PERSPE EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES -t• /, Jerrv IN WASHINGTON STATE BOOSTED • Enomoto ==fM Anti-Discrimination Standards Adopted 'or Nat'l Ptt"dfnl fI) Statewide Compliance: Seattle Pallol Ordinance TUTORIAL SERVI(,E PACIFIC CITIZEN M.mblrlhlp PubllcaUon . J,p,n ... Amort"n CIU.11U ~, .." U5 W,UIr St., LOI Ang.I .., ta 90012 12131 MA 6·4471 ~ By PHILIP HAYASAKA one. makes it illegAl to dis• NCWNDC Civil R i h t • ~ C'ommitt('~ Chairnu," ,lames Senttle criminate In the snl. or .. ental Publllh.d Wull, Empt LIII Witt" 11\, Vllr - Ciln '01\19' 'aid .t L.. Angalu, C.IW, April of 1968 may woll be houshul( for l('Rsons t'ace, Ono'. pItch for District AP• or ot hi~ re1i~ion. proval of A pilot summer tu• recorded in rRce relations color. ancestry 01' nR• lory as Ihr time when gJnnt lionAI origin. Tho only ex• VOL. 66 NO. 22 FRIDAY, MAY 31,1968 Edit/Bus. Office: MA 6·6936 torial project 10 a Santa Clara TEN CENTS County povcrl~' pocket was stl'idcs we!"£> taken IowaI'd clusion would apply to t h • ellminahng one ot Ul(, $orcst 1i"il1~ hi~ ~ J( unanimously okayed at 1 h e own(l'r in I n I f> recent QU81'tt'l'ly mcetinli:,. In inequities in our democl'uC'y• 'amlly dwelling who WAnts to • nutshell, the project in• that of housing dlscl'lnlinRUon. rent out a room. On U,e Federal level, Con• volves tu\oriol sC'l"viccs in a All agencies Rnd porsons TV WRITER STILL llress passed the 1968 C!vll Head Start Project. provided who art' connected ''lith I ht:' Rights Act. promising to mRke •• 1 e and rontal of housIng Cultural pluralism by Jr. JACLel" and some sen- discrimination 111egal III the 10.'S. funded by J ACL money. come under tb(' law - from COMPLAINS OF brok(H"~ An original appropriation sale and rental of 80 % of the leal cstatr 10 bank!" 1 housin~ . of over $4,000 was "educed to nation s and insurance companies that some S2.000. which adds up On the State level. lhe lend money for buying or re• fits America than Washington State Real Estate 8 JACL PROTEST to the equivalent of about pairing housing, fl 'om priv• Commission adopted regula• ate owner who wants to sell 25 cents per district member. The availability of a number tions that brou8ht all licensed his own home to anyone who Admits No Nisei Has of volunteers assures us of a real estate salesmen and brok• would aid him to discriminate ers under strong anti-dis• 01' retallate against him he• Sold American Secrets melting pot idea significant investment of nl• lorial hours with minimum crimination standards. cause he complied with the to Japan in Wartime Under these regulations. law. funding. By YAS ABlKO and establlshing some com• Development of this pro• real estate licensees shall not The ordinance also pl'ohibiL. reCuse to communicate to the the keeping of any 10l'm or LOS ANGELES - Hollywood REDWOOD CITY - America munication with each other. jeel. and its adoption by the writer David W. Rintels has has long been called the melt• Prejudice results in avoid• Dlsh'iel, is both gratifying and owner any offer. or refuse to records asking abou 1 race, negollate or deny any prop• admitted he was mistaken ing pot of immigrants from ance of other grOUP ar signiiicant. The elements of color. religion, ancestry or na• erty because of race, color, about a "Nisei who was a all over the world, but Dr. groups, he pointed out. youth and adult teamwork, tional origin. It bars the is• creed or national origin. Lic• suance at any notice 01' ad• t .. altor selling American se• NISEI CAJ\lPAlGNERS-Alongside Sen. Thomas Kuchel (R• Harry H. L. Kltano, UCLA "If there was no such thing toward a worthwhile purpose, ensees shall not discriminate crets to Japan" but is sllU Calif.), Senate "whip", are Yone Satoda (left) and Steve sociology professor, said here as prejudice, people would are ideally present. Those vertisement eontaimng such in terms or services nor print lamenting the lact that a pres• Doi, both of San Francisco, who were appointed to head the that he no longer believes in invent something to take Ita who Question the concept of information i n connection or publish any nollces I h at sure group 01 Japanese Amer• No. Calif. Nisei Commillee to Re-Elect Senator Kuchel. this premise. place," he said. pay for some of the tutors. with the sale or r e n to I of discriminate. housing. icans "bullled a spineless tele------• In his commenls alter a talk "The second stage, dJa• should note that some of the Nor shall licensees repre• vision nct.work and sponsol' on "Race Relations" at the crimination, is where the Complaints Procedure kids involved need to earn sent available property as not into withdrawing a drama Northern California-Western baWe must begin," Dr. K1- summer money for s c h 0 0 1. being available or induce any The procedure {or handling based on the Kawakita case." NC·WNDC PLEDGES FINANCIAL AID Nevada JACL District Coun• tano said. flIt is most serious What better way to make that person to sell by representa• cil dinner May i9 at the Vet• single regressive step," as it money than in sharing in trus complaints of discrimination Rintels was the author of tion reRarding entry of per• is through the Seattle Human eran Memorial Bldg. here, he leads to disadvantages for kind of responsibility? a Los Angeles Times Calendar sons of 1\ pal'ticutal' race, Rights Commission. First, a said: others . . . leads to depriva• Another noteworthy aspect .ieatul'e, "Some BiUer Gripes color, creed or Illltonal origin. statement o( violation is from TV Vineyards" (April TO SAN JOSE TUTORIAL PROGRAM "We have long been taught tion." of this undertaking is that it that the United States is a Local Ordlnanoe drawn by the aggrieved par• 14), in which he declared Discrimination Calle is aimed at one area. in one ty or by the Commission. The REDWOOD CITY - Endorse• mlttee chairman. melting pot, but from my stu• city, which contains one JA• there was still in the film On the local level, the Se• commission staff then inves• vaults a program about fla ment of a San Jose JACL The project already under• dies, I do not find this to be He pointed out that a per• CL Chapter, in a Districl of son may be prejudiced but altle Clly Council unanimous• tigates lhe complaint. Follow• Nisei who tried to sell Amer• chapter project to assist a taken by the San Jose JACL true. Thjs country is compos• 25 chapters. This means that not discriminate, whereas a ly passed a Fair HousinJ: Or• ing investigation. the Comis• ica's secrets. The television community tutorial program and its Junior JACL for this ed of a number of sub-cul• iunds coming from Ihe whole person who has no prejudice dinance with an emergency sion then must determine show bears no more resem• aimed primarily for Mexican summer calls lor both paid tures, which retain many of D.stricl will benefit this one may still discriminate, very clause that made the law ef• whether a probable cause lance to the actual case than Am e ric a n pre - school age and volunteer workers to con• its traits, customs and values. area. The delegates approved fective without delay. The in• youngsters. and a pledge 01 frAmong the two most suc• often unknowingly. this, understanding that this exists to believe that an un• that ... The man did it, so duct it at an estimated cost of tent of this ordinance was Cair housing practice has oc• financial aid to the project cessful sub-cultures are the A football coach may be is a pilot program sel up ex• it's fair comment." $1,500. Ono and other chap• more toward improving social curred. was made by the Northern Jews. The other is the J apa• prejudiced but not discrimin• peditiously by the District The So. Calif. J ACL Office ter representatives said that and economic condition~, California - Weslern Nevada nese,n Dr. Kitano added. ate against any of his play• If the Commission finds Immediately denied there was many volunteers are signing Civil Rights Committee. with rather than strictly c i v i I J ACL DIstrict Council chap• ers, whereas a law against a that cause does exist. it will a Nisei who tried to sell up to help out this program. Publlshinr Book the hope that its success will rights. as establishing sa f e• ters. certain violation may dis• attempt to resolve the com• America's secret. Associate This project was adopted as provide a model for 0 the r guards in orde.' that all per• plaint through conciliation The Nisei sociologist sald criminate against the poor be• chapters, or combinations o( JACL Director Jeffrey Matsui, At the second quarterly dis• the initial direct invoivement sons may J I V e togelher in with all parties. Only after the he has completed a book en• cause they are apt to be the chapters, to follow. in a letter to the Calendar trict meeting May 19 at the o{ the district council in a peace and with reasonable matter has failed to be resolv• titled uJapanese American" most frequent offenders be• Indeed the basic role of any editor, called Rintels irrespon• Redwood City Memorial Hall, civil rights project. According happines •. ed amicablv will the Commis- which will be released by cause of their financial status. District Committee like this the delegates voted an assess• to distrIct oUiclals, all other Seattle's fair housing ordln- (Continued (rom Page 4) sible for not checking out the Prentice Hall in December in Segregation or what he is to develop ideas. demon• facts. ment of 25c per member to chapters are being urged to be paid by the chapters after which he has explained his call1!d institutionalized dJa• .trate how they might work, work up sirnilar projects and crimination was the t h i r d Matsui Interprelallon hearing an outline of the proj• belief thaI such sub-cultures and lead the way fo r chap• some are now being devel• stage of what Dr. Kltano call• ect from James Ono of San are beneficial. ters. This tutorial proJect is a Recalling that the demand oped. ed ordinary states in preju• Fr. Tibesar recalls JACL meeting Jose, district civil rights com- "1 therefore also believe in small step. but illustrates a for Evacuation was based pri• Against Most Proposal. the continued existence of or• dice. concrete way in which JA• maril,y upon public and poll• The iast stage w h i c h he In the discussion on the re• ganizations such as the J A• CLers, young and old, can tical pressure rather than CL," Dr. Kitano declared. labelled extraordinary includ• do something. day after Pearl Harbor incident upon factual data, Matsui organization of the JACL na• In his new book he said he ed apartheid, expulsion and Some ask if thiS is civil feared the fictional presenta• Contra Costa soph tional board, the chapter de• genocide, the last two repre• rigbts? In today's context, SEA TTLE-Father Leopold H. zens and the.v had to be Uon o( a Nisei traitor as con• legates backed the