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Fujino Yoshida Biography, n.d. [1942]
Fujino
My Biography
My name is Fujino Yoshida. I was born at Stockton in 1931.My grandfather dies in July and I was born the next month, August 15. I did not get to see my grandfather. But I have a grandmother living with us now. She is 61 years old and her name is Tara. She is the mother of my father. My father is 37 or 38 years old and his name is Shokuro. My mother is the same age as my father and her name is Tsuneyo. When I was 2 or 3 years old my ear was very bad. I was sent to a hospital in Stockton. The doctor said I must stay in the hospital and operate my ear. So I stayed in around half a year. Then around 9 years old I cut my tonsils. At that time I was still living in the same house even now. When I grow up I want to sing in the record.https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/sprague/1015/thumbnail.jp
Yuriko Kuronuma, violín (Japón)
Concierto interpretado por Yuriko Kuronuma acompañada en el piano de Harold Martina. Kuronuma inició sus estudios en la Academia de Música Toho. En 1956 ganó el primer premio en los concursos más importantes de su país natal. En Europa tomó clases particulares con David Oistrakj y Henryk Szeryng y se graduó en la Academia ele Artes Musicales de Praga con la alta distinción “magna cum laude” ha actuado, no solo en Japón, Europa y Estados Unidos, sino también en Israel, la Unión Soviética, sudeste de Asia y el continente americano.
En este concierto interpretó obras de W. A. Mozart, Leos Janacek, Hikaru Hayashi, O. Mesiaen y S. Prokofiev
Fujino Yoshida Poem Moving Away , April 22, 1942
1942 Moving Away Created by Fujino Yoshida 6th grade, French Camp School-Apr. [April] 22, 1942 We will have to move away, To the Japanese camp they all say, Still I will always do my part, By buying defense stamps with all my heart.https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/sprague/1016/thumbnail.jp
Oral history interview with Yuriko Furubayashi, 2013 June 21
Yuriko Furubayashi was born in 1927 in Waimea, Hawaii, as one of the ten children of the family. Her father had come to Hawaii from Hiroshima in the mid-1910s as a contract worker on a pineapple plantation. He grew vegetables and kept chickens around the house to help feed the family. Her mother cooked Japanese food only in part because meat was hard to come by. Many of their co-workers on the plantation were Japanese, and Yuriko used to go to the after-school school at Hongan-ji with these co-workers' children. Her peers at the public school included Filipinos, Chinese, Polynesians, Portuguese, and Haoles. When she was ten years old, her uncle and aunt in Los Angeles, who had been successful owners of Olympic Hotel, took her to Japan. They were childless, so their plan was to make Yuriko the family's heir. Yuriko quickly adjusted to the life in Japan and graduated from high school. She was working in an airplane factory when the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. Although she was not injured, she was irradiated because she walked through the city on the day after to look for her aunt and uncle. The entire city was still on fire. She saw many corpses and people with severe nuclear burns. She lost one of her uncles to the bomb. She also visited her friend working at an orphanage, and was struck by how many children had lost their parents to the bomb. In 1948, she went to Hawaii to see her parents, thanks to the arrangement made by her brother who had come to Japan as part of the U.S. occupation force. She decided that she did not want to go back to Hiroshima where memories of the destruction "depressed" her. She studied to regain her English and worked at her sister's bakery near Kahoku. She married a baker, and they became successful owners of another bakery named after their oldest son. Yuriko was somewhat worried about radiation effect when she was pregnant with her first child. She gained hibakusha techo\u304 (certificate of survivorhood) issued by the Japanese government in the 1960s. She also regularly attends the biannual health checkups conducted by Japanese physicians for American survivors
Filmmaker Shinpei Takeda interviews Yuriko Kelly, a survivor of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki in 1945
Yuriko Kelly describes being on a train at the time of the Nagasaki bomb blast and feeling the "hot air" from the explosion. She also describes seeing the injured coming onto the train
Excerpt, Oral History Interview, Yuriko Amemiya Kikuchi
