NATIONAL APPEAL JACL redress campaign steps into 2nd phase • SAN FRANCISCO - JACL's persons-Ellen Endo of effective campaign possible, step since "it was felt a two• and resources of JACL spent members of Congress. it was redress campaign shifted in• Metropolitan LA. JACL, explained T ateishi. prong approach may deter over two years 00 such an ef• stressed. to its second phase-to have media strategy; and Ron Ma• Focus of the two-day dis• action by both the Congress fort would be more effective The redress committee suitable legislation prepared miya of Seattle JACL, legis• cussion centered on pro• and the courts," Tateishi and worthwhile in view of the will confer with other key and introduced in the next lation. Person in charge of posals accepted at the Salt said. The only official vote of convention mandate. members of Congress before Congress. the fund-raising subcommit• Lake City convention as well the weekend, however, does The redress media strate• its ~xt scheduled commit• The National JACL Com• tee is to be selected. as an alternative, concom• not preclude a possibility of gy package will include au• tee meeting in January ,1979, mittee on Redress, chaired Also present were: mitant approach to reverse judicial review, he added. dio-visual material for dis• to discuss specific language by John Tateisbi of Marin Dr. Clifford Uyeda, na• the supreme court decisions Iwama was asked to study tribution by JACL chapters, of the proposed bill. County JACL, met over the tional president; Dr. Jim Tsu• in the Yasui, Hirabayashiand the feasibility ofcourt action. according to Ellen Endo. "Mter eight years of strug• Sept. 9-10 weekend here at jimura, national vice presi• Korematsu cases with re• Also dismissed was an• Mamiya was directed to gling with redress inside JACL Headquarters. It was dent, research & services; spect to federal government other alternative that would begin necessary legislative JAa.., we have finally the first session of the recon• Paula Mitsunaga, acting re• exclusion and evacuation of have asked for establishing a research into preparing the reached a point where weare stituted JACL redress com• cording secretary; Frank persons of Japanese ances• special congressional com• proposed JACL bill. prepared to take our case to mittee. Attending were: Iwama, national JACL legal try from the West Coast in mittee to study the issue by Before implementation of the American public in a na• Henry Miyatake (Pacific counsel; Ben Takeshita, 1942. holding hearings around the the national campaign, the tional campaign," Tateishi Northwest), Raymond Oka• chairman, NC-WNDC re• TheJACLcomrnittee,how• country. The JACL redress redress committee expects declared. mura (Northern California• dress committee; and Frank ever, rejected the alternative committee felt the e!)ergies to confer with the Nikkei Western Nevada),Phil Shige• Chin of Seattle, a reporter, by kuni (pacific Southwest), Mi• invitation of Tateishi. noru Yasui (Mountain Committee members were ISSN: 0030-8579 Plains), representing their appointed for their individu• respective districts; and re• al expertise and knowledge dress subcommittee chair- of redress to launch the most Comments wanted PACIFIC CITIZEN Publication of the National Japanese American Citizens League
on Manzanar plans No. 2,011-Vol. 87 Friday, September 22, 1978 25e U S Postpaid 15 Cents SACRAMENTO, Cali f.-The and the life, conditions and State Dept. of Parks and Rec• history of the camp would be reation wants comments by shown through exhibit pan• those who were interned in els. Manzanar camp during In the second, a few bar• Internment credit bill goes to President World War n 00 plans to de• racks, the guard tower and velop it into a histoficalland• barbed wire fencing would WASHINGTON - Congress Mineta said. "It will help re• tern for time spent after the own government without mark site. be reconstructed to demon• took final legislative action dress the wrongful and de• age of 18 in the internment 'due process' of law ,everyef• The 495-acre site where strate the way the facility last week (Sept. 11) on a bill plorable actions of 30 years camps for the period Dec. 7, fort should be made to com• Manzanar was located is was in 1942; and tea gardens, sponsored by Rep. Norman ago, taken in the name of 'na• 1941, through Dec. 31, 1946. pensate for that unconstitu• owned by the City of Los An• trees and amenities devel• Y. Mineta (D.Qili.f.) to grant tional security,' which de• Retirement credit for Japa• tional action. I am very hope• geles, but the