Phillip Fujii is appointed new Review Board coordinator Ben Yorita

Transcription

Phillip Fujii is appointed new Review Board coordinator Ben Yorita
Vol.lONo.l
Phillip Fujii is appointed new
Review Board coordinator
by Ron Chew
newly appointed City
staffperson to the lntemationaI Speaal Review District board, wants to
use his experience in video production to
make documentaries promoting the International District community.
P
HJLUP R1}U
For the past year, Fujii and two partners have operated Phillip Fujii Video
ProductIOn, Inc .. a local video production servi~. Fujii says he'd like to donate
the services of the company to producing
films on the District, possibly for airing
on Channel 9 and 13
Fujii wa5selected from among 60 applicants for the staffperson position. a role
which involves coordinating meetings of
the seven-member International District
boatd and working as"themajor link, the
primary contact between the lntemationa1 District community and the City. according to Earl Layman. City historical
preservation officer who retired at the
end of last month aiter U years of service.
The Review Bo.a.rd - comprised of five
perctOns elrcted by the community and
two appointed by the Mayor - reviews
aU applications for new construction.
demolition and remodeling to ensure that
proj«ts compl)! wit.h speci-.J develop·
mentgujdetines for L"e area.
Layman dnc:ribed Fujii's po'lihOn as
natown·IntemationaJ District Preserva·
tion and Development AuthOrity com·
plete work on a number of housing pro-
jects.
Evelyn Sun, former director of DCD's
neighborhood and technical assistance
office, stressed that Fujii's role will be
"not only to take minutes of Review
Board. m~tin.gs and bring applicants before the Board," but also to "encourage
redevelopment and assist people who
own property and want to develop."
layman said both Pionet!r Square and
the International District "are in the
throes of a renaissance. with the influx of
development .
Fujii. an assistant urban designer in
DCD for the past five years, has served as
temporary staffperson for the Review
Board for the past six months. so his transition to the permanent. full-time job,
which begms this month, shouldn't be too
difficult.
Fujii attended the University of Wash·
ington. reaivmg his bachelors degree in
urban planning, then entering the Umver·
sity's master's program. receiving a cer~
I would like to work with applicants moting the District as an Asian commun·
tificate in urban d~ign.
- business people and developers - so ity . ckpicting the balance of residentw
In assummg his role a5 ~taffperson to that they understand the development and commercial inte:rests in the:il~a.
However. Fujii's more immed~te prethe Review Board, Fujii replaces Irene ~ulations. and "0 that they come up
Hoskin, who n!'Signed 1000st 5ummel" for with wrll~igned . Quality proJKts for occupation will be supervising a CO~
.l.
; :..M'.' fUl
' d~_ __
nalre ns.
.~;
c:'
unity election t("U '0 expired Rtvi~
PUjil _id he hopn to produ(4' • • t no
to hold the: po.ltlOn Since 'he RCV11Ie'W 0
·'project manager [or the international toet WillS qeated in 1973. He is the tint
District," a designation fonnerly held by Asian in that position,
Fujii said he applied for the Revlew
.AI Kurimura who works in the housing
development office of the Department of Board staff p05ltion because he felt he
Community Development (DCD). Kuri· "needed a change of pace and had a
muril now devotes most of his time in the background in urban design to equip him
International DIstrict to helping the Chi· for the job.
cost to the commuruty, documentaries
p~moting the International District as a
"comfortable. safe residential and com·
mercia.lenvironment.
One fUm, he said could highlight businesses, servinos and foods in the District.
Another film could focus on events pro-
Bo..-d ............................ ---....:
On~ appointed position 111.&0 open.
If you .Ire a bu.sinft.s person property
owner, employee, resident. tenant 01"
community partid~t in the District.
you are eligible to be a c.;mdjdate for a
position on the baud. For mo~ infonna~
tion, call FujiI at 625-4501.
Ben Yorita retires after years
of teaching Asian history
by Sue Chin
"you do make a difference
and you can influence people" as a teacher.
Yonta recently retired after 12 years teaching
Asian and minority history at Seattle Central Com·
munity College (SCCC). HewiU continue, howe~r .
to coordinate and lead the SCCC summer Overseas
Study and Travel Program, which he helped institute
in 1974. ,l'he group will tour mainland China next
summer.
Yorita, a teacher since 1950, singl~ha.nded.ly es-tablished the ethnic studies division of the SCCC history department.
When I came to SCCC in the fall, 1970, the students were demonstrating for minority courses,"
Yorita said. "Nobody was available to teach minor·
ity history courses in Black. Chicano or Asian his-tory ." Yorita undertook the task of creating many of
those courses for SCCc.
"I've taught the hist ory of Japan , the history of
China, East Asian history, Asian American history,
minority history, history of Korea, Taiwan, the
Philippines, and the history of the United States for
foreign students," he said. I have developed all of
them ."
While he and his family were interned al the Mini·
doka Concentration Camp in Idaho during World
War II, Yorita began teaching young people. "1found
it reaJly inspiring deaJing with young people," he
said. Yorita decided , at the age of 21 . tNt he wanted
to bea teacher.
EN YORITA BWEVES
B
8m Yorit;a, nevu lost hiS t'nlhw.~ for te;a,ching-Dean Wong photo
Over the years, sInce he got his teaching certification in 1950, Yorita has taught in eastern Washington
and in the Seattle Public School System at Sharples
Junior High School. Se.lth High School and Franklin
High School before joining SCCC in 1970.
'1 think teachIng is reaJly creative and a positi\'e
thing, " Yorita said. "You do make a difference one
way or another . You can influence people. You an
bring new inslght into things .
'It was reaUy excih.n.g teaching at SCCC. You were
able to create your own courses. Any count that you
were planning to teach . you had to create it by injKt~
ing your own perspective and interpretation. You
could make it very interesting and alive."
FollOWing the turmoil and the "revolution of
values" of the 19605. teaching became "re:aUy exciting·' for Yont., particularly at SCCc. OW. brought
about new courses, such as minority history. At tM
beginning, a lot of was so new that a lot of it wu rap
sessions."
Teachers also had to change their perct'Ptions,
Yorita continued, from teaching ". subject matter to
teaching people.
"One can teilch more effectively with understand·
ins than from an authoritarian point of view." he
said. "The first thing to do' is to listen and not just
push your own ideas."
YOritil says he's never lost his enthusiasm for
teaching over the Pilst 30 years. Among the rewards
of teaching arf youth and vitality, "dealing with
young people keeps YO~OUng,' and immortaJity,
"because people remem
ou. " YOritii is conttmed
that with his departure, the thnic studies division in
ltistory at SCCC may be in j<oporcly sine<, (or the past
12 years, he has been responsJblo! for maintainins the
division . The college is currently looking for a re-placement. Yorila hopes that his replacement will
have a "sensitivity" for teaching those (OUrsH he is
leaving behind .
by SwaI Hayuill
Organization of
Chinese Americans,
a national network of support
£FORE SHE BECAME Executive 0;,...,.
B
tor of the Organization oi Chines<
Ammcans (OCAl. UunI Chin
thOll8ht she would find it dlEEicult to luv.
her job in the ftder.J gov.mment alt.r 12
years oi service th.... "but I felt compelled to change my work. given the political
climate in this city." Chin said in a phone
interview from the DCA national office
in W.shington. D.C.
Chin, who was born in China and
grew up in New York City, moved to
W&ington to do graduiltto work at
George Washington Univ.r>ity in 1968.
and particularly tries to monitor national
legislation. OCA also serves as a clearingM
house of information about Chinese
Amerians for the Washington D.C .
area.
In 1980, the organization formed its
Business Advisory Council which this
year is pl~in.g to publish a national Chinese American Business Directory.
OCA was also active in the fight to
overturn the Bakke reverse discriminaDCA has bee.n instrumental in getting
tion decision , and bilinguaJ educat.ion has
the presidential proclamation of Asian/
been one of the organiz.ation's major conPacific American Heritage Week each
cerns.
year, and would like toget a clause added
One major focus of DCA's lobbying efto the original bill passed by Congress in
forts last year was a bill to revise U.S .
1978 to make the week recognizing the
immigration regulations. The bill died
contributions of Asian and Pacific Amerwhen Congress adjourned in December,
icans an automatic annual event.
but it will be resubmitted for further
When the SmaU Business Administra- debate this year. 'We want to insure
tion considered deleting Asian and PacM
United States immigration laws are as fair
iIie Americans from its definition of as possible," Chin said .
minority groups, DCA worked to oppose:
DCA lobbied heavily Eor an amendthat decision.
ment, contained in the immigration bill,
After receiving a grant from the to do away with discriminatory colonial
of
Education,
OCA quotas, limiting the number of immi·
Department
developed A Place Called Chil1es~ Amer- grants from colonies such as Hong Kong.
where there are six to U year wa.iting lists
iCA, a book for secondary school students
explaining the history and accomplish- depending on the preference category of
the immigrant.
ments of Chinese Americans.
From there she went to work for the gov-
ernment as an editor and writer for the
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, and
WD public affairs officer for the Special
Counsel'sOfEicein the U.S. Merit System
Protection Board before she took the
position of OCA Executive Director in
February, 1982.
Chin had been chairperson iilnd an
active member of the Asian and Pacinc
Ametican Federal Employees Council Eor
several years, Although she had not been
an active member of OCA when she accepted the post of Executive Director, she
had worked closely with the organization
on many issues over the years.
