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[Documents on Japanese immigration into California].
1930, California Joint Immigration Committee
in English
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Book Details
Table of Contents
[1] Japanese immigration : euota or exclusion
[2] Opening gates to Asiatic integration, a movement inaugurated in California
[3] The exclusion question in California
[4] A Far Eastern League of Nations
[5] Open gates asked for Oriental retail merchants
[6] Why we lost Japan's respect
[7] The Japanese quota question, no. 1 : Congress and exclusion, judgment or resentment?
[8] The Japanese exclusion question, no. 2 : What decided Congress in 1924
[9] "The Digest" guesses California wrong
[0] An unpublished letter pertaining to Japanese immigration (November 13, 1933)
[11] The A.F of L. on Japanese immigration
[12] Quota for 185 Japanese would admit thousands "non-quota"
[13] Restriction of Asiatic immigration under past and present exclusion laws and proposed quota
[14] Brazil's offer of quota displeases Japan
[15] Letter to "Quota" pertaining to Japanese immigration (June 1, 1934)
[16] Official story of the picture brides
[17] Japanese propaganda in American public schools
[18] Japan's psychology and American interests
[19] High school students in U.S. to be given books with correct information on Japan
[20] Japan proposes to instruct our public school students
[21] Japanese propaganda in American public schools : plan inaugurated in Hawaii
[22] Congressional recognition of Japanese veterans
[23] Japan and California shake hands
[24] That text book on Japan
[25] The Japanese language schools, criticized as a menace to American citizenship
[26] A feature of Hawaiian statehood would admit 100,000 ineligible Asiatics
[27] Mexican Indians denied naturalization
[28] Japan invades the public schools : what Hawaiian students are taught
[29] Hawaiian troubles come to mainland
[30] Ineligibility of Mexican Indians
[31] Letter to "Honolulu Star Bulletin" concerning a textbook on Japan used in Hawaiian public schools
[32] Letter to Walter F. Lafrenz concerning a course on Japanese culture in high schools of California
[33] Statehood for Hawaii : some of the pros and cons
[34] Those terrible Japanese in California
[35] Dangers created by Japanese dual citizenship
[36] Statehood for Hawaii : a hearing which did not disclose the facts (May 23, 1936)
[37] California Japanese urge dropping of racial bars
[38] Japanese propaganda in the public schools
[39] Ineligible Mexican Indians entering as immigrants
[40] Japan's propaganda machine
[41] Japan is meeting her problems : emigration
[42] A criticism of the book "Pacific relations"
[43] Facts which author Walter Hoffman overlooked
[44] Dual citizenship on the Pacific Coast
[45] Japanese propaganda in California schools
[46] Quota for Japan as a remedy for misunderstanding and promoter of trade
[47] Roosevelt's interpretation of the Gentleman's agreement
[48] Brief in the matter of the immigration quota for Japan.
Edition Notes
Documents issued by the California Joint Immigration Committee, representing the California Department American Legion, the California State Federation of Labor, and the Native Sons of the Golden West; bound together after publication.
Includes bibliographical references.
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December 4, 2010 | Edited by Open Library Bot | Added subjects from MARC records. |
December 10, 2009 | Created by WorkBot | add works page |