Jun 22

Cens lans horough cov rag UW name Dr. Doi dean 98 s in College of Education era) eteran cer:I~ gaand Inouy the attenau:tg PlJblilcity m ciaJs qUJ AlsJ noted ere the ~ April. . Jy hen 8 H Of- sui of test censu.ses in \\ ashingtoo and urban officials con- fice and Ci ril Service sub• oakland, Calif., Camden BaITY Jr., date conmuttee 011 the census .J., Austin. ~ex., Ri census subcommittee that ~ m nf ,il UUoIIUUO or earli r' ear lDOIld, a, and er 1an• the questi nnaire \II, e.rth- arch). hattan, . Y. ha re DO been o too complicated and auhori r or evade Impl'(J\ ement m the encouragmg. Rate of re• too official looking. fun ti n r m Ii' n l 1· I g nd \1m .ltl • • turn by mail 1 than Mean ·bile. printing the 19f1l census take manner counting Asian! was Pre iou. J '. h wn prof The ranar1ts come on Pacific Americans as de• c in the poor areas. But presses will be turning out r f hi h I U ati n from the heels of the recent manded in a senate joint census officials said it will two kinds of fonns: one 1 t th ni '. of ~ i hi- forced f the resolution co-authored by be much better during the that will take 15 minutes to gan.and di 'tOl f '...... J~...., director and - Senators Spark Matsuna- full national ~nsus \ll,ith ~an. and di tor f it ( n· ter for th tud" of Hi ht: r Edu atlon from'l iO. From 1 63 to 1 M. h wo. WSU regents approve Asian American studies dJreclor of in. titutionnl re• search and prof ssor of high• er education at N York .... nm.n, L gram effective Sept 16. ow Full University Senate ap• $70.000 to implement it. ac• w Wa hin on State nlver• the university must find the proval was gh'en April 26 for cording to Francis Ho. 8SS

By WAYNE OYAFUSO mer ethnic festivals in droves. the city's pride and also felt The ethnlc festivals. which Detroit, Mi. The fountain and the plaza the correlation of the plaza began IS years ago in De• Now that the misunder• are the creations of Isamu No• area and fountain makes for a troit's Greektown. are now standing between Detroit offi• guchi, internationally known marvelous site for people to at their fourth site this SUDl• cials and Isamu Noguchi has artist, sculptor and designer come and enjoy a new sense-• mer with 17 other ethnic been resolved and the city's who last month, admonished a casual theater. groups holding fairs on week• Dodge Fountain is operation• Detroit city officials for im• The Far Eastern Festival ends from May 2S to Sept 21. al the way the artist sought at proper maintenance of the this weekend--June 22-24- the $31-million Phillip A Hart fountain and urged officials to will involve the Detroit JAOr The Far Eastern group will Plaza, the site beckons the hurry up and employ a per• ers, along with the Chinese, exhibit a diverse display of curious, spectators and parti• manent maintenance man He Korean, Filipinos, Taiwanese cultural collection A program cipants to the weekend sum- felt that fountain heightens and other Asian organiza• will feature dances. music tions. The French will join the and martial arts. The food and festival for the first time this beverage booths situated at summer at the plaza which is the underground level will not Diploma mill operating in located near the Detroit be hampered by rain as it had River. in previous years. Photo by Wayne Oyafuso Japan 'connected' with U.S. The Dodge Fountain designed by Isamu Noguchi cost $2,632,566, of which $2 million was bequested from the late Mrs. New York State government has never Anna Thomson Dodge. Also in the background (left) is the No• The New Jersey Secretary permitted the institution to guchi's pylon, which cost $400,000. of State's office has been in• "recommend and confer a ril 5 refused on grounds it had structed by the local U.S. ing certain prosecution evi• doctor's degree upon excel• no jurisdiction district attorney to investi• lent persons" as stated on dence admissable at her trial nevvs briefs ____ gate the practices of the "Ja• the certificate, the Yomiuri In a turnabout on Thursday despite its prejudicial effect. pan Chapter of International learned. (June 7), the high court in s0o• The defense had tried to sti• University, U.S.A." for con• In Tokyo, the certificate ther case held anyone convict• pulate without offering any MM __~------news brleh ------ferring doctorates on about charge ~ 2 nruillion yen ed of using a gun in certain evidence that she had fled in 100 Japanese and South Ko• ($10,000), said to be "a bar• crimes must go to prison 1972 to avoid prosecution reans, using forged certifi• the nation califomia gain" in the eyes of Mitsuo Yoshimura became a fugi• The Wendy Yoshimura Fair cates, according to the Yo• Matsushige, secretary-gen• Trial Committee is scheduled BeD Labs employees at sev• Assemblyman Paul Bannai tive in 1972 after Berkeley p0- miuri Bureau here. eral locations observed Asian! authored legislation (AB 953) eral of the university's Asian lice found illegal weapons and to meet June 23, 7:30 p.m., at International University, Pacific American Heritage requiring automotive repair chapter, which started 13 explosives in a garage she Pine United MetOOdist ChlU'ch. USA, based in New Jersey, Week Washington, D.C. dealers to post a $5,000 surety years ago and which has rented under an alias. with Rev. Uoyd Wada, com• JACLer Mike Suzuki spoke at bond as a condition of licen• has no campus. It confers thus far conferred about 100 mittee chair, and her appeals Piscataway, while Cherry sure in the state. He also intro• doctorates and awards of doctorates in Japan and Yoshimura contended the attorney, Dennis Riordan, an• Tsutsumida spoke on "What duced AB 1459, which would merit for a price. It has sec• South Korea appellate court erred in hold- nounced as speakers. If. the Asian American Owes to create a California cata• retariats for Europe and Asia • the Black Experience" at strophic health insurance PERSONAL FINANCIAL PLANNING e INVESTMENT SERVICES ••••••••••••••••••• M!JIT3Y Hill. Asian art was al• plan According to the New Jer• so on display. sey Secretary of State's of• SUSAN HMVA news biieh ------fice, what has been issued in 11986 San Vicen~ Blvd,. L.A., ~ Ca 90049_ (213) 879-4007 (213) 82049 _briIfJ ------Japan as its "certificate of PaineWeMler t, . TOYl;~ amendment" issued by the iapan/asia "Call us now. You could thank us later." washington university in the name of the Japan Air Lines has added a secretary of state is a fake. With tile Jndorbinese refu• EDSATO STUDIO gee crisis involving as many bilingual in-flight slick maga• zine, "Winds", starting June. Aloha Plumbing PLUMBING AND HEATING 318 Ea t First Street as 90,000 boat people having lIC #201875 Remodel and Repairs died trying to escape Viet• The Tokyo staff is headed by PARTS & SUPPLIES Water Heaters, Garbage Disposal Los Angeles. Calif. 90012 -Repd;r~ Our SpeC:'d/ly- Furnaces nam, the House Foreign Af• Teruhiko Hosokawa, publ; Tom Chapman, ed; and Fred 1948 S. Grand, Los Angeles Servicing Los Angeles 626-5681 fairs subcommittee on Asian 293-7000 733-0557 and Pacific affairs voted June Becblen, art director. A ran• Phone: 749-4371 dom guide, Japan Almanac, ••••••••••••••••••• 13 to ask President Carter to call for an emergency session listing events of interest, will of the U.N. General Assem• be updated monthly, such as bly. ' art & film, trade fairs, drama, festivals, music and sports. ttEachcustomer Racial (black v. white) ten• sion still persists throughout "", Japanese pop the U.S. and is the most deep• singers Mitsuyo Nemoto and I meet is a challenge.!: seated, difficult social pro~ Keiko Masuda, has entered lem facing the nation, HEW the American disco market 'I\s a cu tomer service repre entative, I meet many kind of Secretary Joseph Califano with the record "Kiss in the people, both old and young. When they come to me \\'ith a banking said June 13 at an LA Times Dark," with a remake of Washington Bureau session ''Walk Away Renee" on the problem, it mak s me happy when I can introduce them to one of The appraisal comes after flip side. The duo has sold our -ervice, that uit their need , perfectly." more than a decade of federal more than 17 million records legislation aimed at halting ra• and debuted in a film that was Jeri Okamoto Alice Ni himoto i just one cial discrimination in voting, a box office hit last December of 3.500 emplo)ees at California housing and public facilities