California oped by residents during the civil service retirement prived 110,000 individuals of nese American internees ful that the President will see Dept. of Parks and Recrea• war could be developed by credit to Japanese American their constitutional rights." covered by Social Security fiUo sign this effort at com• tion is considering leasing community organizations. civil servants for the time The House of Representa• was passed into law in 1972. pensation made by Con• the land in order to present The third way would have they spent in internment tives first passed the bill (HR Civil Service does not pay so• gress." the camp's history to visi- several blocks of barracks, camps during World War II. 9471) Jan. 23, 1978. The Sen• cial security. tors. . guard towers, and barbed The measure has been sent ate passed a version Aug. 18 Mineta said both the Japa• A general development wire, and would demonstrate to the President's desk for his that included a technical Co-sponsor Rep. John Bur• nese American Citizens plan, resource management the crowded quarters, lack of signarure. change making the legisla• ton (D-caJ.if.) pointed out League and the Committee plan and environmental im• privacy and other conditions Rep. Mineta said he has tion effective Oct. 1, 1978. that, "It is important to em• for Irtternment Credits were pact report are being devel• which prevailed when 10,000 asked the President for a The House accepted the Sen• phasize that both the actual instrumental in winning oped. Three ways of present• people were housed on the special signing ceremony at ate amendment by unani• retirement credit and the passage of the bill. In the Sen• ing Manzanar are under con• ~ one-square-mile of land. In the White House. mous consent Sept. 11. principle that is being for• ate, the bill was supported in sideration at present. • this alternative, the depart- ('This bill has strong sym• The bill would credit fed• warded here are pertinent testimony by Sens. Spark In the first, no reconstruc• bolic meaning to Japanese eral workers covered by the Whenever American citizens Matsunaga and Daniel tion would be undertaken, Continued on Page 3 _Americans and all citizens," civil service retirement sys- are detained illegally by their Inouye (both D-Hawaii). DRS. ITAKURA, HIROSE ON CITY OF HOPE TEAM • Scientists create gene which makes human insulin DUARTE, Calif.-Synthetic Hirose, ltakura and Arthur D. Riggs. the insulin available now. • genes which can manufacture The scientists, using "re• The scientifIC exploit is the human insulin have been combinant DNA"-()r contro• combining of two new fields created by a team of scien• versial "genetic engineering" in biochemical research - tists from City of Hope Na• -techniques, created an ar• artificial gene synthesis and tional Medical Center here tificial insulin gene which the application of recombin• ... and from Genentech, Inc., a was incorporated with a ant DNA (gene splicing) San Francisco firm. harmless human bacteria techniques. The ten collaborating sci• strain (E. coli) tnmanufacture Throughout their research, entists have submitted two insulin identical to human the City of Hope-Genentech comprehensive papers on insulin. team emphasized that they t their work to the Proceedings ltakura said it took a half voluntarily adopted and ob• • of the National Academy of year to complete the chemi• served guidelines and safe• Sciences for publication. cal synthesis of the genes for guards established for recom• Both papers and support• the insulin molecule. Among binant DNA research by the ing data were outlined by Dr. the ramifications of the sci• National Institutes of Health. Keiichi ltakura, City of Hope entific achievement are: In a Los Angeles Times ed• molecular biologist, at a UC• itorial, "Diabetes Research• • Possible commercial production of LA scientific seminar. human insulin, which millions of dia• ers Come Through", it was The first of two reports,ti• betics require daily injections of ID noted that reconbiIImt DNA tied "Chemical Synthesis of live. Eli Lilly and Co. announced an research "has been opposed Genes for Human Insulin", agreement with Gmentech to produce by some who fear that acci• the hormone, but large-scale produc• is authored by Roberto Crea, tion is probably two to five yean dental or even deliberate ge• Tadaaki Hirose, Adam Kra• down the road becaJse Food and ~ netic mutations oou1d be pr0- szewski and ltakura, all PhD.'s Administration tests must be almple• duced that would do irrepa• at City of Hope. ted for all