OCA, because it is the only national
Chinese American group with an office in
the Washington D .C . area, is involved in
many national Asian American issues,
OCA ow-d tho eonpIoyor ........
contained In tho ImmIpation bIB..........
ing employen to haw aU pnlI\IIICIIft_
plor- ohow identtfk:a_ to JII'Oft cWo
uruhip or aDen reptro_ bofore hiJ..
ing. "Anyone foroipllooItIntI wID be ......
ject to .autilly," Chin pointed OUI. ond
"'iAN "will be the onn uktd lint." ....
Aid.
The Organization of ChirwM Americans is a non-profit, non·putiaan IJ'OUP
involved in social and busineoo iooua"foe
Chin_ Americans living in this country"
for the past 10 y..... according to Chin,
The organization has 26 chapma in 20
states, mainly in the ea.stun section of the
country. but with three chapten in Calj...
tomia. 'We'd like to do more in Oregon
and W.shington." Chin explained. but
there are no DCA Chapters so far in the
Northwest.
'We try to provide a ntltiona! networit
oEsupport." according to Chin. "My own
point of view as an A.sian in Ameria is
thai it is important that we organize: and
encourage Chinese to participate as equal
partners in American society. We have to
make people aware they can make a
difference."
Since Chin joined the very smaJIsW! of
DCA as its first woman director, the
group has concentrated on organizins
new chapters. 'Tve been surprised by the
number of Chinese I have met who &r'e'
really concerned about the need for Chinese Americans to organize," Chin said.
The growing anti-nuclear movement among Pacific Islanders
by Ron Chew
\. .
Pacific Islander who has conducted
health investigations among residents in
the Marshall Islands.
antiMnudear activists, on a West Coast tour, will
speak in SeattleJanuary 8 about the
growing anti-nuclear and self-determination movement among Pacific lslanders.
The speaking engagement, held in connection with an upcoming protest at Vandenberg Air Force Base in central CaliIorrua this month. is co-sponsored by the
T
0 PROMINENT
W.shington
Sta~
Johnson has traveled widely throughout Micronesia and the South Pacific.
researching militnism and nuclear
explOitation in those areas. He currently
works as resource development coordinator for the Pacific Concerns Resource
Center.
And Keju , born on Ebeye Island in
Kwajalein Atoll, Marshall Islands, and
raised on one of the outer islands, has
been involved in anti-nuclear Pacific issues for many years, having observed the
effects of the U,S. nuclear testmg program in the Marshalls on the health and
Commission on Asian
American Affairs, American Friends Service Committee, Pacific Peacemaker
Committee and the U.S. Nuclear~Free
PacjEic Network.
The two speakers are Giff Johnson, an
American journalist, and Darlene Keju, a
r----------------------,
culture or her own people. She has spoken warhead accuracy and antj·baUistic mir
at major international conferences in Fiji, sile capabilities. Aldridge says that the
japan. Hawaii and the Umted States.
work on the Kwajalein Missile Range is
Both the controversial MX and new fundamentally tied to a new anns ra~
Trident II missiles are scheduled to be which will seriously destabilize the strate-tested this year at the KwajaJein Missile gic balance.
Range in the Marshall Islands, about
The J.nuary 8 speaking engagement
2,000 miles southwest of Hawaii.
The Missile Range is one of the most will be a pre:sent~tjon by Johnson and
Keju
at the Bush-Asia Center in the Intercrucial installahons for the development
oHirsl-stril 5trategic nu lear capability. national District. The presentation wflf
begin
7:30 p.m. rOT more information,
according to a recent study released by
call 323-3758.
the U.S. Nuclear-Free Pacific Network.
In the study. former Lockheed missile
Aldridge's study was prepared for the
engineer and top military analyst Robert Kwajalein Atoll Corporation, representAJdridge charges that two aspects of an ing the traditional landowners and native
unanswerable pre-emptive nuclear strike residents of Kwajalein, the world's largest
are being developed at the Missile Range , atoll.
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Annual constituency meeting
PDA: 'very hectic, but very
rewarding year'
by Ron Chew
have that behind us." he said. Building it
the easy part of it.
Sullivan said fundraising plans are being fannulate<:! to raise approximately
$100,000 to complete the Commumty
Center Annex , a structure which will
house a theatre and offices. Sullivan said
about S350,OOO has already been put into
the Annex , fonnerly an auto repair garage. near Seventh A venue and South
Jackson. Environmental Works, which
helped construct the rooftop greenhouse
in the Bush Hotel, has agreed to finish
construction of the Annex, he said.
Sullivan said the PDA was "in the process of detennining the schematics' of a
proposal to convert 17 units on the sixth
floor of the Bush Hotel into six housing
units and one community room for men~
tally impaired Asians with language difficulties.
During the last part of 1982, the PDA
had severe cash flow problems and the
PDA Executi~ OU'Ktor McDorWd Sullivan-Greg TlYl photo
Bush-Asia Center operated at a monthly
deficit of several thousand dollars. Last Program, serving lunches to elderly resi~
However, Sulliva,n said PDA adminiAugust, the Mayor agreed to "repro- dents. The Meal Program has 1,200 strative costs were about four per cent, a
gram·· $231,500 in block grant monies to names on its roster. The elderly clients are claim PDA council member Richard Mar
aidthePDA.
asked to donate one dollar roreach lunch, said w.. deceiVing. H. said he did not
Sullivan told the constituents that the he said, and 93 per cent did. The pro- understand how that fi.gure was de.rived,
PDA is "hopeful"' the Bush-Asia Center gram, which operates out of the meeting and added that he was concerned about
will show a ··positive cash flow" in 1983. hall of the Bush-Asia Center, may the financial stability of the PDA, ·'the
The PDA, he s.o.id, will work strongly to expand tooffsitesemen, hudded.
way we're always behind," and whether
increase the amount of income from the
Sullivan said the PDA had entered into the PDA would have the money to com·
renting: of transient rooms in the Bush a "consulting relationship" with the City plete its projects.
In other business, the constituents
Hotel. Approximately $25.000 to because of problems with the completion
$30,000 could be made from the transient of the Bush-Asia Center project and PDA elected, by voice vote. Tony Lee to iI fourhousjng. Sullivan said.
admmistration. The City will perfo rm an year term as their representative to the.
Th~ most suC«SSful part of the PDA s
ovenight study of POA o perations, he PDA council. Lee is a former le:gal Se.r~
oprnlltion has ~n the Co~ate MeaJ wid
vices attorney.
IS
T
HEPASTYEARhasbeen'Veryhectlc,
but very rewarding," the executive
director of the Chinatown-International District Preservation and Development AuthOrity (PDA) said at the
PDAs annual constituency meeting last
month in the Bush-Asia Center.
Executive Director McDonald Sullivan
presented an overview of various PDA
development projects to the 31 persons
who attended and paid one dollar each,
the annual fee for membership as a POA
constituent .
The PDA. de\"e)ope.r and manager of
the Bush-Asia Community Center. was
chartered by the City in 1975 to promote
preservation and development of the International District. The PDA is working
on renovation of the ew Central Hotel,
Community Center Annex and Jackson
Hotel, as well as fixing up rooms in the
Bush Hotel.
Sullivan told the constituents that the
PDA. in the past three months, has concentrated on completing arrangements
for development of the New Central
Hotel, a structure on the comer of South
Weller and Maynard Avenue. The ew
Central will be renovated into a multi-use
residential and commercial structure,
containing 28 units of low-income
housing. The ew Central which Sullivan described as 'a complex project, will
be sold to a New York syndicator who
will en ter in to an agreemen t for the PDA
to man~e t.hr apartments. 'Irs a ~llef to
Who works
at Metro?
,People just
like you!
In order to provide its transit and sewage tteatment
services, Metro has people working in 385 job classifications. Metro is extremely proud of the quality of services
provided and is equally pleased with employment opportunities that it provides the community at large. Metro has
long provided the women's commu nity with excellent
career growth in non-traditional areas .
Who works at Metro? Peopie just like you!
~~mETRO
ii Municipality of Metropolitan Seattle
821 - 2nd Ave ., Seattle, WA 98104
__Opinion_ --The paradox that will haunt
me the rest of the coming year
by GI'<I\ S. Cutilla
... And a happy New Vear7
I used to understand and ~lieve the
message of this phrase which my daughtor repeatedly sang during the Christmas
holidays, but now I'm having difficulty
accepting it.
Call me ideAlistic if you like, but when 1
read about 12 million jobless Americans
(not counting the jobless from other
countries), the innocent civilians brutally
murdered by the governments of EI Salvador, Hondurils, Chile, to name a few,
the threat of nuclear war becoming more
and more real, the gap between the poor
and the rich ever}'lo\'here growing wider,
frankly, I'd rather dream of my early
childhood celebra tion of Christmas and
reminisce: about the multi-<'Olored fireworks that greeted the advent of the new
year.
I loved to hear people sing. 'We wish
you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New
Year: but the song can cloud our visIOn,
commercialize Christmas, create a kind
of holida y fictio n, deluding one into believing that the ew Year is always a
happy one . It's not always the case.
When I find myself overcome by sights
01 beautifully adorned Christmas tnes
and the delicious tilSte of chocolate cookies and roasted chestnuts. 1 begin to realize how frail human nature un be. I realize how easily I can forget the world out
there and act unquest.ionably according
to what tradition expects of me: Be
merry.
