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The New Canadian — August 17, 1966

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Page 1

Age of Reischauer' - continues with Johnson

Pg^chauer’s resignation as Ambassador to Japan in a sense
d of "an era in the relations of Japan to the whole of the western
assumed the role of principle occupying power under
site.
, immediately following the collapse of Japan in World War
wi regarded in' Japan with mixed feelings.
i □^/'Rei^hauer was appointed six years ago in the hope that his
Ambassaa
..^ ^ Japanese culture would have a beneficial effect. In
disown ?J5pr
of opinion as to the long term value of his tenure, tliere
se of some a
U S.-Japan relations are on a healthier foundation than
r be no u^P]ia ww ■ ’
.
;Fe^r ^e^con?equently spe<nal significance in the appointment of U. Alexis
^.^^olace "Professor Reischauer who is returning to Harvard University.
is-5® 5° ;<the senior career diplomat in the State department. He has had

^ ^e Far East including an extremely, uncomfortable p'eriod
®?.e'\
the brutal Japanese military in Manchuria in December
a virtual

v

x

10,1 As
*. _ ......
. , ,he wa not, repatriated
...
.*-... a
_ year after being' ^..kt^
subjected
1941.
for
vice-consul
to deprivations and indignities.
Air. Johnson therefore knows the side of the Japanese military which most
Japanese are. resolved not to encourage. He served on the diplomatic staff of the
U.S. mission in Manila in 1945 and accompanied General MacArthur* to Japan. He
was on the U.S. delegation which negotiated the Japanese peace treaty in San.
Francisco in 1951.
Subsequently the new ambassador* to Tokyo served in Czechoslovakia and in.
Thailand where he was U.S. ambassador for three years until 1961 arid also council
representative to the South East. Treaty Organization.
,
; ? i
. The new ambassador is a tough negotiator, completely conversant .with U.S.;
State department Far East policy. His assignment bo Japan at this pedicular tinm
continues the policy of having a'U.S. representative who speaks and writes Japanese
but injects into the role a new note of workaday realism. ; ;
.
?
i

j

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flic ftto Canadian

Stella Ito’s
;ukiyaki Cookbook

Only $1.50

Jessie ,L. Beattie’s
Strength For The
Bridge. Only $5.00

An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
qXXX-No63

;

'

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1966

Toronto, Ont.

i!ll|[|[inillIllimillll!lllllllIlinilIIII ’IIIHIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIHIUIIBIIIIUJlIHIIIIlIIHlHllUUlllHlUlUlllHllliniI!illIl!llIlllllillllIlliniiniHIIHIIIIiniinilllllllIlllllllIIHIlIllllIIIIIHIHIIIIIllllllllllllll

aru Reischauer was 1st foreign born A 10 year project
ife of US Ambassador-a fairytale
(Ed. note — Among the U.S. ambassadors’ wives featured
enily in “This Week,” a nationally syndicated newspaper supment, is Haru Matsukata Reischauer. Authoress Frances Spatz
ighton writes: “She pulled a switch on Madame Butterfly —
Hove story has a happy-■ending.”’)
.
Haru Matsukata Reischauer became the first foreign-born wife
an American Ambassador to be assigned for duty in her native
antry, when President Kennedy * appointed her husband Ambasior to Japan in 1961.
Haru discovered diplomatic life wasn’t all partying. ’Two years
o, a deranged Japanese youth entered the embassy grounds and
ibbed her husband.
He recovered, later got hepatitis, perhaps from a blood traris>ion. And, recently, thousands of Japanese picketed, tee embassy
Tokyo in protest against Vietnam. .But Haru continues hex* ef­
ts to “build a bridge of understanding” between Japan and her
opted land.
. .
The Reischauers first met when Edwin-, a missionary’s son,
is growing up in Japan. Bhe developed a crush on him, but he
turned-to the U.S., married and had three children.
She spent the war years hiding, working on a farm, because
r family was known to be sympathetic to the Americans. After
J war, she was a Tokyo correspondent for American publications.
Then Reischauer, .a widower on a year’s leave absence from
uvard-Fenching Institute, where he* was a professor and the
rector, revisited Tokyo. The childhood crush developed into love,
d they were married.
Haru is considered “another ambassador” around the State
apartment- Foreign Service, the highest praise that can be be>wed on a diplomat’s wife.
She keeps two secretaries busy full-time ■ and sees her role as
unique opportunity to convince the Japanese that the U.S. “is
* militaristic but will defend its ideals of peace, freedom and
nocracy.”
'
'
'
'
. hen Japanese nationals come to her, Haru is eager to help—
‘ she reminds them, “I am an American now, and I represent
nenca.”.