in Japan. Nikkei candidate as well as court decisions to FIr t. But the attitude she bring' for Miss Oregon desegregate public schools. "I new' brieh ------to her job is one \\'C hope all don't think it's a problem we the world Portland, Ore. can solve with government Jeri Okamoto, daughter of our employec "hare. programs," said Califano. Meet the Herbert Okamotos, was Cali fornia fir. t. the f()rn~r the people Sen. S~ llayalatwa criti- Carol Kamyo Tsuchida, chosen M ISS Portland to rep• cized President Carter's deci- who represented the Holly• resent the city in the forth• Bank of TcJkyo of C'1lifornia. Califo"Atia HI'St. sion not to lift sanctions wood JACL in the 1977 Nisei coming Miss Oregon Pa• i~ now a statewide hank with against Zimbabw~Rhodesia, Week queen contest in Los geant to be held at Seaside calling it a "non-decision" Ha- Angeles, represents the Japa• in July. (wer 100 office. yakawa said, "He (Carter) nese American Press Club at As Miss Portland, she was said it wouldn't be proper for the Miss Nikkei International awarded a $SOO scholarship CALIFORNIA us to act first," because" ... if beauty pageant on June 24 in which she will use at one of Sao Paulo, Brazil. She is the the state universities this all the other countries of the daughter of Kousuke and Ki- fall. She was also recognized world haven't acted, we kuko Tsuchida and is a law at the recent Nikkei Commu• shouldn't act" His answer to student at the Univ. of South- nity Graduation Banquet FIRST BANK Carter? "Well. what the hell Calif' I are we? We're a leading na- ern orma held May 6. Ii tion. We should lead" I ..______.. Three Cenerdl,orh of Sen. Splrk Mats...... (D• £.peflenc:e Hawaii) is sponsoring Iegisla- I Shimatsu, Ogata tion to provide for radio and television coverage of the and Kubota FUKUI Senat 's debate on the Strate• lVlortuary Mortuary,. Inc. gic Amls Limitation Treaty. Panama Canal Treaty debate 911 Veni e Blvd. 707 E. Temple St. coverage by radio last year Lo Angelc Lo Angele~ 90011 was the resul t of legislation he I 749-1-+49 sponsored. "SALT n is a mat• 626-0441 ter of equaJ-or even greater I IJI DL I\: OG \ \ -importance and complexi• R. \'l' l .U: \ I\:l BOl A ty," the senator S8ld. IlDlIESS esponse to 'Question of leadership'

spec·al even

and Orlcago ~. . theman- AlianPark date. and v.rhen they push for ed JWle)«\ t the "IRS p ~". just Park. Tracy its who . 'des the . t? Asian American tudent Based on the Bootst:rap fonnu• A, \\ in ella , 0 tout· la a Jot of people come out \\e d r youth nt hort~ on the • "A Case for Redre I' i- the mandate: those \\ ho left the ftnal Gard na , aUe . J ~ -..------• \\ t Coast and ne~ r went to sei Aware semmar topic reunions camp. the men who left to conferences for the current ~ne on June sene in the 442nd and MIS. OYer 1.300 have registered 2;. ;-9 p.m. mth Karl ·obu· POston 1 Hi8h ~'h 1 ~tu the I sci who died m camp, etc. for the 30th annual JEMS-Mt. vuki. JACL e."ecutl\ dil"e<> dent, . m' 200 Stl n~. tl~ Since money is the method of tor. as peaker. Coordinator xpected for th .July 2 dm adueVlOg the fmal goals. let's Hermon Conference June 24- Ray Goto said,"Th.i impor' ner program at th New t.101 30, in the Santa Cruz Moun- at least make It equitable. All tains. It is the largest mterde- tant issue i one that may at"- Hotel in I.mle 'D kyo, wlth of us suffered.. omeone: (113)626-6936 West Los Angeles JAo.. Detroit JACL held its 33rd certificates for meritorious Bill and Shirley Shimoura, dec· Ben Endow of Blackfoot oration and program. DR. CLIFFORD UYEDA High received the $25() chap• Auxiliary announced its re• annual installation dinner• service were presented to Nc:rtionoI.w:J. Presidrn. cent wine tasting benefit at dance February 24 at the Ra• Jerry Shimoura, Ron and The 1979 officers are: ELLEN ENDO ter scho1arship. PociflC CIfiaf\ Board Choilperson Yamato Restaurant was a leigh House. The invocation Kathy Yee and Debbie Hiro• Elaine Prout. ch; James S~ HAR~Y 1(. HONDA, Editor Hero Shiosaki spoke-at the success, realizing a profit of was given by the Rev. Min naka. urn, ch-e.lect; Denise Nakayama, poatoge paidot loalYlgMs. Co. Memorial Day services held $2,570. Equal amounts will be sec; Mary Kamidoi, treas; Sally Hi• 2nd C1ot.s Mochizuki of Western Mi• Committee members for ~ ~JACl.MemberJ: S70f at the JACL war memorial donated to the March of chigan University, and guest gashi, Tal< Matsui, Kaz Mayeda, National Duet ~ orw year on 0 ~ monument May 28. Toshi K&• the affair were: GeraldShirnoura, ToshiShimoura, per~baJis . !Ib.-i ...b"" $100 Dimes and to the American speaker was Dr. Jitsuo Mori• Ann Togasaki, Min Togasaki, Ron nacll.ance;~: now laid the memorial flow• yeorlX¥lble uss IA.SO Cancer Society with the latter kawa of Ann Arbor Baptist Yee, Kathy YeA!, bel memb. JAYS-• o .,.,or. lnquft for 1sf cbs1,Iaitmoa .Mtr. ers while three Issei whose Kathy YeA!, chairperson; Mary contribution in memory of Church, whose topic was Re• Kamidoi. finance and tickets; Ann Togasaki, pres; Debbie Mjya• Nf.wsOl' ...... e:wadby~ sons were killed in action Tayeko IsOIlO, an active Auxil• dress. Hal Izumi, Elaine Prout, Ron and zaki, vp; Julie Miyama, sec; David .. =ac"~donot were presented corsages and iary member. Dr. Iln. Pas .rib-7CHJ (LA 681-4411) MmoruNix Nagata 1497 Roc~ Haven Monterey Park 268-4554 /opane .... Pholol',peseWng Steve Nakaji 11964 Washington Plare ...... 391-5931 837-9150 Lower Salo Ins, Agy 366 E. 1st SL .. " •. 629-1425 261-6519 your monthly lDYO PRINTING CO. payments with n So. San ~Irn 51. los ~ 90m3 r- ' - · ~~ish~'~~-·- · l our consolidation 11131 ft!6-B153 loan. ,Niseif Trading t . " App.lance,· TV· Furniture t Empire Printing Co. PHOTOMART National JACL Credit Union EW ADDRESS: at B rrow p to S3000 C<) I IERC I land SOCI:\l PRI"T1 G 249 S. San Pedro SL (.Im/·/,) .~' .w "h,( ~ur'lll" 'Encli h and Japan~ yo r SIgnature , los Angeles. Calif. 90012 : 316 E 2nd St • Los Angelps to a I lea borrowers. 114 Weller St., Los Angeles 90012 628-7060 _T~.~~6~~ __ 62... 2 -3968__ .... l_ .• .1 ...... _ ... M M 14 • 4-PACIFlC CITIZEN I Friday, June 22,1979 ------PlfSlDENT'S CORNEl: Crdford Uyeda DOWN TO EARTH: Kart Nobuyvki Joining JACL 'Political Realities' for the Nisei Individuals have different reasons for joining JAa... Whatever they may be. one.of• comforting, and we reinforce voice our protest It happens lems intensify, especially the major reasons is the ooncem for secur- it by public displays such as _over and over again The with the current deficit \\ith ing justice and equal opportunities for "Day of Remembrance", ciVic names and places change; but Japan, we Japanese Ameri• \ Americans of Japanese ancestry. resolutions and the growing the story is a familiar one. I cans find ourselves in a tenu• Ethnicity is not always a matter of choice number of patronizing publi• am getting tired of it ous position We're caught in but more often a fact of life. Trying to ignore this fact can often cations from social scientists. the middle. muddle one's thinking and confuse our behavior. The most con• Recently the term "political It is easy to swallow this It has been 37 years since Do we go the route of once fident are those who know who they are and are secure in this reality" has been mentioned image of ourselves as we sit Japanese Americans were again declaring our loyalty to knowledge. in the PC and many discus• back in our suburban home, victims of mass expulsion and American business and join in At one time minorities in America hated themselves. They sions among the JACL mem• knowing how we have strug• incarceration. We have for 37 the boycott of Japanese wished they were not themselves. They hoped they would be bership. But it's important to gled and fought for our rights years had two generations to goods? Do we have to pro\'e mistaken for one of the majority they were emulating. With note that the term can mean and expecting "those other think about it and live with it. our loyalty once again? Are each nod from the majority, they hated themselves more and different things to different minorities" to do the same. Unfortunately, the American we suspect because of our wished that they were different They were ashamed of their people, depending on the con• We tend to follow the pat• public did not have to live with face? Or are letters to the edi• ethnicity. Their bravados