I' ve always felt that there ought to be a
way of checking myself so that I wouldn't
be blinded by the emptiness, when
applied to ""I life, of phrases like "all is
calm." "peace on earth," and "sing and be
merry." The calmness of the world has
long been shattered by the sounds of gunfires especially in many developing countries. Peace for the many chiJdren of wartom countries in the Middle East, Asia
and Latin America, as they'll probably
teU us, is more than singing Christmas
carols. It 's difficult to have a meaningful
Christmas an d a happy New Yea r if we
limit its definition to a one-day celebration preceded by days of shopping sprees
and the exchange of gilts.
When I saw my da ughter wonder In
amazement at the sight of her gift-fUled
red stocking, I just envied her innocence.
She was so contented, no trace of frustration on her face. Not even the curiosity to
ask herself whether Santa Claus would
visit her next Christmas, assuming that
she behaves well. While I probably would
have felt the same under similar circumstances long ago, my feeling right now is
different.
Foryears.l've had a sneaking suspicion
that the world is in dire need of men of
good will. The escalation of war in North~
em Ireland, the terrors in Guatemala, the
exploitation of natural resources of so
many poor countries by powerful business enterprises is a far cry from the
angels message of "peace to men 01 good
will" hundreds of years ago. But it brings
Alian C ho ng tAu iIIustrOlition
to focus one central point on the subject
of welcOming the New Year. Faith. Faith
on man's ability to change himself and
change society lor the better.
As governments of nations talk of
peace, more guns and sophistica ted wea-
A Number One (and onI ) resolution
by Maria Batayola
Sunday, Decembor 26,1982 .
Enveloped by the soothing calm of the
Christmas holiday, I si t here
Thinking and feeling removed from the
crass commercialism that I enjoy.
Time to make New Year's Resolu tion.
I don't know if it is time that mellows
the old soul or chocolates.
I slide into a horizontal slouch
my mind fed by music my brother
fetched for my paren ts.
Uh, you mean no more fake joy1
Maybe sometime sugar1
everyday. more often, every other day,
sometimes whenever I can,
Let's try again.
Resolution Number One (and only),
I wiU be more expansive this year.
Yeah, what about slowing down1
Oh.
It's more like resolving to be o n time and
wondering if 1am doing my part to
preserve my Filipino heritage.
Resolution Number One (and only),
No more puns.
What7 And suffer not being punny7
Groan.
Well, it ain't like I'm an ACRS counselor
I count do wn the remaining days of this
year, and still fan tasize for that one,
I repeat, one, truly possible New Year's
Resolution.
OkAy, let's tick it off ,
Resolution Number One (and only),
No more suga,r .
resolving to omit premature "Ahas" and
"Uhums" during counseling sessions.
And it ain't like I'm a certain resta urant
resolving to move the garbage cans
away fro m the Valet Pa rki ~ Only sign .
And it ain't like I'm resolving to noss
Mallbox ____________________________
So, let's give it one more ti me for the
gipper Resolution Numbor One (and
only): 1 resolve not to over-write.
Nah. Ron needs to practice his ed it ing
skills.
You see, the problem with resolutions is
that, just like life, they are endJess.
Bound to fail.
How can anyone ch ange a life pattern,
with a single stroke of midnight, that
took a lifetime, however short, to
create.
It's no t like I'm quitting something or
starting something else; it's more like I
like my stuff and want it a little bit
better.
It's not an aU or nothing, which it ain't.
Not racist
Mr. Iwamoto:
Your recent diatribe upon the Vd'. dana.nd of a
mml.oria! " to rKognlu our honOfilhle liUVice" it
without jtHtifialion; and, subsequ~tJy . your siUy
and bude. ch.arp of ndsm is without validity
rVtrtnam memoriitl conts : c:hansin8 rules of tM
pru." Novem.ber3, 19821. You ut' tM rKist l Only
a dOid racist would make such a charael
'Theft was ne-wr 11 problnn with who desi&ned
'~ Wall"; Mltl ~ya Ymg Un, a v~ lovely
You.n& lady, Iud ~ery rishllO enter her deslp for
c~ation We, the Vid·Nam Vd, should ha~
h.d the 1Ht uy ... 10 tM: wnutina design .
after
all we did lhe hahtina and dymg. But , no. a bunch
of civilian sewn (eight nottd,&rlist. and a.rchltects)
did thai for us •.. to fflfu~ that a dmluni.n.g..
humUJa-tJn&, and d,utardly I"t'min<kr of how we
w~rt ~sold down the riyer," by you perfidious!lb-.
n.1 tnlll'Uect\Q.u and puslillnimou, poJitk&1 swine:
inWahircton,mdun.
The bottOlJ'i Ii.rw: is thk I would havt (u
peel
w~1I a'
any ~ Viel-Nam Vd) oppoMd ~ ~ III
qUftlion had It bH-n tksi&ned by my own mother.
Sniveling. cowardly ciyil truh has no fisht to ~
ddc anythina conaml"8 the sacnfices of soldiers!
You roolish sta y-at ·hom~ cowards. with your draft
~=~'I~~~~:;~rd~W!~~:;i:~:~~
tNt moflly RI'WS your own klfilh intertstf;, All to
muk your own cowardice and uptain away your
conduct!
You people are SO daml'W!d shallo w and 10 eaRly
found OUI : a sinmer nHt of Jane Foncb wonhippin&. wwer cruds whOle Vff)' ~,t~ bounds
upon tM: el~rnal d"fo rt or the Krewlng ot America !
ao tMn. how i.n hf'll do you
You Wf:te not the~ .
ha ve Ihf' right to open your stupid ra~ about whal
we d id tMn1 The aruwer is, 01 courw. that filth like
you hu no nabt 10 sil In judgement of het~ who
fo lJ&ht " tM rish! war _ at the right lime - agOlims t
Ih~ right mf'my ,"
You and your Ilk are, In the
Ilnal Anitlysil, some lO rry contributiON to the
humlln r.et Who Lnhellneedlyoul
F. ~ HullOn
Malor. Commanding
Juf\lleGrtn.adLen
4 ' Thrt w.m.UonaI Exanunu , JanUAry 5. 1983
Everything in mode.ration, including
moderation . Yuck.
It's doing something I can do everyday
and be successful at. Sniff, sniff, tears
of frustration rolling down my cheeks,
believing this philosophical fantasy that
programmed change will occur. (There
it is again: over-writing) .
Pulling myself together with the aid of a
dark chocolate caramel, I relax my body
and theta into the dark recesses where
poppies made Dorothy forget Toto.
Breakthrough.
Resolution Number One (and only);
I, MllS, resolve to lum on the
Rerord·A-Cali every single day.
Good .
Because, after all. 1don't have a
Record-A-Can.
pons are produced. As developed countries donate food to developing nations,
the recipients become poorer. As economists talk of economic stability, more
workers are laid off worldwide. As heads
of states taJk of freedom, more dissenters
find themselves behind ban.
_
This
_is_
the .paradox
-01_
that
, -will
"""
probably
,.
- Ilu" hope my daughter outgrowo her
angelic innocence laster than I did.
&/Itor·
Rona....
A.n..m.u.a
~_
Suo ChJn. _
LouIo
-
Co ..tnt-ull,..Edltors.:
Ann FUjii. tA~ Wane:
ArlOfn~to,..
......
S"'ffWnt....
Sum'HoyMIU
COfttfthaOlS;
NobabA....,.. ....
c...s.
c.w..c-.
Iw....... Alua.-Lou._
IIacho, Ma... .,........
Cutilla.Kat...... a....c.-DIIo.
To.. En&.
GoI7
MocIoi&uli.V...... ~
_lobs.-.
~W_IIlcttWOD
A_·'.. -........
_~/o&
JC.-
~.";;.~KuIoo. ,..,
""""'"-
~~~~&..~. .~;J
When Chinatown had
its own lotteries
by D onnie Chin
o .. ~ BEf<)REOURST A TEcame up with
L :~~:~e2~~:::~:~oh~~I~~r~~nrel:~
teries.
The state recently announced its first
million dollar lottery winner. And over a
dozen pla~ in the intemational District
sell tickets to persons who also hope to
winhig.
But to many Chinese. this elusive
search for fortune is nothing new,
Chinese lotteries flourished in old Chinatown of the 1890's, near Second Avenue and Washmgton Street. where most
Chinese In Seattle lived and worked.
Gambling jOints which offered lotteries
lined \-Vashington Street . Second A venue
and Third Avenue. These places also offered other games which required some
skill and luck: mah jongg, py-que, blackiack and craps. As Chinatown moved to
its present location. these games also
moved
The Chinese lotteries wert' very different from today's state-run lottery. All
you needed back then was a dime and a
ChiJ'\ese ink brush. The price of some lottery tickets. however, went as high as several dollars each. which, in those days,
was enough to pay for a room for one
week.
The lottery tickets were printed on
large sheets of rice paper, then cut into
5 L • inch squam. Each ticket contained
eighty different Chin..., characters typ<d
out in rows of 10. The characters were
said to have derived from a poem written
by Emperor HUJ'l Sun. and thr porm containM 1, OOOcharacrrrs, n o two rhr sa me .
After purchasing the ticket, the player
would take a Chinese ink brush dipped
either in Crescent' blue laundry dye or
Chinese black ink and blot ou t ~everal of
the characters. Then the player would
take the ticket to a pe~on who would
make an exact copy of the ticket. giving
the player the replica.
E....ery hour, all the tickets would be collected and a draWing held. One person
would randomly draw written characters
from a basket and place them where
everyone could see. Another person,
with a master copy, would use a large
hole puncher to punch holes in the spaces
where the selected characters appeared.
