SACRAMENTO '(L U-NO BACKS PLAN FOR MINORITY JOBS PACIFI ITIZEN Bar Pact Involve. Job. MembershIp PubliQlion: ;t 51., los Ang.;., C.lif. 90012: !2131 MA 6~936 In Buildinc Trade. By R,\l' )IOND UNO Natlonnl JACL President over 7 -County Area VOL. 72 NO. 5 FRIDAY FEBRUARY 5, 1971 12 CENTS Sail Lake City (SDeclal to the Paoifte Citizen) At the la.t In!ermountain SACRAMENTO -Inforrnall.Y District Council meeting in known as the uHomelown Salt Lake CIt~ ,. I was Invlled Plan" during the negotiatillg t o meet with the Intermoun• stages lhls past year. a volun• tain District YOlllh Council tary, binding agreement now We had break!asl al 7 a.m. known as the Greater Sacra• aHer wbich we decided to mento Area Plan was ratified ~~~~!yH~:~~: have a rap session at the here Dec. 22 to provide in• borne o[ Frank and Sadie Yo• Matsunaga Title II creased minority employment shimura. Olher adults attend• In tbe building and construc• Ing were Tnts Misaka. GO\'- lion trades. As signatol'ies representing Valley of the Gulls one- of the minority communi• N~~!~~R~~'.~( ties were Dennis Nishikawa, Frank lwama and Percy Ma• repealer broadened en,or Ron YokOla. and Sam sakl for Sacramenlo JACL. Adminion to Mori (I'om Snake River Cbap• Nishikawa was one of the W ASHlNGTON- Legislation tet'. mernbers 011 NC-WNDC Group Plan Former Supreme Cou .. t Jus• without restriction, no crimi• five serving the wbich would repeal Title /I Two points conSistently ap~ negotiating subc 0 m mit tee tice Arthur Goldberg also ap• nal or ch'lJ charges 01 any peal'ed to affect all ol the \... ·hic h worked out Ule accept• of the Intel'na} Security Act 01. peared at the hearings and kind were broughl against youth. First, lack o[ commu• ed plan. accol'dlng to attorney TACOMA - DelegaleS to the 1950, known as "The Emer· told the Committee tI,al tbe any inwvidual e\-aCUee or n ication or wlderstanding be• Iwama, chapter president. :tJ.rat. quarterly meeting ol the gency Delention Ad," was Emergency Detention Act pro• against the evacuees as a Pacific Northwest JACL Dis• re-introduced Jan. 25 by Rep. bably is unconstitutional. In tween themselves and their \Villiam Spooner, represellt• group. No trial or hearing was p arents. It appeared the par• trict Council voted unani• Spark Malsunaga (D-Hawaii). his opinion. Goldberg said, tbe ever beld. Military aUlho• ing the blacks. was chairman mously to request permission Matsunaga. the principal provisions of the Emergency ents were rigid and inflexible. of the subcommittee and prio· rities on the West Coast did and pal'i iculal'1y tbe Nisei fa• sponsor o( a similar measure Detention Act would not be not e\'eD consider the sltU3- cipal spokesman lor the mi• fie~daN~Agtli~:~~i~~V~~~~ in the 91st Congress, said thai upheld i [ tesled in courl. thers who only made demands norities. Nishikawa represent• tiOD serious enough to in\'oke but rarely had time to listen elJ to join its health plan, ac• he will seek its early passage In his own testimony. Ma. mal'tial law:' ed the Asian community. cording to Tak Kubota. PN• by the House o[ Representa• to the other side o[ the slory. tsunaga, who immediately fol• Scope Exlended or if thcy did, gave little heed 7-County \1'ide WDC governor. tives. Bill is now fIR 234 . lowed the former Associate Tbe meeting Of the eighl liThe Enlergency Detention or credence to their children. This pact involves seven Justice to the witness chair. The main complaint appeared district chapters was held Act is nothing more - and drew a parallel between the M~r;,~~:; S~ ~d h~a~e~ ~~~ Northern counties here 011 Jan. 17, with Masao nothing less - than a con• to be that Nisei parcnts did seeking to increase employ• provisions of the Emergency extended Ihe scope of the pro• not understand their children Satow, national dU·ector. in centration camp law," Matsu• Detenlion Act and the deten• hibilion against the establish• mcnt of minorities in highly tlaU advisory capacity. naga said . "The elementary and often, made little eHort paid construction trades. tion a nd evacuation of some ment of concentration camps. to try to remedy the si tuation, Satow, In explaining the safeguards guaranleed by the 110,000 persons o[ J apanese The Title 11 repeal provision Second, there really seems Cont1'actors will make a plan and its benefits rurther, U.S. Constitution to tbe most ancestry Irom the West Coast is coupled with other provi• to exist an identity crisis. One good-faith effort to employ a stated that the procedUre lor hardened criminals are denied in the spring of /942. sions e..~cept in a regular Fed. girl from Idaho started out by gyeatel' percentage from the tI,e district council to jOin the to the most innocent of OUI liThe Emergency Detention eral penal or correctional in. minority community. program uwouJd be to petition suspected citizens undel' it s stitution aIter he has bee n saying sbe had no problems. pJ'ovi s ion ~." Act. i! enCorced. would inevi• but a ( t e r lislellin,e to the The agrcement contains a tht administrative coD1ll1ittee tably lead to a repetition of duly coO\~cted and sentenced othcrs talk. she finally con• minimum goal oC 15 percent on the health plan. Subse• The Emergency Detention thaI warUme blunder." he in a court 01 law. Because or ceded she was not accepted union membership of minori• quently, quotas and enroll• Act provides that the Presi• said. these additional provisions. by her white fa'iends as an ties by 1976 in each c r a (t ment procedw'es would be dent OI the "At a time when the courts the Hawaii lawmaker said union of the Sacramenlo• fOl1nulated/ ' Satow said. may: in the western States we r e that the new bill might well equal. She slarted to recall "- . . io the ~vent of f 1) im'a• incidents in which she was Sierra Building Trades Coun• Feb. 21 i\leetlnr sJon of Ule Lerritory of the United functioning normally and be relerred to the older and made to leel differcnt and cil. Membership of the Coun• TWENTY-FIVE YEAR AGO-It was July 15. 1 9~6. and States or Its possessions, (2) de• more highly respected House could not quite understand cil totals 18.000 ill H unions. Ishimaru will explain the claratlon of war by Congress, or Judiciary Committee instead raining in \Va shillgton, D.C., the a(tel'noon Presidcnt Truman JACL-CPS healtb plan at a (3) Insurrection witllin the United her feelings and her predica• PI'esent information on mi• States In aid of a torclgn ene· Sparky Portland-bound of the House Internal Securi• reviewed the .J42nd Regimental Combat Team and welcomed public meeting Feb. 21, 2 p.m., ty Committee. ment. She seemed to be say• nori ty membership is not home the troops Irom Europe. Lt. Col. Allred A. Put'sall, my .." declare the existence ing what the others seemed a\·ailabl • . but the 15 percent at Ibe Epworth Methodisl of an " Interna l ' Security Emer• PORTLAI\ID - Congressman "The 92nd Congress ought ~ 42nd commandet', poses With 442nd patients at Waller Reed Chw'ch with Portland, Gresh• gency," Following such a declara• t o say: I wonder who I really goal. according to minority tion, the President. acting through Spark Matsunaga of Hawaii 10 act promptiy to Insure in• am and where do I fit in this negotiators, w 0 U ld mea n Hospital who were with tbe President's reviewing parly. am-Troutdale and Mid-Co• the Attorney General. Is author• will addl'ess the NOl'thwest dividual freedom whenever crazy world. The oldel' the roughly 3.000 more jobs in Seated in wheelchair at right is Wilson Makabe, now oI lumbia chaplet's co·sponsol'ing lled to apprehend and detain regional Buddhist convention the occasion arises by taking the Sunday session. "eaoh pel'SOll as to whom there youth get, the more deeply six yeal·S. Rella. AI Jelt is Pfc. Tel'ry Kato 01 HOllolulu. is reasonabl~ ground to bel1eve banquet at the Hilton Holel ravorable action on my bill," t hey started having questions PNWDC JACL members that such p~r s on probabJ~ t will bere Feb. 13. Matsunaga conmluded. a bout themselves. Philadelphia Plan have until Mar. 31 to submit engage In , or probably will con• WILSON MAKABE : medical health plan applica• spire with others to engage tn. f[ the parents do not bave This plan is a first in this acts of espJonoge or sabotage." the answers for their own area in that it differs from tions with the CPS quarter• children, who has? the federally imposed Pbila• ly dues: $25.60, m a I e only; uppl'essi\le La\,' delphia Plan in being volun~ 442nd veteran amputee aids others 531.50, female only; S56.80, Congress passed tbe Emer• War crimes trial decision convicting tary and apply to all construc• 1. W 0 party; $69.50. three or The problem seems to exist more (plus additional SI re• gency Delention Act in 1950 In district council after dis• tion and related jobs. The over the vet 0 of President Philadelphia Plan is limited gistration fee) 1.0 National JA• trict council. With the Val'jous CL Headquarters, San Fran• Harry S. Truman, who de• Gen. Yamashita haunts U.S. military nunittees and our youth to (ederalls assisted projects. disabled at VA hospital in Reno cisco. clared ". . the bill would program starting to get down This example o[ p,ivate open a Pandora's box of op• Over baU 01 JACL NEW YORK - Frank Reel, court, Westmoreland would ba to the crucial planning and sector negotiating a m 0 n g (The roll owlnl: iHllcle I.. r('• a 525.000 claim for their bouse portunities (or official con· implementing stages. I am themselves strengthens the prlnted from Ih l" SaCra D\ ~n l O demnatioo of organ.izations defense attorney for Japan's con"icted" hopeful we can come up with Bee, as one more or cOuntl ess and land. They received 700. Johu Yasumoto, chainnan a nd individuals for perlectly Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashita goodwill and confidence be• chal)lUS of Ihe ~I se l ~lo r )' that Makabe altended colleg'e on of the administrative com• Could Not Have KnOWD o ~ me answers. \Ve have placed t ween labor, management and r em nln to be tOld,) honest opinions. The basic er• and autbor of the "Case of the GI BIII and in 1954 ' af• mittee for the beallb plan, Gen. Yamashita," contends "Tbe fact that Gen. Yama• a Cantastic amount of h·ust the minorities. SpooueJ' said, ter graduation, accepted a job said when PNWDC is aUowed ror of these sections is that and confidence in a few peo~ By FAITH GR EAVE' they move in the directions of that the Yamashita case and sbita had no knowledge pie: they carryon their shoul• wilh the Placer county >}vel• to