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Free Republic University, Department of History presents World War II Plus 70 Years: Seminar and Discussion Forum
First session: September 1, 2009. Last date to add: September 2, 2015.
Reading assignment: New York Times articles and the occasional radio broadcast delivered daily to students on the 70th anniversary of original publication date. (Previously posted articles can be found by searching on keyword “realtime” Or view Homer’s posting history .)
To add this class to or drop it from your schedule notify Admissions and Records (Attn: Homer_J_Simpson) by freepmail. Those on the Realtime +/- 70 Years ping list are automatically enrolled. Also visit our general discussion thread.
1 posted on 07/13/2015 4:50:04 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
Selections from West Point Atlas for the Second World War
Luzon, P.I., 1941: Final Operations on Luzon, 3 February-20 July 1945
China, 1941: Operation Ichigo, 1945 and Final Operations in the War

2 posted on 07/13/2015 4:50:39 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
I don't know where to begin...

#8, the article about the food shortage: towards the end of the article is a mention of how Saburo Kurusu was living as a farmer in Karuizawa. Karuizawa is in the middle of the Japan Alps, about 100 miles each from Tokyo to the southeast and Kanazawa to the west. It was where Westerners who were not considered prisoners of war stayed in the last years of the war, from 1943-45. Kurusu was married to an American, Alice Little, whom he had met during WWI when he was studying in NY. She spent the bulk of her widowhood defending her husband's reputation, that he genuinely did not know of the impending attack on Pearl Harbor while special envoy at the Japanese Embassy in DC. (More on her here).

She was not the only American married to a Japanese diplomat there. Gwen Harold was married to Hidenari Terasaki, a junior diplomat at the Japanese embassy. Gwen went with her husband and their daughter to Japan after Pearl Harbor, and eventually ended up in Tateshina, the next village over from Karuizawa. One would assume that the two American wives would have contacted each other during their years in the mountains. More information as to what it was like to live there in the war years can be found here, in a memoir of a teenager who was there.

Incidentally, the number of Westerners who either lived or spent summers in Karuizawa before, during, and after the war led to more than the usual number of churches and Christian organizations in the area, up to and including today. Here is one, and here is another--the office is in Yokohama, but the honcho, Tim Cole, lives and works out of Karuizawa, and his late father was an evangelical missionary there.

10 posted on 07/13/2015 6:40:25 AM PDT by chajin ("There is no other name under heaven given among people by which we must be saved." Acts 4:12)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

By this time the Nips have been having a really bad June & July.

But wait; it gets worse...


11 posted on 07/13/2015 7:00:09 AM PDT by Ready4Freddy
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