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Page 6__________________PIONEER___________September 1, 1943 MERCS WIN LAST ' TILT OF SEASON, 9-2 An eight -run rally in the 2nd inning,featured by George Iseri 's homer, gave the Mercuries a 9-2 win over the Raiders in an ab- breviated three-inning A league tilt Monday evening at the 10F field. The contest was the last for both teams and put the Mercs in 2nd position with five wins and two losses, and the Raiders 3rd with four wins end three losses. The Motor Pool sits in the top spot with five straight wins. Score by innings: Mercuries 0 8 1-9 7 1 Raiders 2 0 0-2 2 3 BATTS: Mercs -G.Matsu- da and J.Hoshizu,K.Yamaga; Ralds-B. Shiro, J. Furuno and H. Hamanishi. AMACHE LOSES, 5-4 ---continued from page 5 - one over the left field bar- rier for the 4th round- tripper of the tilt. This ended the scoring as both sides were held scoreless in the last frame. Norio Matsukawa and Sats Uyekubo had 2 hits to cop the hickory honors for Ama- che . Left fielder Quinn's two homers were the high- light of the contest. Score by innings: Amache 010 200 010 - 4 7 4 Prow's 110 201 00.x - 5 5 1 BATTS: Amache --B.Umeku- bb, J.Niizawa and N.Matsu- kawa , T. Ono; Prowers--C. Gausman and A. McCorkle. SKIBO-KO-NUT GAME ----continued from page 5- fracas Saturday at the 10F diamond. Skibo Harry Fujimitsu was the big gun for the day hitting two triples in three trips to the plate. Ko-Nut Frank Takamoto hit his 2nd homer of the season. Score by innings: Ko-Nuts 200 03 - 5 4 8 Skibos 060 4xx- 10 8 3 BATTS: Ko-Nuts--P.Kuri- hara and J.Aoki, B.Fukumi- tsu; Skibos-T. Abe, W.Fu- kumitsu and T.Miura,T.Abe. BIRDS, TENNIS BALLS SOLD AT 7E REC Badminton -birds, 20 to 25 cents each, and tennis balls, 45 cents each, may be purchased at the 7E rec office, according to the athletic department. AUTO MECHANICS COURSE REOPENED TO YOUNG MEN Samuel Gordon, director of the adult-education pro- gram, announces that the second training session in auto mechanics will begin in the near future. The first eight-week au- to mechanics apprenticeship course, under the instruc- torship of Elzie Brown,su- pervisor of the auto mecha- nics shop, has just been completed. The five train- ees that took the course have re located, and because of the training that they received in this center were able to accept jobs as auto mechanics in ga- rages. This apprenticeship course is a part of the a- dult education retraining program and is the first of its kind in the center. This second course will again accomodate only five boys. All young men in- terested in taking this course are asked to con- sult Gordon any afternoon or evening at the office of adult education in the 8H block. POWERS ARRIVES FOR INSPECTION C. H. Powers, who is in charge of the WRA construc- tion and maintenance, ar- rived from Washington, DC, Monday morning and will visit the center until Fri- day. While here, Powers will inspect the construction and maintenance work of the project and will confer with the heads of this de- partment . NEW MESS TO OPEN The evacuee workers' mess hall will be opened with in a short time, announ - ces William Wells, chief project steward. ==WANTED== Anyone with knowledge of first aid to work at the school first-aid station. Apply at the elementary school office. AMACHE DELEGATES RETURN FROM PUEBLO Paul J. Terry, super- intendent of schools, ac- companied by Kay Sugahara, the junior high school trio- Lucy Kishi, Loretta Kochi, and Chieko Nagatoishi--and pianist Namiko Ota visited Pueblo Monday and attended the Pueblo Rotary club meet- ing held at the Vail hotel. Terry spoke to the group about the background of the evacuation, relocation and the present segregation program, while Sugahara spoke about the problems which confront the nisei. The junior high school trio sang two numbers, and Miss Ota played two solos and accompanied the group singing. Approximately 70 to 75 people were present at the meeting. ==JOB OPPORTUNITIES== Exp body and fender men, 75 cts hr, Cleveland. Bookkeeper - steno, $90 To $100- mo depending on exp and possibility for ad- vancement, University of Wisconsin YMCA. Four workers, may oper- ate own units after looking over possibilities, Iowa. Hat cleaner and blocker, may take family,Des Moines, Ia. Part-time domestic, $10 wk bd and rm, may attend Toledo University, Toledo. Young man,clean and oil presses, learn printing trade, no exp, 55 cts hr. 1½ overtime. Stock clerk, $25 wk, Chicago. Maintenance men, 75 cts hr; oiler for electric equip, 75 cts hr; junior electrician, 80 cts hr; oiler and maintenance for steam and diesel engines, 80½ cts hr. Twelve men to set pins, $25 to $50 wk plus furnish- ed apt--48 hr wk, Ann Ar- bor, Michigan. Excellent opportunity for farm couple with EDC clearance, $900 to $1000 yr, cottage, steam heat, gas, elec, sewing machine, washer, refrigerator, hos- pitalization, social secu- rity insurance,modern farm equip, New York.
