Friday, August 3, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Five Friday 1 1 1 Au us 3, 1 InIM11 1173 1 1111 :: a" . T- SU ME DAILY.Pge Fiv Hawaiians hiot Wilson for insult HONOLULU ( - "You do not call anyone here a 'Jap,' unless yoi want to get smacked in the month," a newspaper editor says. "This is the unforgiveable re- mark," said James Brown, Eng- lish language editor of the Ha- waii Hochi, a Japanese daily. AND MANY of Hawaii's politi- cal leaders had similar reactions yesterday after attorney J o h n Wilson, during a break in the Watergate hearings in Washing- ton, referred to Sen. Daniel Ioa- ye (D-Haw.) as "that little Jap." Wilson's remark touched a de- licate nerve in the islands, where 36.7 per cent of the popula- tion is of Japanese ancestry. "I believe that a public apology is owed to all the people of Hswaii because of your disgrace- ful racial slur against one of our United States senators," s t a t e GOP chairman Canla Coray said in a telegram to Wilson, attorney for former White House aides H. R. Haldeman and John Ehr- lichman. "ON BEHALF of all the peo- ple of Honolulu, of whom riore than 200,000 are Americans of Japanese ancestry, I deeply and Senate bill WASHINGTON (AP) - A bill hiking the minimum wage to $220 an hour and ex- tending its protection to another seven mil- lion workers won Senate approval yester- day, despite talk of a presidential veto. The 62-28 vote sent the measure to the House where action is expected today, the day before Congress begins a one-month recess. REPUBLICAN OPPONENTS have predict- ed President Nixon would veto the bill as inflationary. But Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-N.Y.) s a i d Labor Secretary Peter Brennan told him on Wednesday: "I will request to the President that he sign the bill. I have no assurance or commitment that he will do so." Javits said the statement was reconfirmed by Brennan's office yesterday. THE SENATE VOTE was two votes more than needed to override a veto. Opponents, led by Sens. Robert Taft Jr. (R-Ohio) and Peter Dominick (R-Colo.) ar- hikes minimum"wage gued that the step-ups in the minimum were large retail stores, to $1.80 on Oct. 1, $2 next so abrupt they would result in serious dam- July 1, and $2.20 on July 1, 1975. age to the fight against inflation and result -Raises the $1.30 minimum for covered in increased unemployment. farm workers to $1.60 Oct. 1, $1.80 July 1, But Javits and Sen. Harrison Williams Jr. $2 July 1, 1975, and $2.20 July 1, 1976. (D-N.J.), chairman of the Labor Committee, said the economic-stabilization program -EXTENDS MINIMUM wage and over- should not require "keeping the income of time to full-time domestic servants, includ- millions of American workers below officially ing babysitters. Live-in domestics w o u I d established poverty levels." receive the minimum but not overtime. The occasional babysitter is exempted. THE BILL WOULD grant most covered nonfarm workers a 37.5-per-cent pay hike -Allows employers to hire students at 85 in nine months. Covered farm workers would per cent of the minimum tnder certain con- receive' a 69-per-cent raise over three years. ditions. This applies if the establishment hire-; hyrs- fewer than four students to work up to 20 The bill is a compromise measure, ham- mered out by Senate-House conferees. hours a week. Any number of full-time Here are major provisions. students may be hired by colleges at the 85-per-cent rate. -RAISES the $1.60 hourly minimum wage -Gr-dull re for most nonfarm workers to $2 on Oct. 1, -Gradually reduces the number of hours and to $2.20 next July 1. that policemen, firemen and prison guards -Raises the $1.60 minimum for workers must work before qualifying for overtime first covered in 1966, mainly employes of pay. EVERY WATER POLLUTER IN THIS COUNTRUY HAS A PRICE ON HIS IEAD!! Sen. Inouye bitterly resent the contemptible remark you made . . ." said Honolulu Mayor Frank Fasi, a Democrat, in a telegram to Wil- son. Fasi invited Wilson to visit him, his Japanese-American wife, Joyce, and their 11 children. "Following the introductions, it will be a great pleasure for me to personally throw you nut of my office," said Fasi. DAVID McCLUNG, the presi- dent of the state Senate, said he might have given Wilson "a good old right-hand punch" had he been present when Wilson made the remark about the Hawaii Democrat. "This attorney should be se- verely reprimanded and a public apology should be given to Sen. Inouyee and all racial minorities in this country," said Wadsworth Yee, the Republican leader in the state Senate. "I'm sure Mr. Wilson doesn't realize that the term 'Jap' in Hawaii is about as acceptable as 'nigger' on the mainland," said- A. A. Smyser, editor of the Hono- lulu Star-Bulletin. INOUYE, TALKING to news- men in Washington, brushed off the remark as "unfortunate." "Apparently in these United States we have not yet reached the stage where we.-can comfort- ably call each other brother ahd sister," he said. Nnouye was born t .Japanese American parents in Honolulu. BUT THE LAW THAT PROVIDES FOR REWARD HAS GONE ALMOST UNNOTICED THE WATER ACT of 1899 made it unlawful "to throw, discharge, or deposit any refuse matter of any kind or description whatever into any navigable water of the United States." The only exception is when a permit to pollute is obtained from the Army Corps of Engi- Doers. $59900 $2599s The law makes every individual and corporate polluter subject to a fine of 500 to 2,500 dollars for each day of the violation. And whoever catches, the polluter can get half the fine as a reward. There are oV r' 4000 industrial polluting plants in this country operating-outside the law. If you want to know 'how. to _:catch them write for, The Bounty Hunter' Guide onWaoter, PolhltIOn, The'roject on Clean Water, Nl ural Resource Defe tse Council 36 West 44th Street, New York, N.Y. 10036. The best -way to fight water pollution is to xmake your own waves. _.Prepared by the Stern Concern. Space contributed by The Michigan Daily