Vietnam war dead: 61 Nikkei ~ ~
The Vietnam war bas ended so far • STATE OF HAWAII as United tates participation is con· AMlY-COAlBAT DIiATIJ S cerned \I'ith the cease· fire agreement Pfc. Wayne A. Arakaki, 20, Kaneohe PACIFIOJ t;:ITIZEN of Jan. 23. Its co t in human lives is P{c. John T. Doike, 19, Honolulu fl M[Jmber .:i h,~ Pubhcdllon J.Jp.,meSt" Amencan C,tile"!. 'le.QUC, 12.5 Weller 51 l~ Angeles., Cd ljf 9001 2; (2}3) MA 66936 staggering for history will record more S. Sgt. Melvin S. Fujila, 25. Honolulu than 1.5 million people - including cpt Rodney T. Fukunaga. 22. Hila Publl.hcd W('ekly Except Fir:;.1 and L .. ' Week· of thJ YC '6 ~ St:cond CloJS> PO~ l dg£ P.ud .. , Lo~ Anocle~ , Cdhf about 56.000 mericans-were killed. Spec. 4 FI'Cd K. M. Halada. 19. Hllo P{c. Gary K. Kawamura. 22, Lih"L From the files of tbe Pacific Citizen VOL 76 O. 5 j<' RlDAY. ~ ' EBRUAHY 9, 1973 12 CENTS come the following list of 61 Japane e Cpl. Te.... y Kawamura. 19. Wahiawa Capl. Roy S. Kobayasbi. 25. HOllolulu AmeIican servicemen who were killed Sp. 4c Wallace K Matayoshi. (Hawsli) in outheast Asia-22 of them hailing Pfc. Alan Y. l\Iatsuura. 19. Honolulu from the Mai.nland tates. The first Sp. 4 Michael S. NakashIma. 21. Hlio Nisei killed in action was CWO Jame Pfc. Melvin Nishiyama. 21. Honolulu 7 NISEI REPORTED • • H. Ishihara. 40. of San Francisco on P!c. Rochne M. Nogucru. 20. Honoluiu March 10. 1963. "lajority of the Nisei Pfc. Earl A. OlJapan or the Mainland. the The House GOP bloc zero• Advertiser said. Pfe. Rick Yamashita. 19. Detroit LCpl Richal'd H. Toma, 26. Honolulu crew chief aboard helicopter ed in on Japanese investment, "eporled missing Feb. 5, 1970; wrucb it said has amounted to (2) "Prejudice based on Radio Hanoi reports capture $100 million or more during racial feelings is unfortunate", July. 1970) the past two or three years. refelTing to lbe Los Angeles NAKAGAWA. Cmdr. Gor• Rep. Buddy Soares (R-Waia• Times report tram its Hong don R.. Navy. (Wbidby Island lae. Hawaii Kail expressed Kong cOITespondent Robert NAS, Wash., A-6A pilot shot Elegant that lbe so-called tears thaI: ll 128 teams, 5 from Japan, '~ugly American is being re• down over North Vietnam (a) Japanese control over placed by the "ugly Japanese" Dec. 22, 1972; son of Mr. and tourism would r e !II u I t in 1\1I's. Bunny Nakagawa, Au• "overspecialization" of Ha• on lbe Asian scene. While burn, CaliL) wail's economy there is reason to be concern• UYEYAMA, Maj. Terry J., ed, "such experiences need to roll at Portland pinfest f p end Less' not be the case in Hawaii", Ai,. Force. (Austin, Tex., figbter pilot missing in action. (b) Japanese tourists spend the Advertiser hoped, tbough it ''''as aware 'fblacklash" at• (Special to The Pacific Citizen) women's events are J aue captains. Complete bowling May 20, 1968 Pentagon list; less because they come as part titudes exist in places like PORTLAND, Ore.-A nation• Wing and Aki Dong. schedule will also be included. on POW list published June of prepaid travel groups. Singapore. Jakarta and Bang• al roll-off in Japan was lnformation on available A mixer is being pla.mcd 26. 1970.) (c) Foreign control of tour• ism would reduce opportuni• kok where there has been scheduled the last week of motel and hotel accommoda• on lIlarch 5 nnd the awards MATSUI. Capt. Melvin K., more experience in this re• J anual')' to detenn:ine the tions will be sen t au t in the banquet on March 10. Both Air Force. (Hilo. Hawaii, cap- ties for Islanders to advance gard. roster of 22 men and 6 wom• immedJate future to all team ts '11 b d tured July 29. 1972, wrule on to top management positions. en who will compete in tbe ~~~~atohVIMot~. ~~~. ~t ~~; bombing mission.) Soares said lbe State should The Advertiser had pub• 1973 National JACL Bowling pitalil,. night is being sehed- NAGAHfRO Ll Col. James try to cbannel foreign invest• lisbed other reports on the 'Fournament bere Marcb 5-10. u1ed by Sacramento on Mar Y .• Air Force. (No hometown ment away from tourism and impact of Japanese invest• WILSON RILES TO SP EAK ment and tourism in Asia, Yasuharu Mizuno of Toyota 7. A hospitality night sponsor- listed. reported all Pelltagon into areas such as ocean• ed by the bost organizations: missing-in-action list for Dec. ography, lbe garment indus• such as Japanese officials and Bowl, Japan. and se\'eral of• AT SAC'TO INAUGURAL businessmen worried about fi cials will represent Japan in Oregon Nisei Bowting League 26. 1972.) try and financial services. (men and women). Portland SHlNGAKI. lI1aj. Tamotsu, ... . . this "backlasb" pro b I e m - tbe tournamenl This will be SACRAMENTO, CaliL - The ~ome involving old emotiol13. the third time bowlers fi'om Northern CalifornJa - Western and Gresbam-Troutdale chap- Air Force. MO, TEREY WELCO:lrE-Hawaii Lt. Gov George Ari• Editoria l fears mixing the natural resentment against Japan are competing. The first Nevada District Council will ters of the JACL is bemg 'till lIlissing Japan's g row i n g economie contingent partiCipated in the meet Feb. II at the Sacra• planned for March 8. Among those carried a. yoshi and his wife, Jean (lert). are welcomed to scenic economics with emotion power, anger at shrewd busi• 25tb annual classic held at mento Inn with Sacramen• Bowling events arc scbed- Missing in Action by the U.S. Monterey Peninsula by Pet Nakasako. 1973 Monterey ness tactics and unfortunate Salt Lake City in 1971. to JACL as hosts. u1ed as follows: March S- Army but not listed on the Penlnsula JACL president. The lieutenant governor was HONOLULU-Tbe subject of behavior by affluent business• As o{ deadline, 128 teams The business session will Ragtime doubles: Mar. 6- Hanoi reports is: principal speaker at lbe chapter installation. investment and tourtsts from men or tour groups. are entered in tbe tourna• convene at noon chaired by Rag tim e doubles. mixed MASUDA. Sgt. Robert Su• ment, according to Hiro Take• Gov. Harry Hatasaka. Items doubles; Mar. 7--:-same events: sumu, Army, whose wile Sa• uchi, who, with his co-chair• for consideration include the Mar. 8 - Tear,n, Mar. 9 - dami lives in San Jose. BRITA IN 'S HIGH COURT man Sam Sasaki, have been National JACL Headquarters ~~I~sand giving yeoman service in set• Building, racial bars of Elks Smgles; Mar 10 (The Nisei Veterans of For- ting up the tournament. In• and others, adoption of a Dis• gl .' . eign Warsl when it COD"enes Meanllme last-mmute en- in Gardena on Feb. 16-]8 J» cluded IIJ: 46 tealUs from Ha• trict budget. and lbe Tri-Dis• ~"peclea rivate clubs can ban member due to race l wail trict meeting in Fresno. tr:ontS were fa call fOI' its annual California re• Co-chairpersons for the A banquet \vill get under• Biro Takeucbl (503-.244-4200) union, is planning to consld• way at 6 pm. when attor• for any open spots, If any. on er some appropriate action in LONDON - Britain's private a color baJ' on membership barring racial discrimination. Tbe u.s. Supreme Court ney Phil Hiroshima will be ~::n,b~~1;;:f,e",;~~uJ~. ~try honor of the Nisei POWs.) clubs can go on refusing mem• applications. Tbat ruling was Amarjit Shah, a postal ruled recently on the exclu• installed as the Sacramento berships on gl'Ounds of race, reversed by Brilain's highest worker who immigrated from sion of blacks as guests or J ACL president for 1973 To make the trip to Oregoll lbe nation's highest court court-five judges as IoLaw India 10 years ago, was re• members o{ fraternal clubs. In High court split State Superintendent of Pub• memorable for visiling bowl• ruled Feb. 1. Lords" in the Bouse of Lords. fused membership in a Con• aile case, lbe court found that ers (and nonbowlers accom• servative Party political club lbe fact lbe club beld a slate lic Instruction Wilson C. Riles The decision included the 01 for Public will be the banquet speaker. panying them), sc\'eraJ tour.; Sen. Inouye hopes L on don gentlemen's clubs. m East London. liquor license did not mean it City councilman Robert Ma• bave been scheduled and to some of the most exclusive Tb. Law Lords decided. 4 He charged racial discrimi• bad to serve blacks. But in but upholds gov'l tsui wi II be the master of assist in the planning, Miyuki establishments in the world to I, tbat "a refusal 10 elect nation under the 1968 act, and another opinion, the court ceremonies. Tickets are a"ail• Ya.stti, special events chair• for real peace for the past 300 years. to membersbip on the ground lbe case went all the way to found that blacks could not able at $7 per person from man. of 227 SE 52nd Ave., Many of these clubs, bas• of color would not be unIaw• the Court o{ Appeals, Brit• be excluded from clubs bound Chewy Ito and Joey Ishiha- Portland 97215. requesls res- tions at tbe rich. tbe famous luI." Private clubs. lbey said, ain's second highest court. by state equal-accommodation right to secrets laws. ra. Continued on Ne>.-t Pa,e WARRINGTON - Sen Dan• and the aristocratic. were do not provide goods or serv• That court ruled lbat clubs iel K. Inouye expressed hope pointedly Wal"ed by a lower ices to the general public and The issue remains a live could not discriminate on one, with the justices expect... WASHINGTON - The Fed• that the Vietnam "peace set• court decision 13 months ago therefore do not come under grounds of color C!'al Freedom of lnformation tlement" can bring actual they could no longer operate Ihe 1968 Race Relations Act ed to rule later this term all Acl safeguards the govern• peace in Indochina, as welJ as Test of Law the exclusion of blacks from ment's right to classify docu• Elk's lodges in Maine. Southwestern College tru stees confer an end to Ameriean partici• SALT LAKE NIHONMACHI The Law Lords, in revers• ments Usecret" and "top se• pation in the war. ing lbat ruling, made it even cret". rrhe Supreme Court on "While lbe agreemellt may easier tor tbe clubs to remain Jan. 22 III a 5·3 decision rul• not prove a guarantor a per• exclusive. The real tesl they ed the act does not increase Nisei pastor honorary D.O. at Denver manent pea c e throughout Bicentennial plans may not relocate sai ~ was whether member• the citizen's right to access of Southeast Asia, at least It ship was a mere formality or Non-bias sought classilled material. (' ee f1osokawa-Pg. 3) presentation. 3ss i~led by Bis• gives a chance for peace and not. it marks lbe termination of The court held that govern• DENVER. Colo.-Thirty years bop Melvin E. Wheatley Jr., Japanese churches but worries linger U so. lbey ruled. lb~ club ment agenCies need not auto• ago during lbose frigbtening of Denver and Dr. Jameson du.