Of DR. NOBE AWARD NAMED

Reedley Medlc.1 Member.shlp Publication: Japanese Am!!rl'''" Clhlcnle~e 1'lS \\feij"" St., l os Ange1u, C ~li ( 90012; C213) MA 6 .6936 Student Muuy.m. Publls"ed Weekly E.xcc.pt FIf~1 and L.bt Weeh of '~¥e~r- Second Clcls.s Postago Pa,d at Los Angeles, Calif. lIT ItA JII.lIoui IACL .t USC Selected VOL.74 NO.1 The ftIgbt from Salt Lake JANUARY 7-14, 1972 to ..... calm and ~ RoY Barano joined me Manlyama. 22. was In ChIcago for the IIlght to the 1971 recipient of CinclnnaU, Ohio. Had a Dr. Mutsumi NIXON-SATO SUMMIT TALKS chance to talk with Shlg Wa- Graduate JACL kam.tau by phone re the He Is the son of TOURNA;\IENT PRIZE - Happy Gardena Valley JACL ISLE HERO SAYS CHICAGO COURT JASP and the Hiltory Proj- Ayako Maruyama, of 17352 E. officials at Art Kudo's Toyota are polishing a '72 Toyota U.S.-Japan 'hotline' established, -' and he Informs me every- Manning. Reedley, Calif. Corolla. a main prize of the 1972 National JACL Bowling tIIIni Is goln, wdl and OIl The Reedley JACL cbapter Tournament award dinner on Mar. 11 at the Queen Mary. VIETNAM WAR RULES OUT TAX III!beduie. nominee is a IIrst year medi• They are (from le!t) Tak Kawagoe, co-director; PSWDC cal student at USC. wbo was Gov. Helen Kawagoe; Stuart Tsujimoto. co-director; and Okinawa reversion set for May 1S higbly praised by Biology Thomas Sbigekuni, chapter president. The tOUl"ament Ohio Protessor John S. Garth not A 'LOST CAUSE' BREAK FOR ELKS is slated Mar. 6-11 at Soulb Bay Center, Redondo Beach. SAN CLEMENTE - PreSI• e s e Ambassador Nobublko o n I y for his intellectual dent Nixon and J apanese Cavalier pro basketball achievements but for bls -Pboto by Ken Hutbmaker Ushiba and is retroactive to 'Jbe Dennis Fujii Not P rime Minisler Eisaku Sato, Oct. 1, 1971. Also Ordered to Pay team was boarding the same moral stature as welL Protes• completing two days of sum• tlIbt at ChIcago and looked lOr Garth stated: Against Military One provision ot tile pact mil talks J an. 7, agreed to allows either the United $90,000 in Back Taxet lIIre avel1lge sized players be- "Mr. Maruyama worked as Life and Benefits relurn Okinawa to J apaJlese States or Japan to call (or to County Assessor e.u... they were standing all a volunteer at Wadsworth control on May 15 and to es• prompt consultation if eilhel' _ether. But when Ross and General ao.pltal in rheum a• Two Japan teams, tablish a Washington-Tokyo government feels its textile J Itood next to lbem. we came tology ...... arch and is a very By DOUGLAS WOO j'hot line". industry is being unduly CHICAGO - Circuit Court about to thetr waist-line. A modest Indlvldual and I leam• harmed by the agreement or Judge Earl Arkiss has upheld few of the players, wilb their ed only .... dually of his out• HONOLULU -"Our part in No mention was made of Vi etn a m is wrong. We trade concessions the U.S. had by textile exports from any revocation or tax exempt sta• mod bat and high heeled standiq record and accom• third country. tus for the Elks' War Mem• lIboea towered considerably plisbment. I predict a brilliant 1,000 keglers due ..mouldn't be there an d we requested in return for the .houldn't have gotten involv- political measures obtained by Japanese wool and man• orial, operated by the Bene• OVer ...ven feet tall. career for him in medical re- made fiber textile exports to volent and Protective Order Gordon Yoshikawa picked search and do not hesitate to 00." the J apanese. GARDENA -Over 1,000 from Gardena Valley JACL, Those words came from war In the joint corrununique, the will be ll• of Elks, and ordered lbe fra• 111 up at the airport and drove nc:ommend him higbly. Few bowlers (rom lhroughout the P .O. Box 2361 , or from NBA mited to 997.5 million yards ternal organization to pay 111 to the Carrousel Inn at students I have met are more hero Dennis M. Fujii in an in• Nixon assured the Japanese U.S.A. plus two leams from bowling officials. terview Dec. 21. leader that all American nu• in lhe year from Oct. 1. 1971, $90,000 in back taxes. CiIclnnati. We freshened up worthy and able." Japan are expected for tbe Coordinating non-bowling ..., later went to the Avis Also, cbairman and ot the "We're trying to help peo• clear weapons would be re• to Sept. 30. 1972. The limit is Al'kiss ruled on Dec. 17 that 1972 National J ACL Bowling activities a l' e Tak Kawagoe moved from Okinawa when it increased to 1.04 billion in the the property, at 2750 N. Lake• Ifotor Inn for tbe Cincinnati- Continaed on Pan 6 ple who are not really try• Dayton jOint installaUon. ______Tournamenl being co-hosted and Stuart Tsujimoto, tourna• J is returned to Japan. second year and 1.09 billion view Ave.) was not run for by the Gardena Valley JACL jng to help themselves/ he Toastmaster Masajl Toki got ment co-directors. said. Hit's a lost cause." The decision for the May in tlle third year, which ends chaJitable purposes and that and So. Calif. Men's 15 return date was a com• Sept. 30, 1974. in any event the Elks were btl cbance this year to needle and Women's Bowling Assn. The l a n k y, 22-year-old past MDC Governor Mas Ya• made headlines in F ebruary promise in that J apan bad ineligible for 18.'< exempt sta• Mar. 6-11 at Redondo Beacb's FUZZY SHIMADA ROLLS sought an Aplil I date wbile t u s because their fraternal maaaki, who, I understand, South Bay Bowling Center, wben be won the Distinguish• may get a chance to get even Dr. Watanabe of ed Service Cross, the nationJs the U.S. originally proposed charter violates the 1970 illi• according to Don Aoki, tour• HIS FOURTH 300 GAME July 1. nois Constitution's guarantee next year. .Masajl, as usual, nament chan'man. $econd highest awa.rd for val• Vo... poking (un at everyone or. He was crew cruet of an The summ.it talk here was Mineta aceu·ses of freedom from discrimina• IIIId was reall.Y having a ball. Activities will start on Mon. SUNNYVALE - Fuzzy Shi• Army medical evacuation hel• the last of President Nixon's tion on the basis of race, col• Spokane elected day, Mar. 6 with a pre-tow'Il• Ol'J o=ln£o~:~.ndndcat:y ~ mada chalked up his fow·th icopter which was shot down nine conierences with hjs al• creed, national ancestry ament mixer cbaired by Shozo 300 game on Dec. 12 in the while helping remove wound• lies before his trip to Peking legislators of or sex. =~a·T.~ ~l ~~rr~r!::. Hiraizumi, at MishimaJs Res• Tri-City Nisei tournament at ed trom a Republic of Viet• and Moscow. T b e Elks' membership i. e taurant, and a fashion show Sunnyvale Bowl. He finisbed restricted to male American Onl" and Kay Longbottom, PNW governor nam outpost six miles inside Cabinct Members '~".ndan:au~et1l8kub~~~t~ dil'ected by Mrs. Etsu Andow with a 234-157 to post a 691 Laos. citizens who are non-Cornmu• at Bullock's Del Amo. series in the men's singles. Accompanying Sato were nist and white. Tournament play starts on Soldier of Year gerrymandering ~~J;ers~f!~~vs ~~~eUye,Eu~::; -Dr. James Wa• He rolled his first 300 game foreign minister Takeo Fuku• Decision Bailed Zaplhart, Gerald and Carol Haw• tanabe ot Spokane was elect• Tuesday and will culminate in 1949 at San Carlos Bowl d a, finance ministe.r Mikio kins. Mas and Lily YamasakL with the awards dinner-dance In addition to the Disting• ed unopposed as governor of at a time when the Ameri• uished Service Cross, be was M i z uta and international SAN FRAj'

Dr. Francis Tomozawa and hI. 1972 cabinet members you IIr. invir...... were installed by Jerry Eno• Copy of ORDER FORM for Hosokawa Book, "Nisei". moto, superintendent of the Banquela, Weddings, Receptlons, Soclal·A"al,. Call1ornia Correctional Insti• Ship books 10: ______F."'u,'ng the West'. "neat tution at Tehachapi and im• Pacific Citizen, 125 Weller St., ~~~iiii~:-'B mediate past National JACL Los Angeles, Calif. 90012 Name: ______end bllnquet 'ecll/tlel tor 10 to 2OII1O... president at the annual Wlt• Address: ______Ion ville JACL installation Please send __copies of the Hosekawa book, dinner on Saturday, Dee. 12, uNI.i" (Japanese edition) at special price of 59 to City: State __ZIP ______al the RIversIde in Santa l1Iactirs of this newspaper. Enclosed check to "Pacific Gift Lists Welcome at the Same Special Price. Cruz. Close to 100 member, and lUesla attended. Citi"n" for $___ • Michie MIyamoto, outeolnl vII!e preildeJIl, IntrodWl8d Rev. ad MrL Sumlo KOla md o.tIIau4 _ ..... , SelectetI Bihliograpliy ~n Japanese Mnericans

It'l JACL Directory ('ft. lIIected blbliolnph7 on "The JapaDese In the Japanese Imm..... Uon. Annual Report, Immigration and Nat• RInehart and Winston 1961-Prolessor of Law .t Yale UJIJIed Statea" waa prepared b, Mrs- Me, Nakano ot uarization Service. U.S. Deparbnent of Justice 1964 University states that "the J apanese exclusion prOgram W..... t Creek, Calli., .. a project for ber blltor)' ..... at Revision of Immigration. Naturalization and Nationality rests on fi ve propositions 01 the utmost potential menace" NAnONAL JACL BOARD AND STAFF DIablo Vane, Cone.e. Her lnatruclar wu hl&bll pleaaed Laws. Joint hearings be(ore the Sub-Committee of the and outi1ne. them In language understandable to the aDd bad It reprodueed for dlltrlbuUOD to hb llIJIUII.r oeml· Committees on the Judiciary, Congre.. of the United layman. __1aIn·PlaID• ur tor hl&b aehool teaeb.rs al the UaIY. of the PaoUla to States. 82nd Congress 1951. Rostow, Eugene V. The Sovere!a'n Prerol&tlve: TIle Supreme ...... Gov .Dr.T~1 ~ a, boiler aequalnl them with the problema aDd eoutrlbuUona Paul, Rodman W. Tbe Abrogation of the Genll. men's Av.e• Rumaad S. UIIo, Court Ind the Quest ror Law. New Haven. Yale Univer• a26 s. ani But, 1550 LIncoln #201, of a mlnorll1 ..ouP 01 Am.rlcana. TIle books rel ....d Ilnoe ment. Harvard University Press. Cambridge 1936- Author sity P ress 1962-Collection 01 articles and lectures includes hit IAJre ClIT, Utah 84111 Denver, Colo. 80203. 1.88 bave beeu Included b;, the Paclfio Cltl&en.) r eceived a Harvard Pbi Bela Kappa prize (or this essay a critique 01 the Supreme Court ruling upholding con• ...... 11 ...... IIIJd...... which presents the view tbat the Agree.ment failed to be stitutionality of evacuation. Tmlaka, Gov. Ron Harano effective owing to th fac t "that the United States was al• Hem7 B,ck,round: Japanese History ten Broek, J acobus with Edward N. Barnhart and Floyd W. 11ft Grandview A ve~ 1322 Argyle St. lowing another nation (J apan) to assume a dominant role Matson. Prejudice, War and the Constitution. BerkeleT. Cblcago. Ill. 601540 Cleftland, OhIo 44108 and U.S. Forei,n Policy In controlling the immigration." University of California Press 1954-War-tlme evacuation • .P. (Pall. Afl.)• Co-DYC: CoUn Hara, Xaa Borlla. 4309 N. Kenmore. Morin, Reiman. East Wind Rlslnr. New York. Knopf 1060- is thoroughly examined !tom historical, soelO-psychological a'l1 Bcbool LaIIe ChIcago, Ill. 60613 An American correspondent draws on his accumulated Japanese in U.S.: World War II and legal points of view. (Also reprinted, same publl. her, Co-DYC: Beverly Tana- 1968.) Norriatown, Pa. lHOI knowledge to interpret J apan-U.S. foreign policY. The Military Intelligence Service Language School Album • •• • (BeL" 8y.)• machl Re1schau!r, Edwin . O. United Slates and Japau .. 3rd cd. Thomas, Dorothy Swaine. with Charles Kikuchi and J ames JAma MurakamI, 1502 Ironwood Dr. 19t6-History of the Military Intelligence Language Sakoda. The Salvare. University of California Press 1052 Fairbom, Ohio 45324 Harvard UniverSIty Press, Cambridge 1965-A hIstory of School. 21M lAIWIa Rd., Japanese-American relations from Commodore Perry's en• -A thoroughly documented definitive study of war ti.,. Santa Ron, CalIf. 015401 EaatenI- Mu rphy, Thomas D. Ambassador In Arms. University of evacuation is presented by the author, a Professor o( V.P. (GeL ()p.)• Gov. Grayce Uyebara trance mto Tokyo Bay to the present, by the fonner Hawaii Press 1954-The story of the famed 100th Bat• 1535 Ma rlborough Rd. Ambassador to Tokyo. SOciology at the University of California. Includes staUs• Mike M. Suzuki. talion. a Nisei regiment. tical analyses with instantly readable tables and chartS. tOOl Greenburst Way. West Chester. Pa. 19380 Scalapino Robert, A. The United Slates and. the Far E.. t. Shirey, Orville C. Americans: The Story of the 4Und Com· Sacramento, CalIf. 115831 DYC Chmn . .... an Okazaki, 2nd ed. Prentice Hall 1962-Surveys Japan-U.S. rolaUon. Th6mas, Dorothy Swaine and Ri chard Nishimoto The Spoil• 215 Pennbrook Ave., bat Te.m.- As intelligence officer with this J apanese are, Berkeley, University California Press 1946-1. mostl' 'l'reuartr• from 1853 to the present with special emphasis on the American combat team, the author recounts Ulelr exploits. Alfred Batate, Lansdale, Pa. 19446 post-war era (Cbapter I, pp. 11-73). The author is a Pro• concerned with the one aspect of evacuation: those evac• 824 E. lit St, fessor of Political Science at the University of California. u ees branded as "disloyal" and sent to Tule Lake Cent. r. Los Angeles. Callf. 110012 Evacuation "Traces the course 01 a minority group from law-abiding NaUonal Headquarter&• Uto Club CImm.- 13100m, Leonard and Ruth Reimer. Removal and Return. citizens to people without a legal basis for existence."• Tad HIrota Masao W. Satow, Japanese in U.S.: General Works National Director, Berkeley, University of California Press 1949-Emphasizes note from boo k jacket. 1447 Ada St., Daniels, Roger. Tbe PolIUos of Prejudlc•• Berkeley and Los Zeller, Dr. William D. An Educational Dream. Th. American Berkeley. CalIf. 114702 1634 Post St., socio-economic effects on J apanese Americans who were .... l'raI4m..... San Francisco, Calif. 94115. Angeles: Univ. of California Press, 1962-Has to do with evacuated. Press, 1969- Regarding the schooling f6r chil dren tIId ltrry Enomoto, WaablD8ton R.pr•• enlaUve• the anti-Japanese movement in California and the strug• Bosworth, Allan R. America's Concentration Camps, New adults in the relocation centers during World War. II . P . O. Box 56 Mike M. Masaoka, gle for passage of the Japanese Exclusion Act 01 1924. York, Norton 1967- Well-documented history of the J apa• Tehachapi, Callf. 93561 David E. Ushio, Hosokawa, William. Nisei: Ibe Quiet Americans. New York, nese in California from the 1860's to present, with major Government Publications IAPICoIlJlRI• 2021 L St. NW, Wm. Morrow and Co ., 1969-A Nisei journaUst's account emphasis on war-time evacuation. By a former news• Robert Takasugl, Washington, D.C. 20036 of Japanese in the United States. Commissioned by JACL U.S. Army. Command Decisions. (Washington: Government l'aelflc Cltben- paperman and Navy Intelligence officer. (Also paperback, P rinting Office 1960). Report on decision to evacuata Ja.