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The New Canadian — April 24, 1968

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Page 1

With Psychedelic Art-Music

fe“LW^

Itokyo

_

_

B their minds through LSD. But some members of
®e younger generation are doing so without the help
the drug. Psychedelic art has set up its beachhead
this fad-prone country.
iOf course, the beachhead is in Shinjuku, where hipps made their debut in Japan some time ago.
ILSD, of course, is a compound which has powerful
^arre effects on human users.

Blf you are dosed with the drug, your field of vision
peonies distorted like reflections in a river; you find
| difficult to speak coherently; sounds you hear are
transposed into visual sensations; and with your eves
Hosed, kaleidoscopic whirling and fantastic images over­
whelm you.
|One of the most popular terms coined to describe
file effects of LSD is psychedelic.

to approximateeILSD e^

as an attempt

OneV aCk t0 ?hin'
a drama called^fvd^XicU11^
People threw
the ‘WdeDgro^d) Po^ ?nei?? Fm-In” at
heart, of Shinjuku
? P’
discotheque in the
Some 300 hippi
SS5d
traveler;- Packed'S
’ ’
like a minimovie kXe^ir™'”* ?"air Poking
Change over the ^ata ft’^ f

hall nmde^o^^hemical ’textilen bi?’ distorted
electricity, expanded and
3le ^ ’ ^orated by
heart.
shrank continuously, like a

iiiniiiuiiHniiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii^^

1 S H-®hts.
out- Cowing into the spotlight was
a ballerina in white tights
was
Patterns a^ Tetters smeared on her in
1 Her^d^ pa?nt shot off eerie, luminous images.
had no resemblance to classical" ballet
.2 S±„ £“«.misht have M,We<1!™ °'

Aed"^^6™8 "’U8ic KtW«l “ « “uld
£ed instruments, set to the maximum volume.
Halted the ears of the audience. The sound of instru'
ments imported from India came in.
placS\tf°d£fni°^ Projectors fed with color films
But
dlfferent spots were suddenly switched on.
no screens. The projectors were simplv
owing a torrent of images on the ceilling, the floor,
(Continued on Page 8)

nt I itto C^onodinn

Stella Ito’s
Sukiyaki Cookbook
$1.50

An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Orioin
fol. XXXII—No. 32

liiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

WEDNESDAY, April *4 m

inifnmiiiiiiiirufiiiiiin-................



p^f
1

55 80

Japanese Origin

*|l,illlll|lll|HiniilllliniiI|Iini|II||||11|(|.(I[|||||||1|||iij|||iiiiiiiii_i

Toronto, Ont.

|New Canadian Exclusive
5

United M ^

^ ““ ^ ««"
tangst IC's In B.c. "' **■ p|a" 11 Toronto

huge/domed arena and''peopl(Ta^^^^
"T^l
r* A three-mile monorail conI This week follows the tenth instalment of “The Ministry
watei' through an aquarium could' be built with’ u
b under- necting the zoo with up to 6
S', ^ C "'"' °f Ca"ad° A”»* Japanese ConS of
in
gritish Columbia written by the Rev. Tadashi Mitsui, B.A B D
Jurmg his ministry at Vancouver’s Renfrew United Church’ This
gfois was written by Rev. Mitsui for the degree of Ma«t^ f
gacred Theology in Union College of B.C.
ter of urban'renewal site.
consideied as a possible
• Integration of the zoo with
f The Rev. Mitsui, who was born in Japan 35 years aro will
^t 7lng "^ ?iS ^'^ and dau^hter for missionary work in Lethc size of Maple
• Educational and research
PnS:™^^
’"^ - the ^ Leaf Gardens'foVyear?^

“-V «UWK -Sts;

^pr”s*»^“«•""^
*



B;:;-~

*

By THE REV. TADASHI MITSUI

i 1Uky°A young Japanese i ing lessons from her Califm-nw
°-/ aTter he and consulthousewife married to an Ameri- born neighbor
California .ants visited all the major zoos
Rnie which is particularly
mentioned lay preachers another can, desired American-style cook.
111 the w°rld, is the second of two
- -------------------------- -------- -----v\ hen informed that she could Presented to Metro.
English at the Vancouwr
Shimotakahara studiw■
earn to make a pot roast, she
The first, tabled last year, was
and Imaki under a verv
School with TokoyaSI delighted. Her husband had * study of 16 sites for the zoo
pssion, Miss Gertrude
worker f°r the Japanese
en sP°ke of this dish, one of comPkx (the Rouge Valley site
||m the Columbian ColF^
S^kah^a was also studyBlOW
AWCIV
With

