and then one day i noticed that the name of the interrogator was miyamoto. that's when i realized that i had entirely taken for granted what was happening in the interrogation room, what language it was in. they sounded like japanese american names. that also opened up an entire line of inquiry for me. at the same time, i am looking for different kinds of interrogation reports, having a sense of, for example, there are investigation case files into the camps. there are over 300 of them in terms of investigations into murder, suicide, harm, injury. that became one place to sort of understand what was happening in the pow camps. what became clear by doing that is that the u.s. military interrogation room was not the only time a p.o.w. archivists at theÑiokokÑi Ñiçónl archives, after nineñrÑiñrÑi#rw, ovÜl files andÑiñr the u.s. counterintelligenceñrÑiÑiçóñrçós chinese pow camps aboutÑiÑiçó ñr experiences jtw3ÑiÑiÑilpçóÑiu ñriçó decided ok, i#zi reallyñro through !ld of patterns or thingsÑi Ñithat e surpris*q(puáqñrÑiñrÑi there isa coming backtheyÑiÑiçóÑiçóÑiçóñ