But what was even worse, when we were attacked by a large group of white males, clearly outnumbered and out-muscled, the security guards did absolutely nothing to stop the attack," Yoshika Kusada tearfully told reporters at a press conference last month at the offices of the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, the New York-based advocacy group that is representing the students. "I begged the security guards for help--'Do something, why aren't you doing anything?'--over and over." Kusada said she was knocked unconscious after trying to pull an attacker off of one of her friends. She said the fight only stopped when two black students, who were in a separate party, intervened to end the fight. Kyoko Hiraoka, one of the Japanese students, said, "I think that in this country there is no justice. I'm so disappointed that this report didn't tell the truth. I now have to live in fear of being attacked again because they're free." The district attorney's report contradicted the findings of a report by a federal Civil Rights Monitor who recommended that the manager who ordered the students to leave the restaurant be fired and the hostess be suspended without pay. The monitor also recommended that the deputies, who are no longer Denny's employees, not be rehired. The monitor found that the employees had not received necessary nondiscrimination training and recommended that Denny's develop a new video-based training program. http://www.asianweek.com/091997/dennys.html http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=2nd&navby=case&no=009015v2&exact=1 http://www.expressindia.com/ie/daily/19970606/15750843.html http://maps.yahoo.com/dd_result?ed=xTowJeV.wimQQVd6MsEKU7USFw--&csz=Geneva%2C+NY&country=us&tcsz=Syracuse%2C+NY&tcountry=us
ドキョソ肉便器男捜しの遊学記、語学遊学女にこのタイプが多い。 Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan http://www.fccj.or.jp/modules/wfsection/article.php?articleid=50&category=13 Since graduating from high school in March, Marie Usui has been working as a hostess to save up for a trip to Australia, where she plans to study English for six months. She lives with her father (a robot maker), her mother (a nursery nurse), sister and grandparents in Saitama, near Tokyo. We chatted for a couple of hours in a coffee shop in Shibuya. I've been saving up by working as a hostess. It is good money, about 800 pounds per month - but we work hard until 2am almost every night. ★I used to be upset if one of them touched my bum, but now I put up with it. ★We are taught to tell white lies to customers, such as flattering them or telling them that we don't have boyfriends. ★Half the girls in my old high school class are now hostessing and the ones who earn the most in the big Tokyo clubs are really spoiled They look down on us now. I don't want to become like that, but I want to be rich. It is a difficult balance. My generation doesn't believe in anything except money. I'm really looking forward to living overseas. I prefer Western music such as Britney Spears and U2 to Japanese pop music. ★And I like western men more than Japanese men because the latter are so indecisive. I guess I will have to be more independent in Australia. Everyone in my nightclub, including the mama-san (boss), is supporting me. And my mum has paid most of the 1.5m yen (9,000 pounds) fee. I'm only going for six months, but they all seem to think that when I return, I'll be grown up and a fluent English speaker!!!!
In the last two decades, it has become fairly common for Japanese women to study and even work overseas. Still, a Japanese woman's decision to live abroad sets her outside a mainstream culture that guarantees her security as a homemaker, ★but is not concerned with her professional fulfillment. ★"It's very striking that a lot of Japanese women don't have a long-term plan when they go abroad," said Karen Kelsky, a professor of anthropology at the University of Oregon and the author of "Women on the Verge: Japanese Women, Western Dreams" (Duke, 2001). ★"They have vague notions that they want a career, but they have no societal support for their career goals. It's a poignant situation." ★Most New York hostesses fell into the job when they encountered the city's high cost of living. ★Ms. Karasawa is unusual among New York's Japanese hostesses because she doesn't hide her job from her friends and family. She said she was not ashamed to be a hostess. She decided she needed the flexibility of the clubs, because she can take the night off when she has an English-language class or another conflict. She said her parents know about her job, and offer moral support. The small number of hostesses who sleep with their customers do so outside the clubs' auspices. http://www.amazon.co.jp/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/english-books/0822328054/reviews/ref=cm_rev_more/249-9186307-2664357#3