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The New Canadian — February 23, 1966

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Page 1

THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
^®XX—No. 15

Toronto, Ont

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1966

iwer Tariffs Or See Japan
itionalism Rise: UBC Prof

^SW-sW^.

This is what happened in the 1930’s, he warned.
“If countries stopped buying from Japan, it
would be a national catastrophe and the con­
sequences could be disastrous.
He also said there was little likelihood of any
great trade between China and Japan because of
political differences.
Although China has many rav.
materials which Japan needs
Japanese leaders are wary of
developing trade links Jbecause
|YO.—-It was just like in ordered up a grass skirt Au-Go- they are afraid China -will try
*6 vies. Fourteen Japanese Go featuring island maidens. All to wean them' away from the
fishermen who landed on 14 seamen attended, leaving no United States, said* Copley.
one to mind the boat.
th Pacific island last
liked the wine,' women ana
He said: “The whole feeling in
During the merrymaking, the
so much they, stayed for boat
was washed away by winds Japan now is .one of change.
Shs.
and the sailors were overcome There is pride in what has been
hl began when the crew by drink.
done and optimism about the
Iptain of the 39-ton vessel
Maru put in on Kayangel
U.S. authorities later found future.”
I of the Palau group, look- the vessel aground and detained
Much of the change was caus­
the fishermen for unlawful land­
r bananas.
ed
by the Second World War
I'chief, as is customary, ingwhen 44 percent of the Japanese
industry was destroyed, he said.
Sanatorium To Stardom . .

^COUVER —A University of B.C. assistant
lor of geography said last week that tariffs
f Japanese imports should be reduced.
lard Copley, speaking at a UBC extension
Bi lecture, said: “Unless countries decrease
tariffs against Japanese imports, Japan
gget very nationalistic again.”

|, Women & Song Gets Best of Japan Sailors

I

m

“The industrial areas were re­
built and modernized and they
are now very much up-to-date,”
Following his return to' the
I ANGELES.—Pat Morita,.
comedian, will tape a West "Coast,' where he graduated said Copley.
JU B
high
school
and
then
went
to
^wood Palace” show on TV
“It is only since the war that
fcch Fred Astaire will em- Sacramento City College, Morita
®e show is scheduled to be began helping out his father who Tapan has become a real manu­
Sa turday, M arch 12 over ran a Chinese restaurant in Sac­ facturing country. Before the
TV. JacK Jones and Ethel ramento.
war it was concerned . mainly
It was here that Pat began
Sin are among the stars to
with
textiles and armaments.”
performing before an audience
Sr on the show.
as he acted as emcee at parties
I Situation Comedy
and told jokes and sang.
Eita has just finished. makPat later went to work for the
|TV pilot film tentatively Aerojet General Co. in the com­
B“Unpardonable,” a situa- puter division.
fbmedy about jail. Other
But he had not lost interest in
pans in the cast were Billy show business and when he was
TOKYO. — Police recently ar­
[Ife, Don Rickles and Ster- offered an $800 a month job as rested
a 44-year-old Japanese
Holloway. 'Morita indicated an emcee at the Ginza West night­
man
who
said it was too easy
respects are promising for club in San Francisco. Morita
to
rob
homes
in large size apart­
low to be on’TV next sea- came to crossroads decision.
ment blocks.
Today, three years later, his
gMorita, the “Hip Nip,” is earnings have steadily climbed;
Fujio Sasaki, who robbed 60
s' among today’s humorists he earns substantial fees for per­ homes and stole objects worth
[t he is the first unstereo- formances on TV and for per­ 3 million yen ($8,310), was ap­
| Japanese American come- forming at • nationally known
prehended on a tip given by a
;o gain recognition.
night spots. '
pawnbroker. He. took the things
ita discards the typical . He and his wife, the former
he stole to pawnbrokers and ob­
Kathleen
Yamachi,
live
in
North
sboy” or “funny gardener”
Hollywood
with
their
10-year-old
tained loans using the names of
th er Orientals portrayed on
id in movies, and convulses daughter, Erin.
the owners.
Morita’s hobby is his work and
adiences with non-ethnic
“People in these apartments
he -writes all his own material.
L and thoughts.
don’t even say hello to their
Presently
Morita
is
appearing
^pattern pokes fun at cur­
neighbors,” Sasaki told police.
rents and customs through- at San Francisco’s Bimbo night­ “It was an open invitation to me
club.
Following
this
he
will
make
he world, including many
to enter the homes when the
at his own Japanese ances- the Playboy circuit covering 14 housewives' went out shopping.”
id traditions. He even, dar- clubs.
Sui
। finds funny things to say
| the U.S.-Japanese conflict
>rld War II.
ii in Berkeley on June 28,
iMorita’s comical approach
fe was nurtured - during a
name for a hotel, and he must
By Hoshi Soffen
re and almost heartbreakhave given the same answer
NAPLES, Italy. — One of countless times. According to
bildhood;
the
first sights a traveler gett­ him. his father named it in meI Flat On His Back
ing of a train at Naples, mory of the spirited 442nd boys
n two to 11, Morita was Italy sees is a huge piazza in that fought along the coast and
his back in Weimar Sana- front of the station. It is sur­ around the town of Napoli many
ii near Colfax, Calif, with rounded by hotels on all three years ago.
sulosis of the spine. Then, sides—Excelsior, Metropol, Buon
iiately upon being discharge Sojourno and others, including
The bartender, yes, the same
' “cured,” Morita was con- Hotel Sayonara.
one that waited on these lads,
| together with many other
can recall with tenderness the
It is an old hotel compared to army of teenagers who all ap­
^m a relocation centre until
many
of the others, but in Na­ peared to have been stamped out
nd of World War II when
ples,
as
in' other southern Itali­ of a same pattern, and fought
H3an towns, most of the buildings with machine-like courage and
lead of becoming bitter over are ancient.
efficiency.
| experiences, Morita develThe management of tliis hotel
[a comical and imaginative
Their bravery has become a
was asked why such a cunous
ach to life.

