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Page 4 PIONEER February 27, 1943 ART ENTRIES LIMITED Entries for the Commu- nity Arts and Crafts ex- hibit scheduled for Mar. 5, 6, and 7 are limited to one per person in any one medium and must be submitted to the adult education office or 8H-12B tomorrow between 1 and 4 p.m. or Monday be- tween 7 and 9 p.m. Art in Action demonstra- atons will be given during the exhibit, according to Julia Tanji of the program committee. Tom Okamoto, senior high. art instructor, will il- lustrate the art of cari- caturing, and one of Shizue Watanabe’s students will demonstrate rug-weaving on a loom. Atsushi Kikuchi and Mark Luca are co-chairmen for the exhibit. KANKI SELLS SF SUNDAY CHRONICLE Mitsuru Kanki, the cen- ter's newsboy, today an- nounced that he is selling the San Francisco Sunday Chronicle. It arrives at about 4 p.m. every Thurs- day, Kanki said. The price is 15 cents. TRIO CHOSEN BY MANAGERS Joe Kayokata, chairman, Rokuro Okubo, vice chair- man, and Tomo Nishizaki, secretary, were elected as permanent officers of the Block Managers' assemb1y at a recent meeting. The body will hold reg- ular meetings every Wed- nesday at 9 a.m. at Town hall. MORE MEN School Leaves Issued to 74 A total of 74 education- al leaves have been issued to date, it was announced by the College council to- day. Leaves have been granted to 42 college men and to 32 co-eds. Amache students are attending colleges throughout the United States. One of the latest leave clearances was made for Woodrow Odanaka, who re- ceived a scholarship to Carleton college, Minn. PRINCIPAL DUMAS BACK FROM TEXAS Dr. Enoch Dumas, elemen- tary school principal, re- turned Wednesday from Texas where he delivered two speeches. On Monday evening, he spoke on "Evacuation and Relocation of Japanese- Americans" to members of the faculty and their wives at the home of Dr. R. E. Garlin, head of the educa- tion department of Texas Technological college at Lubbock, Tex. On Tuesday, he talked on relocation and reloca- tion schools before the combined education classes at the college. Both the faculty and students showed a very receptive attitude towards the speeches. WOMEN HEAR TERRY, CASEY Paul J. Terry, superin- tendent of education, to- gether with Lee Casey of the Rocky Mountain News and an evacuee from Minido- ka, took part in a panel discussion on relocation before the Denver Council of Women's organizations Tuesday afternoon. The audience, composed of the presidents and sec- retaries of all women's clubs in Denver, heard Terry present the economic, so- cial, and educational prob- ably of the center. ------VISITORS----- George Leaf, F. D. Poin- dexter, H. M. Schanstrom, Pueblo; Duke Parsons, Hugo- ton, Kan.; L. A. Creaghe, Jack Beall, Lamar. Lee Diller, L. A. Wright, Bristol; Joy B. Stuart, S. T. Kimball, Washington, DC; 0. W. Jeffers, Granada; Dr. Downs, Dr. Holmes, Denver. SHOES WILL BE TAKEN IN MAR, 16 Bob Sakiyama, manager of the Consumers' Co-oper- ative shoe store, today announced that his depart- ment will take in shoes for repair from Mar. 16. BETWEEN US GIRLS BY TAXIE KUSUNOKI Entre el Si y el No de la mujer, No me atreveria yo a po- ner unalpunta de alfi- ler. * --CERVANTES, Don Quixote SOLDIER'S CREED A good creed for our en- listees to follow might be this entry made in his diary by an American soldier of v/orld War I (this, from Joseph C. Grew's "Report From Tokyo): "I will work, I will save, I will sacri- fice, I will endure; I will fight cheerfully and do my utmost as if the whole struggle depended on me alone." On second thought, It's a good resolve for home- front fighters as well. SPEAKING OF SOLDIERS-- You who have raved and ranted for the establish- ment here of a USO center have a chance to contribute toward that end by attend- ing the YWCA's benefit movies today and tomorrow. Funds collected will be used to furnish and decorate the 6G rec hall for future USO shindigs and such. Give them a hand, please? RWA continued-- How about "Rough and Wready Amazons"? Or could it be "Ready With Ammunition"? WE DON'T BELIEVE IT Look at the caption to Phyllis Bottome's novel, "Survival," in the March edition of the "Ladies' Home Journal." It reads: "The Story of a Man Who Understood Women." AND A CHILD SHALL LEAD "Fee-fi-fo-fum, I smell the blood of an Englishman," quoted Mrs. Lili Sasaki to her four-year-old offspring, Mimi. Retorted Mimi ins- tantly: "Don't say that, Mummy--that's Chauvinistic!" NEVER SAY DIE-- It couldn't be "Rich Women’s Association"..."? * WE TRANSLATE: Between. a woman's... yes and no, There is no room for a pin to go. (unquote)
Object Description
Title | Granada Pioneer, Vol. I, No. 43 |
Date | 1943-02-27 |
Physical Collection | Japanese Americans in World War II collection |
Volume | 1 |
Issue number or date | 43 |
