BHS Hosts Guest Speaker David Sakura- Internment of Japanese-Americans Thursday 21, November 201311/20/2013 Internment of Japanese-Americans: A Father’s Voice and a Boy’s Remembrances
Thursday, November 21, 2013 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- David Sakura is a third generation Japanese-American (Sansei) whose grandfather was a leader in Seattle’s Japanese community during the early 1900s. Prior to World War II, David’s family and relatives, along with forty other Japanese families, lived in Eatonville, WA, a small logging community located in the foothills of Mt Rainier. After the outbreak of World War II, David’s family was involuntarily detained at Camp Harmony, a temporary detention camp. The family was subsequently transported to Minidoka, a permanent internment camp in Idaho. During the internment, David’s father and three uncles enlisted into the US Army and served with the all Japanese-American 442 Regimental Combat Team. Toward the end of World War II, David’s mother and her three boys were released from Minidoka and moved to Wisconsin under the sponsorship of the American Baptist Home Mission Society. By using excerpts from his father’s letters from the camps, photos from the University of California archives and his own remembrances, David offers a highly personal account of his family’s internment experiences. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The Students for Asian Cultural Awareness are sponsoring this event. Mr. Sakura will be speaking during periods 1 and 3 in the library to history and art students.
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Attention Students! The Middlesex District Attorney’s Office and Middlesex Partnerships for Youth, Inc. invite high school and middle school students to create their own poster promoting the importance of being involved in the school and community. The goal of the 2013-2014 Poster Project is for students to develop original Posters, to highlight the community aspect of school and the various opportunities available to students. These messages will communicate a direct, positive voice to other teens, in an effort to demonstrate to students that they are valued and that their involvement matters. Possible topics for the posters include: · Ways for students to get involved in their school and community · Healthy relationships that can form within the community · How involvement in the school and community builds opportunities · Positive impacts students can have on the school and community Deadline for submissions is January 3, 2014
ANNUAL ART CONTEST
The annual art competition is a contest for the best original piece of artwork from any BHS student. There is no restriction to the number of submissions, or the artistic medium. The winner of the contest will be featured on the cover of the magazine, as well as on the front page of this website. Top runner-up entry submitted by a junior will be the cover art for the following year’s British Literature textbook. The top sophomore runner-up will serve as the cover for our next American Literature textbook. * Students may submit as many entries as they wish * Entries are read and judged anonymously by students * Top entries will receive a special mention in that year’s edition of Collab The deadline for the 2013-14 contest is December 6th Submit your entries to bhscollab@bpsk12.org (email submissions are greatly preferred) or place them in the Submissions Box outside our room. Good Luck! http://bhscollab.com/annual-art-contest/ |
AuthorChristina Chang teaches art and design to students in grades 9-12. Burlington Public Schools
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