Abstract

didn't care for regimentation, said George Kondo, a Nisei from San Francisco. Get in line for this and get in line for that, you know, so the first opportunity we had, [we left.]... If you have a sponsor, a place to stay and salary, [you could leave.]... We were able to get out.... [W]e were able to leave. Just two and a half months after Kondo and his wife were moved from the Tanforan Assembly Center in San Bruno to the Central Utah Relocation Center at Topaz, Utah, they were free again, living in Chicago. They were some of the first Japanese Americans to be resettled after their forced departure from the West Coast in September 1942.1 Much attention has been focused on the evacuation and

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