This is one of the first pictures in the Densho Archives. It is listed as being taken in 1942 in the Tule Lake internment camp. This would have been taken shortly after the U.S. Attorney General issued “the first of a series of orders establishing limited strategic areas… and requiring the removal of all suspected ‘enemy’ aliens from these areas” (Chronology, 413). This is a picture of three sixth-grade boys studying for school. In most of the photographs from the Institutional Collections in the Densho Archive, the people either are not aware they are being photographed, or they are very posed. On November 3, 1942, and taken from the National Archives and Records Administration Collection, this picture is most likely staged based on their rigid and identical positions. Alinder offers a reason for their perfect behavior and proper positions in her preface; “The proliferation of government and press photographers and their cameras may have played a large part in encouraging the smiles, the orderliness, and the patience” (17). Many of the pictures taken cannot be interpreted directly from the image saved. Instead, all of these pictures have to be interpreted from their subject, source, place, and time. In this case, the boys being photographed were young enough to not understand what was happening and therefore willing to cooperate with photographers trying to create the ideal camp life.