recommen• also questions the conclusions reached by Dr. William Peter• sented by inmates of peni• steps taken to provide cul• Tlbesar, M.M. pastor of Our hrought to a safe place due ditioning the attitudes of the dation of the district execu• tentiaries and death cells. tive board to r e j e c t any sen, in an article appearing in turally and economically de• Lady Queen of Martyrs Calb• to Geneva Convention provi• majority community. In his talk Dr. Kitano on• wins DC oratorical change. the New York Times in which prived youngsters oC ethnic olic Church from 1935 through ~ions.u he said. Because Japanese are a vis• ly outlined the problem. He minorities a chance to catch 1942 spoke on the "Changing The proposals {or a pres• the then UC Berkeley $oci• Father Tibesor said he ad• ibie minority, Matsui said, ology professor praised the offered no solutions, but hav• up with othe.r kids f'arl~ ·. in Scene in ContempOTRr.v Ja• vised the J ACL JO'oup that Hwe do not have the luxury REDWOOD CITY - Kathie ident-eJect, change of status ing participated in many COD• the tough race for an edu• pan." at the J ACL board Abe, 16-year-old El Cerrito 01 the 1000 Club chairman, Japanese Americans as an "what we have to do Is to ride of being judged as individuals ideal immigrant group. ferences, symposiums and cation, is an inlegral part of meeting 1n April. with the waves and disloyalty but are judged as a group." bigh school sophomore, won voUng right to the National discussions, including a num• the human rights struggle. A graduate of Quincy Col• Because of this situation, the Northern Callfornia• Youth Council chairman and "Many Issei and Nisei en• ber with extremists, he at• is going to be the first charge joyed reading that they were Thi. development, sma II lege, Kennewick Seminary to be brought up to you. The Matsui said, "we must react Western Nevada elimination limitation ot non-voting na• tested to the seriousness of law-abiding. docile, success• though it is. is one more sign and Catholic University in only solution is to prove you strongly, as slander aimed at oratorical contest here May tional committee chairman on the current situation. of movement that encourages Washington, D.C .• he has de• one Nisei is multiplied thou• 19 and will represent the dis• the national board to 0 n 1 y ful, educated, high middle• are a good citizen and be so class residents and citizens of UJI. voted all his life to the ori• loyal that they will not ram sands-fold to affect the image trict in the finals at the Na• four were all turned down by proven loyalty," Kit a n 0 NiseI Week coronation entals, especially for the Ja• of the total Nisei commWlity." lional JACL convention in unanimous or near unanimous NISEI FOR IiUCBEL this charge to you." pointed out. panese. In 1926 he was sent by Matsui noted there were San Jose this August. votes. LOS ANGELES - The Nisei He disclosed that U.S. gov• Kathie, daughter of Mr. However, the proposal for American Legion posts, Sadao A. a Democrat who has the Maryknoll Fathers to ernment had approached him two trials for treason involv• Different ConclusIons i ound it tough to convince Manchuria. In 1942 he was i.ng Japanese Americans and and Mrs. Shiro Abe of 812 more frequent meetings of Munemori Post 321 and Com• for advice on how to handle Balra Dr.. El Cerrito, who the national officers was fav• He said in his new hook he modore Perry Post 525, are some that I vote for the man "evacuated" with his Japa• the Japanese com m u n i ty both were wartime strandees bas stated why, in many in• and not the party (apparent• represented Contra Costa ored. sponsors of the 1968 N I. e I nese flock to Minidoka in• problem long before the Pearl in Japan and their acts were stances he has reached en• ly a bit of political naivete ternment Camp. After the war committed in Japan. chapter, was the youngest in Members of the district Week coronation ball to be Harbor Incident if the war a young field of speakers in tirely different conclusions beld Aug. 17 at the Beverl7 at best. and stupidity at he was reassigned to Japan were to break out. His advice nomination committee for the ApolOgizes for Error this contest. The other four coming National JACL elec• fro m those reported by Dr. Hilton Hotel. worst) I was much encourag· and was awarded 4th Order of was that "the Japanese people Petersen. ed to see a news article show• Sacred Treasure. Rintels, in a rebuttal ap• were all i7. tion was announced by Steve Preliminary judging of NI• should be allowed to remain He added thai the biack sei Week queen candidates In ing U.S. Senator Tho mas "Last time J spoke to the where they are. You cannot pearing May i9, apologized Second place went to Mar• DOi, chairman for the district Kuchel with a substantial vin Sakakihara of Sacramen• unit. They are: nationalists have stated only bathing suits starts at 6:30, .JACL group." he began. "was separate the family b.y taking for the error in fact but took the Negroes can speak for lead in a State poll. issue with Matsui interpreta.. to, Grant Union High Nation• Paul IchluJl of Monterey. James followed by dinner at 7:30 and on Dec. 8. 1941. when r was the parents and leaving the Murakami of Santa Rosa, am Kl· their race, judging them from The toughest role of today al Merit scholar in mathema• the dancing to Manny Har• called by the late J.mmy Sa• rest of the family here." tion that he was slandering tabayashl of Martinez. John Va .. their own set of values. seems to be that of the mod• the total Nisei community. lies who represented Florin sumoLo or San Francisco, Aktji mon's orchestra from 9 p.rn. kamoto. George Ish.hara. Bill FollOWing the war he gave Yoshimura of Colusa, PhU Matsu• !lDr. Petersen praised the erate. Extremists of all per• "I am not anti-Nisei in the JACL. Tickets are $12.50 per perIOD Hosokawa, and Bill Mimbu the late Jimmy Sakamoto mura of San Jose. BUJ Matsumo· Japanese Americans for 'con• suasions develop their rabid least;" Rintels declared. "my Lawrence Yano. Berkeiey for dinner and dance. were here," he remembered, credit for negotiating for the §°to~k~~cr~e~~~:°rfsh&t~: ~: fOrming,' but I fear that at iollewers at both ends of the Hand Thomas Masuda and C. only prejudice is against self• JACL entry, took third. Other Oakland. political continuum, and ad• hiring of 45 to 50 Issei and speakers were Carnegie Ouye, times by doing so, the Issei T. Takahashi were not able to styled defenders of right, ----- and Nisei falled to reach vocate easy answers to hard Nisei with the St. Vincent de pressure groups who intimi.. Jr., of Sacramento and Steve come." He was called to dis• Paul organization to start their own conclusions." problems with fiery oratory date the timid, as is true in Jio of San Jose. JACl Deadlines cuss the program to follow t b e i r resettlement program. Contra Costa acclaimed In his talk, Dr. Kltano gave and litUe common ~ense, or with the outbreak of hostili• this case. prevent the showing The winner was presented feeling for people. He credits Al and Tom Koba• a preview of another boo k June 15 - Nomination deadUn. ties with Japan. of a dramatization that is sub .. a $1 00 U.S. government bond NC-WN chapter of year tentatively entiUed "A New for Nisei of Biennium. subm.1t to Moderate leadership, with a yashi for starting the first Kumeo Yosbinarl. cIa Midwest liThe old folks were not citi- stantially correct." prize from the district coun• premium upon human rights form of CARE parcel system REDWOOD CITY - Contra Look on Prejudice" which JACL Office. 21 w. Elm St., ChI• as we know it today. He spoke cil at the dinner by Dr. Har• will be published next year, cago, ill. 60610. have been hallmarks of Sena• ry Hatasaka o{ Palo Alto, dis• Costa JACL was again the June l~ACL Convention Dre• tor Kuchel. During 16 years of his work in Japan with More lights needed to winner of the NC-WNDC outlining his ideas on race registration: $30. Mrs. Jane AM• 1969 EDC-MDC JOINT trict chairman for the con• relations. numa, regis. chmn., 86'l N. 'lth of distinguished service in the chapel quartered in the Chapter of the Year award. bombed out 7th floor of Mi• combat Nihonmachi crime test. Racial attacks in the past St., San Jose 95112. the Senate of the U.S., Tom Kathie's name will also be Don Matsubara of Rich• Jnne l~hapter nominatioQ of Kuchel's quality can best be CONFAB SITE NAMED tsukoshi Building. century in California, he ~:-n~~da~sderre::uat~ ~:.Ola= SAN FRANCISCO - A engraved on the perpetual mond, chapter president, was pointed out, had been aimed measured by the fact that he CINCINNATI - The Dayton As for the Japanese political stronger lighting system on trophy to be held by the Con• presented the gavel award J"ACL Office. 125 Weller St.. La. at the Chinese, Japanese, Angeles, Callf'. 90012. Is held in h i g h esteem by and CinCinnati chapters are scene, he is {earful of their Buchanan, Post and Bush tra Costa chapter {o r the from Grant Shimizu of San Democrats and Republicans rearming program. Japanese Oldest the Japanese again, June Zl-NolJlinatloos from Du• CO-hosting Ihe 1969 EDC• Sts. has been promised by the next two years and her ex• Jose, NC-WN district gov• Mexican Americans and now trtct CouncUs for national J"ACL alike. MDC joint convention here at Hi deology was a built-in sys• city in an attempt to reduce penses to and at the San Jose ernor who made the an• officers submJtted to Mrs. Li1J' tem controlled by the mili• the Negroes. Okura. 2604 Garden Rd .• Omaha, The cheap slur that he is the Netherland Hilton in the rampant robbery, mugging, convention will be paid by nouncement of the winners Neb. 68124. not .. Republican is refuted tary" before WW2. Now J a• The discrimination is not heart of Cincinnati July 3-6. purse-snatching criminal ac· tbe· District Council. here Sunday, May J9 at the limited to the whites, he re• June 3D-Application and lUI'- by DO less than the Minority Co-chairmen are Ray Jen• pan needs new ideology to live tivities in the new Nihonma.. George Sato of the host quarterly meeting dinner. ~~~t~lJrt!~':n::r~~~~~~~ :h~: Leader o( the Senate, Senator in peace. They are in a good minded. "The Filipinos, kins of Dayton and Bob Sand chi area. Sequoia chapter presided at Shimizu said that because Chinese and Negroes we r e ~r:m~ J~ttr~m:.b~tt~eu~ ~ Everett Dirksen, who regards of Cincinnati. Persons wisb• position to start a peace move• Merchants in the Japanese the contest. Senator K u e h e I as an in• ment for the whole world but of their unusually excellent extremely quiet at the time Los Angeles, C-allf. 90012. ing to be placed on the con• Cultural and Trade Center "JACL - Heritage ior the performances. four chapters of Evacuation, while many of .I' uly 1 - National JACL ....,. valuable party man. vention mailing list for an• he sees this as a formidable were also advised to k e e p Future," the 1968 convention Contest entries, postmarked bJ' Most signilicant o{ all is task. instead of three were being the Nisei were silent during rJ.s~i~!b:faIItr.!