-eet American involvement was open to lbe public and for liquor permit matically surrender doc u - days of the second World War, Jones. pr.. ident of the 1I1t{ in the fighting and killing," tbe Race Relations Act ap• ments for inspection by judg• The PacWc Citizen reported School of Theology, Denver. said the Hawaii senator. ALT LAKIi CITY, Utah - "Eminent domain may uot plied. If not, it was a private es when private citizens claim lnouye hailed lbe bravery SACRAMENTO, Calif. - The the incident of a Nisei student Tbe pastor. his wife Yosrue. Legislation enabling tbe for• be utilized by the commission club outside the scope ot the Elks Club and olber groups that the material is not en• at a small college in Kansas and their late son. Noel. al'e at American fighting men and mation ot O,e Utah Bicenten• to lake property owned or act. litled to the secrecy pri\'i1ege prisoners of war, but he also with discrimination clauses in being ousted from the student graduates of the college. After nial Commission was intro• ulilized by any religious or• Tbe major lose!' in the case their charters would be strip• asserted by t b e government. body by the local American receiving his B.A.. (rom noted that many of America's duced last month in the State ganizations 01' institutions. was Shah. 27, wbo started the casualties "were not on the ped of their liquor licenses The coul1 lbus reversed the Legion and tbe Chamber of Soulbwestern College, Paul Senale. The bili (SB65) is "Any pro j e cIs, develop• whole thing. He was denied Hagiya served wilb the U. S. field of battle." under a bill introduced Jan. U . S. court o{ appeal which Commerce, because he was o[ sponsored by Senators Ernest ments 01' utilization of land the cI u b membel'ship he 25. by a black Assemblyman, ruled in 1971 that Rep. Patsy Japanese ancestry. Army in Ew·ope. He eamed As th.i;; nation tries to heal H. Dean. (D-American Fork) bv the commission must allow sougbt and was ordered to pay John Miller, (D· Oakland). Mink and 32 other congress• On Sunday, Jan. 28. iL was rus M.A., from the Berkeley the intel'llal wounds caused by and Haven J Bal·low. (R• for convenient access to pro• tbe club its court cosls for the men mIght be enUtled to see a difterenL stOl,)" as the trus• Baptist Divinity School. and Vietnam, said Inouye, HMay Layton). appeal. His measure (AB 173) perty privately owned or uti• would give the Alcoholic Bev• some secret papers detailing tees and faculty ot Southwest• then went on to receive his we forego any temptation to The legislation empowers lized by any religious organi• quarrels \vithin the Nixon ern College, Winfield, Kansas, MasLer at Divinity from Gar• engage in faultfinding and re• the governor to appoint a 25- erage Control board the au• I zation or institution adjacent thority to suspend or revoke Administration over the wis• confen-ed on the Rev. Paul reLt Theological Seminary. on crimination. ' member commission 1010wn as to or in close proximity to Bank branches OK'd licenses of clubs which prac• dom of the underground nu• Hagiya. the honor",,), Doctor the Northwestern University Inouye. \V h a about three the Utah American Revolu• any projects. developments or clear blast at Amchiika, Alas• of Divinity degree. For lbe campus al Evanston. III years ago switched from sup• tion Bicentennial Commission. SACRAMENETO-The State tice discrintination by barring other utilization of land by minority members. ka. mst lime in its hislory. the He has held J a pan es e porting tbe war to opposing it, This commission would have lbe commission." Ban kin g Depaltment an• Suing under Ihe a c I. the college abandoned tbe Calnp• Methodist pastorates in Berke• said few Americans did not tile authorily to: nounced approval of a branch Under the lIliller bIll. a congressmen argued that a us to present the degree at ley. Calif.. Seattle. Wasb., change their opinion on the I-Acquire the necessar~ The aution of the Bank of Tokyo o( Cali• club would have to present a mere classification stamp did lbe pastor's chw'ch, the Simp• Santa Maria, Calif and here war at some point. "There is real and personal property by Whue .t is pOSSIble tbat fornia in Sacramento at the statement "of nondiscrimina• not immunize from disclosure son United Melbodist Church, in Denver where he has guilt enougb for all to share, purchase. lease or eminent do• changes may be made before southeast corner of Seventh tion OD the basis of race. re• any non-sensitive material Denver. Colo. served for tbe last 14 years. and despite Our fears for a main; the legislation becomes final: and "L" Sts. ligion, or national origin" in included \vith the data that Dr. Donald B. Rutbenberg, The Rev. Hagiya is a mem• f.ragile peace, there is a 1 S 0 2-Improve, reVitalize, re• it is the understandmg of Ibe Approval was also granted order to obtain a license. was properly classified. college president, made lbe ber of The Commission on Re• hope enough in today's (Jan. claim, beautify. and develop J apanese Community Im• to the Mitsubisbi Bank of In lbe past Mille!' has push• ligion and Race a national 27) document for common ac• such areas; provement Program Commit• California for a branch ill ed legislation to take away commission of The United claim/' he said. 3-Elect and m a I n ta in tee thai if the above PI'O• Gardena in tbe vicinity of the tax exemptions from sucb Metbodist Church. He also building or other structures, visions are not amended, any intersection of Redondo Beach groups. But all those meas• serves on its Funding Com• secw'e and install exhibits, plans made by the Bicente.n• Blvd. and Western Ave. ures have been killed. EASTERN D.C. TOLD OF SUCCESSFUL mittee and the chairman of Mineta hopes for arrange entertainment, etc. niaJ Commission for the two tbe Commissions Asian Task The celebration is to take block area west of the Salt SENIOR CITIZENS Force. Be is a 32nd Degree domestic redirection place in 1976. Palace would exclude the Mason. Religious-Owned Land possibility of having Ihe two PROTEST AGAINST RACIST POSTERS SAN JOSE, Calif. - It's time Japanese churches taken over now "to get on to the urban Of interest to the Japanese by eminent domain by this Full lax deducted on medical expense (Spectal to The Paclflc Clllz.en) pan-made lextlle. mto the problems on this nation's community are the following agency WASHINGTON. DC. - The United Stales. agenda." San Jost" Mavor provisions written into the However. thIS does not ex• Norman Mineta said at -his legislalion: ~ucc~sful protest against "ra• Some posters were puUed clude the possibility that may be restored in Sen. Fong measure Cist" advertising jn New York Dews conference Jan. 24 in eminent domain may stili be down by the militant prolest• view at the negotiated cease• City SUbways carries a lesson ors. Sprung reported. and exercised by other state or tor everyone, according to fire settlement announced by CEASE-FIRE HAILED local programs. WA SHlNGTON - Sen. fur- who al'C not now eligible tor e\'enlually the Union replac• President Nixon in a nation• lIIurray Sprung. \'ice-chair• ed the most blatant version am L. FOllg (R-Hawaii) said medJcaid and the broad sup• man of the 'cw York JACL. wide radio - TV address lbe BY REP . PATSY MINK be would propose legislation plement of services it now ot• of the posters saying it did previous evening. in a talk before the Eastern nol realize the barmful et• WASHINGTON _ U.S. Rep. ROOM & BOARD IN JAIL to restore full deductibility fers to tbose witb lowest in• District Council meeting on With lbe cease-tire, Mine• for lbe elderly of medical ex- come." {ects of the adveriising on Ja• la wondered, " Will there sUII penses for income t a x pur-Fong said, lOIn introducing J an. 27 panese Americans. Patsy Mink, a longtime oppo- BETTER THAN WELFARE be an S81-billion Dept. of De• nent of the Vietnam WOl" said poses to help America's seo- this bill, I am fully aware Sprung ga\'e a first - hand ' i\lachinery' Ready fence budget witb peace in ior citizens. that it will rial meet all tbe a.count of how JACL in New P resident Nixon's announce• TOKYO-Police released Yo• Southeast Asia?" (S e ems srutaro no from prison re• needs related to financing at York City, in concert with a "As a result of the concert• there will be increases, in • ment of a ccase-fire in Viet• Fang ranking Republican beallb Cal'e services. S cor e of other minority ed efforts on our part. we cently. but the 70-year-old on lbe' Senate's Special Com- "Jt will. however. be a step stead, in view of reports at nam was "what our country man was back bebind bars groups. pkketed. sent petl• really made ow' point.." he mittee 011 Aging. noted ~at in the right direction as the J an. 29.) has been waiting for four again because he believes tiOIlS and lelters. and in oth• told EWC quarterly meeting. Domestic cutbacks were less than bell ot the medlc- Congress continues Its deUb• er wa~'s attempted to counter In the future, if similar pro• years . . . Those like myself older people Ol'e better treat• al expenses of persons older erations on other improve• ruscussed in Washington-be• ed there than on the outside. Ule subway posters wruch the lests lUust be conducted, the fore the peace agreement was who have worked for this day than 65 years are taken care ments in bealth services for protestors said made scape• machinery and people 10 do announced - by White House for nearly six years have only Imprisoned 47 times Ito has of now by Medicare - sl;lch older Americans." goats at Japane;;e Americans. it can be readily mobilized, officials in a meeting with big one lbought - tbat our efforts spent a total of 11 years .and t h in g s as out-of-hospltal Fang also sa i d be would Sprung added. have not been in vain." two months an prison smce drugs hearing aids. dentures, propose elimination of the The pas t e r > featuring city mayors. including Mine• 1950. Ito explained to pollce American f1ag~ with the The EDC meeting also fea• ta. "We didn't get too much Mr s. Mink added, "I shall eyeglasses and related profes- medicare reqirement tor three continue to pray lbai all our lbat a man at bis age finds it sional services. days at hospitalization betore "Made 111 Japun" label. were lured OJ panel discu&iion on for them on tbe funding sta• u,ed by the lLGWU (Inter• tus at some urban programs hopes and expectations for the difficult to live on the S48.70 Restoration at tull deduc- a person can be admitted to a "Racism in Our Sociely." Pat future will come true, and as a month which the govern• tibility as prevailed prior to nursing home. national Lad i e s Gannent Okura. lIlike M. Suzuki. Kaz for the next year and a half," ment provides under a wel• Workers Union) last year to Mineta added. we turn from war to peace, 1967 would relieve some of Fong ~ke as lbe Commit• Oshiki. and Barry Matsumoto, that we resolve to be!ld our fare program. h ea~mgs publicize the Union'~ com• "Tn prison I get my meals this burden. F a 11 g said. " It tee .continued all lbe plaint that American jobs all JACL leader.; agreed that. attention now to the needs will be ot considerable help SOCIa l Set·tmty S) stem began m general, racial di5crimina- Tell Our Ad v erhser~ and aspirations of lbe people and I have a place to stay," were being exported to J apan he .aid. ..It iA the best place." to the man folder per60IlSlast week. chIP t('l lAn:t'r lmnt'lrtc: nf . T ~- CnnHnu,..1i nn Pl't"r • You Saw It in the PC of onr O\\'tl land." A NISEI VIEW OF JAPAN: by Dr. Roy Doi LETTERS New York morvel Jerry Enomolo Editor For Men Only, But • My personal thanks to Asa• • m, Kawacht lor ber !lne art• P re"~Jdent icle on Mary Kochiyama (PC, B NR\' T 'lAN"-KA, KAY NAKAGIRJ. Board Chairman P ill" X :------_____, J an. 5-12 ). 