• MIO E. Beverly Blvd2 to write the "popular" history. Bantam Books, N.Y. 1968.) Los AnseJea, Callf. 1I0u22 Harry K. Honda, Editor, Kitano, Harry H. L. Japanese American.: The Evolution 01 a panese from West Coast. 125 Weller St., Bloom, Leonard and J ohn I. Kitsus •. The \IIanaged Casually. Subcultur•• Englewood Cliffs, N.J ., Prentlce-Hall, 1969- U.S. Anny. Final Rcport. (Washington: Government Pr in ting • • • Los Angeles, Calif. 90012 Berkeley, University of Calliornia Press 1956-Sociological Office 1943), Final report on evacuation made approxi• heltle Northwest.- A descriptive and analytic overvi.w of the ethnic heritage study regarding impact of war-time evacuation on Japa• of Japanese Americans. mately a year after event. Gov. James Watanabe Rerlonal Offlces-(No. Cam.) nese family institution. Ten selected family histories are U.S. Congress. J apanese American Evacuation ClaiJlls. Hear• 1634 Post St., Lanoaster, Clay. Japanese Inlluence In America. With intro• 304 Siena Way presented. ings before Claims Subcommittee No. 5 of the Committee Spokane, Wash. 99208 San Francisco, Calif. 94115 duction by Alan Priest. New York. W. ll. Rawls 1983- Chase, Stuart. Tbe Proper Study of Jlbnklnd. Harper, 1948. on Judici ary, House of Representatives, 83rd Congress. DYC Cbmn. Leonard NOjl, (So. CalU.)- Work explores the cultural and historical backJtround of Ch. 9, "Revolt in the Desert"-Of the f'1'strations and !It I, Box 25. JeUrey Matsui, director Japanese and defines the impact of Japanese ideas, esthetic Serial No. 23 (Washington: Government P rintin, Olllee 125 Weller St., anger that led tp the Poston WR A Center revolt, told with 1954) . Parkdale, Ore. 97047 Ideals and art forms upon the United States. compassion and insight. Ko, CaIU.·W. Nevada• Los Angeles, Calif. 90012 patersen. William. "Success Story, J apanese-American Style," U.S. Department 01 the Interior: War Relocation AuthOrity. Gov. Shlg.kI SUli.Yama, (Mldwest)- Eaton, Allen H. Beauty Behind Barbed Wire. New York, (Washington: Government P rinting Office 194 3-1946). 36784 Riviera Dr., Esther lIagiwara, New York TImes, (January 9, 1966)-In an extended Harper 1953-0n the arts or the J apanese in war reloca• article, the author, Professor of Sociology at the Univer• Publications Include: Fremont, Callf. 114538; 21 W. Elm St., tion camp. (I) Wartime Exile. Exclusion of the Japanese Amctlcan. DYC Cbmn. Gary ltIta1awa, Chlcallo, Ill. 60610. sity of California, offers a discerning view of tbe Japanese Foote, Caleb, "Have We Forgotten Justice?" Voices In Db• in the United States today. Special emphasis on sociologi• From the West Coast. 2438 Cabrillo St , eut edited by A. A. Ekrich, New York. Citadel Press 1942 (2) The Evacuated People. San Franciseo, CalU. 114121 Youth Servlce_ cal implications of heritage 01 Japanese. - Pr ofessor of Law at University of Pennsylvania, pre• eeatral CaIU.- Ron Wakabayashi, Rose, Arnold M. and Caroline B. Rose, eds. Minority Prob• (3) The Wartime Handiing of the Evacuee P roperty. sents a potent argument against war-time evacuation .as (4) Token Shipment: The Story of American'. War Ref- Gov. Fred Hiruuna, Field Director, and lema. New York. Harper and Row 1965-Sociological in• a flp erversion of democracy." Traces history of r acial in• P.O. Box 136D, Victor H. Shlbata, vestigations include chapter dealing with evacuation or ugee Shelter. 93716 ~ Jr. JACL Administrator tolerance in California. Fremo. Callf. Japanese and problems of assimilation. (5) Legal and Constitutional Phases of the WRA P rogram. DYC: Ed Shlba 125 Weller St, Girdner, Audrie and Loftis, Anne. The Great Betrayal. New (6) Community Government in War Relocalion Centeno 39433 Road 136 Los Angeles, Callf. 90012. Slate Of California. Fair Employment Practices Commission. York: The Macmillan Co. 1969- Has to do mosUy with Californians of Japanes., Cblne.e and FUipino Ancestr;,. (7) Administrative Highlights 01 the WRA Program. CuUet;" Calif. 93615 Community blvolvemen..... the decision leading up to the Evacuation, although it tries (8) People in Motion: The Post-War Adjustment Of the Warren Furutani, San Francisco 1965-Pamphlet provides vital and social hclfle ""uthwat.- to report on subsequent events up to the present. Evacuated Japanese. Gov. Helen Kawagoe Coordinator, statistics 01 three minority groUps of California. Grodzins, Morton. Americans Betrayed. Chicago, University 728 W. Carson, 125 Weller St., Statehood for Hawaii Hearings before the Interior and Insu• (9) WRA: Story of Human Conservation. of Chicago 1949- Polltics and the Japanese evacuation. (10) Impounded People. (Also reprint, Univ. of Arizona Torrance, Callf. 110502 Los Angeles, Calif. 110012; lar Affairs Committee. Testimony of Mike Masaoka for Results of three years of intensive research, complete with DYC: Mark Nakaablma P ress 1969.) Reconstructs life inside relocation centerL CIP 'Fo"el'- the Japanese American Citizens League. House ot R.pre• charts, biblography and index. 1478 S. Garfield Willie Fujinami, 125 Weller sentatives, Feb. 26, 1959. (Reprint includes bibliography of books on Evacua• Monterey 'Park, Callf. 91754 St., Los Angeles, Califomla Leighton, Alexander H. The Governinr 0' Men. Princeton 'I tion, refiections after 25 years and Index.) llltermoantaln• 90012; Ronald Kobata, 175 U.S. Con ...ssional Record. Tribute to Japanese American University Press I 94S-Psychiatrist and social anthro• Gov. Shlgeki Usblo Wood St., San Francisco, Military Service in World War II. Speech of Senator pologist, appointed to observe working of Relocation Cen• Annotated Bibliographies 5105 S. 13th East Calif. 94118 ; Daniel A. Ku• Hiram L. Fong (Hawaii). United States Senate, May 21, ter at Poston, Arizona, surveys general governing prin• Sale Lake City, Utah 84117 bo, 718 S. 2nd St., San Jose, 1963 ci ples. Asian Amerlcal1ll : An Annotated BlbUo(raphy. UCLA Asian DYC Chmn. Dave Hlral Calif. 95112 ; Gerald Sakata, U.S. CODJresslonal Record. Tribute to Japanese American McWilliams, Carey. Prejudice, Japan. s. Amerieans: Symbol American Studies Center (l971)-Over 300 entries, com• Box 138, Chaff.r lfall 2133 S. Yosemite, Stockton, Citizens L.ague. Speech of Rep. Walter H. Judd, (MInn.) 01 Racial Intolerance. Boston. Little Brown 1944-A com• piled by Harry H . L. Kitano, E. Jung, C. Tanaka, B. Wonl . Boise State College Calif. 95206. United States House of Representatives, August 2, 1955 prehensive history of Japanese in California emphasWng Asians In America. UC Davis Asian American Research Proj• Boise, Idaho 83707 Educatlou Commission• Lyman, Stanford M. The Aslana In tbe West. Univ. of Nevada, ect (J970)- Complled by William W. Lum, of 750 master" DYC: Susan Y06b1mura Ronald M. Hirano, period of evacuation and its causes. Prepared at r.quest 3065 S. 2600 East 3437 West Blvd., 1970-Collection of papers on Chinese and Japanese on of Institute of Pacific Relations. theses and doctoral dissertations. Salt Lake City, Utah 84109 Los Angeles, Calif. 90016 west COalit, emphasis on social histories. Myer, Dillon. Uprooted Americans: Japanese Americans and The Japanese In Hawall. 1968-1967. Univ. of Hawaii Social the WRA In World War D. Tucson, Univ. of Arizona P ress, . Science Research Institute (J968)-Compiled by Dr. Mi• Jap.nese In U.S.: Bio,raphy 1970-Personal memoirs of WRA Director Dillon Myer tsugu Matsuda, of both primap' Japan.se and English Edmiston, James. Bome A,aln. Doubleday 1955-"The stirring Okubo, Mine. Citizen 13660. New York. Columbia University material. NATIONAL COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN biography of a Japanese American family and a people Pr.ss 1946-Black and while drawings with brief running .. whose bitter struggle ended in a victory for democracy." commentary by author, an evacuee at Tanloran Assembly "P robably the most complete and authorltativ. informa• Buellel- Paclflo Oitizen Board• -PubUshers. . Cen ter. and Topaz Relocation Center. (Also reprint, AMS tion regarding Japanese Americans t. to be found in THE Frank Yoshimura, Kay Nakagiri, Hull, Eleanor. Suddenly the San. New York. Friendship 19 ~t P ress, N.Y., 1968) . PACIFIC CITIZEN, a weekly membership newspaper pub,• 3065 S. 2600 East, 812 Uclan Dr., -Biography of Shtzuko TakahashI. I Rostow, Eugene V. "Our Worst Wartime Mistake." AmerIcan lication of the J apanese American Citizens League (JACL) Salt Lake City, Utah aU09 Burbank, Calif. 91504 rrlnciples and Issues, Oscar Handlin. ed. New York. Holt, which has been published since World War II."-Walihingtoa c:hlcaro Ad B_ Martin, Ralph G. Boy from Nebraska. New York and London. Personnel- I JACL Office. Jerry Enomoto, Jerry J. Enomoto, Harper 1946-Biography of Nisei war hero, Ben Kuro k~ • P. O. Bo" ~6 P . O. Box 56 Sone, Monica. Nisei Daurhter. Boston, Little and Brown 195 ~ Tehachapi, Calif. 83~61 Tehachapi, Calif. 93561 -Autobiography. ClvU B"bta• I'lannlng- Warinner, Emily V. Voya, er to Destin;,. Bobbs-Merrlll Co" Don Hayashi, Tom Shlmasakl, 1956-The dramatic story of John Manjiro NBkahama, 1407 SE 28th Ave., P .O. Box 876, first Japanese to acquire a knowledge of English during Portland, Ore. 97214 Lindsay, Calif. 93247 his stay in the United States, 1841-49. ConstltuUon• l'rogram & AcUvlUe_ Kent Yano, Shigekl Sugiyama, Japanese in U.S.: Immigration 1525 Evergreen Ln, 36784 Riviera Dr., Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 F remont, Calif. 94538 California State Board of Control. CalHorDla ~nd the Oriental. Convention Board (1912)• Property- Sacramento 1920. A higbly partisan report by the State Harry Takagi, Dr. Kiyoshi Sonoda, EXECUTIVE ORDER 9066 6006 Denton Ct., 12323 Deerbrook Lane, Board of Control advocating exclusion act to prohibIt Springfield, Va., 22162 Los Angeles, Calif. 90049 further emigration of J apanese to U.S. Argument ba s e ~ Credit Union, Nal'l. JACl• l'ublio Relallons• on alleged "non-asslmllibillty" or the race into Americ 1A powerful photographic study Sblgeki Ushio, Chiye Tomlhiro! life. 5105 S. 13th East, 900 W. Newpor , of the internment of 170,000 Salt Lake City, Utah 84117 Chicago, Ill. 60657 :#':P.:P.~:P.!P.:lK!P.~~ Cultural Affau• aeoOrDllloD_ Japanese Americans during George Takel, Jack Ollami, 1131 S. St. AndreWI PI., 376 E. Commercial st., SEASON'S GREETINGS World War II Los Angeles, Calif. 90019 Welser, idaho 83672 GRESHAI\I TROUTDALE Bdncallon- Besolutlon_ Mr. &: IIln. George Ninomiya, 810 N.E. Couch, BaITy Kawahara, Kathy Kadowaki, 1235 Sunny Oaks Circle, 76S1 Koch Dr., PorUand, Ore. 97232 Alladena, CalU. 91001 Mr. & IIIn. RaJ' ShUkl &: FamIJ;" Rt. 3, BOx 269, BodowmeDt Fmad• Sot:J:r:hI~h~~~J!:IOD_ Gresham, Ore. 97030 Dr. George Miyake, Buddy Iwata, JlDLWAUKEE 1700 Fulton St" 1211 Second St., Boward & Hide Hlda, 2647 North Holton St., Fresno, Calif. 93721 Livingston, Calif. 95334 Milwaukee, Wis. 532 12 Endowment Fmad Separate Arm Sludy• BY MAISIE & RICHARD CONR..\T Guldelln_ Hiroshi Kanno, SAN BENITO COUNTY Dr. John Kanda, 2740 S. Pralre # 108, Mr. &; Mrs. Tony Yamaoka and Family, 1942 San JUIII• 1716 Academy St. Chlcallo, Ill. 60616 Hollister Rd ., San Juan Bautista, Calif. 9~023 With an Introduction by Sumner, Wash. 98390 Student Aid:'" ED ISON UNO EtlmJo Oonceh\• Or. Roy Nishikawa, Dr. David Miura, 234 S. Oxford Ave., and an Epilogue by 6226 E. Spring St., Rm. 300, Los Angeles, Calif. 90004 TOM C. CL ARK, Long Beach, CalU. 90810 Thousaud Club- BIHor)' l'rojec..... Holiday Greetings Holiday Greetings Associate Justice of the Shlg Wakamatsu, i:t7 ~~~taSt . U.S. Su preme Court, Retired 2336 N. CoIIlmOnwealth, Berkeley, c8lu. 94702 ehlca,c, Ill. 60814 TIUe D Bepeal- Farmers Insurance Group IDternalioDaI Aflaln• Raymond Okamura, Pholographs by Dr. cuttord I. Uyeda, 1150 Park HIlls Rd., 4680 Wilshire Blvd. PARTEX 1333 Gougb St D-IO, Berkeley, Calif. 94708; and DOROTHE A LA NGE and others San Francisco, CalU. 94109 Edison Uno, LOI ADleles, CalU. 1AP1- 515 Ninth Ave., . Los Angeles, Calif. Robert Takasugi. San Francisco. Calif. 94118 CLERICAL VACANCIES: MI0 E. Beverly Blvd., Visual CommunlcalloD• L6s Angeles, Callf. 90022 Robert Nakamura, Contact Mrs. Phillips or !.q1l1a..... e- 2708 S. Rimpau Blvd., Donna Taylor Rosa Harano, Los Angeles, Callf. 90016 931-1961 CALIFORNIA HISTORICAL SOCIETY) 1822 Argyle, Youth- Equal Opportunity Employer ChIcago, m. 60840 Fred Hoshlyama, Ilembe1'lhlp• 11822 Wagner St., BeJlI7 Kanegae Culver Ci ty, Calif. 90230; 64 Photographs. 120 pages. 8 Ya x 9 forma' 01 Buttonsh6U Lane, Season's Greetings and Alan Kumamoto, Deluxe hordcovor .ai/ion, If ~~c:II, Calif. 92360 2439 Sundown Or., The neutral eye of the camera is witness te) the $72.50 Lo. Anl eles, Ctlil. DOM5 , 1Ilaaka, Coloni.1 S.vings & "o.n Allociation results of' Executive Order 9066 .• , the shock, Full forma' 10ft covor, $4.95 1. $tvem Dr., (Corrected as of Jan., 1972) 400 Nortn Indian run Blvd., Clar~mont the bewilderment of people who have been 1:Sjlt LaIre City, Utah 84117 8220 South Vermont Avenue, Los Angeles ~·-··------~------i made into potential enemies of the state through I 800 West First Street, Los Angeles I no aelion on their own port. Richard and JACL National Headquarters I 5442 Topanga Canyon, Los Apgeles 1634 Post Street I photograph~ I (JUllko Dl Tosti will serve yOU at the Downtown OMu) Maisie Conrat have assembled the San frand"a, Calif. 94115 I I of find a moving Dorothea Longe others into Pi,o" SInd mo Executivo Order 9066: I CHRISTMAS BILLSI Season's Greetings I an~ telling document. Edison Uno contributes an __copies deluxe hardcoyor edition at $12.50 •I 'ay your Holld.y .111. with • low interest introduction that places the evacuation in the -copie. full formal paperback edition 01 $4.95 "Il1011_. 101.. frolll your Credit Union THE PENNZOIl COMPANY perspeelive of a member of the Japanese An Equal OpportUJIity Employer American community, The epi/ogue ;s by retired .:---..,. Namo N~lional Holiday Greetings .Supreme Court Justice Tom Clar~, a reluctant JACL Credil Union participant in the evacuation, who warns us, Add .... 242 South 4th ..at St. "The truth is, as this dep/orable experience Clly ~It ~ Cfty, Utah ..111 proves, that constiMion. and law, are not $,.,. ZIP T".t (IOU 151-1OCO IUfflcienf of themse/vel• •• ," Remember you can ~ up to $1,500 , an your Signature' Huntington 'arte • Burbenk • ------.~ DoW,"" - City of Com",.