tom ikeda, what is the densho project that you've been working on? >> so it's a community nonprofit based in seattle where we go out and collect the stories of japanese americans who were incarcerated during world war ii, so the 120,000 people who were in the camps. what we do are the survivors from that, we go out and do a videotaped interview and then share those interviews on the web. >> how many of these interviews have you done? >> we've now done about 650, and we'll probably add another 50 or so this year. >> jasmine alinder, you're working on an oral history project, as well, the march on milwaukee civil history rights project. what can you tell us about that? >> so, the march on milwaukee several history rights project is a digital archive, it's an online archive of sources relating to mostly the struggle for open housing and school desegregation in 1960s milwaukee. it includes oral histories, but it also includes text documents, photographs and video footage, news footage from a local tv station at the time. >> what do you find the biggest c