei children, Masao and Makoto Okine, both soldiers overseas during World War II, to their Issei parents incarcerated in the Rohwer incarceration camp in McGehee, Arkansas. The correspondence also includes letters from their relatives and friends who are former incarcerees in the camps during the war and have “resettled” in Chicago, Illinois as well as letters from the Okines’ family members in Hiroshima, Japan during the Allied occupation of Japan. In addition, the collection includes a family photo album compiled by Dorothy Ai Aoki, a Nisei daughter to the Okines
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