~ay~~~t:..,. nouncements should fOl'ward their stores lit after business theme, was also the topic for honored for 1967. The other the recent vote on Proposition :. the oft demonstrated fact their name and address lo -Seat lie JACL Newsletter. hours. the orations. 3Td St., San Jose, Cill. 85111. that Senator Kuchel votes chapters honored were: 14." Theme: "JACL-Berita~e for the JACL, 703 JeUerson Ave., 2--Sonoma County,3-Ala.. HCan it happen again," is a rsut~~r~liP~_l~oob°~~n:e= his conscience. If his party Cincinnati, Ohio 45215. was not always heard from meda, and 4--Stockton. question often asked and Dr. double.spaced on eltterhead n. on issues involving human Kltano said he was stating paper. the problem, not ofiering an• u:~ J~:~tt:~~~~ If__ rights. hi. stand was never Be a Registered Voter In doubt. Witness his pioneer Regional chairmen for swers and solutions at this O;~tI~-;;!i°c~~~~ ~e a:~~ support o{ cloture, and his time. July 1 - Selection of cIUtJtd position against the lale un• Inagaki fete announced Name Four Stare. ehampions for N.Uonal JACL lamented Proposition 14, as Oratorical Contat; copy of ~ IN THIS ISSUE LOS ANGELES-The Venice• He said there are f 0 u r and brief biographIcal sketch ~ examples. In his cas e. the r-'~~Ie~ s~lr~~~~~Wm. overworked cliche that his • SPEClAL REPORT Cui v e r Committee for the stages, all inter-related, in Lead~rshlp Conference Resume .. 5 George Inagaki Testimonial race relations. luly ~For cbapter nomJDat- leadership IS needed m 0 r e ~ol:. than ever, is most appropri• • GENERAL NEWS will be an,nouncing names ot First is prejudice or pre- of 1968 coUegtate sehOlaJ'• H~~ !~'n:rcf~rt~~I;~~~; n S~~~ people who will be working judging of others wblch he AUI. I-J ACL Conven_ _ ate. We nee d !houghtful .. .:f Aua.~ counsel, not emotional ha• Sen. Inouye warns or Jong, dU- as co-chairmen for the testi• held was not too serious a registration: 133; alter cull Vietnam peace talk .... • .. 2 monial in various sections of problem that co~d be ovec- ~&Veg!I0:..o. P=dI If rangues; we need experienced Ja8~;eSia~~~l,ural e)(pI0~i~n. ~i~ r:c:.:. the United States. come by working together r«lUHled by Au•. 14. leadership. not ambitious ~~~~ quick draw artists; we need • JACl,.,-NAT10NAL Akiji Yoshimura of Colusa TV wnter stili complainS o[ .T ACL dignified response, not bully• protest acHon . .••. '" .. 1 has accepted as co-chairman "Herltage for the Future" ing arrogance; and most of all • JACL-DISTRICT of the Northern Callfornia• we need restraint, not un• NC-WNOC hears Or, Kilano re- Weslern Nevada District, and pulsivity. The best. place to i:~1al'rr;,e:t!n: r ~C'~ I~he~~~; J~~; Thomas Hayashi of New York 20th Biennial start getting some insurance approved .. . •...... •.•• 1 City for the Eastern District. is in the California pri.mary • COLUMNISTS In addition, Bill Matsumoto National JACL Enomoto: Tutorial Service. has accepted co-ohairmanship on June 4. Nikatdo: Forgotten ISSei Ho ~okawa. Inconvenience or It for the Special Sacramento SRO All. Committee for the George Convention Holta ' Cool Cat Kumamoto : Change If You Mak. Inagaki Testimonial Standing Room Only mark• It ed the banquet of the NCWN• Matsui History Study. MOTHER OF THE YEAR-Mrs. Suzue Ta• kito Yamaguma, chapter program vice-pres. AUG. 21-24, 1968-SAN JOSE DC Pre_Convention Rally, grm~e~ae~~~tO~= ~t:.d •. Expo 7 0 prep coune where about 40 people were Beekman Haw.U's Constitutional kahashi (middle) was honored as Down• Honoree is the wife of Bishop Seytsu Taka• turned away at the door. Al• Convention; Paul Fuji. the town L.A. JACL's "mother of the year". hashi of Koyasan Betsnin and mother of five OSAKA - Ken Murakami. a Boxer Congratulating her were (from lelt) Allred Weeks Remain Until though we're sorry abo~t Mura~.m.· Okel Story cJrildcen. Over 150 persons attended the UCLA graduate, Is direc:Ior of those who were shut out. lt s £:to. Hit Tune Catches On . Hatate, chapter president; Mrs. Tetsu Hlta• event at Man Jen Low. the intensive 20-week English Convention Tune H.yuh.· Three Timely E,,·e.nts 13 ml. pres., So. Cals!. Japanese Women's Club; Marutanl The Accepted Sansei -Toyo Miyatake Photo. course initiated to prepare pe• (Continued on t'aae .) V. Ed',; Think-Ahead Ses.sloDJi Japanese Vice Consul Mlyoko lida; and Ta- lice ofticen for Expo '70. pn" .... o1u.t8 Itudl~1 .t ell. til lien. ""bert Kennett,. u 2-PACIIIIC CITIZEN Treh on • $4,000 Ichnlluhip. Politics Ih~ pI tll~.nll.1 nomln~~. Mrs. Military friday, !\lay 31, 1968 INOUYE WARNS OF Hf'I J(rndunt .. f' thl" month from Frank Okada, ot GRrdflna, • MInk a p p. I r ~ d In Tular~ When Capl. N.llon M. Ka• UC Rrl'k~ lr y.. Tho Air 442nd ",\eTon and p ..1 pre.l• Counly, Calli., thl. PAIl w•• k nltallo, 30. (01'•• 11',. mljor at NEWS Fort'r ROTC TI·oph.v al Unlv. dent of thf Inca) aAJ'dencclt A8" sp•• klnR tor the Kennl'dy Unlv. ot MonlAna. h.ard thl of WnshlnRlon WAS prcllrnled 80riRtion, WRS RppoInted by (or('('s. 291h Brlg.d. or Ihe HawaUan by Roger LONG, DIFFICULT 10 r,d.1 1.1. Col . Roland S. A~tl:(·mblymRn IOI ... nrn" Town• Nallonal GURTd. wa. b~ln. Walhlngton Yo.hld" cnmmAndln" Ih. 200- send to th .. State nemnrrntlc Vital Statistics activated, hE' It~('ured R T("leaJe CAPSULES mf'rnb,.r corp" on cAmpus, CenlrAI Commilloo ... To In• (rom the Mnntana National Newsletter: Nikoido rilll'ing th<" Govrl'not"11 Revleow ject more polltkAI Inlo ...st Ilrrdolph Soh ••r, New York GUATd., quit school and vol. PARIS MEETINGS At Ihr HUlky .tndhlm. Rmon~ Japnnr8e AmericRIlA in plAnisl, died May 12. HI. wit. unl .....d In Tejoln hll lormer Dr. Kuuhlada KIYA.U of SAn Lo. An"eles, Ihe PolitiCAl I. Ihe tormeT Ruby Yo.hlnn. un II, the 29th Aviation Co. In Awards Froncll.o, UC MrdicRI School AWRI't"neIt5 Committee WAS or• who contrlbutpd 11m. and lal• Hllo. Bloodshed In Vietnam ent AS a sin2("f when .hf tra• s::rnduulC in 192 1, WAS honored gonl,ed and hnd Rep. Patsy ForgoHen Issei Four S;\ n 14 (> I J{irbi w("re MInk (D-HawAII) .s ils fi .. 8t voled nn the Ea.t Cna.t dur• to Continue De.plte Rmontt :l2 Montl"l'('Y Penln~lI- as the Alumnus or the YeoI' Ing WW2 on a goodwlJl mll• by Ihc UC MedicAl Aillmni gut'!IIl "pf'nkcr tnRt wrck. Alan 10 sludenls being AWATded the KumAmoto is chRJrman pro• .Ion lOT J ACL. Pe8ce Negotiation. DAR good .11I,en pin rrccn lIy FAl'lIlly Assn. As A medical sludcnt, he Attended the In• tem. Buy-Rite {or outstanding service, I(,Act• HAWAII St.t. 1I0u.o SpeAk• • • HONOLULU - Th. United er,hlp, pall'ioll,m And depend• rtuen .. victims 01 1918- 19 AI WhUo this ""Iumn h .. b.." bouse. wel'~ the old Rotormed Church on or Rep, T.doo Beppu lopped St.Rte~ Is "h(,Aded for It )ona, ability, They Arlene No• th~ Five Star Sales Co. Furniture Co. goneTally Sansol-orlenll'd or Po~t St., 8('rved R5 rllnlcal voting (or delcMalos In the drAwnoul dh;cu~sion" In PAris bu. II d., ConltRnCle S Ulukl, Demo(,l'atic Nalional Conven• tnw8rri~ th, ynunlter J(f'nera• A JACL Rome' Stf'JJhanlr KawRta Rnd Sharon pl'Ol ...or (I'om 1928-4 1. HI. Self-Contained Wlnnebaoo mretinRs with North VletnAm• tion. Conspicuoul1ily nb~pnt ft14 Fine Qual,ty - c;,. ..1 51vlngs lion ('If .lllpant"se Americans, K.klmolo. ,on' Robert ond WIIIIRm, bolh Motor Homes There Is much to bo ,.Id es(> neRotiRtors in efrorl~ to doctOI", p,.Actice with him. delegfttcR were Lt. Gov, Tom thl. we.k·, column to d ..' oted 1' hf' Frank Shl.rf' mUrR Prize .bout the unique slluallon 01 end the VietnAm war, 88YS Gill and Rep. Pal.y IIflnk who SIlYer Streak Travel Trailer, Beautiful Spl ~ction for "F~rgotlcn b~t"ln . j~ pr~~enled by Foundations to the the I ..el In rost homes. Tho Son. Daniel K. Inouye. made a strong plea on behAIt and Campers Th. 1.... 1 hA\'O Indeed com. A1mosph~re o( An AmeriCAn (or International Understand• Medicine Every DKor .nd Every Budget a I~n" wa~· . ThelT slory 01 "It Is w.n that we In AmeT• ing Through Students to tho Rlsln" cost 01 mrdlcal eRl'e Model, for Every Need & Budgel orl.nted Tesl home I. oIten ~l\ldcnl sel1-'A«lft .., and the strug• lh~ JeA realize we 81'e dealinR AmeriCA" who hA S In Japan has crented IIs~rio u. Stop In and Browse! ont" of alienstion for resi• ronl1'lbulen mo~t to interna• Best BUV5 Anywhere gle Ihe)' endured AS Rllens dent ["el. Whal becomcs 01 with a very Rstute opponent troublE''' tor the government And a worthy adVPI'.!IAry in tionRI und.rsta"dln" at tho pl'Ogrnm of health in~lIr8nCe - Open 7 Day. - and 10leT A' nAtuToll,ed cIti• an J ~('i. with lhe lRnguaae 3839 Grandview Blvd. the 1I.ld of diplomACY." Ino• Unlv. 01 Washinglon. Shlge• tor nU. Rccordlng loOT. Elkl zens truly de~(-"rves fPcognl• Rnd cullufRI barriel'! to over• murR was killed In Bction dur• "Ir~con U;\fe ~Qid, and added lhat 1I1nklno, chief of SI. 10959 5anla Monico Blvd. 10603 Venice Bl vd . Los Angeles tion and a"prreloUon. come. who~e expectations Rre Ing WW2. Luke's )nlernnlionAI Hospital EX 7-3291 bloodshed would continue 879.0B60 Lo, Angele 8.1581 Los Angeles VE 6·4151 As a tTlbute to the I""ei, occRsionRlly met when his Ron l\flyakawa, 21-yeal'-old In 'rokyo, dUTlng A study lOUT GR relative. or trlends bring him during lhe peoce talks. .on 01 the Hh'o Mlyakaw8. 01 of CBU(ornl. hospital. In Lo. the JACL and the Un"'. of Los Angel ••, will engage in CaJltomlo al La, Anlteles Japanese lood? The Democratic senR.lor Angeles May 12. have und... laken Ihe task of Wh.theT you RI'e 17 or 70. spoke At the May 14 luncheon Green Tree Nursery Pacific Divers embodyinJrt the " Js~ei Story" one 01 the most Important meeting 01 Ihe HRWAII So• Mould Realty's Into a larger history prejret elements thAt keep )'OU going ci.ty of ('eTlIfted Public Ac• Complete Selection: countAnts, the NRUonol A ••o• Supply, Inc. ot American~ of JApanese an• is the motivation to live R "Gallery of Homes" AccountAnt~, your credit union Pli!lnts, Sprinklers, Nursery ee.try useful end productive life. In dation of And the Hawan A.. oclBlion of R~1I1 5.le, • Service • Rentlll 'We havf" ~hown our lO'aU• the ca~p of the b.sei, (,8n it WILL LOAN ON YOUR SIGNATURE Suppll .. Computerlud hl"te Servlc. tude Ihroulth annual Issei Ap• be upeclod Ihat he will leel Public AccounIAnL<. For Fill! Resulh Diving Instruction "Who knows'! Be[o1'P IIny Top QUllity • Re.1 Saving, preciation Dinners ~pon~ored useful and productive In 8 $ 100 - 12 monthly poymenl, of $8.89 Select Sefore You Inspect With armistlce is sl~ed, we may Lowest Prices In California! b;. local chapteTs. But some• somewhAt alien atmosphere1 Serving Gardeflers a Specialty Our 3-D Illuminated Photos! bow. I ..el Recognition Dln• have another Porkchop HILI $300 - 12 monlhly peymon .. of $26.66 'With the unique environ• where 14.000 AmeTlcAn cll.• II - 39th PI. nors comp.... with the 65- ment In which the I ..al hBvo $500 - 24 monlhly payments of $23.54 1222 N. Hacienda Blvd. UAlttt"! occurred." 5541 E. SpTing St. CAl Belmont Pier) year old deportment store grown, it mRke~ more fien~e to $750 - 24 monthly payments of $35.30 clfrk who on retirement re• Porkchop Hili WB ••Ito 01 a La Puente 333-3715 Long Beach HA 5 -7496 Long Beach 439-02S>7 have them retire in the same KOTe.n WaT battl. thai look S1 000 - 24 monthly paymenl' of $47.07 ceives, a~ recognition of his surroundings - .TRpRnese peo• place dUTing cea.e 6Te talks devotion and hard work, an ple, food, architecture, and $1500 - 3 6 monthly paymenl' of $49.82 at Panmunjom, Stop Battery Trouble engra\'ed ltold-w8tch so that gardens. 242 Soulh 41h Eo.1 Slle.l. Soli lake Clly, Uloh 841 I I LARRY WISE TELEVISION SOUTHWEST TRACTOR be can count the ~ec('lnds in• "I p,.ay th.t the war can be Forever with a New Battery For want o( A better word. stead f the days befoTe his concludl'd with justic., I PTOy RCA· ZENITH· MOTOROLA AdditIve that Lasts the Life SALES, INC. 8 retirement home, spon~ored Ford T'.setor Oealer' e:
Ically racist. M h .. beaD _ preued betore, Amme. "• not lack the pb7a1cal or _ BY DENNIS IIIAOHtDA In t h ~ Supreme Court deol· avaUeble and now, tho nation• tal rOlOure .. tor chID", bat Untv. of Redlands Sludenl slon, Schneck Vi, the United al will must be mobilized 10 lacka the will to do 10. Stote•. He lelt that It I. al· InsU tute suoh a chanlle. PrerequlaJleI tor CIwIn Cool Cal Washington mo.t Impossible to delennine It Is Interesting to note that 01 the (our scheduled meet· that. "clear and present dan· Wirtz's speech was an attempt However, Dr. Cobb Mlleved IlIgs vI the 20lh Annual Con. gel''' exlsl. - Irregardles8 ot to unIty the Uberal communi• that cbange could occur with• C,'fence of the Nallonol Civil what Is being advocated. ty In support oC the present in the structure ot A.tnarkaa 0'1,'. ft. lI'e shutrlpd alonA of w h I r h Is ,sMntlnllv • Liberties CleDrlng Hou ••, I Pombel'lon concluded that direction. of government. It Iffe, but not throuCh .... pr.. Wabush Awnu. In (,hiougo. m~Rns whereby n IlltlJOl"lt y hud the priVilege or nttendlng Ihe quallt,V ot dl.sent In this wa. apparent in his .peech ent sy.tem. IO,"~ hOC'd camt' up Rnd lla\l~ a ltt'n'lpl<: to (l'nrOl'C~ It!\ will t1l1'ee ot Ihem. III this report country w I I I depend, to 8 that he was concerned about iI""""""III""""tII""""ItI""""""""II""""II"""""tt"""tll""""""Il"""""""""""'lli Dr. Cobb, eIaboratilC ru... us the hru'd look My Crlond upon the olhen. t sholl attompt to give a re• large dellrec, on Ihc restraint the divisiveness 01 the liberals S Publlthed II , the National .. ,,01... ClvU RI, hll Commltwe 5 ther, stated that belore ID7 radical change can be lnitlllt. ju.t laughed lind sRld "18k. Arter a pt'l'iod of tlme, one view of the major points mode demonstrated by OU I' govern· throughout the country con· an the I.. . Frtda, or ueb mantb. 8~ I i ed In this country, certalA in ll8ch session, well os, my ment nnd the milliary In deal· cernlna the Issue. of Vietnam It" The Ilustel'ed hood walk• gNS til'ed of "wQr stories". prerequisites must be filled. ed away with not h In g own pel'Sonal evaluntion ot Ing with dissent. and the racial crisis. As someone sRid. it would be thp contE"rencf' 8S a whole. I-White America mull ... "YoU·l'e A cool cnt. how (lomt>' a . hame as a human b~inf! It Alloibor Vlow ln his speech, Wirtz admit· aU.e that It.. instltuUon•• II should b. noted here Olat ted thaI the present adminl· r. 'OU didn't SC81'~ whpn he snid ~\'t'1\t racist and that lhe pr_t the greatest In one's thJ s review mny seem a little Last speaker on the panel stratlon's Vletnnm polley has ~ "OUl' nloney or your lif.... !· .. life was that he came througll was Robert J ordan. It was Civil Rights sy.tem does not include the out dated In light oC recent 'E. orealed " vehement reaction i I Negro. hyou know t don't have at'" aliv. during COni bat , and development-President John· clenr thai his Inclusion on the among mnny liberal. and con· m 0 n e y. and . . 'Hfe', 'J panel was designed to pro• 2-The black man mull be 1l0thiJlg n'Ol'e. It really does son's peace moves in Vietnam sequently, the loss of their "",nvinced of the rightness at thought he said: 'wife!' It nol maUer what one did 25, and Dr. Martin Luther King's duce a viewpoint contrary to support. But he I mp 10 re d death and .ubsequent rioting. the spirit and approach Q/ the his cause, and consequentlJ> 15, 5 tears RgO, one can't live them to look a I the total pic• ;~= ~ _=i Increase pres!llre for chanp. two speakers before him - We only heaT what sup .. on past Rlory. H's how al"e ture; the total lI.t ot priori' Co ...... entary 3-T h e present econornie especially In the area of mili• The First Sell ion • , • ties. He asked them not to ~tructure ports our interest AS or the you making the scene now? tary dissent. '- J[, PAtrick Okura ...... Coordla.UrI, Editor of thl. country must ,Ive Into !rustratlon. which Include the Negro. Thi. call. nloment. We tho ugh I we 1nstead 01 m e e k I y saying, The Ilrst session dealt with Jordan began hi. presenta• mlght In the long run cause heard Dr. Harry Kitano oC what can I do to help you, It Ole subject 01 dissent. The tion by staling the value ot for mas.ive approprlatlolll to division. so dee p that the ~ To Secure Equal Opportunltl.. and Eqllal Dignity ~ help the poor black and while UCLA say at a recent NCWN• might be beUer to feel and question was asked, "Wha.t dis. e n t I. unquestionable. dream.. of liberals would con· arP the right.! and limit.. of However, he p o i n ted out, i E overcome poverty. DC meeting: There Is nothing say: You, SOB, I don't know ti nue to remain unreaUzed. 4--Hlgh priority moat be wrong with prejudice, we aU you, and I m ay not like yO\! , prote.,ts:'u 'Valter G. Davis there are reasonable limits chaired this panel presenta· that should be recognized. He Wirtz concluded hl. speech ~""""""""""tIIltI"""tII""""III""""""'III"""""""""""""""""III"" " "" " """""'~ put on e tf 0 r Is to provide have it, and if we didn't. we'd but I've got to help you get lion. The paMI members in• by slatine that America need. ",e Irish and italian., bul this country today?" higher education tor the N .. Illustrated this point by allud· unified liberal. In this time gro. have to invent some. It lS not some marc- muscle so you can cillded: ing to recent \Val' protest!\ tMlr silllafion Improved oll ll/ The second speaker, Dr. the same 8S discrimination. compete with m.e, because it Daniel Ii. Pollitt, Protes.or where the funcllonlng ot In· oC crisis - not only In over• when the economic securitll of Leslie W. Dunbar, executive Dr. Cobb remarked tn .101- which takes many forms, all help. me. of Law, Unl". ot North Caro• ductlon centers was Impaired comlng our pre.ent problem., the head of Ihe famlill im• director of the Field Founda• ing that America Is now ry. lina: John de J . Pemberton, due to the activities of some ~e'!, \ I~. rea IIzlng our full po- proved. tion, telt that the "private" Ing the "inflationary COl at executive director. Amerrlcan demonstrators. lie telt that -Paul '" Narman bMmolo li b e I' a I in America Is now neglect". And presently, the Civil Liberties Union and Rob• this was not a construcUve . . . tired, contused and frustrat• situation Is deterioratlnl, far ert E. JOl'dan, AcUng General form ot dissent. Third Session • •• ODe Issue Campalm ed. Probably the main cause the white does not .eem will. Counsel ror the Department of Next, Jordan spoke on the 01 this frustration Is the Viet.• Ing to act and the Nelll'o ~ Sounding Board Jeffrey MCltsui HRace Relations in Crisis" In connection with the pre• rapidly losing hope. th~ Anny. publicity aspects of present ",a. the theme of the last ses· vlou. point, Rustin made the nam War. 111111111111111111t1ttltlttltl lll llltllllltltlllllltltltltttllllllltltltlllltlttt"lt Davl. prefaced thl! session day dlssent. He el'pressed slon 01 thl. conference that I comment that r aoism is now Fru. ltallou 01 Vietnam My Peraonal E.aluatloll • , • by outlining the two difterent concern about a growing fcel• attended. more politically and soclally dlmenslons or dissent being Ing among demonstrators that The frustrations of llbera~ • organized than It eve r has concerning Vietnam and tbe When given the privilege to expressed today-civll disobe• peaceful protest.. are now In• This dtscunion concerned been before. attend this conference, I wa. dience and resistance. eftective in drawing attention He predlcted that we are racial crisis has led many ot ft.elf wW, the conflict 0/ them to doubt the worth of asked to report some of the to a cause . Blacks and White., disregard• on the eve ot a one Issue polio new directions that are lakinl Hislory Siudy • Consequently, many groups polltlcal institutions such as DiscussIon. centered around ing the Red aTtd Yellow man, tical campaign. The sin gle Is· the bureaucracies. shape in the tield o! e1vil the draft law., "" Tepre ...... are breaking law. In order 10 or mal/be feeling their prob. sue will be the '·obsecuration" rights. I bad boped to accom. tat I v e, Of t ho ACLU, the gain publicity for their views. lem. were .0 similar lhat once ot d om e.tl c problem •. He The solution to this prob- pllsh this, In part, by rocon. Jordan expressed his belief }:"::"'~t gl ~~g Insofar a. most Nisei are concerned the history oC tbe Arm1l Department and a rol• tIte problems of Ihe Black made the observation that the to Dr. Dunbar, structing some ot the main leg~ laur were pan• that this Is • very dangerous American people are getting pTo/euoT man weTe solved, aU problem3 I-Vasl and new progra..... points made during the a_ Japanese in the U.S. began w,th the bombing of Pea!'1 Har• elist •. precedent. He felt that as soon w ould be solved. However. tired of the Negro problem. sions I attended. bor. This would make any e..xplanat.ion ot our history to our• as views are coupled with un· must be initiated 10 help the Lirtle flew in/onnation came the wall the discussion wa., As a result ot this feeling, My purpose tor elaboratln, .elves and our children con• tawful act lon , chaos will por Negro aTtd White iTt thil pr~ ollt oj tllis disc".