S
stateside favorites.
was Hpb his first choice).
bought in 1904 During the staymg
th.e Mission’s Dormigouver Night School and
course of hls studies at VanB future usefulness amon^™^^
he had a vision
ffigiedicine. His holidays were ^1S countrymen and decided to go into
a c00k. He then proceeded to
Steveston Hospital
company clerk accidentally drop- I ’
IIId die education as an M D
University where he finish- ped
an envelope containing 1 mil- <
Eme an important member”
n Vancouver, and lion yen in front of his office cu‘" *fw
wishes to present
r the church. But the point the upon returning from an errand r A P°und of ground beef goes
Buds would fly inside the
Sen were once in a small
6 fact that all these distinguished to
dome as if they were out of
a nearby bank recently, and for ab°ut $2.
a young CanaSan wnS»°°^ °f1the Vancouver Night School a, hundred 10,000 yen notes were
Meat is so expensive in Japan doors.
^I?yrfun^nR' the main dome
blown away by a gust of wind. that the basic diet is still one of
would
be smaller climate-controll­
Takeo Fujita, 24, an
fish and
feeif aw*
th? SmXy MMLae^evS I ta^T^aTH
1 Cemployee
°/n
I rice,
Chiefly,
the vegetables.
problem is one of ed areas,
one specializing in col­
E^e Mission^
almost three decades to work of the Jana
for dispatch production. In 1967, Japan pro- lections of animals from each of
five continents: Europe, Asia,
Africa, Australia and South
America.
^,® report advocates an ad­
mission charge of $1 for adults
f^nue workihe^
Sapperton in ordeVto
a"d. 'bewildered
- —w and JL1S 110 temP°rary phenome­ a , says that, with admission,
non. The traditional source of parking and monorail fees, the
F time. As a reSl
study at the Columbian College at the S
antlC
beef has been draft animals and zo° c°uld pay its own way.
g^ons on the Island
to work for both of these UteS‘
they are disappearing as farms f
annual operating budget
^“erland where he
“1S penod’ he moved his residence
Police assigned a loud'speaker become mechanized.
500
00Q
Par^ W°U^ ke about $LKazuo, and
many acquaintances since the time van 03 a subsequent job — to
Despite the high prices, con­
bii^^Unil)er One
to conduct a Day School at the mis- request the neighbors to “please
The report says visitors to the
Kuwabara in
Victoria, Oyama was succeeded by turn over to the authorities any sumption of meat continues to
| a until 1913.
' Cut he continued his work in Cumber- °f the missing notes you happen rise. It has quadrupled within the 9^nnn^!d HJi^h®1* more than
43,000 daily within five years of
L Ml those nip
.
I to find.”
last 10 years.
opening.
^akuragi andCfr<er^ed *n ^ancouver and were baptizCJo imaging
aS .^knaries by him. It is not
hnU'er ^ssion at tha^°?°US 1E^slonary zeal present in the
KP"1115 °f the JanaS•They certamly contributed to
But there
fn
in the Province of British I
only by lflv°“e deficiencies in carrying on the
VANCOUVER. — Japan plans elementary HiniOT*
~

