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The New Canadian — April 20, 1966

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Page 1

... Sansei Talent Review At JCC Centre

bung Sansei Talents So Good lodges Create Extra Award
IoRONTO—Performers at the Sansei Talent ReL last Sunday at the J.C. Cultural Centre were
I'd that judges had to create another award,
brought the total of awards .up to five.
Although this was not a contest, those 5 prize

hers were presented with $25. cheques for outending ability. They were pianist Christine Mori,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mori of Wiilowile Ontario; Scotish dancer Elaine Kageyama, 8,
iughter of Mr. and Mrs.. Chick Kageyama of
ironio; Baton
Twirler Carolyn Yoshida, 13,

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kumeo Yoshida of Lon­
don, Ontario; pianist Gordon Okawara, 12, son
of Mr. and Mrs Cecil Okawara of Hamilton, Ontario; vocalist .Mark Harada,
son of Tatsuo
and Eileen Harada of Cooksville, Ontario.
Judges at this contest were show business per­
sonalities, Max “Rawhide” Ferguson, Lorraine
Thomson, and Harry Freedman.
Although the winners of this year’s Sansei Talent
Review will not be eligible to compete in next
year’s show, they will be appearing as special

guests.
“This was one of the best talent shows we havehad here at the J.C. Cultural Centre,” said Manag­
ing Director, Bob Kadoguchi. “this show proved
that there is much show business potential among;
the new Japanese Canadian generation.”
One of the winners of this year’s Sansei Talent
Review, baton twirler, Carolyn Yoshida of London,
Ontario won the Ontario Championship in her art
last Saturday.

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Japanese & English
Job Printing
The New Canadian

Stella Ito’s
“Sukiyaki Cookbook

Only $1.50

An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Toronto, Ont
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;ol. XXX—No. 31

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1966

iss New Canadian
lien Tsuji Wins
liss By-Line Title

409 Canadian,
USMissionaries
For Reischauer
TOKYO. — A group of about
400 Canadian and‘American mis­
sionaries recently sent a cable
to President Johnson urging him
to retain Dr. Edwin O. Reischau­
er as American Ambassador to
Japan.
The cable said Reischauer is
“irreplaceable at this time” and
cited his- ability-to. interpret Ja­
panese events “with the validity
to the country he represents.”

j TORONTO.—The New Canadian's Ellen Tsuji
las done it!
I Last Friday evening she captured the Miss
By-Line beauty contest held at the Royal York
Hotel over fourteen other contestants representing
Jie Canadian Broadcasting Company, the three
Toronto daily newspapers, the ethnic newspapers,
|nd other media.
L The 5 feet 5 inch, 20-year-old Sansei beauty
i

"—'—breezed through the preliminaries

| Japanese Farm
hainees Arrive
I TORONTO. — The three an|uab Farm Trainees sent from
Japan arrived here last week to
legin a year of living and .workon Canadian farms.
^ears group includes
gukm Funayama, Hiroshi Sudo,
Jt 1 oshio Sato. They have alkw been assigned to vai'ious
in Ontario and have now
|egun. their work.

Montreal Sansei Is
p^agogue Guest
VIPaujIOEAI'’ ~ Montreal SanAi!1 Ono was one of agroup
A
fT^ Who tended Temii ?T ^ere at the invitahaboi Harry Stern to
eA
th8 .escape of the
Old R r T t/gyption slavery- 5n
‘ Sed°r
Stern conducted
explained the
-Sind pbtl°nshiP between
Passover.

and into the finals. As the final
judges’ decision was about to be
announced, the over 300 who had
attended the By-Line Ball hushed
with anticipation. And then it
came over the ballroom loud­
speaker: “Miss . New Canadian,
Ellen Tsuji.” The convention
floor* crowd roared their approval
to the rafters. In a state of near
collapse, tears of happiness glis­
tening her cheeks, she stood ac­
cepting the crowds wild accolade.
Fighting back more tears, she
composed herself enough to slip
on the Miss By-Line ribbon and
accept the $500. prize from tae
British Motors Copr.
' Miss Evening Telegram was
second and Miss Daily Star came
third.
As Miss By-Line made her final
parade on the extended runway,
the Applause gained momentum
and-she was covered with flashes
from the newspaper, television
and movie cameras. Ellen Tsuji
is the first Japanese Canadian
to win this title.

