Chanjging Tlm鲁にゝ•
,8ring雄 固For
,)、me»tkU(n、,t}mt Are
so cm fiONm the US* k^I*
U、ふlast qmu't(H' of the夠'h
■im'y.: ■
As a nation at comje"、, the NaUoi、ai Ii、stih、te of MもれbalHe.
$10,, io MGL to d©fin0 the neods fo N'isei as the majoiritj^ of them a'pまach age郎and Tetiiでment. About a KM) pairtici-1、ai、ts and ol>sei'vers效re being fl5?sembled from a cross the nation for the thieシday session.
The project 、vasiがtial!y proposed by Dr. Minoru Masuda of Seattle during the1974 Natiゥna1 Convention in Portlaml arid the JACIj Development 'Com'mittee, 5n tm'n, approached thもNIMH for f.;Tian(iほl'assistance.
At the1976 NationalConvfenti: on hvSacramei)to, & policy statement "On Jauane鍵Ainer'iaui EWfi'ly"i'eaffilmed the projec( as a major pmmy;
、Voi"ldng Paper
A 30-page inference working 'pゅer has been published, conta; in,:ng basic (lata' brひadly-based commenitaries 011the subject and bibliography. It willserye as 8 basis of (Jis^sitm.
Whilもきplanning comniiUee, eonvprised of幼ar(m Fujii of Los Angeles, Mミn0r1^ Masuda of Sea ttlc. ScoはMぇtsuiiiotoofHonoli;i-1",ぉev. HariyMurpkami of West Los Angele$, and JACIi stafifei Don Hayashi, trusts ('the first steps" toward sucC,fu1Nisei refiremmt areexamined, some speciむepropo幼lsiiiay be deve. lOped as Ji consequence.
Itiioted "death after . retire* niei)tさs no "th": Hence, the? conference fp(!us "dresses the needtopi"epaie :f<^r reUrement prior to .actuar、'ork stopp&gje. ♦Among i:he key changes oflばさ "yle forゅe Tetiree,tiie 、V6r]c* ing papersuggeミねdiscusssion on, includedeteriorathig physicalhealth, incomeloss, psych6bぉca1 changes a mi emotionala—sレ mentandloss of roles (work for the man in沐e house, child-rea* ling for the "W咖an.)
For most, socialsecurity would consUtute thelargest source o重 retirement income, which ranges currentlyむom a minirrmm of
Bin Sirfaces In Yoshbmira Jury Stieetion
ひAKhANIレOAli!^ゝAfh、 \v<v«^ ーy j^细细お、
歸麵、N^ of W、d iwi^、tlAにjm'oi'Biu^1t1 J"(MeぉA妙(、"ぃ"ゃi^"e&さA、、、e*
ve J"、ま、vl、o"v"ゅhw,njv
、、ドjm'yメuしv nH、 to、、jir
1M^yれA Jiv州c^&1/n、iu)、、れm1 如k t,れv,)ゅt).,remoi' Hm'-"ml Juぉ(M、、Uoにャl"5v拳
Owぃvtilm、、、ot,、、、,、〗VK'A<*,、"M> t'、"、-
l崎ま、I瞎A〗,、"IU 、、、1顺1
M W M、 ,,xi、tH'U州れllyめffUmU 喊.
T、、i^Wひ、、i、v、,ゥM、hm"wャtth'
mvにih"y i、io〗"、t1、iW1、 1hh、、、(Vs!4: tleft、、、sivhv、vyin'にl、U、、ls
(0<m"h P、れ
れひ8》餘ぉoi、th fov t)iu
M,ぉt"豕もd N)B"
1kfeれ'h、g U bhも1d70《もn&U3, U、e N^oi^idi、g pApev ^mき blfe^covt^dttg: agもdtiaも"bi^tioれ,dl sti^ibiitbn bytegricmafttid Agさ ('most of tヌeNisej f財h、gfiでtiHtig agelive ih the Wさsりにnmi"Hal at "us (80グt^oftl^もNisdarもma-i'Heめ,years of schoolcompieted, !abor status by industries,labo" status by occupations, geographic distribution of the Japanese agedにmarltalstatus of the elderly ゎy isex (over half are wi(io' , and. elderly occupations by
sex.
TotalJapaiiese pojiulation iii the U.S. mimbered58S,324 with 20% <120,349) between the ages of 45 and 64 (as of1970). H"'e is the first table:
Years Male Female Total%
45-49 22,172 ?6,249 40.2 50-5418,04217,440 29.5 55-5911,04910,55718.0
60-64 7,336 7, 50 412.3 Total:58,599 61,750
Heart of the workii>g pap^r raises some considerations of the uniqueness of the iNisei, so加e to I oughts ()f Nisei developmeivt th&t may affect successfulreUr《-meiit asスYellaきinnat兮Nisei qualities.