~ •• PACIFIC CITIZIN-5 Wringing Out: Eira Nagaoka 81111lll &lid l\IJtSort t17e4a. • But how can late bloomer. January 7·14, 1972 manage to gain the position of ------• Can Happen In N.Y . What Makes Seattle Run leadership so quickly and so completely? One ot the sec.rcls chalred by Dr. Masuda; is to get the right person as 2-Public forums on critical lie _ware. HJzzhonor the The Introduction reads, ''No Seattle tbe nominalion chairman. topics; IIr I0Il orAD tIIne ~.. =~or of New York Cit,.; has other chief. executive of an During the fall of 1964 a dele galion visited the Seattle Some of the prospeclive can- 3-Drop-1n Ccnter wit h N YIIIk ...... Ola. toaed his bat IAIo the Pre- American Cl~ b~ controoted JACL Chapter board meeting chaired by Dr. Terrance M. dldates gave In by default funds !rom the Mayor's Youth .. IlideDUal riDI- 10 many en_ Ul 10 many Tada at the Jackson Street Communily Council office (now when tbey didn't care to get Coordinator and the founclin, · maD wllmll - Shlmura, lDddIDlalIy, bid ••• areu during a term ot office." Central Seatue Community Council). The civll rights move- involved in the new direcLion. of tbc Asian Drop-in Cent« ~ far... ~ GIlly _ week tree In New Dbmer at Onele 1IIauI0II The Mayor heads a city ot ment was gaining steam and becoming a national issue. C~ap t e r Go York before be rejoined his over eJabt million people, a Changes were made in the with $1., 5.0.0 fund; ...... 4.... of~: nominalions procedure when . 4-Livmg bibliography pro- IiIJ'Q. IDlllUlf-!.!! JIIroabieditor two companion' from Japan. ShImura arrived onesda Mon- city budget of over 7 bilUon The visitors (among them -. the -...... DurID& thlJ obort sojourn, be da,y n1ahL On Tu ay he dollars _ creater tban any Don Kazama, Mary Suzuki the board of governors s1ate lect; It • ., ",*0 SblmbwL wanted vl5It New York's went sightseeing. On Wednes· state. HI! heads 35.0,.0.0.0 em- and Midori Kono Theil) were Juvenile Court and • past comprising 21 slots was brok- 6.- Pride ~ d Shame tra• to v~ling l ~ • SIIIInura II aD UDusual !III or. John Lindsay, hla daY he decided to ph~ Gr~- ployees and Is tbe "first may- compelled to get in on the winner of JACL-JAL Sophia en down into three categories: exhibll cooperalion man Mu~ I« be apeaU leVel! Jancua'- Mary and their cblld- de Mansion, the Mayor s ~- or who has worked for com- piece of the aclion. Tbey were University fellowship; June long-time members, young oc- With Stat.c Capitol aDd ~ New Yo r k City reo= _ ltau.,., Margie. Anna dence. The Mayor was m munity participalion and city ready to form a coalition and Sblmokawl, social worker and live members, and the candl- under a $6,666. federal grant, ..... thaD moat of III own In· and JobDDy. Sblrnura had Georgia on a speaking en - ,overrunent service." as a possible alternate asked director of the Special Coun- dates still new or ready to be 7-Classes 10 supervision babltaDli. He had GIlly apent brought presents for aU of gagemenL Fmally, on Tburs- The Mayor's work day whether would it be possible seling and Con tin u a t Ion initiated into JACL. The votes fundamentals for Oriental • 7W hen: u a Fulbrllht them aU the way froID To- day he was ab!e to get starts before 8 a.m. on the for them to meet as a commit• School for the unwed teenag- bad to be equally divided. postal w~rke!'S in preparation -, kyo. throuah to Marr Lindsay wbo telephone, and at lunch or tee under the wings of Seattle ers and member of recently This had the eUect of break- for exanunahons; We we r e skeptical as to graciously UlVlted Shimura dinner lime he is usually gLv- JACL? There will be public formed Ma yor's Women's ing up the monopoly of name 8-Conllnued sponsorship ot y ECHOES whether he would be able to and his nephew, Ken Kohya- ing a talk somewhere. He ot- demonstrations, sit-ins, pick• ~::,ts p;,o.:;~~; cfu.~torG . e~~ famili' ·anth·t . 1 b I thl ~ ~~r~sfe commumty Queen 111 meet with, or see, the May- rna, who attends. college ten grabs a sandwich at the ets and sign-carrying in pub• b' Whe er you a e s 9 TJUe II campaign ' MANHATTAN or who happens to be the New Jersey, 10 Cl~y Hall the oUice or in his car and has lic places, tbey warned. youth recrealion, YMCA and wb~le program a social ex- 100000Issei Centennlal' Cele- oeCond busiest maD In the followln¥ day (Friday) .. S~t- a conference, somelimes, with Needless to say, the Chap. Metro. penment or Whatever, the b tl. United States next to the Pre- urday rught they were 1OVlt- as many as five people while ter board was caught off Representation from the ed. board bas slowly sblfted rrl on5'.oth Ann've sary Ban qc:b~J~er:r:I~J:t ~:~ro: 5Idl!l1L Shimura had written ed 10. dinner. (at 7:3.0 p.m.) at trave\llng to his next appoint- guard, triggering a crisis rip• ucaLional geld Includes Ohrlsl priOrity In line with the Na- Quettor the Se~ tl l~ Chaplet; !':m. we had flnt met bIrn. to John Lindsay before leav- Gracie .ManSion. menL His dinner at homl!, pIes of our own. How are we ),{alo, former chemistry teach- lional JACL goal and In con· 12 I I t In Asian .... Y k InI Tokyo. At City Hall, Sblrnura met which Is only once or twice going to talk ourselves out of er and head of science departi formance with the pulse of - nvo vem.en . HU view. ot New '[ Sblm I ted to 111 that the Mayor for the flnt lime a week is usually interrupt- this ticklish situalion? After ment at Queen Anne High the national cOmmitment: The J O ~ 3~~er .;':;o~~; \, e Orlent• ~Ju,:..: ~~::ner~~~ he had :::-:t :heaLiDdlayS ele:v- since 196.0. Lindsay was busy ed by phone calls which go all weren't we discussing tbe School .and r~cent appointee expectation was great With so al StuderitP Union pressing for ..... vhl - k h I think en ears ago when they vlSlt- shaklng hands .i!'d greetln~ a on until 1.0 or 11. And be- possibility of third attempt on as admmlslratlve assistant to much talent. " !'!!·t~.J~~ ~or:S1s th~Great- ed YTOkyO for the first time long line of V1s~lors, alloting cause of his law-school back- the Land Law Repeal, JACL Sharples Junior High School, ASia!, admmlstr~ to rs for com- :::: Ci'v In the Yorld." In 196.0. At that time Lind- less than one mmute to each ground, he usually reads Dance Club New Year's party president of Seattle DOjo; Ben Ohapter Projects mUnl ly colleges...... " OCIIIIJ'PII11an, and person. (It hI! allowed 0 n e "documents involved In haslc and tbe golf ciasses set for the Nakagawa, Wing Luke Ele- Samplings at Chapter pre- 14- Confrontatlons with Se. With him was Prof. Munl!- stilm~ ~laIned, minute for e1IeTl/O"" who policy decision", and that coming spring? And there's mentary School principal; occupation may be seen In the attle Pubhc School official. 1111,. Naruakl, dlrtctor ot the ...... t 1m his way wanted to see bIrn, It would means that he is usually ul the bowling tournament to be Ben Yorlta, former head of following projects of past for b~tter .represent~tlo n s In .l~ Uld1o-e Society and a "He...... ow . take five years.) til 1 d I t h ' d b M y Kobayashi social science department at years: adIDlmstrative staff 10 public Matsuzakaya departmentslore around (Tokyo). I . took him Shimura and Ken were In- un a.~ . ~ a !r, ~ndU'io~y N:~ba . Franklin High School and cur- I-Three-day cultural fes- schools. rtP_taUve. They we r e to the AJakusa S~e, .where traduced 10 tbe members ot 'Ri.osel Jlon' But as it usually happens rently on teaching staff at tlval at the Seattle Center Continued on Nexl Pare litre to borrow repreoenta- prayers are offered. L1O~~ay the City Council and were in- h 1 h ds ailed SeaWe Community College; tlV. originals of Uldyo-e asked 'What shall I say. I formally presented the "Key One of the gifts that Shl· k~~: ii~l a ti~~ s d';~tte~ chapter president Dr. Mlnoru • *• e r v e d In museums ;;i my bead and clasped to the City" mw-a p~ented to Mayor was formed under committee l11asuda, associate professor of ADDRESS·O·PRINT , out thIJ country, The my bands and said, 'Repeat Returning' trom G r a c Ie LiJldsay was a handsome per- chairman Tsuguo Ikeda, who psychiatry (physiologist) at ectJOIII. for a large Uklyo- wlIJt J say, 'I w.ould like to Mansion with an armful ot sonal sealing stamp carved In is the director of the Seattle the Univ. of Was h i n g Ion CENTER INC. MEXICAN GRILL e JzpGliUOII to be held In lIecome til_ PreSIdent of the gltts to take back 10 Tokyo, stone and engraved with four Atlantic Street Center (a so• School of Medicine; Judy Mi· _an this year, commem- Vtllted StatU.o help me Bud- among them was a book writ. ancient Chinese characters cial service agency). This con- yata Motoyama, staff pharma• Complete Printing and Mail• 1307 S. Main St. =monliDl the 360th year of dlla! Lindsay bowed his head ten by "Hizz.honor" entlUed thusly: trontalion became a turning cist, Univ. of Washington Hos• ing Facililies-We Specialize III founding. and clasped his hand and re- ''The City" and lnscrlb;;d RlN JI point fOr the Seattle Chapter. pital and has since left the in Private List Development Santa Ana, Calif. • Iblmura'. newspaper, the pealed.' " "For Hizoshl Shimura, who SEI ON The new movement had stuck state; Joe Okimoto M.D. and and Maintenance 542·2597 !Q1Iy~o:::....:S:bIrn:::::.:bun=::., .:1s:.:am=ong=~th~e __Rec_en_tl..;y..;,_a_s_m_o_s_t_re_a_d_er_s comes from another great city JI means Merciful; ON its foot in the door. currently studying for his L 54 1 54 ! with warm regards John means Grateful; RIN means fh.D. In hospital administra- lZ40 ogan Ave, .o. 8 V. Lindsay, 6 Nov. 1m." N ear i n g, Bordering; SEI Ohangeover tion; Alan Muramoto, medical Costa Mesa, Calif. AREA CODE 206: Joe Hamanaka The book is dedicated to means Saint, or sacred. Seven years later the Chap- student and past chairman of EUROPEAN "Kathy, Margie, Anne, and 'tHence," according to Mr. ter can look at the complete tbe Young Asians for Action PASTRY PALACE Johnny, whose 'father hiS Sblrnura, "he's an individual turnabout of image. There is and Catby IIliyamolo, schooi missed foe many dinners and who Is merciful, grateful and no denying that this Is the teacher with the Peace Corps REPUBLIC Weddings - Birthday. too many evenings, and who Is nearing a saint." The may- type at luxury where other now Hving in Beverly Hills, Insurance Brokers Special Events Nezumi-no-Toshi have returned his preoccupa- or must have been pleased tQ organizations might look with Calif. For the Unusual in tions with patience and love." receive such a gift. envy. Good portions of the From 'the legal profession Commercial Insurance Cake Decorating dla d ZOO "old guard" are in a position we have Superior Court Judge Our Specialty 1545 E. Kalella 639·2781 1972 II the Yet. of the Bat, b7 Oriental 10 c, an . to stay home while the "Young Charles Z. Smith; City Coun- Orange, Cam . mUllon or more city and field rats in Japan are celebratmg SCHOOL BUSSING POLL Turks" run the show _ even cilman Lie.m Eng Tuai; Robert 107 W, Orangethorpe their y..... Nkk though we may boast of hav- Ashley, president of North Fullerton, Calif. Jbe Bat Year ("Ne"-short InIs that go del!p down under ing the largest board in tbe west Seaport, Inc. (historical Driftwood Golf Range fer "nuumt") II aald to be -down to the &ewalle sYstem, Los Angeles area I el" oppose move country. ship museum) ; Barf7 Matsu- 870·0500 tilt year for agriculture and to the subway tunnels. There The magnetic attraction to- moto; and Yuri Sata, Golf Supplies at ~d.. must be as many rats us10g b S1 f I" I "I" 76 p f ward this new look by high Also Harold Kawaruchl Very Reasonable Prices So that Mould ml!an a year the subways as humans. y pC' na lona OppOSI Ion C calibre board members has manager of Corporate Deslgnd' A-l of plenty for the hungry rats In fact, in Japan as in Tal- or 0 been startling. This is not to Physio-Control Co.rp. an 1514 Delaware 538.700. '101110 tat u much as on~fourth wan, rats In the country are imply that everyone here is part-time lecturer In the are LAWNMOWER Huntington Beacb. Cali!. I; th,1r weilht a da,y to IUrvive. said to out·nUfllber the hu- By SAOBIKO OYAMA well be the only means of in- leaning in the same direction. department at the Univ. of SERVICE Or• .ao ..,.. an expert, I "eat" man population, 3 to I. It was tegraling the schools. "While We have representations from Washington; John Y. Salo Complete Lawnmower and ~AN named Kurouwa who oper- reported several years ago LOS ANGELES - Bussing of it will take a long time, it every school of thought which architect and contractor; John Yard Equipment LING RESTAURANT atel a cIlainfection company In that the fat rats In Japan eat children as a means of achiev- is tbe only way to upgrade makes for a brisk dialogue. A T. Furugor!; John l11atsumoto Sales and Service Tokyo. $830 million worth of food- ing racial balance in the the scnoolB and provide a quick check on board mem- Boeing purchasing agent and Cantonese Cuisine st~f! 9449 Heil Ave. 839·298.0 All Food to Go Japan, Inc. has ereated annually. And in TaI- schools is a subject of can sid- needed 'shot in the arm' for bers this past biennium antI past commander of Nisei Vet- Fountain Valley, Calif. many things, including fat wan, some $25 million. erable controversy, In a re- inner city teachers." excluding active JACLers of erans Committee; Art h u r 34U W. Ball Road 826·8041 J'all. And fat eats, too, These are Oriental rats and cent Gallup poll, it was found Those opposed, on the other long standing, we have: Yorozo, Boeing engineer; Dick Ameritone Paints Anaheim, Calif. . The eats In Japan are so they all like their rice. Just as 76 per cent of the general hand, generally deplored the Sam Shoji, social worker Matsuoka, realtor; Andy Go. 41. aD!t. Ilow, pampered and you and I. And the country population opposed bussing, 16 V(35te of time Involved in rid- and executive board member to, broker; Kay Mori, Pan over-c\vI.Iil:ed, says a staff rats have it better and safer per c e n t favored the plan, ing a bus to school when one of Washington Association for Am; Dan Ohashi, manager of Complete One Stop cl~ at Ueno Zoo, that they than their city cousins. Exter- while 6 per cent had no opin, was close by and the conse- Social Welfare; Don Kalama, branch bank of Washington pecoraling Center GENERAL ASSOCIATES are UIelesa u rat·catchers. minators locate In the cilies. ion. Quent loss of contact between assistant chief social worker Mutual; Tomio and T06b Professional Paints & Finiskes INSURANCE The cat-and-mouse status But there's a story out of Whlte opposition was found ch h at tbe Veterans Hospital, Se-. Morirucbl, two of the co- Insurance for All Your NeedJ ~c:.ermed: peaceful co- N:,e ~~::~h~~~er~.EJu~~ :; ~~ID~c~~~sl'Jo,f.eat- !bo~1 b;"'dl~~~e broug t i ~~~ '1:~ ~~t~~ mm~:z,~f~; ~~~~ c ~ , U;~Id. ~ ~ cl ;'~m:,~ 150 E. Oranrethorpe Anaheim, Calif. 