Page 1
nadiai|
'less
9s ia cssk
Wisher
Edik
e Editor
z. .
nt.
ited
Lesson from N. Vietnam Propac
By LEON DANIEL
fO^Some
#0.-Some North
North Vietnamese
Vietnamese films
films released
released in
in
‘4 recently showed pretty much what the Comre wanted to show, but behind the propaganda
ese message Americans might well find disturbhere are any Americans still around who think
Abadie” as a peasant with a vintage rifle and a
5? of rice on the belt that holds up the trousers
_ black pajamas, it would be well for them to
Wese films.
fay would see. among other awesome sights. Ameri»4 blasted out of the air by surface to air missiles
jfs). They would get a close-up view of the hora, weapon American pilots have described as
3g dike a telephone pole coming straight at you.”
If. pilots have described the flak around Hanoi and
wiiiiiiiiniiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiin
know
Las run out. men you remember all that flak lie lived
and wonder if ho was not in fact a lucky- man.
is a lot or footage on the anti-aircraft crews
wneel their guns 360 degrees and
fire from
that
exposed. The film
shows soi ? ot the
being moved into position
by trucks and taken
■ after
SAMs being towed into position bv bi
A few of the anti-airc ' ------------• - ■
are women.
PURCHASED in Hanoi by Nihon Dem?'\^ l“iO•' nearly show at close range dozens'of
troops to landing zones in
South Vietnam
Th camera also catches D.b. tracked vehicles
and
(Continued on Page 8)
ii'iiniiiiHniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniuiiiiiimminiiuiiiini
Bea (tie’s
BRIDGE
An Independent Organ tor Canadians of Japanese Origin
si. XXXI—No. 91
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIlli
nts
ne.
1 ou never find out tor sure but the scene shifts
have been^k^^
pil°L The capture ^«ld
irot o 1 fXtd but the young pilot, who is limpiiw
"Sf as downcast as any man you have ever seen
"
Ine oifieer, surrounded by bayonets, raises his arms
............................... .. ...............................................
inted
The
Ste-lla Ifo's
Sukiyaki Cookbook
$1.50
2164
Haiphoim a* hew'
weaponry of V^rld^wl?!^
anti-airrid0°k at these fi!m makes this eas?
:eve
easy ”toW
to believe.
of Ha“”
defender
bomb<;
?16 ?mei‘fan planes swoop in with
and tlm ? ^ound track explodes in a continual
pX^
ai‘0Una the planes erupts in deadly roar
little
Yot^^n"’ “T®8- A ^ bursts into flames
«iht ’
expect to see a parachute but a few
off around the piLt “he tate'ta"?/ fc"”"?
-------- -- ----- -----
WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 22 1967
^2222222222222222^... .................... l,lll,1!lllllllS*i,l^
Japanese Canadians Urged Tn I ”®™ fellOM Cao. Nisei Semanticist
Retain Identity-Tradition
Urges More Creativity fit Vancouver
FAXCOUVER.—A California Buddhists that the Japanese in I
BV WILF BENNETT
A'st minister warned recent- America are in danger of aban- . VANCOUVER.—What this world badly' needs only intelligence, but the ability to work with
that Japanese Americans doning the traditions that have ’s more creative people, less conformism and fewer others.”
ISHI
The creative person is essentially healthy, said
aid beware of losing their ^Y?/8 been their main virtues. | attempts to “cool it,” Dr. Samuel Hayakawa.
ISE
Hayakawa,
because he
not bound down by preaity in the American melting
FOR
“Many sociologists would credit .! world-renowned expert on semantics, said in Van judices and taboos. Butis creative
people arc’ often
the great Japanese sense of couver recently.
stymied
by
routine-minded
superiors
in their fields
Her. Laverne Sasaki said in family for the lesser number of
The Vancouver-born scholar told 400 Simon of work.
interview at the 13th annual juvenile delinquents from Japa
Fiasei University students he means not merely
Chief trait of the creative individual
invention of the B.C. Young nese homes,” said Rev. Sasaki.
creativity in such fields as art, writing or music,
openness to experience from outside. He doesn't
“But we are becoming so Ame but creativity' in every'day' life. “This requires net
make the common mistake of
g “all policericanized we are losing some of
men,
all
Catholics
all
Communthe basic Japanese virtues.”
।
ists
and
so
on.
”
And
he
doesn’t
He said’ Buddhism is having
make sweeping statements like
difficul ty
its young
MONTREAL.—About 50 countries already' have expressed in “all modern art is silly.”
members loyal to the religion.
terest in sponsoring pavilions at Expo 70 in Osaka, a Japanese
He is also more open to his
“This is a Christian culture Government official said here recently. Japan has invited 128 coun- .
own experiences than a confor
1OK10. — Japanese are suf- and even Buddhists think Chris| tries to take part in the next world’s fair and 19 have formally’ mist is. He can receive much
lVror? what has been called tian
it
is
unavoidable,
”
ho
agreed to date, starting with Canada.
jndrome of just being
conflicting information without
said.
Sango Narita, a Japanese trade official who has spent the past closing- his mind.
“We try to stress that Bud
JaPa«ese are
year in Montreal watching Expo 67 operations, told the Montreal
A healthy, creative person can
2 1th/ medicine lovingest dhism is not just a Japanese re- Advertising and Sales Club that Japanese planners will benefit
experience
other people outside
Jio ! /°n?eiL spending a- ligion, but a great world religreatly' from lessons learned here.
£ 9000 yen (about §14) per gion.”
his own usual group of associat
Excavation work on the 815-acre site in an Osaka suburb be es, with pigeon-holed charactcrdatper [ear ?n me^icine and
He said Buddhists could ben•htter about 4000 yen (about
gan last March 15 and now is 90 percent complete. Construction | istics. He can be friendly' with
efit from taking a hippie-like
on administration buildings and some pavilions will begin next people of other classes, races or
iledlc.nie consumption attitude.
February.
religions.
“These young people are seek
; ’ b national income, Ja“He won’t cut out a whole
hi^est in The ing something. And in Buddhism,
gioup, such as Jews, American
i o? 6 Percent, compar- if you do not seek yourself, all
£6 Pei'Cent f0r the Unit’
tourists, negroes.”
you have left is the form and the
TOKAO. — An association of or younger—is frowned upon.
“If you see only' what most
^“ high rate of medicine tak- structure.”
m T„„
,
“leuwine taKsingle,
working
women
over
30
other
people see, you become a
Officials report an increasing
The two-day convention was
been ascribed
years
old
has
been
formed.
in dropout rate among these ma victim of your culture, rather
“mhe drug consump- held at the Hotel Georgia.
Tokyo.
* o’ Hi fronl t le a<4ministramarried working women from than a beneficiary,” Hayakawa
^ drugs for treatment of
Its purpose: “To create a na- their jobs due to various pres said.
