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The New Canadian — August 7, 1963

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Page 1

E NEW CANADIAN
An independent Organ for Canadia

-’I
VOL XXVII No. 60

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 196
Toronto, Ont.

U.S. Architect

J.C. Centre Taxation-Brief Trip. . .

is Opinion
By .MINORU YAMASAKI

7

4

Mr. Yamasaki is one of Am
rica’s most influential architects.
One of his most recent designs
is the Taj Mahal-like Science Pa­
vilion at the Seattle World’s Fair.
*
*
*
There are some very influen­
tial architects who sincerely be­
lieve that all buildings must be
•strong” — that each building
should be a monument to the viri­
lity of our society.
These architects look with some
derision upon attempts to build
a friendly, more gentle kind of
building.

TORONTO, August 1. — A fa
vourable^ reception was given Ju
panese Canadian Cultural Centre
delegates who travelled to Ot­
tawa on July 30th to present a
brief to the Taxation Division of
the Department of National Rcvenue.
Centre officials
ed
personal invitation to the Prime
Minister- Rt. Hon. D. B. Pearson,
to officiate at the official open­
ing of the Centre next spring.

Summer Santa
aU unexpected and untimely
I dot onto ion July 24, live months before Christmas eve
made by the Metro Traffic Safety Council.;
Here he is being welcomed on the Citv Hall stens"
MXnSafrtv&
and Mrs. Don Smith and Mort Ra skish
retuni ™ d£<^24,”^
1
of the City and suburbs

g C to the Cl(izens

sure in accepting' the invitation.
The busy schedule included a
visit with. Mr. H. E. Nobuhiko
Ushida, Japanese Ambassador,
and Dr. A. W. Trueman, director
of The Canada Council, who was
presented with a brief.
The delegation consisted of
i>, Ted Kimura, Kazuo Nakamura, G<
naka and Tosh Onizuka

U.B.C, Award Winner Trade Team
A
Seek Japaa

VANCOUVER,, B.C.—
Nisei
graduate student, Mitsuo Tera­
guchi (Fisheries) of Richmond,
B.C. was a recipient of a gra­
duate study award from the Uni­
versity of British Columbia re­
cently. He was one of 15 U.B.C.
students to receive awards to­
talling $5700.

PARIS. — Japan was invited
to become a member of the do­
nation Organization for Econo­
in seeing buildings such as these
mic Cooperation and Development
cannot help but influence our
up to now an nll-Atlantic group- .
thoughts and our work. Yet we
ing including Canada.
must realize that the buildings we
Japan sought the invitation—
build for our times are for a
and the United States pushed it_
totally different purpose.
VANCOUVER, B.C.—The end trator and resuming fishing im­
as a means of breaking down
The buildings necessary for our
of
one

of
British
Columbia

s
Europe’s
1 ong-stn nding
res is society should not be-objects to
mediately. The action had " been
costliest
fishing
strikes
was
tancc
to
Japanese
trade.
It
is
as­
awe and impress us, but should
recommended by the union’s cen­
sumed that invitation will be ncbe part of an environment to en­ signalled last Saturday, three tral strike and policy committee.
ceptcj later this year when the
hance our way of life and to weeks to the day after the fisher­
Mi. Stevens g'ave the boats
Diet gives its approval.
men
began
tying
up
their
boats.
,tne as a thoughtful background
End of the strike was announ­ clearance to sail for the fishing
ior the activities of contempor­
The OECD was former two
ced shortly after noon Saturday grounds and authorized opera­
ary man.
years
ago to promote better cotions to resume at 6 p.m. last
ordination
co-operation in
.
E ,
turn commercial by Homer Stevens, secretary- Sunday.
economic
po
1
icies
—domest ic am?
buildings, schools, or residences treasurer of the United Fisher­
NANAIMO,
B.C.

