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The Honolulu Advertiser from Honolulu, Hawaii • 9

Location:
Honolulu, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WANT AD SERVICE CALL 2311 THE HONOLULU ADVERTISER. SUNDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 1. 1944. NINE flenioval Pacific Japanese Long Occupation Of Reich Planned Viewed As Ulqt QPn UDemocracy night.

Officials of all departments By ELAINE FOGG that we are treating them were reported to be in general harshly and suspiciously, not be agreement on what to do with Germany immediately after sur render 1. Convince the German peo pie that they have been decisive, ly beaten on the field of battle cause iney are less loyal Americans, but simply because of their racial ancestry. "Those who are personally unreliable or are sufficiently resentful at the? violation of their righti to Constitute a risk cf anv irinH Continued from Page 1) must precede establishment of anything like a return to normal conditions inside the Reich. The first of these is unconditional surrender. The second is that Allied occupation will be accomplished zone by zone, with the Russians occupying the eastern portions of Germany and the British the northwest and the Americans the southwest.

The third development is destruction of all German arms, including aircraft, ships, tanks, guns, ammunition and Oliitnarleo ANNIE T. U. KI3I Annie Young Un Kim, age 55, 1337 Pua Lane, died at 12:30 p.m. Saturday at Queens Hospital. Born in Korea she resided on the Islands 40 years.

She is survived sons, Paul, Peter Lee. and William Kim, 3 daughters, Mrs Elsie Pyun. Mrs. Agnes Masui, and Mrs. Rosa Silberstein, and 9 grandchildren.

Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday at the Borthwick Funeral Parlors, and from 8:30 a.m. Monday. The funeral procession will leave the Mortuary at 2:15 p.m. Monday for services at the Korean Christian Church, the Rev.

Kingsley Kyungsang Lyn, officiating. Burial will follow in Diamond Head Memorial Park 2. Convince them that they must never again start a war have been carefully selected and either interned or pla.ed in a spe- j.nis program includes com plete destruction of the German udrtenier at Tule Lake, for the duration. T7 military machine and eradica others, who have been examined ana lound loyal is unquestionably a perversion of justice very difficult to understand. Situation Chanced "In the Confusion Of a hurried tion of all vestiges of Nazism, elimination of strictly war industries and prohibition of civil and military aviation.

The long-range program which would follow the above takes into consideration that before the war Germany was the greatest industrial nation in western Europe, one whose economy was situation when the Pacific Coast was open to attack, we might excuse the condemnation of a whoie group as untrustworthy because we had no time to select the untrustworthy from the reliable. STATE DEPT. PLANS FOR GERMANY OUTLINED WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 (UP) The State Department's tentative plan for treatment of Germany calls for punitive measures immediately after the war and a long-range program to keep German industry keyed to peacetime pursuits, it was learned to- closely intertwined not only with that of the Continent but also LAUNCHED BY JETS A heavily laden Martin Mariner flying boat, trailing twin streamers of exhaust from jet propulsion units under its wings, takes off in a demonstration of rocket-assisted takeoffs held at headquarters of Fleet Air Wing 2 here. (Official U.

S. Navy Photo, Pacific Fleet.) with that of Great Britain. De tails of the long-range program have not been worked out but Carole Landis, Husband Separate Advertiser Newsman Tells Kicle In Jet-ILaiiiieliecI Plane many of them will depend on what is left of German industry after the war. HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 30 (UFJ Actress Carole Landis has separat ti AT 0HCE to relieved am (DUC TO COLDS) Prescribed by thousands of Doctors! Pertussin a famous herbal remedt" tcientificaUy prepared not onlj; to quickly help relieve euch couching, but also loosens and makes sticky phlegm easier to raise.

Safe anJ mighty effective for both old and voung. Inexpensive! AtDCnTII I V' aU drugstores. Cli I UOOIfix (Continued from Page 1) ed from her husband, Maj. Thomas C. Wallace, her studio announced motors are employed in a normal way.

For commercial aviation, they may be of special practicality for seaplanes or landplanes where only short runways can be had. For the days when 200,000 pound planes will be winging over the skyways, rockets will be on the job to lift the giant ships swiftly and safely into the air. today. No reason for the break was WANTED WHITE QUART BOTTLES We pay 3c ach If delivered, 2c If we pick up KILLS 'EM CHEMICAL, LTD. 1131 Kapahulu Ave.

Ph. 7006 given. They were married in London in January of 1943 while Miss Lan dis was touring military posts throughout the European and Mediterranean areas. She has just returned from the "Whether or not the wholesale -valuation of Japanese-America from the Pacific Coast was rp'ceary as a military measure, IT will always be a regrettable in American history, is the rtS'nion of John A. Rademaker, pev professor of social sciences at University of Hawaii.