trait Of Nisei Comedian Hip Nip

Thief Claims Apt.
Robbing Too Easy

Parkin At J.C.C. Centre

Visual Order
In Cities
At the Toronto Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre’s
President’s Dinner on January 15th, 1966, renown Canadian
architect, John Cresswell Parkin, RCA, FRAIC, FRIBA, of John
B. Parkin Associates, appeared as guest speaker. Mr. Parkin,
who revealed that he has made three pleasureable trips to
Japan, has often expressed his great interest in Japanese
architecture.
The following is a text of his speech at the J.C. Cultural
Centre entitled, “Visual Order In Cities.”

*

*

' I am grateful for your kind invitation to speak informally
cn city design, planning and architecture. I propose speaking on
what has been described as “the safe, the healthy, the convenient
city with trees and fountains and parks, with handsome buildings,
and the ‘great spectaculars’ that give a city character.”
But “character” is but one aspect of the problem of our
ailing cities. While there has been so much said and written lately
about what’s wrong with out- cities, we often forget what is right
about them. While our cities may be sick, the frequent report
of their d'eath has been greatly exaggerated.
The great majority of North Americans prefer to live in
cities and towns — in fact, something over 70%. The great ma­
jority of those urban dwellers would appear to prefer to live in
cities and towns -— and appear to do so out of free choice. In fact,
our cities have problems because nearly everybody in the world
has decided that in or near a city is the best place on earth to be. .
At the dawn of civilization, say, 5000 years ago, the popula­
tion of the world numbered 20 millions_—- the population of Canada
today. World population has grown so spectacularly that 'there
are alive today as many people as who have lived in the pre­
vious one million years of our species. Yet our world population
will double in the next 50 years. However, in the next 20 years,
all the largest cities of both Canada and the United States will
double in size, and by the end of the century our population will
be not 70% urban — but 37% urban. “Our teeming cities have
just begun to teem.”
Lewis Mumford, the world’s outstanding urbanist, has said
in his definitive “The City in History:
“History opens with- a city that was, symbolically, a world.”
(the) “world! has become, in many practical
today
aspects, a city.”
While Mumford reminded us that for- the ancients their world
was their immediate city, Babylon, Athens, Alexandria, he intended
to point out that physically we are. now but one city. In jet-set
parlance, I suppose he is correct. But in North America we are
becoming 10 or 12 vast metropolises — and the planners have
coined for this super-metropolis the descriptive term — “megalo­
polis”. These great dozen or so “megalopolitan” areas are usually
lineal in form, and — again, technically speaking, these may be
referred to as “conurbations”. The most recognizable “conurba­
tion” is that continuous urban development stretching south-west­
erly from Boston some 500 miles to Washington, D.C. at the
southerly end. Here in Canada the most obvious conurbation is
that emerging from .Oshawa in the East to Hamilton in the SouthWest, and eventually to Niagara Falls and, in fact, to Buffalo
and Erie beyond, with an international boundary only incidental
to its continuity.
These new terms are essential, for while we have had cities
since the dawn of history, our first “metropolis” emerged only
150 years ago when London, England, reached and held a popula­
tion of 1,000,000. Megalopolis, then, is this next order of magni­
tude in urban growth, and its structural form is that the “con­
urbation”. City — Metropolis — Megalopolis — is then a convenient
means of defining size.