>4 " .1° kkle taking of such
tion-wide organization to influ- sures in their private life.
I sychologically healthy' people
^41s as vitamins and reence the government so sue11
are
fully' aware of their own
“For the time being,” Mi
ladies will get assurance that liie Okubo says,, “we would like to feelings,'admit them. They don’t
rol??in“ Played an importafter they get old will be se hold regular meetings, while try suppress them just to conform.
- JWicineCrntlng 5 weakness
cure.”
ing to gain membership, to have
®wbXCose t0 592 ^d“Most people really aren
"- ? 2s spent every year
“The association is aimed at the chance of mutually discussing equipped to answer the questions
TOKYO. — A collective auto assisting these women, much
ted for ^tl5emenfcs> which
our problems, I’m sure such o-: ‘How are you?’ or ‘How do you
^i'l L? Percent of total matic telephone system that will
misunderstood and mistreated in casions will serve many pur- feel?’ Most are too busy feeling
connect
a
call
directly
-with
ex
si®i°onl^ J6 outlay
tension numbers has made its our society,” says Sawako Oku poses.”
as they think they’re supposed
" bv
A •
the amount debut
in a Tokyo department bo, 41, head of the association.
ines -on f°od and
She thinks by sharing such to feel — surrounded by pres
‘ adw15ing and wag store.
“We are also entitled to happi problems, the women “will grad- sures of all kinds.”
^ at a
rate of 20 percent
The Nippon Telegraph and Te ness.”
’ear.
ually be able to get rid of their
A creative person can tole
lephone Public Corporation se
complex
that has affected them rate the ambiguous. One of the
Miss Okubo says the life of
10 a government cured approval for this system
Japanese
working in many ways
sure signs of immaturity is the
.^CT °(a]1 h— from the Ministry of Posts and unmarried
women,
who
number
some
300,“
I
hope
your
association
will
insistence
on a yes or no answer
tot.
s 1
Tele-communications recently.
000, isnt necessarily happy, with develop into a good ‘pressure right now, often to something
The Tokyu Department Store such problems as loneliness, pre group’ soon. Imagine an organi- which is really
SHss*
were victims in Shibuya, Tokyo, is the first judice against ‘old misses,’ and zation
300,000 member- today.
but they to adopt this system which dras early retirement ages imposed by ship.”
switchboard
the medicines tically modernizes
^Continued nn Pa^p RA
k>ng were not a cure- operations.
companies.
In a society like Japan’s, where ■StZtS°ri Of “ ^.oon For The Dead
The system can be adopted for
a group of telephone sets num women’s emancipation progress •
MATSUYAMA. — It was
:5ii
skep<-icism at bering 500 or more.
ed considerably’ but still hasn't symbolic honeymoon for 12 coua |ma last Nov. 13. Their airliner
2nd
11021 effects of _ A spokesman for the corpora reached a Western standard, re pies—a
Ik alonj the scenic i crashed, killing aI! 59 persons
Sedicinn ?ercent said they tion said the system will not re
maining single after what Japa beauties of this citv
asoarf Relatives carried black<e*^s gaTe lh™ 3 place switchboard operations but nese generally consider mar land Sea — but 'the rouple- c raped pictures of the couples,
can cut the number of operators
V t
couldn’t be there. Th^v had
tHei-r Weddi”^ in the
at a switchboard by 40 percent. riageable age—about 20 years olu I out to honeymoon in Matsuya- Sent
ml ent procession recentlv.
apanese People
uffering From
ick Syndrome
Fifty Countries Want To Join Expo z70
Japan Women Over 30 Band Together
New System Links
Straight Call With
Extension Line
'less
9s ia cssk
Wisher
Edik
e Editor
z. .
nt.
ited
Lesson from N. Vietnam Propac
By LEON DANIEL
fO^Some
#0.-Some North
North Vietnamese
Vietnamese films
films released
released in
in
‘4 recently showed pretty much what the Comre wanted to show, but behind the propaganda
ese message Americans might well find disturbhere are any Americans still around who think
Abadie” as a peasant with a vintage rifle and a
5? of rice on the belt that holds up the trousers
_ black pajamas, it would be well for them to
Wese films.
fay would see. among other awesome sights. Ameri»4 blasted out of the air by surface to air missiles
jfs). They would get a close-up view of the hora, weapon American pilots have described as
3g dike a telephone pole coming straight at you.”
If. pilots have described the flak around Hanoi and
wiiiiiiiiniiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiin
know
Las run out. men you remember all that flak lie lived
and wonder if ho was not in fact a lucky- man.
is a lot or footage on the anti-aircraft crews
wneel their guns 360 degrees and
fire from
that
exposed. The film
shows soi ? ot the
being moved into position
by trucks and taken
■ after
SAMs being towed into position bv bi
A few of the anti-airc ' ------------• - ■
are women.
PURCHASED in Hanoi by Nihon Dem?'\^ l“iO•' nearly show at close range dozens'of
troops to landing zones in
South Vietnam
Th camera also catches D.b. tracked vehicles
and
(Continued on Page 8)
ii'iiniiiiHniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniuiiiiiimminiiuiiiini
Bea (tie’s
BRIDGE
An Independent Organ tor Canadians of Japanese Origin
si. XXXI—No. 91
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIlli
nts
ne.
1 ou never find out tor sure but the scene shifts
have been^k^^
pil°L The capture ^«ld
irot o 1 fXtd but the young pilot, who is limpiiw
"Sf as downcast as any man you have ever seen
"
Ine oifieer, surrounded by bayonets, raises his arms
............................... .. ...............................................
inted
The
Ste-lla Ifo's
Sukiyaki Cookbook
$1.50
2164
Haiphoim a* hew'
weaponry of V^rld^wl?!^
anti-airrid0°k at these fi!m makes this eas?
:eve
easy ”toW
to believe.
of Ha“”
defender
bomb<;
?16 ?mei‘fan planes swoop in with
and tlm ? ^ound track explodes in a continual
pX^
ai‘0Una the planes erupts in deadly roar
little
Yot^^n"’ “T®8- A ^ bursts into flames
«iht ’
expect to see a parachute but a few
off around the piLt “he tate'ta"?/ fc"”"?
-------- -- ----- -----
WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 22 1967
^2222222222222222^... .................... l,lll,1!lllllllS*i,l^
Japanese Canadians Urged Tn I ”®™ fellOM Cao. Nisei Semanticist
Retain Identity-Tradition
Urges More Creativity fit Vancouver
FAXCOUVER.—A California Buddhists that the Japanese in I
BV WILF BENNETT
A'st minister warned recent- America are in danger of aban- . VANCOUVER.—What this world badly' needs only intelligence, but the ability to work with
that Japanese Americans doning the traditions that have ’s more creative people, less conformism and fewer others.”