71.0 N. Euclid #Z21 774·5300 ; ••• popularize the eating of grain- In the w a k e of thls and Opposition Oomments member; Eric Inouye, former Seattle Chapter, is the first 87.0·.02.0.0 Anabelm, Cali!. BeelllJ the JapanCH call fed rat meat, struck on an al- strong Chinese American opo "Schools should be close to coordinator at the Internatlon - president and prime mover of have developed - Uke fat ,hu- temate Idea. to externunate position to bussing in San the home and part of the,com- al District Improvement As- International District Im• mana - hiah concentrations tbem. Rat tails were used as Francisco a survey was under- munity," believes Mrs. Sam soci. tlon and currently on city provement Associalion. Tom Duke Piano & Household Movers of cboleJterol In their b!ood ballots for votlnll on a beauty taken at the Japanese commu- Kunlshige of Los Angeles. wide Model City Program Hirai, Jr. of Art Process; Iky Serving All Orange County - 15 Years of Experience aqd have blCOme ahort-Wlnd· contest-one tail, one vote. nily's view of the controver- ~Iannlng staff; Sharon FUjii, Yamada, former wife of late Time Starts at Your Door eel u th., were to cha.. rats. Despite the odO,J', bo\h ~he sY plan and published In the "Furtbermore," states Da.ve drrector, MOdel City Pro-Noboru Yamada who was the Ut year In Trucyo, we ~t contest and the extertn1Oabon Rafu Shlmpo Oct. 23 . Matsumoto of San Gabriel, "a gram's department for the el- assistant director 01 the In- Call 24 Hours a Day • tat cat who lives In ntzy were suceesses. A total of 595 persons In child misses out on ex tra-cur- derly, who h as left for Bran- ternal Revenue Service cover. 543-1739 or 535·61.0 .0 • Denenohofu and who eats So much for rat taUs and four areas of greater Los An- ricular activities because he dels University to work on her ing lhe State of Washington 1575 W. Audre Anaheim, Calif. nothlnl but treah "aji" horse rat tales." geles were posed the follow- ~~~:.?' board the bus to go Ph.D.; Cullen Hayashida of Connie Asaka, accountant; mackeral heads tour times a ing question' the Univ. of Washington, who Cherry Kinoshita who works day. None of that canned or The Oriental IOdlae has 1% . A not uncommon f ear bas left fot Japan to work on for a bank; John Sy Eng, dried aW.ff animals (rat, ox, tiger, hare, Do you tend to favor or voIced was that the children his paper for Ph.D. in 50ciolo- board member, Young Asians RANCHO LUMB ER COMPANY And ca~' are reported to be dragon, snake, horse, ram oppose the ~ussinl;l of chUd- trom the suburbs would have gy ; Susan Tomita, social serv- for Aotion, and owner of Do It Yourself and Contractors Headquarters multiplying so last in Japan monkey, cock, dog and boar). ren to obtaln? racial balance to attend predominantiy poor- ice worker for Harborview printing business; Lloyd Hara, that extermlnatora now are be- Originated in Ohlna as signs. In the schools. . or ghetto schools. Community Mental Health King County auditor; Tom ing wed to rid of both call But later, someone thought of Of those quened, 28 per Still others objected to the Hospilal, chairman of Young Tsutakawa, management staff Finest Building Material ancl rali. animals so tbey'd be easier to cent overall favored the .plan, compulsory nature of the plan, Asians for Action, and recent- in the field of graphic art at Seleclion* in *Orange *County They don't know it, but cats remember. 51 per cent opposed, while 21 since forced bussing was at is- Iy appointed by Gov. Dan Boeing; and representing the in Japan are worth money, The man or woman born In per cent held no opinion. The sue, not voluntary bussing, a Evans to the State Women's full lime and efficient pro• LIke their skins make exccl- the Rat Year (1876, 1888, 'blgh varla~ce of those who system that is presenUy being Council ; Barbara Yoshida, fessional secretaries are Joy 14951 Bea,h Blvd. 893·8305 lent "Amieen" akirui. And tbey 19.0.0, 1912, 1924, 1936, 1948, held no op1010n. as contrast· successfully tried in Los An. Pfobation ofticer for Seattle Sullivan, Yon. Nakako, LUtta.n Westminster, Calif. ~inTh~~~~~~~is~to~edto~~~~~~~ prowl the alleys at ni~t look- clever and careful, but some- IS not readily explamable. Many with mixed emotions ~~ • ~~~~~~~~~~~ii~~iiii~i~ji ijiii~iii~iiii~i~iiiii ir • log tor strays. times stingy. While single and married about the plan were repre- A, for the fat rats ot Japan. He accumulates In small individuals with no children sented by Mrs. Aimee Taka- They bave become so "affiu- wayS, only to lose in big ways. In school generally gave "lack hashi of EI Sereno. "I would ent" that UlOH living alopg He Is liable to acquire wealth, of Involvement" as a reason favor it if I truly believed my the GliUa bave acqulred a being favored With goad for- for their response, it was also daughters could benefit from liking for bananas and those tune rather late in life. He is discovered 14 per cent of It but nobody can guarantee very expenalve melona hu- hon7st and gentle. . tho~e with c~ildren slmillll'ly that. It would depend on mana can't alford to eat. His suitable protesSlons are held no pOUllon. Those who where they were b e i n g Those wbo live In cold stor- In agriculture and/or trade. both favored and opposed bused" lie warehouses have become And he looks happy and can· bussing, dependent upon cir- . c6r\dltlODed to tbe South Pole tented. His complexion is not cumstances, were not Includ- Cblnese Situation dlmale. The&e rals get fat on falr. ed in the latter category. Unlike the Chinese Amer- chOice frozen IIsh and frozen We basten to add, that be- Eaalilde Mother. icans who are presently boy- ve,etables. Ing born in the Year of the cottlng San Francisco schools The ".wln.era" live In well- Rat does not mean that one Heaviest opposition was rather than bus the.ir children pacldecl cabarets and bars, and has sharp teeth or baa dark found in the 3.0 to 49 year old Into other minority areas, 70U CaD bet your whiskera complexion or that one Is age group, among females, and none of the Japanese Amer• that til... fall waah their food sneaky or hairy like a rat. frail) those who presently had Icans cited "cultural heritage" doW'll with UlIaUOII In their And while the year is sup· children in school. Eastem 8S a re~son for opposition. Javisll pacIJ, posed to exercise the greatest areas of the city (Monterey Below is a breakdown of Then there are rats living In inJIuence on one's destiny and Park, Montebello, Boy I e the survey by age, sex, pres• hotels and department atorea, disposition, the month, day Heights, El Sereno) tended to ence of children in the home, where there Is plush every- and hour also have saml! In- disapprove the most wbUe Pa· and by area. thing, and plenty ot food lIuence, and the same 12 zo- sadena, which presently has' a RfVed, prepared, atored and dlac cycle. bussing system, was the least b:'~ · ln~al~~~::arl-;:t P~:~~~~I) 11014. TbtIe I\11l1 bave It (011)- So. unless you come up re- opposed. ftWtaII ....Uke central heating cording Rat Year, Rat Month, Of thOse who favored the For Ag. No Op '1'0101 ...... 28 61 21 1!114 alt cooclltiODlDg. Rat Day, Rat Hour of birth, plan many telt, "It's a good 18·20 ...... 28 50 22 • •• YOU can rest assured, the ex- idea." Irene Masuyam" a 30·49 ...... 26 63 21 AIl4 TeQo baa heeD ~ooc1 terminators are not after you teacher in Lo. Angeles, how• 50 and over .• •••.. 29 49 22 Male ...... •..••. 28 50 22 to the rata. It hu bullt bulld- -and you're not a human rat. ever, felt tbat bussing may Female ...... 27 S2 21 No Children ...... 27 47 26 Children ...... 29 51 14 Grown Children .. 26 45 29 Ea.t ...... 21 64 15 Central ...... 17 51 32 Palldena ...... 31 44 2S SOuth ...... 35 49 16 You are cordially invited to attend the ROSE CARE DEMONSTRATIONS Newport Wrap & at the Pageant of Roses Garden Mail Service ~~ Newport Beach l" #E Rlvenlde. 541 • .0191 .~ 3829 Blrcb, IIts·0791 LL Shell SeRice ROSE HillS MEMORIAL PARK, WHITTIER, CALIF. Expert Auto Repairs Tire. - Batterlea SATURDAYS ~ ' SUNDAYS Tune.Upa JANUARY 8 JANUARY 9 9520 Taillert Ave. J,\NUARY 111 JANUARY 111 Fountain Valle7, Calif, Dtmonsfrition.1ICiI of thue four diY' It 1:30 p.m. and 2:45 p,m. 862·0990 Today's economy is forcing an ever increasing At Bank of America. we aim to help our customers No Admission Charge.,. Ample Free Parking ED'S AUTO BUG emphasis on efficiency of production and marketing meet their very special challenges with every GIrrIen Open Every DIY of the Yur SERVICE as essential to business success. practical assistance at our command. Speda]at in Repalr OIl VoIDwqm '" Poraehe Agribusiness is no exception. Let's Ret together. 11' .. Harbor PDDerIoIII, 0aIIf. 111·7171 BANK OF AMERICA'lfl IIPlIU"" NATIONAL TRUST ANO SAVINGS ASSOCIATlON lem.. Mary Sadatakl I•• tormer 1972 Officers 1 I He further described what Utahn (nee Hato). Her rathe .. Send Us Clippings from p!ouup V&1IZ;, 1nU.. Georc~ ContlDued from Pace 3 and a number at other old• llIIIUIIlWIIIIlI.. IIIII' .. =n::.~a (P~~~. ~~; 16-18 years old and basically Continued from Pa ll"e .iiii _____...... intdligenL The youth prob• time Utahns. When 1 got home Tak K.ubota (~.'Ue). ex-oftiClO. Rev. and Mrs. Junjo Tsumura ably has too many options Abe Hagiwara Fund. and menlioned that I had met EMPEROR . . . as special guests. and parents are undecisive Mary. my mother recalled RESTAURANT Bay Area COIIUIUUUt;y "ACL• Meeting with Mayor Ralph very warmlY of the Hata fam• Ron Lai. Edison Uno. co .. chmn.; Enomoto, as the m a i n themselves. Often there is J . Perk of Cleveland was an 949 N. Hill St. Robin Matsui. Mrs. Elsuko Steln• speaker, related his experi• much tension between parents. ily. In fact. she sa,d. Hata meu. co-ln!.... interesting occasion. 1 found Sensei IISed to tell my dad. (2 13) 48S·1294 ences in the correctional in• Baker stressed the fact that out he was elected mayor in a Conferences stitutions in California where HDon't ever think you arc Coatra. Costa .tACL-Tom Shlml· although drug abusers are be• three way race between two such a big shot, ] was in your PEKING FOOD ~~e POWiI.~d s~~.r:~e!tst O:~~ he has served for many years coming more sophisticated Democrats and one Republi• as the only Nisei high oUicial home the day you were born." SPECIALTY mota. trea.s.: ToyoUo Toppata, about drugs. the I'e is still the can. bimseU. The Republican in the d epa r l men t. His You see, Reverend Hata was Cockt~il rec. src.; Grace Colo, cor. sec.; danger of unknown impurities voter registration is 7% in a friend of the family from Lounge Kat. Ide. newslelu;r: Ben Take- thought-provoking speech was being peddled. the Cleveland area; thus. he At fII. blYltaUon .f file eeoc and CCDYC. I. attended ~a~th 1~. ~~b~.;JC;ar~~l·~~~: well received by the audience. back in Japan and was visit• Puly & Banquet ilia cenlnl Calif. DiJtrIct C~ciJ Conv~ntion held lD Fresno. had to change a lot of Dem• ing my fatber's (amily on the facilitiu hisl.: and Jerry irei. ex .. oUlcfo. Following the dinner. the Eden Township hosts ocratic votes to get in . CalIf. Tbe youth met in conJunction WIth the Conventon. It M.~bers .. at .. Larle - Waller Ayto. members danced until mid• day he was born and so al• _ the larcest turnout of Jr. JACLers for the CCDC Con- Jack and Ann Im.da. Rev. OOlvid night. 200 at Christmas party Mrs. May Ichida whose son. ways kiddingly reminded my DINAH WONG. HosI ... SbJgekawa, Dan Uesu,l. Bill Hi .. Shinji, is a liIetime friend and "mlion. rose Ko ljichi. George Tortyama. About 200 children and dad about lhis tact. ;'*~""'~*~'-~:.::"'~.:.~'~'~.:.::~.:""~.~.-~*:; and' John and Hannah Yuuda. Sonoma County re-elects classmate, looked well. Art .. 'nIe youth lIeIl&ioos center• tralD individuals to work ID adults attended the 23rd an• and Sadie Yamane, Marv ed arowuI loc:aI programmat• communities in eUminating same cabinet for 1972 nual Christmas party sponsor• Irland Tashima 01 Cleve• Downtown L.A. IACL-Ted Ko• Obata and her mother, Frank land of lhe youngest J ACL ic and DrfIIanizational issues drug abuse. I brought infor• jima. pres.: Fred Kosaka, vcec. ed by the Eden Township J A• and Carolyn Shiba, George fIIat particularly apply to the mation on this program back v.p.: Frank T sue h i Y a. V.p. Fred Yokoyama of Santa CL Dec. II. chapter president. He is only (memb.); Taklto Yamaguma. V.p. Rosa was re-elected the presi .. and Helen Ono. Dr. Toaru 23 years old. Furthermore. the CCDYC. Over-aU, the young to the West Coast and three Mrs. George Minami. chair• Ishiyama, Ken Asamoto and ~1I ?~ P;~I:sJ:ukl':a. =~g:ic~t~~: dent o( the Sonoma County entire Midwest District Coun• people were .xpressing a clos• proposals from Asian Amer• man, opened the festivities, many others helped make the er worklni relationship with ican groups, including JACL kui. 1000 Club: Tal.!; Kushida. JACL for 1972. A number 01 foU owed by a welcome from cil recently created J ACL his• pub.; Aklra Kawasaki, prog.; KI• unprecedented actions also oc• 25th Anniversary a Success. tory. They happen to be the fII. JACL, and in tum JACL• were submitted. We ought to yoshi Kawai. !'ecol. President Ichiro Nishida. .. seemed pleased with the have some response from Of.. curred in that the same cabi• A talent show preceded Of course. President-Elect first all·Sansei district coun• development of the youth. Ealt Los Anleles JACL-Mu net officers were also re-elect• Santa's arrival with gifts for Henry Tanaka and his wife cil board and all the council tice at Education-HEW with• pr~s .: be~ While the area Bufen from in a month's time. Dobasht, Tak Endo, 1st V.p.: ed; George Okamoto, Frank the children. On the commit• Sachi, moved· very quietly board members are under-30, Sid Inouye. 2nd v.p.: D r. Robert Oda and James Murakami hind the scenes. Henry ar• Ross Harano being the grand- • problem of geographic dis• I also met with JACLer, Obi. treas.: Mrs. Mild H im~no, tee were: ~* were named perD1~ent board ranged for two TV interviews bunement of Sansei popula• Pat Okura, at the National see.; Mrs. Barbara Matsui, pub.: Mmes: Sam Kawahara. George ContlDued 00 Next Pa"e tion and competiDl programa, Mrs. Sue Sakamoto. hut.: Mab)~ members. Nomura and M.asao Yokota; and a newspaper intelview Institute of Mental Health YoshJ.zakJ, 1000 Club : Tad Endo, George Nomura and Leo Tatara. with the Cleveland Plain tile ieIldersblp is competent, Sid Inouy~. youth adv.; Rob~rt Officers and board members Nam's and discussed s am e at the were installed by National Di• Deale,.. and more activity should be problems that we are facing Takasugi. Ritsuko KawakamJ, del. apec:ted. Bd of Gov-Mattie Furuta. G~or,e rector Mas Satow on Jan. 8, Ron Lai, Edison Uno After the banquet, a num• Tin Sing Restaurant in the area at drug abuse. Ig~, Jo~ Hazama. Ken Kato. Shiz. at a pot-luck dinner held at ber of us went (0 the Sada• Restaurant Whil. partlclpa tIng OIl a Pat is currently involved in Miya. Mas Mi.