This
fish
The two sides failed at meet­
into cathedrals or palaces can men and Allied Workers Union
international

and
the fo
story
was
a
case
of
man
versus
only result in buildings comple- after a two-hour meeting between ings Saturday to resolve a dis­
of
member
coun­
pute
over
terms
of
reference
and
I mammal—with the human angler tries.
tely incongruous to our way of the union and representatives of
scope
of
the
arbitration
but
fin
­
life.
the Fisheries Association of B.C. ally agreed to leave both ques­ I winning the final verdict.
While it was European restric­
Mr. Stevens said the fisher­ tions- up to the arbitrator whose
Dr. N. Nishio was fishing in a tions on trade frpm Japan that
IF A BUILDING IS TOO men voted' 86 per cent in favor name has not yet been announced. boat off nearby Five Fingers provoked the initial move to get
strong or brutal, it tends to over- of recommending the dispute
association statement, is- Island when he hooked a lively Japan into a group, it was Ja­
over
fish
prices
to-a
single
arbisued late Saturday, said the salmon. As he reeled it in, a Large pans own restrictions that pro •
Power man. In it he feels insevided a last-minute hitch.
union has been seeking to revert
cure and uncomfortable.
'
seal
popped
to
the
surface
and
to its earlier position on prices
A monument to the ego of a
which w,as at variance with the seized the fish.
Particular owner or architect is
fisheries for all species. The
contradictory to the principle that
Dr. Nishio tugged on the line,
union later agreed on prices for but the seal would not let go. The
i , !n?n who uses the building
all pink salmon.
>}ou]q be able, through his enThe salmon net fishermen tug-o-war lasted half an hour..
1 ronment, to . have the sense of
TORONTO. — The Japan struck at noon July 13. They were The seal dived underwater, head­
CEmty and individual strength
Trade
Centre recently announced joined July 17 by 3,000 union ed for open sea in wild spurts,
HIROSHIMA, Japan.—Twenty
lion'11' °n hiS h°Pes ^^ aspiraa move to new offices on the shoreworkers demanding increas­ and’ even lay still for moments on three pat ients at tne Hiroshima
ground floor of Britannica House, ed wages.
*
*
*
end. Dr. Nishio held on firmly, Atomic Bomb Hospital died in the
151
Bloor
Street
West,
Toronto
The
shoreworkers
last
week
first six months of this year, hos­
THE
CHALLENGE
OF
5, Ontario.
voted no-confidence in the union using his motor several times to pital .authorities revealed recent]’ir times philosophically and poThis new building is located on executive and decided to return keep pace with the seal’s ma­ ly(i^:iy ls tremend'ous, and the the south side of Bloor Street, a to work last Friday.
noeuvring.
The majority of the deaths, 17.
“nen7c b° architecture is an few steps east of Avenue Road
were
attributed to after-effects
The strike came shortly before
The struggle finally ended .
of the t°tal chal- and the University Avenue sub- one of the largest salmon runs in
of atomic raciiation. ’These includwhen the seal took one last dive,
?m?;?ether "W the architects way. Their new phone numbers
ases of cancer, four of
the industry’s history. The asso­
lim^’ are aWe to meet it are:
and
coming to the surface ex­ anemia and two of leukemia. Six
924-7194.
924-7195.
and
ciation
has
estimated
the
strike
-<-ans io be seen.
other deaths were blamed on
924-7196.
hausted, reluctantly let go.
cost more than $10,000,000.
other ailments including cirrhois of the liver.
This brought to 2-86 the numher of leaths at the hospital
since it
opened in Septem.----- Country by
c
most prospective immigrants ex­ those with relatives living in th shion, they would go into a pool ber 1956.
•\
immigration
quotas cept those coming from Northern United States.
In the six month period, 14,632
to which the new priorities would
abolished because they Europe.
persons
visited the hospital for
Within each priority group, vi­ apply.
basis.in
either
logic
In
a
letter
to
Congress,
the
examination
and medical treat­
re - 'Ji- President Kenned'v told
But he said it would “provide
sas would go first to those who
President presented an alterna­ filed1 applications at the earliest a sound basis‘upon which we can ment, officials said. Of these, 121
^gress recently.
tive quota plan—sure to stir con­
build in developing an immigra­ were, hospitalized for diseases
wennedy proposed legisla- troversy—which he said would ob- date.
ranging from cancer leukemia
Under present law, an annua] tion Jaw that serves the national and malignant tumors to high
‘V Woa^ bo away with the serve “principles of equality and
I
interest
and
reflects
in
every
de
­
immigration ceiling of 1-56,700 is
M’-year-oId national quo- human dignity.”
blood pressure and heart al J divided among the other coun­ tail the principles of equality and men is..
a gradual basis during the
Instead of admitting immi­ tries of the world in proportion human dignity to which our naA r
grants according to quotas as­ te the ancestry of variou na- tion subscribes.”
L ,ect of the program signed their native country, the
id
In addition to
io increase annual im- President proposed these priori­ tionality group; : livimr in the drastic overhaul calling for a
of the quota
United
States
in
1920.
irom the 1962 level of ties :
system,
Mr.
Kennedy
recommenda planned level of 164,This svstem became law in ecf repeal of a provision
1.

