Pafiiue Ib - eVols at University of Hawaii at Manoa: Home...EXTRA BREAKS for Puk

6
r ,. Ii \ ly.' Pafiiue Ib __ •. ________________ ________________ __ :oTt! Soene at National Memorial Cemetery of the Paolfic, July 21, 1949 when fIrst ot HawaH' s 806 War Dead were lald to rest. (Hawaii Herald Photo) Club 100 By-Laws Amended At Convention Uss: lOu.¢ ' !!pr.> is part ot the reorganization y ! progl'Ul ot Club 100, several major changes in the By-Laws were approved IIId adopted by the delegates to the reoent annual oonvention held on Maul ! !be ohangee were also approved by the Board ot Directors ot Club 100! The lore important changes are as follows: !rticle III. Board of Directors. Th, new BY-Laws provlde for a board of direotors consisting of not less tban tive or more than twenty persons III ot mOIl shall be regular members - of the cOrporation, whereas it was fOl'lllerly limited to fifteen. The AGI :oard 111 now oomposed of: The offi- ere ot the corporatlon' namely pre- I :Ident, two vlce-presidents ;ecre- ttl r lry , and treasurer, and one'director 1a fOIl eaoh ohapter who shall be duly 'eoted by the regular members ot ..... lIob eeperate chapter. !b IV. Ixeou tl ve Commlttee. or' louthe COIIIIIittee now ooneista p re sldent, the past president, ot t:"r other dlreotors. The powers Ih. : OCllllll1 ttee are the same, to Inter .. als between meet- lie e Board of Direotors, the II outhe shall possess and tb J S:llrOhe the general powers at a:d ot Direotors In the direo- (e an llanas_ent at all the bue1- .01 ... /10,. f) INTERMENT RITES Remains at 140 ot our deceased oomrades were interred In the National Memorlal Cemetery of the Paolfic dur- lng July 21-August 11, 19491nclusive. Flrst 100th Bn. fallen comrade to be laid to rest was S/sgt. Lei Yamashiro of Charlle Company. Short, but tittlng milltary rites were conducted at the gravesldes. The next at kin of the decedents were presented tlags of our country, fol- lowed by the tirlng of gun salute and the sounding ot taps. Memorial plaques were bestowed to the kin of all 100th Bn. war dead interred in the National Cemetery by Oahu mEmbers. Colonel F. L. Turner and Colonel C. Pence, former C.O. of the 442 RCT, laid token wreaths on July 21st to honor the memory ot all Hawaii war dead. Honorary member, L. F. Deacon, presented an orchld ofterlng on be- half ot Hawali Chapter. New Procedure For Election The Board of Direotors has noml- nated two oandidates tor eaoh at the eleotive oftioers ot president, tirst vioe-president, seoond vice pres1dent, secretary and treasurer. The tollow- ing persons have been nominated : preSident, Warren Iwane and sakae (ConI. on pag' f)

Transcript of Pafiiue Ib - eVols at University of Hawaii at Manoa: Home...EXTRA BREAKS for Puk

Page 1: Pafiiue Ib - eVols at University of Hawaii at Manoa: Home...EXTRA BREAKS for Puk

r ,. Ii \ ly.'

Pafiiue Ib ~r __ ~V~~.~IV~N~ •. ~3~ ________________ ~H~O~N~O~L~U~L~U~!~HA~~~An~~ ________________ ~A~U~9u~st~.~19~4~9 __

~Crtl!:

:oTt! Soene at National Memorial Cemetery of the Paolfic, July 21, 1949 when fIrst ot HawaH' s 806 War Dead were lald to rest. (Hawaii Herald Photo)

Club 100 By-Laws Amended At Convention Je11l~

Uss: lOu.¢ ' !!pr.> is part ot the reorganization y ! progl'Ul ot Club 100, several major

changes in the By-Laws were approved IIId adopted by the delegates to the reoent annual oonvention held on Maul ! !be ohangee were also approved by the Board ot Directors ot Club 100! The lore important changes are as follows:

!rticle III. Board of Directors. Th, new BY-Laws provlde for a board of direotors consisting of not less tban tive or more than twenty persons III ot mOIl shall be regular members

- of the cOrporation, whereas it was ~iI fOl'lllerly limited to fifteen. The 'AGI :oard 111 now oomposed of: The offi-

ere ot the corporatlon' namely pre­I :Ident, two vlce-presidents ;ecre­ttl rlry, and treasurer, and one'director

'1a fOIl eaoh ohapter who shall be duly 'eoted by the regular members ot

..... lIob eeperate chapter. !b ~rt1ole IV. Ixeou tl ve Commlttee. or' louthe COIIIIIittee now ooneista IIIdt~e presldent, the past president, ot t:"r other dlreotors. The powers Ih. : OCllllll1 ttee are the same, to Ing~ ot~1nS Inter .. als between meet­lie e Board of Direotors, the II outhe C~1ttee shall possess and tbJ S:llrOhe the general powers at u~ a:d ot Direotors In the direo­(e an llanas_ent at all the bue1-

.01 ... /10,. f)

INTERMENT RITES Remains at 140 ot our deceased

oomrades were interred In the National Memorlal Cemetery of the Paolfic dur­lng July 21-August 11, 19491nclusive.

