JULY 2020 NO. 7/2020
LOOKING FOR CANDIDATES FOR THE 2021-2022
EXECUTIVE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
This is a big election year, not only
for President of the United States but also
for officers of the Executive Board of Directors (EBOD)
for the 100th Infantry Battalion Veterans organization. If
you are a 100th member in good standing, why not get
involved in the Club by running for the EBOD? The term
of service is two years which for the 2021-2022 EBOD
will start on Friday, January 1, 2121 and end on Saturday,
December 31, 2022.
Candidates may be nominated for the positions of
President, First Vice President, Second Vice President,
Secretary and Treasurer. A candidate must be a current
member of the 100th in good standing to be eligible to
run. Each candidate must submit a petition signed by at
least 15 (fifteen) 100th members in good standing to the
Nomination Committee at least 60 days prior to the
Election Day of Saturday, November 7 so candidates are
asked to please make sure their petitions are RECEIVED
by the 100th Office before 12:00 noon on Tuesday,
September 8. Petitions may be submitted via mail, email
or in person delivery but remember that the Office is
closed on Mondays, Fridays and weekends.
Current 100th Secretary WARREN YAMAMOTO
will be serving as interim Nominations Committee
Chairperson until his replacement from the current Board
of Directors can be found. Mahalo to SUSAN
HASHIMOTO of Charlie Chapter and JAN SAKODA
of Headquarters for volunteering to serve on the
Nominations Committee. Anyone from Baker, Dog,
Descendants and Rifle Chapters want to join them?
Please let your Chapter Presidents know.
CLUBHOUSE WILL RE-OPEN ON WEDNESDAY, JULY 1
The Clubhouse and Office will re-open on Wednesday, July 1 and will maintain regular days and hours of Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays from 7:00 am to 1:00 pm thereafter. We will be closed on Mondays, Fridays, weekends and holidays.
We ask all visitors to please observe the following:
PRESIDENT’S MONTHLY MONKU by Ann Kabasawa
Congratulations to everyone in the 100th family
for surviving another month of this pandemic
situation. I hope that you are all doing well as we
continue to live our lives in this new form of normal.
We have decided to officially re-open the
Clubhouse and the Office on Wednesday, July 1.
Office hours will be Tuesdays, Wednesdays and
Thursdays from 7:00 am to 1:00 pm. If you are
planning to go to the Clubhouse, we are asking your
cooperation in wearing a face mask and observing
social distancing once you are there. We want to
keep everybody safe. Please note that if there are any
changes in recommendations from the State or City
and County, we may also need to change the
Clubhouse and Office hours so please call Office
Assistant ALEX TAKASHY before heading down to
make sure we are open as scheduled.
During the months that we were shut down, it was
often just my husband, CLYDE SUGIMOTO, and
me in the building so we were looking forward to
having the Craft Club back on Tuesdays and the Line
Dance classes on Wednesdays. However, both
groups have decided to wait a while more before
returning so it looks like it will still be just the two of
us us (and Alex) in July.
Thank you to the 100th/442d soldiers of Rifle
Chapter for taking such good care of the Clubhouse
while we were closed and now, also for taking care of
the yardwork not only at the Club but at the apartment
building. What would we do without you? Please
show them your appreciation by supporting their
fundraiser when it is rescheduled.
Turning to our apartment building, renovations
are still ongoing and it looks like it will be a while
before things are completed. For more updates on
what is going on with the apartments, please read
Property Manager JOHN COVINGTON’s article on
page 6 of the PPP.
This year is an Election Year for our Club and I
hope that some of you will consider running for one
of the Executive Board of Directors offices including
President,1st Vice President, 2nd Vice President,
Secretary and Treasurer. There are many important
issues that the Board of Directors will need to
consider regarding the future of the Club and the next
few years will be critical for our organization. If you
can make a commitment for two years of service on
the 2021-2022 EBOD, please submit your nomination
SUMMERS GREETINGS by Brian Shiroyama
Friends and Family of Nisei Veterans June 2020 Newsletter
Hello, everyone! We sincerely hope to find you
well. It has been a very challenging year for all of us.
Today we regret that we must inform you of the
cancellation of our major event of the year - the
reunion. Even though Las Vegas is now open, health
and safety requirements we must meet are beyond
what we can tolerate and overcome. Just limiting the
number of attendees in the hospitality room to satisfy
“social distancing” rules alone will not work for us.
