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• c c November?5 19 3 The National Publication of the Japanese American Citizens League

Chicago Nikkei hear pledges SENATE BILL S 2216 .. . Of support from legislators aDCAOO-1be IIbis Dept. cussioos ClIl bow Asian Matsunaga s .... bmits bill 01 iIunum ftjgbtI held a bear• Americans are portrayed in fog at Truriian College 00 media, scbools, ami among av. 9 to hear testimony on labor unions. Former JACL on redress to Senate ~otry and other c:mcerns of Midwest ~ Ross lfa.. the state's 250,000 Asians. raoo warDed the department WASHINGTON-Sen.. Spark M. Matsunaga (l)..Hawaii), with Twenty-tive witnEsses ~ that bigotry agaimt Asian 13 colleagues, introduced S 2116 on Nov. 16. The bill would IeDted statements ClIl immi• Americans is 00 the rise implement the reammendations of the Commission on War• gration ani ref\Jgee pOlicy, natiooally. time Relocation and Internment of Civilians. employment, educatiOn, • JACL Midwest Director In his remarks, Matsunaga stated that, ''The Commission's censing 01 pn!lewjona1a, Bill Y0I!Ihin0 gave aD histori• careful review of wartime records, and its extensive hearings, bealtb and ".man 1eI'Vices, cal acauJ1 mracism toward confirmed what Americans ofJapanese ancestry have always womeb'. __, and care of Asians and drew historic known: 1beevacuationofJapanese Americans from the West the t!IcIerIy. parallels to the current at- Coast and their incarceration in what can only be described as Williani Ware. chief of ~ of tension. In ~ ~ntration camps staff for Mayor Harold Wash• cl his statement Yosbi- AmericaJrStyle was not justified by mil• iDgton, ~ the bearing no saia tbatprejudice and itary necessity, but was the re;ult of racial prejudice, wartime wftb a statement that diS• "can be as overt as hysteria, and a historic character failure on the part of our crimination against Asian the killing of Vincent Chin in political leaders .• , Americans or any other or • subUe as the Matsunaga's speech, delivered late last Thursday evening, group, wWld oot be tolerated denial of a job promotion. It generated the co-sponsorsbip of five senators from the floor, by tile wasbingtoo ~ is, however, pervasive and including that of conservative Republican Jeremiah Denton tration, and pledced that Asi• darnagi~ creating fear and of Alabama. an Americans an Chicago animus. e must acknow• The 13 co-sponsors of S 2116 are: would no longer be left out Of ledge its existence and recog• the political process. Ware nize the atmosphere in which Daniel K. Inouye (O-Hawaii), Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), Frank Murkow• also stated tbat be would in• it may become intensified." ski (R-Alaska), Alan Q-anston (D-Callf.), John Melcher (D-Mont. ), v~ate_ prospects for He further stated that "this Howard Metzenbaum (D-Obio) , Donald Riegle, Jr. (D-Mich.>, Paul estatJlishing a city Asian public bearing represents an Tsongas (O-Mass.), Jeremiah Denton (R-Alabama), Carl Levin (0- American advisory group. lDlportant firSt slep and de• Mich.), Daniel Moynihan (O-NY), William Proxmire (D-Wisc.), and State Sen. Williain Maro• notes that Dlinois IS assum• Alfoose D'Amato (R-NY). vitz and state Rep. Lee Pres-• ing a leadership role in this SpaJ1< M. Matsunaga ton announced they would in• effort." Inouye, who with Matsunaga obtained the co-sponsorship of troduce 1egisIation in the Illi• The Dlinois Department of the other senators, stated in his speech that, "It is vitally The balance of the fund would be used primarily to sponsor nois General Assembly to Human Rights is the enforce• important that we recognize the gravity of the serious error research and public education. create an Asian American ment ag~ for the Dlinois that was committed and most importantly that we redress in S 2116 also contains provisions compensating Aleuts who Study Ccmmission to serve Human . ts Act of 1980, some fOIDl the victims of this reprehensible event in order to were rem>ved from their homes during WW2. 88 a liaison between Asian which prollibits discrimina• preclude something as horrible from happening again in the "We're very pleased," said National JACL Redress Director Americam, the General AIr tion in employment, hoUSing: future." . aembly, and state agencies. access to financial credit ana John Tateishi of the bill, "and sincerely appreciate the efforts Edwin Cudecki. chair of places ofpublic accommoda• Familiar Provisions of Senators Matsunaga and Inouye. " the Dlioois Consultation on tions. Its director, Joyce Similar to DR 4110, the Senate bill would acknowledge the Tateishi said the bill would probably be referred to the Com• EUmicity in Education, Tucker, praised JACL's ef• fundamental injustice of the internment, apologize on behalf mittee on Governmental Relations, on which both Carl Levin llI'ged tile Dept. of Human forts in cOordinating and par• of the people of the United States, and provide a $1.5 million and Ted Stevens sit. The conunittee is chaired by William .~ts to initiate further dis- ticipating in the hearing. /I trust fund, from which individuals would be paid $20,000 each. Roth, Jr., ofDelaware. /I

Nat'l AlP caucus drafts platform Reagan to sign bill to revive LOS ANGELES----Ommunity elude Asian Pacifies as well leaders from across the coun• as Blacks, Hispanies, Native U.S. Civil Rights Commission try gathered here as the Ame..ricans and women. WASlllNGTON- President seat two of the three new Democratic National Com• Planks fur the 1984 platform Reagan is expected to sign a commissioners he nomina• mittee's Asian Pacific Cau• address the rise of anti-Asian bill, passed by the House and ted last spring. Two of the cus held its first national con• violence, redress, immigra• Senate last week, giving new three old COmmissioners, ference on Nov. 4-5. tion laws, medical aid for hi• life to the U.S. CommISsion however, will stay. Caucus members discuSsed bakusha (atomic bomb sur• on Civil Rights. selection of delegates to the vivors) , and assistance to mi- And the commission is no Democratic National Con• nori~ business ~ s . _ Reagan, who replaced two longer an agency of the exe• vention and issues to be in• In addition to Chaii Hsieh, of the commission's six cutIve branch. Four commis• members earlier in his term, sioners will still be appointed corporated into an Asian/ Lorna Kakesako of Hawaii tried to fire three more mem• Pacific platform for 1984. was'elected vice chair; S.B. by the President, but two will Woo of Delaware, secretary; bers and to apnoint more be named by the Senate lead• Addressing the caucus, like-minded indfViduals in were Rep. Norman Mineta and attorney Mike Eng of Los ership and two by the Speak• Angeles, treasurer. # their place. But the Senate er of the House. (D-Calif.) , Rep. Fofo Sunia refused to confirm Reagan's (D-Am. Samoa), Ann Lewis, nominees. (See PC, 11-4.) political director of the Dem- , Nat'. BCA board An amendment to the mea• ocratic National Committee, , Under the compromise le• sure also appropriates $11.9 Assemblyman Tom Hayden, backs redress gislation, the commission ex• million to run the commis• Calif. State Senate president SAN FRANCISCO-The na• ~ds to eight members. sion to Sept. 30, the end of the pro tempore David Roberti, tional board of the Buddhist Reagan will De allowed to fiscal year. :/I Calif. Sec. of State March Churches of America at its Fong Eu, Los Angeles Mayor recent meeting unanimously More Nikkei Californians elected to hold Tom Bradley, and S.B. Woo, passed a motIon commend• candidate for lieutenant gov• mg the recommendations of political offices throughout state ernor ofDelaware. the Commission on Wartime - In his keynote speech, Mi• Relocation and Internment UNION CITY, Ca.--Nursery• lano County. He polled 55% of neta told conference dele• of Civilians. man Tom Kitayama won an- the total votes cast. gates to address not only is• At the time of the 1942 evac- other tenn as mayor of this Tom MatsumotO of Santa sues of specific concern to uation, the BCA. then known No. California city in the Nov. Clara County garnered the Asian andPacific Americans, as the Buddhist Mission of 8 .elections by a marg.in of highest number of votes in the but also those that affect North America, was the lar- 3,320 to 1,975 for his opponent race for a seat on the Ever• other minorities and the na• gest Ja~ American or- J. Manuel Herrera. green ScOOol District board. tion as a whole. Otherwise, he ganization in the country. _ Matsumoto's 1,576 votes stated Asian Pacifies may National JACL director . Three Nikkei won school equalled 35.2% of the total be looked.upon as "just an• Ron Wakabayashi, in ex- board seats in other areas. nUmber cast. other special interest group." pressing ap'preciation to BCA Attorney Garry Ichikawa ea• CaUcus chair 'Ib

PAUL C. TAKEDA, 86: At the in italion of the Japan e hristian hurch f Los Angeles. the Takedas continued teaching until World ar II At Poston. Takeda maintained lus posture a mmuni~' A Community Service Pioneer servant. As a charter member of tb camp' Red . h expanded his activity as its Junior Red ba.irman and ByBENRY OR! the uncarpet.ed wooden floor. I would remind Paul that his first aid instructor. He as also a cbartermernberl uti . LOS ANGEI...ES-During my earlier period of enforced coo• Japanese name, Chikara , meant strength and power. And. we secretary of Poston Cooperati tor. finementin the ~ of 1M2 at the Colorado River Relocation laughed. even in a bell.hole like Poston. In early Aprill94S. Paul and Shizuko relocated to I . land, Center in Poston Arizona, the name of Paul Cbikara Takeda Perchance, I met one of his nieces on Nov. 11. Veteran's . There, Takeda worked as a hipping clerk Cor hoi 'Was ·tb the American Red Cross. Day, and learned. the 86-year-old, Hawaii-born scholar whose sale house until the end of war. Upon their return to the \ t It was he and his brother, the late Ju• bilingual forte made him a community asset had quietly Coast, the Takedas. who had no children. v ntured in elC ~ . Takeda, who were responsible for passed away in his sleep at s t. Vincent Hospital several hours service IaWldry and apartment bu in . But their careers the formatioo of the first American Red before. In my flashback. I immediately thought about Paul ,,.______C. ,OO_tio.u.ed. oo_' _ .... office in any wartime relocation and the American Red Cross. ,...... ,t ..... sanctioned. by the National ARC. Nihongo lostructor I recall how proudly we were to witness Takeda was six when his parents took him to Hiroshima to the unfur~ of the Red Cross flag in front give him a Japanese education. Sixteen years later, he re- an Army barrack where our beadquar• turned to the United States, and worked his way through high were to be. In the days ahead, we schoo} and college, graduating from UCLA in 1927 as an Pau1 C. Takeda improvised just about everything we had economics major. around us to establish a half-decent looking "office," wiUl A year later , he visited Japan and married Shizuko Kiyo• makeshift shelves, desks, chairs and a visitor's counter. kane who was then attending Imperial Women's College in And, we weathered the hot dust storms when one came by Tokyo. Upon return to California, the coupJe taught at Lod.i closing all the stubborn windows 00 a moment's notice, gaUl• Japanese Language School and Hinode Gakuen near Sacra• ering the loose documentary papers which had scattered on mento for two years. New Mexico Nisei grower tells all about his chili pepper creation ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.