enter lbe program. aU o{ suppressing opinion and be• some of the post-World War and indeed could not bave RENO -During Ule hystel'ia fal'e department in Aublll'n, tbe fow' councils on the Pa• lief." U war crimes trials "were ex• known o( the atrocities in the ders a major thrllst [01' this Calif. cific coast will have become and the coming bienniums. which followed the Japanese Following enactment o( the ercises in vengeance rather Pbilippines was held to be Hopefully, pl'eliminal'Y re• Made-in-Japan attack on Pearl Harbor. Wil• He la tel' obtained cr~ e n­ participants. bill. six detention camps were than law." immaterial, and the effective• p orts and progress wiII be son Makabe was one of many fia ls a nd bec a m ~ a s 1)01 The Pacific Southwest Dis• prepared by the Department In a letter, titled "Laws o[ ness ot bis precautionary ad• _ .fori!lcOlnlng at our .Mal·ch second gell eration Americans leacher in Auburn, whet· jbe trict Council, under insurance o( Justice and maintained War" and publlsheq in The vices was decreed to be Executive Committee meeting -t- O-r--J-amm~l!1!SII5' who ;m;tituted the fil'st clas in conunittee chairman David from 1952 to 1958, when the I:i'ew YQrk Times' edition 01 foreign to the Issue in hill and in July at our National mfllfe-nforro1d a were s en t orr to relocation special education at Placer Ken Yoshikawa of Redondo Congress refused to appropri• Jan. 19, Reel says: case. BoaJ'd meeting. camps. Union High School. Beacb, associated itself with ate funds ror their continued "Tbe dilemma posed by the ". . . SbaU we admit that Today he remembers Ihis Makabe went to Etll'ope to the plan In November. maintenance. Despite Justice My Lai h'ials raises embar• we are horrified at the with no apparent "Wben opeu enrollment was The National JACL Cl'edil bitterness. continue study on an advanc• Department reports Ihat all o[ rassing questions tbat can thought of trying Gen. West• Mt. Rushmore hit Indeed. he ev'en is able to ed degl'ee, but six months lat• taken, over a lbousand PS• the camps have been abandon· best be met by a [rank ad• moreJand and former Presi• Union had its annual meeting laugh when recalling another WDC members became sub• ill on J an. 23. er returned to accept a posi• ed, rumors were rampant mission of past errol'. dent Lyndon B. Johnson for particularly cruel coincidence tion with the VA in San Fran· sClibers within three weeks. about two years ago that such "Professor Telford Taylor. these capital crimes? MC Yukus Inouye was pass• WASHINGTON - Japanese The open em'ollment period, ing oul door prize money like imports came under renewed which occurred after the war, cisco as assistant chief in the camps were being prepared by former chief U.S. prosecutor "The concepl 01 punisbln, when he returned hom e to prosthetic and sensory aids dW'iug which time the mem• the government for the deten• at Nuremburg, stated last a man, Dot for anything he it was gOing out of style. Hito attack but it bad nothing to Loomis. CaliL, a wounded ve• bers will be accepted witbout Okada looked great and seems do with the long battle over service. tion of dissidents. militants, week Ihal Gen. William C. has done but becallse o[ a po• teran with the all-Njsei 442nd a statement of healtb "ill run activ ists, and others with Westmoreland, the U.S. army sition he bad beld. is abbor• to have recovered extremely textile sales and dumping combat infantry regiment: his Be ludependeot tw.'ougl) February. well from his recent illness. charges. This time it was a whom tbose in control of the chief of still, 'mlgbt be con• rent. It smacks of totalilarian draIt board notified him he IIIf I didn1t wear an al'tili• government mlght disagree, victed as a war criminal' un· tyranny rather than Anglo• Shake Ushio, Credit Union group oC AmeJican Indians was an ·'undesirable enemy president, announced. along who were angry. cial leg myself," he said, "1 Matsunaga said. del' the rule of the case 01 Saxon law. The case 01 Gen_ alien:' would be less effective in aid• '-'These rum 0 r s spread Gen. Yamashita - assuming, Yamashita was a lone and with Hito, we are finanCially They were mad because Now 51. I\Iakabe is chief or sound and are in the million• headbands, beaded belts and ing persons who must adjust through the black ghettoes, indeed, tbat atrocities did oc• disgrace[uI departure from aiJ'e category. Olber Indian hanclicraIts sold the prosthetic and sensory both physically and mentally NC-DYC quarterly across college campuses, and cur at My Lai. tbis most impOliant touch• aids service of the Veterans to (he use o{ artificial limbs." anlong war protestors," the flHe is con-ect," Reel said. stone ot human freedom, Had a chance to talk witb at a national monument near Administl'ation hospital here. 'Tube HOI'iuchi about his two a Sioux Indian reservation Makabc "does (or himself," ' Hawaii lawmaker continued, "Pro!essor Taylol'''s only error "Tbe case ot Yamashita boys. ' Vayne and Randy, both were not made on lhe resel'· 'Obvious Disability' selting an example for the "The}' were pubUcized by the is in the use of 'might be.' Un· was not only a grievous mis• meet rescheduled undei'ground press and given der the Yamashita rule as set carriage ot justice - it made National JACL oratOlical con• vation but in J apan and Hong To gct such a Job. the fe• handicapped vetel'an to be in• test \\innel's, Both are gifted Kong. dependent. credence by authors o( books, down by tbe U . S . supreme bad law ..." deral government says. 0 n e magazines and otber publica• speakers, hard workers, and .I They 100k Indian. They're com~ SACRAMENTO -Because or must have "an obvious disabi• A man ot patience and contlict in date among vali· tions," he noted. politically involved. carved. They're beaded. But lity requiring use of a major paSSIon, Makabe daily outfits Wayne. ] believe. was one they're not [ndian at all," ous Jr. J A C L chapters, the 1970 Hearings appliance." the handicapped, and his Sacramento Jr. JACL. bosting of the few. if not the only. Fred Pattee. chairman of the An explosion in northern sparsely furnished office is Sansei intern for a State poli• Crow Creek Sioux Tribe, said the first NC-DYC quarterly At hearings held last year 'MODERN MEDICINE' MAGAZINE Italy while retw'ning from Ihe cluttered wi th artificial limbs" meeting, has rescheduled the by lbe House Internal Securi• t ical party headquartel's n'a• at a news conference. front enabled Makabe to meet crutches. canes and large U'OD 'elling throughout the state over-night sessions for Feb.20- Iy Commitlee, District 01 Pallee and eight other Sioux that U.S. job reqUirement: he frameworks. 21. It was oliginally set for Columbia COllrt of Appeals leal'ning about politics by do• leaders came to 'Vashington walks with an artificial leg CITES TWO NISEI RESEARCHERS ing. He really gol involved in Makabe outfits severely af• Feb. 13-14. Judge Walter B. Yeagley, then Jan. 22 to ask the Government and the other is stiffened by flicled patienls in theil' hospi• Youth delegate, will regis• head of the Justice Depart• a way 1 have seen very tew to give the Indians the con• a parllal [usion of the knee Sansei get involved. 1 think tal rooms. Others, he sees in ter Saturday, Feb. 20, tram ment's Internal Security Dl• MINNEAPOLIS-Ten 01 the and COl cial function I.n thr rfoUl_ cessions r ights at the Mt. an d ankle. their homes. noon at Valley-Hi Molel. \·i sion. leslified tha t the De• oer\'ated larynx for direct. appU. he leal'ned a 101 about politics Rushmore National Memorial nation's leaders in the 111edi· caUon lo laryn."C transplant. 'If[ t had come back whole where the business sessions partment favored repeal of and made some valuable con• ill Soulh Dakota. Acti"ity Therapy cal field al'e featu1'ed in the At Wa!olltngton Unl". and the tacts. Although he is still go• I might bave gone back to are soheduled. New DYC offi• the Emergency Detention Acl Janua,')' edition of "Modem compl~.x of adjocent hospJtala, h. Since 1954 the concession farming," he said in a re• He admits it is "a little di!• cers are also to be installed. because the statute has been works an JntrruJvo W\.'.n-

Are invite,. .•. .... iiIiiiiiiii!..... you Marutama (0. Inc. Banquets, Weddings, Receptions. Social Altairs f'lsb Lake. \hnu'acturer LOweosl new aulo loans! Featuring the Wesrs lines! catering and banquel Isci/lltes lor 10 10 2000 ...,;" .IIIZ" ·iiO ' : . ~ " . ' ~~'CII" Los .4.n,elu 'Alnulel f.) 670-9000 f , , •. ec"nto.... n Los Ange.u or , , Inrel"arlon,1 Alro.:>rl .. R: ...... " I HUltd Poo l· Ele ... alol • rv A ir Conditioned INTERNATIONAL HOTEL 24,Hr. S..... ltchbo.,d , 1\ W C.","" 1lY4 1..0 . ""tttn CA 1Ot.41 ISfl OPERA TEO ," ."' -. , ... '''''' t.t .'.' ,. ~~ ....~~ T,_·. .(c).(2 \'II SI.iU5-;,;n Lc~ ~"ge'eJ AX 5·25~' I ...... f h1bltlOll neaL It wmI14 a1Jo TIll am dMfDate4 tar lit IIffaIn provide oWce IlIAce for varl. complex I. GD Sail Pedro. 1.. OUi different communiI>' aer- northern boundar)' belq Am• Sill Hosohwi $2.9 million budget VIce groups. sa Street aDd Its IOIIIhem "In lact." KunltsutfU added, cand boundaries beIDa the South~ Is pictured ID "the national headquarters 01 ratlroad Un ... Ilew Hoada Blda. aim pIctmed u 1M the JACL Is 8lreadv makin, ~flii5~ plana to move Its oWc,," II Tim.. ArIIel. at 320 E. 2Dd St. and the 17 raldtq wllh pegged for LTRA RQIIlIJIld, Nom u ra Iamlb', Lilli. 'fIIb1I. '!'II;' Froll'lth. 