o~JH~ 'IQ.~~- JACL will oppose Eastland bill II...WASHINGTON - Sen. Dan· record In support of the...

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Per spec lives lI.y J RRY NOMOTO Na ll oDal J (,L PTe Id enl Membe"hlp Publlcillon: J .p.n ••• Americon Cjll.en L •• Y. , w.( t St" Los Angele. , C.llf. 90012; 12(3) MA 6.6936 Publilh. d Weeklv Except Flr> t Ind us t We.'" Second CI". Po,t'go P.ld .t Lo, Angelu, Calif. Sacramento VOL. 69 NO. 18 FRIDAY, OCT. 31, 19611 tublalp110n Rate P.r y.., u.s. ", FOlelgn $7 TEN CENTS With enlhusla.m and high oplrits the Central Callfornia town of Reedley I'Ccently cekbratro U.s ann"81 "FIesta." Th. h\ihllghl ot Ihis """aslon "OS parade ot o\'er 100 unll.. ot whleh beautiful floal enlel'l!d by the Japanes. community was on •. The float was inscribed "The Golden Y .. ars" and Iwo Jr. JACLers, Linda TakaSllk1 and Ken Ko- nemolo, mad. up to look re- mark.bls like l .. el plonee.., SALT LAKE JACL EFFORTS PAYOFF IN REPEAL PUSH Local Seryice, Ciyic Groups "',ainst Title" Write to Con,rcssmen SEN. INOUYE TO OPPOSE HA YNSWORTH FOR BENCH WASHINGTON - Reverslnll his original position, Sen. Daniel Inouye wl11 \' 0 t. against . conflrmation of JudlC Clement Haynsworth to be ••• soclate jusUce of the U.S. Suo preme Court. Evidence dur ing the Judlcl· ary Committee hea rings led Inouye to conclude t h at "a pattern ot Insensitivity to t he problems ot the conflict of In- terest raised by Judge Hayns- worth's many business ven- ture. as they related to his ac· tivlties as a judge in the ted· eral court has been cl ear ly demonstrated. " JACL will oppose Eastland bill likely to include Title II repealer Fiesta in Reedley rode it. It won Orst prlz. In its division. and I rode in a brand new soUd gold Cadillac, jusl ah.ad ot the floal chauffeured by Re.-dle.\· JACL PTesidenl Hank Imagawa. logether with E\'8 (former Kai). As we reachro the end of the rout. and then watched the rest of the parade. we got that thrill- ing feeling thai comes fTOm watchilU! colorful marching bands playing stirring music It looked like every high school band In the Fresno area ""8S there. SALT LAKE CITY-Four lo- cal organizations have adopted resolutions in favor ot repeal- ing TiUe II and more are ex· pected, according to the Salt Lak. J A C L, which mode a elts-wide appeal among serv- ice and civic groups this pa.t summer this month to th e I. tt er sllned by K imura, chap ter pr.-.ldent., wer.- Ihe ,&11 Lake NAACP b ranch, Utab ta te Democrat<, Wasatcb Fr ont Toune Democrata a nd th e Spanisb Orpnlsa lion (or Communlt;y a nd Oppor tunity ( OCIO). Immigration trend in Hawaii may see haole majority 'pn tal m ., be 1"I.cUl 0 elUUD SAN FRANCISCO - A warn- Ing wa. Issued thl8 week bv th e Japanese American Cltl. zen. League that there mov bc 8n a!tempt by the Senaie Judiciary Committee to Incor· porate the repeal of TIUc II of the Internal Security Act of 1 950 Inlo a new and more Internal Security In a leUer sent to all sup- porter. ot the TiUe II repeal campaign, the J ACL NoUonol Commi ttee to repea l the Emergency Detention Act re- vealed thot Sen ator J ame. Eas ti and ( Miss.) wanls to add the repea l of Title 11 as an amendment to his own In- l ernal secu rity bill, S. 12. U this happens and Easl· land'. S. 12 with Till e n .lnoe It was Out learned that ----------------------- the TIUe II repeal Issue may become Involved. The East- land bill I. an omnibus bill covering ov.r 100 pages, and contains literally bundr.d. of provisiona, many of which are of doubtful consUtutionallty. For .xample. Included to the provision. Is the creation ot a new crime at "peace- time treason," and a sweeping loyalty program for employees of so-called "de!ense facUl- ties," which is defined so broadly that it could cover virtually all Industrial, com- mercial and educational in. tI- tutions. Many obs.rvers !eel that S. 12 I. an attempt to elr· cumvent the lIb.ral ruling. of the Supreme Court In recent years. Washington Post calls lor Title II repeal; wide support acknowledged WASHINGTON - Sen. Dan· record In support of the iel Inouye (D-HawaU) stood movement seeking the repeal up twice in the Senate Oct. 20 In TiUe II of the Internal Se- to urge .arly committee bear- curtty Act of 1950. Ings OD his bl11, S . 1872, to re- A resolution calling for the peal the emergency detention repeal of the de- provision (Titl. II) In the In- tention statute was adopted temal S.curlty Act of 1950. by an overwbelming margin Hearlened by the .xpr •• - atter some dlscussion and 0p- pressions from people about positioD at a recent meeting the NatioD, Inouy. .ntered of the Presbytery, it was re- Into the Congressional R.cord ported by the Rl'v. Hei Taka· samples of the widespread rabe, Parkview Presbyterian Followlnlt the parade the ,tax-tOUS nationality groups in ReedI.y set up food booths In the park and were doing a booming buslness. The food at the JACL booth was .elling like bot cakes, a1thougb il was bee! leriyaki. The letter called attention 10 the bills in Congress to re- peal TiUe n. SB 1872 intro- duced by Sen. Inouye, and HR 1 I 8 2 5 introduced by Reps. Spark Matsunaga and Chet Hollifield. HONOLULU-It trends conti- nue, in five or seven yean, Hawaii will have a haole ma- jority. according to Theodore F. Ruhig, executive secr.tary of the Hawaii Manpower Commission, which h06ted a two-<Iay western regional con· ference or Manpower Advl .... ry Committees Oct. 16-17. Sen. Dan Inouye JACL will oppose . 12 In ••• JAOL Caution Howev.r, the JACL Nation- al Committee cauttoned against wri ltog to senators re- gardIng S. 12 at thls tim •. The EasUand bill Is such a poor piece of I.gislatlon that it stands little cbance of pas- sage, .speclalls It there is a singular lack of public inter- . st The J ACL f.an that 11 too much public attention be- com .. focused on S. 12, It may rally conservative power, wbich could b. dlsastrous. support for repeal from: Church mlnister. Los Angeles County Board The resolution, drafted and of Supervisors, Monter.y Park presented by Carnegie Ouye, (CaIit.) City Council, Salt Parkview Cburch elder, also Lake City NAACP branch, calls for it to be seDt by the Federated Awcillarl.. of the local 18,000 member Presby- International LoDgshoremen'. tery to the United Synod of and Warehousemen's Union, Sierra and on to the church'. Offi ce and ProfessioDai Em- G61eral Assembly. The hard working efforts of the JACLers will re- sult in "'ell desen-ed income for the chapter colIers. Omede to It also noled that Utah Con- gressman Burton bad made "no commitm.nt to support the repeal" and that Utah S.n· ator Bennett bad indicated "he is nol in favor oC support - ing the repeal". U. entir et y, announ ced th e by SenlSlor DanIel Inouye and JACL Nallonal CommUtee. 25 other senators, be acted " The JACL wa nta Till e n upon as a separate item. repealed. but not at th e ex- The JACL also urges pas· pense ot a mor e r. p .... lve sage of the companion repeal law," . tated Ray Oka mu ra, bllI In the Hou se of Rl'pr e- Edison Uno and Paul Yama· Ienlotive, HR 11825 by Con- moto, tb e Q o·chalnnen tor gressmen Spark Matsunaga, th e JACL'. rep. al cam· Ch et Hollfleld and 125 other paip. congressmen. Stn ll bt - Forwu d Action ploy... Union, Local 29 of Oakland, and the Salt Lake SeaHle Tunes columnist chapter of the Spanish-Speak- ing Organization for Commu- comments on Title II nity Integrety and Opportu- nity. SEA'lTLE - Columnist H ... b \f e were in Reedley to jOin In a eel.bration of the 88th birthday of Joyce's greal uncl.. Mr. Sakuil Hashimoto. He and his "''TDbolize pioneer Issei who continue to the Ooat certainly seemro apro- pos in relation to them. After a sendee in the Buddhist temple. the family and close friend:s, numbering about a 100. enjoyed a festi"e Cbina - meshi dlnner . In true NIhon· jin style. maDY guests toasted the occasioD ,,-!th champagn. and song. COnp'e5Smen Told Organizations in favor of repeal w.re then urged to send a copy ot the resoluUon to the Utah congressional del- egatioD. along v.1th copies to the local JACL buman rights chalnnan. Mrs. Allc. Kasal, 83 0 Sl.. Salt Lake City 84103. Including military tamilles, Caucasians represent 28.4 pel of Hawail's population today. Not counting the mllltary, it drops to 19 pel Other fig· ures: Japanese, 34.3; HawaU· an or pari Hawaiian, 21.1; Fl· lIpino, 8.8; Cbines., 6.2; mix, ed and others, 10.7 pct. The b a 0 I e incr .... is re- flected in the arrival from the Mainland o! professionals and bighly trained personnel a. the size of the labor forcl!- mainly non·baol.......,onltou •• to dwindle, Ruhig noted. In thls respect, the J ACL peal er as a sweelener to his and Senator Daniel Inouye are otherwise bad bill in order to in complete agreemenl Sena- pick up liberal votes to pass tor Inouye stated at a recent his own bill: ' offered the JACL civU rigbts dlnner in JACL National Commitlee, San Francisco that be will "but the JACL will not fall vole against S. 12, even 11 it for this klnd of political ex- contains a TiUe II repeal pro- pedl ency. We will not compro- vision. mlse our princi ples." Rath.r than commentln&' on the dan,ers of S. 12, the JACL National Committ.e a.ked all IUPPO..urs to con- tinue the posltlv. approacb or urrlDl COnp'e.. for an earl, r.peal of Tille n by p .... re of the InOD}'. and Mataunaea - BoUfield r.peal bilk The JACL believes \hat mIIIclent public sap- port can be 'en ..... ted (or a atrallbt·forward r.-peal. WashIn(ton Poet Robinson, in his Oct. 20 piece A litlle later, be quoted '" t b e Seattle Tim e s, was commenting upon the petition from the Wasblngton Post edi- of Asian Coalition for Equal. torial, wbich ran Oct. 19 and ity urging a prompt pub Ii " :rt'f,e or bearing of Title n, the Em_ ter": gency Derentlon Camp Acl ' 'It is idle to say that the "The campaign merits supo law will n ever b. put into ef- port for two reasons," be sald. 1eet by an American pres- "FIrst, the detention center ident," Inouye r.ad. ' '11 it will law serves no pwpose today Dever be put into elIed, it t!" "A Americans in 1942. Th. Jr. JACLers assisted the chapter in mailing out the appeal lett.rs. Tbe JACL will continue to S. 12 Studled urge that the repeal of TIUe II hi' considered on Its 0'0.'0 merits, and that the straigbt- forward repeal bilh, S. 1872 To l>fr. and Mrs. Hasbirnoto Md daugbter Shlg Kunlsblge our very best for more active and bappy years to come. Alienat ion 11 is interesting to .... bow file "wrongs" of yesterday be- com. the "rigbts" of today. A few short yean ago. dissent against our involvement In Vietnam was sent by most as unpatriotic:. and by some as treason. Today a national moratorium on Vietnam is de- fended by leaders across the country as a symbol ot the desire of thougbtful Ameri - cans for peace. Yet we find as many, f! not mor. . people In places who resort to muscl.-flexing rhetoric to demean and attack those with wbom they dis - agree on this issue. A prime example of this Is the un.fortunate reference by by Vice President Agnew that the Moratorium Day .vents ''';ere the work of "bard core diSSidents and professional anarchists" encouraged by nan elIete corps 0 f impudenl snobs." It seems that the Vice President cannot rid bimself of the unfortunate habit of putting bis foot in bis mouth. Such outbursts, coupled with some of the actions (as well as lack of action) of the administration. make it easy to und.rstand why minority group people and many of America's youth are increas- Ingly alienated by the "estab- lishmenl" I Ond it unpalatabl. that tb. Justic. Department. under Attorney General Mitehell's direction. seems to be more interested in slowing down ochool desegregation, than .x- pediting it. How it could b. slower than it's been. is a question we might all ask. When a number of his own staff rebel against policy and are apparently pul down for It, there is more reason to wonder. In today's society, it is easy to complain, but inflnitely tougber to be constructiv •. yet, those wbo are hurling from bunger, bad bousing, in- adequate education, p 0 a r bealth and spiraling medical costs, no jobs, etc. must won- der wbere the leadersbip is on concrete steps to do something to change these things. How are the costs of medi- cal care to be made reason- able? Can't we increase money and speed up research so can - cer can be cured before some of us are vidlms? Are we going to make sure that no- body in affiuent America 15 hungry'? Are we serious about rrtoppinlt environmental. pollu- tion'? What are we gomg to do to get kids who want to go. to get into coll ege? , Raymond Uno. n a tl on al JACL civil rights coordinator, authored a tuIJ-pag. story on the arguments for repeal of TiUe II ID the Univ. of Utah campus n.wspaper, the Dails Chronicle. Uno was abo interview over • local conversation radio sta· tlon, KSxx, on Sepl 26 and Oct. 12, expWnlng the Title II repeal campaign. Thousands jailed in anH-U.S. riots TOKYO - Th. International Anti·War Day demonstrations here Ocl 21 with violent anti · American overtones end e d with 1,120 persons jalled in the country, 718 of them in Tokyo, according to poUce who estimated 450,000 persons took part in nearly 600 points. The demonstrations are be- ing considered as the start of student warfare against the Sato government in an at · tempt to force canc.llation ot his sebeduled visit to Wasbing- ton next month to negotiate with President Nixon the re- turn of Okinawa. Th. radicals want Oklnawa back immedi· alely without any talks. EXEMPT LIST OF FOOD ADDITIVES UNDER STUDY WASHINGTON - SeD a tor George McGovern (D-S.D.) last week (Oct. 24) recom· mended overhauling the gov- ernment practices which per- mit sale of more tban 680 food additives without r. q uiring tests for safety. Tbe gov.rnm.Dt · exempt l ist included cyclamates until two weeks ago. On the list is MSG, well - known food enhancer, which some baby food p ro- ducers said they would dis· contiDue using. (A Japanese government official said Ut here is no fear wb atsoever as long as MSG is used in a normal way". Ajinomoto presiden t Kyozo Suzuki said aver age human intake i. 2 grams a day.) IN THIS ISSUE crvn. RIGHTS Walker Report in BHe! •••• u •• I Hayaaaka: Law and Order. GENERAL NEWS Nfoel 10 ... $100.000 Ubel <:aU .. U.S. Supr eme Court rej ect. u- .lUe; Migration tTendJi in KawaU N:e'P Vietnamese .py In Green Beret case: Chinatown eeLl $32$,000 for employme nt achool ......... . 3 .lACL-NATIONAL JACL to oppose S. 12. likely to include Ti tl e 11 rec;eal: JACL-CUAPTER F Uip iDo ln6ux Migrants 1rom th" Main· land last year was 36,850- nonmilitary portion being 18,· ISO, wbU. 4,693 aII.ns imml· grated to Hawaii. Of these, S.033 cam. from the PbilIJp- pines, 238 from Taiwan, 159 from Canada, and 1,263 from other countrts. No speciti c fi · gure was avallabl. for Japan. Tbe FIlipino immigrati on figure is bigb because of the revised immigration laws fav- oring aliens wbo bav. nex\- of·kin living in the U.S. Ruhig added that most of the adult aliens coming UD- der the revised laws are also professioDal men or skilled workers. The old Idea that Asians wbo Immigrate are un· skilled p.rsons suited only tor lower income jobs just Is not true any more, he said. Some forces in Hawall, however, prefer to maintain the Islands' ethnic mix and pref.r to make Hawall a training center tor the Trust Territory, Tonga, American Samoa and other Pacific i... lands as well as from the Asian nations. Hard (ore group meets weekly LOS ANGELES - To combat the problem of drug abuse in th. Ori.ntal communIty, the Asian American Hard Cor. was formally organized last mon th d espite many previous attempts by many Ori. ntals. It bas been meeting Wed- nesday nights at So. Calif. J ACL OCtice since August discussing tbe need to rehablitate dru g addicts, to r .ach out into the jails, camps and reba bilitation centers and seek tbose individu als b. retofore ostracized or alienated from the Oriental community . AAHC believes in belplng tb. addIct< with a id of inter- ested communi ty l eaders and organizations. It bopes to reach th e drug·a ddicted Ori· enta ls and help bring the m back to tbeir ethnic identities and to eventually establlsb a haltway house. On the steering committee are: J =, ry MiyaJi and Ray Kurokawa. BRAZILIAN NISEI LIKELY FOR KEY CABINET POST SAO PAULO - Ryoji Fabio Yasuda was expected to be swom in this week as Brazil's minister of agriculture in the new governmeDt of PresideDt Emilio Garrastazu·Medici. It Ihes. questi ons can t b. answered (and there are many more) and a lot ot people haven't evcn asked th em, lel's nnt wnnder why OUT youth are alienated. San Lake eUorla on Tille n re- to' pl ea for more protection ., •• •5 Th. 47- year· old Nisei Is commissioner general for the Brazilian p avilion for t b • 1970 world exposition at Osa· ka and a f 0 0 d dlstributor h.r •. HIs father. the lat. Ryo- ichl Yasuda, came her e in 1906 fro m Kagoshima . HI. younger brother, Eduardo, is s tate official with the Sao Paulo water works. 63 10 Lake Pa rk Dr. S acramento. Cali f. 95831 Free Methodist fete COLUMNISTS Fi esta in GuHt Colmun.lsta: Herb Roblnlon. Malara: W.ahol · wuholt The J ACL National Com· mittee bas been studying S. 12 for many months now, ever Nisei take press libel suit to U.S. Supreme Court, loses Slur on Amertca", recalled "And second, as long as it that Congress had passed dur- remams on the boo . k.s, the Ing the hysteria of 20 y.an the statute lends crediI;>illty to ago over communism the In- black ,:betonc, eveo terna1 Security Act of 1950 mlndouldIlef t giving th. Government au- cans n C PlIeD thority In a period of national again,. _____ _ emergency to put Into concen- tration camps, called ' deren- tion centers', persons deemed IikeJy to commit .spionage or sabotage". Hayakawa larget 01 N.Y. protest at Family 01 Man Ipeclal to ne Pa clflc ChUrn WASHINGTON - Th. U.S. Supr eme Courl upbeld the freedom of the press to print derogatory comments about public officials, .ven It t he statements later prove to be untrue and provided th e sta te- ments were not publlsbed with malice. At Issue before the blgh courl was the appeal brought by Maui Rep. Thomas Taga· wa against Maw Publishing Co., because of a 1962 story in t h. Maw News. T agawa beld the story libeled him be· cause it contained derogatory statements which were W se and the story was published with malice. Tb . Supr eme Court declin· ed Oct. 15 to review the Ha· waU Supr eme Courl decision u pbol ding the newspaper's p0- siti on, which conteD ded there was no proof of actual malic. wh en it published the story. $100,000 Suit Taga wa had ask ed for $100,000 in damag ••. He sued after the s tory re- ported be allegedly used his office to obtain free County la bor. Drive-in fire may be retaliation STOCKTON - Fir e bombs were bu. rl . d into th e Big Dip- per d r i v e-in r estaur ant at 2311 S. Airport early Oct. 12, causing an estimated $250 damage. Police said the tire bombing may hi' tb. r .sult ot words that B • n Tanaka, co· owner bad the previous nigbt with a g r a u p of men who were gambUng at the rear of the res tauranl Tanaka sald one of the men said be would bum the drive- in aCter Tanaka objected to their activities. Inv.stigators sal d the arson· Ists broke into the restaurant, placed a l()-quart can nearly full of gasoline on a shelf, and then threw two fire bombs. One tire bomb landed on the roof and the other inside but the can of gas did not ignite, police said. SAMPLE COpy POLICY As a courlesy to cur- renl readers aDd JACL obapters wbo I U, I( el t nam... aud addresHI ef prospective Inbscrlbers In the United Stales or Can- acla, we ahall &end sam- pl. eopl ... of lb. Pacl8c CltIun with our eompll- menta (or a period of four weeks. ThII shall be a otandIn&' poll.,. Tagawa contended that had the reporter cb ecked with bim before wri ting the story, be would bave found that Ta· gawa bad made arrangements to pay for the work. Th. writer and his new. editor swore in affi davits and depositions tha t the s tory was written in g oo d talth, that they dld not know the work was being paid for or thai aDY of the fa cl.s in the story were talse. In one of Its briefs, Maul Publishing said: " ... it is apparent that plaintiU's (Tagawa' s) concep- tlon of M accurate reporter Is • sucking Innocent wbo be- lieves every sclt-exculpatory statement of every selt-deal· Ing public official" Maul Publishing also point- ed out the U.S. Supreme Court bas repeatedly ruled that 1ailure to investigate cir· cumstances of a story further Is not a valid claim for da· mages for a public official. The "actual malice" stan· dard was set up by the U.S. Supreme Courl involving pub- lic officials in a 1964 ruling, in the case of the New York Times and the police commis· sioDer of Montgomery, Ala. The Wasbington Poot called It an "evil law .•. a legacy of the panic that prompted it". It concluded, "It is a reproach to th. United Stales that Its Congress sbould fail to repu· diate so strange a statute ..• It will not diminish the secur- ity of thls country to restore the ancient pride of Amer- icans that they cannot b. im- prisoned save in accordance wilb duep rocess of law." Other X.solutlona R.p. Spark Matsunaga, c0- author with Ch.t Holifield and 125 more members of the House of the bipartisan meas- ure to repeal Title II of the NEW YORK - Several hua- dred chanting, placard-e1U'!T' ing demonstrators paraded at the New York Hilton In the brisk wind Ocl 20 to protest presentation of the Famlly of Man A war d s by the New York City Counc:ll of Church· es. Internal Security Act also was bearteDed by the informed and concerned citizenry wbo see the shadows of Am.rican COD- centration camps falling in the future. R.presentative of expres- sions and support tor repeal aside for the consideration of of Title II, Matsunaga .xtend· VI.tnam is surely not asking ed bis remarb in th. Oct. 15 Univ. 01 Hawaii students remove Patsy Mink as Moratorium keynoter WhIle guests sat at a $100- plate dinner, medallions were presented to PresIdent NiIOI1 (acc.pted by Secretary of State Rogers), Gov. Avenill Harriman, Dr. S. I. Hayaka- wa and Bayard Rustin (aOo cepted by Norman Hill). Dr. Hayakawa was died for "excellence" in the field of education and drew 1 0 u d cheers and a standing ovation at the dinn .... WASHINGTON - Rep . Patsy T. Mi nk cancelled plans to re- turn bome to address Univ. of Hawaii students because of h er re moval as keynote speak· er in the university's Viet-. n a m Moratorium Day gram. Mrs. Min k originally had been invIted to be the main speaker Oct. 15 to set the tone for th e " the commitment to peace: ' her office said But she was infonued t bat sbe bad been r.moved as the k.y· no t e r and placed among a panel of speakers." Th. message of the cbange ca me from Lin d a Delaney, cha irman of the moratorium committee at the university. Explanation "What the radical students insisted upon and won is con- frontation and I choos. not to b. a ploy," Mrs. Mink stress· ed. Sbe sald that if the major- too much," Inouye sald. R bac,t Inouye urged those in Ha- from the Executive Committee wall wbo seeks a solution to of the G61eral Council of the the Vi.tnam problem "to American Baptist ConveDtion, speak with clarity without be- Salt Lake brancb of the NAA- ing abusive, to speak. torceful- CP and tbe Salt Lake chapter !y without being VIolent, to of the Spanish-sp.aklng Or- speak to the future and not to ganization for Community In- the past, and to listen as well ll!grity and Opportunity. as to express .. .' UTbere is the danger that "Dissent, discuss, and de- the sbameful eplsod. in our cide" he further urged. Nation's history of incarcerat- sent' from the coune wbich led Ing 110,000 innocent Japanese us astray. Discuss the a1ter- Americans and th.ir parents natives wbich are before us. during World War II can hi' Decide how you in your way repeated," Matsunaga sald. can belp chari a future of hope." Mrs. Mink, "I share the con- viction and belief of our youths that thls nation's moot urgent business Is tlndlng a way to bring the war in Viet- nam to an end." Presbytery fayora repeal of Title II SACRAMENTO-The United Presbyterian Cburch's Sacra· meDto PTesbytey bas gone on Several of the demonstra- tors, composed of members and sympatblz.rs of groups against the Vietnam war, and other activist organizations, including the Asian American for Action and Committee of Returned Volunteers, carried posters particularly uncompli- mentary to Dr. Hayakawa, president of San Francisco State College, wbose hard·llne sland on student dissidents was reflected in sucb placard slogans as ''Hayakawa-yelo low skin, wbite inside", ''Ha- by h11!y club," and "What kind 01 an educator sends cops to beat up student?" PTesident N'lXon, the pr0- testers oth... prindpal tarpt, received mention In such tel' slogans as "N'lZOIl Pze7I." TIle Moratorium AASW responsible lor geDing more Asian Americans to graduate schools ity of the students at the uni· She aald thai the preslden- vers ity decline to assert their tlal .lection of 1968 provided pr. eminence 0 v e r the sltua· a forum 10r commitment and ti OD and througb their non- that "now a year later-with- action permit a few radical out the election. to focus our students "to rearrange t b a attentlon on the issue of peace program to swt their wbim, -tbls moratorium, I believe, then they must hi' prepared to can be a youthful appeal to LOS ANGELES-More AsIan School of Sodal Work to do their thing a10D •. " the of Am.rica American students bave been tldpate In a new coune d60 "I regret that I could not ODce agam. admitted to the loca1 graduate sIgDed to better aequaInt !limo be honored by our students as Fang aupported the morato- schools of social work, nine eIbnI.c: stwimts witb the - their keynoter, but I am con· rlum moves as ''l.gitimate at USC and seven at UCLA, clal and cultural reelltt.. 01 fident t bat there will be a exercise of all Am.rlcans" but which represnts more thaD tile Asian COIIIJIIIIIIitles. calmer day wben I sbaI1 again with the proviso that they Ure- 100 percent increase over tile The AASW was orpIIbeIl be accorded that priveleg.... main within the coDstitutional past annual enro1lmeDts. ..,. with 50 IIII!Dlbel'I at the GIdo Bow Tb.y bounds of peaceful assembly'." cordIng to Jim llliyano, c:baIr. set. It bas - ....... On the war itselt, he said man of the Asian AJiIerieaD tlve membenhlp .......... - While members of Hawaii'. that the United States Is de- Sodal Workers an adiaa-art- In eommunlt)' IOCIal wam. congressional delegation all escalaltog the war and that he ented group orpnized last public or private, IIUQ' -- expressed support for the stu- aupports the timetable tor U.S. April. addltloaal IofonnatloD d.nt moratorium, the eDdorse- troop withdrawal suggested by In a haIf.year update report III1y'aDo, chaInnan. S pee ments dlf!ered in degree. President Nixon. on the organIzatloD compriled ServI<:e fa: Groups, IDe., '""'" Perbaps the StroDgest sup- Matsunaga" n d 0 r ,ed the of local area social Ave., port cam. from Sen. Daniel moratorium but said he would of Korean, FI= .. 0 cl Ita eariIeat .... K. Inouye-but Sen. HIram L. not support "any ID8II dem- and Japanelll! ;'";; De was cIeveIGPIDI tba Fong and Rl'ps. Patsy T. MInk onstratlon as a meam of peace revealed the AASW from == fa: npeaI. tile and Spark Matsunaga also In Vietnam." celved ......... ,.,a that I de- BInerIIeDC7 DeI8DtiaD Ad ad said they support the moves He agreed that the Vietnam Angeles County __ bavtDa It adapted Ia& ..,. _ for v 0 I c In g the dissenltol lasue mould hi' liven priority, bI- tile Natioaal .A-. aC SCdal vi.ws on VI.tnam. but added: liDIUal IIsft aDd Wodren ...... tICP! til ... "For our young people to tlODl are too ......... aDd __ from tile USC I'raIIcI-. LOS ANGELES - The Japa- nese Free M.thodist Church, 200 N. St. Lows St., Its 50th an ni versary t b I • w •• k.n d. Hi gblight will be the church luncheon Sunday. elm.: Vle\ nam Morato riUm. Manbo. Rep eat That N.me Ku mamoto: Know EasL Rider. General Medici was elected by the Brazilian armed forces hlgb command, supreme . t:uI- ing junta. to suceeed ailing Presi dent Arthur cia Costa E. Silva. '..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1: ask thai a special da.J' be .. cIanpra aC vIaJeDI».- • -

Transcript of o~JH~ 'IQ.~~- JACL will oppose Eastland bill II...WASHINGTON - Sen. Dan· record In support of the...

Page 1: o~JH~ 'IQ.~~- JACL will oppose Eastland bill II...WASHINGTON - Sen. Dan· record In support of the iel Inouye (D-HawaU) stood movement seeking the repeal up twice in the Senate Oct.