-Roy you know," Rose says of her seeds of No. 7103 chili, known but not as large as Big J im, Minoru Nakayama was the husband. who has a full• as NuMex R. Naky, which he explains. " Naky is valu• fifth of Kaichiro and Tome length apron from a World was released this year. The able for i~!!!ghly extract- Nakayama's eight children. Championship Chili Cookoff pods are larger than No. 6-4 CGdinued 00 Page 7 Kaicbiro had worked his way autographed a few years back on a freighter from Japan to by actor William Conrad. the United States in 1907. He Berkeley Nisei named head adopted the American name The Nakayamas met in of U.S. Figure Skating Assn. John and learned farming about 1950, when from a German family in Roy was driving from Iowa SUN VAIlEY, ldaOO-George the St. Moritz Ice Skating Now')'ou can Nebraska, where be met his State Univ., where he attend• T. Yonekura of Berkeley, Club of Berkeley, Calif. choose the term, wife. ~ graduate school, to Wash• Calif., was elected president In 1967, be was voted into giving you hundred Roy t like his brothers and ington, D.C., between semes• of the United States Figure the U.S. Figure · Skating of new option from 7 sisters, toiled on their ters. Rose had lived with her Skatin~ Assn. , during the Assn.'s executive com• days to 60 months* on Sumitomo Money father's truck farm while four sisters on a ~acre farm goverrung council meeting mittee. Market Accounts. Sumitomo j offe ring mort: they were growing up. Roy near Calif., until Feb• Cortez, Ileld hereon May 14. He is a national referee, way to maximize the interest on your invest• liked farmiDg, even following ruary 1942 when President high test, and junior competi- I George became interested ment dollars. Why not earn Money Market a mule-drawn plow. He liked Roosevelt authorized mili• tion judge. He has put in long in figure skating in 1958 when rates on your terms? school, too. And be found a tary officials to incarcerate his daughter Lynn took her hours on the ice at regional, way to have both. persons ofJapanese descent. first steps on the ice. Lynn, sectional and national cham• " Longer terms are ava ilable. Roy, 60, has a doctorate in Roy bad his troubles dur• now assistant professor in pionship levels. He was a Note: Substantial pena.lty upon premature withdrawal. horticulture, plant pathology ing World War II. He joined the Univ. of So. Calif. School team leader for the 1978 and breeding. He is a profes• the U.S. Army after graduat• of Medicine, went on to be• Worlds in Ottawa, the 1979 sor at New Mexico State inS from Las Cruces Union come Central Pacific and Pa• Worlds in Vienna, and the Univ. horticultural section. Hiidl ScOOol, three months cific Coast Junior Ladies NHK Trophy in Japan in 1980 And be fanns at NMSU's ex• berore Pearl Harbor. He was Champion and National Nov• and 1983. perimental fields south of captured during the Battle of ice silver medalist, the Yonekura and his wife Las Cruces, where he raises the Bulse and held eight SKATING/October 1983 ma• Margaret reside on Berkeley chill. months m a German prison• gazine disclosed. bills overlooking San Fran• Roy and his wife Rose live er~f-war camp. His family, Yonekura's interest soon cisco-From N:' Nakajima, . in a rambling brick house on in New Mexico, wasunaffect• turned to administration. He Sheffield Lake, Ohio. # 1'-______... -_ .. Hatch Highway, north of Las ed by the evacuation edict. served for many years as Cruces. "Roy is 'Mr. Chili,' Nakayama has an interest• board member; vice presi• ing story on his experimental • Award dent, and then president of Cadet Theodore Ken Yooeda, • Theater son of Ted/SueDen Yoneda of Takasugi's probation Stockton, Ca., was awarded aca• Julie Nakagawa, an outsland-· NEW ISSUE demic and deportment honors at ing student of the Scbooi of Cleve• ruling commended Wentworth Military Academy land Ballet, became the first re• and Junior College, Lexington, cipient oftbe Kay Williams Schol• LOS ANGELES-U.S. Dis• Thi. i. not an off., to ...11 nor a ,olicitation of an off., to buy ftI.se MCuritie,. Mo. Cadet Yooeda was listed on arship award. The 19-year-old trict Judge Robert Takasugi The off.ring. it mod. only by the Offering Circular the academic Dean's Special Dis• Nakagawa is originally from Ev• has ~ained favorable atten• tinction list in October and re• anston, m. She is an advanced tion m the L.A. Times letters ceived lOO"lc deportment for the student in the professional stu• to the editor colwnns this fU'St grading period in the 1983-84 dent division and a scholarship/ past week (Nov. 10). $2,500,000 to $3,000,000 school years. * apprentice in the company. The A reader had praised his fIiDd was created by the Cleve• 250rOOO to 300,000 She .... - land Ballet Council in honor of decision to reduce the seven• Mrs . ~edL.Will~,af~ year jail sentence of a con• arts patron and a Ballet trustee. vict to five years probation. Shimatsu, Ogata Here is the text: Amer~can and Kubota PROBATION RULING u .S. District Judge Robert M. Independene r Iortuary Takasugi is to be corru:oended for his well~dered decision to re• duce Jack Cantella Jr. 's sentence Bank, •. A. 911 Venice Blvd. ~n from seven years in to five (In 0'90nlzoll on) Los Angeles Mn. Sowa Uchiyama, 89, of years probation-domg 40 hours a 7~9-1-H9 Oakwood, Ohio, died 0cl30. A ncr week of vohmteer work in his own tive of Fukuoka who resided in soup kitchen ("Flower Street Soup Kitchen Hero Dogged by COMMON STOCK SEIJIOL'l\.I:. OGATA Weiser, ldabo, and [J)(ft recently it \ L 1 ,\l\.A l\.L BOT,\ in the Day1DD, Ohio-area, widow CriIninal Past," Times, Oct. 28). oftbe lateGomo is survived by 4 s His action will accomplisb the Dr John (DEs Moines), Dr George following: -Relieve the prison over• (81 Louis), Dr Sam (Tacoma), Dr I Price $1 0.00 Per Share Mathias (PortlaDd) , 2 d May crowding problem-by not contri• Kimura (Dayton), Lea Nakauchi buting another convict to it. (Dayton) ; 18gc, 7ggc. # -Save U.S. citizem the ap• ~ Four Generations proximately f]JIO,OOO it would cost for Off.ring Cin:ular and a Stack SubKription Application of Experience ... to feed, clothe, bouse and secure please contact the Organizational Office by mail or phone N011CE Of DEAlH Cantella for seven years. TAKIO KATAOKA, 1I,1ow-tme Milwau• -Provide 135 people each day FUKUI kee JAct. ~ In 1954. 1974. 19n with a square meal. and 1978, of 2723 N. FnIdIInd\ AYe ~ Mi• AMERICAN INDEPENDENT BANK, N.A. ~ -Turn a thief and former dope I waIkee. Wl53211 . died 7.1983. (In O'OOOlI0llon) Mortuary Inc. Member of the Thousand CUI and chapIer addict into a solid citizen-an 707 E. Temple St. board. he had ~ it tot a year and month. achievement the prisons, by their 1644 W.t Redondo Beach Boulevard Funeral seMcas _ held Nov 8. He was own admission, fail to accomplish los Angeles, CA90012 II-.rred _the \Nood NaIIOnIII een-ry foe • YeIeraIlS. He is 5UMV8d by .. Uy. sJeIfrey. over 75% of the time. Gardena, California 90247 626-0441 d Margaret. line &:::: 1dchiIIhr. and reIa• T can only bope that the Los lIYeS, 0:Iuding br neD. SIS Tar Ir give a diversified group of For more information. contact the ski club in your local area. PadO(' Busln Bank or Comon('f'('l' or A.S.I.A potential customers to sup• KEN OGAWA port future growth. CHI SKI CLUB·San Franctsco RUT RIDERS SKI TEAM-5an Jose Presldc".,1 American Independent cia AI Leong c/o Gene Yuen K Ogawa G' ompany. Inc. Bank, the first national, inde• (415) 685·3664 (415) 574·8035 pendent bank in Gardena, of• SACRAMENTO ASIAN SKIERS LOS ANGELES ASIAN SKI CLUB For an Offering Circular and ApplicationJor Subscription. fers a wide range ofcommer• cia Pat Klausner c/o Young Lee Please Contact the Organizational Office By Mail or Telephone ~ (916) 452·8111 (71 4) 847·4819 cial services. Its au• ROKKA SKI CLUB·Seatlie/Tacoma DIXIELAND ASIAN SKIERS tomatic teller machine is c/o Dale Watanabe c/o Virginia Wong named "Honest AlB." (206) 272·9164 (713) 777·6694 _P_8C_if_i_c_B_u_s_in_e_s_s_B_ank__ fln_ o,,_anu_auonJ_ For more information, call SKI CLUB INTERNAnONAL·N.Y NATIONAL ASIAN SKIERS ASSO ,lA or write William H. "Bill" cia SIeve Chu c/o AI Leung 438 W•• t Carson Street I Carson. California 907461 (213) 633·1456 Patterson at American Inde• (201) 658·4165 (202) 488·8990 pendent Bank N.A. (In Orga• ASIAN SKIERS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION November 1. 1983 cia Nancy Hom nization)i 1644 W. Redondo PO Box 32706 Beach B vd., Gardeoa, CA San Jose. CA 95152 9Crl47:Tel.: (213) Sl5{J030. -----.....,.----~------...... 111!~ ••••~ ••••~ ••••• •

Come and enjoy the colorful parade• uniqueJ.y Japanese. that accompanles Shl:!9.W1 Sarita as he brings the Holiday Spints to LiUJe Tokyo. Share Your Love with ofJrers- Bring ShOgun Santa canrred food and/or discarded toys and recelue $],00 off on your photo with him. a;JapaneseVillagePlaza 12 NOON, SAT., DEC.3 • • Letters

I am working on a paeer on the late Yamato lchiha hi 1878-1965), the lssei profes• sor of Japan e history and gove~tatSUuUord m• versity from 1913 to 1943. I ha e been trying WlSUC• cessfully to locate Professor I notice up north h r Ichihashi's son to seek ans• rather a feeling of anti-Asia wers to some questions I tic-not just for Japan e. have about his father's early Corrunents have mostly life in Japan. against the poverty of th His son was named Wood• people from Vietnam- being row Tsutomu Ichihashi and m need of public help-also the fear of blue coUar red• ~~~~~~~~~d~~5j nicknameborn December was 22,Woodie. 1918. His I necks loss of jobs due to J a• ...... know nothing about him, ex• pan car imports. cept that he was a jazz buff I enjoy the paper. I have and interned at Tule Lake. been m the J ACL over 40 . I wonder if any PC reader years and lived in Japan six. ?80&~~ knows of Woodrow's where- years prior to 1941. ~--~~~~------~~~~----~~~~~~------~------~----~~----~abou~. Any unormation RENEBORDET about him would be appre- Vallejo, CA EAST WIND: by Bill Marutani Salt Lake City: Past and Present

Salt Lake City fmes of Tule Lake concentration camp, beaded for AS WE TRAVEL about the country visiting Nikkei -r WE HAD THOUGHT that this was school in Mitchell, South Dakota. After a weary bus trip communities, we come across more and more friends our third visit to Salt Lake City: the to Reno where we boarded a train, we proceeded to Salt from the past. On this trip to Salt Lake City we were first in 1958 for our first J ACL nation• Lake City, passq through the Great Salt Lake which pleasantly surprised to see a grade school classmate, al convention; the second earlier this was bifurcated by the train tracks. It seems so far in the Mrs. Janet Fushimi (nee Cbiyoko "Checkers" Arai), ~ ~ year when we attenied a conference distant past (which it indeed is), but we did stq> in to whom we'd not seen in over 40 years. And Army buddy, ... em redress at the University of Utah; view the Tabernacle and were thoroughly impressed. George Nakamura, from C

BY THE BOARD: Miki Himeno Women's Work: Getting Done

