San Francisco Public Library

[Documents on Japanese immigration into California]

Label
[Documents on Japanese immigration into California]
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references
resource.governmentPublication
government publication of a state province territory dependency etc
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
[Documents on Japanese immigration into California]
Nature of contents
bibliography
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exclusion question, no. 2 : What decided Congress in 1924 -- [9] "The Digest" guesses California wrong -- [0] An unpublished letter pertaining to Japanese immigration (November 13, 1933) -- [11] The A.F of L. on Japanese immigration -- [12] Quota for 185 Japanese would admit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
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