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February 1945_._ »I0; puwa GRANADA GIPOeS WIN }age b f<k.-J mm mcmi * mi mw ma West Coast housing is a definite problem,especially in larger cities,and it is impossible to get hotel ace omm o d a tio ns,so dpn!t g o back without someplace to stay* That vms the advice given by Takashi Koga, former Amache police chief,in his report of his recent trip to California at the Community Council meeting at Town Hall last week. Eoga, who went to San Francisco shortly after the ex c 1 u s 1 o n b an wa s 1 i f t e d, declared he had no trouble in any part of the city. At Petal uma, he was met by his renter and stayed overnight with him. Eoga discussed the local situation with the c aunty sheriff,judge and district attorney,who were all very- friendly. They are doing a splendid job of giving the returnees full protection and help,according to Foga. If a returning evacuee runs into any trouble, all he needs to do is to phone the sheriff, he added. An American Legion commander in Sebastopol told Eoga that although he personally opposed the Japanese return, the American Legion charter calls for following the principles of the US Constitution,and the Legion members and officers will abide by it. A superintendent of schools said they were prepared to take care of all return.ing e vac u e e school systems* Eoga revealed that jobs of most any kind were plentiful--many employers have offers listed with relocation offices. Wages are high and labor unions are not opposed to the return of evacuees. In. most sections, housing is the only problem. Salinas and Auburn are the "hot spots" right now, but even there the evacuees are getting along. Few returnees have given up and left their homes when someone talked "tough" to the:::, but if they had notified the sheriff, they would have been protected, Eoga continued. Law enforcement IJ l#illO®IIMi%lEiiS pmUf The Zephyrs,inspired by having everything to gain, and nothing to lose, hurdled seemingly in surmount all. e nil " +- o .-■> "! a .:• 'l-n U <--.■» 1 rl -i 1 -\r .-1 a — »->] HEI- 11 f],o obstacles feat the cagers, night. \ daze handily de- <--0-<:,4, ma' b-i ni seis Wednesday H11 u Ji t a. 61 r o a c.- -,; s to the Wall and aging to jfl ers, the Ee the prize upset or tne current season in outplacing the f Jumping leac: or five play- yrs polled »-h nf t Vi •>red 0-1' $, Into an early points by Tom Eaya- hara and Bill Adachi, the winners were never headed, although the Niseis were In the game for the first three qu"artera. In. s t ead of faltering got stronger entered the and coasted on Hideo Eo ike's heavy scoring. winners, i..oii:e and Mayahara led the scoring with 13 and 11 points respectively, while Shig Sakamoto was GI' s high scorer with 8, Summary? ZSEEYES (55)—Adachi 6, Koike 13, forwards; .Mayahara 11, center; Eltagawa 3 and Mukaida 2, guards. GI EI SSI S (24-)--0tsuki 6, SaEamoto 8, Toyama 1, Hi ur a 4, AE u t a g awa, f o rward sg Miya 1, center; Iseri 1, and Shimada 3, guards. IKANL-llKOIlCwSb K£)SIE visiting Granada girlsr sextet, although off its game, managed to correct enough tim.es to overwhelm the local. Kal-Holos,26-1&* Furslev and Lacv led vi \ }) i Tsutsui, Ft CAGE SCHEDULE TOMORROW AJ.-TSRil00F (1:15 o'clock) Rooties vs. Underpups hal-Eolos vs. Dambis Ubangis vs. Zephyrs FOEEAE NIGHT (7:15 p.m.) Jinx vs. Scrapperett.es Katonks vs. Unknowns Sg' Warren, Wyo*; Ff c, M. Shi- gaki,Bushnell General Hospital, Utahj Pvt.Ray Yono- mura, Camp Food,Texas;Pvt. Ben Eda, Pvt. Frank SEiba, Ft. Sneliing, Finn.; Fvt. Ben Eiraga, Fvt. Horio Ma- t suhawa, Pvt. 1- azufumi Ko j o, Pvt. SEigevuEi Jofuku,Pvt. Pete Rurihara, Pvt. George Earatsu, Camp Blanding, Fla. officers are pledged to give complete protection and they mean business. he Zephyrs as the tilt Einal stanza nto victory the Granada point parade with 8 each, while Mazie Asakawa and Gladys Matsu- moto shared Home scoring honors with 6 apiece. Summary: GEAIAEA (26) — Tyner 6, Parsley 8, Bailey 4, Lacy 8, Myers,forwards; Lococo, Robertson and Coffey, guards. EAL-EOLOS (l.5)--Asakawa 8,-Matsumoto S, M. Morita, A. Miyano, R.Morita 2, Ea- shiwahara 1, Nakamura,forwards; Eashiwabara, Eama- tan.I, T. Miyano, FuEui and Furuno, guards. ssmm§ map jimjt The Spurs sextet, playing a ragged game,was hard 1 in turning back •o It T t, not -i-, ill ing you. to California," concluded Eoga," but, if you want to go back, there is no reason wh y y o u shouldn't." pressc the spirited Jinx lassies by a narrow 25-21 margin. Except for Jane Hagai's 15 points, the score might have been reversed, Sumi Iwatsuru was high scorer. £'qt the losers with 8 digits, while Yoshie Tsubota played a smart defen- s ive in h o 1 d 1 n g S p u r ' s high-scoring Sadayo Washi- no to 8 points. oummary: SPURS (2 5)—Toyama,Yama- saki, Eagai 15, Sadayo Wash ino 8, B. Eochi, Sumi Washirio 2,forwardsjNakano, Miyahara, Makino, EumasaEi and Otera, guard s. JFtil (2l)--Mori 7, Iwa- t s u r u 8, T 0 k un a g a 6, S E i m 0 - s a I ":a, f 0 rwa r d s; T s ub 01 a, Fagao, Okamoto and Sakaeda, guards.
Object Description
Title | Granada Pioneer, Vol III, No. 27 |
Date Created | 1945-02-03 |
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 | 5 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_N27_P05 |
Title | page 5 |
Transcript |
February
1945_._
»I0;
puwa
GRANADA GIPOeS WIN
}age b
f |