Box 8
Contains 8 Results:
Beginners’ Dictionary of Chinese-Japanese Characters and Compounds, undated
Collection contains Japanese-English dictionaries that were used when Shunichi Nakagawa served in the Military Intelligence Service (ca. 1944). Also included is a book entitled “We the People: A Story of Internment in America” (1987).
Saito’s Concise Kanwajiten, undated
Collection contains Japanese-English dictionaries that were used when Shunichi Nakagawa served in the Military Intelligence Service (ca. 1944). Also included is a book entitled “We the People: A Story of Internment in America” (1987).
Sanseido’s New Concise Japanese-English Dictionary, 1944
Collection contains Japanese-English dictionaries that were used when Shunichi Nakagawa served in the Military Intelligence Service (ca. 1944). Also included is a book entitled “We the People: A Story of Internment in America” (1987).
Sanseido’s New Concise Japanese-English Dictionary, undated
Collection contains Japanese-English dictionaries that were used when Shunichi Nakagawa served in the Military Intelligence Service (ca. 1944). Also included is a book entitled “We the People: A Story of Internment in America” (1987).
We the People: A Story of Internment in America, 1987
Collection contains Japanese-English dictionaries that were used when Shunichi Nakagawa served in the Military Intelligence Service (ca. 1944). Also included is a book entitled “We the People: A Story of Internment in America” (1987).
Bird ornament made from shells, circa 1942-1945
Hand-constructed and painted bird ornament; made of shells; enclosed in a box with a label that reads “Made in Relocation Camp”
[Bambi] deer pin, circa 1942-1945
Hand-constructed and painted wooden deer pin; enclosed in a box with a label that states “Made in Relocation Camp”; owner referred to it as a “Bambi” pin
Replica of camp barrack and NCJAR pin, circa 1980s
Barracks constructed of wood and covered in black paper accompanied by a folded placard with reads “Minidoka Remembered: 1942-1945”; National Council for Japanese American Redress (NCJAR) button attached to placard (formerly housed in a plastic baggie with barracks replica; now in a folder)