Page 1
THE NEW CANADIA
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1965
Toronto, Ont.
Five
Awarded
Gold
Pins
At
Discrimination In Chatham Sets
Disci On Civil Rights Marches T.J.C.C.A. Inauguration Meet
g^eo^dStudent^
By ALLAN EDMONDS
By KEN MORI
the oldest Issei pioneers; Mrs. Teruko Ikeda, Tor
(Courtesy Toronto Star)
TORONTO.—Five diligent and devoted workers onto Isseibu Executive; Mr. I. Kawashiri, Toronto
But for Tom Wakayama, a Japanese Canadian who knows what
for
Japanese Canadian causes were presented with Isseibu President; Mr. George Takahashi, former
scrimination feels like because he suffered it in Chatham, Ont.,
ere might not have been a SNCC chapter at the University coveted Gold Pins from the Toronto Japanese Toronto J CCA President; Miss Kay Morita, steady
Toronto to work for Negro rights’ to stage sombre sit-ins locally Canadian Citizens Association at their Inaugura and hard working* Toronto and National JCCA
d massive marches on Ottawa.
tion Banquet held at the Swiss Guild last Satur executive. Presentations were made by the Tor
Wakayama, a 23-year-old former University of Western
day.
onto JCCA Vice-president, Mr. Roy Sato.
itario student, suffered enough in Chatham to “identify” with
The five recipients included three Issei ard
e plight of Negroes in the deep South. It led him to spend over
The banquet, emceed by the President of the
vear° down there with the Student Non-Violent Co-Ordinating two Nisei, They were: Mr. M. Washimoto, one of National JCCA, Mr. Ed Ide, was attended by over
mmiittee (SNCC, pronounced Snick) as its first Oriental free■ 100 people representing various
m fighter.
ethnic and governmental groups.
Shortly after his first stay in the South, Wakayama returned
। set up Friends for SNCC chapter’ on his home campus; in London,
Mr. George Imai, President of
nt., then came to Toronto around Christmas, 1963 to set up a
the Toronto JCCA, spoke on the
•anch here.
growth and advancement of Ja
Initially a fund-raising organization, the U. of T. branch that
panese Canadian citizens. Ho also
e organized was rejuvenated last fall when Diane Burrows, a
stressed the need for a constant
TORONTO. — A Liberal mem- 1 mature enough to accept people vigilance and the great deal of
[ississippi veteran from Belleville, Ont., returned to Canada as
le Canadian organizer for SNCC. So, this month when Selma her of Parliament declared last from all over the world in large work still to be performed.
appened, the local group was ready to be transformed into an week that Canada has no im- numbers ?”
•Speaking in Japanese, Mr. I.
ction committee to stage sit-ins. .
migration
policy
and
that
gov
Kawashiri
— President of the
He said pressure against a
The shame of Selma, Alabama, and the new voting legislation
Toronto
Isseibu
— expressed his
ernment
officials
work
to
keep
; has sparked may be the beginning of the end of white resistance
more liberal immigration policy
pleasure
in
seeing
the many eth
) integration in the Southern states.
people out of the country rather are fear on the past of unions
nic
groups
attending
this meet
But if so, it is also the end of a long and often bloody road than bring them in.
that
newcomers
will
take
jobs,
and
stated
that
all
groups
should
hough dozens of towns like Selma where campaigns to get Negro
latent discrimination in Can- join hands in aid of each other
David Hahn, MP for Torontoders registered met with bitter, violent resistance.
And Tom Wakayama, whose looks are. as Oriental as his Broadview, also told an audience ada against foreigners and fear in their desire to become full and
larents’ origins, trod the road for the year or more he worked of about 60 persons at Marino by the Government of the econ good Canadian citizens.
.or SNCC in Mississippi, Alabama and. Georgia as one of the Catering Hall, College street in omic consequences of entrance
The guest speaker of the
Toronto, that the key question
earn which ran the registration campaigns throughout 1964.
about immigration is.* “Is the of unskilled workers combined evening, Mrs. Gertrude Laing of
Trod it warily
Calgary — only woman on the
Canadian population ready and with unemployment.
He trod it warily, often posing for protection as a Canadian
Royal Commission on Bilingual
newsman. He was chased out of towns by gun-toting whites outism and Biculturalism — was inaged by outsiders who stirred their' once resigned and docile
troduced by Toronto JCCA Viceniggers” to rebellion.
president,
Rits Inouye.
And when his activities went undetected, he found the whites
MONTGOMERY, Ala.—A 21- California was one of four civil
ccepted him as an equal and expected him to join them in deMrs. Laing spoke of the work
lance of the common danger—integration of their society with year-old American Nisei, Steven right demonstrators injured re of her commission and revealed
nt of Negroes.
Kiyoshi Kuromiya of Monrovia, cently when mounted sheriff’s that the Bilingual and Bicultural
, 10? a sense> Tom Wakayama’s fight for Negroes began back
deputies rode into their ranks, Commission’s preliminary report,
when 23,000 Japanese Canadians were evacuated from the
swinging clubs, canes and ropes. which was presented to the gov
y West Coast. His family (he was an infant at the time) were
ernment, was becoming a best
roered to leave their Vancouver home.
He was sent to St. Margaret seller. After experiencing four
The Wakayamas first moved to Cedar Springs, Ont., but in
Hospital in Montgomery, Ala., different springs by travelling
year they shifted to Chatham. There, surrounded by the
where he was being treated for from coast to coast, Mrs. Laing
ostility of Canadians, outraged by the Japanese attack on Pearl
said that the great span and ge
LOS ANGELES, Calif. — A head injuries.
larbour,* they tried to build life anew.
ographical difference of this
,O!I1’S father, who had .owned a firm preparing native Japa- Nisei, Gladys Hitaka Hata, 30country
created many different.
bis
The
elder
Kuromiya
said
■ 'n ^an^ollver> could find work only as a laborer. Tom, year-old former nurses aide, ap
I
problems
to be solved by her
Lt
up ’n Chatham, and went through the city’s school parently shot Charles Hammond, son called home assuring the commission. Later, she answered
32,
over
her
“
pregnancy
’
and
family that “I am all right and many questions presented to her
P
n was there that the spark grew which sent him down to
then committed suicide by shot- was not seriously hurt.”
he b.S. South in 1963.
by the audience. On behalf of
ing herself in the head, police
the JCCA, Mr. Mits Sumiya, exe
reported recently.
,™.
Bad image
The Monrovia High School cutive of both the National and
.
rungs were very rough for us in Chatham,” he says. “The
She was found on the living honor graduate of 1961 is en- Toronto JCCA, offered thanks
Propaganda had taken effect and there were a lot of room floor of her apartment,
rolled at the Univ, of Pennsyl- to Mrs. Laing for her interesting
skre°types, of us Japanese.
authorities declared.
vania, studying architecture. He talk.
,5°rt of Hell. There were the usual names—‘Jap’
Hammond,
shot
by
a
.22
calibre
is a member of the Student
^ inaccurate but as hurtful ‘Chink’—and the oc, Somehow I started feeling ashamed because I was revolver twice in the right chest, Peace Union and the college Samurai Priest Passes
was in critical condition at Gen“T m teast, because I looked different.
NAACP chapter.
TOKYO. — Father Paul Tsu
back from the Southern states just before Christmas. eral Hospital.
J®
1 ^nT think, except I had a lot of debts—from
witness told police that it
Kuromiya recently took part chihashi, 98, a former samurai
‘kared up ™n“S ^^e ^lat—'back here and I wanted to get them was Hammond who said. “The in a sit-in demonstration at In who lived to be one of the oldest
Hata woman shot me.” He called
Hall around the priests in the world, died here
can’t Jv°lle • e?s asking me why I went down in the first place. the ambulance and assisted the dependence
Liberty
Bell
in
Pennsylvania.
recently.
victim to the hospital.
«dL r
answer to that. I don’t think there is one.
Heel
dln identify with the Negro fight down there. It did
°r an
enmtKmally and intellectually. And if you’re looking
ar the f^’^Pof'oation of the truth, then I suppose it’s true to
0 (l« with it»
4 I—We’ my family—got in Chatham had a lot
Immigration Obstacles
Decried By David Hahn
Alabama Bulls Beat Up U.S. Nisei
Pregnant Nisei
Shoots man & Self
Alaska Issei Pioneer Exploits Uncovered
September 1963, he drove south in a two-year-old VolksJUNEAU, ALASKA — The memorial, I started inquiring thousands of dollars in credit to
j Or myself what was going on.” He was in Birthose who never paid him.
girh 6 $a^ racists blew up a Sunday school and killed four Alaska Sportsman published here a,bout it. The memorial is for a
He was described as a typical
contains in its June, 1963 issue daughter who is probably buried
a
feature
article
on
“
Frank
Ya
old-time
interior Alaskan sour
.a.,^Tegro restaurant, where he talked with a waiter,
Stuck cemetery in
suda—Pioneer in the Chandalar.” in the Hudson
dough. Since starting his store,
‘as told:
• . to kelp the Negro fight in some way, and
Fort Yukon.”
he had been the mainstay and
riyway.’’
1 in Y°Ur car and drive home, and thanks for coming A story on Frank Yasuda also
Preliminary information indi- practically the banker of the
appeared in the July 16, 1963 is
News- cates Frank Yasuda as a noted Chandalar mining camp, grub
akayama relaxed in his newly-rented Toronto sue of the Fairbanks
trapper’ who founded the village staking miners for prospecting
Miner.
The
Japanese
American
Retold
emem^
'
of Beaver, and was known never
History
Research
Project
obtain
starting their mining opera
any onp
if I were seen coming out of a Negro place ed leads on the fascinating story to turn a person in need away and
tions, and supporting, during the
Council
-m30^ groups, like the Klan or the White Citiwinter
months,
this Issei from the well known from his trading post. But years unproductive
'^oes,”
’ ^Yd probably beat me up and blame it on the of
documentary' film producer, To later, when Japan-born Yasuda those who had been unsuccessful.
ge Fujihira, and from Mrs. was put in a U.S. concentration Most of his profits came from
Charles Tatsuda of Minneapolis. camp, and when he finally re his fur trade with his Eskimo
Tnstead
Didn’t leave
turned to Beaver, someone had friends. He had been hard hit
1 SNCC’s
he drove to Atlanta and joined the staff
In his memo, Fujihara wrote taken over his store. He baked by
new federal fur and game
to
. That Christmas he took time out to
^ London
organized the chapters of SNCC at Toronto “I first noticed the name Yasuda bread for a while but was so en laws which greatly circumscribed
on a pew in a log cabin chapel feebled he finally died in 1958. the activities of alien fur deal
returned to Atlanta and the battle.
in Fort Y'ukon. Since it was a There remained on his books ers.
CCvntlniied on page 1)
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1965
Toronto, Ont.