melia Earhart Not Spy-Navy
By BOB HORTON
tiate allegations that Miss Ear­
■Sed Press Writer)
hart “was or had been engaged
ASHINGTON. - The Navy in any type of espionage activity
L1Tently investigative files for the U.S. government.”
^ .s^stantiate a publishThe State Department said at
a ^n ^t Matrix Amelia the itime -tee story was published

on a
spy mis- it had no information Miss Ear­
U
vanished in 1937. hart was on a spy mission.
The Navy said the files do re­
A ■ Clai statement was a
u /espouse to a story pub- flect teat a thorough naval
w r
nionth by the search was conducted for Miss
Caln., Register.

Earhart and Noonan at the time.
>Lns'^)aPe.r sa^ a-private
^vestigation revealed Japan Scientists receive
L^s Earhart and her navi^00nan> fed captives Research Fellowship
TOKYO.—Six Japanese scien­
;w3ajKe after their plane
aH-?0'? in ^ Marshall tists have won post-doctoral re­
Pair ^s seek- search fellowships for the acade­
^en and photographs- mic year 1966-67, the Pacific of­
H^^^eld islands in the fice of the United States Insti­
tute of Health announced.
Each ’fellow will receive a
.taken prisoner, grant of $5000 to $6000 plus
5
Sa^’ Miss Earhart
travel expenses.
to Sai.. receive reThose named1 to
h gator
a was
matrix died and search training in the United
beheaded.
States were:
.
Dr. Masao Goto, to tee Umv.
si
said *ts story* was
71
fileS” of the of Calif, at Davis; Dr. Takahide
■^■^4^/ department, arid Ide, to Harvard Medical School;
“literally hun- Dr. Ikunoshin Kato, to Bethesda,
including na- .Maryland; Dr. Masahiro Isomo­
^*4W
Earhart.
to, to Massachusetts Institute of
a review of na- Technology; Dr. Shinjiro Onisni,
S £ e service files con­ to Washington Univ.; Dr. Akira
formation to substan- Takakusu, to Boston Univ.

: 42

they didn't realize

History Shows Our Issei Pioneers
Brave People In A Turbulent World

A Review By George Tanaka

the History of Japanese Canadians.