$ion, as Ih. going I personalLv could not count'll. on these speeches was to veniently simple as it covers sei have made it" it may be Army repTesentativ. avoided break out In this society. He .ce Ihat all mlTtoritie, WeTe ~: N,e~~l~~~ 't"~~~tl,;~~~ vide some feeling ot the sub• referred speolfically to the Z- A quick solution mUlt a period of just 25.,.,. years sound advice to do a bit more any concrete a.n.sWe1'J. There aboul to .olve Iheir problem. be done. He said this attitude ~e stantive and emotional eOfto was some -resentment gen.e,.at· present urban situation in like the Negro. found fOT the Vietnam text ot this conterence. and can be dlvided and cate• serious reading inlo the total poinllng out the dangers of was evident even among llb• War. golized at our convenience. history of the Japanese in the ed among ihe delegates due to -Richard Amano. erals that were present at the After reviewing my notes, A'm!,l'.~ such a volatile philosophy. Dr. Dunbar expressed one outstanding fact stood out ~{ost of us seem to discuss the evasiveness. conference. strongly his belle! tbat the United Slates. It may be well -Paul & Norman l .himoto -the two central issues fal!• our history in terms ot the to see how easily the welfare Limitations 01 Dlssont Jacob Clayman, chairman RusUn also stated that one means for change are avail• of the causes ot this crisis in ing the American liberal t". Evacuation, the 442, the period of an indenU6abie minority At this point, Jordan elabo• of the National Civil Liberties able to us. The J ustice De• day are the Vietnam War and Five Que. tJon. Raised Clearing House, introduced race relations Is the failure ot partment, for example, has after the war involving bard• can be changed by the need rated on the legal precedents the I' a e I a I crisl.. In tnanlI' this session by .tating that thi. government to participate enougb legislation to do "more "'ork and ''proving onesell or whim ot local, nallonal and Pollitt outlined five problem cQncernlng the Iimilations of o\l'ect and covert ways, all the dlssent. He stated that the America's perception of race In a "poll ties ot bope". Be• right than they can do". worthy ot acceptance by the international economic and areas concerning civil liber~ c a use our country and its discussions that were con. present interpretations con· is now In a state of crisis. He Certainly, the nation is eco• white community," and our political forces. Those who Ues that are pending action Celt a deep sense of impotence leaders do not understand the d u c ted at thi5 conference either before the court~ or the cerning the limitations of dis• nomically sound enough to fi• touched upon these two is• p resent period. ot "having claim "we've made it" might sent are based on the neutral• concerning this problem and nature of the problem, the government: Neg r 0 has been promised nance vast programs. But, as sues. made It." discover that the past 20 years Ity principle. the need for a deep reexami· has been expressed before, - l-L"IIalty ooth. nation of r ace relations in more, but given less. Dlvlded Loyallie. Of course, the history ot the or so have been good times In other words, the law re• the n a tl 0 n and It.. present Z-Q u est Ion oj reUgiOtu America was selt·evldent. The Negro does not trust Japanese In America does not but It Is nevertheless just one freedom. He reterred specific• quires an examination of the leadership lack the direction, It was also apparent that Clayman then asked the the government now because begin on Dec. 7 1941 but more phase oC our history witb a aly to a Birmingham, Alaba• actions ot demonstrators, ra• it has not been forthright the will and the central pur• the Ilberals represented at accurately in 1868 (the year lot having happened befofe ma incident where a prayer ther than the content of whal conference to dlstrust their pose to Initiate cbange. th is conference were divided own experiences, pre--conceiv• with them. And this diU.,.. I oC the Meiji era) when the and much more yet to ~ome. session was held despite a they are advocating. ence between aspirations and The necessity for change is in their loyalties and ideu eel notions, and "conventional equally apparent. Dr. Dunbar O:Tirst Year People" (Gannen It is not healthy for any vis• court injunction. The Supreme In Ughl ot such precedenL., progress is leading to a revo• as to what must be don e . wisdoms". stated that if this nation could Throughout the conference, I Mono) emigrated from Japan ible minority that's one-fourth Court eventually upheld a con· it is clear that the law is nol lutionary state ot mind among tempt of court decision charg• interested In the Hreasonable• not find progressive leader. detected a deep sense of fru.. to the kingdom of Hawaii to 01 of the total population Tbree Crl... Negroes. 1'" ed against the ministers who ness" ot cause, but in the: As a result of thi. state ot ship soon, the very fabric of tration and feeling ot Imp... labor on the sugar plantations. to become cocky and com• took part in the demonstn· manner in which It Is pre• Bayard Rustin, executive American Ute will be torn tence pennea ting those wh. dlrector of the A. Philip Ran· mind, Rustin predicted, and It was not. however, until placement, especially in to• tlon. The implic~tions ot thL. sented. J ordan Celt strongly correctly so, that fuere will be apart. were in attendance there. 1885 that emigration from Ja• day's rapidly changing world. decision touched u p 0 n the that in dissent, the ends do dolph Institute, was the first speaker to present his views. more riots, and more deaths New Coalition Seen In essence, [ had the fee!ln. p an began in large numbers freedom or conscience and the not always justify the means. dUring the spring and sum• that In the face of these two right to do something about RusUn's initial point was tbat A1thougb it is unclear which is.ues, the liberal community and to fue Pacific Coasl. es• Il you're one that has no The problem of milltary the crisis in race relations l! mer of this year. pecially California. knowledge ot pre-World War their convictions. di&sent was the next issue direction the American people was undergoing a period of 3-I ncrearing limitation be• really a composite of three Ten Year Revle.. will take in deaUng with the And It was from the late II Japanese history In the Jordan addressed himself to. cbange. When examining the ing impo.ed upon Jreedom of separate crises. racial crisis, Dr. Dunbar pre• language that was used to ex· 19th century and not Decem• U.S., might thIS corner suggest He conceded that this issue Is l-Criri. of white'. attitude In review the progreso of .!peech. In particular, he re• very difficult to evaluate. civil rights during the last ten dlcted that new liberal coalI• press views, this observation ber 1941 that the tright.tul the (ollowing book to get you ferred to the argument being alld prejudice. toward the Ne· years, Rustin commented that tions will soon Conn In reo• seemed especially true. game 01 ''Hate the Japanese" started: used that a speaker can be de• [n regard to the Army's gro. sponse to this problem. Supreme Being test for exam· the tactics of the past will not Tbe directions of change began and it was the culmi• "The Politics of Prejudice" nied the freedom of speech it 2-Crisis of American . 0- belp solve our present prob• This will occur by necessity are, as yet, not clearly defin• he is in a hostile situation pie, he felt that It is very dif• ci.ty .etting up two different nation ot this long and intense by Dr. Roger Daniels, pub• ficult to distinguish between lems or those of the t uture. due to the fact that the New ed. However. there are some where he might Incur bodily locieti.s BIter lile Civil War Deal alliance of labor, Intel. Indlcations as to what tomut eampaign that brought about lished by Atheneum. Price in cowardice and conscience. - rural and u r ban . In tbe Protests per se cannot solve the hYsteria that created harm. The question Pollitt the Negro problem. The na· lectual indlvidualists and mi• this change might tak". paper back Is SJ.95. then ironically raised was, He also admitted that there struggle between these two Arne r' i c a's Concentration The Journal of Southern ture 01 the problem requires nority groups have proven in· First of all, the focus al "Does someone such as Ur. are weaknesses in the admin• factions, the cities of Amer• more e!fectlve planning on effective in providing mean· this liberal civil rigbts organ• Camps more than the drop• History states: "This book is Martin Luther King have a istraUon of the Uniform Mili· ica have been neglected. Ingful answers to the prob• ization seems to be shitting In 3-Crisis wilhin the ma• behal! of tl)e govenunenl; the ping of the bombs on Pearl . .. an informative account of constitutional right to march lary Code. One of the defi· establishmen~ of pew social, lems that plague this society. respect to a number of Issu .... Harbor. although it seems the the Caillornia anti-Japanese into hostile territory?" ciencies ot the code is the lack joritie. who have failed 10 .et Tn the area of dissent. tber .. of a processing mechanism in lip prioriti.. thai are relevant economic, and political priori· Elaborating 1 u r the 1', Dr. Nisei tor his own peace ot movement from its inception 4--ITtvislbility of lime, place ties and the iniUation of a Dunbar proposed that tbis is increasing conaern tor the mind and security preter to In lhe late 19th century to Its and manner Tequirements. The the militafY judicial organiza. to Ihe need. of lhi. countl'1/. vast and comprehensive ec()• quality and content of disseot, tion. new liberal coaUlion will be think the opposite. first major triumph in lbe Ja• inconsistency of the Supreme Rustin stated lhat America nomic p·rograms to promote composed ot the minority as well as, the vebicle form. However, Jordan defended hi~her Court's perfonnance in this has put priorities on economic democracy, poor, 1eft·wing students, in• of prolest. pan e s e - exclusion provision the right of the military to space and Vietnam rat her As was brought out by Pol· It appears that we would of the Immigration Act of area was blamed tor the am• One specific program that telleotuals, and the Neg I' 0 biguity surrounding this sub• impose sanctions on its mem• than helping poor people, re• Rustin expounded on was tbat lilt and Pemberton. increasing naruraliy prefer to believe the 1924 ..." bers. He stated lhat as long southern leadership. Tbis coa• ject. Pollitt raised the ques· Qullding cities or help dimin· of providing a guaranteed in• lition is already taking con· dissent in the military sboulcf abort fairy tale depiction oC By knowing our real history tlon, "Does the freedom of as the United States desires Ish racism. As a result of be expected. . to have a military organiza• come for the poor people of crete shape and Is now sel!