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MONDAY’S 22 INDEFINITES SET NEW DAILY RECORD The urge to hit the open road reached a new high Monday when 22 eva- cuees received their"walk- ing papers,"commonly known as indefinite leaves,stated Mario Vecchio, relocation advisor. This sets a new record for number of indefinites issued in a single day. During the period between Jan.31 to Feb.7 inclusive, a total of 93 indefinite leaves have been granted and if this present pace continues the month of February will be the high- est on record, disclosed Vecchio. KNODEL SPEAKS TO STUDENTS ON DRAFT Walter J.Knodel, Selec- tive Service officer,spoke to 100 high school boys, who are 17 years or over, yesterday afternoon at the high school, according to Herbert Walther, principal. Knodel discussed the various phases pertaining to rein- stitution of Selective Ser- vice, for Nisei._____________________________________________________________ Granada PIONEER Vol.II, No. 28 Amache, Colorado February 9, 1944 QUADRUPED “EVACUEE” OUT ON INDEFINITE The recent relocation team of Boston's Roger F. Clapp and Peoria's Milton C. Geuther, who visited this center for two weeks, were anything but a team or friends on a subject of resettlement when it came to one very interesting incident. Clapp lays claim to being the first relocation officer to persuade a quad- ruped "evacuee" take out an "indefinite" leave and resettle in staid ol' Bos- ton. While Geuther tried his best to convince this “evacuee"en route to New England area to take advantage of better relo- cation opportunities in the Peoria area. But it seems Clapp thoroughly sold this party on Boston and nothing Geuther said had any effect so the Peorian had to be satisfied by grabbing off several fleas off this re- locatee's back and give them a fresh start in Peo- ria. At least Geuther "re- --- continued on page 3--- ARMY-NAVY QUALIFYING TEST SET FOR MARCH 15 Japanese-American youths, who are high school grad- uates and between the ages of 17 and 22 years, will be eligible to take the third Army Specialized Train- ing and Navy College pro- gram V-12 on March 15 at the local high school, an- nounced Miss Grace Lewis, vocational advisor, Monday. Interested persons must register by this Friday at the high school office. Those passing the test will be eligible to train in any college at government expense for special train- ing to provide technicians and specialists for the armed forces.ASTP trainees may be placed in the fol- lowing branches of service: aeronautical,medical,for- eign language,military in- telligence, veterinary or communication. Two-hour best is divided into three sections: (1) knowledge of meaning and use of words;(2)scientific matters of general infor- mation, and (3) mathematics. Taking this test, does not constitute enlistment, although after becoming a trainee he will be in army uniform and receive army pay. "MARCH OF DIMES" CAMPAIGN REPORT SHOWS $212.25 Monday's financial re- port on "March of Dimes" campaign sponsored by vari- ous center organizations totaled $212.25, according to W. Ray Johnson, chief of community management. Leading the entire center by a wide margin is the community activities di- vision with $81.09; the secondary and elementary schools contributed $36 and $31.63 respectively. The drive is not com- pleted as the Amache boys’ club is expected to contri- bute the proceeds from its dance this week. FUJIWARA ORDERED TO REPORT FOR PRE-INDUCTION PHYSICAL To Frank Suyekicei Fuji- wara, 12G-9A, formerly of Lcng_Beach, Calif., goes the honor of being the first Amachean to report to the center Selective Service office regarding pre-induc- tion physical examination, according to Walter J.Kno- del, local representative of Selective Service board no. 35 at Lamar, Colo. Following his reclassifi- cation notice,Fujiwara was notified to take his physi- cal examination tomorrow morning(Fob. 10),6:50 a.m. at his Long Reach induc- tion station. Because of the complications involved due to distance he has fil- led out a special applica- tion requesting a transfer ---continued on page 3--- CONSTRUCTION Of OFFICE UNDERWAY Additional office space will soon be available upon completion of the new building just north of the administration area, accord- ing to William B. Wroth, senior engineer, Monday. A crew of eight men is busy in fitting the pre- fabricated sections t o- gether, and the building is expected to be completed sometime next month. The material used for this 20' x 100' structure was obtained from the Mancos CCC camp.