.an. Sansei In Sun
next day* she was honored
before English Trip byTlie
a meeting with Ontario Pre­


Vancouver
^s *ic■ an
a 1 ecent issue of the
studying a
~end. hZ 4 B Itain Wlth ner
on A b F^twelL ^e two
Waited IfF -16?1 ^Or a lrag
r® spend Lv
E^and. They
ouripr, A L 2 and a half months
^■^ the Continent and Eng-

mier Rob,arts, attended a lunche­
on by the press at the Royal
York, Und cocktails in the eve­
ning.
Later in May she will be in­
troduced on stage at Nationbuild­
er 66 at the Royal Y ork as this
year’s Miss By-Line with three
other ethnic candidates.

Brigitte Bardot To Star
With Toshio Mifune
- TOKYO. — French sex-kitten,
Brigitte Bardot is in Japan mak­
ing a movie with two of Japan’s
biggest stars, Toshio Mifune and
Keiko Kishi.
The picture,
“The Secret
Agent” is being filmed as a joint
French-Japanese venture.

Nickle In The Slot
Gets You Rice Ball
TOKYO. — First it was reces­
sion, and now it may be unem­
ployment. Some of the auto-cafe­
terias in this city are replacing
surly waitresses with efficient
robots. The food is cheap •— 20
yen, or a little over a nickle for
a rice ball to 100 yen with curry
on the side.
The self-service cafeteria is a
newcomer to the catering indus­
RAYMOND Alta.—A Sansei, Jackie Lynn Nishiyama, has try and there .are 14 now in To­
become the ffrst’recipient of a $250. Jubilee scholarship set up by the kyo.
Anything from rice-balls to hot
Lethbridge Allied Arts Council to commemorate the 60th Anmverdogs are available during the
Miss Nishiyama was a successful participant in a recent day, and for late-workers .there
is warmed-up rice wine.
Kiwanis Music Festival held here.
.
Members of the council have expressed the hope that the
As of the end of 1965, there
amount given will be even larger in coming years.
_
were a total of 218,000 automatic
‘‘The -ward will be made to outstanding students in the per­ vendors in the nation-, compared
forming and visual arts, to help encourage and further their with 20,000 five years ago.
endeavours in their chosen field,” a statement from the Arts Coun­
Makers believe that more and
cil said.
_______________ ___________ more vending machines will be
used by foodstuff makers and
other manufacturers in future,
to cater to an ever-increasing
consumer market.
(59.06 - inch)
The increasing 150 - centimeter
TOKYO.
length
requires
that
occupants be J.C. Student Wins $3,000.
height of Japanese people in an
bent
before
insertion.
era of prosperity is even affect­
MONTREAL. — The National
The problem has been even
ing undertakers.
Research
Council of Canada, has
more noticeable with the young­
The ci tv fathers of Tsubame, er generation, whose rapidly ris­ awarded a $3,000.00 Studentship
in Niigata prefecture, have order­ ing height in recent years has to J.M. Suzuki of McGill Univer­
ed the remodeling or replacement made many schools desks and sity.
of municipal-te^rse. coffins^ whose chairs obsolete.

Raymond Sansei Becomes 1st Winner Of Award

Japanese Too Big For Coffins

Page 2

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INSTANT COOKING BASE

hi-me

BAMBOO GROVE
692 No. 3 Road,
Richmond, B. C.
Phone CR. 8-9585
OR. 8-9586

Page 4

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EM. 6-5589 — EM. 6-5711

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Page 7

Wednesday, April 20, 1966

PAGE 7

Dates and Doings

|

Kifcmts Service At Tor. Buddhist Church April 24th I
TORONTO —Presentation service, a service for infants, will I
included in the Morning Service of the Toronto Buddhist Church 1
a Anril 24th at H:00 a.m. Parents with infants are asked to
llall the Buddhist Church to make arrangements for the service.
K
~
T.B.C.