Flrst 100th Bn. fallen comrade to be laid to rest was S/sgt. Lei Yamashiro of Charlle Company.

Short, but tittlng milltary rites were conducted at the gravesldes. The next at kin of the decedents were presented tlags of our country, fol­lowed by the tirlng of gun salute and the sounding ot taps.

Memorial plaques were bestowed to the kin of all 100th Bn. war dead interred in the National Cemetery by Oahu mEmbers.

Colonel F. L. Turner and Colonel C. Pence, former C.O. of the 442 RCT, laid token wreaths on July 21st to honor the memory ot all Hawaii war dead. Honorary member, L. F. Deacon, presented an orchld ofterlng on be­half ot Hawali Chapter.

New Procedure For Election The Board of Direotors has noml­

nated two oandidates tor eaoh at the eleotive oftioers ot president, tirst vioe-president, seoond vice pres1dent, secretary and treasurer. The tollow­ing persons have been nominated : preSident, Warren Iwane and sakae (ConI. on pag' f)

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Message To Kauai Members

The annual convention on Maui ratified some important changes in the organization of Club 100--changes which should be of great interest to you Puka Puka vets on the Island of Kauai. These changes were made with one purpose in mind--to strengthen and revitalize Club 100. It is hoped that you on Kauai will enter whole­heartedly into the spirit of reorga­ni zation and become active partici­pants in all club affairs.

The most popular of these changes is the "forgiveness" feature of the revised dues policy. Undoubtedly, this will remove the chief stumbling blook in your attempts to function aotively as a Puka Puka Chapter.

Another ohange inoreased the number of chapters on Oahu and autho­rized Kauai to form, if necessary, two separate chapters (East Kauai and "est Kauai). Jaok Mizuha has been delegated to present this possibility to you.

With four years of olub experi­ence behind us, we have reorganized Club 100 and readjusted our thinking to meet the needs of eaoh interested member and we are now in a position to pla~ more concretely for the fu­ture. In such plans we need the kokua of a strong ohapter or two on Kauai. We also want you to share in the large investment you as individuals have made to Club 100 during and after the war years.

Let me, therefore, urge you Kauai Puka Puka vets to work with Jack Mi­zuha in molding a Kauai Chapter (or ohapters) which will be an integral, dynamio part of Club 100.

Sinoerely yours,

(Signed) RICHARD MI2lJTA PreSident, Club 100

Baker Company Picnic

Two hundred members of Baker Jompany and their families enjoyed a picnio at Narlakuli Beach on Sunday, August 7th.

Refreshments were served by the company and a raffle was conducted as part of the activities of the day.

7'ivtJ 1/ fltltJ 1190 4- 2-44. Lt. Col. Singles a8Sumed

command of Battalion. 4-21-44. Co. "A" CP on fire. None

injured. 5- 1-44. First beer ra ti on since go.

ing overseas. 5-16-44. Lt. Kim and Irving Alcahoehl

capture pri soners in broad daylight near Isala Bella.

6- 3-44. Hill 415 captured and e8' cured by midnight.

6- 4-44. Advance toward Rome without opposition.

6- 5-44. Arrived vicinity of Rome. 6- 6-44. Kitchen caught up with Bn.

first time in 70 days. 6- 7-44. Vicinity of Ci vi taveoohla. 7-10-44. Part of 442nd moved into

6-23-44. 6-26-44.

6-27-44. 7- 1-44.

7- 6-44.

7- 8-44. 7-12-44. 7-19-44.

7-25-44. 7-27-44.

8- 3-44.

8- 9-44.

8-14-44.

8-17-44.

8-30-44.

area. Vicinity of Grosetto. Highly sucoessful Belvedere attack. Sasseta captured at 2100. Lt. 's bars for Sgts. Kobe­shigawa, Fujitani andObata. Review in honor of Secre· tary of War Stimson. "'l'h18 is my best outfit." (Gen. Ryder. ) Castellina in our hands. Town of Pastina oaptured. Entered Li vorno st 0900. Intermittent shelling. Moved back to Vada area. Gen. Mark Clark presented Unit Citation to 100 lnf. Bn. (sep). Co. A moved back into Li­vorno. Co. B relieved A in Livorno as installation gusrd. Charlie represented Bn. for ceremony in honor of Gen. SUmmervile and Underseore­tary of War Patterson. Took up defense pos1 t10ns along Arno River. Advanced 300 yards toward Arno River.