Five
Awarded
Gold
Pins
At
Discrimination In Chatham Sets
Disci On Civil Rights Marches T.J.C.C.A. Inauguration Meet
g^eo^dStudent^
By ALLAN EDMONDS
By KEN MORI
the oldest Issei pioneers; Mrs. Teruko Ikeda, Tor
(Courtesy Toronto Star)
TORONTO.—Five diligent and devoted workers onto Isseibu Executive; Mr. I. Kawashiri, Toronto
But for Tom Wakayama, a Japanese Canadian who knows what
for
Japanese Canadian causes were presented with Isseibu President; Mr. George Takahashi, former
scrimination feels like because he suffered it in Chatham, Ont.,
ere might not have been a SNCC chapter at the University coveted Gold Pins from the Toronto Japanese Toronto J CCA President; Miss Kay Morita, steady
Toronto to work for Negro rights’ to stage sombre sit-ins locally Canadian Citizens Association at their Inaugura and hard working* Toronto and National JCCA
d massive marches on Ottawa.
tion Banquet held at the Swiss Guild last Satur executive. Presentations were made by the Tor
Wakayama, a 23-year-old former University of Western
day.
onto JCCA Vice-president, Mr. Roy Sato.
itario student, suffered enough in Chatham to “identify” with
The five recipients included three Issei ard
e plight of Negroes in the deep South. It led him to spend over
The banquet, emceed by the President of the
vear° down there with the Student Non-Violent Co-Ordinating two Nisei, They were: Mr. M. Washimoto, one of National JCCA, Mr. Ed Ide, was attended by over
mmiittee (SNCC, pronounced Snick) as its first Oriental free■ 100 people representing various
m fighter.
ethnic and governmental groups.
Shortly after his first stay in the South, Wakayama returned
। set up Friends for SNCC chapter’ on his home campus; in London,
Mr. George Imai, President of
nt., then came to Toronto around Christmas, 1963 to set up a
the Toronto JCCA, spoke on the
•anch here.
growth and advancement of Ja
Initially a fund-raising organization, the U. of T. branch that
panese Canadian citizens. Ho also
e organized was rejuvenated last fall when Diane Burrows, a
stressed the need for a constant
TORONTO. — A Liberal mem- 1 mature enough to accept people vigilance and the great deal of
[ississippi veteran from Belleville, Ont., returned to Canada as
le Canadian organizer for SNCC. So, this month when Selma her of Parliament declared last from all over the world in large work still to be performed.
appened, the local group was ready to be transformed into an week that Canada has no im- numbers ?”
•Speaking in Japanese, Mr. I.
ction committee to stage sit-ins. .
migration
policy
and
that
gov
Kawashiri
— President of the
He said pressure against a
The shame of Selma, Alabama, and the new voting legislation
Toronto
Isseibu
— expressed his
ernment
officials
work
to
keep
; has sparked may be the beginning of the end of white resistance
more liberal immigration policy
pleasure
in
seeing
the many eth
) integration in the Southern states.
people out of the country rather are fear on the past of unions
nic
groups
attending
this meet
But if so, it is also the end of a long and often bloody road than bring them in.
that
newcomers
will
take
jobs,
and
stated
that
all
groups
should
hough dozens of towns like Selma where campaigns to get Negro
latent discrimination in Can- join hands in aid of each other
David Hahn, MP for Torontoders registered met with bitter, violent resistance.
And Tom Wakayama, whose looks are. as Oriental as his Broadview, also told an audience ada against foreigners and fear in their desire to become full and
larents’ origins, trod the road for the year or more he worked of about 60 persons at Marino by the Government of the econ good Canadian citizens.
.or SNCC in Mississippi, Alabama and. Georgia as one of the Catering Hall, College street in omic consequences of entrance
The guest speaker of the
Toronto, that the key question
earn which ran the registration campaigns throughout 1964.
about immigration is.* “Is the of unskilled workers combined evening, Mrs. Gertrude Laing of
Trod it warily
Calgary — only woman on the
Canadian population ready and with unemployment.
He trod it warily, often posing for protection as a Canadian
Royal Commission on Bilingual
newsman. He was chased out of towns by gun-toting whites outism and Biculturalism — was inaged by outsiders who stirred their' once resigned and docile
troduced by Toronto JCCA Viceniggers” to rebellion.
president,
Rits Inouye.
And when his activities went undetected, he found the whites
MONTGOMERY, Ala.—A 21- California was one of four civil
ccepted him as an equal and expected him to join them in deMrs. Laing spoke of the work
lance of the common danger—integration of their society with year-old American Nisei, Steven right demonstrators injured re of her commission and revealed
nt of Negroes.
Kiyoshi Kuromiya of Monrovia, cently when mounted sheriff’s that the Bilingual and Bicultural
, 10? a sense> Tom Wakayama’s fight for Negroes began back
deputies rode into their ranks, Commission’s preliminary report,
when 23,000 Japanese Canadians were evacuated from the
swinging clubs, canes and ropes. which was presented to the gov
y West Coast. His family (he was an infant at the time) were
ernment, was becoming a best
roered to leave their Vancouver home.
He was sent to St. Margaret seller. After experiencing four
The Wakayamas first moved to Cedar Springs, Ont., but in
Hospital in Montgomery, Ala., different springs by travelling
year they shifted to Chatham. There, surrounded by the
where he was being treated for from coast to coast, Mrs. Laing
ostility of Canadians, outraged by the Japanese attack on Pearl
said that the great span and ge
LOS ANGELES, Calif. — A head injuries.
larbour,* they tried to build life anew.
ographical difference of this
,O!I1’S father, who had .owned a firm preparing native Japa- Nisei, Gladys Hitaka Hata, 30country
created many different.
bis
The
elder
Kuromiya
said
■ 'n ^an^ollver> could find work only as a laborer. Tom, year-old former nurses aide, ap
I
problems
to be solved by her
Lt
up ’n Chatham, and went through the city’s school parently shot Charles Hammond, son called home assuring the commission. Later, she answered
32,
over
her
“
pregnancy
’
and
family that “I am all right and many questions presented to her
P
n was there that the spark grew which sent him down to
then committed suicide by shot- was not seriously hurt.”
he b.S. South in 1963.
by the audience. On behalf of
ing herself in the head, police
the JCCA, Mr. Mits Sumiya, exe
reported recently.
,™.
Bad image
The Monrovia High School cutive of both the National and
.
rungs were very rough for us in Chatham,” he says. “The
She was found on the living honor graduate of 1961 is en- Toronto JCCA, offered thanks
Propaganda had taken effect and there were a lot of room floor of her apartment,
rolled at the Univ, of Pennsyl- to Mrs. Laing for her interesting
skre°types, of us Japanese.
authorities declared.
vania, studying architecture. He talk.
,5°rt of Hell. There were the usual names—‘Jap’
Hammond,
shot
by
a
.22
calibre
is a member of the Student
^ inaccurate but as hurtful ‘Chink’—and the oc, Somehow I started feeling ashamed because I was revolver twice in the right chest, Peace Union and the college Samurai Priest Passes
was in critical condition at Gen“T m teast, because I looked different.
NAACP chapter.
TOKYO. — Father Paul Tsu
back from the Southern states just before Christmas. eral Hospital.
J®
1 ^nT think, except I had a lot of debts—from
witness told police that it
Kuromiya recently took part chihashi, 98, a former samurai
‘kared up ™n“S ^^e ^lat—'back here and I wanted to get them was Hammond who said. “The in a sit-in demonstration at In who lived to be one of the oldest
Hata woman shot me.” He called
Hall around the priests in the world, died here
can’t Jv°lle • e?s asking me why I went down in the first place. the ambulance and assisted the dependence
Liberty
Bell
in
Pennsylvania.
recently.
victim to the hospital.
«dL r
answer to that. I don’t think there is one.
Heel
dln identify with the Negro fight down there. It did
°r an
enmtKmally and intellectually. And if you’re looking
ar the f^’^Pof'oation of the truth, then I suppose it’s true to
0 (l« with it»
4 I—We’ my family—got in Chatham had a lot
Immigration Obstacles
Decried By David Hahn
Alabama Bulls Beat Up U.S. Nisei
Pregnant Nisei
Shoots man & Self
Alaska Issei Pioneer Exploits Uncovered
September 1963, he drove south in a two-year-old VolksJUNEAU, ALASKA — The memorial, I started inquiring thousands of dollars in credit to
j Or myself what was going on.” He was in Birthose who never paid him.
girh 6 $a^ racists blew up a Sunday school and killed four Alaska Sportsman published here a,bout it. The memorial is for a
He was described as a typical
contains in its June, 1963 issue daughter who is probably buried
a
feature
article
on
“
Frank
Ya
old-time
interior Alaskan sour
.a.,^Tegro restaurant, where he talked with a waiter,
Stuck cemetery in
suda—Pioneer in the Chandalar.” in the Hudson
dough. Since starting his store,
‘as told:
• . to kelp the Negro fight in some way, and
Fort Yukon.”
he had been the mainstay and
riyway.’’
1 in Y°Ur car and drive home, and thanks for coming A story on Frank Yasuda also
Preliminary information indi- practically the banker of the
appeared in the July 16, 1963 is
News- cates Frank Yasuda as a noted Chandalar mining camp, grub
akayama relaxed in his newly-rented Toronto sue of the Fairbanks
trapper’ who founded the village staking miners for prospecting
Miner.
The
Japanese
American
Retold
emem^
'
of Beaver, and was known never
History
Research
Project
obtain
starting their mining opera
any onp
if I were seen coming out of a Negro place ed leads on the fascinating story to turn a person in need away and
tions, and supporting, during the
Council
-m30^ groups, like the Klan or the White Citiwinter
months,
this Issei from the well known from his trading post. But years unproductive
'^oes,”
’ ^Yd probably beat me up and blame it on the of
documentary' film producer, To later, when Japan-born Yasuda those who had been unsuccessful.
ge Fujihira, and from Mrs. was put in a U.S. concentration Most of his profits came from
Charles Tatsuda of Minneapolis. camp, and when he finally re his fur trade with his Eskimo
Tnstead
Didn’t leave
turned to Beaver, someone had friends. He had been hard hit
1 SNCC’s
he drove to Atlanta and joined the staff
In his memo, Fujihara wrote taken over his store. He baked by
new federal fur and game
to
. That Christmas he took time out to
^ London
organized the chapters of SNCC at Toronto “I first noticed the name Yasuda bread for a while but was so en laws which greatly circumscribed
on a pew in a log cabin chapel feebled he finally died in 1958. the activities of alien fur deal
returned to Atlanta and the battle.
in Fort Y'ukon. Since it was a There remained on his books ers.
CCvntlniied on page 1)
Page 2
N E W
WJ £
b
li
P^ 0
£
4
ix It
5
0
0
*f£
»
®?