(Cont. On Page 8)

Little Cafe In Italy Named “Sayonara” Recalls 442 Gl’s
legend. The honors, citations and
medals bestowed upon this extraordinary group is known around the world.
In the history of the U.S.
Army, there has never been a
regiment like the 442nd.
Our army will never produce
another band of soldiers who
fought with such unrivaled brave
ry. True, they had a cause to
fight, but so did others.
Probing below the surface, it
is interesting to note that these
men who were mostly teen-agers
or in their early twenties, who
were
confined in evacuation

camps, most of them grew up
as buddies, or befriended each
other during internment.
They went through training,
and unlike" other soldiers, were
sent to the same place, fought
together and came out the same
time.
Through it all. they were in­
separable, they protected each
other and fought for each other.
Close Group
After more than 20 years, the
442nd has remained a closely
knit group. Last month some 200
met for a happy reunion to talk
over the old days.

Page 2

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Page 7

Wednesday, February 23, 1966

r The New Canadian's

Cosmopolitan Cuisine

PAGE 7

Dates and Doings

Ai E. McKague, Q.C
Barrister and Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC

Donations (Welcomed For J.C.C.C. Bazaar Apr. 30

TORONTO.—The J.C. Cultural Centre’s Annual■-Bazaar • will
be held on April 30th this year and hopes are high to exceed its
efforts of last year.
Donations of ALL kinds of items, large or small, suitable for
Gingerbread: First of The Mixes
sale at our Gifts, Handicrafts or White Elephant" sections would be
One of the first mixes to come out successfully enough to most welcome from now until April. Please phone the Centre office
sell the home bakers on the idea of using packaged cake mixes at 428-0676.
was that of gingerbread. Its moist,, velvety texture combined with
J.C. Cultural Centre
spicy flavor challenged the proudest of kitchen queens. The finish­
ed product was almost undetectable to the average palate. As for
the time spent preparing it, why there was no comparison between Man. Buddhist Church Announces Officers For 1966
the packaged mixture and “from a scratch’ one. So gingerbread,
WINNIPEG.—Mail. Buddhist Church Association is pleased to
F along with other mixes took, over the pantry shelves in every home. announce
the election of thia slate of officers for the 1966 term.
*
*
They are: Counsellor — "'Chutaro Teranishi; President — Sa­
Tf you want to dress up gingerbread or any other cake-, here’s buro Nishimura; Vice Presidents — Y. Abe, H. G. Kondo; Chair­
delightful
sauce using fresh oranges.
man — M. Watanabe; Vice Chairman — Y. Ohta; Secretary — Terry
a
ORANGE SAUCE
■Miyai; Secretary (English) — K. Teramura; Treasurer^— Henry
Morishita; Special treasurer — T. Nose; Auditors — Y. Tsutsu­
Ingredients:
mi, T. Yamashita; Sanctuary Committee — S. Shimoji, S. Nishioranges,
peeled
a
zeki; Sunday School — H. K. Shimane, Max Utsunomiya; Young
to
3
tbsp,
sugar
2
People and Social— Mas Nagamori, Z. Ariza, H. Matsuo; Japanese
tbsp, cornstarch
Language
School — Koji Sato; Visitations —H. Kuwada; Council­
cup sugar
lors