Little Realization
The long memory of time and the passage of
The
talents
of tee Nisei, in all the field's of
events are tire heartbeat and substance of the his­
endeavor,
are
the
treasures of. accomplishment of
torian. The drama of this work, the writing of
the History of Japanese Canadians, is in itself the Nisei, generation. When the National JCCA
a history upon a history. For it yas at the Second History, project Editorial Committee then com­
National Conference of the National J CCA in posed of Frank Moritsugu, -Raymond.-Moriyama
Winnipeg in 1948, that the writing of a history and George Tanaka, first assessed the Nisei po­
was first proclaimed as a project of the J CCA. tential to write a history, one name only came
And not till a decade later, in 1958-59 was the to mind with the essential qualifications. Thus
project undertaken. And then 7 years for the Ken Adachi (M.A. in English, former editor of
first submission of manuscript, Chapter Two of The New Canadian and writer of the 18,000 word
History of the Japanese Cana­
presages the riot that
dians in B.C.) was selected and liticians,
eventually
happened.
negotiations concluded ■ tliat he
This
brought
Mackenzie King
be the winter for the history..
to
the
scene
as
the
young Com­
Little did the Committee or
missioner
exhibiting
“great skill,
writer then realize, the grim and
unvarying
patience
and
urbani­
SAN DIEGO. — With an.ex­ formidable task that lay ahead. ty” in his investigations and, in
though other writers had
panded interest on youth and And
intimated
to Ken Adachi the pro­ the irony of history ” 35 years
civil rights activities for the
later as Prime Minister, was to
coming biennium, the Japanese ject could take 10 years, the op­ be involved in the evacuation
American Citizen’s League will timism toward the project could and the controversial property
operate under a $147,000 budget hardly portend the truth of the claims.
warning.
from 1967.
The Yellow Peril
Action came recently at .. the
A Great Report.
The fear of the Yellow peril”,
19te- biennial national convention
Ken
Adachi’s
manuscript, a striking phrase coined by
being attended by delegates from Chapter Two, entitled The “Yel­
88 chapters at El Cortez Hotel. low Peril” And The Riots Of Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany
Higher costs in basic opera­ 1907, 15,000 words in length in­ brooding over the rise of Japan,
tions, such as salaries, Pacific cluding 79 footnotes document­ became a-catchword phrase" in
Citizen (JACL’s weekly publica­ ing factual statements, indicates British Columbia.
tion), and an additional appropri­ Adachi’s mastery of the histori­ - ■ The steamer Kumeric and other
ation of $9,000 for an assistant an’s art and techniques. “We are boats bringing Japanese immi­
national director, have boosted all of the opinion that this pro­ grants to Canada, are described
the .annual administrative budget vince must be a white man’s by Adachi in the many incidents
leading up to the riot. The fullof $125,000 by 18 pct.
country. . . . We do not wish to throated cry that 50,000 Japanese
$6,000
look forward to a day when our
The newly organized National descendants will be dominated by would eventually take over B.C.
Jr. JACL has been authorized a Japanese, or Chinese, or any color gave march to the progression
*
$6,000 appropriation. Previously but their own . . ... We are an toward violence.
Adachi
describes
the
day.
of the
onlv $1,500 had been budgeted outpost of the Empire, and that
riot,
with
the
mass
parade
from
for’ the youth program. A sum outpost we have to hold against
Gamble
Street
to
the
City
Hall.
of $9,300 had been requested bur all comers.
The
waving
banners
and
written
the Jr. JACL is expected to raise So the Vancouver* Daily Province
its share through assessments editorialized on September 9, slogans, “Stand for a White Can­
and Jr. JACL dues of 75 cents 1907, humming a variation on ada”, “Steamer Woolwich is En­
route with 500 Japs”, etc. The
per member.
_.
, the same emotional theme that increasing crowd reaching 8,000
While the Eastern District had nurtured fears and exacer­
Council proposed $15,000 to pusli bated passions since the beginn­ at the City Hall. The outbreak
that sparked the uncontrolable
JACL’s civil rights activities, toe ing of the eventful year.”
rAob into violence, overrunning
Budget-Finance Committee, chair­
Thus begins Ken Adachi's
ed by National Treasurer Yone history, Chapter Two, of the the _ Chinese section of the city,
Satoda, separated the sum by re­ I eventful year of 1907 in the an- inflicting violence and property
presenting $9,000 for an assist­ i nals of British Columbia and the damage, swept on to Powell
Street and upon the Japanese.
ant national director, with con­ ' Japanese Canadians.
Adachi tells this story in a
cern in the field of civil rights

The
Chapter,
reading
as
though
restrained
journalistic style, with
that will have a $6,000 budgetary
the
events
had
happened
but
the
inborn
eye of one understand­
authorization.
yesterday, describes in vivid des­ ing the Japanese people. And I
To help meet the $147,00v* cription and chronology of events must say, as I reviewed this part
budget, it was recommended that which built up to the explosion, of Adachi’s record of the Japa­
national dues be raised at the of the riot of September, 1907. nese people, I felt proud of the
rate of 50 cents per $10,000 in­ Adachi’s graphic powers on the Issei who -were then young people
crease in the budget. With this brewing racial storm of 1907, the
rule of thumb, the National Coun­ incidents and happenings giving beginning life in Canada..
An Explosive Narative
cil approved raising dues from rise to consolidation of anti-Ja­
$4 to $5 per member. To this panese agitation whetted by pub­
Adachi writes, “Frank Uyehalic- media and the province’s po­
(Continued on Page 8)
(Continued on Page 8)

JACL ups budget
for Rights & Youth

Page 2

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CAIXA FLORIST
727 Danforth Ave,- (at Pape)
Toronto. Phone Day Or Night
466-9911

Pape Ave.