new drugs. rable hanD to life. • TIle threat of an insulln sbormge The second paper, ''Expres• because of a growing diabetic popula• "The weight of responsi• sion in E. coli of Chemically tion, projected to ocau in the 198Os, ble scientific opinion, howev• Synthesized Genes for Hu• will be alleviated. Presently. insulin er, is on the side ~ continuing man Insulin" bears the from cows and pigs is used. te~ • Five per cent of diabetics are al• research, carried out under names of all members of lergic to the animal-derived iDlulin strict controls and dedicated the research team: now ~human imuIin Genentecb-David Goeddel, Den• should reduce such problema. to the advancement of scien• nis K1eid, Francisoo Bolivar, Herbert • U manlbecteria-m.Ie buDWI 10- tific understanding and itl INSULIN BREAKTHROUGH TEAM-Scientists (left to right) Itakura, Riggs, Goeddel and Crea who L Heyneker and Daniel YIIISUra. sulin can be commerdlllJy IDUI pro• COlidiniId _ hie 7 collaborated on the genetic engineering "first". City of Hop&-Ors. Kraszewski, duced. it mlibt be .. expmIiw IhIn 2-PACIFIC CmZEN I Friday, September 22, 1978 ------______• Doris Matsui Reverse bias issue back ifJ high court AID recruitment seeks wins award WASHINGTON-The legal a lower court's ruling that beenincludedintbeprogram p"o.l.essionals and ,"n+e"ns SACRAMENTO-Doris Ma- question left unanswered by federal law bars Kaiser from at Kaiser's plant in Gramer- I I I~ II (I I j • • • ..:£" f Sa . . . tsw, wue 0 cramento • the upreme Court's Bakke voluntarily setting up so- La. where Weber worked. WASHINGTON-The Agen- _Th o~ seekin g POSItiOns m City Councilman Robert Ma- dec ~on-wheth:r ~mploy- called affinnative action pro- He charged that selection cy for.Inte~tiooalOev~lop- Washington, D.C. must meet tsui, won the prestigious ers illegally discnmmate grams. of black workers with less ment 15 seeking profeSSIOnal the qualifications criteria Rosalie Stern AWard. agal 1st whites when minori- The Supreme Court, which seniority than he made him a and technical specialists and established by the Civil The 51,000 award is grant- ties are given special prefer- begins its new term, Oct. 2, victim of racial discrimina- administrative support per- Service Commission. Over- ed annually to University of ences-returned to the Na- is not expected to announce tion in violation of the Civil sonnel. AID, created by Con- seas posts have initial ap_ California-Berkeley female tion' highest coort last week whether a full review will be Rights Act of 1964. gressin 1961,administersfo- pointments fortDurs up to 30 graduates who contribute (Sept. 14). . granted until Weber's atto.r- The lower and appellate reignB:Ss~~p~sin months, including orienta- extraordinarily to their com- Attorneys for Kaiser Alu- neys respond to the twin courts have ruled in Weber's countries m Africa, AsIan, the tion, and travel and overseas munities. minum & Chemical Co., [em- appeals. favor. # Middle East and Latin Amer- duty of 24 months. Families Matsui is president of ployer of the white Louisiana The Kaiser program, ap_ ica. can usually be taken over- KVlE-Channel6 board of di- worker, BrianF. Weber, who proved in a company-union Senior citizen At present, the following seas with employees. rectors, and is on the Junior claimed he was discriminated pact, trained one black for h' d professionals are sought: To apply, Personal Qualifi- Museum board of directors. after being denied ...!>rticipa- each white forcraftJO' bs with ouslng approve Agricultural ecmomists, agricul- cation Statement SF-l71 She 15' a member of the Sac- }' FIRST BANK \1,.,1 • Hl\\ CertifIcates 01 DepOSIt may be WIthdrawn prior to matu nty, bul In accordance WI th Federal RegulatIon require• ments, Interest for the entire tIme 0' depOSit WIll be recalculated at the pre aIling sa Ings passbook rate, less 90 days Interest. MERIT SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION LOS ANGEL ES: 324 E F,rst St 624 -7434 • TORRANCE/ GARDENA : 18505 S Western Ave 327-9301 MONTEREY PAR K: 1995 S AtlantiC Blvd . 266-3011 • IRVINE: Under Construction MEMBER FSLlC .. 