28 research outputs found
The Price of Prejudice
When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor December 7,1941, about 127,000 persons of Japanese descent were living in the United States, of whom more than 112,000 were on the Pacific Coast. These could be conveniently divided into three groups: the Issei or immigrants born in Japan; the Nisei or American-born, American-educated children of the Issei;\u27 and the Kibei, who were born in America but received some of their education in Japan.
Permanently excluded from becoming American citizens by United States law, and seriously limited in their ability to acquire agricultural and residential property by alien land laws, the 40,000 Issei had nevertheless lived here for more than twenty-five years, had raised their children and achieved a recognized position in the retail and wholesale distribution of fruits and vegetables in California, and displayed every intention of remaining here with their children to live out their days in peace and comfort
Rebel of the Rockies: The Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad. By Robert G. Athearn. New Haven, Yale University Press, 1962. Pp. xv + 395. $10.00.
American Business History. By Louis Galambos. Washington, D.C.: American Historical Association, Service Center for Teachers of History, 1967. Pp. 32. $.50 (paperback).
Arrington, Leonard J. Review of A Mormon Chronicle ed. By Robert Glass Cleland and Juanita Brooks, 1956
Manuscript of Leonard J. Arrington's review of A Mormon Chronicle", 195
Arrington, Leonard J. "The Secularization of Mormon History and Culture", October 16, 1965
Manuscript of "The Secularization of Mormon History and Culture" by Leonard J. Arrington, dated October 16, 1965
National Educators' Workshop: Update 1998. Standard Experiments in Engineering, Materials Science, and Technology
This document contains a collection of experiments presented and demonstrated at the National Educators' Workshop: Update 98. held at Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, New York on November 1-4, 1998