Bill Hosokawa Is Famous For lost Of Things. Bill Hosokawa was remembered as a hero. During his early years, it was hard for him to find a job. Bill Hosokawa whent to a camp. He went to war. He is remembered. Before the War Who was Bill Hosokawa before the war? As a child Bill Hosokawa,was interested in writing in about others. He was born in January 30, 1915. He was a Japanese American.He was born and raised in Seattle Washington. He had a little brother. His really his name was William Hosokawa. He only spoke Japanese language. Also, could not go to school.He couldn't because he was very poor. Finding a job was hard for him.As a Teen he had a hard time finding a job because of what he believed in.They would not let him have a job because he was a Japanese American. Years past, and he got a job as a farmer and housekeeping. His work was 10 hours for 6 days. …show more content…
School was very important to him ,so he went to first grade and he was supposed to be in 7th or 8th. In California he graduated school. Mid life One of the interesting things about Bill Hosokawa is that he was a journalist and people did not want him to be one because of what he believed in. He also, could not find a career because he worked for the Denver post and news for 46 years well working on the rail railroad. He lived in Japan for 5 years and then moved to Colorado. Well in Colorado he married a lady named Alice Hosokawa. He had 4 children. One of his kids were born in the US. Shortly after this more things happen one of his kids were born in the US. He went to jail while his baby was being born. Well, he was in jail, he was a junolest. The reason why he was in jail was that in the World War
He lost his job when he broke his hand boxing. He went out looking for a job every morning, hoping they would pick him up at the docks.
At the age of thirteen he began working in order to earn money for college. He was a shoe shiner, an elevator boy, and a paper boy. He attended the all-black Armstrong High School, where he acted in plays, was a sergeant in the Cadet Corps, and earned good grades, graduating at the age of 16.
Starting off with high hopes, I quickly came to realize that job opportunities were hard to find. I came to have a lot of respect for anyone who felt that college was not right for them and went on to pursue manual jobs or any job out of the white-collar spectrum. His biggest examples are his mother the waitress, known as Rosie and his uncle the mechanic, known as Joe. Rosie and Joe found success and happiness in their jobs that most people look down upon.
and applied. John was accepted almost immediately, after reading some verses from the bible. His age though caused a slight problem. He was almost nine years of age and all the first graders were almost seven. The master of the school, John Lovell, found a nice solution. Since John was excellently trained in Lexington, Lowell moved him up to third grade.
school classes regularly. At the age of fifteen, he got a job at a local
high school.Due to his parents, not knowing English well, it was hard for them to advocate and
Carolina. The. His father died before the war, and his mother and siblings all died during the war from disease or other causes, leaving him an orphan at the age of 14. When he was a kid he only received sporadic education, and education back then was simply not enough. But he did well and eventually went on to study law.
No black school was available locally so he was forced to move. He said "Good-bye" to his adopted parents, Susan and Moses, and headed to Newton County in southwest Missouri. Here is where the path of his education began. He studied in a one-room schoolhouse and worked on a farm to pay for it. He ended up, shortly after, moving with another family to Fort Scott in Kansas. In Kansas, he worked as a baker in a kitchen while he attended the High School. He paid for his schooling with the money he earned from winning bake-off contests. From there he moved all over bouncing from school to school. "College entrance was a struggle again because of racial barriers."2 At the age of thirty he gained acceptance to Simpson College in Indianola, Iowa.
His parents were fed up with him and realized they had to do something to straighten him out. On June 13, 1902, his father took him to St. Mary's Industrial School for Boys. This was a reformatory and an orphanage. His father signed over custody to the Brothers, who were the Missionaries that ran the school.
Kosinski was later reunited with his family and by the time he was twenty-four, he attained a professorship at the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw. Soon after Kosinski got his job as a professor, he went to America. Within four months of Kosiski ’s arrival in America, he spoke fluent English and moved on to Columbia University. He soon had a great novelist career. He was earning national awards, was married to a millionaire socialite, was earning huge sums of money for his books and screenplay, and played a small part in a movie. He was truly living the “American dream”. (Times Mirror Co.)
On May 27, 1837 born in Troy Grove, Illinois John Butler Hickok was the child of William Alonzo Hickok and Polly Butler Hickok. Hickok had a total of four brothers and two sisters. His parents were strict and had high expectations for him. When his parents operated a part of the underground railroad, Hickok found a passion for guns. His passion for guns originated when he and his father were chased by police officers because the police assumed that they were carrying people in their wagon and not just hay. As a child he practiced his shooting on his farm where he could shoot small animals. He was a renowned marksman with a love for the wild west, but when he was only of the age of fourteen, his dad was killed due to his views and thoughts on slavery.
Toyotomi Hideyoshi a preeminent daimyo, warrior, and a samurai in the Sengoku period throughout Shogunate Japan. Hideyoshi was regarded and well known as Japan's second pronounced leader and unifier of Japan. A well-respected man in the Japanese army. Toyotomi Hideyoshi was born in 1536. He was part of stopping the civil war that ended that conflict in that era, in Shogunate Japan. Hideyoshi is remarkable for saving millions of lives and is remembered throughout history for his work in Japan.
Jack had little formal schooling. Initially, he attended school only through the 8th grade. In later years, Jack returned to high school in Oakland and graduated. He eventually gained admittance to U.C. Berkeley, but stayed only for six months because he said it was boring.
Tsutomu Miyazaki, a Japanese psycho who was held responsible for the murder of four little girls, between the years of 1988 and 1989. Miyazaki was a porn addict (child porn, torture porn, and other sadims). When apartment was inspected there was 5,763 porn tapes found and many manga/anime books were also discovered. Even though not said, the tapes and books could’ve inspired Miyazaki into doing the things he did to his victims.
To start, consider that he was raised in an extremely strict household. He was born and raised in Oak Park, Illinois. He had an equitably happy, upper middle class childhood. As he grew older he started having feelings of bitterness towards his parents, mainly his mother who was seen as selfish and magisterial by Hemingway. When he was in his teens he became interested in literature. He wrote stories for his high school newspaper and subscribed poems and stories to the school magazine. When he graduated in 1917 he took a junior reporter position on the "Kansas City Star", writing feature stories. In his journalism he began to show interest in powerful yet objective writings of violence, despair, and emotional disturbance, which dominated his writings. He also participated in World War I, which greatly impacted his writing, as a Red Cross ambulance driver in Italy. He was wounded in both legs by a shrapnel explosion. He fell in love with the nurse that was caring for him, who left him not long after for an older man. He returned to Oak Park, and also upper Michigan to write about his childhood, teenage, and wartime years. In 1921 he married Hadley Richardson, divorced March 10, 1927, he moved to Paris to further his writing career. Here he quit journalism as a result of his maturing as a distinguished writer. From the maturity he had accomplished he was able to write over twenty-five books. He eventually returned to journalism to support himself.