4--Friday,September22,1978======~~~f'------~~------ ISSN 0030-85 79 • PACIFIC CITIZEN Comment, letters, features Published weekly except the first and last weeks of the year at 3S5 E. First St., Am. 307, Los Angeles, Ca. 90012. ~D'Aquino tial pardon, but also should seek a away of Koga Masao (Aug. 18 (In passing, recently I was not lauded Declaration of Innocence. And in (213) 626-6936 PC), extremely talented for his able to locate a popular song of • Editor: admitting our oowardice in not composition of love and nostal• OR CLIFFORD UYEDA NATIONAL JACL PRESIDENT I am writing to you in refer• the early 19505, "Minato Kobe DO challenging the verdict of her gic songs. Madorosu-san". while visiting ELLEN ENOO, PACIFIC cmZEN BOARD CHAIRPERSON ence to Dr. Clifrs Column in the trial in 1949, should erect a monu• My wife located early pictures HARRY K HONDA EDITOR Sept. 1 edition of the PC, "Dis• relatives in Japan. Would appre• ment in her honor. of Mr. Koga with his tutored ciate a copy or tape if obtainable Second class postage paid at Los Angeles. Calif. similar Treason Cases." For not many American wom• child-singer, and I vividly recall I would like to thank Dr. Uyeda en have truly experienced war as from any PC reader. Naturally I meeting both back stage in 1955 shall reimburse.) SUBSCRIPTION RATES for his continuing and untiring Iva Toguri D'Aquino has. And in Tokyo after a one-maD per• JACL Members-$5 of national dues proVIdeS one year on a one-per• support for Iva Toguri 0'Aquino. DOUGLAS KENDAlL householdba51s(S7frcmOcl1978).Non-memberspayableinadvanc&• few people of any race have ever formance show by my favorite Puyallun Valley JAU U.S. $1 0 a year; Fornigl $14.5Oa year. First Class servlce-write forrates. The only traitor in the case of been as loyal to their country as guitar-kashu, Tabata Yoshio. . 1Ss17-34th Ave E :'Tokyo Rose" or Iva Toguri Iva. - Nonetheless, Mr. Koga was ~tVillage-l20 News and opinions expressed by columnists, except JACl D'Aquino was the American pe Denver, Colo. papers of Japm on his impressiom of the TIllS MAY BE the JACL convenmn in Salt lake City. hottest summer in One of the points be made w~ that for Denver's history. Yes• the first time be bad become aware that terday the tempera• Japan's actims, such as piling up a large ture reached 93 degrees. The forecast for trade surplus, cou1d have a profound today. tomoITOW' and the day after is more effect on Japanese Americans. And be felt of the same. It is likely we will have more a little strange, be wrote, to be among 9(}plus days than in any previous year. people who in appearance were like him What's worse from the viewpoint ofa good• and his wi(e, but who viewed problems Iy number of mushroom addicts here• between Japan and the United States fmn abouts, is that the smnmer has been dIy as the opposite sKle of the issues. well as hot. It takes moisture to make the Professor Saruya's reports may have mushrooms sprout out of the forest floor, been ope of the few times Japanese read• and not much is sprouting. ers were given a comprehensive accoont Last year the Rockies produced a of Nisei problems and viewpoints as they bumper crop of mushrooms. The rains, relate to Japm The Asahi, perhaps the apparently, came at the right time. Almost most influential of Japan's three giant na• -FROM HAPPY VALLEY: Sachi Seko everyone who went mushroom hunting tional newspapers, gave an unusual came back with buckets full. Commercial amount of space to Saruya's dispatches. shippers sent hundreds of pounds of mush• Obviously the editors realized their great rooms to Japanese restaurants and significan~ and that's a good sign Peanut Butter Sandwich markets in New York, Oricago and Los • • • ••Salt Lake City: food? Why aren't you eating pIe whose names are famil• Angeles. The amateurs also mailed out NOTES TO THOSE of you who have Cookbooks are meant to be more?" I have this terrible iar, it is interesting simply to hundreds of pounds to friends, mostly on written to express concern over JACL's read for enjoyment. They are habit of getting tempera• read. My impression is that the West Coast (The fellow at the central redress campaign. Thanks, but don't write almost as relaxing as mys• mental with friends who nitr Mitsu Sonoda,Amy Nakashi• post office woo accepts air mail parcels to me. Write to the national president, Dr. tery books. When the first ble at my food. ma, Ruth Watanabe and Toy suggested that if the mushroom season Clifford Uyeda. Yes, I agree that it's pre• sign of fall appears, 1 ex- AS WE PARTED for the Kanegai like to entertain. I lasted a few months instead of just a few sumptuous of JACL with some 30,000 - amine the row of books in the night, Harry was extremely hope my friend, Harry, gets weeks, the U.S. Postal Service might be members to say it is carrying out the wish• pantry, selecting a volume gracious about the dinner. lucky and is invited to one of able to overcome its deficit.) es of the "majority" of the 600,000 Japa• their