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At your barracks at
10 p.m. and lights out at
10:30. That's the cur-fev; regulation according
to Mr. A. S. Nicholson,
Center Manager. The new ruling put out
by the V/e stern Defense
Command, 4th Army, will
change the 9 P»m. roll call to correspond with
the latest orders. Exemptions will be made only
by special permits to
those v;orklng nights. Notice as to the date
when this order will go
into effect will be plac
ed on the bulletin board.
C A S H I E R T O D I S T R I B U T E ' - ^ 1 0 , 6 5 0
T O M O R R O W , F R I D A Y P M . Paychecks for tho month of Juno 10 to July 9, total
ing $10,650, will bo distributed tomorrow and Friday to
approximately 1,157 Center workers from 1 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 8:30 p.m. in front of the cashier'0 windov; 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
'" " other for those with S and N I C H O L S O N M U S T
O . K . P A R T I E S Future parties held by
any group must be approved
by Center Manager, A. S.
Nicholson. Tho administra
tion feels that parties
should bo do-omphasizod be
cause the number hold has
been too largo.
ratings. 's
A R T S T U D E R T S E X H I B I T I
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 tho fine work
the students have done,
there is a possibility of
having the same exhibit in
the Haggin Memorial Museum
;Ln Stockton sometime in
August. Shima is a graduate of
the California School of
Fine Arts, while Mizushima
attended Oakland School of
Art and Crafty
For a full month's v.'ork the U vjorkerr will receive f8, S v;orkorc
: 12 and P workers |l6.
Procedure similar to tho
last distribution of paychecks will be employed.
Workers may call in any or
der, but they must prose:t
their orange-colored wor
order in applying for th-
paychecks. In eases where
tho work slip is lost, tl e
vjork button must be pre
sented^
23 LEAVE FOK MONT
S U G A K B E E T F I E L D S The second contingent
of 23 sugar beet vjorkers
under K'lr. Al Kav/asaki left the Stockton Assembly Cen
ter for Ronan (Lake County) Mont, at 6 p.m. yesterday.
Included in the second
group of workers v/as one
family (?roup, Vs. ond Mrr.
Yasunara.
G E T F R E E C O U P O N B O O K S T O D A Y
. A D V I S E S G O R D O N , C A S H I E R . •• •" All persons who have not
O O
From the W.C.C.A. headquarters comes instructions to Japanese, aliens and citizens alike, seeking repatria
tion. Forms for application may be obtained at the In
formation Booth.
A request for repatriation vjill bo accept^jd from an;
person I8 years or over,_who vjas born in Japan, or vjht
was born in the U.S. an.
has dual citizenship.
But those \Mho are American citizens WILL FORFETi
as yet received their free
coupon books, regardless
of ID number, were advised
by Center Cashier John
Gcrdon to apply for them at 1 p.m. today in front
of the cashier's window.
The arrival of pay checks
and the speedy disposition
of coupon books has neces
sitated a comploto change
in the schedule for distri
bution cf the free scrips.
Unless the coupon books
are called for today, it
was announced that other
arrangements v;ill have to
bo mado with the Center
Cashier.
their citizenship by apply
ing for repatriation.
An acceptance of a re
quest for repatriation by
the W.C.C.A. docs not moan
the U.S. government will
grant repatriation.
Other instructions are
posted on the bulletin
boards.
Page JOAQUIN V/EDNESDAY, JULY
» 0 o o O a R v E U )
6^VlL^: .J
E D I T O R I A L
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 number of voters approximates
the total of 700. To us, these votes represent our
metns of expressing our opinions on various political
matters.
The right to vote is a great privilege granted to us
as American citizens.
The right to vote entails a responsibility. It calls for a study of issues.
The right to vote should be exercised wisely and
fully, after carefully looking over the candidates and
their platforms.
Never ht.s it meant more to us than now. So let's
mfike use of this franchise, and vote.
V
P
B
/ ^
v_y
X
P
X
Desr Editor...
Through some misunder
standing, an item was pub
lished in the EL JOA':.UIN
giving full credit of Mess
t/3's victory in the first
mess contest to the Block
supervisors.
However, I had me£nt to
emphesize 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.