Monterey Park, Ca. ican Cultural and Community Center on Sunday, Oct. 24. Both risma and that political unrest in East Asia overturned Irene Yasutake Hirano has accepted are on the National JACL Aging and Retirement Committee, Naisbitt's projected "decade of Latinos ... the chairship of National JACL's Com• which Mike chairs. Conference program committee members were Miro Sinco, mittee on Issues Affecting Nikkei Midori Watanabe, president of L.A. Singles Chapter, is pio• Dr. Patricia Lin, and Pearl Mihara, co-chairs; and Dick Oba• Women! Irene is former chair and mem• neering a convention of JACL singles during the Memorial yashi, Judy Owyang, Audrey Noji, Florence Ochi and Irene ber of the Califorma Commission on the Day week~d in May 1984. I had the privilege of being their Hirano. President is Mary Wong Lee with Debra Nakatomi, . status of Women and is executive director installing officer a year ago and am cognizant of the unique• president-elect. O~er Nikkei officers include Shirley Komoto, of T.H.E. Clinic for Women, where she has been involved for ness of this chapter and the special needs they are attempting resources and furxiralsing, and Grace Nagata, public the past nine years. She is co-chair of the National Network of to address. . relations. Asian/Pacific Womenj ro-founder and past chair of the Cali• Rose Ochi has been appointed by President Floyd Shimo• Four sessions were held to explore The Family Revolution: fornia Asian/Pacific Women's Network and L.A. Asian/Paci• mura to be Vice President/Membership, replacing Vernon Redefining lifestyles and values; The Elderly of Tomorrow: fic Women's Network, and is also president of the Asian Paci• Yoshioka. Rose is executive assistant to Los Angeles Mayor Majority female and alone; Victims of Our own Success: Poli• fic Legal Defense and Education Fund, among other things. Tom Bradley and is director of the Los Angeles City Criminal ticization of Asians; and Trend Monitoring: Impact in econo• No Asian bas bad as much name identification or visibility in Justice Planning Division. She will add a different dimension mics and technology. Facilitators were Dr. Kenyon S. Chan, connectioo with women's issues in California as Irene Hirano, toJACL. Audrey Yamaga~Noji , Frances ChlkahiSa, Stanley Sue, Dr. and JACLis privileged to baveher. Asian/Pacific Women's Network Judy Chu, Dr. Patricia Lin, Jenny Wong, Michael Woo, Dr. Since her acceptance in mid-October, Irene bas already put The Asian/Pacific Women's Network in Los Angeles spon• Samuel Q. Chan, Ken Hamamura, Shirley Komoto and Dick together papers OIl.purpose, activities, structure, budget and sored an excellent conference, "Exploring the SO's: Social and Obayashi. A tape of the conference has been purchased and reporting, besides a tentative proposal for a workshop at the Economic Trends for Asians" in mid-September at the Uni• will be available for listening, or may be purchased as Pro• national ooovention. Districts are urged to submit names of versity of Southern California The conf~ence showcased gram 769-95 from On-Site Taping Services, 6942 Cantaloupe persons who might serve in the national network.. A core com• Asian leaders who are ordinarily invisible in this community. Ave., Van Nuys, Ca. 91405 for $30 for 5 tapes. # mittee based in Los Angeles met With natlOnaI program The conference sought to create a synergistic network "to director Lia Shigemura on Nov. 17. share information and to define, recognize, and prepare for For a while this summer 1 bad ominoos visions of the col• future owortunities" and to meet the chal1enge of the revolu• lapse of tbe Comritittee on N'1kkei Women when Susan Kamei tionary changes occurring in "culture, lifestyle, and alter• ISSN' OO30"" found it necessary toresign. It did not belpmatters any to hear natives." pacific citizen Keynoting the cooference was Hank E. Koehn, vice presi• fUtmist Hank Koehn make a statement to the effect that the Published by the Japanese Amencan Citizens league every Friday exceplthe first women's movement bad failed in the seventies because they dent and director of the Futures Research Division ofSecurity and last weeks of the year at 2<44 S. San Pedro St .. Los Angeles. CA90012: (213) 626-6936 • • 2nd Class poSUgepald at Los Angeles, CA_ • AnnuaJSUbscnplJons bad DOt libeI'8ted men first. (I could not see men's liberation in Pacific National Bank. Koehn rapidly reviewed the changing -JACl member: $9 .00 of niDonal dues provldl!s one-year on a per-household boriIDn.) To find in the L.A. to family structure, the demise of the Masters in Business basis. Han-members: $16. payable ,n acjVVlce. f1lreiglJ addreues. Add U.S $Se the immediate someone area Hews or OplRlons expressed by columnists other than Ihe Hallonal PreSident or fill the vacmcy at this point in time and still have a WOI'ksbop Administration mentality and the ascent of East Asia and its National DIrector do not necessarily reflect JACl policy pr0s• challenge to Western corporate models. OFFICERS for WOIDf:'Dat the 'M convention seemed unrealistic. The Floyd D. ShlfTlOrnura, HiI'l JACL Pres. Henry S SakaI,PC Board Chan pects were doom ..t gloom Idil cootact was ~ made Most oflm remarks were based on the book Megatr'eDds by EDITORIAL I BUSINESS STAFF Gen MllrfDperallOns: Harry K. Honda HeMS EdItor. Karen Serlguc:hl with Irene aod she coosented to tate the leadership instead of John Naisbitt. Naisbitt writes about management structure, AdvertlSmg: Jane M . Ozawa Staff M5l Henry K. Morl role. amoog other things, and mentions Theory Z described by Dr. Circulation: Teml Hosh,zakJ, Mltsuko Saltal Milling Mar~ SaItO the previous advisory Production Mary /mon , Jon Takasug' Holiday Issue; Charles FuUert Neasa•• y Nikkei W_ William 0Jchi, wbom some of us bad the opportunity to hear Postmasar: Send address changes 10 PaoflC Cruzen. 24-4 S San Pedro 'Ibree wamen who have been in Los Angeles area news are recently ala leadership conference sponsored by USC's Asian !,:, -,506 LosAnQeles. CA90012-3891 Betty Kmm. Midcri Watanabe and Rose Ocbi. Betty was a Pacific American students. featured speabrwilb Dr. MkbaeI Ego attbe JapaoeseAmer- Koehn suggested the executive of 1990 will succeed by cba- Friday, November 25, 1983 / PACIFIC CIT1ZEft--S nOM 1HE FRYING PAN: by BW Hosokawa CLIFFS CORNER: by Dr. Clifford Uyed Exploited Student Exchanges from Japan Whaling Issue .. of . tokyo demand. But everyone ought to know where the money \\ halm.g ~u has 1 aam mean Last week in this space I mentioned is going and that apparently isn't the case. e. ttreme re-pomt in th U. ...J pan r 1 - that Iarie numbers of Japanese TIlere's no quicker way to curdle the milk of good will tions. High!. moti nal har 'and unto Americans are visiting the ancestral than to sOOw that somebody is profiting from another's ercharg are b ing dir ted at ne an· homeland these days. They're com• sacrifice. II other. ing indivWally am in group tours. \ i The American prot !s, thi' time. a in Many retired who have response ' filing of an obje lion t the \. haling mora- are Nisei the d~lared time means to travel, to see the sights, look up PRESIDENTS CORNER: by Floyd Shimomura tonwn by the International Whalin nun' ion (lWC ) in July 1982. There i a lhr ear phasedown period relatives and make pilgrimages to towns and village before the moratorium becomes effecti e aft r the 1985-86 a• where their pareds were born and where the ashes of Visit to NHK son , and the moratorium will be up for revi w no lat r than til grandparents am great-grandparents are buried. 1990 meeting of the com mission. During the Iilasedown period a Obviously the airlines

So. Calif. chapters to sponsor forum rnav Kubose . Thoma.eDartment town meeting naka. John Tani, Thomas Terajl election f on of its board hig~ \ akamatsu, Nob} Yarna: members, Kenji onernitsu . fmwn OIl Monday, earlier, bad moved to vacate to spread the word 1 ~ . 5, 00 the writs of error co~ CmCAG().....4 ACL sponsors a koshi, Ronald Yoshino. Ben to the hualar , h001 boaro the 1M2 Korematsu Yoshioka. , coram nobis the wartime victioo. LOS Al~GELES-A call to "town meeting" on Friday. on Sept. :?D. eM Nikkei cases before the U.S. use the lot Freedom Series Dec. 2, 7:30 p.m. at Heiwa federal court. It is being held Central Cal to cite ~stage stamp, in circulation Terrace, 920 W. Lawrence to ' at the First Presbyterian SInce 1m, was made by Har• involve the Nikkei commUni• Church 1957 W. Redondo John Kubota ry Kaj ihara , Pacific South• ty . in efforts to get sponsor• Beach Blvd., starting at 7:30 west JACL redress chair. ships and endorsements for 2 PURE BR£D FRESNO, Ca.-Jobn Kuro. The HR4110. p.m. ta, long-time member of the phrase ,tOrt'" "G"' to With Frank Chwnan as cha~ The meeting features Mi• ARABIAN HORSES Fresno A.L.L./ JACL "~ple's USAl()C \ nom Yasui, national JACL WI moderat«• the panelists ter, is to be honored for his ~.Y: redress chair as main speak• scheduled to appear are Dale outs~ service in the nght to 1)~ AND A PONY Minami, lead counsel in the Central California Nikkei petition :\ _.' er, and a showing of " Some a~ community. A testimonial for re- i • Kind of AJX)logy, " from CBS's Korematsu coram nobis dress"- ( t:::r' . ; Sunday Monung with Kuralt. peal; Alan Terakawa, L.A. dinner will be held Sunday, In celebration of the grand opening of the office Cowity Counsel's Office; Min Nov. '1:1, at the Fresno Haci• ~~~the , IL .. § Chicago JAGL recently re• Yasui, National JACL re• enda. Social hour begins at organized its redress com• complex, International Equestrial Development dress chair and another who 4:30 p.m. Tickets are $13.50 Amendment-runs along the mIttee, which now has a ' top and right side of the Corp. (I.E.D.C.) will have a drawing whereby 3 has filed a writ of coram nl358. • DEC. II (Saturday) I.E.D.C. engages in numerous aspects of the .DEC.S(s.anay) St Louis--Chri::.tmas party, Olivette Comm 6:~IOpm . equine industry including equestrian facilities, CanclD-Santa's potluck party, Dol• etc, pbin Park., 6:~ . Los Angeles-Asn Rehab Sv dance, breeding, real estate development, racing and CIaIc:q-.Inaugural dnr, Hotel Coo• ARS, 6tblSoPedro, 7pm. t1oerItaJ, 6pn; Milloru Y~ui, splu; • DEC.U (SuDday) cutting horses. President Jacob Rubenstein and Ricbard Yamada, Chicago Mutuaf AlII West Los ADgeles-25tb the Board of Directors combine their talents as Society, booorees. ann'y Aux'y Reunion dnr, Yamato New Yn-Holiday F\m Fair, Jpo Res't,6pm. .knowledgable horsemen and expects in Am Unlted Ch, 255-7tb Av, 12n-7pm; • DEC. U (Tuesday) auction, white~ts, food. ~ons, Calif 1st Bank, finance. Seabrook-&- elt app mr, Buddhist 7:30pm. CHINESE "DEEM SUM" LUNCH Hall.6pm. • DEc. 1'1 (Saturday) NAME ______San FraJXisco.-NIhoomachi Little ~ par\y, Keiro pot• PIKING DUCK ADDRESS ______Friends' ChriItmas arts/cnns show, luck. BY CHEFS FROM 2031 Bush St, 108m. Info 9'll-8898. • DEC. 31 (SalDrday) . CANTONESE & MANDARIN FOOD CITY ______• DEC•• (Scmday) New MeDD-New Year's Eve par\y, su Diep--OOtb Ann 'y inst dnr, KOIla Japanese Kitcben; RSVP 866-4417, STEAMED FRESH FISH STAT~E ______PHONE ______Kai Club, 6:~; Dr Peter Irons, 883-6146, FOR BANQUETS & RESERVATIONS CALL 624·6041 ~. "Reopening the Internment 10.111\010 I'M lunch. Dlnoer· Cockbils • JAN. Z8 (SaUdBy) San Francisco-ACLU mig on C0- st l.cIuD-lnst dnr, MaOOarin Bruse; 944 N. HIll ST. U. __-- ram Nobis Cases, Sheratm Palace. . Henry~sprr. A nw AY AKO T-SHIRT At last. , . L.A. takes a giant step forward Featuring a colorful 'Ukiyoe' print in footwear fashion for the petite woman , c\derella. OF BOSTON INC.