IX
M±
6
9 It
w
co
U
tK 0
JH ii
IX
!r
&
(X
It
It
i^
A
It
Hl ^ $ (
® 3
w nA
9
V'
Xx •5
5
in
i; ii
610
<ra
51
^0
b
9
6
0
0 ®
^ 0
o |§ ^^ •Xi
#7 A FC
It » Hi
{^ ~*-
9 1
tj
FH
3
IX 1
5 6
0 C^ ^
7
M
O
IX
A
IX ;
s # Fl \ § M M ^h ft ®t in i g ^< AHA
~ -UIS st △ ^ $
§|J _ g(
XT
0
^#M^ ^MHORI
I O^
IE I
A7
Ill
i
&
(X
£5
It
0
?ifc
L
Th
#
Th
ft
o
g:® ih A ffl IWKO
<5
iTr
6
It
3
A
6
6
IC
w
7K
•H-
(X
3
o
i'.
A
b
6
IX*
Ft
2
O
li
-/hl® ^/b^-^|
£15 W ± ®5 -f ffl^f TO
®
IX
-0
l(& V'
i»
os
It
tE 'h oi M # ^ ^ △
1ft ? #
£
£ il
itffflu iw#- 7? 1 ^r
# a ra ft
IX
'9
0 IX
to
S&55-t®®fc +
^It^^^^^9
in ^
£b * >
£15 ^
^ ^ ^ A UI + uU ^
^ * »s *
^ $?
^
$ ^'
^A
<0^
oam
^#O#
i
A^^
_
g BI ffi< ft B ^ A
®i«
85 «
^sg® wk ib f ea
« sis
Jr Kf M
△i
X b
^ ra b
b
*1
HO. 6-2041
HO. 6-7962
b 0 6^0
B & WB ^
^#t^^O.
A 3C R
^ ^A ®^ S5
fP^Jl|>i|
*H
4
3
^ JH
942 Pape Av
WJ £
b
li
P^ 0
£
4
ix It
5
0
0
*f£
»
®?
IX
M±
6
9 It
w
co
U
tK 0
JH ii
IX
!r
&
(X
It
It
i^
A
It
Hl ^ $ (
® 3
w nA
9
V'
Xx •5
5
in
i; ii
610
<ra
51
^0
b
9
6
0
0 ®
^ 0
o |§ ^^ •Xi
#7 A FC
It » Hi
{^ ~*-
9 1
tj
FH
3
IX 1
5 6
0 C^ ^
7
M
O
IX
A
IX ;
s # Fl \ § M M ^h ft ®t in i g ^< AHA
~ -UIS st △ ^ $
§|J _ g(
XT
0
^#M^ ^MHORI
I O^
IE I
A7
Ill
i
&
(X
£5
It
0
?ifc
L
Th
#
Th
ft
o
g:® ih A ffl IWKO
<5
iTr
6
It
3
A
6
6
IC
w
7K
•H-
(X
3
o
i'.
A
b
6
IX*
Ft
2
O
li
-/hl® ^/b^-^|
£15 W ± ®5 -f ffl^f TO
®
IX
-0
l(& V'
i»
os
It
tE 'h oi M # ^ ^ △
1ft ? #
£
£ il
itffflu iw#- 7? 1 ^r
# a ra ft
IX
'9
0 IX
to
S&55-t®®fc +
^It^^^^^9
in ^
£b * >
£15 ^
^ ^ ^ A UI + uU ^
^ * »s *
^ $?
^
$ ^'
^A
<0^
oam
^#O#
i
A^^
_
g BI ffi< ft B ^ A
®i«
85 «
^sg® wk ib f ea
« sis
Jr Kf M
△i
X b
^ ra b
b
*1
HO. 6-2041
HO. 6-7962
b 0 6^0
B & WB ^
^#t^^O.
A 3C R
^ ^A ®^ S5
fP^Jl|>i|
*H
4
3
^ JH
942 Pape Av
Page 3
>4, 1965
Page 3
ft5
IE
IX
IX
IX IX
TZ
n
E
dS
3
la
0
0
IX
6
IX
IX
V
ft’
&
Ze
ft>
it
5
n $
6
0
d
£
ft>
It
Ze
s’
IX
ft
'X £
Ze
IX'
L
L
/M
T
ft'
IX
IX 5
3
n
3
8
5
iZ
IX
IX
*E
ft'
IX
•n
w
0
5
IX 5
ft'
gEXTRA'bFANCY S
M
B
wwty
3
V'
y ft' ? X-
I.
If
Ze
V''
o
-\uV
5
ft'
ch
If
3
0
ft'
I£MHS^WS,'Ml!^
l^ED’.KQDA^
‘4J
•^BSi.N ET^VEiGHT^;-^
^K^iWw^X^. J ^
t£
T£
IC
ft’
P^
0
ft'
ft’
ft'
1
1& E
o
T
I' 11
w
^
Ip w X
$
Zc
ft' It 5
E tp E
X n ?1
1
o o
ft'
ft'
ft'
zx
£ 0 ^ X>
V' ^ 51 n u l
X E 5 IX
X
$O X ^ lc
5
IC
6
n
E
n
6
IX'
XL ^l
R
I XI
a
bs
Th
it.Z
tA&
0 T tHi 3 IX
UI
co
w
*s
I?
6
0
oo
o
#0^5
HU
03
2 h w
5
tr>
IC
dto
^ ck?
nn
co r
Continental Family Coop
460 Dundas St, W, Toronto
EM. 6-5589 — EM. 6-5711
rc
5
AJIHO-mOTO
IX
>
s
i
H
s§
a
3
• S3
co i
2
I »
w M
«^ r w
Page 3
ft5
IE
IX
IX
IX IX
TZ
n
E
dS
3
la
0
0
IX
6
IX
IX
V
ft’
&
Ze
ft>
it
5
n $
6
0
d
£
ft>
It
Ze
s’
IX
ft
'X £
Ze
IX'
L
L
/M
T
ft'
IX
IX 5
3
n
3
8
5
iZ
IX
IX
*E
ft'
IX
•n
w
0
5
IX 5
ft'
gEXTRA'bFANCY S
M
B
wwty
3
V'
y ft' ? X-
I.
If
Ze
V''
o
-\uV
5
ft'
ch
If
3
0
ft'
I£MHS^WS,'Ml!^
l^ED’.KQDA^
‘4J
•^BSi.N ET^VEiGHT^;-^
^K^iWw^X^. J ^
t£
T£
IC
ft’
P^
0
ft'
ft’
ft'
1
1& E
o
T
I' 11
w
^
Ip w X
$
Zc
ft' It 5
E tp E
X n ?1
1
o o
ft'
ft'
ft'
zx
£ 0 ^ X>
V' ^ 51 n u l
X E 5 IX
X
$O X ^ lc
5
IC
6
n
E
n
6
IX'
XL ^l
R
I XI
a
bs
Th
it.Z
tA&
0 T tHi 3 IX
UI
co
w
*s
I?
6
0
oo
o
#0^5
HU
03
2 h w
5
tr>
IC
dto
^ ck?
nn
co r
Continental Family Coop
460 Dundas St, W, Toronto
EM. 6-5589 — EM. 6-5711
rc
5
AJIHO-mOTO
IX
>
s
i
H
s§
a
3
• S3
co i
2
I »
w M
«^ r w
Page 4
NEW
2
5
jn
t IC
tc
in
IX
IX
=?B
rut?
3
t*
in
3
0
tx
w
tc
3
3
$]
3
5
0
IX
IC
d*
PH
JU
3
IX
3
IX
IX
a
IC
in
3
£
a
6
IV M ^ it
a
IX
a
a
(X
IX
IC
3
0
PR
^+o
A o
3
(X
W
V'
tK
5
0
IX
it
5
3
o»
tK
IX
It
IC
IX
5
J
IX
K
IX
i)>
IC
iw
&
3
£5
in
0 Mi
K O
o
d>
i
IC
ft
IX
2
IC
it
IX
fir F
it
PJ
it
IX
o
IC ^ li
zK
3 {Ul
3
IX IX
0
fP
SH
^+1
KAI
zK
fill
IX
d»
IX
4t
it
£
IC
3
IX IX
IX
it
3 6
^ t
W
it
V'
&
IX
©
d>
»>
i:
UJ
InJ
in
3
3
?
tc
3
S3
(X
i»
B
3
^f ^ ~
IC
3
<b M t
a
® o c
IX
a
/ cn
©“
3
Aft
& 0«
#n
£. # i
iX
5
IC
t 1'EIXJS
" nm
a a
U
L
aCQ
nn
< 0K
it
*#
IX
a
»
JU
o5 ms
03
CH
to® E
* EG
£ Ms
2
5
jn
t IC
tc
in
IX
IX
=?B
rut?
3
t*
in
3
0
tx
w
tc
3
3
$]
3
5
0
IX
IC
d*
PH
JU
3
IX
3
IX
IX
a
IC
in
3
£
a
6
IV M ^ it
a
IX
a
a
(X
IX
IC
3
0
PR
^+o
A o
3
(X
W
V'
tK
5
0
IX
it
5
3
o»
tK
IX
It
IC
IX
5
J
IX
K
IX
i)>
IC
iw
&
3
£5
in
0 Mi
K O
o
d>
i
IC
ft
IX
2
IC
it
IX
fir F
it
PJ
it
IX
o
IC ^ li
zK
3 {Ul
3
IX IX
0
fP
SH
^+1
KAI
zK
fill
IX
d»
IX
4t
it
£
IC
3
IX IX
IX
it
3 6
^ t
W
it
V'
&
IX
©
d>
»>
i:
UJ
InJ
in
3
3
?
tc
3
S3
(X
i»
B
3
^f ^ ~
IC
3
<b M t
a
® o c
IX
a
/ cn
©“
3
Aft
& 0«
#n
£. # i
iX
5
IC
t 1'EIXJS
" nm
a a
U
L
aCQ
nn
< 0K
it
*#
IX
a
»
JU
o5 ms
03
CH
to® E
* EG
£ Ms
Page 5
^^aday. March 24,19 6a
NEW
Page
3 ^
i X
0
t
5! 0 ip IX
4t
It
BB
©
IX
0
£
5
IX
t
o
f?
0
B
IC
M
i>
W
®
t
0
T
IX
7
3
6
ic
IX $
3
3
©
n T
IX
3
o
^
0
4J
a
0
3
£
IX
<
i
m
■c
IC i 0
IX
h
3
tv A
3d* 0 Jt^
^
^
IC
1
(X
^
0
3
UHlIIIil
p
7
7
fill
5^
0
i
IX
4K
I#
IX
i*
7
o
PH
It
5
Z>>
IC
zp Bij
ic
11
i
IX IX
IC
3
6
'nJ
7?
ic
Bi]
5
IX
£U
7
s
V'
V'
5
2.