}'akoda, Hiro Omura, the Enmanji Memorial Hall, to head Bay Area EXQUIS,n paDel on "The Role 01 Ja• Michi Obi. H~nry Onodera. John taki home for an informal get CANTONESE C .. ntonl,. Cullin. puttiDg together an Asian Kataoka, Junko Tanikawa, Walter Sebastopol. puI8Ie a faculty Don Lai of Berkeley and together. Their l6-acre estate CUISINE Style Dlnno,. AmerIcans" American mental health con• Tatsuno. Sumi Ujimori. Tom Uji• .,nqu"mil,et Room - Cocktail Loun •• _ber of Fresno Slate Col• terence, which should relate mori. Dr. George Wad.a , Roy Ya• The affair was jOintly spon• Edison Uno of San Francisco and beautiful home is a trib· 1523 W. Food to Go leie, who was in the audi• to the problem at drug abuse madera. George Yamate, Min Yo• sored with the Enmanji Bud• were elected 1972 co-cbair- u~e B~ 's business ability and Redondo eller, related to a ltudy that as well as many others. ah1zaki. dhist Temple, which also in• men of the Bay Area Com- hIS gOing mto the steel fabri• BI.d. 205 E. Valley Blvd. stalled their 1972 officers and m un I (y JACL. succeeding cating business for himself b. Wall eooductlng on San• I also had the opportuni• Fremont JACL-Baery Tanouye, GARDENA San Gabriel, Calif. • intermarriage in the Fres- pees.: Mrs. Eiji Amemiya. 1st V.p.: board members and make cbarter chairman Ray Oka- and doing quite well at it. At DA 7·3177 ty to m e e t with Dr. Lo.is Ted Kaneko. 2nd v.p.; Mrs. Eu• presentations to their mem• mura. Bill's, we Were able to see the Food to Go Tel. 280-8377 110 County area. He stated Chatham, Director at Narcotic lene Tsujimoto. 3rd V. p.; Dr. Eijl tbat hla data to date indi• Amemiya, teeas.; Mrs. James bers. Frank Oda chaired the An insurance agent by oc- fYal int.ervi:wf of myself and Alr~~~ ~~~ncd Rehabilitation Programs at Aka~ annual community organiza• cates that 60.,. of the San• NIMH. She gave me the'im• YamaguchI, sec. sec.; Ernest cupation. Lai was the first . ways ee I should have Room, Ri marriages in the area were ba, hist.; Boaed of Directorr.-Mr ~. tions installation dinner. Asian American to run for sa,d something more pro(ound 20.200 • pression at being interested in Thomas Chun. Ted Inouye, Frank OIIbide of the ethnic group the problems ot drug abuse Kasama. Moss KlshJyama. Dick fafte~~r~h~e_a~r~in:.g~t~h;: e~edi ~ · ~ted~_v~e~ r _-~=:::E=;::=~~~=::::!~ J~rry yearthe Be andrke leyis activecity council with lastthe sion of my interviews. . •. C,.iW. (moeUy White). This data among Asian Americans dur• Maruyama. Mrs. Tahira, Santa visits children also indicated that males and Fujio Yamamoto and Dr. William school district, economic. op- ing our two-hour conference. Young. at San Benito party females marry outside of the She put me in touch with a portunity board, con summers ethnic group with equal fre• Gresh.m-~routdale JACL• cooperative and the Asian local N I M H person in Los Henry Kato. pres.; Frank Ota, The Sao Beuito County JA• fluency. This Is a pattern that Angeles, with whom I will be American community alliance. varies greatly from the pat• v.p.: Frank Ando. 2nd V.p.: Ray CL had its annual Christmas Uno, who was president of foUowlng up. I would suspect Shllkl, teeas.: Tamte Nakamura. Party on Dec. 22. The children m~~~ tern of other ethnic groups. rec. sec.; Julie Ninomiya.cor. sec.; East Los Angeles J ACL in that these discussions will ranged from non-schoolers to Regardl ...s of whether one's Nobi Ishida. asst. tr~as . : .Joe }(ato, 1952, was co-chairman of the The New Moon center around a research pro .. Hlsano Murahashi. Takako Ishida. eighth grade who occupied National JACL committee to Initial reaction to this pat• ject to more clearly delineate social. themselves with games until Banquet Room. lVail.1bl. tern (President Ray Uno in• the pattern of abuse, as well repeal the Emergency Deten. ~~ Ora.nre Co un ty JACL- Mrs. Santa arrived. Santa passed tion Act and active with many for ,mall or lar5l. group. dicated that this is a gene• as causal links and rehabili• Karen Kaizuka. pres.; Henry Sa• gifts to all the children pre• ral pattern outside of the civic and ethnic groups in San tation implications. kai. v.p.; Beo Shimazu. treas.; se,nt, and the evening was Francisco, including the Nisei West Coast) is alarm or sat• Yoshi MJyawaki. ree. aec.: Kazu .. concluded with refreshments. 912 So. San Pedro St., Los Angeles ' isfaction, we ought to inves• . mi Mayemura, cor. see.; Betty Voters League, Community MA2·1091 ENJOY THE MANY• aka, Yasuko Ola. memb.: Nancy Center Board, and more re• tigate future implications of Participant Evaluation by Kikuchi. Charles Egawa, Noel Ku• SPLENDORED MENU at this pattern. I would suggest Summer Interns (PEBSI)-A rai. Wayne Tamanaha. Rich ard Fremont JACL installs cently the Labor Council. that there ought to be some couple of years back, the De• lsawa, Katsu UshJoda. Richard :It~e Tokyo's Finest Ch: ;uey :u~e Hiroshima, Ern~ s t Tsuji and Hi• Tanouye as president _ I -'-'-l concern that the issue at partment at Health, Educa• tosh! Nitta, bd memba. "identity" that i. currently tion and Welfare piloted a pro. By AILEEN TSUJlMOTO i SAN KWO LOW I HoIc.l.j'O·T'ikawa l ~J A..,. u gram where users ot agencies SODoma County JACL - Fred III S. San Pedro St. TeL 680.9356 being raised by Sansei, may pr~s .: ,0 Famous Chinese Food evaluated the various select• Yokoyama. Geor,e Ok a.• The annual Fremont JACL 8 I Wt' bring you the world 'a1arge5t be raised again in a tew moto, Arthur Sugiyama and Hi- ,ears by bi-racial children. ed programs under D/HEW ~~~:no~~b:ic~~~~.; Vj~ Y~ko-a;l. installation dinner was held @ 228 E. 1st St. Los Angeles MA 4-2075 , 6ushi bar outsi de Japan. Steak auspices. at the Fremont Inn on Dec. 4. :0--_ - _0_' ala Teppan, sef\.ic ~ a la kimono. treas.; Martin Shimizu. corr. sec.: Guests included Mayor Wil• • • Last year, the PEBSI pro• Edwin Ohki. 1000 Club: Board Exotic .American favoritea. too. Cleveland w.. the .Ite of a gram, which operates in small members (19'11·72): Harry Sugi .. liam van Doorn of Fremont; Midwest D Y C workshop on yama. Tom Farrell, .John Hiroolu. John Baker, director of the VISIT OLD JAPAN OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK teams, focused on agency ser• Raymond Morita. Tak Kameoka. leadership during the Thanks• vice delivery to American In• Community Drug Council; and Banquet Cadlitiu (or 3D to 200 giving George Hamamoto: (1972-73) Ray· weekend. Approxim• dians. Together \vlth Craig mond Yamasaki, George Shimizu, representing the National JA_, All mtjol crwt cutiJ .cupUd ately 120 youth were present Shima bukuro, who was a Ken Otani. Hiroshi Taniguchi. CL, Shig Sugiyama, as install. for the three-day affair. With Milton Yoshioka. D ick Colombini. ing officer. the usual support of adults PEBSI intern last year, dis• Miyo Masaoka, Tom Furusho and cussed the possibility at ori• Fran Peter. The newly elected president, In the Midwest, and h a r d enting some of these evalua .. H arry Tanouye, accepted the work from the Juniors, a very St. Loula .lACL - Dr. Norman e tions toward critiquing Asian Sih. pres.; Ann O,awa. v.p.; Lin• gavel from outgoing president, IUccesstul workshop was held. Ted Inouye. ' Commercial Refrigeration American response. A prelim .. da Ishibashi, seC.: Bob Mttori, I Designing - Installation A revived group from st. inary prospectus is being sub• treas.: Dr. Ml1ton Fujita. Dr. Mayor van Doorn discussed will be hosting the Richard Ogawa. Kimi Durham. mlYRKO Maintenance Louis the organization's participa• Luncheon Dinner Cocktails: I I Spring Workshop around the mitted to Secretary Richard• Dr. M;u Ohmoto. George Hase• son at D/ HEW on this sub• gawa. Mae Marshall. bd. membs.: tion in the city council, public i Sam J. Umemoto • topic of Friendship. PASADENA 139 S. Lo s Robles . 795.7005 ject. Dr. Otto Furuta. ex-officio; Dick transportation in Fremont and I C.rtilleat. Member of RSES II and Vicky Shimamoto. youth adv.; ORANGE 33 Towo & Country . 541.3303 • • Jody Morioka, JAYS pres. other ballot measures. He al• " Member 01 Japan Assn. of Th. Student Aid Program so urged the JACL to take TORRANCE 24 nel Amo Fash. Sq.• 542.8677 Refrigeration. i San Jose lACL-Rlchard Ta• more active roles. for 1971 has been concluded. ~ . pres.; Dale Sasaki. V.p. (P ~111I1I1i1i1i1I1I11I1I1II11I1II11I1I1I11I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I~ i Lie. Refrigeration Contractor _I Sixty-eight applicams were tbu~~ i: ~;~t~~m~~~ .~~(clv~rC Baker provided an inlol'ma- ~ == • SAM REI·BOW CO. examined by the National Scholarship -- tive talk of the drug culture §! Eagle Restaurant ~ lunch Dinner Cocktail 1506 W. Vernon Ave. t aff) ; Ken Ashikawa, rec. sec.: Tad ;,-S!~!., Committee in La. Angeles. ContlDued from Front Pace Sekigahama. treas.; Stan Tanaka. today. and the services that :; CHINESE FOOD :; ILos Angele: AX Applications came from every del.; Sha,ron Uyeda. cor. s~c.; the Community Drug Council ~ Party Cat~rlng _ Take Ouh ~ district save Pacilic North• Dept. of Physiology at USC, Jam~ s Ono. past pres.: Winston p'~~~i~i~~" T~:u s ;ean~r~~ • west. The distribution ot Ashizawa. Shirley Abe. Mike Hon· Ce,C §! Bill Hom, P,op. DA ••5782 §! GRAND STAR UND ER NEW MANAGEMENT ~~i;:.l'" rJ~b!'!fe~s~:o~'~i da, Carol Ishikawa. Karl Kinag., ~ awards were as tallows: CC, Shig Masu,naga. Phil Matsumura. City area dealing with assort- 15«, S. Wutlrn, G.,d,". § 3; Eastern, I; Intermountain, the most capable individuals Norman Mineta. Ellchl Sakauye, ed medical and social prob- ~lIl1l1l1l1l1l1lll1l11ll1l1l1l1l1l11l11ll11l1l1IlIllIl1IlIi; RESTAURANT 0; Midwest, 3; Mountain that has ever worked in our Paul Tanaka. bd. membs. Plains, 0; NCWN, 6; Pacitic department." Elayne & Marty Roberts Santa Marla VaHey JACL-Pete G~;DEN:~ AN EN70;~:E-;:;:N;;~-C;~:~NITY -I Northwest, 0; Pacitic South• Extracurricular Activities Uyehara, pres.: Ellen Kfsh!jama, r' Popular French & Japanese west, 8. A total ot 21 awards ~ s:g~·:fr~~.Ms~~~n;:aA.n u~~i: Poinsettia Gardens Motel Apts. Song Slylisis Wl1l'ii given. Michael's extracurricular treas.: Keldo Shim izu, past pres. i I activities include volunteer So. Normandie Ave. Phone: Santa Mula Valley Jr. JACL• i 13921 324-5883 ' • Abe Barlwara Fund-Fund work at a Veterans Hospital, 68-Unlts. H~at~d Pool - Air Conditioning - GE Kitchens - Televisio n Chairman, Kathy Kadowaki, Roxanne ArakI. pr~s .: Jute WU· i ! 943 Sun Mun Way (Opposite 951 Bud d hi s t Sunday School llams. V.p.; Nancy Hatashita. sec.; ?,!,,~ED A~D O~~AT!D .!~_~?.BATA New Chinatown Los Angeles Il; currently in the process at teacher, religious lay speaker, Judy Okawa. treas.: Susan Dum• 1,_, B!O!; _,_,J working out a fund drive. A CYC basketball coaching. etc. m~r, hist.: Stacy Hagiya. past pres. ~11I1I1I1I1I1II1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I1I111I1II1Il1I1I1I1ll1l1I Polynesian Dance,. number at JACL officials and In his letter 01 application, Watsonville JACL - Dr. Francis Authentic Chinen Cu llin. ., LUAU SHACK ataU have been asked to help Michael mentioned that win• Tomozawa. pres.: Kenji Sh.ik.uma, B, nquet hcilities: 20 to lOO SU,oerb Musical Combo out on the drive via Pacific V.p.: GaU Tao. sec.; Su~o Manabe. ning this award would be an treas.: Zen Ota. auditor: Willie ~ ~ ~~~:~ ~a~aAbNo~~ from Las Vegas Citizen appeals. Literature is honor not just for himself but K being prepared and will soon Yahiro, youth: Tom Arila. Tom I Cocktails in also for his parents who toil• Sakata. del.: Fred Nitta. Issei His· = V- Distributors: Yamas. Enterp rises be distributed to facilitate ed so hard to put him through tory: Tom Tao, pub. w.:::'t~1 ~: . : . S fund raising. Contributions Op.n pe school. It would mean, he r Whiu River Calley JACL-MJ• Tl11 ial ,_' for this fund drive. whose wrote: HThanks. Mom, for chlko Maemborl. pres.: Ka1. Tsuji .. Sundoil)'s till 10 p.m. , q n Interest will be used for the rolling raisins late into the kawa (Auburn). Hiroshi Oyama luncheon •• Dmne,s: 11 I .m. · 1 I m. ' ra II Student Aid Program, may be (Kent), V.p.: Ben Tsuj I k a w a, Pllno Blr, Coc ktllb, Troplul Drinks 'hi 2 I.m. night" and "Thanks, Dad, Jor t r~as.: Miye Toyoshima. r~c . sec.: w (South of Dlsneyllnd, n .. , aent to: Abe Hagiwara Mem• driving a tractor all day long." Margar~t Okitsu, cor. sec.: Tom 320 E. 2nd St., Lo, Angel ... Phone 48S.13~ I First St., S.nti Ana) orial Fund Drive, 7651 Koch Hlkida, hisl.: WillIe Maeborf, dei. Filrle y liilng, Host Ph . 1710) JE 1-1232 Dr., Parma, Ohio 44134. The Dr. Mutsumi Nobe Harry Mizuno G I' a d u a te Memorial JACL LuncheON: 11 i .m. - 2 o.m. FundiDc-Subsequent to the Scholarship was established in D l nn~r S! 5 - 10 o.m. Midwest workshop. I visited 1967 by Mrs. Catherine Nobe Member Washington, D.C., lor the pw'• in memory of her late hus .. Nagaoka- Million Dollar Tai Hong pose of seeking information band. a Sl'eat believer in Continued from Pace on federaUy financed pro• higher education. Round Table Restaurant The seeming breech o( few gram on Drug Abuse. With Persons of Japanese Amer• Most Authentic Cinlonna Cubln. the aid ot Mrs. Toyo Biddle, ican ancestry o{ either sex in years back between the "old F'mous Family Style 0Inn . r. Coordinator for Asian Amer• or about to enter graduate guards" and the sociaU y con• Cockt.lI, fill 2: 00 a.m. ican Affairs in the Office at studies in the fields o( phy• scious activists has become 8inquof F,cilities 11 :00 i .m. - 11: 00 o.m. Special Concerns of the Sec• sical 01' biological sciences 01' hazy. The new breed i.s nOt retary of the Department at engineering are eligible to ap• the wild eyed lanatic and 845 N. Broadway, L.A MAN Health. Education and Wel• ply for ths annual scholarship likewise the rlold guard" is 485-1313 tare, I was able to meet with tbrough their local JACL far from being a die-hard con• GENERAL LEts a number at people. who are chapter. servative with a one-track working ID this area. Applicants may write to: mind. Under the Narcotic Control 1\on Wakabaya!lhl, Youth Pro• Past president Don Kazama Golden Palace Restaurant and Rehabilitation Act ot 19- .tram Fi~ ld Director. 125 Weller used to say that Chapte,· must Ross Harano Stnet. Suite 310. Lo, An&eles, Excellent Cantonese Cuisine 70. there is a program to CaUf. 90012. change' and we must all get ----- involved to survive. It is Star Cocktail and Plano Bar f apparent the Seattle Chapter dEN CALENDAR Silver pin awardee is trying .to do .just .that. Producer Elaborate Imperial Chinese Setting (Suttle JACL Newsletter Edi• Banque t Rooms for Private Parties HAYWARD - Tetsuma Sa• tor Elra Nalaoka. wbo work. kai, serving on the Eden wllb the city enllneeu. explains Township JACL board tor the tlUe of hll occasional CQI• 911 N. BROADWAY. LOS ANGELES umo. wblch wlU appear in the For R.,.",.tion •• Call 624.2133 lQW over 15 years and serving as PC is motivated by the fact lbat.