In addition, limiting to four to a table (instead of 10)
at our banquets is unthinkable. And that does not
even take into consideration the absence of buffets,
four to an elevator, longer wait times in all the
restaurants and fewer numbers allowed at the
gambling tables.
We sincerely hope that we can return to our
wonderful reunion in 2021.
In the meantime, please take great care of
yourself. It will be so nice to see all of you in Las
Vegas - or anywhere soon.
petition and 15 signatures by the September 8th
deadline.
Due to concerns over Covid, the Annual Friends
and Family of Nisei Veterans’ Mini Reunion in Las
Vegas that was previously scheduled for October 18
to 22 has been cancelled. We’ll miss all of the fun
hanging out in the 100th Hospitality Room at the Cal
with our Mainland Chapter ’ohana and meeting the
FFNV folks at the banquets (like in the photo above)
but there’s always next year!
Please continue to take care everyone and we hope
to see you and your face mask at the Clubhouse soon!
DA MAINLAND CHAPTER NEWS by David Watanabe
On a very sad note we lost member ELLIE
OZAWA a few days ago, it’s a shock to many of us.
More will be written about her in next month's PPP.
On a happier note ELSIE HAYASHI (her
husband was the late HENRY HAYASHI of Baker
Company) will be celebrating her 100th birthday on
July 12! To celebrate this rare milestone, we’ve begun
a grassroots campaign for Elsie to run for the
Presidency of the United States. Pictured below is
Elsie and her campaign manager, daughter SHARON
SHIMAZAKI, at our 100th Clubhouse, aka the
Shimazaki home!"
I wanted to share some wisdom written by
ROBERT HORSTING: “One of the drawbacks of
shopping in the COVID era is the time that you spend
waiting in line, which seems to be getting shorter now
that people in general have settled into the “new
normal” of supply-and-demand for the essential items
and stores have adjusted by limiting how much of
those items you can buy in an effort to provide us all
the opportunity to get them. If you like to people-
watch waiting in a line definitely gives you plenty of
opportunity to do that. One of the best uses of time
I’ve seen was a women reading a book. Most people
are looking at movies or other content on the internet,
but they get so into it that they don’t notice the line has
moved and stand there as people behind them fidget,
anxious to move at least 6-feet forward to mark some
progress. I’ve started exercising by stretching, doing
knee bends, shoulder rolls, etc. and knock out 15 - 30-
minutes before I get to shop. Hey, this might be a way
for me to start a mobile gym.”
I’m impressed with all the work Robert has done
for the Japanese American community in keeping the
Go For Broke veterans’ legacy alive, his (and wife,
YOKO HORSTING’s too) participation in many of
the events, and his production of the “Afternoon of
Peace” in February this year about the bombings of
Hiroshima/Nagasaki received a standing ovation at
the Aratani Theater. He is president of Shadows for
Peace.
(PPP Editor’s Note: I received this from
President ANN KABASAWA: “ Just got a call from
STEVE SATO in Los Angeles He said that Ellie
Ozawa who was very active with the California
chapter and always helping at the 100th Hospitality
Room at the Las Vegas Mini Reunion with her
delicious chili, passed away yesterday, June 17th. So
very, very sad. She was so very active and a
wonderful cook too!! We will miss her.)
MORE OF DA MAINLAND CHAPTER NEWS by Yoshio Nakamura
Thanks to JAYNE HIRATA for organizing and
being the Master of Ceremonies of the Educational
half of the Nisei Veterans Virtual Memorial
Day Ceremony on May 25, 2020. Among the guest
speakers were DR. MITCHELL MAKI, DAVID
ONO, and other interesting personalities. from
France, Japan, California and Hawaii.
Big thanks and congratulations also to Dr. Maki
and the Go for Broke National Education Center staff
for the excellent virtual Go For Broke Monument
Ceremony on June 6, 2020. Speakers included Dr.
Maki, David Ono and KISA ITO (granddaughter of
WWII veteran LAWSON SAKAI). Other comments
and visuals made the audience of nation-wide viewers
more appreciative of the Nisei Veterans' significant
contributions to the United States’ World War II
effort.