'pooletned" . ~ the bulldln, 10 com- The same week (Jan. 18) ID who 11". around the corns have ave cIdJdnD" niiiiiliili tbp Los Aneele. Times, urban at H8 S. Sail Pedro St., WU ap fram II to 18. LOS ANGELES-Reporlini to en property purcha.e. wiU be Frying Pan the !lrst 1971 me.tin, of the Initiated this y~ar. This ar•• LI ttle Tokyo Community Re• ls on the comer 01 San p.,. development Advisory Com• elro and Thtrd Street, and I. rnItt~ (LTCDAC) Jan. 21, bounded on the north by the Denver, Colo. Kango KunitsutfU announced Southern Pac I tIc railroad A BOOK OF POETRY-About a year ago, or maybe a $2.9 rnIllJon budget request traclu and on the east by, It was even longer, during a trip to New York I lor Little Tokyo'. redevelop• what b now, the Cleartleld ment program. Cheese Co. ThI. redevelop• dropped in on Howard Cady, an editor for William The budget, whkh cover. ment section will al.o include Morrow & Co., the book publishers. "I've just received the fiscal year, from June 19- situ tor the new Union and lome poetry from a young man narned Lawson Inada," 71-May 1972 m u. t now b. HIgashi Hongwanjl cburchell. lubmltted to the City Council SenIor CltbeD ProJecl Cadl said. "Do you know him?" and the Department 01 Hou .. said no. Ing and Urban Development. The $5 mUllon senior citi• Cady said he was greatly impressed by Inada's KunltsutfU, project manag• zen project w1l1 be sponsor• verSe and would recommend that his firm publish the er for the CRA'. (Community ed, developed, and managed w6rk even though books of poetry seldom made much Redevelopment Agency) LIt• by a community non-profit or• tle T 0 kyo Redevelopment ganization. The Southern Ca• money. Project. also gave a run down lifornia Gardeners Federallon, The book is reality now. It is titled "Before the ot the renewal programs' stra~ the Sou the r n Calilornla War," with a subtitle "poems as they happened by tegy and schedule Jor the r.,. Christian Church Federation, Lawson Fusao lnada." It is a slim volume, 124 num• mainder 01 1971. the Los A n gel e. Buddhist Flrsl Action Area Church Federallon and the bered \lages and the price is $5. Japanese American Citizens I Will have to depend on the book jacket to tell He reported that by June 01 League (JACL) have 8 II you about Inada. There is a picture of him on the 1971, aU elght properties In agreed to be the principal. the "First Action Area" will within the development cor• back, showing a solid, unsmiling young man with rim• have been purchased, and thai poration. less hexagonal glasses, wearing what looks like a black demolition and land clearance One high Ugh t 01 the eve• turtleneck sweater under a heavy pile-lined jacket and will begin shortly therealter ning was the signing 01 the a beret. He doesn't look like a professor of English, (the are. is located along Mo• incorporation papers by repre• but then what is a professor of English supposed to line Alley between FIrst and sentatives ot the sponsoring Second Streets). "We are hop• groups. There 10 sign were: lOok Uke? ing:' Kunltsugu added. "Ihat Masamune KoJlma. Dr. KJyoahl The jacket blurb says: "Lawson Fusao lnada was actuaJ construction ot the new ij~,:;~alt~~ir;~~1 Y~:~~~~a~W:I~' bOrn a Sansei (third-generation Japanese American) in shopping and pedestrian mall NOlakl: Frank Ka,iwada. Nisukl Fresno, California. He lived through the war with his area can begln before the end MttsumoTl. Rev. Howard 'l'orlumt. ot this year." :~~eM~t:~l: ~!b:ne~~~~~~:~ family in 'evacuation camp.' resettling afterward in An exciting addition 10 his larte, Tsulomu Maehan. Tellu the Black and Latin section of Fresno. In this musical report was the announcement Sugll .nd Dr. Tsutayo lchlok&. environment he developed a talent and enthusiasm that progress towards lonna· The 350-unit senior citizen . for the bass. Illada wanted to 'say' something with his tlon of a local development housing structure Is due to be• music, and he soon found another instrument - the corporation seems to be in full gin it. constructlon in 1972. swing. It was revealed lhat at and should be completed original, rhythmic verse collected in this, his first a. recent property owners someUrne in 1973. vOlume of poetry. lnada studied wriUng at Fresno State meeting, seven property own• Cultural Center College, the University of California at Berkeley, the ers have already given verbal State University of Iowa, and the University of Oregon. commitments 10 lhe Incorpo• Finally, KunitsutfU discuss· ration idea. This mean. that, ed the progress made !.owarda Married, with two sons, he is now on the faculty of it successful, the new com• construction of the $3 milUon Southern Oregon College at Ashland ..." merelal development a Ion g Japanese American Cultural • • • MoUne Alley will be an en• and Community Center (Ac• tirely localized enterprise. tion Area 4). WHY POETRY?-Back home in Fresno, where He explained that prelimi• his "However," Kunltsugu cau· Lawson lnada spent much of his youth, peers re• tioned, "it is vitally important nary plans call for a three member him as a lough, aggressive youngster. Few that we foUow up on t hi. building complex that would LEGEND thought he would wind up writing poetry. But lnada t hI n g immediately. because include a gymnasium, theater, the schedule for beginning and office building. The gym m EXISTING BUILDi~~ is no sallow dreamer lamenting a lost love or compos· complete witb basketbaU court ing an ode to the night winds. Inada writes of his construction really makes it CI PROPQStD BUILDING tight." The new commercial would provide faelUties for times and moods with a flinty quality that reflects the anea m us t be completed in many dillerent athletic activi• --PROJECT BOUNDARY abrasions of his youth. Only a small part of the volume 1972. so that it can provide ties. from karate and judo to relocation space Jor the north- volleyball and baskelball. The has to do with pre-war Fresno and the evacuation. tbealer would provide groups The balance reflects the experiences and thoughts of ;~~~edl ~~ ~~e:t ~':,s~~esJ,e:f with a large community meet• a young American in a difficult time, seeking to find street is widened. ing place, a convention hall, himseU, wandering the land, finding frustration and " location tor I tage produc• love, sensing the tempo of a nation where sorrow dis• Rotel ProJeot tions and much more. In olber portion. of hi. re• The office building propos• appointment are as common as laughter and triumph. ed, would 1nclude classrooms, port Kunltsugu discussed the ILLUSTRATIVE PLAN OF I am no more qualified to comment critically on three other l'AcUon Areas" in an art gallery. and culture ex- verse than I am to write about the ballet, a sW'geoD's t b e Lillie Tokyo redevelop• SCHEDULED DEVELOPMENT r ... skill with scalpel or the fine nuances of a symphony's ment strategy. U»IUC a.c..u.& .. 'U, violin section. Tnada's poetry is as distant from Scott's In _pbase one of the Hotel -- Development project (Action JACL Insignia above present "The stag at eve has drung his fill" and LongfeUow's Area 2), during 1971-72, nine Customs brokers locale or JAf:L.PC Ottiee "TH1S is Ihe FORest primeEval, the MURmuring properties in the area bound• PINES and the HEMlocks," as impressiOnistic painting ed by Weller, Los Angel... Is from Thomas Gainsborough or James Whistler, as and Second Streets ,vlU have open in uri Tokyo been purchased. The botel de• acid rock is from Beethoven. And yet, if communica· velopment envisions a major LITTLE TOKYO REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT tion js the essence of writing, whether it be prose or 20-story, 500 unit structure. LOS ANGELES-A new cu .. T H r COWMUNITY RIOIVILO'WINT ••• NCY ., T H • a IT Y ., the classic meters of poetry, Inada has succeeded. Kunitsugu announced that the toms house brokerage firm His poetry is only in passing that of a young man developer for this project opened its office in Litlle T<>• should be selecled before the .kyo, staUed by a coslT\Ol'oll• of Japanese origins. In larger measure, the moods he end of the year. Seven devel- tan coUection oJ persoDl1el. evokes, the perceptivity he imparts, the images he opers, including five from Ja- Tbe firm i. Jack Matsukawa creates are those of a sensitive, sometimes sentimental, pan. are interested, he added. Customs House Broker, locat- often puzzled but undefeated young American in a In lhe senior ciUt en hous- ed on the hUrd !Ioor 01 the ing area (Actloh Area 3). sev- new Honda Bldg., 320 E. Se• harsh period of history. His book deserves the notice cond St.. of a wide critical audience for he has achieved the Ulah-bom Matsukawa has universality of unseUconscious integration. There is been associated with Ken Ha· much of the earthiness and observative alertness of manaka Customs Broker as its Pasadena to start olfice manager since 1962. Steinbeck's prose in Inada's poelry. If you do not Previous to that, he was an understand all of lnada's meanings, at least you can examiner ot imported mer• feel them. And isn't that what poetry is all about? chandise in the U.S. Customs Asian ethnic class Service. His new associates are Ling Headed by WilUe Funak<>• I Po Chan. born in Hong Kong, Funakoshl Insurance shi, a 1000 Club member since PASADENA - Secondary wit h many years ot world star~ schools in the Pasadena Uni• occupies new quarters its the finn began in wide experience, and John V. 1942 wi th two members and fied School District will short• Urbano, born in Hawaii, with LOS ANGELES - Funakoshi today has expanded to include ly initiate a two-week unit ! many years of experience in InSurance Agency. Inc., this three associate. and ten staft on the Asian experience in the field. week has occupied new quar- personnel. The associa tes are America. It w!ll be Imple• ters on the ground !Ioor 01 Mas Kagawa. Tim Manaka mented In the American his• Born In Clearfield. Utah, the 321 Bldg., 321 E. 2nd St. and George Morey. tory course which is a re• Matsukawa was educated in Telephone Is unchanged: 626- 527 5. quirement for all 11th graders. his early years at Terminal Funds were allocated by the Island, trans/emug from Da• ,% t LJ)t$s school district for this project na Junior High to North Dav• late last summer after a group is Junior High when the war 01 J ACLers and parent. in came. Pasadena approached the ad• He was graduated from ministration of lhe district. USC with a B.S. in foreign Mitsuiline Travel Service Involved in the project were trade in 1 9 5 6 and pursued Roy Sunada and Richard graduate studies there in the presents Mlyagawa, both high school School 01 Business Economics teachers, and Robert Uchida and Inlernational Trade. He and his wife. Itsue. who Conllnued on Fa,. comes from Okayama, Japan, Special 10th Anniversary Tours have five sons and one da,u gh· ter. The tamily resides in Gold bathtub hotel Gardena. Active in the Disabled for 1971 TOKYO-fuji Kanko, a sight• American Veterans Nisei Post seeing company that op~rated 100 (Matsukawa spenl four among other things, a hotel years in the HIst Counter In• fe.aturing a bathtub 01 pure telligence Corps) 01 which he APRIL 4,1971 VIA JAL & NWA gold, said it was bankrupt. Its is a past commander, Matsu· president Takeyoshi Ishikawa kaw8 Is also a board member has filed with the district ot the Gardena Pacers, the SPRING NISEI FUN TOUR court under the company re• Gardena YMCA J u d 0 Club JAPAN - TAIWAN - HONG KONG organization law. (Ishikawa and currently serves as presi• formerly operated Mlyako H<>• dent 01 the Gardena H~ g h Escorted by Fred T . Takata tel In Los Angeles.) Boosters Club. "One of the finest tours going to the Orient" 'r •• T .... t. Funakoshi Insurance Agency, Inc. announces the removal of their offices effective APRIL 4,1971 VIA JAL February T, T971 SPRING PANORAMA HIROSHIMA TOUR 10 provide belfer facilities to serve you Escorted by Paul Takeda 321 E. Second St. "Our special tour that will include Amano, Hashidate Los Angeles, Calif. 