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San Diego marks 'Thank You to Friends Who Comforted 50th anniversary A lovq, ~ Quaker wish to say how profoundly SAN DJ.D:;O, Ca.-1bia year couple, .Herbert aDd Made• grateful we are to the Nichol• marks tbe50th year smce the line 'cbol9nn, came into our sons for their lifelong service lives at a time of our greatest to countless thousands of per• fi~m the Sao Diego JACL . In c0mme- travail, and together they sons of Japanese anc try. moration, chapter is host- selflessly gave of their time both in America and in Ja• ~ a banguet on Sunday and energy to li~ten the bur• pan. Personally. I will ne er Dec. 4, at the Kooa Kai Club den of our wartime plight be• forget the incredible regu• larity with which Friend Her• OIl Sbelt.er IslaDd beginning hind barbed wire-a story of at6:30p.m. devotion and sacrifice that bert isited the Issei elderly Twenty-ooe of the 26 past bas now become legendary. in hospitals and the Keiro and presidents will be JftSeIlted It is only recently-and be• other Los AnSeles convales• with recognition pl8ques. latedly-tbat I learned that, cent homes, 10 spite of his Dr. Peter Irons deliven on Oct. 17, only four months own mortal affiiction, after Herbert "Grandpa spreading always, by his ef• P .S. Friends and admirers the keynote speech on II Re- . the Internment Joy" Nicholson's passing, his fervescent 'presence, his spe• who wish, may contribut to ~~ beloved Madeline also quiet• cial contagious brand of love, a memorial fund at the Lake Irons is lead counsel Wilke, co-authors of "Comfort All Who Moum," the story Ave. Congregational hurch for the C«8ID DObis cases of ly passed away. Neverthe• joy and hooe. of Herbert and Madeline Nicholson, display a copy of the less, on behalf of the Japa• I know that many more of 393 N. Lake Ave .. Pasadena, Gordon Hirabayashi, Fred book at the celebraoon of its publication in 1982. CA 91101. Korematsu and Minoru nese American conununity, I us ex-internees who are now Yasui. On Dec. 9,1981, betes• trued before the CWRIC in Boston on the impact of the West L.A. celebrates 42nd inaugural Bilingual service internment on the ~al pro• CHILI------fession and the Judicial SANTA MMCA, ca.-About Lisa KtmmOki and Michael center gets fund Coom.IPrl fnm Page 2 ing. He said if chili farming system. a third of the 15O-plus attend• Shlmano, both of University LOS ANGELES-A $1.17 mil• able red color, used as a dye becomes unrr-otitable, a W~ ,by the meat (for cold cuts and grower will no plant the next Roo Wakabayashi, nation• ing the 42nd annual West Los HiJdl, introduced as lion contract was awarded to al JACL executive director, Angeles JACL installation 1984 chapter representatives wieners) and salad dressing year. California State University, industries. " It seems like the pickers is installing officer for the dinDer Nov. 13 at the Bay• to the Presidential Class• Los Angel~t by the Office of 1984 chapter officers and view Plaza Holiday Inn room for Young Americans. NuMex R. Naky is a result always want more moneY Bilingual.l!iQucation and Mi• of several crossbreedings. five to ten cents a barr t board. (across from Santa Monica Lorraine Kuda reported on nority LaIwlages Affairs, For further information, High School) were sworn in~ her activities as Miss West Nakayama mated Rio more, every year. The grow• U.S. Dept. o[Education. Grande variety with New er can't pass increases on to please contact Robert Ito to office with Sid Yamazaki L.A. JACLduringNisei Week The fwld will create and (619) 277-5460. /I as 1984 chapter president festivities. The Venice Hong• Mexico Native, producing a consumers. It's not like other ~enry operate a multi-functional new chili. That was then crops, because if chili ~ets by Sakai, PC Board wanji Taiko Group enter• support service center which chatr. tained. Jean Ushijima, city mated with a Bulgarian pa• too expensive, people Just will provide tnaining for bi• prika chili. Meanwhile, Na• won't buy it. " 1984 Officers Some officers hold more clerk for Beverly Hills, was lingual instructors in Los ~t, kayama crossed old No. 6 Nakayama is not particu• than one cabinet serv• emcee. # Angeles, Ventura and Santa WEST LOS ANGELES JACL ing in the Auxiliary, scholar• with yet another Bulgarian larly keen about machine Sid Yamazaki, pres; Fred Mi• Barbara counties. paprika chili. The two Bul• harvesting: He doesn't want sbip committee, earth sci• West L.A. Aux'y Cal State trains teachers yata, 1st vp (memb); Charles ence section or Sansei JACL. garian offspring were mated, misrant laborers denied Inatomi, Emily Yamanaka, 2nd for classrooms where chil• producingNuMexR. Naky. thetr work. And, he admitted, vp (prog); Paul Suyetsugu, 3rd vp .. A teacher by profeSSion, to hold 25th fete dren's native tongue is Spa• Yamazaki is coofdinator of "Harvesting," says Naka• there is still no perfected (youth); Toy Kanegai, 4th vp LOS ANGELES-West Los nish, Cantonese, Korean or yama, "is the single biggest chili-harvesting machine. (ars); Helen Eto, rec sec; Roo University Adult Education ~fl~es Japanese. The· center will Kwnataka, cor sec; Roy Takeda. and director of the Nora Ster• JACL Auxiliary is cost in production." A grow• c . g former WLA Auxili- operate two satellite projects er has about$1,OOO in an acre, - From Don S. Tokunaga, Al• treas; Bill Sakurai, pub; Steve ry Lighted School program. in EI Monte and Santa Bar• ' hist; Peggy Hoshizaki, ary members and friends to and half of that is for harvest- buquerque, N.M. With some 1,200 members in its 25th anniversary reunion bara, stocked with Chinese, I ; Jack Nomura\ legal coun• the chapter, he stressed con• ~ ; Arnold Maeda, lmIUr; Vero• dinner Dec. 11, 6 p.m. at Ya• Tagalog, Ilokano and other niea Obara, comm sv; Haru Na• tinuing communication with mato Restaurant, Century Pacific areas language~. # Keep Up the PC Through JACL Membership kata. recog; Shig T~ta, 1000 the membership as a major City. . Club; GeOrge Kanegm, travel; role. He succeeds Charles Started in 1958 by then Walter Ismo, nomin; Yuki Sa1O, lnatomi, woo continues as a chapter president, Dr. Milton ~itality; Cbieko ~ye, program eours, read• PLUMBING & HEATlNG INVESTORS. Ushi)ima. ing the daily papers and Remodel and Repairs ScholarsbiJ)-Satoshi Nitta, showing off what his brief• Water Healers, Fumaces Merrill L¥nch offers a free guide to Investment techniques Ben yamanaKa (1984), Mary Ishi• case contained. Garbage Disposals that rould produce above-averaae retwns- zuka, Walter Isono (l9&S) I Kiyo Serving Los Angeles Teramae, Steve Yagi (1986), Sid Virginia Tominaga, outgo• 293-7000 733-0557 and some cWdelines for usir" them lntellJ&entiy. Yamazaki, Emily Yamanaka ing A~ president, was (1987). honored ~tIi West L.A. Concerned that you may have missed Investors with the means and temper• Auxillary~eko Inouye, JACL Community Service lhe bull market? Our Investment stJat• ament to absorb creater risks In their pres; HaruNakata, Yp: MitsuSo• award. 'The JACL silver pin esiSlS think you haven't. Oier the 1001 search for hi&her returns. And how iloda, sec; Amy Nakashima, was presented to Elmer term. they expect it to CQntinue. With Merrill Lynch's research team. rated Mi~=i~ Uchida, Dr. Robert Funke treas;Earth· emypub-bist. Nagae, Interminent short-term corrections. second to none. can give you invest• ~;.Irene and Jack Nomura. TheJACL pres; Satosbi Nitta, bronze pin (for outstanding Our new booklet explains how suit• ment analysis and information you can Yokota, sec; Betty Minami, sun• able investOlS, who are willing to as• use to help you achieve your goals. shine. service (luring. the year) was Sansei JACL Comm-Chitoshi awarded to Helen Eto, Emily sume.additional risk.can IooktoachieYe . For your tree copy of Slr,,/t9itS {Of Saba, Jenni Fukai, ~ Kishi, Yamanaka and Peggy Hoshi abo¥e-averaee returns. no maner what "49rtSSivt ,,,,,t5lDf'S. call 0( mail the J~mikibara, LonaiDe Ku- zaki. The chapter certificate (he martel is doina. coupon today. ~er:e ~'C~=~ of recognition went to Hiro You'lileam about the potential risks ~. MochizUki, Shig Takeshita and rewalds in aaressively usine tradi- Die Sakurai. Suyetsugu, Brad and Charles Nishikawa. Wakayama. # lional investments such as stocks and bonds; IeYera&ed investments such as William Taki. Jr. Account executive 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms options; futures; and other scphisU• caled techniques. And some eukieJines United Way ~9,990 that make it possible to speculate 3'2845·5620 to inteUi&entfy. Donors The booklet also explains why these 594,990 strateaies should be used only by Support .... J.p.n..JAmeriCM Community FHANA r :;. =-W::U-;nch-_ T,,~;~OneS.-;';;' ~ -_~L SocaI by Designating Financing Pte.e send 1M WOUI free bootlet. SCl~" AwtU;1/t IIIW'WIrJ ___ --, Senices I I your United Way Donations to the ~------little Tokyo Service Center, Inc. I AddreH .1 I 0tJ Sr ..~ l&p I ANY other inc:orporaled non-profit social S8MC8 agency can also be lusinetl Phone Home ~ designated. The IoIowing is a list of some agencies who are LTSC I I MemIt Lrndt ~ ~ Mtne And offlc~ ~H5 01 Aa.l:Mlnt Eaecull't't members: I If' I Asian American VoUltary Action Center Japanese American Community SeMces Japanese American Cultural and Corm-unity Center Pems 8oul~ .tlronwood I Japanese Welfare Rights Organizatioo ~ s~ CA 92388 6F\ 'WI!&!.'!!!.tgacII----~ ... UtIle Tokyo PeopIe's Rights Organizatioo IS.I 14 6*5214 ~ L ______So. Calif. Society For The Japanese Blind --=::: _ A !XYdOPIMnt 01 Friends of the L.itt1e Tokyo Public Ubrary Services iDeo nc.doplnClll.nd Sykes Enrapmcs ...... -C,..... 25.1913