It
7 I
IX
IJ 7
1
IC
5 £
IC
T Ip
6
IX
©
(X
&
K
0
n
6
XIII
»>
i-
a
Z2 V'
^ c
It X
i’
Ip
T
7
IC
tz
7
3
z? ^
° '7
b
IC
^
3
6 Zp h
o
7k
Tn
0
w
3
®
IC
®I
r
X
AS
7
Ip
fl 7c
6
6
8
IX tv
$ 3
t1 0 o 0
y
<p
7c
b 1
0
IC
129 1Y
0 Jr
3
^ t
tz
^L
F
4 & n
09
Zp fz 3
IX
IX
z
'7c
6
3
3 IX
X
IX
£
v> 7
X 7 IC
7 t ?
IC F
g £ *
^’ IX
IX
IC
«Z
0
IC
X
6
o
2.
7c
p
6 IX
o
Bb
JO*
e
IX
ic
IX
0
£7 IX
L
IC
IX
Zp
ic
Zp
ic
0
c
IX
K
6
3 K
^x
IX
55
©
J
7c
0
i)
V' d*
* «
6 IC
0
ft
IX
&.
IC
&
6
;d* IX
0
6
zp
IX
&
IX
$
V'
o
(X
7
IX
o IX
3
o
K
I'
IX
i
i
0
IX
IC.
5
Zp
I'
0
IC
IC
IC
£
IX
72
IX
Zp
o
3
IX
6
3
zic
IW
b
6
3
V*
7c
IX
IC
^^SABKft#
J tRenijfi
8 ^Ifttfi®#
°
3 S & JU-tfcn PJ
WM A
ic if i
•^ o w wft
i4?ti®iT«
#f ^ r
»0 twft#wm
ic
f
IX o
n
0
sS
^f
IX
1# 6
X'
-?t
5 0 'V
£> % 1/
O 4
^1 •
->*
7
1
7
F
1
F
A
IC 72 ft
o
M
3
itS
f
U IX
0 §
tP HJ
^ i»
9
Zp
®
$«J
53
0
1 JR w
3 Va
IZ ^ 3
o
tz
0
F
?
^
“C
IS
IS
z
i
L IC
IC
Sts
0
1
M l> F
3 L 3 ?
h
It ?
IX
m
0
0
7<
0
IS
5
#
^
t.
T
J®
h
£ 7p
5f A £> Jis
ip
SO
CT)
ic
46
riK^
w
“
<
E
<
0
3
P ■'
•
692 No. 3 Road,
Richmond, B. C.
Phone CR. 8-9585
CR. 8-9o86
^g T t# 4 L
■i^Zl^E ic T
X t
6 S(
S i
,$?fi>- RK
AS,W?
4««S J
SIu « ■ i CO
L
«2HS^
l
x
u
£ ^
»
<
i®
BAMBOO GROVE
Fr
to
b
95
[rq SS
H-7^
0
^
IC
it®
IX
o
t 4
fill E i|l| ^
HP
3
^t 6
*1
Ip
NEW
Page
3 ^
i X
0
t
5! 0 ip IX
4t
It
BB
©
IX
0
£
5
IX
t
o
f?
0
B
IC
M
i>
W
®
t
0
T
IX
7
3
6
ic
IX $
3
3
©
n T
IX
3
o
^
0
4J
a
0
3
£
IX
<
i
m
■c
IC i 0
IX
h
3
tv A
3d* 0 Jt^
^
^
IC
1
(X
^
0
3
UHlIIIil
p
7
7
fill
5^
0
i
IX
4K
I#
IX
i*
7
o
PH
It
5
Z>>
IC
zp Bij
ic
11
i
IX IX
IC
3
6
'nJ
7?
ic
Bi]
5
IX
£U
7
s
V'
V'
5
2.
It
7 I
IX
IJ 7
1
IC
5 £
IC
T Ip
6
IX
©
(X
&
K
0
n
6
XIII
»>
i-
a
Z2 V'
^ c
It X
i’
Ip
T
7
IC
tz
7
3
z? ^
° '7
b
IC
^
3
6 Zp h
o
7k
Tn
0
w
3
®
IC
®I
r
X
AS
7
Ip
fl 7c
6
6
8
IX tv
$ 3
t1 0 o 0
y
<p
7c
b 1
0
IC
129 1Y
0 Jr
3
^ t
tz
^L
F
4 & n
09
Zp fz 3
IX
IX
z
'7c
6
3
3 IX
X
IX
£
v> 7
X 7 IC
7 t ?
IC F
g £ *
^’ IX
IX
IC
«Z
0
IC
X
6
o
2.
7c
p
6 IX
o
Bb
JO*
e
IX
ic
IX
0
£7 IX
L
IC
IX
Zp
ic
Zp
ic
0
c
IX
K
6
3 K
^x
IX
55
©
J
7c
0
i)
V' d*
* «
6 IC
0
ft
IX
&.
IC
&
6
;d* IX
0
6
zp
IX
&
IX
$
V'
o
(X
7
IX
o IX
3
o
K
I'
IX
i
i
0
IX
IC.
5
Zp
I'
0
IC
IC
IC
£
IX
72
IX
Zp
o
3
IX
6
3
zic
IW
b
6
3
V*
7c
IX
IC
^^SABKft#
J tRenijfi
8 ^Ifttfi®#
°
3 S & JU-tfcn PJ
WM A
ic if i
•^ o w wft
i4?ti®iT«
#f ^ r
»0 twft#wm
ic
f
IX o
n
0
sS
^f
IX
1# 6
X'
-?t
5 0 'V
£> % 1/
O 4
^1 •
->*
7
1
7
F
1
F
A
IC 72 ft
o
M
3
itS
f
U IX
0 §
tP HJ
^ i»
9
Zp
®
$«J
53
0
1 JR w
3 Va
IZ ^ 3
o
tz
0
F
?
^
“C
IS
IS
z
i
L IC
IC
Sts
0
1
M l> F
3 L 3 ?
h
It ?
IX
m
0
0
7<
0
IS
5
#
^
t.
T
J®
h
£ 7p
5f A £> Jis
ip
SO
CT)
ic
46
riK^
w
“
<
E
<
0
3
P ■'
•
692 No. 3 Road,
Richmond, B. C.
Phone CR. 8-9585
CR. 8-9o86
^g T t# 4 L
■i^Zl^E ic T
X t
6 S(
S i
,$?fi>- RK
AS,W?
4««S J
SIu « ■ i CO
L
«2HS^
l
x
u
£ ^
»
<
i®
BAMBOO GROVE
Fr
to
b
95
[rq SS
H-7^
0
^
IC
it®
IX
o
t 4
fill E i|l| ^
HP
3
^t 6
*1
Ip
Page 6
TH E
G
i
IX
IX
0
SB
IX
0
IX
IX
IX
3
5 3
It
IX
B
IX
tc
^U 3S
0
K
0
it
5
TO
it
a sb
i'
the
NEW CANADIAN
479 Queen St. W.,
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
Phone EM. 6-5005
5
IX (X
0
IX
tp
3 fl
IX
3
IX
ii
0
0
£0
IX
6
IX
it
5
Zb6
(X
it
£
it
it
0
£J
It-
6
£
Xo
SB IX'
v>
3
B
6
£'
0
CD
5
it
PH
M E #>
It
it
IX
#>
^J
i)>
SjD
we?
3
IX
itX
IX
»>
»>
6
0
§
I'
life 0
1^
TO
»»
IX
/|J
5
s
It
IX
2
IX
It
5
3
^
w
it
IX
^
it
ip
£
6 0
6
6
5
IX
u
IX
IX
It
BO
It
cb
it
0
3
d»
it
IX
3*7
3
t
IX
V>
3
IX
I'
b
it
£*
It
t
5?
it
3
(X IX
IX
SU
is
6
t
i>
•5
IX
(X
IX
9
It
5
IX
7
7*
IX
/p
3
IX
V %
0
i
*
3
B
TO
IX
3
it
ft
5
IX'
It
y
IX
it
IX
^
B
IX
it
IX
ip
(X
IX
3
IX' XX
0 4H
rtW
TOR
f
3
d*
° IX & ' IX
3^1
i
5
?t
7
G
i
IX
IX
0
SB
IX
0
IX
IX
IX
3
5 3
It
IX
B
IX
tc
^U 3S
0
K
0
it
5
TO
it
a sb
i'
the
NEW CANADIAN
479 Queen St. W.,
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
Phone EM. 6-5005
5
IX (X
0
IX
tp
3 fl
IX
3
IX
ii
0
0
£0
IX
6
IX
it
5
Zb6
(X
it
£
it
it
0
£J
It-
6
£
Xo
SB IX'
v>
3
B
6
£'
0
CD
5
it
PH
M E #>
It
it
IX
#>
^J
i)>
SjD
we?
3
IX
itX
IX
»>
»>
6
0
§
I'
life 0
1^
TO
»»
IX
/|J
5
s
It
IX
2
IX
It
5
3
^
w
it
IX
^
it
ip
£
6 0
6
6
5
IX
u
IX
IX
It
BO
It
cb
it
0
3
d»
it
IX
3*7
3
t
IX
V>
3
IX
I'
b
it
£*
It
t
5?
it
3
(X IX
IX
SU
is
6
t
i>
•5
IX
(X
IX
9
It
5
IX
7
7*
IX
/p
3
IX
V %
0
i
*
3
B
TO
IX
3
it
ft
5
IX'
It
y
IX
it
IX
^
B
IX
it
IX
ip
(X
IX
3
IX' XX
0 4H
rtW
TOR
f
3
d*
° IX & ' IX
3^1
i
5
?t
7
Page 7
^.^flay, March 24, 1965
Dates and Doings
.OFFICE
s
Fiist Major Dance At J.C. Centre Slated April 10th
TORONTO.—The Japanese
Canadian Cultural Centre will
nr sent, their first major dance since' the New Year on Saturday,
SliOth at the Centre, 123 Wynford Drive in Don Mills, Ont.
8
Cosmopolitan Cuisine
1008 Northam Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO
Bub:
*
T.B.C.
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH )» s^ s..
SUNDAY. MARCH 28, .11965
10:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning .Service
Metnonal Service for . Master Tatsufumi Watanabe
Lichee Garden
(Dinin? Lounge)
Toronto, Canada
118 Elizabeth St.
ERNEST JOMORI
*
When Buying Or Selling Call
Ken Hori
Banquet FaciIities
Suite
403
130 BLOOR ST. W.
► AUTO
‘
•
FIRE
—
TORONTO
—
LIFE
ALL FORMS
OF
INSURANCE
consult
KIYO TAMURA
TORONTO
Bus, 366-5812
Picture Frames
CUSTOM FRAMING
1278 Yongo St. — Phone: 923-6877
(S. ol Woodlawn)
Toronto
Lucien C. Kurata, Q. C
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY -PUBLIC
Office Hours Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO
EM. 6-3323
—
Res: RO. 7-3427
1384V2 Queen W.