chapter president in 1957 . was Seattle Is a wet, wet. town. Last ."..~~ ... tIt. ~t!t",..~.tOt ...... tOttOt ..... tOt ..... 415 GIN LING WAY - MA 4-1811 awarded the JACL Silver PID Marcb. the rainfall tor the New Chinatown . Los A,ngelH month was 1 .•1 InClhes-.Ol Ineb during the recent installation Ihort tor an aU-Ume record.• Banque( Room for All 0--H.llf¥_ T. Onode.. · oown- war. It may contribute to Aberdeen, Wash. 98520 the people of the State ot Ha. ~"~~o=u ~r In~~ town L.A.-HarT,. Yama.m"oto. be copious evidence that the (206) 533·0450 e San Jose, Calif. II" LI! recenU ubll hed .....1IMi4 rdln d About 300 Kaplolanl Com- 12th You: Saoramento - ""'nk Emperor had not only stated deepening mlsunderstandlng, :::' .rtJcle eon pOll,!uo':. det.ri- .:'ata"Wept. o~ ~r.I1l1r,:: munity Colle,. students con- ~F2d'I~k. C;;~~':uri';Id~\~~ the truth about his responsi• serving as a snare to the un• EDWARO T. MORIOKA, Re.lto. =. _ bility but had understated it. Informed and fostering dis• Service Through bpedeocI' • 1114 -.rue Dev.lopm.nt. The fronted college administrators Valley-Mrs. Mlyo UohJyama: Son 29"~120" IIoMbaIu dlotrIet ellmbed from and state legislators on Dec. 1 I'n.netsoo--June Uyeda. According to Bergamini, the trust and hatred tor Japan. OPERATORS Sumltomo Bldg. 2<16.6606 r:~ ~~a.Ugmto Im.~~ TI~I.TC~~~~lo~-g:.dH~':!f- Emperor had been plotting Expertenced on slnele needle: ,• asking why they were not eompl."itr~~~~~ :."y~r 11'_. from 15.4~' 10 24.077; consulted about recent culs In aka· FOwl.r _ H.arl.y M Naka. against the West throughout lin. _e__ S_a-:c-:r-:-a-:m_e_n_t_o-:-'.,.C_a_li_f. __ U·NO Bar- ;=afro":'A.22~'~ D~I;37K::: KCC classes. The students ~1!~;,,~ta Marta - G';'rre I. his adult life. See Isabelle U this book falls to trans• I='''"''':~~::;:i:;~:'''''i=_'~ C~~~akB~;:;~~l!R CoDtlnue" from Pare' laulo. from B.043 10 10.562; and said when they went back to I4Ib Yea" Venlce.cuJver-Dr. Wakano-Ura Jtooiaupoko from eo,23lI to 92.21.9. classes after a holiday break h.so G Kawakami' Puyallup Val• form the Emperor from a shy, _ 1803 S . Hin St.. LA. 90015 Sukiyaki e Chop Suey daddy at 29. Did aome y~ Oahu', to'-l populaUon "'&e from they discovered that 50 credit I.y-Dr: Vlotor I. itorlyasu. scholarly, gentle, well-mean• MUTUAL SUPPLY CO. 749.766t 2?rrIOlt~ 'S:" ~sad di'~rsl people a few yean 110 A7 100.4011 10 1SO.528. hours of classes had been !Sib Y.a.: New York - Rleblrd Ing man into a two-fisted, un• ~ th goin- to ,_... Nih N T. HIrai; San Franolsc:o-Kuntsaku § 1090 5••• 0 .... St., S.F, 11 § the scrupulous militarist bent on SeaHle, Wash. over'?~t l~~n the"Mld_ ame. n t e eWI ~~S;v~~g~;i~~,~~c ~~"fz.!·I~ebi.~~ yoJ?ro ruthJessly expanding his sway mlIIIIIIIIlIIlIllIlIlIlIllIllIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIllUIIIIIIIJI~ e District Counctl, they have Adolph Samuela, a United administrative Officers, called KajltanJ; Downtown L.A.-Cb .... over the entire earth, it is THIRTY WOMEN l:':';cie~~k~s'lra~l~';;'S;:~l:J from no lack of zeal from the Imperial Lanes come, they have Mel! and they Public Workers officer and a the dostng of the classes tem- 2101 - 22nd AYe., So. EA S.2S2S have conquered. alate boxing commIssioner, is porary. He said it was necos- Maleo-Mary Sutow. author. Needed for free sbampoo NiseI Owned - Fred Takagi. Mar. My observation Ia that pro...... ing sati3!actorlly at sary because of uncertainty y~8~~;. Saj'.~an~LoeoK-;;.!l.': i In establishing the appropri• Nanka Printing and halrstyle by licensed mllllY, FAany JACL chapter Ku.klnl Hospital after being about the scbool'. budget. Orange County _ Jim S. Okuda. ate setting for the Emperor, cosmetoiogist. Also nee d 20U E. hI St. Kinomoto Travel Service boarda are ,ettlnl younger I1:rIcken in early Nov. with an James Dau, assistant pro- T. Ben Tak.na,s; SaUnas Valley the author uses various dema• models for free tint, perma• Frank Y. Klnorrioto board members and omc:eJ1l apparent h ear t attack . . . fessor of business economics -G.or,. Hlg ..h1; Fresno - Dr. gogic gimmicks. Under the los Angeles, Calif. nent wave or bleach. S21 Ma In St., MA 2.1~22 ~~ Jk~J\n;;wtD.I~'~r.d­ guise of affording a mnemon• § ANgelu. 8·7835 = throughout the United State.. Newton Ml,.arl, ""c.·treas. of and quantitative methods, told Redken Laboratories Many are SanseI. 1 think the lLWU local 142, has been the Hawaii Economic A&m. ward Nagalan!; p ...d· .na - H. ic device to the reader, names ;;lIIl11ll11l1l1l1l1l1l11l11l1l1l1l1l1l1l11l11l11l1l1l11l1h~ e Washington, D.C, uu. Van Nuys, Calif. IJo a good sign. We were let- Bre.e1erdcted..... ~.hkal. post. He beat recen.tly. that race and class Hk:r~~t~ .. w~~~;,at~~t: are mistranslated and given a tlng worried that the younl owa £~ ,11,738 to 4 ,- dlscnrrunatlon is most serious Yamada (Tokyo). sinister hue: Abe Masahiro MASAOkA • ISHIKAWA ,eo becomes "Flattery-Department 781-4484 people were not going to come V~. ~c;rn~ ~~~~ wa:,.~ in schools and in labor unions. 171b Y.s" Llvtngst.on·Mereed• Mikl::I:;:IIIIIIIII,==_§=!: ANO ASSOCIATES. INC. Legal-Latitude." Others are Into JACL, but we were re-elected without oppOsition. BI.acks and Puerto Ricans, he ~1'k.~~'7;s~· F~~~ts~~~r;:r; Mrs. Meyer C onsu~~ 2~ ts CS~ ~W"f4003~atte,. c~ given identifying nicknames: Sweet Shop wronJ. !?lowly but rurely they Althea (Mom!) Kamau, 26, sald, get only low class Ishl.. kl; VenJo.-Culver - Mrs. Maj. Gen. Tatekawa Yoshiji are comlDg. • public health nurse at W1rl: Jobs ana are doomed to ro- Told Kunlmolo; Orang. County- becomes the "Peerless Pimp." 2« E. lsI 51. Join the JACL At one time, there· was I anae High School, has been main in the low Income brac- ~:hnTa~~~Id,,:"lko~;;::f"= Far from being dedicated _ Los Angeles MA 8-4935 § • Career Opportnnltlea gap in the 21 through 35 age named HawaiI'S Nurse of the ket. He sald Southern blacks Charle. T. Uklla. ~1II1I1II1II1II1I1II1I1II1II1II1I1II1I1I1I1II11II1I1II1I1IIi'§ RrOUP. We are beginning to Year. On Sunday nlgbts shl! js get low quality education, and 18th Year: S.abrook - KJyomJ patriots trying to solve prob• FLORIST TRAINEE position open - 24 Hour (mlra'ftc, _ lems besetting tbeir country, tor talented. Industrious. In. see many people in their tbJr- • hula dancer at the Haleku- in some New York areas ~~W~~~~.cl't~~~~ ~°',!;te -saf~~ dJvtdual. He or she must have ties com I n gin to JACL lanl Hotel. She I. a gradaute P.uedo Rican ~ graduate from ChleUo-Masato Tamura; Puya)• those surrounding Hirohlto own transportatton, be ove.r 21 "'W. Do Anythlno In Gilt'" throughout the country. Ther of the Unlv of Hawall ch I hIgh school WIthout belDg able )up vau.y - DaUehl YoshIoka. are members of a ucabal" or Thre. Gen."tlons of and to be able to work long have settied down, started to at nursing. . s 00 to spe~ English. In ~ost la- ~~:::ot!~aM.t~~b~ ~hnMIT,; " tong." To further the al .. Expe.lenc. ~y~ b:~~~ C r'B~~l~chl:akawa PESKIN & GERSON leged conspiracy, they set up raise their families, feel. cna Krueler. 42, tonner prui- bor uruons, Dau ~aJd, the Takasuml. 8t~~d.Fl5:n1stbl~~:t tc~ little secure in their jobs and doni of Ialand Federal Savtnca & leaders pic k whites over "st Y.a" San Jo,," - Yoah1o "cells." F UK U I GLASS CO. are looking for activities to Loan Aan. here aDd a tonner blacks. ' Katayama; Va n t e e..c u 1 v e r - 921\0. Tel. (714) 297..ut9. :!1:a~ ~~m ~,e:b~r1!;n hl~~,;a~~c~lt:n a~~P~eU~~o~O: 'joe::p~ D~ ' Sa~'k~;'·; Conclusions Questioned Mortuary, Inc. 1st. 1949 - LlCln,t:d Contr.ctor make lome contribution to the w1ri Detroit-Dr. Store Fro"h • In,ur.ne. Repl.IClmtnte Lompoc, Calif., Dec. 1 on parole. hJgbest among the 50 states on a Und Year: Spo1cane - Harry In establlshing his thesis, • Real Estale-So. Calif. community and have found Sliding GI.s. Doon e Louvres e Mlnc" JACL to be the onl,. local afler """'tnc Ie.. tlJ.an run. per capIta basts during the 1970 Malto. the author uses Eng II • h 707 E. Temple St. It i!: Glass Top, - PI.te Window Japanese American group in montN at • two·year te.rm. 2Jrd Year: San DJe,o - Josepb sources available for verifica• & Auto GillS - Free (ltlm.t" • some instances whJch acta on bel1ovelOMES · . . '. To:,SURANCE W 0 r ked hard, contributed also announced Those in- with the unavailable, the and Kubota any member of the Togaahi ~hould Family, formerly located lit much and can be proud of By MONTE ITO his advice and signed with terested in thla submit available giving the hue of re• (BODOlulD Adverllser) Mortuary Mode5to. CaUl. LIDy Takeuchj jlelr ffCord. DaJ'\on Chapter Yon;ti.uri," he added. three photos on 8xll in. tyj;. spectablUty to conciuslons FuJIta. 6.123 20th SL Eut. Ta· Tbe rest is Japanese base• Ing paper to be displayed. drawn from the unavallable. One 01 Ihe largesl Selections liatl aI.tIo done a beautltul job. HONOLULU - Mter 21 coma. Wash. 984.24. All three Chaptera promiaed ball history. Yonamine won There wili be cash prizes. A c.ase in point Is the use 911 Venice Blvd. 2421 W. Jeffe""n. LA. years in Japan', pro baseball the Central League batting For reunion reservations to which he puts Japan', De• RE 1-2121 to have a large contingent at organization Wally Yonamine Los Angeles the 1972 Convention in Waah• crown in 1954 (.361), 1956 write or call Cosmo lltar: clolon For 'Yar: Records of JOHN TY SAITO .. ASSOCIAJES ot Hawaii has been appointed (.338) and 1957 (.343) and Travel Service 810 N 'Clark the 1941 Policy Confe.rences, RI9-1449 Ington, D.C. so their coUec:tlve manager ot the Chunichi Dra• Toyo Printing voices will be heard. 1 am was the most valuable play• St Chi ( , . translated and edited by No- Ofr$O\ • Letttrprm • Llnotyplng IOns ot the Central League. er m 1957. ., cago, WH 4-2730), butake Ike (Pacific Citizen, SEIJI DUKE OGATA aunt they will be heard be• He IUcceeds hi. old friend Appliances. cavae ot their past perform• He was released by Yomlu• Apr. 27, 1967). In Ike's book, R. YUTAKA KUBOTA 309 S. SAN PEDRO ST. ante. and former manager, Shigeru ri after tbe 1960 season when Santa Fe to open the records begin Sept. 19, los AAg(les '12 - MAdlso. 6.815) Mizuhara, who helped Yona• Mizubara was relieved as ma• 1940 and continue through Much thanks to Joe and mine open up a lucrative field l1'0jI}li Kadowakl for PUItlnl nager and signed wit h the Dec. 4, 1941. It was at the ';======::'.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;:==;;;;;::• @ TAMiJUiiA !lOll and I up for the Dflbt. tor local baoeball players in Dragons, batting well over office in Tokyo Polley Conferences that the ' We enjoyed their company Jlpan 20 years ago. .300 in 1961. =~c~"t:~0~:3! . And Co., Inc. and hospitality. YanamlDe slgned with" the CHICAGO - The Santa Fe war with Imp,·,e P,,·nt,·nll CO. Tokyo Yomluri Giants in 1951 Turns to Coaehinr will establish an office In In hJs notes, Bergamini says !f fllu,9'mJ ..,...... , '11' ." ...... , ..... J~pan's and made Dews in pro Y<>namine called in qults as Tokyo thla year, J obo S. Reed, Ike's book Is based on the COMMERCIAL and SOCIAL PRINTING Iii ~nUJ 9Ut~ ranka a, a player and coach a player after the '61 season president and chief executive Sugiyama Memo, the papers English ••d Japan ..e tor two decades. oUicer of the transportation of Japan's wartime Army 114 W II St L A '··12 and was batting coach of the cO~~~:"~~~~ador _e~. MA 8·7060 3420 W, Jeffel"$on Blvd. "Two thlngs Influenced my Dragons trom 1962 through No- Chief of Staff, Gen. Hajlme ,e :' ,os nge_ Los Angeles 18 decision to play baseball in ~-:1J~I~n. ~,,~.~%;-: ~.~-..~-: ~.~-..:-: :.;~:-: r:.~~:-:r~.; ~; :-:r~.;-:-:r~.; :-:.~-..:-:·:.~-..~ :-:.~-..~ -~ 1966. He then signed in tbe bublko Ushiba in a visit with unavailable for ...... :: ...... RE 1-7261 Japan," Yonamine .ald a few same capacity with the Lotte yean alo on one of hla fre• Reed and oUicers of the San- Orions of the Pacillc League ta Fe, stated that he is very Unverifiable Not. quent visits home during the ~ otf·seuon. tor the 1967-68-69 seasons. pleased with the arrange- Into a discussion ot these He returned to the Drag• ments: "It indicates how conferences, Bergaminl intro• Eagle Produce ons as batting coach under Larvest StocIr of Popular 'hI'Tr7ODI Am e ric a n companies are \uces a statement purpOrtediy ..d Classic Japan... RtcorfI Mizubara last year and now working for e closer business trom another source: "As for 929·943 S. San Pedro St. MA 5-2101 "I wanted to play pro 1000t, that his old pilot has retir• JIJIO .... MIIlIZI .... All ...... ball and had a tryout with relationship with Japan "';I,d the United States, she would 1iJ!:;'- ed, Yonamine Inherited hi. the nations of the Far East. remain nominally indepen• Bonded Cominisslon Merchants Gifts the 49.rs. But that summer post. 540 E. In SL, Los AnatIII 1 hroke my han d playing dent after her surrender and Fruits 15130 S West", A•• -"'onamine first caught the would retain sovereignty east - Wholesale a'nd Vegetables - Gardena DA 4·6444 FA 1-2123 s. U.,..,.. Proo. baseball in Honolulu and it tancy of local sports fans In Asian Studies teacher of the Rockies, but the Alaska Los Angeles 15 ~ ....".."."