CHAPTER NEWS

Sakae Takahashi has been eleoted president of B Co. to succeed BaJll1e Yamane during the coming year. other officers elected are: Yasu Takata, vi ce-presiden t; Masao Okumura, eecre- I

tary; and Ernest Enomoto, treallU~ef; Rural chapter members, tend

families and guests staged a gr\ picniC on July 24th at Puiki Beacor I

Homemade lunches, games and t~ot~ay. prizes were the order or e the Chicken Kawaoka was chairman orol1 ' outing which was attended byappr mately one hundred persons.

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h. 1159-C Kaplolanl Blvd. Phone 66566

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We :JJekw. 742 S. 8£AETANIA STRHT ACROSS RAPID TRANSIT CAR URN

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PUKA PUKA PARADE

AND LET THE BOYS KNOW

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Call Yama for Particulars

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FRESH MEAT PORK, FISH

GROCERIES

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Phone 3223 1403 Liliha St.

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Clothu cleaned S pressed

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RALPH N. UVEDA II06AI • .,a'St Phone 575S3 Cor. "0\&1 ~

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disease ~ht 0 H1ROl, ( L, /))cS1 ~.

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BUliness Pkones 53015·65~2

Resic»nce Phone 68665

GREGORY H. IKEDA li fe Underwri ter

NORTH AMERICAN LI FE INSU RANCE

COMPANY Of CHICAGO

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EXTRA BREAKS for Puk<l Puka Boys ~ if you want a clean , reconditioned II

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Marriages and Births BIJmIS

~ushters: To Mr. and Mrs. Roy Tani­Cia; Mr. and Mrs. FUmio Watanabe; Mr. and Mrs. Seisaburo Taba; Mr. and Mrs. W1ll1am Komoda; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sb1rai.

Sons: To Mr. and Mrs. Tsukasa Mura­lIloto; Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Kawahara; IIr. and Mrs. Shigeru Nakata; Mr. and IIrs. Yoshio Takenouchi; Mr. and Mrs. H1romu Urabe; Mr. and Mrs. Kungo Iwat; Mr. and Mrs. George Nakano; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph FUkunaga; Mr. and Mrs. .r8llfJS Kawash1ma.

IIARRIAGES:

M18S Elaine Taba and Clifford Kutaka, M1as Lorraine Yasui and Edwin Miyake, M1ss Chiyoko Kaya and SeiJi Kimura, M1ss Chieko Okihiro and Walter Mori­guchi, Miss Grace Shigemura and Shi­mo Takashige.

DEl'lBS: Noboru Muranaka (mother)

Doc I keda Elected President, Maui Chapter An elaborate banquet fit for a

king was spread out to the convention delegates on July 2nd by our Maui pallans. "Doc" Ikeda and his banquet committee pulled many strings in mak­iDg the affair a gigantic success. .rack "G" Gushiken served as master of oeremonies for the program. Speakers inoluded Bob Taira for Club 100, Yasuo Iwasaki for Hawaii Chapter and .raok IUzuha for Kauai. Goodwill tro­phies were presented by the host ohapter to Oahu and Hawaii. The Big blanders returned the complimen t .

Newly elected officers of Maui Chapter were installed at the banquet. lerl "Doo" Ikeda is the new president ot Maui Chapter for the 1949-50 fis­cal year. His administration in­cludes: Vice-president, Watarn Nou­ohij secretary, Tom Yamadaj treasureJ', Goro Kuwadaj auditor, Ralph Yamatoj aod director, Tsutomu Nagata.

Visits were paid by the dele­IlBtee to Kula Sani tarium and Maui County Veterans Cemetery at Makawao. 'l'brOUgh voluntary donations, appro­priate wreaths were purchased on be­halt of the Puka Puka Chapters and laid at the cemetery grounds.

OAHU WINS SOFTBALL Behind Miki Kamei's nifty toss­

ing, Oahu softballers defeated Hawaii and Maui by 18-6 and 11-3 counts to cop the W. Nouchi trophy. Ko Fukuda smacked six homers for his day's sticking output. "Patok" Hata of Hawaii hurled the first game while Ray Sato and "Poison" Kamimoto shared mound duties in the second game for Maui.

The Valley Islanders copped the lion's share of bowling trophies as Kats Hanada rolled steadily all night. Maui No Ka Oi nosed out the Oahu five to win team honol's followed by Hawaii • Kats had a 587 three games series for high-3 honors. Kanemi Kanazawa of Oahu posted a 189 high single score.