Prof. Rademaker speaks on the v-ject of this wartime relocation u-th deep-rooted interest and considerable authority, since he tervcd as community analyst at Ce Granada (Colo.) WRA camp from May. 133, to July of this rear. Democracy Abused "The regret will be not so much for what has happened to the Japanese-Americans as for what has been done to the American people aS a whole by thus instituting mass action on a racial basis in contravention of our principles of democracy and justice. "Once the lreedom and equality 0f Japanese-Americans are attacked successfully without anything remotely approaching a conviction of disloyalty after a fair trial in a court of law before a jury of their peers, what is to safeguard the freedom and equality of any other group of Americans in similar times of public crisis? "Many available facts indicated that a wholesale condemnation of all Japanese-Americans as untrustworthy was not based on valid grounds and the experience of Hawaii has been ample proof of' that!" Vital Troblem Prof.

Rademaker co i "Whether a better method of handling the situation on the Pacific Coast could have been found and used remains a disputed question. There is no dispute at all about the fact that the problem ith which we now have to deal is both real and vital to the future cf democracy and representative government in the United States and throughout the Pacific Area. "For, if we cannot deal justly, 'and democraticellv a small minority of 112,000 persons in the U. by what right and with what effect can'we undertake to bring democracy to the many millions of people of various nationalities who now look to us for constructive leadership and aid in the areas now under control cf the Japanese army and navy?" Must rehabilitate To the War Relocation Authority, the professor pointed out, has been given the task of dealing with the problem of returning the Japanese-Americans to normal Lfe and self-determination. "I have found that, on the whole, the WRA has been and is doing a fairly good job," he declared.

"While its success has not been phenomenonaL it has been definitely encouraging. This suc South Pacific. should prove highly successful for quick getaways, or, in the case of torpedo planes, a means for a speedy retreat after having released a torpedo at a ship. Full Formula Secret The rockets on the two-motored planes are placed two outboard and two inboard. They are discharged electrically by the pilot who pushes a lever.

The chemical formula for the rocket's fuel, of course, is a secret. Two rockets are fired as the pilot starts his run, the other ones are discharged a few seconds late. There are little or no hazards connected with it. Once in the air the rocket cases are jettisoned since their weight and air obstruction would retard speed. Rockets Assist Take-Offs The rockets are used purely as assists in take-offs.

The plane's naissance before airfields are secured on islands invaded by American forces. Until the fields were ready, the "rocket" planes could be moored to a bouy in the vicinity, under the wing of a mother surface ship. Increase Pay Load Another important factor in jet propulsion is the ability to increase the pay load of a ship. As we lifted into the air, the fact was plain. The ship took only 22 seconds to take off.

The problem always has been in lifting heavily-laden planes from ground or water. How heavy the plane was in the air did not matter. It was how to get the weight into the air. Jet propulsion, with its four rockets each kicking with the power of 325 horses, or 1300 h.p., is the answer. Jet propulsion is not new to the navy.

Three years of work has been put on it in the bureau across from the United States Naval Academy, at Annapolis. Some TBF's (torpedo planes) already have used it, and it appears a likely addition to fighter Late Afternoon and Evening Courses HOn-GREDlT COURSES Beginning in Week of Qclcber 9 inat justification is no longer open to us. "We have sounded out the Japanese-Americans and found the great majority of them to be profoundly loyal. Thousands have volunteered for military service, and many have sacrificed their lives. They have bought War Bonds to the limit of their ability, They have sacrificed millions of dollars worth of property and personal goods in the process of evacuation.

"Many have gone out to find jobs which would help the war effort, and in spite of unfounded suspicion and discrimination, have persisted in their determination to help win the battle against Facism. "I have no fears about the future of the Japanese-Americans. Unquestionably, we owe them a great deal of assistance in recovering as much as possible of the property they had to leave behind and in reestablishing themselves in normal communities. Must Be Just I have grave doubts as to whether or not we can survive as a democratic nation, "with liberty and justice for all, if we fail to recognize and reward loyalty when it clearly exists, simply because we are unable to think past a preconception 'hastily formed under propagandic pressure in a very critical period." Prof. Rademaker said that he first became interested in the Japanese-American situation when he was in the state of Washington and saw so many of those people working about him.

While he was an instructor at the University of Washington, he 'did his doctorial on the subject: "The Japanese Farmer in the State of Washington." Immediately upon the outbreak of the war, he continued, he asked for some service in a capacity dealing with the Japanese-Americans. He was given the Colorado assignment in May, 1943. As community analyst, he declared, his job was to analyze social needs and social organizations among.members of the WRA center and to keep the administration advised on matters of a social- Irritated Eyelids? ogical and psychological nature. Asked if he believes the relocation of these people will create a postwar "problem" in the interior areas of the United States, Prof. Rademaker replied that such is not likely in the Middle-West.

People there are very hospitable, he said, and have received the evacuees kindly. "In the mountain states, he added, "there may be some reaction. However, I think it will be short-lived. The majority of Nisei, in my opinion, will never leave the East Coast and Middle-West once they get settled there." The professor estimated that approximately 69 per cent of evacuees now in the WRA centers are United States citizens. At the outset of the war, he said, the percentage was somewhat higher maybe 75.