· our history. It's so much nicer in America will we hopefully speech include symboUc, as these three crises, the Negro this country. generating and selt·propelling. o the r forthcoming Issu ... and it has a beautiful happy be more able to separate fact well as verbaJ fonns?" Impli• tion. such powers are neces· In this country stands on Ihe Rustin stated that the chal• concerrung civil liberties in• sary to insure its ability to Dr. Dunbar feels thai suoh ending. Are we trying to use from fiction. realism trom cations of this question touch verge 01 u war". lenge tacing America is clear. a coali tion of detranchised clude the limitation of free• upon the issues of Ihe draft function properly. And there is no Negro way dom of speech by prohibitivOl history to predict a nice secure wishful thinking and be thus In conclusion, Jordan reem• • groUps will provide a new lib• future {or ourselves whel:e better prepared to conuont card and flag burning. Ru .• !in deliuered a long and to bring about the change. eral power base in the near time, place, and manner re• 5-Conscientiou$ objector. phasized the need for a II dis· The ,white community must quirement. and tbe issue of we live happily eyer a1ter1 any future adversities with sent to be expressed in a law• well·suppprled • pee c h, In tuture. Pollitt asked. "Can the war In w hich he inferred thaI be• shoulder the Initial burden of w h e the I' punishments for To those who believe the "Ni- courage and prudence. Vietnam be objected to on ra· ful and constitutional man- raising the Negro to a point Confllct and Vlolonce burning draft cards, flags. ancf nero cause the whites we·Te unabte tional, as well as religious to build a good socie!1/. they where he caD take car e of [n closing, Dr. Dunbar made symbolic acts violate the prin• terms'!" ciples of free spE'ech Second Session , • • compensated by persecutiTtg himseli. The fibre 01 ArneI" severaJ observations: Pollitt dId not make any at- the Negro Ihis. he conclude•• ica must be restructured in I-He regretted tha t the FigbtlnJr PovrrfY tempt to answer the questions The second session or this is the CTUX of the crisis: Te• order to minimize Uinevitable liberals have failed to remain Accent on Youth Alan Kumamol0 and issues he raised. He sim• conference featured the Sec• form Ihe l'lIPocrllical whites racism". gentle in "spirit and act". ~s In the area ot this coun• Iply outlined the problems and retary oC Labor W. Willard in poweT, those who see and [n closing, Rustin warned American society has become try's racial crisis. the unani• nltlttllllttlttlllttlltlttlllttttllllttllltltttlttttlllltlttlltttlllttllttltlllllilitt left the discussion of issues to Wirlz. It was clear that be know of Ihe in;u"tlce" I/et do the audience that the Negro more polarized, conflict and mous opinion 01 those present Pemberton and Jordan. was there on beha If 01 Pres· 110 thing or only half-way ·mea• is no longer going to take in• violence have become inevit" called for vast economic pr... grams to help the poor N~gro Dissent ident Johnson. Although the sures. H, ridiculed the Ad· jus I ice sitUng doWIJ. '!'he able. value ot this session has been ministration's projects such as question now is. "Will white 2-He a Iso reg.retted the and White. It wa. implied Pemberton prefaced his re• diminished by President John· Head SIart and the Job Co",s America commit itself to a growing tendency among lib• throughout the conferente Change If You Make It marks by stating that the gen· son's announcement concern• as such half·wall, half·llearted remove the basic causes of erals to associate their causes that since this nation ha. eration gap that exists today, ing his decision not to run tor meaSUTes; proje,,!. didn't help racial inequality existing in \vith color. He felt that noth• more become aware of the on issues such as Vietnam, is the presidency, there are cer• ing good will ever come from circumstances sur TO u n din. a clear indication that a rein• t a invaluable observations color association. the Negro. Now is the time In he,us At • noontime meeting the other day in Long Beach, a terpreta tion of dissent is need· Ihat can be made. In relation to this, Dr. Dun• ed. Such a redefinition is nec· bar believed that the "real eradicating the causes 01 the , roup oC about thirty Sansei met. Th~y were students at the First of all. 10 reviewing ELECTORATE OF 1968 DEPICTED AS e~sar.v because of the growing President Johnson's record, essence" of liberalism is in its racial problem here--instead local state college and were expressly there to distinguish danger of intolerance toward Wi rtz pointed out that prog· collective identity of individu• of treating its symploms. It if a Japanese American stu• dissent in tbis country. ress has been made in defin• a Is. It was disturbing to him was also apparent that the dent group should exist on even though he may come to P emberton further warns inR the real nature of Amer• NON· YOUNG, NON·POOR, NON·BLACK to tind that solutions to prob• need for such action Is urgent campus. Unlike some of the the same conclusion as that that although Ihe record o[ ica's problems. Since Pres• lems are increasingly becom· and desperate. And to achieve other group. in this process tolerance has been good up to in~ group-oriented. these goals, this nation's prio-• other schools in Southern ident K ennedy, poverty has BY PAUL AND NOR MAN ISHTMOTO he is learning and doing his now., a change of eve,nts. such been railed bv its rllth! name. Dr. Dunbar stated thai the rities must be rearranged and Calitornia these stu den l s I the national will to do what 10und that they represented ~i~nl;lt~:1t~re~adnc~r~~ ~~~~ ~~i W;1h submission of the K er· (£xc~rplS or the Paul a.nd Sorman U hlmoto report foUo". deal• ultimate sotution to the na· "own individual thing". inc with thAt su~ ion whioh Dennis M:tch lda d id n ot (lover. tion's racial crisis depends needs to be done must he mo• the largest racial minority ne'" Ftcoort. "sci",,,, is nOW hp.. C ban g e can take place dissent. The psychology or re• ing exposed for what it really . . . upon our ability to deal with bilized. , roup on campus. among the Japanese American Iaction in this country seems to is - not garbed in economic The discussion "The State starving southern sharecrop• individuals. The second apparent aru They also found In this without the group following be increasingly mov ing to• or states right rationaliza• of the Union, 1968: Divisions pers, and an investigation ot In conclusion, Dr. Dunbar of cbange in thls group s_ Ihe rebellion model. Too long wards indicting the dissenters ed to lie in Ihe changing na· hour-long e" C han g e that tions. Also. the rights at con• and Dangers in This Election federal employees who peti• remarked that liberals should c~use s llm~r s not be Hed to anv institution. ture of the liberal coalition many of the smaHer more it appears that the J apanese as one for America's are finally being rec• Year" concentrated on the tioned against the Vietnam Americans have been pur- problems In Vietnam ?t home. ognized. makeup of the electorate, the war. Moreover, the liberal causes in this country. militant racia1 min 0 r i t Y . . Pemberton emphaSIzed the role of the Negro (by Negro He identi!ied America's ma• of peace, elimination of pov• The old coalition oC labor, groups were pressing fOi' a sumg the aspect or aomforr,n - need for watching the direc• Congressman John Conyers, jor problems as color and pov· erlY' Cree speech, and Ireedom intellectuals. and minority ,ly to the WASP - Wblte tions and form. of reaction to Several biting criticism., of position or stand on issues by hi.! speech were heard lnteT; Jr. of Detroit), and the role erty. and feared that the di· should n eve r be forgotten groups seemed to be dlvldln, the visible Oriental cluster. Anglo Saxon Protestant-val- di ssent taking .hape in our of tbe press. visions they caused migbt be• when looking for direction in into two groups. one of thE' Confe,.ence Vice One group, which seemed Thus one or two proposals \Ies. In this process we see country. Chairmen described it ns "fif!· The electorate is basically come permanent in 1968. COD • this time of crisis. He urged the shreads Of overcomlorm- Development or Dissent white, the middle- and lower· yers stated that "we're not all those who agreed with to be mostly made up of labor $ought to formulate • group ed witlt half·truths" nnd fol· and some w hit e mmorlty .Iong political line •. Political ity. of overcompensating to . ,.. . lowing the f'stnnt oLd fiTed middle classes. here to be consensus follow· these views to coalesce with Ihis "dream". Therefore any After th,s. Ltal pOI nt, Southern voting is increas• ers but consensus molders it him. groups. seemed to be loyal to p rimarily in terms of student I tn, linp". Indeed , th e Secretory'.o; the present Democratic Party attempt on the part of any ~emberton dlsc.ussed hvo rna· linE' of -reasoning was general. ing and is increasingly voting government is to mean any• Final Speaker government and student af• like the North: aloo, Negro thing". leadership and Its policies - a of these collegians to get off i~~ y;n~~e °L~:;~nkt~~~:l~~ tv t OTt140 tM. including the Vietnam War. l airs. while still keepin an -Paul & NOrmal! 1.o;h imoto registration there has been Alan Barth of the Washing- The tinal speaker of this eye open to take stanrs on this "complacency bag" is in- da\' C . matched by poor-white regis• ton Post defended the Amer- closing session of the confer· The other group, which waa deed wclccme and any time First ot all, there will be ican press. He stated that the ence was Dr. Cbarles E. Cobb, mostly composed "r the Nell'o wider political and s .... cial is• Cha1ten~e of Tomorrow ti-ation, \"ote·for-vote. ~ inteUectual~. sues ccnfronting all oC us to• the Sansei begin to think for an increl'1sing amount of dis .. There is also a major shitt· power that the press wields is executive co-ordinator of the g r 0 u p t and some students, n b j e c t ~ .. a ay. themselves and not because sent in the nlilitary, The pri• Along with oointin,!! out the Ing of voting strength. from compltcated by daily decisions Committee for Racial Justice itts the loin" thIng but the mary cause for this phenom• nro~e5S that ha ~ been made. rural to urban. and from ur• on what is and isn't newswor- Now, United Church of Christ. strongly 10 th" pr""enl admin. The underlying thome In RIGHT thing then we en- enon will be the large intlux Wi rt 7. th.n elaborated on ban to suburban. "Indepen• thy, as well as where to draw His message expressed the istration'. handling of the ....1' thi~ alternative was to become lOO ~ ev~n thou~h f~g ~~~~t~~ i~~d:illfi ~a ~~~ e~~ what must be done in the fu• dent" registration is up, and the line between sensational· same spirit ot the two previ• in Vietnam and the ~om.w. aware and become involved. dorse that hlfe He &tated that it is rio ism and accurate reporting on