More thoughts on internment camps
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ONE of the wonderful things about traveling is that it tends to open up one’s mind to change and new ideas.
Too bad Charles Jones [“A WWII View of Internment Camps,” Letters, Sept. 11] seems to be so stuck in a WWII time warp that he can’t acknowledge the grievous harm done to Japanese Americans by the internment or acknowledge the heroism of the servicemen who proved that Americans of Japanese ancestry were just as loyal as any other Americans.
DANIEL M. MAYEDA
Culver City
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