page 1 |
Previous | 1 of 4 | Next |
|
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
STEUM I ©f WSEitt fOOl uumiEfFnaifJE To Hiss Stella G. Horita of 8G-4B goes the honor of being tho 4000th person to be issued- an indefinite leave-from Amache, according to the center statistics office. . She Ipft the project, on March 31 for Madison, ■'Wis. ' For the month of March, there were 243 Amache relocatees, of which 46 'were to the West Coast. This makes a total of 4001 indefinite leaves issued by the local relocation program office since the opening .of the project. Vol. Ill "No. 4= IT Saturday, April 7, 1945 Amache, Colo. IfEUN RT FOR Twelve selectee's departed report _ for pro-induction Fort Logan in response to i Service bound of brewers county Those who reported from — the local board"w^ret Jack Yon'o.o Hatanaka, Y u k: I y o s h I Xa j iwara, Ben oarly Yfednosday morning physical examination nt call from tho Selective and other boards. George Shoichi Ibano, Fred Hon Fukusawa, Horio. Oweshi, Taina Hatsu- Continuing the information from the last Issue on. the modificacion of tho present policy governing visits to relocation cen- t.he national dire o t o r , should be made well In advance through the field r eIo c a tion o f f i ce. Exc op t in extreme emergencies, no one will bo admitted pend- upplieation for a third ters, tlie , m.odif ied po 1 icy allows theproiect director to grant an extension, up to continued .oi 30 additional . days, - if a relocationplan is definitely in process for the visitor's fami ly member s, and the director is satisfied that the elan can be completed through an extension of time. In addition to Health emergencies, others excluded from tho limitations on time and number of visits are :l) members of tho. armed forces on active status or in the HRC;2} persons conducting official business, such as relocatees seeking to hire evacuees for on .- sido employment, 3).student s who have not completed courses and- who present 1 etter s from autho ri z ed officials of colleges, trade or high schools-vouching their enrollment. Those students will bo permitted a 90-day stay, to be considered as one visit. Applications for exceptions to the regulations, which must bo approved by o — shita and Takahashi. The following draftees wore received by tho local board- from other boards.; Jack Masaru Fujii, George As at o Nakano, George Takata, Ray Saburo Tani and Frank Goldnmmor. Go Id-mror is a member of the appointed personnel. Masaru Usui, S u s umu Charles Ogino, SHigoru Seta and H e n s u k e Hashiwab ira wer d t raixsfofr boards for p examination. ed to other re-induction 7L15HINCTON--Tho conditions under-. which combat wound' ;d soldiors may bodis- charged from the Army were defined bv the Tkir Depart- SFIKWE 0ffSfl. 0 mmm sum mimmw mmmsM €immip}% With the recent acceptance of two more nisei girls, there are nfw five Japanese Americans in. the Array Nurse Corps, it was disclosed by .the ?k\r Department. Masako Mary Yamada, .the fifth member/ whose mother and s i s t o r r el 00 at ed f r om Heart Mountain relocation center to join her in Hew York, formerly resided in Los Ange1es. Unti1 her-in- duction In tho AHC, on March 3 0, Miss Yamada ment recently, Thoy may be released, on. bheir own request, If they meet all of those conditions: T Hoy are physically sifled permanently isignmont. n xwarded the determined needs of w tai In large How York OBmsroc virjuihids<& Pvt. Hiroshi Kurosaki pf 10H-2B reported recently at Camp Yfoltors, Texas, (IRTC) to begin, his training as an infantryman. He is assigned to a battalion stressing rifle trninin ,, public school,was ward instructor, assistant supor- ■' visor in surgery and first supervisor in a special service. The other AHC inductee, Teiko Harata, -wont on active duty, April 2, at Til- ton General hospital near —,—continued on page 3 — clas limited a Have been. Purple Heart, Have been Msurplus to tho the Army as a whole. Ho enlisted man, the YTar Departm nit said, will bo considerod surplus if an as s igrnient i s avail able appropriate to his grade; if such an assignment would release for overseas shipment a man who had not had overseas service, or if the wounded man, with retraining, bo effectively utilized. IMWJFW%iE SEKWKCic wm mttwmmmNEK- VACAVTLL3, Calif.— A. Hodi, first alien,Japanese to return to the Vacaville district, was refused service by. two local'' restaurants, according to Chief, of Police 0. E. Alloy. Hodi is making his homo on tho Alameda ranch near her>j. •
Object Description
Title | Granada Pioneer, Vol III, No. 45 |