.. .Robert- Okimoto
Thank you for calling
our attention to the item.
Its wording • may have
"aused this misinterpreta
tion. Happy to see Mess
|3 keep up its fine record.
BEET WORKERS RETURN
Mr. Tetsuo Suzuki and
Mr. Tom Iwasaki returned
last Saturday night by way
of Tule Lake from the Idaho
sugar beet fields.
REC. D E P A R T M E N T
Todr.y is the lost day
for girls 17 i.ud over to
sign up for the First Aid
eliss. *• • • »
The Sr. Handicraft class,
which has 40 members, meets
on Tuesdt.y, Thursday and
Saturday it o and 7 p.m.
The fiec. Dept. furnishes
as much materiel ls possi
ble with the exception of knives.
There are else wood
burners for stle at the
Block 8 office..
The fincy posters which
frequently mike their ap-
pe£:ranee oi bulletin boards
are the work of Louise Baba,
Agnes Uyesugi and Koichi Inouye.
Mr. Frank Thornton Smith
will agcin be guest direct
or of the Center choir next
Tuesdry evening. »* *»*
Scturdty's tf.lent xievuo
was fair-to-middling.
TULE LAKE
The fj:ct that it is p^v
lished is proof,, fjp
first surgical opeKtion
was declared a success tj
the hospitcl, Victim-
excuse, pi-tient—was v. wo
man..... .Incidentally, m
you hear -bout excellent
cooperation and harmony i-
mong our ho2pit£.l stiiff?..
TULAitE
v.-ish someone here would
lose one.... .Four-year-old Miyoko Kamon received |75
for returning a wallet containing .^95 lost ly a Mrs.
T. Yoshinaga.
It must be a pretty sad
place. .Headings froni
TULAHE NEVvS "Nicholson
Quits Center" "Parkin
son Resigns"
MEiiCED Not definite—only ten-
tat ive is the date and
destination of Mercedians
They are scheduled to
leave August cl - Septemlier
8 for Granada, Cciorado...
Approximately 2000 evacuees
are to leave at the same
time from "some other cen
ter" Could they be we?
He re' s t odt y • s human
interest story "Little
5-year-old Jimny livakaypma
was gazing beyond tfi3 fence
at an irrigation ditch.....
Somehow he knew that little
rf^'^Sfc^
<Y
minnows >A/ere swimming in
the water and wished he
could get one......A sratU American boy, who '.\as watching his ft ther work, knew
what the boy wanted ,••
Little Jimny's heart ji^P®^
when he wa's handea a fish.
.;Today the fish is Jimay's
dearest treasure."....*P&n-
cho and Tamale think a lot
of thaitaittle American boy
representative of the
true spirit of a little
American.
TANFORAN Hope they don't get an
idea like this here...Bar
ber shop patrons are asked
to wash their hair before
going for a haircut
iieason given was "to pre
vent grit and dust from
ruining the instruments".*
WEDTJ5SDAY, JULY 22, 1942
NEW ASS'l MGR.
EL JOAQUIN Page 3
m a r D O U G H E R T y i S Q .
The S.A.C.'s new Assistant Center Manager from
the Miarysville Assembly
Center, robust, ruddy-com-
plexioned, bespectacled
Willifim Dougherty was born
in Minnesota 45 years ago;
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 hospitalfhci-
lities are the best. It
v;as hot and dusty in Marys
ville. There wasn't a sin
gle tree in the whole Cen
ter," he said.
"No," ho added, as an
afterthought, "There was
one tree."
S O U N D M O V I E
7 U N D R A ^ A N A L A S K A N E P I C /
W D W 5 M ( E A \ O M
In spite of the curfew regulations, the anticipated
sound movie, "Tundra", (first one for the Center-ites
since evacuation) will be shown on the Platform tomor
row and Friday beginning at 8:40 p.m. sharp. The movie
will end at 9:50. "Tundra" is a graphic record of the life of "heroic
riders of the sky"—speci- T T 7 T 7 it o fically, of a young physi- l*^Loo J
cian known as tho "Flying
Doctor", who, in an effort to save the to\'m from a
plague, crashes his plane
in the v;ilderness.