JACL Dues Changing: 1983 & 1984 Sasaki Associates $2.6 billion ..~ ~~"~.Ii:l~II.\.III~\ 1983 HI Boxscore MembemIp tees, "most cases. reftect 1983 dues. dlair. Those responding sho the 1984 dues as posted arts district project underway 11112 TO TAL.S Since hal ill1ll1ded ~of a micHJien- withnameof~chapterIlCAPITAllETIERS.ReoewaJ , D~d soaring new office towers in northeast down• ...... nun ..... PC hal ... chapters by postcard ~ notices fnJn chaptm to members should also lOdicate town Dallas-not long ago a bligbted area-the $2.6 billion • report 1he eMs IIrudIn and name of the mernberstllp the new riII!. 1 O6Pl.AY Dallas Arts District. the largest urban development in Ute NOV. II: 6,lSS" LISTED CHAPTER CODE ORDER United States is underway. Completion on Ute 6()..acre project Alameda • .168 PoIu.od 1 Anzooa ...... 21 Puyt.~ ley ~ 320 Coachela Val"y (535-65. Inct $S conlrlb to fie.. is expected in 10 to 15 years. M 1-40 Selma 107 Mon~ Panln.. 1a (SZt-52)-OaVICI Yamada, PO V,sta. CA 92083 an exhibition of Japanese art, will be the opening blockbuster Flom 6 S I RMlr • .2 eo- 664. Montarey. CA 93940 328 LAS VEGAS (128-52.50, locil Sl0)-George Goto. Ft Lupton ., 6 SonclrnI OOIrtf 101 I'oellton (UD-55. d251-Ruby T Oobana. 8223 13165 8tn. Las Vegas. NY 89104 (NatlOllal & local dues March 17-May 27, organized in cooperation with Tokugawa Fowler , . 6 Spokirle Rannoclt Or. Stockton. CA 9521 0 separate) Fremont StocklOn t68 ~ . 101 Salin.. V ....y (W·55)-TeCI IkemolO. 1118 San 329 GREATER PASADENA AREA (134-59)-Bob Uchida Foundation. FrencI1 9 Tit-Vale'{ . 5 Fernando Or. SIlIn... CA 93901 852 5 Los Robles Pasadena CA 91106 Fresno .. • 168 Tula.. Cty ., 4 Born in Reedley, Calif., the Univ. of Illinois graduate in 1946 .168 TWIO lID W.taonvll.. (SU)-WaUy Outo. 105 BronlIOIl. 330 Progreasive Westside (S34-59)-ToShlkO Yoshida. GaIdeoa Vtoj CItIes Waltonville. CA 95076 where he received his MLA, Hideo Sasaki was professor and Hawllll Vent\61l .. .21 5156 Sunlight PI. loS Angeles CA 90016 WQS\l~ . oSS~ Hoosoef 6 OC .9 lU Barkaier (130,50. lelSO. "20. r15. all0. a .. 331 Southeast Cullural (S )-Oonna Osugl. 340 S chairman of the Dept. of Landscape Architecture, graduate Japan . • 252 W8lSOnV.1e .168 Fuml Nakamura 709 Spokane. Albany. CA 94706 Lalayette Park. Los Angeles. CA 90017 tN·Merced . 168 west l A • .168 112 ALAMEDA ($3G-55. "251-Mr. Tee Yoshlwara, S60 332 New Age-No longer act,ve Trl to 901 National school ofdesign. He also taught three years at Uni v. oflllinois. Mann County west Vtiley Oueen,Ad,A1ameCla CA94501 333 PaCifica (SJO-55)-Jm H Matsuoka, 509 Klngslord St. Mrs. Sasaki, an artist, was illustrator for Ute Carnegie Insti• Manna 6 Wlishro . 4 113 EDEN TOWNSHIP (12'.50-54.00, d2'.50. yU.25. Monterey Park. CA 91754 Marysville ..84 "'0.75)-.10 n Yamada, 2125 1701h Ave Ca5ll0 Vall€'y. 334 Greater LA. Singles (135)-Tom 5h,mazakl, 17124 tute, spec.ializing in children's books. II Milwaukee ceoc ...6 CA 94546 Lisette SI Granada HllIs.CA 91344 Mont Penonsula 168 EOC . .6 'S35.SG-63,SG~Sumlye 114 Lodl Ol<.uha .. , 724 S Califor· 335 TORRANCE (132-59~Sophle 5 Kutaka. 16632 TaylOr Mt 0tvmDus Int8lTTlQJrCain n,a 5t Lodl. CA 95240 Ct. Torrance CA 90504 New MexlOO Mlct.wst OC 115 WEST VALLEY ($32·55, d26)-Jane M,yamolo. 2850 Former JACL director encourages New YorI<. .56 MIn Plen Mlr A e Sanla Clara CA95051 Olympia 8 NCWN"OC 20 116 MarYaYllI. (SlO.55)--flay Kyono, 11>48 Melanie Lane PACIFIC NORTHWEST Oinaha .56 PNWOC Yub Cuy. CA 95991 student participation in APASS ~ Cty .84 PSWDC .20 117 Placer County (SlO·SO)-Dlck Nlsnmura. 5867 Eureka 401 SeaUle (S32-57)-Akl Kurose 1430- 37th Ave. Seattle. Rd Roseville. CA 95678 WA98122 Pasadena .25 Ad DecIt ..•. 444 Philadelphia PC Olfice . • • I 09 1 Ie SONOMA COUNTY (Sll-55)-Dr Roy OkarnolO. 402 PUYALLUP VALLEY (132·55)-Sam Uchiyama , 1002 LOS ANGELES-Althougb a image as being hIghly aca• 1206 farmers Lan • Santa Aosa CA 95405 Fife Hgts OrE Tacoma. WA 98424 derruc and fmanciallv sound, (4901114 chapters.) 403 Mid·Columbla ($28.75-52.50)-Cilll Nakamura 4130 "welcome mat" may not be 11g Cortn (127,49. yI2.50. ,,'0)-Alan Osugl 13500 N and is particularly- sensitive ONE UHE GREETlHGS: 33 (4, t %) Pepper. Turloc CA 9~380 Wlllo,," FlatRd. Hood R'Vel OR 97031 physically present at the 404 Portland (135-55, xS27.50, yS5, s$10)-Terry Akwal. BoIse Valley RlVersde 120 Llvlnllston·M.rced (UO-55, lIS27.50)-June M K,sh •. doorway of Student Union, to the needs of these students Clncmnab 51 LouIS 12077 W Ohve A e. L,vlngslon. CA 95334 1201 SE Halg St. Portland. OR 97202 , 405 Gresham·Troutdale (S35-60)-5hIlO Takeuchi. 2250 Suite 407, Univ. of So. Calif., which are not as obvious to Cleveland Sn BeI'110 121 Fr.mont (130-50)-Belty Izuno, 41966 Via San others. Cortel Sla Baibara Gab"el. Franont. CA 94538 SE 122d. Portland. OR 97233 the office occupants are OeIano Seabrook 122 FRENCH CAMP (S28.50-521-Fumoko Asano, PO 406 Spokane ($26.75-48.50. zS20-40)-Harry Honda. 6185 eager to extend their hospi• Hokoyama encourages stu• Detroit ~ Cty Box 56 French Camp CA 95231 Sherman. Spokane , WA 98055 dents who are not active in Gresh-Tr Tulare Cty . . 10 123 GILROY ($30-55. yS6. zSS)-Mr Misao Nllzawa, PO 407 WHITE RIVER VALLEY (S30-55)- Frank Natsuhara tality and assistance to those Milwaukee TWin Cr1)e6 Box 1238. Gilroy. CA 95020 622 W Maon 51. Auburn WA 98001 , Mlye Toyoshlma. 17844· who visit or call, the Asian university clubs to become Mt Olympus Venlce.QJlller 147th Ave SE. Renton. WA 98055 Wasl1l~. 124 DIABLO VALLEY ($32·55. d25, y$11. sS11)-8ar· Pacific American Student involved in AP ASS pr<>o Pasadena . 23 DC bara MOrtguChl, 1205 Maroonole Way. Pinole. CA 94564 408 LAKE WASHINGTON (S36.50-66.50)-Tetsu Yasuda. Philadelphia Wes1. LA (129~Catheflne 14421 NE 16th PI. Bellevue. WA 98007 Services reported. grams, and for those who al• Placer County west VIoJ 125 Florin C Taketa. 1324·56tn St. Sac· Poc-BIackfoot Whole RIver VIy ramenlo. CA 95819 409-Columbla Basin (135-60; lIS25. zS28.75)-Edward M ready are, to participate out• Yamamolo. 4502 Fallchlld Loop, Moses lake. WA 98837 The APASS REPORT, to 126 OAKLAND (135-55. IcISO)-James Nlsnl. 15 Alida Ct. be published monthly, is side their social groups as JAW.. PROJECT Oakland. CA 94602 410-0LYMPIA (132-55)-Mlchle Groego. 5701 Mlddlelldge (ConIributions$25 & uP. W'f1Il

(.... Pric:ea .. of Jurw', 1983) The Best Bad Pacific Citizen Arnt. Enclosed $. ______. 244 S. San Pedro St., RID. 506 EAST WEST FLAVORS Los Angeles, CA 900U .Thing Please send the following books in the quantities indicated: The ever popular cookbook 9J Yoshlko Uchida ___Uchida, Desert E.xlIe $12.95 published by the _-..__ ~ A worthy sequel to A JAR OF DREAMS. ___Okada, No-No Boy $6.95 West Los AnseIes JACL Auxiliary __Gardincr, Pawns in a Triansle of Hate $25.00 11 -year-old Rinko continues her ~ I am enclosing my donation for: adventures with Mrs. Hata, who everyone says is ----Nilkano; Wlthln the Barbed Wire Pence $11 .50 ---Sone, Nisei Daughter $7.95 .\~, _eop.solClMlllbookI $7.00 crazy, and her two boys, and a mysterious man who __Okubo, Cithen 13660 $8.95 (+ $1 pcIIIIIIgIH\and.46 Tax) lives in the bam and makes beautiful kites. --Bulosan, America Is in the lkart 57.95 __:Copees 01 CIMIIIbook • $9.00 For intermediate readers 9-12 ___Chin, The ChJckenwop ~hlnaman and The Year of the (+$1.30 paIIIgIHIancIIn.59 Tax) 12o-pp hardback, $13 complete Dritl0n 58.95 (soft) : __ $22.50 6Yz,," Sales Tax IS lor CA AesidenIs only) First 50 copies autographed. ___Chu, Bat a Bowl of Tea 57.95 ----Monon, In the Sea of S~ Mountam. 57.95 Amount enclosed: S___ _ '___ Takaki, Iroo Cities $9.95 Name ______Send orders to: JACP, Inc., Box 367, Sanllateo, CA 94401 Postagc & Handling: $1.50 Name ______Srupto: ______

~~------Addr~ ______~- Address: ______Ci~.~.np·------City. State. ZIP ______. City IS tate/ZIP: ______Pl.EASl MAKE CHf(X 'AYARE TO: WEST lOS ANGElES JACt AUXILIARY o Best Bad Thing 0 Special Offer Endosed: $ SPECIAl.. TO PC READERS: -Postage & Hand1inlt lnduded on Ordcrs Over 510. Washington State residcnts add 6.6% sales tax. 1431 Armacost Ave., los Angeles, CA 90025 ~~1;~1r:~i~~~~;~~~~~_it~~~jlmi~~f;~~~t.~~~!tf:i:1 ...,emlbH25,1