1'0 say the le•• t HARR" K HONDA, EdUor It shook me ali t 01 my small Perspectives OI ~ tr \t t Repr(,'Je nt.lI, et ls: it a man's world in Ja- world. l'l'o:WOt-!'lt. :"\'_£doka, NC-WN D C~-Tom ~1I~~naga. ('CDt!'n~d pan" From my own xpor- As I rcud the lorth rlght Hlruuna. P WOC Kt"n Bnva.. hi, mc- Yuki Harada, -;\1POC ·BIII ience and observation I am article, I lccalled counUesl Boaokawa, I\JOC- .Toe TaDrdka, EOC-Ka/: O,hlkl. 110l sure whethcol' the "men acUons o f Mary. I met. her ~ pecla t Co rrespon dt' nt , are men" or whethcr the wo- first at the Jerome detention • \\ a hln r l On, l) C.: Mnu:: MI\"'... o},,1I men lei the "men be men" camp In 1942. One of the " ~r- .. II R ..;h.u d GlUm. A IJnn Bct'kman J llp~n: :\Ia_~ ~Jgnbo The relationship between men things which stands clear in MEETING L.B.J.- The passing of Lyndon B. John· \ d 't'rtl ... i n ~ Reptc"t'l1 U,lh f' and women is quite difTer- my I11cmOJ-y is Mary's sch('m- son, 36th President of the Urtited States, rentinds me No C; .. ltt • Lee RuUle, -tIS Kearney Rm. 406, an Fr311l'1!\CO 9"108 ont from thai in the U.S . ing to save a young lady !rom of the occasion when I had the opportunity to visit Second ..clu, po:-tagr p;ud at Lo~ AnRcle<;. (.;.."Hf Sub~cl'lptlon R .. tc. There doesn't appeal' 10 be being lorcillly Luken by her fpa)'able 1n ad'·ancel U.S. ~ a year. SI1.5O (or lwo ,"ear~ . Foreign briefly with the President in 1967. I remember that 850 a )'cal' lst-ela!li'" st't\'i<.-e US It ('''(l1'a PC't ,ear Airmail :-('I'"\'lce. much dating between bigh lather to Jap"n, and succeed- ~o n gr e ss man U. ..nd Canada. ~15 extra tl('r '''nr JAPan. A~ia. Europe. S411 extra school age youth. and per- Ing! She literally made time Sparky Matsunaga was mainly respon· per yetiI' Sl.50 of J ACL Memberp;hlD Out'~ fOT on .. -\-ur !OUb!'il"l"ption haps even lhrough college to drop brief nnd sincere notes Sible for arranging the visit, and that it occurred in a Nt'\,- and ODlnlon!l exprt's!lied by column',t.. ('~t'cpt for JACL starr \'cry fcw romances arise. The expressing hel' deep feelIngs busy presidential day when General Westmoreland writcrs. do not tlcocc1(!'atlly ~n~cl J ~CL polk~ lugh .chool youlhs appeal' 10 of joy and undergirding them was to brief him on the Vietnam War. ~aUonat J <\CL Ueadquatter'l" be quite innocent. well b e - with moving support. 1 wos sll1diou~. We expected to shake hands and leave but the Pres· 1&34 PO~I ~t, "an }:nncis:co. Calif NI1S Phone ,415l \\ L- l-fi6H ha\'cd, and vcrs one of those rortunate enough Many of the private schools to receive such noies. ident was gracious enough to spend more than a few ~'n da y, Feb. 9, 1973 require their students to wear Many 01 the church people rnillUte,s chatting with us. A physically large and over• 2- unHorms and most of the girl. in those detention camp days whelmlllg m a n, he had a genUe way about him. His· look atrociou~ in theil' below- and since,' have fl·owned upon tory should honor him as a man who assumed an th""knee bagg)' .kirts. Since her activitlcs, but J presume Ha rr y K. Ho nda many 01 the schools also lor- most 01 them had SUilt leel- awesome responsibility, suddenly thrust upon him, and bid Ihe girls Irom gelling a ings aboul their own "in-ac- u ltima tely as responsible for some significant domes· perman ent wave, the h it i I' tivity" and so this was their lIc progress through the "Great Society". styles are also rather severe own way to justify the m- The opportunity to meet a President, not always The boys in their uniforms selves, But, Mary, from the are youthlul looking and gen- lime I Ib·.t knew her, seem- afforded us, is one of the thrills and memories that crall,)' clean cul; in sOlne cd to have passed beyond this remains \vith me as I reminisce once in a while about ~c hools, howe\'cr. tong hair feeling at sci C-c 0 n c c r", J ACL. slJ' les arc permitted tor boy. rationalization, selHustilica- and they do look like our tion, delensiveness, and all the NIKKEI NEWSCASTERS-The other day I w as Sa""e;' ~~~~ anxlcties surrounding watching the early evening news on Channel 5, L.A., -itliatloD In ColleJ< l>Iary ha. continued to move a nd saw a Japanese A merican newscaster. (Must be VIETNAM WAR- AFTERTHOUGHTS In college, although there " lorward with her deep con- Ken ]{ashiwahara of ABC-Los Angeles.-Ed.} He hap- much more freedom as lar as cern lor the most dlsadvan- pened to be the first Asian I've seen, and he did a dre" and hairdos. IIl'lng J-,. ~/~"IU A .) taged nnd marshalled her d d . b di The American role in lhe ielnam war goes down style>. and leisure lime, Ihe r"'fC'"," .....- honesty, IDtelligence, humlli- amn goo JO , I thought. I was also rea ng the latest in the hi tory books as its longe t and least succe iul on. area in which most or th~ ty and became personally in- edition of East·West, a Chinese American paper, and a nd while the cease· fire agreement calls from troop student. arc very careful is Peace in Our Time valved with them. saw a picture and interview of Tritia Toyota, now in withdrawals and retul'U of prisoners·oI·war, the con· their relationship with the Asami Kawachi wondered the newsm edia in Los Angeles. other sex. '------, "If Mary would have become 1 b . . flict in oulheast A ia will probably linger. True peace 1'his is partlcularly true the nctlvlst that she Is today remem er meetin g Tritia when she was lhe is still to come. The issue till unsettled i whetiler with studenls Irom higher mg way) to a .uperior and A good prolusor would or- II she had settled anywhere National J ACL Queen a few years back. The interview Hanoi will again be the political capital for all of class groups. since marriage 'till get away with it, since dtnarily take his pay envelope but here in New York?" I content was very inleresting, and it struck me that she I ndo·China as it was during the century before under m.ny times is a lunctton to "everything is Corgotten··. home and hand it 10 his wile. would be quick to answer that WaS an articulate spokesman with a balanced view• bring together t \\ 0 lomille.' I lound that a person who She would then give him his Mary will be Mary no matter point. Being at once a woman and an Asian in a " ma n's French rule. But ASian specialists have pointed out (or Iheir mutual benellt rath- was not relaxed became re- allowance lor the month. Now where she hnds hersell. She t h at Cambodia and Laos are still anxious to prevent er tban a climax lor a TO- laxed as soon as I joined him the clever prolessor usually would be the "change-agent" game", once limited lo whites, presents a lot of bags Hanoi's domination-a de ire shared by the leader mance Cor two youngsters. in drinking. 1'herelore It is remOl'es "alpha' belore hand- In the society, taking her place to jump into, but she seemed to be han dling it all. in Moscow and Peking However. romances do oc- ab.olutely essenttal to drink ing the p;ty envelop~ to his besides the least o! the unde· 1 have to admit lo feeling pretty good when I see il one Is going to be .oclable wile so that he had some ex- sirable under·dogs. Her ll!e is • I A . . I I J ki ' As unpopular the war has been in many quarter , cur, since one 01 the graduate among men In Japan I I' a bpending money that to love the unloved and to an occaslOna Sian, partlcu ar y apanese, rna ng lt American comnutment had support of political lead· students in my laboratory had month. Jr tho bank credited serve those who needs SCt,\,- in a heretofore r estricted media. Theoretically we are ers in outh Korea, the Philippines. Thailand, Malay· married a girl who was in hi' Cam .... dcri. his bank ae<:ount directly, he ing all striving for the millen rtium w hen we're a ll alike, music circle at Kyodai. Th~ 1'here is tremendou, cama- would not be able to get his It was good to write this and lhat \dnd of thing is n o longer a p henomena. ia and ingapore. Prime Minister Lee Kwan Yue of other six male gradUate stu- rad~rie during the dintng and "alpha" ",iU,out his wile letter. ingapore said U .. involvement in Vietnam bought dents in my group were sliU wining which reminded me knowing about it. ing to beg. Some may po• lifter a cease·fire. Yet aigon is womed thal Japanese fairly extensive and so there Japan, since it does not ha\'t presented a conveniently con• and rooming houses. litely call it negotiating. It i, little Question allout t h . hostes., ..'. book. 011 Evacuation and lif. penetration might lead to economic dominance that it ~ salida ted area which 10 addi• 1'hey began to congregate was begging. When our kin• social and tinctDcial stnndin.c~. Different Bars in t h various relocation failed to achieve when it occupied Indo· hina. "amps but none so far on tion to specializing in Japan• from early morning, sitting dred yeUow were un\1 ilting or ('ducational levels, proCl'ssioll ese stores and restaurants, did around the stO\'e or standing With U .. forces withdrawing [rom Vielnam. other elc., of the potential male. Diflerent c I a • s cabar.t', Heart .Mountain till reading unable to help, when our own /.11'S. Sue Embrey'l mterrltino oller barbers. hotel. a clean• to get the warmth on Ute!r limited funds began to be eat• questions come to fore. In New Deihl, they are a king The Japanese may be more b.rs, and clubs exist tor e' • ers, service.- stations, law of• backs. They were from di• en away, we had to go to practical than romantic about ery social and economic cIa!'.., article (PC, Jan. 5-12) on whether righl,wlllg dictatorships supported by the .. .fLon" Heart Mountain". Hav• tices, etc. We did ha ve ,om~ verse parts 01 Japan and one Anglo strangers. We begged the whole matt~r and mar- ~.g .• there are student bar , learned the diflerent Idiom. during the cold war can uTvive' Can mall nations III ing Lived at Pomona Assem• customers who claimed they lor reductions In the price of riage is not neces54ril)· con- proCessor bars. blue collar enjoyed their occasional visits of \'arious prefectures. Asia hold their own against the hig' How far will social . idercd • "shared relation- bars. white coUar bars. doc• bly Cenrer and Heart Mount• pl'ofessional services, in the aill, 1 (un anxious to obtain. to this area because 01 Its They came and wen t , cost of used clohting, for an sbip" III Japan; however the tor's bars. etc. It is a thrh • ferment. checked by the war but not eliminated, con• a COptl oj Esrellc /Shiga'. i'oriental flavor." There were groups alternating or relorm• ..xtra limousine to transport "my home" concept ot togeth- ing Illstitution particularly ID ~poke tinue in Vietnam? 15 Asia heading into a period of book. Becau .. U'e raT~11I g~t also Anglo patrons who ing. They were not loqua• a bandful 01 mourners. erncss was being cmpha ized business oriented cit.i~ such tluent Japanese. They were cious. Solitude was worn into nonmililary domination by the rivalries of the Soviet more and more on TV. as 05aka where there are 3 - into Los Angell'.!, can we get Perhaps there is a tech• by ntail?