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The New Canadian — March 22, 1967

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Page 1

as
There
A
Negro
Samurai
In
Japanese
W

JOE GRANT MASAOKA
By
a Negro
at me in cold type: “There was
stared Japanese
history named Sakanouye Tamu“ who rose to great honor in Japan. . .
Xd pointed to this line in the January 1 1967,
. The Corpsman, magazine of the .oh Corps,
e of Economic Opportunity. He asked if it were
ST

^he magazine asking to be referred to their
X Jo which they replied, see BEFORE THE
(FLOWER—A History of the Negro in America
rone Bennett, Jr., 1962. The passage in question

“During the early Christian Era, Negroes were scat­
tered to the four corners of the world. For many
centuries, Negro merchants traded with India, China
and Europe. Other Negroes were sold as slaves in
Europe and Asia. By the beginning of the Islamic
Era, Negroes—as merchants and merchandise—had
been introduced into many ‘white’ countries. There
was a Negro general in Japan, Sakanouye Tamura­
maro.”
I wrote to the author requesting the source of his
information. Meantime I decided to check it out
through our own sources just as other more pertinent
items in the historical inquiry of the project have
to be verified.

History?

1
My searches
disclosed that there was a historical
historical
figure in Japan bv the name of Sakanoue-no-Tamurai4o. who lived in A.D. 75S to 811. A warrior, he
gained renown in leading expeditions against the
Ainus of northern Japan, even being captured. In ,97
he commanded the imperial forces and constructed
forts at Izawa and Shiba along the Ainu (Ezo) frontiers-

.

r

n ,

He became a general of the samurai guarding the
Emperor and wielded considerable influence. In 810
A.D. Kusuko Fujiwara attempted to restore ex-Em­
peror Heizei to the throne by a rebellion. Thereupon.
Emperor Saga elevated Tamuramaro to the rank of
(Continued on

Page S)

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CENTENNIAL

YEAR
1867—1967

50 t

^Itl

he Dew Canadian

EXPO 67
APRIL 28—OCT. 27

An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin

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MS

Japanese Advertised Pearl Harbor
In Dormitory Lavatory Stall Attack 16 Days Before, Says Report

i lore,
idy,’ co®
MM 11

nted

East s

“The Broken Seal,” which was published recent­
NEW YORK.—The date, time and location of
arts and science student. She is
ly by Random House. It deals with U.S. and Ja­
jeing held for investigation of the Japanese surprise bombing of Pearl Harbor panese intelligence operations befoie World
loniicide after the body of the may have been contained in a set of cryptic ad­
infant was found in a waste vertisements published in The New Yorker maga­ War IL
The two ads appeared on pages 32 and 86 of
jasket of a women’s dormitory.
zine 16 days before the attack.
The New Yorker of Nov. 22, 1941. About 250,000
The girl is the daughter of
According to Ladislas Farago, a former United
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Uyeda of
copies of the issue were distributed a day earlier.
States
intelligence expert and military historian,
7024 Winona Ct. in Westminis­
The first advertisement showed a pair of dice
ter, a northwestern suburb of the ads may have served to alert Japanese agents
with
six numerals written on their faces. There
Denver.
here that it was time to disband their apparatus.
were the numbers 12 and 7, which Farago says
She was taken from her room
Farago describes the advertisements in his book.
recently and placed in Boulder
could have stood for the month
Community Hospital, where her
and day of the attack.
The figures 5 and 0 may have
condition was
termed good.
been the planned time for the
Police said a hold order was
Gap Husband
bombing, which did not begin
placed on her at the hospital.
HIROSHIMA.