OU5 speakers. crisis. we may argue agmst their ice. .) in numbers, the Democratic This uJ·op ... sition mad,~ it ele'r fHclJlou ~ to preo:;ume that the Party leads the Independents one hand. and between "creat· First, Dr. Cobb elaborated Cause. of DI ..lllon that 'He around the Slns'!i is particular point of view. Pemberton predioted tha t TTnited Statps do£'" not have in registration, and the GOP Ing candidates" and suppress· on the Neg r 0 ' s dream in there will be more dissenters fhe economi,.. oower to deal has the fewest registered vot· ing them on the other. He ask. America. Basically. the Negro The cau,.s of tim division, " ,,' static but rlYllamjc and all "' ..... as said before, seemed to of uS cannC'l bury our hel'lds in. the military such as Cap• wi th its Droblem~ ers. ed for recognition that the de.ires and needs to be a \1s• SH"dlers strike again 10m Levy as long as the Unit· Hp Made the D n I n t that Finally. while the youth are press can't report all things ible and meaningful part 01 r"'ol,,e from the Issues Q/ the in the sand and expect the i~ Vietnam War and the dom_ DA YTON - It was "trick or t~Pt~~%e:;;vJ:r.inv ' olved in the what America ta cks the aeth-fe, students comprise less and that it can't eater to all this nation's community. world to neatly pass us by. "will" to change c:nrne of it~ than 2%, and young people individuats. In other words, the NelU'o tic crisis. It Is very difficult treat" day tor the chIldren at The second developing trend attitudes: fhe "will" to re• comprise less tban 10%. of the \vith all these problems In desires to posses.. human dig• to speculate wbat will be the the. Good Samar~latl and Mi- i, not really new. Essentially, build its citie~ and the "will" this election year. it was em· nity and his ri~hts as a hu· long ran~e effect.. of this dl• If total electora teo Thus, the elec· Some Celt that the Sansei ami Valley hospllals on Mar. lIt IS a growing pntphasis to- to eo"frnnt hiP'otrv for what torate is basically Unon -young, phasized that one shouldn't man being and citizen. Dr. vision. However, the result. took an)' stands that we \\'oulcl 31 as f 0 u r .rACL Shmdler wards tho content and Qualitll be overly a I arm e d by a Co h b emDhasized stron~ly of this y ... r'1 election Ihoulcf it reallY is. Todav's rhallenf'e non-poor, and non-black" provid~ onty be lcilecting like a mil"· Clowns spent several hours Of dissent rather than the ve- i~ to pdllC'ate and nersuade "dirty" c:ampaign; and 8 dozen that the Negro in America more light on wblt ror the positions of thcs~ be• entertaining. hicles of dissent. the maiorit\' of the poonle of Consensu.." I\lolden presidential campaigns were wants this style of Ute now• wl11 be the future nature of {ol'e US. What was not sn~d in Close to 90 young patients In ~onnection with this ob- this ("ountry of the neces !< it~ Rep, Conyers stated thal C'ited for the i r obscenity. with 'fno quarter (iven". II be r a I communilJ' In tbII COIl:lment to this lndindual were mnused at the two hos- I !lie rvat~on . Pemberton took i~ for ,.hange. America is in a serious situa• While relatively little time The cause ot the racial In• country. c"'n~tant1\' • wa~ that the Sansei has to pitals by Fred Fisk R~\ ' Jen- ~ ue with lhe Supreme Cou~t s Wirtz referred to tion. and backed up his state. was spent on the 1968 elec· Justice in LItis country, accord• • exampl~ tiOD', IUOCeed- Dr. is lA cI ....nl. J would lib fa conclusion~ • l' .' • clear and present danger" In- the Cact that the legal, tech· ment with some LIte discussion ing to Cobb, the fact make his own on k.m~, I \.'ehicl~ ,Mas '1: amasak.i and Dean terpreta tion of limiting the nical. and economic General Hershey's punitive ed in showing the context in that America and Its wbile Lltese current Issue. and that (CGDtlDued OD ..... I) Knut.on. freedom 01 speecb, laid down tor such a change are DOW use of the Selective S~viee, whicb It will be COJIducted. coatro1led iDstItutiUDI lUll buo 6 -PACIJlIC CITIZIN Frida,', May 31, 11168 'Yamato Damlshll' catapults 'aul FuJII to worl Junior welterweight boxing litle, star In moyie Undergraduate 'CL B, AU,AN Bt;t;KMAN m an y tlmrs ht"tore-. For A mom.nt, FIljU'1 V.• "YOLI art! H awalirm -bOl'11 HONOLUI.U - Pnul 'I'lIk,·.hl malo dama.hll faltered, I.e• anti 8n Am l'l'i('u ll C'i tilt"n /' sh@ cording to the Japane.. Ian• scholarship entries Fujii, Junior world wrltcr• told him, "bu t you are no \veighl box ing C' hnmpion, And Rua lle account of the Inter• rloubt R J a psm cRe havlnR vie w, heo answered In I Un,. th(> rmbodtmrnt 01 Ynmnto .T ap8ne~e blond . The J apnnE'se voice, like the bU 7-Z of I mOl• dRnt hShU in It!\ flnrat postwnr by chapters due arc 6tronR whatt"Vf' f they do quito, " It's Already born." tlowrring, InCI'f'3N£'d his al• hrr uuJ\c thry hav(t YamatQ AftPT thp interview, tom• J"("ud :v im p r ('s!;~ i v(' st'lttl rf' In LC>S . NGF.LF.s~T.\('r, rhAp• rlam3shli You. to n, ha ve posure I eturned to him. Jt had Pl ports circles by knocking nu t tpr~ \\ t!1'f' rrmindcd thi~ wrek Yamatn damashll. SO R:O to tAken an01her Japanese - the former wodd champion Ro· at tho nomlORtlQn dpftdlln. ot the ma tch with Yamato dA• PI r mier of Japan, at thal• b.rto C.,uz, of the Philippines, ,Tunt!' 1~ (fir the or,eRnilRtion's mtishil." to put F ujii out of counten• in the second routltl of their H E' (.>ntC'r~d the i1(t' na. The ent't>. ,. " t l ('I n 1\ 1 llndel'RTRduRtt fl llht, Ap.'11 2, In Snppor", I n• SC'ho18r!llhip~ . band playC'd the J a p anp~e na• Cont;i de nng the clrcum- pan. Unlike the Collr~iRle Rnd tional antht"m; the spirit o ( stances. hi ~ momentarY faint• Fujii n ilr i bu tf'8 hl~ RUC('f'fiS the J npanesp warrior entered heartedness did not ~aT Fu• GrAduat. Scholarship pro • 10 his inherC' nt Yamalo dnm a• grAn'~ into h im, How could he, a jll 's image as the personifi• which allow an unUm .. .hil ( the .plrit 01 Yan,ato), Ited numb.. Qt .hapter nom• .Japanese, bear lhe II hame o! calion a! the spirit o! Yam.• Jnee~. thr limitin~ to on~v one Though an American ci ti- losing lo an Italian. He want• to. Nikkat. u Studio . tarred .andidat. ha. be.n Imposed 7en, bOl' n and bred ill HOllO · I'd to win p.ven at the cost of him In a film, "The Taketh! for thf" undergraduate (,Rte• lulu, and a fnrmrl' U.S. Ma • hi. 1I 1e, F UJi Story And Yamato Da• liar,\' b""au.. or the I: r • a t rine, the Spirit or Yam"to, He knocked ou l Lopnpoln in m a!ll hii, " which was reJeaaed number or application. tram know n P l'o ( ,8~lo"a Jl y as Tnke• the second round, H. leaped February 15, the •• me night throughout the country, Thus . hl Fuji, Is registered as R in to the air again nnd gain. Fujii knocked out Johnny each chapter will have the op• J apant'se boxer, He identifies He shouted into the m icro~ William. of the Philippines, portunity to nomiORt. lheir hlm:;;e lt as a J npancsC', and phone, "Bnnzai, banzai! [ did in the second round, at Commi~slon ou~t.ndinll lIl'adualing hl/!h the J npnn Boxing it with Yamato damashil." Tokyo's Korakuen. and the .T apant"se newspapers school .cholar for one o( the WWZ Cry Revived In a newspaper interview 14 aWRrcl< claim him as one or ,Japan's about this lime, Fujil dlscu ..- Nominated candidates in two wodd r hnmplol1s - the Unlil he reintroduced it In ed family matters. He ex• turn have until June 30 to other beinR Hiroshi Kobaya• this dramatic manner, the plained that hi. inability Ie complete all application forms Shi, junior IiR htwelght, term uYamato damashii" had speak J apanese well made and submit their data along JR, JACL QUEENS-Six candidates compete for M,s, Dennis Imazumi, pres., Contra Costa J r, JACL; DYC "~ 1a t Ma ke. Him "i ~ ht hardly be('n heard in J apan boxing one of the few fields since the last banzai charge with the rcquirC'd documents Northern California-Western Nevada District Youth queen Linda Seki of Contra Costa; Benny Matsuura, in which he could hope to ex• The Spirit o( Yamato took 01 World War 11, cel in J apan. His son would and letters of r e ,e r e nee, Council With the lass in between two fellows the win· DYC chairman; Aeko Yosh ikawa of Stockton, second Screening and judging of fi• hIs discharge lrom the Ma• In accordance with a J apa• not sulCer from this lingulati. ( nalists wlll tske place in Oma• ner, They are (from left) Ro b in Eto of San J ose; ru nner-up; Denise Amemlya of Sacramento; and Lo r• rine Corps in Japan. He was nese proverb he tried to quote handicap, so Fujii could not ha under the direction ot Mrs. Georgette Takeshita of San Francisco, first runner-up; raine Kitajima of AI·Co,-PC Photo by George Okada working in real estale in after the 6ght, he has striven say he would encourage him Lily OkurA durmg July with Yokohama when something mightily to maintain his po• lo be a boxer. orcuned La evoke his Yama• announcement of sc.holat'ship sition of champion: li fe has F ujii slaled, however, that winners during the latter part FLIGHT TO JAPAN ON to clam8shli 8J1d turll him in• teen a series of h'lumphs he couid say with certainty ot that same month, Meiji Era authority includes Okei story in book t o a malt with a mission. since. that he would bring up hiJI The 1968 Undergraduate FOR DAYTON IN 1969 Watching TV, Jan, 5, 1964, He returned to Honolulu son in the "spirit at Yama• Scholarship. are: he saw American Eddie Per• and knocked out F el Pedranza to." Pvt.. 8th l'Iluaoka J\~m(lrJAJ DA YTON - All system. are kins knoek out Yoshlnori in the second round - sweet lIeholanhl{) or ~. tlle olde.o;t dramaHzing early Restoration of Emperor period of Japan, The sl~ht made Fu• ~rgU:::I~~n23~ke:~; c~~o~~ Olga", according to Day ton revenge, since Pedranza was jii's "blood boll." He vowed responsible for one of Fujii's ScholarshiPS iruUated this year; JACL tlight committee chair• AFTER 20 YEARS, ART By TA;\IOT U IIfURAl'AMA story." adventurous but futile mis• revenge. two prolesslonal defeats, Back {h'e $2.50 awards. two tn memory man Dr, Mark Nakauchl, The of Co). Walter T. Tsukamoto, an• TOKYO - Dr. Kl Kimura, Kimura was instrumental in sion and to her last resting From that moment, Fujii In Tokyo he delended his COMES TO IDAHO SCHOOL other two m memory 01 Dr. 