Depending upon whether the spaces
blotted out on the ticket replica matched
the hoJes in the master copy, you either
wonorlost.
You could win anywhere from one to
several thousand dollars. Winners were
paid in cash as they won. Most won nothing.
The many lottery companies included:
Union, N.P .• Shanghai, ew Amencan
and Wing Tien. Plenty of money was
made in this little empire. and some own~
ers of these lottery rooms made millions.
Thousands who played the game made
nothing.
During World War It the Anny worried about its soldiers on leave. comjng to
Chinatown to spend their money. So the
nuJitary forced the closure of all the lottery rooms and gambling dens. The lottery ended, although other foons of
gambling did not
A/frr th r wa r r ndrd. the Chtn.oltown
Jot tr ri~ d i d n o l s tart upaga in .
Boxes of useless lottery tic k~ts were
thrown out. The lottery presses were
bought by a Japan~ pri nting company .
Punches were used as paper weights, the
abandon~ ink dried up. ~ tablishments
dosed. and people moved away.
For the Chinese, the lo tt~ry rooms we~
cultural sod.. l and brokerage houses,
serving much thr samr function ilS some
of the storefronts, grocuy stores, restaurants and meeting plaCft in the international District today. People came
there to exchange gossip and nrws. pick
FINANCIAL P LANNING
Season's Greetings from the
International District
Economic A ssociation
AND
INVESTMENT ALTERNATIVE~
SEMINAR
January 29, February 5 &< 26
Bush-Asia Center 409 Maynard South
804nl of Dirtdol"3
uW -
RodMy Wons. Attorney ~I
Prft.admt
T omlO Mon,gudti, ~iim~y~ - Vice PrHidml
MMk NquawiI, Litle Bil From The wt - Vice Pt"n&dmt
Willi.Jm [)elbe!. GMC TNck CmttTCorp. - Secm:M)'
Kmt CWk. Suttle First N~tional Bank - TreasurtT
Ed Burke. Burke ilnd Assoti1Ite
Bruct up~n. Cilpliln P~rk.ins
WLlbur Chm. Four Seu Rt:Su.u~t
Glmn Onnn, Merch&nts P~rkins Associiltion
M.ike Hlpshi, DHltitt . DDS
Filye Hona. HOUH 01 Ho",
WUlt&m lshiJ, WUi And Wiltt . CPA
ViMu, VIMMTrave:1
DKk Miltsuob. rnle:rNtionat Realty
Roy SUo, Bush Gilrden
Duc Tnn. Vtet Hoe
Bertha TRlchiYil. Lukes PharmilCY
ShLgtko Uno. RilUuH Heill and Power
Dilvld Wons. Uruted SavU\g1 and ~
Ke:nford Ye(o Lute BLt From Thewt
Victor Yet". Hons Kong Rntaunnt
StAff Ann M FuJu. Executive VlCt' President
MemMn:
~ Counse:lins and ReunU Servn
Century Construction
Dr. HflVY Chinn DDS
ChIN Glte RHUluranl
OUNtown Chamber of Commer«
C~ Arts and Cnfts
City Produ«, Nobi SUYillN
Cruyoko's Resuunnt
Copy Com pliny . C. HHI
w temHotel
Fuji)' ~JN Insurance. Utaka FUJIYilm&
HiI O. V.nety Store
KOll.8Sun
linyen Rnuuranl , Eliline Young. Robert Wong
Mibdo Restilunnl. B~ &: Irwin YOs}\Imur;1l
Wayne Nilunishi, CPA
North CNJllmportin& Compllny
Offi~porium, UWn'na Irnilmura
Brian Oguhim.a InlunnCf:
Rauuer NiitlolULl B~nk, 10
Ro: Land Comp;my. Dwighl Kennedy
Ted SOlk.aha... Insurance
John SOllO and Al50cUtH
Spic4n·Span Cleaners
Tal T un& RnlilURllI, T omm), Quan
TokucP oNp. Royd Horiuchi
T.u~ Chons CompJIny, Henry louie
Wil 5.11\8 Company. Raymo'nd Chinl1
CArryYuiIN. Seil tlkFlnt LakeCLty
Sue Nilito, CPA
Impena\ Pillilce
Inter' 1m
rntun&IIo l\lol Exilmlne.r
l&himiuu Cons.truCilon. Ku liolnlTUt5u
J ~cUon Fumitun' Com"",,, y. Tom Hidaka
KCW Furni tu re. Semice Kamlhachl
Rodney Kawwml
Kilyo Rntilurant
Suttle Chll"lftot' P<at
Cherry Klnodutil . InternilhorW Rufty
l..na: KU.amurii . Kokuul Thutre
Intun..uon.al ApartnKnlS . Able Label and AssociatH. Inc
up mail. discuss the restaurant trad~ and
wait for rid~ to home or work.
What about the police ilnd politicians1
W~ll . they bought tickets. too.
Although I have spoken'" many po<>plr about the Chinatown lottmes, 1 have
yet to meet someone who made anything
out of the gamr .
Now that we have a lrgal . st~t~run lottery. I went o u t to buy a baet. Like the
th OUSMLds of Chinew before me, I took. a
chance- on making monry
1105t.
•
•
•
•
Personal Ca~h Row
Semi-Pennanent Cash Management
Insurance Planning
Income Tax Planning
•
•
•
•
Estate Planning
Retirement Planning
Investment Planning
Banking
REglstratio.n deadJi.ne is J.muary 24 Send S25 fo r iII\ individual or $J.5 .for a couple
(tax~eductible). Make chrd.s payable to the Asian EmploYen AssooatlOn
c 0 Jac.llt' Lum. b37 3rd Ave .. ,.405. Seattle 981 19. Fo r ad~tlonal information , call
Jackie Lum at zs.s..S088 or Janis Honlawil at 524-2904. evenmgs
Sponsored by Asian Employees Association
--------------------------Start off the New Year
on an intelligent note.
Subscribe!
I enclose $____ for a ____ year subscription to the
ln/~"'"honal F.xi1min~r.
Nune _______________________________________
Address
City I State! Zip
Ind.tviduaJ Oocye-u - SlO; Two yan- St8; TIutt y.an - S2l
lNuruuo",: $2 1 pery=. Overseas, S27 ptt y= .
Pk:a.tt mum 10 lnltmationaJ Es::uniner. j ' 8 -6ch Aft". S. MIlJ. StIlttk. WA 98104
----------------------------
JanUJIty 5. 19!J I The lntt:rNtional Euauntr l p&gt:"S
ste~typed to man a member of LO!
Angeles' Latin community who drives a
big car with a chain steering wh~ . phuh
,.. velvet interior, and a rear that almost
drags its fender o n tht street.
Two--and-a-half years ago, Marcelo
OvilUes, Wilson Johnson. Grady Tier,
Carrot Dong, and Ed ~ungalilivod in the
same Beilcon Hill neighborhood and discovered that they al1 had something in
common - cars. They had an with custom paint. lowered rears on hydraulic
lifts, undersize tires, and they all lovf!d
the automobile. People made smart
rrmarks about theiran back then.
The Seattle Police .topped Ovall .. and
rides were greeted with icy stares and can· Tier for having their an too low and
sidered an annoying fad. Whenever a wrote the lellers ''L'' and "M" on their
passing car screeched ils brakes or honk- tickets. assuming they were Latinos.
ed the hom, the "Iow riders" rushed to the when actually one is FiUpmo and the
window to see a friend, admirer, or feared other white. Those dtations were thrown
an imminent collision involving one of out of court.
''Mixed Company" soon learned how
their cars. Last summer, six of the auto-mobiles belonging to the members of to beat every charge law enforcement
"Mixed Company" were hit while parked offici~s threw at them . They studied the
on 15th. Drivers did nol watch where manuals on city and state laws regarding
they were going when they checked out vehicle regulations and learned, among
one "low rider" and hit another.
other things, that chain steering wheels
The term '1ow rider" origmated in the were not illegal in Washington, that they
1940s because the driver sal low in the could be busted for improper aim of the
seat. Since then , "low rider" has been headlights because the back end is too
'Hop itI Hop itI I'm
gonna make me
a low rider'
by Ken Mochhultl
"Mixed Company" tumed oul their
'low riders on a Saturday afternoon .
Chevy Impalas, Rivieras, Monte Carlos,
and Buick Regals painted in custom JlU)(es
of Metalflake Blue, lavender, and Scarlet
Rt'd with pink ro~ parked along the
cramped cu.rb9de of 15th Avenue on
BeaconHill.
The multi·racial members of ''Mixed
Company" crammed into the sma.U living
room of Marcelo Ovalle's house, which
they dub 'The Village." They talkod
aboul the old days, when the.tr souped· up
low, that theycouJd not vfolate wMt they
calIod the "Scrub Line law" - whkh pr0hibits any p.art of a vehicle from btb1a
lowe.r than the rim of the hubcap'.
"Mixed Company" now hu 2S manb6. between the ages of 17 and 34. They
emphasl:lt that they are a club, not a
gang. They fHI teleVision is the main perpetrator of the negative imase associated
with "low riden," citing an episode on the:
television series '7. J. Hooker" as I recmt
example, where '10w riders" drove '64
Chevi.. , sold dope, and kiUod people.
'1 met lOme 10w riden' in CalifOmill,"
Gr.ady Til!( said, "and they're out just to
have a 800d time. They're not a bunch of
gongsten."