The
shadow
of
a
man
who
died
here
twenty
until
7 a.m.
Boulder police would only say
ts Home Burned “the
Above the dice was the legend.
investigation is continuing” years ago is fading away.
The man, no one knows his name, was sitting on the steps “Achtung. Warning Alerte!” and
)KY0. — Mrs. Mitsu Okuda and refused to discuss the pos­
of
the
Sumitomo Bank building eating his breakfast when a 5,U0U- instructions to “See advertise­
sibility
of
further
arrests
or
any
ilained that her husband
ment page 86.”
statement made by Miss Uyeda. degree (C) heat wave evaporated him.
i tight wad.
The second ad showed a num­
That was August 6, 1945 when the atomic bomb exploded
Police would not reveal the
f wouldn’t grant her an al­
ber
of people playing a dice
ee large enough to satisfy charges being considered against over Hiroshima. Nothing was left of the man No clothing no game at an underground table
flesh, no name—just a dark shadow where his body had momentanfee-spending ways.
Miss Uyqda.
while searchlights and explos­
Officials said the body of the ly protected the granite steps of the bank.
. Okuda decided to convert
lit up the sky above.
Soon that will be gone. The shadow that was once black has ions
to the eat-drink-and-be- infant girl was found recently
The
copy told of the things
y philosophy of life by giv- by two girls searching through turned grey and, according to Japanese scientists here, unless one would have in an air-raid
waste baskets for their wallets, the steps are sealed in an airtight container it will be gone in a shelter, including the dice game.
im a whale of a shock.
arrested Mrs. Okuda stolen ■ from them in the univer- few years. A container, they say, would preserve it for centunes.
Spokesmen for the State De­
tly on charges of burning sity dormitory.
There is a move on now, sponsored by the bank and by other partment’s historical section said
Boulder Coroner Norman Howe interested groups, to construct such a container. The movement
their home.
said the body was wrapped in represents a growing feeling among Hiroshima citizens to preserve they had never heard of the ads
and added that they were skep­
paper towels and placed in two the few remaining scars of their tragedy.
tical of Farago’s interpretation.
shopping bags.
san Co. Makes paper
There
are
only
three
left:
the
famed
Hiroshima
dome
that
An. autopsy showed the infant is now beginning to crumble, a museum containing bits of melted The plans for Pearl Harbor in­
volved such secrecy, they said,
died shortly after birth of “ex­
glass
and
blackened
bone,
and
the
shadow
of
the
man.
that it had been feairly well es­
t Toilet Seat
posure and lack of care. No
tablished that Japan’s top dip­
A’0. — Matsushita Elec- bruises or other injuries were
lomats in this country did not
, , . ,
.,
idustrial Co. has marketed found.
know of them. Would Tokyo
The
county
pathologist said Araki Is Oldest Living War Criminal
atory seat with built-in asphyxiation resulted from the
then risk giving the details in
was the same,” he asks, “how a clumsy, blind ad, these sources
By
JIM
HENRY
of immediate care in re­
lavatory seat, on sale at lack
could I tell my wife from asked.
moving
from the baby s
YOKOHAMA. — The oldest yours ?”
ic goods shops and depart- breathingfluids
passage after birth. living survivor of Japan’s war
. stores, is already showing
Much of what he says is still

The
baby
born alive ana criminals is Sadao Araki, a form­
of becoming a “hidden best was a full was
militant,
but the years have mel­
term baby when er general and ■ Army Minister
Made of plastic, the seat
lowed
his
personality, according I The Gift On CBC
who once personified the mighty to those who know him well, and
built-in “weave heater” the birth took place,” he said.
Dormitory officials said Blood Japanese army of the saber rat­ have transformed him into a |
ated from resin cords,
TV March 22nd
was
in
Miss Uyeda s tling era. Incredibly sprightly at lovable grandfather.
multiple switch on the cord room found
89, Araki is still convinced Japan
after
residence
hall
offi
­
_ from the plastic seat
TORONTO. — The Gift, a
and student assistants en did not lose the war.
es the temperature to be set cials
filmed
story of a Japanese

