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The New Canadian — July 26, 1967

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Page 1

Japan is attracting increasing
bcrs f- P adians to inspect for themselves the
snilined factories, laboratories and shipyards for
4i Japan has won world recognition.
ven more important, as travel magnets, however.
Jamas Traditional * attractions —■ the ancient
nles and shrines, the picture-book scenery7 the
irles-old festivals which spai'kle throughout the
niry. the courteous people and comfortable hotels
: fens
omehow, despite whirlwind postwar modernization,
an has managed to retain most of her oriental
rm. New and old blend together in an exciting waych makes for stimulating holidays.
‘oday’s visitor can. for example, board the world’s
:est passenger train in Toky-o, streak past snow-capMt. Fuji and — arriving at the riverside city of
j _ spend an enchanted evening watching trained
OKYtHe

tomorantsretn^.jl^^^ ^^
comorants
fish a
, ^ ligld
of blazing retrievingtorches" j^
by
Across rhe water d>-k
- J/d- prunes ago.
and, here and thlre
ate the night sky.
" " "PI“ ^ of nrew°rks puncu•

World’s Bieee<i

Citv

Major tourist attractionA
Tokyo, now the world’s
.fours?’ «tiH include
night life, shopping
* 1K da2zHng
Japan’s “living museum" filed with

opulence, muM

beyond fc 5^Si"R ? Japa”
s.lriki"S eut
beauties of the InlandUEAuVillUtb

TOUflS^S In 1970
and Kyushu, or the wilderness areas of the large
4 r
U*1?^ of Hokkaido. They are exploring the
delights oi Japanese-style inns, savoring the country's
distinctive cuisine, and meeting its people in thei"
homes via the popular Home Visit Programs
According to the Japan National Tourist Organize°ftice in Toronto, steadily increasing numbers
° j anadians are crossing- the Pacific to sample these
and otner pleasures. Within the past 10 years, travel
^Canadians to Japan has shot up nearly 400 percent,
witli an increase, of 36 percent recorded last vear alone
over the previous year.
While the number of travellers is still relativcly
modest (13.2o6 Canadians visited Japan in ’66). this
years total is expected to approach or puss the 16,000
mark.


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of ^”koku
'''•••■fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiniuiiniiiiiiiiii

(Continued on Tago S)
IIIHHIllHll!Illl|i[IllllliinitlIIIIII|||I!/IIHIHII||U|l

he Ueto Canadian

EXPO 67

UNTIL OCT. 27

An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
lllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllliiiiiiiu

WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1967

“«!^^

rince And Princess Takamatsu

Royalty Ends Successful Tour of Canada

.....

