427 research outputs found
Letter from Frank Sakae and Yasuko Fuchita to Kumataro and Kuni Fuchita, January 31, 1954
Letter from Frank Sakae and Yasuko Fuchita to Kuni and Kumataro Fuchita written on Japan Missionary College letterhead. They describe the growth of their daughter, Junko.The Akamine and Fuchita Family Papers include letters, certificates, photographs, scrapbooks, high school yearbooks, and other materials related to the Akamine, Fuchita, and Yasumura families. Subjects in the collection include the Manzanar and Rohwer incarceration camps, Koyasan Buddhist Temple, Buddhism, World War II, and Japanese American families, and other topics
Maeda, Yasuko
Passport photo of woman. Negative scan.In 1922, Kinso Ninomiya opened the Ninomiya Studio in Little Tokyo, Los Angeles. Due to Executive Order 9066 in 1942, the studio was forced to close but was reopened by Kinso and his son, Elwin Ichiro, in 1949. The studio operated in Little Tokyo until its final closing in 1986. The Ninomiya Studio Collection captures slices of Japanese American life in Los Angeles from the 1950s through the 1980s. The collection contains formal portraiture and candid photography in black and white and color as well as commercial photography for local businesses and reproductions of older photographs. The negatives come in a variety of sizes, including 8 x 10 inch negatives and panoramic negatives on Cirkut film. Each negative scanned has been selected out of multiple negatives and prints from a set. The title of the negative scan reflects the purchaser’s name
Individual income tax return, Form 1040, Yasuko K. Ikuma
Copy of the U.S. Individual Income Tax Return for Yasuko Ikuma for the calendar year 1947 prepared by Howard Y. Yamagata. Kameji's income was $1,237.70.Kameji Ikuma was born in Japan on October 17, 1887. He returned to Japan to marry Yasuno (later known as Yasuko) Ikuta, who was born on June 20, 1902. They had one child: Kazumi (later known as April), who was born on April 9, 1932. In the 1920s, Kameji established Tozai Dry Goods Store on 1214 Fourth Street in Sacramento. The Ikuma family was forced to evacuate to Walerga Assembly Center, Tule Lake, and Topaz. Upon resettlement in Sacramento, Kameji worked as a farm laborer and saved enough money to open Kay's Pool Hall in August 1947. Yasuno began working at Bercut-Richards and California Packing Corp. packing sheds as well as the Libby, McNeil & Libby cannery
Letter from Yasuko Hanami to Mr. [Yukio] Mochizuki, November 18, 1977
A very brief letter explaining that Mochizuki should contact Okinawa Kenjinkai in Los Angeles to get a list of Japanese in Peru.Collection of notes, articles, correspondence, photographs, and term papers collected by Yukio Mochizuki, a student at CSU Dominguez Hills, while researching Japanese American incarceration and Japanese Peruvian internment during World War II
ATF6alpha promotes astroglial activation and neuronal survival in a chronic mouse model of Parkinson's disease.
金沢大学博士(医学)博士論文本文Full 以下に掲載:PLOS ONE 7(10) pp.e47950-e47950 2012. Public Library of Science. 共著者: Koji Hashida, Yasuko Kitao, Hirofumi Sudo, Yoshitaka Awa, Shinichiro Maeda, Kazutoshi Mori, Ryosuke Takahashi, Munekazu Iinuma, Osamu Horidoctoral thesi
ATF6alpha promotes astroglial activation and neuronal survival in a chronic mouse model of Parkinson's disease.
博士論文本文Full 以下に掲載:PLOS ONE 7(10) pp.e47950-e47950 2012. Public Library of Science. 共著者: Koji Hashida, Yasuko Kitao, Hirofumi Sudo, Yoshitaka Awa, Shinichiro Maeda, Kazutoshi Mori, Ryosuke Takahashi, Munekazu Iinuma, Osamu Hor
Supplemental Material - Late-Life High Blood Pressure and Enlarged Perivascular Spaces in the Putaminal Regions of Community-Dwelling Japanese Older Persons (JPSC-AD)
Supplemental Material for Late-Life High Blood Pressure and Enlarged Perivascular Spaces in the Putaminal Regions of Community-Dwelling Japanese Older Persons (JPSC-AD) by Ayumi Tachibana, Jun-ichi Iga Yasuko Tatewaki, Benjamin Thyreau, Hongkun Chen, Tomoki Ozaki, Taku Yoshida, Yuta Yoshino, Hideaki Shimizu, Takaaki Mori, Yoshihiko Furuta, Mao Shibata, Tomoyuki Ohara, Jun Hata, Yasuyuki Taki, Shigeyuki Nakaji, Tetsuya Maeda, Kenjiro Ono, Masaru Mimura, Kenji Nakashima, Minoru Takebayashi, Toshiharu Ninomiya, and Shu-ichi Ueno for the JPSC-AD study group in Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neurology</p
sj-pdf-1-sri-10.1177_1553350621998871 – Supplemental Material for Patient-Reported Outcome Measures in Colorectal Surgery: Construction of Core Measures Using Open-Source Research Method
Supplemental Material, sj-pdf-1-sri-10.1177_1553350621998871 for Patient-Reported Outcome Measures in Colorectal Surgery: Construction of Core Measures Using Open-Source Research Method by Alaa El-Hussuna, Ines Rubio-Perez, Monica Millan, Gianluca Pellino, Ionut Negoi, Gaetano Gallo, Mostafa Shalaby, Valerio Celentano, Ryan Green, Ana Minaya-Bravo, Sameh Emile, Neil J. Smart, Yasuko Maeda, Srinivas J. Ivatury, Graham Mackenzie, Ali Yalçınkaya, Claudia Mellenthin, Nagendra N. Dudi-Venkata, Justin Davies, Angus McNair, Francesco Pata, Kasper Gymoese Berthelsen, David Rivadeneira, Antonino Spinelli, Pår Myrelid, Julio Mayol and Steven Wexner in Surgical Innovation</p
Perception and production of L2 prosody by Swedish learners - Summary and application to the teaching using Japanese and Chinese data
The present paper is about the perception and production of L2 prosody by Swedish learners with focus on L2 Chinese and Japanese by the author. It gives the summary of the author’s previous and ongoing studies on the topic as well as discussion and application to teaching. Swedish L2 prosody is characterized by the upward pitch movement, i.e. preference of F0 rise to F0 fall, preference of upstep to downstep, and lack of a sharp F0 fall in their production. Furthermore, the Swedish learners have a difficulty in distinguishing F0 rise from F0 fall in perception
Letter from Frank Sakae Fuchita to Kumataro and Kuni Fuchita, May 10
Letter from Frank Sakae and Yasuko Fuchita to Kuni and Kumataro Fuchita. Frank informs that he was assigned to a church in Sasebo, Kyushu and moved from Yokohama, stopping by Wakayama on the way. He describes their relatives in Wakayama and the town and his life in Sasebo. Yasuko writes about difficulties of her work and life.The Akamine and Fuchita Family Papers include letters, certificates, photographs, scrapbooks, high school yearbooks, and other materials related to the Akamine, Fuchita, and Yasumura families. Subjects in the collection include the Manzanar and Rohwer incarceration camps, Koyasan Buddhist Temple, Buddhism, World War II, and Japanese American families, and other topics
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