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Annotated Bibliography Primary Sources Iiyama, Chizu. "Chizu Iiyama." Interview by Brittany and Ashley. Telling Their Stories.

Urban School of San Francisco, 6 May 2006. Web. 19 Nov. 2013. This site let me choose one of several people that have been interviewed by the group. I chose Iiyama because she seemed to be younger, and may have been there at a very young age, and thus providing emotional answers rather than just all facts. Hashizumi, Sato. "Sato Hashizumi." Interview by Greg, Jimmy, Jessica, Mikhael, and Jane. Sato Hashizumi. Telling Their Stories, 23 Jan. 2008. Web. 20 Nov. 2013. I chose Hashizumi because I wanted to contrast the opinions by age. She seems to be quite a bit older than Iiyama, though was only a teenager at the time, and I did notice that the older people felt like the imprisonment was more humane than the children did. Fiset, Louis, and Gail Nomura. Nikkei in the Pacific Northwest. United States of America; University of Washington Press, 2005. This was one of the first sources I used from the public library, so I did not find as many facts such as inside of the internment camps, but the all-around idea of what the time period was like when Japanese arrived. Secondary Sources "About the Kooskia Internment Camp Scrapbook." About the Kooskia Internment Camp Scrapbook. University of Idaho Library, 2010. Web. 12 Feb. 2014. Talked about the basic ideas that they thought happened in the internment camp Kooskia and facts about the people. California Nisei College Diploma Project. "Historical Background." Japanese Cultural and Community Center of Northern California. Jcccnc.org, n.d. Web. 22 Nov. 2013. This PDF file talked more about the Executice Order 9066 and its meaning.

"Japanese-American Internment." Japanese-American Internment [ushistory.org]. Independence Hall Association, 2008 - 2013. Web. 18 Nov. 2013. This site was written to tell facts about before internment and what was happening around the USA at the time. Japanese Internment in America. History.com. A&E Television Networks, 1996 - 2013. Web. 14 Nov. 2013. A video that basically told the story of the general idea of what was happening in the internment camps, and their opinions on it. Hoffman, Michael. "Japanese-Americans: Life after the War and Internment." Japan Times RSS. The Japan Times, 19 Aug. 2012. Web. 15 Nov. 2013. The summery of a book by Greg Robinson, talking about how people despised the

Japanese, and how there was much injustice done to the Japanese Americans. Siasoco, Ricco Villanueva, and Shmuel Ross. "Japanese Relocation Centers." Infoplease. Infoplease, 2007. Web. 15 Nov. 2013. Talked about the challenges the internees faced inside and out of the internment camps. Speidel, Jennifer. "Anti-Japanese Organizations." After Internment. UW Departments Web Server, 2005. Web. 12 Nov. 2013. This site provided me with information on what happened after the camps were taken down. "World War Two - Japanese Internment Camps in the USA." World War Two. Historyonthenet, Nov. 2000. Web. 12 Nov. 2013. This site told me about what happened inside of the internment camps around the area, and when the Minidoka camp closed and opened. Yancey, Diane. Life in Japanese American Internment. San Diego; Lucent Books, 1998. My first book read, and was used to primarily find out what was going on inside of the internment camps.

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