Date Created | 1945-02-28 |
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_N45_P01 |
Title | page 1 |
Transcript | STEUM I ©f WSEitt fOOl uumiEfFnaifJE To Hiss Stella G. Horita of 8G-4B goes the honor of being tho 4000th person to be issued- an indefinite leave-from Amache, according to the center statistics office. . She Ipft the project, on March 31 for Madison, ■'Wis. ' For the month of March, there were 243 Amache relocatees, of which 46 'were to the West Coast. This makes a total of 4001 indefinite leaves issued by the local relocation program office since the opening .of the project. Vol. Ill "No. 4= IT Saturday, April 7, 1945 Amache, Colo. IfEUN RT FOR Twelve selectee's departed report _ for pro-induction Fort Logan in response to i Service bound of brewers county Those who reported from — the local board"w^ret Jack Yon'o.o Hatanaka, Y u k: I y o s h I Xa j iwara, Ben oarly Yfednosday morning physical examination nt call from tho Selective and other boards. George Shoichi Ibano, Fred Hon Fukusawa, Horio. Oweshi, Taina Hatsu- Continuing the information from the last Issue on. the modificacion of tho present policy governing visits to relocation cen- t.he national dire o t o r , should be made well In advance through the field r eIo c a tion o f f i ce. Exc op t in extreme emergencies, no one will bo admitted pend- upplieation for a third ters, tlie , m.odif ied po 1 icy allows theproiect director to grant an extension, up to continued .oi 30 additional . days, - if a relocationplan is definitely in process for the visitor's fami ly member s, and the director is satisfied that the elan can be completed through an extension of time. In addition to Health emergencies, others excluded from tho limitations on time and number of visits are :l) members of tho. armed forces on active status or in the HRC;2} persons conducting official business, such as relocatees seeking to hire evacuees for on .- sido employment, 3).student s who have not completed courses and- who present 1 etter s from autho ri z ed officials of colleges, trade or high schools-vouching their enrollment. Those students will bo permitted a 90-day stay, to be considered as one visit. Applications for exceptions to the regulations, which must bo approved by o — shita and Takahashi. The following draftees wore received by tho local board- from other boards.; Jack Masaru Fujii, George As at o Nakano, George Takata, Ray Saburo Tani and Frank Goldnmmor. Go Id-mror is a member of the appointed personnel. Masaru Usui, S u s umu Charles Ogino, SHigoru Seta and H e n s u k e Hashiwab ira wer d t raixsfofr boards for p examination. ed to other re-induction 7L15HINCTON--Tho conditions under-. which combat wound' ;d soldiors may bodis- charged from the Army were defined bv the Tkir Depart- SFIKWE 0ffSfl. 0 mmm sum mimmw mmmsM €immip}% With the recent acceptance of two more nisei girls, there are nfw five Japanese Americans in. the Array Nurse Corps, it was disclosed by .the ?k\r Department. Masako Mary Yamada, .the fifth member/ whose mother and s i s t o r r el 00 at ed f r om Heart Mountain relocation center to join her in Hew York, formerly resided in Los Ange1es. Unti1 her-in- duction In tho AHC, on March 3 0, Miss Yamada ment recently, Thoy may be released, on. bheir own request, If they meet all of those conditions: T Hoy are physically sifled permanently isignmont. n xwarded the determined needs of w tai In large How York OBmsroc virjuihids<& Pvt. Hiroshi Kurosaki pf 10H-2B reported recently at Camp Yfoltors, Texas, (IRTC) to begin, his training as an infantryman. He is assigned to a battalion stressing rifle trninin ,, public school,was ward instructor, assistant supor- ■' visor in surgery and first supervisor in a special service. The other AHC inductee, Teiko Harata, -wont on active duty, April 2, at Til- ton General hospital near —,—continued on page 3 — clas limited a Have been. Purple Heart, Have been Msurplus to tho the Army as a whole. Ho enlisted man, the YTar Departm nit said, will bo considerod surplus if an as s igrnient i s avail able appropriate to his grade; if such an assignment would release for overseas shipment a man who had not had overseas service, or if the wounded man, with retraining, bo effectively utilized. IMWJFW%iE SEKWKCic wm mttwmmmNEK- VACAVTLL3, Calif.— A. Hodi, first alien,Japanese to return to the Vacaville district, was refused service by. two local'' restaurants, according to Chief, of Police 0. E. Alloy. Hodi is making his homo on tho Alameda ranch near her>j. • |