ISHI
The creative person is essentially healthy, said
aid beware of losing their ^Y?/8 been their main virtues. | attempts to “cool it,” Dr. Samuel Hayakawa.
ISE
Hayakawa,
because he
not bound down by preaity in the American melting
FOR
“Many sociologists would credit .! world-renowned expert on semantics, said in Van judices and taboos. Butis creative
people arc’ often
the great Japanese sense of couver recently.
stymied
by
routine-minded
superiors
in their fields
Her. Laverne Sasaki said in family for the lesser number of
The Vancouver-born scholar told 400 Simon of work.
interview at the 13th annual juvenile delinquents from Japa
Fiasei University students he means not merely
Chief trait of the creative individual
invention of the B.C. Young nese homes,” said Rev. Sasaki.
creativity in such fields as art, writing or music,
openness to experience from outside. He doesn't
“But we are becoming so Ame but creativity' in every'day' life. “This requires net
make the common mistake of
g “all policericanized we are losing some of
men,
all
Catholics
all
Communthe basic Japanese virtues.”
।
ists
and
so
on.
”
And
he
doesn’t
He said’ Buddhism is having
make sweeping statements like
difficul ty
its young
MONTREAL.—About 50 countries already' have expressed in “all modern art is silly.”
members loyal to the religion.
terest in sponsoring pavilions at Expo 70 in Osaka, a Japanese
He is also more open to his
“This is a Christian culture Government official said here recently. Japan has invited 128 coun- .
own experiences than a confor
1OK10. — Japanese are suf- and even Buddhists think Chris| tries to take part in the next world’s fair and 19 have formally’ mist is. He can receive much
lVror? what has been called tian
it
is
unavoidable,
”
ho
agreed to date, starting with Canada.
jndrome of just being
conflicting information without
said.
Sango Narita, a Japanese trade official who has spent the past closing- his mind.
“We try to stress that Bud
JaPa«ese are
year in Montreal watching Expo 67 operations, told the Montreal
A healthy, creative person can
2 1th/ medicine lovingest dhism is not just a Japanese re- Advertising and Sales Club that Japanese planners will benefit
experience
other people outside
Jio ! /°n?eiL spending a- ligion, but a great world religreatly' from lessons learned here.
£ 9000 yen (about §14) per gion.”
his own usual group of associat
Excavation work on the 815-acre site in an Osaka suburb be es, with pigeon-holed charactcrdatper [ear ?n me^icine and
He said Buddhists could ben•htter about 4000 yen (about
gan last March 15 and now is 90 percent complete. Construction | istics. He can be friendly' with
efit from taking a hippie-like
on administration buildings and some pavilions will begin next people of other classes, races or
iledlc.nie consumption attitude.
February.
religions.
“These young people are seek
; ’ b national income, Ja“He won’t cut out a whole
hi^est in The ing something. And in Buddhism,
gioup, such as Jews, American
i o? 6 Percent, compar- if you do not seek yourself, all
£6 Pei'Cent f0r the Unit’
tourists, negroes.”
you have left is the form and the
TOKAO. — An association of or younger—is frowned upon.
“If you see only' what most
^“ high rate of medicine tak- structure.”
m T„„
,
“leuwine taKsingle,
working
women
over
30
other
people see, you become a
Officials report an increasing
The two-day convention was
been ascribed
years
old
has
been
formed.
in dropout rate among these ma victim of your culture, rather
“mhe drug consump- held at the Hotel Georgia.
Tokyo.
* o’ Hi fronl t le a<4ministramarried working women from than a beneficiary,” Hayakawa
^ drugs for treatment of
Its purpose: “To create a na- their jobs due to various pres said.
>4 " .1° kkle taking of such
tion-wide organization to influ- sures in their private life.
I sychologically healthy' people
^41s as vitamins and reence the government so sue11
are
fully' aware of their own
“For the time being,” Mi
ladies will get assurance that liie Okubo says,, “we would like to feelings,'admit them. They don’t
rol??in“ Played an importafter they get old will be se hold regular meetings, while try suppress them just to conform.
- JWicineCrntlng 5 weakness
cure.”
ing to gain membership, to have
®wbXCose t0 592 ^d“Most people really aren
"- ? 2s spent every year
“The association is aimed at the chance of mutually discussing equipped to answer the questions
TOKYO. — A collective auto assisting these women, much
ted for ^tl5emenfcs> which
our problems, I’m sure such o-: ‘How are you?’ or ‘How do you
^i'l L? Percent of total matic telephone system that will
misunderstood and mistreated in casions will serve many pur- feel?’ Most are too busy feeling
connect
a
call
directly
-with
ex
si®i°onl^ J6 outlay
tension numbers has made its our society,” says Sawako Oku poses.”
as they think they’re supposed
" bv
A •
the amount debut
in a Tokyo department bo, 41, head of the association.
ines -on f°od and
She thinks by sharing such to feel — surrounded by pres
‘ adw15ing and wag store.
“We are also entitled to happi problems, the women “will grad- sures of all kinds.”
^ at a
rate of 20 percent
The Nippon Telegraph and Te ness.”
’ear.
ually be able to get rid of their
A creative person can tole
lephone Public Corporation se
complex
that has affected them rate the ambiguous. One of the
Miss Okubo says the life of
10 a government cured approval for this system
Japanese
working in many ways
sure signs of immaturity is the
.^CT °(a]1 h— from the Ministry of Posts and unmarried
women,
who
number
some
300,“
I
hope
your
association
will
insistence
on a yes or no answer
tot.
s 1
Tele-communications recently.
000, isnt necessarily happy, with develop into a good ‘pressure right now, often to something
The Tokyu Department Store such problems as loneliness, pre group’ soon. Imagine an organi- which is really
SHss*
were victims in Shibuya, Tokyo, is the first judice against ‘old misses,’ and zation
300,000 member- today.
but they to adopt this system which dras early retirement ages imposed by ship.”
switchboard
the medicines tically modernizes
^Continued nn Pa^p RA
k>ng were not a cure- operations.
companies.