Half
of
all
immigration
he said
TORONTO. — Two Japanese
_of the increase would visas should1 be reserved for those
discriminates
against
immigra
­
Canadian
lads recently received
l®^ ^or by putting to likely to contribute most to the
Mr. Kennedv would boost
tion by those who trace their an­ some good news along'with their
4L00() quota numbers
United States “by virtue of their annual ceiling to 164,500 and cut cestry to an area called the Asia- Grade 13 examination results.
wasted” each year by exceptional
skill, training or edu­ each individual country’s quota I’acific triangle. This area in- One of them, Lorne Umemoto of
saving larger quotas cation.”
by 20 per cent a year for five eludes all countries fro
can use.
years—until these quotas were tan to Japan as well as the Pa­ W. A. Dorter Collegiate took 9
L-S^^r aL^e(J that preU.S. Relatives Factor
entirely eliminated. As quota cific islands north of Australia fRrt. c'ass honors. The other lad.
Kenji Ito of West Hill Collegiate
d^-ua* discriminate against
2—Second priority would go numbers were released in this fa­ and New Zealand.
won 8 first class honors.
THE OVERWHELMING up­

lift and excitement experienced

B»Ce Salmon Strike Efgds

Nisei Hooks
Solmoo ^nd
Fights Seal

JapanTrade
New locale

Still B^feg
Of A-bomb

Kennedy Urges Quota System Scrapped For New Laws

Two Scholars

Page 2

PAGE 2

Page 3

sHoy, August 7, 1963

NEW

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Y. UCHIDA & CO.

Continental Family Co-op

615 West Pender Street
VANCOUVER 2, B.C.

460 Dundas St. W, Toronto

EM. 6-5589 — EM. 6-5711
H0. 6-2041
HO. 6-7962

479 QUEEN STREET WEST
TORONTO 2-B, ONT.

CO n CT) Jill j[h

C^^^^)U
942 Pape Ave.

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NEW

CANADIAN

Wednesday, August 7, J963

Page 7

'^nesday, August 7, 1963

PAGE 7

Bates and Doings
Toronto Japanese Language School Picnic Aug. 11
TORONTO.—The Toronto JaLanguage School wilb be
holding their picnic on Sunaay,
\u<nist 11th. Everyone should
rattier at the Bloor Street en­
trance of High Park.
An interesting program has
been set up by the teachers. All

family members of pupils are
urged to attend. A special invita­
tion is extended to those families
who would like to enroll their
children in the coming term in
September. The date for applica­
tions for the new term will soon
be announced in iris paper.

Montreal Buddhist Church Plans 1st Bon Odori
MONTREAL.—“The Montreal
Buddhist Church is planning their,
first outdoor Obon Odori this
vear. which will be held at
Pletcher’s Field at the Band
^tuid in the heart of Montreal,
just at the foot of the famous
mountain - after which, the city
was named. The event will be
held on the evening of August
18th from 8:30 P.M. and we hope
to see many of our friends there,
both Japanese and Canadian. Our
practices being held at the

Church every Friday evening
from 8:00 P.M. has attracted a
great many interested friends
and the committee’s gratification
would indeed be complete if more
co-operation could be shown by
the church-—members themselves,
both male and female. This is a
Buddhist Obon Odori. There is
still time to learn so may the
committee see more of our own
members in attendance.