90012 and Kagoshima for the first time." Telephone Unchanged (213) 626-5275 WILLIE FUNAKOSHI MAY 1, 1911 VIA TWA Associates MAS KAGAWA TIM MANAKA Whatever your long-range goeIa-e DeW car. mlIep NISEI FUN TOUR TO EUROPE for the kids, en additioD to your boule, or that 1aq• GEORGE MOREY deeerved European lour-you'll nIIlch them fait« at Escorted by our experienced tour leaders. Union Federal Savings. "Our third tour to Europe and our Finest" 'lb meet the special needs of your Iamily, WI! 011. a wide variety of savinp plans. ADd ,.. alwayl PlY the Announcing the Opening of highest interest poEbIe, plaa ~ _Yinp iIeDII8t. IDclu~ iDsuraDce ofaot:lDllllw to $21,000. Oar -- June 20th-Summer Nisei Fun Tour via JAL JACK MATSUKAWA CUSTOMS HOUSE BROKER Jun. 27th-Bunka HOlo Tour via NWA Line Po Chan, John V. Urbano, Auoclatu UNION FEDERAL SAVINGS. 320 Eaat 2nd St., Honda Bid,. AND LOAN ASSOCIATION MITSUILINE TRAVEL SERVICE Loa Allleln, Calif. 90012 Tel. (213) 680-1510 127 lAST FIRST ST., LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 90012 "'.pored 10 s.",. You Reg.ldl... 01 ,h. . TELEPHONE : 12131 62S.15OS Si.. of th. Sh ipment ct. $. ....t. Compl.t. St.ff with MAny V.... of e.-I_ , • 4-PACIFIC CITIZEN Friday, February 5, 1971 PULSE ON THE CHAPTERS: new prcsideDII of the Saake wriIIJd.M, bat .... ___ River Valle, ""CL a .. 11 Ir. mmt_ ...... JACL, respecUvely. The new ollicel"> were Installed Jan, maR. tile "II''' PM , I/Ib8III. Fred Y. Hiruun. Mas Satow starts 25th year in JACL U-NOBAR man bappJ' at..... 11m- 23 in Joint ceremonies with ~ Governor, Central California BOI.., Valley JACL-Jr. JACL quet ba ... l1li4 at BOise. Attorney Robert VoaUnei frem .... 1 onl7 tIleD Imon .. went at Smith 01 Nampa was the guest c:haIr, we make our 1IIOIicJId. It is ~ • • by addressing Alameda installation fipeakcl·. but gotng. n_~ere. • Leaad ...... lise _ I Nanle. of lhe Boise Valley ~Je By ROLAND KADONAGA chapter officers have not been Dr, Jan Kuramada IU1ed gulls saved the in tbls . th ~, ..-- at th valley when. during the bar- received-Ed,) me ID on e --". e vest time loa1sts by the mD- Some 90 m e m bel" and National JACL Bowllng Tour- lions. w~ eatinll .verythinJI gu•• l$ attended the Alameda Dament wbicl! oriRlnated In In their path: that is. unW the JACL annual dinner on Sat• Civic Affairs Salt Lake CIty twenty-five sea gulls came and started urday. Jan. 23. 10 witness the years ago, "Doc" w~ with It eating the locusts aDd regur-• • • • installation of president Shi• Chapter assilh police then and is .tiU With It. !'Ie gitating them until Ihe locusta Fresno "MIERlCAN DElIlOCRA· ro Takeshita and his cabinet community aftain event ~~ ~:Ni~~wj!~ RUELGA-Tbe has C1' GIVETH, AND AlIIERl· by National JACL Director .;::: were decunaled and the har- ceoc ~ias and come out on to vests were proteeted and the repeatedly protested the hang. CAN D~1I10CRAC1' TAKETH Satow, As part o( the monthly mlra~ously tng certain posters on the AlVA}" -This one of the po· Don BeU, prinCipal of Ala• Gene Sato. tbls Y!r'1 tour- people s a v e d at Basic Car Patrol program to nament chairman bas bee from stanoaUon. The sea gull walls at the JACL office in pular slogans 01 our young meda High, awarded the taster better understanding Chapter scholarship awards putting In a lot 01' time. alon~ i. now our state bird and it Southern Calltornia. Such pos- Now that the young people between community and local with hi, committee memben t. IUellal to shool or harm ters and hangings included [rom 18 yean; of age have to: police department, the \Vest one 01 Eldridge Cleaver of been gIVen tbe rlgbt to vo~ Gayle Uc:h.1yalTUl, dau,hter oj to make this year's tourna- them m any way. l\tr. and Mrs Archie- Uchiyama; Lo. Augeles JACL assisled al ment a success. Salt La!< h RecenUy the valley at. the Black Panther lame, a Nortb ID Federal elecbons . ~d In the J 80, 20 meeting attended h d' e as gulls has been making valiant Vietnam guerriUa soldier, a most state elections, II IS in· by some 150 persons at Nora J~ ~~'::'e~"t:' !dUo~ etfort to go beyond the valley Red China calendar. and now c~mbent upon . them to exer• Sterry School by serving the • pro-Chavez poster entiUed clSe the powel of the baU'?t Installat ion refreshments. In charge was ironed out most of the big ~ th:J"~~'::lyth~boJ!: HUELGA NO VIOLENCIA and to tum the course ot thiS Mrs. Toy K8negai. community Kel Nakamura sky. innocent or the past. EN SALIN AS, (Huelga mean~ democracy toward the goals Lw Terao, daughter 01 Rev. and service chairman. Mrs. Elyu Terao; and David MI· 300 GA~tE i\lEDAL-Because scourtng the preseDt, gliding Strike) ~:; ~~e: j~~;n:~:t;S neces- kam1., son 01 Mr. and Mrs John Gus Sato (standing at left) of 1971 Officers with the unpredictable wind Mlkaml. into the tuture, No matter bow much ODe Tbe power ot the baUot, il Alameda w i I I be unable 10 High schoole .. hear P ASADENA. .1ACL m ay personaUy believe In the wisely and eftectively eXel'• The three wel'e aJso present• attend the torthcomlng Na• Monterey JACLer . . e a use of Cleaver and .the cised, was amply proved in • d with a trophy donated by tional J ACL Bowling Tourna• Japanese American dory ~Lack YamaguchJ. pres.; lin. 320 South 3rd East Growers Produce, Haruo Tmu• Thelma Stoody. 1st v .p.: KIm.lko Salt Lake City 84111 Blaek Panthers,. N~rtb Vlet- the last presidential primaries. ment at Salt Lake City. he Within the past couple ol nam, and .Ho Chl Mi,,!h, Com- Young people, working within ra, and Shig Sugiyama. receives his J ACL 300 Game ~~~':in~1uri~:', ~:::~ Mas Sa tow presented the months, over 3,000 students at heads grand jury r.: munlsm, LIl Red China, ~nd legal limits, using the powers Medal !l'om Mas Satow, na• five Portland high schools Butch Tamura, treas.. Mrs. Sen• Cesar Chavez and the UDlted of personal visitation and 300 bowling medal to Gus Sa• tional director, during the uki. ree. sec. Mrs Ruth IahU. to for his recent 300 game (Douglas. Clackamas. Frank• cor. sec.; Dr· Ken Yam_lUchl, Far IT! Wor .ker~ Orgaruz.l?g vocal persuasion, was one of Alameda JACL installalion. lin. Marshall and Rex Put• By TED DUREIN Rud. , Ben Senzokl. pUb.; Mn. MARUKYO Committee, It IS our belief the important faclors that im• because he will Dot be able Sealed are Mrs, Chiz Satow Grace :'ttorlkawa, hist.; Hams to attend the National JACL nam) have heard accounts of (Special to the PadRe Citizen) Ozawa, Ken Dyo. "('ecc,.; Tom Kimono Store that such posters do DOt have pelied the then incumbent and Shig Sugiyama, NC• Evacuation, anti-Nisei discrim• a pla~ on the waUs ot a JA- presidenl to declare hlmsell Bowling Tournament at Salt WNDC governor and 1970 MONTEREY-Kei Nakamura. lto. 1000 Club; Ted Tajbria, scbo.. Lake City, ination. the assimilation and Monterey service station ope• larshtp; Mrs. Elizabeth Ouwa. 101 ~.fler Sl, CL oWce. out of the race. Alameda J ACL president. new mo\'ement in the ethnic th~ rator and car I'ental repreSen• STOCKTON J,\CI.. In case 01 th.e HUELGA If, according to some oC our iUain peaker community Portland J ACL Los "noelet tI!it\ poster, It, was deCided .at ~e young, there js so much so tative, was named by Superi• The priDcipal speaker ot the has been in the vanguard sup• or Court Judge Anthony Bra· YO~~d;,a~~~ ~:~rcr'Nft:~: ire~~ 1968 Nahonal ConventIOn In wrong with American society. again OD Jan. 16 as president plying speakers, books. Cilms 628·.369 '!IS' San Jose that the JACL would it should be a comparatively evening was Mas Satow, who zil to head the 19-member Ma.ry KU5ama. sec.; Bob Yamada. gave a synopsis of the JACL of Pasadena J ACL, though it and related malerial to tbe 1971 Monterey County Grand de.!.; Tets Kato. alt. deL: George not 1ake any position on the easy t.ask to make improve• witb its travails, growth and has been a decade since the high schools interested in Ja• Matsumoto, tnsuranee: Georce dispute betwe~n farmers and ments, It remains to be seen Jury, which was Sworn in Baba, 1000 Club; Ted Jshihara. accomplishments. first lime. He succeeds Kimi panese American history. JaD, 25. hiS! the Chavez UnIon on the mat- wbether they will exercise the Fukutaki. I Co",merclal RefrIg.. ation fa~ The seed of the JACL was Requests are increasing, ac• Nakamura has been a resi• tel' of unionizing work- unglamorous pri\'rilege of the PSWDC Gov. Mas Hironaka cording to chapter president STOCKTON JACL "UXIL IARY I Oesigning Instaliition el'S, It was then deCided that ballot effectively and wisely planted when a lew 01 tbe dent of Monterey since 1948. be.y~nd. Nisei visionaries saw the need swore in the officers. Warren Don Hayashi. who added stu• He served in the Army in Marian Masada. pres.; Mabel this matter was the to accomplish a new society Furutani, National JACL co• Univ~rsity Okubo. v.p.; Amy Mal$Umoto. Sam t jn U~";moto of a Japanese-American orga• dents at the are World War 11 and after tbe sec.; Mitzi!!!! Baba. lrefts.; Joan I scope 01 the JACL CIVi l rights as tbey see it. Tbis un spec• ordinator, community involve· program. In Salinas. in the tacular COlU'se will require nization to look aIter and pro• pushing [or a college-level war was an interpreter in Ja• Fukuhara, his-t.; !\fae Saiki. pub,; CertiflC.1fe Member of RSES tect the weliare of the Jap. ment, was main speaker. Tom course in A s ian American pan. ~lt!ft~~ J~~~ ~~ft, ~a~~a,~t!: Membet of Japan Assn. of present dispute in the lettuce hard work but wiII in the lto was presented the JACL studies. industry, the courts decided long run, a~comp li s h far more nese in America. Just prior He is a member of the gowa, Mary Ishimaru. Helen Na. Refrigeratfon. to the war tbe membership S i 1 v e r Pin for continuous kagawa, Fu~e Tanaka, S~~.3t ­ lie Refrigeration Contractor that the lettuce boycott was and more Quickly than the service in the community. He board of directors of the Mon• illegal and jailed Chavez for picketing. sloganeering, and was 6,000. Then prior to the terey Peninsula Chamber oC arms. I SAM REI.BOW CO. already holds the J ACL Sap• defying the cow·t order to the other lJamboyant methods Evacuation the membership New Officers Commerce. the Monterey city S1'OCKTON ,rR. oI,,"CL I 1506 W Vernon Ave. rose to 18,000. He is not sure phire Pin. Ted Tajima was cease tbe boycott. The matter f a v 0 red bv mam' of the architectural review board, SusaD Nitta, pres.; Carol Tltu• I ~ ' Ang;te, AX S.S20!., is now clearly a case of a young. . of the reason Cor the increase master of ceremonies; the Selma JACL elech Rev. Donald Toriurni gave in• the board of the Carmel Val• nekawa. 