5,328 research outputs found

    Letter from Rev. Fred Fertig, August 1, 1942

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    Typed correspondence from Rev. Fred Fertig providing a character reference for Japanese Americans at the Santa Anita Assembly Center.The Bishop James Chamberlain Baker Collection includes letters, documents, and articles about Japanese Americans during World War II. Subjects in the collection include Japanese Americans mass removal, Pearl Harbor and the aftermath, religion, and support from the non-Japanese American community. The collection was digitized and made accessible online by CSUDH Gerth Archives and Special Collections

    Citizens behind barbed wire; New Caledonia: a French Australia; Records; Letters to the Editor

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    Pages 649-666 from "The Nation." Articles include "Citizens Behind Barbed Wire" by Charles Inglehart, "New Caledonia: A French Australia" by Ida Treat, "Records" by B. H. Haggin, and "Letters to the Editors."The Bishop James Chamberlain Baker Collection includes letters, documents, and articles about Japanese Americans during World War II. Subjects in the collection include Japanese Americans mass removal, Pearl Harbor and the aftermath, religion, and support from the non-Japanese American community. The collection was digitized and made accessible online by CSUDH Gerth Archives and Special Collections

    Letter from Frank G. Muench, May 25, 1942

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    Annotated form letter from Frank G. Muench regarding the fact that Lincoln Christian Center in Sacramento, California helped their Japanese friends move safely to Walerga camp [= Sacramento Assembly Center] about 10 miles from Sacramento.The Japanese American Archival Collection documents the people, places, and daily life of Japanese Americans, primarily those who lived in the once thriving community of pre-war Florin in the Sacramento region, as well as the conditions in American incarceration camps during World War II. The approximately 7,000 original items include personal and official letters, photographs, diaries, arts and crafts, newsletters, textiles, camps artifacts, yearbooks and other publications

    Postcard from Kantaro and Chiyo Matsubara, March

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    A postcard from Kantaro and Chiyo Matsubara. It reported that they arrived at Narita Airport on March 15, safely returning from a trip to U.S. "生長の家 = Seicho no Ie."The Fuchita Family Collection contains one photograph album with newspaper clippings compiled by Kuni Yasumura Fuchita. Subjects include the Manzanar incarceration camp, Buddhism, the Koyasan Buddhist Temple, Ikebanas, Japan, and Japanese Americans. Credit line: Japanese American National Museum (Gift of Lynn T. Akamine, 2005.163.25). The collection was digitized and made accessible online by CSUDH Gerth Archives and Special Collections

    Excerpt from broadcast by Larry Smith

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    Broadcast excerpt from Larry Smith, Station KFI, discussing Japanese American's loyalty to the United States.The Bishop James Chamberlain Baker Collection includes letters, documents, and articles about Japanese Americans during World War II. Subjects in the collection include Japanese Americans mass removal, Pearl Harbor and the aftermath, religion, and support from the non-Japanese American community. The collection was digitized and made accessible online by CSUDH Gerth Archives and Special Collections

    Japanese displacement

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    Article written by Thomas R. Bodine about Japanese American incarceration, incarceration camps, and race and racism.The Bishop James Chamberlain Baker Collection includes letters, documents, and articles about Japanese Americans during World War II. Subjects in the collection include Japanese Americans mass removal, Pearl Harbor and the aftermath, religion, and support from the non-Japanese American community. The collection was digitized and made accessible online by CSUDH Gerth Archives and Special Collections

    Gerth\u27s heuristics for a family of quadratic extensions of certain Galois number fields

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    Gerth generalised Cohen-Lenstra heuristics to the prime p=2p=2. He conjectured that for any positive integer mm, the limit \lim_{x \to \infty} \frac{\sum_{0 < D \le X, \atop{ \text{squarefree} }} |{\rm Cl}^2_{\Q(\sqrt{D})}/{\rm Cl}^4_{\Q(\sqrt{D})}|^m}{\sum_{0 < D \le X, \atop{ \text{squarefree} }} 1} exists and proposed a value for the limit. Gerth\u27s conjecture was proved by Fouvry and Kluners in 2007. In this paper, we generalize their result by obtaining lower bounds for the average value of ClŁ2/ClŁ4m|{\rm Cl}^2_Ł/{\rm Cl}^4_Ł|^m, where ŁŁ varies over an infinite family of quadratic extensions of certain Galois number fields. As a special case of our theorem, we obtain lower bounds for the average value when the base field is any Galois number field with class number 11 in which 2Z2\Z splits

    Letter from Lorne W. Bell to Bishop James Chamberlain Baker, May 31, 1943

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    Typed correspondence from Lorne W. Bell, Chief Community Services Division, to Bishop James Chamberlain Baker discussing the reasoning for Rev. Mr. Goto leave from the Center.The Bishop James Chamberlain Baker Collection includes letters, documents, and articles about Japanese Americans during World War II. Subjects in the collection include Japanese Americans mass removal, Pearl Harbor and the aftermath, religion, and support from the non-Japanese American community. The collection was digitized and made accessible online by CSUDH Gerth Archives and Special Collections

    Some suggestions for resolutions on minority problems, especially those connected with the Japanese evacuees with notes embodying pertinent and dependable facts

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    Document with facts and suggestions about Japanese American incarceration and the War Relocation Authority. Included are excerpts from the Baltimore Sun newspaper dated April 26, 1943, and an address from former Ambassador Grew dated April 26, 1943.The Bishop James Chamberlain Baker Collection includes letters, documents, and articles about Japanese Americans during World War II. Subjects in the collection include Japanese Americans mass removal, Pearl Harbor and the aftermath, religion, and support from the non-Japanese American community. The collection was digitized and made accessible online by CSUDH Gerth Archives and Special Collections

    Asiatic exclusion: work begins on bill which would let Japanese become U.S. citizens; An end to racial exclusion; Supervisors back Japanese citizenship bill

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    Copied articles from the San Francisco chronicle: the city's only home owned newspaper editorial page. Articles include: An End to Racial Exclusion, Asiatic Exclusion Work Begins on Bill Which Would Let Japanese Become U.S. Citizens, and Supervisors Back Japanese Citizenship Bill.The Bishop James Chamberlain Baker Collection includes letters, documents, and articles about Japanese Americans during World War II. Subjects in the collection include Japanese Americans mass removal, Pearl Harbor and the aftermath, religion, and support from the non-Japanese American community. The collection was digitized and made accessible online by CSUDH Gerth Archives and Special Collections
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