School of the Kyogen Kyogen (Japanese: 狂言 Kyōgen, literally mad words or wild speech) is a form of traditional Japanese theater. ...
uses an older sytle of language than its sister school izumi Izumi is the name of several places in Japan: Izumi, Osaka, city in Osaka Izumi, Kagoshima, city in Kagoshima Izumi-ku, Sendai, ward of Sendai Izumi province, former province It can also refer to the following people: (given name) Izumi Aki, Japanese actress Izumi Matsumoto (real name Kazuya Terashima), manga...
Patrick Okura, a psychologist who was among the 120,000 Japanese-Americans interned during World War II and who later established a foundation for developing Asian-Pacific American leaders in the mental-health field, died Jan. 30 of coronary artery disease at his home in Bethesda, Md. He was 93.
Okura and his wife, Lily, were among the 60,000 surviving Japanese-Americans who in 1990 each received a $20,000 check and a written apology from President George H.W. Bush under the 1988 Civil Liberties Act.
Okura was one of the leading Asian figures in the health field and a civil rights leader who fought for the rights of Japanese-Americans.
Okura's distinguished career at the National Institute of Mental Health, they recognized the need to educate promising Asian American and Pacific Islander mental health professions in how mental health services and policies are developed and shaped.
The Okura Mental Health Leadership Foundation, Inc. was founded on October 1, 1988, and is incorporated in the State of Maryland as a non-profit, tax-exempt public foundation.
The Okura Mental Health Leadership Foundation conducts annual leadership seminars called "Week in Washington" to provide young, promising Asian Pacific American leaders in the fields of mental health and human services to learn, experience and build on knowledge needed to be a leader in their respective communities locally and nationally.