• Atty.. Gen. Bell to sign , brief opposing Bakke p~ WASHINGTON - The Car• policy was ruled unconstitu• .. IFIC CI IZEN ter administration has de• tional by the California Su• cided to support affinnative preme Court in a 6-1 deci• Publication of the National Japanese American Citizens League action programs in the case sion. now before the Supreme Court, according to New In Boston, the American Vol. 85 No. 11 Friday, September 9, 1977 Po Ip Id In u.s 20c: 15 Cents York Times writer Paul De• Federation of Teachers af• laney. ter a week-long convention Officials reported the in mid-August voted to re• government's position ject racial hiring and admis• would be given added sion quotas and flIed a brief weight by having Attorney on the side of Bakke. It was 60,000 witness L.A.'s Week parade General Griffm Bell signing the most hotly debated topic the amicus brief. Nonnally, the 2,500 delegates took up. LOS ANGELES - me these are signed by the soli• The vote was 195,135 for, 60,000 people watched the citor general. Brief is ex• 73,503 against the AFr posi• sun drenched Nisei Week pected to be filed by an Oct. tion, with 688 abstentions. ondo parade in Little Tokyo 1 deadline. The other teacher union, Aug. 28. There were 11 Case involves Allan Bak• the National Education floats, 11 marching units, 33 ke, who charged he was de• Assn. with 1.8 million mem• vehicles in the motorcade nied admission to the UC bers, backs racial quotas. for dismitaries and 11 ondo Davis Medical School be• groups for a total of 11 units. cause he was white and de• In Seattle, Marco de Funis Sen. S. 1. Hayakawa had spite having a better aca• authored the amicus brief in support of Bakke for the the honor of grand marshal demic record than some to be in the lead car behind minority members who Young Americans for Free- ... the 442nd veterans color were admitted under a spe• dom. On Aug. 23, DeFunis said the brief guard who also carried their cial admissions policy. submittin2 regimental colors. Takeo The S1)eCial admissions Coodoued 011 Page J Atsu.mi. president of Kaji• ma International, USA, was honorary grand marshal. Hawaii leaders stay cool Nisei Week prince Kevin Nozaki and princess Tara Akashi rode the Japan Royal to Japanese investment Jelly float. Nisei Week pio• neers Saburo Muraoka, HONOLULU-Hawaii may showed that 90 per cent of Mannosuke Nishida, Yoshio be the 50th state for the Hawaii's residents favor Nishisaka and Yoshifumi American school kids learn• some kind of government Takiguchi sat in vintage T• ing history. control of outside invest• Birds. The Curtiss Jr. High But for the Japanese na• ment, and 22 per cent want band with Alyson Mizuno, tionals living back bome or an end to all foreign invest• 1975 juvenile national batoo operating business here, ment twirler champion, was a pa• Hawaii is considered their Gov. George Arlyoshi has radespecial. "48th prefecture". And, also expressed some con• At a pre-parade press con• rightly so. cern over recent popuJation ference, Hayakawa said he A quick glance at the in• boom in the state, many of Attractions of Nisei Week parade in vestments ledger books re• them coming from the felt Little Tokyo should be Unle Tokyo include Loris Kurashige, developed into an economic veals why. mainland U.S. 19n Nisei Week ~ n (upper left); Sen. and cultural showcase for Since 1972, when they However, the poll indicat- S. t. Hayakawa , grand marshal (upper first "invaded" Hawaii by ed that 72 percent felt it was both Japanese and Japanese right) ; and the young ondoists. American interests. embarking on a buying important to the state's ec&- '-" ~ashu Manlchl Photos nomy to attract more invest• Of the New Otani Hotel spree that included major hotels, golf courses, res• ment from finns on the which opened this past mainland week and other rede v elo~ taurants and real estate, the ment projects under con• Little Tokyo's hot lunch program Japanese have invested ''There is a fear among struction, the Little Tokyo more than $340 million in some people here that the Japanese taking over area will be regarded as a America's 50th state. are the islands," said Ken measure of progress by the serves 200 a day, now in 2nd year In 1972, there were 78 J8- Kwak, intematiooal trade Japanese American com• companies panese-owned specialist with Hawaii's In• munity, Hayakawa added. LOS ANG~pularly director, the service pro• fies the program, entitled doing business in Hawaii known as the "bot lunch pro- .• vides 210 meals per day, in• Koreisha Chushoku Kai. ternational Services Agen• He also responded to Today, there are 116, an in• cy. But, he assured that was questions regarding a per• gram" for the elderly, the cluding 20 home-de1ivered Scholars, ministers, priests crease of 49 per cent. sonal assessment of Presi• 200 and Nisei who fre• meals. It started April 2, and teachers had thought Of the six largest hotels CoodDuecl 011 Page J dent Carter, repeated his quent the Little Tokyo Tow• 1976, at the old Japanese hard to come up with 8 on Waikiki Beach, ~ stand to confirm the Pana• ers dining room during the Union Church with funding name, Yamaki recalled. 1(0- the sleek Sheraton Waikiki, Issei church set ma Canal Treaty even week from 11:30 a.m. can under Title vn of the Older reisha means "persons of the venerable Royal Hawaii• for centennial fete though his office mail was obtain more than nutrition, American Act after com• high age" with the charac· an, and the stately Princess 99-1 against it, and support according to the Japanese munity conscious Sansei ter denoting love, respect, Kaiulani-are owned by Ja• SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. - Over 300 representatives of of the unitary tax treaty spearheaded the drive for dignity of the elderly. Chu· panese flnns. Community Pioneer Center, various Japanese Christian which is in opposition to Cal• hot meals inside Little To• shoku Kai stands for ''mid• 23,961 Inc., program sponsors. Of the hotel rooms groups will gather Oct. 5-9 if. Gov. Brown's stand. Now in its second year kyo. dle meal or lunch pro- available on Waikiki, 6,710 An academic touch identi- Continued on Next Page at the Sberatm-Palace to cel• Continued on Page 5 with Mrs. Emi Yamaki as or 28 per cent, are Japanese• ebrate the centennial of its owned. mission in North America. The Japanese own U It was in 1877 that ten Is- ., major restaurants, 21 travel sei met as the "Fukuin Kai" Enomoto's affirmative action plan for prison staff agencies, 23 retail stores, (Gospel Society) and that and at least 20 hotels, condo• ba~ miniums, and resorts, ac• Kanichi Miyama was tized. He was ordained for overturned in lower court, case now on appeal cording to Hawaii's Interna• the Methodist Japanese tional Services Agency. San Francisco Enomoto stated that for staff. TIlls improvement in women have been allowed mission in 1886. He returned Jerry Enomoto, director years women and minorities the number of minority to work in the male prisons. Land holdings by Japa• to Japan in 1890. of the State Department of have been systematically staff can be attributed to the Approximately 150 women nese finns total 11,000 acres Among the special projects $90 Corrections, spoke 00 the denied access to certain effects of affinnative ac• correctional officers are valued at almost million. marking the 100th year are "Politics of Mfinnative Ac• jobs and promotions within tion. now working in the various Just how many dollars an Issei church history by tion" at a recent forum held the Dept. of Corrections. Women were completely male prisons. flows out of Hawaii and into the Rev. Sumio Koga and a in SaD Francisco's Japan• TIlls discrimination caused excluded from working Enomoto stressed that Japanese coffers is any• filmstrip written by the Rev. town. His remarks helped to inequality when comparing within male prisons as cor• corrections work is basical• body's guess, but the $340 Michael Morizono. million in their investment clarify the reasons and the prison inmate popula• rectional officers in the ly dealing with people, with Cars 'greatest talking, listening, and com• represents almost 60 per needs for affinnative action tion with the number of mi• past. challenge to Tokyo - in hiring and promotions. nority correctional staff and In the last few years, this municating. Physical activi- cent of all foreign capital excluded women from posi• situation has changed and investment in the state. SEATILE, Wasb.-Dr. R)'OIticbi Mi• Since becoming director Continued on Page 4 oobe, governor 01 Tokyo, addresaed of the Corrections Depart• tions completely. As more Hawaiians have become aware of Japanese the opening sessioa 01 tile 14th bien• ment, he has actively advo• The prison inmate popula• nial Japan-AmeriCa OIDfereoce at cated affinnative action. tion is currently 55% minor• CEJA amendment aids Hawaiians invasion of their islands a Mayors aud CIuunber at Commerce inserted by Senators Daniel mild apprehension has Presidents beI'e Aua. 21. Consequently, he was ity, basically 35% Black and WASHINGTON - By unani• He said tile city ... been fairly 20% Chicano. In 1968, only mous vote, the Senate recently Inouye and Spark Matsunaga to swept the state. named in a reverse discri• A 1975 poll by Hawaii's succeaful iD c:IeaiDI up .. - mination suit filed by the 8% of the staff were minor• accepted an amendment to the include native Hawaiians in pro• water poIbJtion tile put 10 bid - Ec0- ,eBS ities, while currently, mi• 1973 Comprehensive Employ• grams eannarked solely for na• Dept. of Planning and caremi ...... SIiIIanta ~~ California Correctional Of• tive Americans. fleers Assn. norities compose 26% of the ment and Training Act (CETA) nomic Development Iem. 2 Pactflc CMinn- Frtday, Sept. 9, 19n A drink a day may keep heart disease away BOSTON, Mass.-A six-year study of heart diaea8e 8ID011I tack," Kannel commented. "I am sure that many who ..