were often hidden self-denials. text in which it is used ... and tern of the European immi• it It was written off as a "war• tors enough? Who will speak who uses it grants. We try so hard to as• time mistake" caused by pan• for and represent our inter• What they had failed to realize is that it was this ethnicity, this Let me share my perspec• similate, to "fit in", and to "go ic and hysteria And that is as difference, which was of value in the first place. It was this ests: Senator Hayakaw8 or tive on ''political reality", its along with the crowd". But far as the pubic thinks it JACL? ethnicity that added color, interest and value to the culture we relationship to the Nikkei and every so often, something would go. call America. the JAn organization. happens to shake our senses. This situation is worsened The use of "political reality" • • • Japanese Americans are Some public figure may use by the apathy of those Nisei has been called "a copout". There is a need for an organization which Japanese Ameri• about .3 percent of the U.S. the word "Jap"; or there may and Sansei who understand• It's a nice way of saying cans can turn to for identity that cuts across religious and social population On the West be a problem in employment ably consider their own prior• "chicken". These people sug• differences, an organization to which we can tum to when our Coast, we imagine ourselves discrimination. We become ities and the constitutional is• gest that the Salt Lake City rights as Americans are either threatened or abrogated. It hap• "bigger than life" and assume shocked, and we go through sue of Evacuation take a back mandate has been violated. pened in the past, and it can happen again. During the 1942 that we as a people control our the motion of writing letters, seat to inflation and recrea• They say we must pursue the crisis, we were too young, too small, too weak and virtually· lives, influence politics and complaining among our• tion quest for $25,000 per person unknown Today, many of the deficiencies have been corrected. , contribute to the American selves, attending meetings to As the economic picture But they are living in a world JAQ.. is more than just a civil rights watchdog for Japanese way of life. The assumption is try to educate the public and darkens and the trade prob- of illusion 1'hey do not recog• Americans. The suspension of constitutional safeguards for nize "political reality" as it is any group is a threat to all others. In collaboration with many seen by the Redress Commit• other national organizations, we become one of the many guard• tee, the four Nisei congress• ians of our Constitution Joining JAn is to secure our own men or the majority of our future. TSUKSMONO membership. This reality is We urge each JAQ.er to solicit ODe.DeW member. Send $20 to: based upon our place in the Membership, JAn Natimal Headquarters, 1765 Sutter Street, American political and ec0- San Francisco, CA 94115. # nomic picture. How much clout do we YE EDITO~S DESK: Harry Honda have? If a Nikkei has a hard time getting promoted to an upper management position, what are our chances of pass• ing a bill for $3 billion through Welcome Aboard the Congress looking for places to cut back or protect• Friends of John J . Saito ten• Warren Furutmri, Royal Morales, dered him a testimonial-roast and Dave Torres (acting director, ing its own special interests? County Commissioo of Human Re• Japanese Americans are not, at a Chinatown restaurant this lations). past week. He is now our Pa• and perhaps have never been cific Southwest JAn region• a "special interest". 'That is "a Now, if John could hire an political reality". al director, but he was being office secretary with compar• recognized for his 20 able experience and retired • • • plus years as from civil service at the sala• Sure, we have come a long employee of ry the PSWOC offers, it proves way. But we have a long way Los Angeles trend-setting is his style. to go. Redress presents the County, . . .. greatest challenge to the where he had Another Welcome. Till the· American system and it also been work• Village Wok-a cafeteria in challenges the Japanese ing with youth the Japanese Village Plaza American We have to put at the outset in across the street from the PC things into perspective. This probation, then office opening last week, it did EAST WIND: Bill Marvtani is not a fina] banzai charge nor with street gangs not dawn on us a fresh salad is it a nice quiet chat at the in the aftennath of Watts bar had been missing all these PfA. It's a genuine attempt to riot, and later into human rela• years inside Little Tokyo. Jim secure redress from the tions and affinnative action and Aiko Abe have introduced The 'Hatikvah' American people. First, they He is a "trend-setter" in an ef• Chinese dishes quick-lunch must be educated and con• fective manner. I mean, JACL style-hence, the name. The lows (translated): This is OUT creed we'U live in vinced that what happened in has been the training ground salad bar stays in theme, too, lojalty '42 was wrong and a betrayal So long as still within OUT breasts God help us rid the land of bigot7y for people who aspire to be with ingredients to toss a Chi• The Jewish heart beats true, to all Americans. Our success like John But he has turned That we may waJJc. in peace is only another way to the goal nese chicken salad ... If it So long as still towards the East, and dimity. the ballgame around and weren't for Chas. Kamayatsu To Zion looks the Jew, of making Anierica stronger. So long OUT hopes are not yet lost• THE RB EIINCE to ''the brings to bat his rich experi• (Aiko's father) waving us i&• The Redress Movement is ence for JACL. Two thousands years we Lana or ZIon and Jerusalem" that salad bar would have cherished them- in the "Hatikvah" may be the opportunity for the Nik· gone unnoticed for a while. Prior trend-setters elicited Philadelph!a to live in freedom in the Lcmd symbolic for most, if not all, kei to assert ourselves. To cite during the testimonial found A PHIADBJIHIA lawyer Of Zion and Jerustlkm. Americans of the Jewish "political reality" as a "cop• he had driven the first busload friend of long standing, who NOT BBNG Of the Jewish faitlt For this Nise~ the Umd out" is to show our naivete in of Issei on a "hanami" in the CENSUS also happens to be a longtime faith, I cannot, of course, fully of the Rising Sun is one that I the political process. What we '60s; help found in 1967 the JACL member, apparently relate to the deep emotions view simply as an American: need is a strong moral com• Council of Oriental Organiza• reads this colunm-at least and yearning evoked by and it is my no means a potential mitment to Redress, a willing• fill out and a more detailed one reflected in those words. I say refuge for me, and I do not ness to drop regional and indi• tions; and popularized martial going to about one household every so often He comment• (not marital as first heard) arts ed on the subject of national "fully" because there is nev• look upon that land as such. vidual differences and go in five that will take more time. ertheless some threads of On the contrary, the nation of about putting pressure upon among oollege students. A census taker will visit anthems, of which we recent• lywrote. He being of the Jew• oommonality, the sense of Japan would not accept Ni• the Congress and the Ameri• each household which fails to seeking fulfillment for the in• can public. Trust is crucial. The people who came to ish faith stated that not only sei--socialJy, economically or respond to mail back the ques• dividual and of a people. I Without it there can be no suc• commend him with mementos Polish Americans sing the na• politically. Some reader out tiormaire as part of the new think Nisei in particular can cessful campaign. It is time to and resolutions was a rare gal• tional anthem of their ances• there may be able to point to technique to assure an accur• understand this when we look an exception, which only trust others and ourselves. It axy of Nisei and friends of the ate tally. tral land but that Americans of the Jewish faith also sing to the Japanese American helps to prove the rule: "'The is time to stand up and be Asian/Pacific Americans in Computers will be used to counted. # community and government the "Hatikvah", the Israel na• Hymn: exception