In golf, Willie Goo and company from the slopes of Haleakala romped off with all honors as the outside island delegates by then could not see straight much less hit a golf ball.

Oahu Chapter Enjoys Picnic All roads led to "742, Kalaheo

Avenue, Kailua" on July 17th as Oahu members and their guests motored over the Pali to a battalion picnic.

The all-day outing which was at­tended by upwards of 400 persons was a grand success.

Hideo Sato M.C.'d an entertain­ing program of varied games and all sorts of prizes in reward. In the blue ribbon benedicts versus bache­lors tug-of-war contest, the balance of victory skicded back and forth on many a pants seat. The nightly bed checks, limited "pass" privileges and general first sergeant tactics exer­cised by the wives turned out to be the final weighty factors which re­turned the married ones triumphant over the worn out single strong men.

The refreshment stand was prob­ably the most densely populated area on Oahu .during the day. A steady pa­rade of ice shaves, soda pops and beer emanated all day from its coun­ter.

Most notable fact about the af­fair was the preponderance of chil­dren running around on the picnic grounds. One did not need to blink twice to be dee91y impressed with the Puke Puka bambino production over the past four years. At the rate our battal"ion oolony is increasing by leaps and bounds, the location of a picnic ground large enough to acoom­modate all will become a problem of no small magnitude in years to oome.

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/

By-Laws (Conl. /rom pag' I )

ness and affairs of the corporation." Article V. Officers. Under

Sec. la, the officers of the corpor­ation shall be a president, two vice­presidents, a secretary, and a trea­surer all of whom shall be eleoted annually by the regular members of the oorporation during the first week of June of eaoh year. They are now eleoted by seoret ballot. (Note: Under the old By-Laws, the offioers were eleoted by the Board of Direo­tors. )

Under Section 2a, there is now a nomination and eleotion committee composed of all directors who shall nominate candidates for offioes. Said provision also provides that further nominations may be made by written petitions signed by at least twenty­five regular members of the corpora­tion. All nominations are to be sub­mitted not later than May 15 of each year. The duty of the nomination and election oommittee is to conduct and supervise all nominations and elec­tions.

Article VI. Meetings and Noti­ces. Under Sec. 1, the annual meet­ing ot the regular members shall be held each year within the months of June, July or August at such place withih the Territory as the Board of Directors may detel'1lline·.

Artiole IX. Branches and Sub­ordinate Units. Section 1 provides that "there may be such chapters and subordinate units of the corporation at such places within the Territory of Hawaii as may be authorized from time to time by the Board of Direc­tors.

Under Section 2, each such chap­ter shall have its own officers and governing board to be elected by the ohapter. All otficers and members of

CLUB 100 1710 Fort street Honolulu, T. H.

New Procedure (ConI. ,rum P<lg")

Takahashi j first vice-presidlnt to. j i Ono and Ha Jime Yamane j secoll4 Y10e president, Tanshi Kit.oka edlUcteo Sa to; secretary, Kungo Iwai ed hed Kanemuraj treasurer, Boward H1rok1 and Tom Nose. '

Addi tional nominatioDl .., lie made tor any of the eleothe oft1oel'l by submitting a written Pltitt. signed by fifteen regular lI.berr, August 10th is the deadl1ne for .. U. ing in petitions for nom1naUoal. ~ August 14th, an oftioial ballot I1U be made up and mailed to laob .. _ of the club. 1\11es and r&gulaU .. will be printed on the ballot tor '" members to tollow. These ballow must be in the return mail by All .... The ballots w111 be oounted 0111 ... atter the deadllne of Auguat 31 ... the .. lactlon results wlll be au. 1;0 you soon thereafter.

All directors of the olub al'l au toma tically membera of 1;I1e lailla. tion and Election COfJIIIittel. '1'111. commi ttee 18 conduoting ed luplnl .. lng the nomination and ellotioD ot officers. The o ommit tee urs .. all regular members to exeroist thtlr rlgh ts as members and turn lD tbe ballots and postoardl on or betOft August :31, 1949.

the governing boards Ihall bt 1'181l111 B members of the corporation.

Sect ion 3 provldes 1;I1at " .. bar- h ship tees paid, or to be paid, to the corporation as provlded by tbtll 87' •• Laws may be pro-rated or d1Yld1d, II between the corporation and Ua .. ,. eral chapters acoording to rlgulat101 to be detel'1llined from time to ti.a bJ Ike the Board ot Directors, on .. nll:11 equitable a balis as IlAY bt tOWl' posd ble in the disoretion ot til. board.

Sec. 662, P. L. , L U. S. POSTAGI

Paid Honolulu, Hawaii PanDit No. 111

Ha~/a ii Irar Records Depos i tory Un l ver si t y of Ibwaii P. O. Bo x 18 Honolulu 10. T. H.

. "