Per

spec

lives lI.y J RRY NOMOTO

NalloDal J (,L PTe Idenl

Membe"hlp Publlcillon: J.p.n ••• Americon Cjll.en L • • Y. , f ~ w.( t St" Los Angele. , C.llf. 90012; 12(3) MA 6.6936

Publilh. d Weeklv Except Flr> t Ind ust We.'" o~JH~ 'IQ.~~- Second CI" . Po,t'go P.ld .t Lo, Angelu, Calif.

Sacramento VOL. 69 NO. 18 FRIDAY, OCT. 31, 19611 tublalp110n Rate P.r y..,

u.s. ", FOlelgn $7 TEN CENTS With enlhusla.m and high

oplrits the Central Callfornia town of Reedley I'Ccently cekbratro U.s ann"81 "FIesta." Th. h\ihllghl ot Ihis """aslon "OS • parade ot o\'er 100 unll.. ot whleh • beautiful floal enlel'l!d by the Japanes. community was on •. The float was inscribed "The Golden Y .. ars" and Iwo Jr. JACLers, Linda TakaSllk1 and Ken Ko­nemolo, mad. up to look re­mark.bls like l .. el plonee..,

SALT LAKE JACL

EFFORTS PAYOFF

IN REPEAL PUSH Local Seryice, Ciyic

Groups "',ainst Title"

Write to Con,rcssmen

SEN. INOUYE TO OPPOSE

HA YNSWORTH FOR BENCH

WASHINGTON - Reverslnll his original position, Sen. Daniel Inouye wl11 \' 0 t . against.conflrmation of JudlC Clement Haynsworth to be ••• soclate jusUce of the U.S. Suo preme Court.

Evidence during the Judlcl· ary Committee hearings led Inouye to conclude t h at "a pattern ot Insensitivity to the problems ot the conflic t of In­terest raised by Judge Hayns­worth's many business ven­ture. as they related to his ac· tivlties as a judge in the ted· eral court has been clearly demonstrated. "

JACL will oppose Eastland bill likely to include Title II repealer

Fiesta in Reedley

rode it. It won Orst prlz. In its division.

Jo~'ce and I rode in a brand new soUd gold Cadillac, jusl ah.ad ot the floal chauffeured by Re.-dle.\· JACL PTesidenl Hank Imagawa. logether with E\'8 (former Kai). As we reachro the end of the rout. and then watched the rest of the parade. we got that thrill­ing feeling thai comes fTOm watchilU! colorful marching bands playing stirring music It looked like every high school band In the Fresno area ""8S there.

SALT LAKE CITY-Four lo­cal organizations have adopted resolutions in favor ot repeal­ing TiUe II and more are ex· pected, according to the Salt Lak. J A C L, which mode a elts-wide appeal among serv­ice and civic groups this pa.t summer

R .spon dln ~ this month to the I. tter sllned by Geo r ~e

K imura, chapter pr.-.ldent., wer.- Ihe ,&11 Lake NAACP branch, Utab ta te Y oun ~

Democrat<, Wasatcb Front Toune Democrata and the Spanisb Orpnlsalion (or Communlt;y I nte~ rlt .Y and Oppor tunity ( OCIO).

Immigration trend

in Hawaii may see

haole majority

'pn tal m .,be 1"I.cUl0 elUU D

SAN FRANCISCO - A warn­Ing wa. Issued thl8 week bv the J apanese American Cltl. zen. League that there mov bc 8n a!tempt by the Senaie J udiciary Committee to Incor· porate the repeal of TIUc II of the Internal Security Act of 1950 Inlo a new and more

~~go"f~~9. Internal Security

In a leUer sent to all sup­porter. ot the TiUe II repeal campaign, the J ACL NoUonol Committee to repeal the Emergency Detention Act re­vealed thot Senator J ame. Eastiand (D·Miss.) wanls to add the repeal of Title 11 as an amendment to his own In­lernal security bill, S. 12.

U this happens and Easl · land'. S. 12 with Tille n

.lnoe It was Out learned that ----------------------­the TIUe II repeal Issue may become Involved. The East­land bill I. an omnibus bill covering ov.r 100 pages, and contains literally bundr.d. of provisiona, many of which are of doubtful consUtutionallty.

For .xample. Included to the provision. Is the creation ot a new crime at "peace­time treason," and a sweeping loyalty program for employees of so-called "de!ense facUl­ties," which is defined so broadly that it could cover virtually all Industrial, com­mercial and educational in. tI­tutions. Many obs.rvers !eel that S. 12 I . an attempt to elr· cumvent the lIb.ral ruling. of the Supreme Court In recent years.

Washington Post calls lor Title II

repeal; wide support acknowledged WASHINGTON - Sen. Dan· record In support of the iel Inouye (D-HawaU) stood movement seeking the repeal up twice in the Senate Oct. 20 In TiUe II of the Internal Se­to urge .arly committee bear- curtty Act of 1950. Ings OD his bl11, S. 1872, to re- A resolution calling for the peal the emergency detention repeal of the emerg~ de­provision (Titl. II) In the In- tention statute was adopted temal S.curlty Act of 1950. by an overwbelming margin

Hearlened by the .xpr •• - atter some dlscussion and 0p­

pressions from people about positioD at a recent meeting the NatioD, Inouy. .ntered of the Presbytery, it was re­Into the Congressional R.cord ported by the Rl'v. Hei Taka· samples of the widespread rabe, Parkview Presbyterian

Followlnlt the parade the ,tax-tOUS nationality groups in ReedI.y set up food booths In the park and were doing a booming buslness. The food at the JACL booth was .elling like bot cakes, a1thougb il was bee! leriyaki.

The letter called attention 10 the bills in Congress to re­peal TiUe n. SB 1872 intro­duced by Sen. Inouye, and HR 1 I 8 2 5 introduced by Reps. Spark Matsunaga and Chet Hollifield.

HONOLULU-It trends conti­nue, in five or seven yean, Hawaii will have a haole ma­jority. according to Theodore F. Ruhig, executive secr.tary of the Hawaii Manpower Commission, which h06ted a two-<Iay western regional con· ference or Manpower Advl .... ry Committees Oct. 16-17.

~~,:! a t bt'de~ : Os e: n:t~.'Orh : Sen. Dan Inouye JACL will oppose . 12 In •••

JAOL Caution

Howev.r, the JACL Nation­al Committee cauttoned against wriltog to senators re­gardIng S . 12 at thls tim • . The EasUand bill Is such a poor piece of I.gislatlon that it stands little cbance of pas­sage, .speclalls It there is a singular lack of public inter­. st The J ACL f.an that 11 too much public attention be­com .. focused on S. 12, It may rally conservative power, wbich could b. dlsastrous.

support for repeal from: Church mlnister. Los Angeles County Board The resolution, drafted and

of Supervisors, Monter.y Park presented by Carnegie Ouye, (CaIit. ) City Council, Salt Parkview Cburch elder, also Lake City NAACP branch, calls for it to be seDt by the Federated Awcillarl.. of the local 18,000 member Presby­International LoDgshoremen'. tery to the United Synod of and Warehousemen's Union, Sierra and on to the church'. Office and ProfessioDai Em- G61eral Assembly.

The \~sibly hard working efforts of the JACLers will re­sult in "'ell desen-ed income for the chapter colIers.

Omedeto

It also noled that Utah Con­gressman Burton bad made "no commitm.nt to support the repeal" and that Utah S.n· ator Bennett bad indicated "he is nol in favor oC support­ing the repeal".

U. entirety, announced the by SenlSlor DanIel Inouye and J ACL Nallonal CommUtee. 25 other senators, be acted "The J ACL wa nta Tille n upon as a separate i tem. repealed. but not a t the ex- The J ACL also urges pas· pense ot a more r. p .... lve sage of the companion repeal law," . tated Ray Okamura, bllI In the House of Rl'pre­Edison Uno and Paul Yama· Ienlotive, HR 11825 by Con­moto, tbe Qo·chalnnen tor gressmen Spark Matsunaga, the JACL'. rep. al cam· Chet Hollfleld and 125 other paip. congressmen.

Stnllbt-Forwu d Action w.::.~ n~o~d~~:" :itfero~a~

ploy... Union, Local 29 of Oakland, and the Salt Lake SeaHle Tunes columnist chapter of the Spanish-Speak-ing Organization for Commu- comments on Title II nity Integrety and Opportu-nity. SEA'lTLE - Columnist H ... b

\f e were in Reedley to jOin In a eel.bration of the 88th birthday of Joyce's greal uncl.. Mr. Sakuil Hashimoto. He and his ,,~t. "''TDbolize pioneer Issei who continue to

en~" 1!!&'~~e~ey~~Lon the Ooat certainly seemro apro­pos in relation to them. After a sendee in the Buddhist temple. the family and close friend:s, numbering about a 100. enjoyed a festi"e Cbina­meshi dlnner. In true NIhon· jin style. maDY guests toasted the occasioD ,,-!th champagn. and song.

COnp'e5Smen Told

Organizations in favor of repeal w.re then urged to send a copy ot the resoluUon to the Utah congressional del­egatioD. along v.1th copies to the local JACL buman rights chalnnan. Mrs. Allc. Kasal, 83 0 Sl.. Salt Lake City 84103.

Including military tamilles, Caucasians represent 28.4 pel of Hawail's population today. Not counting the mllltary, it drops to 19 pel Other fig· ures: Japanese, 34.3; HawaU· an or pari Hawaiian, 21.1; Fl· lIpino, 8.8; Cbines., 6.2; mix, ed and others, 10.7 pct.

The b a 0 I e incr .... is re­flected in the arrival from the Mainland o! professionals and bighly trained personnel a. the size of the labor forcl!­mainly non·baol.......,onltou •• to dwindle, Ruhig noted.

In thls respect, the J ACL pealer as a sweelener to his and Senator Daniel Inouye are otherwise bad bill in order to in complete agreemenl Sena- pick up liberal votes to pass tor Inouye stated at a recent his own bill: ' offered the JACL civU rigbts dlnner in JACL National Commitlee, San F rancisco that be will "but the JACL will not fall vole against S. 12, even 11 it for this klnd of political ex­contains a TiUe II repeal pro- pedlency. We will not compro-vision. mlse our principles."

Rath.r than commentln&' on the dan,ers of S. 12, the JACL National Committ.e a.ked all IUPPO..urs to con­tinue the posltlv. approacb or urrlDl COnp'e.. for an earl, r.peal of Tille n by p .... re of the InOD}'. and Mataunaea - BoUfield r.peal bilk The JACL believes \hat mIIIclent public sap­port can be 'en ..... ted (or a atrallbt·forward r.-peal.

WashIn(ton Poet Robinson, in his Oct. 20 piece

A litlle later, be quoted '" t b e Seattle Tim e s, was commenting upon the petition

from the Wasblngton Post edi- of Asian Coalition for Equal. torial, wbich ran Oct. 19 and ity urging a prompt pub Ii "

:rt'f,e ~e':' or th~a~ bearing of Title n, the Em_ ter": gency Derentlon Camp Acl

' 'It is idle to say that the "The campaign merits supo law will never b. put into ef- port for two reasons," be sald. 1eet by an American pres- "FIrst, the detention center ident," Inouye r.ad. ''11 it will law serves no pwpose today

Dever be put into elIed, it :Xvc~p~ t!" in~ving ~ap= sh~: ~f,;~~tlt1ed "A Americans in 1942.

Th. Jr. JACLers assisted the chapter in mailing out the appeal lett.rs.

Tbe JACL will continue to S. 12 Studled urge that the repeal of TIUe II hi' considered on Its 0'0.'0

merits, and that the straigbt­forward repeal bilh, S. 1872 To l>fr. and Mrs. Hasbirnoto

Md daugbter Shlg Kunlsblge our very best for more active and bappy years to come.

Alienation

11 is interesting to .... b ow file "wrongs" of yesterday be­com. the "rigbts" of today. A few short yean ago. dissent against our involvement In Vietnam was sent by most as unpatriotic:. and by some as treason. Today a national moratorium on Vietnam is de­fended by leaders across the country as a symbol ot the desire of thougbtful Ameri­cans for peace.

Yet we find as many, f! not mor.. people In hi~b places who resort to muscl.-flexing rhetoric to demean and attack those with wbom they dis­agree on this issue.

A prime example of this Is the un.fortunate reference by by Vice President Agnew that the Moratorium Day .vents ''';ere the work of "bard core diSSidents and professional anarchists" encouraged by nan elIete corps 0 f impudenl snobs." It seems that the Vice President cannot rid bimself of the unfortunate habit of putting bis foot in bis mouth.

Such outbursts, coupled with some of the actions (as well as lack of action) of the administration. make it easy to und.rstand why minority group people and many of America's youth are increas­Ingly alienated by the "estab­lishmenl"

I Ond it unpalatabl. that tb. Justic. Department. under Attorney General Mitehell's direction. seems to be more interested in slowing down ochool desegregation, than .x­pediting it. How it could b. slower than it's been. is a question we might all ask. When a number of his own staff rebel against policy and are apparently pul down for It, there is more reason to wonder.

In today's society, it is easy to complain, but inflnitely tougber to be constructiv •. yet, those wbo are hurling from bunger, bad bousing, in­adequate education, p 0 a r bealth and spiraling medical costs, no jobs, etc. must won­der wbere the leadersb ip is on concrete steps to do something to change these things.

How are the costs of medi­cal care to be made reason­able? Can't we increase money and speed up research so can­cer can be cured before some of us are vidlms? Are we going to make sure that no­body in affiuent America 15

hungry'? Are we serious about rrtoppinlt environmental. pollu­tion'? What are we gomg to do to get kids who want to go. to get into college? ,

Raymond Uno. n a tl on al JACL civil rights coordinator, authored a tuIJ-pag. story on the arguments for repeal of TiUe II ID the Univ. of Utah campus n.wspaper, the Dails Chronicle.

Uno was abo interview over • local conversation radio sta· tlon, KSxx, on Sepl 26 and Oct. 12, expWnlng the Title II repeal campaign.

Thousands jailed

in anH-U.S. riots TOKYO - Th. International Anti·War Day demonstrations here Ocl 21 with violent anti· American overtones end e d with 1,120 persons jalled in the country, 718 of them in Tokyo, according to poUce who estimated 450,000 persons took part in nearly 600 points.

The demonstrations are be­ing considered as the start of student warfare against the Sato government in an at· tempt to force canc.llation ot his sebeduled visit to Wasbing­ton next month to negotiate with President Nixon the re­turn of Okinawa. Th. radicals want Oklnawa back immedi· alely without any talks.

EXEMPT LIST OF FOOD

ADDITIVES UNDER STUDY

WASHINGTON - SeD a tor George McGovern (D-S.D.) last week (Oct. 24) recom· mended overhauling the gov­ernment practices which per­mit sale of more tban 680 food additives without r. q uiring tests for safety.

Tbe gov.rnm.Dt· exempt l ist included cyclamates until two weeks ago. On the list is MSG, well- known food enhancer, which some baby food pro­ducers said they would dis· contiDue using. (A J apanese government official said Uthere is no fear wbatsoever as long as MSG is used in a normal way". Ajinomoto president Kyozo Suzuki said average human intake i. 2 grams a day.)

IN THIS ISSUE • crvn. RIGHTS Walker Report in BHe! •••• u •• I Hayaaaka: Law and Order.

• GENERAL NEWS

Nfoel 10 ... $100.000 Ubel <:aU .. U.S. Supreme Court reject. u­.lUe; Migration tTendJi in Kawa U

N:e'P ~ r l '::: I ~~e "1~~~Zna i J Vietnamese .py In Green Beret case: Chinatown eeLl $32$,000 for em ployment achool ......... . 3

• .lACL-NATIONAL

J ACL to oppose S . 12. likely to include Title 11 rec;eal: suP ~ rt

~f aie~ ~ ~~est~na y e:~ r~~ • JACL-CUAPTER

FUipiDo ln6ux

Migrants 1rom th" Main· land last year was 36,850-nonmilitary portion being 18,· ISO, wbU. 4,693 aII.ns imml· grated to Hawaii. Of these, S.033 cam. from the PbilIJp­pines, 238 from Taiwan, 159 from Canada, and 1,263 from other countrts. No specitic fi· gure was avallabl. for Japan.

Tbe FIlipino immigration figure is bigb because of the revised immigration laws fav­oring aliens wbo bav. nex\­of·kin living in the U.S.

Ruhig added that most of the adult aliens coming UD­der the revised laws are also professioDal men or skilled workers. The old Idea that Asians wbo Immigrate are un· skilled p.rsons suited only tor lower income jobs just Is not true any more, he said.

Some forces in Hawall, however, prefer to maintain the Islands' ethnic mix and pref.r to make Hawall a training center tor the Trust Territory, Tonga, American Samoa and other Pacific i ... lands as well as from the Asian nations.

Hard (ore group

meets weekly L OS ANGELES - To combat the problem of drug abuse in th. Ori.ntal communIty, the Asian American Hard Cor. was forma lly organized last month despite many previous attempts by many Ori.ntals.

It bas been meeting Wed­nesday nights at So. Calif. J ACL OCtice since August discussing tbe need to rehabi· litate drug addicts, to r.ach out into the jails, camps and rebabilitation centers and seek tbose individuals b. retofore ostracized or alienated from the Oriental community.

AAHC believes in belplng tb. addIct< with aid of inter­ested communi ty leaders and organizations. It bopes to reach the drug·addicted Ori· entals and help bring the m back to tbeir ethnic identities and to eventually establlsb a haltway house.

On the steering committee are:

~ <¥o"I1\,1~ :,:o~f J=, ~: ry MiyaJi and Ray Kurokawa.

BRAZILIAN NISEI LIKELY

FOR KEY CABINET POST SAO PAULO - Ryoji Fabio Yasuda was expected to be swom in this week as Brazil's minister of agriculture in the new governmeDt of PresideDt Emilio Garrastazu·Medici. It Ihes. questions can t b.

answered (and there are many more) and a lot ot people haven't evcn asked them, lel's nnt wnnder why OUT youth are alienated.

San Lake eUorla on T ille n re-

s ra..~ l e ~ ! :~I\~ l ~e ~e ~ ~ to' 'IA.e ~ plea for more protection ., •• • 5

Th. 47- year· old Nisei Is commissioner general for the Brazilian pavilion for t b • 1970 world exposition at Osa· ka and a f 0 0 d dlstributor h.r •. HIs father. the lat. Ryo­ichl Yasuda, came her e in 1906 fro m Kagoshima. HI. younger brother, Eduardo, is state official with the Sao Paulo water works.

6310 Lake Park Dr. Sacramento. Calif. 95831

Free Methodist fete

• COLUMNISTS E nomo Lo ~ Fiesta in R eed l ~y.

t1::~!~: R ~~ l A c;a~ !: tf3im ~nt . GuHt Colmun.lsta: Herb Roblnlon.

Nrk~ 1d : ;e~~ ~~em ;~ ish. Malara: W.ahol · wuholt

The J ACL National Com· mittee bas been studying S. 12 for many months now, ever

Nisei take press libel suit to U.S. Supreme Court, loses

Slur on Amertca", recalled "And second, as long as it that Congress had passed dur- remams on the boo .k.s, the Ing the hysteria of 20 y.an the statute lends crediI;>illty to ago over communism the In- black e~ ,:betonc, eveo

terna1 Security Act of 1950 thOughlnsis~li mlndouldIleft ~. giving th. Government au- cans n C PlIeD thority In a period of national again,. _____ _ emergency to put Into concen-tration camps, called 'deren­tion centers', persons deemed IikeJy to commit .spionage or sabotage".

Hayakawa larget

01 N.Y. protest at

Family 01 Man

Ipeclal to ne Paclflc ChUrn

WASHINGTON - Th. U.S. Supreme Courl upbeld the freedom of the press to print derogatory comments about public officials, .ven It t he statements later prove to be untrue and provided the state­ments were not publlsbed with malice.

At Issue before the blgh courl was the appeal brought by Maui Rep. Thomas Taga· wa against Maw Publishing Co., because of a 1962 story in t h. Maw News. T agawa beld the story libeled him be· cause it contained derogatory statements which were W se and the story was published with malice.

Tb. Su preme Court declin· ed Oct. 15 to review the Ha· waU Supreme Courl decision upbolding the newspaper's p0-

sition, which conteDded there was no proof of actual malic. wh en it published the story.

$100,000 Suit

Tagawa had asked for $100,000 in damag • •.

He sued after the story re­ported be allegedly used his office to obtain free County labor.

Drive-in fire may

be retaliation STOCKTON - Fir e bombs were bu.rl. d into the Big Dip­per d r i v e-in restaurant at 2311 S. Airport early Oct. 12, causing an estimated $250 damage.

Police said the tire bombing may hi' tb. r.sult ot words that B • n Tanaka, co· owner bad the previous nigbt with a g r a u p of men who were gambUng at the rear of the restauranl

Tanaka sald one of the men said be would bum the drive­in aCter Tanaka objected to their activities.

Inv.stigators sald the arson· Ists broke into the restaurant, placed a l()-quart can nearly full of gasoline on a shelf, and then threw two fire bombs. One tire bomb landed on the roof and the other inside but the can of gas did not ignite, police said.

SAMPLE COpy POLICY

As a courlesy to cur­renl readers aDd JACL obapters wbo I U, I( el t nam... aud addresHI ef prospective Inbscrlbers In the United Stales or Can­acla, we ahall &end sam­pl. eopl ... of lb. Pacl8c CltIun with our eompll­menta (or a period of four weeks. ThII shall be a otandIn&' poll.,.

Tagawa contended that had the reporter cbecked with bim before writing the story, be would bave found that Ta· gawa bad made arrangements to pay for the work.

Th. writer and his new. editor swore in affidavits and depositions tha t the story was written in g oo d talth, that they dld not know the work was being paid for or thai aDY of the facl.s in the story were talse.

In one of Its briefs, Maul Publishing said:

" ... it is apparent that plaintiU's (Tagawa's) concep-

tlon of M accurate reporter Is • sucking Innocent wbo be­lieves every sclt-exculpatory statement of every selt-deal· Ing public official"

Maul Publishing also point­ed out the U.S. Supreme Court bas repeatedly ruled that 1ailure to investigate cir· cumstances of a story further Is not a valid claim for da· mages for a public official.

The "actual malice" stan· dard was set up by the U.S. Supreme Courl involving pub­lic officials in a 1964 ruling, in the case of the New York Times and the police commis· sioDer of Montgomery, Ala.

The Wasbington Poot called It an "evil law .•. a legacy of the panic that prompted it". It concluded, "It is a reproach to th. United Stales that Its Congress sbould fail to repu· diate so strange a statute ..• It will not diminish the secur­ity of thls country to restore the ancient pride of Amer­icans that they cannot b. im­prisoned save in accordance wilb duep rocess of law."

Other X.solutlona

R.p. Spark Matsunaga, c0-

author with Ch.t Holifield and 125 more members of the House of the bipartisan meas-ure to repeal Title II of the

NEW YORK - Several hua­dred chanting, placard-e1U'!T' ing demonstrators paraded at the New York Hilton In the brisk wind Ocl 20 to protest presentation of the Famlly of Man A war d s by the New York City Counc:ll of Church· es.

Internal Security Act also was bearteDed by the informed and concerned citizenry wbo see the shadows of Am.rican COD­centration camps falling in the future.

R.presentative of expres­sions and support tor repeal

aside for the consideration of of Title II, Matsunaga .xtend· VI.tnam is surely not asking ed bis remarb in th. Oct. 15

Univ. 01 Hawaii students remove

Patsy Mink as Moratorium keynoter

WhIle guests sat at a $100-plate dinner, medallions were presented to PresIdent NiIOI1 (acc.pted by Secretary of State Rogers), Gov. Avenill Harriman, Dr. S. I. Hayaka­wa and Bayard Rustin (aOo cepted by Norman Hill).

Dr. Hayakawa was died for "excellence" in the field of education and drew 1 0 u d cheers and a standing ovation at the dinn ....

WASHINGTON - Rep. Patsy T. Mink cancelled plans to re­turn bome to address Univ. of Hawaii students because of her removal as keynote speak· er in the university's Viet-. n a m Moratorium Day pr~ gram.

Mrs. Min k originally had been invIted to be the main speaker Oct. 15 to set the tone for the " the commitment to peace:' her office said But she was infonued t bat sbe bad been r.moved as the k.y· no t e r and placed among a panel of speakers."

Th. message of the cbange came from Lin d a Delaney, chairman of the moratorium committee at the university.

Explanation

"What the radical students insisted upon and won is con­frontation and I choos. not to b. a ploy," Mrs. Mink stress· ed.

Sbe sald that if the major­

too much," Inouye sald. ~;:'fu~~n~e R bac,t ~~: Inouye urged those in Ha- from the Executive Committee

wall wbo seeks a solution to of the G61eral Council of the the Vi.tnam problem "to American Baptist ConveDtion, speak with clarity without be- Salt Lake brancb of the NAA­ing abusive, to speak. torceful- CP and tbe Salt Lake chapter !y without being VIolent, to of the Spanish-sp.aklng Or­speak to the future and not to ganization for Community In­the past, and to listen as well ll!grity and Opportunity. as to express .. .' UTbere is the danger that

"Dissent, discuss, and de- the sbameful eplsod. in our cide" he further urged. j'Di~ Nation's history of incarcerat­sent' from the coune wbich led Ing 110,000 innocent Japanese us astray. Discuss the a1ter- Americans and th.ir parents natives wbich are before us. during World War II can hi' Decide how you in your way repeated," Matsunaga sald. can belp chari a future of hope."

Mrs. Mink, "I share the con­viction and belief of our youths that thls nation's moot urgent business Is tlndlng a way to bring the war in Viet­nam to an end."

Presbytery fayora

repeal of Title II

SACRAMENTO-The United Presbyterian Cburch's Sacra· meDto PTesbytey bas gone on

Several of the demonstra­tors, composed of members and sympatblz.rs of groups against the Vietnam war, and other activist organizations, including the Asian American for Action and Committee of Returned Volunteers, carried posters particularly uncompli­mentary to Dr. Hayakawa, president of San Francisco State College, wbose hard·llne sland on student dissidents was reflected in sucb placard slogans as ''Hayakawa-yelo low skin, wbite inside", ''Ha­yakawa~ucatlon by h11!y club," and "What kind 01 an educator sends cops to beat up student?"

PTesident N'lXon, the pr0-testers oth... prindpal tarpt, received mention In such ~ tel' slogans as "N'lZOIl Pze7I."

TIle Moratorium

AASW responsible lor geDing more

Asian Americans to graduate schools

ity of the students at the uni· She aald thai the preslden­versity decline to assert their tlal .lection of 1968 provided pr. eminence 0 v e r the sltua· a forum 10r commitment and tiOD and througb their non- that "now a year later-with­action permit a few radical out the election. to focus our students "to rearrange t b a attentlon on the issue of peace program to swt their wbim, -tbls moratorium, I believe, then they must hi' prepared to can be a youthful appeal to LOS ANGELES-More AsIan School of Sodal Work to ~ do their thing a10D •. " the con~!""" of Am.rica American students bave been tldpate In a new coune d60

"I regret that I could not ODce agam. admitted to the loca1 graduate sIgDed to better aequaInt !limo be honored by our students as Fang aupported the morato- schools of social work, nine eIbnI.c: stwimts witb the -their keynoter, but I am con· rlum moves as ''l.gitimate at USC and seven at UCLA, clal and cultural reelltt.. 01 fident t bat there will be a exercise of all Am.rlcans" but which represnts more thaD tile Asian COIIIJIIIIIIitles. calmer day wben I sbaI1 again with the proviso that they Ure- 100 percent increase over tile The AASW was orpIIbeIl be accorded that priveleg.... main within the coDstitutional past annual enro1lmeDts. ..,. with 50 IIII!Dlbel'I at the GIdo

Bow Tb.y S ~-~ bounds of peaceful assembly'." cordIng to Jim llliyano, c:baIr. set. It bas - ~ ~~~ ....... On the war itselt, he said man of the Asian AJiIerieaD tlve membenhlp .......... -

While members of Hawaii'. that the United States Is de- Sodal Workers an adiaa-art- In eommunlt)' IOCIal wam. congressional delegation all escalaltog the war and that he ented group orpnized last public or private, IIUQ' -­

expressed support for the stu- aupports the timetable tor U.S. April. addltloaal IofonnatloD ~ d.nt moratorium, the eDdorse- troop withdrawal suggested by In a haIf.year update report III1y'aDo, chaInnan. S pee .t.~ ments dlf!ered in degree. President Nixon. on the organIzatloD compriled ServI<:e fa: Groups, IDe., '""'"

Perbaps the StroDgest sup- Matsunaga" n d 0 r ,ed the of local area social ~ ~1~~ Ave., ~ ~ port cam. from Sen. Daniel moratorium but said he would of Korean, FI= .. ~_ft_ 0 cl Ita eariIeat .... K. Inouye-but Sen. HIram L. not support "any ID8II dem- and Japanelll! ;'";; De was cIeveIGPIDI tba Fong and Rl'ps. Patsy T. MInk onstratlon as a meam of peace revealed the AASW from ~ == fa: npeaI. ~ tile and Spark Matsunaga also In Vietnam." celved .........,.,a that I de- BInerIIeDC7 DeI8DtiaD Ad ad said they support the moves He agreed that the Vietnam Angeles County ~ __ bavtDa It adapted Ia& ..,. _ for v 0 I c In g the dissenltol lasue mould hi' liven priority, ~ ~~te bI- tile Natioaal .A-. aC SCdal vi.ws on VI.tnam. but added: '~~~ liDIUal IIsft aDd ~ Wodren ...... tICP! til ...