FMont Japanese Catholic Bazaar Slated For Mayz 7
MONTREAL.—The Montreal Japanese Catholic Mission will
Rre’ent their “Japanese Catholic Bazaar” on Saturday, May 7th
Kom 12 noon to 10 p.m. Location is the Japanese Catholic Mission,
Hgl55 Rousselot, Montreal 25, P.Q.
Evervone
is coi-dially
invited
to attend.
I**
everyone
for this
worthy
cause. We ask. the generous

1
*

;
*

Con Fukuyama, J.C.M.
*

OFFICE
EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395

s

Cosmopolitan Cuisine

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

By STELLA ITO

Ohz What A Peach Of a Pear!

care one of the oldest fruits known to man. We know
d^ellTi ate pears iecau^ archeologists have
lounapeai seeds in the debris surrounding their dwellings
Greeks were among the first to cultivate and& improve
was the French and Belgians of the late ISth and early
centuries who brought this fruit near to its present standards.
4njou Pears
i
market f^m’ October to
Tillsx

pears. It was brought to America about 125 years ago.
T,
a .^edmm-to-large pear, approaching- roundness in shape.
yellowish-green skin is sometimes stippled with russet Its

BConsul Gen. Saiki To Open J.C. Craft Show Apr. 26 ““ST’ *t’* flssh

2 Vesta Drive
HUdsou 5-1365

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

Bus:

824-8153

Res:

922-1353

ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered

Accountant

Suite 403
130 BLOOR ST. W.

TORONTO

fl“r-

■ '
Lose is believed to have been raised from seed in Bel# TORONTO—The Toronto Consul General of Japan, Mr. Sen- gium, in the early 19th century and named after the distinguished ‘auto
- FIRE — LIFE
■uro Saiki will formally open an Exhibition of Japanese Canadian naturalist, Louis Bose. It, too. has been in America for more than
ALL FORMS
Krafts on Tuesday, April 26th fromx 8:30 p.m. at the Canadian a~ century. This pear has a long, tapering
.
neck.
OF .
handicrafts Guild (Ontario) at 77 Bloor Street West here.
Its skin color is a dark yellow freckled with cinnamon russet.
H The Exhibition will be opened for the public on April 27th Ihe flesh is yellowish-white and its flavor is richly aromatic.
Suntil May 7th. Hours are 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and to 9:00 p.m. It’s very juicy.
%n Friday evenings. Everyone is cordially invited to attend. —T.U.
‘Cornice’
consult
Comice