J.
Nakano, T. Sawa, A. Tamoto, H. Tazumi; Bulletin.—
tsp. salt
M.
Fukui,
chairman; M. M. Watanabe, T. Nose, T. Yamashita,
tsp. grated orange peel
S.
Nishimura.
cup fresh orange juice
1
Building Project Committee met on Sunday, Feb. 13th and
cup water
1
tbsp, butter or margarine
agreed to proceed with the proposed addition. A meeting will be
3
held on Sunday, Feb. 27th, to discuss the extent of the program
Gingerbread squares
one-third cup sliced toasted almonds or flaked coconut
and other vital problems.
M.B.C.
Method: .
n
o
Cut oranges into bite: size pieces and combine with 2 to 8
tablespoons sugar to sweeten. Set- aside. Combine cornstarch, %
cup sugar and salt in saucepan and mix well. Add orange peel, Jailed Issei Minister At St. Andrew's Anglican Sun.
orange juice and water. Bring mixture to boil. Lower heat and
TORONTO.—An American Issei minister, who was jailed for
it cook 4 to 5 minutes or until thickened, stirring constantly.
two days while involved in the peace march during the civil rights
Add butter, stirring until melted. Remove from heat and add demonstrations down south, will be the guest preacher this Sunday,
undrained sweetened orange pieces. Set to cool. _
Feb. 27th at St. Andrew’s Japanese Anglican Church. He is Dr.
I ®
Before serving, spoon sauce over warm gingerbread squares, Dai sake Kitagawa.
and sprinkle with toasted almonds or flaked, coconu'
Known as Dr. Dai to his Friends, the good Reverend has long
8
This sauce is excellent over spice or yellow . cake, and will been a strong champion-of good causes since coming- to the United
keep several days when covered and refrigerated. (Makes about States in the 1920’s.
i
3 cups).
During the war, Dr. Kitagawa and his brother Joe were strong
E'- ^H
*
*
champions fighting for the Japanese Canadians in the.camps. When
EGG AND ORANGE
he was working for the Japanese Americans at Minneapolis, he
you
are
camping'
out
with
the
family
or
friends.
became a good friend of the present United States Vice President,
The next time
iW treat them to this for breakfast ...
Hubert Humphrey.
Instead of juice, serve them half an orange. Tell everyone to
Dr. Kitagawa worked for four years at the World Church
suck the juice and eat the pulp, but very carefully. Tor you want Council in Switzerland specializing in African problems through
./ the shells-back, if they want a poached egg for the next course.
which experience materialized some books on racial problems.
Take the cleaned - orange shells, crack an egg in 'each ball,
He will be the guest of the Grace Church-on-the-Hill, Forest
and set near the coal or on the grill. Watch the orange, skin, start
Hill,
from February 26th to March 3rd.
to bubble gently, then the outer edge of the egg white wvill do
Rev. Ken Imai
I the same. Remove to the farthest spot away from the fire and

*
let the rest of the egg poach in the juice from the orange rind.
You’ll be pleased with the fragrant aroma of the fi’Bsh orange Consul General Presents Books To Toronto Library
Of combined with the mellow flavor of.'the egg, and no grubby pans
TORONTO.—A gift representing the finest achievements in
to scrub.
contemporary Japanese printing technology and book arts has
been received by the Toronto Public Library from the Government
of Japan through,the offices of the Consulate General of Japan
in Toronto.
r
I. A. HENCKELS
The 16 titles cover a wide range of Japanese accomplishments
in the fine arts ' front the earliest periods to the present, and
§
include works on garden design, architecture, painting, printing,
textile arts,, costume and ceramics.
Printmaking is represented by Selected Masterpieces of Ukiyo-e
'world-famous since 1731
Prints,
a magnificent 2-volume folio of facsimile reproductions
K
of the colour woodcuts of 18th: and 19th century -masters including
re­
Hiroshige, Masonobu, Hokusai and Toyokuni, published by the
sold at:
'famous Adachi Institute of' Woodcut Prints.. Forty-eight prints
have been reproduced, each with an extensive description and
|
MING WO CO.
commentary*
Y
j j
The postwar revival of printmaking in Japan, is recorded in
The Modem Japanese Print, a collection of 10 original prints by
Restaurant Supplies, 23 E. Pender Street, Vancouver 4, B.C.
the foremost of Japan’s printmakers, selected by a panel of inter­
national jurists in a competition held ■ under the auspices of the
Japan Society of New York. A lengthy appreciation of each print
is provided by James Michener.