Montreal Buddhist Church

*
*

*
Toronto Buddhist Church Holds Special Services
TORONTO. — The
Toronto'
Buddhist Church cordially invites
the public to attend a special ser­
vice on Sunday, August 11 from
10:00 A.M. The guest speaker
will be the Rev.. Takashi Tsuji,
who is now visiting Toronto with
his family.
The Rev. Tsuji is the founder
of the Toronto Buddhist Church.
He is currently serving as Direc­
tor of the Bureau of Buddhist
Eduction, Buddhist Churches of
America.

This is the first trip home for
Mrs. Tsuji and their daughters
since leaving here for San Fran­
cisco five years ago.
Immediately following the ser­
vice, a welcome reception will be
held for Rev. Tsuji and family.
Please make reservations for
the reception luncheon by calling
the following numbers: T. Baba
(691-1596); Eda Shin (757-7022);
Misao Nishikawa
(767-4469);
Toshio Mori (924-1550); Teruji
Goto (466-5904).

CONTINENTAL FAMILY CO-OP
fresh meat anal fish
order Thurs. and Fri.,

OCCIDENTAL FOODS
JAPANESE AND

FREE PARKING AT
REAR OF STORE

Cosmopolitan Cuisine

By STELLA ITO
GREEK DISHES
GREEK DISHES are usually seasoned with lemon juice. They
use it freely as we would shoyu. The Greeks boast a delicious soup
made of chicken broth and lemon juice and served either warm or
cold. Pieces of lemon are always on the table and everyone squeezes
some on everything . . . meat, vegetables, salad, soup. Here are
two recipes for chicken dishes that had their origin in Hellenic
clime.
LEMON ROAST CHICKEN
Ingredients:
1 large plump roasting chicken
1 tsp. dried oregano
salt and pepper
cloves crushed garlic
i stick butter (^ cup)
lemons
% cup water
Method:
Clean, wash and drain chicken.
Rub the inside well with oregano and garlic. Sprinkle, salt and
pepper outside chicken and lay it breast side down in roasting pan.
Pour melted butter over and bake for 30 minutes in hot oven (325)
until golden brown. Leave cover off.
Turn chicken breast side up and continue roasting for another
30 minutes. Baste frequently.
Sqeeze lemon juice over chicken and roast for another hour at
lower temperature (300 deg.)
Add water and cover chicken with lid or tin foil 20 minutes
before the hour is up. This gives steam from lemon juice a chance
to penetrate and tenderize the chicken.
Serve on large platter, springle some oregano on top and pour
drippings from pan over it.
ROAST CHICKEN OREGANO
Ingredients:
’ 1 large fat roaster
14 cup olive oil
14 cup lemon juice
1 tbsp, salt
1 tsp. oregano
1 medium can tomatoes
1 tsp. pepper
Method:
Wash, drain and dry chicken. Mix salt, pepper, olive oil, lemon
juice and 1 tsp. oregano.
Rub inside chicken with this mixture. Also put some on the out­
side. Place in a pan and roast for 1 hour at 375 degrees. Baste fre­
quently.
Mix the tomatoes and remaining oregano. Pour over chicken and
roast for another hour. Towards the end, lower heat to 325 degrees.
Both of these chicken dishes will have piquant tang and zippy
aroma, very tantalizing to the palate..
Allow from 25-30 minutes per pound for roast chicken. If over
baked, they will be on the dry side, so moisten with plenty of juice
and drippings from the pan after they are carved. If done just right,
warm fragrant juice will ooze out even before you have pierced the
fork beyond the skin. This is roasted chicken at its supreme.

460 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
8
EM. 6-5711
Phone EM. 6-5589

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AND NOTARY PUBLIC
Millar & Alexander Bus. JA. 8-1186
Suite 901
Res. FU. 3-3545
15 King St. W.
Hamilton, Ont.

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to

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Repairs

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OSCAR'S
1500 Dundas (at DuHerin)—LE. 2-4267

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464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171

Lucien C. Kurata
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Office Hours Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO
Res: RO. 7-3427
EM. 6-3323

RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
HUdson 5-1365

OFFICE
EM. 4-1394
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1008 Northern Onlcnio Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
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For Complete
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TOSH IWAI
WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE
LIMITED,
1444 Danforth Ave.,
Toronto
Bus. HO. 9-1151
Res. PL. 7-7578
Member Toronto Real Estate Board
and Photo Co-op

JAPAN

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TO
FORMER QUEENSBOROUGH JAPANESE
SCHOOL STUDENTS AND RESIDENTS

George Fukusaka

Phone: HO. 3-7400
Open Thui. and Fri. Until 9 p. m.