‘t'ndenC*-f^
°f Kaburagi’s to revolutionize its educational elementary junior high and senior CO conference in Washington at
high school curricula aimed at the invitation of UBC education
k<?hdi^ot have
Quite apparent.
system QVer the next 1Q
lightening
students’ burden and
^X^r^^
director-general of Japan’s
professor Dr. Joseph. Katz.
better meeting individual stufaoan0? complete their J r unssions several years, left the National Institute of Education dent needs.
Within 10 years we are going
fepi6’ ^ost of the m;l-UC, On‘ Despite the great influx of and Research, said in Vancouver
He
said
his
institute
was
work
­
to
make
a revolutionary change
ftVa11 hain d fS 5 !® growth came to a standstill. The recently
^t ^t£SX
by th£l “»d Hiratsuka said ing closely with the department in our educational system,” Hira­
of education and he was con- tsuka said.
that
his
institute
will
be
making
fident
the changes; would be
' k^ onlyT 7 _VS; the Conservative, 1907-1917
He said research institute stu­
recommendations to the national made.
before the^greatest influx of the
dies had shown that the previous
department of education in mid­
Dr. Hiratsuka made the com^ in n'aiITe canine
Tour into Canada and the Liberal
educational set-up had imposed
1 ^nmlbe Japanese
^ere on dle brink of the first open May calling for sweeping chang­ men ts. in a press conference at
too
heavy a burden on students
Securer f0 tX £y when Rev. Zentaro Ono arrived es.
the University of B.C.
in
the
content of courses studied
pastorate in the Vancouver Japanese
He said the recommendations
He stopped over here briefly and the hours of school attend­
(Continued on Page 8)
are for extensive revamping of on his way home from a UNESance required.

,000 Yen Notes

A Gust Of Wind

£3^ a» srSGB ^

To Revolutionize Japan Education In 10 Years I

Page 2

PAGE 2

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CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY
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Page 4

PAGE 4

Wednesday. April 24
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460 DUNDAS STREET WEST,
TORONTO 2-B, ONT.
TELEPHONE EM. 6-2164

Page 5

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Page 7

We d n esd ay, April 24, 1968

PAGE 7

Jessie L. Beattie Writes New Book
TORONTO.—Jessie L. Beattie, author of Strength for
Bridge — story about a Japanese Canadian family —°has v-rit^
another book. Her latest is a book for all seasons, but especial?"
for spring. In A Season Past, Jessie L. Beattie tells of her child'
hood on a farm near Guelph in a-series of sketches that deftl y
nex‘ ‘‘Toronto"'./'
captures the texture of life at the turn of the century.
*Y Panese ^atb-X^.1”^0? “
Family and friends, hired hands and travelling pedlars par d at the Kameoka Han, Dund^s/w^X^m^ ^ ^
again, unique and unforgettable. While life was simpler in th"-6
days, there was drama and tragedy too. Miss Beattie blends h^
Asagao seeds will be distributed. Everybody
welcome. —TJGC
ingredients well Her description of “a bright spring mornin- when
*
he 'ilver of the poplars was beginning to show green and the
Pints' Day On
l3nde of vine and shrub along the stump fence was bri-htenino- ^^
May 12 th
Hih rapberry blossom, pink creeper bells, and the mauve of
service
and prdulsweed,” .sets the scene for tales of the Beverley
~ “ (Sunday) from 2 p.m. at the TorK
, . <
,
,,

—-wamp, where onto Buddhist Church.
desperadoes hia and more than one man was sucked to his death
Here is the charming, gentle, voice telling the stories just a- old fcin^lsXffl”/?”/ members who became
'■< years
all of us would wish. A book that- should be read aloud to families
^^peciullv
reco°'!ii7pd A
a survey
ed
recently
revealed
'
^co^mzed.
conductwho don’t possess an aunt.
“kiiu”
*
c 1Ine Issei” member reach the age of
Jessie L. Beattie spent her childhood on a small Ontario farm
The highlight of the serving

but now lives in Hamilton.
of the Year” award The
announcinS the “Parents
the announcements.
San»ha selection committee will make

TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
701 Dovercourt Rd.
'
SUNDAY, APRIL 28/1968, 11:30 A.M.

aateriainment and refreshments following tho

sen-ke/

c

°

^ B1°°r-

Sunday Service and Church School — 11:30 AM
English
• Rev. G. Imai 444-5159
Japanese — Rev. M. Norisue 766-5632
A warm welcome to ail. ’

TTOi-^T W“ner Announced At Bazaar
_ Japan draw wiil take taTtte Cl" .Cu]tulal Centre’s Trip To
- 4th. The bazaar runs fr n 1 1 J
7 AMUal Bazaar
Mav
‘ J
S
1 t0 1 P-m- ^ ^e draw is at 6:30 p.m.

