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  • Subject > Evacuation (World War II) (remove)
  • Subject > Japanese American Community (remove)

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  • rights for all races and groups; opportunity for all, not those hereditarily fortunate.I will continue my subscription, though I have never been so furious with an editorial as the one you had the nerve to foist on your readers Tuesday evening.
  • Readers' Referendum--Japanese Like Food At Salinas Center[Editorial]
  • readers.--HENRY B. ADAMS.March 17, 1944."As twilight surrounds the celestial sphere once more and the momentum of the usual daily activities has slowed down to its minimum, I find myself with sufficient time to drop you a few lines.
  • To the editor: I just read Capt. Lettunich's letter carried in your Readers Referendum June 19. Apparently the captain either has not been associated with the American-Japanese he speaks of, or his association has been so close that he has
  • ; I don't think you know what procedures we have to go through in order to get our permit to relocate. If you do know, you are keeping it away from your readers. We have to have our past records checked by the War Relocaton authority and the Federal
  • - J. P. McEvoy in Readers' Digest for March, 1943.Remember also - persecute these people for the accident of birth - establish a precedent and the cold heavy hand of persecution and intolerance may one day rest on your shoulder because your name
  • , signed only by the initials G.T.: "We are 3,000 strong with physical features that are alike. Does that make us think or do the things identically as the next person? Surely, we have minds of our own." The author also advised readers, "Belief and faith
  • READERS' REFERENDUM--JAPANESE LIKE FOOD AT SALINAS CENTER A DISSERVICE TO OUR NATION [Editorial] "Further evidencing the need for national martial law, which Riptide consistently has advocated, is the action of the Civil Liberties Union which