Toronto, Ont.
iiHiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiii

Vancouver Issei's $1.5 Million Evacuation
Compensation Test Case, Says Van. JCCA

VANCOUVER. — Prince and' a quiet evening in the Hotel
VANCOUVER. — An elderly likely be millions of dollars in
incess Takamatsu overlooked Vancouver’s royal suite.
Japanese
couple battle for $1.5 claims by other Japanese Cana­ Japanese moved inland as a sec­
ancouver when they7 honey­
urity risk.
The next morning, they7 attend­
boned in Canada 36 years ago. ed a garden reception and in­ million compensation for confis­ dians.”
The family eventually receiv­
But the Japanese royal couple, formal luncheon at the residence cated property is regarded as a
Mr. and Mrs. Torazo Iwasaki, ed $13,015.99 for their 640 acres,
ho jettted back to Toky7o re- of Japanese Consul-General Te­ test case by Japanese Canadians, of Vancouver, are seeking more with 21i miles of shore-line on
a spokesman said recently.
ntly after a 10-day7 centennial tsuo Ban, 3351 The Crescent.
compensation from the federal Saltspring.
"i regard it as a test case,” government for their former
jit to Canada, made up for
Kadota said he is not aware
At the reception, attended by
said Gordon Kadota, president of Saltspring Island property, which of any other actions being under­
eir oversight this time.
about 200 Japanese Canadians
The prince and princess made and Japanese businessmen sta­ the Japanese Canadian Citizens' was confiscated when they were taken at present by other Japa­
incouver their first visiting tioned in Vancouver, they re­ Association, Vancouver chapter. evacuated to the B.C. interior nese Canadians who were evacu­
ated.
ace, travelled to Victoria for a ceived long-time Vancouver res­
“If they .are successful in during the Second World War.
iy, returned here and then idents and seven Japanese ex­ ;heir appeal, or get anything
“But almost all the families
Iwasaki, his wife, and son Ray,
aded east to Ottawa and Exchange students studying in Van­ from a court case, there will were among some 20,000 coast who were forced into the Interior
1 67.
had their property either con •
couver.
fiscated
or were forced to sell
quiet EVENING
The royal party7 travelled from
at confiscatory prices,” he said.
They flew in from the East the consul-general’s home to the
“They have a just case for
a Calgary recently and spent airport in an escorted motor­
TOKYO.—A high official of Japan’s foreign office recently7 compensation.”
cade.
criticized the Japanese exhibit at Expo 67 for being too commercial.
ENVOYS THERE
Kinya Niiseki, cliief of the public information and cultural
nited Arab
Japanese Ambassador Osamu affairs bureau, said the Japanese pavilion at the Montreal exhibi­
t]'rders Over
Itagaki and his wife and the tion is far removed from the true purpose of Expo.
Canadian ambassador to Japan,
Niiseki had just returned from Montreal where he visited Ex­
sponese
EI. O. Moran, and his wife, saw .
-------------------------------------- — po. 67.
£ ~
D”W Arab be prince and princess off.
He said the Japanse pavilion
Prince and Princess Takama­ Japan Emig. Sevrice
public has ordered more than
TOKYO. — A song popular in
has placed emphasis on the dis. ?eSe ?ovies t0 replace tsu and their party7 of 10 left on Man Arrives In Toronto
bich
British films a regular Canadian Pacific Airplay of Japanese merchandise, pre-war Japan had a prospective
TORONTO. — A member of
in contrast to every other foreign father of the bride singing, “I’ll
lines flight.
the Japan Emigration Service
last month, an
give my daughter’s hand in mar“They were very pleased with arrived here this week and will pavilion, which embodies the Ex­ riage to a university graduate
toducers A^e • ^0t*0n Picture
po theme of Man and his
aid.
-Association of Japan their tour of Canada,” said Ambe stationed temporarily in the World.
with a bachelor’s degree”.
31lOrihad ”0t yet been fill- bassador Itagaki, “They were office of the Consulate General
It loses something in the trans­
very lucky with the weather, of Japan. He is Mr. Kunizo KaThe image of each, nation is lation but does indicate the em­
but ne« <>n to see Everywhere they went, it was waji. His main purpose is to shown in an attractive way, he phasis placed on education in
^^ JKff ^change dif perfect.”
find out how the new Japanese said, citing examples such the the Japan of that era.
5 to Japan ^ ^eCb reimttaneThe 62-year-old prince is a immigrants are getting along the theme of “time” in the Swiss
The emphasis is even strong­
r^Soi-ip-Japan exPorts five younger brother of Emperoi- and aiding them in general. pavilion and that of “machine­
er
in 1967 Japan, a nation so
eS a year to Egypt.
Hirohito.
ry'” in the West German pavilion.
— T.U.
woefully lacking in natural re­
sources it must regard intellec­
tual capacity as one of its most
valuable resources for the future.

Japan's Exhibits Under Fire Again

Rep.
50
Movies

Brain Power Is
Japan's Valuable
Natural Resource

Earl Warren And The Japanese American Evacuation
By MIKE MASAOKA

<Pacifi0 “^

the darkest chapter in an otherwise most “exemplary” life.

And education is the key to
unlocking as much brain power
as possible.

