| Title |
Interviews with Japanese in Utah: Mitsugi Kasai |
| Alternative Title |
Mitsugi Kasai: interviews on August 9, 1984 and August 20, 1984, |
| Creator |
Kasai, Mitsugi, 1918-2013 |
| Contributor |
Kelen, Leslie G., 1949- |
| Publisher |
Digitized by J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah |
| Date |
1984-08-09; 1984-08-20 |
| Date Digital |
2014-05-07 |
| Access Rights |
I acknowledge and agree that all information I obtain as a result of accessing any oral history provided by the University of Utah's Marriott Library shall be used only for historical or scholarly or academic research purposes, and not for commercial purposes. I understand that any other use of the materials is not authorized by the University of Utah and may exceed the scope of permission granted to the University of Utah by the interviewer or interviewee. I may request permission for other uses, in writing to Special Collections at the Marriott Library, which the University of Utah may choose grant, in its sole discretion. I agree to defend, indemnify and hold the University of Utah and its Marriott Library harmless for and against any actions or claims that relate to my improper use of materials provided by the University of Utah. |
| Spatial Coverage |
Milford, Beaver County, Utah, United States, http://sws.geonames.org/5543146/ ; Idaho Falls, Bonneville County, Idaho, United States, http://sws.geonames.org/5596475/ ; South Korea, http://sws.geonames.org/1835841/ ; Japan, http://sws.geonames.org/1861060/ |
| Subject |
Kasai, Mitsugi, 1918-2013--Interviews; Japanese Americans--Utah--Interviews; Japanese Americans--Idaho; Japanese Americans--Marriage customs and rites; Japanese American Citizens' League--Idaho; Japanese American soldiers; United States--Armed Forces--Japanese Americans; Military intelligence |
| Description |
Transcript (typescript, 247 pages) of two interviews with Mitsugi Kasai, a Japanese-American living in Utah in 1984. |
| Type |
Text |
| Genre |
oral histories (literary works) |
| Format |
application/pdf |
| Language |
eng |
| Rights |
 |
| Relation |
http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv45901 |
| Scanning Technician |
Matt Wilkinson |
| Conversion Specifications |
Original scanned with Kirtas 2400 and saved as 400 ppi uncompressed TIFF. PDF generated by Adobe Acrobat Pro 9 for CONTENTdm display |
| ARK |
ark:/87278/s66t24hs |
| Topic |
Japanese Americans; Japanese American soldiers; Japanese American Citizens' League; Military intelligence |
| Relation is Part of |
Mitsugi M. Kasai Memorial Japanese American Archive |
| Setname |
uum_ijau |
| ID |
899938 |
| Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s66t24hs |
| Title |
Page 241 |
| Format |
application/pdf |
| Setname |
uum_ijau |
| ID |
899930 |
| OCR Text |
Show LK MK LK MK you did it. Sometimes it1 s understandable right there. Well, a lot was involved when you get meet a source. You prepare a report depending on what case you're working on and put that on your report and who you're going to meet and, of course, and an informant don't use a name. You use a code name that we have assigned to him in a confidential file. Only certain people can get at it. Right. Because your colonel,unless he has a need te know, he doesn't know. Right. Let me ask you something in terms of working with informants, was food scarce? WAs food an item that you could give to people? Oh, yeah. Some of them w~re - of course, rice was rationed in those days, you know. And sometimes they didn't have enough rice. So I would get rice from some of my friends, farmers who had enough rice. I would purchase the rice. I could get rice at the commissary, you know, but I couuldn't buy commissary rice and give it away because that was against the law. If you do that so I had to buy it from the local economy. Of course, it was expensive but I would do that. Sometimes I would rely on my relatives, my stepfather's relatives up in Yarnashina, Canton, to supply us with 240 |
| Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s66t24hs/899930 |