dinners. for the night's perusal. . But the next night, when we This year the woods have produced vir• nese Americans in seeking $3 billion from This season there is a new happened to entertain an• But Virginia Tominaga is book on the shelf. It got there my husband's favorite con• tually nothing. Those who have scoured the United States government for the in• other group of friends, one their favorite areas report that even toad• justices of the Evacuation. If you want ..in the strangest way. Some• came bearing a gift from tributor. He has already tried are JACL policy changed, the to complain time in July, when we Harry. It was the cookbook, her marvelous German stools almost non-existent. man learned that our friend, "East-West Flavors II." I pound cake three times. There aren't many Issei who are hardy to is the man in charge. who'm we shall call Harry, have a sneaking suspicion Once, he tried to improve on enough to go mushroom hunting. Their • • • was coming to town, we that there is a subtle message it. It was impossible. Ern place has been taken by Nisei, many of RUNNING FOR POLITICAL office called to invite him to dinner. in this gift. thinks he is a coonoisseur of whom are retired and are free to head for these days is an astonishingly expensive .. To confirm our invitation, cakes. He has been working the hills any day of the week. But they are "East-West Flavors II," is a proposition. It shouldn't be, but that's the we sent him a letter. I men• for years on his secret recipe. burning up a lot of gasoline for nothing. way it is. FrierxlsofCongressman Nonnan presentation of the West Los One day, he plans to retire in tioned that the entree that Angeles JACL Auxiliary. It If your favorite mushroom-provider Mineta, seeking his third term as U.S. night would be peanut butter Mexico, where he can bake follows the first cookbook, and sell cakes for a living. He hasn't sent any, it isn't because he's for• Representative from a Northern Califor• sandwiches, the specialty of gotten you. He hasn't found any to send. nia district, are asking for contributioos. ~ "East-West F1avors I," putr was certain that his recipe the house. I spent most of my lished ten years ago. As the • • • Mineta, a Democrat, has been an outstand• time shelling peanuts. In a was the best. But after tast• title indicates, it is a com• PROF. SARUYA of Tokyo s~ rare expression of courtesy, ing Virginia's cake, he has to KANAME ing member of Congress. He merits pilation of Asian and Ameri• admit that her recipe is pret• Women's College, mentioned in this col• port. The address of the Mineta for Con• I offered to remove the crust can recipes. I noticed that all from the bread. He looked ty hard to beat. umn a few weeks ~go, has written a de• gress Committee is 724 North First St., San of the ingredients can be pur• I HA VE ALWAYS har• tailed series of articles for the Asahi news- Jose, CA 95112 . :# like a finicky eater, being a chased in our inland town. .. _ city creature. And although I bored a desire to submit a didn't tell him, there was ajar The nicest part about the recipe for publication. And YE EDITOR'S DESK: Harry K. Honda of jelly in the pantry. It is the book is that finally exact maybe I want to prove a same and solitary jar of jel• measurements are given for point to my friend, Harry. ly that 1 have kept for yea rs in some of the foods I grew up That I don't restrict my cook• .,. • case of famine. eating. Both my grandmoth• ing to peanut butter sand• Niihau Incident ., The appointed night ar• er and mother were excellent wiches. So, here is my recipe kaka Kanehele got mad and pilot were identified 14 years rived. Frankly, I thought cooks, who prided them• for spinach salad dressing. It jumped the pilot, taking three later and returned, it was a Harry would invent an ex• selves on their culinary can be also used on swiss bullets in his stomach, but still major story in the Honolulu chard. managing somehow to pick up cuse to squirm out of dinner skills. But neither paid much the pilot and brain him against a Japanese language press. at our house. There was attention to measurements. SPINACH SALAD DRESSING stone wall. Harada turned his Their English sections They added and subtracted 1/4 cup sugar shotgun on himself and the battle missed the item altogether. ~. ::a~~eo~:o~;e~~f~~h:n~ ingredients as suited their 1 teaspoon salt for Niibau was over." The Japanese consular offi• thought. It was a nice eve• taste or mood. 1 teaspoon dry mustard THE MYSTERIOUS LIFE Rest of Seiler's story tells cial in Hawaii