-Y.M , Livlngs• mainly returned missionaries their faces, like lenclng across nique to begging. I know only nion, China and the U.S' What mav come will be Life t.les Ya... 000 top class club. alone. 0'" prh'ate domain. Toward eve• rOil, CaIiJ. and former service personnel. that the words stop in you r "mdigenous people's republics" controlled by local The hostess is usuaJly an anxious to retain and prac• ning. they always disappear• throat. And samelimes in or• forces calling themselves Communi ts though not of In any caSe thE" relationship attractivc young lady whose A-There was an "ad" in tice this lorelgn language. ed. Back to their single cu• of a man wi th women is der to justify it. I would as• [he 1I10scoIV or Peking connection. Observers in India main purpose IS to bolst~r the the lalla wing luue (PC, Jan. In essence, I imagine Ulat bicles whicb contained all sure myself. "It is not for me quite hmited belore marriage. man's ego while he is drink• 19). which we hope ~·ou used. it I" were an outsider, First they owned, in which the~· ahio do not discount mililaristic regimes ThIS is quite opposite r rom or my family!' I was young ing {or about an hour or so. Checks or $339 which i n - South would be remembered sometimes cooked and sl~pt and vain. At best, it shall be a period of uncertainty. the American IHe style. siOce .tat~ l' h. Japanese man would cludes sales tax and as a rather Quaint street on and existed. Some had wives Wo were many klDds. Some dating takes place Irom iun• handUng are payable to Hol• which one could listen to con• and children in Japan. to i a r high school day.. How• never admit he has been at of us broke laws, some drank a cabaret. but I have never I)'\\ood JACL. 1801 1'1 Dillon versations in another tongue, whom return had been prom• to excess, so m e gambled, ,'ow that the decade of frustrating involvement in c\'er. a Japanese friend ex• St_ Los Angeles 90026 lor secure a \'a~e crafted in Kyo• ised. Many did go home, ash• plained to me that Ibe Ja• lound a man who didn't go some kept women other than Vietnam is over undoubtedly there \\'ill be mallY dif· il lhe opportunity present"d one cop", Books are now av• to and enjoy JapaneS<' cui- es in an urn sent through the wives, women kept men oth• panese life ~tyle is ~omewhat ailable • ine. It woutd be excusable il postal sen' ice . ferences over what and who contribuled most toward like that 01 the French. itselr However. 1 should er than husbands, sometime. mention that this surpri~ ed Ulese were the remembrances this negotiated settlement Political leaders played 1'he French also Irom CUl• pregnancies preceded mar• mc, since it is quite an in • Books by Hea rn 01 hall a century ago. But not riage. Some 01 us lied, cheat• important roles a well as the thousands who prayed tural and rellgJous inlluen• 10 be able to recall a place B ow did these people, be• ces have Yen' litlle man-wo• nocent !\ituation and should longing to no one. unable to ed and stole. Tbese are not or demon trated for peace. There were Iho e who reo not be threatening to any Q 1 have Tcad tit. 11/. truthlully which existed less lI1y man relationship~ b (> 0 r ~ communicate in English, man• imaginings. sister was r man'~ wife nor reputation. oj Lafcadio Hearn bur cannot than a dccade a~o is beyond mained leadfast ,,'ith Pre ident ixon. despite mi . marrIage, but after marriage age to secure the most meag• employed by the local police wa~ an~ locate a II II orlter boob bl! comprehension. Were they so department. ~vings when he authorized military actions which he th story can be quite dltfer- In any caSe this ~.rCt'pt J4TJaneS~ er necessities and servIces? monogamou~ 'tim lor 'A young,? Or have some oC us felt neces ary to sholl' HanOi that it couldn't Will cnl (rom the other pal't of the man's code, Miscellany" rl901). Art th." been so detached' They were our collective res• I have known the injustice. American life stylE'. Le.. never mention anything any otlt.,.s' - O .K •• Spana• ponsibility, if it is true that we have meted to our own, Peace advocates, accu ed of givlllg Hanoi fal e In So. as France. the J.- about cabaret hopping. Appa• WClIl, lVo&h we all care tor our own, I have heard vocal bicker• hopes that their minority viewpoint would snowbalJ, panese man apparenUy rcal- renUy thi}! is a threatening [ bad turn (, d (wcnty .. one 1'hat is a beautilul fantasy. ings and whispered slander also prodded ixon to withdraw ground troops more izes that his world had been concept or beha\"ior pattern A - Chari •• Tuttle, Rut• when the store was licensed The wretched of our commu• I hO\'e known the cruelty or raipdly than he might otherwise. This teady \I~th· somewhat limit.ed before maT- to some American wives, since land, VI., has reprinted a in my name, because I was nity, the aged and sick, the exploitation at our own. It ts riage. 1 certainly do not im- I was literally ordered out ot lonely and depressed, the observed silenUy. Yet we drawl also did much lo how llanoi that US senously number of his boqks: uKwai .. the first born citizen. My la• pi,\' t hat aU Japanese men a Nisei home recently on ac• dan ". "Exotics and Retrospec• ther, taken by the FBI at the poor and hungry were cared scream "injustice" when we wanted to negoliate all acceptable peace. suddenly run wild arter mar- ('ount o( my tolerant altitude Ul'es". "fn Ghostly Japan". outbreak of war to Bismarck, lor by only a handlul. t re• belie\'e whites tre6pass a• Furlhermore, the outh Vietnamese have stood Mage, but I think they do not towards such behavior on the ··Japan: an Attempt at Inter• North Dakota, had been re• member pauper lunerals. My gainsL u~. ill·m. The offensives designed to spur Communist ob· mmd havIDg their ego. bol- part 01 Japanese men. (There• pretation", and "ShadowLngs" leased Irom Gila as a paro• mother and her friend, the We denied our unwashed. slered by beautiful and char- fore for Nisei men, unless yoU la te Mrs. K. Okl, always in• How did they respond? En• Jeclives with ma s upporl of the people in South all soltcover lee. In view of these condi• ming club hostesses. have a trusting relationship tions, I who had no interest sisted that there be at least \'elopes would be requested so Vietnam did not pa s. Their attitude about St!X je; with your wlCe, don't evpr in enterprise, returned from modest flowers. S 0 m e how thel' could insert their small also different althoug.h it h; .. mention this a:\pecl or ,Japa- !Ochool in the midwest and as• these were managed. contributions for each com• 1 are I y di5Cussed subject nest:' behavior_) Bowling- .umed my hllal duties. When one bachelor passed munity lund raising. Olten we .JACL 113' aware ince 1967 thai the Vietnam liar However. in contra!'t to most ' ''i~dom and Patience Because 1 was young, there on, we found he had two suits. took coins to make a paper lias becomlllg divisive. affecting culs III the Great ontinued from Front Pare was a myriad 01 other things We buried him in one and dollar. It meant self-denial. ~~~r~cn~\V~~~' i~h: ~a~:nae~~ Agifin this illustrates to me Tltey gave up certain loods ociety legislations. '1'0 make the issue of liar relevant 1 wouJd have enjoyed more, saved the other for a funer• doesn't have to pro\'c lo hlm- Ihe wisdom and patience of en'alions be made as soon as At the time I didn't appre• al we already projected. I they should have had. They 10 the isei. lhe late Harold Gordon III a 1967 PC selr that he I~ a man with Japanese wh'es who I'm ccr• possible. Checks covering tour ciate what an education I ha \'e ~een my own kind wrap• washed dishes in cales and column compared the hysteria that led to EvacuatIOn every woman he meets; 1 bC'- tain know the exlstence of costs are payable to National wouJd receive. Nor did I real• ped in filthy rags. sipping shivered home in inadequate with the emotions evoked by the killing 111 Vietnam lIe\ ~e this is a great $hort- this system and tolerate it. 1 J ACL Nisei Bowling Tourna• ize the privilege or penetrat .. milk souring from being chill• clothing. ment ,\t the 1968 nalional convention. during the great coming about American men actually think it is healthy (or 109 the real Cace of our peo• ed on a window sill. who ~eem to han" to pro\·e the husband-wife relationship TOUR I -Cntumbla River Sev· There was another whn was ivil right · dlscu ions which evolved the commitment .. n-Hour Boat CrUISf' (Monday. ple, J was completely oblivi- In Ibl& context, we would their manliness and therefore- there, slnce it only appears to Mar. 5,. Bu~ lV5 0;30 A.m. from subsisting on one mf'al 8 day to repeal the Emergency Detention Act, there was no complicate their relationship~ me that the apron strings are Shcraton $9.50 per -person. cotree of pork and beans. He hoard• realize that the era of the with women extended tolerantly and the and box luncl1 "'Ill be served Mar'l Minimum 01 15 required, ed the rest of his weltare Issei has passed. We h a \ . • general agreement on the Vietnam war being " racist" Boat P05S(!5 through ship lock! at bw Iva Sh~uton at 8 8.m. $115.50 imposed too long on thei r sac• despite the point raised that the white racist public ~:nst~biri~~1 o~~\e: h~~~k h~:' BonncvUJe Dam and c r u i • Ie S per person without lessons, $3 check to send to his widow• Mter'\\'orklllg L1 0urs through scenic Columbie Rtvtr exira for 2.. hr. J~sson, ski rental ed daughter and her family rlllce and generosity We felt it \I as O. K to bomb in Vietnam because "the\ Much ot the J apanese man s One does wonder who pulls CeorgeBrlng camera for this trJp! :;adn5~~sage Calif• in Hawaii Truman signs bill al lowing permanent stay Regardless, the silence must year 111 Washington. urginl! all mJlitary forces 1 think thc~ se5=sionl' :-t!rve ring the month would not be ornia ban on Issei tishl11g op• There were other times be broken. The time is now. a very good psychological able to keep it without Utelr posed by General Clark and lor Ohio Issei. Acting Pre• be lIilhdrawn by October, 1973. and supporting legis· mier He rbert Anscomb holds when 1 wondered why a com- Perhaps it is too late to call purpose and are therapeutic wives' knowledge ("alpha" Department 01 Justice . munity either rejected or Ig- back the myths we Ni. ei lation that lIould cut off funds to end military involve• to thc souls of men who may turned out to be a sum of Report Nisei businessman "or• up move to ban 800 J apan• e50 Irom British Columbra nored 1\$ own leS! lortunate. stubbornly hold. But lor our ment 111 outheast A ia be under great !'ocial pressure money for some special lec• dered out" at Japan 7.000 Sometlme.s we would call on chJldren and theirII-", and lor j~ Ni!'ei stranded 10 Japan have lands :1anne hero hails ~Inre at all times Apparent):.' it lures or work lor which the th"'e we though t would like history Itself, we must teU It can he said nf IIhal was not dnnr or . hnulcl onl~' m forfelt.ed American citizenship loyalty of Niliel m Japanese one 01 the tIm.. Ihal proCessors was paid addi• to a&&I6L The aIliwera were iU il. wa. and I&. hale been done-but let tbat be water o~er the dam one can be cntical (in • jok- tion to hi& reiUJ,ar WMy). n gilta ••• Gen. Clark hails prison. 