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,
2,3,4 and 5 should attend
tomorrow; Blocks 6,7,8 and
9 on Friday. EVERYONE BRING HIS O M
CHALRJ
The sound pro jector will
bo furnished by the Exieger
Motor Comp-ny of Lodi,
F O R M A T I O N O F
GIRL X:OUT
TROOPS URGED "Although we realize
that the Japanese evacuees
will be in your assembly
center only temporarily,
we are veay much interested in letting them have the
opportunity of forming Girl
Scout troops, if they are
interested. The training
in citizenship and the
'.vholesome 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 Nevjell, also sent Girl Scout literature
to assist the organization
of troops. Such plans are now boing formulated for
this Center.
This is no bull! A ne'7
reeordl Tho canteen sold
5239.20 v7orth of Bull Dur-hal yesterday in 4 hours.
o c o
t l t c i u o n l f i n t i n c i
A meeting to formulate plans for a general Cen
ter election v;illbe held
at 1 p.m. tomorrow; at the Edex Hall.
Interested individuals
or groups are urged to
attend.
W E L L - B A B Y C L I N I C
HELD TRI-WEEKLY
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 11 a.m, at
the Center Hospital.
Each 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
ed to come.
I N T E R N E E S J O I N
F A M I L I E S H E R E Mr. Walter Takeo Atsumi
and \&c, Kameichi Ichiho ar
rived from Bismarck, North Dakota, on Thursday, July
16, and Mr. Jitsuro Hira
moto from Santa Fe, New
Mexico, on Sunday, July l8,
to rejoin their families.
"V/e don't knov; how they do it; nobody ever seems
to be doing any v/ork. Yet,
they consistently have an
immaculate building, insid^j
and out, from end to end.
Maybe it's the old system
of having a place for every
thing, and everythine in
its place," exclaimed Mr.
L. C. Shaffer as Mess jf
walked off with top honors
in the second mess hall contest.
Block 6 janitors copped
the prize this time for
cleanliness and will share
in the prize vjith Block 3.
"Messes #2 and ^5 both
vjere close seconds to ^ 3 , vjith ;f2 coming fast in the
stretch," added Shaffer.
/ 8 B O Y S C O U T S A T T E N D & H O L J R
S E S S I O N I N F I N G E R P R I N T I N G S U N . Eighteen Scouts attended
the six-hour course in
fingerprinting, instructed
by Mr. John Alexander of
the Interior Police Dept.
last Sunday at the Visitors'
Booth. Fingerprinting slides vjere shovm by Mr.
Iven Hitt of Commercial
Photography.
Scouts were fortunate
to receive this course, as ordinarily it would cost
$25 for each outsider. To
obtain a Merit Badge for
fingerprinting, a Scout
must pass a series of five
tests.
Only First Class Scouts
who attended the session
are qualified to take the
test.
Page EL JOAQUIN VEDNESLAY, JULY £2^o;,.
S O C I A L W E L F A R E
DEPT ISSUES
INSTRUCTIONS
The Social Welfare Dept.
announced that the applica
tion for clothing will be
taken every working day ex
cept Saturday.
Instructions are:
(1) Bring the orange in
formation card. (I ) Any
responsible member of the
family must place applica
tion for all the f&mily.
(3) The applic;. tion must be
signed by the liLAD of the
family on receipt of notice
from the Department. (4)
Tim.e for application (which
metns piecing of order) is
9 to 11 in the morning end
2 to 4 in the afternoon.
(5) Bring the list of all
needed clothing for the
rest of the family. (6)
List must stt.te the clothes
needed, size and fpproximate
color. (7) Come etrly in
the morning to receive ap
pointment number. (6) No
tice will be gent to each
family head when clothes
arrive. This procedure is sub
ject to change without no
tice, so please watch the
EL JOAQUIN for later announcements.
E R C E H T E R S R E L O C f l
PINEDALE JURLOCK BEGIN D(ODUS
The slow dri inage of Japanese from til assembly cen
ters to relocation areas will be hastened by the exodus
of 4,750 Pinedale evacuees to the Tule Lake W^r iteloco-
tion Center at Newell, beginning July 15 and of 750
Pinedaleans to ti-ie Colorado hiver Kelocttion Center neer
Parker, Arizona, beginning July c3. Vi/ithin a space of a few
L u t i i p i
From 8 to 9»4o p.m.
will be the usutl Satur
day nite Stomp Session.