Object Description
Title | Granada Pioneer, Vol. I, No. 96 |
Date | 1943-09-01 |
Physical Collection | Japanese Americans in World War II collection |
Volume | 1 |
Issue number or date | 96 |
Page count | 13 |
Object type | Newsletter |
Donor | Shitara, George |
Description
Title | page 6 |
Item number | HMLSC_Granada_Pioneer_V01_N96_P06 |
Page number | page 6 |
Physical description | 35.6 cm x 21.6 cm |
Full Text Search | Page 6__________________PIONEER___________September 1, 1943 MERCS WIN LAST ' TILT OF SEASON, 9-2 An eight -run rally in the 2nd inning,featured by George Iseri 's homer, gave the Mercuries a 9-2 win over the Raiders in an ab- breviated three-inning A league tilt Monday evening at the 10F field. The contest was the last for both teams and put the Mercs in 2nd position with five wins and two losses, and the Raiders 3rd with four wins end three losses. The Motor Pool sits in the top spot with five straight wins. Score by innings: Mercuries 0 8 1-9 7 1 Raiders 2 0 0-2 2 3 BATTS: Mercs -G.Matsu- da and J.Hoshizu,K.Yamaga; Ralds-B. Shiro, J. Furuno and H. Hamanishi. AMACHE LOSES, 5-4 ---continued from page 5 - one over the left field bar- rier for the 4th round- tripper of the tilt. This ended the scoring as both sides were held scoreless in the last frame. Norio Matsukawa and Sats Uyekubo had 2 hits to cop the hickory honors for Ama- che . Left fielder Quinn's two homers were the high- light of the contest. Score by innings: Amache 010 200 010 - 4 7 4 Prow's 110 201 00.x - 5 5 1 BATTS: Amache --B.Umeku- bb, J.Niizawa and N.Matsu- kawa , T. Ono; Prowers--C. Gausman and A. McCorkle. SKIBO-KO-NUT GAME ----continued from page 5- fracas Saturday at the 10F diamond. Skibo Harry Fujimitsu was the big gun for the day hitting two triples in three trips to the plate. Ko-Nut Frank Takamoto hit his 2nd homer of the season. Score by innings: Ko-Nuts 200 03 - 5 4 8 Skibos 060 4xx- 10 8 3 BATTS: Ko-Nuts--P.Kuri- hara and J.Aoki, B.Fukumi- tsu; Skibos-T. Abe, W.Fu- kumitsu and T.Miura,T.Abe. BIRDS, TENNIS BALLS SOLD AT 7E REC Badminton -birds, 20 to 25 cents each, and tennis balls, 45 cents each, may be purchased at the 7E rec office, according to the athletic department. AUTO MECHANICS COURSE REOPENED TO YOUNG MEN Samuel Gordon, director of the adult-education pro- gram, announces that the second training session in auto mechanics will begin in the near future. The first eight-week au- to mechanics apprenticeship course, under the instruc- torship of Elzie Brown,su- pervisor of the auto mecha- nics shop, has just been completed. The five train- ees that took the course have re located, and because of the training that they received in this center were able to accept jobs as auto mechanics in ga- rages. This apprenticeship course is a part of the a- dult education retraining program and is the first of its kind in the center. This second course will again accomodate only five boys. All young men in- terested in taking this course are asked to con- sult Gordon any afternoon or evening at the office of adult education in the 8H block. POWERS ARRIVES FOR INSPECTION C. H. Powers, who is in charge of the WRA construc- tion and maintenance, ar- rived from Washington, DC, Monday morning and will visit the center until Fri- day. While here, Powers will inspect the construction and maintenance work of the project and will confer with the heads of this de- partment . NEW MESS TO OPEN The evacuee workers' mess hall will be opened with in a short time, announ - ces William Wells, chief project steward. ==WANTED== Anyone with knowledge of first aid to work at the school first-aid station. Apply at the elementary school office. AMACHE DELEGATES RETURN FROM PUEBLO Paul J. Terry, super- intendent of schools, ac- companied by Kay Sugahara, the junior high school trio- Lucy Kishi, Loretta Kochi, and Chieko Nagatoishi--and pianist Namiko Ota visited Pueblo Monday and attended the Pueblo Rotary club meet- ing held at the Vail hotel. Terry spoke to the group about the background of the evacuation, relocation and the present segregation program, while Sugahara spoke about the problems which confront the nisei. The junior high school trio sang two numbers, and Miss Ota played two solos and accompanied the group singing. Approximately 70 to 75 people were present at the meeting. ==JOB OPPORTUNITIES== Exp body and fender men, 75 cts hr, Cleveland. Bookkeeper - steno, $90 To $100- mo depending on exp and possibility for ad- vancement, University of Wisconsin YMCA. Four workers, may oper- ate own units after looking over possibilities, Iowa. Hat cleaner and blocker, may take family,Des Moines, Ia. Part-time domestic, $10 wk bd and rm, may attend Toledo University, Toledo. Young man,clean and oil presses, learn printing trade, no exp, 55 cts hr. 1½ overtime. Stock clerk, $25 wk, Chicago. Maintenance men, 75 cts hr; oiler for electric equip, 75 cts hr; junior electrician, 80 cts hr; oiler and maintenance for steam and diesel engines, 80½ cts hr. Twelve men to set pins, $25 to $50 wk plus furnish- ed apt--48 hr wk, Ann Ar- bor, Michigan. Excellent opportunity for farm couple with EDC clearance, $900 to $1000 yr, cottage, steam heat, gas, elec, sewing machine, washer, refrigerator, hos- pitalization, social secu- rity insurance,modern farm equip, New York. |