El Joaquin, vol. 2, no. 4 (July 22, 1942)
Primary tabs
woh ia} NO. ai}
STOCKTON ASS dood CENTER
---
WEDNESDAY , JULY 22, an
Une ~POUCHECKS ARRIVE |
Canis f
At Wl barracks at
10 p.m. and lights out at
10:30.
few regulation according
to Mr. A, S, Nicholson,
Center Manager.
The new ruling put out
by the Western Defense
Command, 4th Army, will
ehange the 9 Poems roll
call to correspond with
the latest orders. Exem-
ptions will be made only
by special: permits to
those working nights,
Notice as to the date
when this order will go
into effect will be plac-
`That's the cur-~
ed on the bulletin board,
CASHIER TO. DISTRIBUTE $10,650
TOMORROW, FRIDAY P.M.
Paychecks for the month of June 10 to July 9, total-
ing $10,650, will be distributed tomorrow and Friday to
approximately 1,157 Center workers from'l'to 4 pem. and
1 to
8:30 p.m. in front of the cashier's window by Cen-
ter Cashier John Gordon and his staff.
in order to avoid confusion and congestion two lines
will be formed, one for workers with U ratings and the
NICHOLSON MUST
OK. PARTIES
Future parties held by
any group must be approved
by Conter Manager, A. 0x00B0S.
Nicholson. The administra-
tion. feels that parties
should be de-emphasized be-
cause the number held has
been too large,
Pastel and pencil sket-
ches of students under
Louie Shima and Hiroki Mi-
zushima of the Adult Edu-
cation Art Dept. will be
exhibited at the Edex Hall
for three days, Friday, be-
ginning at 7:30 p.m., all
day Saturday and on Sunday
when the hall is not in
use,
Because of the fine work
the students have done,
there is a possibility of
having the same exhibit in
the Haggin Memorial Museum
in Stockton sometime in
August,
Shima is a aredusea of
the. California School of
Fine Arts, while Mizushima
attended Oakiana School of
Art and Craft.
All persons who have not
as yet received their free
coupon books, regardless
of ID number, were advised
by Center: Cashier John
Gordon to apply for them
at lop.m. today in front
of the cashier's window.
The arrival of pay checks
and the speedy disposition -
HAL STUBEATS EXH
BIT
tion.
formation Booth.
other for those with S and
P ratings, For a full
month's work the U workers
will receive $8, S workers
$12 and' P workers $16,
Procedure similar to the
last distribution of pay-
Checks will be employed,
Workers may call in any or-
der, but they must present
their orange-colored work
order in applying for the
paychecks, In cases where
the work slip is lost, the
work button must be pre-
Sented.
23 LEAVE FOR MONT.
SUGAR BEET FIELDS .
The second contingent
of 23 sugar beet workers
under Mr. Al Kawasaki left
the Stockton Assembly Cen-
ter for Ronan (Lake County)
Mont. at 6 p.m. yesterday,
Included in the second
group of workers was one
family group, Mr. and Mrs.
Yasunaga,
From the W.C.C.A, hepdcudttors comes instructions to
Japanese, aliens and citizens alike,
seeking repatria-
Forms for application may be obtained at the In-
A request for repatriation will be accepted from any
person 18 years or over, who was born in Japan, or who
GET FREE COUPON BOOKS TODAY
ADVISES GORDON, CASHIER.
of coupon books has neces-
sitated and complete change
in the schedule for distri-
bution d the free serips,
Unless the coupon books
are called for today, it
was announced that other
arrangements will have to
be made with the' Center
Cashier,
ean citizens
was born in the U.S,
has dual citizenship,
But those who are Ameri-
MAY. FORFEIT
their citizenship by apply-
ing for repatriation.
An acceptance of a re-
quest for repatriation by
the W.C.C.A. does not mean
the U.S. government will
grant repatriation,
Other instructions are
posted on - bulletin
boards,
and
FRE R
EL JOAQUIN
WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1942
O00 CURFEW
than ot?