This time it's the "Cur
few Cut-up." Come one,
come all v/ho cares if
Ole M£<n Sol refuses to
get his snut-eye early??
Eh, what?
F I R S T A I D C L A S S E S
Instructors have been
selected and tin.e has been
arranged for the First Aid
classes. Art Hisaka and
Ted Oseto will give the
course to 50 Air riaid Vi/ar-
dens on Mond; y, Wednesday
f-nd Fridf y from 9 to 11 ? .m.
Kats N-'gtiwill instruct
24 firemen at the same time.
Fifteen xiec. lei^ders
will tike the course on
Mondty i nd Thursday from
9 to 11 p.m. with Vic Ito as instructor.
MESS 7
H A S H O M E - L I K E A T M O S P H E R E
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-
ziting relief timekeeper,
revefled that H. Takuraa
and E. Ono were the tv;o
chefs. An efficient waiter-
dishwasher crev/is composed
of J. IkLwa, T. Sato, S.
Terrnishi, H, Tomodr, n.
Murrno, T. Kf jiwt.ra, I. Oba,
S. Tt.ked; , T. Higjiki, S.
Okuhrr: , T. Hirt.no, H. Shi-
momura, N. Imamura, K, Su
zuki, J. Mptsuo, K. Ohata,
M. Y?:mamoto, M. Ikeda and
T. Eshima. Carolyn Suzuki, Mits Sa
gara, Yo Sagara and Kuth
Akeba are the cordial serv
ice girls, while H. Hirose
and Assistant B. Arakawa
keep the supplies in order.
Members of the scrub
crew are S. Shiica, S. Take-
hiro, y.Yonemura, K. iaka-
ta and M» Baba, and in the
vegetable trimruing dept.,
are K. Aoki, Y. Tsukimoto,
S. Ito> n, Ikemoto and K.
Yaniashita,
The hard-working assist
ant cooks A. Tokunaga,
S, N£.gayama, 3. Ytmate, S.
Hirano, S. Sato^ H. Kusu-
noki, M. Mi sudf , K. Mi hara
and K. Aoki—were patient
ly waiting for the late-
as-usual Kats Nagai to
finish his morning breakfast.
days the Turlock Assembly
Center will begin mass mi
gration to the Gila River
relocation project near
Sacaton, Arizona, 50 miles
southwest of Phoenix, be
ginning with ^7b advance
migrants oi July 18 and the
remaining 3,100 beginning
on July 26.
At present plans the
Merced Assembly Center wUl
further deplete the stock
of evacuees by transferring
its residents to the new
Colorado Keloci-tion Center
at Granade , beginning Au
gust 31.
100 compW
IN ^-DAY GO &
SHOGI TOURNEY Under the chairuianship
of Mr. M. N?jkamura, the
liecreation Department spon
sored a successful four-day
Go end Shogi tournomait
with over a hundred compet-
itors participating.
vvirmers in the Go con
test were; Messrs. Masu-
hara, 1st; S. Yoshirriotc,
2nd; Nakashima, 3rd; Taka
hashi, 4th; Mizutani, 5th;
Nishi;..oto, bth; &nd Shige.,
7th. Shogi tournament wiiuiers
were: Messrs. Miwc, Ist;
Y?;no, Snd; 3. Yoshiiuoto,
3rd; Kawamoto, 4th; Kfji-
ta, bth; Fujimoto, 6th;
Senzoku, 7th; and Kektgc-
wa, 8th.
In the special event
affair, five-msn elimina
tion, winners were: Go
contest—J/ir, Yokoi and in
the Shogi—¥ir. Hiramatsu.
Thursday: ?^a£^ofT^c^^/^'(^^5_, 4|00
7i00
6:40-9;50
p. m.
p.m.
p.m.
Friday:
Beginners' Dancing
Comfflunity'Singing
Movie for Blks. Ii2,^. 4 and 5. (Platform)
Beginners' Dancing
Art Exhibit
Movie for Blks. 6, 7.8
and 9. (Platform)
^^^^^ (Platform)
All activities to be held at Eaex Hall unless otherwise indicated.