In a society like Japan’s, where ■StZtS°ri Of “ ^.oon For The Dead
The system can be adopted for
a group of telephone sets num women’s emancipation progress •
MATSUYAMA. — It was
:5ii
skep<-icism at bering 500 or more.
ed considerably’ but still hasn't symbolic honeymoon for 12 coua |ma last Nov. 13. Their airliner
2nd
11021 effects of _ A spokesman for the corpora reached a Western standard, re pies—a
Ik alonj the scenic i crashed, killing aI! 59 persons
Sedicinn ?ercent said they tion said the system will not re
maining single after what Japa beauties of this citv
asoarf Relatives carried black<e*^s gaTe lh™ 3 place switchboard operations but nese generally consider mar land Sea — but 'the rouple- c raped pictures of the couples,
can cut the number of operators
V t
couldn’t be there. Th^v had
tHei-r Weddi”^ in the
at a switchboard by 40 percent. riageable age—about 20 years olu I out to honeymoon in Matsuya- Sent
ml ent procession recentlv.
apanese People
uffering From
ick Syndrome
Fifty Countries Want To Join Expo z70
Japan Women Over 30 Band Together
New System Links
Straight Call With
Extension Line
Page 2
PAGE 2
Wednesday, N0VPni^
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MEMBER OF INTERNATIONAL AIR TRANSPORT ASSOCIATION
TOKYO BUILOIs; MA3UNCUCH1 CHIYCDAKU TOKYO JAPAN
YOUR JAL TRAVEL AGENT
j B^M
JI U^P^N ^iR UNES
Toronto, 364-7226 for information Calgary, EEr?j c-S-X?
Toronto, 364-0301 for reservations Edmonton, Zt-mtn $330
199 Bcry Street, Toronto,
Vancouver, B.C. 682-5111
/
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Phone: EM. 4-7692 EM. 6-3663
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Page 7
November 22, 1967
Japanese Dressing Adds Spice To Salad |
. 1965
I
-.PAGE 7
Dates And Doings I
It Is a good policy to
bars the EIGHT POLICY
Ry CECILY BROWNSTONE
I Take a cue from one of the Japanese steak houses that have
Lilrbecome so popular. Serve a salad with a special dressing Dr. H. Saddhatissa, Pali Srhnkr
a
i
TORONTO
V
'
To
S
P
ea
k
Atscholar
TBC
full of surprise.
Saddhatissa, a Pali
Liu goes into the salad? Iceberg lettuce, sliced tomatoes and Of the te™X
L sprouts. The dressing has a base of oil and vinegar enlivened “Doctrine of Bebirth” at the rXn1 X Toronto, will speak on
L such interesting, seasonings as tomato paste and soy sauce
Ln-and onion go in, too, though the vegetables aren’t reco- U
at the
X because rhe dressmg is mixed in the electric blender.
I One np: M e ^eep tomato, paste from a 6-ounce can in a small
Lin our freezer so that it is. on hand when it’s needed in small
l^siH15 2L
121 Xins diessing. Tou may find it convenient to
SUK-
S ICEBERG LE1TLCE SALAD WITH
Wliad iceberg lettuce
or 3 small tomatoes, sliced
drained canned bean sprouts
Dressing: see recipe
5
X tom s^oT R°rW StK“' ” ^.X^aM
II
JAPANESE DRESSING
L cup coni oil
pt cup cider vinegar
i tablespoons tomato paste
! tablespoon soy sauce
i teaspoon monosodium glutamate
^teaspoon salt
teaspoon ground ginger
^ cup sliced celery
Turn all the ingredients, in the order given, into an electric
bl“d 3.t0 5 seconds or until celery is
m?y
Co4.1 tightly and refigerate until serving time. Makes
^cups. Serve with Iceberg Lettuce Salad.
I
Remember Mama" by John
Xi c=; ii S?:? r “
me years the dilemma of the specialist, the expert and th^
Z1 ”2JXSty
* •««*£& ^ Sys:
ever been
perhaps more harrowing today than it iris
|
*
^ Takara Jewellers
DIAMONDS AND
WATCHES
n ^on* ~ Fr>- 9—6, Sat. 9—1 p.m.
Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1103. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
Lichee Garden ®
ns
, (Dhing R^ge)
118 Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
Phone 364-3481
(4 Lines To Serve You)
ERING SERVICE — “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
*
eentaS™7?,?ril is- °P™'E 10
examination
tS
^P^ enlarging or renovating 12 others, Transport
Minister Irwin Haskett said recently.
xunspou
nilm^eiin£^^ng tests this year is running- about 10 per2i±a<l " ? /*”*’> ^ Haskctt “«•
expansion^
facilities is intended to meet the demand for tests in specific areas
I olid to anticipate further increase in test volume.
the ,Transport Department’s examiners gave more
— tests t° Persons applying for driving licences. These
included vision and written examinations as well as road tests.
•
grease in testing this year is due partiv to an increase
ln Jhe numher of drivers and partly to the introduction of separate
tests for motorcycle drivers.
The Department now has 54 permanent centres and 103 travellm& points for the testing of drivers.
New centres have been opened this year in Burlington, Fort
fiances, New Lisxeard and Wawa. Seven other communities that
ar®
gravel points are to get new centres and most of these, if I
not all, should be ready for opening by the end of the vear: Hawkesbury, Leamington, Orillia, Renfrew, Strathrov and TillsonburokeeP pace ^itlT growth of local population and to provide
facilities that are designed for maximum driver convenience, the
examination centres in 12 communities are being replaced or re
novated. Most are substantially larger than the previous centres
These are in Barrie, Belleville, Brantford, Galt, Kingston, Drvden
Kitchener, Pembroke, Peterborough, St. Catherines, Sarnia and
"Walkerton. — O.D.T.
Call: KEN HORI
Business Or Private Parties
1 G RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
MUSIC NIGHTLY
S^anadi»
I
xind enclosed $
for which
isX^y subscription....................
SlOn
^W su^cription for... . year/months
r six months • $7.00 per year.
Lt S
J
i
ZONE____ PROV.
reception or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food! Plenty of free parking!
CHINA
925 Eglinton W. Toronto
1
insurance
LIFE
consult
1
i
KITO TAMURA
TOBONTO
Res. pj, 9-8317)
824-8153
Bes:
^.^^
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered
Accountant
Suite
403
130 BLOOB ST. W.
TOBONTO
Custom Picture
Framing
1279 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, Ont
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
ToHo Nishimura
B23-6877
KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
SKATES
Skate Sharpening
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 p.M.
Formal
Rentals
Private! No Time Limit!
Get the most enjoyment from your wedding
1
[
Phone: HO. 3-7400
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
74 Perivale Gres.
Phone: 267-57 94
Scarborough
I *®Vb1®' west,
-
ALL FORMS
OF
(a»<n Carlaw)
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
^l Your Friend To Subscribe To.
FiRE
-
PICTURE FRAMES
When Buying Or Selling A Home
Banquet Facilities
■
*
Ont. To Open 10 New Driving Examination Centres
t
AU1O
2-
|
|
Bus:
I
Japanese Service
3;00 P.M. Annual Meeting
13841/2 Queen W.