EDITORIAL
THE RIGHT TO VOTE
A PRIVILEGE
Last Thursday witnessed the registration' of many
residents for the
privilege of being eligible to vote
in the August primary election.
In this Center,
the total of 700. To us,
meens of expressing
matters.
the number of voters
our opinions
approximates
these votes represent our
On various political
The right to vote is a great privilege grented to us
as American citizens.
The right to vote entails a responsibility. It calls
for a study of issues.
The right to vote
fully,
their pletforms.
Never hes it meant more to us
should be exercised Wisely (and
after cerefully looking over the candidates and
then now. So let's
mike use of this franchise, and vote.
Dear Editor...
Through some misunder-
standing, an item was pub-
lished in the kL JOAQUIN
giving full credit of Mess
#e's victory in the first
mess contest to the Block
supervisors,
However, I had meant to
emphasize the point that
the cooperation of the en-
tire mess crew had been
the reason for our winning
and it is to them that most
honors should be given,
-.-fobert Okimoto
Thank you for celling
our attention to the item.
Its wording may have
caused this misinterpreta-
tion, Happy to see Mess
#5 keep up its fine record,
BEET WORKERS RETURN
Mr. Tetsuo Suzuki and
Mr. Tom Iwasaki returned
lest Saturdsy night by way
of Tule Lake fromthe Ideho
suger beet fields.
REC. DEPARTMENT
NOTES
_Todsy is the last day
for girls 17 undsover to
Sign up for the
class.
He A a a ak
The Sr. Handicraft class,
which has 40 members, meets
on Tuesdsy, Thursday and "
Seturdey et 5 and 7 pom |
The Rec. Dept. furnishes
as much mtericl cs possi-
ble with the exception of
knives,
There are 0x00B0 also wood
burners for sele ut the
Block 8 office. 4
ke ek
The fancy posters which
frequently m.ke their ap-
peerance m bulletin boards.
ere the work of Louise Baba,
Agnes Uyesugi end Koichi
Inouye,
we a oe
Mr, Frenk Thornton Smith
will again be guest direct-
or of the Center choir next
Tuesdey evening. ,
. aK I
Seturdsy's talent Revue
wes fair-to-middling.
First Aid
TULE LAKE... ... :
The fect that it is pub-
lished is proof........The
first surgical operation
was declired a success by
the hospitel,...e.Victim="
ExCUuse, pitient--was u wo-
MiNe+eeseIncidentally, did
you hear sbout excellent
cooperution and harmony a+.
mong our hospital staff?,,
TULARE. eee 2
_ Wish someone here would
lose one.....Four-year-old
Iilyoko Kamon received $75.
for returning a wallet con-
taining 4695 lost by a Mrs,
T. Yoshinaga,
It must be a pretty sad
place.s....,..Headings from
TULARE NEWS....."Nicholson
Quits Center"...,.,"Parkin-
son Resigns"..,..
MERCED... "6.
Not definite--only ten-
tative.....is the date and
destination of Mercedians
eee eThey are scheduled to
leave August 31 - September |
8 for Granada, Colorado.,,
Approximately 2000 evacuees
are to leave at the same
time from"some other -cen-
ter".....eCould they be we?
Here's todey's human
interest story....."Little
S-year-old Jimmy Wakayama
was gazing beyond the fence
at an irrigetion ditch....
Somehow he knew that little
on. ial ae
minnows were swimming in
the water and wished he
`Could get one.....eA small
American boy, who was watch=
ing his fether work, knew
what the boy wanted.......
Little Jimmy's heart jumped
when he was handed a fish.
_"eTodey the fish is Jimmy's
dearest treasure,"....Pan-
cho and Temale think a lot
of that little American boy
eos eerepresentative of the
true spirit of a little
American, |
TANFORAN.. 50%
Hope they don't get an
idea like this here.,..Bar-
ber shop patrons are asked
to wash their heir before
S0ing for a haircuteses.es
Ree.son given was. "to pre-
vent grit snd dust from
ruining the instruments",,
ant Center
WEDNESDAY , JULY 22, 1942
EL JOAQUIN
NEW-ASST fa MGR:
FTIR WJ" DOUGHERTY, ESQ.
