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The New Canadian — February 24, 1965

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Page 1

THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1965

Toronto, Ont.

Discrimination In Ontario

"Vagaries" Columnist
Larry Tajiri Passes Away

Introduce Move To Eliminate
Discrimination In Apartment

ENVER, Colo. — One of the cum bed to a massive stroke on
Japanese American journal­ Feb. 12 th.
in the United Stater, former
The 50-year-old writer, who’s
t coast newspaperman Larry
column “Vagaries” frequently ap­
TORONTO. — An amendment to the Ontario tains more than six self-contained units
iri'who held the post of dra-.
peared in. The New Canadian, Human Rights Code designed to tighten restric“I believe it is now time to take further step:,
editor at the Denver Post suchad been associated with the Post tions against racial and religious discrimination to make the code an even more effective legal
since 1956.
in apartment occupancy was introduced in the instrument for the protection of human dignity
in this province,” the Labor Minister said.
Born May 7, 1914 in Los An- Legislature last week.
first since the Human
The amendment,
Labor Minister Leslie Rowntree said one of
geles, Tajiri was educated there
Rights
Code
became
law
nearly three years ago,
and' took his first newspaper job the bill’s provisions seek to bar discrimination in
has been sought by various organizations, includ­
on the Kashu Mainichi in 1932. any building that contains more than three selfing the Toronto Japanese Canadian Citizens Asso­
Three years later he moved to contained dwelling units. As the code stands,
ciation, the Social Planning Council, the Canadian
{ONOLULU, — Fleet Admiral San Francisco to become English this prohibition applies to a building that conJ e w i s h Congress, Canadian
ester W. Nimitz believes the editor of the old Japanese News
Labor Congress, and others.
apanese made several mistakes (The Nichi Bei Times).
“The Pearl Harbor bombing of
Another section of the bill
c. 7, 1941, which “helped very
would extend to the small bus­
In four years. he went to New
terially, to shorten the war.”
inessman
the type of projec­
York and was with the Asahi
Mimitz, who will be 80 Feb. 24, Shimbun news office until the
tion against racial and religious
.de his observations in a pubdiscrimination that now applies
led letter to Honolulu Star- outbreak of World War II. He
NIAGARA FALLS. — Japa­ zation of industry, the ambas- to an employee. This section
illetin editor William H. Ewing, accepted editorship of the Japa­
sador said.
would prohibit, discrimination in
war correspondent with the nese American Citizen’ League’s nese skills are being recruited
Japan is only _one-27th the size connection with the occupancy
for
Canada