1973 Officers ., P'riday, Feb. 0, 1973 PACIFIC CITIZlN-3 Bill H050kawa ALAi'lEOA J ':1.. lstH! ,_ p~~r~;'1 ~k~~ •. ~~~ ,!'~r;u~~~!: ~~;h71 N~k:~~;~. r~~ r_ ·~~c; . ; r.~r.8i Sign Up Today Froln the 'Yamashita. treu .. Board membtrs ·Haj F'ujimorl, George Furulchl. Shfg Futagakl. Mn· Mary Hana~ Dear Friend, mura, Tates Hanamu!";!, Rl Church, 7.50 p.m. ._ft.ft,...... ft ..... ft~"" Japanese Scientists BOOK REVIEW: Allan Beekman PAC'"'C CITIZlrN-5 CLASSIFIEDS Friday, Feb. 9, 1973 Aloha from Hawair synthesize 'Californium' TOKYO - Japanese sclentis'" l'ang Art in Japan • ElIlplo:nnonl by Richard Glm. have successfully synthesized - Business Ind - n small amount of Califor• • 1IDlliJilIDIIIWII1mllllllllllllnllJllDnnlllwUNUnmmll11111111UII1UI1IIII1I1IIIUUIIIIIIlUIUIIJIIlIIIIII nium, a radioactive element, THE ARTS OF OHINA, by Hugo Munsl.rber, Tulll., Yemato Professional Guide following three years of work, 2S' ])1)., $17.50. ' Honor Award by the Hawaii Defensc will release 9,500 Employment Agency Your Ihllln ... c.,. , ..... I. lhe Japan Atomic Energy Re• uch bsue for 2' w.ekl ..: Friends of National Jewish aores of surplus milJtary lands search Institute said Jon. 26. Pointing out that China has the oldcst unbroken ru11stlc J IInCls (m'nlmum) ____$U Hospital and Research Center in HawaII valued at $133 mll• Room 202, 312 E. lsi 5t. Officials said it was the first tradition In the world today, the author begins hi. survey Los Ange!e, • MA 4.2821 hch addltlen.ll lin. ,. ,., I. of Denver, Colo. He will re- lion. The state will end up time that Japanese scientl.t. of Chlncse art with the prehistoric period (c. 3000 B.C.-1500 celve the award 11101'. 22 at a with .ome choice property on hRve succeeded In .vntheslz• testimonial dinner at tho DI- which to locate an aviation B.C.) trom which lruly artistic works survive. The book car• Job Inqulrie. Welcomo • Greater Lo. Ang.I" Ing Californium, believe to be ries a photograph of a line painted pottery jor trom lhls f' REE kai. . UakaTu Taok .. has airport at Bellows Air Force highly effecUve In cW'lng can• been elected pres. o[ Club 100. Base station In Waimanalo, neolithic period. ~nberil~~r s::re~irlu, dnln ..•. 607 1~~~ W J.'tv~~t~ ~~:o (~~) ~'t:~~ff. cer. b~liniw.F t COOo~~ Hawaii Today Donald Kuwaye wos recently a Univ. of HawaII medical However, the amounl or By the beginning of the portray. c'Jri J'rld'y IArt Ito welcomes 'lour Flor,l Gift Gen Ote aUk Icrcen b·li··t33--606 ord.rs for the Greater LA. Arl•• hired to 1111 the vacancy of school at Ft. Ruger, possible a 0 Honolulu Calitornium synthesized was succeeding Shang Pel' I d In the 5th century AD., I rE£ .. M-:-cn-;:t-:'o:-:n_p...,C::-. ______executive ..,cretary for the second UH campus at Scho• (1500 B.C.-llOO B.C.), bronze bland err prices are soar• too small fOT practical use. Hsieh Ho enunciated six prin• ~dm Ing. Two years ago the me• club .. Dr. Robert C. H. field Barracks, a sewage- waa replacing stone, clay and Au" bltlnllUol (nel) .... ?oo JACL Group Health In.. hung has been elected to trealment plant at Barber'. Californium was Jlrst syn• ciples of painting that still T~~~(:)I e~~~l::r·J. Jlm~ dian price for eggs was 7t wood as material for the arti• form the basis 01 Oriental art M··i;"·ooo Gouwa - (213) 165.971$ serve as chairmen or the Ho- Pt. and state parks near Koe• thesized by American scien• Silt J\JU z\tech. lit; mIr 4.00.g:~~~ 13.59 Cleon Ave ., Sun v.lIey 91352 cents a dozen. Today it's 81 to tists at the Berkeley Atomic san. In towns surrounded by criticism. To quality as a mas• 89 eents a dozen, and the nolulU Police Commission. no Point and possibly housing thick woll., craftsmen were Shop Trl. repair wa.he,. ... 2,?5hr NISEI FLORIST Chung was chairman m 1971 acres at Lualualei. Energy Rese31'ch InsUtute In terpiece, a painting muot ful• ;~PtrfJ~:' ~~~\v:;:a:vew~~ ~r worst Is yet to come. It's all 1950. making v..,sels, weapons and fill Ihe requirements of all six. .• In the Hurt of LI'I Tokyo and vice chairman In 1972. tools fTom metal. Floor Waxer e:cp ..... 2.80.3..00':;' 328 E. 1st 51. MA 8-.5606 due to the extraordinary high Five 01 the principles con• cost of imported poultTY feed, Fiftecn girls have entcred Gambling Thc Shong Period olso saw Cook, ",mz 100d, Rdn Bch to 900 Fred MorlguchJ Memb. Teleflor. the 21st annual Cherry BI ..- cern technique. The first ond ~~~~~:.t"~tkW~~.~J~e::.·:s:j~~~ the pl'oduccrs say. Just think! Honolulu police and FBI Gas explosion rips the emergcnce of • system at most important, accord. to the DR . ROY M. NISHIKAWA A month ago--yes, just one som Festlvnl queen contest. agents teamed for a serle. ot writing based some 3000 ,~~~~I~~1~rdn (~ t.ldL t.:~7':&o They are Bonnie Y. Terada, on modern conceplion of inspira• Factory Wkr (t), .eafood .. •. 2.22br month - ago soybeans cost searches early Sunday morn• Buddhist day nursery I'lctographs from which mod• tion. NEW OPENING DAILY 160 a ton. Today, the price Darlene Sugi, Sonia Shishido, ing, Dec. 17, aimcd ot a 1"".1 ern Chtnes. script bas Wendy Nakamura, JIJI Ma• Paintings are highly perish• YAMATO TRAVfl BURI ... U j, about $300 a ton! How can bettlur rU.g. Police sciled bet• SEATTLE, Wasb. _ The 5e- evolved. 312 E. t::... St.'-6'o~ 1900t21 you ever say. HLucky come tsui, Kay Nlshita, Brenda Sai• ting rccords, $50,000 In cosh able, as aro some at the other fuku, Wilma Iwasaki, JllIri attle Buddhist Day Nursery Since scholArs spent their mediums In which tho Chi• Hawaii!" and weapons, but none of the '1 days with a writing brush at- Honolulu set a record car• Murayama, Jonl F u k u d a, 41 persons were arrested. 1416 Jaokson St., was Tockea lemptlng an artlstlo represen• nese excelled-lacquer ware • Watsonvill., Calif. Louise Tsureyoshl, Katherine by an explosion Jan. 22 and tatlon of tile oharacters used textiles, WOOdwork, and arch~ TELLERS bon monoxide poUution ill the Philip Bash.,,', special agent I~ture, air on Monday, Jan. 15. The Tashiro, Cynthia Iwata, Fay in cherge, sold the evidence Its director, Mrs. Yoshito Ha- In script, a corollary art, which succumbed to Rf~ time and the ravages of the TOM NAKASE lovel was 412 per cent of that Kagibara and Shoron Sekiya. will be taken to the federal rada, was injured In the blast pointing, grew Irom calll• Acreage RlInc:h .. - Homn Festival dates are Jan. 22 wal'S that wracked China. The pNmitted by the state air grand jury ill Honolulu by that tore oil most of her graphy. The Chinese were to Full & Part time need for Inco",. quallty standards. FOT the first througb April 7. clothes. hold the art at painting In author says of the Buddhist three Rttorney. for the San archllecture 01 the T'ang Pc• OUT Santa Monica & 25 CT,~r.,J· ~:~'Mj'j~1~ 77 time It ros. above the level Froncisco slrike force. The Some ~O I're-school children greatest e.teem; palnUng is West Lo. AngeleS officea Political Seen. In the nursery walked out the only In which China rlod (618-006) Ihat "almo.t »Crmltted by tho federal air sweep Is said \0 be the larg• art • San Jose, Calif, PromoUon In. t1'l8 Honolulu calmly under leadershIp ot I. doing outstanding work to• nothing remains ... the Nara• pollution standards. os\ anti-gambling strike in Excellent work In, condiUonl &: It will be years. it ever, be• r oUte Dept. have b~n announced several adults. None was In- day. period (600-794) temples in Hawaii history. Police Chief Japan, like the Todai-ji and Fringe Bf!11eftb. eaU M.l&s Lee EDWARD T. MORIO- K-"'-,-R-II-h.-r fore the courts will allow Ha• ~J'uu~~e~n!'!dn~!ill ~:a~ltc~alri~ Francis Keala said the ring, jured. In landscape palntlng, the Service Through hl'firlmee waii or any other state to $pector in charge 01 the rural known as The Company, ap• There was no fire but tbe artist ~trove to pierce out• the Hoshodal-jl, gives a bet• Bu •. : 2.6-6606 R... : 2~1 -9554 control population rrowlh by dUitrJcts. Promoted to lieutenant ter idea of T'ang Buddhist 870-0393 Ext. 45 L~. pears to be strictly a local odor at natural gas was werd appearance to render I placing Icgal Ii.nits in in• were Leslie Moah. Donald operation. Keala and Basher strong. From the outside the lhe heart of the Icene. Con• architecture thon the scanty • Sacramento, Calif. EuRene Uemura. LatTY Ta1c.ahAt'a remains In China." to 12 Noon lor Ippointment. migration, Dr. Paul Y1,~saker and Warren Ferreira. The follow· said the ring handled $400,000 damage appeared to be IImlt- slderlng hlms.1t only an ele• o said here Jan. 16. Y1visaker, a inc have bc!-cn promoted to tier• in bets during one recent ed to shattered windows and ment at nature, the Chinese The Todal-ll also ha. a Wakano-Ura--• Reont - Clendon Nunes. Dennis building, the Shoso-In, famous 1st Federal Savings & Loan Sukty.lkl • Chop Suey Harvard dean and one of the KawakamJ. Clenn Peterson. Den• week end, and $275,000 on a a brick veneer that was blown painter sought to Identify leading experts on land use nis Hlu, Walla~ Akeo. CUthbert succeeding week end. Police away from the east wall ot with the mountain., streams, as a repository of articles of ~ff'IM,,-1:' ~o"'l;IM~~ I and urban problems. said at• Cornie.! and Andrew Glushenko. and FBI agents were issued an adjoining playroom. trees and rocks he sought to T'ang decorative arts. In 756 ASs'n at Santa Monica tempts to do this In New Jer• Edward Lingo, Keith Pocock and 79 search werrants on the 49 days DUer tho death of he~ sey by zoning and other con• Don Yamaruchl were name-d de• busband, the Emperor Sbomu • Seattle, Wash, tective, corresponding to sergeant. evidence obtained t h r 0 ugh "" Equal OPportunity Emptoyer trols are beine thro"." out of wiretaps. the Empress Komyo stored I~ cO;:~;~o this treasury, which resem• Imperial Lanes T3dakl, supervtsor of Traffic: Fatality th~a~g:tlf::m~~lh~~al'i ~a,~~ bles a large log-cabin, all the 2' 01 - nnd Ave. So. EA 5-25U I'ublie wel!are on the Big uland. Three persons died In a Ir.me venUes in the island'. hWOry. 442nd Reunion this summer in Hawaii • Annonnc.emen& Nisei Owned - Fred Takagi, Mar. Pollee raIded a boy~' restroom relics and dolly utensils of tbe ~~~ntymC"c;~~~J's °!ocft~e an~a~~~ ~;~de\~~;rin8 l~I~;_:~~n~:Hb~~~~: on the Kaual High SChool camp• deceased - jewel., glass ob• Klnomoto Travel Se,;jc.• tural deve-Iopment committee the less refuse truck plowed into six us and netted 17 youUu. 1-1 to 17. jecte, musical Instruments sil• Frank Y. IClnomoto BI, Island's greate-s;t !'ocial need ears stopped opposite t.he Kailua who were watching or taking mobilized as week full of luaus, lours 521 Main St. MA ~.15 n is adequate' hOUSlnl for low and Dri\.·e-In Theale-t. Ten other per• verware, writing malm.ials moderate income residents. Be sons were. injured. Dead were f:~~n ~o dlc:O l ,~~e. h~~Q~7.