3:00
7:30
B:40-9i50
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
Saturday: 8:00-9:45 p.m.
* • * >)e *
V/ith the Center's major
league season coming to a
fast close this weekend, a new and a more pov;erful
loop vjill be planned out
tonight in the l^ess room
lounge after roll call.
There is talk of combining two blocks into one
powerful squad. The cham
pionship Reds, with the
exception of two or three
players, will stay intact
while the Aristocrats will probably import four horse
hiders to strengthen their
ten.
Also the National Lea
gue champion Poop-outs will
most likely join this new
league. >|( 3^ :4: }|c )f:
This action should prove
profitable because it will
make competition tougher
and closer and at tha same
time should prove mora interesting 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
v;ho cannot make the grade
for this new circuit will
be left out in the cold.
Tv;o nevj leagues of the
National caliber is expect
ed to be formed at tiie same time to keep every horse-
hider in competition. * * * * *
Down at Santa /uiita
Assembly Center, the na
tional pastime, class "A"
hardball league was offici-
ally ushered in last Sun
day. Ono of the features
of the opening day was the tilt between San Pedro and
San Jose, one of the better
nines in Northern Califor
nia. * * * * *
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 pov/erf ul Shn
Pedro Skippers in the West
Coast Nisei athletic clas
sic of the year. * * * * *
Something unique and
unprecedented in sports
annals was created for the
(Continued on page 6)
•^DIJESDAY, JULY 22, 1942 EL JOAQUIN Page 5
T E R f l n i S H I S T O P S R E D S &
SEnflTORS IZ-6 flno 5-3
R A I N B O W S E D G E A R I S T O C R A T S I N
N I N T H I N N I N G 1 3 - 1 2 . B U M S S P L I T .
The resxirgent Blk. 7 Bombers paced by the classy
hurling of Sanji Teranishi skyrocketed to glory by up
setting the American League champion Blk. 3 Reds 1 2 - 6
Friday. Teranishi bounced right back Sunday again to
handcuff the lowly Senators 5 - 3 on a magnificent one-
hit Job.
The unpredictable Rainbows threv; the fight for the
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 chased home Manager Jimmy Hamasaki v/ith the
winning tally. The defeat by the Rainbows sees the sharing tho
H O R S E S H O E 1
Opportunity is knocking
at tho doors for the ta
lented pitchers of the tempered stool half loop.
The first open doubles
horseshoe tournament of
the Stockton .Assembly Cen
ter will be held this coming Saturday and Sunday in
front of the Block 10 Recreation Office, under the
supervision of Kosuke Iji
chi. Deadline for signups has
beon set at Thursday, 8
p.m., and bracket for the tournament will be posted
at the Main Rec. Office at
Block 8 Frid?.y morning.
AI.1ERICAN LEAGUE W
Reds 14
Aristocrats.. 9
Bams 9
Yankees 9
Trojans 9
Rainbows 8
Bombers 7 10 Bears.. '. 7 10 Kiwanis 6 11 .352
Senators $ 12 .293
L
3
7 7
7 8
8
Pet.
.823
.562
.562
.562
.529
.500
.411
.411
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Poop-outs.... 13
Cardinals....11
Hell Divers.. 9
Shangri-las.. 7
Spartans...., 6
Giants 5
Grapepickers, 3 10 ,230
Ramblers 3 10 .230
Kibei 1 10 .100
L Pet.
0 1.000
2 .846
.692
.500
.500
.357
4
7 6
9
i\ristocrats
socond spot with the Bu.iTis
and the Yankees. The Bums, after dropping
a hoartbroaker to Manager
Will Kagawa's Kiwanis 9 - 7, camo back Monday to stay in
the thick of the race for
the coveted second spot by
rapping the Trojans 10 - 7.
RESULT: R H E
BOMBERS 12 12 2
REDS 6 5 ? S.Teranishi * B.Saiki; G. Baba, M.Takeuchi, T.Horita
and B.Uayashi. (Continued on page 6)
JmONAKA
LEADS N.L.
BATTING PACE Ted Shironaka, hard
slugging Poop-outs' star, paced the National League
hitting parade v;ith a
blistering .725 average.