·We' ... the safely ,Ide of the 'low riden'
guUd ," Wil50n Johll5On emphuized, 'We
don't drivethegall/l bangers' or 'clappedout rides' that are one sttp from the
wrecking yud. Some kids iust want to
10w ride' and have yet to figure out the
...rely part of the car. He has the chain
steeri.ns wheel he's right down in the se.at
with the headband and the whole trip.
And the whole front end of the car i5
wobbling as he's driving down the street
with the wheel bearings ready to fall out.
But he's a 10w rider,' and thaI's the stuff
people like to see. But we're not inlo
that."
"Low riders" are regular transportation cars that do not req~ a lot of
money to mainlain and "still tum a lot of
heads." It costs about $2,000 to initially
convert a car into a '1ow rider:' All other
repairs and maintenance are pe.rfonl'ted
within the group. Outside of their automobiles, "Mixed Company" is out to
have fun, '11'5 a lot how you think, " Garret Dong said. 'Whatever makes you
happy , whatever you want to do, just do
it. "
During the summer, "Mixed Company" meets every other weekend. Sometimes the word is spread and low cars, f~t
cars - anything to do with custom can
- meets somewhere in the Rainier Valley.
The~ is another '1ow rider'" group
composed mainly of Latinos stationed at
Fort Lewis, another small group in the
North End, and a sman group of latino
'low riders" in West Seattle. The West Seattle group dislikes "Mixed Company,"
feeling that '10w rid.... should only
belong to latins. and not to a mixed
group of Chinese, Filipinos, whites, and
black.' _ Beacon Hill. But "Mixod Company" actively discourages rivWe5 between groups. Staruey Chin, one of the
mechanics in the group and nicknamed
''Ooc,'' said, '11 doesn't bother me unless
they come mess with my ca.r, "'
Last Word
Processing
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call 624-3925
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groups and Jtudenfl
Eather Bugei
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622 R... ,,,,~.
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725 10th Av~nu~ E. Apt 4
Seattle, WI. 98102
A ~,,_
So«'"
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206)2) OU t
323-0964
EAS-252S
2101 - 22nd AYI. S.
Social Secunty . Immigration . ACCident
Claims · Employment Problems
l aw firm of
Gibbs, Douglas, Theiler
& Drachler
Smith rower - SUlte 1613
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pqe 6 J The Inl~matlONl Wnuner I J~mu.ry 5 , 1983
EAST ASIA CORPORATION
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Earlington Park Industrial
Renton, Washington 980S5
3204 tm\lfW) ffiSl
S£AffiE lOOSHWGTOO 0610£'
(206) 328.Q088
Jackson Furniture Co .
• (11a))
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624.0465
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of Mn"t'd Comp.lnv
For now, 'Mixed Company" is shuttling their cars off to their own garages to
get ready for the K¥YX Auto Show in
fd,nary, th~ Autoram. in Canad. in
IVhrdt~ And du.r:in8 the summer, the fll'St
Low Rider Happening ;at Lodi , Califor-
nia
Mixed Company' has parhcipated in
car shows in Canada, Centralia, and
Shelton, at which people have approached them and thanked them for helping to
dispel the bad images of 'low riders." The
group remembered a kid who traveled the
auto show circuit and said "Mixed Company" was the first '10w rider" group he
wasn't afraId to talk to.
"When we show our cars at auto
shows, we're not out to collect trophiestrophies just collect dust," Johnson said.
"The highest high you can achieve is just
having your car in the show. We're not in
competition with anybody Your car is a
trophy"
'Old guys Just walk up to me and w.y
my a.r is ~.. utifuJ Chin added 'That 5
Heads in other cars turned to watch the
procession. Marcelo Ovalles steered his
candy red Chevy Caprice aas ic with
one hand and held hiS flexible hydraulic
lilt remote control in the other, bou.ncin&
what turns me on
the Jow Tiding rear of his car up and down
e.nt types of musIc on th~lrc~~dedc.s,
'Mixed Company fHis they are the
Number One 'low rider' group in the
state - if not the country. They were the
first to lift a car off one pump with two
batteries, the first to have the hydraulic
lifts shift form side to side, and are now
the first to be able to work the lifts by remote control.
The car club decided to drive one of
the.ir favorite cruising grounds - the
Stan Sayers Hydroplane Pits at Lake
Washington. They always stay together
on the road, and they convoyed through
15th and down McCleUan to the lake,
to prevent It from scrapa.ng the street. 'On
Beacon Avenue and Empire, I have no
trouble, 'hesaid. 'It"sthesidestreetsthat
a"'tough."
At the pits~ Grady Tier demonstrated
how a turn is executed by a "low rider" in
California, He pumped his lifts aU the
way up on the right side and all the way
down on the left, tilting the car into the
tum. Wilson Johnson directed the arrangement of the cars for the group shot
All the members pitched in to help move a
picnic table for an &aminer photographer to stand on. Another driver's car bat-
but use th~ songs "low Rider," 'Why
Can't We Be Friends,' and Ain't No
Stoppin· Us Now'· as anthems to express
what they want to say to the world,
"Lots of people thought it was gonna
die right away" Ovalles said , "Lots of
poople thought 'low riding wasnt going
to last. What people fail to realize is that
the young people now - all they want is
'low riders: They say to me: 'Hop itl Hop
itl Work your lifts!l want this car when I
get old enough to drive. rm gonna make
mea low rider.' h's gonna be around for a
longtime."
Kurumaya
An("hol"llge: (907) 2?8-U IJ
Ifyou have an
Snlllo: (206) 623-2468
immigration problem,
consullan
Keith W. Bell
3500 FiClb A 'enue Plaza
Seattle, WA 98104
tN THE tNTERNA TIONAL DISTRICT
SEA GARDEN
Seafood Restaurant
MiJ{Abo
We serve live lobster
& live crab
RESTAURANT
S14 South
Come In and choose the sIZe and
Mon-Thur 11am. to2am
Fn-Sat 11 am to 3 a m
Sun 11 am. t01 d m
\-\oe take orders to go
509 7th S
~attle,WA
Tel &23·2100
•
the way you want
OPEN HOURS
jtlrrllle,e Res/tllI/rllll
r/ltd Slrsh, Bm
,.
IMMIGRATION
LAWYER
we'/( prepare it
tery dJed. "Mixed Company· went into
action as a group again getting the car
started, while the music of KFOX blared
out the hatchback. window of a Pinto.
The poopl. In the "oup all play differ-
_
~
J~ckson
SIrt'C't
AUTHENTIC
JAPANESE
CUISINE
TATAMlROOMS
AIR CONDITIONING
COCKTAILS
PARKING
ot SEA·FIRST BANK
For reserntions: 622-5206
_ _ _ __ tate of the Art ______- - - - Japanese clnt-ma possesses a rich variety and tradHion and is one of the easiest
ways to begin understanding that island
nation.
Viewing Japanese films can be a rewardin8 and enjoyablf! ex~ence. partkuJarly as it shows how different we all
cOln be. Sometimes it's the qurstioru
raised and the things I don't understand
about a certain character's behavior that I
find the most interesting. And if you don't
bdJeve there are differen~. go to a Japanese movie and see how American audiences react. What may be a touching,
poignant. or even tragic circumstance for
IheJapanese charactf"r may often result in
peals of laughter or complete puzzlement
from the audit-nee. Cultural modes of behavior and expectations sometimes differ
so greatly that what a Japanese viewer
finds serious may often seem corny.
ridiculous or just plain incomprehensible
to hisAmerian count~rt .
The easiest and most entertaining way
to develop your own sense of what you
like and don't like is simply go to a Jot of
movies Ol1ld see for yoW"Sdf.
Beginning later this month, the Seattle
Art Museum wiU host a Japanese film
srries, as good a choice as any for starting
an apprrciation of films from that country. "Japan..., Experimental Film 19601980" is a series designed to introduce the
rich and varied experimental films of
Japan to Western aucfjences.
The 20 films in the series, ranging from
three to 20 minutes in length, include narrative Ol1ld abstract works by pioneers of
the avant-garde and new film makers.
The seri.. is curated by Donald
Richie, one of the first American fUm cri tics to caU attention to the quality of modem JapOl1le5e cinema, and Katsue T omiyama, director of Tokyo's lmage Forum,
a studio with regular showings of expe.ri-
nus ImAge is (-rom Yoichi Tabbayashi's the SMdow of a Doli ,"
mura , rrom January 13 to 19. The Harvard Ex.it plans a future showing of Kurosawa's film, The Seven SamuTQi. And on
January 31, the Neptune will present two
films by Hiroshi lnagalti.
If you think the only Japanese films
made are by Akira Kurosawa OT are
Samurai
movies starring Tashjro
Mlf-une. then you' I't rni:s&inS out .
.r.rw:ntaJ Jilin ~d V;Mo. TM filnw .....
Thue are a.lso a number of useful
spon:sored by th~ Japan-United States
books on Japanese film. The landmark
Friendship Commission.
volume, The Japanese Film : Art And
Part J wilJ be shown January 12 at 7:30
Industry, by Josoph L. Anderson and
p.m. Part 2 will be January 19 at 7:30
Donald Richie, published in 1960, will
p.m. And Part 3, a lecture by noted Japsoon be repubJished in an expanded and
anese film critic Audie Bock, will be Janrevised edition by Princeton University
uaryI6at3p.m.
Press. It was one of the first debUed
All evmts will take place at the Volunbooks in English on Japanese cinema.
teer Park Museum Auditorium. A series
Kodansha has recently issued a new
ticket for both fUm programs and the lecI~ format book, lavishly illustrated
ture is $7.50 for Museum members and
with photos, entitled Th. Japan...