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BAMBOOGROVE
692 No. 3 Road*
Richmond, B. C.
Phone CR. 8-9585
CR. 8-9586

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Page 7

PAGE 1

Qates And Doings
F-sei Kai Hold Shakespearean Trip On Sat.

jThe New Canadian's

1
f

Cosmopolitan Cuisine

The Nisansei Kai - are sponsoring a trip to the.
kTOKOA* ^‘^ at stratford ‘ony Saturday, August 20.
^^hino- to make the trip, can do so as there are still
HIYASHI LA-MEN (Saimin)
^®e
Tho rlavs showing- at this time are Mozort’s DON
Ingredients:
5 pkgs, saimin
and Shakespeare’s HENRY V.
• ferested people should call Dave Shimozawa at 247-3o2G 3 slices ham
10 slices kamaboko (slice thin)
,£ Hurry because they’re going fast.
^
1 small cucumber
-—
stalks green onions
2 eggs
L Cultural Centre Booth At CNE Hobby Show Seasoning:
tablespoons vinegar
The Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre, for the 3 tablespoons soy sauce
IJ
a row will participate in the Arts, Crafts and Hobbies 1 cup daslu jiru
KPSd at the Canadian National .Exhibition, August 19-Sept- 1 tablespoon sesame oil
1 teaspoon salt
one of the largest shows' of its kind in North America 1 teaspoon sugar
I’ iuofc bustling with activity, the show creates a leisurely Ajinomoto
Krp°of quiet enjoyment. This, has been especially true Pepper
Method:
K
booth occupied bv the J.C. Cultural Centre -with its display
LSiStatta of IKEBANA, SUMIE AND ORIGAMI.
Boil saimin, wash in cold water and drain. Fry eggs thin and
slice
finely. Bub salt on cucumber on board and cut in fine slices.
s vear the committee hopes to surpass its past year s cfAlso,
cut ham and kamaboko in thin slices. Chop onion fine
l Be‘sure to visit the Cultural Centre , booth when you’re at
^Exhibition. The show is in the General Exhibits Building near and wash in cold water. Mix the ingredients for seasoning and
after the saimin is well-drained, put it in the mixed seasoning
fee Princess Gates. *
*
*
before arranging on plate.
Pour tlie rest of the mixture on it and garnish with rest of
Japan's PM Sato Supports Chiang Kai-Shek
ingredients. Pepper may be sprinkled over it, if desired1.
I TOKYO—Japanese Prime Minister Eisafku Sato pledged Ja­
WON BOK SALAD
ki’s continued support for Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist China
Ingredients:
United Nations.
.
\
m v
,
1 medium size won bok
I ‘I don’t think it would be fair to give United Nations member- 5 or 6 small red peppers
Lip to Communist China at the cost of expelling Nationalist
stalk green onion
Ciina,” he told newsmen here.
:
1 medium size ginger
■ But Sato refused to be drawn into criticism of Communist Few drops sesame oil
China. “I don’t think China is taking an isolationist policy by Sauce:
‘choice,” he said. “I want to be friendly with China if possible.”
3 tablespoons oil
3 tablespoons vinegar
3 tablespoons sugar
2 teaspoons salt
He: lets perambulate the circuference eh babe
Dash of Ajinomoto
she: only with gentleman will I perambulate.
Method:
He: OK, could I have this next dance, ma’dam
Cut off crinkled edge of won bok. Wash separately then slice
she: fade, buster, fade. .
into thin strips. Put in bowl and sprinkle salt, Chop onion and
ginger in strips. Split red pepper and take seeds out and wash.
Sauce:
An example of conversation you won’t hear at THE
Saute the pepper in oil then add vinegar, sugar, salt and
seasoning and cook until sauce becomes clear, Then add green
onion and ginger. Remove from- fire. Rinse won bok and squeeze
the water off and pour the sauce over the cabbage.
YOO-FU ZUSHI
(Western Style Sushi)
Ingredients:
4 slices ham or teriyaki meat
4 ti leaves
eggs
2 tablespoons white sesame seeds
2 cups rice
3 tablespoons su (vinegar*)
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1966
1 tablespoon sugar
Door prizes
1 teaspoon salt
Time: 8:00 p.m.
Novelty dances
Place: J.C. Cultural Centre
1 tablespoon wine
teaspoon Ajinomoto
Bar and refreshments
Admission: 8-9:00 p.m. — $1:00
after 9 p.m. fine-50^
2 cups water
Mustard