SALEBYOW ER SAlE OR LEASE Greater los Angeles 8 E"A Asahi Travel GARDENA, Las Vegas, CALIF. Nevada CAlVIN MATSUI REALTY V2-acre R E lot H_ & Commercial 371 N. MobilAv@, Su.,. 7. Comon110 8,000 sq ft 5 min to - I OS)98~-saoo Strip Nisei Travel San Jose COMMERCIAL, 1 4". 5 .... 51 Go a .~; _.E.. OfIPORTUMTYfOrwt.' (CD) 4 yrs old; or IJ )27 5"C, Kayo K. Kikuchi, Realtor• IDEAl. FNIIILV fJUSINESS Downtown. FUT~ SAN ..105£ ~EALTY CUSTOM MADE 996 Mimetoro A.... ,# 100 FOR SALE BYONNER 131-;:~3 - 27SJ 60Kterms Son Jose, CA 9512.S-2~93 Partially leased suZU '1 RHO FG (~08) 27S-1111 or 296-2059 Lake Tahoe 4O-Space Mobile ' 2,700 sq ft.; or55K cash. TOKYO TRAVEl SER-V-'C-E• Totwlco "Tolty" Kikuchi SlOW 6m 51 "429 Generollowronce Broker, OSA INC Home Park • los Angeles 000 14 080-3545 RENT Leaseable space (213) 538-5212 Sol•• , Renlol., Monagemenr with RV spaces on south Oregon IGkuchi Insurance Agy. 80" 65, Cornelion Boy. CA 95711 coast. HlA> of recreational and 5,300 sq ft.; or write Travel Guild 996 Mimetolo Ave .• # 102 (916) 546-2~; Shig &Jud To"uOO tourist area., fishing, clamming, 40J S f '9 ueroo SI level 6 Son Jose, CA 9512S-2~93 Lo. Angeles 90071 (213) 624-104 1 aabbIng and deep-sea port. MST, Box 2766 (~08) 294-2622 or 296-2059 Seattfe, Wa. Aski~ pnce $395,000, Sale--$695K; YAMATO TRAVEL BUREAU EDWARD T. MORIOKA, Realtor negotiable. Sell equity or carty 321 E 2nd St , #S05 580 N. 5th St., Son JQ.WI Impe~Tal. Lanes oollbact. ptease wriIIIJ or call Lease 67ft sq ft. Gardena. CA los Angele. 90012 624 6021 (<408) 998-833-4/5 rn. 371-04A2 owner. Complete Pro Shop, R .touranl lounge 90247-0766 Change County WAYNE NISHINAKA, Agent 210 I· nnd Av So. (206) 325. 25h 917 S. Empire (213) 329-8801 Formers lowronce Group EXCEPTIONAL HOMES 2680 Cropley A""., SonJc»e 95132 The Intermountain Coos Bay, OR 97420 (~08) 943-0713/5 res. 996-2582 (500) 888-3819 AND INVESTMENTS Mam Wakasugi VICTOR A KATO Watsonville XffH: INVESTORS Re!identiol & In...estmenl Consultont Sale. Rep. Row Crop Forma SALE BY OWNER 18682 Beoch Blvd . Su~e 220 Blockoby Reol Estate, Rr 2 ax 658, OnIO' Oregon Farm Huntington Beoch. CA92648 Tom Nakase Realty riO, Or97914/(S03)881 - 1301. 262-3459 SHORT & SMALL (714)"963-7989 Acreoge, Ronches, Homes, Income 32 +IIC 'arm 01'1 W11lamelle RIVer, 15 Mirt The Midwest from Eugene; ..:Iuded at efld 01 prv .rd. TOM NAKASE. Realtor and ~moundecl by .pect,aoenery: MEN'S APPAREL The Paint Shoppe 25 Clifford Ave. (AOS) nA-64n 3-11C IllCOfneoprodUClnn young Suits IW sports Coats Sugano Travel Service BluebeITin; ·ow ~4-42 Short tit fJllra Short loMoncho Cenler. 1111 N Harbor 17 E Ohio St, Chicog060611 2·11C In pueure, balance all tillable, (Jlvmch). Lanvln. YSI.. St. Raphael Fullerton, CA (71 4) 526-0 I 16 (3 12) 944-5444 784-S517, eve, Sun c .... 11Oi1. AT NEW LOCATION 2 BR. 1.324 eq It, dbl-wide mobtle home Dru.s Slac:u N.J.-Pa. 3Ox80 metel bkig.; eqpt end weter right • . 27 '-J6 Kane's Hallmark Ctr. 22SK, cuh or terms, local Mgmt. avail. Sensol (Renee Jourdan) loMoncho Center. I 117 N Horbor Aloha Plumbing CaJlorwme; larry Nefson Dress Shirts Fullerton, CA ' (71 4) 992-1 314 Llc. #201875 -:. Since 1922 Ben M. Arai PARTS - SUPPLIES - REPAIR Attorney at low (503) 747-4361, 14- 16'1> I.JO I!t J I Sleeves llii~ 86153 Lard Lane, John Menry Oscar de la Renta. 777 Junipero Serra Dr. 126 Mercar SI .• Trenlon . NJ 08611 San Gabriel, Ca 91 n6 Hrs by Apml. (609) 599·2245 Pleasant Hili, OR 97455 Dress Shoe. Member N.J. & Po. Sor 5'h-8'f2 0 I!t f: Widlhs MIKAWAYA (213)2~18 INYES1IENTS (.... ) (01) French Shriner Nurtn Bush (B.B.) SWEETS~OPS Washington, D.C. looking lor year ..nd tnVeSlment? .... n L»'cd.I-o.m.:.- Tlloroughbred 8tood Mare, hail-aiSle' to MIKE MASAOKA ASSOCIATES a Chaniplon "re, in foal to a Champion (408) :5 74-1466 ESTABliSHED 1936 244 E. 1st St.. Los Angeles Con!uitonl$ - Wo shington Moffa" racehorM. AWllable lor syndication. 10 785 W. Hamilton Ave.. Campbell 900-171h 51 MN. WoshinglOt1 , DC 20006 ahanIs, $20.000 ellCh. Write to: 1IUlCt< 51\" TOI'1>\S UI'WY (213) 628-4945 one w= or NISEI (202) 296-4484 P.O. Box 533 2801 W. Ball Rd.. Anaheim Hackensack, N.J. 07602 (714) 995-6632 TRADING Tell Them Yau Saw It oreall (201) 488-4037 Padftc Square. Gardena Appliances - TV - Fumiture In the Pacific Citizen looking lor yea.r-and invelltmertt? Top' BREED THE R.I.S. 1630 Redondo Beach Blvd. quality, Egyptlan-bred Arllblan mar.. & (213) 538-9389 249 S. San Pedro St. lilliel by Champion Egyptian Stallion. Commercial , Induttrial VI.lto,. welcome. Appointment appreci• Now to Size 118 Japanese village Plaza .Los Angeles 90012 ated. Air Conditioning' a.frig.vtlon Los Angeles / (213) 624-1681 (213) 624-6601 CONTRACTOR GRAOIN ARABIANS for FUN & PROFIT Rt. 2, Box 235 Utilizing Genetics Sam J. Umemoto Corvallis, OR 97333 JapaneSe Phototypesetting Lie. #201863 C-20-38 (503) 929-5724 lET'S SEE NOW. DOES YOUR TAX SHELTEFV SAM REI BOW CO. REAL ESTA1E('CaIIf.) (08) INVESTMENT ENCOMPASS ALLOF THESE? TOYO PRINTING CO. 1506 W. Ve.rnon Ave. Los Angeles /295-5204 So. Cal. Mid-Wilshire 1. Not on the "preference tax items" lisl 309 S<1 San Pedro St.. Los Angeles 90013 320 S Ardmont. 1 BR. 1 SA. 3rd fl. Iront, 2. Therefore does not trigger the "alternate minimum tax". Experienoad Since 1939 bright sullny units wI balcony. Upgraded 3. Short-term depreciaoon taken agailst ordinary ncome (totally (213) 626-8153 blue carpet, pnce $49.900.' 'Single 2nd 1Ioor, sumy unit. perfect tor lirst-tfme depreciated in 5 years). buyer. Prtce $36.000 w/all8Umable loan 4. All expense items applied against ordinary income. of $2".000 al 12%. Contact Jan, (213) 5. 10% invesbTlent tax etedit (equivalent to 20% expense deduction 394~941 . . first year). Empire Printing Co. REAL ESTA1E(UWI) (09) 6. Profits from sale treated as long-term capital gains. 7. No recapture of long-term capital gains. COMMERCIAL and SOCIAL PRINTING SALE BY OWNER English and Japanese Provo Utah area. InvestmenVdevelop• 8. Flexible estate planning possibilities. eiKmura ment property 5,OOo-acre Devel pro!>, 9. On spouse's death, entire herd can be sold at current value with ro cabin sites. Recreation land, summer 114 Weller St., Los Angeles CA 90012 PHOTOMART grazing, pines. aspens, streams, stock tax. (213) 628-7060 waler, appraised value $350 acre, sacri• 10. Flexible IQutdity. Cam"as & Photographic Supplies fice $150 acnI. Contact Vern Wnght, 11 . Good a~reciation potential. 2358 S 3600 W, Salt Lake Ctty, Utah 84119. (801) 654-3373. 12. Good profit potential. 316 E. 2nd St., Los Angeles 13. Managed by professiooals. (213) 622-3968 REALESTA1E(\bh) (09) 14. Possibility of total Investment paid for from tax-savings alone! Sale by Owner. Utah Investment/property WELL, MINE DOES!! Wanshlp MtnkFann B-ae includtng 4 BR house plus 6 mink TAX-HAVEN FARMS e Polynesian Room: Dinner & Cocktails, Floor Show sheds, $245K 3571 Kinney Creek Rd., Jacksonville, OR 97530 e Teahouse: Teppan-Yaki, Sukiyaki ~IIC development land, zoned R-t5. e Sushi Bar asldng $3451< Lounge: Entertainment Luxury home. 6BR, 5BA, 3 fireplaces. Or Call (415) 456-3838 • Cocktail 5. )'63 sq ft. "" ae, landscaped $375K Elite breeders of pure-bredlexotic livestock. e Banquets • Open Daily: Luncheon 11 :30-2, Dinner 5-11, Sunday 12-11 (801)942·5580 De Panache 226 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, CA 92704 Today'. C..... c Loob TO EXPORT OR NOT TO EXPORT? (114) n5-7727 for WOIDeD IIr Mea Call for Appointment TO MANUFACTURE ABROAD OR TO UCENSE? Phone 6S7-0387 105.1." ". vm...PIua TO APPOINT FOREIGN DISTRIBUTORS? ...... Loe~_90012 HOW TO PACKACE?,HOW TO LABEL? tJ& EAGLE ~ Toshl ~ Prop. HOW TO ADVERTISE? HOW TO FINANCE? w~ -.aft ...... ,...., thew aDd other qu~iooa. and IOlvUlI U1wnabooal rnariteling 9 PRODUCE CO. ~~o. aM ...... t, _ .. FattUDe SOO compa"'es and otben. l(XXX D'P/s/eJ/l ,,/ K,lly' V"srt,,"''' Dlslrlbuturs. life W..... w- d.,...... tb. cliffeu1,". We pAI'IJlt.l~uhs. 0. 35,..,. fII apairace .. foreip trade, cambmed with upertiIr From our 22 OVene&S orr!.:'es ..11,..·4 ' . BONDED COMMISSION MERCHANTS TOYl;~~ W~ ..... boll call _ for your filii free ~ U ~uu are at.artlnI out . we will WHOLESALE FRUITS AND VEGETABLE ..... ,...... _si'" your npart poWfttiaL !f.1OU have L!UIIlio& upon buaIanMI we .... ,...... dDuWe your ~iD ..~.u. Call .. (ocia). 929-943 S. San Pedro St. STUDIO .CRYCNER INfERNATlONAL CITY MARKET P.O. Box 1987 3 18 East First Street PALM SPRINGS. CAUFORNlA 92263 Los Angeles, Ca. 90015 Phone: (213) 625-.2101 Los Angeles, CA 900 12 RCA TELEX: 295671 (213) 626-5681 (619) 323·7379 ftwItmb'It25.1 ClT1ZEH-ll CLASSIFIED ADS UBi d Lima,Pera (1) tares· FORSALE{!rt I) REAl. ESTATE(MI!!ourt (01) • II -~...... fill) EXCITING OPPORTUNITY ATTENTlON: INVESTORS ISSOURt _ hiGft c:etI rrc ~ 2o--NW MlSSOun Farms-20 Pan American <::Onference ~ .oon atIII1ecI tal or Set of 15 original Faatunng. a a ri ~~ rom 3.030-ec trKt wfi ..,.., 11.. 5 ., t . and hog,.. or dta - &I)d sandy .'<*n bottom I BJ MlSAO LSALUIOIO nga 04 BIU One . eutographed by 8II~"".1rtIdea ~ u nd ~ t Loam Wnt.. _die P Countertop Lennon of honeymoon ,I IEI"s.-.~ • YOIIOOno. Ho\lL REALTY ... ,.... .,IIIeJ Video Fun Games. Inc. Boll H8. C,ty. MeG« 0 .. 0lIl." ... ., die t G nee __ .... we fIiIeIi .. (714) 892-6666 Com e.. on lhe Ian oreall (816) «2-3\16 or (816) 442·5534 • rct'- -lUI. M oIModemAr1 I11 NYC . EXCITING OPPORTUNITY Valued at $70.000. Pnc:e raason• REAL ESTATE{lbltana) The conCa dKe ball in Uma. Peru, South America res0und• able. Complete proIIeNllCle and an mt1'IeCNte hid! cah flow . rrc. a.preo• papers of ~t tCll ty ava RESORT ed th the national anthem ofPeru, and then came a powerful abOn ElIceIiiInt .an., bu nus or complete ~nt e lot ..