Bus. 366-5812
TORONTO. BUDDHIST CHUBCH
~1 SX“^1XX“^ ^ ^S'<w±. &
'““St
' '
r“X8«
XeiXsX^
Mondays.
mY/1?^™ r 1967
I S® I5-?0.?"11*’’ t0 Thursday, and 83.00 mWavs and StahK
10:30 A.M. Behgious School
I
Morning Servic®
I Students-tickets
available at HU are
5-78^3 __
*
Xckets and reservations(lljs.
are
p
■SSes
p-- “x1 T“ ~
^?xfv^
I#
464 Yong® Street, Toronto
Phone 921-3171
aging inquiries" and SX^m^
With a small sharp knife, cut out the core from the lettuceJR |se in cold water and drain. Cover with plastic wrap or nut in
l^tic bag and refrigerate to keep crisp. At serving: time cut
f head of lettuce in half lengthwise.
’ cut
I Coarsely shred the lettuce crosswise to make 5 cups In a salad
serration* Xr X'’’ “ ‘ta'e “ °"ly a ltaiW “n,hEr of »
Ld arrange the lettuce, tomatoes and bean sprouts. At the table
^h-j k rhe vegetaoles together and pass the Japanese Dressing- or
L^some of the dressing over the center of the salad and" toss o a event. — Con Fukuyama, publicity
□ tie vegetables. Store any leftover dressing, covered in 4
Uiator.
Makes 6 to 8 servings.
’ 111 le"
M
er
051kl
The N.C. Theatre Opens New Season On Nov 23
Aote: You may want to core the lettuce by whacking the head
sioown - on a cutting board, then lifting or twisting out
0
1 [score with your fingers.
I
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
Dec' 9th At Bousselet St J 14
^moSbeII^^^^
JAPANESE DRESSING
Consult
HOUSE
RU. 1-9123
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc.
ALKA?
Of Toronto
CUSTOM MADE SUIT
Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE
PHONE: 463-8104
Japanese Dressing Adds Spice To Salad |
. 1965
I
-.PAGE 7
Dates And Doings I
It Is a good policy to
bars the EIGHT POLICY
Ry CECILY BROWNSTONE
I Take a cue from one of the Japanese steak houses that have
Lilrbecome so popular. Serve a salad with a special dressing Dr. H. Saddhatissa, Pali Srhnkr
a
i
TORONTO
V
'
To
S
P
ea
k
Atscholar
TBC
full of surprise.
Saddhatissa, a Pali
Liu goes into the salad? Iceberg lettuce, sliced tomatoes and Of the te™X
L sprouts. The dressing has a base of oil and vinegar enlivened “Doctrine of Bebirth” at the rXn1 X Toronto, will speak on
L such interesting, seasonings as tomato paste and soy sauce
Ln-and onion go in, too, though the vegetables aren’t reco- U
at the
X because rhe dressmg is mixed in the electric blender.
I One np: M e ^eep tomato, paste from a 6-ounce can in a small
Lin our freezer so that it is. on hand when it’s needed in small
l^siH15 2L
121 Xins diessing. Tou may find it convenient to
SUK-
S ICEBERG LE1TLCE SALAD WITH
Wliad iceberg lettuce
or 3 small tomatoes, sliced
drained canned bean sprouts
Dressing: see recipe
5
X tom s^oT R°rW StK“' ” ^.X^aM
II
JAPANESE DRESSING
L cup coni oil
pt cup cider vinegar
i tablespoons tomato paste
! tablespoon soy sauce
i teaspoon monosodium glutamate
^teaspoon salt
teaspoon ground ginger
^ cup sliced celery
Turn all the ingredients, in the order given, into an electric
bl“d 3.t0 5 seconds or until celery is
m?y
Co4.1 tightly and refigerate until serving time. Makes
^cups. Serve with Iceberg Lettuce Salad.
I
Remember Mama" by John
Xi c=; ii S?:? r “
me years the dilemma of the specialist, the expert and th^
Z1 ”2JXSty
* •««*£& ^ Sys:
ever been
perhaps more harrowing today than it iris
|
*
^ Takara Jewellers
DIAMONDS AND
WATCHES
n ^on* ~ Fr>- 9—6, Sat. 9—1 p.m.
Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1103. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
Lichee Garden ®
ns
, (Dhing R^ge)
118 Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
Phone 364-3481
(4 Lines To Serve You)
ERING SERVICE — “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
*
eentaS™7?,?ril is- °P™'E 10
examination
tS
^P^ enlarging or renovating 12 others, Transport
Minister Irwin Haskett said recently.
xunspou
nilm^eiin£^^ng tests this year is running- about 10 per2i±a<l " ? /*”*’> ^ Haskctt “«•
expansion^
facilities is intended to meet the demand for tests in specific areas
I olid to anticipate further increase in test volume.
the ,Transport Department’s examiners gave more
— tests t° Persons applying for driving licences. These
included vision and written examinations as well as road tests.
•
grease in testing this year is due partiv to an increase
ln Jhe numher of drivers and partly to the introduction of separate
tests for motorcycle drivers.
The Department now has 54 permanent centres and 103 travellm& points for the testing of drivers.
New centres have been opened this year in Burlington, Fort
fiances, New Lisxeard and Wawa. Seven other communities that
ar®
gravel points are to get new centres and most of these, if I
not all, should be ready for opening by the end of the vear: Hawkesbury, Leamington, Orillia, Renfrew, Strathrov and TillsonburokeeP pace ^itlT growth of local population and to provide
facilities that are designed for maximum driver convenience, the
examination centres in 12 communities are being replaced or re
novated. Most are substantially larger than the previous centres
These are in Barrie, Belleville, Brantford, Galt, Kingston, Drvden
Kitchener, Pembroke, Peterborough, St. Catherines, Sarnia and
"Walkerton. — O.D.T.
Call: KEN HORI
Business Or Private Parties
1 G RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
MUSIC NIGHTLY
S^anadi»
I
xind enclosed $
for which
isX^y subscription....................
SlOn
^W su^cription for... . year/months
r six months • $7.00 per year.
Lt S
J
i
ZONE____ PROV.
reception or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food! Plenty of free parking!
CHINA
925 Eglinton W. Toronto
1
insurance
LIFE
consult
1
i
KITO TAMURA
TOBONTO
Res. pj, 9-8317)
824-8153
Bes:
^.^^
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered
Accountant
Suite
403
130 BLOOB ST. W.
TOBONTO
Custom Picture
Framing
1279 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, Ont
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
ToHo Nishimura
B23-6877
KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
SKATES
Skate Sharpening
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 p.M.
Formal
Rentals
Private! No Time Limit!
Get the most enjoyment from your wedding
1
[
Phone: HO. 3-7400
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
74 Perivale Gres.
Phone: 267-57 94
Scarborough
I *®Vb1®' west,
-
ALL FORMS
OF
(a»<n Carlaw)
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
^l Your Friend To Subscribe To.
FiRE
-
PICTURE FRAMES
When Buying Or Selling A Home
Banquet Facilities
■
*
Ont. To Open 10 New Driving Examination Centres
t
AU1O
2-
|
|
Bus:
I
Japanese Service
3;00 P.M. Annual Meeting
13841/2 Queen W.