The author concede, that “No other California official was
$ anniversary nf’ Y^S Se HDC Banquet commemorates the
This is why 13 percent of the
more
responsible for thi ; action (Evacuation) than Warren. True, 1967 national budget will be
? °T Jananp-o „ ‘-He a™itrary, racist mass Evacuation of per42 b7 listening ^ncestry from the West Coast in the spring of he had the support of he military^ in General DeWitt, and the spent on education; why 99.9
^F^b^on LOL° f°ur former top WRA officials residing in Justice Department, in Tom Clark. If they had not agreed with percent of Japanese children
^s®s, the \’Xvvri
bow they resolved their most difficult him, there would have been no exclusion. But to a great extent from six to 35 years old are in
AM book
Polishing house McGraw-Hill came out Warren exerted influence on both. As an example, DeWitt includ­ school; why 72.3 percent of the
r
barren: A Political Biography,” which ed many of Warren’s charges and statements in his ‘Final Report 16-18 age group are in senior
high school.
X? tainted
eiai1™ examination of the reasons that may on the action as justification.”
While
noting
that
Warren
was
50
years
of
age
at
the
time
^ did re?^i n°w Chief. Juctice of the United States to act
that song was popular
’“^l of ^g A A
wadime Evacuation as the then Attornev of Pearl Harbor and that he had already served more than 20 in When
the

SO
’s there were only 190,vears
as
a
public
official,
all
in
the
field
of
law
enforcement,
the
, .^Pter is
t °f.Califomia:
bioerapher suggests that the then politically ambitious Attorney 000 students in universities. A
?
books on \ -^P^-page biography by7 Leo Katcher, author General “lived” what seemed like two characters. One, his public diploma guaranteed a good job
Y^L^'ew YorU p ,2LiCab and- social issues, a former city editor life, seemed to be run “by the book”. The other, his social thinking, and a bright future.
treason ^j t b a!r- a Policy speech writer for the late seemed to be the acceptance “of the mores of his time and place
Today there are nearly a mil­
^erie^ce
°Hn Kennedy, devotes 14 pages to the Eva- without question. And among these was his attitude toward the
ion
university students ’ (almost
Japanese whether alien or citizens.” Warren is said to have ac20 percent of the university-age
ibough he’ i
biographer is an admirer of the Chief Qeptsd the “Jan s a Jap' cheoK advanced by De V Itu
population) and the competi­
aenviYF u-ong with many others, considers that Earl
(Continued on Page 8)
tion is rugged.
• 0 in connection with the Evacuation constitute