1st v.p.; Joyce- Kuma .. jurisdictional dispute between To Quote Josepb N. Bell, which could be many, such as new president ley Rancho Canada Goll Club maru. 2nd V.p.; Alice Komure. people could have though I vocation and benediction. cor. se-c.; Ga~ ~ Taked41, ree. sec.; two u n ion s, the UFWOC professor at the University of and a board member and past Keith Kanegawa. treas,. Susan (AFL-CIO) and the Team- Calilornia at Irvine: " I want• being in the J ACL was some• Tbough Sus Komoto was president ot the Monterey Pe• YOshiml, Debbie Ohta. Nancy JAPA NESE FOOD alers Union. Chavez is now ed to talk in a tone less than how patriotic, or they tinally Nathaniel Colley to pl'e\riously announced as 1971 ninsula chaptet of the Japa· Tsunekawa. sgts.-al-arms realized the need for an orga· president, Selma JACL at a out ot jail, but the matter is shrill and deal in conversa• address Sacramento JACL nese American Cit i zen s SPOKANE JACL .~ill pending in. regard the tion, not disputation. And I nization to represent their in• recent meeting elected George League. rIght to boycott In a lunsdic- suddenly I'ealized tbat the terests; but with the evacua• Sacramento JAOL installa• Tokunaga to replace him, it He and his wife. Swni. are Yone Ola. pres.; Denny Yasu· tion orders this increase was was announced by Alan Ma• hara. preS.-elect; Dave- lnashlma, tio!'al dispute between lwo young people I had tended to tion dinner will feature Na• the parents of two children. Sushi Tempura llnlons. admire so lavishly were un- too late. Because ot JACL's thaniel Colley as guest speak• sumoto, past president. His brother Nabe, is a mem• ~~~r~ttiin~Te~:~~~;~!:; 2&du ~~ We again bring thiS matter able to do much ot either, cooperation with the govern• er, an able and widely- recog• ber of the architeclural firm lsumoto, sec.: Sue B"aY3shl, tor Teriyaki ment in the Evacuation, many tbat designed the Japanese sec.; Frank Bisayasu, )000 Club; to the attention ot President mainly because so many of nized local attorney. Judge Dr. Jame$ Watanabe, del TAKE OUT SERVt CE Ray Uno. National Director them see the entire human members became disenchant· Mamoru Sakuma will intro• February Events Cultural Center in San Fran• Masao Satow and Regional condition in great global ab• ed wit h tbe J ACL and he duce him. cisco. WEST VALLE\' .lAC' .. 3045 W . Olympic Blvd. Director Jeffrey Matsui. We solutes that preclude conver• still hears some saying that Yamato Restaurant chef In issuing directions to the the JACL sold the Japanese The dinner Feb. 6 at Sacra· Dr. Ray Uchiyama, prcs.; Ds\' !!!! 12 Blocks WeS1 ot NormandleJ ask that these posters be re- salion below the wearying mento Inn's Walnut Room to demonstrate for Issei Grand Jury, Judge Brazil told Muraoka, 1st \'.p.; Mrs. Mar)' Na• lo. Angel. . DU 9·5847 moved from the Los Angeles level 01 revolution or intel- down the river because they starts with a 6 p.m. no-bast t b e members their proceed• kaii, 2nd v.p.; Jam~s Imal. treas.; did not fight for their rigbts. ings are secret by nature and Kay Ono, ree, sec.; Mrs. Janel - Fre_ Parklno - office. lectual abstraction," social hour. Robert Matsui Kenichi Noda, chief chef at Ka.ku. cor. sec. At the 1946 National Con• will emcee. Tom Fujimoto is Yamato's Restaurant at Cen• cover a wide range of activi• vention in Denver, the JACL dinner cbalrman, Frank A. tury Plaza, wW demonstrate ties, including management of asked Mas to serve as Nation• {wama, deputy attorney gen• preparation and serving of jails and prisons in the COUD• al Director tor one year - eral in the SacrameDto office, various Japanese dishes at the ty, and any corruption by of• Potshots and it turned 0 u t to be a i. tbe 1971 chapter president. West Los Angeles J ACL pro• ficials holding public otfice. Don Hayashi 10Dg year, this being his 25th gram for senior citizens Feb. year at the post. At this time 7, 2 p.m .. at Felicia Mahood The New Moon be was asked to tonn new Snake River Valley Recreation CeDter. Event is Stock exchange chapters in the East and told names new officers open to the public: Kikkoman Banquet Rooms , nil,bfl at t h. hardship In getting International Is providing HONOLULU - Takeshi Ko• for Iml ll or II .... group. people interested to start a Tom Uriu ot Weiser aDd door prizes, tbe chapter is bayashl ot Wong Investment Color Me Success chapter, but by doing the ne• Mike Saito of Ontario are the serving refreshments. Co. was elected presIdent of cessary work was able to form the Honolulu Stock Exchange. 912 So. San Pedro St., LOI Angeles MA 2-1091 tbe chapters. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Today, the membership is OUR DINING OUT SUGGESTIONS TO ALL IACL MEMBER~ Portland bas been far tram "success". 25,000 and people join the JA· Renew Your "You people are nice; why No, we have not all arriv• CL tor various reasons like an't other mlnolity groups bowling, aDa the health plans. ed. And there's the Noguchl His philosophy has been to get UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT be nice and quiet uike you ...to case, the Elks Club, and lack JACL Membership Today! Tai Hong "You have nothing to worry ot Nikkei in politics and high them into the organization and about you're accepted." These then get them intel'ested in Dear JACLer: management which bear this the other aspeets of the J A• Restaurant commonplace rem ark s by out. So, s 0 m e modify and Most Authentic C, .. to .. _._ (wlsi .. _ Whites often are taken as say, uWe havt:' not mad;e it.. CL. Your annual membership is the lifeblood of JACL. It sus• Fa mow. Fa mily Styla Dt .... _n compliments by the typical true ~ The Nisei strove tor accep• tains some 40 active national JACL committees covering ;II Coc:ktails till 2:00 •. m. yet." Maybe Others ask, tance in a democracy, he con• .li'/panese American. ' ~iU we ever?" wide gamut of activities, such as legislative, PR, civil rig hts, Banquet Fac:lIitles II :00 .,m,· 11:00 p.m. . Sansei, like their Nisei eld· tiDUed, but the young today cultural heritage, history project, student aid, scholarship, ~ rs have been showered by the want to be themselves and chapter programs and actiVities. A major emphasis this bien• 845 N. Broadway, L.A " success" image. Many actual• What is the psychological this is a good thing because nium shall be in the area of Education. Our continuing com• 485-1313 ly believe that they're bue. aDd physical make-up of the they are participating in the mitment to youth shall provide them most creative and On the surface one could con• Nisej or Sansei which has led total community and he leels challenging opportunities. ' PalyneJian Dance,. clude that they're right. Land· him to believe that he is ac• t bat tbe J ACL members JACL will continue to fight racism in whatever form . cepted and has blinded him should participate in the to• JACL will do its share to push for mear'lir'lgful changes for at LUAU SHACA seape gardeners are at a pre• Superb Musical Combo nlium (and ot course we're with the feeling that he has tal community. The toaslmas• the welfare of our nation, but we are opposed to violence or tel' was Shig Sugiyama, DC revolution to bring about the changes necessary to rectify the from LII Veg •• the bestl) M 0 s t Japanese made it? Is it lhe upward governor and 1970 chapter ~ :::-~ '; ~:: .- Tm~erial ~ American families live in nice mobility aspirations of Japa• wrongs that sustain unrest. "", .. Cocktail. in homes. have two or three cars nese Americans ever since president. JACL has done mOre for people of Japanese ancestry in in their driveway. and watch they began to come to Amer• the US. but we have not done enough. Your membership will ica? Or is it the experiences help 'oday. 8 color TV at home. Right? Dr, James Tanaka head. Right. of Evacuation which have RAYMOND S. UNO forced us to hide our racial Stockton JACL chapter National President L".,h, •• , • DI•• "" 11 • •m. ·10 p.m. ::aJ raOoo FurUlermore, that's quite a "lno • • " ( o c: khU., Tropical D,I.. 1n 'tH I • . m. 1 (South .f DII.. , lnd, ...., IIUCCCSS story in just 20 years color and try to integrate? New officers of the Stock· Re newa ls should be sent to t he Chapte r Me mbe rship Chair• 320 E. 2nd St., lo. Ang el.. Pho .. 4~5.1341 PI .... It .. Su ta Ana) after we were considered the It's been said by other mi· ton JACL, Stockton JAOL man, Amount of Dues for Si n91 . or Couple Membership i. HOlt Divis Lee, JohN Chin, M,r. 'h, (7'.) II 1·12J2 enemy. Righ t? Right!! Dority groups that we jus t Auxiliary and Stockhon Jr. Shown. might be "the Yellow men on All this seems so wonder• JACL will be honored at the (Pa rtial List) l uncheon.: '1 a.m. - 2 p.m. ful until we walk Into Lit· a White horse." What do they ann u a 1 installation dinner, P ACIFIC NORTBWEST CENTRAL CALlFORNlNA Dlnntra: ,- 10 p.m, tle Tokyo in Los Angeles. Chi• mean? "Have we sold out?" ... Feb. 14, 6:30 p.m., at Johnny PO~::d ~m- ~~~ ~e (~ Fr:~ 1~~750E.$~~~:rn!:ei!r~s:~ n atown in San Francisco. or flAren't they (other minori• 2Hf'fE Golden Palace Restaurant ties) jealous?" .rWhat gives; Hom's, 1563 E. Fremont St. Club, $30, 1000 Club spouse S10) most any big city where there Superior Court Judge Bill Puyallup Valley { ~5. $25)-Yosh PAClf'IC SOUTHWEST Excellent Cantonese Cuisi ne is a concentration of Japanese we Jet them do their own Dozier will be guesl speaker Fujita. 2207 Freeman Rd. East (A.ll c.bapters: $15, $20) Cocktail Ind P lano Blr thing'!" 'fCan we help it if Puyallup 98371. (1000 ers: $7 ex• in older sections of town. [f and installing officer. they don't try?J' tra). G~~:~!;~u:v:.