"For our young people to tlODl are too ......... aDd __ from tile USC I'raIIcI-.

LOS ANGELES - The J apa­nese Free M.thodist Church , 200 N. St. Low s St., o b serv~s Its 50th an niversary t b I •

w •• k.nd. Higblight w ill be the church luncheon Sunday.

elm.: Vle\nam Morato riUm. Manbo. Rep eat That N.me Ku mamoto: Know EasL Rider.

~~ ~ e: ~~I I[,;~ ~e~,

General Medici was elected by the Brazilian armed forces hlgb command, supreme . t:uI­ing junta. to suceeed ailing President Arthur cia Costa E. Silva. '..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1:

ask thai a special da.J' be .. cIanpra aC vIaJeDI».- • -

Page 2: o~JH~ 'IQ.~~- JACL will oppose Eastland bill II...WASHINGTON - Sen. Dan· record In support of the iel Inouye (D-HawaU) stood movement seeking the repeal up twice in the Senate Oct.

,.

2-PACIFIC CITIZ&N loriday. Oct. 31. 1969

W .. hlngton New.letter

by Mike Mellok.

Repeal Campaign

As this First Session of this 911t Congress .p'

proaches the fnnJ two months. it may be appropriate to ascertain the status of Ule bUl introduced by

nator Daniel K. Inouye and 25 of his colleagues and by Congre smcn park Ill. Matsunaga and Chet Holi· field and 125 of !llcir fellow Representatives to repenl the Emergency Detention Act. Title 11 of the 1nternol Seeurit,· Act o'f 1950.

At ihe moment. the Inouye "Bm is pending belore the nate Judiciary ubcommittee in Internal Se­curity. It has not been scheduled for any considera· tion thus far. even for public hearings.

The ~Iatsuna"a·Holifield Bill is pendin!! before the House Internal ecurity Committee. It also has not been. scheduled for any action so far. including public heanngs.

In both ClSes, the committees are waiting for offi·

cial reports or recommendations (rom the Administra· tion ~encies that are im'ol\'ed in this legislation, lor most congressIOnal committees will not act upon any measure until after they haye received the reportS or the recommendations of the executive agencies concerned \lith the bills at issue.

ince the Department of Justice under lhe 1950 statute administers the concentration camp authori· zation. the Attorney General of the United tates has been requested to make known his ,'lews on behalf of the 'ixon Admini tration. In addition. since security and defense matters are also inVOlved. the Departmelit of Defense has been requested to submit its views. Finally. the Bureau of the Budget, which serves as tlle legislati\'e reference for the President. has been requested to transmit its recommendations.

Cp to this time. the Department of Defense has wai\'~ its opportunity to express itself, contending that SlIlce the Justice Department has primary reo sponsibility under the law, it should be the one to make. the ~ c ommendations to the Congress. Aside from infornung the Pentagon that it had no objection to the Defense Department's action, the Bureau of the Budget has not been heard from. And the At· torney General has not submitted his views to either the Senate or House committees.

According to Congressman Carl Albert, the House ~I ajority Leader. what has happened in this matter is typical of the Administration's failure to acknowledge !ts responsibility to provide legislative leadership by infonrung the Congress of its desires on all bills, in· cluding ~ose introduced by members of the Legis· lature WIthout reference to the Wbite House. He re­ported that almost 3.500 requests had been made to various administrative departments and agencies for their official recommendations on certain specified legislation. with less than 500 replies.

• • Both Senator Inouye and Congressman Matsunaga

have tried to prod Chairman James Eastland of IIIissis· sippi and Chairman Richard Ichord of Missouri, re­spectively, to submit additional and more urgent re­quests to the Justice Department for the Nixon Ad· ministration's official views on this repeal bill. ls the Administration for the repeal of the Emergency De· tention Act ~ Is the Administration for repeal but with amendments to propose to the repeal bill? Is the Ad· ministration against repeal? Is the Administration against repeal but \vith amendments to modify exist· ing la\\'7 These are the only questions the Attorney General need answer.

Syndicated newspaper columnists Richard Evans and lWbert Novak have written that the Attorney General has unofficially decided to oppose the repeal of Title 1I of the lnternal Security Act, but has not yet transmitted his recommendations officially to the two committees that have asked for his views.

Since committees and subcommittees may act upon legislation whether the Administration approves or not, more important at this time than its endorsement is its submission of its recommendations to the can· cerned congressional units.

Thoul!h time is running out on action this year, Senator Inouye and Congressman Matsunaga remain hopeful that their respective Senate and House com· mittees may be able to at least hold public hearings on their measures prior to adjournment possibly in mid·December.

In any event, since this is the First Session, all bills not acted upon this year are automatically carried over into the Second Session that convenes next Jan· uary. So, all the work done on this bill this year is not lost.

• • When Senator Inouye explained to the Civil RIghts

Banquet in San FranclSco several weeks ago that he would oppose S. 12, the so-called Internal Security Act of 1969, even if it included a provisO to reJ>1:al Title 1I of the 1950 Act, he was expressing official JACL sentiment too.

When it became known that the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Internal Security had approved ,an amendment to repeal the Emergency Detention Act and appended this amendment to S. 12, a compre­hensive and lengthy omnibus bill that would in the name of internal security restrict the Lives and free· doms of many loyal Americans, JACL's Washington Representative and Senator Inouye discussed this legislative maneuver as one calculated to try to "sweeten" S. 12 in order to attract civil libertarians and others who wanted to repeal the concentration camp authorization provisions of existing law to sup­port a dangerous and damaging threat to civil and human rights.

It was at that time that the JACL attitude to S. 12, with or without its repealer amendment, was set forth. Subsequently, that opposition to S. 12 was officially confirmed by, first, the National Ad Hoc Committee to Repeal the Emergency Detention Act and, then, by the National JACL Board, as well as by the National JACL Legislative Committee.

NEWS

CAPSULES

Politics san Francl.co N i • • I are

lupporUng the rlecUon or Chi­nos. America" candldale. lor county .upervlsor In the Nov. 4 eJection as well as r~-.Iec. I!on 01 Ihe n". Incumbents. 1: orllAd. ",.d. for Rager Bo-85; llo'\I.\rd llun.stkt (or Jack Morri~on: l\ta .ta.o Ashllnwa. EdLson Uno (01' P('tl!r Tamu­ras; n.,·. Lloyd Wake and Wada for GOII\on Lou; Uno for GecrRe Chinn. Fiul-lImc supervisorial candidalcs with NI.el supporl Includei Uno ond Wado for Dlonl1~ Fcln­stein; IIlasaru "aka ne tor AU,­IlIldllus MnUnUpR\'; Chlyoko Yukawa for John Leslie. Jack· .on lllroso Js 011 oUldnl SPUII'

sOr for Incumbent oily nttor­lIey 111. O'Connor, 1'I111nlne unoppo$ed.

Ul1 G. 'VonI'. S8C'rnm~nto cllv coullclln,.n. Is scoldna re­election 10 his POsl . O.orre I'uptnl heads Ihe LI.m E. Tu­al movie commille. 10 hop the Chinese Amerlcftn (and a JACLcr) on the Seattle oil" council. Tual. who ",rvcs os ohalrman of the council's parlu and public Rrounds commit Ie., was appointed 10 the post to fill a vacancy. WI­ll iam J. Ishii Js campaJan treasurer.

On the committee planning a testimonial dlnnet· for Frank Small. candida Ie (or a speclol Los Angeles city council elec­lion. No,'. 12 a~ the Proud Bird restaw'ant ore Oeorre Inarakl and am tahlbarA.

Five Los Angeles J nponese Americans joined the re-elee­tlon campaign of E.-.tI. J Younaer for dJstrlcl allomey by supporting a $125 per plale tesUmonlal dlnnor due Nov. 23 al the Century Plua. They are Frank ('human. olebl Fukui, Kell.JI Ito. To TakopIU and IUtsuma Mukaeda. Younger Is chairman of the President's Task Force on Crime and Law Entorooment.

Architect

Cblet arcbJtect of New York's World Trade Center. lIllnoru Yamasaki of Troy. Mich .. will be guest of honor at the Building and Real Es­tate Industry benefit dinner Dec. 3 In New York to mark the 70th ann!"enary of the National Je,,;sh Hospital and Research Center of Denver.

Business Spar Warehouse and Dlstrl·

but 0 r s and AlI-Trucldng Corp. Chicago, was reported­ly sold for a sum In excess ot $500,000. Both firm. were owned and operated by Joe Sac.ml, active JACLers and LegJonnalre. The deal was re­garded as the largest single Nisei business transaction In recent years In the Mldwesl.

Dr. llIae Takahashi of Fres· no. owner of Valley Medical Pharmacy, and Joyce Rosetta. who gave up her Inleresl In a hardware store, are now partners In a two·store drug chain. Both met each olher in the Fresno Soroptimlsts. found they had many common Jnter .. 1a In communIty proj­ect. and bobbies and event­ually went on 10 share the same apartmenl.

Mitsublshl Heavy Industries Is planning a nation· ,vide distributorship of its farm ma­chinery out of Fresno. Call1., regarded as the center of agri­business. Stress will be trac­tors and Ipray equipment, ac­cordJng to Tsuneo Takahashi, design engineer !rom the COlT)­pany's headquarters In To­kyo. who was here recently to exhibit their equipment at the Fresno District Fair.

The environmental design of lhe multi-million dollar MaytJeld Mall sbopplng center in Mountain View, Calif., with Its outstanding quallty of the commercial designs through­out the project was prepared by Tom H!!ata of San Mateo. of Hisala·Marsh Indullrial Designs. Born In Olympia. HI­sata attended Unlv. of Wash­ingl<>n and Art Center School, and became active in e.nviron­mental design work through­out Northern California In 19-61. His design and sign work may also be seen In the KIn­ttllU Bldg. Interior at San Francl .. o Cultural and Trade Cenler.

Enterta i nment Lincoln Hayes comedy'

"Mldnlrht Soba." refers to the New Years's Eve custom of sharing hot noodles (soba) at midnight. Play i. being staged at Crossroads Theater In HoI-

I I I :' I '

Iywood on Thuraday, Friday ftnd Solurday nlahu unUI Dec. U. IIlfuml Inlo, who reco"lly toured wllh 0 noUonal com­pany of IIFlower Drum Son 1 II h.. th. lead femme rolc of Morna-San. P loy de. ls wIth th~ lo"e atcol. ot Moma·San . n un.ophllticated U.S. major' complicated b y hi. urbane colo".I. the ."perlence of alrls In Moma-Son's employ at n Tokyo bor and the arrival of th. m.jor's mOlher from r>oladrno. Haynes. now wllh CBS-TV .•• r"ed on the Slafl & SI,·lp ••• t.1I In Tokyo. Oth­er Nbol tn Ihe cost Include Koko Tnnl. ('hl llAko Kowama­ru. I' ronk Eml .nd Kleko Koullll,l.

MOUNTAINEERING SCHOOL TEACH!It

Scales Mt. McKinley, Over 20,000 Ft. DENVER-When schoolleach· mark, but It h .. the reputa. &r Art AaatsumA scaled AlaI' lion ot .eparating Ihe men kn·. MI. McKinley In.t .um· from Ihe boys. mer, he couldn'l gel "way Docs thJs .ound Jlke a pro­'J,11~'g."."Ylni "II'. no big per ovocallon tor the Ion ot

Rev. and Mrs. Takeo Agat.u. With th~ top lome 20,320 rna? It oil depends. For Ins­

teet above seD lovcl. McKln. tance. lake Inlo consideration ley I. lhe highest mOllnlaln the school Art Agatsuma tea­In North America. ches (I<> end a senlence wlth

a preposlUon) al. Just lhc some. 11 wasn·t.. 1\'0 the OUlward Bound

Government Fre.no County board of IU.

pervlsors named lhree NI.el as .peclal dlstrict board mem­bera: John Nakamura to the Firebaugh .011 con.ervatlon district, Bobert KanarlwI of San,.r 10 tho T rim mer Sprinll wal.r dl.lrlc!. and Ed K. Koda of Dos Palo. 10 the Mercury Spring. water district. Their elective posl-

U~~. N';;~~ ~ot be up tor elec-

the San Fernando Vall.,. OJ)- -umlau ••• Bella Vln. Opti­mlsu In Ea.t Lot Anlela elected nurseryman H'-bJ L. Osaka pre.ldent. IUcceed­In, Bob RolT. O.ako durlnl WW2 w.s Interpret.". In the ' Cblna.Bunna-lndla sector un­der Lord Louis MounlbattAm and laught NlhonJlo .t MJ8 school at Ft. Snelling and at Prelldlo of Monterey... Richard 8urly.ma I. presi­dent ot the Harbor OpUml11L. ot Long Beach. organlud taJt year with Dave "okl. em.­while Belmont Opllmi4t mom­ber al the helm.

tho ugh Agolsuma wasn't School In Lake City. which rendy for It. He'. only 21. but leaches youths aged Ie to 22 In Ihe post .Ix y .. rs he has how to handle them.elve, In

Music lcoled no Ie .. lhan 20 peak. dllllcult 81luaUon. Celllsi Ken labl!. 1ft. of Lo. In his naU"e Colorado. all 01 Art's teach Ina 'chores In·

Mauo Tomita. pool Nllel Veterans commaoder, is chair­man of the Sealtle Po.1 Olliee equal employmenl 0pporlunlty rommlttee. Tomlo Hamasaki of Seattle occupies • Ilmllar committee at lhe regional lev­el covering th. sta\.eo of Wash­Ington. Oregon. Idaho. Mon­ana and Alalka . .. Sharon M. Fujii, daughter ot the Salbo FujiJl. Is program dlrecl<>r of the elderly. developed by the Seattle Model City Program wel1.re taak force. She work­ed wit h the Neighborhood Youth Corps this post sum­mer after graduating In loclal work trom Unlv. o( Washing· ton.

Southeast Youth Or,anlza­tlon (SEYO) board membeTi elecled John MlyawakJ pre .... dent. Funded by Nisei group. In the Orange Counly and southeast Los Angeles area. It provide. an athletic program . ot baskelball and baseball for boys and girls botween .,es 8'; and 16. Primary IUpport­en Include:

Angele. performed V. r nOn Ihem 14.000 fee~ or more. elude mountoln rescue. moun· Lertwlch'. Concerto for Cello lie 11180 got to Ih. lop of tolneerini. campcratt, and, and Orcheslro OCI. 10 at Crtn- Veslal Peak In the San Juan perhaps. cOlUlldcrlnr the cur­shnw Blah School. Concert Notional Fore .. t. ThaI" a 11\. riculum. very nece .. ary .ur· wos IInder sponsorship of Ihe ll __ e_u_'_'_d_e_r_t_h_e_I...:4 • ..:.00:.:0-:...f...:oo~t _v:.:l..:.v:..l:....:.n:::d:..::llr:..::t~aJ::::d.~ __ _ Metropolitan Symphony Assn., with Louis PruRnge a t the pe­dlum. Son of Ihe Jack Ishl1s. ncll". Hollywood JACLers, he beaan hi. musical career at nge G. By aae 11 he was the young.st member of lhe com­munity symphony FOllps In Southern California. He ha. nllo pla)'ed with the Junior Symphony under Ihe boton of Petor Mer.blum. the J apane~ Amerlc.n Philharmonic and h05 WOn recognition in several

~1~~~'· . ld. m u sic a 1 compe-

Sister Cities EI_ht educalol's from P ... •

dena', Sisler City of Mlshl­mo. Shltuoka-ken. and sur­roundln~ communities were It\Ie.u Ihl. pOll week of the Pasadena City school dlstrlcl. complellng their reseorch of schools here. Group Was the tilth J aponeoe research mis­sion on educallon to vblt U.S. and European school. under sponsorship 0( Ibe Shll:uoka Shlmbun and the Shlzuoka Broadcasllng Corp., accordlna to Thelma toody. Pasadena For e I a n CIties M!Illatlon. Committee publicist .nd ac· ti"e JACLer.

Two rare Japanese hooded cranu were presented from the Hlaashlyoma Zoo. Nagoya. 10 the Los Angeles Zan to mark the new "!(Ister zoo" re-­laUonshlp. The Japanese have not yet st.led their prefer­cnce for an exchana. In what is regarded as the tlrst such zoo proF.m of Its kind.

Military Army lIIaJ. 1I1Jnoru R. Naka·

mura. son ot the Naold Naka­mura, of Palo Alto. received the Bronze Star for outstand­ing service 85 a signals com­munication otficer with 24th Corps Artillery near Phu Bal. Vlelnom. H. I. a 19&7 gradu­ate of Illinol.. and commis­sioned through ROTC.

Medicine

branch ot Amc. Research Lab. oratory. Motretl Field. brought back 66 grams-le.s Ihnn two ounccs-ot moon dusl from Hou.ton to delect whalher there I. any cvldenoe 01 grow. In g oraanloms MIcroscopic amount. o( dUll will be placed In a cullure medium for the complex research program.

Geocheml.u Milsunobu Ta· I. umolo. John Raaholt and Ir· , ' Ing Friedman al Ihe U.S. Geological Survey Isotopes laboratory al Denver Federal Center are examining lunar du.t to delermlne the amount of lead and which ot the tour kinds or lead are present. In January. they will Join scien­tific .peclall .... from II I.nsU­tullonl and research cenler. who have been examining moon .ampl.. at Manned Space Center al Houslon 10 pre.en! Ihelr reporl.

Dr. Tom Taketn o( San Jose. with the National Aeronautics and Space Admlnlslration, was Invited to read his paper On the biological BlIpects of ra­diation protection al an Inter· national symposium meeting Ocl. 13·25 at Kyolo. He also nttended the 121h Intemallon. 01 Congress of Radiology In Tokyo Ocl. 6-11.

Agriculture Research scientists al Wash­

Ington S tat e' s agricultural center, Including Dr. MallAO Masul, are trying 10 produce •• p.raaus so uniform thai It c.n be ettecllvely harvested by machine. They are oeeldng to nnd two aoparagus plants as near perfect as possible and then use them 81 parents. By reproduclni Iwo parents through tissue culture rather than nature's random method of ferllllzaUon. the men be­lieve they can produce whole fi eld. of identical plants.

The Agricultural Stabiliza­tion Act of 1969 is being co­sponsored by Rep. park Ma· launap (D-Hawail) aims to permanentiy extend the com­modity programs first author. Ized by the 1965 Food and Agricultural Act. with some unprovemenl.

Crime

dlspenler Nanole Kawala 21 of Hollywood. "You have' two seconds I<> put all the money on top of the coun~rJ" the robber demanded . . . Oak­land high school senIor Le.lIe Krono, J 7, seriOusly wounded al school by a aunsbot fired Sept. 19, underwent tour hours ot surgery 10 repair dama,e 10 his heart which wal gru.d by the shot. PoUce arre.led a 15-ye.r·old lad for altempted murder. It was apparenUy • result ot mistaken IdenUty when the suspect mistook Kyono for another Oriental with whom he had an alter· calion earlier In the day.

School Front Leading 2.300 women edu­

cators In the Washington State chapler of Della Kappa Oam­rna thl. year Is Mrs. Soml Kuriyama. chairman, who is librarian at John Muir eleme­mentary .chool In Seatlle. Sb. spent (lve wee k. visiting schools, Institutions and gov­ernment omce. In Europe and has already traveled exten­sively throughout the U.S. She majored In psychology and hao a master's degree In edu· cation. both fro m Unlv. of Washington.

A. Arlene Kau. Sl<>ckton­born dJellclan. supervises tood ,ervlces for the 20 schools of lhe Berkeley Unified DI.trlct A home economics major at UC Berkeley with addJtional studJes at UC Medical Center, lYfiss Kasa's experiences range from work in private hospi. tals 10 the MInot (N.D.) AFB.

Book A naUve of Maul. Japanese

novelist Ranama Taukl ro­vi.lted HawaII after an ab­sence of 33 years. He was coo­ferlng In Boston regardJng the publication of another book. He I. the author of "Long the Imperial Way" (llory of Tak­eo, sensitive Japanese soldier In the China-Japan war and what happened to each mem­ber of his .quad) and "The Mountain. Remain" Ca sequel: ot Takeo atler 1950 In a J.pan .. ethlng with contllcl of new against th. old) . His latest novel to be published deab w it h a KamJkaze. Tasakl worked for the Osaka Malnl· chi and Domel News Agency during World War 11.

Kodansh.. major Japanese book publishers, will move In­to the export sale of audio. visual material with Weslem Publlablng Co., Chicago. pre­paring film strips on such subjects .. blgh school and college physics and chemistry with narrations In English. Strip., inItially, will cover about 20 type. of laboratory experiments.

Organizations Burt Nakamura was install­

ed as president ot the Gardena Evening OptimIst Club. .uc­ceedlng Morlo FukuI<> of the predomlnantiy Nisei business­men's group ... MalaO "MaU" Malaumoto leads the Uptown Optimlsls, succeedJng Joe Fa· vatella •.. Lee Hall succeeds W,3'lI. Chan as president of

Suburban Optlmist. of Bu81Ul Park, Onnle County Kamo Ma·

~a~~~; p~itt~~anf:a r~:~;:l. Norwa lk Japanue Community Center. Oranlt'e County JACL aDd Sf/lanaco J ACL.

Sports The San Franc!!co Giant!!

have Invited .lx J.pan .... players to train with them In the Arizona !n.tructional. League. according to Giant ' scout Cappy Harada of Loc!L' Being Invited are two N\abI­tellU Lions of Osaka and four Talyo Whales or Kawasaki. Under close scrutiny wtll ~ Whale. pitcher Aklra KUo, 25. • 5 tl. 10 and 165 lb .. whom the Giants mJght acquire it th.y like hls performance durin, the six-week season.

Carl Lee III.rtln, .. 20, .. of Oceanside. Calif.. last year joined his father who works for Westinghouse at Tachi_ kawa U.S. Air Force Base near Tokyo and became Interested In sumo after watcbing It on TV. Last year he won four of his five matches in the novi •• division and was profession­ally ranked in the Jonokuch1 class (lowe,t rung) . He re­turned to the U.S. for a pre­Jnduction physical but wu turned down because of be­ing overweight. This past month the ex-football player competed in the Tokyo tour­nament. winnJng all four In the novice dJvision and decid­ed to ma.ke a career ot it. He will wrestie under the name ot Yonenokuni (Rice Couo.·' try) given him by hi. master-" at Hanakago Stable. He !! tha second American to take up a sumo career after Je8le Kuhaulua of Hawall who u known as Takamiyama.

Los Angeles Japanese Casualty Insurante Assn. - Complete Insur,nce Protection -

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A Unlv. of Colorado asst. professor In anthropology, King Hunter. 30. of Boulder was bitten by a deadly Afri­can puff adder. a pel snake he was showing to friends. His physician. Dr. WUII.m Takahashi who tea red the only place to obtain a serum would be In South Africa, was Informed by the State Health Dept. that some ex· Isted at Colorado Slale Uni­versity. Fl Collins. The pa­tient. hospitalized for two weelu. plans to get rid ot his pet makes.

OTice Nakashima. of Los /lngele. W81 treated In Kern County General Hospital. Ba­kerstleld, after telephoning police she had been kidnap­ped. beaten and robbed ot J650 In cash and $400 In check Oct. 19. She told police a man, about 35-40 with a Texas ac­cent. lorced hi. way In her car In a downtown garage and forced her to drive to Long Beach and lben robbed and dumped her at Bakerstleld and drove away. She was ask­ed about the large s um of money she carried with her at the time. "I always carry that much. I was going 10 pay the rent for my apartment," she explained.

Students and professors who supported the campus strike at San Francisco State Col­lege declared Infialed grades were given to sludent.. who sided by Prof. S. I. Ha,.a­kawa. according to the cam­pus newspaper Pboen ix, which reported a computer showed more than 75 pet. ot all grade. given last aprlng were either A or B, averaging 3.22 on a scale of 4. Previous record high average was 2.75 r e cor d e d In 1964. But Dr. Frederick Terrien. chairman 01 the Academic Senate. sald grades were also given by a number of professors as tire .. ward. for strildng or staying away from classes." A com­puter study has been ordered

and the "real scandal wtll ~====================::.' ;;' come when we get down to • .-IndJvidual case. - grade by Nippon Expretl '

fe"~e~,rr~J~~r by professor," EXPO '70 U.S.A., Inc.

Dovld Morloka, son of the 39 Gel" St .... Saloru Morioka of Los An. TOURS Sin F .. nciIC0 . 94tOI ,: ,n geles, Is with 18 Call10mJa Tel.: (415) 982-4961 • State CoUege Jtudenta part!- BY

Churches The Rev. KoJlro Unoura, Is­

sei minister with the W est Adams Christian Church con­gregation for 46 years. will re­Ure from the active mtnlslry at the end ot this year. and after much discussion the Is­sei congregants accepted the reQuest tor resignation.

cipatlng for a year In the state

college International Study NIPPON Aboard program. The Cal-

Poly San Luis Obispo ltudent EXPRESS __ • J'.,.. @

.. The Buddhist Temple of

Chicago observed tts 25th an· nlversary Oct. 4-5 with Dr. Klkuo Taira of Fresno. promi­nent BuddhIst lay leader and physician. as keynote apeaker at the silver jubUee banquet.

Pharmacist Fro.nk N!!hloka. 55. ot San Mateo was slugged Ocl 9 by two bandits wear­Ing gray fiannel masks over their faces who entered Me­Clards Drugs at Third Ave. and B Sl shortly before 9 p.m. Some money and droes were stolen . . . Burglars

Sc i ence broke lnl<> Ken's Jewelry in Llttie Tokyo Oct. 16 and made

~~t)~ttendlng Wased. Unlver-

Ten Unlv. of Wa&hlngton Sansei students received Icho!. arships worth $345 !rom the University Students Club were:

Dain Aokl. SU'ldra Fu.aml, Dean KashJno, Chrl.tlne Nakala-

~·I. ~~rr:~ ~!~tfhi~ttJfe G~!ft~: Renton; CharJotte Omoto, Taeoma;

~d·e~lfu~~~bt~·~~·~~iu ~r •. : Kay Fujlblra, 20. daughter

of the Toge FuiJhlras of New York CIty. has beeun ber junior year as an exchange student at Waseda University under the Great Lake. Col­lege Assn. program. MIss Kay attends Oberlin.

Amaleur astronomers in Ja- off with watches and jewelry pan continue to dlocover com· valued at $2 500. reporled ets, and a new one was sight- proprietor Wlluam Kubota. ed Oct. 10·12.and it contlrm· Grauman's Chinese thealer ed. It w ill be named after the was robbed some $450 on Oct. trio who spotted It: Akllilto 1 when a young man simulat. Send Us Clippings from Tako of Tsuyama, Okayama Ing a gun approached ticket Your Hometown Papers ken. who dIscovered one of a ;;.;;~;....;:~..;.:;.:;..~;;;;.;.;.. ... .;.;;.;._....; .... _ .... _____ _

brightness of the lOth magni-tude near the horizon between Serpens and Ophiculus short-ly alter 7 p.m .• Ocl. 10; and by y •• uo Soto· of Nasu. To­chlgi-ken. and high school stu· dent KOlO Kooaka of Okaya­rna, who spotted the same co­met Oct. 12. This is the sev­enth tim. that a new comet has been reported discovered this yea r in the world. lhe second dJscovered by J apa· nese astronomers.

geni£l1merimna Vanee Oyama, chief of the

NASA Ufe detecUon systems

Playing Oct. 2B-Hov. 4

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Ma:.. rL~ o H~:e"::';'al,W~':ct ' :""::~Qto ANO

Akum iyo Ichidai Shlnttto Kihu and Jlro T.mlye

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in a check package, now available at Sumitomo.

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. ,

It was unanimously agreed that the price of S. 12 was much too high to pay f{)r securing the repeal of Title 1I of the Internal Security Act of 1950. It was also agreed, however, that the JACL should continue to seek con2I'essional consideration of the Inouye· Matsunaga BU! as separate legislation on its own merits.

A SPECTACULAR EPIC OF THE LOVE AND BATTLES OF PRINCE YAMATO, A LEGENDARY HERO OF OLD JAPA~1or

THE SUMITOMO BANK.

Come in and pick up the new

Savlnss Plan brochure with su{ll­mer & spring festival. listed,

That is what is being done at the moment, with the emphasis in the House and the spotlight on Con· gressman Matsunaga, in the hope that the House will consider and pass the repeal measure and send it on to the Senate where, with Senator lnouye's leadership. it may be considered directly by the Senate, without being referred to the Judiciary Committee, and on ill own individual merits as urgently needed and sound I legislation.

TOSHIRO the 7hree MIFUNE'N ~

..... ,..1110 .. ~'" I rensures I&Y.ANGIOI, DirKtlUy STARTS OCT. Z2 "AY IAr" HIROSHIIIIlSAXI

OF CALIFORNIA

SAN FRANCISCO I SACRAMENTO I SAN JOSE I OAKVoND

SAN MATEO I LOS ANGELES I CRENSHAW, LA.

GARDENA I ANAHEIM I MONTEREY PAlIK

..

Page 3: o~JH~ 'IQ.~~- JACL will oppose Eastland bill II...WASHINGTON - Sen. Dan· record In support of the iel Inouye (D-HawaU) stood movement seeking the repeal up twice in the Senate Oct.

..