Toronto
—
LE. 2-
DANFORTH
SPORTING
GOODS
SKATES, SKIS
AND
SKATE SHARPENING
551 Danforth Ave.,
(naar Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
(Member of Toronto Real Estate Board)
CHINA HOUSE
Proudly Presents For Your Enjoyment
Our New
"Cherry Blossom Room"
With Japanese Motif
BANQUETS AND SOCIALS
- 925 Eglinton Ave. W.
—
Phone RU. 1-9124
Toronto, Ont.
J
Res. Pl. 9-8317 '
Open Thur, and Fri. Until 9 p. m.
K. Hori Real Estate — AM. 1-5194
22 Peterlee Crescent
Islington, Ontario
BElmont 3-3095
Accountant
*
MARCH WIND DOTH BLOW—and there’s nothing like a hot
soup to chase away the chill, sharpen the appetite and warm
the heart.
FISH AND TOFU SOUP
To the katsuo dashi add pieces of white fish fillet and bring
to a quick boil. Turn off heat and add cubes of tofu, simmer long
enough for tofu to heat through. Try not to have the flame too
high or tofu cubes will break to pieces.
Thin slices of onion and carrot will add coloi’ to the soup.
Some like it slightly thickened with cornstarch—about 2 tea
spoons to 6 cups of liquid—after the heat is turned off.
■Squeeze a few drops of lemon over top of each serving—toss
in. a thin piece of rind, the size of your thumbnail, for the gour
met touch.
L™es To Serve You).
ERING SERVICE . “TAKE-OUT”ORDERS
for-your weeing candids
home portraits
and special events
Chartered
*
Phone: 364-3481
WDDTNrBSr^£mOr Private Parties
^TREC®^IONS^ (Large - or Small)
___ DINNER MUSIC’NIGHTLY
Res: LE. 3-6759
924-8153
L°wer flame and continue to simmer for about 25 minutes,
u^d will decrease to half the amount. Let the bags stay in
this liquid so the flavor will saturate into the vegetables thoroughlv.
TORONTO. — The Toronto Buddhist Church is observing a
KONNYAKU NO GOMA MISO NI
[ week-long-Buddha Week commencing on . April 5th through the
pith to commemorate the birth of the Buddha.
(Konnyaku Cooked In Goma and Miso*)
In S'! edients •
The public is invited to two lectures by the Venerable Piyapieces
konnyaku
; dassi of Ceylon, who is now.a fellow: at the World Religion Centre,
/2 cup parched sesame seeds
. harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., on April - 7th and 8th. He 1
cup katsuobushi stock
is scheduled to make other lectures during the day.
2 tbsp, shoyu
The Public is also invited to a .showing of drawings, paint 4 tbsp, miso
ings and other works by Buddhist children in Japan.'This exhibit /2 tsp. red hot pepper (shichimi togarashi) optional
!,. ™m “e Japan National Exhibit, for..Children, sponsored by the
Method:
pishi Hongvanj^ in Kyoto, Japan. Included' in the exhibits are,
Cut konnyaku into 1 inch long pieces. Put in a pan and stir
paintings, calligraphic works and compositions.
over the fire until all moisture has evaporated.
Sprinkle the shoyu over, and continue cooking until the shoyu
Dana ^omen’s organization of . the Buddhist church is
has
penetrated
into the konnyaku and the bottom of the pan seems
sponsoring -an afternoon tea to publicize-the role of .the Buddhist dry.
of
• chan°inp age and is . emphasizing the . importance
In another pan, mix the stock, miso and sesame seeds, Put
2
understanding -atmosphere. The .'Public School
n m A ^ ^ren attending the Buddhist church are extend over the fire and add konnyaku and cook, stirring.
When miso is completely dissolved,, remove from fire and
ed a special invitation to attend.
serve in individual bowls. If you wish, ;sprinkle red pepper over
s
^e Buddhist'-Religious School is holding each.
SeS E KrV-Ce run entirely by children. The Morning
You will be pleased with the flavor of konnyaku that is well
beg5ns at Hr00 A.M. In - the afternoon, the flavored, and the combination of miso, shoyu and goma makes
ice in the Japanese language is rat 2 :00 P.M.
for a delectable dish.
,
Barrister & Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
*
*
»
»
; Tor. Church To Observe Buddha Week April 5-11
2
A. E. McKague, Q.C.
By STELLA ITO
' * The dance, entitled “Spring. Frolic”, hopes to welcome in the
Two Okazu Favorites
fir^ pleasant weather long due inithe Toronto and area. A good band a fi?fa™S”V coup’s of dishes that are sure to become
^ pleasant refreshments are expected for. this event. Further
and °-uestv ThPi d t e >an encore when served to vour friends
details will be forthcoming in this .newspaper.
nA
j re two okazu Biat show you have given a little
Everyone is urged to attend — have a-good time and support dining table. 3Ud time t0 pleasing those who gather around your
the Centre simultaneously. See you there.
’
*
*
J.C. Cultural Centre
VEGETABLES IN ABURA-AGE
*
Ingredients:
6 abura-age
Hamilton-Tor. J.C. Anglers To Hold Meet April 4 2 medium onions
2
TORONTO.—The general meeting of ..the ..Hamilton-Toronto 6 medium carrots
Japanese Canadian Anglers’ Club .will be held on .Sunday, April 1 dried mushrooms, soaked
cup shiratake
4th, 1965 at 2:30 P.M. at the “Nikko Garden”, 460 .'Dundas St. W.,
strips
kampyo
Toronto, Ontario. There will be. movies, reports, elections and Nitsp.
salt
hon Shoku to round out the day. Bring, your .'friends.
cups stock
. One of the major issues at .this meeting is the adoption of 2 tbsp, sugar
a constitution for the club. This has . been .discussed several times 3 tbsp, shoyu
previously and one has finally been: .printed for each member to
tsp. Ajinomoto
read before the meeting
Method:
REMINDER: Opening dates for Rainbow - May 1st to Nov.
CSl!D?a'age
catty corner, so Jr°u Have a triangular
30th; Pickeral— May 8th to .Mar. 31; Bass -'June 26 to Nov. 30th. ba°.- Slice the vegetables , and mushrooms in thin slivers and
j
Limits of catch — Rainbow and Brown’5 (in one day); Brook sprinkle, salt over them lightly. Soak kampvo in water
Dram the vegetables and stuff them in abura-age.’Add shira; or Speckled (Elgin, Middlessex and Norfolk .county) —,5 Jbs. plus
Wlth the pst- Binch the edge of age over the opening
' one fish or 10 fish, whichever lesser..'Elsewhere — 10 lbs. plus one
°
; fish or 15 fish, whichever lesser; Pickerel 6 in one day; Bass and tie kampyo around it.
/
^B®56 stuffed bags in a pan. Add enough soup stock
f C in one day.
’
simmerh<tent^^^^
the bagS’ Add sugar, shoyu, Ajinomoto, and
*
RESIDENCE
1 Ve«ta Drive
HUdsoa 5-136S
EM. 4-1394
KM. 4-13*5
Formal
Rentals
Reserve
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc.
ALNA
Of Toronto
Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE.,
PHONE: 463-8104
Dates and Doings
.OFFICE
s
Fiist Major Dance At J.C. Centre Slated April 10th
TORONTO.—The Japanese
Canadian Cultural Centre will
nr sent, their first major dance since' the New Year on Saturday,
SliOth at the Centre, 123 Wynford Drive in Don Mills, Ont.
8
Cosmopolitan Cuisine
1008 Northam Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO
Bub:
*
T.B.C.
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH )» s^ s..
SUNDAY. MARCH 28, .11965
10:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning .Service
Metnonal Service for . Master Tatsufumi Watanabe
Lichee Garden
(Dinin? Lounge)
Toronto, Canada
118 Elizabeth St.
ERNEST JOMORI
*
When Buying Or Selling Call
Ken Hori
Banquet FaciIities
Suite
403
130 BLOOR ST. W.
► AUTO
‘
•
FIRE
—
TORONTO
—
LIFE
ALL FORMS
OF
INSURANCE
consult
KIYO TAMURA
TORONTO
Bus, 366-5812
Picture Frames
CUSTOM FRAMING
1278 Yongo St. — Phone: 923-6877
(S. ol Woodlawn)
Toronto
Lucien C. Kurata, Q. C
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY -PUBLIC
Office Hours Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO
EM. 6-3323
—
Res: RO. 7-3427
1384V2 Queen W.
Toronto
—
LE. 2-
DANFORTH
SPORTING
GOODS
SKATES, SKIS
AND
SKATE SHARPENING
551 Danforth Ave.,
(naar Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
(Member of Toronto Real Estate Board)
CHINA HOUSE
Proudly Presents For Your Enjoyment
Our New
"Cherry Blossom Room"
With Japanese Motif
BANQUETS AND SOCIALS
- 925 Eglinton Ave. W.
—
Phone RU. 1-9124
Toronto, Ont.
J
Res. Pl. 9-8317 '
Open Thur, and Fri. Until 9 p. m.
K. Hori Real Estate — AM. 1-5194
22 Peterlee Crescent
Islington, Ontario
BElmont 3-3095
Accountant
*
MARCH WIND DOTH BLOW—and there’s nothing like a hot
soup to chase away the chill, sharpen the appetite and warm
the heart.
FISH AND TOFU SOUP
To the katsuo dashi add pieces of white fish fillet and bring
to a quick boil. Turn off heat and add cubes of tofu, simmer long
enough for tofu to heat through. Try not to have the flame too
high or tofu cubes will break to pieces.
Thin slices of onion and carrot will add coloi’ to the soup.
Some like it slightly thickened with cornstarch—about 2 tea
spoons to 6 cups of liquid—after the heat is turned off.
■Squeeze a few drops of lemon over top of each serving—toss
in. a thin piece of rind, the size of your thumbnail, for the gour
met touch.
L™es To Serve You).
ERING SERVICE . “TAKE-OUT”ORDERS
for-your weeing candids
home portraits
and special events
Chartered
*
Phone: 364-3481
WDDTNrBSr^£mOr Private Parties
^TREC®^IONS^ (Large - or Small)
___ DINNER MUSIC’NIGHTLY
Res: LE. 3-6759
924-8153
L°wer flame and continue to simmer for about 25 minutes,
u^d will decrease to half the amount. Let the bags stay in
this liquid so the flavor will saturate into the vegetables thoroughlv.
TORONTO. — The Toronto Buddhist Church is observing a
KONNYAKU NO GOMA MISO NI
[ week-long-Buddha Week commencing on . April 5th through the
pith to commemorate the birth of the Buddha.