Bus. 366-5812
TORONTO. BUDDHIST CHUBCH
~1 SX“^1XX“^ ^ ^S'<w±. &
'““St
' '
r“X8«
XeiXsX^
Mondays.
mY/1?^™ r 1967
I S® I5-?0.?"11*’’ t0 Thursday, and 83.00 mWavs and StahK
10:30 A.M. Behgious School
I
Morning Servic®
I Students-tickets
available at HU are
5-78^3 __
*
Xckets and reservations(lljs.
are
p
■SSes
p-- “x1 T“ ~
^?xfv^
I#
464 Yong® Street, Toronto
Phone 921-3171
aging inquiries" and SX^m^
With a small sharp knife, cut out the core from the lettuceJR |se in cold water and drain. Cover with plastic wrap or nut in
l^tic bag and refrigerate to keep crisp. At serving: time cut
f head of lettuce in half lengthwise.
’ cut
I Coarsely shred the lettuce crosswise to make 5 cups In a salad
serration* Xr X'’’ “ ‘ta'e “ °"ly a ltaiW “n,hEr of »
Ld arrange the lettuce, tomatoes and bean sprouts. At the table
^h-j k rhe vegetaoles together and pass the Japanese Dressing- or
L^some of the dressing over the center of the salad and" toss o a event. — Con Fukuyama, publicity
□ tie vegetables. Store any leftover dressing, covered in 4
Uiator.
Makes 6 to 8 servings.
’ 111 le"
M
er
051kl
The N.C. Theatre Opens New Season On Nov 23
Aote: You may want to core the lettuce by whacking the head
sioown - on a cutting board, then lifting or twisting out
0
1 [score with your fingers.
I
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
Dec' 9th At Bousselet St J 14
^moSbeII^^^^
JAPANESE DRESSING
Consult
HOUSE
RU. 1-9123
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc.
ALKA?
Of Toronto
CUSTOM MADE SUIT
Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE
PHONE: 463-8104
Page 8
Yuasa Develops New Emergency Battery
Japanese Firm Introduces The New Canadian!
Revolutionary Wage System ^
’ ^ ^S.
Authorized as 8Brn .
Post Office DepaXV^ ^
and tor payment of postCg6°>^
TOKYO. — Yuasa Battery Co., I The batterv lasts for 10 hours
Japan s leading battery export- ■ and is not rechargeable
er, has developed and placed on I
,
° . '
K. c tsumuri e h
the market a new water-powered I , Arie battery uses silver chloriTOKYO.—A leadin g Japanese to work with his wages and re
reserve type battery for use with de at the positive pole and zinc
emergency lights attached to life at the negative pole. Either fresh plant maker soon will introduce tirement pay remaining practi
Advertising.
revolutionary
management cally unchanged. He will, how
jackets for recreational, marine or sea water acts as the electro- a
SUBSCRIPTION
system under which each em- ever, receive a regular wage hike
or aircrafts use, the company’s
S4S7°MPer 6 moathl
American subsidiary reported _ Among the battery’s distinc ployees ability will be reviewed of about 10 percent until the
S/.UU per year
recently.
every
other
year
from
the
age
time of his retirement at the ag-^
tive characteristics are a long
of 42 for a wage hike and total of 55.
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
The safety device consists of shelf life, constant discharge retirement pay.
Chiyoda
Chemical
Engineering
voltage,
small
size
(11
mm
by
42
an improved, high-performance
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
The system was agreed on re and Construction now. has a total
silver-zinc battery and a lamp mm and 67 mm, or roughly ^
1^
which are attached to a life jack- I inch by 1% inch by 2% inches)-, cently between the management of 2,300 employees and some 300
EMpire 6-5005
et. The lamp emits special light j and large
- electrical capacity7 for of the Chiyoda Chemical Engi management officials, of whom
neering and Construction Co. of 1,300 are engineers.
to enable rescuers to spot the lts volume and weight,
UI
Tokyo
and the company’s labor
The new system will be simi
scene of a man overboard, a
According to executives of union.
larly applied to the management
fisherman who accidentally slips
Originally planned by Akiyoshi officials.
into the water, survivors on an Tuasa Battery (America) Inc.,
aircraft ditching, or even a large Japan Air Lines has adopted the Tamaki, president of the com
___ FemaIeJHelpWanted
ship disaster at sea.
equipment for the life jackets pany. it will go into effect soon.
CLEANING woman fo_ In an emergency, the lamp is on its fleet.
Undei- the system, each em
Lawrence Park. Phone /sS-Syj pi
lighted by pulling the battery’s . Many merchants ships and ployee of the company will be
water-tight seals. Water enters fishing boats are provided with subjected to an “ability” check
GIRL, Japanese, Enal^
= SMnishi
in April of the year after he
to activate the encased battery. ! the Yuasa life jacket light.
speaking, for seilina at*
Dee Shw®
turns 42.
at Toronto Internationc
sort. S’- '
work.
Mr.
W.
Morcomb*
If the check proves he is a
■2857 (h
onto).
Vietnam Film . .
(Continued From Page 1)
TORONTO.—Dominion Travel
capable employee, useful to the
shows Viet Con.g tioops moving I and passing out propaganda leaf- company, his salary and retire Office Limited of Toronto recent
Domestic Help Wanted
through jungle only
only a few
___ hun..
lets to those aboard. One of the ment pay will be raised at a ly announced that Mr. Stanley
M. Furuya is now associated' with LIGHT household duties. StudeiTb^
dred yards away from them.
buses had “Saigon-Bien Hoa” on higher rate than usual.
girl of woman. Ardv Mrs I
them in the capacity of Sales Hess
Hutner, 279 Chaplin Cres i Toro'nfn '
If not, he will be free to choose Representative.
Some of the Viet Cong are its side.
HU. 5-8839 (Toronto).
°
THIS COULD HAVE been fak to leave the company or continue
women. All are well armed, most
Mr. Furuya is a well establish
with AK47 automatic rifles. They ed, although it did not appear to
ed member of the Japanese com
be. It is well-known that armed
munity
in Toronto. His intimate 1WO bedroom, kitchen and livinc ft ,!
move quietly through the jungle Viet Cong often stop traffic on Hayakawa . . .
knowledge of their travel re
stove and refriaerator. Pbon^
with leaves and vegetation stuck South Vietnam highways to ex
quirements,
combined with the after 6 p.m. 244-1528 (Toronto).
(Continued
from
Page
P)
act
“
taxes.