~~r:;:tt:: you watch carefully you can The new chapter presidents Seattle 1$10.50, $19)-Don Kazama, EOWI tt,s . Baborate Imperial Chinese Settlno see some poverty, or if you Who really knows? Maybe are Dr. James Tanka, JACL; 304.2 - 19th Ave., South. Seattle Gt~"e~a9~aOileY_Thoma. it is that we've led ourselves 98144. N. Shi- Ba'nQuet Rooms for Private Parties will, exceptions to the suc• Marian Masad~ Auxiliary; Spokane ($ 10. $2O)-Dave Inashi• gekuni, Suite 400. Union Bank cess model. (Every model has to believe that we made it and Susan Nitta, Jr. J ACL. ma. East 8405 Liberty, Spokane HJtr~~d~t i: ll~~e.l~03st. . a few impel'feetions.) But on our own. We want every• L.A 911 N, BROADWAY, LOS ANGELES MAN More recently, 01'. Tanaka 90012. For Rese rvat ion., CI U 624.2133 what don't you sec'! one else to do the same. But was honored as the ranking GE NE RP-.L LS ~: Some young, concerned San• we ask, frOid we really make Nisei in the Knights Templar RIversideklhara. 12782(SI0. WUmacSl8)-Hank Ave .,Naka-I Col- I~'::======: ~ ci and other Asian Ameri• it on our own?" Didn't the by being installed as tbe emi• ton 92324 lw) 787-5818, (r) 783- c an~ have probed i n to the Caucasian. no matter bow 0316. nent commander. S(l~k~,fe1s40 (~'! tlo~J,-n~ ~t 3 Gl!neratlon, Superb Cantonese Food - Codctall Sar -SI"Quel Rooms dal'kest corner with the aid few, make it a little easier'! Tickets are S4.50 per per • 0 1 social workers. concel'ned Isn't it a process of being ac• son (S4 lor Jrs.) and reserva• $25. 1000 Club spouse $8.50) , cepted; \'Ve certainly did not Santa Marta Valley-George Ha• Quon's Bros. Nisei. and JACL staff mem• tions are available at: yashf, 1629 N. We.rtern Ave:. bel'S. What the)' have lound do that. The majority culture George's Shoe Store, Henry's Santa Marla 9345-1. Grand Star Restaurant dEN found is palatable. Pharmacy. Fl"ed Dobana, Tsugio SeIanoco-Dr. Al Muronaka, 15539 Kubota and Rarold Nitta FacUJdad. Hacienda H e I , h t S 91745; ph 336-5910 I U.yn. Robd a--JU2 ,i, .. lst _nd Song",,... CALENDAR Many JACLers today a I' e Venice-Culver - Frances Kn3ca• Entertalnlft. TwescbY· Satwrday like this. They are Question· Bill Hosokawa to address wa. 01566 Centinela Ave., L.A. 94) Sun Mun Way IOpposite 951 N 8dWy.J I~ b. l (I ridal) 90066 . Webt t.o:;. Allgl'les-Eatth Sci mtg, inc· They want to know who W est Valley inaugural NEW CHINATOWN - lOS ANGELES they are, why they are, how INTER~tOUNTArN lQW Stoner PI8.)',u'ound. 7:30 p.m.; MA 6·2285 R~lo~~I~~~ .~rk{ i fln~~~~~~&ICal they have become. Lt·s all a West Valley JACL elected process of becoming aware. Dr. Ray Uchiyama president ~ ,.,,., _tOt ,...",.,~.ft'" 4lS 'II UIIC WAY - III 4- 1. Island" .. _ ClIin1\OW11 • 1.01 .Il0l111 Se:lanoco-Comrn Inll, Norwalk Pl'obably most dramatic dil· (or 1971 and will honor him ~ Oanl at Southern Caltfomll's Most ExqUISite Shill'l9n·LI r:to. _\lOt _ lor All _ Pub Lib. 12 ~ hllperlal Hwy. (erences are reflective of the and cabinet officers at an in• 7:30 p.m.; "Asian Studies". Dr. stallatioD dinner Feb. 20, 7:30 Robert Su~ukl, :opkr youth who demand Asian Feb. 6 (SalUrda)') American studies. U's all a p.m., at the Plateau 7 Restau• :&a ~t Los An¥elc\-hu,tallauon dnr process of becomIng aware. rant, San Jose. ~/p/flg dance, Montebt'J1o Country Club B i 11 Hosokawa, associate A Tv.'ln Cltlcs-In:-lelleth.m dnr. Pl'obably most dramatic dif· Sm'ran\Cnlo-lnlitallatfon dnr. ferences are reflecting of the editor ot the Denver Post and Sll!rcl-lnento Inn, 6 p.rn youth who demand Asian authol', will be main speaker. CANTONESE CUISI NE Nalhan~~~b~~II~\U~;) American studies. U's senior San Jose Vice Mayor Nonnan Prt .... Ponies. CoclttJlb. BanQuei FacIllU.. CCrJ)f~~I~~cLun~~~~ Im~ein. high schools which ask tor Minela wiU install. Dinner Japanese American history, tickets at $6.50 may be pur• 3888 Crenshaw, Los AngelM AX 3-8243 N C-'VNDC-QtrlY Session, because they begin to realize chased now from: Placcr County J ACL holtlS Or. Uchiyama (887 -02SS), Dne Whitney Ranch Nlit'l GolJ Club, that race is not only Black Muraoka (961-;(430) or John Kak\1 Rocklln ~ State' A'!j..;,cmblyman f and White. II's the curiosity 1253 -8187) . .Eugene Chapple. spkr., reels 12n. bu. 1 p.m., dnr 6 p.m of many races of our ancestry, Member! are urged to renew via mail now to insure Feb. 13-1~ Thanks to the diligence ot Mack Yamaguchi back at uninterrupted subscription ot the Pacific Citlzen aDd to !: ~~~roD!~l~bL 'tl~!fs ; ~~~:t Ellen Bepp on the Univ, ot enable the Membershlp Committee to secure new mem• Oregon campus, there was an helm for Pasadena JACL bers " Members can encourage their friends to join. ~~t~ ~~II~':ile~.nr H~:h D~or~~dri Asian paper given at a racism _~.?~t_~~.!'~e_~I!_t:a~e t,? ~e as.!'!d ______a .m. workshop .. Mike Yamalo. Genial insurance man Mack Feb. 1~ (SI.'urd .y) and other Asian·Americans Yamaguchi was i not a II e d liockton-lnstaUaUon dnr, Johnny Kom' •• 8:30 p,m.; Jud.. e BUl contribute to a Social Work JACL MEMBE RSHIP APPLICATION Doder. spkr Education in ealU. to tell are alike," Feb. 20 (Saturday) social workers to forget the It's going 0 u t to rugh ______Ch.pter " 'ut V.tl~y-ltuLAllation dnr, 'Platuu 1 R~UH.nt . San Jo.se, "success image" and deal with schools and relating to the I' , p .m ., BUI Hosokawi. spkr. the real problems, .. It's the prejudice. the war experience, .'tb. '!~ 1 leadersrup in JACL who take the heartache. the pain, the ID~~ : lr:ron~~~5aPfn~~el~urf:;'~ the time to listen to other pride tn being ot Asian aDces• First Name (U Couple. wife'a tfnt name) TlIb. 21 (Sunda.:\·) minorities by sitting on Bu· try. That's what really counts. in the P~l'.~~l\ ~~ci~ mao Relations Boards. attend• No more phoney labels, cost• When Elko • • • Stop at J'rieDdlr PonJand, 2 p.m. a.ruo tng ethniC' conferences on ly stereotypes, - just human Phon. §ft~'~~ Iurday ) Blacks. Browns, and IDdians beings. But ."en more - hu· tJhlmai!',;. as well as AsIan caUses _ . , man beings ot Asian ancestry D "ll'O U-~th I.nnua. instaliatioD §tvckrnen·s dnr: R:lymond Uno. spkr. lP1.~ It's coming together with oth· That is pride; that is Amer· ZIP 10 bft annount'«ll er Asian American minorities ican: that is where tbe MO"e- . CAFE • BAR • CASINO 'J_,.. ,...... like the Chin",e. Korean. and }l:llIonal J ·\CL 811whn Filipino to examme lheir own mer::r!~ ~\t. mc.y hurt at first .J NeYo 0 Rene>;l'""&J Amount !ride ed ------EOco, ...... Toumamllnt. • It ..... k. J ACL .1~ bosts ~th annual. Rtsz ~JC !iimilarities cd differences . BtH It'S real. ADd that is: On. subscrlpuon per ho\ls.e.bold mc1udeCJ memba'lhlp; DOll-I "'____ .... _ .... ______Loll,.. It'. true -"nOI aU OrieDtals beautiful. trUlSfuabl.. 0 Check acre U )'OU ckt DOt want the Pad8c CibmD. ..

f , r..r.r~'_" BOOK RIVIIW: Allan Beekman __"'_III_II";_"'_IIIII_II_._II_II •• ""_11111...... PACIFIC CITlDN-S CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FrIday, Februu7 I, 1171 Aloha from Hawaii Japanese Fairy Tales Reissued C...... _ . I .. _~ SJ _ ... _ • • • - BUlinesl Ind - ~ by Rlchord Glml Tffi: JAPANESE rAIlW BOOK. cin, match In which he cuts com pUed by Yel Thl'Odorl OUkJ; off the head of his detense• ftI JnIlIl"mlOlllllllnllntllftnJlnnnNlftIUlOlftmmtnllmUllnllllllllnHIRI"lnIlUIiIUIlIIWKtlUtlllllUlUllUllltil +~~3~· ~~~B~ ~p~: p~~~l~.c~ : less foe. Profeslionaa Guide Icged Ollcnsc was a l the tl m~ lJy un unknown KiHt:'· 18st $:.24. The authoress attempts to ~~:Ia West~rn T':J,II;:,';'e"1orc:r a reporter called him from Oct. 23, j ust 10 days belore Tb.ls volume contains no di• ameliorate abhor• Honolulu to a.sk for comment the 1970 genera'! election. rect biographIcal informaUon rence of these dastardly deeds. a IIDe ImlIlImllm) ...... wer ~ f!r! i t~~e l e~ISrJll~nd~;d n w~ C o ~ ea: ~; "In this way. sometimes bv a!ter the indictments about the complier. It appears. using his wisdom and some-• - addl1kmol IIDe • per u... made public. H :~ re~';~~u~~~ r !':~ r\ ~: the however, t hat sbe spent at least part of her childhood In time. by uslng his bodilv su ~ f pu s~~rc;Ta ~ ~h~I~ ~P ~ I I~~~ .trength. and at other times Grater Lot An ..... Hawaii Today England. by resorting to craftine.sJ, • School Front A \Vest Hawaii committee lnl1ba'. OenZ. O'Connor, Ted 1n the dedication to Elean• whIch was a. much esteemed Honolulu 13 intent on breaklnr the 81, ~~~~f~sa, u~{~aan c' a \ ~ee~c~m~f~ or Marion-Crawford, d ate d Aower View Gardens 1903. Tokio. lhe compiler says. in those days at it ls despls. R.ORlSTS "Isle schools may need po- b land Into two county gov- l,.3kJ. Robert Kln;urn, T,e. Yim. ed in these, he prevailed .101 N. W...... A... 4M-mI lice help." That's what the el'nments and. a~, its tl,rst. aim. ~k~:rdsa~~~"!.~' T ~ ~h~,r:p, ~ ~~I:i "To you and to the sweet against ail lhe King's foes . . . " ~~ =~~~ child-friendship that you g~ "e Other unfamiliar concepts htadUne of a Honolulu ncws- ~\t~~s;~o:~~~on :~ ~ ~ ~~f ~ f~~ ~~!t.rtsu~lshl ~ :~I~ ' Jr'Jcr !':d~at~gl~~l l a~:g~p~~~a..~~~ B ool< in 1889. He was to pro• JAPANESE NEWSPAPER teed blacktop sealer used by • admitted experimentation ,vith g;e: grate here ought to be aJ)ow• duce 11 more books of fairy COMPOUNDS: The 1000 Most ~~~O" r g b!!~~~ehO~:~ s a~g ~~ : EDWARD T. MORIOKA, Aul"" inhaling volatile substances Hawait. 27.6, and nat1onaJ. 61: and ed to continue it. But Fasi tales; the 12th In the series. ServJc. Throuoh ExDerItneeJ &i .;~ t!~~gna t fo~)~rC~~r.s. Important in Order of Fre• torl es. schools. hospltalJ. banks Sum"..... Bldg. 294- 120. 2>16'" including gasoline, paint and H.awB; !, disagrees. T he Lilac Fai<1I Bool<, would quency. CompUed by Tada• ~~~~'renLi~~~fa~~~~IO~; One ot the Largen Select rON ,lue; (2) 183 used ampbeta- State Sen. President David appear In 191 0. ohl Klkuoka, (Charles E. Tut• advanced weekly. Open account 2421 W. Jefferson. LA Palo Alto, Calif. mines; 269. barbiturates; 238. Vietna m Casua lties C. 1I l cC l un~ said he is opposed T I, . Japane. e F ail"Y Bool< Ue Co.. Paperhack, $2.50) is ~J~rre ~~e~3~ . ck~~, r t~lr~:: RE 1-2121 • LSD; and 81 , heroin; (3) rea- to legalized ga(Jlbllng and did originated in a suggestion JOHH TY SAITO ASSOClATU 47 ~ fooc' H ~~ ' !~:asi . N ~~:le ~ ke.2~ i : J an Ingenious aid to the ad• 64132. & StlI" & Service Ions for use ot drugs, in the not {avo\, any legislati ve stu• Lang made indirectly to the vanced student ot J apanese YAMAHA PIANOS. ORGANS order 01 f requency or rc- Jan. 15 In South VietnaM. He was dy o( the issu~. Hawaii vot• compiler. The book was ori• who is trying to learn to ;!