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February 17, 1945 ; ;_ ALIEN TRAVEL — continued from page 1—- endorsement upon a copy of the statement and will deliver it to the alien, 'who shall- have it with him at all tlines while he is travel ing . There is also provision for frequent or' regular businds-s"' travel to cover the cases "of traveling salesman,truck drivers and 35 forth, so that they may travel without making a separate application for every trip'. However, travel by airplane is not permitted. Change of residence or of employment shall be made only after at least seven daysT notice to the'US Attorney of the proposed change, and a holder of Certificate of Identifiea- tion shall not change his name,residence address, or place of employment without a written" notice to- the Alien Registration division of the Immigration and Nat- _ uralization Service and to the FBI at the office shown, in the holder's Certificate, Travel restrictions apply to all aliens 1-1 years of aye or older, who Were or are citizens or subjects of Germany,.Italy or Japan, or who are at pre sent' stateless but who were citizens, er subjects - of any, one of those countries. The curfew regulations of the VEestern Defense Command no longer apply, since they were' rescinded' under Public Proclamation No. 21, -If there are any actual differences in the' regulation of the conduct of al-' lens as a result of differences -in interpretation, they should be called to our attention,so that they may"be uniformly interpreted and enforced. However,* the solicitor .concluded, the only difference in interpretation will most likely be those which properly follow from' the geographic limitations of the community involved. For example, in the area of San Francisco, the. bay area would undoubtedly be considered a part of t he community; whereas in the case of another city the community might properly be considered' to be a much smaller area. ,._' PIONEER. „........EPage 5 The A ma c he Stud e n t So hcl- arship Fund society was off ficially or,.v^tiized through the efforts of the school advisory board, with the .full approval and endorsement of ihebloek managers' assembly and the Community Council last Tuesday night. The ocietv, which has MISSIES Ot 10 R 0 s s ma n, senior business enterprises advisor of the New YorkTCRA office ,arrived in the c enter early this week to study the local Co-op's inventory and financial condition, a c e o rd ing to Dr. T,"Mi yamo- 10, ed uoat I cna 1 d ir ec t or . Rossman will discuss liquidation procedures and problems With the board of directors before leaving Amache. representatives from every active center organization, will foster and assist any student graduating or having g ra d ua ted fr om'Ama c he high school with his education at some American institution of higher learning. " All applications for funds and the appropriation of money to all eligible applicants will be handled by the following executive committee• Herbert K. W a 11 he r, c ha i r ma n.; T e k uy o s h i Kawa s a - ki,- vie e-c ha i rman j Gra c e 0 . Lewis ,secretary; Dr.- Taka- shi Terami,treasurer; Reb- b i n Fa ne ko , a ud i 10 r, and Ya s ut 0 s hi Yo shi zawa, pub - licity director, Application blanks, as well as 'further details, may be obtained from Miss. Lewis at the high school office .- The 7VRA hospital services under the health section are furnished to the center residents here as a free service by the HS Government, according to Dr. William T . Oarstarphen,""' ■ chisf . medioa 1 officer.. Ihis service . _. includes mainly all branches of medicine, dentistry and pharmacy. This .s ervlco ,when available, is also furnished to members of the appointed personnel, but to them the service is not free, and a fee schedule ,has been set up by the government for whatever services are rendered . - Visitors to the center are expected to get their medical, services v/hereve.r they now reside. However, should an emergency arise while .they are visiting the center, and it can be established that it is an emergency prohibiting other arrangements,thai emergency medical service will be rendered. In which case, such persons will come in the same category as the appointed personnel and a fee will be accordingly applied. ' . In order to obtain this emergency service, the approval of the project di- rector-an-d the chief JaQ^^| officer will be W&£&g&py? ~- continued from page 1—- assistsk»ce will be rendered wherever possible before the evacuee leaves the cent er . . .EEIA wi 11 he 1 p 3 e- cure bus iness Iicenses, , , TiIRA ' does not intend to extend announced time for removal of evacuee, property ' stored In government warehouses., FERA will assist with legal problems, but will not handle court cases.,.Schools definitely will not reopen after the end, of the current school te rm,,. Ma j or i ty. of 7/ est Coast unions favorable to Japanese,, .AH centers to. close by Jan.. 1,El946V At present there is no schedr uleto close one center before others. , .Relocation assistance program's' ex» pec ted budget for 1945.—* |8,000,000," Myer coneluded the -dis* cuss ion , expressing confidence in the relocation program and hoped the 'evacuees will .take, fulladT vantage of it,
Object Description
Title | Granada Pioneer, Vol III, No. 31 |
Date Created | 1945-02-17 |
Description | Newsletter of the Granada War Relocation Center |
Location | Granada, Colorado |
Facility | Granada War Relocation Center |
Subjects | World War II--Incarceration camps--Publications |
Type | Documents |
Genre | Periodicals |
Source Description | 6 pages, 26.5 cm. x 20.2 cm. |
Collection | Japanese Americans in WWII collection |