~::..e wearing apparel, masks and uJd rentals now range from ~50 'Irs. Jrlke thne. "4, of t9..074 then released In the C"UFlody ot mirrors. tI. • • the coUection Wa6hlngtofl, D,C, to $3CIO monthly while the DePt. Kamehamehl R1lhway. Francine their parent.., • . . The uno vice B1 FRANK AKAIIIOTO reunion. That evening Is the Is not only eomplete but un• or Social Sen'lces ,rants from N. Runewa, 24. of 49 .. 132B Kame- ~quad on Dec. 18 arrested 10 RUo ~~cil~lau,;,elcome 559 to $109 a month for housing hameha Highway. nnd 1\Ir5. Ku• Hfgh School .tudenla In the ~ CHICAGO _ The 1000 Club reception, 0 questionably authentic. Im• • Real Estate. MASAOKA • ISHIKAW ... need~ . dependJn~ on famUy site. newa's ~-yearo.()ld daughter. Mar• ('Ond gam bUng raid In three days and the Nisei Post 1183 of On July I , Sunday, will be ported from China or made In AND ASSOCIATES, INC. The 5econd gfC!8test net"d. he !:aid. 't'eJl. PoUce Slid th.t the truck. 1n HUo. Ten boy!>. Bfl:Ml 15 to 17. Chicago have chartered a a memorial service ot the Japan in Imitation at Chinese SKI TAnOE-2 bedroom cabin. Consu~O~~J LSt:"~~~0'3~tt 'r1 !d~~r f:~i~~o~:~tniBg~Uj~: ~~: ~~~~~~r t~~u~~~~ua b~~I:'e~· l\i:~ were raUlht r;hootlnJt' dice to • models these objects represent completely fur n 1 • h e d with umpus res1.r'C)Om. polfer laid. OIght to HawaU lor the 442nd Punchbowl. Afternoon would kitchen. 3 miles to heavenly cente" more than a mile before the latAl WilHam Borthwick. Ale 100. ReuniOn, end according to be every man for himself tho highest level of T'ang skUng. S mUes to Catinos . • ft~ ...... " ...... ~ The prlre or milk in Hawaii crash .scene. died Jan 8. H~ once !lerved as a their agenda, there Is going to (beach activities) Evening decorative arts In workman• le~st TerrilorLal Jellst.tor and .5 Ter· ship and design." Tbe collec• ~go minim~~. ~?aa~f p:oe;:~~ - 2.4 Hou, Im.rg."cy _ wUl eo up Feb. I by at Oeatl!s rltorial tax eommtsstoner. He be a luau evel'J:' .night! would be more luou. Scbed- er • p.m. (213) 383.,'1510. two cents a qU31i. Darry founded Honolulu Savings and So far, the Itmerary looks uled for Mondoy, July 2, ere ghl'na~s superior to any in trW. 00 Anythlno In GI • ..,. 1aJmers wUl receive 25 .3 cents Peter ;\. Grlmng, 2!, "'('In 0'1 the Loan In addiUon to BorthwiCK like this-leaving June 25, sport activltles-golllng bowl• 8 quart for milk on Oahu and Robert GrtMnx' o( 3M7 OwenR Morhullry. The influence of Chinese Harold r . ~1cGu're-. 12, 8 found .. Man day morning, O'Here ing deep sea flshlng' pool Excellent PESKIN & GERSON 24 cents on the Big Island. ~~ .• s'l~::ri!e~tJft~ 17L~15 ao~~r!: er or the wmo\Y~ nestaunnt. Field and arriving mld-atter- • h <> p pin g tours sw"mm1ng art on Japanese was lo eOn• Calil. Peter was a student at dJed Dec. 2'7. He WIS tht!" oldrst tlnue through the ages. The Development Property ot th~ elght brothers and IJfMtl"$ noon in Hilo. A big official with the gal. and other fun GLASS CO. Names in tho News ~~&nStr~i,p~~:f!~lThl~S~1~!~ dmner recephon follows upon activities. Tbere will be teen• most famous Chinese painters, who founded the popular restau• regarded by many Japanese Located near I'roposed I.st. 1949 - UCtnlt4 e."".ctw the rant on Hausten S1. In MolUUI arrIVal and le.s for everyone. age programs also In conlllOe- IW110 Yokoojl, 51, has re• CrlJRng \\185 direct ot Bono• critics as the greatest painters entrance to BUllon Dollar signed from his post as ad• lulu Academy or Arts tor 16 ye8.B Dr. Curtis A. Manchrrtu. 60. Tuesday, June 26: Tour at tlon with the adult program, ~r~~r£~~ o!x,~r~~~~I ~~ bt:for~ his retirement in 1963. Univ. of HawaII professor r:merl ... ot China, are Ma Yuan and Palmdale international ministrative assistant to the tus of geography. died Dec. 8. Re• orch.d nursery, lunch at Vol- and on Monday night, there Airport tired alter 2$ yean on thf': (acul .. cano House, and evening luau. will be stag fOT the men end Hsla Kuei. Active during the Gl~to T8r.~; P}~~~ W~ city's manoging director, He Univ. of Hawaii a late 12th and early 13th cen• & .. .. gave bealth reasons for his ty. he Is sun,01ved by his wil, On Wednesdas, (the 27th) a fashion $how for tbe ladies 2'h Acres to 40 Acres The Uolv. ot HawaII pl8llll and a son. lunch at Kona, departure for . tury, both profoundly inftu• 724 S, San Pedro St., l ..... 900" resignation from the 519,000- enced the painters of ChIna at Ollered with Attractive Terms 0- year post. Yokooji was to increa.e educational oppor• MaW. Atternoon Is on your ClosinK Banquet Cl13) 622·8243 Courtroom their 0"'" day os well a. Ja• chairman ot Mayor Frank tunities for members of "dis• own and that night is the of- Tuesday, July 3 Is the Pearl P. O. Box 141 ...... Fasi's campaign during the advantaged" e t h n i c groups, Takeo Yamaucbl, 49, a Maut !Icial Maul Island recepllon, Harbor cruise (you will .ee panese painters at the Muro• -- ... --- ...... _- ...... macbi Period (1338-1573). last two masoraJity cam• Including Hawaiians, Samoans gambler, pleaded guilty Jan, another luau; On Thursday, Tora, Tora in action!) and La Mirada, Caill. 90637 Pottery manufacture in Ja• I'aigns. and Filipinos, UH Pres. Har• 15 in federal court to a mis• a tour of Lobaina, picnic that evening, more individual or Call: (714) 774-4460 Ruald A. Naumu. who was de!''' lan Cleveland said on Jan. 17. demeanor violation tor the lunch at lao Valley Park, t! lti Wed d tb pan cnn be traced to the Jo• luted last No\,. {or re-election In a speech before the Ha• possession of three $100 coun• afternoon - out with tbe 1.- j~ h~,pita1Ir;' ~m; mon Period (c. 2500-250 B.C.) to the Kaua! County Counell. has ;! been hired by the County PublJe waiian Civic Club, Cleveland terfeit bllJs. The bills were dies! Evening, lnlormal Maul open to everyone and the eve- though the Jomon potters may Worka Dept. under contract to said, U)fy main message to found in a U.S. custol1Ul get-together. nlng will be tbe otlicial 442nd be unrelated to the residents assist In overaU management ot you tonight is to affirm that search at Yamaucbi wben he Onl1 Halt of It Reunion Banquet. of modem Japan. Ceramics We6ley WSCS Cookbook thp Parkl and Recreation Ojvl. relurned tram a trip to the had acbleved sophistication by 12th PRINTING I510n. County Engineer Herbert the Univ. ot Hawaii, which 1 notice that many are go- has not laced this problem Orient in Dec., 1970. On Friday morning depart lng to Japan and tbose that the time ot the construction ortental and Favorite Rect. t~~~d~ Lc1t'~:'eu.:il~ n W~r:~~ squarely, now proposes to do Anne Iloyo Shimabukuro, for Kaua. and tour of Haena already bave extended them• oc the Shoso-in, but declined fo":: ~~~!~08nft.~0 :~~~ One of the Largest Solectlona in devrloplng a year· round rec• just thai." 32, was released from Queen's and Han.alel ond that evening, selves On this vacation will thereatter. Church. 568 N. 5th SL, 2421 W. Jefferson, LA reational program. RE 1-2121 lIlasayuki Tokloka, pres. of Medical C e n t" r psychiatric the offic.al Kaual Island dln- head home but doesn't this In the 13tb century, Kato San Jose, CaUL Congreuional Score ward brieHy Jan. 16 end o~ National Mortgage and Fi• ner the Wailua Boat Ride. sound like' a lremendous re• Shlrozaemon returned to Ja- , i~:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;~ JOHN TY SAITO & ASSOCI ... TD nance Co., Ltd., bas been en. Hiram Fonr announced charged with murdering her Da.;SD t thls sound like fiI!, so union? Hoping to see you all! pan with secrets ot the art of named winner of the 1973 Jan. 18 that the U.S. Dept. of intant son Dec. 12. She was far This IS only holt of It! Now, this doesn't mean that ceramics he had learned In also charged with attempted China. He revitalized this art . On Saturday, June 30, the you must be a veteran. U you AJk for, , • Appliances • murder in the stabbing of her s.xth day III Hawall, will be are a non-veteran, YOII will be with which the name of China daughter. Renee, 3, who was the Waimea Canyon tour and a welcome guest of the ChI• bas become synonymou •. 'Cherry Brand' George Yoshinaga severly Injured but bas since lunch WIth the gals. Then de- cago Nisei Post, so feel tree The author, who has also recovered. parture for Honolulu and the to .ign up. Hoping to see yoU published books on Japanese MUTUAL SUPP LY CO. lIlisdemeanor char, .. bave lua~ art, shows the Influence at @TAMURA varIOus Company mixer. In on those evening under 1090 San.ome St., S.F. 11 been filed in Honolulu dis• the afternoon so thls Is a real the swaying palms. Chinese art on that at Japan. And Co., Inc. Ringside trict CQUr\ again.t 23 unsuc• He covers the complete spec• cessful primary electlon can• trum of Chinese art in clear f'JIUJ 1JHud didates who !oiled to fil. or language. ~'JUJ ~ni41r¥ were late in filing reports of The deluxe book has maps tit campaign expenses. The max• Danielson bill reintroduced for showing the historical art Miliowoya 3420 W. Jefferson Blvd. Seat imum penalty under the mis• centers China, a blbli• at Sweet Shop demeanor charges is $500 and ograpby and index. 115 illus• Los Angeles 18 six months in jail. The law trations, some full page, and 244 E. lst St, RE 1·7261 • • • requires that campaign ex• Japanese American Friendship Act t!t.1n color, accompany the Lo, Angeles MA 8-4935 taln. penses be filed 20 days aU.,.,. Spring season ..,...... ~ ...... Los Angeles Roger Repoz, former Call• the general election. Two 1970 candidates. Ernest Heen and WASHINGTON, D.C. - In Dance the programs. Tbe pro• If you peer out the window lomia Angel, will be playing an effort to strengthen t b e posal is identical to one which UMEY A's exciting gift of and see all that rain pouring for the Taiheiyo Lions (torm• Richard W I III a m s , were chaTged earlier for the same tles at friendship existing be• he introduced during tbe last down from the heavens and erly Nishitetsu Lions). tween the United States and crispy Robert Taylor and James offense. Ot the 23 charged, Congress. feel the cold wintry blast Japan, Congressman George "In less than 30 years," Da• sweeping acrOss the ground, Williams, botb formcr Coast only Donald S. White, who goodness ran as a Republican from tbe E. Danielson (D-Calif) h a , nielson said, "Japan and the it's hard to imagine that it's League players with Pboenix introduced legislation to cre• Tops for sheer will be on the roster of the 1st Congressional District, has United States have progressed nearly spring and the sports ale an .international educa .. from a state ot war to a spI• run, excitement, pages of our town are be• Chunichi Dragons, managed not filed his report. Cbarged Wisdom were' tlonal education and cultural rit at International coopera• ginning to carry photos of by Ni.sei Wally Yonamine. exchange between the two olus Fla'lOri Wally cut loose 1\\'0 other Herbert Minn. John Goemans. tion and close economlc ties. baseball players warming up David Ems. Danny Kamalani, nations. The people of the United lor the coming season. American players to make Peter McGo\·ern. Eugene Res."c,m .. room for Taylor and Williams. The legislation, entitled the States and Japan would Est~~~~h.cI A handful of Dodgers are ~[Jo E).Te~~.1if~~' ~\~~, S~fcn~!r~ Japanese American Friend• grea tly benefit tram tbe even at Dodger Stadium working Released were Bert Shirley NISEI and John Miller, both former ~~!