”
in theii’ hats for camouflage.
world wide facilities of Domini
The mature person can relax on Travel Office, established* in
The North Vietnamese obvious
One of the most startling se
quences shows what is said to ly consider these film valuable beside insoluble problems. The Toronto since 1923, is hoped will Use New Canadian Ads
be a pro-Viet Con rally “near propaganda. Otherwise, it is not ™?r
be ofas7o??tes
benefit to
his many friends
““' creative I and"
‘.“ 7^
For Best Results
Saigon.” Hundreds of
■
peasants likely that they would release peuon can be comfortably dis----------- -------------are riding in trucks and shout- them in the West.
organized.”
ing and waving the :flag of the
But they could prove valuable
so-called
National
As an example, Hayakawa
Liberation to Americans. They could help
Front.
destroy once and for all the myth gave his own attitude, as a U.S.
A Nihon Dempa spokesman that their enemy is a little man citizen now, to the war in Vietshowing" the film was asked who who wages war mostly with punji nam.
Made To Measure
owned the trucks and he replied sticks and trained hornets.
‘T can see it both ways, as
And Alterations
that presumably they belonged
to the French owners of the ...J^e has sophisticated weapons an American duty and as a
like SAM s that can track a crime
plantation.
Chris Nomura
against humanitv.” he
The film showed Viet Cong speeding jet down and blast it said. So I feel a tremendou
the air. These films make
304 Dupont St. Toronto
troops casually stopping buses that °fabundantly
clear.
sympathy and empathy to our
Phone 924-2692
president, who is being subject
ed now to tremendous pressures
from both sides.
“On one side are the
CHRISTMAS GIFTS
number of Americans who
AND
bomb the hell out of North Vi
Ladies slacks, skirts, blouses, coats,
CULTURED PEARLS
nam we can dump enough ।
sweathers, suits, etc.
plosives on it to change it to one
big parking lot.
“On the other hand are those I §
/33 Danforth Ave. Toronto, Ont.
a
489 College St. — 4th floor — Toronto 4, Ont. i who say let’s get out of there j §
(1 Block East of Pape Ave/)
right away.
r
TELEPHONE HO. 3-7831
5
I “Whether we agree with Presi- I £
Hours: Friday’s from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Store Hours: Mon., to Sat.: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
from
9
a.m. to 6 p.m.
I dent Johnson or not, we must r
Excepting Friday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
After Nov. 27. Open Nights to 9 p.m.
admire the firmness with which /
I he holds his own line, not sub- —
milting to pressures.”
I^
Ha\ akaw a said the creative I
APPLICATION FOR PERSONAL GREETINGS
position in life can be lonely.
tcart. . .
IN THE ENGLISH SECTION
Any new idea, immediately brings
an “it won’t work” volley. Often
THE NEW CANADIAN
419 Queen St. West, Toronto 2-B, Ontario
it brings professional loneliness
Phone EM. 6-5005
and ridicule.”
Dislike ot creativity is general
S
MR. & MRS TOM SUZUKI
in academic life, he said “Our
TOM SUZUKI
®
JOHN,
GEORGE & MARY
education methods
out
And FAMILY
W
10 Main Si
I pretty well in kindergarten and
al
Toronto 6, Ont.
£
I they get steadily worse right un
I to the Ph. D.”
$2.00
$3.00
I
Hayakawa said that ChristoI pher Columbus took a chance,
Greetings Omitted Due
5
I and ex en though he ended up
To Bereavement
JO
I with a tremendous mistake __
TOM SUZUKI
thinking he had discovered In
And FAMILY
5 Is
£
dia—his accomplishment is ur10 Main St.
I paralleled.
Toronto 6, Ont.
I
|
“The world desperately needs
most exquisite papers,
$3.00
creative people,” he said.’ “Don’t
•P you could wish fori
I
be afraid to break convention'":
ich raised lettering—elegant
Over $5.00 space according to sum.
and conformity, and try to live
I enclose $....... ..... ........ for which to publish my
.hi:
in the Christmas Issue as follows:
creatively. You may come out or
*
(Please remit with cheque or money order)
it. with your eyes blackened or
with your eyes full of stars?’
Hayakawa said he was born
I on Powell Street in Vancouver
but his family moved to Mont
ADDRESS
real when he was three. A Mc
479 Queen St, West
Gill .graduate, he now teaches
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
English at San Francisco Col
lege.
:* e
classified
Mr. Stan Furuya
Joins Dominion
Travel Office Ltd.
MEN'S SUITS
the greatest
gift of all
MANUFACTURER'S CLEARANCE SALE
HALF PRICE AND LESS
oouquet
Invitation
THE NEW CANADIAN
PARAMOUNT GIFT SHOP
Japanese Firm Introduces The New Canadian!
Revolutionary Wage System ^
’ ^ ^S.
Authorized as 8Brn .
Post Office DepaXV^ ^
and tor payment of postCg6°>^
TOKYO. — Yuasa Battery Co., I The batterv lasts for 10 hours
Japan s leading battery export- ■ and is not rechargeable
er, has developed and placed on I
,
° . '
K. c tsumuri e h
the market a new water-powered I , Arie battery uses silver chloriTOKYO.—A leadin g Japanese to work with his wages and re
reserve type battery for use with de at the positive pole and zinc
emergency lights attached to life at the negative pole. Either fresh plant maker soon will introduce tirement pay remaining practi
Advertising.
revolutionary
management cally unchanged. He will, how
jackets for recreational, marine or sea water acts as the electro- a
SUBSCRIPTION
system under which each em- ever, receive a regular wage hike
or aircrafts use, the company’s
S4S7°MPer 6 moathl
American subsidiary reported _ Among the battery’s distinc ployees ability will be reviewed of about 10 percent until the
S/.UU per year
recently.
every
other
year
from
the
age
time of his retirement at the ag-^
tive characteristics are a long
of 42 for a wage hike and total of 55.
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
The safety device consists of shelf life, constant discharge retirement pay.
Chiyoda
Chemical
Engineering
voltage,
small
size
(11
mm
by
42
an improved, high-performance
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
The system was agreed on re and Construction now. has a total
silver-zinc battery and a lamp mm and 67 mm, or roughly ^
1^
which are attached to a life jack- I inch by 1% inch by 2% inches)-, cently between the management of 2,300 employees and some 300
EMpire 6-5005
et. The lamp emits special light j and large
- electrical capacity7 for of the Chiyoda Chemical Engi management officials, of whom
neering and Construction Co. of 1,300 are engineers.
to enable rescuers to spot the lts volume and weight,
UI
Tokyo
and the company’s labor
The new system will be simi
scene of a man overboard, a
According to executives of union.
larly applied to the management
fisherman who accidentally slips
Originally planned by Akiyoshi officials.
into the water, survivors on an Tuasa Battery (America) Inc.,
aircraft ditching, or even a large Japan Air Lines has adopted the Tamaki, president of the com
___ FemaIeJHelpWanted
ship disaster at sea.
equipment for the life jackets pany. it will go into effect soon.
