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ar«まJ y卯鄉寞ビTo**^i"au trelckei from Calif—ia to仇e La,yeir助.Yiill)ey:wd啦《lUj^chUd-r幼to take JioW 、 ofれmetWng h, couM :n<)t oWiliininjO^iifor-
The atate of Calばof:fi(a had pawed aland ejcclusion .law, barring ,ny:l|)ers<m ofiQdental ii^^^t from owning property, bu, found he. Cf>u!d own
land in ijt^evゃ4a., imd b^in6 o加 り£ tile. first Japanese to settle hsrs, ■
fjfeiiyii i"6miira卯,右0"yもar old 80ri of Bill,^sTas nゥt cJven Aixrn when tlie: elder ,两iyasu on ths orte"lvun如"。sixty, acr— ofゆen grro加d.
"Sure we »llhelped out," explained Nanyu, known as "T加-my,"邻ho wdirjced with his father for im6Tもthantw0 decad明.
"You could onlyleave the財-ea iby f6ot, and you weren'tlikely to wander too far' wdtiiout someone finding something" for you to do," he added.
Tom加y and his wばe Setsuko nowひpwatきalandscaping firm.
"iBuV, he went on, "that was the same with allfam"ies then. We 'preはy jnuclistuck around by ha'Wt to help mother and
、
Tammy's faiher developed the land —th amazing success, and soon contracted with the "Big Sii" cーpani的for》roduce to feもd the thousands pf /workers w|io dPIooded the valle^y during t)ie (Jonstriuction of Hoover Da^m.
ぉowever, in1的6, Tommy ,ent to stu4y ti:chitectvire at the U" niv. of Calぱomぉatぉerkeley.
But, when 3ie graduated, the secondsuまof anti• Orientalfeelings was in fulliflower and Tommy returned to L&s Veg^i 邻henゅe enti<«Japanese popu-〗aおon of Californiawa? being ^t.in T ecolaction cairips.
,y father had turned to tree f aim inおもjrthもn since iabor was aliiv>st^ non,e3dstet,,, Tommy ex* plained.. "Memib^rs of thel(?cal Indian tribes,ljous,d、!J WQrぉ the iieris were dyiiig out as tW younger oneslゅthe area for ""erjobs,
:"A tireentirserydiiin't requiぞe hary—ng and selling — Strfctlime dea4ぉneslike I)r^li-
ce.
While Tommy's architecmral slid113 became ^orm&nthisagipi' culturaleducation began again, a study he saM stillgoes on to-
Sansei Caught匿n Drug Raid
TORONTO. — John Toguri, 18, of Mississauga was one of 24 people arrested for allegedly trafficking in drugs.
A to mlof 60 officers from
—Cdnt. on 2
day.
"lt,s something that I,ve been in since'I was a boy and it rie-'ver朋e, thelessons can be forgりtte^" he ,id, "We had grown ev抑ything from」(mushrooms to enがve to :poultry and turk— riglit downwli&&you ;ゅn see JiU thpsecondominiuiris 'now..: .
"But there are new turf grus-se^, methゥぉ,ofhylijridi?saぉon tゃ belearned. Whatever you do, whex;ever. you go, there areal-やaysゃeople to feed inズひrmaiiort to:,ijroii*,,.:...'',::...,:,..:.'-::.
iMuch of ai:e£t of thゃoriginal Toimiyasuland is n辆)a liousiれ多"dゃvもlopment. In the souも-heaゅcorner ofゅe Las Vegas vaileめthere is an elementary sdioolTiam争d :^)r the elder To-•miyasu ana even a streもt bears the family n拜e,
Tommy saM he and his father derived much of tlieir know-howfんm services offered by bo-the在)rly ah(icurrentりfficiais of tRte CJlark Cotmty Extension Service, most notably John WUt-mer.
Jnlooking aぃhe present time compared to the past, Tom勿 cites ithも"scarcity" era of the pr绍eTit the應きchange. ,"The Unite4 Ste^s, and rea-11yV the entire world, has goはen to the point now where a maximum a mount of agricultural products are being produced from existing hybrids that are available," lie sポ.
*In refe卿ce to the harmful aぉects of certain Jnsectici细, Tommy pointed out, "We,ve gone to a saturation pointおfar as (Jevきlo萍ent〗s efjnc&rried and now people a're turning back to see whether enouj^h heaUhy《ood caiibepradi;iced a乡sopiething to ini:rease pr9d1icぉon.
"Norwr Tve have to start thinking al)cmt- the ecology ofもhe land. ]Ts6e the trend constantly. Trees and shrill)s that don,t require a lot of babyinぉ,insfectici-deS:orwaler are todscajiing in-dustry trend..
"r don't think the private in-ーiduals knows it yゅ,.but we,v:fe: srunnirtgぉut of . everj^thing , water, fossilfuels — tlvatヌive the United Staぉs itsぉood Hfe. To allintentsきndpurpQses, We a" out.
Tommy noted tha, his youngest son, ii-year old Bobby, showsゆme inter est in the family business.
"People are not dirt doppers anymore. They all want to wear nicecl«m business suiほwhen they go to work," Tommy said.
He added that there wHlaレ ways be people who are willing to work outside, but noted, "Let's hope it,s because he or she wants to be there and not just looking for the big dollar sign."
VANCOUVER. — Art interna-rioなalalert has been issued by the Can"ian T ranap orはlion Ministry on thS op" at ion oJf DeHavilland TwinOtter a!iv 6fぱt following a crash in the dty,s harf)c>r Sept. 2 that killed '! nine' Japanese toviずlsはand tSvo Canadians according to aVati-cOliver newspaper.