who bad been ning. He pleased his hostess. The cookbook is unique in 1 tablespoon onion juice patterns of Hawaiians who of life on Niihau, its owners-• trying to locate the remains Not once did I have to ask, another way. Since the re• V3 cup cider vinegar live on Niibau, 20 miles the Robinson Family, regard• through the U.S. Anny "What's the matter with my cipes are contributed by peo- 1 cup salad oil southwest of Kauai, were un• ed by Hawaiian officialdom Graves Registration section 1 tablespoon poppy seed folded in a LA. Times, front as caring deeply .about the in 1953 bad recalled the EAST WEST FLAVORS I & II For those who may be in- page feature this past week. health and well-being of the Niihau incident in a Japanese terested, I have also been Reporter Michael Seiler's people and recognizing their military publication. working on a rice recipe for story, datelined Lihue, men• efforts to preserve a bit of Harada is identified as a dogs. Nicholas has been eat• tions the last time anything Hawaiiana. dual citizen in Beekman's ac• count, born on Kauai and • East·West flavors. the ing it for the last two weeks. interesting happening on the LONGTIME PC RE~ • ever popular cookbook He likes it. # tiny island was on Dec. 7, among the few employees publIShed by the West ERS should recall our Holi• working in Niihau. Beekman Los Angeles JACl 1941, when "a luckless Japa• day Issue contributor AIlan Auxd,ary, now has a nese pilot trying to return to wrote that the pilot had sequel. hSt-WMt FI~.ors 35 Years Ago Beekman had written two "seized the shotgun" at the II . Th,s beautdul 331 poge If ~ PACFIC aT1ZEN his carrier in a damaged stories on the Niihau incident s,lver and black cookbook Sept. 25, 1943 ranch house where Harada w,th all new reCipes and plane was forced to crash -in the 1971 and 1972 edi• Sept. ~tar witness Earl Best lived, in search of his own pis• menu suggest,ons w,lI land on Niihau" ... and "un• tions. (Both stories are copy• compliment u .sl·Wesl before Dies committee charging bued with the spirit of the tol and papers which had flavors I, the o" g,nol 202 WRA pampering evacuees arrested righted by the author.) been relieved by Howard Ka• pJge cookbook. Order day, the pilot-whose name in Los Angeles on Wyoming warrant Beekman bas made a sys• leobano, a cowpuncher who now. Both cookbooks for forgery. has been lost in the mists of tematic, exhaustive study of are ava, lable. (Rei bad seen the plane crash land Sept. IS-First Nisei woman history-attempted to claim all available material, identi• Kihara) passes Idaho state bar exam• Niihau for his emperor". and pulled himout.lt wasKa• ination. fied the pilot (with a picture leohano's house that was Sept. 1S-Canad.a begins auction Seiler's story continues: in the 1971 PC Holiday Issue) 1 am enclOSIng my dona lion ror burned down thinking the sale of evacuee goods in its custody. "He enlisted a Japanese alien as Naval Airman Shigenori _cop,es E-W I, ~4 50. 7Sc postage and handling 55 25 each -• Sept. I~Ban on roast return re• pilot's papers might be d~ resident of the island, YoshioHa• Nishikaichi of Ehime Pre• _cop,es E-W It, 57 00. 51 pmtase and hondlinR 58.00 each __ mains in force, says Gen. Emmons; rada, who supplied a shotgun and stroyed if theywere secreted fecture, and interviewed TOTAL enclosed 5 __ "substantial change" in military situ• helped the pilot work the plane's there. ation required to restore right. machine guns loose from the many of the participants, in• Namc ______In the 1972 story ,Beekman Sept. 2O-Nisei instructors s;redit• wings. cluding Harada's widow who StreCLt ______ed with success of U.s. Navy's Jap& "Now formidably armed, the mentions the papers had to nese language program at Univ. of was later interned by the do with the Japanese Zero C,ty. State. ZIP ______pilot and Haradaattempted toex• Colorado. tend Japanese hegemony over Army at Honouliuli. and it was the pilot's duty "to PINsc make checks payable to Sept. 22-JACL staffer Joe Grant Niillau, burning one Hawaiian's It's a tale that makes print preserve the secrets of the ~ est Los Angeles JACL AUXiliary Masaoka airs evacuee problem at now and then. About the time Colorado Conference of Social Wel• home in the process. 1431 Armacost Ave Los Angeles. C. 90025 6IiidiiIIICJ OD Nest .... fare. .. Another Hawaiian, Beneha- the cremated remains of the &-PACIFIC CmZEN I Friday, September 22, 1978 ------..,...----' • OCT. Sm.ndu) Sept. 27, 7:30 p.m., at the s.a c.brieI \'aIIey-Pre-reti Calendar ment seminar. ESGVJCC.8 P-J1I .: Paul JACLHall. • A non.IACl. ... Hana hiro. M.D .