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The New Canadian — June 3, 1959

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Page 1

THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
WEDNESDAY,. JUNE 3, 1959.

VOL. 22 — NO. 42.

| e ON THE NEWSFRONT
Need Protection From Impact of Asian Goods

TORONTO. ONT.

Head of BCA Tour
To Include Vancouver
And Steveston June 8, 9,

Murata Elected to Head
’59-60 MJCCA Executive
SAN FRANCISCO. — Bishop

Shinsho .Kanayama of the Budd­
WINNIPEG.—At a recent gen­ Sakamoto; Messers Y. Abe, T
hist
of America will eral meeting of the Manitoba Adamatsu,. 1. Hirayama, .H. Ku
MONTREAL.—Protection against cheap imports or a “rice ’and leave Churches
for the Pacific Northwest
fishheads economy” were presented here Thursday-last as the alter­ on June 1 to begin his tour of all JCCA held at Buddhist Church wada, T. Mitani, R Murata, J.
hall, participants elected Dave Okimura. S. Sato.
. Ariza, J.
natives facing Canadians. G. M. McGinn, of Montreal, sales manager churches in the BCA.
Murata president for the 1959for Dominion Textiles Co. Ltd. said the impact of cheap goods from
In the Pacific
Northwest
H. Takatsu.
Japan, China, India, Hong Kong and some European countries was Bishop Kanayama will visit the 60 term of office.
With the conclusion of the
Out of the attendance number­
being felt by many Canadian industries. The textile industry, Can­ churches in Portland, Oregon;
ada’s largest manufacturing industry, has 'been pressing for pro­ Yakima, Spokane, White River, ing- twenty-five, the following election portion of the meeting,
tection against Japanese imports, he said. “Industry generally has , Tacoma, and Seattle, Washing­ were elected to serve in the exe­ reports were given by various
io be protected from low wage country imports,” he said. “The peo­ ton; Vancouver and Steveston, cutive capacity and to assist the sub-committee heads on Inst
year’s. activities.
ple of Canada should realize, that the textile industry is only one British Columbia. He will be ac­ president. They are:
Misses
R.
Fukumura
and
D.
A motion was passed, however,
of many being hurt by imports.” Mr. McGinn urged better adminis­ companied by Mrs. Hanayama.
without involved discussion by
tration of existing tariff laws and implementation of quotas on im­ The following is his schedule:
the executive on the coming
ports. He said Canada’s resources should be used to supply and
June 1-2 Portland, 3 Yakima,
term’s proposed budget for pubbuild up Canada’s own manufacturing industries? “Canada is not 4 Spokane, 5 White River, 6 Ta­
lie relations,
Also decided w:is
uoing to grow economically if we continue to export our own re­ coma, 7 Seattle, S Vancouver, 9
the
combining
sources until nothing, is left,” he said.
Steveston.
members into one committee
Welcome dinners and special
rather ' than continue with past
services are being planned at the
practice of two separate bodies.
churches. The bishop will also
The combined executive will be
I ‘MRA Is Answer to Asian Conflict’—Gladstone
attend the Northwest district re­
headed by Nisei president Mura­
TOKYO.—Mr.
Matao
Endo ta.
VANCOUVER.—Canada’s only Indian member of the Senate presentatives’ meeting at Taco­
who
advanced
from
the
position
ma
on
June
6.
said here on his arrival from Tokyo that he sees new hope for unity
The first executive meeting of
On June 10 Bishop and Mrs. of Japanese Consul of Toronto the recently instated officers was
between the nations of Asia. “We need heart work as well as brain
work,” said Senator James Gladstone of Cardston, Alta., after at­ Hanayama will return to San to head of the China Section of held May 2Gth.