• 7,705 men of Japanese ancestry in Hawaii baa led Dr. WU• this editorial will be quite willing to drink totbat statement." liam Kannel, a leading authority on causes of bean diseaIe, The survey noted that in the 294 (leu than 4%) who ~ to conclude neither coffee oor moderate use of alcohol veloped coronary heart di8eaae, there were fewer moderate causes heart attacks and that a few drinks a day may actu• drinkers and more non-drinkers than the group's average. ally help protect against heart disease. Dr. Kagan told the press moderate drinking consim of The examination by the federally-funded Honolulu Heart one, two or possibly three drinks a day and he defined a Study headed by Drs. Abraham Kagan, Katsuhiko Yano and "single drink" as al1h-oz. jigger of whiskey, a bottle of beer George Rhoads, and the editorial comment by Dr. Kannel or-with less certainty because of "so little evidence" on appeared in the lead article of the New England Journal of wine drinkers-a 4oz. IZlass of table wine. Medicine Aug. 25. But the doctors cautioned heavy drinking can severely Several other American and European studies of a similar harm the heart and other organs; that alcohol and coffee nature have found similar evidence. Kannel said. !MY have to be limited in some (with irregular heartbeat, for ID8tance), and that evidence on coffee is perhaps not c0m- . "I.t is enco~ to note that not everything one enjoys plete. . m life predisposes to cardiovascular disease. There is The Honolulu data still under develorment may sbm\ n~thing to suggest, for the present, that we must give up some connection between moderate alcohol consumption either coffee or alcohol in moderation to avoid a bean at- and some kinds of strokes, Kagan reponed. 0 HOT LUNCH Trace mineral --- Contlnu d rrom Ftont Paae cy to locus OIl the sheltered kindled anticipation, a link to epilepsy workshop portiOO of the p~ . Director and staff of the hot lunch program stand in front of the gram". chance to dress up and some ClDCAGO-Pregnant wom• gram, it was 8JlJlOUDCed by Joim Littte.Tokyo Towers dining facility where 200 are served Monday Ha1UeymDa, ARS board chair• At least three meals 8 have abandoned the "en• en with a defIciency of the to Friday. They are (from left) Kiyo Shishido nutritionist· Setsu• week are Japanese or Chi· ryo" attitude, Yamaki noted. man. Mayeda is the eldesrson of k~ Takeshita, secretary/bookkeeper.: Emi Yamaki, program mineral manganese may Hideko and Rev. Sentoku Maye• nese in preparation. The "People aren't reluctant to give birth to epileptic child• director, Yaeko Murayam&, sight aide; Takashi Ichikata and Kay staff is bilingual. Informa- ask for different kinds of da of the Gardena Buddhist Kitabayashi, senior aides. ren. a Canadian Nisei re• Church, and ARS rlSCal mana• tion imparted during the services, such as Social Se• searcher said this past week ger prior to his appointment. .... course of the meal is in both curity, escort service or (Aug. 30). The Univ. of Washington Retired state auditor heads Japanese and English, cov· even simple questions," she Dr. Yukio TBDaka of St School of Medicine's CIBA ering such areas as nutri- explained. Mary's Hospital in Montreal Pharmaceutical Co. Award, a tion, special services and re- Volunteers - about 30 - said his studies provide the collection of medical books to sophomores making 0utstand• Contra Costa's Sakura-Kai lated activities enhancing also playa significant role in first link between manga• nese language instructor at their cultural heritage. the program. A council also ing contributions in health care RICHMOND. Calif. - Wll• nese deficiency BOd convul• to the community was present• liam Waki. retired Califor• the U.S. Army Military Lan- Overall, the Japanese helps in menu planning, sions in humans. fie said the ed to SeJjo 01 of Seattle. He is nia State employee, was in• guage School during World Community Pioneer Center method of getting donations condition may be relieved the son of the Rev. and Mrs. troduced as the new coordi• War n. He has been past bas rendered wholeheaned and procedure. by a dietary supplement of Shojo Oi. Seijo organized ~30 nator for Sa.kura Kai, the president of the Contra Cos- support to meet the goals of The program is expected the trace material. volunteer medical students to senior citizens group for Ja• ta JACL and has been very this Title VI1 project by to reach into Boyle Heights, Tanaka presented his staff blood pressure and health panese speaking residents active on the board of the sponsoring classes in art, where over 200 elderly Ja• findings to the national screening stations during the Berkeley Buddhist Church. sewing, calligraphy, Eng- panese are believed to be meeting of the American past year. of West Contra Costa. It was Dr. HideId Kibmo, neurolo• announced at a farewell Since his retirement as an !ish conversation, and occa- living. Yamaki said a site is Chemical Society here. 0 auditor for the Board of sional field trips. The goals available but the question of gist formerly at Wayette Clin• luncheon given for the first ic in Detroit, bas associated with coordinator, June Sakagu• Equalization, he and his are to help participants financing needs to be re• Kaiser Hospital and the Univ. of ~ who is retiring after wife Tae have decided to de- maintain maximum health, solved. Hawaii Medical School in Hono• four years. vote much of their time to independence and dignity When the Japanese Amer• Health lulu as instructor-researcher. community service. Their as long as possible, remind- iean Cultural and Communi- He is setting up the state's first Waki is a native of Wat- daugher, Mrs. Amy Shins&- ed Yamaki. ty Center is completed, the Dr. Joe Yamamoto. 54, of epilepsy clinic. Dr. Richard sonville but has been a long- ko, will also be involved in Besides meeting the need Koreisbs will be among the Los Angeles, professor in resi• Korsak, chief of neurosciences time resident of Fl Cerrito. this family effort to help the of elderly to congregate, tenants. It is Mrs. Yamaki's dence and director of adult am• at Kaiser, said Hawaii has He is a graduate of UC elderly Japanese of this their participation has hope a multi-purpose "one bulatory care service at UCLA gained a foremost expert in this Neuropsy~tric Institute, bas field. Research that the Nisei Berkeley and was a Japa- area 0 meant new friends and re- stop" senior citizens center --:::-:-:~-:--:-=~~-::-'::'~--:- ---:-:------=~---- ean be established. ''We feel been nominated president~ physicial continues at the Uni• ______--. of the American Academy of versity may lead to more break• JAPANESE COMMUNITY gunthat"?~e~~ just be• Psvchoanalysis. For 19 years, be throughs in understanding and PIONEER CENTER Fund Drl·ve has been chief of the adult out• treating epileptic seizures. Little l - Los AftCII__ patient psychiatric clinic at LA County-USC School of Medi• New health drink Noontime lual:J set cine. He is currently working OITA-A mushroom (shiitake}lni& with the county mental health era! water bealtb drink being bottled for WLA lunchers association to start an Asian here, reputed to be effective in pre• mental health center. venting caocer, is attracting Middle LOS ANGELFS--Kapualani East petrodollars. Of the 7Y.t-millioo hula dancers and singer Mark M. Mayeda, 32, of Ven• bottles produced this year. 5Y.t-mil• Phyllis Budzyn will enter• ice, California, is the new execu• lion are to be exported to Saudi Ara• tain at the West ws Angeles tive director of the Asian Re• bia and Kuwait United Methodist Church, habilitation Services, Los Angel• OVER 50,000 READERS 1913 Purdue Ave., on Sept. es, succeeding Sachio KaDo, who is remaining with the agen- SEE THE PC EACH WEEK 16 during the senior citizen hot lunch program directed by Mrs. Kay Okitsu. The . The P~oneer Center offers cultural programs project serves five hot are• and direct services to Issei and Nisei in Los meals a week. Angeles. We are the largest direct service agency in Little Tokyo. San Mateo JACL We twice applied to United Way for funding. gets CETA funds Our second appeal in May, 1977 was The Need: SAN MATEO, Calif. - Two ... the traditional denied. All our activities and programs, with one-year positions were an• the exception of the Federally funded nounced by the San Mateo tastes oj the Orient, programs, are supported by memberships and JACL for a Japanese histor• ,yours enjoy donations, which are inadequate for our ical researcher ($800/ to ... needs. month) and a clerk-typist (S600/month). Many of OUT flne Japanese and OrIental speciaI1ies are ARE YOU NOW CONTRIBUTING TO A The project, funded by made available to you exclusively under OUT own brand names. PAYROLL DEDUCTION PLAN? the Comprehensive Em• The PI an: ployment Training Act (CETA) and under direction Hapl • Hlme • Wei-Pac YOU ARE PERMITTED TO DESIGNATE of the chapter executive YOUR GIVING. Tell your employer that you committee, calls for a Dynasty. JFC • Japan Food . want your contribution to go to the Japanese graphic, tabular, pictorial Community Pioneer Center. All contributions and written report of the Ja• Pride Pac • Japan Rose Rice and memberships are tax-deductible. panese community in San Mateo County. Botan and Tsuru Botan Rice IF YOU ARE NOT ON A PAYROLL For additional informa• tion, see: DEDUCTION PLAN, here is how you can Yasuko Ito (343-9198) or Ernie T. help: Supporting memberships are $25 per kaba.shi (573-2222). year. Regular memberships are $7. Mail j81'81110011 eorl'oratloft your membership check to: Nutrition coordinator MAlNOFF1CE 445 Kauffman Court. South San Francisco, CalIf. ~ OAKLAND, Calif.-Kimiko Oura, nutrition project director with East Branches: Los Angeles. San DIego. SaaamenlO, Chicago, Japanese Community Pioneer Center New York. Balt!more, Houston Bay Japanese for Action since Ita in• Takekuma Takei, Bd. Pres. 120 N. San Pedro St. ception In September, 1975. has Paul Tsuneishi, Bd. Treasurer moved to Seattle. Laura DIlte wu - Los Angeles, Calif. 