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllmllllll SoYAM}:HAI ;EN l i'NSU~- sponse: pleasure, experimen- ~~h:n tr:lnib~b~~aSStr~ear e~~ l o~~~~ er'. he said, probably would ginally published in England. read newspapers. The book 32'~701 tation, peer influence, anger NakJ a 1968 grad"uare of Castle tul'n down any proposal to The 22 stories are based on permits the student to con• iii N k P" iii! J73t £1 CimIno Real ("5) at someone and curiosity; (4) High' School. was the 2"t person legalize gambling In the a J apanese language version centrate on those words caus• Fugetsu-Oo Sacramento, Calif. r easons tor not using drugs in from HawaU to die tn the Viet· Islands if a referendum were by Sadanami Sanjin. There Ing the chie! difficulty. Each I:; an2024 a E. 1rmtmg.. 51. Ii!i -• ______order of frequency of l'e· nam War. held on that issue. But he are 66 black-and-white illus• word Is listed by number. fol• CONl'ECTIONARY ~ ~ l ponse: no desire. illegality, C ri m e File (avors legalized cockfighting trations by Kakuzo Fujiyama. lowed by the two kan1 i com• mE. lit SL, Lot An,ol.. 1J Lo. Angelel. Co llI . fear of addiction. {ear of im- so long as no gambling was Some ot the stories are posing it, a 'Tomaji rendition, IIlAdI. on $08595 iii ANgelul 8-7835 § pairment. o( health and lack o( Detective Norman Crowell involved. well-known nowadays, such and the meaolng in English. ;;lllIIllIIlIlIlIlIlllllIllllIllllllllllllllllllUlUlUlUh' opportunity. told Circuit Judge Thomas S. as Ura!hlma Taro, the k i n d The index arranges the words Then was an attempt at rob· Ogata Jan. 18 that a grave Deaths fisherman who returned to ~~ ~ e\, o :lt tl~" h bU~~ 1 O;!~~~tb.~ alphabetically. followed by SeaHle, Waah. dug on a sandy \Vajanae beach Dr. Selehl Ramamolo, tHo at his native village after s p e nd ~ kanji and number, permitting :!'n':.~ ~o~t~~e"J'..:.~vaf h ~~~!·~~~~ ~ ~t .P'i,; o 2 K1~ ~~ b3 ~~ - Y~ '~ ~ - 0~~ Wat1uku, Maul, died Jan. 14 at. Ing hundreds of years in the t he student to easily locate Toyo Printing • 1he IHaui Memorial Hospital. palace of the Sea King, and Imperial Lanes ! ~:re ~gtl e~r:~cecat~~ , u~e ro~:';~ ~~~~!!1~to. a~d de~~!eSrat~lc~R I~~ any word. Tests enable him Offm • lotltrpfm • lInot,,1Ilt .. have been big enough (or the story of The TOllgue-cut to check his progress.-AB. 2 tOt - 22nd Ayo .. So. EA 5-2"' velt teacht: r told the House Com· three. Miss Klotzbach was Maul. then HnaUy to WaUuku Sparrow. Others, such as The 30t S. SAN ,mRO ST. NIseI Owned - Fred TakaGI. MOt. mtttee on Education Jan. 19. slain and buried there be• ~r:O~Y~d~;~I.t~fk:e hts" s~~!~~~~ Ogre of Ra..homoll and T h • Los Ang,l .. 12 - MA611111 6.815) Darold Butda. an English teach· cause she was a witness to a daughters and three grandchtl· Stone. of F i ". Colour:, are Kinomoto Travel ServIce ~e;o~n~~;olsl:!O~eth'~;e~~r 'l~ I! murder. The other two wit• dren. BOOK SHELF: I Frank Y. Klnomoto more obscure. ~2t Ml ln St .• MA 2-1522 PUleb.UC .. SCQnheOOI t'e'a·stech~!~ 1sU}~ t ~ I~ ; nesses reportedly destined for The stories are primaxUy Names in t he News b the grave are now under po• directed toward British chil• Three GeneratiON of ~ ~~et~.~e~:du~J. a. disturbed stu· lice guard. One is Kathleen Shimatsu, Ogata Waahin,tonr D.C. Assislant U.S. Atty. Gen. dren. The spelling is British. Zen master meefs ExperIence • Ha lvatl Loa Colle,e In Wind. Mc lJi ck, 19 ; the other, accord• Shlro Kash lwa has been or• The compiler has not slmply "'ard Oah u has received tuU ac· ing to police. is a female. She translated the stories, she has and Kubota MASAOKA .ISHIICAWA creditatlon from the Western has not been identified. dered to take over ail the F UK U I AHD ASSOCIATU, INC. ~in;f ~h~~~3~rCO~~~ge~o; ' ~: mounting number ot pollu• retold them, adding descrip• Mortuary Charged with the murder of tion cases. He will work close-• tion and local color where a~ American minds Co""'J;mYS,::v:;W"!'i8:l,W- propriate a nd attempting to Mortuary, Inc. ' < o~~e ';f:~~nn~ State Teacben ~~es ~~~acr5; ~: n l e fes;;. ly with the nation's 93 U.S. 91 I Venice Blvd . ft' ~Pe~!lr~rr:sut~;~o;t~~ ~p h~~~ attorneys who will perform reconcile dltterent conceptions By Sbter Aqulnata Br.unan 707 E. Temple St. K'nun,h, eo"'pute. Trelnt..., Pog-tis . 19 ; \VUl iam K. Mede. most of the court room work and East and West traditions. Los Angeles For Men, Women der the collecth-e bargaln1ng law iros. Jr., 24: and Roland C. Children of the West have Loa Angelel 90012 in connection with pollution ZEN MIND, BEGINNER'S MIND. RI 9-1449 ~ ~ f::~i~ . Lt!l~~e; . S · Th~~Um~~ Eeuchl, 19. cases. At a recent press con• been taught that the her 0 by Shunryu Suzuki: edited by 626·0441 AUTOMATION Dona. ~ d 19fol~~\J!d ~ 1 ~ U !la~l~ u~~~~ must always figbt fair; only Trudy Dlxon. New York & To~ Gill. Woll ett ot UC Da- ference, Atly. Gen. John N. ~~ . Walker/Weatherhill. 134 pp., SEIJ I DUKE OGATA vis .•.nd John Dunlop of the Na· trend, according to the Maul Po. Mi tchell praised Kashlwa for the villain fights toul. But In Selchl FukUi. Presld.nt INSTITUTE tion a) Education Assn. Jlce Dept. Theft reports were up the good job he was doing in a story originally taken trom R. YUTAKA KUBOTA James Na kagawI , M, n.ger 41.3 per cent with the value of From a world that has " onnerly Control Data 'mtftuteJ Congressional Score fighting pollution. the Kojiki, Prince Yamato Ta• Nobuo O.umP. Counsellor _ ... T.k"'~ DI_ ~~enMlj~or~m::l~~re~~JI3g.; Queenje Sui Ling 1\10\\1. ge unhlushlngly resorts to toul reacbed the zenith of material 411 Ie. Hilt, LA. Pin _ .. Robert Carson, Sen. Hiram aspirations; w h er e wealth, 40.6 per cent from the pre'vlous daughter fo the Frank K.S. means to subdue his enemJes. (APProved for yl.. Itvdtntt) L. Fong's indicLed aide, has ~abU~g~a~~~ea:~d O~n · 7 :e~r ~~~t Mows, won the Narcissus The Prince dlsgulses him• health, and the "good life" lApp roved for Vet.rans) written a friend here main· in lareenJe5 contributed primarily Queen contest Jan. 16 at self as a woman. insinuates have offered their war es at HOME OF THE OR IENTAL BOWLERS bining that there is "no to the increase in major crimes. Honolulu International Cen• himself Into the favor of the Vanity Fair the American is ~lmllmmlttlllitlUllnllintttlUtnmDnru ] truth" to charges against him. AeeordJ,ng to vJce bureau staUs· ter. Runners-up in order were rebel Kumaso. makes hi;n turning away surfeited. Sur• Carson added tbat he would tics, there were 50J oUenses In hlted but empty-handed, or :; A,k for , •• 1970 as compared with ~69 In Princesses Ca rol Sau Jun Kon, drunk, then stabs hlm- to HOLIDAY -BOWL never do "anything to em• 1969. These Included 159 narcotic Susie Siu Mun Lau, Rosa death. The Prince feigns more e"actly empty-hearted. barrass my friends or associ• offenses and 81 cockfighting and Yearning tor a fulfillment be 3730 CRENSHAW BLVD., L.A. IS gamblln, offense!. Linda Chi Mel Chen and friendship with another ene• I 'Cherry Brand' ates." Carson was suspended Gene" leve Shun Glt Lum. my. steals the other's sword, baa not found In material pos• ~ MUTUAL SUPPLY u administrative assistant to sessions, he is now seeking co. Insid e t he Capitol Sen'en Oahu men have received replacIng It with a dummy ~ 10.0 SonlOme St., S••• 11 Fong alter being cbarged the Silver Beaver Award, Scout. sword t h at cannot be drawn w h at he has spurned since -In West CovIn. Shopping Center nel r Bro.dway DeDt. Stor_ .... ith consptring to fix a fed• The state legislature opened lnC's highest recognition to adult. trom the scabbard; the n he eightenth century Skepticism iilmlllttllUttllllnlmlnlllUlllltlllUUlllIlIlIII I!ral securities fraud case. Car• its two-month session on Jan. ~er~ e pr~~~nJ7an?'l~9 :~'la~: challenges the other to a fen- led fr o m the path of P ll• l on pleaded innocent to the 20 with one chair - that of Slst annual inspirational dinner grim's P rogress. HOLIDA Y• STARDUST BOWL charges Jan. 18 in federal the late Sen. Larry N. Kurl- ~I~;~ S~~U~~f~o~:ri~u~~~IP~: Ever in search ot the new. AppOancea. 1035 W. WALNUT 'ARKWAY, WEST COVINA court in New York. In the let• 1ama - vacant. The future of ents were G O\'. JOll O A. Bum.s, the exotic. he recently turn• ter to a friend here, Carson Kuriyama's seat remains in Clyde E. Wil son, Ralph Shim a. ed to EasLern mYsUclsm for maintained that the llist the hands of a federal court. bukuro , Roy K. M .cha d o~ Cha rles Ethnic studies - nourishment for his . pirltual knowledge he had to the a1- F. Lan,. Dr. KatsumJ Komelani Kurlyama was gunned down and Patrtck D. D~ 1to n . Continued from Pale' hunger. eiAMiiRA Zen practice a n d medita• And and Harry Kawahara trom the tions seem to be the nutrients co., Inc. community. most palatable at the present 9MSIWtMI Ramon C. CortInes, assistant moment. Empire Printing CO. " hi· me" i. an In.lant and .uperinLendent for secondary CO MM ERCIAL and SOCIAL PRINTINC ';'~8W~ A smaU group of Americans Enollsh and Japanese economlc. 1 Ihlng 10 have in education, stated that the pro• under the famous J apanese HANDY posed curriculum is "interest• Zen master, Shunryu Suzuki, 114 Weller St., Los Angete, 12 MA 8-7060 3420 W. Jeff,rson IJ/vd. LITTLE your kilchen or on Ih. table ing, chailenging and thought· met in Los Altos. Calif.. and Los Angeles 18 ~ ~ --.~ ....,~.'uuuw. provoking. It provides young ...... tOt ...... tOt ...... • fo r better food enjoyment. seriously undertook the prac• RE 1,7261 people with the opportunity to tice of Zen. Under this mas• learn more about and appre• ter the group spread out to " hi-m e"i•• very un ique and ciate the contribution ot Asi• other places and the Zen an in our nation." Mountain CenLer at Tassajara Eagle Produce hi modern type 01 d ..hino moto . . Hot Springs in Carmel Valley. ~~- " which I. a strong fla voring agenl Rio Hondo Colle,. ThIs is the first Zen train• 929-943 S. Sin Pedro St, MA 5-2101 ing monastery outside Asia. 100 ___,"'·i_ .. t: conlaining .ssenc. of fla vors WHITTIER - Two 3-unlt 'IS HERE ! courses on the Far East will Marian Derby, the bead of ~~ the Los Altos group, taped Bonded Commission Merchants 01 meal, dried bonilo, be otfered at Rio Hondo Col• 15130SWesurn aw. lege In the spring semester Suzuki's meditations. Then - Wholesale Fruits and Vegetables - Tr udy Dixon, another disciple Gerdeno DA 4-6444 FA 1-2123 In instant .hrlmp and lang Ie. starting Feb. 8 with Tal< Los Angeles 15 ~ S h i n d 0 instructing. Tho of Suzukl-Roshl. edited th e cooking basI tapes and put them into the aaaa====aaaaa aaaaaE. Availa bl•• 1 food .tore. courses are: i"~'~"~ii~ii'ii"ii~l~ii~I~II~lIIiii11illiiliilmnll'""'~I~II~"~;n;""'~lIiillll,mlifnn; from Ihe ma ker Introduction to the Arts of present form. In . n .Itractive red.lop .haker. Asia (T-Th, 1:30-3 p.m.) ; His• EIf,~~hIII of "AJI.NO·MOTO" tory 01 t he Far East (T-Thu, In simple language, hut not g CAL-VITA PRODUCE CO., INC. § NISEI 12-1:30 p.m.) . in Western logic, the author ~ BoDded CommlsSi OD Merclwlts-Frulto ... Ve, etlbl.. ~ AJIN OMOTO CO. OF NEW YORK. INC. ShIndo also teaches ethnic attempts to gUide the begin• studies and Far Eastern mus• ner through the early steps =_= 774 S. Central Ave. L.A.