...,.,." I I'" • handicapped me. 1942 when he ran wild for . "I couldn't make It in foot• at San JOle State sought Governmen t-General of J a• OO=~::=~=:=:::::::~~ Lahainaluna. He dropped out pan's Co-Prosperity Sphere ball, 10 I decided to try base• of foolball in 1943, sitting out SAN JOSE - The Asian ~1~II=n~~"~I~II=II;;:;;II~IIIII~I~I;11=1~1~I~m~1g balL I played with the Salt American Studies Program at would 'include Alberta, Brit• the year as a transfer to Far• Ish Columbia, and the state Lake Bee, of the Pioneer rington. Then in 1944 he led San Jose State Is In the pro• CAL.VITA PRODUCE CO., INC. League in 1950 and I felt 1 cess of expanding its curricul• ot Washington.'" I I the Governors to their first One may search Ike's book :; Bonded CommiSSion Merchants-FruIts &: Vegetable. " was ready for the Pacific I.L.H. championship. um and faculty and a teach• Coast League," he continued. ing position Is available start• In vain for verification. Ike'. l§ 174 S. Central A"e. L.A.-Wholesale Terminal ~larke' :~==_-~ ''Lefty O'Doul, a min I ad• Quick Kick Recalled ing in fall, 1972, according to book shows Japan's leaders lIlA Z-8595. MA 1-7038, MA 3-4SOf TRADING (0. Roy HlrabayashJ (294-6414, ______mired very much, advised me Yonamine was a lefty all • Appliances TV· Fumlture to go East - to Japan. He the way. In a game with St. ext. 24~9) . 348 E. FIRST ST., L.A. 12 told me 1 had a better chance Applicants with at least a Louis he picked up a bad MAdison 4·660 I <2. 3 4) Marvtama CO. Inc. of making it big in Japan snapback, raced to his left and master's in the humanltles than in the minors. So I took kicked the ball on the run are preferred but those with Fugetsu-no CC===:===C:C=CCC===~ I'IIb Cab IIlaaraetmw teaching experience with a T.alnlnl to pull Farrington out of a CONr=ONARY c:. ...,_ hole. He had superb reflexes B.A. will be considered. The I- LotI &qeI.. f., Me.. , Women college currently otters a mi• 115 B. 1st St., Lo. An,e1.. 11 BRAND NEW PRODUCT Aloha Plumbing and one of his tavorite tac• IllAdison >8595 tics was the quick kick. nor program in Asian Amer• PARTS & SUPPLIES Ican Studies. MlItI ••• AUTOMATION He was a great competitor - Repairs Our Specialty - as an athlete, a smart teach- 194B S. Gr.nd, L.I A.g.ln .INSTITUTE er as a batting c 0 a chand R19--4371 should make his mark as rna- READ THE STORY THAT HAD TO BE TOLD Uw... T.kllhl, P.llidlnt , just as Bozo Wakaba• .51 So. Hili, lei Ans.l.. ~~e~RA~ , INIIST ON and Kaiser Tanaka did. Phon. 687·0660 They were Islanders who at• Japanese Americans The Untold Siory ED SATO 'HE FINEST lADDrowct fo, vlu ltudenta) tained the rank of manager _ PLUMBING AND HEATING - (~ for Veterans) Wakabayashi with the Han• by the J.p.n"e Amerlcln CurrIculum Project Remodel and Repairs • WIle. IANEMASA shin Tigers from 1942 through p.bll.hed by Holl, Rln,hlrt .. Win.lon, Inc, H•• I .... Garbago Disposal .. 1944 and Tanaka with Yom!- • FI"t bock for slud.nts g ..d~. 5 - 7 lHSTANT SAfM(N Furnaces lrand Stocka and Bondi on uri in 1957-58. about J.panese Amerfcans by Japanes. Americans. - ServIcing Le. Ang.r.. - AU. EXCHANGES • Sublect of d.bat. bV JACL a, BCA. AX 3·7000 R! 3-05$1 • "Best selle.," says San F.lnclsco Center for J / A Studies. - HAWAIIAN RECIPE - Lyndy'. • "Our children need this book", Housewife .nd former teacher ...... 926 S. BOlCh BI. from So. Collfoml •. MOlt Sanitary Wholesom. .-d... NEW LOCATION Fred Funakoshl ~ ANAHEIM, CALIF. • Conlain. hi.lory, biographies .he.t story & music. 161 psges. JA 7·5176 Salmln on the Mark.t fWIIIOTO'I R.perll and Studl,. H.... ld '"rUe", .... IIJSO. Avail_Ie an Requ ..t (i R'L Mg •• Give Your Child His Heritage This Holiday Season B,twee. Dls.,yllnd .nd o /(,'IIIUU ORDEI NOW ~ I"! AT YOIII KAWANO & CO. Knou', BfrTJ farm PHOTOMART SllIII'PIlIC CEIITII ~ Pri .. $3.60 pl •• 22. post,...... o"'nl Tolll ••I •••• I.t. $3.82 Available at Your Favorite Shopping Center \ MImb: Pee 5tk ExdI. C.llfomla ••• Id ••tl .dd 18. t .. Tot.1 clm. ,"id,nt $4.00 & eu,.,,~J ~ 1J.1,f"lt.,,,L .f' "'r. l.., fUJlMOTO CO. I .. W WGIItIN ."". • • • NANKA SEIMEN CO• 502·506 So 4UI Wilt @C!.!II~ J16 I. 2nd St., LOl An ..'" - 'lo.ulO J,po.... A.... rI... C."I•• I .... M.k. chock. p.y.bl. t. JACP La. Angelel SIll ..... CIIJ. U\III Res. Phone: 261--4422 Prolect, P. O. Box 367 622-3968 1""SLJ"'""HOIII' 5•• Mlho, Collf. 94401 TOI.I .mo.nl .nclolld: $ ___ ~ 2012 Sin ... Monica II"'. s.. ... Monl.. , CIIiI. HolideV W",pp'-___ TO OUR SUBSCRIBERs WHO ARE MOVING 1lIIY .. G..... bIIllDb ' EX '·4111 SEND TO: Los Angele. Japanese Casualty Insurance Assn. N.m. (Pi .... p.lnt> - Complele Insu •• nce Protecllon - Addre .. Alh ... 1.1, Agy., Alh ....()molru·k.klt., 250 E. hi st._626-9625 A.IO. F.lloka AI1" 321 E. 2nd, Suit. 500.... 626 ... 393 263-1109 MARUKYO City 51.1. Zip kOl~~:nE.1~~'t.~~~:~~~:~~.~~:~~2t5215 Kimono Store ' ••• 462.7406 • • • HI",hlt. In .. AIf., 322 E. Second 51 ..•. _._. •. 628·1214 287·8605 STUDIO FROM: I.ouye I... A"., 15029 Sylv,nwood Av.~ Norw.Ik...-.864.5774 J.. S. It ••o & c:." 318~ E. hI 51 ...•...... _ .. _ .. _ ..___ .624·0758 N.me To ... T.lto, 595 N. Lincoln, Puodonl_794·7189 (LA] 681--4411 3111 EASt Am S,,", MIN.. 'N"" N.. It., 1497 Rock H.ven, Monleray P.rk....268... 5S4 too Ang.I., Calif. Sm. N.ka/I, 4566 Cenlln.l. Avo ____391-5931 837·9150 SIte I.... Au.. 366 E. lat St 629.1425 261-6519 1M 6-5611 II - - - , a • ,.------., month .t the home of the ed to assume new ~po",lbl­ bridegroom's par I! n t., the lities with the bank's head• mp at ~ s Moses r.e-r. of Beverly quarters In Osaka. He served Hi.lh, Calif. Lesser heads the Biro Mlntake. 67. Los An• NEWS as bank president for five geles. died of cancer Jan. 2. cello department at the Pea• years and was appointed Surviving are widower Toyo. body Conservatory In Balti• board cha.irman last June. well-known photographer, CAPSULES more. Miss Usbioda won the Chinese cornmunit,y leader sons Al'Chie, Robert. Richard Mainichi Music Contest in J. Ii. Cboy bas retired from and daugbter lIIinnie Takaha• 1957 before studying at the San Francisco Federal Sav• Leningrad State Academy and shi. • • ings and Loan Associalion. J. BaJlnte Takata. 73, ot 'I'D O'I'IIIB nAY. after a three year blatus, 1 belatedl,. appeared with several Eur0- He jOined San Francisco Fed• ...... to _ dowD to the U.s. Naval Hospital for my an• Courtroom pean orcbestras and also at Gardena died Dcc. 30. BI. eral Savings In 1956 to assist son-in-law Fred Kosaka ~ JiuIl pbJIIcal ebeck-up. ,.. alway.. there are thooe con• Mn. IIIari.. Sblbu.va, 40, of the Hollywood Bowl. The in opening a branch office of couple met in Moscow In 1966 manager ot Union Fed.,·al fpuaded am. to be filled out and th~ young corpsman on Rolling Hills, wbo bas served the Association in Cbinatown. Savings and Loan in Gardena. ~ during the Tchaikovsky Com• He was apPOinted manager oC ...". _ down my statistics: age, welgbt, etc. As I on the 1966 Los Angeles petition. Sut'vi\ling are w Sei, and d ~ -m. the quee\:IlIm, I suddenly became aware of C o u n t y Grand Jury, was this office upon its opening In Fumi Ige altd Ruth Kosaka. oil tIme-pp IiIeDce and IooUd up to see ~ face contorted In among 23 persons selected to 1957 and under his direction serve on the 1972 panel. Ap• Book the office bas attained a de• l!H!!ep..t: PinalI7. lIOIDeWbat painfully. be turned to me posit balance of $60.000000 IDI1 ..... "tJb, what IbDuId I put down for 'race'?" pointed by Judge Allen Mil• Mrs. IIIarlYD Tamun ,vith __ aaaa1I7 I tau u m - ler, Mrs. Shibuya is the moth• making it the largest of i~ Greetings er of two college-age cblldren the Los Angeles Public Li• kind in Chinatown. Although ...... to ouch an 1rn!Ie\'llIIt brary since 1958 was appoint• tional alta1JUnent. law 'n or• and bas served on the County retiring from full time busi• CI!S'1 (mod otten respoodIng Human Relations Commission, ed director of brancbes, ad• ness life, Choy will remain ac• Arbor Bridal "human" wIleD the qua;• der, and so forth. All t b e ministering tbe operation of WIIh views were Invariably by the advisory board of the Los An• tive with the Chinese Cultw'e tIaa appean In forms), but geles Urban Coalition, Angeles 61 community libraries and Foundation as a Director of & Formals ~'. yardstick of the white. mid• five bookmobiles circulallng lie helpless predi• dle-class society, and it was Girl Scout C 0 u n c i 1 board, that organization and is con• _t struck me as being more than 12 million books sidering publisblng his diary Bridal -Bridesmaids clear that what was being FEDERAL EXECUTIVE-Gordon Yamada (left) is sworn League of Women Voters and annually. Sbe had been "act• """-"",,11,. fuDn)' and I res• overlooked was t b e inesca• In as chief of the Management Systems Branch in the Execu• advisory board of tbe Office abo u t his experiences in Formals - Alter 5's - Cocktalls •• iIaruIed with a cbuckled. 'Put ing director" since October, mainland China during the 30 pable (but unrecognized) fact tive Office of the President and will oversee 70 department! of Continuing Education at 1970, after serving two years IDwu 'lapanese' ". tbat our society, for better Claremont Colleges. ye31' period prior to World '!'lIe corpsm.an turned back and agencies to belp reduce government red tape and paper• as regional librarian directing War II. QuaU.nd Tom re• 7801 Pacific 582-5UI 10 the form but It became or worse, was composed of work. Formerly the ranking Nisei civil servant with the Dept. the activities of 11 branches peoples other than the white placed Cboy as manager of Hun tlngt()n Park. Cam. w.dlI7 apparent that present• ot tbe Air Force, he is a graduate of Sophia Universty. Tokyo Education In the Hollyw ood area. A na• tbe Chinatown Office of San with the small box for middle-class. And so I de• tive ot Hawaii, sbe graduated ed cided to propound a basic, and bas a master's from MIT. Others in the pboto are Veima Nancy Takayo Komae, 21- Francisco Federal Savings, ef• "nice" be would bave to ab• Baldwin, Office of Management and Budget cbief adminis• year-old daughter of the Jos• tram the USC Scbool oI Li• fective Jan. 1. breviate me to "Jap". And I tundamental concept, step by brary Science. step. trative officer: OM13 deputy director Caspar Weinberger and eph Komaes of Los Angeles, Greetings ot Mr. Case __ be was In another was named Better Business L. T. Tanaka of P ortland, qUUldary. In the meantime, 1 It went something like this: Wesley Sasaki, just apPOinted deputy chief of OM13's natural Ore., is autbor of fl Complete Press Row I, myself, am an American, resources programs division. -Cut Courtesy: Rafu Shimpo Girl of 1971 by tbe USC chap• III1I8t admit that I was wait• ter of Alpba Kappa Psi, na• 7-Day Esper31lto Course for "J-Town Collective", reput• Dye Oxygen Co. iDa wlth some treplda tion, being born, raised and edu• International Con'espondence cated here; having served in tional professional buslne.s ed to be a revolutlon31'Y or• ~veto any sucb ab- fraternity. To be graduated in -Esperanto: tbe World Auxi• ganization working in San 17022 S. Flruero.. its defense along with my two liary Language" due for re• brothers, and seeking to im• JW1e in accounting from USC Francisco's J apanese Ameti• 770-0175 Gardena, Cam. After a moment of ponder• School oC Business Adminis• lease this month. Portland can community, has started a iDa as to bow diplomatically plement its very laws by my 1s1 Voluntary Action Center set up will also bost the 57th Uni• profession. R i gh t? (Rigbt) . tration, she intends to con• monthly publication, " New .urmount an otherwise pby• tinue bel' studies In computer versal Esperanto Congress this Dawn". (PO Box 26310, San Open All Year tiw impossibility, be sudden- Now, then. th.is country is my summer, July-August, t b e (Not. just three months) land, and no other; it belongs science. Francisco. $1.80 per year) . 17 brigbtened with the solu• Frank lIUzukami was elect• third time a meeting bas been First issue came out October. Federal & State Income Tax Uoa. "Let's just put you down to me. period. with no if's, for Asian Americans in Los Angeles convened In the U.S. and's or but's. Right? (Rigbt). ed to the Fife (Wash.) district Individual or Corporate Tax as 'Oriental' .. and with that school board, the first J apa• No appt. necessary This being so. 1 can turn to leaders to head be Inserted a big "0 " in the LOS ANGELES - The Na• grant. "Tbe Asian American nese American to serve on the Fine Arts Moe $2 Discount with Thts Ad box after the word "race". you, fellow citizens who hap• Voluntary Action Center is tional Cenler for Voluntary board. His brother, Bobt is a St. Louis installation • pen to be white. and tell you Tbe American Academy of Some naive comments to all (reversing the usual flow) Action announced a $10.000 the first center In the U.S. Fife city councilman. this would DO doubt include start-up grant for an Asian• set up solely to work wIth Arts and Letters, the nation's MDC Governor Ross Harano ALL YEAR that you can remain in my American Voluntary Action the problems of t b e Asian highest bonor society in tfis and MDYC Co-Chainnan Bev- . the slmpllstic observation: land provided 1I0U behave "Aren't you really being 'up• Center in Los Angeles t b i s community. Much credit must Military field, elected three men and edy Tanamachi bead tbe Jan. INCOME TAX SERVICE yourselves, right? There was a three women to its member• 29 program for the 26tb an• tight' over something that's moment of shocked silence as past week (J an. 4) . be given to the representa• Recent U.S. Army promo• unimportant?" I will readily tives of the Asian community sbip on Dec. 8. Included was nual installation dinner of the 321 N. Weslern, L.A. the listeners assessed wba t Tbe purpose of the center tions to rank of colonel inclu• J ust Norlb ot Beverl:r agree LI, by tbJs question. the is to he 1 p alleviate critical in Los Angeles who worked ded at least Iour Nisei: Tosbio sculptor Isamu Noguchi of SI. Louis J ACL at Grant's they had been inexorably led New York. Tbe 50-member 462-7077 Inquirer means to ask if the through. The n one of the social problems facing the hard together towards this Aoyagl, Peter J . Hino, Larry Cabin Restaurant, 8352 Wat• H goal." Academy was founded in 1904 son Rd., St. Louis. question of " race is unim• m 0 r e fervent la\V-~n-order J.