tending the Asian Assembly for Moral Re-Armament at Kyoto. He Francisco where they will have a the Department of Foreign Af­
spoke of the 26 nations represented there and of their leaders who short stop-over before leaving for fairs, arrived at Haneda Airport
in Tokyo on May 24 accompanied his message be conveyed to Torhad found a new unity between themselves and their countries. The Los Angeles next day.
by his wife. T. Tsuyuki, NC To- onto, Endo, in short, gave this
senator was accompanied. by Kenneth More, MP from Regina;
kyo correspondent who was pre- message : “Mrs. Endo and I. sinRobert Muir of Leduc, Alta., and Gordon Southan of Winnipeg. Can­
sent at their arrival reported that, cerely thank all the people :jf
adian delegates spoke of the sense of urgency among leaders of
many officials were at the air­ Toronto for their kindness and
Asian countries. Mr. Muir said: “Asia has problems of shortage,
port to greet the former Toronto the many farewell parties given
which are even more real than Canara’s problems of surpluses. Mr.
Consul. Among them, former in our honor. Toronto, without a
Southam said, “At a time when relations- between Japan and South
Vice-consul E. Uchida, T. Mori­ doubt, will forever remain in our
Korea are in crisis over the question of repatriating Koreans in
waki, Chief of the Departihent of hearts as well as remembering it
Japan to North Korea it was significant that Korean and Japanese
Metro Tokyo and R. Niibori, Me­ as the most intimate of places
leaders began to find a .new approach to this problem.” He quoted
Among
the
problems
faced
by
tro
Tokyo Parks Department having spent 2-and-a-half won­
Gen. Choi Young Dug, founder of South Korea’s air force as saying Canadian -parents, what, causes
head.
Also among the welcomers derful years in that City.” Endo
to the Assembly, “MRA is the answer to threats, terrors, confusion them the greatest concern ? The
was
Canadian,
T. Ide, a member concluded by extending best
and division facing Korea and Japan.”
answei' lies somewhere between of the Kotobuki-Kaj touring wishes, to all friends and former
the American parents’ concern group from Toronto. Asked that associates in Canada.
that-their children do not steal
and the British worry about their
children being unkind to animals.
E very thing In The Pink
This observation is made by
famous author and anthropo­
logist, Dr. Margaret Mead, who
Sometimes they become stupor­ analyses' family activities and
VANCOUVER.—Plug-in mon­
keys are tools in conducting work ous, withdrawn, disorganized. their effect on national character
in mental research at the Univer­ They may have convulsive seiz­ in a new television presentation
sity of British Columbia by a ures. Or they may go into a cata­ showing the home life of four
husband-and-wife
team,
Drs. tonic. state, a trance so deep that families in widely separated
Patrick and Edith McGeer, and when the monkey’s arm is raised parts of the world. Entitled
Dr. John Wada, in. the explora­ he will hold it aloft for 10 minu­ “Four Families”, this unusual
tion of mental illness.
one-hour telecast will be present­
tes at a time.
The
work,
being
divided
into
ed
in the COMPARISONS scries
By a process developed in the
on
the CBC-TV network, Tues­
two
phases
in
preparation
ofneurological research laboratory
schizophrenic
extracts,
are
being
day,
June 9, at 9:30 p.m.
Qi UBC, they have electrodes per­
done
by
biochemists,
Doctors
McUsing
unrehearsed films shot
manently implanted in the brains
Geer, and the testing of the ex­ especially for COMPARISONS,
of two monkeys.
- .
. ’Bhey can be plugged in to a tracts in animals by neurophy- and interviews with child experts
in each country, Dr. Mead and
Dr. Wada.