A
war
is
like
a
game,
he
.20 to 30 degrees over room tered hundreds of rooms, ripped, maintains, “and it is governed Olive Oil On
girl who survived the atomic
bedding
from
beds
in
coeds
ture. The company claims
bomb attack on Hiroshima in
bv 3- set of strict rules against
.or 4 yen a day, the cost of rooms and inspected the sheets.
1945, will be televised over
Navel Creates
The officials telephoned her atrocities.
to warm the seat, a
CBC-TV on Festival, Wednes­
“In dropping the atomic bombs,
saved from the chilly dis- parents despite the girl ? P
day, March 22nd at 10 p.m.
B of a cold lavatory seat. she be given an opportunity to the United States broke these Glowing Skin?
rules. We called it quits because
The film follows the girl,
call them first.
1 seat retails for 5000 yen.
Yaseko from present-day To­
you can’t continue a game if the
TOKYO. — Patient application
other party refuses to observe of olive oil on the navel gives
kyo, where she now works in
a bar, on a visit to the village
the rules. It wasn’t a defeat. _ a woman glowing skin. This was
Meeting with American visi­ reported in a vernacular recent­
of Omura, where her grandtors, discussing the world situa­ ly by Dr. Bunjiro Terada, a for­
father took her after the
tion with politicians and going mer professor at Nihon Univerbomb fell, and to Hiroshima,
to funerals keeps Araki quite sity in Tokyo.
where she recalls the horror
LSHINGTON. - Japanese- Treasury Henry H. Fowler and busy.
and where she tours the reHe had tried the oleaginous ex­
he declares,
। television sets have been John W. Gardner, Secretary of
built
city.

At
my
age/
I to~ the bulky array of Health, Education and Welfare, “people die right and left and periment with success on 20
This
documentary was creat­
| of President Johnson’s now watch television on their you have to go to plenty of women.
It was also reported that the
ed by Ron Kelly and filmed
travels to and from work—often funerals.”
st members and his own.
, ,,
dermal treatment was effective
reading newspapers at the same
by
Grahame Woods.
Araki does nov agree ^itn the for men as an aid for youthful
jkesman said recently that
time.
_ .
Communist theory that all men
of Defense Robert S.
All TV sets are manufactur­ a£T equal. “Why, if everyone skin.
piara. Secretary of the ed by Sony.

DENVER, Colo.—An 18-yearP®?-; i
^^ansei coed at the Univ, of
ronto).
lado in Boulder is reported
.^r
residents to have
ses -.;
in
a
lavatory
stall of her
36'Sps
ito).
^3®itory for more than eight
s while in labor before givBirth to a baby girl. Another
■EasteS
^“helped her” during this
foronta).
Uhe sources said.
S^ice identified the coed as
Susan Uyeda, a freshman
to

LICK

Shadow of A-bomb victim still remains on steps

Ltd.
BlltS

rorouto

L

)R
ARS

Hill
93

. 4
:00 P> !
>n ?!■’« {

'9
jf Me®et West.

7 P>
iers, ^e
ssion ^

rporated-

4<

Bl's Car Has Sony TV Set

Page 2

Wednesday, Marche
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UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE COMMISSION
GOVERNMENT OF CANADA

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

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INSTANT COOKING BASE

BAMBOO GROVE
2B

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

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Page 7

March 22 1967

IL

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PAGE 7

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jiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiii^

hsutaFKakuni |

=Gold Seal Upholstery |

Dates And Doings

be eaten safely, pork must be well done is the familiar
and a half hours should produce a well done pork dish
when the meat is cut in
inch cubes. Buta-kakuni
Skated in three steps. Two or three pieces of the meat served
pieces of vegetables makes a very attractive dish. Any
overwork is delicious and serves as garnish for noodles.
K
BUTA-KAKUNI

I T

(6 to 8 Servings)
[lb. piece pork with fat

Shodo Lessons To Be Taught At JC Cultural Centre
TORONTO.—Shodo or Japanese calligraphy will be taught for
the first time at the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre. Mrs. Sa­
dao Nikaido, who is proficient in this art will be the instructor.
“'Shodo” or calligraphy is a fascinating art of manipulating fude
or brush writing. Writing is a natural means of expression, with
the writer’s own personality appearing in the work. Shodo, there­
fore, can be termed an expression of life.
Shodo had proved very popular with Sumie students last term,
when Mrs. Nikaido demonstrated her art as guest instructor,
that the Centre has decided on a separate class to begin this spring.
Those interested are asked to call the Centre 429-0076.
J.C.C. Centre

I
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
>14 Penvale Cres.
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough

Takara Jewellers
Diamonds And Watches
"Our Specialty"
Mon. — Fri. 9—6, Sat. 9—1 p.m.
_
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1103. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe

Lichee Garden 1
(Dining Lounge)
118 Elizabeth St. '
Toronto, Canada

Japanese Can. Hockey All Stars Play For Charity
TORONTO —There will only be one winner when four hockey
clubs get together for a double header at the George Bell arena,
Sunday, March 26th.
, _ . That winner will be the Firefighters Educational Fund for
the children of deceased firefighters. All proceeds and the serv­
ices of players and officials will be donated to the Educational
Fund.
“Japanese Canadians” Monday
In the first game, it’s
In the second game, Toronto
versus tire Italian Canadians.
Firefighters will be up against the Metropolitan Police. The
police are still smarting from last year’s defeat and are out
to even the score this year. The firefighters have vowed to score
a goal for every 100 persons attending.
All that is needed is your support, that’s Sunday, March 27th,
at the George Bell Arena . - - Game time . - . seven o clock.




*

1967 National Home Show Aims At Garden Lovers

I

Outstanding feature this year will be a
Ga^
created by Alexander Bu^v,^
^SS^AIla cedar fe^^
many flowers of the wildflower
tme^ ^ Mr' Budrevich. “I hope it will give
cSSdiSI a sense of what their forefathers were able to do with

their limited resources.

Red & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C.
Phone 355-2211

DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS

SKATES
Hockey Equipment
Skate Sharpening
551 Danforth Ave,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukuiaka

Phone: HO. 3-7400
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.

Bub:

Re*:

824-8153

922-1353 ’

ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered

Accountant

Suite 403
130 BLOOR ST. W.

TORONTO

Ed

Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
923-6877
Tokio Nishimura

AUTO

-

FIRE

-

LIFE

AU. FORMS
OF

INSURANCE
consult

KIYO TAMURA

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

*bey AZ A host^*Tw“ted to makeTguest particularly wolS’Sd tae Plants in the ^ bedroom, and the plants

Banquet Facilities

would
BuZevits is designing a floral
For. Le f whKmres thousands of chrysanthemum blooms
Centennial symbol that
1967 set out in contrasting flowers,
in six different sl^de^ ^h 18^^96^ s^
d ^ Model

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

KINO'S MARKET

'TORONTO__ Garden lovers will have a field day viewing the

Phone: 364-3481

II

z

z
Don Mitsubata
=
z
Res. _ RO. 7-6078
=
FniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiniiH^

onion
■small Piece fresh ginger
Bimo, Konyaku, carrots
, , t
t
» Place pork in a deep pot with enough hot water to cover and
inch
-anidlv for 20 minutes. Remove pork and cut into
Place cubed meat in a wide bottom pan. Add % cup water Annual By-Line Ball March. 31st At The Royal York
TORONTO—The Toronto Men’s Press Club will hold its 22nd
4 cup sake. Add the chopped green onion and the sliced and
Sised <dn4r. Cover and simmer for two hours until meat is tender. annual By-Line Ball at the Royal York Hotel on March 31. Last
^A^in transfer meat to another pot and add
cup shoyu, year’s winner was The New Canadian's Ellen Tsuji.
r-f
^^cop°sugar, 14 cup mirin (or 2 T. sake). Cook 15 minutes, bastOpen to the public, the ball is part of National Press Week
often.
,
,
, . .

,
. being held from March 27 to April 2.
Music will be provided by two bands. Trump Davidson and
® Serve with satoimo, konyaku, and carrots cut into pieces about
his
12-piece
orchestra will play from 8:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. Don
same size as the pork. Prepare enough for 6 to 8 servings,
fek until tender in 1 cup pork stock and 5 T. of sauce from Thompson’s band and the Go-Go girls will provide entertainment
from 8:30 p.m. to midnight. Tickets are available at $2.50 per
dish preceeding.
, • v
t
j
the
Serve with English mustard paste or han shoga (slivered person from the Toronto Men’s Press Club, or at the hotel on the
night of the dance.
llresh ginger).
Announcement of the winner of the Miss By-Line contest wil
be made during the evening.
Other events during National Press Week include presenta­
When Buying Or Selling A Home
tion of the News Hall of Fame Awards, and the National News­
Call: KEN HORI
paper Awards to honor leading Canadian journalists.