(Konnyaku Cooked In Goma and Miso*)
In S'! edients •
The public is invited to two lectures by the Venerable Piyapieces
konnyaku
; dassi of Ceylon, who is now.a fellow: at the World Religion Centre,
/2 cup parched sesame seeds
. harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., on April - 7th and 8th. He 1
cup katsuobushi stock
is scheduled to make other lectures during the day.
2 tbsp, shoyu
The Public is also invited to a .showing of drawings, paint 4 tbsp, miso
ings and other works by Buddhist children in Japan.'This exhibit /2 tsp. red hot pepper (shichimi togarashi) optional
!,. ™m “e Japan National Exhibit, for..Children, sponsored by the
Method:
pishi Hongvanj^ in Kyoto, Japan. Included' in the exhibits are,
Cut konnyaku into 1 inch long pieces. Put in a pan and stir
paintings, calligraphic works and compositions.
over the fire until all moisture has evaporated.
Sprinkle the shoyu over, and continue cooking until the shoyu
Dana ^omen’s organization of . the Buddhist church is
has
penetrated
into the konnyaku and the bottom of the pan seems
sponsoring -an afternoon tea to publicize-the role of .the Buddhist dry.
of
• chan°inp age and is . emphasizing the . importance
In another pan, mix the stock, miso and sesame seeds, Put
2
understanding -atmosphere. The .'Public School
n m A ^ ^ren attending the Buddhist church are extend over the fire and add konnyaku and cook, stirring.
When miso is completely dissolved,, remove from fire and
ed a special invitation to attend.
serve in individual bowls. If you wish, ;sprinkle red pepper over
s
^e Buddhist'-Religious School is holding each.
SeS E KrV-Ce run entirely by children. The Morning
You will be pleased with the flavor of konnyaku that is well
beg5ns at Hr00 A.M. In - the afternoon, the flavored, and the combination of miso, shoyu and goma makes
ice in the Japanese language is rat 2 :00 P.M.
for a delectable dish.
,
Barrister & Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
*
*
»
»
; Tor. Church To Observe Buddha Week April 5-11
2
A. E. McKague, Q.C.
By STELLA ITO
' * The dance, entitled “Spring. Frolic”, hopes to welcome in the
Two Okazu Favorites
fir^ pleasant weather long due inithe Toronto and area. A good band a fi?fa™S”V coup’s of dishes that are sure to become
^ pleasant refreshments are expected for. this event. Further
and °-uestv ThPi d t e >an encore when served to vour friends
details will be forthcoming in this .newspaper.
nA
j re two okazu Biat show you have given a little
Everyone is urged to attend — have a-good time and support dining table. 3Ud time t0 pleasing those who gather around your
the Centre simultaneously. See you there.
’
*
*
J.C. Cultural Centre
VEGETABLES IN ABURA-AGE
*
Ingredients:
6 abura-age
Hamilton-Tor. J.C. Anglers To Hold Meet April 4 2 medium onions
2
TORONTO.—The general meeting of ..the ..Hamilton-Toronto 6 medium carrots
Japanese Canadian Anglers’ Club .will be held on .Sunday, April 1 dried mushrooms, soaked
cup shiratake
4th, 1965 at 2:30 P.M. at the “Nikko Garden”, 460 .'Dundas St. W.,
strips
kampyo
Toronto, Ontario. There will be. movies, reports, elections and Nitsp.
salt
hon Shoku to round out the day. Bring, your .'friends.
cups stock
. One of the major issues at .this meeting is the adoption of 2 tbsp, sugar
a constitution for the club. This has . been .discussed several times 3 tbsp, shoyu
previously and one has finally been: .printed for each member to
tsp. Ajinomoto
read before the meeting
Method:
REMINDER: Opening dates for Rainbow - May 1st to Nov.
CSl!D?a'age
catty corner, so Jr°u Have a triangular
30th; Pickeral— May 8th to .Mar. 31; Bass -'June 26 to Nov. 30th. ba°.- Slice the vegetables , and mushrooms in thin slivers and
j
Limits of catch — Rainbow and Brown’5 (in one day); Brook sprinkle, salt over them lightly. Soak kampvo in water
Dram the vegetables and stuff them in abura-age.’Add shira; or Speckled (Elgin, Middlessex and Norfolk .county) —,5 Jbs. plus
Wlth the pst- Binch the edge of age over the opening
' one fish or 10 fish, whichever lesser..'Elsewhere — 10 lbs. plus one
°
; fish or 15 fish, whichever lesser; Pickerel 6 in one day; Bass and tie kampyo around it.
/
^B®56 stuffed bags in a pan. Add enough soup stock
f C in one day.
’
simmerh<tent^^^^
the bagS’ Add sugar, shoyu, Ajinomoto, and
*
RESIDENCE
1 Ve«ta Drive
HUdsoa 5-136S
EM. 4-1394
KM. 4-13*5
Formal
Rentals
Reserve
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc.
ALNA
Of Toronto
Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE.,
PHONE: 463-8104
Page 8
s
, Page 8
Wednesday, March 24 i-
Third In Series
™E NEWCAffii
IZUMO - Land Of The Gods
Authorised a#
end for payment oi
Post Office Dep^’^
1 T. UMEZUKI, Public V
TSUMURA,
eSV^
went across the road to the house, took off our shoes at
Editor,
KEN
MO^
^® d?°™ay .ai]d Paid a small admission fee to an old lady with Y°4’’ anT a bamboo ceiling that had turned a dark honey color,
Section
Editor
and Ad/^
i
J16,5? house of this kind there was no furniture except
socks
a?d lv?ry sl<in, wearing a dark kimono and white tab- i"
C?V’ofhth?b™^^
tWO ^J0!111^ rooms that form the main lor the low table with a cushion beside it in the centre of one
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
go into
Se‘ Theie F3 alS0 a utlllty wing we did not ro°Ph anu the ceremonial alcove with a kakemono, or hanging
?r thi^v
straw tatami mats, and scroll,. and _a vase of flowers. It was rather shabby and verv
Toronto 2-B. 0^
T
°ld^^ in a guide’s singsong, gave her spiel that
sliok OtW l
in °i °ne open space by hiding back the M
0^
without Toshi’s translation. Here was the table
EMpire 6-5005
wa™
°U er Walls’ were also slid back in this V^e P r^TT had written his legends and tales of Izumo, Land
thehouse
° glVe a Viem Of the tiny gardens that surround
the house. The rooms were well proportioned — good, aged wood- 0± the Gr°ds- Here was the little garden with a rock-work pool
vdiere the snake and the frog had lived, which Lafcadio had told
about m the chapter called “In the Japanese Garden”. ._. . No she
Nisei Marcher . . .
the guide, had not been one of Hearn’s pupils; only one of his
(Cont. From Page I)
pupils was still alive, a lady now nearly ninety years mid.
G°V\ Georg-6 Wallace, of Alabama came to town and
Male Help Want^
^
we went next door to’the Lafcadio Hearn
SNCC organized a demonstration. Tom Wakayama was cariwing
GARDEN helne^
121 ^^'^ concrete Japanese-Bauhaus style 241-S11S. Mr. aSutlSi!5>’
a placard. A middle-aged white approached him and said:
g
and built-in 1934., There are glass, cases with Hearn’s collection
_ -I’m very disappointed in yoi/, boy. I was out in Korea
of long-stemmed Japanese pipes, the trumpet shell he used to GENERAL gardener beloer
iXX'ta die back>‘° heIl> y“U folkS- Tha, y” ““ "’ l,m
^e( Phone CH. 1-4103,' M- ^7
a ^ttie pocket comb with a few of (Toronto).
off, ana some. neatly-folded, shabby clothes:
lb acks wd summer white drill. There is a brass oil lamp oS D^r'N ^eb^^
Hearn designed and had speciallyqHey;
you a Hawaiian?” Said Wakayama: “No, I’m Japa- made
made
in
Tokyo
after
he
moved
?r thoHa^
“Hell< 1 thought we got rid of all you basta?ds framed photographs and letters,there from Matsue. There are TRUCK driver ^F^TpwT
, and a _ lifesize oil portrait —
11‘ ULU TdoU Wal.
head of Hearn showing the right-hand side of his face with its Heike at GA. 1-5040 (Toronto)? 1
fPnrAt J XY^Tr21 was part typist’ part janitor,-part chauf- horrendous, bulgin.
for grocery store
p
" ,eyes- One photograph shows the students MAN
S’
public relations man for SNCC. He was supposed to be
RU. 7-4041, Nigh/BA. 2 -1370 (U°k
r
Middle School. The boys, among whom are
t0 ^ hlm alive- Mostly’ though, it worked inobably the individuals Lafcadio wrote about in “Glimpses,” wear
out to
every two weeks.
Help Wanted
U V T5® ^ Ernies and stand ram-rod behind, the seated row
Eh and the other SNCC workers went hungry, slept in the p£teaihT' Hearn and his colleagues all have on frock coats and OFFICE clerk required imaedijl-'
oHice dormitory, cadged meals from Negro restaurant owners.
each teachei- holds a glossy top hat on his knee. . . . In a little Must have driver's license Mr B=Juk
,.Ee became a Photographer for Student Voice, SNCC’s main sine room of the Museum there are shelves containing some of phone ME. 3-2180 (Toronto). ‘ ’“'
publication.
sales d^j^TT
.^----scripts, and various collections and editions of his EFFICIENT
RulevHle deep m the Delta country of Mississippi, a town books in English, Japanese, French and German. The place is M^v11 wanjed- Japan Camera^
294 Yonge Street, 362-1555 (Toroniol.;
m°St y Negro ^ud sharply segregated, he went to buv evocative and sad, as was Hearn’s life.
cigaiettes m a grocery store. A wrinkled Chinese woman, the
When we came out of the Museum we rang up for a taxi at
Domestic Help Wanted
owner’s wife, approached 'him.
'
^e
oraiige
pop
place,
and
into
town
to
a
restaurant
where
the
She said: “How y’all doin’? Can I help y’all?”
WOMEN or couple for general Hjb
^°^lst ?urea^ bad ordered lunch for us. It was a nice old house work.
Husband employed elsewhst
. k 1 was,’ recalls Wakayama, “quite shattering. I was all ready
, ei riVerJan7 Wlth Pnvate r?°ms each with a balcony looking Separate quarters. Liberal free tiV
Deltr^v^
English then out conies this broad ™1J
SWlk>i clear water. I sat on the balcony and' had delicious Phone 783-0506 (Toronto).
OR
Soanese beer, the lunch of pickled, raw and grilled fish, and
Rooms To Let
Vf6ntab iS- aid °ut m. bttle dishes bn the table nearby. Some
No-man’s land
.• S'
Eimgs taste fairly nasty at Hirst, but they graduallv en- FURNISHED room and kitchen. Sj
ChinlWaS hl
D®]t^ country that Wakayama discovered the
Wish
two. Bloor, and Landsdowne. PhNegops
sta??sJ1- a n°’m1au’s Iand between whites and aear themselves. Before I left Matsue, where one got only Japa- LE.