The S.A.C.'s new Assist-
Manager from
the Marysville Assembly
Center, robust, ruddy-com-
plexioned, bespectacled
William Dougherty was born
in Minnesota 45 years ago; 0x00B0
is married
and has 3 boys
and a girl. He fishes in
his spare moments,
"The physical set-up of
your Center is much better
than at Marysville. Your
butcher, Center Store, re-
creation, and hospital faci-
lities are the best. It
was hot and dusty in Marys~
ville, There wasn!t a sin-
': ~gle tree in the whole Cen-
ter," he said.
(e .
(Some Pell.
"No * he added, as an
afterthought, "There was
one tree."
SOUND MOVIE
`TUNDRA' AN-ALASKAN EPIC: /
In spite of the turfew refuldtions, ~
sound movie, "Tundra",
- evacuation) will be shown on the Platform tomor-
ow and Friday beginning at 8: 40 p.m, sharp.
ii end at 9:50,
The movie
"Tundra" is a graphicent pocord: of the life of "heroic
riders of the sky"-~-speoi--
fically, of a young physi-'
cian known as the "Flying
Doctor", who, in an sffort
to save the town froma
plague, crashes his plane
in the wilderness. |
Showing the grandeur of
Alaska with its thundering
avalanches and crashing
icebergs, "Tundra" is ex-
pected to provide grand
entertainment for the Cen-
ter-ites.
Residents of Blocks 1,
2,354 and 5 should attend
tomorrow; Blocks 6,7,8 and
9 on Friday.
EVERY ONE BRING HIS OWN
CHAIR!
The sound projector will
be furnished by the Krieger
Motor Company of Lodi,
The Well Baby Clinic
under the supervision of
Dr. Bertha Akimoto and Dr,
George Sasaki is held every
Monday, Wednesday and Fri-
day from 9. to 1ll.a.m...at
the Center Hospital.
Hach baby. is weighed,
measured and examined every
other. week with records
kept of their gain and de-
velopment.
Children up to the age
of 3 years old are expect-
ead to come.
the anticipated
(first one for the Center-ites
Page 2
" FORMATION OF
GIRL SCOUT
TROOPS URGED
"Although we realize
that the Japanese evacuees
will be in your assembly
center only temporarily,
we are very much interested
in letting them have the
opportunity of forming Girl
Scout troops, if they are
interested. The training
in citizenship and the
wholesome recreation offer-
ed in our program. should
be of value to them."
This is an excerpt from
the letter which came from
the National Girl Scout
Headquarters in New York.
The Executive Secretary,
Sibyl Gordon Newell, also
sent Girl Scout literature
to assist the organization
of troops, Such plans are
now. being' formulated. for
this Center.
This is no bull! A new
record! The canteen sold
$259.20 worth of Bull Dur-
hal yesterday in 4 hours.
NIC
MESS #3
ere RH Be an NO mY ck
WAONS AGAIN coo
election Mes ting
A meeting to ea tee
plans for a general Cen-
ter election will be held
atip.m. tomorrow at the
Edex Hall.
Interested individuals
or groups are urged to
attend,
INTERNEES JOIN
FAMILIES HERE
Mr. Walter Takeo Atsumi
and Mr, Kameichi Ichiho ar-
rived from Bismarck, North
Dakota,
16, and Mr. Jitsuro Hira-
moto from Santa Fe, New
Mexico, on Sunday, July 18,
to rejoin their families.
on Thursday, July.
"We don't know how they
do it; nobody ever seems
to be `doing any work. Yet,
they consistently have an
immaculate building, inside
and out, from end to end.
Maybe it's the old system
of having a place for every-
thing, and everything in
its place," exclaimed Mr.
L. (c). Shaffer as Mess 43
walked off with top honors
in the second mess hall
contest.
Block 6 janitors esntet
the prize this time for
cleanliness and will share
in the prize with Block 3.
