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Page 2__________________PIONEER_________________September 8, 1943 _________G R A N A D A P I O N E E R___________________ Published Wednesdays and .Saturdays by the WRA and distributed free to each apartment. Editorial office: PIONEER building, Amache, Colorado. Telephone: 63. Editor: Joseph Ide Staff: Kats Arimoto, Bob Asamoto, Tad Fujii, Ailene Hamamoto, Tomoko Yatabe, Hiroshi Ito, Satoru Kamikawa, Betty Kanameishi, Ted Kinoshita, Khan Komai Yutaka Kubota,Henry Kusaba, Taxie Kusunoki, Toshiharu Matsumoto,Amy Minabe, Yaeko Morita,Toshio Ninomiya, Toshie Nishida, Kayo Sakaguchi, Sueo Sako, Yoshiaki Sugita, Yoshio Tsuruda, Johnnie Tsuruta.____________________ L e n d A Hand The farm is again appealing to the residents for help. The relocation of farm workers and the beginning of the school year have created, a shortage of manpower which must be met by volunteer workers. In the past, residents have responded to temporary emergencies. Now it is harvesting time, the fruit of a year's labor is waiting in the fields to be brought into our mess halls. To fail to meet this need would mean a waste of months of sweat and prime for all who gave both time and effort unstintingly to make a success of the farm. It is our labor that will have gone for naught and it is our stomachs that will go hungry. Don't let it. -K.K. =====RELOCATION===== Hayden Masahiro Masuda, Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. 7. Yo Ishihara Highland Park, Michigan, Sept. 9. Dorothv Shigeko Sato St. Paul, Minn,, to enroll at Hamline University,Sept. 8. Reiko Yoshino, Rolfe, Ia., Sept. 9. Tayeko Agatsuma, Denver, Sept. 6. Tayeko Sumigawa and Hi- roo Harry Sumigawa, Rock- ford, Ill., Sept. 8. Nobuye Inouye, Jackson, Mich., Sept. 9. Tomi Murakami, Jackson, Mich., Sept. 9. Carol T. Tanaka, Chi - cago, Sept. 14. Julia Tanji, New York City, Sept. 9. Emi Kusumi, Menomonie, Wis., Sept. 9. Sbizu Nishinouchi, Minn- apolis, Minn., Sept. 9. Magohachi Mats umoto, Rocky Ford,Colo., Sept. 6. Violet Mitsuko Kumimoto, Yellow Springs,Ohio, Sept. 8. Harry Yoshio Tademaru, Greeley, Colo., Sept. 6. Iris Masako Hatanaka, Des Moines, Ia., Sept. 7. Ben Shirokichi Hasegawa, Des Moines, Ia., Sept. 7. Aiko Nomiyama, Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. 10. Elsie Shizuko Arikawa, Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. 10. Bernice ayako Tsumori, Denver, Sept. 10 to attend Parks Business School. Clarence Yoneo Arima, Denver, Sept. 7. VISTING =====SOLDIERS==== S/Sgt. George T, Matsu- mura; Pvt. Shiyo Doichi; Pvt. Mitsuo Munemura; S/Sgt. Frank Sagara from Camp Shelby, Miss. NOT ONE SUBVERSIVE RELOCATED HOLLAND SALT LAKE CITY,--That not one Japanese evacuee on leave from relocation centers has "engaged in subversive activities" was revealed bv Thomas W. Hol- land, chief of the WRA em- ployment division, Wash- ington, DC, while attend- ing a conference of WRA heads from six northwestern states. Only 15,000 of the 105,000 Japanese in the United States are known to be disloyal,and they, said Holland,will be transferred to the Tule Lake center shortly. BETWEEN US GIRLS BY TAXIE KUSUNOKI HULLO- Under the screwy influ- ence of you'll-never-know (not to mention our new boss), here we go again-- STUFF After six months of (1) pounding out Town Hall Talk, (2) chopping articles, (3) pasting them onto dummies, (4)alternately tearing his naturally-curly hair and messed up stencils, (5) being the goat for all com- plaints from departments that for reasons of their own considered him an un- wanted quantity, (6) attend- ing all kinds of usually- boring meetings,and (7, 8, 9, 10) being a good boss that we all hate like the dickens to lose--Khan Komai is abdicating his editor- ship to leave for parts East and--he fondly hopes-- a saner environment than that of the Pioneer office. REFERENCE KK is one of those pee- pul who can cut you low and make you laugh at the same time. He works like 'h' one minute, then chortles like same the next. You never know when to approach him for permission to trot out to Granada. (Which, we suspect is his motive.) We won't say he's absent- minded, but he'll scold a reporter for writing sen- tences of about 100 words, then sit at a typewriter and bat out a sentence of about 102 words. (S h h h h - - his penmanship is something to shudder at!) He won't wear a shirt unless he can't find a clean T-shirt, in which case he'll reach for a sweatshirt. When it turns chilly, he wears a T-shirt AND a sweatshirt! A queer? Huh-uh, he's just a good guy who is fi- nally doing what he should have done long ago--getting outside where his talents may be used to better ad- vantage than they ever could be used inside a relocation center. All kinds of luck and stuff, boss!