NISEI MAY HAVE JAPAN SOCIETY TAKES __ Fr_ld_a_y,_O_c_t._3_1.,_1_9_69 __ PACIFIC CITIZEN-3

Bill Hosokawa

Froln the

Frying Pan

IMPERSONATED

VIETNAMESE SPY New Sources Reveal

Role in Grocn Beret

Spy Murder Case

OVER 'OREGON WEEKLY'

POR'rLAND - Tho ,Topunc •• Socloly of Portland, 327 NW Couch SI .. published Its Inlllni odillon of "Ohshu Jlho" Ocl. 23. laldnl( ovel' lhe Ol'ogon Wcoltly. • bilingual weekly Plll>lIshcd by Ft'ank C. Kyono who suspcndcd his pubUeRtlon because or Illnoss.

American concentration camp

rumors to persist if Title II remains Dllnvel', Colo.

NISEI ACCOMPLISHMENTS - Not long ago a young vi'itor trom Japan dropped in for conversation and amon" the questions he asked was why, in a land geared to big busines ·. there weren't any Nisei hold· it\g top management Job' III major I11du t.rial 01' com· mercial corporations. Good question. That's what you say when ),ou don't h,wc an answer.

The vi itor wondered whether dlScl'lmmallon had anything to do with 1l. I rather doubted that explana· tion, altllough Min Yasui might have answered in the affirmatl\'e if he had been there. On a television panel how some weeks back Yasui cited as nn examplc of the ubtle and lingering discrimination {aced by

isei the fact that there is not one of their number on the United tates Supreme Court. He said there were many isel jurists and attorneys qualified to serve on the highest court, and I am in no position to contradict him on this poiut. But I contended that the absence of a isei Supreme Court justice seemed to be more a mdtter of percentages - there are only seats for nine men on that court bench out of a total American population of more than 200 million. The odds. it would appear are against a man from an ethnic group numbering fewer than a half million ever getting one of those eats, regardless of dis· crimination.

• But getting back to the Japane,e visitor's question,

is it possible that the deplorable old Enryo Syndrome is holding the 'isei back in the savage competition that characterizes American business? Or, all things considered, have the Nisei done as well as could be e..'l:pected in their professional fields' It would take a team of scholars to come up with an answer and whatever their conclusions might be, they'd run into an argument. That's the way things are these days.

The truth is. however, that there are any number of N'lSei in middle management positions - in busi­ness, banking. industrial research, school administra­tion. manufacturing, or whatever - but very few in the topmost jobs.

• • •

La. Anaelcs Who I. the "J apancse Arne­

dcan" mystcl-Y mRn In the .h·angn Cllse ot Ihe clghl Green BCl'ots':

Sinc~ eh ul'ges involving lht Alleged mUl'dct· or Glecn Be­I'et inlc.,,..eler Thai Khsc Chllycn by Col. Robet t B. Rheaull and seven olher Spc­clal Force. soldlet .. have been dropped. the answer m RY ne­ver be known.

1(. however, thr case is l 'e­

opened in some way, some Nisei Gl may pl ~y R pl'oml­nent role.

N. Y. Tin,.. Report

rnvoh1emenl or a Japanese American in the case came 10 light in R copyrlghled New York Times News Service ar­tiele by Homer Bigarl.

The slory shcds new Ught on the evenls leading to and following death ot Chu),en. II. indeed. he is dcad . Rheault has denied any such killing took place. Bil(art did not. na­lurally, reveal the source 01 his new intonnaUon .

The stUl unnamed J apanese American soldier, according to Bigarl. was "attached" 10 the Green Berets in Vietnam. Thi. man involved was himself a Green Berel-and it does not necessarily mean he was not.

Chuyen was suspected of being a double agent and, af· ler some 10 days of inlerrogR­tion at Green Beret headquar· lers at NIla Trang on lhe cen­tral eoast 01 Vietnam. was al­legedly killed on June 20.

The following day, order. were received {rom Saigon I<> return Chuyen 10 duty.

To cover up the killing. ac­cording to Bigart's story, the J apaneso Amcrlcan soldier travelled to Saigon posing aa Chuyen, who was supposedly to be sent on a "one way missionll.

Newsweek Rcporl

The Oct. 13 issue ot News­week also tells ot the Japa­nese American who imperso.­naled Chuyen. According to the weekly magazine, the man is a Green Berel

llIllial Isslle ",no " . Ingle 10 " 13-lnch shcol wllh Eng­lish on one side and .TapAnese Oil Ihe olcht· sldc.

U.S. Labor Dept.

grants $325,000

to S.F. Chinatown Concentratod iob

procram approved

SAN FRANClSCO - On·lhc· jol> lrai nin ~ and clas.e, In English are to I>e provided Chlncse Immigrants he .. e un· der lhe Concenlraled Employ· menl pl'ogram for which the Labor Dept. will spend $326. 000.

ApproVtlI was given Oct. 17 tor lhe program designed to aid immigrants lind work elsewhere and m 0 v. out ot lhe crowded. subslandard con· ditions 01 Chinatown .

The majori ty ot Chinese 1m· migrants come to San Fran­cisco wllh IIltle or nO abll t­Iy I<> speak English . Even those who have had some 8ca· demic training in English have not had lhe opportunily to practice speakin g the Ian· guage.

This lack ot English re­stricts Ihe immigrant in a Chi­natown environment where working hours are long and lhe wages in sumcient to sup­port a tamily in a highly·ur­banized Western city.

Here lhe i.nunigranl may re­main for the most part, in a sul>eulture, unable to become a p. r t ot American society economically or culturally be­caus~ of his lack of English, and often restricting his chilo dren's ability to improve their living situation because ot his reliance upon another cullure.

(Uttl) nobllllU II I •• coIUllln'.' ror tht" St'I\U1t Tlm l!a edlt.orlal IUtce. 1111 (ommen", on Ihl! "fll­d,, ' II"," ultertd by • OJ Dlrc~c­lor Hnover and or tht c:tJnJ)lllrn LO rep t,,1 Tltlt II . Jntern.' St· ourllY \ct. or 1950. af1,,~artd tn the Oct. 20 l.,lIe .)

By IUmB ROBINSON

SJ:;ATTLE-In his annual ap­pl!afUtlCeS before thl! House Rpproprlatlons subcommittee to discuss Ihe Fcderal Bureau 01 Investigation'. budget, It is ,f. EdRor Hoover's custom to oulllnc his views On C rim e , communism. internal SCCU1;­IY and olhel' mallet'S 01 FBI Intercst.

This year. news accounts ot Hoover's lestimony-deliv­ered in Apl'il but not made publlc u n III July - dwelt largely upon his opintons on campus l'sdil!81s and the new· lett movcment.

It was not unlil laler thai attention was rocused on an­olher statemenl made in Ihe ~umc hearing, one that bas pl'ovoked heated pro te s t

San Joaquin Co.

supervisors note

Centennial Year

umong Americana or Orien­tal de.cent and that may lead 10 ropeal Of an all-but-lorgot­ten section ol lhe McCarran, or Subversive Activities Con­Irol . Act.

Dlscu •• In" lite "rowth of Communist Chi n a's mtelIl-

GUEST COLUMN

gence ac tivities wilhln the United Slates, Hoovel' said lhe FBI is conlronted wit h rIa

growing amounl of work in being alert for Chinese Ameri­cans and others in this coun­try who would assist Red China."

Communisl China, Hoover continued, has been " flooding Ihe counlry wilh its propa­ganda and there are over 300,-000 Chinese In the United Slates. some of whom could be susceptible 10 recruitmenl eilher through ethnic lies or hostage sltuaUons because of relatives in China."

A month laler, lhe Japa­nese American Citizens League In San Francisco responded to Hoover's remarks, saying there was, by inference, a Hmelan· choly resemblance 10 lhe charges a g a ins t Japanese Americans prior to and dur­ing the Second World War."

MeanUme. in Seattle, the newly organized Asian Coali­lion for Equality (ACE), was stirred inl<> aelion . A spokes­man for the group, consisting of people from Seattle's Ja­panese. Chinese and Filipino communities, said "it is an outrage that loyal American

cltizens-.imply because lhey are not white-are considered pot.entiaUy disloyal Amer­icans."

Hoover. racial a1ur, the ACE statement said, "makes us wonder bow tenuous the relationship of Chinese Amer­icans is in this country and how safe lhey are from being victims of the same fate as the Japanese Americans dur­ing the war."

Truman's veto ("it punishel opinions. not actions/ ' said Mr. Truman), has been invali .. daled over lhe years by a ",,_ ries of Supreme Court deci­sions. Still intact. however. is a section authorizing the ar­rest and detention 01 citizen. -during a declared "internal­securily emergency"-Ielt by Ihe Justice Deparlment to be capable of espionage or saba .. lage.

Among Oriental Americans, few have forgotten the dark moments of 1942 when more than 100.000 American resi· dents of Japanese anceslry­many of lhem natlve-bom­were rounded up and herded into detention centers, a polite euphemisim lor "concentration camp." The episode remains an incredible chapler in Unil­ed States bistory. particularly since no such action was tak­en against Gennan- or Ita­lian-Americans. They. a (t e r all. were white.

Because memories are still fresh on Ihat score, not all Orientals in this country have been as skeplical as olher Americans loward the wild ru· mors circulated by black ex­tremists in recent years, about the existence ot "Negro con­centration camps."

They recall, tor example, that the House Un-American Activities Committee recom­mended last year lhat the gov­ernment activate detention camps for black nationalists and Communists under au­thority ot the McCarron Act.

• • • 1I1uch of the McCar .. n Act,

passed in 1950 over President

Literature is circulating in ScattJe describing various gov­ernment installations being held in "sland-by" status for rulure use as detention camps. Despite the queslionable au­thenticily ot this llteralure and official pronouncements that no such facilttief: are in existence, rumors COt'ltinue to circulate. due partl )· 10 Ihe efforts of black extremist agi­tators.

Fortunately. legisiation 'has been introduced in ConlIl'ess to repeal the McCarran A<t's de ten t ion - center clause. Among co-sponsors is Rep. ~\l

Ullman of Ore~on. who tlMs it "inconceivable that a law should still be on the books Ihat permits Ihe righls. of American citizenship to be ex .. tinguished. . simply on the basis of national origin or other indiscriminate reasons."

• Rer&'J'etlably. bowever. the

repeal measure has not yet been scheduled for hearings and - as reported in The Times yesterday by Rowland Evans and Robert Novak_ the Justice Department unof­ficially wants to preserve the existing law.

Continued on Pal'e ,

STOCKTON - Tbe San Joa· quln Counly board of super­visors, In its Sept. 23 resolu· nese Americans on L h e i r tion. commended lhe Japa· achievements and contribu· tions to the growth and pros· perity of lhe counly.

The resolution was unani· mously passed I<> recognize lhe J a pan e s e immigration centennial being celebrated this year. It cited lhe role of Japanese farmers developing lhe San Joaquin Della and the cultura l enrichment subse­quently endowed the commu· nit;}' by their descendants.

A BEAUTIFUL AND MOVING EXPERIENCE

The resolution was accept,. ed by the Stockton J ACL. It was signed by supervisors Vernon Lehman, Frank Hoyt, Cannen Perino. Gary A. Wi· leI' and Clifford C. Wisdom.

A New Wind Produced and Directed by Award-Winning George Stoney

Documentary Film Set in Japan, Israel, India and America

A NEW WAY OF LIFE

What brought all this to mind in very round· ahout fashion was receipt this week of a paperback book titled Asian Dilemma: United States, Japan and China, published by the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Barbara, Calif. It is the distillation of papers and conversations between prominent members of the Japanese Liberal Demo­cratic party and their American counterparts. at a two-day conference early this year. Among Ameri­cans taking part were Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas. Setlators John Sherman Cooper, Alan Cranston, J. W. fuLbright. Mark O. Hatfield, Prof. Edwin O. Reischauer and Arthur Goldberg.

This article said he not only impersonated Chuyen In Saigon, he also pretended I<> set out on the ethnic Cam­bodian's mission-at a time when h. was already. accord­ing to most sources, dead.

New Hongwanij

to be dedicated Hancock Auditorium (on USC Campus) Univenity Ave. at Childs Way

What the Japanese delegates said makes very Interesting and thought·provoking reading, but that is not in the scope of this column. What interested me was that no Nisei was among the primary partici­pants. However. there were at least two Nisei at the conference - perhaps there were more - but they participated only as interpreters. Moreover, they were from Japan. One was Shin Higashi, a Canadian Nisei who was in Manchuria before World War II, and is now a member of the . .I\ssociated Press business staff in Tokyo. The other was Day lnoshita , who went to Japan before the war following graduation from UCLA. He worked for both United Press International and Associated Press in Tokyo and went into the public relations business a few years ago.

Both Higashi and lnoshita are old friends of mine. They are thoroughly knowledgeable and have opin· ions worth listening to about Japan, the United States and their mutual relations. The point I want to make is that they deserved to be full-fledged participants at the conference, not just interpreters. And by the same token it would seem that any of a number of Nisei deserved a place on the American delegation.

Or was it a matter of percentages?

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LOS ANGELES-Lord Abbot U.S.-Japan Mayors Wed., Nov. 12 - First Showing, 8 p.m, Admission Free

The identity ot the Nisei Involved-if these accounts are accurate-may never be known. At this stage of the game. it seems that the sup­posed widow who has receiv­ed more than $6,500 "consola­tion money," wants to for­get the whole ",andalou. mess.

SPONSORED BY USC School of Religion, USC School of Law, Bahai's of Los Angeles

Kosho Ohlani ot Kyoto will L ON G BE A C H-The 1971 officiale at the dedication of meeling of U.S.-Japan mayors lhe new Nishi Hongwanji and chamber of commerce Nov. 14-16, now in lhe 1lnaI presidents will be held in stages of completion at the Kyo\o. - - -., . - . - . - - - - . - , -

corner of E. 1st and Vignes- fTIj~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iITl five blocks east from its pres· , ent loca le.

The altar is being transler­red on Nov. 9.

Electrician charged

in 3 assault cases

HONOLULU - A father ot two children, Theodore K. Shibata, Jr., 27, of 917·Haus­ten St., was charged Oct. 15 with two counts ot rape, one ot attempted rape, and abduc· tion in cases involving girls be met in Waildld. He was arrested at bome six hours after a 26-year old I<>ur ist told police she was raped on the Roosevelt H i g h School grounds. She had given police a description ot the man and his car.

Shibata was charged wit h lhe case ot Sept. 18 when a 26·year-old woman sa i d she was t a ken to Palolo Valley and assaulted. Charges ot aD­duction and attempted rap ~ were filed in the Oct. 11 case involving a 19·year-old girl told police she wall t a ken from Waikiki to upper Pal· 010 Valley.

-----New Year's Dance

NEW YORK - The Japanese Association's New Yea T r S

dance will be held at the Nip· pon Club, 143 W. 57th St., on Saturday, Dec. 27, starting with dinner and dancing from 10 p.m., according I<> Stanley Okada. general chairman. Ta· ble reservations for g r 0 ups between 4 to 10 per lable is being urged.

Ceremonies begin Nov. 14. 7:30 p.m., when Bishop Ken­ryu Tsuji conducts lhe servo ices in Engl.i.sb, followed by a reunion of former YBA memo bers. Welcome banquet, scheduled Nov. 15, p. m .• at the Hill<>n Hotel, honors Lord and Lady Ohtani.

Sunday program includes lhe Chigo parade at 10 a.m. and solemn temple dedication by Lord Ohtani at 1:30 p.m.

Nisei GOP leader heads

Calif. e1hnic group LOS ANGELES-Mrs. Toshi Yamamol<> was ap p oi n ted chairman of the slale council ot the Ethnic and Nationali· ties Committee ot the Repub. lican Party, comprised ot 14 county chairmen who seek in· crease participation ot the ethnic population in politics a. well as administration sup· port of ethnic programs.

Mrs. Yamamol<>, president of the Americans of Japanese A n c est r y Republicans ot Southern California, was also summoned to a meeting of lhe Republican National Commit· tee in Washington.

Club members also support· ed the recent $200 a platc lestimonial dinner for Sen. George Murphy at the Cen· tury Plaza.

-----PC Holiday Issue

Deadline-Nov. 30

Care and Convenience are nearby ...

ROSE HILLS MOTmlARY. .. CEMETERY

Peeple care ~t Rose Hills. Care has created the convenience of every needed setvice at one pl.c~ ... inspired the beauty of the world'. moot naturally beautiful memorial puk ... Uld provided the comfort of sllmpdhetic, experienced counselors. At tim. of need, all Rose Hills for every need : Mortuary, Cemetery, Flower Shops. Chapels, Mausoleums, Colwnbariwn. Peeple core.

50 much more -costs no more

...... n .... '

It's the !rind of inEO!'l'DIrtion -- gn.a our customers. Keeping a dose e¥e on the constantly changing world of finance i6 a full-time occupation wttft liS. We record the slightest tremor,

and when opportunities for iocleesed

annual .... te

1 PLAN

mmings GIl. ...,. eMIle 110 the ~ face oc c:ast0lDlelS au the fHst to

know_ Yau can ~ this infonnation.; Union Federal Savings DOW offera these opportunities to obtain the high. est possible eamings £01' YOIll w:ount.

Few faR details..n _ tw- fIedeNI .................. "..,..ceilal."."

UNION FEDERAL 5~~ 89

_ Wholesale Fruits and Vegetables -

Los Angel.. 15 ... "- ....... _ ... _ ........ _, ... J900 Workawl Mill RoM' WhIttier, CaliforniA' OXford 9-09n

f

Page 4: o~JH~ 'IQ.~~- JACL will oppose Eastland bill II...WASHINGTON - Sen. Dan· record In support of the iel Inouye (D-HawaU) stood movement seeking the repeal up twice in the Senate Oct.

~

PACIFIC CITIZEN Pub1l$h.cS .'~P~l.th:)'fI!:~ ;n"cM:rw.o~:r~.~;t~'~' LMfU·

"oa • elL IU[Lla lI:~

h .... CL 1\."1 •• tb nramoUI\I aaU,'. ttadJ(llraUon b, tht b\dlvldua) In "h'l(\ and nadana' ur. , "(\\lTln~ JnJUn and t(lu..t

:,~wr!~\\~~: I. \~Il~~~1 ~::, to~IJ:r~~t-1:t a~::l~ r;.rt~ :~~fdr.I~:nt~: aT n.,ttona' (IrSIC'n. JACl .. Is " 1\(-'"11 rli'AI\, 1\on ~f'a tarl .. n Orlll1\l. ut1t'>n. ,,'hou '''flmbna.b\o U open to .U ;\lllfrICl.nl, II )"Ian of ace ('Ir ",Idu,"