Fifty full-coloured full-size reproductions of painted fans nf
the Korin school are bound Japanese style in a traditionally de­
corated cloth cover.
_
,
. ,.
BUY AT OUR PRICES
The works of Tessai, the master of ink and brush painting
who died in 1924, is superbly reproduced in a monograph in the
23 TO 50% OFF
Japanese language. Captions in English are supplied to most of
ON ALL MERCHANDISE AND REPAIR PRICES.
the more than 100 illustrations in colour and black and white. ;
A portfolio of 28 full-coloured illustrations to the classic
Japanese collection of Tales of the Genji presents an interesting
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1103. Phone 363-0952
documentation of the court life of medieval .Japan.
This gift will be on display in the Theatre foyer of the Central
Mon. — Fri. 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
Library,
20 St. George St., 3rd floor until March 19. Hours: Monday
Eve. By Appointment
to Friday, 9.30 a.m. to 9 p.m., Saturdays, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
HUdsou 5-1385

OFFICE
EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395

By STELLA ITO

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

Bus:

624-8153

Res:

822-1353

ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered

Accountant

- Suit* 403

130 BLOOR ST. W.

TORONTO

AUTO





FIRE

LIFE

AU. FORMS
OF

INSURANCE
aoaault

KIYO TAMURA
TORONTO

Bum. 366-5812

Res. PL 9-8317

Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES

Is

1278 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
Tokie Nishimura
923-6877

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

TWIN BRAND CUTLERY

13841/2 Queen W.
Toronto

LE. 2-637 r

DANFORTH
SPORTING
GOODS

BIG SAVE!!

SKATES, SKIS
AND
.
SKATE SHARPENING

■ 551 Danforth Ave.,
(neaxCarlaw)
George Fukusaka

TAKARA JEWELLERS

Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe

Lichee Garden
(Dining Lounge)
Toronto, Canada
118 Elizabeth St.

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH

918 Bathunt:St.

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1966
10:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service
(Group discussion on Dana Month)
2:00'-P.M. Japanese '^Service

Phone: 364-3481
(4/Lines To Serve You)
CATERING SERVICE - “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS

When Buying Or Selling A Home

Banquet Facilities
For Business Or Private Parties
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or SmaU)
DINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY

Ken Hori

14 Perivale Cres.
Scarboro
Phone: AM. 1-5194

Phone: > HO. 3-7400
Open Thur, and Fri. Until 3 p. m.

Formal
Rentals
"

Reserve
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc.

ALNA
Of Toronto

Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE,
. PHONE:- 403-8104

Page 8

PAGE 8

NE W

Visual Order In Cities ....

Wednesday, February w
.
----(Cont. From Page 1)

