Modern Architectures of North AmericaMain MenuHelp! Help! Help!SuburbiaArchitecture Relating to the Natural EnvironmentPatients, Prisoners, PoliticsIdentity: What Lies Beneath Style and FormChange and AdaptationErica Morawski - The Hotel Nacional de Cuba: Making Meanings and Negotiating NationalismsAmanda - Organic Architecture/F.L. WrightSteph - Moorish Revival ArchitectureBrittney - Sustainable Urban DesignsThe Shift: Art Deco & Modernismby Bayleigh BoganTransition to Streamline ModerneSydney - The Coppelia Ice Cream Shop in Havana, Cuba: A Cultural Moment ManifestedKatie - LevittownGenevieve - The Multifaceted Development of Creole ArchitectureThe Former Church of the Holy Communion: A Specific Example of Change and Adaptation of a Single Building Over TimeRe-Purposing a Religious BuildingZarah Ferrari: Tule Lake Segregation Center: Rising Above an Unjust SystemZarah FerrariLaura - The Suburban Kitchen in Levittown, PABy Laura Krok-HortonMarianna Mapes, Disease and the Body Politic: The National Leprosarium at Carville, LouisianaLiz - Eichler, Neutra, and the mid-century Californian SuburbV. Nash- Berkeley City Women's Club (1929), Berkeley, CA, Julia MorganJulia Morgan was a West Coast architect.Metropolitan Museum of Art: A Transition to ModernismBrendan - Academy of Music
Farming
12016-03-28T17:03:29-07:00Zarah Ferrarifce7cef03458dbb9b1eca281924074181a2de910818012Watanabe, Guy, and Audrey Watanabe. Tule Lake Camp. Digital image. Remembrance Project. Japanese American National Museum, n.d. Web. 18 Apr. 2016. . Edit Delete Taylor, Alan. World War II: Internment of Japanese Americans. Digital image. The Atlantic Photo. The Atlantic, 21 Aug. 2011. Web. 18 Apr. 2016. .plain2016-04-18T21:27:02-07:00Zarah Ferrarifce7cef03458dbb9b1eca281924074181a2de910Further isolating the internees from the outside world, Tule Lake Segregation center produced much of its own food. The workers at Tule Lake, due to being considered as holding dangerous detainees, were paid less than “$16 a month got a 44-hour week” (Thomas, Japanese Internment). The farms did not just produce crops but also meat and dairy produces. The government planned to make meals that costed no “more than 45 cents per person" (Ibid). While some food did come from the outside world, it was basic foods that would be more commonly found in prisons.
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12016-03-28T13:34:26-07:00Zarah Ferrarifce7cef03458dbb9b1eca281924074181a2de910Tule lake Simple map2Tomlinson, Anders. Tule Lake Map. Digital image. Nature At Work and Play. N.p., 2013. Web. .media/tulemap-large.jpgplain2016-04-18T14:28:28-07:00Zarah Ferrarifce7cef03458dbb9b1eca281924074181a2de910