proves the rule". In match commercial address There was a dream my father so many ways, Nisei would again, trend setting. No indi• listings, local records, immi• tional anthem. He reported that singing the "Hatikvah" dreamedfor me run into far greater discrim• vidual entering the JAn staff gration records, lists of people A in which mtn JACL-W5U Fund Can be, and very often is, a land all are/ree ination in Japan than else• has slx>wn such pull. We hope who have driver's licenses, '1'hen the desert camp with address corrected very emotional experience watchtowers high where, including the United they forgive me for running and those who belong to eth• States. (For example, 00w the names in smaller type: nic organi7Btions-to seek for Americans of Jewish Where life stood still 'mid sand Contributions to theJAClr and brooding sky many Nisei have been elected Jim Miyano. Jeffrey Matsui, anyone who may have passed faith. often with tears stream• WSU Fund, which are tax de• ing down faces as the anthem Out of war in which my brotht:Ts to office in Japan?) Indeed, Mike Ishil<:awa. Kay Kokubtm (a through the sieve. ~ ductible, should be forward• neighbor of the SaIto family at P0s• is sung. This aroused my curi• the irony of it is that we Nisei ed to: Why all this care? About 100 Their muted wices with mine would (and do) run into great• ton n, Judge Robert Takasugi. Ron osity and I, therefore, took the cried Rob Fukai. treU. Wakabayashi (who packaged re• federal programs distribute er discrimination than a White a ~ time and trouble to obtain a This is our dream that all men E 302J - 62nd AYeo \'e8ling slide show on John's past nearly billion annually on copy. The words are as fol- shan bejru CoatiDued 011 Beck PIce Spokane, WA 99203 51) 'e8I'S), Ken; Doi. Mas FUkni. the basis of census data. DOl

. the De man most for r• suading Co to elimina e racial re- 1 m .. from U.S, immigrn· n and ith hi rent was In· naturalization la carceratespeclLlIt II I!1l' d to QI\' lanty among other Nisei or whether we vision comedian, star of the Barney Miller Stockton. and they have a ou prompt. courteous s r Ice paying canful approve of their politics and beliefs. This show, who died just as his genius was be• daughter, Mimi. wbois a sec· attenlion to the small details th ,lt could nhlk > Ih wasn't to be a popularity contest Here are ing recognized ond-year student at Harvard big dIfference. And Sumltomo IS an tnnovatlv Law School. ., full-service California Bank which continually some of the names we came up with, in no TAUL WATANABE. a vice president of the particular order. strives to bnng you th very besl In banking giant Burlington Northern Railroad. pres• Chico Nikkei services. KAy GAMARA, of course. His name ident of the board of regents of the Uni• Marysville,Ca. So whatever your banking needs may be. from isn't a household word, but he is an impor• versity of Washington. Chico Cemetery, where many personal to commercial 10 International, come to tant figure in the high-risk field of inter• Japanese are bUried.1S undergo• Sumltomo Bank. 1\ serves you right. DR PAUL TERAsAKL whose work in tis• IDg beautification. Permission is national hipping. sue compatability took much of the gam• being sought from families to re• The Sumitomo Bank of California MINORU YAMASAKI, architect. whose ble out of kidney and other organ trans• move deteriorating concrete slabs and copings. the Marys• • M"m!><" FOIC handsome buildings grace numerous plants. ville Buddhist Church reported. cities in many partS of the globe. He also NEll. FUJITA, who may be something of Word should be sent by Aug. 31 designed the world's two tallest buildings, a surprise since the influence of his work to Mrs. Julia Dowd,P.O. Box 893, the World Trade Center in lower Manhat• is largely subliminal He is in high de• Chico, Ca 95927, (916) 345-7243. tan, visited by millions of tourists each mand as designer of book jackets, record VC travel exhibit year. albums, corporate annual reports--rus de• Los Angeles Seventy historic photographs SENATOR DAN INOUYE, a resPected, signs sell products that affect the cultural life of millions. from the Asian American Photo• workrnanIike veteran of both houses of graphic Archives of Visual Com· I J.. Congress, well on the way to becoming an And Gvo OBATA, another architect, cer• munications depicting the Japa• nese experience in the United The Mitsubishi Bank important senior member of the moder• tainly belongs on this list • • • States began a three-month tour of California Member FDIC ately conservative wing of the Demo• in Japan on May 1. and is cur· cratic Party. In addition to those named above there rently being shown in Osaka be- UttIe Tokyo Offtce must be dozens, perhaps scores of Nisei fore going toWakayama andNa- 321 East Second St, Los Angeles. Calif. 90012 S.L HAVAKAWA, recognized here pri• who have exerted a profound influence gasaki The travel exhibit is marily as an educator and semanticist that extends beyond their immediate field ~t'cl:~~~red:..:Ex:~:han:th~::e . In_te_rna_tio_nal...... !~====~==(2=1=3=) 68=O= - 2=65==O======~ rather than as the first Nisei U.S. senator of activity. ._ from the mainland. although his political Readers who would like to nominate career undertaken in his sunset years cer• someone for inclusion in this list, please tainly qualifies him for the list drop me a note telling about this person GOORGE ToGASAKI, fonner president of Write to me at Box 1709, Denver, Colo. Make your Rotary International, most influential of 80201, explaining why you think this per• the service clubs. son has an extraordinary impact on our ISAMu NOGUCHI, sculptor, artist, de• society or our nation All of us may be money signer, happily surprised by the number of Nisei DR. HARVEY ITANO, now of San Diego, is who have made or are making important best known for his discoveries and work and unusual contributions to our way of turnover with sickle cell anemia and more recently life. # ...... ,.. cit'-' ----- Mail ballot on JACL redress out before a 35 years ago San Francisc:o utilized as the first step, it was JACL chapters are being announced by Karl Nobuyuki, year does JUNE 17,1M4 May 31-General Assembly of polled by mail for ratification National JACL Executive Di• Presbyterian Church urges re• of the National Board position rector. tum of evacuees as soon as mili• endorsing the Redress Com· The ballots should be !'e• tary ituation pennits. mittee recommendation that cei ved at National Headquar• 26-Week JUDe 2-U.S. Socialist Party a commission approach be ters by Monday, July 9, 19~. demands right of Japanese Americans to return to evacuat· Money Market ed area: Seattle delegate Anne FlSher calls [or reimbursement Certificates of evacuee losses, J1IDe 7-Topaz camp paint hop damaged by tU"e. * CANCER INSURANCE ~ U-Report S1 Hean <;.alifom~ Mountain. Wyo,. draft delin• Only Annual Rate Annual Effective Yiefd quents wilhng to sen-e if citizen• uo you know the 7 CANCER WARNING SIGNALS? ship status cleared, FlU tells fed· eral court. Send for free brochure with information on CANCER facts .hme l3-Military situation on and insurance that helps pay for the high cost of medIcal 9.410% west roast determines any care. Benefits paid regardless of other insurance. 9.0470/0 change IJ1 exclusion ord~. ~ , of War timson tells Califonua NO AGE llMIT NO PHYSICAL EXAMINATION FOA CERTIFICATES ISSUED JUNE 1~20,1979 congressmen. worri.ng about the PREMIUMS ARE lOW! lOW! lOW return of e ...-acuees. Sharp de• ·This Is an effedive Annual VIekf assuming refnvestrTHmt of prlndpal and interest at maturfly. However. if bate flares in California Assem• ~~~~------~-~~- is subject to change at renewal. Federal Regulations prohibifthe compounding of interest during .he bl)' ~ Gannon * For bnxnure call: Ben T. Tsuchimoto eeo Olesrer term offhe account. ' [0 and John Pelletier (LA) (415)~ ANNUAL INTEREST RATES ON INSURED SAVINGS or additional fUDds (Sl.OOO) to Or Mai I Coupon To: All Interest Compounded Daily. Account Insurance Now Doubled To $40,000 continue Gannon's interim com• 1409 - 331d Ave., San Francisco, CA 94122 mittee on Japanese American problems ostensibly to stop re• Name ______turn evacuees to the state. Pel• letier points to war record of Address ______Certtilca es o' DepoSit may be wllhdta .. n prior 10 maturol,. bul I accordanc.e .' 111 Federal ~eOjJla .on (<:(lu·re· ents erest lor he enl.re ume of oepOs.! .... i1I De recalculated at t !l pre va I "9 sa. nos Pjlsst>oo~ fa e le~. 90 'isej 10, GI days lTI'eresl .. lS-Federal Judge l'ill------~~ ------man t Lake City ERITSAVI SAND LOAN ASSOCIATfON ds right Japanese Amer• P ne Area Code ______--:: ______62 4 -7 4 ~ icans to open . in UtBh; lOS ANGELES: 324 E First S . • TORRANCE/GAROENA: 18505 S Wes ern t-ve 327-930 City of Layton enjoined from de• ONTEREY PARI(' 995 S Allan c B ,'d 256-301' • IRV IN E. 5392 Wanu A;e (714) 552·4751 nying . 00 rac:i8l grounds. ME BER fSlIC 6-PACIFlC CITIZEN I Friday, June 22,1979 ______