$10 for non-members. Tickets for the
by Alan Chon, tau
Movia , also by Richie. Other books on
individual programs will be available at
Japanese film include Joan MeUen's Voicthe door, first come, first srrved, $3 for
es From /Qpgnese CinemA (Livewright,
Museum members Ol1ld $4 for non-mem1975), and Waves at Benji's Door (Panbers. Call 447-4670 for ticket informatheon, 1976), Noel Burch's To thtDist.nt
tion .
Obsenter: Fonn and Meaning in the Ja~
The films to be shown include Eiko
paJte5€ CinemA (University or CaJi£omia
Hosoe's NQvel And A-Bomb, Hiroshi
Yamazaki's HeliogrQphy , Nobuhiko District . The Toyo Cinema is at 5608 conditions in Japan during the tum or the Press, 1979), Screen Series JapQn by Arne
Obay.shi's Complex, Tadashi Hirose's Rainier S. in Columbia City .
Svensson (A. S. Barnes, 1971), J.p"" ....
century.
Ultramint, Takashi Nakajima's Insidfr
Not unlike American cinema, most of
The T oyo Cinema will present the most Film Directors by Audie Bock (KodanTelevision , Sakumi Hagiwara's Mist , the movies made in Japan nfn the gamut rKent version of the dassicstory of the 47 sha, 1978, Th. Samurai Film by Alam SilHideaki Marrs Born To Run, Yoichi rrom mediocre to awful, but the few ex- room, Chushingura, during the first two ver(A . S. Barnes, 1977).
Takab.yashi's The Shadow of • Doll, ceptional films during the course of a year weeks of January. At the end of January,
For a more detailed look at individual
Tashio Matsumoto's Atrnan, Shun taro make up for it all . After seeing a lotofJap- the Toyo will show HAkAi - known in directors and films, the~ are two books
Tanikawa and Toru Takemitsu's X, anese films , you'll know the actors and English as The Sin or The OutCQ.5t by Donald Richie - The Films of Aldr.
Kohei Ando's Like a Tr-Ain PASSing (in actresses, directors and screen writers adapted by Kon Ishikawa from a nQvel by KurosQwa (University or Cali£omia
Pa,rts I and ll), Mako ldemitsu's At Yukj- you like. Check out posters for those art - Toson Shimazaki . The story deals with Press, 1970) and Ozu: His Liffr And Films
gaYQ-2, Shuji Terayama's The Cage, ists you' ve come to expect consistent the continuing discrimination against the (University of California Press, 1974) Shunz.o Seo's Polar-oid, Nobuhiro quality from. Also, keep in mind that Eta or caste society in Japan. When a vil- as we1J as The Seven SamurQi (Simon and
Aihara's Shelter, lsao Kota's Meridian most Japanese films come to Hawaii, then lage schoolteacher's true identity as an Schuster, 1970), RA5homort (Grove
Transit, Taka limura's A Dance PArty in los Angeles, San Francisco and eventual- Eta is discovered, he is forced to leave. Press, 1969). TrQnscendental Style in
the Kingdom of Lilliput, Yoichi Nagata's ly Seattle. Reading film reviews from The movie deals with his struggle to come Film : Olu-Bresson-DreYfrr by Paul
Still Movieand Takashi Ito's SPQcy .
other newspapers, as the films inch their to grips with his true identity once he is Schrader (University of California Press,
A ataJogue accompanies the film way up the coast, will give you an inkling exposed.
1972), and film scripts of Kurosawa's
series and can be ordered by writing the of what to expect.
You should veriry all showings by call- movies in lkiru (Simon and Schuster,
American Federation of Arts, 41 East
Both the Kokusai and the Toyo show ing the theatres for exact schedules, as the 1968) .
65thSt., New York , N.Y. 10021.
older films with a few new ones in be- schedules sometimes change.
Two recent books are important beA1though finding Japanese movies in tween. Both put out a monthly flyer listAside from the Japanese theatres, cause they show how the Japanese perSeattle may not be the easiest thing to do, ing film schedules. The Toyo provjdes a every commercial theatre usuaUy has a ceive their movies, and to a certain exthere are two Japanese theatres, the printed program preview for its special Japanese HIm festival or Japanese film at tent , their culture and history as well.
Kokusai and the T oyo Cinema. Both only new films, usually describing the plot, one time or another. The Seattle Film Currents in /QPAnese CimrttlA (Kodansha,
show on weekends and don't have much with a review by Los Angeles Times film Society, Seattle Film Festival. University 1981) is by Tadao S.to, considered by
of a budget to advertise, but they're critic Kevin Thomas.
of Washington film series, Seattle Art many to be one or Japan's most respected
worth se6.ing out.
Presently showing at the Kokusai is Museum, Seven Gables Theat~ chain critics. And Kurosawa has published an
The Kokusa.i is one of the oldest Japan- Nornugi PASS, a story based on a true have all presented Japanese movies.
autobiography, Something Like Qn Autoew movie theatres in Seattle and is locat- account of the struggle or women texttle
The Crest will show EijQ,tuika, a film biography. translat'ed by film critic Audie
ed at 412 Maynard S. in the International workers to organize and protest working by a major director in Japan. Shohei Jma- Bock (Knopf, 1982).
Japanes~ experimental film series
The rich variety
and tradition
of Japanese cinema
PoISr3 ' TlwlntunationaJ Exam.iner I JanunyS, 196J
\
Prints by Mlchl Osaka. usms:tradition.
.1 Japanese art forms. are hem8 shown at
Evergreen GAlleries in the Evans library
of the Eve~ St,te ColI,,!!e in Olympia. through januMY 20. It's open Monday through Friday. noon to 6 p.m .. and
Saturoay and Sunday. 1 to 5 p.m. Call
Arts
-etc-
860-6128.
Azum. Art Gallory. specializins injapanese prints. has moved from Br~dway
to 313 E. Pine S~t with iii. new exhibit of
five artists. Call 622-5599.
JaMt H050kawa shows her ralu masks
at the Francine Seders Gallery through
Janu.uy 9. Also showin.g are paintings by
Fay Jones and E. Kaye Kaminski and
masks by RuthieNei1son. Call 782-C3SS.
Selections from an ooibit of tnditlonaJ NOrthWHt art, organlz.ed by the Nahonal Museum of Art in Osaka. will be
shown at the Seattle Center Pavilion
Gall Okawa will teach a coune at the
Burke Mmlorial Museum this wintrr entitled, ··Joumey Through the World of
japan... Folk Art,"" wilJ be oUered eight
Saturdays h"I!innlng}anuary 15, from 10
a.1T).o to noon in the Burke Memorial
CompUed by Alan Chona Lau
branch of the Seattle Art Museum in february . Some of the featured artists indude Paul Horiuchi , George Tsutakawa,
johsel Namkuna, Frank Okada. Mark
T obey, and Guy Anderson . Call 4474796 .
The Northwest Asian American Theatre, formerly known as the
Asian Exclusion Act, held a "community show-off" December 11 to
the tenth anmversary of the Asian Multi-Media Center.
About 100 people came to watcli the how, which
tur loe
comedian Arnold Mukai, songs, musical and theatrical skits
including a parody of the Seattle Gty Council. Among the
community cast were: Stan Asis, Mayumi Tsutakawa, Arlyne Day,
Pio DeCano, Bob Santos and Chris Wong. The show netted about
$600 for Asian Multi-Media . Pictured above, from left to right, are
Bea Kiyohara, Misaye Okano and Seattle City Council member
Dolores Sibonga delivering a special rendition of "Silent Night. "
crl~rate
Roomofth.Museum.CaU~5592.
The Wing luke Memorial Museum is
lookir\3 for a new directof-<urator. This
part-time job JnYS $7,400. The job involves writing; grants, putting together
shows and orpnw"i iii volunteer group.
Applications are due by January 15 . To
apply, write to the Museum bOOlrd of
dir<ctorsat414 Eighth Ave. 5., 98104
Dftms Tsutalc... w.s new album,
"Deems," is out. A Northwest jazz pianist
for OVer 10 years, his album futures solO$
on piano plus rhythm and hom sections
and background voals on mostly original compositions. Support your local
musician. To order your copy. write JTown Rocoros, 8818 - 36th Ave. S., Seattle 98118. attmtion; Jean. Or call 4428143 during th. day .
The Japanese Performing Arts Series
continues at the Nippon Kan Theatre
with a concert on Wednesday, January
19. The SeillttJe Taiko Drummers, a
unique community group which blends
traditional Japanese rhythms with
American. Latin and Jazz influences, will
perfonn. Call 624-8801 during the day , or
324-7954 in the evening.
Jeffrey Adachi has self-published two
new books intended for the young adult
reader: Yancha. a collection of short
stories and poems and Maniwa1i11 Boy:
The life and Times of ill Walnut Grove
Country Boy. a novel. For more information, write jeffrey Adachi .t 4971 F~
port Blvd. Sacramento. CA 95822.
poe.. In the Americu - North, Contral
and South America, lntereoled poeto
should submit 6 to 10 proviouoly unpul>lished poemt with a short I t A _ I and
biography.
Poets and publishers may suinnJl
books of poetry for rniew by individual poets living in the Amorica•. Anthplogles will not be accepled for review. Reviewers may submit previously unpublished reviews of poetry books by Amn
Ammcanwritersaswell.
Payment will be in copies of the maga~
zine. The deadline for both pom15 and
book rn'iewsisFebruMY 1,1983.
