12023-01-13T20:06:14+00:00Answer "No" to both questions5CYOA (1)plain2023-01-13T22:07:44+00:00 You answer No to question #27 and #28 on the loyalty questionnaire and are therefore determined to be "disloyal" to the United States government. You and others who became known as the "No No's" because of this questionnaire are sent to Tule Lake, an incarceration camp with a "Segregation Center," a prison camp specially designed to hold "disloyal" Japanese Americans.
Security at the Tule Lake site was increased when it became a segregation center. More barbed wire was added and an eight-foot high double "man-proof" fence was constructed to secure the maximum-security segregation center. The six guard towers surrounding the site were increased to twenty-eight, and a battalion of 1,000 military police with armored cars and tanks were brought in to maintain security. Working and living conditions were even worse than your previous camp, and violence was used more often to keep workers in line.
Soon after you arrive, Tule Lake became more like an armed camp with a prisoner curfew, barrack-to-barrack searches, and a near complete cessation of normal daily activities. Martial law was declared on November 14, leading to months of repression and hardship.
12023-01-13T22:26:04+00:00Answer "No" to Both Questions2CYOA (2)plain2023-01-13T22:36:57+00:00 You answer No to question #27 and #28 on the loyalty questionnaire and are therefore determined to be "disloyal" to the United States government. You and others who became known as the "No No's" because of this questionnaire are sent to Tule Lake, an incarceration camp with a "Segregation Center," a prison camp specially designed to hold "disloyal" Japanese Americans.
Security at the Tule Lake site was increased when it became a segregation center. More barbed wire was added and an eight-foot high double "man-proof" fence was constructed to secure the maximum-security segregation center. The six guard towers surrounding the site were increased to twenty-eight, and a battalion of 1,000 military police with armored cars and tanks were brought in to maintain security. Working and living conditions were even worse than your previous camp, and violence was used more often to keep workers in line.
Soon after you arrive, Tule Lake became more like an armed camp with a prisoner curfew, barrack-to-barrack searches, and a near complete cessation of normal daily activities. Martial law was declared on November 14, leading to months of repression and hardship.
12022-02-01T19:26:03+00:00Tule Lake2The Tule Lake site is located in Modoc County, California, near the California-Oregon border, about forty miles southeast of Klamath Falls, Oregon and 10 miles south of the town of Tulelake. Following the ill-conceived loyalty questionnaire that was administered in early 1943 to the imprisoned population, inmates who refused to give unqualified "yes" responses were segregated to Tule Lake and unjustly labeled as "disloyal."plain2023-01-18T19:29:42+00:0041.8833, -121.3667The Tule Lake site is located in Modoc County, California, near the California-Oregon border, about forty miles southeast of Klamath Falls, Oregon and 10 miles south of the town of Tulelake. Following the ill-conceived loyalty questionnaire that was administered in early 1943 to the imprisoned population, inmates who refused to give unqualified "yes" responses were segregated to Tule Lake and unjustly labeled as "disloyal."