A plan is underway to have a reunion
dinner in honor of Mr. and Mrs. T. Tanaka by
n liooi (New
and students of the Queensborough JapaQ^ kpr i 1963.
Westminster, B.C.) in Toronto on Sunday, September 1, 19^.
Any former residents and students
town, desirous of attending this event will be
. It is practically an impossibility
JX
individually, so through the- medium of tlie new p P . .
^
contacting you and request your co-operation in
of your intention as soon as possible.
+ marram would
If you are unable to attend, a letter or telegram woui
add greatly to the success of this Reunion.
nl-mse
For further details and notification of in
'
contact any one of the following persons:
, , m
MR. GEORGE TAHARA, 376 Strathmore Blvd., lor on
6, Ontario. (Phone HO. 3-6879).
_ , .
n .ario
MR. HIROMU FUJIKI, R.R. No. 3, Pickering, Onta .
(Phone AT. 2-3920)
MR. FRANK ODA, 2016 Hartland Drive, Clarkson
tario. (Phone TA. 2-0514).
„ ,
MR. DON YOKOTA, 1345 Davenport Road, Toronto, U
tario. (LE. 5-2478).

,
MR. M. IKEGAMI, 6530 Le May Street, Rosemount, Q
tec. (CL. 5-9424).

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dealer in the heart of Ginza.
on the 2nd
floor We’ll be glad to send you a TAX FREE fKlUB
and CATALOGUE at your reauest.

^fd^a^AiM^
OPT. DEPT. STORE/

3-chome, Ginzo, Tokyo

For Taxi Driver:

Tel. 535-3451/5,

<ADAO HIKAIDO
TOROXTO

For the very best in
wedding casuals. . .
For those who wish to
treasure the present in
the future
71 Tansley Avenue
Scarboro, Ontario
AM. 5-8446

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Page 8

PAGE 8

Wednesday, August 7. ioa?

n

«»

THE NEW CANADIAN

Appeal Not In Vain
By FRANCIS K. ICHIGAYA
TOKYO.—“The death of my
father has not been in vain,” said
the 14-year-old daughter of the
Japanese
isherman who died
after the fishing boat Lucky
Dragon was showered with ra­
dioactive ash from a U.S. nuclear
test.
i
“My father has not come back,”
Sayoko Kuboyama added, “but
I’m truly and wholeheartedly glad
to hear his appeal for- no more
nuclear victims: was answered.”
Aikichi Kuboyama and 22 other
fishermen aboard the 100-ton
tuna boat were showered by
white ash from a test at Bikini
atoll March 1, 1954.
All were taken to hospital with
radiation sickness. Kuboyama
died September, 23.
The incident brought on a
country-wide outcry against nu­
clear tests. Tons of tuna from the
mid-Pacific were found to be ra­
dioactive and were destroyed.
Kuboyama’s widow, Suzu, and
her children live in the fishing
village of Yazu, in central Japan.
They heard that the United
States, Britain and the Soviet

Union had agreed to stop nuclear
weapons tests except those underground.
TELLS HIS SPIRIT
Mrs. Kuboyama led her chil­
dren to the family altar, report­
ed the signing of the test ban
agreement to her husband’s spirit
and offered prayers to him.
“I now hope a total ban on nu­
clear testing will come soon,” the
widow told reporters.
The news of the test ban treaty
agreement was widely acclaimed
in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the
world’s first atom-bombed cities.
Mayor Shinzo Hamai of Hiro­
shima commended:
“The countries that will re­
ceive the biggest profit (from
this treaty) will be the United
States and the Soviet Union.
“Our (anti-nuclear) movement
has continued for the last IS
years from the point of view of
the human race. It has not been
in vain and its effectiveness has
been demonstrated.”
At a Red Cross hospital in Na­
gasaki about 50 patients still are
being treated for- radiation burns
they received IS years ago.

