Swathi naidu on bed latest fucking
my girl twerking on my dick
Espiado x mi sobrina
Jr Doidera gravou a novinha gostosa carioca Bibi Werneck na festa de swing meteu na cabine com glory hole aberto
Carole, la milf gourmande baise sur un bateau
Latina alexia rey sells her body for the family
Mature Tart Sky Haven Has Her Pussy Stretched by a Horny Grandpa
Sexy Babe Kimberlee Bends Over For Good Dicking
Bonnie Hot Girl
Erotic Solo Strapon Lesbian Girl
0 notes
https://twitter.com/JagdevRs/status/1360549632711921666
https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:6766315438810001408
https://www.trepup.com/shrirsjagdev/stories/465234
https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=550818302498706&id=538047083775828
https://myspace.com/shrirsjagdev/post/activity_profile_82323977_3b3102332d0546b88a04c3783e6e004d/comments
https://flip.it/CevKIw
0 notes
Anna May Wong
In honor of Asian Pacific American Heritage Month we would like to share with you some of the images and documents within our holdings at the National Archives at Riverside.
Today, we pay tribute to Anna May Wong, considered to be the first Chinese American movie star, and also the first Asian American actress to gain international recognition.
During most of Ms. Wong’s life, she was subjected to the Chinese Exclusion Act which restricted the immigration of individuals of Chinese descent into the United States (see Friday’s post on this topic). Case files were created by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) on an individual basis to document interactions with persons of Chinese descent. In many cases, in-depth interrogations of the subjects and their acquaintances were held to verify evidence submitted and to see if each interviewee provided the same information.
Although Ms. Wong was a United States citizen by birth, she was required to submit documents to the INS. These were required prior to travelling abroad to ensure that, upon her return, she would be identified as having the right to re-enter the U.S. As part of this process, she would receive a Certificate of Identity. The documents we are sharing with you include three “Application of Alleged American Citizen of the Chinese Race for Preinvestigation of Status” forms, one for each time she traveled abroad.
Here at the National Archives at Riverside, we hold Chinese Exclusion Act case files dating from 1893 to 1968. These files are maintained according to the Immigration and Naturalization Service's district offices that had responsibility for the ports of entry where individuals first entered or departed from the United States.
Series: Chinese Exclusion Act Case Files, 1935 - 1965. Record Group 85. (NAID 5831056).
For more information about the Chinese Exclusion Act and records in our holdings, please visit the following links:
National Archives educational materials, reference papers, and other documents relating to the Chinese Exclusion Act
National Archives at Riverside’s Chinese Exclusion Act records
22 notes
·
View notes