CUllBlI:NW JAOL AOll'lVlll'1 S

tt.~?~.thM:~~~;' ~~~~~~t'A'(!t~entMl\tll in 1~ , 3-Promote tntu1't\~.l ~am\ol~' and justice 4-Promot. w.1taN of p~non. of J .. v.n ...... nc:e,\r7 in A!\\lrl('&,

~~~~o!~:":lI~ra cgi~:;:~· ~.~n:.rle •. ~~u~.tCh~~w\~I.'I~rnJ:~a~n;~~u.~~j, Act... t-AdJntn~r th. Natf:nal J ACL tchl:tlal"!thlp 'Ol"OI"m..

lo--1!\.--pand atr"\1t'H to JACL membershtp

• • atJonal J CL B radquan""

18$4 Po5t St., San ...... ncl..eo, CalK. gn15 - Phonal (Ull \V'Z I"".

lUT7 Enomot'O Nat" Pre.. -~ K.nltO Kuntt1ru.fU. PC Board Chmn

.1!:ntued. u 2nd Ous Matt.r .t 1..0. An~l~ Calif -:- SnbaO.r1f1t1on

R&teu . J~1~~t:'jl;1ova~~luo~J· ~ ~~r~:~rJ'.n50":O~er~e~~an. ~.$O of "ACL 'M~mb.,nl\-'I' Ouu Cor rur subKript.h'ln

F.dttarta1·SusinfU Of (Ire Ibn :10'1. l~S W.U .. St.. Loll "","1 ... CaUf. gootJ - (1131 MA 1-6..038

N~ C.l1f. • • .••• ~.Lee R~~~~~S~~~f~~~.R: . tJ~. San Francllco Nl08

~t ~~~ ~n~t~~ ::.~~p~~ ~~ BARRY K. RONDA. Edit",

That was no wad

of bubble gum

puffing my cheek B1 STIRLING SAKAMOTO

Sacl'nnlenlo LASt week nlY tooth be,an

to ache. I think this on wos perhnps the SGvercst I've ever conlO In conlact with. One ot the worsl palnl 8 humon belne cen encounter I. a toothache. Thc ache b.com~1 worse 8S you st.ay idle, the nerves pounding ol(.lnst your tissue like a big sledge hrun­mer. Man, I oald to m..vselt, this one Is IIOlng to kill me.

It began at the start of the wc~kend and, .l"OU know, den .. USI$ keep fun n y hours. They're never there when yOU wanl them. They only work three ro lour days at their 01-iice. Maybe for ta" purpose ..

I was (ortunate because 1 caught my denUst at his home. Another five minutes later and he would have been oft to his favorite (Ishlng grounds

Our Judo Expert

FBI crime statistics

show up Japanese

, only second best' B:r BILL MARUTANI

Philadelphia Firuru do not turo me 00;

the cold staUsUc.1 kind, that Ia. And 10 Jt was InevItable that while working on a po­Uce ca.e that required me to anal>,,!" FBI crime staUsUcs that my reading should drift to ethnic crime staUslics.

There are numerous d a t a by age, area, race, types of offenses, eIA:. But taking the a r res t rate for persons 18 years of age and over, In city

EAST WIND

areas for the year 1968 tor II.x classifications as propounded by the FBI, the figures show the following: White •••• 2,291,9811 Irre." !88.1 ~ 1

rn~ .::: l ·~~ l~~:i: ~ ~ ) Jap&neao 2.370 It.JTeata 0.1%) Chtneae.. 1.087 arraN ( ... ,) Others &. unknown

15,2'19 orreN ( 10,\1 {Note: WhUe It .. noted that the

• • • • Henry lanegae, Nat'l 1 st Vice President

Crisis in Membership s.nta Ana mon, oppooltlon to the ape

AlthollIb tile recent PC re- pointed committee', ftodlnp, port showl National Member- nnd general downgradlns of ship to have reached an all- the ''Establlsbment'' are just time high of 24,041 members 80me areas of dilTerences con­on OcL 7, I cannot be too fronUng the membera today. happy with the 81W'''' The Talks of plan. to "over-1969 goal ot 10% Increue over throw the regime" and tea 1968 hu not been reached. over the rutlng body of Na­Not even clo.... tional JACL are also prevall-

To have met the goal. 2,343 Ing. Rumors ot separate na­additional otgn - ups were tlonal organlzationa are heard needed. Our increase ot 1188 often. All these tend to ,.... JI only 2'f.z %. Statistics show strict greater member slgn­one chapter defunct, live with upa. We hear of unhappy "old­no gain or loaoe .. twmty-llve timers" thinking of letttnc exceeding 1968. eighteen hlt- their membership lapse. The tlng all time high, but with YOU!lg adults are reluctant to forty-two chapten showlnS loin up for many reasons. All losses. In all, the .um total of these

District _ wlae there were makes the member.hlp chair­live losses, and three Ihowlnl man'. job difficult.

4- Friday, Oct. 81, 1969 on hls annual vacation. I sob- I _______________________ ..J bed to blm that thl' pain Is -

f:~f:~t.a"'C!I.tot:1 ~Xaee:!~ l~.not~j noporia tho ftrurul

gain. PSW with a largest In- One thing to remember: creas~ of S09 Mountain PlaIn. both the "unhappy oldUmera" 95, and Central Cal with ~~ and the. Impatll!llt younger a total gain of 956. The other acttvlst, IS the absolute neces­live districts with a 1011 ot 368 otty for m.oney to fund the gIve us a Det Increase of 58S. many prolects. Membership District Membership Chalr- fee b our main source of men should look Into t.hlI funds. matter to better the total for We are now meeting many

• •

killing and please do 8Ome­thing. I told him to save me from this misery and besides I WBS getUng B IIlUe swelled up on my cheeks and begin­ning to look like I wen t through a fast 10 rounds with a heavyweight and got beaten bad.

Letters from Our Readers

Hospital Volunteers 'Nisei-Quiet Americans'

Editor: Edtor: There has been much crt- Concerning the controversy

Between thoae with the two lowest arrests, it Is readl1y apparent that Chinese have less than halt the number of arrests ascribed to Japanese. A biased comment by t his writer might be: How would the arresting officers know the difference?·

1970 requesto for money that Ia not . In the budget. If the trenM

• •• convention time In Chicago, Aa 10ur Na«onal 0111.8< &1- continue In the months until

signed by our President Jerry the demands will continue and Enomoto to oversee National Increase. Membership, I am not overly ••• concerned with the numbers In .... Dce. WI1a& 1& _ alone, but am deeply con- down to II the need tor leaden corned with the underlytng ot all Inclinations to arrlve conditlOll8. Thl. Is something at a meeting of minds and A POSTER, A LETTER AND A SHOW

A baltered poster used to hang in Jeffrey Matsui's office. His brain-child never won the limelight it de­served. It was shown to a few chapters at board meet­ings to encourage them to expand their horizons. It was a wav for officers to assess the worth of their own chapter program or activity.

Like a swell ega that he Is always, he promised to meel me at his oHIce In about an hal( hour and I thanked him and told him I ..... 11 leave my lite's stake in your delicate hands.

tic Ism and disgust expressed over the tlUe ot Bill Hoaoka­concerning the shortage of wn's book-I wlohed the crl­starr help at our slate mental lICR had had the opportunity Institution., and In partIcular, like the Simpson Methodist at Sonoma State Hospital. Church folks In Denver, to

Games of Chance that will become of great im- work together for a more ef-In only three categories portance the coming year. fective JACL. This means to

Looking like a target on an archery range, only this one had solid rings colored from dark to light blue. the bull's eye was titled "Chapter Program." The next ring was labeled "JACL Chapter," the middle ring "Japanese Community'· and the outer ring "Com­munity-at-Large_" But unlike the pastime of bows & arrows. the point of Jeffrey's poster was to score so solidly that impact of a particular program would ripple outward to the community-at-large. The worth of a particular activity was to be measured by its

capacity to affect the greatest numbers.

I ~ot to bls orfke door 15 minutes earlier ju.st In case he came early and not finding me tbere head (or the flsb­Ing hills. Now that I got him, I wasn' t about to lose him. He was my man o( the valua­ble hour

I have just recenUy parU- hear In person from Bill, the cipaled In a two-week volun- "play by play" account ot leer program sponsored by writing his book. We were Palo Alto's First Congrega- (ortunnte to hear him say Uonal Church, whlch saw 26 lome things that have given high school and college atu- us a deep appreclaUon o( his dents willingly volunteer their difficult task. For Instance:

(out of the 30 ttsted)- lar- Aa evident from PC arUc)es, quit sharp - sbootlng each ceny-thett, narcotic drug laws. letters to the editors, threats other, and resolving the d1f­and gambUng-<lld Chinese ot boycott, speeches, picket&, ferenceo towards a more ef· have sufficient number of ar- dlscusalons, there is a great tecttve and meaningful pro­rests to be translatable Into dlfTerence ot opinion on how gram, not (orgettlng the basle a percentale figure. However, JACL affairs should be man- original reason tor our exist­a. to the tblrd one, gambling, aged. Even the basic phlloso- ence. they managed to have twice pby is under fire: Jr. JACLers Towards this, the cominS as many arrests than In elth- requesting votlng seats on the Executive Board meeflng will er ot the other two categories. National Board, Ad Hoc com- have a meeting with the Eth-IItUe tal .. nt and precious hu- When asked to be Its author,

man love to bring a lItUe Bill turned It down because of bapplness Into the live. of the not only the Immensity of retarded at Sonoma Slate Ho .. wrlUng hlstory but a180 be­pltal. It soon became obvious cause he knew the author to me that the complaints crl- could never please everyone. tlclztng these staff shortages But the JACL History Project and the meager budget are Committee kept after Bill justltled In the.1r truth. (and (ortunately), for they

On the other band, Japa- mittees questioning the decl- nlc Concern Committee to \roD. nese registered enough activl- slonl ot the elected officlals, out the areas of dlsconteDL ty as to appear In no less than twelve categories of arrests: He came. began his prepa­

raUon. FIrst, sitting me on his chair, adjustments with his feet, bibs and assortments of tools and at the same tlme he was gabbin~ to me about his earlier fishing ventures and It seemed strange to me that at that moment. my pain w8sn't there. I guess It was just In my mind. Come to tblnk of It, it did always happen each time when I sat down on hJs torture chair. The pain wasn't there.

manslaughter by negligence

It aIao became obvious to knew his talent and his hlgh me that my work as a volun- esleem for the pioneers ot his teer was very valuable, and heritage. that It enough people would Just before leaving to meet take a IItUe time to under- the publishers Bit! • p 0 k e stand the needs of the retard- again to our io-oup, and his ed, and If possible. volunteer personal tllIe was, "Americans a IitUe of their time and love, With Japanese Faces." Well. the necessary and desirable you k n 0 \V the publishers' humane quallty w J 11 be a choice and Bill being a hum­beautltul reallty at the hospl- ble m~n said, "They know the tal. Many of the patients des- pubUshing buslness-I don·t". perately need human contact I'm sure that when those cri­and human love - especially tics write their first book, they those who are neglected b1 u1l1 realize that there are

The poster was an effort to revive direction and action to promote the welfare and safety of persons of Japanese ancestry. The poster was an attempt to have chapters initiate at least one activity to affect the community-at-large. Perhaps the poster was aban­doned because a chapter would conceive a program it felt was for the community-at-large when in reality

As he probed Into my mouth scraping my teeth and gums recklessly (to me, any-

• •• :bf~ ~ ,,~!S~ ~!::'se ~rit it only served the interests of the chapter.

One sign by which a chapter can measure its pro- a1l, he probed further up to grams are reaching the community might be the at· the gums where the swelling tendance it has at meetings as indicated by a letter was now In the process of . . , getting bigger, he proceeded to published m the Seattle JACL Newsletter, congratu- slice up my gums like aba-lating the chapter for moving out of its stalemate. lone (to me anyway). After

''W'thin th t th b hi • rinsing my mouth he saId we I e pas year, e mem ers p meetings got rid of the pains, (that's

doubled, then tripled in attendance. With each meet- what he tblnks) , and (or me ing, more members are participating in the discussions to apply warm water to my

of ~e business . .. '. the q~~t Americans are coming ':1:,:,ksant3 ~e~pco~;le s:r~~~

to life. It certainly IS gratifying and an asset for the we'll begin with the cause-of_ board members to hear the pros and cons of any issue. It-all tooth. It helps to make decisions I said, "Hey, aren't you go-

. ing to do something about that "The past several months (saw) an excellent se- tooth now?" and he replied,

lection of speakers on topics such as rapid transit, "Not now, ,~er the swelling Asian Coalition for Equality by Rev. Mineo Katagiri. goes down. . Central Area school problems by Dr. Minoru Masuda, As he left the office In hls uod 1 C' ty b T . ... hi did d camper truck, I stood there DI elY OIDlO monguc . ,an on aw an or er with my bands on my hips with members of the SeatUe Police Dept. .. (These) and said to mysell, that's

~ept the mem~rship up-to-date on what·s going on ~;~ ~o ~~~ ~~y~.a;:~ m ~ur commuDlty _ . . . camper disappeared around

'Perhaps there are many reasons for such an m- the comer I added, I hope he crease in JACL meetings. The main contributing fac- doesn't catch any tlsh. Here, tor is that the new leadership and board members I got to ~er two ,!,o~e days

with fresh ideas have ,really brightened the. future for w~: J;; s d~;P~~~s~~l' my Seattle JACL. And \Vlth the excellent chOIce of sub- pains unchanged, I decided to sequent presidents-to-be, the Seattle Chapter for years call him up again and he ans­will really climb." wered and before I . had a

Le.tter was sig~ed by Tom S .. Iwata., ch~pte r pr~i- ~a":'c:~ !:o~;~I::'f'!: dent m 1967, active W1th the Ftrst Hlll Lions, chalr- know he caught six good size man of the recent Japanese Cultural Festival and the ones and proceeded to tell me chapter's Issei Appreciation Night project. about his last trip. With one

hand on the phone and an-Another factor, we believe, which has contributed other holding the watered to­

to ~be new life in t.his chapte,r has been its monthly ~~ t~i:"';,~n~~a'::~~\~ ~~~ newsletter, ably . edited ~Y Eu·a. Nagaoka, a .p,rewar him know that my pains are newsman now WIth the CIty engmeers. In additIOn to still there my swelling has meeting notices and calendar of local events, it has doubled ";d I was miserable. lengthy reports and commentaries (some of which The doc in his mUd-man-

::"a:~~"'1~nt!f~~~~~~: other forces In operation. often difficult to accept by Anyway, whatever title of many' but It I. real tor the the two were chosen, we know retarded are real ";'d their that In our honest moments. needs for love and under- they would have depicted the standing are real Oftentimes truth of the people the hlstory

the staft at th~ ' ho~ltal ~ ~ a~~t,ryJ'mo(SUllie t~~~;:~e~ constanUy OCCUPIed WIth the e. dIfI custodlal and feeding needs of wrItten, It will bear a erent

the paUents .. Th! volunteer, tlUJ~t the most Important fac­because ot ~s WlIlin~ess, Is tor that I wish to convey to ~b le to proVIde the reinforc- the crttlcs and boycotters, i.! tng love that ~e staff does that we heard Bill tell us some not have the time or energy historical hlghllghls of our for. Is d' th t

Although it has Its d.epress- ~~~ h':;"ardPI~~~~~~ Ing moments, vount:e,,,,,:,,g can ence. ot our heritage that be v e r y ~If-satisfying as were truly exciting noble and man y patients, especially b rol • wheel-chair patients, seldom e C. • get a cbance to get out of their When all the .other mlnon­wards. To see smiles on their ties are clamOring for .more faces can be so gratifying tor knowle<!ge o( their .hetltage, them as well as as tor the those NIsei an? SanseI boycot­volunteer. One can learn so ters are gomg backwards. much about human love and They will be the losers for understanding by giving to they will never know some of others. the truth. and the re.a1 hls-

Mrs. LeVere, Coordinator of tory of our noble hentage.

REV. PAUL HAGIYA Simpson Methodist Church 6001 Wolff SL Arvada, Colo.

Volunteers at Sonoma State Hospital, as well as other in­terested people, would great­ly appreciate support and un­derstanding. Words are in­adequate to express well

enough the need for concern. Guest Column­Perhaps thi.! need can best be understood by personal in-volvement with the patients CODttnued from Pare S at the hospital, whlch will add to the much-needed awareness of human beings.

DAVID KATAYAMA 1440 California St. Berkeley, Calif.

That Is why SeatUe mem­bers of the Asian Coalition for Equality have begun a peti­tion campaign urging prompt congressional action.

g :~~, a~:clJ:~it ~,%, !~~~ Accent on Youth Alan Kumamoto

~':'~~ 1~;!7 . b.2~:~~.;.~:. 1II11111111111111111111111111111nnllllOOlllOUlUlOllllllllllllllllllllllllllltn tion and commercialized vice • ...... .-...... 0.1 %, sex offenses 0.2%, for-

~~:~=~~~~~O~!'!t alcohol 0.1%, gambling 1.1% and other offenses 0.1 %.

Incidental1y, Japanese un­der 18 years of age also tal­lied up scores In twelve ca­tegories but In differing ca­tegories: however, they too, managed to tally the highest number 01 arrests In the "gamhllng" category at 1.50/0_

If one accepts these figures. it would appear that Ori­entals-whether they be Chl­nese or Japanes~ over or un­der 18 years of age,-are prone to being arrested for gambling more than any otber offense, notwithstanding that even for thJs category they are among the very 10wesL

What are some possible conjectures? Oriental poker sessions are much more sus. ceptible to being hit than non­Oriental games of chance; Orientals are less discreet about gam es of chance or, Orientals somehow have a predilection toward gambling.

Then, perhaps, they're not suCficienUy sophlsUcated to seek out, or cannot afford, the more "refined" for m s of games of chance such as the race-tracks.

On the Totem Pole And apeakine ot ,amblln~.

the figures show that there were !lbout lwo and one-hall tlmes more gambling arrests against Blacks than Whites. Also, perhaps not without some significance, in those ca­tegories which would general­ly require the offender to have access to the more so­phisticated employment cir­cles, Whites far exceed Blacks in arrest rates: embezzlement, fraud, forgery and counter­feiling.

Know Easy Rider

Yo.emite . , • The crlsp .>ir f4lUng Into autumn . - • a slight breeze nahlng through the oonll"" ••• fl!1D Iournll remaining to oopturc the pom11l1 aummer . , • communing 10lth ""ture. the tree. and the grandeur of the rock-IDaIled lIal~. There ... A lOife sitting beside her husband rlding, ridl11l1 .•• two bOV' alOakeni11l1 aft"" a too-brief nap • , -cha.ri11l1 a MUll""" 1DIth 01 Por.che along II U71ndJng t'OIId ••• to be free. 1110111/ from. the urb.... mos_ an e.oope. all In.t""lude, lind P.ace.

• • • We camped III Yooemlte Valle1 aeveral wee'" .,0 blIdD~

riding. and basically ttryIng to absorb wbat little time we had, being together u a family. It was getting away anlt stopping to think, experiencing In litUe ways the joys of __ small car. tenting. outdoor open-fire cooking. and most p ..... clously the wife and boya In the clean air ...

Then on the road through the back hlghways of North. ern California away from the screaming screechlng treewaya We twisted and turned. bumped and tossed through dale and hill. Finalb' an open road, the rising "tach". hillsides green, small hlstorle towns, into the Ctty-San Francisco.

"Wblch Way America", a song from the series of Sing Out programs, bad a message current with today. The movi~ "Easy Rider", also had its social outcry towards a look inu some shades of America. We felt the spirit and the "want· Ing to be tree" of the Rider and would suggest for one point of view to see the flick. You might agree or disagree but there are suggeltlon, as to misunderstood lI!e styles. . . .

How beautiful a country we live In, how wealthy. how prosperous. how materlal7 There are some simple things in life that count ... a whole 10L Where are these simple tblngs? Maybe It's personal but where it's at is where you're at. You make out of \lfe what you make iL . . .

Finally & comment In this bash of words. We heard a speaker last nlghL He spoke beautiful words that flowed like honey. Too much of anything can kill you. It is noted that either the audience was sleeping open-eyed or that we as Asian Americans are still dupes for whatever majority provides the best lip. We still don't have the ability to dis­tinguish thls (which would be a generous comment) or we really don't have the forUtude to stand against the conven­tionality whlch imposes US to conform.

h b . t d' th PC) II I cal nered way answered, "Oh yes

a~e een repnn e m e as we as 0 news the swelling has come to the of mterest. head, and then it will proc,:"d

Correction Necessary

Editor:

The campaign merits sup­port for two reasons. First, the detention-center law serves no purpose today except to re­call the awful events involving Japanese Americans In 1942 .

The two areas in which Whites have the very highest arrest rates,-Iiquor laws and driving under the influence. -happen to be the categories In which Blacks bave the low­est arrest rate, about f 0 u r times lower.

1970 here we come, will we ever gain the wisdom and knowledge to change the tbings we can with conviction, strength and courage?

. '

• • • On the same beat - program and activities. Henry

Tanaka's farewell speech as governor to his Midwest District Council (see Oct. 24 PC) contains a blueprint for what a chapter needs structurally to survive in the space age : the "task force" concept. The Chicago JACL human rights committee has effectively divided its work this way. National JACL "ad hoc" committees operate in the same way.

The "task force" system may be the key to turn on the internal thrust or ignite the motivation within a group so vital to the successful conduct of an opera­

tion.

• • • There is still room for "fun" in JACL chapters and

a most unique example we know of is West L.A. JACL's Earth Science Section. which staged its second biennial show recently. It involves about 50 house­holds in a hobby where everyone is a winner through participation. One member even gave up fishing to to go rock-digging. knowing he11 never come home "skunked" by the latter.

Tastefully presented were exhibits by both young and old members. One particular display-not exactly earth science - by Charles and Michi Asawa, entitled "Epilogue to Apollo xr', showed funny-looking luniks standing about the earth capsule and telling the visi­tors not to litter the moonscape. I thought I saw a discarded chewing gum wrapper near one grayish

crater. Credit should be given to its chairman. Tak Susuki,

research man at UCLA Dept. of Geology and commu­nity-minded enough to organize this hobby group. He says they're running out of places to dig locally. n and when they can't dig and all the stones and rocks are classified, polished and admired, they might take up a long, disclaimed art of geomancy - or ts that not to be uttered by earth science men?

to go down so keep applymg the towel and you'll be fine,"

After be hUDg up, you nev­er saw such a helpless man like me.

Another thing that keeps bugging my mind: W hen a dentist himself gets a tooth­ache, does he operate on him­self or does he go to his colleague?

-Hokubel Mainichl

CINCINNATI ISSEI

SUMMARY COMPILED

CINCINNATI-The "Histori­cal Summary of Issei In the Cincinnati Area" was prepar-­ed by Walter Futamachl and Fujio Okano for the local JA­CL J a pan e s e Immigration Centennial observance.

First Issei here was Kataro Shirayamadanl. who joined the Rookwood Pottery Co. in 1883 as a designer. Two bio­chemists, Dr. Shiro Tashiro and Dr. Joseph Tamura. each known for contributions to medical science, are also cited In the summary.

The paper has been donated to the Cincinnati Historical Society. It will also be made a rart of the congressional t r but e with Congressman Taft participating.

U.N. DAY A resolution to make Unlt­

ed Nationl Day, OcL 24, a per­manent International holiday was Introduced by Rep. Palsy MInk (D-Hawall) •

After seeing my letter print­ed In your column "Letters From Our Readers", Oct. 17 I I was thoroughly disenchanted with your proof-reader.

PATRICIA MURAKAMI Los Angeles, California

sp~fUng~f:i~~fa~tU;ol~~~led I am in agreement with Mr.

Bosak.wa reg a r din, Author

~n~~~:.e~~:~:n~& ~ee ~~~; tacka true understandlng of the subject: Japanese-American .ub .. culture. HJJ portrayal of the Ja-

g:n: s ~1r:b1~e t!' ~ U:U~~~ of alf the .rapenese .. Amerlcan. For sake of drama he bOrTOwed the b.ck-<lroP ot the Evacuation in­cident in dellneattng an atypical

~~~y t~it ~~~~~iIOi~ r~~;e would hardly qualUy as Japanese In nature. APparenUta Mr. Cha-

~~IU~~~tsth~u:nan v~~:eo~ hippies prevalent on our streets

~odra'ifz~g . uS~i~o;e ~~~u~t~n~d ~~~~t~cn; ~I~fe nt'her:-Ig~u!!at: atan counterpart in bei.ng as un­conve.ntlonal as possible.

Tax exemptions for

handicapped urged

WASHINGTON - In a state­ment to the Senate Finance Committee, Sen. Dan Inouye urged a special tax exemp. tlons tor the physically disabl­ed, up to $600 deductions, si­milar to that allowed the blind. The deduction would assist the handicapped in meeting extra expenses in­curred because of their dis­ablllty, such as special trans­portation, special furniture, tixtures and special medical and InsuranCe expenseL

And second. as long as it remains on the books. the sta­tute lends credibilit yto black ext rem i s t rhetoric, even though right-minded Amer­icans insist lilt couldn't hap­pen again." -Seattle Times.

Natura I ization

Can an aUen who bas beeo hospltalhed tor a nervous breakdown sa(ely apply for natnraUsatlon?

u~~tI~:!i~ ~a~ela~~ r~~ allen for 16 years but have never become naturalized because about seven years ago 1 had a nervous breakdown and was hospitalized for two yea.rs. The Qoctor teUs me

!z:":to~O~I:t~er;;~~V:;dh~~W had the nervous breakdown will interfere with my naturalization. Ia It all rIght for me to go ahead?

AnJwer: In 8 case sueh u youn

~o:r g!~~~:-~~Uth~:f~ of an expert-elther a voluntarY

:l:~:.,:~t:n~':eym:,~:-:~ clalI%e& in 1.mm1gratton and nat· uraUz,ation. FTDm the facts you

~~~Jo~f ~:~~~!:~b~!J!~ were not tnstttutiona1i%ed within

~\h~r ye~ .• ~~ :~~ionOnm~~ ariM wheth.e1' your nervous bre8.k­down indicated mental lUnea

~~~ ~~t ~~I ~~ ~b~~ ~ee ea;o~:'~uflOC:;~~~ ~on of deportation 11 you

~~ ::po~l:ecsN:cn: .':lellll;

read and write Enal1ah and to undentand the prll\clplel of tha American ,oovernme.nt. b\lt frOm the way in whlch TOU have put

::w~u~:~ ~~ ~t.= -

Also, in the somewhat re.­lated category of "drunken­ness". Whites tallied about three and one-bait times more arrests than Blacks.

"Drunkenness also happens to be the highest arrest cate­gory for Indians, being about three Umes hlgher than their next highest arrest category of "liquor laws". But in gambling arrests, where Ori­entals seemingly exceed, In­dians have the lowest of all, practically none: Indians-14, Chinese-1J6, Japanes<>-598.

Tallying the ",ore card. ne­gative as it may be, Chlnese have the best record and we're only. sec~nd .best.

• On the question of Identity. a rabbi'. son told me this one. Old Jeremiah. who had been a devout orthodox Jew aU his life. was on hll deathbed. He called his aons to his bedside and asked them to swnmon a Roman CathoUc pr1est so that he milht be converted to cathollelsm before he died. 1'be IODS were shocked and thO\llb dutttul IOns they were. they re­fused. But when the old man pes: ..

25 Years Ago In the Pacific Citizen, Oct, 28, 1944

President lifts martial law tolerance be c a use of race, from Hawaii Oct. 24 .. ,Over creed, color or national origin. 90 peL of 442nd combat In- ChInese American youths at fantrymen win ArmY badges Lake Tahoe conference ex­... Twin FalIJ Grange con- press goodwill tor Nisei . . -demos resolution to prohlbit JACL President Saburo Kido further relocation ot evacuees confon with Western Detense Into Idaho _ . _ Most Grange Commander Maj. Gen. Bone­memben oppoIII raclat reIOlu- steel at San !'raIlclsco. tion. adopted by their mas- ••• ters In atateo of Washington, m.eJ. USA: LaokIn. at tha Oregon and California, such Labor Record. as calling for revocation ot Edltorlala: "Vanished Can­Nisei to renounce cltlzeftablp, dlMteo" (on purpoaetul ab-

I n t e rio r Secretary Iek.. MIlI:e of Nisei names in Ha­bran.a reported government wall ballot): "Grange and Ra­plans to establllb evacuees dml" (on hypocrilY of West colonies In California centnl Co. a t Grange'. re8OIutlons valley as ''pure bunkum- • • • against Nlsel): "Martial Law" Author Carey Mc:W!lllama de- (OD return of civil authority c1ares west coast antl-evac:uee to Hawall): "The Rilht to drive not will of majority. _. Vote" (on c:rudal national SeatUe Ma10r DevIn ~ IJl. e1ect1ons)_

-------------------------------------------~edtb.thz.:~ ~.l:'. ~ f&ther repUed. ""Well. look at 1t th.1s way: there's only 10 maD.)' of I

'tt ::: ~unUll80ha~ ~fe~J~mm.= : ARE YOU A SUBSCRIBER?

u well be one of them." I

Vetefln. Day chairman

I I I I

HONOLULU - Gov. Jo h n : Bums named Tamotsu Sbimizu I chaIrman of the state Vete- I

rans Day Committee- A ell&- : abled veteran of the tOOth In· I (antry, Shlmizu will be assist- I

ed by Tad T. Miura on Kau&!: :

• While The P..:IfIc at.... II • "*"'*""'" publlc.ollon of the J_nese ArNrIcIn 0_ ~ ......... mbe ... ,e Invited to .. bocribe. Fill out lhe caupIII Of and In yOU>'

_.1 check IndatInG your choice.

Rates: $500 a year: $9 SO for 2 years

PACIFIC CITIZEN, 125 W .... It .. LA. Calif. 90012

N.",.,: ________ ---------

~""~I------------------------------

Klngo Kanechika on Maw: I

~ge Taketa on the Bl& li~CiIy:=!:::=======:St*~::===l~tP=====_ •

Page 5: o~JH~ 'IQ.~~- JACL will oppose Eastland bill II...WASHINGTON - Sen. Dan· record In support of the iel Inouye (D-HawaU) stood movement seeking the repeal up twice in the Senate Oct.

Friday, Oct. 31, 1969

:~,.~a:lI·t~~"'~\~., t"n~. III'lfI.ln"hllfl/..l,c\o lurhd.III1"'ll\r~t" NOCQtrtbuliona. to; .... "JIll. No>NUtUr. N.e,..nb.tlon.lh."f'''l'' \,IIIUI\\""'t'It\llta 'nJII'\oII,da). ''oudon',,,,nll," t"'.·lIrl.~dltl\'. JU'I~lrto.l\IP

'C~~~il~Ri~~~~:' i 'Rig~ts ,in Co~f1ict' pr~bes pro,blem Commentary I of diSSidents In American society "",,,'llIl

!~~~~~I::'U::,>JOr'-This year, bea

\I .. t..d .... rlbtl~~ nf\llh ..... Nr. lofll.r. O1'«Iun,," ...

lhl"''''P 1''-\l.Cthllt". In&.Y\lnl~'I'~J'f'l "tl,",cnlo'~lf

'\'II'MIITCf'" tthl1kba\'taT'«ln,1.

- NCEW YORK-The NaUonal ventlon met In AUIUII 1958 the Uce even So omml •• lon on the Ca\IICI the police w.re 0 fr ted 1 tPO more. me

onel Prevention ot Violence with a lar c n on 0 he I e action. had been

t r 0 u b Ie could have been avoided if the authorities had beon Ie.. insistent on Blrld enforcement of park curfewl and other regu!ationl, and had approved 01 way. In w b I c b the demonltratora could regllter mau dJuent peacetully.

To Secure EquII Opporlunltltl Ind Equal Dignity

set up by President Johnso~ people wh~e !~~~P I~~e~~un~ ~~adnned, l0III. ju.t happened I~ 1~8 the day after Sen- expressing lhelr dissent from VOk~o::,ye t;:~olfc":ua~y pro-

~3n~ .~~f,r~·e~: ~u~d~el:::eJa; ~i~tn'ao~er~:,,~~'~ ~:c~~ l~ ~~blr~:d ~~~: 0~V: t:~~ \ou"~ .n0lt1l.&met. Don'tUMUltm. J).}a'1p'11T1I1) ur "mill' 10 u .. the. 'tn,od~r.1"Ql'l ....

3-poge sludy, "Rlghtll In general, and many of whom to dlsru t the cl a mp Confliel", of the riO\8 in Chl- were nonconformlill with conventign ty and the engo during the Democratic long hair, garish clothes and AI a re~t, th

~~!Otr.~~ ~~~"u~~':lctM

HUMAN RIGHTS: Phil Hayasaka Notional Convention. unpopular opinlonl the art I th .re wu on /The trial 01 eight leod.rs Whlle most 01 the protest- "wlJ~ cl~b ;.,~~ce, ~ r:;UCth

The report conclud.. with the warning that although the crowds were tlnally dlope!)ed on th. nighll of violence In Chicago, the problems they represent remain; that this II not the lalt time a dissenting rroup will clash head-on with those whose duty It i. to en­force the law; and that in a tree SOCiety a balance mu.t be achIeved between the need to maintain order and the need to usure citizens a pubUc fo­rum for the expres.lon of Ifievance or dissent.

'm, C'tf\lll\l~ .bt. dati to be fI"UlI, .t ...... L ~11'.,..h.t.

Law & Order ~ror~iJ hRSthbr~n. ;fhlS report ero, accordina to the Walker ing. and Indilcrln:in~te !fo: thi k es e) oc ground to reporl, had no Intention of len c e that It amounted to

I cy C080. Inltlaung violence, the police what th. Walker re ort calli The Inquiry Into the Chl- were targell 01 mounting pro- "a police riot" p

\lnUiln .uitNUI<I'" (~t_hul'II ... nt'l,

1ft ""'''''11" u.1'.I",~ • 1,,,", -Il

Does Law and Ord~~a~: a n "suppOrl your local police" or does It mean oppression by your loc.l f,0llce'/ Does II mean domest c tr.nqui1l~, or does It mean repressIon? Doea it mean "getUng toueh" on crime, or does It mean 8 pol­Ice state? Does it m.an all of thesc, or none ot these?

majorl~ I, not relponslve to the Inju8Uces suUored by tho minority (in spite 01 mony peB.eful ollempts of recourse) the ne. d for decency and jus­Uce ov.rcome Iranquillty and order. The Boslon Tea Party the Labor Movement. the Women'. Suflro~e, Dr. Mortln Luther KIng's non-"Iolent Movemenl, to menUon but a few, illustrate where the op­preued minority, In pursuit 01 JUIUce, acted out ogalnst the maj ority'l law and order.

cogo closhel wos undertaken vocation by both word and lIIan:r poi lee commll\ecJ fOr the CommIssion by a acUon. There wal a cluh of vlol.nt aell far In .x I ~dY t ec~ headed by a well- attitudel, of backrroundl and the force n •• ded to ::r:1

leI °W~lker, C~g~ lc~o~ree.;·efu:; beliefs. the orowd or to make the

evonl. In Chlcogo as part of Demonllraton ~::::fdpoll:r"~InInFwlda-the larger conflict between The very appearance of IrD d oui h' w .. the cltlzen'l right to dissent many of the demonstraton th ore . ..n w en on nnd SOCiety's rlRht to have tended to aroule the ho.tuIty toe ICeDe w.re OHeD IID&ble public order and security of tho police. TheIr actions at aonlrol their meD. malnt.lned lor aU cItizens Umel, intentionally Inflamed th Tr

e report further indicates

The Commission. which II a a g rea t deal of the

-American Council for Nationalities ServIce

M"..,... .. __ ~ -_ .. _- To many :roulbl. to m~:r blaoks and to many "non ... conformists," law and order holds a nentln connota· tlon - a tronslltlon th.\ readJ oppruston, repreulon and suppre.ss lon.

Today, we sllll have manY In the racial minority Ihat are being denied jUltlce denied equali~, denied hu: man dlgnlt-Y. denied respect tor the individual. B.cause this phrase IIlaw and order" h R. for so long meant op­pres.ion to the oppressed, re­pressIon to the allenalcd dIs­crimination to Ibe .earegaled and conUnued Injustice to the denied, the RhrBle translates Into "maintaining the status QUo:'

prelently holding hearings In WashIngton In preparation lor Its own report, released the Walker report bocaule of the Umellooss 01 its material but wIthout comment. '

Wash lin. Roger Nikaido WIIIllIIllIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

Book Tille Fetish

To many In the ra.lal, r e l~loU8 and eoonolDloan:r poor mlnorll:r, It readl malntalnl.... the llalul quo where the maJorlt-Y retalnl An po".r and the mlnorll:r I. pur po •• ly kept I.",o,at· ed. dlscrlmlnal.d and pow­erless.

(0 recent years there bave be.n an Incr.Balng number of disturbonces in the clUe., unl­venitles and the centers of 1I0vemment which place the pollee, as the lUardlans of public order, In conmct wIth IhoSe who wIsh to exerci.e ~~~~n~ght to publlcly expre ..

Every Nisei columnist worth his or her weight in

used typewriter ribbon doth, including this one. is writing about the con trover ial title of a hook written by . Bill Hosokawa. There has been appreciably enough "Tltten and said about the "Nisei: The Quiet Ameri· cans" book title for any foreigner to Japanese Ameri· can amusements to conclude that our lot has finally succumbed to the lowest form of erotic, literary devo-

To many d!ssenUn. U translat.s Into an unjuII treatment without an:r re· ooune. lor tho oomlor\ and oon,,"nl.noe of Ibe maJorl­~.

To man, penon., lome­tlmt! (!onaolonl l,., lome­times not, II means a ra.1I1 .O('lely whe.e non·whltea ar. e"oluded and a olos.d sodet, wbere the poor n'hlle! are barred.

Laws are necessary and order must be maIntained If we desIre domestic tranquilI­ty. But to assure equal appli­cation 01 law and order and the same meanlna for every­one, It must first require a firm loundatlon of justice and equality for aU, regardle.s of color, religion or economic Itatul.

How to relolve sucb con .. tlloll and to deal more satl .. factorlly with the s1tuatlonl In which such conflicts ari •• I. one of the urgent issues facing public 0 It I c I a I. throughout the country and Americans in general.

tion - the book title fetish . •

As a best seller on the list of Nisei books even before its formal introduction to the public, Hoso­kawa:s book boosts a peculiar odyssey to the top of classlca~ works. unmatched by even the nation's cur· rent pnme seller - "The Love Machine" by Susann.

Hlslory Is filled with In-

f~"':b~s n~;r~f ~:\V m~3rio~~

Tho Wa Ike r reporl, "RI,hll In Connlel", throw. conalderable U,bI on one major eonlronl&lloD of thll nalur., the Chlca,o .Iash .. 01 AUJ\lsl, 1968. The W.lku Itub leam •• nsllted of more than 200 p.nons.

They took 1,410 .yewlt­neu .tatemenu, reviewed 2,012 otber ltatemenll pro­vided by the Federal Bu­reau 01 Invel tlptloD and .tudled 180 hours 01 mollon pl.lure f I 1m, more than U,OOO llUl pholo,rapha, and thousand. of DeWli report. betore !ssuln, their r.port.

BLUE DIGNITY CARD-To stimulate awareness, concern and involvement within the Japanese American commu· nity and to foster understanding and im· prove relations between ethnic groups,

PULSE ON THE CHAPTERS:

this b!ue card (actual size as above) was designed by the JACL Ethnic Concern Committee. It is available at the So. Calif. JACL Office, 125 Weller St., Los Angeles 90012.

But, not unlike the controversy caused b~ Susann's book •. an expose of the hedonists in the motion pic· ture Industry, Hosokawa's book. the contenl~ of which are still in the form of rumor . has caused its critics. nevertheless, to disclaim any similarities between the people in the story and th'e descriptive title of the

book.

• •

der, has mistreated the mi­nority. In 1942, persons 01 Japanese ancestry were re­moved from theIr west COBlt homes and confined in evacu­ation camps. During World II. Germany was a police state and Jews were the vlc­Ums In concentration camps.