defeated: 5 yes, 9 no, 2 abstain mative action programs in em• c)Comminee has until Dec. IS. proiit (but not tax-deductible Second motion "to borrow" since ployment.) 1979, to incorporate recommen• Sec. SOl (c)4 organization. Endowment Fund was not a true 1000Authorized a new mem• dations into final draft and re• 17-approved nat1 JACL re• Brief summary of 1979 trust situation and that the fund bership dues of $20 by Head• submit to all chapters. dress committee fund drive: principal was not being used was quarters with $3.SO going to 13--Accepted emergency re• $397,996 annual package to edu• adopted: chapters; couple's dues are $40 vision of FY1979-80 Budget to cate American public and the Nat'l JACL Board decisions YES (12)-Higuchi, Kodama. Koji• with S7 going to chapters. (So of• minimize a $100.000 shortfall. Congress through speaker's bu• San Francisco ma, Nagata, Nakashima, Nishio, Oku• ten. Headquarters does not know 14-Endorsed recomendation reau, legislative and media ef· ra, Shimizu, Takeshita, Tameno, Tsu• what individual chapter dues are forts. Besides decisions on iedress and budget revisions (June 8 jimura, Kato. that National JACJ.. scholarships, PC), the National JACL Board at its June 1-3 meeting at Nation• NO (4}-Kawamoto, Kimura, Shi· when a person wants to join.) now provided college-bound stu• 18-Denied request of di trict al Headquarters took the following actions: momura, Wakabayashi ll-Authorized chairperson dents, be offered to participation governors to carry over unused of the National JACL health in• at youth-leadership workshops. FY1979 district fund budget into 7-Ratified without objection I-Accepted the Jan 27-28 ferred to youth between ages 14 surance committee (Vernon Yo• l~Endorsed special mem• FYl980.district fund (because of EXECOM minutes but directed the appointment of Bruce Shimi• shioka of San Diego) full clear• shortfall-deficit). and 23 for public service, per• zu as national youth director. bership performance cash that a brief summary be includ• sonal achievement and explora• ance to obtain facts through the prizes for chapters enlisting the 19-Approved National JACJ.. ed on how the decisions were tion. S--Tabled District Governors' respective health group. most new members through re• certificate of recognition for made. ~Adopted a JACL fund drive Caucus motion to rewrite the dis• 12-Accepted the constitu• mainder of FY1979 (Sept 30): Frank Sato, recently appointed 2-Ratified the EXECOM ac• with proceeds into the National trict funding guidelines. (Such tional revision committee's ini• $300 to Chapter grossing the by President Carter to be inspec• tion to settle the Campaign for districts receiving small sums tial draft for distribution to the most percentage over the May tor general, a new post within the JACL Reserve Fund: 9 yes, 3 no, each quarter had requested Human Development (Amy Doi 3 abstain. chapters as per scheduie of the 31 enrollment during the June 1- Transportation Department. vs. JACL) case. Settlement pu~ funding guidelines for accounta• Salt Lake City mandate: Sept. 30 period; $100 to Chapter 2O-Ruled there would be no &-Authorized the National bility be eased.) grossing the most percentage ' lished in May 18 PC. Treasw-er to borrow from the a) Initial draft has been sub• conflict of interest in Ben Take• 3-Directed the National Di• Weber Case mitted one year prior to Consti• over the previous year total; and shita being the district gover• JACL Endowment Fund rather $100 to Chapter grossing the rector to check with National than a commercial bank a sum 9-Ratified EXECOM's action tutional Convention set for July nors caucus representative to Board or EXECOM prior to su~ 28, 1980, San Francisco. most by the greatest number the EXECOM and chairing the up to $100,000 to cover cash-flow of May 9,1979, supporting rever• over the previous year. mitting proposals for outside deficit occurring the first half of sal of the Weber v. Kaiser Alumi• b) Chapters/District Councils national personnel committee. grants. a fiscal year. The first motion num now before the U.S. Su• have until Oct. 28, 1979, to re• 16--Ratified EXECOM action (Takeshita was appointed to 4-Endorsed establishment of "not to borrow" because of pos• preme Court (Weber case was view and return with further to proceed at appropriate time chair personnel before elocted Congressional Award to be con- sible conflict with trust law was cited as an attack against affir- recommendations. with formation of a JACJ.. non- district governor.) - #

organization" . between Floyd Shimomura, to check off their choices. (b) "Interim committees" member of the Revision The constitutional revi• (which functioned between con· Committee, and Lillian Ki• sion committee would meet Constitutional revisions noted ventions) are replaced with mura, chairperson of the one day prior to the consti· "special committees", select or tutional convention to ren• 4-The "average chapter Committee on Organization• By HARRY HONDA language has been clarified ad hoc, established by the Na• al Restructure, the process der its own recommendation San Francisco and it incorporates some of dues" concept is proposed for as• tional Council and/or the Presi• sociate members. The EXECOM dent. by which changes would be of the variations. Schedules are being met the revisions which had been will determine the amount after incorporated into the final Any chapter wishing to proposed during the past 10--The tenure of the Pacific with respect to the JACL con• a study is made of prevailing Citizen Board members is ex· draft and acted upon at the further amend the constitu• stitutional convention in 1980 year. chapter dues. The spouse would tended to three years, the tenns constitutional convention tion outside the constitution• as the National JACL Board, The Revision Committee's pay half of the designated being staggered; the PC Board al convention still has the amount was resolved. at its recent meeting here, recommendations include: chair, however, serves only for regular procedure. Uchiya• I- Expanding the JACL Pre• S-The $5 student dues has the biennium upon appointment The variations as submit• was handed the first draft been replaced with "a special ted for the chapters would ma added. now being distributed for re• amble to include all persons who of the National President. "foster American democracy, rate to be fixed by the National 11-The $2,500 limit for late all be incorporated by the re• Kimura hoped the draft is view by JACL chapters. promote active participation in Council . .. and entitled to the PC budget requests is raised -to vision committee, the lan• reviewed and recommenda• Timetable, as resolved at civic and national life, and se• if no other members of the $5,000. guage being consonant with tions made at a general chap• household receives a copy". the Salt Lake City conven• cure justice and equal opportu• Process Explained the main draft. Chapters ter meeting or by at least the nities for Americans of Japanese &-Specific amounts for Na• tion, follows: In a subsequent dialogue would have the opportunity full chapter board. II I- To be of two-day duration ancestry permanently residing tional Supporting Members prior to the 1980 Convention (Ju• in the United States, as well as (1000 Club, Century Club, Cor• ly 28-Aug. 1). for all Americans, regardless of porate Club) are substituted 2- D raft of new constitution to sex, race, creed, color or national with: "Apportionment of the al· Performance Prizes offered to JACL chapters be submitted to all chapters one origin . . . " The phrase, "Ameri• location of such dues between year prior or July 28, 1979. can citizen", bas been stricken. National and the chapters will be On the basis of the JACL percentage-wise from May Nclk.ashima said he would 3-Chapters! district councils (At the 1974 Portland Conven• determined by the National Membership Bulletin, May 31, 1979. "We hope this gen• solicit contributions to the to return draft with recommen• tion, a similar request ws de• Council". 