Curt Fukuda and Ralph Pearce, co-authors of “San Jose Japantown: A Journey,” spoke at the Japanese American National Museum in Little Tokyo on Nov. 7. Published by the Japanese American Museum of San Jose, their 430-page book required hundreds of interviews and 15 years of research into Nihonmachi’s history, which began in the 1890s in San Jose’s Chinatown (aka Heinlenville). With a rewrite of “Casey at the Bat” and an illustration by the late cartoonist Jack Matsuoka, Pearce recounted one of the highlights of Japantown’s history — a 1935 baseball game in which the San Jose Asahis beat the visiting Tokyo Giants. Fukuda said he had an opportunity to talk about Japantown’s history when Anthony Bourdain visited Minato Restaurant for a segment of “Parts Unknown” that aired on CNN on Oct. 18. The book is available at the JANM Store. (Photos by J.K. YAMAMOTO/Rafu Shimpo)
Hirahara to Discuss Terminal Island BookTakano Recognizes Riverside Community Leader Yoko BoucherSuma Sugi Yokotake: The Woman Who Became the First JA Lobbyist (Part 1)Sansei Vietnam Vets Honored at Gardena Memorial Day ServiceRiverside Unified Hosts Renaming Ceremony for Harada ElementaryThe Weight of Prodigy SuccessThe Weight of Prodigy SuccessIT PAYS TO KNOW: Why Older People FallHistory and Heritage Come HomeIt’s Summer Festival Time at SEJSCC Mayor Swears In 3 New Members of San Francisco School Board Hanako Greensmith Promoted to Series Regular on ‘Chicago Fire’ LA vs. Hate Unveils Anti IT PAYS TO KNOW: Inflation Is A Decline in nursing program enrollment in Taiwan raises concerns over talent crisis Monument Status for Historic Ozawa Boarding House Stalled L.A. Conservancy: Ozawa Boarding House Site Damaged and at Risk Mainland green lights tourism to Jinmen Ocean View School District Seeks Investigation of Wintersburg Fire Maloney Sworn In as Mayor of Alhambra
0.1462s , 14154.3671875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【barely legal shemale sex videos】Enter to watch online.From San Jose to L.A.,Global Perspective Monitoring