A rew hund.red years ago. slaves were repressed and to this day. the blac"- sUlI are. A couple Ibousand years ago Christians were being op~ ~tss::e.and in some countrie5,

SeatUe, .. most lor,e olUes, Is experlon.In, a h~ber Inolden.. of orlme. In the name of law and or­der. there II IBlk 01 form· InC v\xllanle. and lb. sale 01 JWlS has skyrocketed. To • partloular ",oup Ihat hal been Itereotyp.d and feared, thll m~ht be trans· l a~ d Into belnJ vlollms 01 "shoot flrat and ask Ijues­tiona laler" - "J\lllty un­tn proven innocent" - ln­c.rea.ed repression - COD­tlnued oppression - fur· ther seeregalion and dis· orlmlnallon.

Accordlna 10 their report, Ibe Cblcago poUce were gen­erally restrained In behavior during the rioll which lollow­ed the death of Dr. Martin Luther King lalt year. After Mayor Richard Daley Issued

Seattle police answer to charge of inadequate Issei protection

area. The purse snatching rate meeting went home with the has gone down sinc. the open- thought, "We'll wait and see." ing of the school term .

Surveillance Increased Civic Affairs Local PIcture The .intensity of this book title feti<lh reached maior

proportions weeks ago when critics of Hosokawa's book threatened its publishers with certain "kami. In contemporary times, bere k ,. ta ti t t d in Seatle. we have witnessed

aze C cs 0 cu own the book's "ales potential the injustices Ibat minorities,

Law enforcement bv the police and by the courts are necessary in our !oclety in or· der that •• ch individual be protected from harm. Thos. persona guilty of law viola­tion must be apprehended and admlnlst.red justice.

his widely publlclzed order, "shoot to kUI arsonists and to maln looters," there was a change, bowever, in th. attl· lude 01 the pOlice toward 81 EffiA NAGAOKA

New.letter Editor

The officers .aid that sur-veillance with unmarked po- San ~nciseo JACL Uce cars haa Increased and ita A commuruty for u In on plainclothes tncllcal squad hu Prop. 'il and the c.ontrov.usial been heeled up since the let- Educational Equality - Quality ters were received Report wu on tap Oct 29 at Among the more practical actions, the critics and particularly blacks, re­

threatened to give the so-called Oriental ''IGss-of· ceive. in comparison to that Death" treatment to the book which. in its basic an. the majority would not re-

demonstrators.

ch, all f 1'" ceive in a s1ml1or situation

p.roa c or one card-carrying critic to borrow a such u the courts levying ~gle copy of Hosokawa's book from the local public maximum penalltiel; law 01-library, peruse its contents, and circulate it among flcers stopping, questioning

the rest of the critics. ~~i~~rln!rng ":'~e:t6P!C;;;im~~

But It Is the Individual who violates the law. not th. whole racial grouP. Iberefore, It must be the individual law breaker that must be judged and not Ibe raclal group to wblch he belongs.

Vlottm. of Unjusl Law

Before taking this action, however. it may be neighbor harrasslng; subU~ helpful to caution the book title critics that in at· forms 01 denying .mployment tempting to squelch one rumor about the Kisei, they or obstructInll promotions; will be, in effect, promoting another. So take your and insidious means 01 maln-. k "Q' talning a closed housing Persons 01 Japanese an-piC' _ wet" or "Cheap" Americans. market. Attempts for a just ce.try were vIctims of unjust

P erhaps as an alternative to these planned theatri. recourse have met with re- law and order Immediately I t ts . I di th ' d f f' h sistance and in the name 01 prior and lollowlng World

ca s un • mc u ng e I ea 0 ormmg a uman law and order. have been re- War n. Chinese were vlcUms barricade of protest in front of the first store wishing pressed, especially when reo of unjust law and order dur­to add Hosokawa's book to its collection, we can learn peated attempts become In- ing the early days of Seattle'. from the subtle but effective way in which students creasingly more demanding history. For the past several are solving a similar problem. noticeable and discomforting hundred years and continuing

Because students find many of their textbook to the majority. ~Cti~/~r:;~ju~t l a~a~~~ ~~~ titles to be uitra-conservative. unimaginative, and tic~7e~~~v~la~~ th.:'po~j~; der. To these and other op­even offensive, although they actually describe the minorities, those in position pressed minorities, law and contents. they conceal them with plastic book covers o! power and authority car- order meant a loss 01 free-n d t lb" slbillti' dom In a police state. having titles that more suit their "now" generation e ou ~Ir respon es' t tes In preserving law and order Law and order must have as . on behalf of t h. majority equal meaning and applica-

More importantly, what the title of a book should who by their support - vo~ tion to ali of us or none of or should not be involves personal opinions; and the cal . or l>assive - condoned us are really safe and our use of book cqvers, inscribed with your own opinion Ibelr acbons. freedom is in danger.

f bat th ti I h G t f La What does law and order owe t e s ould be. amounts to a mild protest overnm.n 0 'II' mean? Depends on where you that is kept at a personal level We are a nation governed sit, apparenUy - as a part 01

• by laws and based upon an our society or apart from our orderly society. Yet wben the society.

When the Democratic Con-

Customs warning issued

to those crossing border

SAN DIEGO - Persoll5 cross· Ing the Mexican border from the United States carrying Ja· panese or other foreign·made equipment should obtain a customs registration lorm.

Charles R. Marshall. assist· ant district director of the Bu· reau of Customs, warned that Japanese cameras, portable radios and binoculars could be contiscated if there was no proof of purchase In the Uni· ted States.

The registration lorms are available at the customs of­!lce at the border and are good ror multiple entries.

Dallas Museum exhibih

DALLAS-An exhibition of 80 of the finest example of Ja­panese art will be on exhibit at the Museum of Fine Arts through Nov. 20. The mu­seum's permanent collection has one piece of pottery from the lale Jomon period, c. 2,000 B.C.

Sealtle JAOL Standing room only crowd

following the business session of JACL meeting Sept. 17 heard the Seattle Police De­partment public relations of­ftcers EmIl Drovetto and Joe M. Manning answer the com­plaints of inadequate police protection In Central area. The letters were sent to the Mayor. Chief of Police, and to Coun­cilman Sam Smltb 01 Public Safety Committee on Aug. 28. The letter said In part:

num~~re~~e ~DoI~e~"!r~~ robberies, theft:. and assaults. the vloUnu beinl the elderly cltltens of Japanese ancestry who are properly owners and ruldentl of the Central Area. Many ot these victims have been eonftned to their beds be<:ause of the Injuries sustaIned in these instances of as­l8ult.s. a ll of which have oct:urred du.rlng the daytime.

The Japanese Ame.rlcan Citl-

!~t ~;egu~r!~n~r~t co:;~~ eltUens. and ask that thls area be Ittven addJtlonal poUce petrolllng fhrcUlhout the dayUcht hours.

lsi Jtro Aold, president

Public relation. officers ad­mitted Ibat since Jan. I at least 207 reported pur. e snatching and 4,000 burglaries had been committed in this

&>t17 aim. ropo';'d ...... th~ PIne Methodist Church.

:.':it~y b~~':!~.!~~ !!,,~~ ~~:.akami wa. evenln,

:~~~bm:r~rs ae,:tdio C:~::Il~~: Dava Hat'8: and Ron N'aka-chart 1h9WI where the crime yama co-chaired the previOUS tak .. pIAu. Th. troublt ... Ct.- week (Oct. 21) with the Nlsel ~~ 'Yr:~ ";::o:.ro:: ~la~lr~~" V 0 t e r s League the rally to The prevenUve measure is bf!~ meet political candidates. l.nI taken by the poUee depart-

::~! tivo~"ee~ t ~J ~:m::~~:t ~u~ ~~P' to chan,e &b.

Changes In shift for pollc. personnel a~ now staggered. In the past the muggen timed well their attack hetween shift changes. Major Moore is In cbarge of Ibe 41-strong plain clothes tactical squad.

For the Elders PhUadelphia JACL

Ten Philadelphia Issei over age 80 received the Wakama­tsu medallions at the chap­ter's celebration of the J apa­nese Immigration Centennial Oct. 25 at ChIna Village.

For any doubting Thom...,. 5 wbo believe that police are not eattle to celebrate exerting their maximum ef- Issei Centennial lort are welcome to make ar-rangement with Ibe public re- Sea ttl. JACL lations section for a cruise in Washington Plaza Hotel Ia a patrol car. the site 01 the Nov. 24 (Mon-

There were aBsurancos that day) program commemorating there Is no problem 01 patrol the J ACL Immigration Cen­car shortages. There is no tennial with some 230 Is­need to divert existing speed sel residenls here verilled ... patrol cars to residential &rea. being 80 years or older helng

the honored guests. They will Tokoda T .. UmoD7 receive the specially struck

Many who attended the bronze medallion.

In forming our own opinion of the controversy

~ounding th~ book title, w~ were informed by its cnbcs that therr arguments m favor of eliminating t he present title should not be interpreted as a form

of censorship.

DR. KAMIYA'S EXPERIMENT

meeting were dismayed by the The arbitrary 80-year cut­deplorable condition resulting oU UmIt resulted only from fI­from law breakdown, espe_ nancial considerations, It WBI cially In the testimony of pointed out by Dr. Minoru George Tokuda. As one ex. Mas u d a, local Centennial ample, he cited the case of cbairman. But the evenln, Issei customers leaving the will pay tribute to ali IsseI, premlse 01 his former drug regard.less of age.

At the same time, they claim that the hasic argu· ments used by the JACL in its campaign to eliminate the use of the word "Jap" equally apply to the use

of the word "Quiet." While both of these statements may be true sep·

arately, they are contradictory when together, in that, the JACL's policy on the use of the word "Jap" has been pure and simple censorship.

In our consideration of the arguments presented by the objectors, we did not doubt their sincerity in believing that "Quiet" can be interpreted as an of· fensive word, but it should be remembered that what is offensive to the flaming liberal is the sweet truth

to the neo-conservative. Then again, there is a possibility that critics will

eventually win their case, not exactly on Hosokawa's book, but one which deserves to be Written. P erhaps a b~o~ cove~ng an in·depth sociological study of the Nisei reactions to the Hosokawa book title, to be written by Dr. Harry Kitano, e n t itled: "Nisei - The Revolution of a Subculture." But can you imagine what the Quiet Nisei Americans will have to say about

that title!!

Film industry trainees

LOS ANGELES - The Assn. of Motion Picture and Tele· vision P roducers and the Di­rectors Guild 01 America an· nounced a joint Iralning pro­gram 10 teach administrative and managerial luncUons next year. Further informa­tion may be secured from the Producers Assn., 8480 Bever· ly Blvd .. Hollywood 90048.

BasIc requlremenls include U.S. cltizenship, or age 21-32, and graduation I rom a four·

~:i;nfo;~:!i~~c~~b~e e;L~

industry. Pay as second assis­tant director begins at $305 a week.

NHK Symphony concert

SAN FRANCISCO - The NHK Symphony Orchestra 01 To kyo makes Ils single Bay Are a appearance Nov. 29 at the Masonic Auditorium.

Hlroyuki I w a k i will con· duct the orcbestra in Stravin· sky's Le Sacr'" du Printemps, MayuzumPf "Bugaku" and

~h~'futY ~h;~ YJ~~~ ;s°'iWo: 1st.

Brain Wave Project store. The Issei would see the DIstinguished guests expect­kids waiting acrOSS the street. ed to be present Include Con­The Issei would bravely lIart sui General Sbigemi Haya­on his way home but Is forced shIda, Gov. Daniel Evanl and to make U-turn to seek refuge a representative from th. Ma­until the would-be muggers yor's office. Both the gover­get tired of th. waiting game. nor and the mayor are to Is-

Dr. Joe Ka.mly., lapanue American pSyeholorJst at the UnJverslty ot Ca.ntornl. l'tfe4teaJ Center In San Francl.co, wa. interviewed for the July If, Ban Francisco Cbronle1e reporUn, of the hpsycho-phyllolo,y of con-

t~~~snu~~';r\!1~~ ::V:lm~roJec:t

By DICK HALLGREN

San Francisco Out at Dr. Joe Kam1ya's

modest little laboratory near Ibe UniversIty 01 California Medical Center, there Is a hand-painted sign on Ibe wali reading: liThe doctor is IN."

The word "IN" I however, has been crossed out and ap­propriately replaced with the phrase, "Far Out."

Dr. Kamlya, a pl .... nt mIId.mann.red psyoholortat, may not have even noHced the chanc., but his title 11-selt-dlrector of "The PsY­cho-physlolor:r of COD­sclousness" pro J e e t-iDdl­cateJ its accur"y. For In that laboratory, about

ten persons a week are parti­clpaling in an extraordlnarUy futuristic-sounding e x per 1 -ment-Iearnlng how to control their own brain waves.

And In the proceoa the.,. are bcginnlnJ to map for \be first time what Dr. Kaml7a •• ns "th. dlm.nslonl of tbIa enormOUI world of Inner ltates." The volunteer-subjecll 10

Into a darkened Utile room Uned with aluminum foU to

keep out extraneous static, or what hi-fi fans call "hum," Electrodes are glued to Ibelr head, usually one on the fore­head, and another on an ear­lobe and a thlrd at the back 01 the head-and then the elec­trodes are plugged Into an electroencepbalogram (EEG) machine.

The complex machine meas­ures the tiny electrical voltage generated by the brain (the output Is In mlcro-volls, or millionths 01 a volt) and re­cords the results with green­Ink tracings on moving graph paper. It has been used for more than 40 years to detect epilepsY and brain tumors. but Dr. Kamlya Is Inter.sted In it as far mOre than a clinical diagnostic tooL

Ch ... oterlltlCl

He wanls, lnstead to find out what the brain Is ali about. and wbat are the pby­slological characterlslics of the subjective states of conscious· ness that man experiences.

(As Dr. W. Grey Waller, a British physlologlsl. put It In hla boo~, "The Living Brain." u . . . mere was no possible understanding of the mecb­anlsm of the hraln until the k.y to It, the electrical ke1, was In our hands.")

11 waa Dr. Kaml.,..'s brainstorm, whUe be waa a deep and dream researcher a\ tile Unlvenll:r of ChleaJo

s.ver.1 years ago, to wonder they do produce alpba, Ibe If there Is a complaint about su", proclamati,,!,s commemo­II people could be trained speaker emits a c han gin g, the crime condition or if there rating the OCCaBlon while Rep, to discern, and then conlrol, warbUng tone-louder as the Is a need lor special protee- Brock Adami will Insert the their brain waves-partlco- alpba waves themselves are tlon, the citizens shali call Ibe :Wuhington State Issei Story I.rly their alpha wave. of a greater ampUtude. police department community m the Congressional Recorcls,

And he has proved con- Exp.rlment relations d.partment; JU 3- The dinner co!"",ences at 'I elusively that they can-ana 2186. Special request can be p.m. Prorram will Include Ja-there are at least 60 persons Tbelr task; to stay on alpha made for added poUce protec- paneH "!'tertalnment. 0 ~h e r now walking around the Bay as much as they can; or, In tion during churcb services, commuruty .groups are helpinl Area who have gained con- olber exp.rlments, to stay off weddings. or any other activi- to underwnte the expense of trol 01 the alpha waves of alpha. ties Involvinl l&rle concentra- th. banquet. Tlekell will be their own brains. While the proceu may be tlon of people. $7.S0 per penon.

clearcut, producing the alpha The officen did lAY that Rbytlurul waves at will rlgbt away they can only do what the law SaD FraIl.lleo JAOL

(There are four principal usualiy does not occur. will allow them to do. Many The JACL Awdll817 made brain wave rhythms, accord- In a try-oo\ 1 .. 1 week, I repeaters 01 crime .. em to Its se!"i-annual visit of x.­ing to Dr. Kamiya and other record.d aD avera,e alpha have immunities In court. Po- sel patima at Laguna Honda researchers: alpha, which ap- score when Dr. KamJ:ra fIrd Uce department .... h.lp!eu In HoIpItIl Oct. 28. Jud7 Urabe, pears to be associated with conn..,Ud me to the BBG trying to keep them out of cIr- Ie r v Ie. chairman, ... I .... tranquility. with closed ey" machine, with \be _ker culation. Thll is not the juris- chirp. and a lack 01 visual imagery; not opera\InJ. diction of the poUce depart- Cultural beta, with tension and anxiety; But when h. activated the ment. gamma \vitb day-dreaming speaker, and .. ked IDe to at- The o1IIcen Drovetto and and uncertainty; and delta, tempt to produce alph.- MannInII did their ben to pa_ IeatUe 1A0L which is found in Wants and signaled by the warbUng tone city the crowd They '11'_ ChIIwjI Ea\a7BD1a dema­sleeping adulls.) -I oank COIlJIderably below COIlIIenlal Those attendIDII till 1tra\ecJ Ca1IIgraphy Oct. 10 at

Dr. Kam[y.'s procOM, a\ my normal alpha production \be JapaDMe Baptllt Cbuntb. least In Its curren\ form, Is rate. It wu par t of the Japan_ relollvely slmple-eonslder- I wu somehow able to gen· the speaker lHMed malt pro- cultural MrieI beIDa ~ Ing how lar.reachInJ are til erate more alpha Wivel u the nounced when I !at ~ mind by the chapter to IIeIp BUIIII Implications. After the vol- 20-mlnute trial period went wander without attemptlnl to achieve c:uItural ldenUIiJ. unleers are pluned Into \be on, but at the end I '11'81 stl1l control It In any w~- PrevIously, 1ln. Kaa A!IIl EEG maohlne, the psY.holo- aUghtly below III,)' reeular al- In, of wrltInI till 1tor7. Ie- demonatratad flower IIr'IDI­list takes a "baIO-llne- ph. rate. member\ng what I bid ~ ID& and DorotlIY Lahr .... readlne 01 their repJar pro- J had learned In advanee the da7 before or wIIIIt I wu tIon.I d\raCIOr at tile .. tile dootion of alpha rh:rthmL that vilual \maprJ lPpare!lt- lolng to do that nllht. jun Art ~ pya • I1Ide .. Then be tells them they will ly IUPP"-' alpbl, 10 1 tried roaming In ~ IIDlllnaticm. tun of JapIIInB 1ft ~

hear a steady tone-the am- to IUppreu tIIIt. I alIo at- U wu ~_t IItt1ngln the Dr. Joe OIdmOllO IIIIl plifted sound of their own tempted to be calm and peace- room. aDd I felt retrabed ltIDetI .... In cIIIrII cd brain rhythms, in ef/ect-from fuI-but of course attemp~ atterWarcII. but J _ realI7 .me.. whlcb will CIIiatbme • a speaker in the darkened to be calm is a '* 'Wa7 NOT WIIhle to tiIIl wbat ~ CD ItlIII • tile ....... -*-t.

r:mn:b~~w::"P'#t.u: to.::e =- _1OUJId from ~ - .... • ...... - .... •

Page 6: o~JH~ 'IQ.~~- JACL will oppose Eastland bill II...WASHINGTON - Sen. Dan· record In support of the iel Inouye (D-HawaU) stood movement seeking the repeal up twice in the Senate Oct.

6-PAC1F1C CITIZEN l"rldtl)" Oct. 3l, 1969 PULSE ON THE CHAPTERS: INCLUDn~G KOSEKI FROM JAPAN money, and relourcu for ce-l ----

Return Call Hideo Magara

thf" t'(lun s nnd In\\" H~ ~ h11 lo w up to tlw S ~ \ ph \ lllb " l

nWl·tlnjl with Scn tth: Iltl llt' t' nil tht l\t. '~d Cor m OH' Pl o tt1t" tlOll .

IllntUl illt" lll!ii!liIil llllillnlililh!lii' B (" n YlWUII. sud n) tudl r" t r It t" h l ' r HUtl nrliv\' cm till' t'hnpt l'l' 1\\1111"11 ,('\ ntioll l' I'(lm mitlf'(', S II () 1 , ~ ' il l Hw Oct 1!\ m r 11\b"\'shlp l1W t'ltlUt on hi!' ( " 'I) e "i.l \ n Cl'~ ut tl\ ~' l '~1 1 9 t - WC. 'g t Washoi r Washoi

Q-Whl\ t d\)(' "",."It.I-n •. bot" aH' IU\ ill J a 1>llut e ~ t

\ - It '$ all idio m atiC' C' .-pt'(",s ­

"01\ n\ ~" I\\t\~ "h(\(')\"RY" thoulth it h Ri-n ' , Itn" htcl'Al lnm!'lN.­h on II 1$ U!"l'<i lw lRbot('rs h aulinj: h,,'nvy lORd. Thh-, ("hRnt 1. bdlt"'V,,'ri by llHU'IY to

h Rn " ~ h .' mml'd (rom thC' Ht'­hl't'W 'Vh .. y H ('b t't'w " BeI.:RltSl' IhN an" th(\!!> who clAim that thf' J a p n IH "~ (' wN"e one of tht' t("n los t tr ibt":' Ont' l'hnpler of " F01,(,lRnt'l'S \1' r.hkudo Lon d" is d,,-,'\'ottd to nn American in tht' l SiO'!' whl' ,,"-enl to Japa" In thl' >ole purpose 01 pl'ovln~ this IA t Ho a<tualb' didn' t hut found enough (acts in the thret" ) ' l "~r'$ sNu'eh to leav(' a l('!i:.Rcy o( doubt find wonder H u~(' bouldN'S wlth Hebrew wrltin~~ W(,\'C discovel't.."<.l in the n\ounlamous area on H on­tthu in th e carly '305. But th~y W Cl'e destroyed or buried to " pre~er\"c\t the- " purlty·' ot the race 'Theft" arc m a n \. more (,x p l'C~ions. customs and at ­tire or tho J apanes. that has aU the . ann.T\....,. or Hebrew (l ri~in . .. tho)' should be fun to look up.

0-W1Iat' the 10 les t <ounl on dettntion camps?

",cnt W 8~ R p art k utlil' \ ' aM~ elf 1:\1\ individual (lu mly w ha nd­mUted to bC"lR in the \OW ~1 In com. Ie,'. \' The U.S. Fedot'nl R l'::'N'Vf' B A nk ~ Rsscssrd th t" \"Alur or J npA\\(,sC' Amc:1'lcRl1 ho lrl inl{~ JUSl brfon' Evncuo· tlon at M OO.OOO.OOO-n'I>I'o­H'll ted b~ ' ns..lI:;rts in thl'" tl ~ hi1\ ~ And cRn n i n ~ i n (\ u ~ b ' i cs. . fnl'm ~q u ipm(, ll t. !'\h · \\ c t \1t ' ~ And lnnd. m\ ~ e-ntor v In :ot t or('~, r "nd ~ In bank$, C- l ~ . •

Q-\\lhtTt al't al1 thf" ru '" or ds of \VRA Ccntcr ~ ~1

A- Most Rcce ~ ible rccord~ R.l~ at the- Bancroft Librar" III t h ~ Un,\, . o( Cali lorniR at Serkeley Con lac I the 0I1'Oe­lor. Mr Jame. E. kIPPN'

(Much still remains In the National ;,rc h i ~ ' cs . -:Ed . )

Q-Wh.t .".otl~ dId Su · -pervlsor Ernest E. Debs 58"'" in bebalf of the- Japa.nu~ Amtr ... leans bat' )'; lo the e.arl~ 40 ' ~

to h a"f" en.tor 1nouy e laud blm at his leslimonl.l dlnn .. in Septenlber':'

A-rve looked into the mat. ler and it all appears futzy. A local newspaper library h as data on Debs durin!! the war yesl'S. but In 1941 . h e WAsn't in any official position to say anything. He was elecled in 1942 and look offiee in 1943 as an assembly 1 doubt very much he said Imythin« in be­haIJ o( lhe J apanese Amer­ican~ . 1n those years it would have been politiCAl suicide. · .

Q-EXIletly ",hili d Id Debs say in beh ll, lf of the Ja-panese Americ41l5 in t.be t Brl y 1940's wben il was 1)olitiral sul c;, lde 10 m ake Ihal sl3 nd ~

t"ntel' In Honolulu IItln nr thr A ~ ' n t\ rOltnll'tr 8 h (' vl s lt ~ d

JA L IllcetlllK' nrC' hcld il l th ~ J ACt. 0«(1< •• 526 1; • • hu' k ­~('I n s,t,

Installation

Dr. Nishikawa billed

.. installation ,peaker

San Cil\brtel Vallcy JACL Or . Roy Nishiknwu. PU$t

national J ACL prc.ldcnl. wl11 br the banquet speaker 8t the thi rd annn ni chnpler In. tnlln­tion dinner Nov. 15. 7 p.m ., At the Montebello COunll'\' Club 901 Vin Son Clemen le . •

David Ito. who hns bee n I e-ele. ted presidenl , nnd hi. cabin e t m p m b e r ~ wi ll be sworn by J eff rey M u.lsui . 8S­

soclnte natlon"l dlreclOi . " ick-

Dr. Roy Nishikawa

.J UIl W' M\ll"ill~ami witl b t ~m ­

n '!.' An h,1o.'l1\l,\l Slc t ... tolt' thrr will tollow ut Ih(' home o( Mr ann MI S. G TnJII . Tho .. who would like' tn nllc nd un" AH krd to cnnt llet Ch n")t'llC' T .! Htn . tlno ~

tn. 823·3071. by Nov. 3. Co. t 111 Ow olnlH'1" I" Sol .5n.

Granite Mountain Safeguards Records ne.alOKY research? Th. answer lllttl1111"1tt111t111""tnlttnt""tm1l=1 hel in the belle(s of the ~ • church that by prayers and IsM IIi 8 W 8r 8 baptism Ihc antecedents of I E PI esonl.doy Mormons may be ~ Sweet Shop glvcn salvotlon. ~ 2 •• E t " 51 ~ n,. .IOE GRANT ~tASAOKA

Suit Lake Clly ~ l \ I"'I1 ' e~ hundred (cet Inside

the alope o( a gl'anlte moun· loin. the Church o( Jelus Chri. t of LaUer Day SaInt.! popuJn1'1y known 8 ft 'the Mor~ man Church, hus constructed huge ehumbers 101' the storage of microCilm records. Over­hend, 700 Icet of lolld granile protects Ihcse microlllms stor­ed in subterruneAn vAulta.

dCpotlilol·lcl. The louring vlslto ... were all

ama:eed at the safeguards tok­en to render these records stlre from time, (\oods. inseci. Ilres

11 II thc desire and goal of ;: \.0' Angele, MA 8-4935 ~ lhe church to gather and pre· ;: -serve copies of Ihe world'. ge- .. l1lttl1l1l1lttll1l1111111111111I1I1IUIttI1I1UtnIUUUii

Rep. Spark Matsunaga

to addrcII Illei fete

1\, \lOY YOSUlOA

1·I.eol· County JAOL Doughl\, bul . Iowly dwlnd­

linK numb!'r of l !ls ~1 plonec\'l 80 yeRl's-old and ovel' r es ldln~

In lhis ol r" will be spre lally u'coQniw d ul the 29th nnnuul ~ o o d w ll1 dlnnel' ot the PI ncer County .IACL Ihis Snturdoy. Nov. 1. 6:30 p.", .. soclul hour I'nd 7 p.m. dinner in lhe John-• nn Hall a t Roseville. dlsclo. ­cd .J A1'r\('!l Mnkimoto, general c.'huirtnun.

Thi. being the cenlcnnial ~ ' e0 1" o r J apanese tmmil(l'aUon to America, locnl JACL om­olols deem It very fOI·lunat. and approprlale il, having Rep. Spark Motsunaga dellver the principal address.

Some 31 long-time Pl ace r I ~sci l" c~ id en t s have been In­vlted to pnrtlclpate In • cere· m ony Ihot will pay homaR. to thcir patience, penevel'­('nee, nnd industry that en· . bled them to make invalu­able contibullon. to the agri­cultural economy or the coun­ty.

The ceremony will also Pa.Y tr ibute to th. firs t group of 26 brave immigrants who came t rom Alt u \Vakam alsu J apan, to c~ t a bli s h the W a ka~ matsll Tea and Silk Farm Co­lony 01 Gold Hill on or aboul

, J une 8, 1869. Accord ing to Kunia OkUBU

recogniUon chAirman . 8 S ~ memento or the occasion (,8ch Is,ei guest will be presented with 8 bron1.e Wokamatsu Co· lony Centennial me d a II ion rommemoraling 100 years 01 Japanese in AmeriCA.

Prol"ra m tn Brief

neology data recorded and bomb blast •.

Immediately inside lunneled entrances, up from the floor o( Little Cottonwood Canyon (20 miles southe • • t 01 5 all Lake City) at. the oHice and working arcal containing rows and rowa of microfilm read­ers. Behind Ih. office com­partments arc the storage areas with three access tun­nels leading to them.

throughout the a g. s In one central storage areas which F 0 wUl be soCe (rom the ravages Ilgetsu 0 of nalure and Ih. deslruction -

Some 300 genealogists . hls-101'l8ns. librarians nnd archI­vists from ~h .. oughout lhe wor ld tour<d thll archival r •. posllory when thcy partiCipat­ed in the World Conference on Recol'ds In S.lt Lake City . Augusl 5·8. 1 was among those p81'UcipaUng and afler n brief t 0 u r or Salt Lake CI~y, we wel'e conducted through one of the world'1§ mosl prolected

be at least 15 pd. e,. Weigh· In I. Rt 7 p.m. at Mlts Ikeda', RorSKe.