Page 2

PAGE 2

Wednesday, July 26, ls

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1867 II 1967

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

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

Page 4

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PHONE 271-4S03

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Page 7

Tuesday. _July_26,_1967

CANA DIAN

jBMi Choir Perform At Expo 67’s Ont. Day |
Tg

Dates And Doings

PAGE 7
hare the RIGHT POLICY

Consult
TORONTO.—Ontario's day at Expo 67 will feature an exir -ntfcolorful two-hour- pageant with a cast of 1,200 Ontario
William Wales Ltd.
VPrinie Minister John Robarts announced recently.
J-C-Tee:ners To Start JCC Centre Club With Dance
Insurance Agents
shivers, dancers, musicians and gymnasts—26 groups in
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
mo/^“e Canadian Cultural Centre is aettrepresent all areas of the province.
blwl " “> “S'
A new
Ontario Day celebrations, the largest “national” dav « £ ’■ ^
Phone 921-3171
W1 at Exuo. will be held on Saturday, Aug. 5 in Place des ° ™ 1 Sansei teens is being formed within the Centre.
m, where* all nations and provinces represented at Expo
tlie
? “Set-a<iumnted” dance and social at
r/honored wit-h a special day.
T
rSth "ins S:3°p"'- The>”™ als»
In making the announcement, Mr. Robarts said the Ontario wX
11
ta“ "1U1 ^b® leaders prepared to take the
presentation will “pay tribute to the most vital commodity lov
loss personally- if the dance is a failure.
ie provence—its people.”
-Re said Ontario is as much an international meeting place for will ^!'"“°' S^IL
Mo for our Japanese Canadian future.
nations of the world as is Expo 67.
support- and encouragenmt Please send vour
“What better way to celebrate Ontario Day than to honor the Ww
nle of so many backgrounds who have built the Province of teens to this all important first get-together. — J.C.C. Centre.’
ado.” he said.
The performing groups range from 12 Canadian Indian danc1384^2 Queen W.
from several Ontario reservations, to a 140-member mixed United Appeal Needs The Support Of Everyone
•ainian choir.
TORONTO.—In this 50th anniversary year of the united wav "Toronto
LE. 2-6378
Thev represent a large segment of Ontario’s people—the
iding races of the English and French, along with the Italian, o giving to voluntary health and welfare agencies in Canada,
man, Dutch, Estonian, Filipino, Greek, Hungarian, Indian, Irish, ere are some thoughts on charitable giving by the 12th centurv
AUTO — FIRE — LIFE
nese. Laman, Lithuanian,
Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Jewish scholar, Maimonides. He talks about the eight degi-ees >
ALL FORMS
of giving. The steps, in order of importance, starting with tlie '
tdsh, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Ukrainian and Japanese.
OF
The J.C/s will be represented by the Japanese Canadian Cul- lowest, are:
il Centre Sansei choir and dancers. The Sansei Choir was
• To give, but to give grudgingly.
ned in the spring of 1964 under the direction of Harry Ku­
• To give less than, you should, but at least graciously.
no, and in a short while became one of the main attractions'
consult
• To give, but only after one has been asked.
die Cultural Centre. It sang for Prime Minister Pearson at the
KITO TAMURA
icial opening of the Cultural Centre in the summer of 1964,
• To give before one has been asked.
TORONTO
| sang for Japanese Imperial Highnesses, Prince and Princess
• To give, but in such a way that the poor know from whom
Bu«. 366-5812 Res. Pl. 9-8317
casa, on their Toronto visit in 1§65. They present the Sakura,
the =^t came, even though the giver does not know to
Cherry Blossom Dance with the Sansei dancers.. Director is
’ whom he gives.
ny Kumano with a group of 25 singers and 10 dancers.
The groups will give two shows on Aug. 5th in the 5,000-seat
• Tlie donor knows to whom he gives, but the poor do not
Bus: 824-8153
Best 922-1353
ice des Nations—at 2:00 p.m. and 6:30 p.m.
know from whom the gift has come. (An example of this
The pageant will begin with a flag-raising ceremony to prois when the great scholars in Talmudic times used to go
5m Ontario Day and brief addresses by Mr. Robarts and Expo
about in secret and leave their money at the doors of the
.mmissioner General Pierre Dupuy.
ERNEST JOMORI
poor).
A highlight of the program will be the 75-man Fort Henry
Chartered
Accountant
jard in an 1867 military tatoo, including cannon, and the Brock• To give to charity and not to know who will receive the
Ue Rifles in band and drill performances.
gift, nor do the poor know from whom the gift has been
The entire cast of Hie pageant will perform in a flag finale,
Suite 403
received.
laying and singing the Ontario thenie song, “A Place to Stand”
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
• There is only one degree of giving higher than this, and