K. HORI
REAL ESTATE

_

X AU Phases Furniture & Antique* £
Z Custom Upholstered — Built. Expert jj
3
Polishing and Finishing


By KIMI SHIMAMOTO

I

Phone 633-3244

j

TORONTO

Res. Pl. 9-8317

Bum. 366-5812

studio

Mel Home will'S a do-it-yourself style in keeping with the

We Specialize in
Biftware of Quality
I From the Orient
tacquerware — Porcelain Tableware — Household Ornaments
Lanterns — Handiworks of Wood, Bamboo — Framed Lctures
fcrolls of Japanese Painting — Oriental Jewellery — holding
| Screens — Flower Arrangement Accessories — Fans
I
Dolls and Statuettes

I Paramount Gift Shop

I

733 Danforth Ave. Toronto, Ont.

I

(1 Block East of Pape Ave.)

I

TELEPHONE HO. 3-7831

B


Store Hours: Mon, to Sat.: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Excepting Friday 9 a.m. to 9 pan.

economy-cost house.
features of particular interest to
Outstanding Home Show teat
1
North Amegardeners will also include Harvey Hall, tai in ah over 1
rica, who fX’tft—^1" ™d
DS“
SrSJ »X «a» Cancer Society, volunteers will dmtribute blooms.

_________

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH

sis Bathurst st.

SUNDAY. MARCH 25. 1967
10:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service

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

Formal
Rentals
Reserve
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc.

ALNA
Read Jessie L. Beattie's

Of Toronto
CUSTOM MADE SUIT

nninPE

STRENGTH FOR THE BRIDGE

A Japanese Canadian story
Available at The New Canadian For $5.00
479 Queen Street West
Toronto 2-B, Ontar.o

Sus Nagai
.

437 DANFORTH AVE,
PHONE: 463-8104

Page 8

Wednesday, Man* 2’

C A N ADI AN

Health Of A-bomb Victims
I Grim But Encouraging

Big Major U.S. Sports And Motor Car The New Gana^
Magazines Praise "Hot" Toyota Sedan
Post Office De.p,®^

Popular Mechanics magazine erate conventionally and are well
419 QUEEN ST, ^
joins Motor Trend, Sports Car placed. Head room is excellent
Toronto 2-B, Out/
Graphic, Car and Driver, Car and leg room adequate.”
EMpire 6-5005
Markovich’s road test report
WASHINGTON—A new summation of 20 years of research Life, Road and Track, Popular appears in the January edition
among survivors of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings Imported Cars and Road Test of Popular Mechanics and attests
indicates the long-range effects on health have been grim but not magazines in hailing the Toyota
nearlv as extensive as it was first feared they would be
Corona sports sedan as the “hot­ to Toyota’s performance claims.
“Our test car needed just 15.1
The appraisal is in an article in an
test new import to hit the United
National Academy of Sciences, evaluating highlights of 600 tech­
Male Help Want?
seconds
to reach 60 from a dead
nical reports made over the years by the academy-appomted Atomic States since the Volkswagen im- stop,” Markovich reports. “40-60 A TRUCK driver ior'o^T'
pact of the late 1950’s.”
Bomb Casualty Commission.
.
, , ,
1 on
Phone WA. 3-5356 (Toronto^ 1 5
who took 8.0 seconds, 50-70 took 12.The article reports the commission has kept tabs on 100,000
Alexander
Markovich,
A FEW gardeners watfeTpus
persons in the two Japanese cities—including many who were tested this snappy new import 1.”
6196, Mr. Maehara
within 1.3 miles of the bomb-drop points, plus many non-expo^ed
“After eight consecutive panic
from Japan’s giant Toyota Mo­
UNIVERSITY
student
persons used as controls.
tor Co., reports “if the Toyota stops from 60, fade was barely helper during summer months x
The report says:
,
,
“The picture that is emerging from the records of the (com­ Corona I’ve just tested is any noticeable, and there was no grab­ LE. 4-4366, Mr. Sada (Torow)
mission) . . ... is grim beyond doubt, yet not as grim as many (01 indication, the Japanese have bing. Many American cars Iv’e A FEW garden helpers and taffiJ
immediately. Phone si
the survivors) had feared.
.
.
tested faded worse after one or needed
Mr. Heike (Toronto).
“Much that is hopeful.for the survivors is to. be found heie, gone their European competitors
two such stops.”
for by separating the real horror from the imagined, the ABGU one better.”
GARDEN helpers wanted. ToTS
Markovich concludes his road for experienced person. Pho4 in
has both identified and reduced the tragedy.”
“One of the Corona’s most
”'
The article was written for the academy s monthly Nevs Re­ endearing features is that you test evaluation of the Toyota 8345. / (Toronto).
port bv Ann Corwin of the publication’s staff, and an academy
Corona in Popular Mechanics SHIPPER-packers for automotive"^
spokesman told a reporter it has the imprimatur of the commission. can jump- in for the first time with the line “at $1760 it’s a Aggressive, steady, good wgO
fits. Phone RU. 7-1728, 'fc-^
The article savs the Japanese people studied during the past and drive away without fumbl(Toronto).
'
steal.

