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Had she agreed, there were several, including Mercer, the camp boss, who'd have found her employment.
He counted out credits into the camp boss's eager palm.
Once having gained enough allies, he announced that he was the camp boss.
He was employed by the Tooele smelter as a camp boss.
We keep our individuality and we don't serve any camp boss."
He raised his voice, a warbling yell with a break right in the middle of it: "Camp boss!
A camp boss called them "bride and groom."
The camp boss hurried away, leaving Dedran to look at Laris.
She'd despaired; then Mercer, the camp boss, had come to her smiling and she'd cringed.
He went on with introductions for the rest of his party: "Angelica Button; our camp boss and quartermaster.
Other inconsistencies include contradictory statements from the camp boss, Maki, and evidence of injuries on the bodies suggesting a struggle before their drowning.
He had married a Nisei, many years his junior, Alice Iwamoto, daughter of the Latuda mine camp boss.
Many were told that they owed money to the rubber camp bosses for food, clothing or equipment, and would have to remain until their debts were paid off.
Twelve years afterwards, Eiji Iwamoto, who had become blind in 1935 while working as camp boss, returned to Japan with his wife's ashes and stayed there to die.
In addition to Rivers, the main recurring characters include fellow members of his safari firm, including his partner Chandra Aiyar, camp boss Beauregard Black, and cook Ming.
All mill, smelter, and mining towns had Japanese boardinghouses that camp bosses ran themselves and later, when the Picture Bride Provision of 1910 allowed women to emigrate, with their wives.
In the other direction, the Warden commanded twenty Camp Bosses, who in turn gave orders to a dozen or so Overseers, each in charge of a number of work gangs supervised by a Trusty.
The agency removed the pronouns "I" and "me" from a chapter in which Mr. Soufan describes his widely reported role in the interrogation of Abu Zubaydah, an important terrorist facilitator and training camp boss.
Whether the Japanese lived in mining towns under "camp bosses" like Eiji Iwamoto or in mill, smelter, or farming areas, neither they nor their children were subjected to continual harassment as were other new immigrant groups.
The rubber camp bosses "feared an exodus if the news got out, and so many rubber soldiers were still there in the jungle years later, unawares," said Marcos Vinícius Neves, a historian who is director of a government historical preservation foundation here.