'I'a• 'Waseda University professor having a replica a! Oke!'s place neat here. chapter has chartered an en• became a dedicated man. title by knockin g out Willi kuhJ. TuamJ and the fifth donat· Okel is buried near the Co- ed bV 'It. and Mrs. James A. and authority on the Meiji tombstone placed in her na• tire plane for a !light to Ja• He had a good record as an Quatuor of Germany in the AMERICAN FALLS, Idabo• ::ut~ner , 10ma'Gold Hill highway, SaUohal JACL offers Era. will include the stOl~Y of tive place some years ago in amateur boxer, but he had fourth round, Lincoln J r, High Scbool, wbich ~~~ su:~~~~~t:l ~~~~srs~~ where a headstone bearing pan in 1969, not (ought rol' some time, His Okei in his forthcoming book, what is now Fukushima pre• her name marks the end or a had no art classes for 2D af Sl50. A. of mid-April, 142 per' weight had gone up to 185, "I did it with Yamato da• uMeiji Kensetsu" (Construc• fecture. coiorlul caree.', She died at mashii again," said Fujii. years, has revived the course ----- son. submitted their initial He tumed prolessional and tion of the Meijl Era), 19 and lives In the memo,·y He received the "Fighter a! -thanks to a slender, ener• The story of Okel i. a ro• a! the Japanese people as a deposits, leaving only 23 seat. trained down to 154, For his getic teacher, Klmiko Shima• 9,500 Koreans residing beauti(ul and romantic figure, first light, he was matched lbe Month" nod in the World mance that dates back almost TOKYO TOPICS remaining, Arter the 165 seats Boxing Association ratings, da. ] 00 years for she was among The grave, as the years add with one or the top ranking Now the Pocatello JACLer in U,S" says Seoul While the Okei story has romanticism to the episode, are taken, all deposits receiv• middleweights or J apan. He and knocked out Sadao Taka• the first band o( Japanese im• ed will go on a "stand-by" gi in the second round. Is urging her students to ex• been dramatized by the Ko' grows as a slu-ine among the knocked out his opponent m plore, using whatever mate• SEOUL, Korea-Thel'e are al• migrant. to setUe in Cali• .J apanese people. Scores an• baSis. the second round. 'Girl o( Yamato' fornia in 1870, Her final rest• buki Theatre here, a motion nually pay silent tribute to lhe rial for expression and stress.. together 589,374 Korean res• picture is being planned for Idents abroad, according to the ing place atop a hill near Gid Pioneer at their race by Beats LOPoiloio In the meantime, romance ing that a project once started release in connection with the must be completed and that Foreign Ministry of the Re• Placerville, Calif., has bee n visiting her resting place. had come into bis life, In ex• Meiji Centennial this year. 'Rice Bowl' sit-in for By the time he chailenged students put for t b at least public of Korea. designated a historicai land• Kimura, who translated In• plaining what had attracted mark. 11l. a recent interview. Dr. to Japanese the Mark Twain Sandra Lopopolo, at Italy, to hal! 01 the hour, Ot this total 570,688 or 89 JACL, CACC staged him to Tsutako Miura of Hok• Okei was the Japanese Kimura produced clippings tale 01 the Jumping Frog the tiUe match, to be h.ld The story, Which appearea per cent are in Japan. A total and Is (amiliar with the Cali• April 30, 1967, Fujii, as a pro• kaido. he said be was par• maid to the Dutchman Ed• out ot the mountainous mass CHICAGO - Inrormal Nihon• ticularly impress with her in the Christian Science Mon• of 9,500 Koreans are living in of material about the Okei forma scene, revealed recent• fessional boxer, had racked the United Ststes, 6,509 in ward Snell and his Japanese ly how he plans to make Okei shoku potluck dinner, films on Yamato h adeshiko. As a "girl itor May II, noted that band wife who established the story, One at tbem follows up a record o( 26 wins, 21 by and choir were the havens for Latin America, 1,404 in Asia, and her iiI-tated dream 01 silk Japan and entertainment were knockout, against two deleats, of Yamato:' she is a fitting Wakamatsu Colony at Gold (from the Sacramento Bee, and tea in California the cen• the best students. 252 in Europe and 20 in Atti• featured at the Chicago JACL In childhood, his parents consort for the modern em• Hill, which failed. SneU was May 27, 1931, wrilten by DOD ter at his new book. "Rice Bowl" sit-in staged May bodiment a! the "spirit a! ca, Castellano) : had gone to mainland Ameri• The n u m b e r o{ Koreans found later living in Geneva Roma nee In Story 4 at the Church at Christ wilh Yamato," Champion Fujii. with a white woman. ca to work, and his upbring• Mail handle .. staying abroad temporarily i. JAPANE E GIRL PIONEER "I find a great romance in memben 01 the Chi n e s e ing had lailen to his grand· Three weeks after his mar• 26,121 including 335 Govern• Dr. Kimura, whose research TO BE IMMORTALIZED the story at the beautiful American Civil Council as mother, Jvlrs. Hisa Fujii. Now riage, Fujii was presented to Tber e are 350 job openings ment officials, and 7,985 stu• of the Okei story dates back Okei," he said In fluent Eng· guests, he sent her $1,000 to come Premier Eisaku Sato, who as Mail Handlen in the Loa to 1931 in California, cites Coloma (Eldorado Co,) May lish, the product of two years The event bappened spon• tried to put the young m an at Angeles Post Office, Beginninll dents, of which 6,483 students 27-The bravery of the beau• and see him light Lopopolo, are studying in the United Setsujo Takeda, tbe Japanese ol study in England, Hand taneously when J ACLers at• ease by patting h.is shoulder salary i. $2,59 per bour with Americans News correspon· tiful Japanese Girl, Okei, first when I visited her grave and Pep Talk States, woman of her race to venture tending their Chinese New and congratulating him on his periodic increases to $3.55 per dent in Sacramento, as uncov• the country to which she to California, in 1870, In a ro• came so young, I was great.. Year festivities suggested the She came and gave him the success, hour, plus 10% additional for ering this story to the J apa• mantic search for wealth from Iy touched by it. two groups meet stricUy for kind of inspiring exhortation "When is the baby being work pel'!ormed between the Cleveland scholarship nese reading public. the growing of slik and the "She came here with 8 par.. iocial purposes. he must have heard tram her born?" said Sato, houri a! 6 p.m. and 8 a,m. .ward dinner June 15 "Some Japanese writers are tea a! her native land, will ty organized by the Dutch ------trying to claim this distinc• soon be immortalized for J a• consul at Nagasaki, whose ob• CLEVELAND - Name of the tion," Kimura said. "but on panese readers by the author, ject was to transplant the silk Cleveland JACL scholarship the basis of my research, this T, Kimura. and tea of Japan to Californ• winner will be announced at Kimura, in Calilornia on a ia, whose climate was even pioneer Issei newspapennan political lecture tour, recently the annual graduate. dinner deserves the glory of finding then famous. But it wasn't made this known, following a kind to tea and silkworms. As June IS, 7 pm" at the cburch and presenting the 0 k e i visit to the scene of the girl's ot the Savior, 2537 Lee Rd. the project failed, her health George Dobrea, Cleveland • • failed too, and she soon died." school board president, will be To Visit Europe main speaker. Furn iture Designer Charms Japanese Kimura will take his ro• mance, yet unwritten, to Eu• Graduation event By TAIIIOTSU MURAl'AMA gold medal tram the Amer• rope with him alter he com· CHICAGO-The Chicago JA• ican Architect Association 16 pletes the speaking tour on TOKYO - Recently George wbich he is engaged with K. CL graduation dinner - dance Nakashima, 63-year old Nisei years ago. He used old wood and brougbt out the beauty of Asaha .. a and H. Tahara, To• will be held June 29, Among designer from Pennsylvania, kyo political leaders. He will the scholarships being award• beld a special exhibition o( his natural grains. travel through the European ~d are the $250 Chicago JACL creative production of tables, It was explained that he continent and through Russia, scholarsbip, $250 Mitsuuchi chairs and desks at the Oda• spent many months for the and will write his book in Icholarship, S150 Jr. JACL kyu Department S tor e in produQtion ot even one table Nippon next fall. scholarship, $50 Savings Bond Shinjuku district. in order to create a design of (Editor's tv 0 t e: Dr, KI Kimura's name can be read Youth Commission American• The price of these items was beautiCul grains on the sur• ism Award, and two American f ace. Nakashima's creative Takeshi or Ki, it is T. Kimu• Japan has never been closer or more convenient Ihan il will be this summer. unusually high, but it was ex• ra here,) Your Legion awards, plained as the "creative pro• products will last lor genera• Japan Air Lines has put togelher a series of lours Ihat concentrale on a varie!) tions, for whkh wood grain duction of Nisei from Amer• of places·to·go and things·to-
"hi·me"ll I very unique .nd A college life melodlama with episodes Caldwell Toyota hi mod.m type of
June 15-1 6 at the Eden Japa- mnto, Barbara Noll. Patty Tamu- ... ~ ... tIt ... tIt"",.,,,,,,,,,,, .. ~,,,,, .. nesl Community Center here. ra. & Connl. KlyokRwa. ColI.g.... I FOOD TO TAKE OUT i I" HAWAIIAN ENTERTAINERS " ii_2_ 3 _8~ '~ EE_' "2 _m.nd ~' _.pL _A _ · i ' r~ ' e8 ~ _' : : pb ~ '''~~qhlornl,a'''pMost/E,';,qU'''gt. Tetsmoto Sakaiare co-chailmen.and Fred Miya-P,'O- Cheryl Okimoto Ibu.lne.s). _o::--:-:::_,_o_._Jr,-.§;-EtVE,N.lnNGSq ;;'111111111111111111111111111111111111'__ W_EO .c·_T_oO_.S.UN_.11 11111111111111111111;; 1:.""" Sh.nqrl-ll Roo", ceeds go to upkeep 01 the San Mateo JACL events ; ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.;~~~~~~n~e:\;VI:Y::b:U:il:l~c~e~n:te:r~ . ~~~~ SANfo, June MATEO scheduled - Two special I COMMERCIAL and SOCIAL PRINTING CANTONESE CUISINE Get More Car events mark the June calen- I English and Japanen f Private Parlin Cocklall\ Banque't faclllllH I~a~e~':ritS~o~:t~~n!AfL;:',sO 1__ 1_1~~~~ __ MA 8.7~~ 3888 Crenshaw, Los AngelM AX 3.8243 <: ';;;;;;;~I~~;;~~;;;;;;;I~;m;;;;~;;;~I;~I~;;~III~III~III;;;;IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU: .,....:...... ::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::~::::;::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::~::::;:~ for Your Money at... p.m., at Ihe Buddhist Church I ' • li~ ~'J~~~::~.tcoB":';s~7il~ ~!~; Highland Park E CAL-VITA PRODUCE CO., INC. =_!= I." ...... -...... •••• """.. • .... :;;; Movie cbairman Kay Okila Bonded Commlssloo Merchants-FrUits & Vegetable. When in Elko ••• Stop at the Friendly said two Daiei - !;('ope color 174 S. Central Ave. L.A.-Wbolesale Terminal Markel c==,,_ Imports films with English subtitle. MA 2-8595. MA 7-7038. MA 3-4504 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~II~III~I 4301 N. FI'aueroa arebi andbilled.: Ai noZatoichi Tegamiwa JigOkuta-1 lku :~ ,;: §tf)ckD1en~§ Avo. 43 Off R.mp Toshitsukl. CAFE • BAR • CASINO PUildena Freeway Community churches, the HOME OF THE NISEI BOWLERS CA 1-4118 LARGE Gardeners Assn. and JYO are Elko, N.v.cIa SElECTION co-sponsonn~ the JACL pic- nic. Live music will be pro- HOLIDAY BOWL T Immediate ",ded by lhe teenagers. I 3730 CR!:NSHAW BLVD., L.A. 16 Delivery Scholarships offe,ed Th. tetlt,nr Torl~ CnrOt'la 4 ~ "POtt.s !Nf,n Cl"