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__ EICNEER ,_.___..„'May 16, 1945 by Roy Yoshida TOLERANCE AT HOME ' m HEVITABLE HAS FfRALLY li TAPPED US on the' shoulders * ty. - Closing of 7K and 9L mess halls on May 21 and June 4 respectively- has - •'been announced by the project director.These events have been expected by the evacuees as a part of the pos t-exclus ion center pro- gram. Until these blocks ar® closed, their residents will ..dine at the nearest' mess Hails.This in-between arrangement may bring up a delicate social problem--- unless the residents concerned brush up on life's amenities. '■■ It will mean that the "host"block and the "guest" " bf ock must show great amount of tolerance and fair play --If they are to Have smooth sailing- IHey will Have to conduct themselves as If they" all livid in the same block and had"equal share" in. Its ups and downs. It will be important that they get a .good start--or they may. end up in. a bad finish. "If in the c our se ? of events the pride of either block is hurt, then the outcome may be frosted with muc h unpleasantness, And that is one thing that should be avoided at this time' . How Is the time to stick together' on a good neighbor policy so when th i s ■ n I gh t m a r e called evacuation is ended, we shall start life anew on the outside on the best of terms. We shall need '"all for one,one for all"snirit dur ing the f ir s t p hase of •'the 'resettlement period. Any inter-clock friction now will hurt only thg evacuees concerned and nobody ■else. It must be nept in mi nd that , it is our"own welfare alt hhtake, and What happens to,us is within our power to aecide . PULLLHG TOGETHER m~ OR THE FIRST TliKEj in ^ ti long, long time, the evacuees saw something at ^V<^%. .IPISIIIIEIE H Published'. Wednesdays "and Saturdays, by the WA and distributed fre^e 'to ■each apartment. Editorial office: PIOHEER building,Amache, ColoH Telephone 63* '..-? . .. Editor:. Roy Yoshida Staff|.-.;Mits .Ikeda, John Ito, Asano Hasai, Henry Kusaba, Ren -Miyahara, Audrey Hakabe,- Florence Okida, Julia Shimosaka, Allan Asakawa* Japanese section ...... Editor; Ichiro Konno Staff: Yutaka Kubota, Moji.ro Hamakawa, 'lakahiko Kawamura. EDITORIAL Two American nent to protect CUT** ENT asked the U.S.govern- soldiers have their parents from terrorist shooting raids on their California home. Vandals ride by in an auto,'firing into' the house of the invalid father. How can such a thing happen in this country? Well-, the victims are Japanese-Americans.. And there are some in this country who don't, think those people have the same rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, and to protection by the law, as the rest of us Ame r i c an e i t i z e ns . Because Japan is our enemy and guiltyofatrociti.es, some think we should take it out.on. those Americans of Japanese ancestry. Fortunately, they don't try to punish Americans of - German ancestry for Hazi. barbarism. but they think that Japanese-Americans somehow are different* ... ..-■•'• The record show the Japanese-American units fighting in Italy are among our • finest soldiers. They have earned fair treatment .for themselves and their families here at home. . . .„. • . Hot only in justice to these fellow-Americans who have proved ' their patriotism the -hard way, but also for our own self-respect and the -preservation of American ideals, our law -officers must protect-'the equal rights of all citizens regardless of ancestry. We can't win a war against barbarism by becoming-barbarians ourselves. May 5, 194-5 --NEW YORK. WORLD TELEGRAM WMiRm klhn or WirSJ|IHINI<S Pvts.. George Yamamoto, Joii Hitahara,' Camp Hlanding, FlaVj Sgt; Kay Kashiwabara, Pfcs. S>. Murayama, I« Kawauciii, ( M. Sakamoto-, Camp Car son, Colo. pulling together--in the same direction* The thought-I-was-seeing -things was the tug of war between the two aforementioned groups and the ap- pointed pe rsonnel --the block managers and the c ounc ilinen won the " is s ue . Which goes to show you .what can be done when you pull together . P.S.I'm still wondering moms %CHtmM% Next of kin of war heroes should guard against fraudulent schemes based on published •casualty 'lists, the War ■ -: Depar tjGent r e cently war ne d. One of the commonest form of swindles is to write the next of' kin seeking further information on the soldier listed as a casualty and advising that the deceased soldier is to be given a special niche in a so-called "hall of fame," "hero's memorial book" or photo gr a phic 1ayout. Deposits in advance or other cash requirements are set forth, and as soon as the remittance is received another fighting man's family has been victimized. the Ffefd Day that they where they found so many BIRTH: -;•- ■ thought had "gone with the new block - managers and To Mr. and Mrs, James wind." They saw the block .councilmen on such a short Yamaguchi., 7E-7D, • a 'girl, managers and the' councilmen notice. Tsk tsk I May 11. i
Object Description
Title | Granada Pioneer, Vol III, No. 56 |
Date Created | 1945-05-16 |
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_N56_P02 |
Title | page 2 |
Transcript |
__ EICNEER
,_.___..„'May 16, 1945
by Roy Yoshida
TOLERANCE AT HOME '
m HEVITABLE HAS FfRALLY
li TAPPED US on the' shoulders * ty. -
Closing of 7K and 9L
mess halls on May 21 and
June 4 respectively- has -
•'been announced by the project director.These events
have been expected by the
evacuees as a part of the
pos t-exclus ion center pro-
gram.