"Messes #2 and #5 both
were close seconds to #3,
with #2 coming fast in the
stretch," added Shaffer.
18. BOY SCOUTS ATTEND 6-HOUR
SESSION IN. FINGERPRINTING SUN.
Highteen Seouts attended
the six-hour (c) course in
fingerprinting, instructed
by Mr, John Alexander of
the Interior Police Dept.
last Sunday at the Visitors!
Booth. Fingerprinting
slides were shown by Mr.
Iven Hitt of Commercial
Photography,
Seouts were fortunate
to receive this course, as
ordinarily it would cost
$25 for each outsider, To
obtain a Merit Badge for
fingerprinting, a Seout
must pass 4 series of five
tests.
Only First Class Scouts
who attended the session
are qualified to take the
test.
Page 4
SOCIAL WELFARE
DEPT. ISSUES
INSTRUCTIONS
The Social Welfare Dept.
announced that the sapplica-
tion for clothing will be
taken every working day ex-
cept Saturday.
Instructions ares
(1) Bring the orange in-
formation card. (2) Any
responsible member of the
family mst place applica-
tion for all the femily.
(5) The pplicetion must be
Signed by the HEAD of the
femily on receipt of notice
from the Department, (4)
Time for cpplication (which
meens plecing of order) is
9 to 1l in the morning and
to 4 in the "afternoon.
(5) Bring the list of all
needed clothing for the
rest of the femily. (6)
List mst state the clothes
needed, size and approximate
color. {7) Come eerly in
the morning to receive ap=
pointment number, (8) No-
tice will be sent to each
femily head when clothes
arrive.
This procedure is sub-
ject to change without no-
tice, so please watch the
EL JOAQUIN for later an-
nouncements.
EL JOAQUIN
WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1942
UlHeR CENTERS RELOCATE
PINEDALE, TURLOCK BEGIN EXODUS
The slow drsinsge of Jepanese from el] assembly cen-~
ters to reloci.tion ureas will be hastened by the exodus
of 4,750 Pinedele evecuees to the Tule Lake War Reloca-
tion Center at Newell,
beginning July 15 and
Pinedsaleans to the Colorado Hiver Kelocetion Center near -
of 750
Parker, Arizone, beginning July 23.
Curfsur Citura
From 68 to 9345 p.m.
Will be the usuel Satur-
dey nite Stomp Session,
This time it's the "Cur-
few Cut-up." Come one,
come @ll----who cares if
Ole Man Sol refuses to]
eet his shut-eye early??
ih, what?
FIRST AID CLASSES
Instructors have been
selected and tine has been
arrenged for the First Aid
clesses. Art Hisake and
Ted Oseto will give the
course to 50 Air Raid War-
dens on Mondsy, Wednesday
and Fridey from 9 to ll-e.m
Kets Nsgaiwill instruct
pound4 firemen at the same time.
Fifteen ec, leaders
Will tzke the course on
Mondsy "nd Thursdey from
9 toll p.m. with Vie Ito
as instructor.
HAS HOME-LIKE ATMOSPHERE ...
MESS 7
Replete with etchings
from the brush of diner
Louis Shima, Mess #7 pre-
sents a wholesome home-like
appearance to any or all
who may enter its portals.
In the absence of the
regular timekeeper Frank
Inamasu, Tsug Kubota, ro-
teting relief timekeeper,
reveeled that 4H. Takuma
end EH. Ono were the two
chefs.
An efficient waiter-
dishwasher crew is composed
of dJusEkewe,
Terrenishi, H. Tomodee, ik.
Mureno, T. Ke jiware, I. Oba,
Se Teked: 5) 0x00B0T. Higski "A; 0x00A7.
