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ARCADIAWEEKLY
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13 - DECEMBER 19, 2018
Since 1996
VOL. 22, NO. 50
HOW ARCADIA GAINED A RARE PIECE OF HISTORY Galen PATTERSON galen.patterson303@gmail.com
R
iyo Sato was a developing artist by the time she was detained in 1942. She was sent to Santa Anita Park, where she waited out a portion of the war in captivity before being transferred to Wyoming, to a different detention facility called “Heart Mountain.” Cameras were confiscated within the detention camps. The reason why is the same reason that the Japanese/American population within the U.S. was detained to begin with: the war with Japan was on and the country wasn’t taking any chances. While in captivity, Sato obtained onion skin paper and charcoal pencils and began sketching. She sketched scenes from the daily life inside Santa Anita Park’s internment camp, of things and people’s daily lives. “I think she just wanted to keep her skills sharp,” said Sato’s niece Pam Hashimoto. However, Sato didn’t talk about her time in Arcadia very often according to Hashimoto, so the precise reasons may never be known, but what Sato left behind is more than brief drawings of daily life in 1940s internment. Her sketches are part of the collective voice of the detainees. After the war and Sato’s subsequent release, she moved east, taking a job doing sketch design for Curtiss-Wright in Buffalo, N.Y. She flew in airplanes and drew aerial sketches for the company, and eventually
Riyo Sato visiting Cambodia in 1988. – Courtesy photo / Pam Hashimoto
BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT
ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT
SPORTS
GrandCare Sets
Arcadia Stage’s ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’
Sue Drops 29 as Arcadia Molly Wops Muir for Third League Win
High Standard for Home Health Care
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SEE RARE PIECE PAGE 11
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