\ sian communities in the Los M. Shlnod.. and Hldekazu portant. My response would Angeles area through citizen• Twenty-three communities Uyenoyama. . . . The name of as an inner body of the 250- Dinner will be served at 6 protagonists managed a 'Vl'Y member National Institute of also be In the affirmative if grin as realization dawned to-citizen assistance. The nationwide p31'ticipated in Tom Kobashlgawa, 23, of Ho• p.m. Congenial Bob Mitori human dignity is unimport• As ian -American Voluntary various grants from the Na• nolulu was among tbe 18 list• Arts and Letters. Aaron Cop• will serve as toastmaster. upon him. land is president of tbe acad• ant. Action Center will act as a tional Center. ed as Ameican servicemen Final plans are being made PUZZLING TO ME, al• Approximately $400.000 of beld captive by the Viet Cong emy. Important Things? clearinghouse for volunteer to honor the Issei in the St. though not really so. When a recruitment, training and federal money is being chan• in South Vielnam. The list was Louis area; they will be guests Compl iments white-American espouses cer• placement in the Asian com• neled through the National released on Tuesday before Hea lth of tbe cbapler. An informal THIS SIMPLISTIC VIEW tain aspirations for himself Center, a non-goverrunental Christmas. He was the second would no doubt consider it munity. The Montebello J apanese dance is scheduled immediate• from a and our society, it is being organization, to help create Nisei now ]mown to be pris• ly after the dinner. equally unimporlant and in• Alan F. Kumamoto, presi• more eHective ways to put Women's C 1 u b contributed "patriotic": but when a non• den t of tbe newly created oner-of-war in Vietnam, the Committee cbairman Dr. Friend offensive when "well-mean... white citizen similarly pro• volunteers to work in com• first being Capt. Terry.J. Uye• $1,500 to Kelro Nursing Home. tngu questions or comments Asian-American Board, noted munity service. Tlte funds the proceeds derived from the Mas Ohmoto requested t bat claims the very same aspira• the increasing immigration of yama of San Francisco. Ko• reservations be made in ad• 5 U c h as the following are tions for himsel! as well, it have been provided by the bashigawa was a crew chief club's successful Nisei Week posed: "When did you come Asians to the United States federal action agency. f a s h i 0 It sbow·luncheon last vance by calling Dr. Normall suddenly becomes "rabble• iD the last five years. " fn fis• aboard a belicopter, which Sib, A34-0353. Cost will be to this country?" "Where did rousing" and . "nationalistic". crashed Feb. 5, 1970. year. you learn to speak EnglJsb so cal 1970 there were 92,816 im• The National Center for $7.50 per adult and $4 per Tbis land is my land. And migranis from Asia, nearly Voluntary Action was open• person 18 years of age and well?" "I visited your quaint you're all welcome to slay. land, and your people are so five times as many as oniy ed in February 1970 as the Flower-Garden Churches under. well-behavedl" "You people five years earlier. Of further private-sector component or Redwood City wbolesale Ho• Rev. Frank Y. l ehlshila bas are bard"working." "Do you note is the fact that In 1970 the National Program for Vol• rist Biro Higasbi was nanled been paslor of tbe 500-mem• know the Yamamoto's from for the first time in peace untary Action Initiated by a member of the S311 Mateo ber P e 0 pie 's Presbyterian • In the Frozen Food Sections of so-ani-so?" Okinawa- time an Asian nation, Ihe Phi• President Nixon. CountY fali' and convention Cburcb In Denver for a year. Supported by private con• Markets in Southern California As a native son, born and Conllnued from Page Z lippines, gave m 0 r e immi• associatIon board of directors P reviously he served t b e bred in this, my land, I grants to the U.S. than any tributions, including a major .. . Frank Kuwahara. 59, gen• black Inunanual Presbyterian need not suffer such Inane other single nation outside tbe grant from the Ford Founda• eral manager of tbe So. Calif. Cburch In Indianapolis for six Slates Civil Administration of tion. it operates the nation's banalities dripping with pat• the Ryukyu Islands (USCAR). western hemisphere. II Flower Growers, Inc., was one years. A graduate of McCor• MOCHI for your Traditional Ozoni ronizing condescension. A The High Commissioner was The Asian American VAC iargest clearinghouse on vol• of three judging Hoats entered mick Tbeological Seminary, couple of weeks ago, follow• granted the power to "pro• will be working with five dis• unteer programs and the an• in the I 97 2 Tournament of Chicago, he holds a master's Ing a delightful dinner party mulgate laws, ordinances or tinct A s ian communities, n ual National Voiunteer Aw• Roses. In the Hower growing degree in church social work Oshiruko - Yakimochi - Kina komochi attended by some chiefs and regulations" and, regarding namely, Chinese, Japanese, ards to recognize volWlleer business for 40 years, be is the and was director at the Phil· near-chiefs of a federal agen• Ryw..-yuan bills, laws, or elect• Korean, Filipino, and Samoan. achievement. flrst Nisei cbosen a Hoat judge. adelphia Neighborhood House, cy, the discussion centered ed officials, to "(1) veto any Volunteer coordinators fo r Voiunteers desiring to as• There were 47 awards made. organized by tbe P resbyterian around the various ills of our bill or any pari or portion each of these groups will be sist in this program or to de• Felton Jones, who intro• Cburch. In 1960 he was assis• 8ocle~: riots, lack of educa- thereof, (2) annul any law or recruited. termine other volunteer op• duced bonsai In Atlanta, Ga., tant pastor at the souUt side any palt or portion thereof Presently an advisory board portunities should contact the after studying the art under Chicago's Emerald A v e n u e within 45 days after its en• .trom the various Asian com• Los Angeles Vollmtary Action Frank Nagata of Los Angeles, Presbyterian Churcb . actment, and (3) remove any munities is being fonned. Center at 7 49 So. Harvard will adw'ess tbe Santa Anita Orange (ounly- public official from office." Tbe Los Angeles Voluntary Blvd., los Angeies, or call 389- BOllsai Society Jan. 15, 8 p.m.• 1221. at the County Arboretwn. Business • Though the order states that Action Center a United Way ConUnued from Pace 3 he sbould exercise tbis dele- service, will administer the Program is p311: of the group's 1I1itsubishi Bonk of Callfor• gated authority "based upon grant. hope to introduce the borti• nla will open for business Jan. greetings along with some leis. democratic principles . . . to Mrs. John Endicott, presi• cultural form to tbe general 18 in the new 800 Wilshire Rev. Abraham Dohi of the improve tbe welfare aud well• d e n t of Los Angeles V AC, Gima-- public. Budg. at Wilshire and Flower Wintersbu rg Presbyterian being of tbe inhabitants," the welcomed the new center into with officials from the parent Church will give the invoca• range of his well-nigh despo• the growing family of volun• Continued from Page 7 bank In J apan, Toshio Naka• tion with Dr. William Shinto, Sports tic powers belies tbis state• tary action centers by under• fiscal year. The support amounted mura, president, and Yusbln of the American Baptist Home ments. Besides the foregoing lining the uniqueness of this ~C~~~g ea~~e JS~~~otti~:en ~1 A ternpor31'y injunction was Yamamuro, director-manager MIssionary Society and Asian (0L, issued against Nanka Yn• of the international deparl• powers, the Higb Commis• Higher Education. Only Utah, American educator, the bene• sioner has the authority to ap• danshakai last month by Su• ment, joining the Califomia• diction. Mas Uyesugi will ban• point the five judges who sit ~~i~rta f/~;e. ~~::ru; l v~A~!le{ya ~ perior Court Judge Robel1: A. charlered bank officials 31ld dle the recognitions awards. on the bighest Ryukyu court, the bottom with $19.81. Hawaii Wenke atter statements filed directors in the opening. Ya• Karen Kaizuka will take the ranked filth among the states for by attorney L .. 0 n J . Garrie subiko Isbizaka is president to transfer any case at any Big crowd hears state support per full·time stu• oath as incoming president. time to USCAR out of the dent. and judOist Hayward Nishio• and chief executive of the new The evening concludes with hands of local courts, and to ka. N31ned in tbe petition bank headqu31·tered in Lo s entertainment by tbe Kono alter or reverse any decis ion Political Scene were Kaname K. KunJyuklJ Angeles; lIIalaicblro Kazuya is Hawaii musical troupe. Drl Togasaki talk Shlgeru Okada. IIl asaru Hara• board chairman, w ho beaded Mf'd. by Umeya Rice Cake Co., los Ange l!t made by them. Until Novem• The Republican candidate tor Tickets are $7.50 per person. ber, 1968 he a lso appointed Governor in 191D-Sam P. Klng• da and Don Algie. T h e in• the Mitsubishi Bank Los An• Cocktail bour s!arts at 5:30, has been elected as Hawatt's na- junction called (or suspensiotl geles agency, whicb bas ope• and dinner at 6:30 p.m. the Chief Executive of the Tbe announcement of Dr. of all business by the organi• R yuk yu Government. '1'0 Yosbiye Togasaki as guest iJ:~ 1 r:~ra~~~ca;h1ft°m~ jt1e;= rated since 1962. Ing Jr., who reslgne~ for personal zation and forbidded its offi• !sao Yamasaki, board chair• make cerlain that military pr!- speaker for tbe newcomers cers, agents, employees 01' rep• orltles will lake precedence meeting co-sponsored by the reasons. Republicans also set l\'iay man ot the Sumitomo Bank GET THE BEST LOAN l:! as the opening day (or the resentatives !rom conducting of California, bas been recall- over civilian concerns, safe- Bay Area Community JACL Lwo-day state con\'cn11on next year . . . AI Ra ma.l , executive sec. 311Y business Wlill the injunc• Local Scene guards in the powers of the and the International Institute tion was lifted. The officers High Commissioner were de- of Alameda County drew an retary or the KawaU State Teach. FOR YOUR NEW CAR ______--l fined In t~ Executive Order. overflowing cross-generatlon- ers Assn., says the HSTA w ill be were charged for violation of \, endorsing political candiates and the Callfomia parliamentary Double Knit I of raising campaign funds In next Tbe democratic trappings al crowd of Issei (new and procedw'e statute . local autonomy-the unicam- old), Sansei, and Nisei to tbe .)rea.r·s elections. Bamal made the Fabrics for Sale Lo. An,elet announ cement Dec. .ears after the end of broaden their understanding between Nebr a:~ ana; t~e f,~TY~ Fleet Price to AII-.... k for CENTURY CITY Cren, hlw-L.A. B.lnch: Tel. (213) 731-7334 ~lthH~m:~g ~h~~d 'S;T~le~~~rlf~~ FRID MIYAT ... tai ADaeles 80018. the Pactfic War. of the cbanging social mores I Inside Plclflc bt Na~1 We"ern L .... Branch : Tei. (213) 391·0678 • • • (To be continued) of the generation of today. fro,n $22 to $100 each . Charled elnk Bldg. Open 11 :30-6:00 Ga.denl l ra nch : Tel. (213) 321·0902 :.~~ ~~:: r d°':... S:Olm'::!I",:a~n Hansen Chevrolet Her talk was heightened jVOh': 190 I Avenue of tho St ... Si n'" Ani B.l nch : Tel (7 14) 541-2271 with reminiscing vignettes Edmond LllUe. 56: EUJche Willard IUS! W, Olympic II•• , W." L.A . • or Lo. Angel.. Call 277-1 144 Ch r istmas C eer her experiences bere and In Loach. 41: "n. ,\nn Nob ue Au.o, 479-4411 . ... 12.-' IOJ PanO.l ml Ci Branch : Tel (213) 893·6306 h Japan, where she taught in 21: and Juuo Ivan Kanabe, 30. I fO~th~~hrl:rm~ ~~r l~m= ~~.;,~b~v~O th:P:~:!~~e h~~ Military New. =~:te:r:m~7gf ~~J~~"b0W~; a bilingual gynecologist for the A fund w;ve hal been orpnbatto:-- • San Franolsco area. launched to raise $85,000 to Tbe meeting W85 closed rp- build a two-aore J apanese T_l tbls report (\10) .... 1.JN.OO luctantly. but not before ",.d.n on the campus ot Nor• Previous Tou1 1802) •••• • .•,399 .00 many enthusiastic suggestions mandale Jr. College. Bloom• CUlIat Total (8711 ...... ,,185.00 were made for tuture new- Ington, Minn.. a fast growing comer meeting topics, Includ- suburban conununILy n ear Ing the scbedullng of another Camp Savage. Ft. Sneilln, Jee fund drive meeting with Dr. Togasaki. and the Twin Cities of St. LOS ANGELES-The Japan- SUC<:e.U of the program I. Paul-Minneapolis. The garden e s e Ch_ber ot Cornmerc~ gratefully shared with Ron project i. under the sportaor• fund drive for Iu SOCial scr- Kobata, JACL Fox and the ship of Ihe Bloomington AftI• vices departmenl concluded Japanese Community Youth HaW Garden Groups. More Dec 17 with 12,357.24 reo Couneu for th.lr aalstanc.. A InfonnaUon iII a v ail 8 b 18 S II Bank of Call-tornla ce\ved 727 pertIOIII and specla\ acimowledllement abo through Richard S Oauro, • + um omo ca::1~.iZ!!~~ It was al1nOUllC- to Mrs. Lob Workman for member of the Honolulu Mll1- 365 Cillfo,nla 51'.11 San F,anc''Co Colli 94104. Sa"amenlo S.n Jose Oakland ICC;: ~- !lie of the YWCA that after- tary Inte1llaence &ervlce Ve&-II,==~5;an~M~.~teo~.~L~oa~A~n~g~I~I"~"~ . c~r~"~n'~h~a~w~,G~a~r~d~en~.~ . ~A~nS~n~.~'m~.~~~lo~n~to;r~.y~p~O;r;k;:; .W ;;'~I ' :;;h;".=.:::G~ra~n~d======:::;:=:::;:=::!.I IIIIGII. erma Club. Ii