bataan death march
Yes it is true. Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, President FDR issued Executive Order 9066 which lead to the relocation of thousands of Japanese-Americans to internment camps. Though not as harsh as concentration camps set up by the Germans, people died and living conditions were rough.
Forced convection is forced [man-made] and normal convection is natural.
No, its forced by an electric blower...otherwise it wouldn't be forced air
forced circulation is done by pump and natural circulation in done by nature
birdcaging
Japanese soldiers forced their American prisoners to undergo the Bataan Death March.
The Bataan Death March got its name when nearly 72,000 American and Filipino prisoners during WWII were forced to march from the southern part of Bataan to the northern side. During the march, over 10,000 died due to harsh treatment or hot weather conditions. In 1942 after MacArthur was forced to leave the Philippines because the Japanese had invaded it, Bataan Peninsula was surrendered to the Japanese, and all these soldiers were taken prisoners.
Filipino and American soldiers whom were prisoners of the Japanese
The American and Philippino soldiers marched from Corregidor across the Bataan peninsula did so with insufficient amounts of food, medicine, water and rest, and were subject to death by bayonet at the whim of their captors for any or no apparent reason.
The Japanese forced 75,000 Filipino and American prisoners to march 60 miles through the Bataan Peninsula of the Philippines. Only 54,000 managed to make it to Camp O'Donnell where they were held for 3 years. Thousands died at the camp due to starvation and disease and being killed by the Japanese.
The surrender of 75,000 Allied soldiers in the Philippines.The Bataan Death March resulted in the death of more than 7,000 American and Filipino troops who were forced to make a grueling journal after surrendering to Japanese troops.
NovaNET Answer: American and filipino prisoners were forced to walk through the jungle to a prison, and many thousands died along the way.During World War II, the Bataan Death March occurred in 1942 after Japanese troops occupied the Philippines. It received its name from the area in which the march (mainly) occurred -- the Bataan Peninsula -- and from the number of deaths that it caused among the wounded and under-nourished (and simply fatigued) Allied soldiers involved in it.
The Bataan Death March was not a battle. It was a forced death march, e.g. being forced to march at least 80 miles under extreme conditions. Over 10,000 soldiers died during The Bataan Death March.
The US Army in the Philippines made a valiant last stand against Japan on the Bataan Peninsula with the island of Corregidor as their headquarters. After the fall of Bataan, the American prisoners were forced to make the infamous "Bataan Death March." Corregidor held out for another month before it fell. * The full story is complicated, but General Eisenhower's plan to relieve the Philippines was cancelled because of Roosevelt's decision to deal with Germany first. General MacArthur was recalled to Australia, and US and Filipino forces withdrew to Bataan so as to hold out longer. They were in effect abandoned, and they called themselves the Battling Bastards of Bataan.
Bataan Death March
The Bataan Penensula.
The Bataan Death March refers to the forced relocation of nearly 80,000 United States and Filipino prisoners of war from Mariveles, Bataan, to San Fernando, Pampanga in the Philippines. During this forced march, about 10,000 Filipino and 650 US soldiers died from a combination of neglect and outright abuse.