Give Now
UCLA College
  • About
    • The College
    • Leadership
    • Bruin Bookshelf
    • Podcast
  • Academics
  • Admissions
    • Undergraduate Admissions
    • Graduate Admissions
  • Magazine
  • Stories
  • Events
  • Search
  • Menu Menu

With memories spanning decades, majors and interests, graduates of the UCLA College reflect on their time as students and their hopes for the College’s next 100 years. Read their stories below, and click here to share your own.

  • 2020s
  • 2010s
  • 2000s
  • 1990s
  • 1980s
  • 1970s
  • 1960s
  • 1950s
  • 1940s
  • 1930s
  • 1920s
A black and white photograph from the 1930s depicting Kiyoshi Patrick Okura and other UCLA students.

1930s

BLAZE TRAILS

“How one handles hardships makes you a better person. You accept it and make the best of it.”

Kiyoshi Patrick Okura ’33, M.A. ’35 | Psychology

Kiyoshi Patrick Okura was the first Japanese American student to play varsity baseball at UCLA, as well as a founding member of the Japanese American Bruins Club. After earning his master’s degree — becoming the first Asian American to receive such a master’s degree in psychology at UCLA — Okura was frustrated by the difficulty in finding suitable work.

Read More

He challenged the city of Los Angeles’ segregationist hiring practices and succeeded in becoming the first Japanese American to work for the Los Angeles Civil Service Commission. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, he was falsely accused of using his position to run a spy network and forced to resign, although charges were later dropped.

In 1941, Okura was sent to the Santa Anita Park internment camp, where he and his wife, Lily, lived in an 8-by-8-foot tack room in a horse stable. He was able to leave internment when Rev. Edward Flanagan, founder of the nonprofit Boys Town, sponsored about 50 Japanese American families and brought them to Omaha, Nebraska. Okura became Boys Town’s staff psychologist and later worked for the National Institutes of Health, creating programs for minority communities.

Okura also became a leader of the Japanese American Citizens League, the oldest and largest Asian American civil rights organization in the U.S. He was honored by the JACL as a “Japanese American of the Biennium” in 1978, and by the emperor of Japan in 1999. In 1988, President Ronald Reagan signed the Civil Liberties Act, which offered a formal apology and financial compensation for surviving victims of incarceration during World War II. The Okuras used their reparation funds to cofound the Okura Mental Health Leadership Foundation, promoting leadership, research and training in human services. They also donated their papers to UCLA, a testament to lives of service.

In an interview with The Washington Post in 1990, the 79-year-old Okura spoke about the experience of receiving a federal redress for the crimes he suffered.

“Despite the injustices that may exist in our system of democracy, if you stick to it, if the cause is right, then you do have a chance of righting the wrong,” he told the paper, going on to say, “How one handles hardships makes you a better person. You accept it and make the best of it.”

Adapted from UCLA Alumni Connect with thanks to the UCLA Alumni Association.

Teresa White Riddle ’68, M.Ed. ’76

Mary Lois (Walker) Peters ’34

Mendel Rittenberg ’36

James N. Yamazaki ’39

Bob Schiller ’39

SHARE YOUR STORY

Special thanks to the UCLA Alumni Association and UCLA Alumni Diversity Programs & Initiatives.
Visit them to further explore the UCLA College community.

Read more from the UCLA College Magazine 100 edition.

Share this entry
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share by Mail
  • Link to Instagram

Los Angeles, CA 90095

UCLA College

  • About
  • Stories
  • Magazine
  • Commencement
  • Giving
  • Brand
  • Staff Resources

Related Sites

  • Equity, Diversity & Inclusion
  • Corporate & Foundation Relations
  • Impact of Philanthropy

Connect

  • Alumni
  • Prospective Students
  • Current Students
  • Parents & Families
  • Faculty
  • Staff

Information

  • Careers
  • Directory
  • Academic Calendar
  • UCLA Newsroom
  • Parking & Transportation
  • Maps & Directions
  • Emergency
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
Scroll to top