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Kanaya, Jimmie Segment 2
An interesting thing happened while Kanaya was there. They had a patient that needed a blood transfusion every day.
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Kanaya, Jimmie Segment 3
The 100th Battalion joined the 442nd in Italy and was their first battalion.
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Kanaya, Jimmie Segment 4
When Executive Order 9066 [Annotator's Note: Executive Order 9066, or EO 9066 led the way for the internment of Japanese Americans] was implem
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Kanaya, Jimmie Segment 5
Kanaya felt that living during the Depression years and learning to live under those conditions, working and living on a farm, helped his POW exper
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Kanaya, Jimmie Segment 6
The Preparations for Overseas Movement [Annotator's Note: POM] he doesn't remember a lot of.
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Kanaya, Jimmie Segment 7
Kanaya said that medics followed the troops into the field.
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Kanaya, Jimmie Segment 8
Both sides honored their gentleman's agreement to meet at the river in order to collect the bodies.
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Kanaya, Jimmie Segment 9
As a medic, Kanaya had to treat the Germans like their own wounded.
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Kanter, Joseph Becoming a Soldier
Joseph Kanter was of age for military service and had been in the ROTC [Annotator's Note: Reserve Officer Training Corps] at the University of
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Kanter, Joseph Early Life
Joseph Kanter was born in November 1923 in Helena, Alabama.
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Kanter, Joseph Interrogating Prisoners
Many Jewish people in the Army spoke other languages, and sometimes the words would get mixed up.
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Kanter, Joseph Life in the Field
Joseph Kanter [Annotator's Note: with 2nd Battalion, 406th Infantry Regiment, 102nd Infantry Division] became friends with his colonel because