Masaki Kobayashi, the Japanese director who made the highlypraised trilogy, “The Human Condition,” will be represented .at this
year’s Montreal International Film Festival by his latest picture,
“Harakiri.”
“Harakiri,” which was generally considered to be the main
rival to “The Leopard” for the grand prize at last May’s Cannes
Film Festival will wind up the Festival on Sunday, August 11 at
9:15 p.m. (“The Leopard” will open the Festival on Friday at 9.15
P-™-)
*
,
The film, set in seventeenth century Japan, centres around the
“Ronin” class. The “Ronins” were samurai who had lost their feudal
lord in the unsettled times and found themselves unemployed and
unprotected.
Untrained and unskilled in earning a living, they were soon
faced with poverty and took to begging from the still prosperous
feudal lords. The common practice was to appear at the mansion of
the powerful man and ask politely for the use of a corner of the
lord’s garden in which to commit harakiri, “rather than to continue
living in poverty and disgrace.”
Most lords found such incidents embarrassing and would gener­
ally give the “Ronin” food instead of a suicide site. “Harakiri” takes
place on the estate of one of the less humanitarian lords who forces
the wandering samurai to go through with the harakiri they have
threatened to perform.
The protagonists of the film are Hanshiro and his son-in-law
Motome who at different times arrive at the estate in question .and
made to go throug-h with their suicides by Kageyu, the lord’s right
hand man.
The story of “Harakiri” was written originally for television by
Shinobu Hashimoto. When the script was completed it was too long
for TV but just at that time director Kobayashi told the author* that
he was thinking of making a samurai story.
Hashimoto showed his story to Kobayashi who fell in love with
it at first sight and the production of “Harakiri” began.
. . ,
Kobayashi was asked what he wanted to express in “Harakiri.”
“When I read the script I felt that it had something in common
with the present. Hanshiro looked at the samurai spirit from the
human side and Kageyu looked at it from the side of the system.
That is where the contradiction and antagonism lie. And- this is all
HONOLULU.—-Japan’s screen
As a 4th grader in primary
washed away by something like the feudal system. This was the star Yujiro Ishihara who is here school, Yujiro took up yachting.
point that fascinated me.”
to film “Taiheiyo Hitori Botchi” He stated that he will leave the
When Kobayashi is making a film'he concentrates on that and' (Horie: My Enemy. The Sea), Contessa III here until next year
nothing else. He is a hard man to please and tries to get as much said that he would like to and then send her to Newport
perfection as possible into his work. When his films open in Japan compete in next year’s Tahiti race Beach in Southern California for
lie tours the country giving the theatre technicians lessons in the use as he was not able—(due to movie repairs.
of the projectoi* so that his pictures will be seen in the best possible and other business pressure—to
The film, “Taiheiyo Hitori
light.
skipper his Contessa III, a 39- Botchi,” is based on Kenichi Ho­
In an effort to achieve greater realism, Kobayashi used real foot sloop, in the recent 23rd
rie’s solo, 93-day May 17-August
swords in “Harakiri.”
biennial
2,255-nautical
mile
“Fighting in most samurai pictures is like a dance because Trans-Pacific yacht race from 12, 1962), 5,625-mile trans-PaciCc yacht crossing from Nishino­
the sword is "only swung with the hands. In actual fact you cannot Los Angeles to Honolulu.
miya
Yacht Harbor in Japan’s
cut anybody unless you use hip movement. Because the real sword
Inland
Sea to San Francisco,
is so heavy, the actor must walk like the samurai of olden days.”
aboard
a 19-foot sailboat, the
Kobayashi has made a dozen pictures over the last decade. The
Mermaid.
film that preceded “Harakiri”, “The Inheritance” was shown at last
_ He revealed that he has hired
year’s Festival. The second and third parts of “The Human Condia
Hollywood publicity man to
Lion.
"Road to Eternity” and “A Soldier’s Prayer have also been
publicize
the picture as he would
presented, in Montreal.
like
to
have
the film Mewed by
The star of “Harakiri” is Tatsuya Nakadai who has appeared
the
people
of
foreign
countries as
TOKYO.