Collection Finding Aid | http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf4n39n6th/ |
Collection Description | The Japanese Americans in World War II collection contains both contemporary and contemporaneous materials about the relocation of Japanese during World War II from the perspective of Japanese-Americans, the United States government and others. |
Rights | Copyright has not been transferred to California State University, Fresno. |
Description
Local ID | HMLSC_Granada_Pioneer_V03_N31_P03 |
Title | page 3 |
Transcript | February 17, 1945 ; ;_ ALIEN TRAVEL — continued from page 1—- endorsement upon a copy of the statement and will deliver it to the alien, 'who shall- have it with him at all tlines while he is travel ing . There is also provision for frequent or' regular businds-s"' travel to cover the cases "of traveling salesman,truck drivers and 35 forth, so that they may travel without making a separate application for every trip'. However, travel by airplane is not permitted. Change of residence or of employment shall be made only after at least seven daysT notice to the'US Attorney of the proposed change, and a holder of Certificate of Identifiea- tion shall not change his name,residence address, or place of employment without a written" notice to- the Alien Registration division of the Immigration and Nat- _ uralization Service and to the FBI at the office shown, in the holder's Certificate, Travel restrictions apply to all aliens 1-1 years of aye or older, who Were or are citizens or subjects of Germany,.Italy or Japan, or who are at pre sent' stateless but who were citizens, er subjects - of any, one of those countries. The curfew regulations of the VEestern Defense Command no longer apply, since they were' rescinded' under Public Proclamation No. 21, -If there are any actual differences in the' regulation of the conduct of al-' lens as a result of differences -in interpretation, they should be called to our attention,so that they may"be uniformly interpreted and enforced. However,* the solicitor .concluded, the only difference in interpretation will most likely be those which properly follow from' the geographic limitations of the community involved. For example, in the area of San Francisco, the. bay area would undoubtedly be considered a part of t he community; whereas in the case of another city the community might properly be considered' to be a much smaller area. ,._' PIONEER. „........EPage 5 The A ma c he Stud e n t So hcl- arship Fund society was off ficially or,.v^tiized through the efforts of the school advisory board, with the .full approval and endorsement of ihebloek managers' assembly and the Community Council last Tuesday night. The ocietv, which has MISSIES Ot 10 R 0 s s ma n, senior business enterprises advisor of the New YorkTCRA office ,arrived in the c enter early this week to study the local Co-op's inventory and financial condition, a c e o rd ing to Dr. T,"Mi yamo- 10, ed uoat I cna 1 d ir ec t or . Rossman will discuss liquidation procedures and problems With the board of directors before leaving Amache. representatives from every active center organization, will foster and assist any student graduating or having g ra d ua ted fr om'Ama c he high school with his education at some American institution of higher learning. " All applications for funds and the appropriation of money to all eligible applicants will be handled by the following executive committee• Herbert K. W a 11 he r, c ha i r ma n.; T e k uy o s h i Kawa s a - ki,- vie e-c ha i rman j Gra c e 0 . Lewis ,secretary; Dr.- Taka- shi Terami,treasurer; Reb- b i n Fa ne ko , a ud i 10 r, and Ya s ut 0 s hi Yo shi zawa, pub - licity director, Application blanks, as well as 'further details, may be obtained from Miss. Lewis at the high school office .- The 7VRA hospital services under the health section are furnished to the center residents here as a free service by the HS Government, according to Dr. William T . Oarstarphen,""' ■ chisf . medioa 1 officer.. Ihis service . _. includes mainly all branches of medicine, dentistry and pharmacy. This .s ervlco ,when available, is also furnished to members of the appointed personnel, but to them the service is not free, and a fee schedule ,has been set up by the government for whatever services are rendered . - Visitors to the center are expected to get their medical, services v/hereve.r they now reside. However, should an emergency arise while .they are visiting the center, and it can be established that it is an emergency prohibiting other arrangements,thai emergency medical service will be rendered. In which case, such persons will come in the same category as the appointed personnel and a fee will be accordingly applied. ' . In order to obtain this emergency service, the approval of the project di- rector-an-d the chief JaQ^^| officer will be W&£&g&py? ~- continued from page 1—- assistsk»ce will be rendered wherever possible before the evacuee leaves the cent er . . .EEIA wi 11 he 1 p 3 e- cure bus iness Iicenses, , , TiIRA ' does not intend to extend announced time for removal of evacuee, property ' stored In government warehouses., FERA will assist with legal problems, but will not handle court cases.,.Schools definitely will not reopen after the end, of the current school te rm,,. Ma j or i ty. of 7/ est Coast unions favorable to Japanese,, .AH centers to. close by Jan.. 1,El946V At present there is no schedr uleto close one center before others. , .Relocation assistance program's' ex» pec ted budget for 1945.—* |8,000,000," Myer coneluded the -dis* cuss ion , expressing confidence in the relocation program and hoped the 'evacuees will .take, fulladT vantage of it, |