IW

J.C. Hockey League's
Labour Day Dance
Rides provided from Eglinton and Don Mills 8 to 9 p.m

^iiiniuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif UmiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii । mi । iiiiiiiiiir

For Beat Results
Use New Canadian Ads

Go To Church Of Your
Choice This Sunday

Scramble eggs; roast sesame seeds until fragrant and soak
in mixture of su and sugar (2 tablespoons su and 1 tablespoon
susar) for 1 or 2 minutes. Cook rice rather soft, add egg and
sesame seed; stir well. Wilt young tender leaves in hot water.],
Using 2 leaves, place ham in centre and brush with mustard. .
Over it place sushi rice, fold leaves, tying ends together; also .
tie entire roll. Slice after leaving for 4 or 5 hours.
.

TORONTO JAPANESE LANGUAGE SCHOOL

Why Take A Choree?

Enrolment for 1966-67 season at the following schools

Have Your Diamond Rings
Checked, Repaired or Remounted
And Your Watches Checked o? Repaired

No. 1 Japanese Language School
Orde Street — Downtown
No. 2 Japanese Language School
J.C. Cultural Centre— Don Mills

No. 3 Japanese Language School
Etobicoke

TAKARA JEWELLERS
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1103. Phone 363-0952
Mon. — Fri. 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
. ,

COmirience on Sept. 10 excepting the no. 3 school.
— Saturday 9 a.m.-12 p.m.; No. 2 school —
o p,m'^ pan- and Monday 7 p.m.-8 p.m.; No. 3
;.5n
Saturday 9 a.m.-12 p.m.; Adult classes — Tuesday
P.m.-9:3O p.m.
b^mCOnuno^a^ons are limited, early registration will assure
i^c6^- Contact the School Board immediately for
®iormatlon and appiication forms.

Toronto Japanese Language School
Ken Saito
54 Simpson Ave.
Toronto 6
461-5318

\

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

RESIDENCE
2 Vesta. Drive
HUdson 5-1365

OFFICE
EM 4-1394
EM. 4-1395

A. E. McKague, Q.C.
Barrister and Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street Jat Adelaide)
TORONTO

Bus:

Res:

824-8153

922-1353

ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered
Suite

Accountant
403

130 BLOOR ST. W.

TORONTO

AUTO





FIRE

LIFE

ALL FORMS
OF

INSURANCE
consult

KIYO TAMURA
TORONTO

Bus. 366-5812

Res. Pl. 9-8317

Ctistom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yongo Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
323-6877
Toho Nishimura

tudiO"
13841/2 Queen W.
LE. 2-6378
Toronto

DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS

Fishing Tackle- and
Golf Equipment
551 Danforth Ave.,
(n*ar Carlow)
Georg* Fulruxxka

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

Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe

Special Adult Classes
Nikko Garden — 460 Dundas St. W.

sc

It I# a good policy , to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult

Lichee Garden
(Dining lounge)
Toronto, Canada
118 Elizabeth St,

Phone: 364-3481
(4 Lines To >• rve You)
CATERING SERVICE - “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS

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

Formal
Rentals
Reserve
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc,

AINA
Of Toronto
CUSTOM MADE SUIT

Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE,
PHONE: 463-8104

Page 8

PAGE 8



Japan journalists create havoc on
Bond set, “Go too far"—Connery
Shooting of the new James
Only Llve Twice,” started on schedule here'
nimediately ran into a major confrontation with the
spokesman for the company producing

hili said. ■

wic x

About 35 Japanese reporters and photographers came
on the making of the new 007 thriller, which
scars bean Connery.
'+bo1R dl?PUte ^roke °ut between the Japanese reporters
aa
ri° d movie people almost as soon as work began
Pro£t'fi m’ according to Tom Carlisle, spokesman for Eon
Eroductions, makers of the film.
1
Upj This was a very serious confrontation, Carlisle told
“?£»°pe we can solve this Problem before there is some.
bloodshed.”
nni
Japa^^
apparently were
bys ProvideS for their transportation
? shooting site and the bleachers set up for them to
photogaph the movie in the makipg.

.
Were Unreasonable
that^m?nov^h^ Japanese photographers also demanded
iP 7 be r<?enacted so they could get more pictures,
unse? whPnVIS°
that actor Sean Cannery was verv
in thei^
S We Were ^siegedby photographers
"iroin^^A^1’
^^ the journalists they were
fZ^o^rink’n A ,fchat S
Japanese journalists recomnanv
i 7
r
beer provided* by the movie
i tui'ned back their press badges stating they
of al C^
h
™ "'ithouf &™al approval
T
WouId Increase Cost
aai
the Japanese reporters want to do is direct-and
shoobJ?ls movm themselves,” Carlisle said.
them”
S “S to do some things over again - just for
a?.pIrTg to spend $3 million in
went the
S
budget of $8 million. But the way things
alo mmf^
”1Sllt be spending; SB million out of

S ^

^ ^-

Bond°mS B Tm’* «bCCvSe ^ 016 Popularity of James
ona movies in Japan we have been inundated bv renortprq
“o^^mhl1™®'j?®,^ in any of the earlier Bon/films.”
press ale S'? C?hf contended, “is that the Japanese
tiymg to make Sean Connery into the man he nor»a a P’ ^“-'“es Bond- which simply“rt’k

J



17.1



jade, because they found it as
van. IQCle in Japan l^6 toughest material then avail-'
TOTTYO
Jable for ^^ tools and weaLr 1 °
~
exhibition of pons.
tfiTdl^?adp products is .being
The traders, however, introdu<'the .Palace Hotel Annex, ed iron and steel to replace the
I atti acting the attention of pas-I elegant stone.

Authorized ca

ad

“0 f« parent of ^

a T1
A c,entu^ later, Chinese laborofSee oft CmMS
o XT ™S‘t
I annex
Bureau at the hotel . Canadian railroads were delight”