s
manufacturing
in
­
mir.al’s headquarters through- weekly Pacific Citizen in the
dustries, Japanese ambassador of Canada and supports- a popu- of any commercial unit.
t World War II.
spring of 1942, voluntarily eva­
'Their (Japanese1) failure to
Hisanaga Shimadzu told' the lation of 97 million.. The country
Gaps in the provincial anti­
tneback a second day to de- cuating to Salt Lake City for his Canadian Club of the Niagara must import nearly all its raw
discrimination laws should be
•oy our repair facilities at the new duty.
materials but it ranks among plugged, agreed Leonard Braith­
Frontier
last
week.
ivy yard and to burn our 4.5
the top six nations in world waite (Lib. Etobicoke) in the
He served in the same capacity
Ilion barrels of fuel oil in suMr. Shimadzu said Japan has
trade.
ce tanks was a most serious for 10 years, using his journalis­ a shortage of skilled workers
Legislature Last week during
ror,” Nimitz writes.
Canada and.
Trade between
tic craft to inform persons of but is releasing technicians to
the Throne speech debate.
i“These tanks could have been Japanese ancestry who were con
Japan is rising rapidly, Mr. Shi­
He said an Anglo-Saxon was
Canada because of an interest
;stroyed by machine gunning
madzu said. Canadian exports to refused permission to rent a
fined
in
U.S.
and
Canadian
re
­
in closer economic cooperation
em with 50 calibre incendiary
Japan increased from $96 million
location centers parts of those between the two countries.
diets. :
cottage because he planned to
in 1953 to $296 million in 1963
years.
In
1952
he
resigned
to
have a Negro ■ as a guest. “The
/‘The Japanese made an even
Japanese export triumphs are Japan’s exports to Canada jump­ owner was clearly discriminatgOre serious error by leaving join the staff of a newspaper in
F submarine base at Quarry Colorado Springs.
not due to low wages but to ed from $20 million to $130 mil­ ing but he couldn’t be punished,”
|int free from attack. As a
modern techniques and ratiouaii- lion in the same period.
Mr. Braithwaite, a Negro, said.
•'nsequence submarine nor supAt the Post, Tajiri conducted
The Anglo-Saxon “wasn’t re­
irting equipment was damag1 and submarines could pro- a daily column, “The Spectator,”
fused the cottage because of his
ied immediately to stations in in which he reviewed the na­
color. The Negro couldn’t com­
ie far western Pacific and’ start tion’s movies and the theatre.
leir long campaign of desturc- He was nationally known for his
Catholic scholars deyoshi Toyotomi ordered! a ban plain because it wasn’t he who
TOKYO.
rn of the Japanese merchant
here are doing research on the on Christianity and the expulsion tried' to rent the cottage.” He
vast knowledge in the field.
Barine.
of foreign missionaries. For re­
life of a medieval Japanese lord fusing to adhere to the shogun’s said progress has been made but
* The submarines sank in cxwho defended Christianity, pre­ order, Takayama and his family “there is a long way to go to
iss of 75 percent of Japanese
eradicate prejudice and dis­
erchant shipping,” Nimitz de- Los Angeles Police Gets paratory to proposing his beati­ were made hostages and impri­
soned in a castle until the com­ crimination in Ontario.”
ares in the letter published re- 2nd Nisei As Sergeant
fication by the Vatican.
ing into power- of leyasu Toku­
sntly.
The
subject
of
this
research
gawa, in T613.
LOS ANGELES. — James Sa­
^nJz' wl10 reached Hawaii
is
Ukon
Takayama,
the