Excerpt, summary, and index of an oral history interview of Yuriko Amemiya Kikuchi. Conducted on February 7, 1989, in Berkeley, CA. Interviewer and transcriber unknown.This oral history interview was conducted to collect background information and exhibition quotes for the Strength and Diversity: Japanese American Women, 1885 - 1990 exhibition, which launched at the Oakland Museum of California in 1990. The exhibition was created in a partnership between the National Japanese Amerian Historical Society, the Oakland Museum of California, and the Women's Exhibition Committee, a group led by Anne Saito Howden, Chizu Iiyama, and Alice Nakahata. The book Japanese American Women: Three Generations, 1890 - 1990 by Mei Nakano also coincided with the launch of the exhibition and incorporates information from this oral history project
Halocaridinides Fujino & Shokita 1975
Genus Halocaridinides Fujino & Shokita, 1975 Halocaridinides Fujino & Shokita, 1975: 106. Palauatya Hart, 1980: 481. Amended definition. Rostrum unarmed. Supraorbital, antennal and pterygostomian spines absent. Telson broad, with two pairs of dorsal spines. Eyes reduced. Carpus of first two pereiopods excavated anteriorly. Palm of chelipeds distinct. Exopods absent from all pereiopods. Epipods on first three pereiopods. Pleurobranchs on first four pereiopods. First male pleopod without appendix interna. Uropodal exopod ending in a tooth. Diaeresis with one to several movable spines. Type species. Halocaridina (Halocaridinides) trigonophthalma Fujino & Shokita, 1975. Remarks. As there is no concensus on the delimitation of subfamilies within the Atyidae, subdivision has been abandoned (De Grave et al. 2009, De Grave & Fransen 2011). Von Rintelen et al. (2012) did not recover these subfamilies in their phylogeny of atyid genera. Instead of using subfamilies they recognized five groups of genera based on their phylogenetic reconstruction. The anchialine Typhlatya group comprises Halocaridinides, Halocaridina Holthuis, 1963, Typhlatya Creaser, 1936, Stygiocaris Holthuis, 1960 and Antecaridina Edmondson, 1954.Published as part of Fransen, Charles H. J. M. & Damme, K. Van, 2018, A new stygobiont species of Halocaridinides Fujino & Shokita, 1975 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Caridea, Atyidae) from caves on Socotra Island (Yemen), with notes on the genus, pp. 241-261 in Zootaxa 4442 (2) on page 243, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4442.2.3, http://zenodo.org/record/130308
Letter from Fujino Yoshida to Claire D. Sprauge, May 15, 1942
May 15, 1942
Dear Mrs. Sprague,
I received your postcard few days ago but I wasn’t able to write because I got a shock [shot] in my arm that day and it sure hurted. I’m sorry I didn’t answer your postcard. It was my 2nd shock. I’ll have to do it again next week. When I received your postcard I was very glad to hear from you. It is very lonely out here because my classmates aren\u27t here. I’m also lonely because you aren\u27t here, too. Are you still trying to do the dance? Well I’ll stop now.
Goodbye.
Truly yours
Fujino Yoshida
Blk. 17. Brk. 6-Unit 5
Turlock Assembly Center
Turlock, Calif. [California]
P.S. Will you please give these letters to the person that its addressed to.https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/sprague/1014/thumbnail.jp
Photograph, Anna Mae Fujino
Photograph of Anna Mae Fujino, printed for Far East Magazine. 1 page, single sided. Cardstock, ink.David C. Moore was an administrator at Poston. Collected by David C. Moore at Poston
Onycocaris spinosa Fujino & Miyake 1969
Onycocaris spinosa Fujino & Miyake, 1969 Onycocaris spinosa Fujino & Miyake, 1969: 429–435, figs. 13–15. — Bruce, 1985: 9–10, fig. 7. — Bruce,1990: 11. — Davie, 2002: 316. Material examined. 1 ♂, 1 ov. ♀, Heron Island reef, north-eastern side, stn HI09–064C, 23.42996°S 151.95050°E, 4–5m, 20 November 2009, coll. N.L. Bruce & K. Schnabel, QM W 31913. 1 ♀,. Heron Island reef, north-eastern side, stn HI09–076C, 23°25.990’S 151°55.601’E, 10m, 22 November 2009, dead coral heads, coll. N. Bruce & K. Schnabel, QM W31920. Diagnosis. Rostrum very short, unarmed, second pereiopod merus with ventral margin with several small stout acute teeth, ischium with strong acute distoventral tooth, ventral margin with several small stout acute teeth; ambulatory dactyl corpus with large bicuspid distoventral tooth, cusps acute, ventral margin with several small acute denticles. Host. Not recorded. Distribution. Previously reported from Heron Island by Bruce (1969). Otherwise known only from the Ryukyu Islands (Fujino & Miyake, 1969; Bruce, 1985). Remarks. The pair of specimens are in good condition, intact, the single specimen is badly damaged, but with both second pereiopods. The specimens were collected from dead coral heads, presumably from associated encrusting sponges, and were found with numerous Saron, porcellanids,? Microprosthema sp and other species.Published as part of Bruce, A. J., 2010, More pontoniine shrimps (Crustacea: Decapoda: Palaemonidae) from the CReefs 2009 Heron Island expedition, pp. 20-36 in Zootaxa 2604 (1) on pages 20-21, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.2541.1.3, http://zenodo.org/record/530266
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