Such加da][ scienぉ各ts aslUrry Kdtano, FrankMiyaTnゅ,M乖o-rplga, L.T,Do"TamotsiiShiinu t帥i and I^indberg S«t^ are quoted along: with theiriKm邻sei colleagues who have situdied Japanese in America andれe
Factひi'swhicH hれe play" with Nぉもi development .are. BO ted in both positive and negativeve* hiswはh respect to adjust me i)t in retiremientj sudi as 一 Meijd notions of raisinjgr a jfamily ryo,, synぉome, "haji", value of education, etc), Japanese cultural ch?nracterぉticS ("on", ri", "oya - koo)co", "sWkataga-加i", etc.), and adaption of A-merican idealism (rpggぇindivl-麵lism, self"^ete怖ination)•)-
How racism affected Nisei self-i麵tUy during: his develop* mentalyears and struggle inlater years i"roadly covered with observations from such writers as Monica Sone ("Nisei Daughter"), Charles Kikuchi and William Cainli".
Coat的P. 2
forCeiMMllon德ofJtt(Mi—衡Orioln
亂40ー的
FRIDAY, MOVEMむE议26^19ぉ
In細n
OTTAWA. — Prime AMmstci Piもr re Truedau says a speech he m"e during his recent tdp to J,n was not a 11 apology for trぉtment tha J a p an eae-Canadians "received during World War n.
The Prime Minister made the statement in the Hoijse of Commons &i>dlater Ivan Hゃad, his
foreign affairs adviser who wrote the 'speech, said "it was ack: 110"wledgertlent of aninjusUce, a" act of contrition, if you will,but in no wa, an apology to the go-veiTiment of Japan."
Trudeau told StUai?t LeggaU (NDP — NewWestmiilister) th&t the speech, 、vhich mentioned intolerance and denialof civil
Crimes Up ,n Japan For The First Time In OverFiveYdars: Survey
TOKYO. — iCrimes dn Japan rose ini975,'t)he firstincrease in five yeai's, ihe JusticもMinistry said in a white p&per recently.
The ministry saW1,673,727 crhnes were co?nmHtedlast year, up1780 from1974. It saW hpmkWe and robbery increased by10 per cetit ;whUe sexヌrimもs
were down.
There邻as a marked increase inやhe number 6f (rivilservants charged wiUigiving or receiving bribes.
'II: said 563 persons were killed ひT hurt in violence involviHg ra-ぉca1groups, sUght〗y fevm' t'han l;he1974 total.
T郎ni咖yi嫌in,麵ik0
By KAY TAT E柳 I TOKYO. — Princess Miゅiko, fiー met her husband, Crown Prince Aぉhiio, on a "niiis 卿rt, celゅrat^ ;hiar 42nd W他.
She told r^eporte" th«it • imd他ecr(Myivprinc6 oocasaiona-lly play iennis, iticiuding d(H^les witぉthゆchildren PrinceHiro, 16, and Prince .Aya,10. Hieir youngest is Princess Norしぉ"n,
The princess幼id tJiat as fひr any parenttj汰is hard to say how wellhei'e)iiWrcれare deve* lopinsr ami thatlike any other mother 8worries about their education.
Sbe told a press conference Jit TogxJ—Palace her15ore ar "n'a
trip to Belg:iuniand S]^ainla^t summer at ttie iひvitations of the Kd:ng: andゃecn of ?elぉum was valuable experience for the
During her spare moments, the prineess s"id, she continues h«r less咖in hax^ an (J caき;rapliy. Sheおlearning J邻&nese painting ォrさm Eiiiprぉs Nagako'liei Tnorther-in-】aw,
PrincessMichifco said the imperial faittibr is tniundecided on how to celebrate the SOth year anniveraiy of Emperor Hirひh(to,s ascension to the throne.
Some decision is expected to be mads between Grown Prince AkiMto and hiali>rotherゃince HはAO hi before thゅ,she added.
rights 、vhjen the Japanese 、vm, moved from the Pacific coastaf-tci, Japan entered the war, "vvas a recitation of "not very glorious facts."
Repoi'teis 、vith the Prime Mi nister,s party at the time said recently they \m'e told byRに chai'dO,HagaiVthat Uie speech was 、vHtteijHead, and was intended as an apology.
SAME INTERPRETATION
O,Haganlis director of communications in the Prime Minister's office. He could not be reached for comment.
Reporters say Canadian embii-ssj^ officials in Tokyo gave t"he same interpretation to the TTru-deaii reference to war-time movement of Japanese-C&nadians.
Sources say the Prime Minister's of〖ice is upset at references that Uie speech 、vぉan apology to the J a pan government.
In the Commons, Leggaはasked ぱTrudeau had somet:hing moire t^ngn>ie than apologies t<? offer to \Japanese,Canadians who sufferもd injustice.
He asked two things: Is: there so^mething more tangゅlきfm'ぉ-p an ese-Canadians 二 who suffered injustice and was there any化di, ion from the Japaneseゆat tl^ey. "pologized for thも;r treat-menぃof :。 anaがan prisoners of war?:-
;NO INDICATION : T)Tii(kau saidゆere is rlo indica-:ti艮iri his speech <rf an apologized and that it ,as just a statement of facts. -
Outsdde the Commons, Leggatt said ihere stillare Japanese who deserve better compeiisation than, t)hey ^received .for .loss of I Property when they were moved. He said this particularly applies to those who lost boats and w^at now has become vfSuable recreation 〗and.