• spkr. pulse, memos • SEPT. 22 (F1UD,\Y) Calendar, (FridIry) • Marin County • OCT. , s.a DIeao-Bd mig. 'San JOse-Mcr Candidate '70 Full chapter membership 'Los Angeles-Bob Matsui recep• Forum. Oak Grove High. 7:30 p.m. tion. Bilnnore HOlel Gold Room. support is expected at the > • ocr. 7 (Satardlly) $300 at the Greenwood Park NC-WNDC's second annual 7:30 p.m. 'San J~r Service Keirolem. White River to host PNWDC International Festival June • SEPT. 23 (SatardIIy) Buddhist Church Annex. 4-6:30 om. Marin Invitational volleyball Hoosier-Hayride, weiner roast. W~ D.c. - Japanese SEATTLE, Wash.-White Nakayama, 11858 SE 282nd 2-4 with sale of food and tournament on Sunday, Sept. Southeast Way Park. Indianapolis, School OS-week sessions start). Ce• 6:30p.m. River Valley JACL will host St., Kent, Wa. 9B031 (631- handcraft. It served as a test• 24, at Terra Linda High dar lane Unitarian OlUrch. 9:30 a.m.' 1195). ing ground for its upcoming • San Jose-MlS dnr mfg, Pinehurst 12:30 p.m.; Tomie Otani, enrollment. the Pacific Northwest Dis• School gym. Games get un• Inn, 4 p.m.; Mayor Janet Hayes, dnr 942·7929. trict Council session sched• October International Festi• derway .:It noon. spkr. • Sacramento-FoodICraft bazaar, • Houston val Oct. 20-22 at the down• Japanese MethodistOturcb.11 a.rn.. uled for the Oct. 28-29 week• • SEPT. 24 (SaDdIy) o.m. end. Houston JA(1 and Nogi• town Indianapolis Conven• • Sacramento NC-WNDC-Invit volleyball tour• ku-Kai (a Japanese wom• nament, Marin JACL hosts, Terra • OCT. 8 (SuDday) Infonnal reception of vis• tion Center. Bob Bunnell and Sacramento JACL will Linda High, 12:30 p.m. 'Berkeley-Alci Marsuri. Buddhist en's club) will have a Japa• 'San Oiego-Pioreer day, Bud• Church. p.m. iting district officers and Ken Matsumotoare co-chair• have an October Japan flight 12n4:3O nese food booth and cultural dhist Church. 'San Matec>--Troop Ts 25th army delegates will be held on ing the chapter project. orientation meeting Sept. 26, ~taurant. display at the Old Sixth Ward • SEPT. 2S (Moadu) dnr. Four Seasons lDs Saturday, 7:30 p.m., at the 7:30 p.m., at the Nisei Hall. TUlare CoaDty--Gen mtg, V1S8lia Altos, 5:30 p.m. • M ulti-ethnic Ftm & Food Fair • Idaho Falls Buddhist Church, 7~ p.rn. White River Buddhist The flight is full. • OCT. 9 (MaadQ) at St. Joseph's Catholic WestLol~n mtg. Church in North Auburn, it Idaho Falls JACL kicked Chapter is also pushing the • SEPT. T1 (Wedoe8dIy) Church Sept. 29-Oct. 1. Idaho FaI1s-Gen mfg, JACL Hall, • OCT. 10 Asian American fasruon de• PHOTOMART TI 318 East Fir.st Street I want to see what EPAULE • signers, hair stylists and YES, o My check for the amount, plus $1 each for amer.)' {\ PhOtoW,lph,( 5uppl,e, Los Angeles, Calif. 90012 Magnetic Necklace will do for me. Sub• dancers. Sumi Haru and Pat shipping, handling , and insurance (plus 6% 3 16 E. 2nd St. , Lo Angeles ject to 30 days return privilege. Please sales tax for California delivery) is enclosed . Li will interview celebrities 626-5681 send me: and personalities participat• 622-3968 Charge my Master Charge ing in the extravaganza. Ac• _ Women 's 17" Rhodium Plated. with 9 REG o o VISA o tor Robert Ito, from the tele- magnets , type ER-9 @ $27 .95 each . # ______Exp ~ vision show "Quincy", and Empire Printing Co. actress Nobu McCarthy will _ Women 's 17" 14K Gold Plated . with 9 REG Signature ______OM IER lAL and 0 IAL PRlI TING magnets. type EG-9 @ 529 .95 each . model the fasruons. # Engli h and Japanese _ Men 's 22 " Rhodium Plated , with 11 REG Name _____ MIS dinner meeting 114 Weller St., Los Angeles 90012 628-7060 magnets , type ER-11 @ $29 .95 each . SAN JOSE. Calif.- The No. Calif. Address Military Intelligence Service Assn. _ Men 's 22 " 14K Gold Plated . With 11 REG dinner meeting Sept.23 opens with a 4 magnets . type EG-11 @ $32 .95 each . City _ __ State __ ZIP __ p.m. meeting, followed by dinner at 7:30 at the Pinehurst Inn. Mayor Janet Or, for fastest service 24 hours, call TOLL FREE Hayes is dinner speaker. Reserva• TOYO PRINTING CO. 800-421-4543 (Including Hawaii, Alaska) In California, call1·800-252-G636 ...J tions are 512 per person through host 309 So. San Pt'( lro St. Los Angel 90013 t chairman Roy Uyehara, 10651 Stokes L Ave .• CUpertino 95014. (213) 626-8153 ------Manufactured by TDK ELECTRONICS CO . LTD . Tokyo /© 1978 by TDK ELECTRONICS CO , LTD All Rights Reserved / U.S Patenl4095587 'U S Desion No 245769JTM EPAULE Owned by TDK ELECTRONICS CO . LTD . 