Until these blocks ar®
closed, their residents
will ..dine at the nearest'
mess Hails.This in-between
arrangement may bring up a
delicate social problem---
unless the residents concerned brush up on life's
amenities. '■■
It will mean that the
"host"block and the "guest" "
bf ock must show great amount
of tolerance and fair play
--If they are to Have smooth
sailing- IHey will Have to
conduct themselves as If
they" all livid in the same
block and had"equal share"
in. Its ups and downs. It
will be important that they
get a .good start--or they
may. end up in. a bad finish.
"If in the c our se ? of
events the pride of either
block is hurt, then the
outcome may be frosted with
muc h unpleasantness, And
that is one thing that
should be avoided at this
time' . How Is the time to
stick together' on a good
neighbor policy so when
th i s ■ n I gh t m a r e called
evacuation is ended, we
shall start life anew on
the outside on the best of
terms. We shall need '"all
for one,one for all"snirit
dur ing the f ir s t p hase of
•'the 'resettlement period.
Any inter-clock friction
now will hurt only thg evacuees concerned and nobody
■else. It must be nept in
mi nd that , it is our"own
welfare alt hhtake, and What
happens to,us is within our
power to aecide .
PULLLHG TOGETHER
m~ OR THE FIRST TliKEj in ^
ti long, long time, the
evacuees saw something at
^V<^%. .IPISIIIIEIE H
Published'. Wednesdays "and Saturdays, by the WA
and distributed fre^e 'to ■each apartment. Editorial
office: PIOHEER building,Amache, ColoH Telephone 63*
'..-? . .. Editor:. Roy Yoshida
Staff|.-.;Mits .Ikeda, John Ito, Asano Hasai, Henry
Kusaba, Ren -Miyahara, Audrey Hakabe,- Florence Okida,
Julia Shimosaka, Allan Asakawa*
Japanese section ...... Editor; Ichiro Konno
Staff: Yutaka Kubota, Moji.ro Hamakawa, 'lakahiko
Kawamura.
EDITORIAL
Two American
nent to protect
CUT** ENT
asked the U.S.govern-
soldiers have
their parents from terrorist shooting
raids on their California home. Vandals ride by in an
auto,'firing into' the house of the invalid father.
How can such a thing happen in this country? Well-,
the victims are Japanese-Americans.. And there are some
in this country who don't, think those people have the
same rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, and to protection by the law, as the rest of us
Ame r i c an e i t i z e ns .
Because Japan is our enemy and guiltyofatrociti.es,
some think we should take it out.on. those Americans of
Japanese ancestry. Fortunately, they don't try to punish Americans of - German ancestry for Hazi. barbarism.
but they think that Japanese-Americans somehow are
different* ... ..-■•'•
The record show the Japanese-American units fighting
in Italy are among our • finest soldiers. They have
earned fair treatment .for themselves and their families
here at home. . . .„. • .
Hot only in justice to these fellow-Americans who
have proved ' their patriotism the -hard way, but also
for our own self-respect and the -preservation of American ideals, our law -officers must protect-'the equal
rights of all citizens regardless of ancestry. We
can't win a war against barbarism by becoming-barbarians
ourselves.
May 5, 194-5 --NEW YORK. WORLD TELEGRAM
WMiRm klhn or
WirSJ|IHINI |