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Change s of procedure designed to speed up the relocation of paroled enemy aliens Have been made by the Immigration and naturalization Service. One of the principal features of the streamlined procedure will be the approval of travel applications as promptly as possible after requests have been made. Parolee's ap-' plication will be handled on/an individual basis. Each paroled alien will be responsible for following completely the terms of the INS instructions i s s ued in h i s c a se. 'To avoid delay, a temporary sponsor who is a public official., but not an IHS member, may be designated at the parole.ers relocat:ion destination. ©/&TE-: JJUUJM 25 Vol.Ill Ho. 56 Hudnusdny, Hay 23,1945 Amache,Colo. mn SAH FRAI'ICIGCO—A "full protection" was guaranteed nisei CIO warehousemen at Stockton by CIO leader Harry Bridges last Friday against any .possible discrimination by fellow workers, and promised official punishment to members violating the union's fair play policy. If the union insists on inclusion of returned Japanese Americans, it would "only create trouble and friction," asserted two un i denti fie d wareho u s emen at Stockton. CffAJfFfRS *>!#*.£*§ A Jf CAit In. order to facilitate the relocatib f. €.^%Mi% of "special case" evacuees to the West Const, a' Pullman car will be chartered exclusively for returnees to leave here on June 25 for various Cal- i fo rn i a - cities, ami o i mc e d Lewis Fanslan, relocation ad vi s o r, Mo nd ay. Evacuees in the following categories are eligible for Pullman reservation; 1. I'others with infants under 18 months. 2 . Womeh who are pregnant six months' or more. 3 . Hen. and women 6 5 year s of age or over. 4. Persons who are ill, regardless of age. Evacuees who are eligible for Pullman service and planning to re'burn to California during n ext month are urged to take advantage of this special accommodations are very difficult to secure, added Fanslan. In any on the above listed cases, a signed approval from the chief medical officer is required, It was pointed out. iliiSi-ft* feiiftJi VtHREftTliNlliD ■ The WRA disclosed that it . was prepared to turn over to law enforcement of fie:* a 1 s the names of f ive men who have threatened Hiss Ibary kasuda, nisei girl, with bodily harm unless she moves out of Tal- car." Individual Pullman bert (Orange county),, Calif. .Hiss Kasuda, who Has four brothers with Army service- records,'lives with a Caucasian family named Irudeaux. Her four brothers are-: Hazuo, killed at Cassino; Takashi, wounded while with the 442nd Infantry in the -Vosges mountain;Hasao , now en route home on furlough, and Hits, who has received a medical discharge. Their parents reside at Gila River (Ariz.) relocation center. II »«I$IN lb 3»S James G-, Lindley, project director; Mrs. Fima R. Pollitt, a c t i n g project attorney, and Dr. William T. Carstarphen,chief medical officer, left the center Monday morn.ing'for Denver on official business, revealed Henry F. Halliday, acting project director. The trio is expected to return today. However, refusal to work with nisei "constitutes a violation of our policies and union constitution," warned Bridges. Tho CIO leaden took this REVERSE POLICY ST.0CETON—Throe hundred members of tho International Long sho r emen and Warehousemen's union (CIO) last week voted to reverse a "no discriminatory" policy adopted several weeks ago and refuse to work with returning nisei. .Dick Lyndon, president of San Francisco Local 6, failed in an effort to persuade tho members from taking this action. • Hlvin M. Balatti, u n ion b u s ino s s ag ent, d i solosod that he had boon forced to remove three nisei from, a warehouse to which they had been assigned, in. order to prevent a work stoppage. stand: "The union, will not retreat in any way or relax for a moment in its determination to meet and deal with, an individual within the union or local who seeks to project and support Hitler-like policies. "Japanese Americans, particularly veterans of tho armed forces, will 'be welcomed back and helped to find jobs by our union and they will receive full protection and support of tho ILTJ." The nisei, declared Bridges,"enjoy the respect and support of the overwhelming majority of our union members and loco.], and national officers." : ffJffME'SfJfttfO HBHEimiS KAMLOOPS, BC- -Persons of Japanese ancestry should "never again be permitted to reside in British Columbia," doc Hired Inn ifac- Kenzie, minister of veterans' affairs, last wool:.