THE NEW UNMm

/ .. —e ‘ cj^r ^ civilization are of common word origin in many
“We- shall never bring disgrace to this, our city; we shall
Authorized as second
!
languages and are, in fact, synonymous. There is no civilization
' fight' for the ideals and sacred things of the city; we shall
and for payment of p^taa?1' ^ I
separate from The life of, and in, cities. History , is the story of
Post Office DepcXi9?^!
revere - .and obey city laws; we shall strive unceasingly to
cities, and their struggle for power, ascendancy and domination.
quicken'the public’s sense of civic duty; that in all these'ways
One might even conjecture that' the contemporary ‘nation is still
we may - transmit • this our city not less but greater, better, T. UMEZUKI, Publishe r
TSUMURA,
^
but a collection' of city-states sometimes coalesced into uneasy
and more beautiful-than it came to us.”
English
Editor,
KEN
mori
,
,*
CKn^e^e^a^°n'
^°^s true, in my belief, in both Canada and
What we Jack is the sort of public and'official thinking once Section Editor and Advew^l
the United Strifes' today. For example, cities have always been
dynamically
led by such urban visionaries as the Medicis of Flo-,
the centre of influence arid of (domination drawing upon a hinterSUBSCRIPTION
rence.
(who
recreated what was. a provincial town), the Renais­
land to economically sustain themselves. These areas of influence
sance
Popes
(who
rebuilt
a
city
from
medieval
swamps)
and
Na
­
00er 6 mOnths
sometimes overlap arid merge with inevitable rivalries to be re­
»/.U0 per year
poleon
III
and
his
chief
planner
Baron
Haussmann
(recall
how
solved. Sometimes there are economic disparities between two
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
rival cities, both wholly competitive otherwise. The historical pat­ little more” than'- one hundred years ago Paris was one of the
tern of rivalry between Montreal arid Toronto is a case in point. ugliest of cities, a decade or more later, one of the most beautiful.)
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
!
Montreal, through-the 19th century, was in every sense, statisti- In brief, our city, like many others, ..appears to have little practical
interest
in
civic
design.
Certainly,
our
predecessors
'
had'
little,
caRy> in power and population, Toronto’s superior. Let me cite
EMpire 6-5005
.7
but one example. It took more thari 40’ years struggle for Toronto if any.
After fewer than nine-score years of tenancy, we and our
to achieve a chartered bank independent of Montreal—a fascinat­
.predecessors'
have despoiled a site whose original beauty we can
ing study in itself. While 1 do not wish to’ demean the importance
now
imagine.
We 'have destroyed our ravines. We have-polluted
of the present cultural tension between Frerich-language Montreal
the
water
and
fouled the air. We have expended the small amount
and English-language Toronto, nonetheless, fe'w wo'uld 'deny that
of
<
space
set
aside-for
. parks' in the first place. We have turned
the serious issues- behind' the problems of language' are ' substan­
our
backs
on
Lake
Ontario
and made access to it both difficult I
tially owed to an imbalance of economic means, exaggerated by
Female Help Want^:
and'ugly.
We
have
banished
green spaces and cool trees from the
Toronto’s post-war affluence, and now serious bid fbr' pOplation
COUNTER girl for dry clean^
dominance. Thus, ! see many of the problems not only iff- Canada city’s heart.Somehow,' we have managed to deny all of the ele­ Highest wages. West end. 766-1007 (£
onto).
“Tl
but-in the United States in terms of what I, frankly, adm-if to be mentary relationships between man and. nature.
We are yet a city without a true centre, a house of corridors SEWING blouses at home. Wed*
an urban bias. For regional loyalties are concentrated through
cities, whether those cities be Vancouver, Calgary, Winnipeg or without rooms. For the heart' of a city to throb, the city must and pick up. Call Mary at 3534s
(Toronto). .
J
be alive. For much of the day, Toronto seems scarcely to breathe.
Montreal. ■
operators for r-a'-i
This wealthiest ’ of Canadian cities is an 8-hour-a-day, five- EXPERIENCED
Perhaps I have speculated too long on intra-city problems, when