Post OHies Der,r^

T MS

U9 QUEEN ST.
To^to 2-B, Ont
UlPire 6-5005

It, is a collection of ladies/ and chunks of jade^nsteatL ^^s * of
SUBSCRIPT^
I mens accessories made of the I it, in °reen shnd^Q -frAm
S4.00 Pei 6 noa{i.
Ade fpom t116 valley tints to deep forest tones wen?
S7.O0 per ^
°f .^® turbulent Fraser River in off to Ohana ■
British Columbia.
I —-———— ———
Before the arrival of European _ _'_'
traders around 1800, local In- J
dians had searched avidly for
(Continued from Pape 1)
“squ’s lisht” as they called the
Female Help Wanted
latter figure, whatever amounts I
MOTWs'hX^
----- chapters assess must be includwoman, 2 cHM-Jn' 'O3?^ eg
America Honda Co.
ed. For inost chapters, single no
heavy
memberships
thus will ran sr ^t;. 9-3754 (Toronto)/
Indicted For Price Fixing from
$6-7.
SAN FRANCISCO.—The U?.S.
This is .the first increase‘in
[ Grand Jury indicted .the Ameri­ national dues since 1962, Satoda
coats.
dd v a c^ StoS
can Honda Motor. Co., a dealers pointed- out.
534-7538 ‘(Toronto)
association, and seven men on
Appropriations from JACL’s
.charges of illegally fixing prices i eserve fund for the Washington SEWING I4ACHINE^TE----- 7
of the Honda motorcycle in the alien land repeal campaign ($6,-* enced on men's shiris/S/^
enrAgo°n wages- Andv
San Francisco Bay Area.
” 000) and a JACL amicus brief T
onto)/ P °°r) °r Ph^W|
The company, of Gardena and on the janti-micegenation case
some of its Southern- California before the U.S. Supreme Court OPERATORS experien^TTn^/Tl
managers were fined May 25 in ($5,000) have been authorized by aresses. Steady vwi.‘•“’s
Colette Origi^
P.h Cl Oil vf1. i n T .no
A v» zv»z^ 7
U.S. District
Court in Los Angel
­ the National Council on matters Apply
St. (Toronto).
9
es. The managers were given that are non-recurring oi’ those
suspended jail terms.
Male Help Wanted .
projects which a one-time quality
The indictment said retail such as the above.
GARDENING helpers needed ' isd
prices of Hondas and parts were
The increase in the 1967-GS a - A. Phone 533-6196 (Mr.
arbitrarily fixed in the San Fran­ budget : over the current
one
cisco Bay Area and competition .amounts to a need for 100 pct.
P
opportunity for ■ aigJ
among dealers was suppressed.
renewal of. membership, Satoda ment. Apply JoU Hort Handbag
The indictment said Honda reminded.
sales in the area last year total­
Business for Sale
I
ed $4.3 million compared to $135 ■
million nationally.
LANDSCAPE gardening business J
OFFSET ANO LETTERPRESS
complete equipment, and lull tins 8,1

A I HQ

PRINTING

OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHEADS

ior four helpers. Phone ^W'-fel

8 p.m.

I

TOKYO. — A kangaroo wear­ .'y/'eMcny t^wi5zZ'<,4j^enfac
House For Sale
H
ing
boxing gloves and hopping
vuev
CvU
dll*
HOUSE has five .bedrooms, moi
along at 40 miles per hour was
kitchen, recreation room, laundry i«
HARRY S. KOHOO g
captured recently by police who
with tub, a 3-piece. bathroom and
finally overtook him and then 627 BAY ST., TORONTO Phone 368-9768 garage. Total price 618,000, phon* e
6-.O'clock 465-6106.
outboxed him.
Vietnam TV Special
HISTORY
The
three-year-old
marsupial,
Sponsored By Toyota
(Continued from Pape 1)
known in local circus rings as
The Southern California Toyo­ ra, one of the first children born Fuji, escaped from this trainer
ta Dealers Advertising Associa­ of immigrant parents, described during a boxing lesson and took
tion co-sponsored Jerry Dun- part of the opening scene as he off for a bit of unauthorized road
work.
“Vletnam: The Village saw, or rather heard it:
When word came that the crowd
War, an hour-long color TV
Several police cars gave chase
special, on CBS-TV Sunday, Aug­
was nearing, those along Po­ but Fuji. Ayas finally cornered by I
ust 14, at 9 p.m.