two decades represent “the largest defined population ever studied ing,” he reports. “Controls opWAREHOUSE men experiencedIs;
in such detail over a long period of time. . .
.
motive parts. Aggressive, steady,a
It reports that at the time the commission began its studies
wages benefits. Phone'RU. 7-173/
late in 1947 the survivors faced “the. appalling prospect that U.S.A. Nisei Writes Book On "Rumors
Rubuen (Toronto).
radiation-induced genetic damage would irrevocably alter „the lives
Female Help Wanted
of their children and of numberless future generations.
BERKELEY, Calif. — Rumors, tani, a Santa Barbara socioloSome of the hopeful findings are these:
.
despite their disastrous potential, gist, as a form of collective pro- SALES clerk for gift shop in Easts
So far, at least, there has been no evidence of any increase are seen by Dr. Tamotsu Shibu- blem-solving.
Phone 463-7831 (Toronto). .
in congenital malformation in children conceived by radiation-.
act
intelligently,
'
“In order to
Experienced odf
men caught together in an un­ OPERATORS.
ladies sport wear and dresses. 4
^P^hile^efects were found in the heredity-carrying chromosomes
clear situation seek news,” he Miss Sun Valley, 7th floor, 8S SpsS
of about one-third of the heavily exposed survivors examined Miss Japan Teen
writes in his new book, “Impro­ Ave., Phone 368-2391 (Toronto);-.#®
there is no evidence so far that these have affected the persons
vised News: A Sociological Study
Help Wanted
To U.S.A. For Int'nl of
Rumor.” “Rumor is essential­
heal^e incidence of leukemia among those survivors exposed to
OFFICE duties, man or woman,
ly a type of news,” he says.
the bomb’s radiation within about 2000 yards of ground zero Competition
35 years of age, knowlecge olM
Dr. Shibutani’s study of rum­ and Japanese. Apply with HEM
was up to 13 times higher than that of the normal population
English and Japanese to the
ors
drawn from four years, of in
during the rears between 1950 and 1960. But ...
TOKYO. — An attractive 18sulate General of Japan, 20 Teas
“It has* now declined considerably, and no increase has been vear-old lass has been selected field observation and an examina­ St., Toronto 1. Or call 363-7038/r?..^
detected in the incidence of leukemia among the children of parents to represent Japan in the “Miss tion of historical cases, has re­
Flat For Rent |
.
t y vealed that the common concept
exposed within that distance.
Teen International” beau
There was a definite increase in cataracts and other abnor­ pageant being conducted at the of rumor as a statement passed THREE room flat for rent. Best ^
Hollywood Palladium during along a chain in persons, with Phone after 5 at 463-1351 (Toro4|
malities of the distance from the bomb drop.
.
“However,” the summary said, “the great majority of these Easter Week as a feature of the each making changes or embel­
lishments, is oversimplified.
changes were detectable only upon examination; the number who annual Teen Fair.
It la a good policy to
j
suffered noticeable loss of vision was small.”
“Rumor,” he states, “is not an
Yoko Sasaki, 1967 Miss. Teen
havo the HIGHT POUCT w
On the grimmer side, these findings:
• Japan, from
Iwate-ken, will individual creation that spreads,
Consult
■ «
Cancer of the thyroid, especially in women, has occurred strik­ compete against teen. beauties but arises in the collaboration of
ingly more often among radiation-exposed persons than among from , throughout the ■ United many.”
William Wales Llig
the non-exposed.
.
, ,
States and several foreign coun­
enact various rol­
Insurance Agents |
There has been an unusually high incidence of microsepnaiy tries. She succeeds Junko Asano, es.Participants
he
notes.
There
is
the
mes
­
464 Yonge Street, ToJ
(abnormally small head) and of mental retardation among a com­ who reigned in 1966 and placed senger, who brings information
paratively small group of children who had been exposed to bomb second in the queen contest.
Phone 921-3171 i
to the group; then the interpret­
radiation* while they still were within their mother’s womb.
Miss Sasaki is a statuesque 5 er, who tries to place the news
Survivors who were within about 1400 yards of the bomb
ft.
6 in. tall, weighing 132 lbs. in context; the skeptic, who ;exdrops have shown over-all higher mortality rates than those at
She measures 33%-26-36%. She presses doubt or urges caution;
greater distances.
has a total of eight brothers and the protagonist, who, when there
sisters and attends Ichinoseki is more than one interpretation,
Peter Morello
Trade School. Painting and vol­ sponsors one over another; and
the auditor, who listens but says
leyball are her hobbies.
Get Your Friend To Subscribe To. . .
'
Custom Made Aluminum L
Miss Sasaki and the delega­ little.
Last,
there
is
the
decision
­
The New Canadian
tion from Japan will arrive at
Windows, Doors, Awnin^g
Los Angeles International Air­ maker, who takes the lead in
479 QUEEN STREET WEST,
port March 16 aboai'd Japan Air determining what ought to be
TORONTO 2-B, ONT.
691-1135 or Res. HO. M^l
done. Dr. Shibutani writes.
Lines flight 62.