om the Ontario pavilion movie and Bobby Gimby’s popular Canla song.
that is to take hold of a man who has been crushed, give
The pageant is being staged by the Ontario Department of
him a gift, or a loan, or find work for him, and put him
anomies and Development and the Ontario Folk Arts Council,
on his feet so that he will not be dependent on his fellows.
Custom Picture
ider the direction of Leon Kossar, who is in charge of a CenThe last two degi-ees of Maimonides’ dictum articulate the
jnnial series of 100 folk festivals in all 10 provinces.
Franting
i Mr. Robarts said Ontario Day will be a departure from the purpose of many of our present voluntary health and welfare
ther national day programs, which present one performance. On- agencies and the organizations that support them — our united
NISHIMURA
irio has scheduled a second performance because of the success appeals,
united
funds
and
community
chests.
These
agencies,
belany of the groups have had over the years. Many of the singers,
oncers and musicians have given special performances for Queen cause they carry out the two highest forms of giving for us, de­
1278 Yong® Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
.lizabeth and Princess Alexandra.
serve the attention — and the individual support — of us all.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
Because of the crowds at Expo aiid the short time between
ToJdo
Nishimura
bows, 1,200 box lunches will be sent from the Ontario pavilion
923-6877
esiaurants to Place des Nations for the performers.
Expo '67 & Folk Dance Festival Performers Ready
But it will not be all work. The cast will have most of SiiiMONTREAL:.—The Montreal Expo and Folk Dance Festival
ay, Aug. 6 to see Expo before returning that evening bv bus to
Bon Odori performers will soon be meeting their “junior de grace”
.oronto.
„ • The Government of Ontario will hold a reception in the On- on August 5th and 6th — only a few short weeks away. With al­
i°n after the final performance Aug. 5 for some 400 most over 22 weeks of hard work and practicing under their “obi”,
;®tis. including the commissioners of all pavilions at Expo 67.
plus public practice performances of 2 Bon Odori numbers per­
formed at Place des Nations on Canada Day, July 1st, the 35
strong Montreal odorikos will join forces with about 55 strong
Toronto and Hamilton odorikos to perform at the International
Shell and La Fountaine Park “Theatre under the stars.
The ambitious program, which has been lined up by tire
Sloccm City, B.C.
Montreal and Ontario teachers, will be a performance well worth
(Dining Lounge)
118 Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
the attendance. It is a program which culminates a co-ordinated,
Phone 355-2211
concentrated and co-operative effort by the 3 Buddhist churches
Phone 364-3481
across 365 miles. It has been a hard, long pull, full of many head­
(4 Lines To Serve You)
aches for the teachers, for the odorikos, and much sacrifice of time
CATERING SERVICE — “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
for everyone. However, everyone concerned, has given, this project
everv support and co-operation and if effort can be the measure
by which anv degree of success can be achieved, these performances
For Business Or Private Parties
SPORTING GOODS
for
August 5th and 6th should be the final desirable answer to all
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or SmaU)
Fishing Tackle and
these past weeks of hard work. The Montreal Buddhist Church
DINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY
Golf Equipment
wishes to express thanks to all the supporters of the 2 events for
such high interest and co-operation we have received in the past
Dew Worms
551
Danforth Ave-,
months.
The highlights of both Expo and La Fontaine programs will
(near Cariair)
be a Kenbu number given by the Toronto Sangha (Mens) group,
G»org« Falraaaka
special teen age numbers given by the 3 churches, a special number
Phone: HO. 3-7400
by the Montreal group, with a special exotic finale number by the
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
Montreal church, employing parasols, fans, and banners (nuno)
for a special ending for the Expo program. La Fontaine program
will contain many more folk dances not being performed at Expo
due to time restriction at the latter site. Canada Ondo, also, should
prove of much interest, being the first musical composition and
choreography to be created by a Canadian Nisei for Canada’s Cen­
tennial Year and to be danced at both the Expo and La Fontaine
Lan terne
P°rcelain Tableware — Household Ornaments
Reserve
Scrolls nf t ^HuLworks of Wood, Bamboo — Framed Pictures
sites in Montreal. — M.A.
Now
For
Screen/P^rn6 ^^Si — Oriental Jewellery — Folding
Flower Arrangement Accessories — Fans
Weddings
Dolls and Statuettes
When Buying Or SeUing A Home
Dances Etc.