90012 named her succesaor as of Sept 1. Pacific Cltlzcn-Frlday, Sept. 9, 19n 3 BAKKE OW/'s Parachute News found HAWAII Continued from "'ront PaRt! about mainland~ h0- TOKYO-A complet col• conclusion of war, some 4.6 home, antiwar short story of ha ~ brought him "full cir• not true. tels here, how can we com• lection of the U.s. Offic of million I aflets were famous writer Ashihei Hi• Actually, say members of plain about Japanese-owned cle" as he had challenged dropped by Americans over th Univ. ofWashingtonlaw War Information leaflet. no, the new type of military Hawaii's business and poli• hotels?" KWH asked. air~ropped during the lat• Japanese territory. weapon-the A-bomb-five tical communities, much of "Mter aU, we are trying to school' admission proce• ter part of World War II days after it was dropped on dures in a similar case that Akitake had been a civil• the opposition and resent• tum Hawaii into a regional over Japanese troops and Hiroshima, were some of business center. We are try• th high court declared ian worker in Manila in ment toward Japanese in• moot in 1974. o er the Japanese mainland 1943, but was drafted into the stories published. Last vestment stems from old ing to attract multinational DeFunis is optimistic the has been reported to be in the Japanese army in order edition announced the ac• World War II prejudices. corporations to establish re• the po session of Morikazu to defend the city while reg• ceptance of the Potsdam "People here still remem• gional offices here. We want supreme court will rul in to attract quality people for favor of Bakke. Akitake, 69, of Tokyo. ular troops retreated into Declaration and surrender. ber Pearl Harbor," said The YAF brief noted a The Mainichi Daily News the mountains. He was cap• Philip Loyd, a Honolulu con• quality jobs. 0 long line of high court cases recalled Japanese authori• tured in February, 1945, and tractor. "They feel they ties gave strict orders Military demonstrated the evolving because of his English abili• _. were attacked once with Banzai Cliff statue principle that the Constitu• against reading the leaflets, ty was assigned with 10 oth• bombs and now they are be• TOKYO-The 10-ft. .tatue at Kan• "Rakkasan News" (para• . tion is color-blind. Race is a er prisoner journalists and AId 0sbJda of Pacific Grove, in~ attacked a@in with Ja• non placed by a Sendai BuddlUt al• tar equipment mUer in 1972 III 8a& "suspect criterion" that is chute News), but as the situ• Ni ei MIS linguists by the Calif., was elected president of panese yen." ation worsened, many Japa• zai Cliff in s-ipan baa d.lappeared justified only on the OWl to put out the paper, the Military Intelligence Serv• (In Denver, the American without a trace. TouriaU fnm JipCl grounds of a "compelling nese began to put more trust which was being printed in ice Assn. of Northern Califor· Legion passed a resolution have said it baa been miIIiDa aiDce state interest", de Fun.is in what was held to be pessi• the former Mainichi Sbim• nia. It meets next at San Jose's recently asking Japan-made November. Statue WIll p&.ced in memory~ the motben audcbildn51 wrote. "No compelling state mistic information about Ja• bun office in Manila. F\J.ng Lum Restaurant, Sept. 24, souvenirs not be sold at the pan's campaign in the Sp.rn. who hurled tbemaelva alf the cJiI'f interest is found here." 0 Pearl Harbor memorial.) to escape c:aptur'e duriDa the c:IoGII8 dropped material. There were 23 editions Paul Suauro. a June graduate But most of local leaders, day. of the war. The propaganda war be• published in 1945. First edi• of Seattle's Cleveland High and recognizing the realities of gan in earnest in 1945 when tion related the B-29 bom~ an appointee of then Rep. Brock today's economic order with We Are One meeting item per it became apparent that the ings over Tokyo and Nag

• Real Estate---Orange ety. Blue Sky Country THE Immaculate, highly functional, superbly constructed mini ranch in the canyons east of CALIFORNIA Orange. Nearly new 3 bdrm. home, 1300 sq. ft. workshopl garage and 400 sq. ft. converti• ble office. 2·stall barn with tack room, other enclosures SAVINGS AND for animals with water piped everywhere. Delightful pool area. All on serene fenced acre. Nothing comparable at LOAN LEAGUE $150,000. 9800 S. SEPULVEDA BOULEVARD Canyon Realty, Silverado LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 90045 (714) 649-2632 tat'OUA"~ LENDER • 1 SN 00)0 B!>7Cl PACIFIC CITIZEN Publish w kly pi hr I lnd I I w k ot th t 3S5 FIISI St, L At1Ql)jc. hi 9001 2 (21 - Comments, letters & features James Murakami. NatIOnal JACL President Alfred Hatate, PC Board Chairman breathtAkina novel" or the J!:vacua• marries him three weeka alter Pearl eventually retuma to America brinI• Hany K. Honda, Editor Nikkei Influence don experience. I'm an outsider, at Harbor. Her biaoted parenu diaown Ins • Y0UD8 cousin with him. 'lbe cousin's parents were IdUed in Hir0- Editor: least I'm not a Nikkei, and 1 have her and part of my story concerns . , U 'cnpllOf'I rut lAW bk1 In written two thirds 01 such a novel. her relationship with her parents. shima. Ted and Lisa take aver her r Fr.;1 class ovi\i~ upon 11.'qVC5t Readlna Barry Saiki's article (pc, My Nisei husband impriaoned at grandfather's very nePcted and Aua. S), I was appalled at the Unuted was Usa, the Caucaalan wife, follows for ono lJI ubscnphOn IhrOUQh JACL Pinedale, 1\11e Lake and Minldoka run down fann. Alter many yean, ~ 1765 Sutter St n Fmnostn oht 9011 1 (415 921JA Ll knowJedse of Buddhism. The human her hU8bend. Tadashi, to camp and they put the fann on • payina buiI. riShts stance of President Carter's b Jlnd I have done extensive research worka in the hospttal at PInedale and I abo eo into the rebuiJdini of the News end opinions expressed by columnists. .xcept JACl Buddhism. He understands that on this subject ... Tule Lake. Ted's father dies of pneu• aWl wrilws. do not necesuttIY reftect JACl policy. 1 have been workina on the book strained relationships between Lisa Uberation Is freedom from all that monia at TuJe lAke and Usa's broth• and her parents. In time they to confronts to becom&--the quali• Cor six years. Durtna that time I alao arow man er, Jack, Is killed in the war. Ted's like Ted and his family and rmaUy Friday Sept. 9, 1977 ty to be human. went to collqe, sot a teachlna career brother, Pete, is a "No No Boy" and 4 In orbit and rallied a family, 10 the invite the whole clan to their hou8e SaUd aounded as thouah Buddhlat soes to Japan after the war. Ted and for Ouiatmas. churches were only .hella without writini has been slow. 1 have a rouah his brother-in-law join the army 81 draft and I hope to fi.n1sh It by the I try to touch on all aspecU of the substance and meet. But there II Uniulats and eo to the Pacific juat 81 Evacuation and its effects on the J. EDITORIALS: more, such as "small b beautiful" end of the year. thelr 1ami1les are moved to Minid0- I am not a well known writer, In panese Americans. Near the end of economlca as thouah people matter ka, leavina brother Pete behind at the book, Ted's mw teeuaae claUlh• as written about by EF. Shwnacher fact I'm not known at ah:but i 'have Tule Lake. Tad's mother, two sisters taken all the writing courses at East• ter questions Ted about the Evac• MIYO MORIKAWA and Usa move into an apartment in uation and his feeliDp about it 1m Bilingual Education Chic:aao. m. ern Michigan Unlverslty because I Detroit, which is Usa's home toWIL want It to be as well written as poe• finally bas to face the painful fact aild' article was nol U1~nded 10 Tad Is reported missing and Usa that his government bettayed him Under the Bilingual Education Act enacted by the C0n• delve inlO lhe Buddhisl phllo.~ophy sible. My own writing teacher has gives birth to a baby girl. given me a lot of heJp and encourage• and his people. I write of the gress in 19m, nearly $5OO-million has been appropriated bUllO only cile lhe architecture ofilS Usa takes a job at Children's H0s• prejudice that the Japanese Ameri• lemple.s.- dl/or. ment. pital in Detroit lbat evening a sec• through um. Through 1976, there have been nearly 1,900 Moonray u. naht, there is much cans faced and still face, both overt ond telegram is delivered. Ted has and covert federally ftmded projects involving 46 languages for about • drama in the Nikkei experience. I do been found. Usa tells her baby that not feel quallfied to write from the This is a very rough outline, very 1.l-millioo participants, according to statistics from the The Nisei Novel her Daddy is coming home. This is hastily typed but I couldn't resist Nisei point of view because I am not the end of the first part of the novel National Advisory Council on Bilingual Education. EdItor; Nisei so my main character is a writing and telling you about it If Moonray Kojima (pc Urs, Aug. youns wasp none who falls in love Part two begins with a reunion of anyone around there would like to The question now being raised is whether bilingual edu• see a chapter or two I will be happy ~ 19) thinks that it may take an out• with a Nisei farmer from the WhIte Tad, who has lost his \eft leg, and his cation is paying oft'? Some educators say bilingual SIder to write a "romantic and River Valley in Washington. She family. There Is a touching scene to send a copy. Ob, yes, the title is tion magnifIeS differences among ethnic groups and thus when he sees his six-month-oJd ''The Long R(XI(i from White River". This is just one novel written from hinders ~tiOD ofnon-English speaking daushter for the first time. The rest students. 0th• of the book concerns the Nisei ef· one point or view. I would still like to ers are also worried that bilingual education is cutting into ENOMOTO compJy Wlth the order until forts to rebuild their lives, both on see a novel of the Evacuation written the budget for athletics, music. art and other special pro• Continued from Front PaRe it is reversed. the west· coast and in the middle by a Nisei. 