comes
from

Doyenne du Comice,” which means,
*
*
*
KIYO
TAMURA
r
w
English, “best in show.” The Comice is a gorgeous pear, but
TORONTO
|MisS By-Line At T.B.C. Fashion Show On April 23 °F rather unpredictable performance. It bruises very easily when
sI TORONTO.—The Toronto Dana of the Toronto Buddhist Church nPe. Its skin is greenish-yellow, with a hint of pink cheek and ; Bus, 366-5812 Res. PL 9-8317
some russeting. Its flesh is butter-smooth and very juicy, its flavor
p\ill present their Spring Fashion Show on Saturday, April 23rd, sweet and rich. It came originally from the western coast of France
|1966 beginning 8 p.m. at the Church, 918 Bathurst Street. Tickets and reached America in 1850.
Bare 81.00 apiece.
Nelis and Bartlett
Custom Picture
| All proceeds go to the Dana Scholarship Fund. Refreshments
Hl be served.
Winter Nelis has, delicious flavor, but does not store well which
Framing
s A wide range of fashions from, children’s wear to bridal gowns is why we do not see this pear in the market more often. It was
Mil be presented. Everyone is cordially invited- to attend.
raised from seed in Belgium by a- M. Jean Nelis early in the 19th
NISHIMURA
; Special guest model will be the New Canadian’s Miss By-Line, century. It reached America in the middle of that century.
Ellen Tsuji.
The Bartlett pear, now the world’s leading- pear variety, is
T.B.C.
on tlie market in volume from July until mid-October, but is avail­
;
*
*
*
1278 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
able in small quantities in later months. It is not properly con­
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
a “winter pear.”
jNisansei Kai To Hold Car Rally On Sat., April 23rd sidered
Here are some ways to serve winter pears:
Tolao Nishimura
923-6877
| TORONTO.—The Nisansei Kai (formerly Jr. J.C.’s) will be
FRESH APPLE AND PEAR COMPOTE
isponsoring a car rally on Saturday evening, the 23rd of April.
|Whether you are a novice or. a rally enthusiast, come out and / cup sugar
'join us in some friendly competition. Drivers may be male or ’/z cup water
one-sixteenth teaspoon salt
female and any number of navigators will be allowed.
cup fresh lemon juice
i The contestants will gather at the J.C.C. Centre at 6:00 p.m.
cup fresh orange juice
%
pt which time special instructions will be given. The route will
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
1
teaspoon
pure vanilla extract
sover .^l’1’0™^6^ 65 miles in about two hours. Arrangements
NOTARY PUBLIC
pave been made for refreshments and a social at the finishing 1/2 cups fresh apple balls
Office Hours Saturday
l'/2 cups fresh pear balls
point of the rally.
Octobox to April Inclusive
i Interested persons should contact one of the folio-wing for Fresh mint
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suit 513 Templo Building
giUTther^information: Tom Maikawa — 461-6696; Howie Kagawa Maraschino cherries
Combine sugar, water, salt and lemon juice in a saucepan.
/8wl04; Marie Kawano — 259-2664. —H.K.
TORONTO
Bring to boiling point and cook about 1 minute. Remove from heat.
EM. 6-3323

Rea: HO. 7-3427
Add orange juice and pure vanilla extract.
In the meantime make the apple and pear balls from ripe
eating apples and pears with a melon ball cutter- or the % teaspoon’
measuring spoon. Add to the syrup.
Toss lightly and chill. Serve in tall sherbet glasses. Garnish
each serving with a sprig of fresh mint and a maraschino cherry.
. studio..*
Seiwes 6.
CIWtHS-PHOTO SUWE?
POACHED PEARS AND ORANGES
Family Co-op
4 fresh pears in season
2 cups water
cup sugar
1
Japanese & Occidental Foods
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
13841/2 Queen W.
teaspoon
vanilla
extract
Slocan City, B.C.
Toronto

LE. 2teaspoon salt
460 Dundas St. W. — Toronto
cup fresh orange section cartwheels
Phone 355-2211
EM. 6-5589 and EM. 6-5711
Peel pears and cut into eighths. Combine next 4 ingredients
in saucepan. Bring to boiling point. Add pears to hot syrup. Cover
and cook 15 to 20 minutes or until tender, but not until they lose
their shape.
Add vanilla extract. Cool. Add fresh orange sections. Chill.
SPORTING GOODS
Serve in sherbet glasses. Sprinkle with a few drops of Curacao
if desired.
Fishing Tackle and
Siwes
5
or
6.
Have Your'Diamond Rings
Golf Equipment
BAKED FRESH PEARS WITH SHERRY
Checked, Repaired or Remounted
r
&
And Your Watches Checked or Repaired
6 fresh pears
551 Danforth Ave.,
(near 1 Carlaw)
1 pkg. (8 oz.) cream cheese whipped
3 tablespoons dark brown sugar
Georg# Fukusaka
1 tablespoon fresh lime juice
Phone: HO. 3-7400
J 21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1103. Phone 363-0952 |
cup toasted slivered almonds
Open Thur, and Fri. Until 8 p. m.

Mon. — Fri. 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
I
/z cup sugar
1 cup fresh orange juice
Eve. By Appointment
cup dry sherry
Cut pears in half and core. Place in a shallow baking dish.
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
Mix together whipped* cream cheese, sugar, lime juice and almonds.
Place about 2 tablespoons of cheese mixture in cavities and over
t0P Mix^ugar and orange juice together and place in bottom of
baking dish. Bake in a pre-heated moderate oven (350F) 55 to
60 minutes or until tender.
. ,
.
T
r
Reserve
Baste occasionallv the last few minutes in oven. Just before
Now For
removing from oven, pour sherry in liquid and baste. Serve warm
(Dining Lounge)
Weddings
Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
or cool.
Dances
Etc.
Seiwes 4 to 6.