Corlel JACL Drawing parUclpants fro m

throughout the state because of Its outslandlng pr ize. the annUAl chapler striped I bass derby will be held Nov. 9 in the Franks Tract are a with (lshlng restricted to B r 0 a d Slough and up . ~ream , accord­Ing to co·chairman Mac Saka­II\lchl and Kazumi Kajioka.

Tho . e wl . ~lng to res.rv. boat.! should write to D e It a Resort. Frank's Fi. Wne Re­sorl and Bethel Harbor. all on S ethel Island.

~fonterey Peninsula JAOL Some 125 members and

friends enjoyed the annual chapter barbecue at Bolado Park t'ecently. Social chair­man J ack Nishida WAS cre­dilcd for the suceesslu) out­ing. which saw many Jr. J A­CLe .. present.

of man . $2.000.000 have been expended in the world's saf­cst vaults.

The access lunnels are faced ,v!th heavy bonk vault doors With encusemcml! that arc strong enough to witholand

Each day cameras are click­Ing in archive repositorle. the world over to amass the vital records oC the world page by page by book to be stored a. priceless treasures securely protected 10 the top of thll mountain .

Ihe shock of Ihe most pow­erful atomjc bombs, unless a direct hit were encountered. :rhe large bank vault doors In . the center tunnel each weighs ove.. 14 tons and the narrower doors to the .ast and \ ::i~ . : ~~~~el. each weighing

Acute Problem

'rhe preservation of records Is an acute problem and the World Conference was ad. dressed as to Its urgency by Dr. James B. Rhoads. Dr. Al­[red Wagner of UNESCO. Ge· nadii A. Belov of the U.S.S.R.

The natura l temperature In the storage area i. 57 to 58 de­grees Fahrenheit the year round, regardless of the h.a~ or cold outside the mountain and the natural humidity i~ always 40 to 50 percent. These conditions are per feci for ml­crorum storage. Some 80 pho­tographers throughout t h • world are busily engaged In filming records 01 land grants deeds, probate records. mar~ riage records, cemetery re­cords. palish registers, census returns, and olher records of genealogical value. Over a holl million 100.loot roUs of mI-

Managers of re ~ taurantl

advertised in the PC ~ppreciat.

your identifying yourself as a PC reader.

SUEHIRO RESTAURANT

THE FLAVOR OF JAPAN LunCheon· Cocklails' Dlnner·Cally Japanese Cullural & Trade Cenler

1737 Post Street. San FranCISco Phone: 922-6400. Parkmg

Tin Sing Restaurant. EXQut.Stn

CANTONESE CUtStNE

1523 W. Re:dondo

Blvd.

CONI'1:Cl10KABY m E. hi St., Lo. AqeIM II

MAdIIoD 5-85K

£t~tk" elfl" Dine • Dance - CocktaSJI

IUll.lYAKl • .tAPA""'" aooll. 314 E . ~St.

Lo. AOleleJ • MA .....

MAN GENER!;L L:~:

dEN ~i'I

475 GIN LING WAY - MA 4-1. New Chlnatawn • Los AnII<fto

• Banquet Room for AU 0c:caskJnI .'--There are approxlmatelv ten . Most frequently mention­ed camp is near AUen\vood, Pa., a little- Appalachian town 01 10.000 linked 10 New York Clh" bv 1nterstate 78. The area takes: ' m !lome 4.500 acre~ "nd is ,urrounded by barbed wire. Another one is located 30 miles from Oklahoma City on t'S 66. El Reno. Four more are located at F lorence. Wick­.nburg. Sallord. and Tuscon. ;:1.11 in Arizona. On the easlern CO'1S\" camps are located at A \'on P ark. Fla.: ~f o nt 1! ome ry.

Ala. Greem·iI1e. S. C.: and ?ri11 Poin\. W.va. For those who prefer the n orth, Elmen. Qod camp near Anchorage.

A-Wha tever he said must ha,'e been aftel' 1947 Per­hap. you could lind the an ­swer b y calling Mr. Debs' of­fice: phone number i. 625·3611 e"t 6448 1

ets are $7.50 per adull, $5.50 tor Juniol'S un d e r 18. lor a prime rib roasl dinner. Reser­vations are being acc.p~ed by Mrs. Fumi Kiyan, 338 - 1648, until NO\T. 8.

Program wlU open With the Pledge of Anegiance led bv Jack Yokole. 10 be lollowed with an mvocation by the Rev. Richard Emsl. F il'St United Methodist Church o( Loomis. Chapler pres ident Nobuya Ni­mUfa and RoseviUe Mayor

Fund-Raisers Alameda JACL

croUlm have been accumulat­ed thus far-the equivalent of nearly 3,000.000 printed vol­umes of 300 pages each. GARDE ....

DA 7·1177

Food to Go

AlrCondlUoned Sanqult Rooms 21).200

· laska. might be used for peo­p le arrested under Title II of Ihe 1950 In tornal S ecurilv Act. OUt ,,·e.t IS Tule Lake. Calif.

Q-Appro,<lma t e t y how much does a D . , rerare news· leiter <05t to pUblish!

Cincinnati·Dayton slate

joint fete Nov. 15

Clneinna ll JACL

Willard Dietr ich will extend their greetings. George Hira-

Two Japanese films, Nihoki no Y 0 jim b 0 (Two Body Guards) and Sanbiki no Onna to Bakushl (Three Lady Gam­blers), will be shown at the ch a p~ e l Js scholarship benefil m ovie Nov. I. 7 p.m .• at Ala­meda Buddhist Church. Mrs. K ay Hallorl Is movie chair­m an.

The Genealogical Society of the Church is engaged in one oC the most active and tar­reaching genealogy programs known to the world. Abo u t 550 person. are employed with

approximately 200 volunleer ~ =::::;:=::==~~~ aids assisling in cbmpiling and l~- -organizing material 101' genea- I . . .

Q-From lbe recent serle. nn Japanese Americans on T\ ~ , 1 ~ot tbe inference than thp )o ~ ~ u s biDe d by them durin!! \,,"\ V 2 Evacuation wam 't too much since they ~ 'e re ' l1oor" in the economic """Ie. Is thai true~

A-Far 'rom it. That seg·

CALENDAR Oc.t. 3 1 ( F rida))

West LoA Angdes - Ballowc 'cn T~s\\'a.l. Stoner P layground , 6 pm.

' 0" . 1 (SalUrda)l P J.cct {';oUDI)-Z9th annWll Good­

will Dumet. Johnson 1UJl. Rose­v ille. j p..m: R ~p. S park AU­

WJtaii;4I. spkJ". ~ .n ~ leo - : Monl~ Carlo Fun

• · lght. BuddhlSt Church. S p .m. A 1 a m e d a - Scholarship b enu l

mones, Buoc;lh1st Temple . 7 p .rn. San Diego - lnsta.1lauon d mner

Stardust Hotel. 7 p..m.. Atty. Godfrey Isaac $:"pkr. "NoguchJ . _ . and Wberc 00 We Go from Here?"

S O"'. 1-: P !\-WDC-D i • t r 1 c t eoo\=u,tlon,

Port.Land J ACL hom. Sb eralon­MolOr Inn.

SO" . :! ( S UDcb.),) }lon~r~Y Pe.runsula - AuxY Fall

Potluck OUUler, J ACL HAll. S p.m.

6 l1o~e: Ma~~D AlcC~~O :.m~U1 . N o",. -4 (Tuuday )

Oakland-Bd MI,. Sum I to m 0 Bank, 7 ~ 30 p .m.

N"ov. 7 (t- ~ r i d.a )'l

San Jo~e-JT J ACt. clcct lon. "Sov.7-10

N at'l J ACL-ExC'C Comm M1( . ]n­lernat1o~ 1 Bole l. l..os Angeles.

SO\' . a ( Saturda y ) },fontercy PenUlSUli-Allxy Rum­

mage Sale. J ACL. Hall. 10 a .m .-2 p.m.

Sonoma Ccrunty-Jr. JACL insuJ­I..,uon, Blaek Forest Inn , 5:30 pm. Peter Leveque, spkr , "'Lov£"

A-It all d.pends on the circulation . 11 it·, published onre a month and about 500 cap i ~ s per issue and in fou r sections (8 pages) of mimeo­!U"8phed material. it should run about S65 yer year. · . .

Q-Thls Is lh. Ryoj lkan (Consulale 016 •• ) and W. w ou.1d like to know tbe 1'oJ) ·

obtion of the J alJ ilneSe Amer~ iean s. A-Th er e ' ~ approximateLY

holl a million In lhe United Stales. In Calilomia there are 157.317 (1965) and in Los An· geles area there are 81 .204 Japanese .. l\mer icans. · .

Q-Wbat', GIDRA number!

A-734 -7838 · phone

0-1 h eard lhat the J ap.· nese Community Pione.er Cen · ter is bavinr a membersbJp dr ive. Could you rive me more information'!

A- Yes. Ihe Japanese Com· munity Pioneer Center which is located at 125 Wener 51. (ground floor) is currently having a drive. Membership is open to everybody regard­I~ of age. To become a P io­neer Member. one has to be 55 years or older. Their dues are 50c per month. It includes 'he privilege of using the rec­reation section of Goh and Shogi. private lounge with Homecast R a d i 0 program.!. and enjoying num erous other activities. The Center is look­ing {or members and organi-7 .a~ions to h.lp support lhe project. Please contact Mori Nishida at 626·4471. . . . ConU3 Costa - Ladies Night. El

Cernto Com m UDltY Center, 7 p.m.

6£lanoco _ Installation d i n n e r dance. Los COY01.U Country Club, , p m. Atty. Godtrey l5aac, $pkr.

No~ . 1--9

Q-l would like to know more abou~ tbe JACL Group Medjcal Insurance:.

A-P lease contact Mr. P aul Chinn. 272-9842. . .

It's CmcinnaIJ's turn to host the jolol Cincinnati-Dayton J ACL inslallation din n e r -dance. Chainnan Walter Fu­lamachi promises an enjoy­able affair Nov. 15. 6:30 p.m ., at Imperial House in Even­dale. ott 1-75 on Bypass 50.

Dr . Hankyo KIm. of the Un· iv. o( Cincinnati. will be guest speaker, reporting on his Far Eastern trip lh.is past sum­mer. The Silvertones wil l play dance m usjc pat tem ed (or both young and old. T ickets are $5.50 per person. Reserva­tions may be made with Fu­tamachi (471-5053) or Stogie Toki (561-6257).

Sela noeo J ACL A full house is expected 10r

the Selanoco J ACL inslaUa­tion dloner·danee Nov. 8 at Lo Coyoles Country Club in Buena P ark to hear Godfrey lsaac. the attorney for Coun­ty Coroner Dr Thomas No­guch i at the recent hearings before the civil service com­mission

Dr. Albert Muronaka w\ll emcee. Ticke13 will be avai l­able at the door at $7.50 per person or reserved with Don W a to na b e (213-863- 6584) the new preSident, or with Dr. J ames TOOa (714-871·6803) , outgoing president.

In.tallation keynoler

to talk on 'Love'

ODoma Counly JACL

Contr .. Com - F 1 S h i n, de rby. welgh-ln Sa \.. 6·7 :30 p .m. Roy Sak .. j·s home. -1606 Florida Ave: .: Sun. 5:30·7:30 p .m . Joe Olshi's packmg ~h e:d , 130 S . 47th 5t

SO"'. 9 (Sun d ~ Y ,

Alame<u-F1Shln g d erb y. Mil Ike­da' ~ garas:e welgh.ln . ., p .m.

Q-Wb .. ~ was the total.,.· penditure: or the food con­sumed in the \VRA camps?

Saturday, Nov. 8. has been set 10r the installation 01 the 1969-70 Sonoma County J r. JACL cabinet. The 6 p .m. d in­ner at the Black Foresl Inn will be preceded by cocktails. Peter Leveque. biology in­structor a 1 Santa Rosa Junior College, will speak on " Love".

Installing the new officers will be Frank Oda. NC-WNDC Y o u t h Commissioner and

C Orte7~triped bass derby. fran~ T ract

Rep. Spark Matsunaga

hawa wi ll serve al toastmas­ter.

Talented swinging trio Il'om Tracy. the lloda Sisters, wi11 fur nish the musical entertain­ment. They use the guitar. and a samisen as accompaniment lor their folk songs.

Co- chainnan Harry K awa­hata repor ted that the steering committee an ticipates a crowd 01 about 350 persons.

Local civic:, business and political leaders are the in­vi ted lI\lesls.

For the Fami Iy Alameaa JACL

Tates Han amura. chairman o( the annual chapter fishing der by. Nov 9. said there wi11

No\< . 12 (WednhdaH P 3~dr n a- Bd Mig. Gr~ce MDrj·

k.lwa res. 8 p .m. } 'resno-~el d lnn£r. Selland Con­

vention C~n1c r So, . 1S (Satur cl1y)

D ncuUI.atl-0 .. yton-Jo int iruotalla· 1.lon dinner. imperial J{ow..e. E vendale. 6 :JO p .m .: Dr. HankYo K un. spkr "The Far Ectst. To· day "

A-Approximately $48,000.-000. In the per iod 01 'Ph yeal" , WRA asked Congress lor 45c per person per day. As it lurned out. 3 1c was a llotted with an additiona l Hc from the camps farms. The m em­bers at the armed services re­ceived 55c per man per day. We were shori changed again.

DEPENDABLE LEASING CO.

S an G abne l Villl ev - In!otalla tion d inner:. Montebello Country Club. 7 p .m Or. Roy N15hlkawa IOpkr.

!'olo,·. 2J-"!J :lhlw.aukee-Folk F.u·

SO"' . 22-2J P S WDC--4th Qtrly Session . Ch.p·

ter CliniC. Howard Jobnson's <iotar Lodge. Shel man Oaks;

Wanen furuLani . Su nday lunch· eon .:opkr

CeDC- Dlstrlct convent ion, f ru· no R .. cienda In n ; Or. s.. J. lUI ­,akawa . Sunday banquet apkr.

No" . 22 (Saturday) 6.1n Fernando Val1ey-Iru.t.alla l IOD

dinner, How .. rd Johnson's MOlor lAdge. Sherman Oaks. 7 p .m .

Nov. ~J ( S unda.y) NC. WNDYC-Qtrly Se>sion

No .... 2-1 (Monday)

& W!1~t ;ff:aec~ \ t: l~ : ~~ . r, No .... 28-30

IDC-ObtrICt convention. Snake. RIver Valley J A CL hosts: On­tariO. Ore.

~ ' C~tC:;;;{ A!1fe~~Ot~~: ion Blackb'on~ Holel

Nov. 29 (~a turd a.y) Mi.lwaukee-Gen Mt,. lnt-e m ahon­

al Institute . Chlca,o - 25th Anny Inaugural .

~:~~t ,,~k~~a~ ~~ e:.;30 ~~ . ; Wat50nvlfte _ Insb uatlon ~ner~

danee, Elks C lub. 6 p.m. S ov. 30 (Sunday)

C hll:~lo- YJ" A Bd Mt" JACL Qt­ftee. 7:30 p.m.

Oee. 2 (Tuesday ) o .. ~ 1 ~ n d-Cf!n Mtl. Sumltomo

Ban" Bide·. 7 :30 p.m . Dpe . 6 ( Saturday )

O omlra CosLa - Chr1st.rn.it.l party. Krnnedy B lah School

W ~ Lor; Anlele. - Insullatioft dlnn~r...clancr. Surt Ridc.r&

&.an Trancl6CO-A n n u a J br l dl~ tournament .

Orc. 7 ( S tllldaY) P rorreulve Wet.tslde: - Chrlslmaa.

party for MC'nlilly ReLarcied Children. Cilnurtllo State Ho.­Pili!.

Clnelnn.at l-Chrl t lrUll' p.a rh. ClIf­lon 1_ N. t".1 Bank. 2 p.m

Pulse-Continued from Pare 5

For the Youth Sequoia JAOL

B ee a u s e ot ins ufficient funds. Sequoia JACL is un· a b I e to secw'e unitorms, equipment or insurance tor its youth basketball and baseball program, according to Dr. Gregory Filura. 2064 Cynthia Way. Los Altos. chairrnan of a special fund drive now un­derway.

For the Women ~looterey Peninauia JACL

The W 0 men ' s AWClliary rummage sale, major fund­raiser of the year, wi11 be held Nov. 8, 10 a .m.-2 p.m., at JA­CL Hall. Items (nothing will be turned down, the commit­tee promise.) should be turn­ed in by Nov. 7

Emma Sato. Yae Ninoyarna or Jean Tanaka may be con· tacted for pick-up servlces.

Meetings Seattle JACL

In addition to the nomina­tions for the chapler board be­ing announced for next year, the chapter membership will hear representatives from the Bar A!Sn. on Nov. 19 discUS3

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ed in Japan. A K E M I i SANTA ANA, CALIF. (South of Disneyland)

Sao Mateo JAOL For R $5 donation. Ihose a~·

tending the chapler's second annual Monte Carlo Fun Night Nov. I a ~ the San Mateo Bud­dWst Church, 2 S. Claremont S\., will be entitled to buffet, refreshments, extra chips and door priz.es.

Church devote so much time. i FOOD TO TAKE OUT Why do.. the Monnon j

j 238 E. 2nd, LA. _688'8036

i)KAW~~

1I10nterey Peninsula JACL An evening of Japanese

music, song. and dance was enjoyed by some 100 Issei at the chapter Issei Appreciation Night, chaired by Mrs. M. Ha­shimoto, at the JACL Hall on Ocl. 4.

The Chidori Band from San Jose and numbers by dance instructor Han a y a g I were highlights of the program.

Judce Tanaka's term on

Hacue Court to expire

UNITED NATIONS - Judge Kotaro Tanaka of Japan is on. of the five judges of the I 5 - m e m b e r International C our~ of Justice in Th. Hall\le whose term will expire next Feb.5.

The U .N. general assembly and the security council was expected to meet concun'ently Oel. 27 to elect the fiv e new judges.

Marutama (0. Ine. FIsh Clke ~fanuIaetur.r

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.lACL Major Medical Health & Income Protection Plans

ENDORSED. TRIED

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The Capitol Life Insurance CO.

CHINN & EDWARDS General Agents

11866 Wilshire Blyd. Los Angeles, Calif.

Telephones: BR 2·9842 - GR 8-0391

Excellent Sales Opportunity for Career Agents

A M ...... To Hertz & Avll. Moye Oyer.

Bul not too for. W. won', tole up rhot much room. We're iust

o small, new Quto renlal and leasing film. AUlo ~ Reody , Inc.

W.· .. roody when you oro. With a shiny new Impola. Or a

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I Sam J. Umemoto I i CertIficate Member of RSES

I Member of Japan Assn. 01

Refrigeration. i Lie. Refrigeration Contractor i • SAM REt.BOW CO.

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R E5TAURA>IT luncheon. D,nn.,;(

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Grou p Pert.es

7C~ S. SPRING. Fie:: r,' .. , 5:'·;::

, G.n,ratlo .. Superb Canton ... food - Cocktall Bar - Ba_ -Quon's Bros.

Grand Star Restaurant I .. utiful form., Mbs H ••• iJ..-D.U.Ff1I nuu .... '

Entertaining at thl Pi,no

943 Sun MUn Way 10pposite 951 N. BdWy.1

NEW CHINATOWN - LOS ANGELES MA 6-2285

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Privall Parties. Cocktails. Banquet facOlUes

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Excellent Cantonese Cul.lne Cocktail and Pllno elr

Elabor.te Imperiat ChlnMe Setttno

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THANK YOU. PKltlr: ~ QUatftIn Dope. 125 Weller St. 1M ~ Ca- 9Olll1

,.

Page 7: o~JH~ 'IQ.~~- JACL will oppose Eastland bill II...WASHINGTON - Sen. Dan· record In support of the iel Inouye (D-HawaU) stood movement seeking the repeal up twice in the Senate Oct.

..

Aloha from Hawaii The Spartan Baat Mas Manbo

by Rlch.rd Glm.

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Repeat That Name

Mor.torium PQ~ceful

' ·I.lnom Moratotlum Day (Oct. 1~1 aclh·ltI .. e<>nt.N'd around U,. Unh·. ot Hawan. where th mood has brcn for an end to hootllltlcs whnle,"er Iho prlCt' in Pl'(', tiRe. lIli Pl'C'" Id.nl Hartan ('t"' cland, in his \,-;11 Dn", 'pH-ch, pulled no punrh('!t in c;\Uinlt for with­drawal from Vietnam "w1U, dO<!\c"ted di.palch". ne or the thlnJ$ thai has kepi us In Vit-tnam has b('tn tht (tt'r of "losinll t..... lind l."eland w~n\ on: " I havt" to !'RY that In this pa .. Ucular sllualion, U,e '(a~' of my country is not worth the Ute ot nw son." ne­spite Ihe exampl,'. ot rude­nes.< and pro(nnil\' which ap­pearod 10 b. isolated cas.s during th~ ciay. 1\ ",os peace­ful meeting There was no "io­len~ . no a~s~.

R.,ntal Survey Bel ... ·H:n St'Dt. 1966. and SePt..~

lM1. rentals In the :'I. laldki .~. ('It Honolulu ln~ru~fli ~l »f'r C'e:nl,.

~h;d ~:~\O!~~U s~p~~~~r~n~~~ts. ~~ . ~e).~~~~l~~ ~~~f('~ \~ ~nU tn "'.ltlki wUl conUnu~ to «t' UI) ab~ut !i ~r" cf!'nt Yf'at' ytar. )ott'S. lAura C . . leCarlf'~·. who con .. ductf'd ~ l"tnt.Al !nIt"\~y. said tn ~pt, 196&. the a"eraKf!" one·b~· mom f'lImls.h.-d apartment In " ra­klltt was "180. In rf'Nnt month.$, wc:h aoartmtnts tn Maldkt ha"e ttf!"e.n ad'·el'1.~ .t SlP~-so. $..""0.5- and $:30.

Names In the News

H.rold )lIehael FOIlK, 31, " 'as sworn in recentl., as U.S. assistant district attorney. US. District Attorney Robert Fu­kud. said Fong's 6",t assil!n­ment will b. assisting U.S. Assistant Dis t ric t Attorney Joseph )1. ~d.n In the pro­se-cution of the narcotics cases pending in federal court.

Hiroshi :\lIn.ml. executi"e director ot the H 0 n 0 I u I u Council ot Social Agendes, "'as reelected president ot the Hawaii Council ot Churches • .. Bock ChollK. who arrh'O<! heN! in 1885, celebrated hi. 106th birthda~' Oel. 15 at the P alQlo Cbinese Home. Words ot ad"lce he ga,'e at his birth­da,; party: How to get along ,,1th yo~ people-"Let them alone. let them lI\'e, don't ar­gue with them" How to sta..'I' young- "Don'! worry. Take it easy." How to stop war- "Let ~\'erybods out of the army." How to reach a ripe old age­"eat only fresh meat, t res h "egetables from the garden In your bad..-yard. go to bed e&nJ', don't chase around."

Dr. Paul y , Tamura. direc­tor ot Pathology Associates Medical Laboratory, is the ne'" president of the Hawaii dhislon, American Cancer So-

CANOY

I~t). . Rreot A. 1Ionoou, llB­tlon,1 dlr~dol ' ot pllbilc r.llI­lion. for thr ,101m Rlrrh So­rial), and tho ~o n ot E" 'n Taft Stnlon. fOl'mt'r sccl"otnry of a,,·lrul\\.n., WPS In HOllolulu . 11 wno \'('pOrt~d Hawnll hns about l~ chaptN'S wiUI from 10 10 20 nlembrl'$ earh .. Rep. Mit. uo V.oltl .... IIl\l.d hi. dual job wlOl Ih~ Hnwall FedrrnUon ot T~n<hN'S •• <'­ecuth~ st'rretnr:-o' nnd b\lslne,,~ !Illent (or the union .Ine. 1961. U~hl WRS .Ieeted to the slate ho\ue in 1966.

Bishop Musoum BI!;;hop r-l\l~eum mny have

to curtnil .ervices to the pub­lie \lnl~s . It f'('c~i\fe!li omr ftmUlcial aid trom the State ~notc, Dr, Rolona W, .'oro.,

dh~lor, has announced. He SAid the museum hn~ run a ~100.000 deftclt ror the Inst thrce yenrs

New Buildings

Ground Wft. b.'Oken Sepl 1~

for U,e now 52 mUlion Na­nakult H~h Sohoot. Located on Nanakuli Ave .. it wlU oc­cupy 80 ftc .. es ot land provid­ed for schooi purposes b~' the Hftwnlilm Homos Lnnd. Depl ... Kuaklnl Hospita l's (tor­merly the Japanese hospilal) new S~.6 million m.k.i wing was dodlcnted Scpt. 28. The 6-story st.ructUN! houses !!mer­lIency, laundry, outpatient, ra­diology. malnlenance, audito­rium, lobor 8tor~', phar-moc~·.

p h ~ •• i c a I and occupatlonnl therap~'. surgical operating suite. TeCOven.' and conference faciliUes as welt as a 3~-bed nursing ftoor.

Weather Note HUn t. well ('In III 'C\':lV ta otC!ttfn,

~es·lt~~u~··tn~t~.~c ort~ ·dl~f; that 1$4.97 Inrhe$ of raln have fallen \.hw tar thls :'o'C!'U. tar above the normal annual r.lnfan of 13ll.Sl lnches. Thf!' ~rd lor an· nual TalnlaU at lh~ RUo Airport 1.s 1158,36. Jet in t956

Ma,ijuana Problem

Ten Kauai youths went to court re<:en!b' chargO<! with il­legal possession ot marijuana. They were usan 1'1. Krau.5e, Gary 1\{, Abben. ,,"nthony K. JaramUlo. Abraham K. Bud­dy, C.ellblon K. 0 hlu, Glenn D. ~liJ'll .. to and Do u g I •• Chrisllan. T h r e e juvenlles were ret.rrO<! 10 femUy court.

Business Ticke,

D.nJel T. Kawakami. for­mer manager ot KOHN-TV, has joined Pelerson Associates. Inc. as "ice presidenl.

The Ala ;\loanll hopplnK Center celebrated Jts 10th an­niversary In mid-September. Its 155 stores spread over more than 250 miles. In its first fiscal year 1960, Ala Mo­ana Center grossed $39 mil­lion In retall sales. Nine years later, retall sales leaped to S127 million. On Ihls, the cen-

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Modem Servl,e &. Plm DePf,. Factory Tr, lned Mechlnla.

·Open 7 dati -. I.m. to 10 p .m.

DOWNTOWN L.A, DATSUN 1600 $. FIGUEROA ST., co,. VENICE BLVD.

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~I'O.'S .. ou~hty ",iii hr' $140 million .. 111"" ht Oka\lIoto hos beon promoled to COII­

lroller 01 Shrl'nloll 1:Iote1o In Hnwnll. it wns 11I1IlOUncQd by S14nlr;r Tttknltulhl, head COn­

lron.r tor thr Shrratoll lin· wnil Cort),

Congressional Sco,e Rep. Spark l\t. ~1at una,a

h.. Introduced 1'1l1.laUol\ In ConRt0" thai wOlltd commIt $38 bUltol\ In IOOMOl (\Ind. o\'rr the n~xt dCl"ndo to lIiolvo :-omc or the ('ounh"y's educn­tion"t probirms.