-Whole.. le Termlllil lIfllket =§ ic at Sal State-L.A. tilat lead to the Zen mind. In lIlA %-85n. alA t -1038, lIlA S·CS04 TRADING COl some detal I he discusses Zen ~'''''''''''''''''II''III''''''''IIU''III'''''II''''II''''''tII''II I1 ''III1I1I1I11'''lIl1l1l1l1l11l11mllllllllllllltit1U~ • Applloncu 1V - Fum llurl practice, attitudes and spirit. J ... L FIRST ST .. LA. 12 If the reader tries to fol• MAdison 4-6601 12, 3 ., Packaged noodle by Japan's top maker low the centrifugal movement of the Eastern mind with Los Angeles Japanese Casualty InsuranCE Assn. aalc III ICIC F Western logic, he will .00 n - Completl Insurance Protection - give up the effort to move through the seemingly unsolv• Aih ..o Inl. Agy., Alhara·Omatsu·Kak.lla, 250 E. ht 51 .. _ 626·9625 Aloha Plumbing ToP Ramencomes to America! ed paradoxes. An,on Fuiioki Agy., 321 E. 2nd, Su it. 500 __ 626-4393 263-1109 PARTS & SUPPLI ES Funakosh i In •• AIY., Funakoshi-KagaWil·Manaka.Morey The author says, "Our prac· - Repel .. Our Speclolly - Tn," Jut IIh lh faln'"I· noh4 'hlDn: tice has nothing to do with 32 1 E. 2nd St ...... _ _ .. 626·5275 462-7406 lis MI· n.1\·o(,d soYp docs. And 0( C'Out~ tile nooJlt. Th, some particular religious be• Hlrohato In,. Agr., 322 E. Second 51 __.. _ .. 628·1 21 4 287-8605 " ... So G.... , Leo ,...... fIOOJl e \lijlh Ih ~ lypiC'lI lOIt·h.,d r«1 ....'"SI tour 1 « 1tt-lh ~ liel . . . So there is no need Inouy. In,. A9 Y., 15029 Svlv.nwood Ave.• Norwalk. .._ 864-5774 R1 9-4371 rlQJurablr tltllaJlLln, USI , onl) Ihe t\.-sl·P'rp.ted Ramen ('.an to worry about diUerences be• Jo. 5. llano & Co., 3 I 8'h E. lst 51...... _ .... _ ... 624-0758 off«. You Me bound 1(1 lib U. and )OUf children. 100-(\(" tween Buddhism and the reli• Tom T. Ito, 595 N. lincoln, Pasadenl_794-71 89 (LA.! 681-4411 Irlhe) annOI UK: rhoplllc.b! 11'11 rn4l( . IIoondnfulluneh fJ( gion you may believe in." Minoru 'HI.' Nagata, 1.97 Rock Hov.n. Montorey Park._268-4554 ED SATO mid"lchr marL "'nd it'$ 10 ,1mple 10 coot. Ne)! lime )OU SI ••e Nakail, 4566 Centln.l. Av .... _ . __ 391 -5931 837·9150 Further on he says, "l dis,. PLUMBtNG AND HVoTINCO 11\ JhoA!i"" '*1I1(h OUI rOf the NcbsC ",Ih the FORK ·hell! Sat. In, . Agr., 366 E. l SI 51 ..... _ . ___.6 29- 1.25 261-651 9 covered it is absolutely ne• Remod.1 ond Repel ... w_ n

weclev wscs 11th PRlNTINGCookbook INSTANT SAtM'" Ortentll and FAvorite Rec i· I pes. Donation $2.50 Hand• ling SOc. Wesley Uniled - HAWAIIAN RECIPE - Methodi,' Chun:h, 566 N. Most s.nltIrY Whol __ 5th 51.. San Jose. Ca lif. 95112. t ...... ~ S.imln on the Mlrket I .. - •I STUDIO '1, H.wbilEOfaRace Lliti•• : S5.sa 'I:, Available at Your Favorite ShoJlllbll Center I IWuh. res. odd 28c .ax) t ...... ~c.a F. & T. PUBLIS HERS • NANKA SEIMEN co. .. 8"" 6262, RI"rton HIs. Br·1 .... AnatJ- ..... iI *"'" W..tt. 98188 . I , PACIFIC CITIZEN Eighty-Six Jerry Enomoto PubUahed'::~lh:7fj~ . ~~:r ~~ri~tl1c;t~~ LUIUI Z DI ~ OBlAL-8 0au ..n a orne!! By Robert M. T.k.. ugi =.r~ ~d w~t;: ~,itt~ ·a ~~~!J~ . ~ . ': .l ~I~ur;,~r~p:;: National JACL LillI Coun ..1 Perspectives ..tuu . w.·~:ut:'J.t'-:mtio~af · p~ ~~V:re~.e:a ~:r ~:r . yeara J'!.50 of I CL Membehhlp Outs for y ear 8ubscripUon - Adt'crt1slnC Jl;epresentatl.",e No. C.Ut...... LH Ruttle, 46 Kurny. Rm. 408. Si n Fl' iln~JU o g·n08 J, EDGAR . •• AGAIN-Approximately a year ago, I pedaJ Conetp0D..deDt.I J. Edgar Hoover, Director of the Federal Bureau of SALINAS VALLEY JACL-My first installation of " wail: DIehard GlmA, A1lan Beakmu JaP&ll: J1m He.nry, Mu Manb o investisations, testified to the effect that there are 1971 was my first chance to introdnce l\Ii.ke Sumlli DlJtrlct COUDell ftepre,entaUvtl approximately three hundred thousand Chinese resid· to a JACL audience as a maiD speaker, ]n the style PNWDC _ Ed TautakawI : NC-WNDC -Homer Takaba3h1: CCDe - ing in the Uni te~ State ~, m~n y of whom. may be ~. that marked his successful appearance at the 1970 =hT~~~~ ! ~~~?h~t ~ a ~~Jk~ r ~ ~ 1~~ a !!'fiu Kt~ ~&i ceptible to recrwtment 1Il ald of Red China. The Chi' Placer County JACL Goodwill Dinner. Mike was very '.Uon.al J'ACL Headquarter. nese community, other irate organizations and sensi· well received by the Salinas Valley Chapter. He talked 1&3' Pod St., SaD B'ranef.sc:o. C&llL 9415 -P hon.: (415) WE l-6644 tive individuals, totally outraged by such reference, of youth and the JACL, subtly sugsestin~ that the bee?: =r~ ~no~t::&s::uw: r~dec~p.¥;!~ :otfcr;:ued raised a hue and cry for his ouster as the Director of Nisei might not always be on the nght Side of the IIAYMOND UNO. Pruldent KAY NAKAGIRI. Bom! ChaJrman the FBI. No affirmative or positive action resulted. proverbial generation gap, if indeed there is a right IlABBY K. BONDA, Edttor Just recently, J. Edgar struck agai1}. :rhis time it or "Tong sIde. He also pointed out that the times that was against the Mexican and the Puerto Rican. Hoover conditioned the Nisei are not the times that our Sansei 6- Friday, February 5, 1971 stated that the threat upon the physical safety of the are growing up in. When all is said and done, Mike President of the United States at the hands of the was adding his voice to the many calls. in and out of Harry K. Honda Mexican and Puer to Rican would not be by their use JACL, for that collective voice of understanding, 80 of fireal'ms in that they do not possess the ability to often lacking. shoot accurately. He continued by stating that if they, I had the privilege of installing Shiro Higashi, who however, "com e at you \vith a knife . .. look out." serves his second year as chapter president. and his Attorney General John Mitchell responded to such officers. A surplise visitor was ational 'Membership comments and reminded the critical factions of the Chairman Henry Kanegae. who looks as good as new public that J. Edgar also had the right of free speech. after his brush lvith death. Henry denied the truth Hoover, himself. justi fied or rationalized his prior of the myth that one's life flashes before one's eyes statements by citing his friendship with certain memo Tora! Tora! To,a! in those split seconds before eternity. He was too busy bers of those ethnic persuasions and that his com· instinctively applying the skills that saved his life. • ments were "taken out of context". Tom "Lefty" Miyanaga handled the MC job with 'PC' POTPOURRI Those who either expelienced or studied the 1942 characteristic aplomb. "PC Cutoff-Feb. 28" is the cry this month with· evacuation tragedy will recall that bigoted and ignor· • LETTERS FROM OUR READERS NO CLASS-The· cold and insensitive manner in in JACL chapters in the midst of their membership ant utterances of this natUl'e by supposedly respected Lolle" to the Editor are sub,ect to condcusat1on Each must be campaign. That slogan is the annual r emiI~ d er for reo individuals ignited the movement and removal of the stgned and addres,ed. :hough withheld from print upon reQue,t which the Palmer House management has handled the newals to be made by Feb. 28 to lllsure unlllterrupted Japanese from their homes under the guise of military aftermath of the Okubo Yamada tragedy in Chicago service including the PC subscription. We allow a necessity or national secUli ty. We missed it tbat the Chinese wanted. So, is appalling. Every J ACLer should know that the three·week subscription grace period, then inform the the British struck on the Palmer House is a part of the renowned Hilton Corpo• Tllis indictment against Hoover cannot be more Editor: hideous idea of addicting the ration, which also issues the Carte Blanche credit card. r.hapters of delinquencies before initiating our own strenuously or vehemently asserted. Race l'elations We did not reoeive our Ho• Chinese to opium. which they direct inquiry with the individual subscriber. . . could easily grow in their In this era of quality and competitive services, an out. within this country are, to borr ow from the current Ji day Issue. Our family reads fit that handles its business without regard for basic Over half of the 50 libraries and schools recelVlllg vernacular, preselltly "uptight", if not already "bent each issue thoroughly and es- colonies in India. Tile opium pecially look forward to the trade grew to devastating human feelings and moral (if not legal) obligations, the PC at the present time are gifts from local chap· out of shape". J. Edgar, as tile titular head of the special articles in the Holiday ters.There should be more. Library rates are $5.50 proportions. and the Emperor should not escape the sanctions that can so easily be FBI, should and must exemplify the impeccable high Issue. We would have written of China had to decree that applied against it. for one year, $11 for two years. standard of priority expected of an individual en· s!'1 .... ToyODO Watanabe ban on non-white attorneys whoJesale mart . Seven but it has been oniy one of men and civilians. the Vietnam nese silk and tea but bad Iv repre•• nt the ethnically ori• bousing looked most attrac• dlt'd January II. - ElIdU Canadian government leader:; in Hea" l JlIounlaltl a number Of incidents involv• war is a Special war. In the nothing to barlel' in return enled people of Hawaii tive. On their 0'\10"11 too. toad Sakauye). "ilieizes British Columbia draft conspiracy case to be ing the base. Trade unionists, past all those who relurned If you are interested in , ------I t ~. t me nt of Ni"ei eimens h-eed as d!sDlisoal of chorges .tudents and even hippie-type from the war tront were he· es of burnt rui..rJ.:; . There was heanng more about this book. I denied [ranchise and entry sougbt ... Conneeticul Coun• ,'\merh:an tourists are con• roes. Tbe modern history 01 nothing to give them comfort. the San Francisco Cenler for : ARE YOU A SUBSCRIBER? i In lo prof. oions ... No im· cil tor J apanes<> Americans s nlly conducting campaigns the United States is general· The ' burned their lice-ridden Japane:;e American Studi~ ~ ucees ses . I mediate deportahon seen for organi?"ed • , . Rea .. on [or WQI • to aroll. e anti·war feeli ng ~ ly a suCi:ession of uniforms amid a strange leel· will pre;en a panel dL