Send poetry submissions with a ~~
addnossed, stamped envelope to Laureen
Mar, 244 W. 20th 51. 11R, New York,
N. Y. 10011. Books and reviewsshould be
sent to Alan Lau, clo The International
Examiner, 318 Sixth Avenue 5., Seattle
98104.
Kearney Street Workshop, a San francisco Chinatown community uts group,
rece:ntly celebrated an anniversary with a
group show and publication of a book of
photographs entitled, Tex.aslong Grain.
This is one of the first Asian Amenan
photography anthologies published.
Isthmus Press, one of the few publishers of Asian American literature, has
announced it will do a second pOntine of
poet Janice Mirikitaru's Awake In The
River. The first printingsevem yea.rsa.go
sold out immediately. Editor and writer
George Leong says he expects it out in
January or February. For more information , write Isthmus Press. 1550 Lombard,
San Francisco CA 94123.
Seattle ceramic artist and sculptor Piltti
Warillshlna is featured in a major exhibilion at the Tucson Art Museum until FebPing Chong and his Fiji Theatre Com- ruary 1. The show is accompanied by a.
pany will perform their brand of narra- handsome catalogue written by local art
tive. visual, experimental theatrt: at critic Matthew Kangas.
The Arco Center for Visual Art in Los
Washington Han Performance GaUery as
poilt of the On The Boards series. January
Angeles recently presented an exhibition
20to23. Call 3ZS-7901 ,
entitled, Point of View: Four Emerging
For writers and ~ts, two quick Japanese Amerian Artists, featuring the.
reminden about deadline. "Backbone.- works of Mrneko Grimmer Masayulti
~ anthology of writtns by women pubOda. ~oOt.andAnnP. . .
lished by SuI Press wants contributions
Local North~t artists ha.ve an opporfor their fifth volume which will feature tunity to have their work purchued and
"New Writing by Northwest Women of shown through the Seattle Arts CommisColor: Send your writing and a self- sion . The Commissjon will purchase
addressed, stamped envelope to Seal drawings by Northwest artists for its Gty
Press 312 S. Washinston, Seattle. Dead- Light Portable Works Collection. Doadline is March 1.
line is Monday, March 14. Please write
UContact D," a hi-monthly poetry the Seatcle Arts Commission at 104 Cenmagazine from New York, will publish a ter House. Seattle Center. 30S Harrison
pedal issue devoted to Asian American Street Seattle 98109 orcaU6ZS-4223.
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Want to volunteer?
Two local organizations serving Southeast Asian refugees
by Cynthia Rd<dal
Volunteers ..... n...ded to help during
the day in the main office, in the down
town YMCA building at 909 - 4th A venue
(Room 611 ), and for two particular IRC
programs. The first program uses volun·
teen as tutors in the homes of refugee
families who lack transportation or need
ou treach programs. The second uses vol ~
u nteen to teach ESl evening classes in
downtown Seattle a t the First United
Methodist Church at 811 - 5th Ave. ESL
volunteers rKt'ive training through
workshops sp onsored by the Tacoma
Community House, interested persons
may con tact Ryan at the IRC office or
phone 612-2105.
The Language Institute for Refugees
was begun early this year , and is a pro-gram of the Refugee Resettlement Mini..
try of the University Presbyterian
Church . It provides English language
training for refugees to assist them in find·
ingjobs and functioning well in America n
society. It is fu nded by private donations
and the church .
Anyone with refugee status is eligible
for classes, provided without charge,
Refugee groups served include Southeast
Asians , East Europeans, Cuban and Latin
Americans.
Instructo r-Co·ordinator Carol little-john, estimates that in its first year of
operation the Institute will serve over 100
8
Refugees ..... those who have been
fo~ to leave their na tive countries for
sodal or political reasons involving persecution. imprisonment and possible exe--
Voices From
Asian Pacific
Women
cuHan .
av.,r 600,000 refugees from Southeast
Asia have entered the United States since
1975 . Many have settled in the greater Seattle area. A variety of different services
are provided for them. They include
financial aid, educational and vocational
training, counseling, low-income housing and legal and eme.rgency assistance
(food, shelter, clothing, medical aid).
These services are furnished by the
government as well as various voluntary
agencies. Two such organizations, operating in Seattle, are the International Rescue Committee (lRC) and the Language
Institute for Refug-.;.
The IRC, begun in 1933, has 14 regio nal offices in the U.S. The Sea ttle office
was opened in 1975 in response to the tre-
mendous influx of relug-.;, primarily
from Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam.
Funded through a contract with the
U.S. State Department, it has an administrative staff of nine persons who work
with a group of volunteers to help refugee
families with the initial problems of resettlement in a country and culture
fo reign to them.
Volunteer Co-ordinator Molly Ryan
described the agency as a resource for
refugee families . The IRC finds housing
for new arrivals, helps them with prol>-lems. p rovides public assistance infonna·
tion, sponsors English-As-A-SecondLanguage (ES L) and employment classes
Cynthia Rekdal is co-dlairperson of which stress applica tion procedune (fillth e Asian - Pacific Women 5 Caucus and ing out fonns and mock interviews) and
has pu blished v arious books and articles assists in finding jobs,
As a resettlement agency, the IRC acts
on education topics. She has worked
w ith the International Rescue Committee as a co--sponsor with a refugee or refugee
and the umguage Institute for Refugees family to help bring relatives to the U.S.
and has been an Enghsh-As-A-S,cond- IRC-sponsored refugees ane then eligi ble
for the many services the agency offer&,
Langwlge volunteer.
Nineteen Southeast Asian refugees
celebrated their graduation from a cus·
todial training program at ceremonies
last month at the Pike Place Market.
The refugees, who spoke little or no
English when they entered the program,
.....ent through an intenslve IS-week pro8 12m c:onductrd by the As;an Counsding
and Referral Service (ACRS) and the
Cleaning Consultant Services, lne ,
The first class of graduates fr om the
progTam was congratulated at the De-cember 17 ceremonies by administrators
and instructors representing ACRS and
Oeaning Consultan ts Services,
And with the support of the American
Building Maintenance Company. four of
the graduates have been placed in fulltime jobs and 12 have pa rt-time temporaryjobs.
Theresa Fujiwara, ACRS associate di·
rector, explains, 'rrhese gradu ates are
well trained and read y and eager to work,
but there is a definite appeal for jobs fo r
Refugees celebrate graduation
from custodial training program
by Marl Robinson
those involved in this program. Support
is needed by other companies to employ
these graduates."
The program, which began September
7, was held seven hours a day, with training in a variety of custodial duties, The
first three-and-a-half hours each day
were spent familia rizing students with
custodial equip ment such as floor mach·
in es an d heav y power equipment and
i-
~ $p«lal;u
I
I
I
I
I
teaching the names of chemicals. A por·
tion of the custodial training work conve-niently took place at the program site, the
Pike Place Market . The Market's hardwood and cement floors, walkways, windows and staUs provided areas for train·
iog in basic and specialty cleaning.
The second hall of each day's trainirig
was spent providing EngIisll-As-A-Second·Language (ESL) skills, so that the ref-
refugees. Students attend. maximum 01
three quarto,.. (10 weeks ~r quarter) of
training in listening, spuking. .....ding
and writing English. C~smre. maximum of 25 students, volWlteer aides
working with sJTllllI groups within tho
class. Program graduates an provided
with assistance in job placement.
Classes ane h.ld both In tho morning
(Monday, Wednesday, Friday from 9-12)
and ev.ning (Monday, Tuesday, Thursday from 6-9) for students with beginning
to advanced levels of English competency.
Volunteers, especially for the morning
classes, a~ needed. No experience is ~
quired; tralning and lesson plans are provided by the Institute.
Fo r fu rther Wortnation regarding
classes for refugees or volunteer work at
the Institute, contact Littlejohn at the Inn
behind the University Presbyterian
Church (4555 - 16th Ave. N.E.} in tho
University District, or call 524-7300, extension 6l.
This column has been developed as an
ongoing project 0/ the A sian- Pacific Women ·5 Caucus which m eets the SC!cond
Tuesday 0/ every month at 6:30 p, m. in
the Bush Community Center. All inter·
ested persons are invited to attend. Fo r
more informanon , please call Maria
Batayola (days! . 447-5859.
ugees would be able to leam cleaning
industry terminology and impro ve communication with other employees and
supervisors ,
A unique feature of the program was
the availability of four bilingual instructional aides , The four aides - Cambodi·
an, Hmong. Mien, and Vietnamese :.heJped initially recruit and sc:reen from
over 100 applicants, and helped train and
provide social servict>S for the students.
Ouring the course of the training. stu·
den ts and their families received $50 a
wed< plus food fro m the ACRS food
bank.
Steve Raskin instructed the refugees in
the ESL portion of the program, and.Cail
Bailey conducted the vocational training.
The program also covered the basics of
fiH ing o ut applications and provided
pointers on intervieWing.
A second custodial training class will
begin January 17. For more information
on this program, call 447-3606.
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To place an ad, call 624-3925
January-5, 1983 ThelntC!.mationalExamitwt pasell
Shawn Wong, loc.1 writer was named
,..-
to chair the Se~ltJe Arts Commission in
1983. Wong was vico-cha>r in 1982 and is a
~t chairperson 01 the Arts Commission
Budget committee and a memhf>r Qf the
Review and Artists-tn-Residence rommitttes. Wong is a professional writer
whose nove.l Horm~~ won the Washington Governor·sAward .