Okuher:, T.Hireno, H. Shi-+
momura, MW. Imenmure, K, Su-
2uki, J. Matsuo, K. Ohaeta,
M. Yemamoto, M,. Ikeda and
T. Eshime.
Carolyn Suzuki, Mits Sa-
gare, Yo Segera and Ruth
akeba are the cordial sgerv-
ice girls, while H. Hirose
and Assistent 3B. Arekawe
keep the supplies in order,
Members of the scrub
i Sato, Ss
Crew are S. Shima, S. Take-
hiro, Y.Yonemura, K, Saka~
ta and li, Baba, end in the
vegetable trimuing dept.,
are K, Aoki, Y, Tsukimoto,
S. Ito, H. Ikemoto and K.
Yamashita,
The hard-working assist~
ant cooks---A, Tokunaga,
S. Nagayema, S. Yemte, S.
Hirano, S. Sato, H. Kusu-
noki, M. Mesude, K. Mihara
and K, Aoki--were patient-
ly waiting for the late-
as-usual Kats Nagai to
finish his morning break-
fast.
Within a space of a few
days the Turlock Assembly
Center will begin mass mi-
gration to the Gila River
relocation project near
saceton, Arizona, 50 miles
southwest of Phoenix, be-
ginning with 475 advance
migrants m July 18 and the
remaining 3,100 beginning
on July 26,
At present plans the
Merced Assembly Center will
further deplete the stock
of evacuees by transferring
its residents to the new
Colorado Kelocstion Center
at Granada, beginning Au-
gust 31.
lOO COMPETE
IN 4-DAY GO G
SHOGI TOURNEY
Under the chairmanship
of Mir. M, Nekamura, the
wecreation Department spon-
Soreda successful four-day
GO and Shogi tournament
with over ahundred compet-
itors participating.
winners in the Go con-
test were; Messrs. Masue
hara, lst; Ss, Yoshimoto,
end; Nakashima, 3rd; Take-
hashi, 4th; Mizutani, 5th;
Nishin.oto, 6th; and Shiga,
7th.
Shogi tournament winners
were; Messrs" Miwa, lst;
Yano, 2nd; S, Yoshimoto,
ord; Kawemoto, 4th; Ke ji-
ta, Sth: Fujimoto, 6th;
senzoku, 7th; and Ne kaga~
wa, 8th,
In the
Special event
affair, five-man elimine=- "
tion, winners were: Go
contest=-Mr. Yokoi and in
the Shogi--Mr. Hiramatsu.
Pact of uc/mr `bas
Thursday: 4:00 p.m, Beginners' Dancing
7:00 peMm, Community `Singing
8:40-9:50 p.m, Movie for Blks. Leesa.
4 and 5, (Platform)
Friday: 5300 pm. Beginners' Dancing
7330 pm. Art Exhibit
8:40-9:50 p.m. Movie for Blks. 6, 7,8
and 9, (Platform)
Saturday s 8:00-9:45 p.m. Dance (Platform)
4ll activities to be held at Edex Hill unless other-
wise indicated.
aa nanan te
* OK Ok Ok Ok
With the Center's major
league season coming to a
fast close this weekend, a
new and a more powerful
loop will be planned out
tonight in the Press room
lounge after roll call,
There is talk of combin-
ing two blocks into one
powerful squad, The chan-
pionship Reds, with the
exception of two or three.
players, will: stay intact
while the Aristoerats will
probably import four horse-
hiders to strengthen their
ten.
Also the National Lea-
gue champion Foop-outs will
most likely join this new
league. -
* OK OK Ok
This action should prove
profitable because it will
make competition tougher
and closer and at the same
time should prove more in-
teresting to the . softball
fans, who always crave for
scintillating and stellar
performance instead of
loose and long drawn out
lopsided contests,
The above movement does
not mean that the players
who cannot make the grade
for this new circuit will
be left out in the cold.