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KINO'S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store

Lichee Garden

DANFORTH

Banquet Facilities

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from the Orient

Formal
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Paramount Gift Shop

Call: KEN HORI

733 Danforth Ave. Toronto, Ont.
(1 Block East of Pape Ave.)

TELEPHONE HO. 3-7831
_

*ore^onrs: Mon. to Sat.: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
cep ting Friday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

" '.

_

K. HORI
REAL ESTATE

MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perivale Cres.
Pbone: 261-5194
Scarborough

ALNAi
Of Toronto
CUSTOM MADE SUIT

437 DANFORTH AVE,
PHONE: 463-8104

Page 8

-^SSSkVjTul^^
(Continued From Page 1)

Influx . .

(Cont. From Page 1)

att^adia,

With Expo 67 as a prime at- ] ent. It will take place in Osaka
and for payment
traction, Japanese pleasure and from March 15 to September 13
1970,
and
its
backers
expect
it
to
business travellers are flowing
into Canada at an unprecedent- attract some 30 million visitors, K. C.TSUMUR4 P^*'
ttitude toward the- N
more than one million of which
*
are likely to come from overseas.
Conventions in Japan
A.nd Warren's efforts to force the
Admittedly impressed by Mon­
Ana Advertising

e—were mo ivated by his personal beJapan is also beginning to at­ treal’s triumphant Expo, the Ja­
liefs and fears. They wer not part of the state’s defense effort.” tract a new kind of Canadian panese are anxious to make their writes author Katcher.
visitor these davs . . . the coii- own fair as exciting and imagin­
oner. More and more inter­ ative as possible.
ven
To™l° 2'B' 0»t.
I
^ others had doubts about what to do concerning the Japa­
nese, whether aliens or citizens, Earl Warren had none. When national conventions and business
Among the many innovations'
he macle up his mind that all Japanese had to be evacuated is conferences are being scheduled promised are a 1,312-ft. observa-J
uncertain. However, he publicly declared this to be his nosition in Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka and other tion tower, moving sidewalks, ai
on January 30, 1942. T have come to the conclusion,’ he haid, ‘that major centres. 'These cities have mammoth central Festival Plaza ,
the Japanese situation as it exists today in California may well the big luxury hotels, the modern ringed by international restaube the Achilles heel of the entire defense effort. Gnless something exhibition halls and all of the rants and shops, and an “out­
other complex facilities needed door airconditioning system” de-.
is done, it may bring about a repetition of Pearl Harbor’.”
OPERATORS, exEe-i=acJ ~
uccessful business gatherforPleasant working ron&L^i
Three days later. it a meeting of California law-enforcemen bigs, For example, the giant signed to keep fairgoers comfort- * coats.
apply 22 Benton”d ir'
ably cool during the heat of Osa- •; wages,
officers, Warren warned against the dangers of sabotage and new International
'
Conference ka’s summer. Elaborate land- ? Lawrence) Toronto
i
espionage by the Japanese. He called for a resolution that "All Hall in the northern outskirts
COUNTER girl
4
alien Japanese be forthwith evacuated from all areas in the State of Kyoto is one of the largest scaping, including traditional Ja-j
Dve aay week. PhOn='V:
93
° of California to some place in the interior for the duration of and most elaborately equipped panese gardens and bamboo; (Toronto).
groves, will add restful touch-? HOME
the war.” As t e author comments, ‘•The distinction between
convention centres in the world, es to the fair grounds.
pick up. Calf
:
‘alien’ ; ind other Japanese was
contradiction. At no time did
or 363-3782 (Toronto).
' "
largest auditorium capable
Warren distinguish between the two grous (aliens and citizens) its
The
second
large-scale
attracPROFESSOR'S home ’requffTTrvf
of
accommodating
2,000
people.
while urging evacuation.”
the 1972 Winter Tr to ’l^ ovw house and hr“’4
Its unusual architectural design tion will
Olympic
Games
to be held in and:- dren. Private room and bmh
1 he words and activities of Earl Warren during this critical has made it one of the city’s
^lapy- Must speak English
near
Sapporo
on
the northern, (Toronto).
period when the Evacuation decision was being made in mid-Febru- prime sightseeing attractions.
c^i*
island of Hokkaido. Nearly ring­
ary make fascinating reading to one who lived through those davs,
Fast air travel has done much ed by mountains and blessed _ ______ personal
even though we have our own version of the role plaved bv War­