Chris
­
The following year, Takaya­
r. ".nstmas, 1941 said the Pa- koda, 29, was recently promot­ tian Daimyo” who died in exile
ed
sergeant
by
the
L.A.
Police
ma,
his family, and a group of
- fleet actually was lucky to
in the Philippines in 1615. He
been caught inside Pearl Dept, and' is assigned to the Wil­ was a daimyo, or lord of an es­ about 350 Christians and mis­
;mbor. If the fleet had been at shire Division as patrol super­ tate, in Takatsuki, where he had sionaries were deported’ to the
HAMAMATSU, Japan. — A
5a> admiral Husband E. Kim- visor.
a chapel inside his castle. He is
A two-year veteran of the said to have helped to convert Philippines, then under the rule man who bought a 20-box tobacco
would have had to try to
arce a battle with the then Korean conflict, he has been on 20,000 of his feudal subjects to of Spanish Catholics. Forty days carton with 800 yen (about $2.Wior Japanese fleet.
the force for 7 years and is the Christianity and to have built 20 after his welcome into Manila, 20) got a big present.
Masanao Samejima, 21, bought
aJjTanese task force that second Nisei to attain the rank churches in his province.
Takayama was felled by a fever
the
carton at a nearby tobacco
^©aiT Harbor that day on the force, the first being Sgt.
In 1587, however, Shogun Hi­ and died, at the age of 63.
Stanley
Uno.
shop
recently. He opened it and
Kirjra^ can’iers whereas
found a total of 7,000 yen (about
®leI had none,” said Nimitz.
29 dollars) in the carton.
^^^ would have
He said when he opened the
hin« -ed °t our slower battlecarton he found three tobacco
irm? Th- an action ^th the
packages containing folded two
1
0 S1X carriers working
1,000-yen bank notes each and
p
-and with our fleet havthe
building
of
pride
in
the
Ja
­
“I have respect for law came from their panese heritage and the streng­ another- one housing a folded
SACRAMENTO.
air cover at all.
close family ties and cultural thening of close-knit families.
1,000-yen.
1 380neTd °f loshl® some 37 )0 1,300 prisoners tonight as
most every night—not one is a heritage.
The packages were completely
The sheriff’s observations
? as we ^ at Pearl Nisei. In - all my 30 years as
sealed.
further confirm findings in the
rownina o W°UJd have lost by peace enforcement officer in
He commented on his parents
00
J Rapture almost 20,- various parts of the country, I as being of Italian and German 4%-year study of Sansei delin­
,?ur fleet been in don’t remember having had to extraction, and that other im­ quency by Professor Harry Ki­
tano, ~ social - psychologist at
crater,” the letter says.
jail any Japanese. They don’t get migrant groups of the first ^nd UCLA under the $82,000 grant
t Quartan ^'S ^fe now Bvc into trouble with the law,” de­ second generations were similar­
MOOSE JAW. — Tony Imai
sland in £ °nr on Yerba Buena clared John Misterly, Sheriff of ly law abiding. In succeeding from National Institute for Men­ of 203 River street east recently
tal
Health
and
with
$40,000
from
J^jnSan Francisco Bay.
Sacramento County, to Joe Grant generations - when these ties be­ UCLA. Dr. Kitano’s preliminary was fined $10 and costs on a
Masaoka, Japanese American Is­ come loose or disappear, their conclusions of the study of 39 charge of theft.
sei History Research Project Ad­ names begin to appear on the Sansei delinquents show high
Imai was charged with steal­
Z®* Bank of Tokyo Gets ministrator.
police blotters. He noted that as association with broken homes, ing an electrical outlet, a pack­
Sheriff Misterly noted from immigrant groups become more but strikingly different from age of raisins, a spool of thread,
6^ Uaison Officer
his long police experience that Americanized in the sense ox the usual community pattern is a bottle of aspirin, two bars of
— Mr' Yutaka except for San Francisco China­ abandoning their cultural heut- that .these delinquent Sansei have soap, a tini of crabmeat, total
$3.23
from Canada
1
formerly- an assistant town’s hatchet men in tong Srre their offsprings begin to gev little sense of racial pride. Pro­ value of
involved as juvenile delinquents fessor Kitano is now preparing Safeway.
wars,
and
those
involved
in
drug
®anaser in Tokyo, has
He pleaded guilty to the
violations, hardly’ any Asians ran
The sheriff commended the his findings for publication by
Iiaison oTTiceir for afoul of the law. He believes
charge.
the
University
of
California
°f Tokyo in Vancouver.. that the Nisei and other Asian s History Project for encouraging

imitz Reveals
ipan Blundered
t Pearl Harbor

Skilled Japanese Labour
Released To Canada

Sainthood For 17th Century "Daimyo

Cigarettes Pay Off
For Japan Smoker

Not One Nisei Prisoner In 30 Years

Charged with theft

Page 2

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A. MASUHARA

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Katt 75

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5842 Cambie St., Vancouver 15, B.C.
Tel. 321-6881 — Res. 879-1700

S^K $
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Phone CR. 8-9585
OR. 8-9586

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NEW CANADIAN
179 Queen St. W„
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
Phone EM. 6-5005

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Page 7

r.^pjay, February 24, 1965

Dates and Doings

[The New Canadian's

Cosmopolitan Cuisine

RESIDENCE

2 VMta Drire
HU<WouS-13«S

I New Canadian Theatre Presents "Kratt" March 2-7 A. E. McKague, Q.C.