INSURANCE

Lucien 0. Kurata, Q.C.

KINO’S MARKET

Continental

Red & White
Food Store

DANFORTH

Why Take A Chance?

TAKARA JEWELLERS

|

I

Formal
Rentals

Lichee Garden 4
Phone: 364-3481

^ Lines To Serve You)
* ^RING SERVICE - “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS

Banquet Facilities
Or Private Parties
LDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or SmaU)
^^^JWNER-MUSIG-NIGHTLY

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH 918 Bathurst St.
SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 1966
10:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service
Presentation Service — Rev. N. Ishiura

ALNA
Of Toronto
CUSTOM MADE SUIT

Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE,
PHONE: 463-8104

Page 8

PAGE 8

Part I
The New Canada

Japanese American Success Story

Authorized ch secone c^
7
and for payment of postage
Post Office Depar^^

479 QUEEN ST. WEST
Idaho, Montana, California, Nevada and Utah.
Toronto 2-B. Ok \
This is the first part of the JaoanMA
whoJe vasfc ,ai’ea /all alien Japanese and native-born
storv that

Japanese Amenan success cozens of any degree of Japanese descent — 117,116 persons
EMpire 6-5005

6 recent Pacific Citizen and the New York U \ were subjected in rapid' succession to a curfew, assembly
Times Magazine, written by Professor William
ch.
£ ^'Y01'^7 camps within the zone and evacuation from the zone
Univ, of California
.
William Petersen of the to relocation centres.” Men, women and children of all ages wer^
ogy department at Berkeley.
upiooted, a total of 24,712 families. Nearly two-thirds were citi*
*

zens, because they had been born in. this country;- the-remainder
a v 1 1 • 1
"ere aliens, barred from citizenship.
jecteZto thVmos°tf d^^
ethnic minorities has been sub- hd nS3
they had; many lost most of what thev
Male Help Wan^
few persons would even S ? and the worst injustices, verv
L d h ^lal report of the War Relocation Authority,
PAINTERS heio
ricans ” Yet,
by evacuees, according to thepre- 753-2495 (Toronto)
nmy well be the cor^
refers to persons alive today, that 1
estimate, was worth 8200-million. After the war,
hek^ wanted 5;
been the object of color
Negroes, the Japanese have J doi
perhaps as much as 30 or 40 cents on GARDENER'S
(after 8 p.m.) or" RU
1-5741 (d^
feared and hated as
been aXr ?
onl^ in November, 1965,
A
FEW
gardenYY-TU-U"
any other group thev
And, more than
f tb th’ee ^^al plaintiffs had died.
533-6196, Mr. Ma^ (l^)
enemy. Conservatives* liberals and^r^Y^?^^
an overseas h-n?Ihat conceivable reason could there have been for this forced
Federal Government and Hie Suorpml r
i°Ca sheriffs, the
°f an entfe population to concentration camps, where TRUCK driver and aa-^^p
denying them their elXX
ba^ wire and watched by arm^ ed. Phone GA. 1-5040
‘h^
World War II evacuation to inteimf 1 n°LOriOusIy
m their P^ds - The official explanation was that
“the evacuation was onto).
n to internment
camps.
.
impelled by military necessitv,” for fear of a fifth column
YeeuabiF^YYYY^
prestige apartment buildir.a C’-^i-j
_ . Generally this kind of treatment, as we all
General DeWitt said: “A Jap’s a Jap. Itmakes no difference
driving licence required'^op^
creates what
might be termed “problem minorif-iY ” eSu days>-1 w .ether he is an American citizen or not. .
(Toronto).
' '
'~
.
They
are
a
dangernumber of inter-related factors—poor bin
1
1 Each of a ous element, whether loyal or not.” '
By WILLIAM PETERSEN

.