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
SUNDAY, APRIL 28,

have to be present? There^re^"0 e.ach and the winners do not i
xneie aie 2o prizes totaling $5,000.

13C8

A-M- Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service

918 Bathurst St.

Telephone:

534-4362

S/ta k« /^"T f00d

J happi coats), home baking bon """ • b°"]S' ^nns, leisure wear I
.
and o/tal // and tX’T’ "hite e'^nt -le of
.afternoon from f 00 p.m. No’ charge'Xr aS"'8

When Buying Or Selling A Home

It i« a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult

William Wales Ltd.
Insurance. Agents
IM

Tonge Street, Toronto

Phone. 921-3171

Bum

824-8153

822-1353

ERNEST JO.MOR1 '
Chartered

Accountant

Suite 403.
IK BLOOB ST. W.
TORONTO i

Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES

ms™™ *"t r”“'" ’- o"i
SOUTH- OF- WOODLAWN
I
ToHo Nishimura
323.6K7

KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store

Call: KEN HORI

Slocan City, B;C.
Phone 355-2211

K. HORI
REAL ESTATE

MEMBER °F TO*0™ REAL ESTATE BOARD

M Penvale Cres.

Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough

*

*

ed throwout
Metro To^onVo as
another birth of the Buddha festivity/ d

reception, or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food! Plenty of free parking!

temperature prevail-'
in
Apn 'th) markin"

SPORTING GOODS
Fishing Tackle and
Golf Fqifipme/lt
Dew Worms
551 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlaw)
Georg© Fukusaka

°PEN FRI,

925 Eglinton W. Toronto

sin fiom Kyoto University was the speaker.
*
M iscon
i , ®^ny T oshida was the youth service leader
c
chaired the Morning Service?
d K
0 Suyama
The choir introduced a new number
chant during the Morning Service

iai ’ a gatha 1,1
□ ,.During tne noon hour, a Jr. YBA sponsored box lunch
a big success. The proceeds will go to the Lumbini Camp
a
Wrongs, the faithfuls sprinkled “sweet tea” on the babvBuddha, enshrined in the flower shrine beautifully decorated pthe Fujmkai ladies. —T.B.C.
uecorarea

RU. 1-9123

o T-,,.
(Dining Lounge)
D8 Elizabeth St
t
11
- Toronto, Canada

Buy & Sell

Phone 364-3481

J4 ^ T° SerVe You)
SERVICE — ‘TAKE-OUT” ORDERS

Your Home
Through

|

I

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I

I
I

Diwl^71,1
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sasses—
MUSIC

TOSH

IWAI

PRESIDENT

Phone 757-5184 — Res. 757-7578

479 quefv 9anadian

i

Wo^^ WEST,

i

D Pen $Ud enclosed $
for which
0 Enter'// inscription.
'
54.00 for^iv mUb^Ption for ------ year/months

Takara Jewellers

$7-00 per year-

"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment

——---------------------------

ADSRESS

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

ZONE------ PROV.
1

UNTIL 9 PJ<

Formal
Rentals
Now For
Weddings
Dances Eke,

alna
Of Toronto
CUSTOM MADEMHT^
^AisNagai

437 Danforth, ave
PHONE: 4M-8104

MELL REAL ESTATE LTD.
1527 O’Connor Dr.,, Toronto, Ont.

The W. ^ ^ F*na To Subscribe To.

*-

DANFORTH

Phone; HO. 3-7400

house

china

I

"

to VOO^Th^^
estimated between 500
Ishiura who likened the strue-^lp
lscourse from Rev. Newton
I asked for a silent tribute
ma/ an^ Dis liberation. He
Kev. Marta Luther “tag
'
late
the Rev. FuroiXo5^^
t ^ S*««^ University of ' Toronto,' dZ ^'di’'

Get the most enjoyment from your wedding

*■ Mrs. Mk)

*

I-

Ptorow^a Celfbrated Hana Matsuri Festival

It's Private! No Time Limit!

name

J.C.C. Centre

I

Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe

J

travel office
Specialists
In Group Travel
Travel with your
friends and associates
and Save!
For details — phone
Stanley M. Furuya
251-0170
Office 364-7331

dominion
Travel Office
55 Wellington W. Toronto
Eat.