TORONTO.—“THE ICR ATT” will be performed by the NEW
By STELLA ITO
§
CANADIAN THEATRE March 2nd thru 7th in the Central Library
Theatre, College and St. George Sts.
Evening performances at 8:30 p.m. Matinees Saturdav and
Two Salads For Calorie Counters
Sunday at 2:30 p.m.
Tickets at $1.50 — $2.50. Students and Children — half price.
1 4NY TIME IS A GOOD TIME for a calorie counter to hold
Is breath inj tighten his belt and- go on a binge of waist whittling — For tickets and information call: 261-3487 of HU 5-7823.
K.M.
There has been reams written on how to take off a little of
*
*
¥
rirth a pound here and there. .Some are effective and others
lot. so but we are all intelligent enough to finally come to the Monte Carlo Benefit Nite At J.C.C. Centre Feb. 27th
iLrhUion that there’s no exercise as effective as pushing oneself
Iwavfrom the table at the right.time.
TORONTO.—Monte Carlo Benefit Nite has been planned for
I Fortunately, among you dear readers, there are not many the Centre next Saturday, February 27th from 8 — 12 p.m. Ladies
that are bothered with weight problems. But even so, every once are welcome and an interesting and enjoyable evening is promised
tfa while, it’s a good idea to give our body a rest by not refueling for all. Admission is only $1.00 and includes coffee and refresh­
ments.
over-abundantly.
it)
You’ll find fund-raising fun and fun raising funds the Monte
WEIGHT-WATCHERS WESTERN SALAD
Carlo Way! Remember, Saturday, February 27th at 8:00 p.m.
w Ingredients:
M
J.C. Cultural Centre
medium head iceberg lettuce
*
*
* ..
can green beans (1 lb.)
pound fresh mushrooms or 1 can sliced mushroom, drained
J.C.C. Centre's Teens & Twenties Dance March 6th
tsp. crushed dried oregano
cup low-calorie Italian Dressing
TORONTO.—The Toronto Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre
hard-cooked
eggs
will
be holding a dance for young people on Saturday, March 6th.
£6
® whole pimiento
- Called the “Teens and Twenties” dance, this affair was originally
I Core lettuce, rinse in cold water and drain well. Place in plastic scheduled in January but was cancelled due to the amount of other
&«■ or transparent film; chill. Drain beans. Wash, drain and slice major Nisei dances taking place at the time.
gresh mushrooms; mix in bowl with beans, oregano and- dressing.
“Teens and Twenties” is being handled by a young people’s
group at the J.C. Cultural Centre, 123 Wynford Drive in Don
gCliill to blend flavors.
H Just before serving, quarter eggs; cut pimiento into wide Mills, Ont.
Strips. Cut head of lettuce lengthwise into halves; place cut-sides
Music will be supplied by Johnny Kunitomo and his band.
Sown on chopping board. Shred, across head of lettuce with sharp
J.C.C. Centre
Knife; lace in large bowl. Add bean mixture, eggs and pimiento.
*
*
*
KToss lightly. Add salt and pepper to taste^ if you wish. Serve at
Bonce. Makes 6 servings.

W. Shibata Appointed To Planning Commission

*

*

OFFICE
EM. 4-I3S4
EM. 4-1395

WINNIPEG, Man.—The Citizenship Council of Manitoba will
| 39 CALORIES—'Sauerkraut is another food ideally suited for
the basis of a weight-reducing diet. It contains .an extremely low hold a seminar on Wednesday, March 3rd., and Thursday the 4th. at
plumber of calories—1 cup contains about 39 or just slightly over the Marlborough Hotel, under co-sponsorship with the Canadian
^3 percent of an average diet allowance of 1200 calories. Even more Citizenship Council. Justice Thorson will be the keynote speaker.
Wednesday night’s session will be open to the general public.
[important, kraut supplies vitamin C and is rich in calcium.
Theme “Human Rights in a Canadian setting.”
$
*
Judge Linda! has been appointed chairman. W. T. Shibata of
KRAUT APPLE SALAD
the M. JCCA has been appointed to the planning commission, as
applied to the ethnic group other than English, French and' Native
Ingredients:
Canadians.
h No. 2^ can sauerkraut
*
*
#
12 red skinned apples, diced
h cup thinly sliced celery
Knox United Church appointment: W. Shibata, has been ap­
h tsp. sugar
pointed to the position of House Committee chairman, and Manse
tsp. salt
Committee chairman of the church, with operating budget of $83,cup mayonnaise
000. Mr. Shibata, has been on the Board of Stewards since 1960.
Wally Shibata
Method:
Place can of kraut in refrigerator and chill overnight or
*
*
^several hours. Open can and’ drain? off juice. Combine chilled
hraut with remaining ingredients; mix lightly but thoroughly. J.C. Cultural Centre Library Volunteers Wanted
; Serve on crisp salad greens.
TORONTO.—95% of the J.C. Cultural Centre’s work is being
done
through volunteer help. With the opening ..of our Centre