6-3479 (Toronto).
i
'ibeCan/e leally t'ond of thin-sliced raw fish eaten
N egoes. He asked an old Chinese, a leader among his people whv S'SS e m
st on
they did not. help either Negroes or whites.
P P e’ vny dipMta soy s“°°
<>f- large, bland white radish) and illllllliniHlIIIIHflllllillllllHIlIlira
t2i
"F-Ou see’ these Negro people, they don’t know
vhere they come from. These whites, they don’t know either__
For
Best
Results
Clev
seem to thrive on their
SSi i
- People all look healthy and vital and show almost- no
except they i-e el bit whiter then the Negroes*.
e s
m2• tnAe11’ E^es until very old age. And most of them are Use New Canadian Ads
“But me, I know where I come from.”
In Philadelphia, Mississippi, just after three civil rights work- distinguished by the smooth freshness of their ivory skins One iiiinHiinBHniiHinnniiiuifiiiiiiiiii
CUSS
rjLveiC ml7d'leC
tleJe lasfc sPring, he posed as a Canadian almost never sees a person who is overweight. They seem rarely
ee pl
bpead or Pastries, a small, bowl of rice supplying their
nn?4n q^n to^
a V° e1' r^istration campaign like the present
cue in oeima.
tWC wP^^^ usually is fresh fruit; the apples amL strawberries
GOLF
The other, bona fide, cameramen and reporters had all leftFt observed everywhere- being perfectly delicious. A regi11 °f JaPauese food makes one’s digestion a pleasure to live with.
there; was therefore, no safety in numbers. A week, earlier another
and
m ’ Photographer, a Negro, had been hauled from his car by
at S6 Everside restaurant we-took a car to
no
J1 ^^
on the outskirts of the town. This place is the
a policeman, then beaten.
*
Fishing Tackle
of i nine generations of the Matsudaira family,
o
Wakajama asked Sheriff Rainey, subsequently arrested for S 8’
ONI
OSCAR'S
complicity in the murder of the three civil rights workers, for vho weie the feudal lords, or daimyos, of this part of the country.
s Pn
kept, up, I understand, by members of the Matsudaira
permission to shoot pictures from inside the courthouse
1500 Dundas (at Dufferin)—LE. 2-4267
ered
Tamily. It lies m a grove of magnificent trees, cryptomeria, pine,
Haid Rainey: “No. Get out of town—quick.”
'
Japan
Wakayama then drove past the demonstrating Negroes outside cypress, on a gentle hillside. There are hundreds of mossy skne •
^^hoase, shooting pictures through the window. Rainev and
aud^ scores' of separate burial plots with inscribed
old
u
It is a good policy to
other whites spotted him.
”
tS’ but ?at uiakes the place really notable are the hand’assn
hare the RIGHT POLICY
“I knew damn well I was going to get it if I stayed around
that form the entrances to the
Consult
any longer, so I just kept on driving out of town. That’s Neshoba
e agatFayS care paviIions’ reallV, with steepfs
that
have
been
formed
from
layers
and
layers
of
county, and that's no place to even say a good word for Negroes.
tends
WALES and DUNCAN
™
dr:OVC’
fast' But before I got out of the county the ^E^fbrown cypress bark, and with eaves and lintels and cornices
t alsi
INSURANCE AGENTS
wood that is carved in high relief into superb designs
car filled wit h smoke. I thought at first, it was a bomb—von.know'
n aid
m Neshoba county you get a prickly feeling if you’re a civil rights beautiful ’ pe°1Ues’ animals and birds. They are marvelously
454 Yonge Street, Toronto
orker,
,?a'^
The carved gateways, Gesshoji is famous for its great
Phone WA. 1-3171
j
vJ stopped to let the smoke cleai'—it must have been oil
inis in
€
ag? there was an evh spirit in Izumo which took
trouble—and got more frightened by the second. If my car had
ion J;
serious need of repair, L wouldn’t be able to get awav. Then, when the foim of a huge ghost turtle that came out of its cave at nhdit
■> Trm
5a\age ^e farms and villages. Finally, the Matsudaira lord
the car was clear of smoke, I drove like Hell.
‘
. read
conceived the idea of exorcising the evil spirit.
th® horror of Mississippi. It’s so unpredictable. Anyin no'
Sp in i£° m£™V”
Ca”
at y0U ancl yOU '*ht not Wa^ - t the place at Gesshoji, which he had chosen for his tomb, he set
e boi
fhnw -ornwus titanic, ^ image of a turtle, caived with
ed wit
™ uf7e™Sm and ^’otesquerie at which the bld Japanese
FF,
?ed; Th® creEiture is the size of a large automobile,
brute
£
ri
d
outraged^
head
with
spiteful
eyes
thrust
forth
from
m
bon
mVX^? fa? "'°nU
trouble? But they
‘ He
outraged fury. But it is'impotent to do further evil
dy d&
because it is pinioned to the earth by a monolithic, square-sided
was “^rchata SS m^T’ “^
nder.
5°^ C?lulVn? SIX or seven feet high, wliich rises up from the centre
of the turtle’s carapace.
e bo
Heat had cooled
(To Be Continued)
Pon o
r Fukayama went to the scene to photograph for SNCC Five __ , _______ ______
L a?“'S .^ wh6 k“ Wakayama bv si J" spotted him
war
classified
u
the greatest
gift of all
Mentally III Girl
hot w^S^X ^ ^t of another iMg
Caged For 7 Years
.Months of working for SNCC had left Tom Wakavama with
SUSONOMACHI, Japan. —-A
His Volkswagen needed repairs which neither
fanner
kept his mentally ill
he noi SNCC could comfortably afford. At home here in Ontario
daughter locked in a cage for
there were debts, obligations to be met.
seven years until her death re
So he came back.
cently,
police said.
But he still identifies with the Negro fight. Recently he acted
bv Univer'itt
7ho
the passive demonstrations
/The cage was 5 feet, 3 inches
m
Of Toronto students who have been squatting out high and 5 feet, 10 inches square.
side the U.S. consulate on University Avenue. He also ^et^uu a
said Jusaburo Ichikawa,
of SNCC. the local organization bePin| 64,Police
caged his daughter 'because
familial with the headquarters operation at Atlanta
she was considered a hopeless
And he’s being called on to help give orientation lectures on mental case. She was 34 when
non-violence techniques to those Canadians planning to join in the she died.
demonstrations down South.
o
j
w
The woman had been admitted
.These -activities have temporarily interrupted his attempts to
earlier
to two public mental in
start a new life as a freelance photographer.
stitutions.
She was discharged
‘Perhaps 111 go back. ’ he says. ‘T will if I can. But while I
in
1956
because
doctoi-s decided
v.as there I hoped I helped, and in a strange way it helped me.
she
could
not
be
The
. . I feel lie spent a year of my life doing somethin0' worth farmer told police he cured.
lacked the
while—and if I did have a chip on my shoulder about being Japa money to put his daughter in a
nese before I went south, it’s gone now,”
private institution.
et.
Extraordinary Opportunity For Girl :
Wanted for permanent position as secretary in law office. Goos
shorthand and typing required. LEGAL EXPERIENCE NOT NECESSARY
Must be intelligent, hard-working and loyal. Excellent starting sc>®7'
EM. 4-1171 (Toronto).
-
000
Shiro i
arch
Toronto Buddhist Church
FOOD-A-RAMA
‘ * Tasty Japanese Style Cuisine I OriziWC
Celon, Sushi, Donburi, Mochi,
Manju, Coffee, Tea, etc.'
Trui
;W
joiner
AND
7.' c
^ thin
’ said.
^ aite
TKEBANA DISPLAY
e Wade
Sat. March 27, 1965
1 to 6:30 PM
At 918 Bathurst St., Toronto
• Berth
, Page 8
Wednesday, March 24 i-
Third In Series
™E NEWCAffii
IZUMO - Land Of The Gods
Authorised a#
end for payment oi
Post Office Dep^’^
1 T. UMEZUKI, Public V
TSUMURA,
eSV^
went across the road to the house, took off our shoes at
Editor,
KEN
MO^
^® d?°™ay .ai]d Paid a small admission fee to an old lady with Y°4’’ anT a bamboo ceiling that had turned a dark honey color,
Section
Editor
and Ad/^
i
J16,5? house of this kind there was no furniture except
socks
a?d lv?ry sl<in, wearing a dark kimono and white tab- i"
C?V’ofhth?b™^^
tWO ^J0!111^ rooms that form the main lor the low table with a cushion beside it in the centre of one
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
go into
Se‘ Theie F3 alS0 a utlllty wing we did not ro°Ph anu the ceremonial alcove with a kakemono, or hanging
?r thi^v
straw tatami mats, and scroll,. and _a vase of flowers. It was rather shabby and verv
Toronto 2-B. 0^
T
°ld^^ in a guide’s singsong, gave her spiel that
sliok OtW l
in °i °ne open space by hiding back the M
0^
without Toshi’s translation. Here was the table
EMpire 6-5005
wa™
°U er Walls’ were also slid back in this V^e P r^TT had written his legends and tales of Izumo, Land
thehouse
° glVe a Viem Of the tiny gardens that surround
the house. The rooms were well proportioned — good, aged wood- 0± the Gr°ds- Here was the little garden with a rock-work pool
vdiere the snake and the frog had lived, which Lafcadio had told
about m the chapter called “In the Japanese Garden”. ._. . No she
Nisei Marcher . . .
the guide, had not been one of Hearn’s pupils; only one of his
(Cont. From Page I)
pupils was still alive, a lady now nearly ninety years mid.
G°V\ Georg-6 Wallace, of Alabama came to town and
Male Help Want^
^
we went next door to’the Lafcadio Hearn
SNCC organized a demonstration. Tom Wakayama was cariwing
GARDEN helne^
121 ^^'^ concrete Japanese-Bauhaus style 241-S11S. Mr. aSutlSi!5>’
a placard. A middle-aged white approached him and said:
g
and built-in 1934., There are glass, cases with Hearn’s collection
_ -I’m very disappointed in yoi/, boy. I was out in Korea
of long-stemmed Japanese pipes, the trumpet shell he used to GENERAL gardener beloer
iXX'ta die back>‘° heIl> y“U folkS- Tha, y” ““ "’ l,m
^e( Phone CH. 1-4103,' M- ^7
a ^ttie pocket comb with a few of (Toronto).
off, ana some. neatly-folded, shabby clothes:
lb acks wd summer white drill. There is a brass oil lamp oS D^r'N ^eb^^
Hearn designed and had speciallyqHey;
you a Hawaiian?” Said Wakayama: “No, I’m Japa- made
made
in
Tokyo
after
he
moved
?r thoHa^
“Hell< 1 thought we got rid of all you basta?ds framed photographs and letters,there from Matsue. There are TRUCK driver ^F^TpwT
, and a _ lifesize oil portrait —
11‘ ULU TdoU Wal.
head of Hearn showing the right-hand side of his face with its Heike at GA. 1-5040 (Toronto)? 1
fPnrAt J XY^Tr21 was part typist’ part janitor,-part chauf- horrendous, bulgin.
for grocery store
p
" ,eyes- One photograph shows the students MAN
S’
public relations man for SNCC. He was supposed to be
RU. 7-4041, Nigh/BA. 2 -1370 (U°k
r
Middle School. The boys, among whom are
t0 ^ hlm alive- Mostly’ though, it worked inobably the individuals Lafcadio wrote about in “Glimpses,” wear
out to
every two weeks.