1923

Page 8

PAGE 8

History of J.C. United Church . . .

NEW

Wednesday, Aprilju^.

Cont. from Page One

The New

Canada
lan^th?
ac^^Panied by Rev. Dr. Alex Suther- were quite essential for the interests of Japan, sue was prepared
Authorized
az
boco
-h m
Method^f
n
Of the M^Sionary Society of the to co-operate in any negotiation to retain friendly relation with
Methodist Church who had visited Japan. They arrived in Van- both countries. Nevertheless, the Oriental question at that time was
iVth^H4’ 1907 by the C.P.R. steamer “Empress of Japan”.
a very touchy one, and the church was careful in wording state­
“a Ini fin i e-£f °?° S !rrral) the Vancouver Mission was like ments about this issue. In the report for the General Conference K. ^TSMUSAiSfe
f
Wlthoub a shepherd because of an unfortunate in- of the Methodist Church in 1910 which was held in British Colum­
™ &M^
h h ,.was the unfortunate resignation of Kaburagi due bia, the Missionary Society stated the problem and their attitude
And Advertising,
months
IOn’ The ™ission had been without a pastor for two as follows;
“Whatever may be our national desire, from the economic or the racial
S°me ™e,mbfers who had been loyal to Kaburagi had
479 QUEEN ST, WEST
standpoint, we must be prepared to accept in the not distant future
been meeting separately from the mission.
a large increase in the immigration of Orientals in Canada. Our problems
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
°f
/neatest turmoil of the Anti-Japanese moveas _ Christians is that of the evangelization and assimilation of these
Empire 6-5005
Orientals within our civilization. While this is not yet a task of great
R fP1 U
theT W upsetting struggle in the Japanese
magnitude
in
our
country,
the
seriousness
of
the
problem
in
the
future
Z
between the Liberal and the Conservative camps, and
will largely depend upon the degree of thoroughness with which we
mi^ants TXr
thousand unwanted Japanese imdeal with the situation now.”
th^Sdtv
A °n°
himself solely to the restoration of
Upon the conclusion of the Gentleman’s Agreement in 1908,
d harmony of the congregation. He proved' to be a very the influx of Japanese immigrants had virtually stopped and immi­
am°?g the young P^e. He brought the sepa- gration reduced from several hundred to one hundred and fiftv
to the congregation. Nearly sixty new converts by the 1930’s.
Female Help Want^
o
d
church During his short pastorate, he achieved
■This reduction of immigration quota from Japan was entirely PRESSER wanted ioTi?d^U'
atmosphere in the congregation that he was the action of the Canadian Government. Of course, there was a Experienced. Phone OX
longtime^ affectionately remembered by the members for a constant Anti-Japanese agitation in B.C. that resulted in this onto).
liegradual reduction.
Domestic Help WanteF
to uhetoCOr^^
Ono contributed to the MisFrom that time on, the church determined to aid Orientals
began to hold Morning Worship Service in in four steps; to extend them friendship, to evangelize and edu­ YOUNG girl for mother's heh d--the Japanese that Sunday is the Sabbath and cate them, and help them assimilate into Canadian Society. Rev. summer. Must be fond of child‘s ^
kMPt holy. The attendance was short of his expecta- George E. Hartwell, who in 1911 became acting superintendent for tor s home.' Own room with bath and
t
M,ornm& Seiyice was continued by succeeding min­ the Oriental .Mission of the Methodist Church until Dr. S. S. Eglinton & Bathurst, 789-4050 (Tow
isters. In the Japanese Missions, Evening Services alwavs had Osterhaut officially took post, expressed the church’s stand on the
P°PuIar than
Moniing Services. Since the Japanese Oriental problem in the Missionary Bulletin.
Though in the political arena the policy of exclusion of Orientals is UNFURNISHED roomiT^fe
Sabbath, it was usually the day for domestic
seriously
under discussion, yet for some time to come the church will ^j J°^es- Kitchen, gas stove
^the^^af^shed business and many preferred to come to the
have a great responsibility as well as a splendid opportunity to illustrate and sun room. Suitable for counit
\
?eJX1Ce^aftJer they finished their affairs on Sundav. Ono
her peculiar adaptability to assimilate and make brethern of all peoples. single. $78, Call 463-7782 eveX
^attendants in the morning and 100 in the evening.
The work among strangers is important in all parts of our Dominion.
are io he witness for or against the true genuineness of the
The Night Schools students numbered 80. Miss G. Copeland was
Articles Wanted
Church s missionary spirit."
die superintendent of the Sabbath School, While Mr. Keijiro Sato
(To Be Continued)
ARTICLES wanted for "Go" game h
?eaV°f the Dormitory and conducted the Bible Studv
eluding bowls, stones and board Wil­
everyday for 2a male residents.
liam. Phone 364-9527 (Toronto). '
outside of the church, existed a vortex of hate, jealousv, con­ Psychedelic Art . . .
(Cont. from Page One)
troversies, and violence. There were more Japanese arriving from
Hawaii everyday ano with it the hate and resentment of the white the ballerina and the audience.
100 psychedelic posters are often
■Simultaneously turned on were sold in one day. The majority of
OFFSETS LEHM
?eOi9O7Tt counting higher until its explosion on September
,
' Kaburagi and his followers were busy taking care of the several color slide projectors, its patrons are young artists or OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHEADS
them shelter in co-operation with the Hotel adding more dizzying effects to art-lovers.
^^w^IfcMi/ta ^AtvaaCavti^n//^
'’
ngh?US?K Assi^
and trVin^ to find them jobs. the color fantasy created bv the
And
psychedelic
art
is
not
con
­
3 tlOk t0 the efforts of Kaburagi, out of sheer jealousv movie projectors.
fined to the Shinjuku area.
Photographic strobe light be­
P " rS because of imperialistic (or Nationalistic) zeal, the
A beer company has commis­ HARRY S. KONDO
tbf Japanese community opened an attack on gan flashing at 20 different plac­
sioned
a psychedelic illustrator 627 BAY ST., TORONTO Phone 368-97«