Other hitters i)i the
exclusive ,500 brackets-
are Shangri-las' Guorge
Ouye, Poop-outs' Matsuo
Okazaki and Cardinals' Jim
Hiromoto.
G AB H Pet.
T.auiDnaka,P..ll 40 29 .725
G.Ouye,8..... 9 24 IS .625
M.Okazaki,P..11 33 I9 .575
J.Hiromoto,5.12 47 26 .553
R.Miyanishi,P.. 12 40 I9 .474
C.Wakai,8....12 42 19 .45^
N.Tanimoto,5.12 49 22 .428 T.MirJkiterli,7..11 36 16 .444
Sumimoto,K... 8 25 11 .440
N.Matsumoto;P. 12 41 I8 .439
K.Hiramoto,5.12 41 I8 .439
A.Kume,5 7 14 6 .428
N.Ito,6 6 14 6 .428
(Continued on page 6)
Page 6 EL JOAQUIN WEDNESDAY, JlTLY_^g, g .
F L A M E T T E S C O P G I R L S ' L O O P S O F T B A L L C R O W N /
Hail the undefeated Blk.
2 Flamettes, champion of
the Girls' Softball League.
Led by fly-chaser Cspt.
Tcye Kuwabara end the sen
sational battery combina
tion of chucker Toshi Ohata
and fleet-footed Bette Ouy^
the Flamettes swept through
five opponents with ease
to come through unscathed
for the loop gonfalon. .
The championsMp squad
besides the above trio is
composed of lb, Teru Yaku
shiji; 2b, Ethel T3utsumi;
3b, Kay Takamune; outfield.
ers, Grace and Dotty Puns"
mura and Gr?.ce Kuw&bara. "
The princess of swj t-
also a Plamette, ncmelv
slugging Ohata, who con
nected for six four-ply
clouts during the sefRnn
L A C E K I B E I l A - 9 .
W A L L O P G I A N T S The undefeated Poop-outs
ight victory of the ser'son
The desperr te Cardinals s
outs by walloping the Giant
hit bombardment.
The third place Hell Live
of the season by tripping
the Kibei 14 - 12.
RESULTS: R H E
POOP-OUTS, 14 12 5
KIBEI....^ 9 7 7
J.Okino, F. Ito & N.Mi^tsumo-
to; Yamamoto, Ueno & Ikeda.
C ARLINALS 26 23 2
GIANTS 2 5 4
NiTanimoto, A,Kume & J.Hi
ramoto; G.Kamidoi & Tsutsui.
HELL DIVERS...... 14 15 5
KIBEI 12 7 4
L.Shima, D. Shimasaki & Y.
Umino; Ueno & Ikeda.
S O F T B A L L M E E T I N G
ilmerican and National
League softball managers
and represents tive meet
ing tonight after roll
call at Press room.
A.L. S O F T B A L L ,^^^^continuea from | . g | 5^
BOOEKS 5 6 0
3ENi-.TOiiS....... ... 3 1 1
3. Teranishi & E.Saiki; K.
Kfwtraura and G. Tomura.
-{AIITBOVS 13 16 8
.LRISTOCRATS. 12 13 1
J.Kuwadr Sc Joe; M. Ni kai &
J. Sakamoto, G. Uyedc.
KBVANIS. . =' 9 14 1
BUMS 7 9 £
G. KagfWL. & K . Fujinska; Y.
Moriwaki & B. Iwataki.
BUMS 10 11 1
TROJAI^S • 7 9. 2
Y.Moriwcki & B. Iwataki; H.