SAVORY SUGGESTION — Whether it’s chicken, turkey or Library
we'will require volunteers to act as library assistants on
I duck you’re stuffing this coming holidays, add a can (1 cup) of
a
rotation
basis. If you like books, you can use this opportunity
[sauerkraut to your dressing. You’d be pleasantly’surprised with
at will/while serving the public at the same time.
to

browse

the faint tartness and the crunchiness of the stuffing.
Transportation can be arranged from Don Mills-Eglinton bus
stop for volunteers.
Please leave your name with the office — Telephone No.
429-0676.
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH 918 Bathurst St.
LIBRARY HOURS
SUNDAY FEBRUARY 28, 1965
The
Centre
Library
will be open to members for reference pur10:30 'A.M.' Religious School
(
poses
on
the
following
evenings: Monday to Thursday Evenings:
11:00- A.M. Morning Service
17:30

40:00
p.m.;
Saturday
and .Sunday Afternoons 2:00 — 4:30
Rev. Newton . Ishiura

p.m.
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service, Rev. Fumimaro Watanabe
Won’t you volunteer as a library helper?
J.C. Cultural Centre

CHINA HOUSE

When Buying Or Selling Call

Proudly Presents For Your Enjoyment
Our New

Barrister & Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC

100® Northern Ontario Bail ding
338 Bay Street (st Adelaide)
TORONTO

Bus:

Res: LE. 3-6759

924-8153

ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered
.

Accountant
403

Suite

130 BLOOR ST. W.

AUTO



FIRE

TORONTO



INSURANCE
consult

KIYO TAMURA
TORONTO

Bus, 366-5812

Res. Pl. 9-8317

NISHIMURA
Picture Frames
CUSTOM FRAMING
1278 Yonge St. — Phone: 923-6877
(S. of Woodlawn)
Toronto

Lucien C. Kurata, Q.C
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
OHice Hours ■ Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO .
■.EM. 6-3323

Res: RO. 7-3427

13841/2 Queen W.
Toronto

LE. 2-

DANFORTH
SPORTING
GOODS

"Cherry Blossom Room"

SKATES, SKIS
AND
SKATE SHARPENING

With Japanese Motif

551 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlaw)

BANQUETS AND SOCIALS

Minton Ave. W.

George Fukusaka-

Toronto, Ont.



LIFE

ALL FORMS
OF

Phone: HO. 3-7400

Phone RU. 1-9124

(Member of Toronto Real Estate Board)

Open Thur, card Fri. Until 9 p. tn.

K. Hori Real Estate — AM. 1-5194
(5
ft
$
»
I)
$
£
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft

FULLY LICENCED

? Lichee Garden

For Family or Friendly
Gatherings
Dine; at

(Dining Lounge)
118 Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada

NIKKO GARDENS
Wo Ga®

Phone: 364-3481

460-Dundas. SV W.
Toronto

Reservations: EM; 6-2164
For best arrangements
Reserve ahead of time.
ft ^TSI^J^PS °F SUSHI AND OTHER JAPANESE
ft
AVAILABLE FOR FAMILY PARTIES
FREE DELIVERY

ft

Formal
Rentals
Reserve
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc.