rt

^Cti°n W°4 M
days-a-week,
city.
Its
fragmentary
life
expires
after
the
five
there are so many more complex issues facing us within cities themtM. ^4-/307 (Toronto).
d
o’clock rush hour. Few' citizens live within, strolling distance of
selves.
City. Hall. Many appear to wish to do so, but are given no attrac­
MaleHelp Wanted
Basic means of control-Dept, of Urban Affairs / Agriculture tive alternative but to fight .bumper-to-bumper at the end of the
30-35% representation — 1 vote Supreme Court.
DRIVER for dry cleaning route. Md
day to escape to a one-family. house in the suburbs. If you ask be
reliable. -Guaranteed salay'iJ
The late. President John Kennedy defined the problem of why they commute, they may suggest they want privacy. Probe bonus. Apply in person, 300 Jones Aril
city growth .and renewal as an issue second only to survival, while still further and they’ll admit they also shun downtown after- (Toronto). .
his administration bent heroic efforts to attempt solutions. Presi- hours because it bores and repels them. Toronto at close-up is MAN to learn sheet metal work. Ms
" •
. dent Johnson has made the redefinition of the physical structure pretty dismal. Why ?
have chauffeur's licence. East end'S
ferred. Steady work. Phone 29!-®
of American cities, fundamental to the Great Society. Where in
Cont. Next Issue
(Toronto). ■ .
Canada is our equivalent leadership or similar concern ? The great
majority of both Americans and Canadians live, as I have said,
in cities, but we Canadians appear to lack both spokesmen and
leadership. We have, ..of course, several worthy civic and private
groups in Toronto, each working to. correct the man-made physical
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2 P.M.
disorder of our city. But no all-out attack is being, made on the
problem of visual blight — the sad legacy we leave our heirs
Admission: Adults 50 cents, Children 25 cents
and successors.
.
Anyone Wearing Kimono Admitted Free — Free Gifts For Children"
Special
attraction: mochi-tsuki . . . .. Displays: art objects
We do have a Community Planning Association, whose Toronto
TOKYO. — In spite of the
Japan,
ikebana, sumi-e, origami, festival decoration .. ..
branch certainly deserves your support. We have both a Metro­
world

s
worst
air
disaster
in
To
­
Deinonstrat
1
^!^
: $umie, ikebana, origami .... Program:
politan . and City Master Plan to guide zoning, land use, traffic
■children’s^choir, .folk-.dance, story telling, movie . . . . Tasty
organization and other, critical issues. We have hard-working, kyo Bay recently, All Nippon
Japanese Meal At All Hours . . ... Japanese Souvenirs for Sale;
under-financed historical societies, and an Architectural Conserv­ Airways said 166 girls showed up
All proceeds to Centre Children’s Projects
ancy who attempt the preservation of historic buildings. We have at their office the next day for
Planning Boards (on which many of you should serve) and a stewardess examinations. Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre
private Redevelopment Advisory Committee doing its best to un­
123 WYNFORD DRIVE (One block north of Eglinton Avenue)
tangle the chaotic conditions of cur downtown commercial area.
The airline said only three
And we do have ever-increasing support in the press and other
media, but. not-nearly enough. Surely it is ironic that in the face girls scheduled to take the ex­
of the welter of critical attention given by the press to music, amination were absent.
painting and ballet in our city — and wholly deserved this is. —
but to what purpose if these arts take place in a mean environment
— this surely can be'only a “Half-Culture” at best.

CLASSIFIED

St. Augustine in “City of God” said 14 centuries ago:
“A nation is an association of reasonable beings united in a
' peaceful sharing of the things they cherish; therefore, to de­
termine the quality of a nation, you must consider what those
things--are.”
Few things can be more important to well-being, to self­
fulfillment, to the full-life than an environment of excellence. No
art is more important than the art of city building. The nature
,of the city, as the quality of a nation, is the summation of its parts
s and the physical representation of its aspirations.
For most in our society, the’ .art of the city environment is
not an art at all. Other cities in other civilizations did, however,
view their cities as worthy of them highest loyalty and creativity.
The ordinary citizen of Athens more than 2000 years ago gave
this pledge:
-

Down With Martial Arts!

Girls Seek Job As
Air Stewardesses
Despite Air Crash

SPRING FESTIVAL

SKIS

Mortgage Protection

Ski Rentals

through Life Insurance?

SKATES

CONTACT

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

Ron Marks
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
COMPANY OF CANADA

It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult

Bill Wales
Insurance Agency
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
. Phone WA. 1-3171

Office 364-5141

Residence '925-9636

KINO'S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C.
Phone 355-2211

When In Montreal, Visit

TOKYO SUKIYAKI RESTAURANT
Re-opened At New Location

Continental
Family Co-op
Japanese & Occidental Foods
460 Dundas St. W. — Toronto

EM.

6-5589 and EM. 6-5711

7355 Mountain Sights
Montreal. (Near Decarie & Jean Talon)

Most Authentic Atmosphere
And Excellent Cuisine
TEL. 737-7245