Hirose rnd T. Srtox
. C A R D I N A L S
26-2 chz Iked up their 13th stra-by licing the Kibei 1 4 - 9 .
tayed right behind the Poop-
3 £6 - 2 on a murdering 23-
rs registered thejr 8th win
N.L- BAT RACE (cent, from Page 5)
B.Mikawa,5,, 12 50 21 .420
S.Funamura,P 12 44 18 .409 H,Usui,P.... 12 36 15 ,394
N.Shi©akawa,6 12 38 15 .594
T.0gawa,p... 9 21 8 .380
G.Shima,?,.. 8 27 10 .370
N.Arata,9... 8 27 10 .370
K.Fukumoto,8 12 36 14 ,368
G.Oune,5,... 12 55 20 .363
E.Yoshlkawaie 11 25 9 .360
L.Shima,7... 8 28 10 .557
R.Tanaka,8.. 11 42 15 .557
M.U'akai,8... 12 <±2 15 .357
A.Umino,7... 9 31 11 ,354
G.Tsusaki,6. 10 25 6 .547
F.Ito.P 10 32 11 .5^3
M.Tsudama,6. 12 3d 12 .533
M.Naksmura, 9 7 24 6 .533
S.Takahrshi, 7 10 ^2 1^ .533
J,Hiramoto, 5 9 35 11 .535
E.N:gati ,9.. 11 40 15 .325
F.A5ada,.3,.. 12 57 8 .i>Z :
Shimozaki,2. 11 54 11 .525
Kuwabarc,2.. 10 25 6 .520 G.Y/-mashitt,8 12 44 14 .318 T.Kiriu,2... 7 26 8 .307
D.Shimasaki,7 10 26 6 .307
J.Okinaga,7. 11 53 10 .305
TEAl. BATTING AVExL'.GES
iLB R H Pet. Poop-outs 419 205 166 .396
Cardinals 446 195 164 .367
Sh£a^ri-las 391 116 156 .347
Hell DLveis. 372 109 109 ,-293
Spartans. 349 '-92. 92 ^Ze'6
Giants... 34«''.1.03 . 90 .'238 *
Grapepkrs. -315 83- 73 .-947 •
Ramblers. 323 68 65 .'2-01" Kibeis... 212 51 40 .rLSB .
.COAST LEAGUE
W
San Fra ncisco. 6
Sacramento.... 3
Portland.*. ...' 4
Hollywood.,... 3
Seattle 3
Oakland 2
San Diego..... 2 Mission 2
ST..TE LEAGUE / • . 7 ^ L
0
2
3
4 4
3
4 5
Pet.
1.000
.600
.571
.428
.428
.400
.353
.285
Yankees... 2
Lions..., \
Tigers,,.,.,.... 1 Panthers i
Elephants i
Zebras, ,,,«,,*;. o
Greyhounds o
L Pcti
0 1.000
1
1 1
1
1
1
.500
.500 ,500
.500
.000
.000
^ W ^ L Pet. 7
Flamettes..,. 5
Blockheeds,.. 4
Debs S
Yankettes.... 2
Jinxes,..,.., 1
Troyettes.... 0
0 I.OOO
.600
.600
.400
.£0u
.000
1
2
3
4
5
S P O R T A L K S
(continued from page 5)
coming All-Center Track and
Field Meet. The athletic-
minded Kagawa Brothers will
be ineligible for the foot
ball throw, for the simple
rec son of just being i lit
tle too classy for the rest
of the field.
This move wt-s necessi
tated beer use otherwise
there wouldn't have teeii
any entrits in this inter
esting event.
Southpav/ George Kegawe
is ranked as one of the
State* s better prep pifskin
throwers end has a msrk of
over 210 feet vhiie Ulill
has flirted around the 160
feet mark.
SPOBTALITY:
MATSUO "OKI" OKAZAKI,
Lodi, Sport Supervisor, 6-
157-D. Gridiron immortal
of 1951-52 Northern Calif
ornia champion Lodi Hi
Flames and one of the
State's Jill-time Nisei
football greats.
Starred on 1940 State
Class "A'' baseball champion Templars, ,, National .'YilBA
"B" Basketball champion
T okay ,C i ty' YltBk F 1.& me s,
1929 State baseball .l inalr
i^t Amelrican Legion nine,
1955-34^-55 Sscramento Val
ley Baseball champion
•lepp^ftr?. . —
JUNIOR LKAGUE
Dive Bomb
Flames...
Seals.., .
Troys..,.
Flyers...
Cubs
Jr. Arist Smallfrys
3rs..
. 4 . , ,
OS,.,
4
4
tj
2
2
2
1 0
L
0
0
2
2
3
3
3
5
Pet.
1.000
1.000
,600
.500
,400
,400
.250
.000