REXDALE
men. Will train
Company Benefits
244-5880 after 6

:ciu
S

iOV

female Help Wanted
NISEI

operated Store wants ch
weekends only. P -’eier middle-aaei
Phone 25J-9534 (Toronto).

therefore furnished them ,>tul
these schools aften validated the original stereotype ’ ’

COIUNTER girl- tor dry cleaning pit

Apply 2215 Dundas St'reel West. Ph;
d ^PPhcations renouncing their citizenship. Many of th^m LE.
-Ugh, it is
2-6714' (Toront
even equal opportunities are opened nl X
;’r,rt?”iB«’ illus^ned^
were pressured by their distraught and dis? X) “ likf!y ‘° be "^‘^tX^efa^ ”£““ ,1
O-TYPIST.
resting resits
a
a ’ tn^ii applications were illegally accented bv STEN
^u^ber of the’renunSnta were available in head
:ice of presiia
T.n

ob-consumnig as to be self-destructive >w? all the
company at St. Cic
& Yonge. ■ Gee
few cases are S ^
‘° T1”"'6 Japanese citizenship. A salary and excellent
^XE'^xx s hXoIarly- xn ”
Y
stl1.1 Pending, more than 20 years after the event. For appointment call 924-9571.
Baillie. (Toronto).
the slave traders started
'
to repair the damage that District6
nia9°ntp the renunciation was voided by the U.S.
Distuct Court m San Francisco after five years of litigation.
Apartment For Rent
Ihe history of Japanese Americans, however, challensres pvptv were^subiSddn
^meri9ca^si wbat manner of people TWO bedroom, unfurnished cncrtzeat
S SSxlS£ wax s”
strike
?
injustices? Seen from tire outside, thev for rent, Caledonia and Ealinton'dis­
sirke the white observer , as a solidlv unitary group but even trict. Preferably quiet couple with on
child. Phone after 6, RO. 7-6078 (Tor­
Ion
acquaintanceship reveals deep fissures ‘along every d'imen- onto).
cmeiion of good citizenship that we .choose, the Japanese Amerf
The division between generations, important for everv
CrUciaI in their ^se. That the Issei tiS^X
moreover, by their own' almost
unaX^
the oc^atTonaFri^
and
of
ssgssssss
and

GOLF

Fishing Tackle

S the Hoiatio Alger hero, there is no parallel to this success story.

ried so late
dren’s oranduarents

missing, for many of the Issei mar111 a°a ^ey might have been their chil-

iF1Om mily 148Tn 1880 to almost 140,000 in 1930 the number
oi Japanese in the United States grew steUilvnumbei
almost constant for two decades. Then in I960* whh
remained
200,000 Japanese in Hawaii addel to the national ptpa S‘ th’e
g
total reached not quite 475,000. In other words, in prewai vear^
constituted slightly more than 0 1 Decent
/
in CaKfornia, where then asYiow ____ __________________ (Cont. In Next Issue)
Of
mainland Japanese lived, they made up onlv 2.1 percent
oj. the state’s population in 1920.
'
peicent
the PersPective of these minuscule percentages it is
CJ^Icult to recapture the paranoiac flavor of the vast mass of
anti-Japanese agitation in the first decades of this centXv Pre
ed'Ashtfe bX'™ Xt"S a ?°Ci“‘
labor-dimtaatlarge ;
X
adopted what was termed "the Ca
S a’
gradually
“the. Tenon- Pern- untiikn.^ S'“r °S