1bere is room for many west 1 think that this in itself is a novels on this subject grams. ty Wlth uunates IS a very During the trial, Enomoto very dramatic and inspiring story. I LOIS MORIOKA Advocates of bilingual education--and many JACLers small part of the job. He was accused of practicing tell of how Pete goes to Japan and Be1\evilJe, Mich. are in this comer~y the concept of bilingualism is a stated, "We hire women to reverse discrimination. He bridge for language minorities to gain equal access and be women, and not to make responded to these charges East Wind: by Bill Marutani participatioo in American society. For the oon-English men out of women." His ex• by saying, "There can't be speaking child, bilingual education does oot compete with perience with the women reverse discrimination un• correctional officers has the or English language in less there is discrimination Wandering Thoughts dominant a classroom but allows convinced him that they in the first place. " Since ~ J for in math, science and other subjects without create a positve and healthy there has been a history of (While Clipping t ledge) having to wait until a proficierq in English bas been estab• influence in the environ• discrimination which sys• Philadelphia lished. The same child is further helped in gaining that ment of prison life. tematically denied women THE OTIIER EVENING as I was clipping our hedges, in proficiency in English. Enomoto has been ac• and minorities a chance, af• order to while away the time I was letting my mind drift to Other collateral questions over the merit of bilingual edu• cused of discriminating finnative action is a step in various thoughts. It makes the task considerably easier that cation show programs can either be "transitional" or against white staff mem• trying to correct the past in• way, and it also relaxes the mind. More and more I fmd that ''maintenaD('9''---sb>rt-range vs. long-range. Transitional bers because of his belief equalities. Minorities and every time I do some menial task around the house or yard, programs are designOO to bring the language-minority in affirmative action. He women bad to wait a long the question that crops up in my mind is: "What am I doing ~ explained. time for opportunities, now, here?" And then I begin to re-convince myself all over again child into the mainstream of society quickly as possible, that I've got to try again to convince Vicki that we ought to until the child is "caught up" with Englisb-speaking child• ''When you try to go others will have to wait for a through a process of equali• while until a balance in the move into town, into a compact townhouse. Where I don't programs strive to educate as ren. MaintenaD('9 students zation, that very process workforce is reached, En~ have to worry about mowing grass, trimIning trees, sweeping bicultural-bilingual citizens by giving equal weight to both will require for a period of moto added. off the drive way, painting the outside woodwork, etc. back to - languages and culture. time that certain people Enomoto's closing re• mowing the grass, and going the cycle for the umpteenth But the differences between the two approaches have wait. The competitive pool marks stressed that women time. created division within the teaching conununity. The Span• will get large with the addi• and minorities have made THEREONCEWASa time that I actually looked fonvard to isb-speaking and Asian American proponents insist any• tion of minorities and gains despite the setbacks, performing these tasks. Not· only performing them, but per• thil1g sOOrt of the maintenance approach discourages cul• women. lbat is not some• but must be sensitive to the forming them the "hard way". Let me explain. The other tural and ethnic pluralism in American society. Yet others thing I created. I'm not try• situation around them. The evening, the hedge was being clipped with an electric clipper; argue there is no U.S. responsibility to finance and promote imz to deliberately abuse Minnick and Bakke cases at• but it was not always so. For a number of years I persisted in white people." tmching ethnic language and culture or preserving the tack affinnative action and using hand shears in the belief that the exercise was good for of Nevertheless, in the suit should be important issues the upper body, not to mention the walking back and forth. mother toogue at the expense of quality education. filed by the Correctional Of• to any organization con• And when it came to mowing the grass, for the same reasons I A recent Editorial Research Report notes a study c0n• ficers Association, known as cerned with civil rights. ducted for the U.S. Office of Education by the American persisted in a gasoline push mower: no self-propelling rig for Minnick case, the Judge ''We have not come up a me, and a riding mower was out. Exercise was the thing. Institutes fir Research in the Behavioral Sciences that found the Corrections De• path long enough so that we Spanisb-speaking children enrolled in 38 bilingual pro• partment guilty of discrimi• can forget about equal op• WELL, THAT DIDN'T last too long. When clipping the grams were not learning to speak and read English as nating against white offi• portunity in hiring or jobs, hedge, or mowing the lawn, took me hours, my energetic quickly as students who were picking it up on their own. cers. The judge ordered that because the very existence enthusiasm would be transfonned into grumbling. We had race, sex, and national ori• of such things as these cases vigorous, healthy kids: I could not understand why I consis• Very little other evidence appears to indicate whether gin should not be used as a indicates we have a way to tently got "stuck" with these tasks. Every time. (Sound famil• bilingual education is pa~ off. The Editorial Research benefit, preference, or ad• go." iar?) Or if I managed to enslave one of them to undertake Report adds that true effectiveness of the program carmot vantage in hiring or promot• The forum was sponsored some duty of upkeep, it was more of a hassle and bother than be detennined until the shortage of adequately trained bi• ing within the department. by the Nihonmachi Political simply to go out and do the task myself. And so it went. lingual teachers is cleared. The General ACCOWlting Office The department is appeal• Association, P.O. Box 15008, last year only T/% of the teachers involved in projects ing the decision, but has to San Francisco, CA 94115. 0 NOW, I DON'T remember we Nisei giving such a tough foom time to our Issei parents. And our Issei parents imposed some were trained to teach in bilingual classrooms and only 69% pretty heavy demands upon us, labor-wise as well as scholas• were bilingual themselves. The Office of Education notes a tically. And while we may have grumbled (never openly, shortage o!'textbooks and other instructional materials has Enomoto's affirmative action however) we went ahead and completed what we were told to handicapped the program. do. And did it when we were told It never crossed my mind Hence, the questions over merit of bilingual programs or policy at prisons endorsed that I might ignore a mandate from my parent and think I could get away with it. the approach seem picayune when one looks at the Office of SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. - opportunities for all Ameri• Education estimate that as many as 3.&-million sclxx>l-age Jerry Enomoto, director of cans. IN THE CASE of our Sansei youth, I decided to use the children have English-language difficulties-and deserve the Calif. Dept. of Correc• "We applaud Mr. Enom~ ploy of a small tractor to cut the grass. For I was getting attention. While most of the participants have been Span• tions, received strong sup• to's example and are en• weary of coming home, eating, and then rushing out to push isb-speaking children, it is also interesting to note that more port and endorsement of his couraged by his strength the mower around the yard at night. So, as I say, a small than half of the 461anguages covered are of "American affinnative action policy and fortitude," Nobuyuki tractor: with an electric starter to boot. For a while, that stock"-3) different Native American tongues, four Eski• from the Japanese Ameri• told Obledo. ''We proudly tractor was going around our yard like some device at an mo and Salman. Eight are Asian: Cambodian, Chinese, can Citizens League in a let• stand as a member of your amusement park. And the poor grass never got a chance to llocaDO, Japanese, Korean, Punjabi, Tagalog and Viet• ter dated Aug. 19, signed by team." 2TOw; the tractor tires just matted them down. But then all• namese. National Executive Direc• too-soon the novelty wore off, and you know who is now atop tor Karl Nobuyuki, and ad• While the letter makes no that tractor to cut the grass. At night with the headlights on. Another federally funded project language, Pennsyl• dressed to Mario Obledo, mention of the litigation in• vania Dutch, might be "American", except that's a Ger• Secretary of Health and volving Enomoto as director OH, ABOUT THOSE electric clippers for the hedge. A few man dialect introduced by immigrants in the 17th and 18th Welfare Agency. of the Dept. of Corrections, Christmases back, frau Vicki "surprises" me with the device. centuries. We mw wonder whether Meiji Era Japanese At the same time, the the so-called Minnick Case (I must admit that I did not, upon opening the package, ex• brought by the Issei over the past 100 years might similarly JACL saluted Secretary 01>• is on CU)peal. Alleging re• claim: "Just what I wanted''') It appears that she was begin• qualify as "American Japanese". Of course, the brand of ledo for his courageous verse discrimination, the ning to feel sorry for me, out there "exercising" my weary pectoral muscles. For I was beginning to understand, and Nihongo being taught nowadays to our Sansei has been up• stand in supporting affmna• plaintiff was sustained in tive action as a process to the San Francisco superior feel, what the Issei meant when they said: "Kata go koru." dated since the Nisei spent hours after regular sclxx>l in the And these days, they do. They sure do. 0 prewar era obtain equal employment court earlier this year. 0 Pacific Cltlzen-Frtday, Sept. 9, 19n 5