31, 1979, three types of in• erates a new cycle of JACL special performance prize dations eight months prior or feated 35 for, 46 against; a three• 7-Being added are "Life creases in chapter member• memberships and renewals fund. Oct. 28, 1979. fourths majority was required.) Members" as those 1000 Club ships generated through the 2-Providing the District members who have given $SO for that we need more than ever Progress chart for 1978 shows 4-Final draft with chapter summer or as of Sept. recommendations resubmitted Youth Council chairperson a 20 years or individuals who have 30, now," Nakashima said. perfonnance percentage against to all chapters six months prior vote on the National Council in given $1,000 in a lump sur~1. 1979 will be given special Second prize of $l00 would the 19n total of 31,717: or Dec. IS, 1979. lieu of a vote on the National 8-The National Board, in• prizes, it was announced by go to the chapter with the 1978 Pracre- CIIut ~Adoption at the San Fran• JACLBoard. stead of the National Council, Steve Nakashima, national greatest growth percentage March ...... 22,059 69.7% cisco Convention (July 28,1980). 3-National Council "may vote would issue the chapter charters. vice president for member• over last year's total. A third June ...... 29,483 929 to close nominations" after any The first draft was de• 9-FUnction of national com- ship services. prize of $l00 would go to the September ...... 31,039 97.8 additional nominations are made mittees is clarified: __ December ...... 31,545 99.4 scribed by Judge Mikio Uchi• at the first session of the Nation• (a) "standing" or "permanent" The first prize of $300 chapter with the greatest yama of Fowler, chairman of would go to the chapter 1979 Procrets CIIut al Council but that the nomina· committees perform "a continu• growth numerical increase March ...... 21,734 68.9 the revision committee as "a tions committee retains the pri• ing function ... in existence per• showing the greatest growth since May 31, 1979 (see below). May ...... 26,821 .85.0 starting point". Much of the vilege to "work out the slate". ma:lently or for the life of the

~jod • -"'------urn, New Exec Off Bldg, 12:30 'Cleveland-Bon Odori, Bud• pm; Patrick Okura, spkr, "Work• dhist Church JACL Membership Bulletin calendar ing in the System". "Seabrook-Obon (2da), Bud• Districtsl Total to * 1978 tutal SUlI m d • JUNE 30 (Saturday) dhist Church. Chapters m8 dIR Central Callfornla (9) • JUNE 22 (Friday) San Gabriel ValJey-Schol • JULY 19 ('I1mnday) Pacific Northwest (8) "Detroit-Far Eastern Festi- award supper, ESGV JCC, 6:30 Clovis ISO 142 Intermountain (7) Twin Oties-Midwest-East Columbia Basin 34 26 Delano. 56 59 Boise Valley 173 173 val (3da), Hart Plaza pm; film: 'Uprooted'; George DYC conference, Twin Cities Gresham Troutdale 152 148 Thou, Sue Embrey, spkrs. Fowler 143 138 IdahoFaUs 125 85 NC-WNDYC-Workshop (2 JAYS host (4da), Bethel College, Mid Columbia 235 192 Fresno 510 485 Mount Olympus 247 206 da), Monterey JACL hosts. StPauJ. Portland 321 261 Parlier 162 130 Pocatello-Blackfoot 113 111 • JUNE 30 (&dDnIa,y) . • JULY 20 (Friday) • JUNE 23 (Saturday) Moot!fty P'aJiDsu1a-Reno tnp Puyallup Valley 268 263 Reedley * 170 171 Salt Lake City 394 341 ·Gardena-Carnival (2day), (2da). ·Monterey-SFCJAS Asi!o• Seattle 770 539 Sanger 209 203 Snake River 285 250 JCI. • JULy 1 (SUoday) mar ill (3da). Spokane 151 122 Selma 128 122 Wasatch Front NGrth 80 53 "Honolulu-Nisei Veterans re• CIeveIJaI-Comm pianc White River Valley 62 59 Tulare County 268 262 TOTAL 1.417 1.219 union (Jun 23-28). Seabrook-Comm picruc, Par• TOTAL 1,993 1,610 TOTAL 1,796 1,712 Ceara CAlsIa--Health screen• vins State Park Mouataln Plalaa (1) Northern Callfornla Pacific Southwest (32) Arkansas Valley. 67 70 ing, Ric.hm:ni Health Dept. 9-.Dun • JULy 4 (Wf'!dneMay) Chicago CU Ceara Costa-Quwash, Geor• SaD Diego--Comm picnic, Sil- Wesb!m Nevada (31) Arizona 410 357 Fort Lupton 103 102 Alameda 377 326 ge's Union 76, Berkeley. ver Strand State Beach, llam. Carson. 82 93 Houston 55 Berkeley 451 340 • Alameda-Bazaar (2da), St I.cJuis....-Pianc, Eden Semina• declares 5.75 CoachelJa Valley 112 109 Mile Hi, 133 107 Contra Costa 591 491 Downtown L.A. S09 260 New Mexico 139 129 Buddhist Church. ry Grounds. Chicago ·San Francisco-Update on Cortez 186 170 East Los Angeles 747 572 Omaha 149 143 • JULy 7 (SaIanIIIy) The Chicago JACL Credit Diablo Valley 175 158 Wendy Yoshimura, Pine United NCWNDYC-Volleyball t0urn- Gardena Valley 1,585 1,062 San Luis Valley 54 40 7S~ Eden Township 354 304 Methodist Church, 7:30pm. ament, Contra Costa hosts. Union declared a S. divi• Greater Pasadena 47 42 TOTAL 700 591 Florin 117 103 Hollywood 280 235 • JUNE 24 (Sunday) "San Francisc&-MIS reunion, dend for the year 1978, it was Midwest (9) FremoId: Bowling towney, Fre• Miyako Hotel, 6:30pm; Joseph Fremont 178 108 Imperial Valley 70 68 announced at the 32nd an• French Camp 160 125 Chicago 1,065 923 mont Bowl Harrington, spkr. nual meeting held March 23 Las Vegas 64 54 Cincinnati 159 126 ~Picnic . Gilroy. 146 154 Lon~ Beach Harbor 81 41 • JULy 11 (Wecec:rlnlD"""eedI~lI1) at Como Inn. Livingston Merced. 183 188 Cleveland 213 181 One j'.... LBd mtg, Lida Fuku• W~ D.c.-Bd mtg, Met:ropolitan LA 38 22 Dayton 187 147 mura's res, 1:30pm Redden res. . At the April board meet• Lodi 322 284 North San Diego 144 86 mg, Lincoln Sbimidzu was Marin 87 81 Orange County 648 S69 Detroit 211 183 • JUNE Xl (Wednesday) • JULy 13 (Jiiday) Marysville 320 302 Pan Asian 169 130 Hoosier 120 93 "Gardena-Nisei Awareness C)MIencL...Bd mtg, Swnitorm re-elected credit union pres• Milwaukee 138 111 Bank, 7:30pm ident for his fourth consecu• Monterey PeninsuJa 476 436 Pasadena 173 ISO seminar, JCI, Spm; Karl Nobu• Oakland 176 89 St. Louis 128 110 RiwDId&-Serxiai Festival (2da). Progressive Westside 57 SO yuki, spkr. tive term. Other officers Placer County 295 271 Riverside. 132 134 Twin Cities 217 159 MouIat!)' flrnhwde.-Bd mtg, Riverside MaI!:.. are: Reno. 66 82 San Diego S83 539 TOTAL 2,438 2,033 JACJ.. Hall 7:30pm. • JULy 14 (Satant.y) Dr. Roy Teshima, vp; Sumi Sacramento. 894 992 ~(4) Ccmtra Costa--Summer bene- San Fernando Valley 493 413 • JUNE 28 ("Ibanday) Shimizu., sec; Ariye Oda,treas; Salinas Valley 421 354 San Gabriel Valley 334 296 'Washingto~APAFEC fit dance. New York 228 198 For- Sumiko 000, &Sst treas; credit• San Benito County n 70 San Luis Obispo 97 88 Philadelphia 198 177 RichaJ'd Hikawa (c), Thomas San Francisco 1,751 1,230 Santa Barbara 134 132 Seabrook 179 134 Masuda. Shimizu. Teshima, Dud• San Jose 1,515 1,296 Santa Maria 164 154 Washington, D.C. 395 307 If you are moving, allow 3 weeks' ad• ley Yatabe; education-Mits Ko• San Mateo 712 656 Selanoco 213 185 TOTAL 1,000 ' 816 vance notice. Include the old address label, write in dama (c), Ruth Kumata, Roy Ku• Sequoia 955 722 South Bay 136 109 roye, Jack Nakagawa, Hiroshi e Solano CountY 107 8S Venice CuJver 343 304 *"AMl-' 1 18 37 new address and effective date below. Nakano, TakTomiyama, Ron Yo• Sonoma County 486 452 Ventura County 86 79 NadouJ Sappor1Iq 5 Ne'" Addre ' . _...... Apt.1 . ... _... . shino; security officer-ROY Ku• Stockton 399 388 West Los Angeles 1,351 1,254 roye. Wilshire 157 154 NadouJ Totals 31,54526,821 City, State, ZIP ...... , ...... '" _...... _ Tri Valley 70 62 Total assets increased to Watsonville 345 329 Marina South 49 Etfocth Date: ...... $67l,837; total loans $623,686, West Valley 349 329 New Age ..36 Pacific CitiIM. 355 E. ,. St., 1m '¥II, '-~ Co 90012 • 213~ total share deposits $605,994. TOTAL 12,73910,977 TOTAL 9,439 7,826 7CaJ CL eld resutts