District
Notes
l
by Ann Fujii
Seattle's Miss Chinatown Pageant wUl
be held at the Four Seasons, OlympiC
Hot.1 January 15. There will be no-host
cocktails, wnner, the pageant and
Queen·sDance, all beginning at S;3Op.m. ~
For more information call Abe tum, 682- counts are admin lStered by the Immacu4900 or Bill Chin, 232-C711.
late Conception Church Council and a
The Asian American Legal Defense and p riest.
Education Fund will select five student s to
Visual Communications' current film
participate in the 1983 Summer lntem- p roduction, " Yuki Shimoda: Asian
ship Program . which will run from june 6 Amuican Actor," has Just received a
to August 12.
$1,000 award from the West Los Angeles
lnterested applicant s should send a j ACL Women's Auxi li ary. T hi s genero us
resume , writing sample, and a cover contribution helps bring this .30 minute
letter describing theI r interest in working documentary. now in its post-production
for the Legal Defense a nd Education Fund phase, closer to completion.
by Feb. 4.
''''t'uki's life was unique in many reInterns will be assigned to work on aspects" sajd John Esaki. dIrector o f tht>
"\o--a.r1ety of lit igat ion and education activi- proiect," At the outbreak of World Wa r
ties: conducting client int.ake. planning n, for instance. he was imprisoned in T ule
and conduct ing community education Lake concentration camp. Following his
seminars, doing legal research and main- release. he began to develop the quite
tauting and expandlOg the Fund's work at ypical Nisei careerofa performer ..
with Asian American law students,
Ta,,-deductible contributions dnd inThe add ress is: Margaret Funs, Asian qwries can be addressed to: Visudl ComAmerica n Legal Defense Jnd Education munications. ·'Yuki Shimada Film Project
Fund, 350 Broadway, Suite 308. New 224 South San Pedro SI. Room 30<1 los
York. ew York 10013
Angeles. CA 90012.
A Rainier Nati onal Bank trust account
A chance to learn ~h$h through dehas been established to benefit a 2J-year- monstrahon and practice will begin Jan.
old Seattle woman severely burned in a 10 through Feb.lOfrom 7t09p.m., MonDecember lq flre that did more than days and Thursdays at the Bu<h-Asia
S120.CXX> damage to Immaculate Concep- Center. The address is 409 Maynard So.
tionCh ucch in the city sCentral Distnct
meeting room B.
Contributions 'hill be accepted by mail
M. Margo Sentel a lertitied Teach~r
at Rainier's Promenade 13 branch (P.O. and an English major minoring in linBox 22322 Seattle \\,A 08122). Jean gulstiC$ will be the instructor. PartinMarie Moran, a King County District pants de .... elop sel.i:-<:cmhdf'nce in c;:peak.ing
Court clerk suffered second and third de- situations through training and will
gree bums over about 70 percent of her learn to correct ~rrors in articulatIOn 1m
body at the landmark Catholic church.
prove accents and VOIce mt,dulatlon. and
A second trust account has been set up practice the pro c.r
lw.!.is d ~
to hrlp fund rettc>r.t,Qn 01 thf! dtu.rclt. A
$lOO,(X)() rrnovation project had started
severaJ we-eks before the fi re. Bo th ac-
5062forinformation
A series 01 I_I progrAlM will !;ok.
place at the Columbia library 4nl
Ramier Ave. S. on thr.. W.onesdaY" at
7:30p.m., beginningJanuaryU.
Income tax laws is the subject or t~
lirst program. A second program will
cover wills and estate planning and the
third program wdl locus on the individual and the law. For more infonnahon.
coli 625-4921
The YMCA offers a multicultural. d..
velopmental preschool program at it.
East Cherry Branch , 2920 E. Cherry, The
Cherry Street Carousd serves children 2
t05 year> old. HoUr> a",6:3O a.m. until 6
p .m .. Monday through Friday. Call the
Branch at 322-C18b lor fees and registration mformation.
The 10th Annual Show Me How Fair IS
slat.o for Jan. 28 to 30 in the Seattle Center Coliseum, and those mterested 10
learning everything from health care to
hydroponic gardening .hould mark their
calendars now.
The Ir.. lair is presented by Em..t
Home Centers and Pay n Save drug
stores as a public service and draws tens
of thousands of Creater Seattle area doit-yourselfers iumuaJly.
The Fair is c<>-sponsored by KlRO
Radio and TV and the hours will be from
4 p .m . tol0p.m . Friooy , Jan. 28; from 10
a .m. to 10 p.m .. Saturday and from 11
a.m . t06p.m. Sunday.
Registration for winter quarter classes
and programs at 24 Seattle Department
Parks and RecreOltion commumty centers
will end Jan. 8. Most classes will begin the
week 00an. l0.
Information about the wide can~ of
program offerings around the city lS
available from rhe neighborhood com
munity centers and pools or by $toppin&
by or calling the Rf!creation Information
4 JO P m . For more mIormithon. plea!llr
call 543-S5QO.
on word • .
Speakers of English as a H"Cond lan~
guage and all others who wish to tram
CLASSIFIED ADS
County Rapt RelW volunt ..r, rogIstft
now for the winter tr.ining . .ion
Orientation for winter training will bqtn
Jan. 31 at the Cood Neighbor Cent.., 305
S. 43rd, Renton.
Call Lois Loontjens or Julia Boyd 22tr
their speaking voice are welcome. For reogistration informahon, call 244·2275
after 5 p.m. The fee is $4S and includes
materials. A dictionary that shows phoneticspelling IS required.
.,- Senior citiuns can help kids in trouble
at The Shelter a home for runaways on
BeaconHW .
Through the KIng County Retired Senior VoluntHr Progr~. seniors can volunteer as house counselor aides and recreation aides. or help in the office. or with
food preparation. Training is provided.
This is a one-year experimental intergenerational program. Interested persons
are encouraged to call The Shelter at 3280902 .
Free EngUsh as • Second language
classes. beginning. intermediate and advance arE' being o ffered at the following
locations:
Asa Mercer Middle School, 1600 S.
Columbia Wa y 6,30 p .m_ to 9;30 p .m.,
Thursda;', Jan . 6.
South Seattle CommunIty College,
6000-16th Ave. SW. 9 a .m . to noon.
Monooy through Thursday and 6,30 to
9;30 p.m .. Monda y and Wednesday. R...
gister a t room IT 200 at South Central
Com munity College
A travelling collecti on of photographs
by Bill We!tt, a n Associate Professor of
Design at University of Victoria, wiU be
on view at the Burke M useu m on the University of Washington campus.
In 1979, West travelled to Japan to take
his camera behi nd the scenes ot Japanese
theater. focusing on the anonymous
craftsmen in the areas of scenography
and properties.
In 40 photographic pa nels. West presents the anonymous Japa nese craftsmen
who create the magic of Japanese theater
H. captured on film back tages at the Nahona} Theater of japa n, the Fujinami
Small Properties Company and the Kanal
Scene Company \I\'est.
This exhibit opens Jan . 15 and runs
through Feb. 27. Admis.sio n is fret".
Hours: Tuesday - Fnday, 11 a .m. to 5:30
p.m., Satu.rday and Sunooy. 9 a.m. to
Office in Lower Woodland Park 5201
Creen lake Way No .. 625-4671.
If you w ould like to serve as a King
$2.SO for the hrst 15 words, 20¢ fo r each additional word.
Ad, are due the second and fourth Wednesdays of each month.
fOOD
~
II
II
PtlARMACY
624-3925
Royal Glass Co-
NOTICES
tl1foS "d
_~""'Ml"
"'ute and Residential
GIas5 Replacement
STAR TOFU
==:a~n '
W. Nakamura Co.
,4,ppjlCatlOruare a".lIa.1:Me. Ktna
Se,kosa!csll1ld service
6l8S.j.<hon St
for V1Ctln'lS of sexual and domettic ,,~. and 5er\<1CeS for
WOI1"IM 10 1(1111 County Ja~
TokudaDrug
PUBLIX CAFE
County Women's ~ms. 1101
PRESCRIP170N
OUR SPEClALTY
609 South MalO
501 S KmK St
Seattle. WA 98104
StMhT~.Seattk WA98104
~J44..'i1«l
Meat Market
DeltHrtfftHID
Rct"ailMears
6'15 Kin,Sc IOSa ttlc9l1~
622-1 8
b.~~I~
WA SANG CO.
Onent.1
GroceCle~
6635 Klnll 51
6.24-4716
624·7098
Floyd Horiuchi. Owner
RusseU's Fau
l>f.1;".
Requats for ptOpOSoIJ due
1:20"83 few nonptOht ,..ence to
L
SIRVtc£s
PouIH. KIng
ATIORNEY AT UIW
PRODUCTS
International Oistrtcl
Jod<3on Bldg.
Car KCident lnjunes,
82_
r
~====~========~
General Jrtlgation
Free c:onsuttatlon
King Chong lung #2
Chmese Gil,s and Clothing
623-3321
Gary Chung Httie
"t
a..-,....
&1 7 5 ~InH
10 624 ·062b
S~altl f' ''6104
International
District
Emergency
Center
SIIJln,ScaJcFtt$
c-.. CMIMd CriMiNd Pn<tkt
622 -2032
~~~u.
n..~_.,\
patro~tJ Sun May
IotemationaJ
Examiner
Adnrtisers
10
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• QoJU""""b
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67~4~/1
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_ p lono tun ing
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lIIustraoon and
GraphlCDeSl<)f1
C<lIJthe'f~
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