From the Frying Pan: Bill Hosokawa

HE HASN'T SEEN THe SAME SINCE 'THE ~fLDCATlON CAMP Pun, Books & Mail REUNION. -mE GAL HE USED TO DAn:. HAS A FAMIL'I1HAT'S A NISEI YERS10tJ OF mE 'BRADY BUNCH.' Denver, Colo. brother, Larry, made the English section of If you like puns, parti~ the Japanese-American News in San Fran• larly Japanese puM (not cisco the most literate and lively of Nisei journals. Valentino, which has no Nisei ANO YO() 116 to be confused with buns), you may ftnd this 64Y one amusing. I heard It from Mary Masu• angle, shou1d be the start of a ftne writing WAS AFRAID 7b et/6f/ naga, who heard it from Sara Terasaki. career for Vince. Sara heard it from her mother who lives in tJAAlC'& N'/io/ //CR ? The secmd book is Gmm's Nebraska or some such outlandish place. I Rex TMv Called Her Tokyo ROle (t5.50 by maD don't know where her Mom heard it; maybe through JACL .headquarters), a recounung she made it You may have heard it al• up. of the tragic Iva Toguri saga. Gum, who ready. covered her trial fer the Associated Press Anyway, it starts with the observation radio wire, has done a remarkable job of that the Japanese feel very good ~ the documenting the record, and fer this reason current administration in Washington the book is a valuable additim to history. headed by President Carter and Vioo Presi• Unfortunately, in the first editim the print• dent MondaJe. Why, you ask. Because, it is ers have fouled ~ footnotes and miapeUed explained, kata mondero. proper names, corrections which sbould be made for the second printing. I'm not going to clutter up this space by trying to explain it for non-Japanese-speak• The pardoning oflva Toguri is covered in ing readers. You're just going to have to ask a brief epilogue in which Dr. Clifl'ord Uye• somebody who can. da's name is t'Qn4!;istently misspelled. 1bis • would have been a much more valuable work if Gwm had had to Uyeda's. A Comer for Our Guests: '!be mail bas brought two paperback access own written account ofhis committee's dra• books which I must acknowledge here only matic baille to win a pardon for Miss T~ briefly because there hasn't been time to do guri. August: a month more than leaf through them. • The first is Vincent Tajiri's Valentino (Bantam, $1.95), a biography of the fabled, Catching Up With die MaD: To Smnio Doi tragic screen lover who died in 1926. The of South Lake Tahoe-{)f morse you're of memories for Nisei right. Blackjack dealers aren't supposed to Even now, when a more activist genera• book has been getting wann reviews. "With By CHARLES MOURATIDES do a lot of talking 00 the job, but I sure ran (Lerner Newspapers) tion is replacing those who have been pas• the eyes of a master photographer," says sive, fmd themselves one, "Tajiri has given us the images of the into some gabby ones. Chicago in the same boat any American could be at man and his life imtead of the ~ To Fujiko Kitagawa ofEngleWood, N.J.• For North Sider lillian Kimura, August is any time. historical, psychological, or sexual implica• the month of memories. They are memories You're right. I have written that I think the • tions so many biographers are woot to in• evacuation reparations push is a bum idea. of fear and outrage. Most of us, immigrants, or the sons and clude." It is the fear felt by a Japanese American daughters of immigrants, cannot help but be And I agree it would be better to focus our as a teenager, when she was ordered to the faced with the same question: If the ances• Tajiri, as most of us know, for many energies and resources 00 some project like concentration camp in ManulDar, in August, tral country were at odds with our nation, years was envied by thousands wOO wished challenging the Coostitutionality of the 1945. The outrage comes from witnessing how would the majority of Americans react they bad his job. was photography editor Evacuation. the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Naga• He to us? Would there be subtle discrimination? of Playboy Magazine. (I remember him saki, Aug. 6 and 9, of that same year. Outright bigotry? Concentration camps? To Shigeya Kihara of Mooterey, Calif.• Many Americans have found the deci• (They called them relocation centers during telling me about his work: "What you look More power to your project of getting a sions of Presidents Roosevelt and Truman World War ll.) at in a model is the eyes; if the eyes aren't book written about the Japanese American justified because of the war. TIle first or• Can any Ameri~rmans, French, right she doesn't make the grade.") Now experience in Military Intelligence Service. dered the round-up of Japanese Americans, Spanish, Jewish, Chinese--be sure that the living in Van Nuys, Calif., he has been edi• Joseph D. Harrington (Apt. 3M, 2910 Pierce the second ordered the bombing. passions of a war or economic misfortune torial director of four recently published St., Hollywood, Florida 33mO) has been A'S a new generation of Americans has will not aroose hatred? photographic books but this is his first solo asked to write the book and he wants to bear been brought up without personal memory If it happened to the Japanese Americans, effort. Tajiri is no stranger to the printed directly from veterans about their exper• of those events, their importance grows generally recognized for their high culture, word. For a time in the 'Thirties he and his iences. 0 dimmer, their significance is viewed only as and their tradition as law abiding and hard part of history. working citizens, can it happen to any of us? • • Priorities: Henry Tanaka But Kimura does not forget. Kimura admits the way one American "Among Japanese Americans the mem• views another has improved over the years. ory of the bombing and the concentration "I think it has changed," she says. ''But it camp lingers on," she says. is very fragile. Even today we feel the im• It has affected all Japanese Americans, pact of any adverse relationship between In Lieu of an Ombudsman even those of the third generation. America and Japan. Whether it's the intro• "Most other people, when they meet they duction of Japanese products in the U.S. Few persons will challenge the view that Recently, I read a Midwest Office report ask each other, 'Where are you from?' We markets or the killing of whales. organizations exist primarily as means to by Tom Hibino, the regional director. It was ask. 'What camp were you in?' "People forget that we are Americans. serve its membership; rather than the an excellent report. I believe it represents "It's a bond between people. In addition, it Some of us have never been to Japan. membership to serve the organization. Yet, convincing evidence as to the necessity and has some social mearung. If you were at the "Even the Korean bribery scandals have not infrequently, organizations like JACL importance of. having a full-time, knowl• Heart Mountain, Wyo., concentration camp, caused some adverse reaction against the get top heavy, and without realizing it, edgeable and experienced regional direc• it probably means that you come from the Japanese. gradually move away from the general tor. That is, if we want JACL regional of• Pacific Northwest. If you were held at Man• "People fail to distinguish." zanar, you could have been a 'Yogore', sort membership. fices to be more than just "window dress• That's why third generation Japanese The voices of the individual members are of a hillbilly. Americans have not forgotten the concen• ing". If you were just out of college or high muted or distorted, or perhaps silenced, in• tration camps. Often, when they meet they In the Midwest, the complex issues of school and you were sent to the concentra• ask each other: tentionally or otherwise. We have no om• tion camp, you never can feel secure in soci• "What camp were your mother and father budsman to insure that these voices are civil rights, bilingual education, anti-defa• ety. That's why many Japanese Americans in?" 0 heard and given proper consideration. At mation and public relations handled by the have entered technical fields as opposed to times, we insist that individuals follow the JACL Regional Office could not have been other peopl.e-<>riented fields." tortuous route of JACL structure. dealt with by vohmteers alone. These issues American-born Kimura, a governor of the NISEI WEEK demand the energy, skills, and knowledge Continued from Front Page • Midwest District of the Japanese American I am still of the opinion that a "federated of a professional person who is committed Citizens League and president of the Japa• With a longer parade route, spectators plan" is a reasonable solution to JACL's on a full-time basis. nese American Service Committee here, is were afforded a better view as the crowds• problems of conununication, paternalism an Uptown resident. were dispersed over eight blocks. But view• • Kimura is a national program consultant and its inability to achieve organizational ers also became impatient at the gaps between In the long run, the concerted, effective of the YWCA. She received her master's de• front units which either marched rode on goals and objectives. gree in social work at the University of Illi• cars and floats while the kimono corps To expect national unity for all which strategies and efforts ofregional offices wiD nois when she came from California. After danced but never at the brisk pace set by the JACL stands and fights is unreal. Another serve to establish a solid "base of opera• the war, the Japanese American community marchers. Evacuation, or such similar event that tions" for moun~ and sustaining legisla• here swelled from 300 to more than 15,000, In the past, ondoists were all grouped at threatens the lives of Japanese Americans, tive support 00 issues ofinterest to National most of whom live on the North Side and the the end to signify a colorful end to the an• would be needed to mobilize an all-oot JACL. The immediate benefits are to ~ northern SUburbs. She traveled to Japan for nual festival. JACL effort. Short of such events, it seems ters and their membership in learning mw the fIrst time in recent years as a visitor. One enthusiastic viewer was Gloria Car• to me that national1egislative issues serve to become more sensitized, infonned, and For many years, the Japanese Americans ter Spann, sister of President Carter, who as the principal focal point for national sophisticated in legislative activities and preferred to avoid drawing attention to watched from the Parker Center parking hmnan relations projects. 0 themselves or the war years. structure. It was her first visit in LA JACL thn.ms. t" ... 'I \ •. f , ••• 6 Pacific Citizen-Friday. Sept. 9. 1977