ren in those times.
to encourage tourist and business with a dependably heavy snow­ COMING TO EXPoTT^—
travel between Canada and Ja­ fall, Sapporo provides an ideal: clean rooms, 3 miles to Exoo S3—«f
pan, and present services are due setting for all types of winter ? cTuPle‘, special rates bv week
The author reminds us that “Nor did Warren’s anti-Japanese for impressive expansion. Today, sports. And a variety of attrac­
°' 363 Churchill'Blvd G-“crusade stop with the evacuation.” He then relates what Warren one can fly from Montreal to tive hot spring resorts, within held Pk., Montreal. 671-3923. ’’
tlid in this regard, even after the heroic exploits of the Tokyo via a Canadian Pacific easy driving distance, will offer EXPO — three bedroom with all c-comodation, living room and T.V. hf-JNisei in uniform began to reach the public print.
DC-8 jet in only 1614 hours’ inviting relaxation after each minutes to subway. $5. each daily 2.
tor children. Contact Martin Eih,
And yet, when the udueiv,.
exclusion vK.
orders were finallv revoked in flying time and for as little as day’s events.
EvelineSt. Fabreville, Laval, P. Q.
December 1944, the biography reports oat Earl Warren went to $980., round trip, economy class.
Plans are already under way
Next spring, Japan Air Lines for new hotels and elaborate _____ Flat For Rent
gie.it lengths to see that the returning evacuees were protected.
” Warren has never publicly expressed regret or admitted will begin linking Vancouver sports facilities for the 90,000 THREE room flat for rent. Private ws
error for his part in the Japanese evacuation. It could be that with Tokyo, probably using their contestants and spectators ex­ room and entrance. Unfurnished. 6
this sports tral. Phone 699-0889.
continuued to feel as he did in 1944 when he told a state DC-862 long-range jets for the pected to attend
official, How can I ay it
‘ was wrong’ when we were all for it when trip. Two or three years from spectacular. The area is only 70
Domestic Help Wanted
now, the “jumbo jets,” with their jet minutes from Tokyo. — Mont. HOUSEKEEPER, five day weeiY
it took place?’ ”
*
tremendous
seating
capacity, Star
pectable home. Phone 925-6934 beiwe
9 to 12 a.m. (Toronto).
will start criss-crossing the Paci­
f
Li l '11?11’ Los An»eles attorney who is in the forefront fic. This will, in all probability,
of those who have over the years tried to protect the rights of result in lowered air fares. Lat­
Japanese Americans through resort to the courts, is quoted as er still, in the early 1970’s the
'ag, I belieied Isarl Warren and the Army were wrong, but first of the supersonic jets will
■ Realized that California had fallen victim to a racism like that link North America with Japan
of the Nazis. Earl Warren was as much a victim of it as the Ja­ slashing travel time to a very
panese Americans.”
few hours.
Robert Kenney, who followed Warren as Attorney General
Those able to travel at a more
had a similar explanation. “We’d been brainwashed about the Ja­
leisurely
tempo can select from
panese all our lives. The great thing about Earl Warren is that once
a
wide
choice
of passenger and
was enough for him. The record proves that.”
cargo liners — the Sakura Maru
Author Katcher, now a resident of California, concludes his included — which sail from
chapter on Earl Warren and Evacuation in these words •Earl
_
West Coast ports to Yokohama
\
Mon. — Fri. 9—-6, Sat. 9—1 p.m.
hr' did iT those years bec™se he did not know and Kobe, with a stopover in Ha­
21
Dundas
Sq. Toronto, Suite 1103. Phone 363-0952
an? better. What few realized was how soon Earl Warren would waii often included.
not know better, but would also know more. Not even Earl Warren
V
could have realized at that time how much better and how much
Japan Plans Expo
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
more.
During the coming decade, Ja­
JiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiniiniiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiujiiuii
pan is planning two major tour­
ya
ist attractions. Of paramount in­
Read Jessie L. Beattie’s
terest will be Expo 70, the next
ra
world's fair and the first such
It

S
Private!
No
Time
Limit!
exhibition to be held in the OriA Japanese Canadian story
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rei
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4/9 Queen Street West

Toronto 2-B, Ontario
A quick summary of
ustory of jingoism against the Ja
ncse is provided, to emuha ze that the West Coast’s attit
toward the J a pane e wa
nalogous
ne unrecons

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