l00-Combined With Mas1ers C; 2 MD.L-Bob KJhara. WLA, 10 58. Karl Yanauc:hi. 'C, 11:02, Bruer Horlguc:hi, EIA. l1:06. DRIVERf SALES-$an Fen ••1do MASTDt'S '8'; ..., (NOD-Sc) Mat'. ABC DTotaI Valley Auto Parts D,stnbutOf needs re• NORTH sponsible, reliable. energel1c and lOO-CombUied "'lth Master' C. 112 90 66 62 330 pef· Ide DirectorY ~Bob SOlJTH 153 114 66 52 384 sonable Young Lady for dnver 01 estab• IGhara. WLA. :U8 (Dr); K Women's lished Valley Route No axpenence .., .... ·Pi...... Yanaudu. NC; Kishi. VC, 226.3. f'r'!!Ik NORTH 38 32 i'O necessary Call 786-3571 MAS1ER'S C: 0Yu 50 (NOD-Sc) SOUTIf 76 82 158 HELP . General Bra erage MEN'S'C' lOO-Roben Watanabe. \lrl..A, 112: Totals .•. NORTH 400: SOUTH S42 Co . Produce. Whse Mkt Sales/CIencal so YD-Steve S/umahera, EI.A, Sab Fukuda. SF'A. Ben MonJnOtt), \W. Expenence Df'eferred Start 2 a m 597, Dean Yamada. Seq, 60. Andt' 440 RELAY -South CF Kishi. J Okazakl. 1EAM SPONSORS (213) 627-9039. Lew Anyama, Tn-Clty, 6.1 ; l00-Dean B Kihara R Watanabe), S2..89; North. NORTH-West Valley (WV), San GREAT BUY! 10 units in Los An· Yamada Seq, 11 08, S Shimahara, s.:U (SMa); Contra Costa (Con); Sac• Mateo geles. 2·2 bedroom. 8-1 bedroom. ELA,l1 2, Glenn Babeob. ELA. 11 4, WOMEN'S 'A' ramento (Sac); 5.F Troop 12 ITr12 ); 1.0- ~Shan $24,228 yr x 9.7 gross $235.000 seiling • Greater Los Angeles .22O--John Fukuda. SF Assoc. 26 52 100 KislUyama. Car. di; San Jose (SJo): SF. Associates (SF'A); price. Down 20% pnnopals only Own• (new e\'ent), C Babeoka. ELA. 27.1; 11 .75 (nr); Michelle Hong. Con, 12.2; Tn~ty (Tn-O. Min. View; Sequoia er 8gent call (213) 351 -8664 Mr Irvin or ~han A,ohi International Travel Bnan Kuwahara, Car. 27 2, 44G• Renee Chew, WV._12.5; (Seq); ~ Eden CEde); Berkeley (Ber). 295-7441 Mr. Ingram. John Fukuda. SF'A. 57.01 (nr); 0 Va· Kishiyama, Car, 26.81 (nr). Alison SOUTH EastLosAngeleso Kuraahige. VC, 5-7".. SMa, 29.3; 88O-Vee McCarthy, OC, Veruoe-CuIver (VC); West Los Angeles DATA PROCESSING USA •• Jopan, Worldwide (nr), Rick)' lto. oc. 5-1 : Mark Abe, 2:23.75 (or); Marl Gibbs (OC). 2:27.6; (WLA); Pasadena CPas). , A r-Seo·lond-Cor. HOfel CONTRACT lCONSUL TANTS (JCURJE) fUJWBI YriW GoWlINS #'1--. o.i .... 110 S loa ~ St. U, 90012 , July 1 deadline for Hayashi law scholarship ~~OtyW. ANALYSTS $25. HRL Y Mw Mila Jr Call (713) 62(H)8Oe New York available to either a first year Priorities for eligibility for PROGRAMMERS $20. HRL Y Nisei Florist High school graduates and applicant or a law school stu• the law scholarships are: PLENTY HRS REST OF YA. In t • Heo rt of little Tokyo others who are interested in dent in an accredited law (1) to a member of the Japa• WORK FULL OR PART TIME 328 E. ht - 628· .5606 applying for the JAa.. nese American Citizens League Fr d Moriguchl M.mbef· T.I.~or~ school who is in need of schol• Call 668-1990 for Appt. 1llomas T. Hayashi Law or whose parents are members, arship aid This is a one-year (2) to an applicant of Japanese Seattle The PAINT SHOPPE School Scholarship are re• grant, though the applicant ancestry, and (3) to an Asian lo Mancho Ceon!,",. 1t 11 N. Horbon minded that the deadline for American. fullerton. Ca . (7U) 526-0116 may have received a need ROOSEVELT HIGH School Claas aU applications is July 1. scoolarship before. The honorees of this year's 1939. Seattle Washington 40th Re• - Yamato Trovel Bureau union. Need whereabouts Suml Aki• Candidates for admission to scholarships will be an• mota and Chlzuko Okamura Please 321 E. 2nd St., #!D5. L.A. 90012 Being the recipient of other accredited law schools may nounced at the coming Joint C9ntact Mrs. Jessie Cochran, 56()()' (213) 62"-6021 scholarships, either from 45th Avenue NE, Seattle, Wa 98105 1------• apply by writing to: EDC-MDC JAU Convention ~9428 . . Ruby Yoshino Schaar, c/o New JAU or any other organiza• (2061. • San Diego. Ca. in Bloomington, Minn.. Aug. • l ~!J"U! York JACL, SO West 6th St. New tion, does not preclude appli• 25-26. I-uswa" • . York. New York 10023. cation for the Hayashi Law .POLYNE IAN ROOM Paul H. Hoshi VA. NI A.TO Inaurance Service At least two scholarships of Scholarship. Ms. Schaar an• ( Dinner & Cockta il s Floor Show) 852·16th St. (714) 234-0076 $SOO each for the coming year nowx:ed. Son Diego 92101 rea. 264-2551 -COCKTAIL LOUNGE will be available. with Bruce ------:..----1 Ente rtainme nt Hironaka of Sacramento. who • Watsonville, Calif. Long Beach. California Municipal Golf Courses 'V will be entering his senior Solicits Bids Far EMPLOYMENT year at Stanford Law School. I,~ _oaHey . 0 "'0 ' 0- Tom Nakase Realty and Susan Kamei of Anaheim, Golf Professional Services 312 E. 1st St., Room 202 Ac~ge . RanchM. Homel. Income who has just completed her Los Angeles, Calif. TOM NAIlroIlNtn lments ~ fl.,ol'S I, o"g.n.r 202 •.••...... •••....••.. IRge mokboo O rd r Phone 687 ·0387 Both coo kboo REK.TOR lOS Japanese VIDage Plaza Mall .,e ""Iable. George Nagata Lo. Angeles 90012 Our New Cookbook Realty Toshl 0a1. Prop ~OSI m oor~1 n or 1850 Sawtelle Blvd. Favorite _CClP'~ ~ e~ los Angeles, Ca. 90025 E-W I, ;0 - Sc pos·age.. "d hand "1: S5.2' h __ fT~ 478-8355,477-2645 MARUKYO _cop~ f-" II, S- OO S1posage. d ndl!1fi: 5 u:'h __ ~ Recipes lOT L c.S(C-d S _ Kimono Store $4.00 per Copy 5c pastagaltwdng CHIVO'S '{ \.:7New Otani Hotel & t _' reoe ------Japaneee Bunka Garden---Arcade 11 So. Alameda County Cr-. _ e ZIP Needleerwtt 110 S. Los AngeJ~ Buddhist" omen's Assn. I 2943W Sa Rd. LosAngele8 I 628-4369 . 329 5 Anahe,m Ca 92804 17·4) 99&-24'32 &-PACIfIC O,IZEN I Frl~ . y~ J'.'ne 22,1979 ------

at the Tenth Awards dinner May time sensitive queries concern• In SaD Fn"C'isco, Henry Rights Act enhances nation• pc people ____ S. He was sponsored by the Eden ing the U.S.-Philippine Military Der, executive director, Chi• al unity "by allowing lan• Township JACL Bases Agreement He is the 2+ year-old son of the Moffet Ishi• nese for Mfirmative Action, guage minorities to panici• pc ...... ------• JaDe Mati, North Torrance Rep. Mike Lowry appointed her High School senior and Candy kawas. which spearheaded the dri\'e pate" in the electoral process. books & fine arts senior community representa• Striper at Gardena Memorial for bilingual ballots, said Ha• Hayakawa, a semanticist. "Lyra's Mom", a polypropy• tive. Kurose feels Lowry will be Hospital. is the recipient of the yakawa was "showing his is "playing word games", N~ lene fiber suspension work by responsive to needs of the Asian El Camino Lions Club's Commu• HAYAKAWA true colors in joining a crowd buyuki declared.. Toronto artist AiIro Sazilki, was community and has supported nity Service Award for this year. of racists". The situation in purchased by theCanadian Gov• bilingual and social services in this country could in no way ernment for its collection, "ea: Seattle's International District pc ...... ------• must take heed of the while be equated to the situation in MARUTANI . nadian Tapestries", which will on the King County Coun• military & veterans growing demand to reduce be put on tour outside Canada cil, she said Canada, Der continued. CAA CoadDaed from .... 4 Los Angeles attorney Jan Mori Glen S. M8rumoto of Live Oak government spending." aims, not a separate state for pc III ,I was elected vice president of the (Ca) High School, was appointed Hayakawa campaigned minorities, but for moving American in the land of our Los Angeles Board of Harbor to the U.S. Naval Academy upon forelintinationofbLlin~ parents! education recommendation of Rep. Robert disenfranchised people into Commissioners in April His ballots while running for the electoral process. Sheri Abmine, of Univ. of Ha• term on the commission termi• S. Leggett (D-4th Dist). He is the lET ME QUIOClY add that waii, received a $5,800 fellow• nates June 30, 1980. son of the George Marumotos, U.S. Senate in 1975-76. Der also noted that all elec• by no means do I reject the ship to pursue a Master of Fine Marysville JACLers. (National JACL has tradition• tions are becoming expen• cultural heritage passed on to Arts in the writing program at pc ...... ------• o~ Shiro Tokuno of Sacramento is ally endorsed expansion of sive. Over 50,000 sample bal• me through my parents: I UC Irvine. honors & awards the new president of the No. portunites for all groups to par• Former congresswomanPatBy Calif. MIS Assn. Other cabinet ticipate in the democratic pro• lots for last Novembers gen• take great pride both in my T. Mink failed to make the list of Nobuo Kawe• members include Sbig Kihara of cess and was in favor of the 1975 eral election, for instance, ancestry and my heritage, six semi-finalists for the positi.on bata of Hay• Monterey, exec. vp; William Na• amendments to the Voting were returned as undeliver• and such shall continue to of chancellor of the Univ. of Ha• ward, was cho• katani, Berkeley, vp; Tad Hirota, Rights Act intended to eliminate able to the San Francisco reg• flourish under the Stars and waii Manoa campus. Selections sen by the Inter• Berkeley, vp; Roy Uyebata, Cu• djscrimination against lan• istar of voters. Over 150,000 Stripes. And, yes, in many were made by UH President Dr. national Insti- .