(4 Lines To Serve You)
CATERING SERVICE - “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS

ALNA

Banquet Facilities

Of Toronto

For Business Or Private Parties
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
DINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY

Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE.
PHONE: 463-8104

Page 8

Page 8

Wednesday, February 24 i9r

• ■ the new cmiij
After
13
Kamikaze
Attacks
The Bicultural Society I
Of Schizophrenic Japan | Everything O.K. At O.K. Eatery

Authorised as second da® M i
and lor payment of postal/
. Post Office Department Ottat i

4\

T. UMEZUKI, Publisher K
TSUMURA, ' EngliS '^1

FUKUOKA. — Down in Fu­ was located at a sharp turn on
By JAMES JOLL
kuoka, Kyushu, peace at long Route 3 where drivers, failing Section Editor and AdvertSj
The impact of Tokyo on someone who has never been to Ja- last is coming to the “O.K. Res­
to slow down in time, rammed
pan before and who does not understand Japanese is overwhelm­ taurant”—after 13
SUBSCRIPTION
encounters
into
it.
14.00 per 5 month*
ing: the crowds, the dust, the industrial smog, the noise —espe­ with kamikaze drivers.
#7.00 per year
cially the ceaseless admonitions and exhortations which bus­
For
the
sake
of
the
lady
own
­
Owned
by
a
proud
Lady,
Ki
­
conductresses and shop-assistants pour out over loud-speakers —
479 QUEEN ST. WEST all these combine to produce a sense of confusion that at moments mi Nimbe, 65, the restaurant er’s peace, the police authorities
with the interesting name has have now installed huge “Slow
is near to panic.
Toronto 2-B. Qin,
And even after this is overcome and you begin to find your nothing so special to offer on its Down” signboard’s at about 100
EMpire 6-5005
way about, to talk to people and to respond to the warmth 'of menu, ’ but the place has blos­
Japanese hospitality, you are still left with a sense of bewilderment. somed into headlines 13 times meters from the restaurant. In
*
*
order to make sure drivers slow
these past few years.
IT IS EASY TO SEE WHY MANY PEOPLE visiting the
down, police affixed on the sur­
Thirteen times ,a driver smash­
country for the first time talk and write of it just in terms of
ed
into the restaurant, generally face of the road- near the restau­
unresolved contrast — the-computer and the kimono, the chrysan­
in the dead of night, and each rant a series of chatter bars to
themum and the sword.
time
the lady patiently had her give shock treatment to any
Female Help Wanted »
On the other hand, any attempt to find a single category to
establishment
repaired to keep driver who
include all the phenomena of contemporary Japanese social and
might choose to SEWING blouses at home. We
ler business going as before.
political life is likely to. be equally misleading.
and .pick up. Metro Toronto’^
ignore the sign. .
suburbs. Please phone 363-2782 fTc;
If you call it an Asian state you are faced with the fact that
The 13th case was like all

technologically and economically it is an advanced Western coun­ others before it. At about 3 a.m.
“Thanks,” said. the brave lady onto).
try. If you call it a capitalist state, you will suddenly come up there was the big bang. Kimi- to the police. “I guess I can sleep
Male Help Wanted i
against pre-capitalist and feudal elements. If you describe it as san hopped out of bed and raced well in the future.” Headlined a
AMBITIOUS young man to train ns -a democracy, then you have to explain how a single party has held downstairs to witness a driver,
cord-changer technician. Steady wot
power almost continuously since the end of the occupation, and injured but. still very much alive, Fukuoka daily: “Battle Comes West-end.
Kipling and Bloor distrit
to. face the fact that the opposition seems to have no prospect of crawling out of his wrecked car To End In O.K. Corral.”
Apply ,T. Nishi, 239-2913. Evenk-.
259-6973 (Toronto).