Two new leagues of the
National caliber is expect-
ed to be formed at the same
time to keep every horse-
hider in competition,
` ek' +
Down at Santa Anita
Assembly Center, the na-
tional pastime, class "A"
hardball league was offici-~
ally ushered in last Sun-
day. One of the features
of the opening day was the
tilt between San Pedro and
San Jose, one of the better
nines in Northern Califores.
nia,
* OK OK Ok OX
The above game is remi-
niscent of the 1940-41 era
when the kingpins of North-
ern California baseballdom,
the Lodi YMBA Templars and
Stockton Yamatos used to
clash with the powerful San
Pedro Skippers in the West
Coast Nisei athletic clag-
Sic of the year.
e + es @
Something unique and
unprecedented in sports
annals was created for the
(Continued on page 6)
TRON
Page 5
EL JOAQUIN
SH STOPS, RUS and
SEFATORS 12-6: AND 5-3
RAINBOWS +e
NINTH INNING
The resurgent a : Bo
hurling of Sanji Teranishi
ARISTOCRATS: IN
-12... BUMS SPLIT."
mberg "paced . -by the classy
skyrocketed:. to:glory by up-
setting the American League champion . Blk,--5 Reds 12 ~6
Friday.
hit job,
The unpredictable Rainbows
Teranishi bounced
handeuff the lowly Senators
right back Sunday. again to
5 - 3 rm, eer yan peng one~
shanti fieht" oat We
undisputed second position into a three way tie by drop-
ping the Aristocrats 13 - 12
in the ninth "inning. A
screaming double by Manini Sakuda into the-; rightfield
barracks
winning tally.
HORSESHOE
Opportunity is knocking
at the doors for the ta-
lented pitchers of the tem-
pered steel half loop.
The first open doubles
horseshoe tournament of
the Stockton Assembly Cen-~
ter will be held this com-
ing Saturday and Sunday in
front of the Block 10 Re-
ereation Office, under the
supervision of Kosuke Iji-
chi,
Deadline for signups has
been set at Thursday, 8
Peme, and bracket for the
tournament will be posted
at the Main Rea Office at
Block 8 Friday morning,
Mour Shey Stanol
AMERICAN macs
JLWS .T wey
RGEGGe odds vee 614. 192.6825
Aristocrats.. 9 7 .562
BDUMBGs " He 0 o He 7 ~562
Yankees.... ee 7 32962
TROJANS y!. da'. 8 .529
RainbowS,...e. 8 .500
BearsSeece. i ."wtit
Kiwanisecer.c.e zl "552
Senators, ..e. 12 .293
g
9
9
8
Bomberss..... PSD. ephin
7
6
5
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W ten FOt,
Poop~outsy.e.13 0 1,000
Cardinals....11 2 846
Hell Divers... 9 4 ,692
Shangri-las.. 7.7 .500]
Spartanse.... 6 6 .500
GiantSesese. 5 9 .357
Grapepickers, 3 10 .230.
Ramblers...s. 3.10 0x00B0.4230 |
Ki ti. os as "ts 110 .100.
chased home Manager Jimmy Hamasaki with the
The defeat by the Rainbows | sess the
Aristocrats 0x00B0 "Sharing. - the
second spot with, the. Bums
and the Yankees. |"
The Bums, after dropping
a heartbreaker 0x00B0 `to Manager
Will Kagawats Kiwanis 9 - i
came back Monday to` stay in
the thick of the race for
the coveted second: `spot by
rapping the Trojans `100x00B0+ a
RESULT: R' HE
BOMBERS 6 66 6-reswrwede- 22. tg
REDS sw di 7 ha hE AD ee
S.Teranishi and B.Saiki;
Baba,
and B Hayashi.
(Continued on page 6)
SFIRONAKA
LEADS. N.L.
BATTING RACE
Ted Shironaka, hard
Slugging Poop-outst star,
paced the National League
hitting parade with a
blistering .725 average,
Other hitters in the
exclusive 0x00B0500 brackets
are Shangri-las' George
Ouye, Poop-outs' Matsuo
Okazaki and Cardinals! Jim
Hiromoto. ` :
G AB H Pet,
T.Shimnaka,P..11 40 29 .725
G,Ouye,8..... 9 24 15 .625
M.Okazaki,P..11- 33 Adc hee
J Hiromoto,5.12 47 26. 553
R.Miyanishi,P..12 40 19 e474 *
C.Wakai,8,.,.12 42.19 0x00B0,452
N.Tanimote,5.12 49 22 .428
T .Mirkiteni,7,.11 36 16 .444
Sumimoto,K.., 8 25 11 ,440
N.Matsumoto;P,12 41 18 5439.
