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A
Brief History of Global Engagement at the
University of Pennsylvania
Trends
by Country: JAPAN
This on-line exhibit was created by Alison D. Graham,
a
University Archives Research Fellow during the summer of 2007
The first Japanese student to graduate from the University of Pennsylvania appears to have been Tosui Imadate, who graduated with a Bachelor of Science in 1879. The first Japanese student to have graduated from the Medical School seems to be Osam Nagura, who graduated with a Medical Degree in 1880. The Japanese alumni from Penn seem to have been quite active in the first half of the twentieth century: for example, Sadijiro Suguira established "The Same Window Society," the first Penn alumni association, in Japan in 1903. Also, the Japan Students' Club was active as early as 1928. But it is easier to mark trends and patterns in Penn's relations with Japan during and after World War II.
In
1942, Sannosuke Yamamoto, a Japanese man whose daughter attended the Penn campus,
began to teach the language of Nippon to men in the military at the University
of Pennsylvania (pictured at left). Of course, it must be understood that Yamamoto
had been in the United States since 1905. Anti-Japanese sentiment was perilous
to those of Japanese descent in America after Pearl Harbor, and the Penn campus
was not unaffected. In an article from 1944, it was argued that the policy at
the University of Pennsylvania was to allow all those Japanese students at the
University (who had already been accepted and registered for classes) to continue
their studies and remain at the University, but not beyond the degree program
they were enrolled in (for example, an undergraduate Japanese student could earn
his undergraduate degree, but would not be accepted into graduate school). All
those new Japanese students applying for admission would not be accepted. A report
stated that in answer to questions about the policy, "[t]hey [Penn] have
had no satisfactory answer
except for vague replies that the policy was
adopted 'at the suggestion of the Navy.'" The same report also interviewed
Admiral Randall Jacobs of the Navy, who had apparently "never heard of such
a rule."
At
any rate, policy or not, the Japanese student population at Penn was certainly
affected by the second World War, and they would have to deal with anti-Japanese
sentiment while they resided in America. A student at Penn wishing to pursue graduate
study who was supposedly affected by the policy at this time was Naomi Nakano
(pictured at right), who, even though born in Philadelphia, was of Japanese descent.
Her story reveals that two other Japanese students had been denied entrance into
graduate studies - Koshi Miyasaki and Robert Sato. It is hard to discern what
here is fact and what is false. It may be possible that the students were not
accepted for graduate study based on academic credentials, though reading about
Nakano makes it probable that this was not the case. At any rate, Nakano was accepted
into Bryn Mawr for graduate studies.
An informal agreement was reached in late 1955 between the University of Pennsylvania and Kanazawa University in Japan for the two universities to exchange various published and non-published writings and to exchange personnel. The idea for the project had been given by Dr. Shozo Toda to the American Embassy in Tokyo, which invited Penn to be the American institution to participate. Panel discussions on "The Japanese Search for Peace" were held in May 1962 in Bennett Hall. The discussions were chaired by Dr. E. Dale Saunders, and sponsored by the University's Kanazawa Affiliation Committee and the Japan Society of New York.
In 1965, the University of
Pennsylvania was visited by members of the Japanese royal family. Prince Mikasa,
Princess Mikasa and their daughter, the Princess, attended a luncheon and toured
the campus. Prince Mikasa was the youngest brother of Emperor Hirohito.
The
royal entourage, composed of ten individuals, were greeted by Penn President Gaylord
P. Harnwell. The Prince (pictured at left with Harnwell), who was a student
of Near East history went to see that collection at the University Museum and
spoke with other Japanese countrymen in the Oriental studies section in the library.
In 1968, the Department of Oriental Studies was aided in its East Asia Division
by the efforts of Dr. Saburo Kitamura in Japan, who had graduated in the College
class of 1930 and the Medical School in 1936. Kitamura helped develop a book fund
whereby the University Library would receive more texts in Japanese. He explained
that the year was a good one to develop such a program as it was the 100th anniversary
celebrating the Meiji Emperor opening Japan's doors to the West. As Western knowledge
had poured in one hundred years prior to Japan, it was only right that Japanese
knowledge would flow into America as well. That knowledge flowed into the University
of Pennsylvania. At the time, Penn offered courses in Japanese "medieval
prose and drama
[as well as] the linguistic approach to the study of [Japanese]
history and structure of the [Japanese] language." It was one of the only
institutions to do so. The book fund would aid this work as well.
Kitamura's
story is an interesting one in and of itself. After graduating from Penn, he went
home in 1940, only intending to be there for a short visit. It would last twenty-five
years. After having worked in a Tokyo hospital in 1942 as the only doctor on site,
he was found after the war by Penn professor Eugene P. Pendergrass. Through Pendergrass'
efforts, Kitamura (pictured at right) became the head of the Atomic Bomb Casualty
Commission, an organization designed for the treatment of victims of the Atomic
bomb. After spending some time in Hiroshima, he returned to Tokyo where he opened
the Kitamura Diagnostic Clinic.
The Wharton School and the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, in early 1980, held a symposium on the Japanese economy, Japanese history and Japanese sociology. There, the former United States Ambassador to Japan, James Hodgson, stated that "The American-Japanese bond has become the singlemost relation. They have the two great economies in the world. Each nation, however, needs a better understanding of the other in the years ahead." The envoy to the Japanese mission to the United Nations, later stated that, "[t]hrough these seminars, the differences between the two nations can be better understood."
In May 1983, with the aid of two grants, the Institute of Medieval Japanese Studies was enabled to purchase materials that would aid in scholars using the slide and microfilm archives therein. The Institute had been established in 1968, financed by grants from both the University of Pennsylvania and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). As of 1983, it was the only one of its kind outside of Japan. The materials being purchased in the 1980s would also aid in the analysis of reference materials that the Institute had acquired through Dr. Barbara Ruch, while she was in Dublin, Ireland. What she had acquired were the "only such materials in the world." The grants for the research materials, which included a purchase of a five-hundred volume set of reference works, were donated by the Japan World Exposition Commemorative Fund and the Japan Foundation.
That same spring, a new United States-Japan Center was created at Penn as "the first university-based research operation to develop data on the Japanese economy and its interaction with the U.S. economy." For eight weeks that summer, a Japanese delegation composed entirely of executives stayed at the Wharton School studying American management techniques. The Center was financed by the efforts of both American and Japanese companies.
This on-line
exhibit was created by Alison D. Graham,
a University Archives Research Fellow
during the summer of 2007
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