Nikkei Service Center A1ameda- Mtg, Bucna Vi 'Ui Metho• Sept, 17 (Slturday) Food festival entertainment, pmes and door dist hurch, 7:.10 p.m. , Int Louis I I day. FRESNO, CallI.-Monthly blnhday prizes. Herb Okamoto and DennIa GARDEN GROVE, Call!.-W1nten• Vata are festival co-chaJnnen. ega Mta, saka RC'laurum, Salt Lak Monte Carlo n~ht, Bud· paJ1y for NIJtkej Service Center par• burg Prelbyterlan OIurch holds lUI calendar 8p.m dhl!lt Chun:h, 7 p.m. ticiPllllUl will be held on Friday. Sept. 2lat annual food festival on Satur· 9. 12:30 p.m., which will Include Sept. 9 (Friday) pt. 13 ~sday) Sept, 17-18 day, Sept. 24. 4-9 p.m., at lUI church SeattJ&...... Nikkel. R~t Senunar. uoia-8d Mfg. Pal Allo I i Hall Nat'l JACL-EXECOM Mta, Hq, luncheon and sames. lAmcheon COlt lJI"Ounds, 13711 Fal.rvIew 51. (about . CLASSIFIEDS , Bannan Hall. SftlnJe UOlV.. p.m. :JOp.m. isco. Ia SJ.7S. PC ClasSlfted Rate IS 10 cents pet ~Issei San Fran one mile aouth of the Gwen Grove birthday party, t kto Bd Mtg, A1if 1 t Bank. II Sept, 18 (51lDd.y) Fwy). Besldea the food, there will be word $3 minimum per InsertlOfl 3~ Nikkel Or. U:JO 0 m. 8p.m. in innali Pioneer pICnic, Buyo Optimist Clubs discount If same copy lor four luTleS, Pu,yallup Vall y-lnst dnr. pt.14(W~y) Payment WIth order unless poor cre· Sept. 10 (Saturday) horne, 0 'Rood, Ind. TORRANCE, CallC.-Flve Optirn.lst drt IS established WIth our PC OffICe. runge ounty-Bd Mig, CaM 1 '\ Red Carpet PNWDC-Qtr an JA Sept. 2i (wedne8day) clubs (Crescent '&y, Upton. San Fer· Bank, th & Mom. Santa Ana. Mile-Hl-Mta, Cathay Post, 8 p.m. nando Evening, MLulon San Gabriel REALTORS hos :JO p.m. • Employment Contra Costa--&rbe..-ue dnr SeIJt. 2J (Friday) and Crenshaw) will hold their joint Wa rungton, D. .-8d Mig, Su 10 Sept. at Del Howard Klshlda veland-Picni N Camp, SeattJe-Nikkei Retirement SemInar, UlStallation dinner 11 w~ lcluuii' re! Conti's Restaurant here. ASSOCIATE Foremm. smaU factory Leesville.... . Bannan Hall..! Seattle Univ., 7 p.m. machine shop and fabrication Fremont-I''OOCl Bazaar. Fremont Sept, 16 (Friday) Sept. 4:4 (Saturday) 1031 Rosecrans. #201 . noma County- Benefit movie, En• department. Kato EQuipment Hub Shopping Or, 10 a.m.4 p.m. IDC~rly Volleyball tournament Fullerton. CA 92635 Co. llnS E. Slauson, Saitta Fe mal\il Hall. :30 p.m. se ,Ponderosa Inn, (714) 992-63631992·5297 11 (SuDda)') CallC. (213) 693-138S. Sept. West Los AngelM-Sr lutJu, WI.A Burley, Idaho, 1 p.m. SAN RAFAEL. Call!. - The NC· at Grow>-Wint~blD'i NC·WNDYC- olleyball. Terra un• United MethodISt Church Gorden Presby• WNDC/Marin Invitational Volley· da High. San Rafael. teriQn ChurchfoodfesriI/(JI, 13711 bal.I Tournament Ia echeduled for _ Sept. U (l'tIooday) Seattle-Nikkei Retirement Seminar, Fai~w, 4-9 p.rn noon on Sunday, Sept. 11 at Terra I're:sDo--Nikke 'lr mtg, 7.30 p.m. Bannan Hall. Seattle UOlV •• 7 p.m.. ' 'VAMATO CHIYO'S West Valley- Issei apprectation Unda High School. An "award! din• rught ner" (hot does and 10ft drinks) will Japanese Bunka Needlecraft Sept. 24--25 follow. If your chapter Ia interested Jt ft ¢il) • Contra Costa-Golf tournament. Nationwide Business and Professional Directory in playing. there is s till time. For WHOLESAlE· RETAIL Your business card placed ., eacn ISSUe new /of 2S 'M;! S (a Ilal1 IV) Sept. 2S ( unday> more inlonnation concerning ru.IeI, .M~LOYM.NT Bunka KIIS • FramHlQ • AOI KIlIIekOmI Doll Kits al $25 per Ihree-hnes Name In I rger I pe counts 11 two hne Cincumatl--&i Mta. Fred Morioka's .,." directions, and entry fee, contact W~lcome Each addlhonal line at S6 per hne per nall·yoar penod re , 1.30 p.m. Paula Mitsunap (415) 388-7260. .-" .. ,. AO ... cy .0.Ot. NIppon Doil Klls Mall urcJers Washington. D.C.-Chapter PIcnic Lessons · InSlructor s Cerllhc:ate . ' Greater Los Angeles • Seattle, Wash. 312 E. 1st St., Room 202 Sonoma County-Niaei G1 Memonal Support PC Advertisers 2943 W. Ball Rd. Service.. Erunanli 1'emnIe. 2:~ o.m. Los Angeles, Calif. tMPERIAL LANES Renew Membership Anaheim, Calif. 92804 Asahi Intemational Trovel NEW OPENINGS DAILY 1111 W o~ los An9tles 90015 N.se. Own<"d . Fred 10kog •. Mgr (714) 995-2432 no I . 22nd Av", So 32S 2Sn 623-6125 '19 pt~se Call Tom OT Gladys 624-2821 Open D8Ily 10-5. Friday 10 8 US· Japan Wonct.. ~ e Closed Sunday, Tuesday AI -SfA-tAND-{AR-HOTH GOLD KEY REAL ESTATE INC Homes and ACteog" IMPORTANT NOTICE GnJnd ()pening--ftOWER VIEW GARDENS #2 flM MIYAHARA. Pr., To All Capitol Life Major Medical 11{) S. los AnoeIes SI. LA. 90012 Call ColI«1 (2061226·8100 Aloha Plumbing EDSATO f'IowerVGo~/PbI1$ New Otani Hotel Shop II #201B75 PLUMBING AND HEATING INOM010 1RAVEl SERVICE Policyholders of the ~ An Ito k Call (213) ~ PARTS & SUPPLIES • Remodel and Repairs Fronk Y inomolo ulspo~;a'liI -RI'Pcl /(~ Our peClil/ly- Water Heaters, Garbage 605 S Jackson SI 622· 3.2 Central California District JACL Furnaces NISEI flORIST 1948 S. Grand, Los Angeles In Ihe H~n ollinle To yo Due to steadily nsing hospital and medical charges the Servicing Los Angeles 328 E. hi SI ·628·5606 Phone: 749-4371 ~ Fr<"d Moriguchi Member' Telefloro Company has announced that It has been forced to raise 193-7000 GALA SUPERMARKET BAZAARS current premium levels, effective October 1.1977. The PAINT SHOPPE lo Mancha Cenler 1111 N Harbor BM!. The new quarterly rates will be $43.20 for male insured MARUKYO • Fullenon. Calil. (71415260116 G. I .. only, $54.00 for female insured only, $91.80 for member and one dependent, and $118.80 for family. YAMATO TRAVel BUREAU 312 E lSI SI Los Angeles 900 I Capitol Ufe has made every eHort to keep premium rates at (213) 624-6021 NewOtud Hotel. the lowest possible level. The previous increase. almost two years ago. was a result of greatly extended policy benefits. GucIeo--Arcade 1 One of Ihe large .. Selec'ions 110 S. Loe Angela • Watsonville, Calif. The policy subscnbers one of the most comprehensive, oHers 2421 W. Jefferson, LA. LoeAngeIa liberal. major medical coverages available, with a $300,000 628-4369 Tom Nakase Realty lifetime indemnity, a Hospital Daily Room Limit of $80.00, and 731·2121 Acr~ge Ranches. Hom",s Income a $50 deductible and 80120 coinsurance. JOHN TY SAITO & ASSOCIATES Tom T No~ose . Reollor SecfI. b'n S onc:l SCXl I . "" . $'01 . 25 Clifford Ave (408) 724 · ~77 ~\ ... ~11~le ~~'6'~O C )7fO Complete Home ~ Let Allgelis Japall.se Cas_tty hlsurac. AlIa. Furnishings MikawaJa .• San Jose, Calif. • The Midwest Complete InSUI.nee Protection Sweet Shop EDWARD T MORIOKA. Reollor SUGANO TRAVel SERVICE Aihara Ins . Agy ., Aihara.()molsu-Kakito-Fuiioka 24.4 E. 1st St. 945 S. 8oscom Son Jose 17 E Oh.o SI Chocago. III 60611 .~w=e Bus. 24{H;6()6 Res 24 I .95S4 Los Angelet MA 8-4935 944· 5444 eve Sun 18" ·85 17 250 E. 1sl SI ...... 626.9625 324-6444,321·2123 Anson Fuj ioka Agy ., 321 E. 2nd., Suite 500 ...... 626-4393 263.1109 • S.F. Peninsula • Washington, D.C . Funakoshi Ins . Agy. , Funokoshl·Kogawo-Monoka.Morey Established 1936 - MASAOKA·ISHIKAWA JAPANESE BUNKA EMBROIDERY 321 E. 2nd SI...... 626-5275 462.7406 Ask for 4600 EI Com,no Real. Suile 216 AND ASSOCIATES. INC. Hirohata Ins . Agy ., 322 E. Second St ...... 628-1214 287-8605 los Ahos Colil 94022 Conivhon' - Washlng,on Monen Nisei Trading Irene T Kana - (41 51 94 I ·2711 900·1 71h S' NW. Rm 520. 296·4484 Inouye Ins . Agy., 15092 Sylvonwood Ave., Norwolk ...... 864.5n4 'Cherry Brand' Appltances . TV· Furniture MUTUAL SUPPLY CO. Tom T. 110 , 595 N. lincoln, Pasadeno .. 795-7059 (LA) 681.4411 1090 Sansome St. Minarv 'Nix' Nagata, 1497 Rock Hoven, Monterey eark ...... 268-4554 San FranCISco. Calif. Steve Nakaji. 11964 Washington Place ...... 391·5931 837.9150 348 E. First St. So to Ins . Agy., 366 E. 1st St...... 629.1~25 261-6519 Los Angeles, Calif. 90012 Tel. : 624-6601 Eagle Produce TOV';~ 929-943 S. San Pedro St., Los Angeles D. 625-2101 £ Ku" .... STUDIO BONDED COMMISSION MERCHANTS PHOTOMART 318 East First Street -WHOLESALE FRUITS AND VEGET ABLES- Camerils & Photograph,c Supp/le< los Angeles, Calif. 9001 316 E. 2nd St., Los Angeles 622-3968 626-5681 ~ALACE GENUINE T ATAMI M.nufecturer Empire Printing Co. McKOW CORPORATION co I 1\1 ERCIr\L and ~OCIAL PRINTING 1030 Byram 8t. . Los Angeles. CA 90015 fnj(1i h and JdpanC\l' rATAMI Tel. (213) 747·5324 114'Weller t. , Los Angeles 90012 628-7060