ram recording device so the siologist
A team of chemists, using a NFB writer-producer Ian Mace.ectncal activity of their brains technique known as chromato- Neill discuss and compare attican be studied to observe the ef■tecis on their brains of potent
(continued on page eight)
(continued on page eight)
5 en1nc?!1 compounds produced in H----------- .
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ——■------- —
:—■-----------body of schizophrenics, those
'' ose mental lapses have made
uni?L "spht personalities.”
.x,Lr?cts of these chemicals inii?t° the monkeys’ brains,
v® monkeys behave start“ ‘S'*? hxe human schizophrenics.
STRATFORD, Ont.—Thirteen Hayes, the festival’s director and
. feature-length motion pictures, associate director respectively.
plus an assortment of many short Negotiations «are underway for
subjects, from all movie-produc­ nine others within two or three
Acconimodations for
ing parts of the globe have al­ weeks.
Bussei Confab Available ready^Jaeen scheduled for this The Film Festival, which will
- summer’s Stratford International be held once again in the air con­
^ANCISCO. — Bishop Film Festival, it was announced ditioned Avon theatre during a
? Hanayama will ‘ deliver by Louis Applebaum and John two-week period^ (Aug. 24-Sepr.
cU\ieeYes at the Buddhist
5) will offer many Canadian pre­
sL?-,;Ses or, America Summer
mieres, including the first show­
be held on July 10. Laverne Sasaki on the introduc­ ing on this continent of “The
E
£<4? 12 at }he Asilomar Coni tion of Jodo Shinshu: and “An Scapegoat”,
Michael
Balcon’s
Spring Sweetheart modeled by Jane Tentden in
grou,nds- This will be the Aspect of Buddhist History In­ new British film in which Alec
octal
pink won the Master Artist Award for Mr. Law­
verj'-H-rnab the former Uni- terpreted” by Rev. Akira Ono.
Guinness stars with Bette Davis.
Oi Tokyo Chairman of the
Special one hour discussion lec­ Nicole Maurey, Irene Worth and rence at a recent annual B.C. Hairdresser’s Convention
wjp
°-^ Indjan Philosophy tures will be given by Rev. Yurii Pamela Brown. The Stratford
in Aj iT®c‘:UrinS' since his arrival Kyogoku on “Shinran as a Re­ connections with this picture are in Vancouver. He is the first male to win this award.
VANCOUVER, B.C.—“Spring Chairman of the Styling Council
TaAd I"’:6’3 State»- The ad- former”, and Rev. Keisho Moto­ both firm and affectionate since
HUthoH--*e<;LXi7.e
the noted yama on “The Buddhist Feeling: it was Mr. Guinness and Miss Sweetheart” won the B.C. Master of B.C. Hairdresser’s Association.
Wilf
°n Japanese Buddhism An Examination of our Attitudes Worth who opened the first sea­ Artist Award for hair stylist Mr.
His other achievements in­
_on
“The Characteristic and Consciousness.”
son of Shakespearean drama here Lawrence (Iwasaki) at an annual clude winning the Hair Styling
Poini,
Japanese Buddhism.”
Accommodations include rooms in 1953. Miss Worth is also starr­ convention recently held there.
Award as well as his personally
. Oth
wK‘’nr®s h°ur lectures will and meals. Pre-registration dead­ ing this summer on the stage in
The first male to win this trained, Miss Ingrid, winning
buddhism?” by Rev. line is June 15. Brochures and Peter Wood’s production of “As
5k;
first in the Preliminary Contest.
f'nJiLani on the basic further details have been sent to You Like It” which will be seen award, he was elected 2nd ViceMr. Lawrence is the owner of
president of
Vv-r- ? J'? 01 Buddhism;
“The- ail local churches, according tp
. the B.C. Hairdress_
Mai son-Lawrence Coiffures locat­
(continued on page eight)
xor me Alone” by Rev< the
Seminar
ors Association and also is the ed in. the Burnard Building.
*
- - - - committee.
........