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Samurai ...

(Continued From Page 1)

travel was perilous. Thus, a jour­
ney from Africa to Japan by
anything less than a purposeful
and determined tribe would be
unrealistic—even so there would
have been only a handful of sur­
vivors.
It was in the 6th century A.D.
that Chinese scholars had intro­
duced the arts of writing to Ja­
Family Co-op
W.as he of African origin? pan and Chinese artisans had
Believable accounts indicate his brought the influence of the
Japanese & Occidental
ancestors came from China in mainland civilization to the re­
the 5th century, and he was mote land of Japan.
known to be the imperial clan
My conclusion: Tamuramaro in
460 Dundas st. w. of the Han Dynasty, which dates the 8th and 9th centuries was
and EM.
EM. 6-5589
from 206 B.C.
a Japanese.
What were his physical charac­
teristics? Ruddy, heavy beard­
ed with coarse hair, penetrating
eyes, distinguished, he excelled
in the martial arts.
most enjoyment from your wedding
Get the
In build he was five feet, nine
*
inches in height, barrel chested,
reception or anniversary
Plenty
of
free
parkingand weighed over 200 pounds.
Plenty of delicious food!

Vice-Minister thus preventing
the possibility of his becoming
allied with the rebels.
Then, Tamuramaro leading his
elite samurai circled Gifu, then
mown as Mino, and blocked the
ex-Emperor’s escape to eastern
Japan.
AFRICAN VS. CHINESE

Continental

It’S Private! No Time Limit!

TAMURA WAS NIPPONESE

THE NEW CANADIAN
- 479 Quec-n St. W.
Toronto 2-B, Ont.

Dumont Aluminol
Ltd.
I

Our project historians believe
Tamuramaro could hardly have
been African. Japan was almost
unknown, long voyages in primi­
tive boats were doomed, land

CHINA
925 Eglinton W. Toronto

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MJ. I*"

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