~!! ~!! JU!!lWA" £i'Jik'H, Nanka Printing T oyo Printing -POLYNESIAN ROOM ~uJ,.lYaJ,.1 • J,lpaneSI' Room( Su~hi 2024 E. First St. Oriset • Letterpress· LIOotyping CDlnner & Cocktails· Floor how) Bdr • COCklail) 3 14 E. Fir t S(.. L.A. Los Angeles, Calif. 309 S. SAN PEDRO ST On Bamboo Records and Tapes. -COCKTAIL LOUNGE Tel. 629·3029 Lo~ Angeles· 626·81 S3 "As musicians. we want to express our feelings about Ihe ASian Amencan Entertainment Phone: 2.68-7835 Movement. We began by Singing songs wntten by other Asian Amencans. But as E9 UONB-ROTHERS, time passed. we saw the need to create and develop our own musIC. In our songs. Three Cl'nerallom al we try 10 reflect the history of our people. the present issues In our communities. Expeflencl' and our hopes (or the future. With thiS album. we hope to extend our musIC to Shimatsu, Ogata those who have not yet heard us, and to e,1Courage other As ian Amencans to assert themselves creatively." -Yokoh;tma. California: 1977 FUKUI and Kubota Mortuary, Inc. Mortuary ------Pacific Citizen, 355 E. 1st 8t.. Room 307 Los Angeles, Calif. 90012 OPEN EVERY DAY 707 E. Temple St. Luncheon 11:30 • 2:00 GRAND STAR 9Il Venice 8lvd. Dlnne, 5:00 • 11:110 Lunch · DIOnet' • Coctctalls . Enlert311T11ent los Angeles 9001 2 Please send me __ album(s) of "Yokohama. California" Los Angeles Sunday 12:110 • 11:00 7 Time Winner of the Prized (Bamboo Records) at $4.25 each postpaid. 626-0441 749·1449 Restaurant Writer Award Name Amt Enclosed $, ___ 226 South Harbor Blvd. . BANQUETS TO 200 Soichi Fukui, President Address ______James Nakagawa, Manager SEIJI DUKE OGATA Santa Ana, Calif. 92704 :943 N Broaa.vay (in New Chlnalown) ..lA City, State, ZIP ______oJahdallOll. Free Patklng 626-2285 Nobuo Osumi, Counsellor R. YUTAKA KUBOTA (714) 531·1232 • P8cIfIa a..r-....errldly. 8IpL I. 1m • • - 7 Intermountain Ex-Poston worker at Detroit Festival YPCC's 50th New Jersey Asian Americans draws 350 hold first awareness workshop changes site NEWARK, N.J. - The New Americans compared with the BERKELEY, Calif. - A Jersey chapter of Pacific/ general population and u• ONTARIO, Ore.-The third huge turnout of 3SO Nisei Asian CoaHtion held Ita first plored stereotypes by com· quarterly meeting of the In• gathered to mark the 50th Asian American awareness piling a list ofsltuations bav• tennountain District Coun• anniversary reunion of the workshop here July 9. Most of ing the most negative impact. Surprisingly enough. ethnic cil has been changed from No. People's the 30 partiCipants were of Calif. YO\Uli Chinese, Korean, Japanese groups working separatel~ Twin Falls to Burley, Idaho, Christian Conference here according to acting Gover• and Phlllpino ancestries. There came up with a similar list of Aug. 28. was one Indian and another born stereotypes which cause the nor John Tameno. TIlis ses• Dr. Fred Stripp, the key• Indonesian-Japanese parentalle. most impact, the coordinators sion will be held at the Pon• noter, had addressed the Rhoda Galima-Kerr and noted. derosa Inn on Sept. 24, com• YPCC in 1937 and again at Ron Osajima coordinators, Corky Lee of Asian CineVi· mencing at 1 p.m. Tule Lake during the war. said the workshop was design• sion, New York, showed two Support for the District "You came out of the dark ed to elicit individual slide-tape shows: "Racism in Convention in November responses concerning ex• Comic Books" and "Grain of days in American history periences and stereotypes. Sand" - the latter a multi· and attendance of Youth Ad• without bitterness, without visers from all chapters are Participants discussed media presentation of the' hatred," he remarked. Some significant dates and events agony, foneliness, alienation, high on the agenda. Other in the audience recalling affecting Asians throughout determination and hope which topics include: those years were seen da~ U.S. history, studied 1970 Cen· make up the Asian American Revenue sharing funds, Youth sus data to show how Asian experience. p.rogram, National Omventioo Re• Detroit City Council member Maryann Mahaffey greeted citi• bing their eyes with hand· port, Prosram and actiVlty, Repara• zens at the opening ceremony of the Far Eastem Ethnic Festival ke~&s. ~------tions., District nominations, Paclfi Sumile Morishita, now in July, that featured queen Cathy J. Hironaka, Michigan State Citizen, Scholarship, Old and new Mrs. Nobuno Oda of Tokyo, bu.siDess. graduate, and JACL booths. Ms. Mahaffey, who was a recrea• We've got a yen for·your new car tion worirth Fresno OffICe ...... (209) 226-7900 American Institute. of the three branches of the Anita Hall graduate work at Claremont With SO members and the Federal Government. And Tax cOllector. College. los Angeles Main Office ...... (213) m-6'JOO Mayor of Albuquerque in at• los Angeles Office ...... (213) m-5m tendance, the Chapter mem• as a special treat, President If she chooses to expand Rise from dreams and loi- CrenshOvv Office ...... (213) m~5440 Carter invited the PCYA on her recent experiences, ter not. Open to truth thy Montebello Office ...... (213) ~1 bers and students took turns 391~ singing their favorite songs class to be part of a welcom- Texans are sure to find her mind. Practice righteous• Wes1em LA Office ...... (213) ing reception for the visit- name on the voting ballot ness and thou eternal bliss <3ardena OffICe ...... (213) 327-0360 . in English and Japanese. Torrance Office ...... (213) 373-8411 On the reception commit• ing President Jose Lopez one of these days, one Hous- thou shalt find. Portillo of Mexico. "It was ton JACLer added. SHOKO MASUNAGA Panorano CityOffice ...... (213) 89'J..6.n> tee were: Artesio-Cerritos OffICe ...... (213) 924-8817 Mrs. Taro (Tame) Alrutagawa, thrilling," says Anita, "Pres- r~~~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::~1 ident Carter walked right by San10 1v-cJ, 5th ondMar. OffICe ...... (714) 541-2271 Mrs. Mike (Jean) YooemolD, Toshi• Irvine OffICe, 17951 ~r BML ...... (714) 549~9101 nobu Yoshida and Takao Uchiyama. me'" • Sonoma County For Anita, an honor stud• -Mole Than 100 OIBcesStateMde- ent and daughter of Hous• CONSOLIDATE. The annual Sonoma Coun- ton JACLers, Ed and Mie ty JACL Nisei GI memorial Hall, this was only the be• service has been resched- ginning. She was selected to uled for Sunday, Sept. 25, at represent her school at the Enmanji Temple starting at Bluebonnet Girls State in INTERESTPLUS ... 2:30 p.m., in place of the tra- Austin. On June 14-24, she ditional last Sunday in Oc- and approximately 600 oth• tober when these services er delegates convened to A new concept In were first held 30 years ago. learn the operations of local, (Sonoma County JACL is county, and state govern• time depOSIts. probably the only chapter to ments. continuously observe this "The delegates actually JACL-instituted memorial. set up and ran their own Last Sunday in October was mock government," says selected because of its prox- Anita. "This included cam• imity to the date the 442nd paigning and holding elec• Ref had rescued the Texas tions for various offices National JACL Credit Union "Lost Ba~n" in the V.os- from City Council to Gov- PO Box 1721 Borrow up to $3000 In the race for top interest rates in time ges Mountains, a campalgn ernor of the state." At this Salt Lake City, Utah 84110 on your signature deposits, all good banks finish about the same. which had cost the 442nd convention she was elected Telephone (801) 355·8040 to qualified borrowers. But now Sumitomo moves ahead with the new more casualties than the Coun T~ Assessor and 1DterestPIDI. :. number of men rescued, but liJl1III1"NIIIUIIIUIIIIUI"'IIIII1IIlIIlIIiIlIIlN~11U1111II1I1I1I11II111I11I11ImllllllllllllllllllllllUIIIlIlIllIIllIlIlIIlllMllllIlIllllIlllIlIlllllIlIlll11I11111111111111111111111111111111ftllllnJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIlItIIIIII Now, $2,000 in a one-year Time Certificate of Deposit earns a full 6%, the highest bank interest :U::~!",J=;~~ rate ... PLUS ... one of the most generous and • Th M-tsUbt-Sh- 8a- I, FRIENDlY unique package plans ever offered! :=~e~~~'" 1 '.' 1 111\ SERVICE A maximum $1,000 credit line Friday,.~pt.16,7:30p.m.,at . e of California (overdraft protection)! . EnrnanJI Temple. Free checking account (no minimum balance required) ! Tn 5 53 HEAD OFFICE Commission-free travelers cheques! Commercial & Industrial 800 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles, Calif. 90017 (213) 623-7191 PLUS many more opportunities ~ Air-conditioning & Refrigeration to savel . ~ Contractor UTILE "rOKYO OFFICE 321 East Second St., Los Angeles, Calif. 90012 (213) 680-2650 So get the best run ever for time GARDENA OFFICE deposit money at 5umitomo...... Sam J ..Umemoto Regulations Impose subslanltal mleresl penailies upon premature Withdrawal. Li C!. 1208863 C-20-38 1600 W. Redondo Beach, Gardena, Calif. 90247 (213) 532-3360 SAMREIBOW CO. SAN FRANCISCO OfFICE 1506 W. Vernon Ave. 425 Montgomery St., nr. California (415) 788-3600 + ~ 8umitomoCJlankgfGalifol7l.ia Lo_ Angeles 295-520< Member FDIC Member FDIC • EXOPripncffl ~inre 1939 , ______~ _IIIIIIIIIIUllIIIIIIUl1IIllllllllllllllIllIInblllllllllllllll\llllllllilldlllllllllllliunnlllnllllllUlIIJIIII1IIIIIII1NnMIIIIIIllllIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIRlllllllllllllllllllnn_.U1l1t21.... 11:------8 •P cific Gltiz n-!-Frid y. Sept. 9. 1977 e