~:i::a, D~f:J l\~~O~g. EuA~~7~ ship Act of 1973, would s et greater mutual respect and out already aside 10% of the paymenls understanding that would de• Spring training staTts of• Dodgers. Kek:auoha, James COfe-),. Gerald recelved by tbe United Stat.., Umm Rice Cakl Co. lnforzato, Clare Barton, Roddy velop from an expanded stu• los Angeles ficially in about a month Dlrosbima Carps J3Mlhante. Donald BumJli, MYTon from Japan for the return of dent a nd cultural exchange TRADING (0. In Japan tbey don't really "Park. Norma Carr and l>onald Okinawa to establisb a trust program. Certainly there Is • Appliance, • TV • Fumltu .. stop playing baseball. The Another former Dodger, White. fund to finance student ex• players are paid on a month• Jim Hicks, has joined tbe Hi• Former Kauai lIlayor An· much we can learn from each 348 E, FIRST ST., L.A, 12 roshima Carps. Hicks played lone Vidinba, Jr. did not file change and scholarship pro• other." ly basis all year round so grams between Japan and the MAdison 4·660 I (2, 3, 4) they are expccted to play in last at Hawaii in the Pacific late lax .. tor 1969 and 1970 United States, accord.ing to 1973 CHEVROLET IMPRESS ~..--."....cr"'-=C:==:~I the "oIf' ~calion as well as Coast League where he hit 26 ''until he was Iorced wltb Congressman Danielson. during the regular season homerun. In 1972, wbich imminent and immediate Fleet Price to All-Ask fOl I So, the teams go off on learned him the homerun title criminal prosecution." Sam Danielson said that out of FRED MIYATA Aloha Plumbing junkets to Taiwan and Korea for the loop. Strother, a Virginia attorney the trust fund, the interest SOMEONE for games Teaming with Hicks at Hi• here to prosecute Vidlnha's and no more than 5% of the Hansen Chevrolet I PARTS & SUPPLIES roshima will be Frank Cog• case, said in federal court principal could be used to fi- 11351 L.A. - Repairs Our Specialty - Foreign Players W. Olymplc Blvd. Wert I gins, a former infielder witb Jan. 8, in response to pretrial 479-4411 Res. 826-980$ Your mother. Wife. Big Brother. Boss. 1948 S. Grand, Lo. Angel .. None of the foreign players Wichita in the triple A AmeT• motions by Vldinha's attor• RI 9.4371 on the rosters of the team 'ean Association. Coggin. neys that the case be dismiss• Girl Friend. Neighbor. Bookie. have to play during the oU played In the Major League ed beeause Vidinha eventually Dr. Doi- Maybe Even Your Dentist. season. however. with the Washingion Senator. paid the taxes and Is being Most of the foreign players tor two Years. "selectively prosecuted" to Continued from Page 2 Toyo Printing I ED SATO PLUMBING "'NO HEATING arc Americans and they re• Holdover Americans from make an example of a public momentarily when I couldn't OHm. Leuorprtfs • lI~OIYPIn9 Just Rent or Lease an Impressive 1973 Car turn to the U.S. until the last year include: Clete Boyer official. Vldinha's attorneys Remodel lind Repal" Wat., join them in tbeir scbool or 309 S, SAN PEDRO ST, From Heaters, Garbage Disposals. formal spring game begins. and John Sipin of Taiyo; are Arthur B. Reinwald and An9~1" Furnace. It's amaling to note that Dave Roberts and Arturo Dennis O'Connor. An admit• drinking songs, because all Los 1Z - MAal1.n 6.8l5' ted ml11Ionalre, Vidlnha was - Servlclng Los Angeles - durlnlt the post war era, a Lopez 01 Yakult, Blll Sorrell andthe Japanit struckese menme knewtbat I tbemwas ;,;"#;;;';;';';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, Auto-Ready, Inc:. AX 3·7000 RE 3.0557 lotal of 350 Americon players Of Hankyu; Gcorge Allman of indicted On Nov. 20 on two "We're Reildy When You Ar .... counts of \\~ll!ul falillre to file an outsider wben I couldn't ha"e appeared in a Japanese Lotte; Clarence Jones and raise my voice with them. 208 S. San Pedro St, Los Angofe, 90012 baseball uniform. This Is Willie Smith of Nankai; Willie federal income tax Teturns tor Slnce 1950 Kirkland of Hansbin' and 1969 and 1970. The tederal And the warmth of their 624·3721 .-d... NEW LOC ... TION During that time, .t Is be• Bob Christian of the F1)'ers. gTand jury charge. wllJtu1 tellowship reminded me at Nanka Printing lieved that the average wage Each Japanese team is al• failure for 1969 "when be what could have been a part 2024 E. lst St. of lhe American players bas lowed two foreign players. well knew he had gross In• ot my li!e style. Their life Los Angeles, Calif, style seems to keep them ~ been around the $20.000 per Which means that with 16 come at S72,906" and tor 1970 ANgelus 8-7835 I('mut. ,eason le,·el. Not at all a bad signed. lor. the coming year, "when he well knew he had young and vigorous in spite Los Angeles Japanese Casualty Insurance Assn. IS gross income ot S66,305." Vi• at obvious social pressures. PHOTOMART a"erage for the type of play_ there stili room for eigbt - Complete Insurance Protection - ers who ha"e been signed. more on the leams without dinba had been mayor of Ka• They certainly know how to ~~== &"144.-ip~ ~ It must be remembered their tull complement. uai since 1968 and \\'as county enloy themselves compared to REPAIRING REGULATING Aih.,. In •. Agy., Alhara·Omatsu·Kaklta, 250 E lst Et ..... 626·9625 most msei and otber Amer• that until rccently, most of NODe for Giants chairman from 1966 to 1968. Artistic Piano Tuning An.on Fuiioka Agy., 321 E. 2nd, Suite 500.... 626-4393 263-1109 316 E. 2nd St., Lot ...... the American players signed icans. funako.hi Ins. Agy., Funakoshi.Kagawa·Manaka.Morey-Fulloka 622-3968 were o,'er-the-hill pcrtorm- Of co u r s e, the Yomiuri By HIRAOKA 321 E. 2nd 5t ...... _ ... 626-5275 462·7406 Giants have to be eliminated. Cardinal-elect Taguchi With Yamaha Tuning Scope Hirohat. In •. Agy., 322 E. 5econd 5t ...... 628·1214 287·8605 They don't want foreign ploy• JULES MEYERS rOI CH I HIItAOKA Inouye In •. Agy., 15029 Sylvanwood Ave., Norwalk...... 864·5774 Fronl·Line Talenl Tel.: (213 ) 294~2811 ers on their roster. ROME-Pope Paul VI last (c. II before Noon or £Venlngs) Jo e S. It.no & Co., 318Y2 E. 1st 5t ...... 624·0758 Of late, howe,·er. front· line Oddly enough, the Giants week (Feb. 2) named 30 new PONTIAC Tom T. Ito, 595 N. Lincoln, Pasadena 794-7189 (l.A'> 681·4411 Major Lenlt"ers ha,'e been keep winning the champion• cardinals, including one Japa• Minoru 'Nix' Nagata, 1497 Rock Haven, Monterey Park.. ... 268-4554 " ooed to Japan. ship without any help from nese and announced he would 1973 Le Man •• Firebird Steve Nakaji, 4566 Centinela Ave ...... 391·5931 837-9150 This year a number of new American players. elevate them in a conSistory Grand Prix and the exciting S.to Ins. Agy., 366 E. 1st 51. .... _ ...... 629-1425 261·6519 plll)'''''' will be in J apanese All that may change this March 5. Archibisbop Paul new Grand Am I MARUKYO umform. hc"dcd by Jimmy year~ " coming however. The Yoshigoro Taguchi, 70-year• See the.se and more. at: . I KiInODO Store Lefebvre, former Dodgcr. who a,·era~e a~e of the Giants is 30 old J apanes. residing in Osa• .. w.ll play for the LaUe Orions and tbeir pitching staU is not ka. is one of the new ap• ------_ STUDIO 10860 5anta MonICa Blvd. ~ 101 Wener SL at a (igure believed to be the as strong as it used to be. ~.it:ili. to the College of highest e"er paid an Ameri• But, in the spring wbo West Los Angeles, 272-7904 Em!!!!:,~,,~~!!!i~!,}o. 318 East First Street can in Japan ... a neat $70 _ Los Angrles iii:\. kno"."s what will transpire. A.k for -I Lo. Angel .., Calif. 000 per year with an additlo";• And the rain continues to MA 8·5902 ~ al SIOO.OOO bonus for "ariou. Thousand Clubbers t English and Japanese MA 6·5681 fall outside. RANDY SUNADA • TODAY! I I) 114 Weller St" Los Angeles 90012 MA 8·7060 accolllpllihments he must at: -Kashu hlainicbi Donate $25 a Year t ( , 6-PACIFIC CITIZEN Friday, Feb. 9, 1978 Ikaling profe.. lonelly 10r lev- REV. TARO GOTO: 1902-'972 en year., Is spending her third NEWS yea,. touring Europe A churchman and Sister City envoy N. Y. Medical Board action closing Awards CAPSULES As lIrst recipienl. o[ the LOD!, Calif. - When Lodt'. Rev. Goto wM appointed to new Department of Defense Rev. Taro Golo died last De• the position a. superintendent acupuncture cenfer seen as race bias (DOD) Design A war d 5, cember 18, messages of con• oC the Pacillc Japanese pro• George i\lalsumoto and As• dolence to his family poured visional annual conference in In (rom all over the world. 1949. WASHINGTON, D.C. - "It friends set up the N.Y. Cell• Entertainment sociates of Son FrancIsco and wa. a foolish ruling by peo• ter when he lert the Army. lhe Sacramento District Army Not the least ot the Im• Ordained in 1931 ple who are not even elect• Young HOllolulu filmmak• COIl'S Of Engint'Crs were portant me.. ages to have been Palle,,'" in , .1'. jomUy honored [01' the out• received wa. 0 telegl'am (rom Berore that, and after hI. ed. Even from publicly a p - ers, Roduey Kob_ya k.",a, President Nixon. pointed officials you would "We had been Ii'eating sev• standing design and cOllstruc- ordination in 1931, he wa. In expect bonesty, truth. and in• eral bundred doctors, public Keonetb ozawa and Clyde 11011 01 the 102 family 11OUS• It said: "Mrs. Nixon and I Portiand, Ore. From 1945 to tegrity. The New York Med• official., and some of the New Tanaka won a tolal of $275 illg units at the Presidio of want to convey our deepest 1949, he was In Spokane, ical Board dlsplayed none of York Jets football team," he in grants for two short works Son FLoancisco. sympathy to the tamily of Wash., where the Japanese these," cbarged Dr. Anlold said speaking of the N. Y on super-8. The winning Reverend Taro Goto. Rever• people had not been evacuat• Benson, head of the Washing• Center. Then the State Med• piece. "Hawaii 0-0", was a Health end Golo wa. one ot the great ed during the war years. ton Acupuncture Center, in a ical Board stepped in. spoof on Hawaii Five-O Japanese American pioneer. On Deo. 7, 1941, Rev. Goto recent Interview commenting Atter the Boards decision featuring Tanaka in a cookle• norm J ACL preSIdent Dr. wbo contributed so much to and his wife, the former AUce on the Medical Board's deci• against acupuncture was pub• stealing caper. Pidgin narra• David As.hara attended the the development ot CaUlor• Yamada, \V ere serving a sion that forced him to close lished, he said, he Board then tive is featured. Rwmel'-up meeting of chiropractors !rom nia and the western United church in San FrancIsco when his thriving New York Cen• publicly announced that they was their "Land of HawaU", U.S., Canada, Europe, indIa States. they learned of the attack on zooming in on floral and ond Australia to hear Dr. Sid Pearl Harbor. ter and relocate his growing were taking a course in acu• Ben N. Matsui uHe will be remembered practice in D.C. puncture. scenic aspects with a rich E. Williams, founder of Dy• fondly, not only by his fam• Mrs. Goto recalled the event musical sound track namic Essential. and president as u a great shock." "The N.Y. medical board is "They acted in total ignor• ily and friends, but also by Rev. Taro Goto