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    Letter from Harry and Yaso Ueno to Michi and Walter Weglyn, June 03, 1987

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    A letter from Harry and Yaso Ueno to Michi and Walter Weglyn in which the authors lament a United States Supreme Court and criticize Japanese American Citizens' League (JACL) leader Mike Masaoka.These materials are from box 73 and 74 of the Frank Chin Papers. The Frank Chin Papers contain personal and professional correspondence between Frank Chin and Michi Weglyn relating to particular projects on which either author was working as well as files related to the Day of Remembrance Tribute to Michi Weglyn

    Toshiya Eto becomes the foremost concert violinist in Japan

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    Toshiya Eto becomes the foremost concert violinist in Japan. Concert given as a student at Curtis Institute, Philadelphia, PA

    Ueno Park

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    上野の山の上である。 左手に見える建物は上野清水堂。On top of a mountain in Ueno. The building to the left is Shimizudo of Ueno

    Harry Ueno

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    Color photograph of Harry Ueno. Mr Ueno was a prisoner at the Moab Isolation Center and inspired LLoyd Pierson, to visit the Manzanar War Relocation Center in California for research

    Excerpt, Oral History Interview, Harry Ueno

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    Excerpt, summary, and index of an oral history interview of Harry Ueno. Interviewer unknown. Transcribed by Yi-Shen Loo.This oral history interview was conducted for the MIS Oral History Project by the Military Intelligence Service Association of Northern California, Inc. (MISNORCAL). This three-part project includes the MIS Biography Project and MIS Biographical Questionnaires; the MIS Oral History Project, which consists of audio-only oral history interviews conducted by the MIS Oral History Committee; and video interviews conducted by Sheryl Nakahara, Marsha Tagami, and Calvin Roberts. The project was originally created to capture the stories of the MIS veterans. Some of the footage was used in the documentary "Uncommon Courage" by gayle k. yamada. Ownership of the MIS Oral History Project was transferred to the National Japanese American Historical Society, Inc

    Ueno Park, Tokyo, Japan [002]

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    Photo shows some visitors at Ueno Park in Tokyo, JapanVisitors at Ueno Park Tokyo, Japan

    Interview with Emiko Matsuo Ueno

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    Emiko Matsuo, eldest of six children, was born to Umesuke and Masae Matsuo in 1926 in Hale‘iwa, O‘ahu, Hawai‘i. Her father, an immigrant from Yamaguchi-ken, Japan, graduated from high school in Japan and attended Hilo Boarding School where he acquired English-language skills. Her mother, a Hawai‘i-born nisei, attended sewing school and beauty school. Umesuke Matsuo was involved in sales and taught at the Hale‘iwa Jödo Mission Japaneselanguage School. Masae Matsuo did sewing and hairdressing as businesses. By 1932, the Matsuos had moved to Nïnole on the Big Island of Hawai‘i, where they hoped to teach and prosper at a newly-opened Japanese-language school. With a small population base, its inferior location, and a competing school, the prosperity they hoped for did not materialize. By summer 1941, the Matsuos moved and began teaching at another Big Island school in Waiäkea Uka. With the outbreak of war, Umesuke Matsuo was removed from his home, initially detained at Kīlauea Military Camp, and later sent to Sand Island Detention Center and various facilities on the U.S. Mainland. The Matsuos, without the economic support of their father, relied on welfare and income earned by Emiko. By late December 1942, the family, too, was being sent to the Mainland. The Matsuos were held at Jerome War Relocation Center in Arkansas. In 1944, Umesuke Matsuo who had been held in Montana, Texas and Louisiana rejoined his family. From Arkansas, because of Umesuke Matsuo’s expressed desire to return to Japan, they were sent to Tule Lake Segregation Center in California. From Tule Lake, with no intention of following her father’s plan, Emiko joined the Cadet Nurse Corps in Illinois. At war’s end, the family opted not to go to Japan. Instead, they returned to O‘ahu where Umesuke Matsuo eventually worked in maintenance at the Moana Hotel and Masae Matsuo worked in the linen room at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel. Emiko, now retired from nursing and federal civil service, resides on O‘ahu. She and Norman Ueno raised three children

    Ueno Park, Tokyo, Japan [001]

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    Photo shows a Japanese family at Ueno Park in Tokyo, Japan, during the Occupation period (1945-1952)At Ueno Park Occupation Period Tokyo, Japan

    The Ontology of Withdrawal (3) : The Vibrant Voices of Ambience Through ISHIMURE Michiko

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    application/pdfThis section addresses literary texts written by Michiko 石牟礼道子.In the first section (Ueno, 2018), I have already analyzed some passages by Jean Genet to articulate ontologically the notion of withdrawal in both things and humans. This section, with a similar intention, also explores Ishimure’s literary works from several perspectives. How does Ishimure’s ecocritical discourse contribute to the elaboration of ontology of withdrawal?departmental bulletin pape

    Visualisasi Business Model Canvas pada Ueno Coffee

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    Ueno Coffee adalah bisnis yang bergerak dibidang Food and Beverages (F&B) berupa kedai kopi. Ueno Coffee berdiri sejak tahun 2019 berawal dari daerah Madiun. Ueno Coffee memiliki konsep dan karakter Coffee shop yang berbeda dengan yang lain
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