The fact that many young men among them have gone into the service, and other contributing factors, will tend to lessen the percentage as time goes on, the professor believes. Bathe them with Lavoptik. Promptly Wednesday Classes Begin Oct. 11 5:30 to 7 p.rru CHINESE III SPANISH III 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. ADVANCED PRINCIPLES OF PHOTOGRAPHY 7:10 to 8:40 p.m.

SMALL HOME CONSTRUCTION (Free lectures) soothes. Also relieves inflamed, sore, burning, itching eyes and soothes tired eyes or money refunded. 30 years success. Praised by thousands. Get T.avnntilc Inrtav.

(Eve-cuo included-1 Tuesday and Friday Classes Begin Oct. 10 5:30 to 7 p.m. PLANE GEOMETRY PRACTICAL ENGLISH SPANISH I 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. DRAWING AND DECORA-TIVE DESIGN (Tues. only) 7:10 to 8:40 p.m.

INTERMEDIATE ALGEBRA CORRECTIVE SPEECH VOICE AND DICTION STRENGTH OF MATERIALS DESIGN OF STEEL AND WOOD TRUSSES PERSONNEL AND INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS ELECTRICAL CIRCUITS AND MACHINES (Friday Monday and Thursday Classes Begin Oct. 9 5:30 to 7 p.m. ALGEBRA l-A HAWAIIAN I CHINESE II SPANISH II CHEMISTRY (Lectures on, Mondays, 5:30 to laboratory on Thursdays, 5:30 to 8 p.m.) 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. WATER COLOR AND OIL PAINTING (Mon. only) 7:10 to 8:40 p.m.

ALGEBRA l-B CHINESE I JAPANESE I PUBLIC SPEAKING DEAD RECKONING (Begins Oct. 30) HYDRAULICS Observers believe it ah druegists. planes eii SINCE PEARL HARBOR IVER since Pearl Harbor, Pan only. Class begins Oct. 13) i American World Airways has maintained regular, scheduled air Registration for non-credit courses may be made In Room 110, Hawaii Hall, Oct.

2 to between 8 a.m. and 12, and 1 and 4 p.m.; Oct. 9 to 13 during the same hours; and one hour preceding th first meeting of each class. For complete schedule of courses and fees, phone Adult Education. Service, 9951.

a a i a 3 a Do You Hate HOT FLASHES? If you suffer from hot flashes, feel weafe, nervous, a bit blue at times all due to the functional "middle-age" period peculiar to women try Lydla E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. Made especially for women it helpi naturet Follow label directions. service to the Mainland. As soon as conditions permit, PA A will operate new, giant Clippers on schedules of much greater frequency.

cess is due largely to the loyal support and cooperation of the evacuees themselves and the fact that the vast majority of the WRA personnel were genuinely con lemed an aero for: Thsy cerned with the future welfare of the Japanese-Americans and woiked long, enthusiastically and cevoteaiy to help them, "I think that, if it is given the work PA IV AMERICA WORLD AIRWAY Septan a xAc (Ztifrfccx "photographically VJdT proper support and cooperation by the people and their congression al representatives, the WRA will HAWAIIAN te able ultimately to undo much cf the damage which American by transferring llieir files from "bullcy" rnncjples cf democracy and jus-tee suffered by reason of the paper la microfilm vviih REGJ3RDAI evacuation. Reasons Against Delav AIRLINE "It will have great difficulty in doing if there is any delay in returning to those Japanese-Americans who have been adjudged loyal their rights of citizenship, tnesr freedom of movement and cccupation and their rights of self extermination without especial governmental supervision (except, cf course, for aid to overcome the handicaps already imposed on tr.em 83 a war measure for the benefit-of the entire nation.) "Military conditions seem to have changed considerably, and 'ould seem appropriate that a ar reexamination of the entire situation be undertaken at an early date by executive, legislative a-id judicial authorities with view to restoring the Japanese-Americans to a status identical with that cf other Americans. "Otherwise, we can hardly deny announces Opening of a New MiCTofllming, also applied to current records, now makes important saving in critical materials and replaces 25 steel file cabinets formerly required yearly for storing tracings and engineering drawings alone. Many business organizations have long been using RECORDAK to "com-press" important documents on safety film. A RECORDAK "master file on film" takes up less than 2 of spacs required by original documents and can be stored in the stesl-and-concret security of your vault.

A LEADING electrical manufacturer who needed gpaco to make vital war materials begrudged the acre in which were stored 2,000,000 old documents shop orders, charts and drawings too valuable to be thrown away which Included original sketches of the first power generators at Niagara Falls. Microfilming with RECORDAK was the solution. Photographic transfer to microfilm reduced the bulk of paper records by about 98 and cleared an acre for war work but with these vital records always available for reference. mm ui. .11, mi.

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About The Honolulu Advertiser Archive

Pages Available:
2,262,631
Years Available:
1856-2010