twenty-three MD's appointed ance for their own gain," be of Lilc Foundation at Allanta, the Japanese American Com• She said in her quiet voice, by the Governor who form alleged. Government Ga., recently. munity and the nation to II We were in tears. \Ve went Japanese naturaUz.Uon rights their o\vn legislature, execu• Benson cited the case of Dr Do'. Tsunehlsa Ma kino ot whicb he was [uly dedicat• to cburch and prayed tor were restored, Rev. Goto be• tive, and judicial branch and Lee for comparison. Dr. Lee Mrs. Marie Y. hlbu.l'a. was the Laboratory of Human Re• ed and which be served so Gods forgiveness." came a ci lizen of the Unit• wbo make and set their own is one of the Cblnese acu• appointed to Los Angeles production and Reproductive et1'ectively," Evacuation Era ed States. rules and enforce them," Dr. puncttu·!sts that the State County CommJsslon on Hu• Biology, received The PrIze It is signed "Richard NIX• Benson explained. "Tbey are Board kept !rom practicing man Relations for the Ull• Thesis Award (December on." She sald they helped other Sisler 113' in N.Y. Dr. Lee had th!rty expil.... d term oC Robcrt ilL 1972) (rom The Amedean people by housing their be• outside the law and are the Melhodist Leader In the fall of 1959, Rev. most unconstitutional body in years of professional expe• Takasugl who resigned. The Association ot Obstetrics and longings (as the Japanese Goto lett for Japan, not only existence today. Tbere is no rience and had been the head terms end Feb. 28, 1974. Su• Gynecology. His study con• Although he took an active were being ordered to reloca• as a representative of the Pa• recourse in state statute to of 11 hospital in Hong Kong. pervisor Ernest E. Debs who celltrated on the interacellular part in many community af• tion camps). c i f I c Japanese Provisional Tbe medical expert of the made the appointment said mechanism through which the At first, tbey were sent to their rules and they can and fairsJ Lod1ans seem to remem• Conference of the Methodist do change them from day to State Medical Board who tes• Nilli ~~~ ~ lives in Rolling releasing factor o[ the brain ber him best as head of the the Tanforan race tracks, Church, but also as a rep• day." tified a g a i ns t acupuncture acts on the pituitary gland: Japanese Methodist Churches where some of the people had resentative of the Cit y ot Dr . Benson, an American was, in contrast, an "intern Dr. Makino is an Associate in in the United States - and to sleep in the borse stalls. Lodi. M.D., found 0 u t about acu• !rom Presbyterian Hospital." Beauties Obstetrics and Gynecology at tor being instrumental in es• Then, they were sent to a According to tus wife, Rev. puncture wblle stationed in Racial Bias ccn U,e Harvard Medical School. tablishing the Sister City re• camp near Salt La k e City, Goto was particularly im• the Far East with the U.S. Ellcn Orauo, daughter of At the Clinical Congress of lationship between Lodi, Cal• and the Gotos went along, he pressed by Kofu, because of Army, and witb several RaCial prejudice, in addition Mr. and Mrs. Thomas T. The Amedcan College of ifornia, and Kofu, Jallan. as the leader, and they were its vineyards. its location, to the desire to keep the prac- SUI·geons. Dr. Tcruo Matsu• Uranot Fort Lupton, is com• Rev. Goto was 70 years old accompanied by their two some 100 miles from the tice in the hands of M.D. 's, peting in Colorado's Junior moto, Hahnemanll Medical when he died. (Rev. Goto is sonSJ Mark who was the n coast, and of its lovely homes had a strong role in the Miss Pageant. Winner o( the College and Hospital, Phila• a first cousin to Mike Masa• three, and Leo, 7. that are kept in immaculate Board's decision according to Colorado competition will ad• delphia, lectured on the scien• oka.) They stayed at the camp condition. -News-Sentinel local Scene Dr. Benson who termed the vance to America's Junior tilic studies car ried out at tbe for about a year "helping above named Institution in re• He was born In the city 1 decision the "N Y. State 1972 Miss Pageant in Mobile, Al a~ of Olaru, Island of Hokkai• wherever we could." Cbina ExclUSion Act," May 11. gard to th e relationship of "They will let English and acupullctw'C and electrical do, Japan, and he came to the Meaning of America 30 individuals aided Australlan technicians and stimulati on. In Dr. Matsu• United States in 1919, to de• Los Angeles nurses practice but exclude Education moto's experiments, inter• vote the rest 0' his life to After coming to L 0 d j in by AANBA since opening his adopted country. 1949, Rev. Goto sald in an Conversational Japanese ror Asians tram licensing or prac• mittent electrical stimulation Lone Mountain College, interview for the ,I L 0 d i LOS ANGELES-Asian Amer• chlJdren as well as adult be- tice," be said. He classified was found to be superior to San Francisco, founded by the manual needle movement. Times" tbat, at the age ot 17, ican National Business AI• J 30 N acupuncture as "a therapy Religious of the SaCl'ed Heart gan an. at ora Sterry like physical therapy or a Sam S Sato he'd had a purpose tor want- liance, of 777 N. Broadway, Community Lighted School, nurse giving penicillin," and in 1898, and co-educational ing to come to America. contracted by the U.S. Dept. since 1970, has added David Crime 1730 Corinth Ave., West Los feels "it is definitely a part of Two Califormans ',,"'ere ap• Higashi, Lo uis 1., 51 of "I had rebeUed at the ideal of Commerce to provide as• Angeles Tbe Co m m uni ty Yamakawa and Edison no of militarism and regimenta- sistance in developing loan Ligbted School is an experl- medicine." . to its board of regents as pointed to head Bank of Tok• New York police Jan. 26 San Jose died Jan. 27.' An mental program suPpOrted b,' The Center's recephon in yo oC Calif. branch.. Bcu arrested two of the trio who M1S "eteran and Unlv. tion which bad begun to show packages for new and existing among the 26 commwllty ot its bead in Japan. I believ- firms seeklng operating cap• West L.A. JACL and sever3I Die:· bas been fantastic ex• representatives by boa r d l\latsui, vice president and had stabbed Japanese student Texas ~ .. adaute, the HoWster• Japanese and Mexican-Amer- p aIDed Dr. Benson. He told manager of the North Fresno Ma ... haru Tom 0 no, 24. to born chemist has been credit. ed in the value o[ individual- ital. revealed over 30 individ• cbairman Supervisor Dianne ity and I knew that in Amer- uals bave been assisted since lcan community organizations of the many doctors who have Feinstein and Sister Gertrude branch, will head the new death all a Manhattan street ed \\. ith M:\'cn inventions in Cl held aft . come to the Acupuncture Oakland branch slated Cor a before down Jan. 2. Arrested plastics and six in magnetic ica democracy c 0 u 1 d be its opening late last year. ernoo~ Patch, president of the liberal found." The AANBA board is com- asses are . Center both as patients and alts institution. March opening. The Oakland were boys - one 14 years old coathings. Most recently. he apd evenIngs ~mg the faCl- observers and of man ._ o[!ice will be the II-branch He said at the time - in prised of' ties of a public school in a . i .. Y m When Inez Nagai started and the other 15 years old _ worked (or Karex. Inc. volunteer program directed qwr es for tralI!mg courses. bank's first in the Eastbay, a known as hooligans In the 1954 - that his two heroes WUbur K. Woo, chmn .. Tsutomu teacblng at Fresno's Edison three-story s t r U c t u r e at Mrs. Marion R . Wadell, 88, were Abraham Lincoln and Uchida, pres.; Tad Ikemoto, sec.- by a community council. Di- Tbe N.~. attitude on .acu• neighborhood. They attacked ~ ~;, J~~\;" ~ d i~ySo~ punct~e f~, High in 1938, she broke pre• Broadway and 19th SI. am and stabbed him in the chest Wi fe ot John Wadell, the Walt Whitman. C. rector Sid Yamazakl (477- IS, he a trunor- cedent as being the iirst Nisei In 1953, a year after the ~ m .. dlroctors. 0994) said. The L i g h ted opinio,:! Is medIcal cU:~es. . ato. asst. v.p.. San Fran• killing him before stealing ~ lounder of tbe Japan Amer• !:r employed by a Callfomia eL.co Main Omce, has been Ica SOCiety of Chicago, died ~ ...... School classes are free but The. attitude of medlcme secondary school. Still teacb• money police added. the adult school sessions re- here m D.C. IS ,that although named vice president and [ollowing a prolonged illness ~ ing, this time at Men10- manager of the North Fresno on Dec. 9. La wson Sak.i Associ.tos : quire t uition and .i1PPly ex- the doctors d.on know what Atherton High in BW'lingame, : LSA travel penses in some classes acupuncture IS, It d~s seem branch, established two ye3l'S ~C:~!:en~or!d ~~~ :rS~ _ AIR : . to benefit without causmg any Mrs. NagaI may establish an• ago and its second oUice in GARDENERS CHANGE i other precedent by winning Fresno. We Are One meets Feb 16 harm. Its practice is bere- Three Generations of •: In S.n Jos. coli 578-2630 :• 7:30 p.rn. at the Bank of Tok~ fore permitted as long as it State Teachers Rew..",ent HilTON DINNER SITE Experience . System service credit for four Suntor)" International. ex· • Suites 11 & 12, S.nt~ Teresa Professional Ctr. • yo Crenshaw branch to elect is done under medical SUpel'• port arm 01 Suntory, Ltd., school years she was interned : 6116 Cilmino Verde Dr., San Jose .: officers. Installation dinner vision." established d U.S. subsidiary OAKLAND. Calir.-The P 0 - F U K U I will be held March 24 The Embassies from the during WW2. Resolution in fesslonal Gardeners Federa• support was adopted by the S.l. Enterprises, to export : In Salin .., Watsonville, Monterey, call : . Chinese Peoples' Republic and American goods to Japan, it tion of Northern Calltornia Mortuary, Inc. Dne to increa"" in mem- Taiwan have referred pa• California Teachers Assn. changed its Feb. 17 installa• : our .epresentotive Harry lida 422-1197 • State Council recently. An• was announced by ;\Uchio bership of the Nisei Singles tients. Torll, president. It will focus tion dinner site to the Edge• 707 E. Temple St. ~ Club response to its Valen• other prewar Nisei school water Hyatt House here on ...... ! E".hange Plan teacher wbo would be similar- on exporting barrel staves, Los Angeles 90012 tine's Dance on Feb. 10, the barrels and fnlit juices at first Nimitz and Hegenburgel' Rd., Plans bad been made whi! Iy assisted is Frances Klta• locale has been changed to ex~ and later expand to export of ]ommg National JACL in its 626·0441 American Legion Hall, 15247 in New York to set up an gaw.. of Culver City. American - made machinery boycott of Hilton Hotels. La Cruz Dr. in Pacific Pali• change program between T3l• and technology for its whisky Persons who already bave SolChl Fukui, PreSident sades, according to George wan and the U.S. Taiwanese Churches and soft-drink production. tickets were asked to take James Nakagawa, Manager Fujita, in cbarge of the an• Nobuo Osumi. Counsellor acupuncturists w a u 1 d bave George H. mezawa of SCi note of the change of place. net capital gains of 35 % per annum ( nual event. come to the U.S. to do 1'