K.Hiramoto,5.12 41 18 ,439
A. Kune Se. o. 7* 14* *@ - 426
oN, 60/6. 0.05. 6 14 6. 428
(Continued on: page 6)
M,Takeuchi, T, Horta
a
nd vhs cea
eae ceainettly
Page 6
FLAMETTES.. COP GIRLS'
Hail the undefeated Blk,
pound Flamettes, champion of
the Girls' Softball League.
Led by fly-chaser Capt.
Taye Kuwabara end the sen-
sational battery comb ina-
tion of chucker Toshi Ohata
and fleet-footed Bette Ouye
EL JOAQUIN
the Plamettes swept through
five. opponents with ease
to come through unscathed
for the loop gonfalon.
The championship squad
besides the. above trio is
composed of 1b, Teru Yeku-
Shijis 2b, Ethel Tsutsumi;
POOPOUTS
LACE KIBE! WNTC OD
WALIOP. GIANTS
ease
ae
e undefected Poop-outs chelked up their 13th stre-
ight victory of the sesson by lucing the Kibei 14 - 9,
The despers.te Cardinals stayed right behind the Poop-
outs by walloping the Giants 26 ~ 2 ona murdering 23-
hit bombardment.
The third place Hell Dive
of the season by tripping
the Kibei 14 - 12,
RESULTS i: 2
Pr QU as bs 0 dns dh ae +O
KIBEI.... oD oat
J.Okino, F.Ito and N.Metsumo-
to; Yamemoto, Ueno and Ikeda.
CARDINALS "..secse 260x00B023 2
GIANTS. pound37
N.Tanimoto, pound-Kume and J.Hi-
ramoto; G.Kamidoi Tsutsui,
HELL DIVERS.....% 14.15 5
RIP Bi Ad+ chee anes acho ntarth
LeShima, D. Shimasaki and Y.
Umino; Ueno and Ikeda,
SOFTBALL MEETING
American and National
League softball managers
end represent: tive meet-
ing tonight after roll
son ee eee
e@eetcoeoevae
call at Press roon.
A.l. SOFTBALL
ung he pgtimaed from pose 5}
BOMBERS soh.c%e. " f a! 1 6
SERATUEGtstececemein O she il
S. Teranishi and B.Seaiki; K.:
Kewemre and G. Tomure.
RAINBOWS. smens LO abt +8
ARISTOCRATS " etuy e bende D
J.Kuwade and Joe; M. Nekei and
J. Sakamoto, G. Uyeds.
KIWAR lon + stinedomeue iat A
Wipetestteeensenrnt 9
G. Kagewe and K, Fujineka; Y.
Go 0}
rs registered their 8th win
N.L. BAT RACE
(cont. from Page 5)
B.Mikawa,5., 12 50 21 .420
S.Funamura,P 12 44 18 .409
H.Usui,P. "2012 38 150x00B0 .394
N.Shimakawa,6 12 38 15 .394
T.Ogawa,?,.. 9 pound1 8 2380
G.Shima,7..- 8 27 10 .370
N.Arata,9e.. 8 27 10 4370
K,.Fukumoto,8 12 38 14 .368
GeOune, 5.205 iz 55 20 20638
BsYoshikawa,6 1125 9 .360
L.Shima,7 se. 8 pound8 lO 2057
Rk.Tanaka,Ss. 11 42 15
M.Wakai,8,.. 12 42 15
aeUmino,7ieee 9 31 1k
G.Tsusaki, 8., 10 23 6
F 10, Botswana WO: SR
M.Tsudama,6. le 56 12
M.Nekamura,9 7 24 8 333
S.Tekaheshi, 7 10 42 14 .3533
J.Hiramoto,5 9.33-11- .333
E.Nagete,9.. 11 40 13 1325
F asada Gio .ol2 37 8 4324
Shimozaki,2. 11 34 11 .323
Kuwebare,ey. 10 25. 8 .520
G.Yemashite@ 12 44 14
TsKiriu,2.: a0mse86 "ecCrsoy
D.Shimesaki,?7 10 26 8 .307
J.Okinage,7. 11 33.10 .303
THA. BATTING . AVERAGES
AB Re+ H" POE
Poop-outs 419 203 166 .396
Cardinals 446 195 164 .367
Shangri-las 391 118 136 .347
Hell Rivers. 372 109 109 .293
"557
2504
"847
"049
+558
WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1942
LOOP SOFTBALL: CROWN. /
ob, Kay Takemune} outfield--
ers, Grace and Dotty Funa-
mure. and Greece' Kuwabara. (c)
The princess: of swat is
G lso a Flemette, namely, .