(PPP Editor’s Note: Yoshio Nakamura who is
better known to most of us a “Yosh” is a 442nd
veteran. He very humbly did not mention that among
the “interesting personalities” who spoke at the
Virtual Memorial Day Ceremony that I worked on
was himself! He actually was the closing speaker for
the day’s events and did an excellent job. MIS
veteran DR. SHINYE GIMA who is the current
President of the MIS Veterans Club of Hawaii spoke
during the first half of the Ceremony as did our dear
friend from France, Bruyeres Mayor YVES
Continued on page 4
HEADQUARTERS CHAPTER NEWS by Janice Sakoda
How is the COVID-19
affecting you? For us, it’s having
had to cancel our trips for the year.
We had planned to attend the
opening of the National Museum
of the US Army in April but that
got postponed to later this year or
early next year. We were also
scheduled to have a family reunion
in Washington state but will be
cancelling that. There was so
thought of going to Japan in the
fall, but again, that got cancelled.
But the upside is that I’ve
spent more time gardening and am
now harvesting cucumbers and (1)
lone zucchini. Still haven’t
written my New Year’s newsletter
(maybe it will be a Happy Solstice
Newsletter!), nor started a quilt,
nor tackled organizing my photos,
which were are all on my to-do
list, but I’m optimistic it’ll get
done one of these days!
I’m sorry to hear that
AKIYOSHI KURIYAMA passed
away January 20, 2020 at 103
years. He is survived by his son,
KENT, daughter-in-law MAE,
three grandsons and 2 great
grandchildren. ED IKUMA
remembers that Mr. Kuriyama was
a member of the Radio
Communications Section. He was
quiet but a very efficient radioman
in combat who took over the radio
section during part of the 100th’s
operation in Italy and France.
MAINLAND CHAPTER NEWS Continued from page 3
BONJEAN. If you missed it, the Ceremony in its entirety can be viewed
here: https://www.facebook.com/susanyuen/
videos/10105464764869193/?t=10. Individual segments can also be
viewed on YouTube.
I was not surprised to learn that tens of thousands of people tuned in
to watch the virtual Tribute to the Go For Broke Monument but I was
pleasantly surprised to see the familiar face of our President, ANN
KABASAWA, on the screen. If you weren’t able to see the Livestream
of the event, it is available on the GFBNEC’s Facebook page, on their
YouTube channel, or on their website at http://goforbroke.org/news/
annual_events/monumentanniversary/. Ann makes her appearance at
about the 28 minute mark).
EVEN MORE OF DA MAINLAND CHAPTER NEWS by Peggy Mizumoto
Paying respect and remembering loved ones under "stay at
home" and social distancing
For those of us, either under stay at home orders or recommendations,
or voluntarily at home and socially distanced by choice, our trips to take
flowers to where loved ones have been laid to rest have sadly stopped for
now.
Recently, friends reached out,
knowing the anniversary of my
Dad's passing was June 8th. They
sympathized with our not being
able to "visit" Dad this year. My
Mom and I discussed being unable
to get the national cemetery in
Riverside, California, as usual.
But, we thought about him
throughout that day and thanked
Dad for "watching over us."
A dear friend in Hawaii shared
this brilliant idea with me. Her
family are all interred on the
mainland and she suggested something to me, that they do now. They
light a flameless candle in their home and put it near the photo of their
loved one who has passed away. It gives you a place to sit quietly and
remember. And, she said throughout the day, as you pass it, it will give
you pause to commemorate a special soul.
I immediately got a little Amazon "retail therapy" - ordered and
received flameless candles within just a few days. We decided, in this era
of COVID 19, the candles will be used to celebrate birthdays across the
miles, as well. It's a little annoying being considered "elderly", but
playing it safe at home is the most prudent now, especially when
caregiving. We send our warmest regards to all veterans, families and
friends, and thought this suggestion might be something of interest.
JAVA SCHOLARSHIP AWARDED TO 100TH GRANDDAUGHTER,
CAMI TOM
Congratulations are in order to 100th descendant,
CAMI TOM, who was selected as the recipient of a
scholarship from the Japanese American Veterans
Association (JAVA). Cami is the granddaughter of
YURI OGAWA and the late JAMES OGAWA of
Charlie Chapter who passed away three years ago.
Cami will be attending Biola University in the Fall.
