- Medicine - Feb 3
Professor cited in brief to U.S. Supreme Court on new public health law - Psychology - Feb 3
Public lectures explore the brain and behavior - Environmental Sciences - Feb 3
NorthStar Initiative launches corporate sustainability webinar series - Medicine - Feb 3
New device removes stroke- causing blood clots better than standard treatment - Arts - Feb 3
Aphasia: A Stanford music professor’s work about obsessive attention to ridiculous things - Arts - Feb 3
University of Minnesota School of Music presents Benjamin Britten's War Requiem March 1 - Computer Science - Feb 3
Researchers to receive high- performance computing grants - Medicine - Feb 3
Neurons from stem cells could replace mice in botulinum test - Agronomy - Feb 3
Gene related to fat preferences in humans found - Physics - Feb 2
The physics of football - History - Feb 2
Exhibit documents Washtenaw County’s history of substance abuse - Life Sciences - Feb 2
Scientists coax shy microorganisms to stand out in a crowd
Chemistry
Physics
Computer Science
Environmental Sciences
Earth Sciences
Life Sciences
Medicine
Business
Law
Literature
History
Arts
» » more
Decades late, a diploma -- and an ovation -- for Cal Nisei

Elise Kiya, 10, accepts an honorary diploma on behalf of her grandfather, Seiji Kiya, who died in 1997. Bestowing the degree is ethnic studies professor Michael Omi.
As members of the Class of 2010 celebrate after Thursday’s graduation ceremony at Zellerbach Playhouse, Sachi Kajiwara (left) and Saburo Hori proudly clutch their honorary diplomas. (Photos by Yasmin Anwar / NewsCenter)
Elise Kiya, 10, accepts an honorary diploma on behalf of her grandfather, Seiji Kiya, who died in 1997. Bestowing the degree is ethnic studies professor Michael Omi.
BERKELEY — For 92-year-old Saburo Hori and 87-year-old Sachi Kajiwara, graduation day came on Thursday, May 20 — more than 60 years late. With pride and a dash of humility, the two survivors of Topaz internment camp in central Utah received honorary degrees at the Department of Ethnic Studies graduation ceremony.
They were among 11 Japanese-Americans whose studies were cut short due to the internment to receive honorary diplomas — seven of them posthumously — at the Zellerbach Playhouse ceremony on Thursday. Degrees for those not at the ceremony were accepted by their family members, some of whom bowed and shed a few tears.
Ten-year-old Elise Kiya accepted the degree on behalf on her grandfather, Seiji Kiya, who studied engineering at UC Berkeley in 1941. He died in 1997. More than 2,500 students of Japanese ancestry were enrolled at California community colleges and universities at the outbreak of World War II. Hori had been pursuing a graduate degree in engineering, and Kajiwara, undergraduate studies in social work.Their graduations inspired a standing ovation from the crowd.
The bestowal of honorary degrees to Japanese-Americans whose studies in California were cut short following the Pearl Harbor attack and the subsequent executive order that forced more than 100,000 Americans of Japanese ancestry into detention camps is part of the California Nisei College Diploma Project , which was launched as a result of a California law in 2009.
» Share this page:
Last job offers
- Life Sciences - 3.2
Postdoctoral - Natural Resources - Brenner Laboratory - Life Sciences - 2.2
Research Specialist - Environmental Sciences - 28.1
Professeur(e) en santé envionnementale - Département de santé environnementale et... - Medicine - 23.1
Postdoc - Pediatric Radiology III - Business - 19.1
Research Scientist, Economic Modeling - Medicine - 18.1
Assistant Clinical professor - Dentistry - Business - 6.1
Research Associate (#20093175) - Life Sciences - 3.1
Professor of Biology, Neurobiology, College of Arts and Sciences