Theyancou旨ProVinee says it haslearnedtli, fniniistry'sac-
cideれt investigators blamed a malfunction in、 the twiri- engined float pl&ne,s propeller reverse system forきmechanicai cause of I he crがh.
Thiei"ゃare 400 of t}ie 20^as-senger convmut"' ai rpi;aft op era-ting inCanada and aiiotjier 200 thro ughひut the wo I:Id.
The newspapers"id theal印t iInstructs pilots in the use of ihe
CQCゅit powerlevels that c6nt: folengine speed and says that ゎe:fore each flight the backup system desほned to prevent re-vwsalof j)owefもhrustまould be checked.
While invesUga"ng沐e Sept, 2ci'ash, ministry officios found thattliepl&ne,'sleft engine was in reverse tl^ru8七while the right engine was pushing /oi«W3rd.
画麵i画o麵鄉
■ Congressio股l
.U)S ANGELES. 一 As had l)een expected, incumbent Gov. George Ariyひshi defeaiediRepu" blican State Sen. John Leopold to retainゅe governorship of Hawaii in the nation-wide elections. vThefii"st JapanAmerican governor Win、、,easlieutenant governor in the coming term, State Sen. Jぉn Sad alio King, who becomes the first woman to occupy that off ice in the state of Ha\^^aii.
On the ma inland United States, in the meantime, the A si 311 Amei、icaひGongressぇon'al.'caucus =■ offom, gained a new member in the person of Robei,tMatsuし the 36-yeai'-old Sacramentolawyer' and -city/coundlinan .who. defeated Kepublican Sandra Smo-ley to w,;n the CJo n gi"ess i On a】 seat for the thh'd district of
.A_' 'city..'で.ouncilmarrsince1971,
.M1'.Ma.tst2iis a third-generation Japanese American par0ntswere.born in Sacramento amiwhose grandparents came to the United States in the1890,s, Tれe Matsuis were interned at i^ile Lake and Mindoka during World War II.' ^Described by the New York Times as "a mQderate conservative," and by his opponent as "a liberalposing as a moderate," Matsui wHI be filling" the seat being v a dated byゎemoer" John Moss.
Re]D. Norman Y. Mineta, Democrat, was'reelecte.d .by.'his. cen-tral Galif6rnia cゅstHuents for what wH1be his second tもrm.
The three otherJapaii^eAm-ei'ieans serving irtぉhelegislalu-re are Senators DartielInひu ye (D,ぉawaU), Spai'kMatsunきga (D. Hawaii), and. S.I. Hayaka-、va(R. California).
HiさにFevfsr ^iay Arr专st Caiicerぶells
TOKYO. — Japanese scientists arelooking intoclぉmsノゆat high fever has a beneficialeffect intreating carteer. '
Japanese Natioii" Institute of H、ealtth told the Associated Presさ recently, "Ganger cells a re less resismnt. to high body .temperature than normal, h eillthy eells."
Dr,りkumura,leader of ate, •of can6er rぉearch, saW "。an' cer cells stopped rieprodu咖g at temperatufes above 3£^,6 degress Centigrade (103.23 degree "nheiりand 80 per cent of tもe maiignant cel!s died at that tゅ-peはtureinoneweek,"
A,lthe cancer ce"s .disappea, red from infected human u!enis tisues after ten ays of theHiigh temperature treatment while normal body cells survived and continued to reproduce, Dr. Okamlira arm OUTiced at a medicalconference in Osaka— recently.
The Japanese medミcalprofessor said his fesearchwasprom, pted l^yvexperience seeing patd-印ts recovetまfomcancei:aftev siiffeHng for a week to ten days from pneumonia of .other .dレ "ses accひr^anied by higl^ fever.
N.CにSpedaに ,お1 le Eli mi nates Regular issues
ゎue to the forth-coming Special Issue, we willcancelregular issues after December15th,
Allsubscribers aひd advertisers please note. The specialissue willbe published dated December 29,1978.
The New Canadian Publisher
yOL» 42 NO, 95
薩
transformation
TORONTO. — The、 architect firm of 'Sniaste and Nakashima recently pfepared a.多9,000. study for the City of Toronto urging the spending of多49. million to transform an ugly section o《the waterfi,onしinto a 29-acre housing development for 4,285. people.
The S川a3te and Nakashima study deg[ls with ihe Queen Elizabeth dock area — south of the Gardinもr Exi>ressway between J a wis and Parliament.
To ugh Coach of Jf^nz, Wd巾enV YoUey, Dies
TOKYO. — H"fumi Da—t-su, former m9nager ofゆやi^a-panesにi^Ubfialwomen's volley, ballteafti,ポed orさ'heart aU-ack .^fov. 24 at a:hospitalin Ihara, 01cay am a. Prefecture, af-te?" h(^ had (?ollapさe4 at d hotel th6re.
Hj^ was 57に
pairaatsi^ had heen hr'I"rき-city sin亡きiNov. 23 to e.oad> a sen,or high schoolvゥlleybj|11te-j^m in the dty. Hesuffejed acute pains化the ohest; at11:30 p.m. at thehoi^elafter he had returned from his Volleyballco-acmng session-He was rushed to a hosp"a! 2nd died two hourslater.
Known for his hard training as a coach, Daimatsuled the nationalwomen's volleyball team to the gold medalin the 1964 Tokyo Olympics.
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