and his enterprises, in co-operation with the conservative- es.
for
an
ad to sell black beer to
nunded Japanese consul, Morikawa. The open war between these
Then long-haired men in color­
young
men.
The theme itself
?' camPs °f the Japaiiese continued for about two years. It ceased ful garbs began drifting all over
sounds
a
bit
psychedelic:
“Let’s
the discotheque, holding burning
once in 1910 but began again in 1915 and lasted indefinitely.
AUTO — FIRE - LIFT
black in.”
joss
sticks.
ALL FORMS
Kaburagi’s reluctance to involve the church in the
A sales promoter of the com­
All these sound, color anc
OF
p? t>cal. dispute because of the ministers’ fear of involving the
COnfh^ again- ?e Vancouver Mission had been an out­ smell effects combined to drive pany said, “The beer is selling
almost half the audience out of well. A big hit for such beer, in­
sider in these affairs of the community for several vears.
their
seats. To the frenzied music deed.”
at the
the church as a whole and the Canadian
An automobile firm has run
they
danced
and danced the gom SRAVe-le kePtbusy protecting “the Orientals”. Outside of go.
OMIUlt
psychedelic ads in newspapers
J
aS
Canadian Pacific Railway which
KIYO TAMURA
show lasted an hour and .and magazines for its newest
cheaP labor of the “little brown men” re- a The
half.
TOHONTO
models
aimed
at
the
younger
n,y he .Llb®ral Government in Ottawa and Lieutenantgeneration.
Bus.
366-5812
Res. Pl. 9-8317
A
few
blocks
away
from
the
Governor Dunsmuir, the church .and Christian ministers were the
Letters
are
flooding
the
com
­
discotheque
is