Former Japanese Consol
Well-Wisher in Message
To Toronto Residents

CBC's "Comparisons"
Series Views Varying
Concerns of Family Life

Japanese Canadian Doctor Among Mental Illness
Researchers at UBC Experimenting With Monkeys

Japan Among Entries in Stratford Film Festival

Page 2

Wednesday, Jun-e

PAGE 2

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Page 3

sdav, June. 3, 1959.

PAGE 3

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E.J.
(Sid) Arbour

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........

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ROBERTS, Kelso X

Province of Ontario
Hon. Mackinnon Phillips, M.D.
PROVINCIAL SECRETARY AND
REGISTRAR GENERAL

Robert Cudney, Q.C.
Deputy Provincial ^Secretary

I ALLANGROSSMAN|X
ST. ANDREW RIDING — TORONTO

OUR STRONGEST VOICE IN THE FROST GOVERNMENT

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Page 6

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Page 7

Wednesday, June 3, 1959.THE

NE W

CANADIAN

Department of Lands and Forests Release Black

SPORTS
Japan Olympic Committee Buzzes in Preparation

Bass Season for Fishermen in Various Locales

Now that the trout and pickerel 28 inches in length, is the catch
seasons are under way, anglers limit (angling) for maskinonge.
await the next big; fishing- event,
In all Ontario waters where
the opening of the black bass there is a closed season on stur­
TOKYO.—Japan plans athletic southwestern Tokyo will provide season in most of Ontario on geon, the season will be from
facilities rivaling any in the hockey fields, volleyball, hand­ Dominon Day, July 1.
June 15 to May 14 next follow­
_The season is July 1 to October ing. There is no closed season on
world for the 1964 Olympics.
ball and other playing courts and
15, both dates inclusive, with sturgeon in the Great Lakes,
Selection of Tokyo May 2 as fields.
the 1964 games site touched off
Georgian Bay, North Channel, in­
Also to be built or rebuilt at these exceptions:
(1) St. Clair River, Lake St. tervening- international connect­
an already planned 816,700,000 scattered locations are a new
construction program. When com­ Yokohama yacht harbor, Koishi­ Clair and Detroit River: June ing waters and that (portion of
pleted it will include.
the St. Lawrence River between
kawa metropolitan football sta­ 25th to December 15th.
(2) Lake Erie and Niagara Lake Ontario and the dam at the
A tree-shaped Olympic park dium, a rowing course, two shoot­
near central Tokyo housing a ing ranges, an equestrian park River between Lake Erie ^and Robert H. Saunders Generating
Niagara Falls: July 1 to Decem­ Station in Stormont County,
100,000-seat stadium: a giant and an Olympic hall.
ber
15.
30’,000-seat outdoor but roofed
»
Camp
Drake
Rebuilt
(3)
St. Lawrence River west of
swimming stadium; a completely
refurnished Olympic village to
Camp Drake, a Northwest To­ the dam at the Robert H. Saun­
Extensive lake surveys in the
house 10,000 competitors; broad kyo U.S. Army- housing area built ders Generating Station in Stor­ Geraldton area as a basis for a
new high speed highways; exten­ in 1945, will be rebuilt to house mont County: June 16 to October fisheries restocking program are
sive practice fields and at least all competitors. It has complete 15.
to be undertaken this ^summer. In
(4) Boundary waters (other the
27 modern, western-style hotels.
McDiarmid area, 12.000
utilities, broad streets and motion
than Lake Superior) between speckled trout already have been
picture
theatres.
It
will
be
equip
­
Financing Arranged
ped. with practice areas for all Thunder Bay District and Min­ planted and the Port’Arthur dis­
Financing has been arranged. major sports.
nesota, and Kenora and Rainy trict is to plant 260,000 lake trout
Many of the basic facilities are
A separate area within the vil­ River districts: June 10 to De­ in the Rossport area to assist in
already in place.
the rehabilitation of Lake Su­
lage will be set aside for wo­ cember 15.
The limit of catch is six in one perior fishery.
Heart of the program is the men. It will include a beau tv
day.
Olympic park, site of the highly parlor.
The maskinonge season opens
successful 1958 Asian games. The
New highways will link the vil­
100,000-seat stadium . will be an lage with Olympic Park- and Ko­ variously on June 20, June 25 or iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiu
expanded version of an existing mazawa by 30 to 40 minute bus July 1, depending on the area.
June 20 to October 15 is the
stadium seating' 60,000.- The ride, Japan's Olympic committee
maskinonge season north and
swimming stadium will be near­ says.
by. So too are facilities for fenc­
Tokyo already has 23 modern west of and including the French IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJ
ing, rugby,weightlifting, and western style hotels with 2,586 and Mattawa Rivers and Lake
June
baseball if desired.
rooms_ for housing- spectators. Nipissing, and that part of Geor­
A new 19,800-aci’e parking lot Four more ultra modern hotels gian Bay north of a line from
—Toronto. Seven Samurai movie at
the northern extremity of Fitz­ 4-5-6
is planned.
are going up.
Kent Theatre.
Percentage of income
william Island northeasterly to
Komazawa sports centre in
for Toronto JC Centre Fund.
Most important to the athletes, the southeasterly limit of Travers 10—Montreal. Homemaker's meeting at
perhaps, is an experienced com­ Township.
the home of Mrs. J. Ito.
mittee to run the 31-event games
20

