we are going to focus next on a discussion on oral histories and digital histories with tommy cada, executive director of the japanese american legacy project. the project which some of our history tv viewers are familiar with. and jasmine alander from the university of wisconsin. tommy, what is the project you've been working on? >> so it's a community non-profit based in seattle where we go out and collect stories of japanese-americans who are incarcerated during world war ii. so the 120,000 people who were in the camps, what we do are the survivors from that, go out and do a videotaped interview and share the interviews on web. >> how many of these interviews have you done? >> we've done about 650 and will probably add another 50 or so this year. >> jazz anyone alender, you're working on a project, the march on milwaukee civil rights history project. >> a digital archive, an online archive of sources relating to mostly the struggle for open housing and school desegregation in 1960s milwaukee and includes oral histories but also include text documents, photographs and video footage, news fo