winning a majority arid forming a government. ■
which had smashed into her
$
*
*
restaurant.
EXPERIENCED master chef. Good wr.
STILL, IT IS BY REGARDING JAPAN as an advanced
es. 6 day week. Apply: The 27 Tavern J
Restaurant. Call after 1 o'clock. Phons
Western society — technologically and economically in many ways
“Again ? ” she snapped,
233-8880 (Etobicokei, .Ont.)
ahead of Britain — that it is easiest to begin to understand some­ went back to sleep, too proud or
thing about its peculiarities and its problems.
sleepy to inform the police of the
I suspect that many English people with no previous first­ latest rider into her restaurant.
Use New Canadian Ads
hand knowledge of Japan are still more or less unconsciously in­
The
police,
though,
proved
ex
­
For Best Results
fluenced by the traditional view of Japan as an exotic Oriental
ceedingly
sympathetic,
and
had
TOKYO.
society — when they are not remembering the Japanese as a
Friends of Dr.
a group of traffic-analysis spe­ Ichiro Oga
brutal and cruel enemy in the Second World War.
the
internationally
cialists study what to do the next famed “Lotus Doctor,
However, anyone who goes to Japan mainly looking for the day.
” who is
exotic, will be disappointed. Certainly, for me at least, it was the
lying seriously ill in a Tokyo
physical impact of industrial Japan that was the first overwhelm­
Of course there was nothing suburban hospital, destitute and
ing'impression.
much to study. The restaurant practically forg'otten are rally­
*
*
ing to save him, it was disclosed
recently.
IT IS NOT ONLY THAT TOKYO, THE largest city in the
world, has been rebuilt twice in this century, once after the earth­
The’ 81-year-old scholar be­
quake in 1923 and once .after the bombing in the Second World
came- famous when on July 18,
War
and indeed it has been almost rebuilt a third time in honor
1952 he succeeded in raising a
of the Olympic Games — it is that all over Japan a high degree
lotus plant to bloom from a 2,000of industrialization and1 of technical efficiency is taken for granted.
year-old seed found among the
In a country where 98 percent of the population is literate and
relics discovered in the little
where over ten million of them own television sets, even the
town of Kemigawa in Chiba pre­
■HONOLULU. — Akiko Koji- fecture, near Tokyo.
minority who have not left the countryside for the city are never,
as an American scholar put it recently, “long out of sight of a ma, Miss Universe of 1959, is
The octogenarian lost his wife
posing ’ for fashion pictures to in 1957 and has no known rela
factory chimney, a power line, or a schoolhouse.”
In a society of this kind the similarities with the United appear in future issues of the fives. Last October he suffered
otates or with Western Europe are more noticeable than the dif­ Harper’s Bazaar during a stay a stroke and was taken to the
in the Islands.
ferences.
Musashisaki Hospital where he
*
*
*
With her from New York is is being given medical care
TEMPTING, THEREFORE, TO regard Japan simply Hiro Wakabayashi, formerly of through government aid.
as a western country which happens to lie off the coast of Asia, Japan, who is rated as one of the
The press reported the doctor’s
and in some ways it is easier to understand Japan in these terms ity’s leading fashion photo­ plight and since then letters and
than to think of it as a traditional Oriental society in the process graphers. Miss Kojima, still the gifts have been pouring into the
charming lady she was when she sick doctor.
of modernization and westernization.
. ‘
^Certainly, Japan is more like Germany than like, say, Thai- won the beauty crown almost
. Recently Crown Prince Aki­
lana. Yet when one has come to the conclusion that Japanese so­ six years ago, is believed to be hito, a botanist himself, sent
first full-time Japanese flowers to the ailing scientist.
ciety can best be described in Western categories, one is at once the
struck by the differences, by the idiosyncrasies and peculiarities, model to work in this country
Meanwhile, a fund raising
on a special visa, she said.’
of Japanese life.
campaign for Dr. Oga has been
The Christian Science Monitor
She has been in New York started at his home town in Oki­
In fact, perhaps the Japanese, with their fantastic quickness,
One Norway St., Boston, Mass. 02115
perceptiveness, and power of assimilation, are producing a new since last August, after the close nawa, in >southwestern Japan,
Hmm enter my subscription to ths
type of society to which it is no longer appropriate to apply the of last year’s Miss Universe and in Chiba prefecture where
contest.
labels Western or Eastern Asian or European.
.
Monitor for the period checked behe found the lotus seed.

