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Our Price CelebrexTM $761.35 Bottle B Typical US brand price for 200mg x 100 Manufactured By Generics Manufacturers Celecoxib* $64.00 Generic equivalent of CelebrexTM Generic price for 200mg x 100 Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid prescription is required for all prescription medication orders. Call Toll-free: 1-800-409-2420 Prescription price comparison above is valid as of November 1, 2014. All trade-mark (TM) rights associated with the brand name products in this ad belong to their respective owners. *Generic drugs are carefully regulated medications that have the same active ingredients as the original brand name drug, but are generally cheaper in price. Generic equivalents are equal to their "brand" counterparts in Active Ingredients, Dosage, Safety, Strength, Quality, Performance and Intended use. It may vary in colour, shape, size, cost and appearance. Montague, California made a transfer to Detroit, and within 6 months they drafted me. I didn’t have much of a life anyway. From the time I was a kid during the Depression, my mother died and I don’t even remember her and my dad couldn’t take care of the 5 of us so we were put into the orphanage and I stayed in San Francisco for 14 years. In Manzanar we were classified 4-C. They didn’t even look at the Constitution or anything – that’s what upsets me the most.” Masao said he was sent overseas. First, he landed in Scotland, crossed the English Channel into France, and from France he was shipped over to Italy until the war ended. James Makoto Ogawa, born in Riverside, California on October 25, 1923, enlisted right after the war broke out. “I was packing celery in Salinas when the war broke out. A friend of mine wrote a letter to me and told me to come home he wanted to talk to me. I borrowed my boss’s car and went to Sacramento. And he says, ‘Let’s join the army,’ so I said, what the heck we - join[ed] the ROTC in high school - so we did. We went to San Francisco [to] enlist in the service. After that, we were shipped to Little Rock, Arkansas. We finished up basic training and they took our arms away because we were Japanese. In Fort Leonard Wood they wanted us to do yard work. I said, gee, I didn’t come to the army to do yard work. So I told them Finding Senior Housing can be complex, but it doesn’t have to be. “You can trust A Place for Mom to help you.” – Joan Lunden Call A Place for Mom. Our Advisors are trusted, local experts who can help you understand your options. Since 2000, we’ve helped over one million families fi nd senior living solutions that meet their unique needs. A Free Service for Families. (800) 605-7996 A Place for Mom is the nation’s largest senior living referral information service. We do not own, operate, endorse or recommend any senior living community. We are paid by partner communities, so our services are completely free to families. let me work in the kitchen so they brought me to do KP. I said I didn’t want to do KP, and said, teach me how to cook. So then I went to cook school. Later in 1943, when we went to Camp Shelby in Mississippi.” Then he joined the 100th and fought in France, where it was so cold, he got trench foot. He was sent north…and later in November he was sent home to Chicago where he lived for nine years. While vacationing in California, he decided to relocate, and worked first as a sheet metal worker, and then became a very astute salesman in the Golden State. Ralph Kaneshiro, who was born in Maui, Hawaii on August 8, 1925, said, “My MIS Language Education was at Schofield Barracks on Oahu. We were devastated because we couldn’t go to the mainland. We stayed in Oahu and got our education there. We were supposed to be a special group; we had half a day of basic training and half a day at language school. In the beginning we all baulked that we wanted to go to the mainland, but we were grounded after that until we decided to study. We relearned Japanese. When I was younger I went to Japanese school and eventually we went overseas. But before we got into the war zone, the war ended. Prior to those couple weeks, we were assigned to Naval Instruction. The Navy wanted us to interrogate prisoners after they sunk all the ships but by the time we got there, the war ended and all the prisoners were sent to the mainland and the rural Philippines. After we landed on this island, about a week later, they told us to pack up - we were to go somewhere else. We ended up in Manila in a camp. It was ATIS (Allied Translator Interpreter Section).” Ralph then continued to tell of his time in the MIS and said he interrogated prisoners of war. Ralph served in Japan after the war from November 1945 to December 1946 as part of the occupation forces. He helped the Japanese recover after the war and said it was because the MIS were there that Japan got back on their feet so quickly. As the afternoon came to an end, these brave veterans took time to sit, meet, and greet anyone who wished to shake their hands. George Nakano commented, “It’s wonderful because for as long as I’ve been living here – this is the first time this has been done. Every time I see David Ono’s documentary, it brings tears to my eyes.” George was not alone. I remembered these remarkable men from the Go For Broke Gala last fall and each time I hear their stories, I learn more. This generation truly is special. Thank you, gentleman not only for your service, but for your example of character and resilience for the ages. • Isamu (Ralph) Kaneshiro, James Makoto, Kenjiro (Ken) Akune, and Masao Takahashi. Masao Takahashi.
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