- U. . nators Alan Crantton New York ute lnaurance couver symphony orchestras JACL cancels theater tour (D) and S.L Hayakawa (R) have aaents Georp s. 0D0, Henry and gueat-conducting through• NEW YORK-1beJACL-J. The tour bad been ICbed• pc' circulated 1 tt rs to th ir note Watanabe of Loe Anselea, and out the world. pan Theater Tour tor Octo- uJed to coordinate widI coUeagu ' to co- 'ponsor a reso• HJ.roabI Shim"" of Granada ber-November was can- opening ot the new theater p ople luti n to attra 't the 1984 Sum• Hills have qualified as 19n Star Entertainment ~Ued, according to Ruby season in Japan. For in• mer lympi to ·th U .. -and Club members on the basis of Japanese Americans with Schaar, tour. coordinator, stance, BUIlI'IIlat and Gap• Award hopefully to Los Angel . A significant sales. . 'imllar "Dear Ueaguc" lett r . roles in Universal Picture's who said all deposits are be- ku perfOftllJlDCft are only Karen C. Ishlzuka f n OJ was introduced in th Ho by "MacArthur" starring Gregory ing returned. held in the taU. go, Calif.. has been sel ted for Rep. Yvonne B. Burke ( ). Music Peck include retired Seattle ho• tHlllIII"nIIIIIIlINIDlIIIIIIIII_lIIWllllllllldllJlJlllillllllllluu.II.IUlllUlllwwe."•• II __ inclusion in the 19n editi n f Kazuyosbl Akiyama i ign· telman Dick KJmura as Foreign Outstanding Young Women of Government ing as music dire tor of the . Minister Shigemitsu; Art Furu• America. persons betw n 21 The recently· igned fxtcraJ American Symphony Orche tra kawa of Seattle, aboard the USS 1977 JACL and 30 who are being gnized 'trip-mining controls law of New York at th close of the Missouri; and Tad Tanabe, L.A. for th ir aclu vement in the tandard for nvironmcntal 19n-78 n becaus of his Mun; Sports director, a diplo• h me, prof 'ion or mmuru• prot tion to be met at all mn.;or demanding schedule as mu ic mat; and 12 unnamed in the sur· ty. urfa e m.in.ing perations for director of th Tokyo and Van- render scene. Travel Program coal. The Honolulu tar-Bulletin 1U 11I11I1I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I11I 11I 11I1II11I1II1I 1I1I 1I1I1I1I1I 1I1I1I 1I1I 1I 1I1 1I11I1I1I1I11I11I1I11I1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Sports n ted that whilc Hawaii has no SPONSORED BY Althea Tome, 1-, f Honolulu ' trip mining. the state can take National Japanese American Citizens League wonth U GAGirlsNatlonalJr. part f th credit In its pa sag TOUR WITH ... Golf tournam nt at Huntingt n. for a central figure In th > effort Open to All Bonafide JACL Members W.\"a .• held Aug. () b ' defeating was fonner R p. Patsy T. Mink, Japan Travel Bureau International a Texan. Melissa 1\1 George. l .... n w a tate Dept. official.who -Day MAIN TOUR: TOKYO TO HIROSHIMA GROUPFL~HTSTOJAPAN 3 and _ in a four-h ur match haired the u mmitt on Basic Far : $$,17'; 5g1 Rm upp $123 Via JAL 747/GA 100 Round Trip Fare: $564. The Japanese Amencan girl mirung of the House Intenor 1 okyo (] nIlthts). Tohil ( I I, Kal uurll (0. ~hlruhllmll ( I I. Kyolo (2) who "'till attend Uni\,. of Ha• Committee. GROUP NO DEPART FROM DATES waii on a golf scholarship is only Legi lation authored by 6-0ay KYUSHU EXTENSION: fljro hima to Fukuoka 9- FULL San Francisco ...... Sept. 25-Oct. 16 the second Hawaii golfer to win Assemblyman Floyd Mori (0- Basic Fare: $378·; gl Rm Supp $43.50 San Francisco ...... Oct. 2-Oct. 23 a U GA women' e ent. Jaclde 11- FULL Pleasanton) affecting motor ve• B rpu ( I ntght). Mlyo.zakl (1), Ibusuku (1), KaMo hima (I). Fukuoka (J) 12- FULL Los Angeles ...... Oct. 9-Oct. 30 Pung, now a pro, became the hicle license fees for severely fU'St when she won the l':ationaJ disabled persons was signed in• 6-0ay TOHOKU EXTENSION: Tokyo to Tokyo 13-- FULL San Francisco ...... Oct. 9-Oct. 30 Women' amateur crown at to law by Gov. Brown on Aug. 5 a ic Fare: $434·; Sgl Rm Supp $53 14- FULL San Francisco ...... Oct. ll-Nov. 1 Portland in 1952. 19n. AB 822, which passed Tokyo (I ntg ht), Asam u hi (1). Ynsumlya (I), Hanamakl (1). Matsushima (1) 20-- San Francisco ...... Oct. 12-Nov. 7 (ThL tour operated from J une to October .) through both houses without a 19- San Francisco ...... Dec. 2O-Jan. 9 Sadaharu Oh ties dissenting vote, exempts from • TOUR PRICES based on IS or more members traveling toaether. vehicle taxes on modifications lnclud hotel accom modations. land transportation, EnaUsh-spe.aldng Via Pan Am 747/GA 100 Round Trtp Fa .... $564- home run mark gwde and escort. All fares may be subject to chanae. necessary to the mobility of dis· 16- FULL Los Angeles ...... Aug. 13-Sept_ 3 TOKY0-4apanese slugger Sadaha• abled persons exCEeding $200 in 'l our rare Revl ed a of May 20, 1977 10-- FULL Los Angeles ...... Oct. l-Oct. 22 ru Ob belted his 7SStb career home value. run on Aug. 31 to tie the home-run Arrival and Departure Packages Via JAL Charter Round Trtp Fa .... $549* record held by Hank Aaron of the Business United States. Arrival: Transfer to hotel, overnight in Tokyo ...... $30 17- FULL Chicago ...... Oct. 2-Oct. 22 3~-yeaNlkl The YOlDluri Giants Shigeo Kameda, Hawaiian· 'gl Rm upp SlS.so CONTACf YOUR ADMINISTRATOR FOR FOlLOWING ruGHTS fIrSt baseman bits curled up liJce born Nisei who was stranded in No. 13-Grant Shimizu (408-297-2088) Stan Musial and with leg up like Mel Departure: Overnight in Tokyo, transfer to airport .... $30 Japan during WW2 and served San Jose JAa., 724 N. Flrst St, San Jose, Calif. 95112 on. two supe.rstBrS of baseball of yes• in the Japanese submarines, has gl Rm upp S15.SO teryear. No. 10, 12-Ak:l.ra Ohm (213-4n-7490), 2007 Barry Ave., Los Angeles 9OO2S retired after 23 years with Ja· IUIIllIlllIIIUIIJIIIIIIIUIIllIIIItIllIIUdIlJIUIlIllllIIItItU... I ...... IIMI __. ...1IM No. ll- Tad Hirota (41s...... s26-8626). 1447 Ada St, Berkeley 94702. pan Air Lines. He was manag. Little League champs • Air fare. effective Aug. 1. 19n (except for Chicago charter), includes round ing director and V.p .• flight oper• J ACL-A UTHORIZED WlLL.IAMSPORT. Pa.-Taiwan de• ations, in Tokyo. Between 1958- trip air fare, $3 BJrport departure tax and $20 JACL administrative fee. AduH and child seats same price on any flight; infants 2 year old. 10% of applicable regular feated El ~ Calif., 7-2, for the 1971. he held key managerial Little League World SerIeS title here Retail Travel Agencies fare. ALL FARES, DATES. TIMES SUBJECT TO CHANGE. posts in JAL offices in Los An· For land lour arrangements, documentation and cus tome r service, Aug. 2 It was Taiwan's sixth title in geJes. San Francisco and New contact one of Ihe follOWing authorized travel agents . If there are any questions regarding the National JACL Travel (;om• seven tries smce 1969. York. m lttee policIeS or decisions, write to Steve DOl , clo JACL H~uarteTS , PACIFIC NORTHWEST DISTRlCf COUNCD.. 1765 Sutter St .. San Francisco 9411 5 or telephone (415-92I-JACL) and Ringside Seat: George Yoshinaga GEORGE AZUMANO/JIM IWA AKI (503-223-6245) ask/or MlCh MLZushimn. Az umano Travel rvice.400 W Fourth Ave, Portland, Ore 97204 Projected 1978 Group Flights to Japan MIKJ KAWAG CHI (206-622-5520) From Los Angeles: (9) April, May. June-July. July-August, KawaguchI Travel v. 71 J-3 rd Ave. u lte 300. eattle 98104 Numbers 42 and 13 August-September, September, two in October, NO. CALIF.-W. NEV. DlSTRlCf COUNCB. October-November. Los Angeles It is interesting to note KEN YAMAHIRO (4)5-845-1977) From San Francisco: (7) May-June. June-July. July-August. The Japanese are a group that in the Kajima Building yamahlro's Travel Sv, 2451 Grove I. Ber keley, Calif. 94704 of people who have many on First and San Pedro there VICTOR IWAMOTO (4 1 ~98-S777) two in October, October-NoverOOer, November-December. strong beliefs in areas we is no 13th floor. The number East West Travel, 391 Sutte r St. San Franc isco, Calif. 94108 From Seattte (Var:mwer. B :. ~.): (1) April. may refer to as "oW wives' jumps from 12 to 14. MORRIS KOSAKURNKEN IMAMURA (415-956-4300) Kosakura Tours & T ravel, S30 Bus h St #51S, San Fra nclsco941OS tales". Many athletes don't seem JIM NAKADA (415-342·7494) to care about the so-called Information Coupon One of stronger be• Sakura T r avel Bureau, Slt-2nd Ave, San Mateo, Calif 94401 the bad luck aspect of the num• DE NNIS GARRJSON (408-373-3266) liefs among the Japanese is Mail to any JACL-Authorized Travel Agent, Chap• ber 13. Monte rey T rave l Agenc y. 446 Pacific St, Montere y, Calif. 93940 ter Travel Chairperson or President, JACL Regional that the number 42 is very JERRY MIYAMOTO (916-441-1020) Frankie AJbert, the old Miyamoto Travel Sv, 2401-1Sth St, Sacramento, Calif 95818 Office or to: bad luck. Stanford football star, who Basically, they will tell TOM KOBUCHI (41S- 781-8744) National JACL Travel first made the T-fonnation J a pan American Trav Bureau, 25-B World Trade Ctr, San Fran 94ill 1765 Sutter St., San Francisco, Calif. MllS you that the number four is popular, wore the number. HENRY OE (415- 982-4965) "shi" in Japanese while the Nippon Express USA. 39 Geary St, San f'rancis9o 94108 • PEARL OKAMOTO (408-371-9070) Send me information regarding 19n number two is "ni". Just for record, the the Horimn Travel Sv Inc. 187S S 8a.scom Ave. Campbell. Calif 9SOO8 Nat'l JACL Flight, especially Group No. _____ Put them together and next Friday which falls on AKI TRAVEL SERVICE (415-567·1114) the spell "shini" or death. the 13th is in January, 1978. Japan Ctr . West Bldg, 1730 Geary Blvd. San Francisco, Calif 9411S ICH TANlGUCm (415-922-717117172) ·Name ______When Elvis Presley died And, if your 42nd birth• Kintetsu 1n!'1 Express, 1737 Post St, San Francisco, CaUl 94115 recently at the age of 42 the day happens to fall on that FRANK or EDITIi TANAKA (415-474-3900) Address ______~ ______Japanese all nodded their date, boy, you've got it all Tanaka Travel Service. 441 O'FarreU St, San Francisco, Calif 94102 head with a "what did we tell going for you! CLARK TAKETA (408--287·5220) City, State, ZIP ______Trave l Planners, 2025 Gateway PI 1280, San Jose, Calif 95110 you" regarding the age of -Kashu Mainichi Oay Phone Chapter ______42. PACIFIC SOUTHWEST DlSTRlCf COUNCD.. KAZUE TSUBOI (213-628-3235) The Japanese say that if ~------~------. ~ ~ you can survive the age 42 Asia Travel Bureau, 102 S San Pedro St, Los Angeles. Calif 90012 I a c No. 1960 WILLY KAlfI'OGO FURUMURA (21~5284) I a ~ ~ :6:;; you can expect to go merrily 'UNIQUE Kokusai Int'l Travel, 321 E 2nd St, Los Angeles, Calif 90012 I ~ . .i :~ ..~ ~~ on your way to a ripe old JOANNE MATSUBAYASm (213--S32-J17l) I ~ ~ ~ age. JAPAN TOURS Classic T ravel Sv, 1601 W Redondo Beach Blvd. Gardena, Calif 90247 I ~ ~ .:: ; Evidently, over half the HlROMICm NAKAGAKlIYOSHlKO OTA (213-625-1505, 624-1505) fro m NIPPON EXPRESS Mits uiline Travel Sv. 327 E 1st St, Los Angeles, Calif 90012 I ~~ C\I world doesn't know about TO HI OTSU (213-321 -5066, 323-3440) ~. 5' fo r the t raveler who is interested _.

/