slugging Ohata, who `cone
nected for `six four-ply
clouts during the season,
Gvks `etic al
ce %0W ode Pete
Flamettess... 5. 0 1.000
Blockhezds"..-4 .1- "800
DebSs.eess svacd: 2542600
Yenkettese.ss 2 3 +400 |
JINKCSssseene 1 4 8803
Troyettese... 0 5 .0U0,
2557 (c)
ovle |
SPORTALKS
{continued from page 5)
Coming All-Center Track and
Field Meet. `The ethletic-
minded Kegawe Brothers will
be ineligible for the foot-
bell throw, for the simple
reesonof just being "= lit-
tle too classy for the rest
of the field..
This move wes necessi-
tated beccuse otherwise
there wouldn't have been
Eny entries in this inter-
esting event.
Southpaw George Kagawa
is ranked as one of the
State's better prep pigskin
throwers and has a merk of
over pound10 feet while Will
has flirted around the 180
feet mark,
SPORTALITY
MATSUO
"OKI" OKAZAKI, -
_ Lodi, Sport Supervisor, 8-
*157-D.
Gridiron immortal
of 1931-32 Northern Calif-
ornia champion lLodi Hi
Flames and one of the
Stete'ts all-time Nisei
football greats.
Starred on 1940 State
. Class "A" baseball champion
Templars, National YMBA
"B" Basketball champion,
Tokay City YMBA Flames, |
Moriwaki and By Iwataki. Spartans. 349 92.92 .263 1929 State baseball final-
BUMSs++eseseeees 1011 1 Giants... 348 103 90:.258 igt American Legion nine,
TROPANS oe see oe 4s 7 9 and Grapepkrs. 315 83 73 .247. 1955-34-55 Secramento Val-
Y.Moriweki and B, Iwatski; H. Ramblers. 323 66. 65 ,201 ley Baseball champion
Hirose end IT, Sato. Kibeis,.. pound12 1 40 .188 Templars,
.COAST LEAGUE STaTE LEAGUE JUNIOR LEAGUE
W .L,,.Pets WoL Pet. W*e, et.
San Francisco. 6 0 1.000 Yankees.........2 01.000 Dive Bombers.. 4 0 1.000
Sacramentoe... 3 and 4600 LianG V6. aeahae te 2 **20x00B0 "806 Plemes.eeeees. 4 0 1.000
Portiand.sss.4cent 4: -.S.eO?E TigerSvecosesss 10x00B012 .600 JCC lSeccccoges and 8B: "600
Hollywood.e.ss 5 4 .428 Parnthe Pas. veces oF 70x00B0R 0x00B0* [5067 ThUseeectsbsss and RB 2BDC
SCattlesor.ssee 5 4 2428 Elephantse.see. 1 1 .500 PLyenYCPSC 4.60600 20x00B0 30x00B0". 400
Oakland.ceccee ..@ 0400. 2.3 " oF ` CubSis 8s ins es z @ "400
San Diegoerses 2. 4 #359 meeps bostee Gs . - Jr. Aristos... 1 3 ,250
Missions...... 2 5 .285 Greyhounds..... 0 1 .000 smelifrys..... 0 5 [000