~Ir-IIIiiiiiPf pertino, sec.; Bob Midzuno, San guage-minority voters.-Ed.) Fajio Matsuda. tute of the Francisco, treas. English-language in that ways I can, and do. "relate" to Bay as an out• (The Scripps-Howard electon were not used at all, the people of Japan; but in» pc ...... ------• The Navy Achievement Med• standing immi• al was presented to John M. Jsbi. newspapers editorially he added. far as the nation of Japan is entertainment grant from Ja• bwa of San Jose, Ca, an intelli• agreed with Hayakawa that Karl Nobuyuld, JACL na• concerned, whenever I go pan for his out• ! 1gence specialist 3d class with "every U.S. citizen should tional executive director, through customs, I pass Impresario Kamko Hillyer standing contri• the U.S. Navy Comm.and based speak English for a common called Hayakawa;s worries through the gate marked has been in tre musical artist butions to the ~ management business since in the Philippines. The citation language is one of the essen• about national unity "a bunch "Foreigners". And that's the East Bay com- commended his superior per• 1968, organized her internation• munities. . formance of duties, enabling the tial glues that holds this coun• of baloney", for the Voting way it is. al firm in 1973 and two years Immigrants of 39 different eth• commander to respond quicldy try's many ethnic groups to• later booked tre flrst tour of the nic communities were honored gether.") N.Y. Metropolitan Opera in Ja• and accurately to high-level, ...... pan Her New York-based flrm is also the first Western impresa• . 1979 National JACL rio to get an East German group NISEI GEMOLOGIST Authorized Retail Travel Agencies (Leipzig Gewandhaus Orches• tra) to perform outside of that PACIFIC NORTHWEST country, organi2ed 32 orchestra Azumano Travel Service ...... ••..•. • •. (503) 223-6245 Commissioned by Smithsonian George Azumano, Jim Iwasaki, 400 SW 4th Ave, Portland, Ore 97204 tours the past fiveyears and now Beacon Travel Service ...... (206) 325-5849 moving into scheduling dancers was sent to New York for ap• States, after which the col• George Kooa, 2550 Beacon, Seattle, Wa 98144 and singers. A Boston Univer• San Jose, Ca. Kawa9uchi Travel Service ...... •.•.(206) 622-5520 sity graduate in music with a John Sumida, a jeweler proval by the designer and a lection will be on permanent Mlkl Kawaguchi, 71'-3rd Ave #300, Seattle, Wa 98104 display at the Smithsonian master's degree in musicology and goldsmith, was selected committee of experts. Upon NORTHERN CALIFORNIA-WESTERN NEVADA from New York University, she as one of 20 jewelry design• approval of the finished Institution Aki Travel Service ...... (415) 567-1114 is the daughter of a Kyoto silk jewelry, it was taken to the The jewelry made by John Kaz Kataoka, 1730 Geary St, San Francisco, Ca 94115 merchant and is married to Ra• ers and manufacturers from East West Travel ...... (415) 398-5777 all over the United States, to Smithsonian Institution. Sumida was a set of Star Victor Iwamoto, 210 Post 51 8th Fir, San FranciSCO , Ca 94108 phael Hillyer, former violinist Cuff Links. One side was set with the Juilliard String Quartet make a piece of jewelry for Japan American Travel ...... (415) 781·8744 The entire collection con• with a 5.8 ct Virginia spes• Tom Kobuchi, 258 World Trade Ctr, San Francisco, Ca 94111 pc pupl the permanent Smithsonian sisting of 19 women's jewel• Kintetsu Intemational Express...... • , ...(415) 992-7171 sartite garnet and the other Ich Taniguchi. 1737 Post St, San Francisco, Ca 94115 Institution collection. Only ry and 12 men's jewelry govemment three such individuals were side was set with a 6.9 ct Ida• Kosakura Tours & Travel ...... (415) 95&-4300 were presented to the Smith• ho star garnet, both from the M Kosakura, K Imamura, 530 Bush St, San Francisco, Ca 94115 selected from the State of sonian Institution at the LSA Travel ...... , ..... , •. (408) 578-2630 Smithsonian collection of Lawson Sakai, 124 Blossom Hili Rd, San Jose, Ca 95123 California. Each of the indi• American Gem Society's viduals honored were select• gems. Miyamoto Travel Service ...... ,...... , •... (916) 441 · 1020 45th Annual Conclave held Sumida operates an exclu• Jerry Miyamoto, 2401-15th St, Sacramento, Ca 95818 ed on the basis of jewelry Monterey Travel Service ...... , .(408) 649-4292 at the Corcoran Gallery of sive shop in El Paseo de Dennis Garrison, 446 PacifIC St, Monterey, Ca 93940 made by them in the past All Art in Washington, D.C. on the jewelers were reqpested Saratoga Center at the cor• Nippon Exj)!8ss, USA ...... (415) 982-4965 April 6. John Sumida and his ner of Saratoga Avenue and Simmon Shimomura, 39 Geary St, San Franclsco, Ca 94108 to submit pictures, wax de. wife, Dorothy, were guests Sakura Travel Bureau ...... (415) 342-7494 signs and other information. Campbell A venue, in San 'Jo• Jim Nakada, 51'-2nd Ave, San Ma1eo. Ca 94401 at the presentation. se. He is a member of the Tanaka Travel Service ...... ,...... , .(415) 47+3900 All of the jewelry pieces American Gem Society and Frank or Edith Tanaka, 441 O'Farrell, San Francisco, Ca 94108 were made from stones It was disclosed at the pre• Travel Planners ...... (408) 287-5220 sentation that the entire col• a certified gemologist He is Clark Taketa, 2025 Galeway PI #280, San Jose. Ca 95110. ~ which are native to the lection will be placed on tour also a member of the West Travel Tech ...... , ...... , •• (408) 737·7!lOO North American continent. Aki Yoshida, 333 Cobalt Way. #101, Sunnyvale, Ca 94086 for three years in the UnitPtf Valley JACL. · II Yamahlro's Travel Service ...... •..•...•.(415) 845-1977 All of the gold used in the Ken Yamahiro, 2451 Grove St, Berkeley, Ca • 94704 making of each piece of CENTRAL CALIFORNIA jewelry was contributed and Mlkami & Co. Travel Service ...... , ...•.. . (209) 268-6683 Ruthann Kurose obtained from one source to Most Appreciated Henry Mikaml, 814 E St. Fresno, Ca 93706 PACIFIC SOUTHWEST RutbanD Iturose became the provide for uniformity of Omiyage in Japan Asahllntemational Travel ...... • ,...... (213) 623-6125 first Asian congressional aide in color and quality (18 cn. M- ' Pete Endo, 1111 W Olympic Blvd, Los Angeles, Ca 90015 the State of Washington when ter the jewelry was made, it Asia Travel Bureau ...... •• • ...... ,..... • .(213) 628-3235 Plwnlum GuIIIIly Kazue Tsubol, 102 S San Pedro, Los Angeles. Ca 90012 1III1I1IIKI"""IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1I111I1IUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH Classic Travel Service ...... • ••• , ....(213 ) 532·3171 Joanne Matsubayashl, 1601 W Redondo Beach. Gardena , Ca 90247 Gardena Travel Agency ...... , .(213) 323-3440 STEAKS Owaln Kamimura. Pac Sq .'0,1610W Redondo Beach, Gardena, Ca 90247 Pltcked In Blue Ice Box Intematlonal Holiday Tour & Trael ....• ••••...•.. .•.•• (714) 898-0064 Nanaml Nt George, 12792 Valley Vaew C-2. Garden Grove, Ca 92645 ROSE HILLS Kokusai International Travel ..•....• , .• . .•.••• ,...... , ,.(213) 62&-5284 12 cut FILET MIGNON 4.51b Willy Kal, 321 E 2nd St. Los Angeles, Ca 90012 Mitsuline Travel Service ...... • .... , . (213) 628-3235 Offers care and understanding 8 cut NEW YORK CUT 4 Ib Hiromichi Nakagaki. 345 E 2nd St, LOl Angeles. Ca 90012 11 cut TOP SIRLOIN 41b Monterey Park Travel ...... (213) 721 ·3990 when Its needed most 16 cut T.T. STEAKS 51b Les Kurakazu, 255 E Pomona Blvd. Monterey ParII, Ca 91754 New Orient Express ...... ,...... (213) 62+1244 6~ AlSO~~:~~E~ACK B:e~ Giro Takahashi, 330 E 2nd #201 , Loa Angelel, Ca 90012 • (213) 1271 . Nisei Travel " • ...... • ...... ,.. .• . •• •.•.• • (213) 327·5110 JERKY,ORANGES, HONEYDEW. Aki Mano, 1344 W 155th St. Gatdena. Ca 90247 (eve) 283-9905 Takahashi Travel ..... _ , ...... ,..., ,.. (2131684-1863 I(en Takahastu, 221 E WhlttJer , laHabra. Ca 90631 ACOIIO U.S.A. m E. 1at St., #301 ... ~ Alcala Travel ,...... •.• •• (714) 287·1530 Angel•• , ClIOO12 . Sandra H Ojln. 5343 UniverSity, San Daego, Ca 92105 Certified by the U.S.OA for £mY clearance through Japnse Customs. Deli\