Japan

s
giant
Mitsu
­
in a variety of important pictures in reacent years. Among them are
well
as
by
the
people
of Japan.
bishi
business
complex,
broken
up
“The. Human Condition” and “Yojimbo” by Akira Kurosawa which
by
American
officials
at
the
end
Yujiro
is
a
young
busy busi­
was also screened at last year’s Festival. “Harakiri” will be shown
of
World
War
II,
was
reassemb
­
nessman
as
well
as
a
fovie star.
with English sub-titles.
led recently.
He is the head of Ishihara Pro­
Directors of the three new ductions and recently built' the
companies which General Doug­ S. Y. Tower Building in Yotsuya
las MacArthur’s advisers created Ward, Tokyo.
Toronto Buddhist Church
out of the old pre-war Mitsubishi
Director Ichikawa
Heavy Industries Co. agreed to a
918 Bathurst Street
Movie
director Kon Ichikawa
merger.
said that about 70 per cent of the
It will make Mitsubishi the yardage of the film, “Taiheiyo
largest
business organization in .Hitori Botchi,” will be devoted
Welcome Luncheon
Japan although its annual sales to scenes and sequences of the
of 8800 million will still be less sea. ■
for
than that of the Hitachi Electric
“Hawaiian waters are,” he ex­
Corporation.
plained, “adequate for the film
Pre-war Mitsubishi was chop­ because of their deep, deep blue
ped up into three companies by Pacific Ocean color; but for the
I American occupation authorities. rough seas and fog sequences,
They are known as new Mit­ we’ll have to go to San Francisco
Sunday, August 11 at 12 Noon
subishi Heavy Industries Com­ for such shots.
pany, Mitsubishi Shipbuiding and
“'We’ll remain in the islands for
Admission—$1.25 per person
Engineering Co., and Mitsubishi about- three weeks and then pro­
ceed to-San Francisco, where the
Nihon Heavy Industries Co.
city
authorities have promised us
The
merger
has
been
under
ne
­
For Reservation Calk T. Baba—691-1596; Mrs. Misao Nishi­
their
fullest cooperation in mak­
gotiation for several years. It was
kawa—767-4469: TerujI Goto—466-5904: Mrs. Shin—757-7022;
ing
the
mo Me.
announced by presidents of two
-i—924-1550.
“In producing the picture.
of the companies involved. They
said that the 3 firms will merge we’ll follow Kenichi Horie’s
on equel terms either- in May or diary faithfully : but we hope to
September of next year at the hot only stress Horie’s trans-Pacific solo crossing as life-defy­
latest.
ing and newsworthy but also em­
phasize especially the struggle
between man’s life and nature
and the challenge of man’s trust
CHINESE AND CANADIAN FOOD
in his life.
TOKYO.—The Japanese must
face the. bare facts—it is going
to cost them more to take a bath.
An increase in public bath
house charges is inevitable. Wel­
fare Minister Takeji Kobayashi
said recently.
Wedding
The. owners now charge 19 yen,
Receptions
Sales & Service
or five cents. They want to raise
Banquets
it to all of 25 yen. or seven cents.
Private
T.V. — HI-FI — STEREO
Parties
First, though, the government
Owned by I. Gord Nakamura
is going* to study reports on the
Meetings
condition of bath houses.
1344 Gerrard St. East.
Free Parking
They, are in every neighbor­
Toronto
hood and it is daily ritual for the
Bathurst and Sheppard Plaza
Japanese to treck to the nearest
Bus: HO. 5-6213

Res; 451^0148
one and soak in near-boiling
water before retiring.

Scenes Of Kenichi Horie’s Epic Voyage
Across Pacific Being Filmed In Hawaii

Mitsubishi Restored
As Japan Giant

Authorized as second class mail
and for payment of postage in" Tea
Post Office Department, Ottawa*'

T. UMEZUKI, Publisher K r
TSUMURA,
English
Editor, KEN MORI, Janane^
Section Editor and Advertiser-'
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479 QUEEN ST. WEST
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EMpire 6-5005

msifb
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FEMALE operator. Experienced. Aoriv
to: Miss- Sun Valley, 8th Floor, 95 Saadina Avenue (Toronto).

Apartment For Rent
apartment,
call
255-5321.
Parklawn Manor, 317 Parklawn Road,
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Male Help Wanted
TWO BODY MEN for machine shop io
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DEPENDABLE baby sitter wanted :o:
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Apply Box 18, The New Canadian. Re­
ferences. (Toronto).

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