CLASSIFIED

Famed lotus doctor
Seriously III In
Tokyo Hospital

Miss Universe 1959
To Appear In
Harper's Bazaar

world
news
In

fecus

*

*

, ^-^ JAPANESE ARE NOT ONLY FACED with the problem
°‘ J^milating huge doses , of foreign culture. They have, after all,
a highly developed and sophisticated culture of their own.
And although some Japanese and even more foreign amateurs
S Japan are complaining of the loss of the traditional way of
life and the passing of what they think, of as the “true Japan,”
in fact enough of the original Japanese way of life survives to
face every Japanese at almost every moment of the day with a
conscious choice between two ways of behavior. Is he 'o-oim-' to
eat a Japanese or a Western meal? Is he going to furnish° his
house in a Western or a Japanese style? Shall he go to a Western
oi a Japanese theatre in the evening'? And so it goes on at in­
numerable points of-.‘everyday life.

low. I enclose $.

Victim's Brother Confesses To Slaying

(U.S. Funds)

01 YEAR $24 0 6 months §12
□ 3 months §5

OSAKA, Japan. — Police re­ morning he discovered his bro­
cently announced the arrest of a ther dead. He had bled from his
...
32-year-old former factory work­ mouth and nose.
Street ■
—------ -—-—
er as the killer of a man whose
The man told police he dis­
body had been found cut into membered his brother’s body butCity----- ---------------- ------------several pieces and baffled police left some of the pieces in promi­
for 13 months.
Stat®_________ ZIP Code------- nent places so they could be easily
Police said Harukiyo Inouye, found and his brother be given
PM4
32, confessed that the victim was his last rites as soon as possi
his elder brother, Yayaro Ino­
*
$
uye, a former patient in a hospi­
JA?^ES? ?AVE ADAPTED themselves completely tal for the mentally deranged.
Discovery in November, 1963
- ,
habits; but they have not really assimilated them
into traditional Japanese culture. Instead they have preserved two of parts of the body in Naaoya
separate and alternative ways of life.
city and in Osaka shocked the
i§ a.situation that is unlikely to last; and already at manv entire nation.
5*l*ct your
Police said the clue to the ar­
&
Japanese ways have gone under to Western
^Ht a residue will remain; and it is encouraging to find' rest came from the paper which
whA already know how to make, literal!v. had been used in wrapping tire
fi-om
combine in their daily life elements severed portions of the body.
ii om both the
estern and the Japanese ways of living
Both brothers had at one time
It is, indeed, in a synthesis of this kind that a new wav of worked at one of the factories
life may emerge —- a distinctive blend of East and West, or at which had been traced to use the
aPbT-Ch of Western civilization with a flavor of its own same type of paper.
^e
co
^
nFSt aS, Bntain °r France or Mexico or Israel all now displav aspects
Police suspicion against the
f a common culture, each with its own special characteristics.
slayer increased when they dis­
Cotalogua „
covered that his brother, who
lived with him after leaving the
It is a good policy to
hospital in July, 1963, was mis­
hare the BIGHT POLICY
sing.
Harukiyo was called in by
Consult
Osaka police as suspect recently
SKI RENTALS
WALES and DUNCAN
and he confessed to the slaying,
police said.
'
INSURANCE AGENTS
THE NEW CANADIAN
He told police that his brother
woke up suddenly on the night of
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
OSCAR'S
479 Queen St. W.
Nov.
17, 1963 and went beserk.
Phone WA 1-3171
1500 Dundas (at Dufferin)—LE.24267
He stopped him by pressing a
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
quilt over his head.The-next ■

SKIS

SKATES