I

OSCAR'S

1500 Dundas (at Dufferin)—LE. 2-4267

2 gehoo!
It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY

Consult

Shipbuilders Launch Unsinkable Sh

Bill Wales
Insurance Agency

'P

TOKYO. — A ship purported
v.atei absorption rate is virtual­
to be practically unsinkable ha - ly
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
at only two percent and
been in operation in the Inland it isnilpractically
non-inflammable.
Phone WA. 1-3171
Sea of Japan since last October
Ana e renovated Sanuki Maru
(1,829 gross tons) which wa*
constructed at the Kobe vard*
the immigration laws of the nineteen-twenties.
excluded by of the Mitsubishi Heavy Indus­
tries Co. in 1961.Mt has keen hi
Until the exclusion law was0 enacted Japanese businesses were use as a ferryboat plving be­
piikOitci*
In Smi
Fruncisco,
Juptiupse
avptp 'KQnnii-ad
The Board of Directors of the Jape
and, if they
tried
to, ptoteet
’tlXZ
« a «e? fcT tween Honshu and Shikoku on
nese Canadian Cultural Centre wish
JaP^ese National Railways’
turbmg the peace. Since marriage
1
d
Uko Route.
to acknowledge with thanks the fol­

OBJECTIVE $100,000.

-

Foam-Filled Bulkheads
in Wl. The
ship was divided
^icunurai land.
e^ en when one or two compare
this people as
have been
"€re dama^ed and flood^Pfcted. Denied citizenship, the Japanese were exceptional Hw
1
TVeVer> ]t was Torrid that
abiding aiien resident. Often unable to mauw for^rnnm-\
"hen two or more compartments
Jiey developed a family life both strong and‘‘fl^xib4 enon^^^^
there was danger
hop their children cross a wide cultural X.De^
» ?fb?' Y?ssel rolling over e?en
many urban jobs, both white-collar and manual X
• ^ pt.tne ship did not sink.-To elimenial tasi<s with such perseverance that thev achieved n nuX- c "Y^ th‘s dan®eU the Uko Ship
success. Denied ownership of the land, thev acquired control ^dT Contro1 Department of the Ja°\YW^er subterfuSe hy intensive cultiva4n £ ^
National Railways has
^H. “Vm the C-lifo-»- ^sert into' a kbulous
R^t «&"^




was ^.
giving military commanders authorityOrder 90b6, I Slde °f the ship, sea water canirom designated military area* The'foH™?16 aY
Pedons not enter and flood the vessel.
John L. DeWithh, head‘of the
Lieut. Gen.
p
_
fined the relevant a
major portion' ’ ^t1^ .Gomnuind, de-I Four bulkhead's located in the
majoi poicions of Wasnmgton, Oregon, antral part of the Sanuki Maru
| were filled with foaming liquid
polyurethane and the liquid left
to harden. By this method, even
it the snip should collied with f
another vessel and a hole ripped
Call
^ 4 Peri vale Cres.
in the central part of the bodv,
tneie would be 110 fear of th^ •'
Scarboro
compartments being flooded. ’ I

Ken Hori

Phone: AM. 1-5194

It is also possible to make poly­
urethane foam on the spot. Its

o
C
d

Iv<
I
I si

lBiPf

W{

J W€
199

wo

lowing contributors and pledges generously made to the current fund campaign:

Takeuchi
$ 50 16. Harunori Nagata
2. Paul Nakagawa
75 17. Mutt Otsu
Hem my
45 18. Fuzzy Fujiwara
F. Fukumoto
75 19. Susumu Koyama
5. Shigemitsu Fukumoto
90 20. Tamotsu Tohana
6. Tom Hayakawa
45 21.
K. Terashita
Mas Sugamori
150
22.
Koh
Takahashi
8. Shigeshi Fukushima
150
23. Nishimura Picture
9. Robert Kamino
150
Frame (Tokio)
10. Sid Sakanashi
300
J. Nakawatase
11. Prof. Makoto' Ueda
75
25.
12. S. Kawasaki
Masayoshi Shiomi
45
13. Tsunehiro Shoji
100 26. George Tsubone
14. Hiroshi Kawaguchi
50 27. Pat Y. Hirota
15. Dundas Union Store
28. Takejiro Hirasawa
Ltd. 200 29. Mitsuo Endo

Japanese Canadian Cultural Centres

ANNUAL BAZAAR

25
50
15
45

15

Da
fie

the
gen

100
20
50
10
50

®gi

A®,
■ sj«[
4s ■
®a

M;
Ports
Wei

Giff Items Galore — Japanese T-feals Served Through

Saturday, April 30th



1 to 7 p.m.

fein