CLEANING woman fo_ In an emergency, the lamp is on its fleet.
Undei- the system, each em
Lawrence Park. Phone /sS-Syj pi
lighted by pulling the battery’s . Many merchants ships and ployee of the company will be
water-tight seals. Water enters fishing boats are provided with subjected to an “ability” check
GIRL, Japanese, Enal^
= SMnishi
in April of the year after he
to activate the encased battery. ! the Yuasa life jacket light.
speaking, for seilina at*
Dee Shw®
turns 42.
at Toronto Internationc
sort. S’- '
work.
Mr.
W.
Morcomb*
If the check proves he is a
■2857 (h
onto).
Vietnam Film . .
(Continued From Page 1)
TORONTO.—Dominion Travel
capable employee, useful to the
shows Viet Con.g tioops moving I and passing out propaganda leaf- company, his salary and retire Office Limited of Toronto recent
Domestic Help Wanted
through jungle only
only a few
___ hun..
lets to those aboard. One of the ment pay will be raised at a ly announced that Mr. Stanley
M. Furuya is now associated' with LIGHT household duties. StudeiTb^
dred yards away from them.
buses had “Saigon-Bien Hoa” on higher rate than usual.
girl of woman. Ardv Mrs I
them in the capacity of Sales Hess
Hutner, 279 Chaplin Cres i Toro'nfn '
If not, he will be free to choose Representative.
Some of the Viet Cong are its side.
HU. 5-8839 (Toronto).
°
THIS COULD HAVE been fak to leave the company or continue
women. All are well armed, most
Mr. Furuya is a well establish
with AK47 automatic rifles. They ed, although it did not appear to
ed member of the Japanese com
be. It is well-known that armed
munity
in Toronto. His intimate 1WO bedroom, kitchen and livinc ft ,!
move quietly through the jungle Viet Cong often stop traffic on Hayakawa . . .
knowledge of their travel re
stove and refriaerator. Pbon^
with leaves and vegetation stuck South Vietnam highways to ex
quirements,
combined with the after 6 p.m. 244-1528 (Toronto).
(Continued
from
Page
P)
act
“
taxes.
”
in theii’ hats for camouflage.
world wide facilities of Domini
The mature person can relax on Travel Office, established* in
The North Vietnamese obvious
One of the most startling se
quences shows what is said to ly consider these film valuable beside insoluble problems. The Toronto since 1923, is hoped will Use New Canadian Ads
be a pro-Viet Con rally “near propaganda. Otherwise, it is not ™?r
be ofas7o??tes
benefit to
his many friends
““' creative I and"
‘.“ 7^
For Best Results
Saigon.” Hundreds of
■
peasants likely that they would release peuon can be comfortably dis----------- -------------are riding in trucks and shout- them in the West.
organized.”
ing and waving the :flag of the
But they could prove valuable
so-called
National
As an example, Hayakawa
Liberation to Americans. They could help
Front.
destroy once and for all the myth gave his own attitude, as a U.S.
A Nihon Dempa spokesman that their enemy is a little man citizen now, to the war in Vietshowing" the film was asked who who wages war mostly with punji nam.
Made To Measure
owned the trucks and he replied sticks and trained hornets.
‘T can see it both ways, as
And Alterations
that presumably they belonged
to the French owners of the ...J^e has sophisticated weapons an American duty and as a
like SAM s that can track a crime
plantation.
Chris Nomura
against humanitv.” he
The film showed Viet Cong speeding jet down and blast it said. So I feel a tremendou
the air. These films make
304 Dupont St. Toronto
troops casually stopping buses that °fabundantly
clear.
sympathy and empathy to our
Phone 924-2692
president, who is being subject
ed now to tremendous pressures
from both sides.
“On one side are the
CHRISTMAS GIFTS
number of Americans who
AND
bomb the hell out of North Vi
Ladies slacks, skirts, blouses, coats,
CULTURED PEARLS
nam we can dump enough ।
sweathers, suits, etc.
plosives on it to change it to one
big parking lot.
“On the other hand are those I §
/33 Danforth Ave. Toronto, Ont.
a
489 College St. — 4th floor — Toronto 4, Ont. i who say let’s get out of there j §
(1 Block East of Pape Ave/)
right away.
r
TELEPHONE HO. 3-7831
5
I “Whether we agree with Presi- I £
Hours: Friday’s from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Store Hours: Mon., to Sat.: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
from
9
a.m. to 6 p.m.
I dent Johnson or not, we must r
Excepting Friday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
After Nov. 27. Open Nights to 9 p.m.
admire the firmness with which /
I he holds his own line, not sub- —
milting to pressures.”
I^
Ha\ akaw a said the creative I
APPLICATION FOR PERSONAL GREETINGS
position in life can be lonely.
tcart. . .
IN THE ENGLISH SECTION
Any new idea, immediately brings
an “it won’t work” volley. Often
THE NEW CANADIAN
419 Queen St. West, Toronto 2-B, Ontario
it brings professional loneliness
Phone EM. 6-5005
and ridicule.”
Dislike ot creativity is general
S
MR. & MRS TOM SUZUKI
in academic life, he said “Our
TOM SUZUKI
®
JOHN,
GEORGE & MARY
education methods
out
And FAMILY
W
10 Main Si
I pretty well in kindergarten and
al
Toronto 6, Ont.
£
I they get steadily worse right un
I to the Ph. D.”
$2.00
$3.00
I
Hayakawa said that ChristoI pher Columbus took a chance,
Greetings Omitted Due
5
I and ex en though he ended up
To Bereavement
JO
I with a tremendous mistake __
TOM SUZUKI
thinking he had discovered In
And FAMILY
5 Is
£
dia—his accomplishment is ur10 Main St.
I paralleled.
Toronto 6, Ont.
I
|
“The world desperately needs
most exquisite papers,
$3.00
creative people,” he said.’ “Don’t
•P you could wish fori
I
be afraid to break convention'":
ich raised lettering—elegant
Over $5.00 space according to sum.
and conformity, and try to live
I enclose $....... ..... ........ for which to publish my
.hi:
in the Christmas Issue as follows:
creatively. You may come out or
*
(Please remit with cheque or money order)
it. with your eyes blackened or
with your eyes full of stars?’
Hayakawa said he was born
I on Powell Street in Vancouver
but his family moved to Mont
ADDRESS
real when he was three. A Mc
479 Queen St, West
Gill .graduate, he now teaches
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
English at San Francisco Col
lege.
:* e
classified
Mr. Stan Furuya
Joins Dominion
Travel Office Ltd.
MEN'S SUITS
the greatest
gift of all
MANUFACTURER'S CLEARANCE SALE
HALF PRICE AND LESS
oouquet
Invitation
THE NEW CANADIAN
PARAMOUNT GIFT SHOP