Winnipeg. Buddhist Young Women's
July 1 to October 15 is the sea­
Club Chinese- Cooking Class at
—first Olympics ever- staged in son south of and excluding the
Church 7 p.m.
FISHING TACKLE
Asia. It handled the 1958 Asian French and Mattawa Rivers and 28—
Toronto.—Toronto Young Buddhist
Games with a precision that Lake Nipissing-, except * • ■
Society’s Annual Picnic. Further an­
and
nouncements forthcoming.
brought praise from Interna­
(1) St. Clair River, Lake St.
CAMERAS
tional Olympic Committee presi­ Clair and Detroit River: June 25
dent Avery Brundage.
July
to December 15, and
(2) Lake Erie and Niagara
Toronto. Toronto JCCA Community
, Somehow, on the first few River between Lake Erie and 5—
1500 Dundas at Dufferin—LE. 2-^267
picnic at Jim Rick's Park north of
rounds in spring, golf doesn’t Niagara Falls July 1 to Decem­
Whitby.
11—Montreal. United Church picnic.
seem to be the same game you ber’ 15.
Toronto. Co-sponsored Kisaragi Club
Two in one day, not less than 12—
remembered.
and Kisaragi Credit Union picnic to

For 1964 Games Following Word of Its Selection

CALENDAR

Oscar's Photo Sports

High Park.

INGE R
E W IN G
MACHINE CO.

S

H. 5. TSURUDA
(Japanese Canadian Agent)
35 Eowntree Ave., TOEONTO
EO. 9-0673

the MALE shop

Female Help Wanted
HOME WORKERS. Experienced on ladies
blouses. Apply Elite Blouses, 460 Rich­
mond Street West. (Toronto).

PART TIME girl for dry cleaning store.
Phone RO. 6-1007 (Toronto).
BOOKKEEPING machine operator. Good
opportunity. Phone EM. 8-239! (Toronto)

Domestic Help Wanted
YOUNG girl for domestic help. Live in,
char kept. Phone RU, 1-1844 (Toronto).
A MIDDLE AGED woman or business
girl free room and board in exchange
for light household duties. Phone RU.
1-174a (Toronto),

A WOMAN for housework and help
with children. Live in, excellent wages.
Phone RU, 2-0914 (Toronto).

Male Help Wanted
GARDENER TRUCK-DRIVER wanted im­
mediately. Please call BA. 1-2145. Ask
for Kinoshita. (Toronto).
GARDENERS. Will take? university stu­
dents for summer holiday position.
Apply Tom Matoba, 55 St, Andrew’s
Blvd., Weston, Phono CH. 6-6038 (Tor­
onto).

Rooms to Let
TWO or THREE rooms with kitchen.
Trinity Park district. Phone EM. 8-9709
after 7:00 p.m. (Toronto).______
THREE unfurnished rooms. Gerrard and
Broadview district.
Phone LE. 2-7445
(To: onto).

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LE. 2-6378

Page 8

THE

PAGE 8

Mental Research

(continued from page one)

NEW

Wednesday, June 3 1959.

CANADIAN
(Continued from Page One)

THE NEW CANADIAN

about the old China, directed by
Sang Hu in color. (Monday ma­
tinee, Aug. 31).
“My Dear Man”
(USSR)
directed by Heifitz. (Tuesday
matinee, Sept. 1).
“The House Under the Rocks”
(Hungary), Grand Prize winner
of the San Francisco Film Festi­
val, directed by Makk. (Tuesday
evening, Sept. 1).
“Aparajito” (India), a sequel
to “Father Panchali” which won
the critics’ award .at last year’s
Stratford Film Festival, directed
by Satyajit Ray. (Wednesday
evening, Sept. 2).
“’Jonas” (Germany), .winner of
eight major international awards
directed by Domnick with origin­
al music (The Liberian Suite) by
Duke Ellington. (Friday evening,
Sept. 4).
“A Midsummer Night’s Dream”
(Czechoslovakia) Trnka’s puppet
film, based on the Shakespeare
comedy. (Saturdav matinee, Sept,
5).
“The Scapegoat” (U.K.), Alec
Guinness, Bette Davis, Nicole
Maurey, Irene Worth and Pamela
Browm in adaptation of Daphne
Du Maurier’s novel, . directed by
Robert Hamer. (Saturday even­
ing, Sept, 5). Programs for the evenings of
Ahg. 24, 27, 29, 31, Sept. 3, and
for the matinees-of Aug. 25, 26,
Sept. 2, 3, and 4 are still to oe
announced.
Evening showings are at 8:30
p.m. and matinees at 2:30 jp.m. A
full selection, of short films will
accompany features. All foreign
language pictures will be shown
with English sub-titles.