The
Apple,

a
defended Japanese. It was very unlikely that the
pany requesting copies of a pam­
church and the Christian ministers were representing the interest month-old dress shop.
phlet
on its rotary engine cars.
Stepping
inside,
you
might
thitathPvC?lta ?S ?e LlbepaI Government did. It was for certain
"ere standing on the firm belief in equalitv of all human feel dizzy. The whole interior is The pamphlet designed for disAlmighty. And also it was quite time to sav painted red. The clothes display­ sribution abroad has plenty of
S' °f 1T crat^^de closely knitted communication ed there are all in primary colors psychedelic touches.
Garments for men are de­
And a department store recenti
OM Church government, they could take much more
finitely on the feminine side. y staged a “Psychedelic Fashion
wider stand in every issue than the people in the Province
Wiring, Installation, Repairs,
On September 16th, 1907, Rev. J. R. Gordon of Cental Con Frilled shirts are selling fast. Show.”
etc,
Ties _ to match such shirts are
. A designer of the store pre­
gregabonal Church, Winnipeg, spoke to a group of newspaper five
inches at the widest part.
dicted that “most resort and
Kenji Tsuruda
Kt T ln S'®- '”“. “/ the Ja-P«nese and urged the public to
Meanwhile, appealing to girl casual wear for women are going
bieak down their prejudice and to extend friendshin to Janan
Phone 489-3341
for this spring
W^ a sbocking statement to the white population of Van- customers, are mini dresses in psychedelic
com er, because it was a time of hate, when a single friendlv word bold, colorful stripes or large through summer.”
to the Japanese from any clergyman was frowned upon Shouih flower patterns. An old-fashion­
they were not as forthright as Rev. Gordon, the Sisters and ed cape is the latest in fashion
Ghnstian volunteers of the Methodist church never ceased to be for a girl here.
“KARATE FOR THE FAMILY”
:
“What’s wrong with long hair
friendly to the Japanese Mission. Anv difficulties in acouirinoAt One of Toronto's Officially Recognized Clubs of The
;
Canadian volunteer workers for the Sabbath School and the Niiht and red shirts?” demanded a
NATIONAL KARATE ASSOCIATION =
School cannot be found in existing records. The church muVhave male customer.
CENTRAL — Tsuruoka Karate School, 782 Yonge St., 924-4385
“We’re rebelling against old
EAST END — Higashi School of Karate, 832 Eglinton E., 425-6003
;
customs,” said another.
DON MILLS — Nisei Karate Club, (J.C.C. Centre) 123 Wynford Dr. 429-«7» ;
WEST END — Chito Karate Dojo, 5415 Dundas St. West Phone 233,
T^6, sh°P reports good business
with its customers, mostly in
tion no one, including the consular qnthorihr
T inimigia- their teens and early 20’s.
Government
k
and the Japanese
A few hundred yards away
from the dress shop is “Flower
^®"’er>”_Jflpairs first shop speci­
Hamilton Buddhist Church
. ............................................................... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihiiiii alizing in posters. Many posters
there have come from under­
Read Jessie L. Beattie’s
ground studios in the United
States.
The walls and ceilings are
covered
with posters with psy­
.
Japanese Canadian storv
chedelic
distortions
or colorations.
at 671 Tate Avenue, Hamilton
479 Q«en'stS ^
B O t •
Hippie and comic posters pre­
xoronto
Ontario
dominate. There are also portra­
on Sunday, May 5th, 1968
—11....... 111,11........... .......................... „„„■■„,,......................................
its of President John F. Kennedy
and Cuban Premier Fidel Castro.
Commences 1 p.m.
Standing in the middle of the
shop, you might feel as if you
were drowning in a flood of color
blindness test charts.
for your wedding candids
To ordinary people, the letter­
home portraits
ing on these posters is illegible.
Specializing In Chinese Food
Even frequent visitors to the
and special events
shop are often seen to frown or
cock their heads.
But they seem to get their
message across to customers in­
fluenced with sleeping pills.
Businessmen Luncheon
The other day,” a clerk re­
22 Petearlee Crescent
We Cater To Parties And Banquets
sorted, we had a customer who
Islington, Ontario
ooked dopey because of sleeping
BElmont 3-3095
pills.

TAKE OUT SERVICE
“I was surprised how easilv
Phone: EM. 3-7646 — EM. 8-0035
le could read the lettering.”
Toronto 2, Ont.
123A Dundas St. West
The posters at the shop range
.rom 400 to 2,000 yen in price.
Parking At Bay & Dundas
The shop reports that more than

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INSURANCE

STRENGTH FOR THE BRIDGE

JACK

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