Page count | 8 |
Object type | Newsletter |
Donor | Shitara, George |
Description
Title | page 4 |
Item number | HMLSC_Granada_Pioneer_V01_N43_P04 |
Page number | page 4 |
Physical description | 35.5 cm x 21.6 cm |
Full Text Search | Page 4 PIONEER February 27, 1943 ART ENTRIES LIMITED Entries for the Commu- nity Arts and Crafts ex- hibit scheduled for Mar. 5, 6, and 7 are limited to one per person in any one medium and must be submitted to the adult education office or 8H-12B tomorrow between 1 and 4 p.m. or Monday be- tween 7 and 9 p.m. Art in Action demonstra- atons will be given during the exhibit, according to Julia Tanji of the program committee. Tom Okamoto, senior high. art instructor, will il- lustrate the art of cari- caturing, and one of Shizue Watanabe’s students will demonstrate rug-weaving on a loom. Atsushi Kikuchi and Mark Luca are co-chairmen for the exhibit. KANKI SELLS SF SUNDAY CHRONICLE Mitsuru Kanki, the cen- ter's newsboy, today an- nounced that he is selling the San Francisco Sunday Chronicle. It arrives at about 4 p.m. every Thurs- day, Kanki said. The price is 15 cents. TRIO CHOSEN BY MANAGERS Joe Kayokata, chairman, Rokuro Okubo, vice chair- man, and Tomo Nishizaki, secretary, were elected as permanent officers of the Block Managers' assemb1y at a recent meeting. The body will hold reg- ular meetings every Wed- nesday at 9 a.m. at Town hall. MORE MEN School Leaves Issued to 74 A total of 74 education- al leaves have been issued to date, it was announced by the College council to- day. Leaves have been granted to 42 college men and to 32 co-eds. Amache students are attending colleges throughout the United States. One of the latest leave clearances was made for Woodrow Odanaka, who re- ceived a scholarship to Carleton college, Minn. PRINCIPAL DUMAS BACK FROM TEXAS Dr. Enoch Dumas, elemen- tary school principal, re- turned Wednesday from Texas where he delivered two speeches. On Monday evening, he spoke on "Evacuation and Relocation of Japanese- Americans" to members of the faculty and their wives at the home of Dr. R. E. Garlin, head of the educa- tion department of Texas Technological college at Lubbock, Tex. On Tuesday, he talked on relocation and reloca- tion schools before the combined education classes at the college. Both the faculty and students showed a very receptive attitude towards the speeches. WOMEN HEAR TERRY, CASEY Paul J. Terry, superin- tendent of education, to- gether with Lee Casey of the Rocky Mountain News and an evacuee from Minido- ka, took part in a panel discussion on relocation before the Denver Council of Women's organizations Tuesday afternoon. The audience, composed of the presidents and sec- retaries of all women's clubs in Denver, heard Terry present the economic, so- cial, and educational prob- ably of the center. ------VISITORS----- George Leaf, F. D. Poin- dexter, H. M. Schanstrom, Pueblo; Duke Parsons, Hugo- ton, Kan.; L. A. Creaghe, Jack Beall, Lamar. Lee Diller, L. A. Wright, Bristol; Joy B. Stuart, S. T. Kimball, Washington, DC; 0. W. Jeffers, Granada; Dr. Downs, Dr. Holmes, Denver. SHOES WILL BE TAKEN IN MAR, 16 Bob Sakiyama, manager of the Consumers' Co-oper- ative shoe store, today announced that his depart- ment will take in shoes for repair from Mar. 16. BETWEEN US GIRLS BY TAXIE KUSUNOKI Entre el Si y el No de la mujer, No me atreveria yo a po- ner unalpunta de alfi- ler. * --CERVANTES, Don Quixote SOLDIER'S CREED A good creed for our en- listees to follow might be this entry made in his diary by an American soldier of v/orld War I (this, from Joseph C. Grew's "Report From Tokyo): "I will work, I will save, I will sacri- fice, I will endure; I will fight cheerfully and do my utmost as if the whole struggle depended on me alone." On second thought, It's a good resolve for home- front fighters as well. SPEAKING OF SOLDIERS-- You who have raved and ranted for the establish- ment here of a USO center have a chance to contribute toward that end by attend- ing the YWCA's benefit movies today and tomorrow. Funds collected will be used to furnish and decorate the 6G rec hall for future USO shindigs and such. Give them a hand, please? RWA continued-- How about "Rough and Wready Amazons"? Or could it be "Ready With Ammunition"? WE DON'T BELIEVE IT Look at the caption to Phyllis Bottome's novel, "Survival," in the March edition of the "Ladies' Home Journal." It reads: "The Story of a Man Who Understood Women." AND A CHILD SHALL LEAD "Fee-fi-fo-fum, I smell the blood of an Englishman," quoted Mrs. Lili Sasaki to her four-year-old offspring, Mimi. Retorted Mimi ins- tantly: "Don't say that, Mummy--that's Chauvinistic!" NEVER SAY DIE-- It couldn't be "Rich Women’s Association"..."? * WE TRANSLATE: Between. a woman's... yes and no, There is no room for a pin to go. (unquote) |