Object Description
Title | Granada Pioneer, Vol. II, No. 28 |
Date | 1944-02-09 |
Physical Collection | Japanese Americans in World War II collection |
Volume | 2 |
Issue number or date | 28 |
Page count | 12 |
Object type | Newsletter |
Donor | Shitara, George |
Description
Title | page 1 |
Item number | HMLSC_Granada_Pioneer_V02_N28_P01 |
Page number | page 1 |
Physical description | 35.6 cm x 21.6 cm |
Full Text Search | MONDAY’S 22 INDEFINITES SET NEW DAILY RECORD The urge to hit the open road reached a new high Monday when 22 eva- cuees received their"walk- ing papers,"commonly known as indefinite leaves,stated Mario Vecchio, relocation advisor. This sets a new record for number of indefinites issued in a single day. During the period between Jan.31 to Feb.7 inclusive, a total of 93 indefinite leaves have been granted and if this present pace continues the month of February will be the high- est on record, disclosed Vecchio. KNODEL SPEAKS TO STUDENTS ON DRAFT Walter J.Knodel, Selec- tive Service officer,spoke to 100 high school boys, who are 17 years or over, yesterday afternoon at the high school, according to Herbert Walther, principal. Knodel discussed the various phases pertaining to rein- stitution of Selective Ser- vice, for Nisei._____________________________________________________________ Granada PIONEER Vol.II, No. 28 Amache, Colorado February 9, 1944 QUADRUPED “EVACUEE” OUT ON INDEFINITE The recent relocation team of Boston's Roger F. Clapp and Peoria's Milton C. Geuther, who visited this center for two weeks, were anything but a team or friends on a subject of resettlement when it came to one very interesting incident. Clapp lays claim to being the first relocation officer to persuade a quad- ruped "evacuee" take out an "indefinite" leave and resettle in staid ol' Bos- ton. While Geuther tried his best to convince this “evacuee"en route to New England area to take advantage of better relo- cation opportunities in the Peoria area. But it seems Clapp thoroughly sold this party on Boston and nothing Geuther said had any effect so the Peorian had to be satisfied by grabbing off several fleas off this re- locatee's back and give them a fresh start in Peo- ria. At least Geuther "re- --- continued on page 3--- ARMY-NAVY QUALIFYING TEST SET FOR MARCH 15 Japanese-American youths, who are high school grad- uates and between the ages of 17 and 22 years, will be eligible to take the third Army Specialized Train- ing and Navy College pro- gram V-12 on March 15 at the local high school, an- nounced Miss Grace Lewis, vocational advisor, Monday. Interested persons must register by this Friday at the high school office. Those passing the test will be eligible to train in any college at government expense for special train- ing to provide technicians and specialists for the armed forces.ASTP trainees may be placed in the fol- lowing branches of service: aeronautical,medical,for- eign language,military in- telligence, veterinary or communication. Two-hour best is divided into three sections: (1) knowledge of meaning and use of words;(2)scientific matters of general infor- mation, and (3) mathematics. Taking this test, does not constitute enlistment, although after becoming a trainee he will be in army uniform and receive army pay. "MARCH OF DIMES" CAMPAIGN REPORT SHOWS $212.25 Monday's financial re- port on "March of Dimes" campaign sponsored by vari- ous center organizations totaled $212.25, according to W. Ray Johnson, chief of community management. Leading the entire center by a wide margin is the community activities di- vision with $81.09; the secondary and elementary schools contributed $36 and $31.63 respectively. The drive is not com- pleted as the Amache boys’ club is expected to contri- bute the proceeds from its dance this week. FUJIWARA ORDERED TO REPORT FOR PRE-INDUCTION PHYSICAL To Frank Suyekicei Fuji- wara, 12G-9A, formerly of Lcng_Beach, Calif., goes the honor of being the first Amachean to report to the center Selective Service office regarding pre-induc- tion physical examination, according to Walter J.Kno- del, local representative of Selective Service board no. 35 at Lamar, Colo. Following his reclassifi- cation notice,Fujiwara was notified to take his physi- cal examination tomorrow morning(Fob. 10),6:50 a.m. at his Long Reach induc- tion station. Because of the complications involved due to distance he has fil- led out a special applica- tion requesting a transfer ---continued on page 3--- CONSTRUCTION Of OFFICE UNDERWAY Additional office space will soon be available upon completion of the new building just north of the administration area, accord- ing to William B. Wroth, senior engineer, Monday. A crew of eight men is busy in fitting the pre- fabricated sections t o- gether, and the building is expected to be completed sometime next month. The material used for this 20' x 100' structure was obtained from the Mancos CCC camp. |