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mnANW fire 3 viotion tenants by notices any owner to of property inCalifornia must be sent to the tenant stating that he wants the property for His own use and p o s s e s s I on in 30 days, stated Mrs,Mima R.Pollitt, project attorney, last Wednesday. A copy of this notice Is sent to the regional OPA. If the owner wants the property for the use of his family, such as where the owner is in the armed service, a letter must first be written to the OPA of the family's returning to the property. If the OPA c on s ents,a 30 d aysT not ice Is then served on the tenant. Cm MHtfT" W Aft e r a c o ns u11a t i o n b e- twe e n Pr o j ec t Director James G, Lindley and tho negotiation committee of tho AmaoHe Community Council, a new plan for the gradual closing of the center was agreed upon,accord- ing to a council soo.kesman yesterday. Under the new arrangement, the two blocks previously scheduled for complete closing and evac na if/ % *% //r Thirteen Amache prein- due tees left early yesterday morning for Denver to report for their Army phys- 'ical examination. They are all reporting from the lo- ' cal board of Prowers county. Those called were.: Minora llamatani, 10II-7C; Shigeru Hirose, Box 256, Holly; lakeo Itano, 8.IC-6E; Shigeru Homatsubara,7F-4D; Richard Teruo Masato, 12G- 313; Walter Hobuo Matsuoka, 7H-7B; Albert Mitsuo Hi shi, !»Ill «9L. mm Ge org e H o m u r a lilt-OF: GS-2S. Tahashi Sasai, 10H-12C; Mitsugu Sumada,12II-4E, Edwin Hor.i and Evan Setsuo Toyama, Box 23, Granada, and Tadao Watanabe, 7G-2E. Following relocated selectees we re also 1is t ed t o report: Jane s Yo sh i t o Mo r imo t o, Boulder, Colo.; Paul M. Okada, George Watanabe and Frank Akio Tashiro. all of Chicago. M^AtMJMWICDH fO> IrlEJ^IMMlIL Pme)lEiiIii¥ IBIW 5blVIMMEIIIirS> The commencement exercises for the Amache high school class of !45—109 strong and in caps and gowns—will be held this Tuesday night,7;30 o'clock, in the school auditorium. The pends class, be the The will feature a member and William Sakamoto will led by Masashi Itano and exercises win reature a pageant, On Me," written by the members of Miss Setsumi Saito graduate speakers, procession .will be Miss Cookie Takano, jgusnimr class president and secretary respectively. Following seniors are nominated for. graduation: "It All De- he senior iLEAWfc -REQUESTS Hi yoko As a i, S h i g e ko Fukuda, Toruko Hamakawa, * Sh I g eko llama oka, Grace Hobu Haratani, Mary Jean Haruye Hirakawa, *Mitsue Iwata, May IC. kamikawa, Asano Hasai, Mae If, Hato. *Hamiye Mamie 13. no shit a, * Eunice Kumagai, Juno T. Kumasaki, Shinobu Huni- moto, Margaret T. Makino, Mary Matoba, Gladys Asaye —continued on page 3 Slashing all past roc- cords, 577 persons or 10 per c ent of the c ent or population appliedfor indefinite loaves during the month of May, proudly revealed Mario Yoochio,relo- cation advisor, yesterday. Howevor, tho actual do-* par tares wero 139, of which 84 returned to the West Coast. In March-and April there wore 243 and 34G departures respectively. tion of residents during •this . month will not be closed. It was agreed tho plans would not call for any block to close before Aug* 1, and furthermore, negotiations, would be made before any action is taken at that time. Closing of moss Halls, however, will nroc eod, b.a s od upon the dwindling population in tho blocks. This procedure ■ is in aceordance to the Y/HA handbook of regulations issued by the Washington office which states in Section 50.5L: "In order to conserve manpower it is .recommended that mess halls be closed when the average number of persons served is 150 or lc ii An oarly ruling, first from tho Calif ornia Supreme Qourt and then from the US Supreme Court, upon the constitutionality of the California Alien Land Law vd 11 be sought by A. L. Wirin and J. B. Tiotz, attorneys for Yoshitaro Yoshimura. Wirin rocontly filed a motion in tho San Diego, (Calif*) superior court that a judgement should be entered in tho eschoat proceedings filed by tho State of California against Yoshimura and other Japanese defendonts, so that an immediate appeal can be taken to tho higher courts. In an affidavit submitted to tho court by "Tirin^ it is recited that Judgo Charles C. Haines, who hold the Alien Land Law legal, did so only by leaving tho issue for final d ec i s i on by tho .higher courts. The affidavit further stated that a research made concerning tho legislative —continuod on page 3
Object Description
Title | Granada Pioneer, Vol III, No. 61 |
Date Created | 1945-06-02 |
