Set as Homepage - Add to Favorites

成人午夜福利A视频-成人午夜福利剧场-成人午夜福利免费-成人午夜福利免费视频-成人午夜福利片-成人午夜福利视

【hardcore pregnant sex videos】Enter to watch online.Travel Trailblazer Peggy Mikuni Passes Away
As president of Yamato Travel Bureau, Peggy Mikuni led tours to Japan and other places around the globe with her trademark grace and attention to detail.

By ELLEN ENDO, Rafu Shimpo

The Japanese American community has lost pioneering businesswoman Peggy Mikuni, who for more than six decades ran a travel agency in Little Tokyo. She passed away earlier this month at the age of 90.

Mikuni worked with her father, Eddie Yamato, in his multi-service employment agency in Denver after World War II. As the eldest of nine children, she was expected to take over his business. Unfortunately, she found that trying to find work for former incarcerees amid postwar racial prejudice and a sluggish economy was difficult and discouraging.

In a 2011 interview conducted by her youngest sister and **Rafu Shimpo**contributor Sharon Yamato for Densho, Mikkuni revealed that she preferred to help people “who were happy to be going someplace rather than worried about finding a job.”

After the Yamatos moved back to Los Angeles in 1955, her father re-established his business at 312 E. First St. Mikuni, meanwhile, focused on expanding the travel services and made customer service her hallmark. By 1957, she was ready to open the Yamato Travel Bureau, becoming one of the first women and possibly the first Sansei to own a business in Little Tokyo.

Mikuni’s family roots reach back to 1893 when her grandparents emigrated to Hawaii from Japan. Her father, who was born in Hawaii, moved to Los Angeles in 1931 when she was still a baby.

Mikuni, known for her low-key demeanor and uncanny problem-solving skills, once stated that she preferred to remember the good things that happened in her life and not necessarily the bad. She said that she remembered little about wartime camp experience in Poston, Ariz. “It was harder on our parents than on us kids.”

Something she did remember was what it was like to attend junior high and high school during the war. “School in camp was difficult…because all the students were Asians,” she remarked. “They all seemed to study hard and had good brains.” She went to say that the instructors “turned out to be Japanese Americans that had gone to college and seemed to grade us very strictly.”

Her family moved to Denver after being released from Poston. It was then she experienced overt racism for the first time. She went into a coffee shop where they refused to serve her because the father of one of the staff had fought the Japanese. “They didn’t know the difference between Japanese Americans and Japanese,” she said with characteristic empathy.

Alan Kumamoto, who worked for Mikuni as a college student and ran errands for her uncle, insurance man Kiyo Yamato, commented that it was a great experience. “I went to the World’s Fair in Seattle in 1962, took tours to Mexico, and went on a ship up to Vancouver.”

Just as durable as her U.S. relationships were Mikuni’s Japan connections. “Everybody knows her in Japan,” remarked Kumamoto, who recently took his family to Japan.

Peggy Mikuni with daughter Joanne, 2019 New Year’s Day. (Photo by Janis Nakamura)

Andrew Lee, manager of the Kajima Building, where Mikuni maintained her travel headquarters beginning in 2004, became good friends with her as they commuted to and from the office. “She had lived a long life, traveled … and done so many things. I learned so much from her.

“She treated everybody with a lot of grace. We are definitely going to miss her,” Lee added.

Kim Nomura echoed Lee’s observations. She first met Mikuni in the 1980s, having taken several Yamato tours. Nomura’s sister-in-law, Lilly, worked for Mikuni as a travel agent. More recently, Nomura and Mikuni found themselves living in the same retirement complex, The Terraces.

“When I entered The Terraces, Peggy was there to greet and welcome me. Her thoughtfulness, kindness and generosity were very much appreciated. I (along with) The Terraces staff and many resident friends will miss Peggy very much,” said Nomura.

The brick-and-mortar legacy of the Yamatos may have ended with Mikuni’s passing, but the feeling of goodwill she embodied lives on.

Sharon Yamato, reflecting on her sister’s legacy, said: “In our family of nine children (eight of them girls), Peggy was its vigilant onee-san, ahead-of-her-time businesswoman, and consummate perfectionist. She took pride in doing things right, as evident in the Oshogatsushe painstakingly prepared every year (with the help of daughter Joanne). Taking a break from her nonstop planning of many unforgettable trips for others to Japan, she applied that same meticulous preparation to ensure every New Year’s Day was a family event to be remembered.“

Mikuni is survived by daughter, Joanne Mikuni Hong (Rev. Richard Hong); granddaughter, Naomi Hong; daughter-in-law, Cathy Mikuni; grandsons; Mathew Mikuni (Lily Der Minasian) and Michael Mikuni; and siblings Mary Jane Yasuko Tashiro, Betty Emiko Mikuni, Evelyn Akiko Shimada, Phyllis Keiko Kim, Susan Tomiko Yamato and Sharon Teruko Yamato.

A Celebration of Life service will take place on?Saturday, Oct. 26, at 1 p.m. at Evergreen Baptist Church of San Gabriel Valley, 323 Workman Mill Rd. in La Puente.

 

0.1452s , 14373.8828125 kb

Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【hardcore pregnant sex videos】Enter to watch online.Travel Trailblazer Peggy Mikuni Passes Away,First Hand News  

Sitemap

Top 主站蜘蛛池模板: 国产视频自拍一区 | 欧美夜夜夜 | 调教视频网站 | 日韩精品福利视频 | 国产不卡在线视频 | 91热爆| 福利姬一区二区 | 欧美一区二区高清 | 久久主页 | 成人爽免费 | 日韩欧美午夜电影 | 高清无码网站 | 国产在线观看黄色 | 日韩资源国产乱伦 | 激情综合网小说 | 日韩欧美国产aⅴ另类 | 国产h视频在线观看 | 激情图片视频小说 | 日本91视频 | 久久国模吧 | 日韩AV在线免费观看 | 国产三级视频网站 | 另类在线1| 激情文学18 | 岛国午夜视频在线观 | 亚洲偷怕自拍 | 日韩欧美一区二区三 | 日韩在线第一区 | 午夜成人在线播放 | 婷婷深爱五月 | 日韩中文在线免费视频 | 九九九九九精品视频 | 操天天操| 亚洲成a片 | 91福利视频导航 | 中文字幕丝袜第一页 | 日韩三夜精品在线播放 | 日韩电影中 | 欧美日韩精品在线 | 一伦一色一性一交一配 | 成人一区二区 |