Education Mauna Olu COllf'1fI hu ~I~·

tned !lOa JltudtnlJl rnr thtt preu!nt .~ hoal nar- tt. IUlut t'lutllhn.nt In lhl(10 .HaT' and the third lUI· ~.t In th", ~('hool·. lO-ynf hllifH'Y -an.d InOludln. 11 Junlnn. The

.,"', ,, prlvatll ('011".. at Pal .. ,

~~~~t. 0:' aJurrt.n~t~~~nl~:w!~ f:,,:~ cconlin, a tonr·yrnr ('011('10 and hal JUlt ~nrollC'd It. Ilnt junior "In!:. 1'wo !"landt'I'S r('u lved mutf'r'. de~C!'t" from Purdue Unlv, at t.h. t nd ot the lummn IC''\S.lon, Charlr. S. TaklLa or Ka­hului. Maul. rt'C't'lvC"d hll rltl.crt'C:

~"nkC~~~II.ri~,;;r~~~'Ul~I(~ \~ I!e;;~nl:; td dt"rt't! In modt'"\ 'InJUR'U'" .• Url.n 11 . t talakl ()t M·ll!\ II r tl'('O­ilia St, Alt'a. eAn\e-d an MS. de-

~i n '~~ fo~ ~:at~~~v 1~: 1~~:1~:! ~ ~m be,~~ 'tr~~~,ed ar {tt~~~.ee Vietnam KIA

The Army has announced Ihe death in Vlclnllm ot S .. I. lst CI ... Altr.do Pacolba. 37, ot Waialua. Ho wa. klUed on Sept. 11 whon tho booe camp he was In 01 Quang Tin came under h05111e flrt'.

Death,

T ~I';!bf!'JIt':I~~'~~~l bl ~'ur:~ ~onef!'r :\ttll .mfllo~·~., h. I. be­lieved to h.a\"1! bf!'f'n thf' ft1"lt Ja ..

r:u:~~ l~~rle~~~~=~~n r.~I: • , . Also durin, thf' \"'f't'k af Oct.

l~ia~d~~ Cl~~";::!s t~r .~~';'r ~e~~ rorm~r pr('~ldt'nt ot Bllhop Trust

~:ltaT' ~~It'Ha::fA·TI~~s.P~:'J~d~ ~lrt~ts i~~:' \~ft1'o':.::'~-U a~ \ ~ U .udtn. 93. founder ot 1h. WI1~ 10.... restaurant and KawaU's "tolhtr of the- YeRr In 1 95~

~f". Clarhsa PIIl.»nl ('onf!'Y Gu ..

~~I'K:~~~~lxretd ~~ ~~I~~Se~~~ ~he had bun an educator on .lUWlt for 38 YUN

Sllnm .. t.su Kinoshita. lOt. dJ~

Sf!'pt 12 In KaUlit Vf'lerln.J Me­moria! Hospital Ht" h.d b~n In reUremt'nt rOr" ~ :-; ean. Ht' was born In Yam.lrUchl·kf'n. Jap.n. ('In No\'. ~. 18ti1 and CJlmt" to Kaual 11 yun a,o.

Univ. of Hawaii

A ..,rious morale problem _ms to be de"eloping In the ranks ot the faculty of the Univ. ot Hawaii Hllo campu., it has been learned. Their un­hBppines..c:, it seems, stems from overall campus admin­istration with the denial ot tenure to lOme taculty mem­b ..... with faculty promoUons, and with other aspects ot fac­ulty life.

At City Hall A TourIst room tax has a

good chanc. of becoming law In the next session ot the state legislature, Mayor Frank F. Fasl told the Hawaii Slate Federation ot Labor recently. Fasi's request for a 10 per cent room tax was d.terred In the 1969 session, while legislators awa.ited the results of a study detennining the value ot such an aetion,

By Feb .. J 979. Mayor Frank F. Fasi would like the land now occupied by the Queen's Surf to be replaced with open space, Including grass. trees, sand and picnic arens. But be­tore that happens, Fasl, the e1ty council, the beach-goers, the conservationists and the restaurant operators are ex­pected to clash on the Issue of a bar-restaurant in a beach park.

Tokyo On. thlnr one r •• III .. after

being in J.pnn tor a Ion II Urn. i. thnt Hlkozo Hamada cer­t"lnly hAd Ihe right Id.o .

IIIl,ozo HnmAdA. of coune, Is the rhnp who went to AmorleA ViA a shipwreck more than 100 yours ago and carv­ed him sol( 0 nlohe in history,

Whnt ho did In U,e proce.s \\fa. lo !'hed hI8 Japone.e nome and adopt 000 that WIIa

nice and clear, which was Joseph Hceo. .

AI evoryone know. In thlo country, nice and clear Is what JaponC'!Oc names are not-in too many ca.es.

Becnm:e nomes usually can be rtad several WRYS when wrillen in kanji charaetero. c".n n top sport star I. Bpt 10 eo Ihrough his wholc ca­reer with ht. nome bailed up.

One who hos I. Te t!llharu Knwakaml, Yom I u 1'1 Gi ant mnnn~er who lust piloted hi. club 10 It.. !l!th straight Cen­Iral Leoguc pennant.

Knwokaml played for the Giants 18 seasons, until his retirement in 1958. winning tl\'e bBlllng crowns and two home run titles. He was a bl~ hero who~e No. 16 was known to ono and all and hi. name b.come a household word. The only trouble was that procti­caUy e\,erybody had it wrong, He was 41Telsuji" and not "Teuubaru" to most fans.

Then there I. Mualchi Xa­neda 01 Ihe Giants, Japan's winninge.t pilcher who reach­ed the 400-mark In mound victor ••• early In October.

Not holohl

Raneda. who won 30 or more games 14 straight sea· sons !rom 1952. played at lea.t nine years before Tokyo's Engllsh·IBnguage press woke up to the fact that Iili name was being given the wrong reading, M 0 s t people, ot course, still bell eve that Ka­neda's given name is I'Sht> Ich1."

One 01 the rules tor new .. m en Is to re t the nam •• of p.ople co,rect In the pa­per . This is a mAn-slled job In Japan w her. too otten II's a fUcssln~ rame

One ot tlili wrlter's heroes In the dim past was the only J apanese sprinler ever to gain the Olympic J DO-meter final, Takanori Yoshioka.

At least we thoueht hla name was Takanori back In L.A. In 1932. Now, more than 35 years later, we'll have to coniess we're not sure what his name was.

Yoshioka's name wsa listed In the record books as Ryuto­ku Yoshioka wben he Ued the world 100-meter mark of 10.3 in 1935. Now a coach, he has been introduced In television programs in Japan a8 Ryulo­ku Yoshioka.

SlllI. th. correct reading ot his name may be Takayoshi Yoshioka, as It appears In "A World Hislory ot Track and Field Alhletics" by Roberto Qu.rcetani. wb.icb was pub­lished in 1964.

Fl1rUbasbl's !lfonlcker

The name of HIronosb.in Fu· ruhashl. the famed "Flying

hlah-ranldnr Iwlmmin, otti­olal, h81 otlen nppeared a. "Konoshln." The family name 01 pro loiter Tadashl X Itt a hoo turned up 81 "Kltauto" occa.lonaily. And the name ot ex -prince Truneyolht Takeda, an Olympic bigwig, haa come Ollt In tho papers as "TlUne­nori.n

With thlo kind 0' Iitua­Uon, one can .ee that tho J.p.n .... Ihould e .. Uy win the p,118 for Dames moot llkel, to be touled up, . . .

Of ClOUrle, there are more dUficult nam.. eleowhere In tho worid, 88 lor 8' spelling ,De,. The handles ot Thai boxera, tor Instance, can live one plenty of trouble. Ltke Bel' k r e r k ChartvanchJ. Suo pornehal Ch.ammu.ng, Som­klat Klatmunngyon ODd Mun­chai Mongkutpetch.

But they are not llkely to show up In prtnt One way one dlY and qui'" di!terent the next.

Tip trom Beco

Some .ection. ot Japan's s p 0 r tan d entertainment worlds, whether they know II or not, have been taking a Up trom Joseph Heco. They have been adopting names Ihat are more simpie Ilnd easI­er to reme:mbcr,

Some ot Japan'. leading protesalona! boxers, lor in­stance, h ave been going In lor Weslen-style monickers.

The most prominent among them. of course, Is Fight­Ina Harada, ex-world cham­pion In the fiy and bantam division. who now I. gunning for the feather liUe. Then there are SpeO<!y Haya.." Ja­guar Xaldsawa. and Lion Fu­ruyama. And also Cassius Nai­to, a mUddlewelght who bas lust .cored bl. 11th ItraIght win.

In grunt and groan. Giant Baba, The Great Kusatsu and Antonio Inok! are heroes In t he I r homeland (and, no doubt villains abroad),

Among Japanese stage and screen personalities. one can t lnd !Ileh names as Peggy HayamB, Ethel Nalcata, Romy Yamada, Bob Satake, Frank Nagai, Antonio Koga, Fran­Ide Sakal and Tony Tan!.

And naturally, the famed Peanuts, the long and dance twtn •.

• :~MIM~'~~Lr~ ' (i Lyndys

JA 7·5116 Ha .. ld G .. rtun,

R.~ Mg" B.I", •• n Olsneyland Ind

Knolt's 8erry Farm

INSIST ON THE FINEST

KANEMASA Brand

FUJIMOTO'S £00 IIISo.

. --

AVAILABLE AT YOUR FnVORITE SHOPPING CENTER

FUJIMOTO & (0. 302·)Ob So 4Ut Wtst

Salt lake City. Utah

Ga,y Yamauchi Itrokel Fish of Fujlyama," now a g)1I11I1II1I1II111II1I1II1II1II1I1I11II1I1I1II1I1II11II1I1II1II1II1II1II1II11II1II1I1I11II1II0I1II1II1II1II1II1II1I1I1II1I1I1!!

~::t;:A~nH:~:YY am..l CAL-VITA PRODUCE CO., INC. i=====_=_

uchl ot Gard.na JACL roiled Bonded CommisSIon Merchants-Fruits &< V.getables _ a 299 game in the 20th annual 174 S. Centr.t Ave. L,A,-Whote .. te Terminal &farkd

ro~nJ,a~:;~h at N~;~,V:°i~~~ _ &It\ 2-8595. &It\ 7·7038, MA 3-UM

Oct. 18 during the team event. ~1I1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111Iltl§ He finished with a 690 series, His 1907 tootal claimed the aU·events scratch prize.

(Since Gary has taken over active operation of a restau· .anJ..bar with a partner ear· Her this month, he has had lItlie or no time to devote himse!! to the "Foul Line.")

C,enshaw Dodge Inc. I 1970 Dart· Coronet · Mon.co Pol" •• Ch"liI er • Oodg. T,uclu

For Appolntmenf. Ask for:

KAY KURIMOTO 2.900 Crt nlh.w Blvd ,

LOI Angtl.. Phon. 734·1141 ~ ......

1970 CHEVROLET Freet Pric. to All

Ask For FRED MIYATA

Hansen Ch«!vrolet 11351 W. Olympic Blvd., West L.A. 479-4411 R .... 479 .. 1145

HANDY LITTLE

hi

HOME OF THE ORIENTAL BOWLERS

HOLIDAY BOWL 3130 CRENSHAW BLVD., L .r\. 15

-In West Covina ShoppIng Center "eor Broldway D.pt. Slore-

HOLIDAY· STARDUST BOWL 103S W . WALNUT PARKWAY. WEST COVIHA

I Empire Printing Co. COMMERCIAL IJId SOCIAL PRlNTlNQ

L Englbh and Japan",

114 Weller St" Los Ang.le, 12 MA 8-7060

"hl·me" Is an Inrl,nt and

economical thing to have In

your kitchen 0' on the tlble

fo, beHe, food en(oyment.

IDe "hi·me"l. a very unique and

modem type of dashinomo/o

i whIch II a Itrong fl,vo,ing agenl

- containing essence of fl,vors

of meat, dried bonito,

shrimp and tingle.

IS HERE!

In instant

cookin\! bue

hom Ihe maker

of HAJI·NO·MOTO·

Availabl. .t food rlor ..

'n .n ittractlv. red·top sh,ke,.

AJINOMOTO CO. OF NEW YORK. INC.

.....................................

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING C" .. _tth Ord". 10. ,., .... $1 ...... '" .........

Trainees

PACIPIC CITIDN-7 Friday, Od, 31, 1969

- Bu.in •••• nd­Prof.llion.1 Guide

ExceUent opporlunlli" for career-minded women In­tere.Ied In joining a arow­Inl 0 r I an I z a tI 0 n, with chane.. 01 advancement, top Ialari .. and m&n7 trln,. beneflll, No expertence ne­cessary. The folJowlng jobl are open.

• Dining Room Supervlaon

• Grut., Los Ancel.

IASTMONT ItIALTT

m'o ~u:~rJc &81~~M~r.',~ p~

Assistant Bookkeeper

• Personnel for Gift Shop

Miyako Restaurants

PASADENA/ORANGE a.IVY Plyroll, Account Ply.ble, Call MU 1-3088

MUST BE GOOD TYPIST for Ippolnlment In Puadma

Salary Open-Apply in penon 8·5 • REAL S'TATS

Adami Bros. Plastic

12519 Ccrlse Ave.

Hawthorne, Call!.

INSURANCl:

MOBlL!: HOMlil ZONm

98 .c:rH, ~l m11. hilhWA7 froata, •. UtU1Uea avaUabl •• P300 par aCT&.

Call or wrllAl Jim crandall

CUMMINS &. KELLIS 531 E. Malne St •• M .... Ariz. 15201 (802) 964-2431 (1102) 884.0400

YOUR OWN ISLAND

Flower View Gardens fLORISTS

1101 N. Wettem Av.. 466-7371 Art Ito ... Ieomt. YOUt phone Of"detw

and ... Ir. Old.,. for la, Angela

IMCO REALTY A9NQa Comme-rel" • InduIt, ...

",~l:ntl/:,:.k~ ~~':~ 397-2161 - 397.2162

KOKUSAI INnRNATIONAL TRAVEL, INC.

UI L 2nd S •. It2I 6260$114 Jim Hlgllhl, 8UL Mar.

NISEI FLORIST In the ..... rt of L1'1 Tokio UI E. hI St .. MA 8-5606

'fWd Morlguchl .. Memb T.I.ftore

DR. ROY M, NISHIKAWA SpeeI.IIz_no in Contact lames

23. So Oxford f.) - OU ".7400

YAMATO TRAVEL BUREAU 312 E. lsi SI .. LA 1900'21

MA 4-6011

Gent'ra1 l~J:rC. A,ency 090 Acret, San JoaQ.Uin Delta. "£xeeUt'nt fann 1nc:ome, Prlc. rtt'ht • {or Farmer-lnvutor or bunten.

Wahonville, Calif.

Minimum ot 5 yun. Excellent

Phone'~~~~~ ?o~y .~I~t.ment. AMESBURY &. MEE. mc.

SlO N. Lake Ave,. Pasadena

Onl,y $350.000. Call Mr. Xa:r.

KNIGHT REALTY 312 Webner St.

Wett Sacramento. Calli. (GIS) 311-1651 Eve •. (GI8) 685-1702

TOM NAKASE REALTY Act.,g ... lUnches ~ Homes

Income Tom T. N,use, R •• ltor

2$ Clifford An. '-408) 72-4~77

MECHANIC 2,400 ACRES--PANOCHE VALLEY ::e=:-:S-:a-:n....,.,J_o_le,.,',..",.C,-a_li_f_. __

IDWARD T. MORIOKA. R •• II"" Service Through Experience!

Heavy dUly, moo be f.mlllar wlth dieMI engines &: Internal combus­tlon e.n,lnel. 2nd aMlt work.

Apply In perlOn to

HUGO NEU·PROLER CO. IIOt NEW DOCK ST. TDWINAL ISLAND

Flnest SOUt _abun4aDt w.wr. Paved road tron~,e. power. Dlven.18ed

~~tly~h! :n a~N.~ writ. or caU

ro~TLAND ASSOC1AT!l!I 20 Ma.1n St., JacklOD.. CallL

(:lOll) 223"1$7

ISO SCENlC ACRES. 4 mlI.. to town.. nur paved road. e mU_ to t.ake Selmac. Semi .. leve1 ten'a.tn •

Sumltomo Bk. Bldg. 201 294-120.

e Sacramento, Calif,

Wakano-Ura

OomSu''r~~ll: l~~~~ 2217 lOth SI. - GI 8-6~1

Www=~vt~'~ri~: o~tenna • Portland, Ore.

I NEED 8 MEN Young. mature, and older for Hi-Gallonage Station

Experienced and inexperienced 78 ACRES. nr aJn>orl, a4J Induo­

trial pa.rk, all utilities avlbl at • ucrlflce $2750 per acre.

--er-Oll-on-'-P,-o",,-rt-I .. --ne-.-, -Po-"-I.nd­FIrms • Acreages .. Rt'1ldenlial

luslneu • Induslri,l • RKfe.tloNJ

J. J. WALKER IHC. 19().43 S,£. Stark St .• Port lind 97231

H.nrv T. "'to, Realtor (5031 665-4US Paid wbUe training

Full or part-lime All shitts Including split

CALL 441·2111 EVENING

~~~rl"'V.'I."~ 'J'tffjU!·::~br: _e __ S_ea_tt_le_,_W_at_h_. ___ _

~aUtt'°~p~50~~c:r::

Join the JACL

Downtown los "'ngal.s or International Airport

H.lted Pool - Elevato, • TV AI, Conditioned

27too S. state. Hemet.. Callf. (1I4) 658-11429

BELIEVE rr-\T'S TRUE

49+ ael. 2 ~v~lee. lUi than $4000 ac. divtd. make: ... to aea. readY to rubd1v. view. taX shelter at ,'7400 per ac.

:'~o ~e .=: ::~cn~ REALTY. 623 S. Santa F .. Vista, catIL, !7l4) '28-2777.

SACRIFICE--200 a«:rel. La.k.~ OrovWe, view proper13. 4000 It. lake fronta, •• (stote take) .. eU

~t!~·o:~ l~::::" ~r~w:r call Geor,e .Ban.se.n.

2~i~Ei 6p~'t,'TEDd '1'. Oro~1!.~IMI~~BZ2 ~542 .. AX -5.2544 ' . "'gel.. 20 ACRES'+ FOR MOBlL!: HOMES

................... •• Will eoruJder Joint venture part­

::IIIIIIIIIIIIIUlllllllllUllllllllllllllllllllllllllnllll~ ~:';un~~*".:'tf,e:=lfentba~ri

I Nanka Printing I ~:::::~:~~.:;u ~ 202. E. t sf St. ~ 1931 s. B!f.,l~: ·· '7~n::tde. CaUt.

~ Lo. Angel ... Calif. ~ :; ANgelu. 8·7835 ~ f,lIl1l11l11l11l1l1l11l11l11l1l11l1l1l11l1l11l11l1l1l1l1l1h~ ,

Ask for ••• 'Cherry Brand'

MUTUAL SUPPLY CO. 1090 SANSOME ST., S.F. 11

Three Generations of Experienci

F UK U I Mortuary, Inc. 707 E. Temple St,

Lo, Angeles, 90012 MA 6-5B24

Solehl Fukui, P,esldenr James Nakagawa, Manager Nobuo Osuml, Counsellor

Shimatsu, Ogata and Kubota Mortuary

911 Venice Blvd, Los Angeles

RI 9-1449

SElJI DUKE OGATA R. YUT AKA KUBaT A

These adv.rtl~rw look

forw.,d to s.rvlng youl

Toyo Printing OfrJet • Ltturpms • LII!oI1PInI

309 S. SAIl PEDRO ST. LK Artg~l .. 11 - MAdIsoa 6-81U

Aloha Plumbing PARTS & SUPPLIES

_ R.palrs Our Specility -

1948 S. G'ln., Leo "",.1 .. RI 9-4371

ED SATO PLUMBING AND HEATING

R.model and Repairs - Wit .. H •• t .... G.rbago Dlspo .. l ..

Furnaces _ Sorvlcing Leo Aft,.I .. -AX 3.7000 III 3-0557

MARUKYO Kimono Store

to I Weller St.

Los Angel ..

628-4369 • BRAND NEW PRODUCT

rj:J\j)E~' INSTANT SAtM'"

- HAWAIIAN RECIPE -

MOlt Sanitary Wholesome

Sllmln on the Market

Available at Your Favorite ShoppJq Center

NANKA SEIMEN CO.

Los Angel.

KinOnioto Travel Service Fr,nk v, k inomoto

521 Main St .• MA 2·1522

• Waahington, D.C •

Appliances •

~TAMuURA And Co., Inc..

5M6iM6I m~9Ut~

3420 W. Jefferson Blvd. Los Angeles 18

RE 1-7261

NISEI Est~;~~h.d TRADING (0.

• Appliances TV - Fumlture 348 E. FIRST ST., L.A, 12

MAdison ~·660 I <2. 3 4)

==== 55 == == =::===§ IBM KlYPUHCH.

COMPUTfR TRAUrUNG

For Men, WOrM.

• 5RITC R E R LTY~()·

MOMES . '-';'SURANCE

One of tho Largest Sel.ctlona 2421 W. Jofferson, LA

RE 1·2121 JOHN TY SAITO. ASSOCIAns

&it /(;mut4 PI-lOTOMART

e.-...-J~~

1141.111 ' .. IL IIA ~

STUDIO

J'I East FlIIt SIrMI

lA>o Ange.., Calif.

MA 6-561'

Page 8: o~JH~ 'IQ.~~- JACL will oppose Eastland bill II...WASHINGTON - Sen. Dan· record In support of the iel Inouye (D-HawaU) stood movement seeking the repeal up twice in the Senate Oct.

8-PACIFIC CITIZEN FrhIA) , Orl 3t, 111611

ElIo'Tl\EPREN'EUR, Thr"~ workillR memb.rs of COlll ra Cos­ta JACL m,,"led • ~50,OOO to ope II Tri-SCl'\'let' Automobile Cenlor at 10.33 San Pablo. EI Cern 10, with n slaff o( II em· plo . yee~ At the ribbon cutlllls:! rUe!' tnt" lfrom leUl: local

hamber o[ Commerce ~fficinl. Kunlo Shlbn(a, Ron Shlbala And Tom Honds, partncrs in 8 v('ntule Oun began in 1956.

Kamlya-C'ontlnutd (rom r"'fI 5

th,. IIp!u' WltVt' I or whnt (h o \' ~ lhl'lU Awn\"

('onlrol

And Ihl., . old Dr Knml),n , hi (oldy typtrnt, lwnpl~ It-An) to prnducr tht" nlph" WR" f lll

only Ih1"o\lllh trlnl-l1Ud. ('IlTDI" nnd r\' (\n tilt' " thry nrC' not qult~ ' III. HOW Ih,' )' oro do­tnl! II .

A. 0., . C>I Ih. a"bjort, \lui It "1'h. onl" wny 10 . olvr Ihr lnoblr m Is to Rive \IP tryina: to ~O " I (' the' vroblt'm"

NfVl"flhrl r " Or. Knmlya report, most llN110n" ('Ian .-aln ron . ldrrablt (lontrol -70 10 80 pfr fr ll( or hl ~ h .. -In Ion 10 20 bount of . ;EG mt\(lhlnf' work. Anrl onf or hi (lUff"nt pro J r cd ~ '" stud\' htk WhRI hnUPtn~ to tIlOtnr or his subJc(lt, who h,,,,r It"nrnrcl to proliut'f' lIearlv 100 prf ('tnt nlpha tor up to RS 10nJ u, 20 hours. tnt (lo r ~~ll n M h hl' h n~ dbrnv­

~ r (' d t hut pC' nm ll ~ who hnvp ('xpl"rienc:ed ml"dltnt iol'l- 511l'h R ~ sc\'('ra l s\l bJr ct:-: h,,· hns work~d \\ ith from 5nn Frnl1-cI~('o Zrn C('n tcr-nr(' able to l(,Arn nlphn con t r 0 1 nbaut tWicC' n~ (nst os oth!:'1' person ,:

He- !'ay~ thr a lph" \\'0\1('

statl~ i!t likt;" being " in n good mood, ( •• lh'K on top of th llll!<"

a1thouRh it Is nol nn "over· whclminRly ,'C,lnlic Ihlng."

H l" ~oid his sl1bjl'c t ~ wh o have leo81'nrd thr \cchmqlle nrr not nec('~n r ily chongt'd­$.ince ··t h ~y go bnck \0 their

.. rn. \Iv •• " H. did .fty, hnw. 1'\,('11' , ht hnd workrd with "our Q,- two P('1'1I0111 \Ilhn ('Inim th,,~' t\lln On nlphn WRvrll wht'n thty fr.1 them .Iv", R. ' llIn~

naltnh'd or r('din" Hll'\loUf" 1'h. 43-y •• r-old p.yohol­

oal"t g ld, \\11th an rxpru· • 1011 or wondt'lr, thlll hr- .. ('1Jt flvf' or.1 (lAII" " dRY rrom pIII"Ionl «,_arr to volunt(,f'r Cor hhl f'xperlmtl1t!ll. Ito btl­lIf1vc" thai thry R r(\ rrf'­q1J~ntly prraons who think. lI.al ltarnloll' Ih. Rlpha I •• b­ulque 'It a ahorl out to If''aTn (h. dlmoul( arl ot m.dUa­lIon-bu( lie lII\y. he'd ra(h­fir "dlscourale that kind of .lml,le Ihlnklnll',"

F.v('n now, he S9 Y~, Ull'rr I" " no ndC'Quotr theory" nbout whll t J,tenrrnt('!ll bruin wnves or whnl Ih.l .. function I •.

"Thl\ bruin t~ nn nwC\llly big place," he SAY', " nn .1 1111. II toae the rc ~~ nr c h ' lis vrry nluch like e ' plorin ,,: n tOH'st"

lo:cdluy

He- beH('\'eN thc)'r m ay h(l h 1I n d I' C' d {Ii or yel-unknown butin WIWC pnllcl"s und IIll's ('nlitely conccivnble w e rnny run lnto ('u lnSy"-thr plnc:(' Whl' I'C o (' ~ t nc y ll ~c lf "' (' t!l olly tl' x l !ll t ~ In lh(l bruin l bl ~ it " or­$tnnir , 01' sublime so torl , or whot(' \'('1' ..

Already. h ~ su id , p('opif' utilb: lng the fcedbAck proc('!'il!l: hnvt> been obit' to control !<i \l ch olher conditions "' hCA .. t beal , blood pressur£' or muscular tf' n l:lion , Once they lenrn w hot Ihey ole doing v in Iredbnrk, they ar c In R position to c h . n ~.

"The Held is an enormou lli ono, ospcclnlly ill lerms or the

p,),chntlc IlIne .... which are Dr. Karoly. w .. bom In the dream anc! .Ieep ft!HIlCh lIy 01 throe lOll. 1Dc! • c!.\IIh. .0 rommon lorlo),," he aold Cortez, you n g. I ( of throe project before joining !he UC ter feU on !he mother. After

AI Ihe lenst. hr anld, thll brothers, and • Iroduale of Medical Center 1!a1I. HI. fa- 27 yea" with !he education rnn Ill' " a ~ · IllI'lom-.hnpplnil- UC Berkeley, He Joined the Iher, Mlbujl, died In 1933 of her children completed • • h. 1111 nnll'HomtlVr tvpr ot tht'r- Unlv. o( ChlcuRO (acuity and when Joe WOI .Ix years old. remarried the now late Choyel "II.\' " Allfl h,' ndmll. It mlRht WBI 1.( .. appolnlcd dlreclor of Burden of ral,lng of (he fam- Kondo of Lo, Angelel.

worry I\omr psychlnt dab who """""""""..";";";".",,,.,,, ................ ""' ..... ,;;;,,,;,;,,;;;;;;;;,;;;.,;;;,;,,,;,;;;;;....,,;;;;;;;;.,;,;,,;;,; ........ ;;,;,;""""=!!!!II "b. frlb. 10 Ihe "hydra (ho- ~

OIl''' Ihlll wh ... )'OU .lImlnnt. Japanese-Americans How d ... I!look """ mora Ih." a qUI"" 01 • nnr ' ~ ' J11plom, Ano(her POPI up in the Relocat'lon Centers .I"fury? Now fn book 'orm with p .... nl day to rrpiner it overview, one 0' Ihe mosttmportlnt ftnll report.

11. Ihlnkl 1\ Noe.llll' beyond 0' 1111 W" RltoclUo" Aulhorlty_ ••

I h n I dORrrr of u.efulne •• , IMPOUNDED howev,,!", "ll"lc~ n symptom can

r:: : d~~;!;'O~a:~~, IA C'd by a PEOPLE EDWARD H, SPICER· ASAEL T_ HANSEN KATHERINE LUOMAtA • MARVIN K. OP~

01'. Kmnl)'n, who II a re­.rn reh l "o.lnllo( ror (be LanR­h 'Y POl't~r Nruropsyc;hlntrle In. lltul. and a leclurer al the Univt r.lI)' of Cnllfornl. Med­irnl Ct'nlcr-, nnd whose work I. pnrtly finnnced through a grolll from Ih. Notional In-Illul,' of M"ntnl Hf"l(h, pre­

dict. Ihnl "In five ),e ... we'lI know C'normollsiy mOre about hrn ill w nvr.s And about con­"cIOU8 nC5!11. "

Unlll r. C f n II Y. he laYI \Vrs tcn\ man hAS been "no rnore C'llllA:hlrned on lhe na­tllrr o( his !'IlIbjccUve expe­r if'n r(' thull ArllloUe was."

Ho nld part ot Ih. dlm­.ully h .. boen that "most ot nur education III concerned wl(h Iho olh.r world_l­thou.rh tvtr,vone Is concern­a bout thclr own I,nner state. hveryone's trylnJ to be hap­llY -" n d wondermr why thry (lan't he."

Il is work is unquestionnblv " startling nr", way to explore Ih. r ntlr . Acid- and, as he !WY"!, It· ~ n big subject.

-Chronicle.

Thelorced uprooling and relocation or110,OOOWeJ! COli' Japanese during World War II represents sn unprecedented end significant chapter i n the growth 01 American cunure and freedoms, An actuat accounl of whit happened In the relocation centers during the four year. of their exiatence II described In this work by three men and one woman who In

1942 were a part of the edministrative unit of the clmps.

Some 30.000 Ilmlllos moved inland from the Plcille COlat to reconstruct their lives 10 banack., betllnrj barbed wIre Whal followP'd for the evar,uees Wei a nlghlmare 01 fear, uncertainly, and humlli.~

tlon - 'C?"owed by confinement to crudely ralh~ loned HVlng quarlera, close JUNelllance, and -no knowledge of what would happen next. 'tHo me"

for the Involuntary Ir.velers walth. cl(,ared wood· lands 01 Rohwer, the ugebrush plains of Minidoka, the SWirling dust of POlton,

There arose nevertheless out 01 the initial tur ... moll and conlulion a dominlnt mood at busy con-­

cern lor straightening out the details of living. a

, .IOry 01 courage, hopeand inltialiveskltllu1ly pieced together by the authors. Augmenting the powerful direct Impressions of these authorities are their reflective thoughts In today's setting. Spicer, In •

comprehensive Introduction, extrapolates fresh meaning and values to the work, dealing with th. rationale behind the formation of the center •.

Significantly. this government report by the,. administralors .Iresses how "given chaos and be-.. Itayal IS the starling point, people strive to bring meaning back Inlo their lives," Their account 0' how altitudes at Jap!nCSA-Arnerlcan relocatees and WAA administrators evolved, adjusted, and affected

one another on political, social, psychological, and symbolic lavets contributes much to our under. standing of what really happened in the relocation centers.

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