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 | 4 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_N61_P01 |
Title | page 1 |
Transcript | mnANW fire 3 viotion tenants by notices any owner to of property inCalifornia must be sent to the tenant stating that he wants the property for His own use and p o s s e s s I on in 30 days, stated Mrs,Mima R.Pollitt, project attorney, last Wednesday. A copy of this notice Is sent to the regional OPA. If the owner wants the property for the use of his family, such as where the owner is in the armed service, a letter must first be written to the OPA of the family's returning to the property. If the OPA c on s ents,a 30 d aysT not ice Is then served on the tenant. Cm MHtfT" W Aft e r a c o ns u11a t i o n b e- twe e n Pr o j ec t Director James G, Lindley and tho negotiation committee of tho AmaoHe Community Council, a new plan for the gradual closing of the center was agreed upon,accord- ing to a council soo.kesman yesterday. Under the new arrangement, the two blocks previously scheduled for complete closing and evac na if/ % *% //r Thirteen Amache prein- due tees left early yesterday morning for Denver to report for their Army phys- 'ical examination. They are all reporting from the lo- ' cal board of Prowers county. Those called were.: Minora llamatani, 10II-7C; Shigeru Hirose, Box 256, Holly; lakeo Itano, 8.IC-6E; Shigeru Homatsubara,7F-4D; Richard Teruo Masato, 12G- 313; Walter Hobuo Matsuoka, 7H-7B; Albert Mitsuo Hi shi, !»Ill «9L. mm Ge org e H o m u r a lilt-OF: GS-2S. Tahashi Sasai, 10H-12C; Mitsugu Sumada,12II-4E, Edwin Hor.i and Evan Setsuo Toyama, Box 23, Granada, and Tadao Watanabe, 7G-2E. Following relocated selectees we re also 1is t ed t o report: Jane s Yo sh i t o Mo r imo t o, Boulder, Colo.; Paul M. Okada, George Watanabe and Frank Akio Tashiro. all of Chicago. M^AtMJMWICDH fO> IrlEJ^IMMlIL Pme)lEiiIii¥ IBIW 5blVIMMEIIIirS> The commencement exercises for the Amache high school class of !45—109 strong and in caps and gowns—will be held this Tuesday night,7;30 o'clock, in the school auditorium. The pends class, be the The will feature a member and William Sakamoto will led by Masashi Itano and exercises win reature a pageant, On Me," written by the members of Miss Setsumi Saito graduate speakers, procession .will be Miss Cookie Takano, jgusnimr class president and secretary respectively. Following seniors are nominated for. graduation: "It All De- he senior iLEAWfc -REQUESTS Hi yoko As a i, S h i g e ko Fukuda, Toruko Hamakawa, * Sh I g eko llama oka, Grace Hobu Haratani, Mary Jean Haruye Hirakawa, *Mitsue Iwata, May IC. kamikawa, Asano Hasai, Mae If, Hato. *Hamiye Mamie 13. no shit a, * Eunice Kumagai, Juno T. Kumasaki, Shinobu Huni- moto, Margaret T. Makino, Mary Matoba, Gladys Asaye —continued on page 3 Slashing all past roc- cords, 577 persons or 10 per c ent of the c ent or population appliedfor indefinite loaves during the month of May, proudly revealed Mario Yoochio,relo- cation advisor, yesterday. Howevor, tho actual do-* par tares wero 139, of which 84 returned to the West Coast. In March-and April there wore 243 and 34G departures respectively. tion of residents during •this . month will not be closed. It was agreed tho plans would not call for any block to close before Aug* 1, and furthermore, negotiations, would be made before any action is taken at that time. Closing of moss Halls, however, will nroc eod, b.a s od upon the dwindling population in tho blocks. This procedure ■ is in aceordance to the Y/HA handbook of regulations issued by the Washington office which states in Section 50.5L: "In order to conserve manpower it is .recommended that mess halls be closed when the average number of persons served is 150 or lc ii An oarly ruling, first from tho Calif ornia Supreme Qourt and then from the US Supreme Court, upon the constitutionality of the California Alien Land Law vd 11 be sought by A. L. Wirin and J. B. Tiotz, attorneys for Yoshitaro Yoshimura. Wirin rocontly filed a motion in tho San Diego, (Calif*) superior court that a judgement should be entered in tho eschoat proceedings filed by tho State of California against Yoshimura and other Japanese defendonts, so that an immediate appeal can be taken to tho higher courts. In an affidavit submitted to tho court by "Tirin^ it is recited that Judgo Charles C. Haines, who hold the Alien Land Law legal, did so only by leaving tho issue for final d ec i s i on by tho .higher courts. The affidavit further stated that a research made concerning tho legislative —continuod on page 3 |