• • (Fishing) Also IlMd partner to pu~ 1956 In Beautiful Montana SlDre, restau• c:olJective voice of'''Viva Peru!" The multirolored flags on the lent 1n\lQttnen1. 5 11\ 1. NW rant, bar. boats & mOlors, docks. cabins, stage replE&Lted delegations from Peru. Brazil, Argentina, Bentley lormerty belonging to the RENTAL (So. CIiI lf.) 10 Countertop Bu.11eS and lhe late John Lennon to RV hoc ·ups on 2096 aa wI900-It. on Bolivia, Uruguay, Colombia, Mexico, Canada, and the United be used In • mobon ptctu,. lake frontage World famous fishing. Xlnl Video Fun Games, Inc. wsheller PHYSICIAN'S OFFICE ga~ States. This was a of Japanese people, whose (714) 892-6666 Call or Write KR AFT 1 ,000 sq. ft . parents and grandparents had immigrated to the Americas Box 187 , Proctor. MT 59929 WIli.IAM TUTIlE (406) 849-5454 160th block of Western since the middle la)O's. Its purpose was to help enrich the PRINTING ADVERTISING & PUBLICITY historical and cultural heritage of those who share this com• Well Established REAL ESTATE (Oregon) (09) Ave. in Gardena Business in great Fairfax loca• c/ o Black umousine LTD. SSALE BY OWNER (2 13) 532-7139 mon root. A total of' about 600 delegates attended this confer• tion. Good income. Fine poten· #1 Chnstopher, Apt. BC 532-1201 Willamette Valley, Ore. ence mch.liing a large number eX Peruvians. tial. Xlnt eqUipment. $450.000. New York, N. Y. 10014 10-ac beautiful valley w/3 houses. barn. My husband, Calvin, and I bad decided toattend this confer• HOMESTEAD (212) 807-6616 or + 6 ac crop Hardwood, coOifer, frull, Tell Them You Saw It ence in July, 1983 &41 one of our unique adventures in South cherry & bernes Cascade Ylew asking (213) 376-9464 (212) 666-6665 price $ 130.000. Machinery. & Irrlg equip In the Pacific Citizen America. As members of the Japanese American Citizens BUSINESS OPPORTUNfTY fCoIo.) (O3) Included. 2 ml to Capitol blOg & 45 miles REAL ESTATE (CaIl'Ofn") League, we were aware two years ago that a conference bad r REALESTATE(CaUf.) (01) . to Portland. (503) 389-1126 days. BY OWNER 389-9562 eves. Auburn.z CA been scheduled in Peru. The first Pan ~rican conference SALE BY OWNER EXCELL~NT Colorado, U.S.A. NO. CALIFORNIA REAL ESTATE (So. Dak.) (011) was held in Mexico in 1981. sao Paulo, Brazil would host the IDEAL FAMILY OPERATION DEVELOPMENT third conference in 1985. Colorado lann relall vetennary supply & Villa Brocco 1.200-ac ranch/ farm/ teed lot PROPERTY wholesale fann supply busmess along AUCTION-MON. NOV. 28, 9 a.m.-Full 6.19 BC commercial property 1~lOYed We knew there was a large emigration from Japan to South With 320 ac. farmland in pas• PRIME SAUSAliTO LOCA TION hne equipment and feed Terms on ranch. in Auburn, calif. (open zon· America. But we knew little eX the life and culture of the lure. NICe Improvements on Stale Hwy. Yungwlrth Ranch, Redfield, SO. ing) water and power to prop• Asking price $300,000, neg. including 2 erty. $6 per square It. Just present-day Japanese community there. We thought this con• BR house. 2.400 sq. ft. Some owner 120 f1from new multl-mllhon$ Casa Ma• WAYNE NELSON REALTY financing, more details wnle: drone Hotel. Charming 4-storey Mediter· (60S) 472-2311 completed 126 new condos adjacent to property. For lur• ference would give us a good opportunity to expand our own J.R.WILSON ranean style building. Zoned Central PENFIELD AUCTION REALTV horizon. 4<4505 State Hwy 14 Commercial. Poss. Hotel, retail, bank. (800) 437·2040 ther Inlormation, please call: Briggsdale, CO 80611 offices or COIJ)Orale HQ w/penthouse In No. Oak. use (800) 472-2647 'Ibe thn!e-day conference was held at the Civic Center Am• apartmenl. 180-degree view of Bay and (916) 823-9300 phitheater adjacent to Lima Sheraton Hotel where the foreign Owner Retiring yacht harbor. 20% tax credit available for REAL ESTATE (Tun) (01) rehab. $1.25 million. Bus.NESS OPPORTUNfTY (Ore.) (03) delegation stayed. 1be bi-lingual earphones helped me to un• In California call: Texas Survival + $ derstand the language and capture the spirit of the confer• BY OWNER (800) 428-7824, exll14 96,4 acres: improved pasture w/approx GOLFERS IDEAL FAMILY OPERATION 2-ac spring fed lake, 2-1 brick home, ence, for it was conducted entirely in Spanisb. The speakers OUT OF STATE V.-mi from city limits, property bounda• • Great BUSiness Opporlunlly lauded the early immigrants, wbo, through beart-breaking Restaurant (800) 428-7825, exlll4 ries Include: State Hwy frontage, railroad SEAFOOD & DELI for sale. located In track at rear 011 and , & all top road on 3rd • Limited Investment largest shopping center on the Oregon times, persevered and worked very bard in a foreign coontry, NO . CALIFORNIA side. (214) 645-2386 or • Proven 11 Year Track Record I was especially impressed by an older Issei, representing the coast. Asking $34.500. term available. (214) 856·7142 PM-wkends. • High Profit Potential Japanese Central Association of Peru, who spoke in fluent For more Informallon. write to: Livermore • Low Time ReqUired Fisherman Grotto. Pony Village Shop• • Tax Advantages Spanish. I thought the immigrants bad adapted well to the new ping Center, North Bend, OR 91459. Downtown, 3.7 ac. Prime commercial wI Corrpiete 15,000 sq It existing building currently ~ome Furnishings BUSINESS OPPORTUNfTY CT-) (03) leased: 60,000 sq ft leased as RV slo• country by learning its native tongue. I cannot say the same rage; total open area 2.5 ac. 500 It. on for my parerlts, or many other Japanese immigrants, in Ha• Hwy 84. Can split Into smaller parcels. Broker cooperation welcomed. For In• ~£!PIlJII~Iil@@Ij • Golf Media Services: waii or the mainland United States, who never learned to Seeking formation call Dan: (415) 447-7334. (619) 724·0458 speak the English language. ~lified Financially person as limited REAL ESTATE{Maaa.) (09) 151205. WestemAve. partner In a step-ou1 development Oil "Ibe Tree ofFrieDdahip' str~ Gardena,CA (oot.d: LON FUGATE Well to be drilled in a producing 324-6444 321-2123 The poignant words of Yoshio Kokubo, delegate from Texas Oil Field. Min. Invest. IS 85K. Boston Area Into 214/980-8739 SALE BY OWNER Colombia, touched my heart when be said, "Let us contribute - to the tree of friendship, and let it grow and grow until it REAL ESTAtE CT-) (01) Brick Bldg, 2 floors develops good fruits. Let all Pan American Nikkei protect it Zoned commerCial/residential V. mile from downtown Boston, formeraulodeal• from possible storm." West Texas ership or auto related location. Currently This message held an additional meaning for me. I bad read occupied by 4 tenanls. Annual Income ~ $65,000. Price: $400,000. Details fur• Plaza Gift Center "Pawns in a Triangle of Hate: The Peruvian Japanese and the Ideal Family Operation nished to serious inquiries. FINE JEWELRY - CAMERA - VIDEO SYSTEM United States," by C. Harvey Gardiner in preparing for this 3 motels w/cafe-service station; (617) 646-6166 HOMEOOMPUTERS - WATCHES - TV - ~O 1-motel 60 units; conference. He writes of the policies and programs of both the SOFTWARE - DESIGNER'S BAG - BONE CHINA 2-motals 4O-units each. '(617) 646-9390 American and Peruvian governments that resulted in the Xlnt income property, little compelltion; seizure and internment oftbe Peruvian Japanese. He gives an also lease service stations. Three shop• Authorized SONY Dealer ping centers (lease or buy). Convenient Los Angeles Japanese analytical account fX about 2W) Peruvian men, women, and stores throughou1area. Casualty Insurance Assn. 111 Japanese ViUage Plaza MaD children of Japanese descent who were interned in the United O1her line properties available Los Angeles. CA 9OO.t2 in Houston area. COMPUTE INSUIlANCE PIOTECTION States during World War II simply becalR they were Japa• (213) 680-3288 These people, most of whom were fann~rs, merchants, Aihara Insurance Agf. Inc. nese. call Owner 250 E. 1st St .• LA. An.... 90012 barbers, and clerks were brought to the United States and (713) 350-3107 Suita 900 626-9625 placed in internment camps in Texas and New Mexico. Tbere Anson T. Fujioka Insurance were DO criminal charges against them. These facilities were EMPLOYMENT (c.m.) 01 321 E. 2nd St.• LA. Ansa .... 900 12 operated by the United States Immigratioo and Naturaliza• TOPSKOUT Suita 500 626-4393 tioo Services. (Note: Internment camps for United States PfRSONNElSERVlCE Funakoshi Ins. Agency, Inc. FEES PAID BY EMPLOYER 200 S. San Padro, Los Angel.. 90012 citizens of Japanese ancestry were administered by War If you have a coOeoe degree or eQlivaJenl and bi• Suita 300 626-5275 Relocation Authority ,) After the war, the author tells us, more lingual, let us sewl a more fulfilling and lop salary for you. Send resrne ilJallaneselfnljish 10 1543 Inouye Insurance Agency than a thousand people from Peru were sent to Japan. Many of W. OlympIC BM!., lDs Angeles 90015. 15029 Sytvanwood Av•• them were exchanged for American prisoners of war. EMPLOYER INQUIRY WELCOME Norwalk, CA 90650 864-5774 As Ilist.eoed to the otber speakers I remembered October 742~10 hano & Kagawa, Inc. (213) or Tix 673203. 