Object Description
Title | Granada Pioneer, Vol. I, No. 98 |
Date | 1943-09-08 |
Physical Collection | Japanese Americans in World War II collection |
Volume | 1 |
Issue number or date | 98 |
Page count | 12 |
Object type | Newsletter |
Donor | Shitara, George |
Description
Title | page 2 |
Item number | HMLSC_Granada_Pioneer_V01_N98_P02 |
Page number | page 2 |
Physical description | 35.6 cm x 21.6 cm |
Full Text Search | Page 2__________________PIONEER_________________September 8, 1943 _________G R A N A D A P I O N E E R___________________ Published Wednesdays and .Saturdays by the WRA and distributed free to each apartment. Editorial office: PIONEER building, Amache, Colorado. Telephone: 63. Editor: Joseph Ide Staff: Kats Arimoto, Bob Asamoto, Tad Fujii, Ailene Hamamoto, Tomoko Yatabe, Hiroshi Ito, Satoru Kamikawa, Betty Kanameishi, Ted Kinoshita, Khan Komai Yutaka Kubota,Henry Kusaba, Taxie Kusunoki, Toshiharu Matsumoto,Amy Minabe, Yaeko Morita,Toshio Ninomiya, Toshie Nishida, Kayo Sakaguchi, Sueo Sako, Yoshiaki Sugita, Yoshio Tsuruda, Johnnie Tsuruta.____________________ L e n d A Hand The farm is again appealing to the residents for help. The relocation of farm workers and the beginning of the school year have created, a shortage of manpower which must be met by volunteer workers. In the past, residents have responded to temporary emergencies. Now it is harvesting time, the fruit of a year's labor is waiting in the fields to be brought into our mess halls. To fail to meet this need would mean a waste of months of sweat and prime for all who gave both time and effort unstintingly to make a success of the farm. It is our labor that will have gone for naught and it is our stomachs that will go hungry. Don't let it. -K.K. =====RELOCATION===== Hayden Masahiro Masuda, Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. 7. Yo Ishihara Highland Park, Michigan, Sept. 9. Dorothv Shigeko Sato St. Paul, Minn,, to enroll at Hamline University,Sept. 8. Reiko Yoshino, Rolfe, Ia., Sept. 9. Tayeko Agatsuma, Denver, Sept. 6. Tayeko Sumigawa and Hi- roo Harry Sumigawa, Rock- ford, Ill., Sept. 8. Nobuye Inouye, Jackson, Mich., Sept. 9. Tomi Murakami, Jackson, Mich., Sept. 9. Carol T. Tanaka, Chi - cago, Sept. 14. Julia Tanji, New York City, Sept. 9. Emi Kusumi, Menomonie, Wis., Sept. 9. Sbizu Nishinouchi, Minn- apolis, Minn., Sept. 9. Magohachi Mats umoto, Rocky Ford,Colo., Sept. 6. Violet Mitsuko Kumimoto, Yellow Springs,Ohio, Sept. 8. Harry Yoshio Tademaru, Greeley, Colo., Sept. 6. Iris Masako Hatanaka, Des Moines, Ia., Sept. 7. Ben Shirokichi Hasegawa, Des Moines, Ia., Sept. 7. Aiko Nomiyama, Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. 10. Elsie Shizuko Arikawa, Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. 10. Bernice ayako Tsumori, Denver, Sept. 10 to attend Parks Business School. Clarence Yoneo Arima, Denver, Sept. 7. VISTING =====SOLDIERS==== S/Sgt. George T, Matsu- mura; Pvt. Shiyo Doichi; Pvt. Mitsuo Munemura; S/Sgt. Frank Sagara from Camp Shelby, Miss. NOT ONE SUBVERSIVE RELOCATED HOLLAND SALT LAKE CITY,--That not one Japanese evacuee on leave from relocation centers has "engaged in subversive activities" was revealed bv Thomas W. Hol- land, chief of the WRA em- ployment division, Wash- ington, DC, while attend- ing a conference of WRA heads from six northwestern states. Only 15,000 of the 105,000 Japanese in the United States are known to be disloyal,and they, said Holland,will be transferred to the Tule Lake center shortly. BETWEEN US GIRLS BY TAXIE KUSUNOKI HULLO- Under the screwy influ- ence of you'll-never-know (not to mention our new boss), here we go again-- STUFF After six months of (1) pounding out Town Hall Talk, (2) chopping articles, (3) pasting them onto dummies, (4)alternately tearing his naturally-curly hair and messed up stencils, (5) being the goat for all com- plaints from departments that for reasons of their own considered him an un- wanted quantity, (6) attend- ing all kinds of usually- boring meetings,and (7, 8, 9, 10) being a good boss that we all hate like the dickens to lose--Khan Komai is abdicating his editor- ship to leave for parts East and--he fondly hopes-- a saner environment than that of the Pioneer office. REFERENCE KK is one of those pee- pul who can cut you low and make you laugh at the same time. He works like 'h' one minute, then chortles like same the next. You never know when to approach him for permission to trot out to Granada. (Which, we suspect is his motive.) We won't say he's absent- minded, but he'll scold a reporter for writing sen- tences of about 100 words, then sit at a typewriter and bat out a sentence of about 102 words. (S h h h h - - his penmanship is something to shudder at!) He won't wear a shirt unless he can't find a clean T-shirt, in which case he'll reach for a sweatshirt. When it turns chilly, he wears a T-shirt AND a sweatshirt! A queer? Huh-uh, he's just a good guy who is fi- nally doing what he should have done long ago--getting outside where his talents may be used to better ad- vantage than they ever could be used inside a relocation center. All kinds of luck and stuff, boss! |