Please enjoy her award winning essay about her
grandfather below:
“Growing up, I listened to stories told by my
mom and grandma about how my grandpa was only
nineteen years old when he decided to join the army;
but as a young girl, I didn’t understand these soldiers’
sacrifices, nor how their decisions would change the
future for Japanese Americans. Now that I have friends
who are nineteen, I see how selfless and brave my
grandpa was. I cannot imagine my friends forfeiting
their future endeavors to voluntarily enlist with the
army to fight in a war.
“Go For Broke” was a common phrase I heard
growing up, however, I didn’t fully understand the
value it held. I wore sweatshirts that had “Go For
Broke” written, and when friends asked me what it
meant, I couldn’t put it into words. I would often
answer, “My grandpa fought in WWII and it was a
phrase they would always say.” I look back on those
moments wishing I didn’t water down what this phrase
means to me. “Go For Broke” is not just a phrase that
gets tossed around, it’s a lifestyle. A lifestyle I saw my
grandpa live out. A lifestyle that I want to live out.
To me, “Go For Broke” means to give it your all
and hold nothing back. For ten years, I trained and
competed in Junior Olympic Gymnastics, overcoming
several injuries to earn state and regional titles. I’ve
worked to the best of my ability in high school, being
inducted into the National Honor Society and the
California Scholarship Federation. Now that I’m
moving onto a new chapter in life, I can “Go For
Broke” in college. This fall, I’ll be attending Biola
University, where I’ll be majoring in Communication
Sciences and Disorders to pursue a career in Speech
Pathology. My grandpa inspired me to choose this
major because he had to overcome the challenges of
losing his ability to speak when he suffered from a
stroke. He had to work hard at vocal exercises and have
patience in his recovery time to reclaim something that
we take for granted—talking. Witnessing him prevail
over those debilities has inspired me to help others
do the same. This is my way of living a “Go For
Broke” lifestyle.
Winning this scholarship would validate that I
am living up to the legacy that my grandpa left.
Grandpa valued hard work. In elementary school, I
would tell my mom, “I don’t want to go to school.”
Then I would be reminded that school was a reward
to my grandpa because he had to wake up before
sunrise to complete chores on his family farm in
order to be rewarded the privilege to go to school.
That recollection would always change my mind.
Sometimes I think college is just something that I
have to do, but really it’s a privilege that I get to
pursue my dream. This scholarship would help me in
the pursuit of leaving my legacy at my dream college
to honor my grandpa, forever my hero.”
(PPP Editor’s Note: Thank you to Mainland
Chapter Reporter DAVID WATANABE for letting
me know about Cami’s wonderful accomplishments.
David also passed along this request, “If there are
any Hawaii folks also attending Biola University,
please, please look her up. Also please teach her
how to speak some pidgin because she only knows
how to speak kotonk English. Cami by the way is a
very talented scholar athlete, has a wonderful
personality and as you can see from the photo, has a
million dollar smile.”
He also added, “Yuri thanked me profusely for
sending the scholarship application but I told her I
had no recollection of sending such an email. Today
I checked the old messages and sure enough I did
forward it to her on April 15th which was when you
sent that JAVA info out to everyone. I'll tell Yuri
you deserve credit too!!”)
APARTMENT UPDATE by John Covington
Telephone: (808)942-7100 Email: [email protected] Web: www.cbi-hawaii.com
AVAILABLE APARTMENTS
We currently have two vacant units
in the apartment building, #105 on the
first floor and #304 on the third floor.
We may
have additional
vacancies
opening up in
the future due to
tenants not
paying rent,
being nuisances to others or for other
reasons. I will let President ANN
KABASAWA, Treasurer BEVERLY
SHIROMA and the office know once
these apartments are available for rent
so they can pass on the details to you.
Please contact me directly if you
would like more information on the
available apartments as well as those
which may be available in the future.
REPAIRS
The United States Postal Service
called me last Saturday to let me know
that the mailbox at the apartment
building needs to be repaired or
replaced. My suggestion is that we
relocate it to a space at the stairs from
its current location in the apartment
parking area. However, this would
only be feasible after the concrete
work required by the railing
renovations is completed. An
alternative would be a stand alone
mailbox in the grass area or a wall
mounted mailbox by the wall across of
the washer/dryer on the ground floor.
RECOMMENDATIONS
I have suggested to President
Kabasawa that the building could
benefit from having an on-site
Watchman. An interview with a
potential Watchman was held on June
25.