Object Description
Title | Granada Pioneer, Vol III, No. 58 |
Date Created | 1945-05-23 |
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 | 6 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_N58_P01 |
Title | page 1 |
Transcript | Change s of procedure designed to speed up the relocation of paroled enemy aliens Have been made by the Immigration and naturalization Service. One of the principal features of the streamlined procedure will be the approval of travel applications as promptly as possible after requests have been made. Parolee's ap-' plication will be handled on/an individual basis. Each paroled alien will be responsible for following completely the terms of the INS instructions i s s ued in h i s c a se. 'To avoid delay, a temporary sponsor who is a public official., but not an IHS member, may be designated at the parole.ers relocat:ion destination. ©/&TE-: JJUUJM 25 Vol.Ill Ho. 56 Hudnusdny, Hay 23,1945 Amache,Colo. mn SAH FRAI'ICIGCO—A "full protection" was guaranteed nisei CIO warehousemen at Stockton by CIO leader Harry Bridges last Friday against any .possible discrimination by fellow workers, and promised official punishment to members violating the union's fair play policy. If the union insists on inclusion of returned Japanese Americans, it would "only create trouble and friction," asserted two un i denti fie d wareho u s emen at Stockton. CffAJfFfRS *>!#*.£*§ A Jf CAit In. order to facilitate the relocatib f. €.^%Mi% of "special case" evacuees to the West Const, a' Pullman car will be chartered exclusively for returnees to leave here on June 25 for various Cal- i fo rn i a - cities, ami o i mc e d Lewis Fanslan, relocation ad vi s o r, Mo nd ay. Evacuees in the following categories are eligible for Pullman reservation; 1. I'others with infants under 18 months. 2 . Womeh who are pregnant six months' or more. 3 . Hen. and women 6 5 year s of age or over. 4. Persons who are ill, regardless of age. Evacuees who are eligible for Pullman service and planning to re'burn to California during n ext month are urged to take advantage of this special accommodations are very difficult to secure, added Fanslan. In any on the above listed cases, a signed approval from the chief medical officer is required, It was pointed out. iliiSi-ft* feiiftJi VtHREftTliNlliD ■ The WRA disclosed that it . was prepared to turn over to law enforcement of fie:* a 1 s the names of f ive men who have threatened Hiss Ibary kasuda, nisei girl, with bodily harm unless she moves out of Tal- car." Individual Pullman bert (Orange county),, Calif. .Hiss Kasuda, who Has four brothers with Army service- records,'lives with a Caucasian family named Irudeaux. Her four brothers are-: Hazuo, killed at Cassino; Takashi, wounded while with the 442nd Infantry in the -Vosges mountain;Hasao , now en route home on furlough, and Hits, who has received a medical discharge. Their parents reside at Gila River (Ariz.) relocation center. II »«I$IN lb 3»S James G-, Lindley, project director; Mrs. Fima R. Pollitt, a c t i n g project attorney, and Dr. William T. Carstarphen,chief medical officer, left the center Monday morn.ing'for Denver on official business, revealed Henry F. Halliday, acting project director. The trio is expected to return today. However, refusal to work with nisei "constitutes a violation of our policies and union constitution," warned Bridges. Tho CIO leaden took this REVERSE POLICY ST.0CETON—Throe hundred members of tho International Long sho r emen and Warehousemen's union (CIO) last week voted to reverse a "no discriminatory" policy adopted several weeks ago and refuse to work with returning nisei. .Dick Lyndon, president of San Francisco Local 6, failed in an effort to persuade tho members from taking this action. • Hlvin M. Balatti, u n ion b u s ino s s ag ent, d i solosod that he had boon forced to remove three nisei from, a warehouse to which they had been assigned, in. order to prevent a work stoppage. stand: "The union, will not retreat in any way or relax for a moment in its determination to meet and deal with, an individual within the union or local who seeks to project and support Hitler-like policies. "Japanese Americans, particularly veterans of tho armed forces, will 'be welcomed back and helped to find jobs by our union and they will receive full protection and support of tho ILTJ." The nisei, declared Bridges,"enjoy the respect and support of the overwhelming majority of our union members and loco.], and national officers." : ffJffME'SfJfttfO HBHEimiS KAMLOOPS, BC- -Persons of Japanese ancestry should "never again be permitted to reside in British Columbia," doc Hired Inn ifac- Kenzie, minister of veterans' affairs, last wool:. |