Authorized as second class rnaH,
Post Office Department, Ottawa
T. UMEZUKI, Publisher, JERRY KUTSUKAKE, English Section Editor; KEN
MORI, Japanese Section Editor and
Advertising Manager.
SUBSCRIPTION
$3.50 for 6 months, $6. per yesr
(Ad rates on request)

Stratford Festival

in the Festival Theatre, opening
into the brain.
Dr. Wada has so far prepared June 29.
In addition to the screen pro­
only two monkeys, five-year-old
Indian macaques, in this fashion. gram, an exhibition of drawings,
He calls them Taro and Jiro— colored photographs and puppets
the common Japanese names for used by Europe’s “master of ani­
mation”, Jiri Timka, of Czecho­
First Son and Second Son.
Taro and Jiro, in spite of their slovakia, in the production of
Frankensteinish appearance, be­ several films, including “A Mid­
summer Night’s Dream’’ which
have quite normally.
Jiro recently underwent his will be shown at the festival.
The lineup of Film Programs
first test since getting his new
as
it now stands, is as follows:
headpiece.
“The Idiot” (USSR), DosAt first he was ferocious,
snarling and biting whenever troivski’s famous novel filmed in
Wada’s cautiously gloved hand color and directed by JPyriev.
(Tuesday evening Aug. 25).
came within range.
“The Rickshaw Man” (Japan),
Then Wada uncapped rhe canula leading into the venrride ot Grand Prize winner of the Venice
Jiro’s brain and injected into " Film Festival, directed by Inaga­
five or six drops of tire McGeers’ ki, in color. (Wednesday evening
schizophrenic extract.
Aug. 26.)
The reaction was almost Im­
“The Last Day of Summer”
(Poland), Venice Award winner,
mediate.
Jiro shopped grinding his teeth directed by Konwicki and Las­
and slumped on his stool. He no kowski. (Thursday matinee, Aug.
longer looked angry—just be­ 27).
wildered.
“Legend of Narayama” (Ja­
In 10 minutes he. could be pan). in Cinemascope and color,
stroked with a bare hand. The directed by Kinushita. (Friday
recording pens on the electro­ matinee, Aug. 28).
encephalograph traced the slow
“The Royal Ballet” (U.K.)
squiggles that indicate a brain at Paul Czinner, who filmed last
rest.
year’s celebrated mode of the
But two minutes later the pat­ Bolshoi Ballet, presents “Ontern of the deep brain structure dine,” “Swan Lake” (Act II) and
switched to a frenzied, spiky “The Firebird” with Margot
scrawling. Jiro, Wada declared, Fonteyn and Michael Somes as
(continued from page one)
was having a seizure.
principal dancers. (Friday even­
Soon
he
recovered
but
a
few
ing. Aug. 28).
tudes towards children in family
“The
Double-Faced ' Mirror”
situations in France, India, Japan minutes later there was another,
and Canada. To provide the ele­ more prolonged seizure. Jiro’s (France), directed by Cayatte
ment of comparison, the family teeth chattered, his eyes rolled and starring Michele Morgan,
(Saturday matinee, Aug. 29).
chosen in each country was care­ back, his limbs stiffened.
Sixty minutes after the injec­
“New Year Sacrifice” (China),
fully selected to represent an
average rural home in which tion Jiro went into stuporous a film made in The new China
there was a child of about twelve trance-like state. Wada stroked
months with older brothers and the monkey’s face, pinched his
cheek, lifted his upper Hip—but
sisters.
In each case, the family group Jiro paid no attention.
Wada explained: Jiro’s senses
was filmed in a similar situation.
The father arrives home for the were still picking up sensations
TAVERN
main family meal . . . the family and passing them to the brain.
But
the
brain