8-PACIFIC CmZEN 1 Friday, September 22, 1978 ------__ r------:o __ ~------dl\·ISlon. featured the contnbunom: of Akron. Installation \\as held last • of the late Prof. Misazo Yamamoto October durin!! a PlOt U .-Japan ( 1928- 19-01 I. fir ~ t Japane e educator• emmar at Akron. Among the U pc's people SClentl t to be named to the Intema• partIcIpants was CIe\eland JACLer tlonal clence Hall of Fame. the 0\\' Nobuyuld Nakajima. • • Health • JapanBusiness Air Unes has reassigned To- Retired founder Rirofaml Om of shJo Koodo, southwest regional mana• Honolulu Dental Laboratory, estab• Ange~ THE SOUTH PACIFIC ger based at Los to its Tokyo lished in 1929, was named to the How• Sales office. TomobInJ autais the suc• DEPARTS APRIL 15, 1979 cessor . . . Ziebert International medica Hall of Fame, a worldwide af• Corp., Troy, Midi., a licensing firm filiation among dental labs. 18 Days for more man 700 autotruck rust• proofmg dealers, named Rikuma Ito, • Honors FIJI WIth Treasure Island· SYDNEY • v.p.-asst. to the president. Itohad been Frank Fujimara, member of the NEW ZEALAND WIlt! Chnstchurch Te Anau MIlford Sound & Oueenstown dean of the College of Business and Honolulu Jaycees baird who chaired Administration of the Univ. of De• its Have a Heart campaign, was TAHfTI WIth Papeete - Moorea troit named Jaycee 1977-78 Man of the year in ~gnitio~ of his leadership KOKUSAIINTERNAT10NAL TRAVEL, INC. In commuruty servIce. • Education 321 E, 2nd St_, Los Angeles, Ca, 90012 Douglas S_ Yamamara, 62, chancel• • Military I 213/626-5284 lor of Univ. of Hawaii's Manoa cam• A new Nisei. Deborah Furlan. of pus, will retire at the end of the year, I~ Bowie. Md .. is completing her ''plebe it was announced by UH President summer drill" prior to commencIng Fujio Matsuda. A temporary replace• her studies at the U.S. Naval Aca• HENRY Vlli proudly offers FRESH BEEF, SALAME, ment will be named while a nation• demyat nearby Annapolis. Her fath• and BEEF JERKY for very popular gifts to Japan. wide search is conducted to fill the Most Appreciated er. Allen FUrlan. was In the Navy Please try it yourself oncel top administrative poston the univer• when he met his wife. Sachiko. tn Ja• sity's biggest campus. The Maui• Qmiyage in Japan * Certir.~d by the USDA for easy c1earonc~ Ihrough pan in the late 19SOs. At Bowie HIgh. Japanese Customs . born chancellor was a UH student in she was an a11 -A srudent. * Delivery to JAL counler at Airporl on departure dole. the 193Os, joined the faculty in 1945, ord~r b~low The first JapaneseAir Force pilot to * You may by \Ising Ihe form supplied or and worked his way up the adminis• ord~r by phone up 10 Ih~ morning of departure. trative ladder until IE became chan• serve as an exchange officer at the (415) 668-1344. cellor in 1975. U .S. Air Force Academy at Colorado • •••••••••••••••• (cut along dotted line-)...... • Springs, Major Shoji Takegouchl, 34, Check items listed below for orders • Government of Hiroshima, has canpleted his two Idaho Governor John Evans has an- years of teaching operational leader• I New York Cut 5 LB . $40 .00 $ nounced appointment of Yoshle Ochi ship to the cadets. He returned to To• 2 Filet Mignon 5 LB . $40.00 $ kyo to assume a JAF staff position. PREMIUM QUAUTY STEAKS 1 Packed In Blue Ice Box of Idaho Falls as a member of the Ida• 3 N.Y_ 2V21b&Fil 21hlb 5 LB. $40 .00 $ ho Advisory Council on Aging. The FILET MIGNON Sib 16 pes 40.00 4 Hickory Smoked Hom 6 LB. $35 .00 5 position is a new one and Mrs. Oehi's • Organizations Ruth Watanabe of West Los An- NEW YORK CUT Sib. 10 pes 40.00 5 Italion Dry Salome 130z X IO $30 .00 $ term will run until June 30, 1980. Mrs. geles was elected to the UCLA Alum• 6 Pemmiron 8eef Jerky 24 oz 517 .00 $ Oehi, who lives with her husband, NEW YORK CUT 4 lb. 8 pcs. 32.00 ni Assn. board of directors. A 1959 7 Pemmican Beef Jerky 12 az X 3 $30 .00 5 Fred Ochl, at 1675 Cramer Ave., in - graduate, she is active with the Keiro TOP SIRLOIN 4 lb. 11 pes. 28.00 TOTAL AMOUNT $ Idaho Falls, is employed in freight Nursing Home, City View Hospital, traffic management work. Both are 8EEFJERKY 9 1t2 oz. Vacuum Pack 8.00 ~(N_AM E~ )~ ~(P_H_O_N~E~) Japanese Retirement Home, Friends ______longtime JACLers. of Little Tokyo Arts, Japanese Amer• 8EEFJERKY 5 oz. Vacuum Pack 4.50 (ADDRESS) The Seattle City Cwncil appointed ican Republicans, International Insti• Ted Chol, an associate broker with tute, JACL and director of Surety Acomo USA, 312 E. 1st St, Rm. 309, (DEPARTURE DATE) (GROUP NO.) S&LAssn. Grubb & Ellis, to the Board of Ethies Los Angeles, Ca 90012: (213) 629-1271,283-9905 (eve) , "2J:I &t-tt