321 E. 2nd St., Los Angeles 90012 1945. I was a United States Civil Service employee in General Suite 301 624-Q758 Douglas MacArthur's Headquarters in Occupied Japan. Dur• Ito Insurance Agency, Inc. ing my stay in Japan I visited a little settlement outside Travel Agency 1245 E. Wdnlt St. Suita 112; PaiDdatID Tokyo. Here I met a group of people who had been repatriated 91106; 795-7059.611 ...... 11 LA. Typing. Filing from Peru. Tbey were destitute. Defeated Japan did not wel• Bookeeping Kamiya Ins. Agency, lne. come them. They were living in a makeshift shelter, using 327 E. 2nd St.• LA. Angeles 90012 Downtown LA Suite 224 626-8135 crude equipment and tin cans to prepare their meals over the (213) 413-3200 BY OWN~R and BUILDER outdoor fire. 1bey did verbalize bitterness or disa~ Maeda &Mizuno Ins.. Agency open not 11902 a.-w-.t St. FouNain VaI!.y pointment 1bey told me they were in the process of develo~ CA 92701 (714) 964-7227 Join the JACL Age Dictates Sale ing a cooperative farm on that land. For them it was a matter The J. "".., Company of survival based 011 mutual assistance. I was touched by their 11010 AItaIiD IW. swe. ., c:.me..CA MARUKYO 90701; (213) 924-3494. (714) 952·2154 Sun Belt's nicest R. V. Parle. 71 spaces on prime 1-10 lOcation in fortitude. I was not then aware of anti-Japanese sentiment in southern New Mexico. 10.6 acres. AU utilitj~ underground and Peru, and that these very people. whom I was visiting, were Kimono Store Steve Nalcaji Insurance stubbed off for 44 more space approved expansion. Potential 11964W.h...... gross on existing spaces over $200,000. Raisable.rates. AU ~ar~e the ones I would read about. :fI years later, in "Pawns in a LA...... 90066 391-5931 Triangle fX Hate." Now. I tbougbt of this group of people and ,--' pullthrus with complete hooleups, cement patiOS and PIcnIC ~ - New 0tanJ Hotel & Ogi~Aizumi Ins. Agency tables. . their cbildren. Had tbey returned to Peru? Garden--Arcade 11 109 N. Hunt",_. Mlntarwy ....rte 3 buildings. Office and 2 bath apartment, 1500'. All apartment Japaaese C8I8araI Cea&er 110 S. Los Angeles 91754; (213)571"911.213-1233LA. furnishmgs will be mcluded. Satellite TV system for apartment ODe morning, during the COIIference. a small group of us Ota Insurance Agency with over 100 channels. 1320' building for restrooms, nore visited the Peruvian Japanese Cultural Ceuter. It was built on ~~(j) 312 E. ht St.. Suite 305 room and spacious laundry. Laundry equIpment owned. 6 Speed LA...... 90012 617·2057 Queen washcrs and 3 laree commercial dryers. Clubhouse is the piece fX land dmated by the Peruvian government to the 1152', furnished with tables, chaIrs,. TV, pool table. etc. ;::======~=: Sato Insurance Agency Other equipment included are tractor, 8' x 40' rubbish Japanese cooununity after the war, as reparation. 1be his- I 366 E. ht St .. LA. Angela 900 12 tory of Japanese inwnigratioo to South America was well d0c• 626-5161 629-1425 trallerand new" wheel Suzuki. Also much miscellaneous. Park IS CHIYO'S 4 years old showing increases m gross every mo nth Ovcr 200 umented aDi displayed in the cultural center museum. The Japaese BII*a Netdllcratt Tsuneishi InalraNe /Ivefv:y, Inc. trees planted mcludmg some pecans. Underground watering enlarged pmtograpbic exhibit showed the life of the early Fmlilg. Bunka Kits , Lessons, Gifts 327 E. 2nd St. .... AngaI. 90012 system for trees. I Suet. 221 62&-1365 imm.ignmts OIl the rubber, banana, sugar cane. and co~ (714) ~2432:2943 W. Ball rna 550,000 firm p Ilh m inImum $ 175 000 dixtll to-jtar ptr)off (J1 plantations. Many immigrants fulfilled their initial three• Rd. Anahem, CA92804 Wada Asato Auoc:iates, Inc.. all.:ash O K. (213) 617~06: 450 E. 2nd 16520S. W ...... Ave.Galdana90247 PO Box 1 - Vado. NM - 880 72, (505)233-3003 year labor mntract and then moved to the cities to meet their St., HoI11a Plaza . LA. 90012 (213) 51~110 COiiQppecJ OIl • • ext Pace I .. Exchange. outlined tb goals PANA------hce u gram: to de op petitiv rts and c..I...,,,.. cal, scientific and cultural inform tJ n. H en cbiJdreu's educatimal needs. Others rebelled, broke their students to master tb English language if aJDtract and establiShed their own fanns aDd t.LCiness. The study in North America. largest IUDber 01 immigrants came fromOUnawa Ken, Ku• 1 gathered, from the discussion, that Japan 'the 01. r mamoto Ken and Hiroshima Ken. the southern prefectures of country that bad offered scholarships and oth r educa ional Japan. 'Ibis center was also used to meet present social needs opportunities. But most of the students a desi of tile cormxmity ru.il as language classes, the tea ceremony. study in the Americas instead. Tb y especially w ted to Dower arrangemera, and other coltural pnwBIDS. know more about fmanciaJ aid and born stay programs in th We alao visited the group 01 little children attending the United States. One Brazilian student said that he had accepted Saturday morning Japanese class. The teacher said. a scholarship in Japan in 1981 but did not complete his stud! " Kiritsu" attention; "Orei" bow ; " Okalrenasai" be seated. there. He felt that the academic courses in the Japanese uru• The children responded like little robots. I chuckled. I recalled versity was not suitable for his projected career in uth my childhood wben I attended the Japanese school in Hawaii. 16) of PANA-2 America. J too had mconform to such formality. Conference hears Fbyd Shimanura (third from left) speak on 1 empathized with these students who wanted to uni- The Lima Japanea- comnllmity also established a medical JACL's redress and other mai1 objectives. Others seated are versijy emcation outside of their own country. I felt that their clinic adjacent to the commuoity. There is an emergency and (from left) HarTy Horda, PANA president Car10s Kasuga; Chuck perspectives and opportunities would be limited if they con• diagnostic clinic statred by 45 doctors, 35 ofwhom are Nikkei. Kubokawa and Jose Yoshida cA Peru, session chairman. tinued to confine themselves to the Japanese community. The clinic p-ovides free multi-pbasic and annual examina• They should be encooraged to reach out to other conmum.ities tions. I noticed a metal plaque 00 each large piece of medical lerns. '!be older students are resisting these daily exercise throughout South and North America. But they should flI'St equipment with a notation, "For technical cooperation. drills, and now the younger ones are begiooing to show some explore the foreign studies programs with the help of their Donated by the government of Japan." I would have been indifference too." own established universities. proud had I seen a sign "Donated by the government of the Aha, I tbought, this is not Japan where group exercise is 1 was very glad 1 had bad the opportunity to attend this ~ms . United States." I wmdered whether my own country is shar• deeply rooted in its school and industrial conference. It helped me to expand my ownseose of identity. 1 ing its medical tedmology and equipment with third world Hamada went on to explain that the school does not have any felt even more appA!Ciative, than I had been, of our common countries._ _ ~ _ ~ _ drug problems and the staff and administration try to help the roots andetbnic culture beyond my own geographical realm. I I bad ooticed II group of students in school uniforms attend• students maintain a high scholastic standard. Last year about became aware of a strong we-group feeling in the Japanese ing the cmCereoce each day. 70% of the students enrolled in universities. "Would you like to community in Lima. The Japanese culture seemed to be deep• "What schools do they come from?" I asked. meet our psychologist and social worker?" he asked. ly embe- ci $.F.-Tokyo.. •. •. •• •• •••. 6S6rt ' VACATION RENTAL: Coodo in Pucs· z SHttJe..Tokyo ...... 6S6rt fa Dd Sol. Pucno vaUana, Mexico; --;.,=....:.-.-...:..-=------=------t.. i Cbl~T_yo .•...... • 9S8rt sl«pS 1-4, pure watu. pool centrally ~.Y.-ToIr:yo ••• •• •• . . •• •• 899rt located, dose [0 shops. beach. On hill HAWAII VACATION e A5ba Travel • Quinn Okamoto above picrurcsquc Bay of Bandcras. Air & Hotel Pkg. Rd-trip from ...... $ 2'19 £ (213)'208-4444 Reasonable ta1CS.. Call (408) 266-4453. Christmas PaCkage-Air & Hotel, Rd-Trip . fro~ ...... :, . -'- .349 - , (Accepting orders now-Book early-Don t Miss Out) ''8 , ..0 L.A./TOkyo/~t.P~~fr:!i~ ~~ ~~~~ . ) c:: ...... • .$ 6ffi ~ dmericafl HOlido){1fovel Chicago/Tokyo/ Chicagq Rd-trip from ...... $ 975 ea > '0 ~ O.K. TRAVEL CONSULTANTS ea j -1984 Travel Schedule - .rA .2 714 W. Olympic Blvd., Rm. 612 los AngeJes, CA 90015 ~.! Hawaii Golf Tour . Call: Yoshi . TeJ. (2)3) 748-7163 i_ 8 days, 6 days golf ...... May 5 J.8 1 Mea t J- HOkka~ ~ ~~~i~ ~~~ ...... June 24 ..2E == Los Angeles-Tokyo iiJ Ura-Nihon & Shikoku Tour .. 15days ...... Oct6 aI ' . ROUNDTRIP c: ~ Gala Mediterranean Cruise .-> 15days ...... ~ ..Oct 9 0 $572.00 E (l, ~ For information and reservaticlns. please write or call us. ...CD N (Q ! AMERICAN HOUDA V TRAVEL JAPAN CLUB TOURS 'lJ ~ BE. lstSl Suite 1.losMgeIes, CA ~2 354 s. Spdug St. #402 ::::I ~ 0 Ci5 (213) 625-2232 (213) 84~ 1833 (Ikrbank) Lc.Aarl..... CA 90013 ~ (21 ) 689-9448 >- CD ~ - Z ()