FROM THE EDITOR’S DESK
I hope everyone is doing well as we enter into yet another month
of coping with Covid. Unfortunately, I am not the only one in the
family who has grown in size due to the “Quarantine 15” weight gain.
My vet informed us yesterday that what we feared were cancerous
tumors in my girl dog were actually lumps of fat from the six pounds
she gained in the past two months, taking her up to a whopping 90
pounds! As she is a senior with bad knees (just like me), I often feel
like I am hauling several big bags of rice when I have to carry her.
That is one plus of having the kids at home, they can lift the heavier
okole part of her.
Aside from my obese dog problems, I have been spending the past
few weeks working on a video about the 100th Club for the Tadaima!
Virtual Pilgrimage event after ERIN AOYAMA asked President
ANN KABASAWA if we would like to participate in some way. As
often seems to happen, this assignment
somehow ended up in my ample lap and I had
to once again reluctantly enter the world of
technology that I had hesitatingly entered
with the Virtual Memorial Day Virtual
Ceremony in May. I should have stayed in
the comfortable Stone Age as it turned out to
be a whole lot harder than I expected, so
much so that my youngest son offered to buy me an Apple Computer
with his own money (I have an archaic PC) to make things easier, he
said, for me but in reality for him. After a lot of swearing and
chocolate eating, I did finally finish it and it will be shown during
Week Four of the Pilgrimage. Please be kind to this newbie
filmmaker - in other words, no monku-ing allowed.
With the news of so many events being impacted due to Covid,
including our beloved Las Vegas Mini-Reunion in October, we are
trying to come up with virtual or social distancing alternatives for our
own Anniversary Banquet, Grave Decorating and the Rifle Chapter
fundraiser rather than just cancelling them until 2021. If you have
any suggestions or would like to help, please send them to me at
[email protected] and I’ll pass them on to the Board
of Directors.
Speaking of the Rifle Chapter fundraising efforts, please visit the
Clubhouse during office hours to check out the ongoing Rifle Chapter
Mini-Craft Fair. A variety of handcrafted items, craft supplies and
craft projects are for sale including seatbelt and handle covers, bags
of fabric remnants, pre-cut material and backing that just need to be
sewed to complete, and lots more. Photographs of some of the
inventory are available on the 100th Infantry Battalion Veterans aka
Club 100 Facebook page. Thank you to those shoppers who helped
us already raise over $500 to support Rifle Chapter community
service projects.
We are still working out the logistics of the Rifle Chapter Garage
Sale that had previously been postponed but donations are still being
accepted and can be dropped off at the Clubhouse during office hours.
JAPANESE NATIONALS ON THE USS MAINE by the Japanese American
Veterans Association Research Team (JRT)
At 9:40 PM on February 15, 1898, five tons of
powder charges exploded in the forward section of the
battleship USS Maine as she lay at anchor in the harbor
of Havana, Cuba. The explosion obliterated that part of
the ship where the enlisted crew had their quarters and
were retiring for the night. Of the 355-member crew (26
officers, 290 enlisted seamen and 39 Marines), 261 men
died or were declared missing and presumed
dead. Ninety-four men survived and, of this number, 16
were not injured. Though largely American, the crew
also included citizens of Canada, Great Britain, Russia,
Japan, China, and the Philippines.
Of the USS Maine’s 261 known or missing/presumed
dead, 231 have gravesites at Arlington National Cemetery
and 27 at the USS Maine Plot in the Key West, Florida,
City Cemetery. The remains of three men were returned
to their families. The identities of 63 men interred in
Arlington National Cemetery are known and 168
gravesites are dedicated to those whose bodies were
never found and who were declared missing/presumed
dead. The USS Maine Plot, dedicated on December 11,
1898, and administered by the City of Key West and the
U.S. Navy, contains nine gravesites of identified
crewmen and 18 dedicated to those missing/presumed
dead.
Nine Japanese nationals were serving as U.S. Navy
seamen aboard the USS Maine when it was
destroyed. One had completed 14 years of sea duty; three
had completed their first three-year enlistments and were
on their second three-year enlistments; and five were in
their first three-year enlistment. Two of the nine men
survived; one was wounded, the other
uninjured. KASHITARA SUZUKI’s body was
recovered from the Maine on March 24, 1898, one week
before recovery activity stopped with 75 bodies still in
the vessel. His tombstone is at Spot 47 in the USS Maine
Plot of the Key West City Cemetery. It is likely that the
unidentified remains of the six Japanese seamen declared
missing/presumed dead are also interred in the City
Cemetery. In Key West their graves are marked by
individual tombstones bearing the inscription, “One
Unknown. U.S. Battleship Maine. Killed in Havana
Harbor, February 15, 1898,”. It is not known how many
of the Asian nationals risked their lives to gain
U.S. citizenship that was not otherwise possible as the
U.S. Naturalization Act of 1790 prohibited Asians from
becoming U.S. citizens.