s

integrating
together in the evening . . . and
and
the rituals of putting baby to centre”—a sort of switchboard
bed. Although differences in that receives sensory impulses
STARLIGHT ROOM
family activities in each country and passes them on to various
are often very,;obvious, there also other areas of the brain—was
Catering to social functions
The
messages
are some startling similarities. disorganized.
BOWLING BANQUETS
With wit, wide' knowledge and weren’t being passed on and Jiro
understanding, Dr. Mead brings didn’t know how to react.
WEDDING RECEPTIONS
Later Jiro went into another
new meaning to familiar things
as the differences; and similari­ series of fits. Wada feared he
315 Adelaide St., West
ties are explored. She concludes might suffer some brain damage
Toronto — EM. 8-6239
that significant differences in the if they continued, so he gave him
family group shape the national an anti-convulsant drug to end
character, but far more import­ the seizure and a sedative injec­
ant arc the similar attitudes tion.
See SUS NAGAI
Dr. Wada, head of the EEG
which proclaim our common huand Neurophysiology Laboratory
inanity.
Phone WA. 4-8427
“Foui- Families” is the first at UBC, will be attending a meet­
program of the National Film ing of the Society of Biological
COMPARISONS Physchiatry in Atlantic. City,
Board’s new
series in which other subjects of June 13 to describe the effects
international interest will be as­ of substances extracted from
sembled in film for purposes of urine of schizophrenics on normal
comparison and understanding.
behavior
graphy, are trying to identify
chemical compounds known as
aromatic metabolites in the urine
of patients at Crease Clinic and
Essondale Mental Hospital.
These compounds are the waste
products of metabolism, the con­
tinual breaking-down-and-building-up process by which the body
maintains itself.
Wada has tested crude extracts
of these compounds in his in­
geniously wired monkeys.
To prepare his monkeys, Wada
first , removes a four-inch-long
oval-shaped section of bone from
the top of'the skull.
This is replaced by a plastic
cap containing an electrical con­
nection from which 42 hair-fine
stainless-steel, wires run down
into carefully preselected areas
of the brain.
.
These wires convey the brain s
electrical impulses to the plug in
the skull cap and thence to the
electroencephalograph.
The skull cap also holds a
canula, a tube running into the
ventricle in the centre of the
brain mass so that the test ex­
tracts can be injected directly

CBC Series

it is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY

Consult

!

i,

: WALES and DUNCAN
INSURANCE AGENTS

>
T

464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171

479 QUEEN ST. WEST,

EMpire 6-5005

I BOOK REVIEW:

THE TEMPLE OF THE GOLD-'
:EN PAVILION, by Hukio
Nishima.
McClelland & Stewart, 262 nn
$4.25.
n

The attempt of a young Zen
Buddhist student to destroy himself is chillingly presented in this
latest novel by Japan’s most
popular author.
The story - penetrates deeply
into the young man’s mind as\ie
develops an obsession for the
beautiful ■ temple where he is
studying, -erecting it as a barrier
between himself and the outside
world.
Like the classic Zen koans, or
riddles, scattered through the
book, Mishima’s tale is subject to
various
individual interpreta­
tions. It can be viewed as an ex­
pression of postwar Japanese
social revolt, or simply as a study
of a psychopath.
Or the novel may suggest dis­
content with the Zen Buddhist
way of life that has influenced
Japan for centuries. At a time
when Western intellectuals, in­
cluding the more intelligent
members of the “beat genera­
tion, are turning to Zen for its
advanced concepts of individual­
ity,,, the novel suggests that Zen
may not be what it once was.
A finely written book, the
page* are infused with a disturb­
ing beauty, as scenes of timeless
melancholy contrast with sudden
sharp violence.

OFFICE
EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395

Lucien C. Kurata
BABJRISTEB and SOEICITOB
NOTARY PUBLIC
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62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
TORONTO
EM. 6-0959

Res.: RO. 7-3427

CENTRE

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HUdson 5-1365

BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
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1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO

ANNOUNCEMENT

Brought Back by Public Demand

"SEVEN SAMURAI''

IN BELLWOODS

(English Sub-titles)
“Silver Lion Award Winner”
at-

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YONEMITSU

KENT THEATRE (Yonge and St. Clair)
June 5—2 showings from 6:30 P.M.
June 6—4 showings from 3:00 P.M.
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