well Street got their first taste a group of pedestrians. Fuji toos
Family Co-op
Last May, veteran TV news­
of a blackout; lights were turn- them on but finally -was downed
man Jerry Dunphy headed a pro­ ■ ed off. All was dark and* still. by a policeman who had a longer I
°
duction crew to Vietnam to covA deadly hush reigned. It was reach.
Japanese & Occidental Foods
broken by a distant murmur
a heretofore unreported facet
ot the Vietnam conflict—the
which quickly filled the night
Slocan City, B.C
silent war being waged by U.S.
air. Soon the tramp, tramp,
460 Dundas St. W. — Toronts
armed forces for the hearts and
tramp of many feet and the ed the savagery of the shameful
Phone 355-2211
souls of the Vietnamese people.
sound of many voices became and _ unprovoked attacks. The
EM. 6-5589 and EM. 6-5711
audible. Mothers clutched their Yomiuri Shimbun of Japan in
War Against Fear
children closer in the darkened naive homily, told the Japanese
Dunphy reports that tliis is “a
backrooms
of their homes. Not in Vancouver to “respect them­
war against hunger, fear, disease
a
word
was
spoken. At last. A selves and thus earn the respect
and ignorance . . . one that is
:• Please note our new Address and Telephone.
mass
of
marching
men swung of the people amonsamong who™
whom tlmv
they
tar removed from the politics of
lived.
around
Main
heading
up
Powell,
baigon and from the front-line
A
PARKING AT REAR
picking up crushed rocks from
tactics of the Viet Cong.”
But
the
temper
of
the
B.C.
the semi-paved street and hurl­
Dunphy’s hour color TV special
ing
them at the windows. . . A people could not be all one-sided,
diamatically showed how this war
,
child
’s shrill cry split the dark as Adachi states, and to which
had become a personal project of
silence
of one of the houses. we all know from personal ex­
dedicated 1 Americans who, on
It
was
followed
by another, and perience, is truly the case.
^ time and during their
Much more is described by Ken
another. A bedlam of wailine
oh" duty hours, are volunteering ’ broke
461 EAST HASTINGS STREET,
Adachi, as he paints the nation­
loose.
°
ferVces to help educate The police, drawing their clubs al and international scenes that
and to heal tlie frightened people
VANCOUVER 4, B.C.
concerned the Japanese in B.C.:
who still do not understand the as they were belatedly called to of Theodore Roosevelt’s concern
s
the scene, were unable to cope
shooting- war.
oyer
relations
with
Britain,
the
TELEPHONE
254-5101
with the mob or were unwilling
to do so. Stores and private U.S. and Japan.
I homes suffered considerable dam­
age as the Japanese met the mob History To Be Proud Of
at first with defensive tactics ,,
is no doubt in my mind
by pelting rocks down from roof­
Aen Adachi will complete
tops. But then the Japanese ral­ a history that Japanese Cana­
'
^EG0- — Phil Sheridan lied forth with sticks, clubs, iron dians^ can look upon with pride.
fonner chief Justice bars, knives and bottles broken Ana i must -say Ken Adachi has
of the California Supreme Court °^,,a^ the necks. Crying “Ban - worked indefatigably conscien­
was honored by the Japanese zai , they tore into the mob tiously these past 7 years on the
American Citizens’ League at the Some of the Japanese went to nistory. It has been a formidable
convention recognitions banquet ground .. as .. stones „ thumped project- and one deserving of
on July 30.
against heads, but the mob soon praise ^nd appreciation to ° the
After serving 25 years' on the wavered, broke, retreated—some writer. The thousands upon thou­
state supreme court, 24 as chief gashed and bleeding, their lust sands of words that have beer,
justice,.- Gibson retired in 1964. for conflict quickly dissipated bv written and discarded bv Adachi
His forthright opinion invalidat­ the unexpected and fiery resist­ is a ^monumental tribute to his
ing the California alien land law ance.”
search for creating an outstand­
in 1952 and declaring this law
The- riot brought world-wide ingly written histoiw. Certainlv
as outright racial discrimination, attention upon British Columbia. Ken Adachi needs our encour- I
was particularly gratifying to
Times of London and the agement and our support. He de­
Japanese Americans.
Daily Telegraph ridiculed the serves our appreciation.
Though he was not present to idea a few .thousand Japanese
The History of Japanese will
accept the National JACL scroll were likely to turn B.C. into a r
°^ !^e heartbeat of
of appreciation, Gibson s out­ Mongolian province and execrat- Canada. Its achievement will be
standing leadership in- the im­
a matter of pride to Canadians
provement of judicial procedur­ c4?r. ^^ creed ^ncl his continuing as well as serving-as a conscience
es, his deep and sincere concern
to its citizenship. For it is k
for maintaining equal justice in activities as a public servant much a part of Canada and the
were acknowledged in the cita­
the courts regardless of race, -tion.
smry becomes Canadian more
and more.
m atc h e s

M^H^>

KINO'S MARKET

Continental

Red & White
Food Store

K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE

Chief Justice Gibson
Honoured By JACL

J