TADAIMA! VIRTUAL PILGRIMAGE CURRENTLY UNDERWAY from the
Japanese American Memorial Pilgrimage website at www.jampilgrimages.com/
Tadaima! A Community Virtual Pilgrimage, a
collaborative undertaking, involving representatives
from many different contingents of the Nikkei
community, as well as scholars, artists, and
educators committed to actively memorializing the
history of Japanese American incarceration during
World War II, will be wrapping up week two of its
nine week run from June 13 to August 16 as the
PPP goes to press. Rather than separate in-person
pilgrimages, Tadaima! is bringing together the
unique traditions from each internment site with
new pre-recorded and live content - online exhibits,
workshops, performances, lectures, panel
discussions, film screenings, a community archive,
and more - to create accessible and wide- ranging
opportunities for learning, sharing stories, and
building community.
Each of the nine weeks is centered around a
specific theme. Week four (July 5 to July 11) will
feature programming on the theme “A Question of
Loyalty” and will include a short video about the
100th Infantry Battalion Veterans organization as
well as other new content about the Japanese
American World War II veterans.
Each day of the week also focuses on the
following themes: Community Sunday, Museum
Monday, Tend Your Garden Tuesday, Wisdom
Wednesday, Throwback Thursday, Fine Arts
Friday and Socially Distant Saturday.
Foodies may enjoy the “Sunday Supper”
segments which include recipes and hands-on
cooking demonstrations such as making takuan
from scratch or pickling ume.
If you are staying home due to Covid, you will
surely enjoy the Film Festival of Japanese
American movies and documentaries selected
based on that week’s theme: https://
www.jampilgrimages.com/film-festival
For the younger generation, a new episode of
The Yon-Say Podcast is presented by Nikkei Rising
every week. The podcast is a round-table
discussion with young adults involved and around
the Japanese American community. You can listen
on Spotify or at the JAMP website at https://
www.jampilgrimages.com/the-yonsay-podcast-1
The Puka-Puka Parade is the official newsletter of the 100th Infantry Battalion Veterans organization
and is published monthly, twelve times a year.
The opinions expressed in the PPP are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily reflect the position of the 100th Infantry Battalion Veterans.
All articles are written by PPP Editor Jayne Hirata unless otherwise indicated.
Please e-mail your articles, comments or questions about the PPP to [email protected].
If you do not have access to email, please mail or deliver your articles, comments or questions to the
Clubhouse Office.
The deadline to submit articles for the August 2020 issue is July 20
100th Infantry Battalion Veterans 520 Kamoku Street
Honolulu, Hawaii 96826 Phone: (808)946-0272
Email: [email protected] Website: www.100thbattalion.org
OFFICE HOURS Open on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays from 7:00 am to 1:00 pm
Closed on Mondays, Fridays, weekends and holidays
JULY CLUBHOUSE CALENDAR (all events at the Clubhouse unless otherwise indicated)
BOARD Meeting Saturday, July 18 at 9:00 am CRAFT CLUB No meetings in July LINE DANCING No classes in July RIFLE CHAPTER Open during office hours on Tuesdays, MINI-CRAFT FAIR Wednesdays and Thursdays from 7:00 am to 1:00 pm. Check or cash only.
UPCOMING EVENTS
Sunday, July 5 to “A QUESTION OF LOYALTY” - WEEK Saturday, July 11 FOUR OF TADAIMA! A VIRTUAL COMMUNITY PILGRIMAGE Sign up at the Japanese American Memorial Pilgrimages website at https://www.jampilgrimages.com/ virtualpilgrimageregistration
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Donations of new or gently used items for the Rifle Chapter Fundraiser may be dropped off at the Clubhouse
during office hours on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays from 7:00 am to 1:00 pm.
Happy Fourth of July
100th Infantry Battalion Veterans 520 Kamoku Street Honolulu, HI 96826 RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED
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