Help Wanted
U V T5® ^ Ernies and stand ram-rod behind, the seated row
Eh and the other SNCC workers went hungry, slept in the p£teaihT' Hearn and his colleagues all have on frock coats and OFFICE clerk required imaedijl-'
oHice dormitory, cadged meals from Negro restaurant owners.
each teachei- holds a glossy top hat on his knee. . . . In a little Must have driver's license Mr B=Juk
,.Ee became a Photographer for Student Voice, SNCC’s main sine room of the Museum there are shelves containing some of phone ME. 3-2180 (Toronto). ‘ ’“'
publication.
sales d^j^TT
.^----scripts, and various collections and editions of his EFFICIENT
RulevHle deep m the Delta country of Mississippi, a town books in English, Japanese, French and German. The place is M^v11 wanjed- Japan Camera^
294 Yonge Street, 362-1555 (Toroniol.;
m°St y Negro ^ud sharply segregated, he went to buv evocative and sad, as was Hearn’s life.
cigaiettes m a grocery store. A wrinkled Chinese woman, the
When we came out of the Museum we rang up for a taxi at
Domestic Help Wanted
owner’s wife, approached 'him.
'
^e
oraiige
pop
place,
and
into
town
to
a
restaurant
where
the
She said: “How y’all doin’? Can I help y’all?”
WOMEN or couple for general Hjb
^°^lst ?urea^ bad ordered lunch for us. It was a nice old house work.
Husband employed elsewhst
. k 1 was,’ recalls Wakayama, “quite shattering. I was all ready
, ei riVerJan7 Wlth Pnvate r?°ms each with a balcony looking Separate quarters. Liberal free tiV
Deltr^v^
English then out conies this broad ™1J
SWlk>i clear water. I sat on the balcony and' had delicious Phone 783-0506 (Toronto).
OR
Soanese beer, the lunch of pickled, raw and grilled fish, and
Rooms To Let
Vf6ntab iS- aid °ut m. bttle dishes bn the table nearby. Some
No-man’s land
.• S'
Eimgs taste fairly nasty at Hirst, but they graduallv en- FURNISHED room and kitchen. Sj
ChinlWaS hl
D®]t^ country that Wakayama discovered the
Wish
two. Bloor, and Landsdowne. PhNegops
sta??sJ1- a n°’m1au’s Iand between whites and aear themselves. Before I left Matsue, where one got only Japa- LE.
6-3479 (Toronto).
i
'ibeCan/e leally t'ond of thin-sliced raw fish eaten
N egoes. He asked an old Chinese, a leader among his people whv S'SS e m
st on
they did not. help either Negroes or whites.
P P e’ vny dipMta soy s“°°
<>f- large, bland white radish) and illllllliniHlIIIIHflllllillllllHIlIlira
t2i
"F-Ou see’ these Negro people, they don’t know
vhere they come from. These whites, they don’t know either__
For
Best
Results
Clev
seem to thrive on their
SSi i
- People all look healthy and vital and show almost- no
except they i-e el bit whiter then the Negroes*.
e s
m2• tnAe11’ E^es until very old age. And most of them are Use New Canadian Ads
“But me, I know where I come from.”
In Philadelphia, Mississippi, just after three civil rights work- distinguished by the smooth freshness of their ivory skins One iiiinHiinBHniiHinnniiiuifiiiiiiiiii
CUSS
rjLveiC ml7d'leC
tleJe lasfc sPring, he posed as a Canadian almost never sees a person who is overweight. They seem rarely
ee pl
bpead or Pastries, a small, bowl of rice supplying their
nn?4n q^n to^
a V° e1' r^istration campaign like the present
cue in oeima.
tWC wP^^^ usually is fresh fruit; the apples amL strawberries
GOLF
The other, bona fide, cameramen and reporters had all leftFt observed everywhere- being perfectly delicious. A regi11 °f JaPauese food makes one’s digestion a pleasure to live with.
there; was therefore, no safety in numbers. A week, earlier another
and
m ’ Photographer, a Negro, had been hauled from his car by
at S6 Everside restaurant we-took a car to
no
J1 ^^
on the outskirts of the town. This place is the
a policeman, then beaten.
*
Fishing Tackle
of i nine generations of the Matsudaira family,
o
Wakajama asked Sheriff Rainey, subsequently arrested for S 8’
ONI
OSCAR'S
complicity in the murder of the three civil rights workers, for vho weie the feudal lords, or daimyos, of this part of the country.
s Pn
kept, up, I understand, by members of the Matsudaira
permission to shoot pictures from inside the courthouse
1500 Dundas (at Dufferin)—LE. 2-4267
ered
Tamily. It lies m a grove of magnificent trees, cryptomeria, pine,
Haid Rainey: “No. Get out of town—quick.”
'
Japan
Wakayama then drove past the demonstrating Negroes outside cypress, on a gentle hillside. There are hundreds of mossy skne •
^^hoase, shooting pictures through the window. Rainev and
aud^ scores' of separate burial plots with inscribed
old
u
It is a good policy to
other whites spotted him.
”
tS’ but ?at uiakes the place really notable are the hand’assn
hare the RIGHT POLICY
“I knew damn well I was going to get it if I stayed around
that form the entrances to the
Consult
any longer, so I just kept on driving out of town. That’s Neshoba
e agatFayS care paviIions’ reallV, with steepfs
that
have
been
formed
from
layers
and
layers
of
county, and that's no place to even say a good word for Negroes.
tends
WALES and DUNCAN
™
dr:OVC’
fast' But before I got out of the county the ^E^fbrown cypress bark, and with eaves and lintels and cornices
t alsi
INSURANCE AGENTS
wood that is carved in high relief into superb designs
car filled wit h smoke. I thought at first, it was a bomb—von.know'
n aid
m Neshoba county you get a prickly feeling if you’re a civil rights beautiful ’ pe°1Ues’ animals and birds. They are marvelously
454 Yonge Street, Toronto
orker,
,?a'^
The carved gateways, Gesshoji is famous for its great
Phone WA. 1-3171
j
vJ stopped to let the smoke cleai'—it must have been oil
inis in
€
ag? there was an evh spirit in Izumo which took
trouble—and got more frightened by the second. If my car had
ion J;
serious need of repair, L wouldn’t be able to get awav. Then, when the foim of a huge ghost turtle that came out of its cave at nhdit
■> Trm
5a\age ^e farms and villages. Finally, the Matsudaira lord
the car was clear of smoke, I drove like Hell.
‘
. read
conceived the idea of exorcising the evil spirit.
th® horror of Mississippi. It’s so unpredictable. Anyin no'
Sp in i£° m£™V”
Ca”
at y0U ancl yOU '*ht not Wa^ - t the place at Gesshoji, which he had chosen for his tomb, he set
e boi
fhnw -ornwus titanic, ^ image of a turtle, caived with
ed wit
™ uf7e™Sm and ^’otesquerie at which the bld Japanese
FF,
?ed; Th® creEiture is the size of a large automobile,
brute
£
ri
d
outraged^
head
with
spiteful
eyes
thrust
forth
from
m
bon
mVX^? fa? "'°nU
trouble? But they
‘ He
outraged fury. But it is'impotent to do further evil
dy d&
because it is pinioned to the earth by a monolithic, square-sided
was “^rchata SS m^T’ “^
nder.
5°^ C?lulVn? SIX or seven feet high, wliich rises up from the centre
of the turtle’s carapace.
e bo
Heat had cooled
(To Be Continued)
Pon o
r Fukayama went to the scene to photograph for SNCC Five __ , _______ ______
L a?“'S .^ wh6 k“ Wakayama bv si J" spotted him
war
classified
u
the greatest
gift of all
Mentally III Girl
hot w^S^X ^ ^t of another iMg
Caged For 7 Years
.Months of working for SNCC had left Tom Wakavama with
SUSONOMACHI, Japan. —-A
His Volkswagen needed repairs which neither
fanner
kept his mentally ill
he noi SNCC could comfortably afford. At home here in Ontario
daughter locked in a cage for
there were debts, obligations to be met.
seven years until her death re
So he came back.
cently,
police said.
But he still identifies with the Negro fight. Recently he acted
bv Univer'itt
7ho
the passive demonstrations
/The cage was 5 feet, 3 inches
m
Of Toronto students who have been squatting out high and 5 feet, 10 inches square.
side the U.S. consulate on University Avenue. He also ^et^uu a
said Jusaburo Ichikawa,
of SNCC. the local organization bePin| 64,Police
caged his daughter 'because
familial with the headquarters operation at Atlanta
she was considered a hopeless
And he’s being called on to help give orientation lectures on mental case. She was 34 when
non-violence techniques to those Canadians planning to join in the she died.
demonstrations down South.
o
j
w
The woman had been admitted
.These -activities have temporarily interrupted his attempts to
earlier
to two public mental in
start a new life as a freelance photographer.
stitutions.
She was discharged
‘Perhaps 111 go back. ’ he says. ‘T will if I can. But while I
in
1956
because
doctoi-s decided
v.as there I hoped I helped, and in a strange way it helped me.
she
could
not
be
The
. . I feel lie spent a year of my life doing somethin0' worth farmer told police he cured.
lacked the
while—and if I did have a chip on my shoulder about being Japa money to put his daughter in a
nese before I went south, it’s gone now,”
private institution.
et.
Extraordinary Opportunity For Girl :
Wanted for permanent position as secretary in law office. Goos
shorthand and typing required. LEGAL EXPERIENCE NOT NECESSARY
Must be intelligent, hard-working and loyal. Excellent starting sc>®7'
EM. 4-1171 (Toronto).
-
000
Shiro i
arch
Toronto Buddhist Church
FOOD-A-RAMA
‘ * Tasty Japanese Style Cuisine I OriziWC
Celon, Sushi, Donburi, Mochi,
Manju, Coffee, Tea, etc.'
Trui
;W
joiner
AND
7.' c
^ thin
’ said.
^ aite
TKEBANA DISPLAY
e Wade
Sat. March 27, 1965
1 to 6:30 PM
At 918 Bathurst St., Toronto
• Berth