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The New Canadian — May 29, 1968

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Page 1

Japanese Singer’s Search For Father In United
TOKYO.—Michi Aoyama, voluptuous and beautiful
i currently enjoying a successful career
up for the unhappiness denied her in child-

From a life of torment and shame, she has emerged
;iniiing and happy to be alive.
Her “crime” was being different. As a schoolgirl
j in Yokohama, Michi was taunted by cruel name-calling
because of her mixed-blood and unmarried parents.
Her mother is Japanese and her father a U.S. mess
yr-emit who was shipped out of Japan when she was
three. She never saw his picture and was not sure of
his name.

hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiniiNiiiiiHiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiniii^

nd hoped tl t

mg success as a bi
cepted and if not, she t„M i
she was called when simZ

□IIPPPCC
rJ

dav
* ^ the name

lee Shop & r;^-^ N”X?:

« and i„lpi.essed a talent

M * roaue-

c ne a0" HKe many other such
places that
Prang up m those years, but Michi
gone onortomy
s X^X S " M

,'",I,I""1HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|||||||,min,„„!„„!„!,„

went, she would fail to show up for performanc
and became known as “the runaway singer".
haS
Sr0"'n into a younS’ lady who admits
^ .'Ctioni,, which inconvenienced many people
veie those of a child who didn’t know anv better

Where’s Her Father

Michi’s real dream all through the years has been
to see her father, “even though he may be married
and have other children’
Lie Japanese press described her father only as
i Negro, and her mother could give her little else to
to on. She explained only that he was a rancher

(Continued on Page 8)
n,,,l,"*‘"!HIIHIlinHllimlIIIIIIMlII|ll|!|I||II|IIIIIII|I||I|1||m^^

Canadian

Stella Ito’s
Sukiyaki Cookbook
$1.50

a c..WMt

Vlig^y

She always ui-..,

For about six
/
pe.-ro™;.., SulNZJ“™

Sings to Success

States k

Jessie L. Beattie’s
STRENGTH for the
BRIDGE
$5.00

Vol. XXXII—No. 42
MiiiiiiiiiiiHHninninHnniiiniiiiiHii:

Toronto, Ont

u,un,,,,,”’niuiiHiiniinjiHiHj|innniiiini«iif

New Canadian Exclusive

United Church

Ministry

Amongst JC’s

In B.C

^ "eek foiIo^s the 15tH instalment of “The Mimstrv
nl1^ Cv^h °f Cana<5a AmonSst Japanese Canadians ot
British Columbia written by the Re
4 •
. .
- —-v. Tadashi Mitsui, B.A RD
urmg his munsfry at Vancouver’s Renfrew United Church’ This’
by
MitSui f- the degree of MaMei of
..acred Theology m I.mon College of B.C.
The Rev. Mitsui, who was born in Japan 35 years a-o will

miSSiOnary work’Le.
” m'",Ster '° “' JaJ’a ‘

-..Canadians for »,„ H jeai
*

*

By THE REV. TADASHI MITSUI
Thu h
•ian churches somehow^
’n ^le Japanese ChrisJa‘ of the 1900’s. Marit-d
.^fereiit. kind of service from
!® the picture-bride kind
"ff^^lHes which seemed inevitable
;res such a gaVbl
were numerous. Social
the appearance of
mvolved the family.
erent way of nv£

J Japanese homes, in which a difof bachelors, d%y
r°re ^nspicuous than in the
l^ were still conduced f
°f the susPicious whites
11 ®nr cases such trouble
the Japanese were inassimilable.
W The counsel
.SniS brought to Akagawa’s church
^importance to Ak"^? 4
children became of
The Eleventh Biennial Congress of the Interna- patronage of Governor
^?ool in Victoria was akvn4
T^e W.M.S. Oriental Home and
patronage of Governor General Roland* Michener
r^ children. And the eduZar a ? ^ce °? refuge to troubled wives tional Federation of Landscape Architects will and will include welcome by Honorable Hugues
1 more demand. The chumP 10na^ function of the church became take place in Montreal June 16 to 2d at the Hotel
Lapointe, Lieutenant Governor of the Province
Ability of sponsoring
°>ften .comPeHed to take the res- Bonaventure.
ihe
Canadian
Society
of
Landscape
of Quebec and feature speaker Stuart Udall, Sec­
^amanization of the
U education programs to promote
Architect
re hosts to this international conven- retary of the Interior, U.S.A.
in
aRvays was very
^ ^ere keen to carry on in 'r 9a??adlan waV of living. And tion with landscape architects attending from some
The Congress will hold two professional exhi­
-n born children in ? f an ^ Cnristian Education of the Cana thirty-eight countries. The Congress was held in
bits.
The Canadian Society of Landscape Archi­
, T
ln a Ca”acban way of education.
Germany two year
and four years ago in tects will present a comprehensive exposition of
JoTlUHrv 1Q1O
.1
AV^oOf the
?Pan^sh hu was already becom- Japan.
the best works of Canadian landscape architects.
Buddha pi?e?tV Vb5^ of the people, Consul Ukita
The Congress will open under the honorary The Society has included five of the works of
•A^ ^e leaders oVlbn v?1 stian ministers, newspaper report-

Nisei Landscape Artist’s Work At Congress

the promohon
a<ianese Association to his residence
«• ha”« -NfV m,™™‘ .
al^ady was
;^uon Moveniem” Tb?% Sei^atsu Kaizen Undo” — “Life
L ^3tl'Zadons rem'p<orH .Consul wanted this done through
X^‘ hbe Japanese in r^ ^? those people he invited, in
*4, tne Modern Jaua-ip-r^Tv a could join the movement to
®;'KMtic" “indnsb-;?*-"1 This term could denote such terms
il? ‘4earnin^ fro^a
rt was the move^‘^nient was intern^ ?-S ' heedless to say tha when
OSAKA.—Matsushita Electric
Canada, it mPnL ed 111 terms of the Japanese immiimmi- Industrial Co. said it has deblack-arid
“‘^tion. The' meeting
a movement of assimilation through veloped a miniature
white
television
receiving
set that
residence was dispers:y?r acc°rding]v tn
L?eIdea. back to their own organiza- can be carried in a pocket or
was fo^-^ ■
> re fit it into their own programs handbag.
A in exchange
Monday Club” which was to meet
Matsushita said the television
~ opinions .and report on process.
set, with a 1.5-inch screen, trarle
social educaoh
although it
_33 ni°x®ment had five categories in its named “TIC-3000,” uses integrat­
it
°n jvas to annlv " n°^ a systematic curriculum. Every ed circuitry.
It said other firms had developy-0 there exiNAa°nCre^e .Programs according to its own
but
tiie areas on wh\«b a varietV of opinions. The following ed such tiny television
vmch everybody agreed.
claimed i s set is the first com^^Ti'atfg
p
Nr stressed* V- anac ian lav's, morality, customs and mercially developed set.
y;ret to know r^1'0^ Programs were designed to eduThe se will operate for two
'ariee and
Practice them. For instance. Sun- hours bei ore its batteries must ™ot?s (tipper & Lower) Tanaka's Confederation
.
A caE^11^ I31 both ddly and business
red. The set may also
Par* .Centennial Garden In Stratford, Ontario
- ' a- strongly wa<^ed a®ains^ Prostitution, drinking, and
ed with bouse current
kanaka; “A Private Golf Course”, “The Citv of -Stratford
use of an adapter, it F°^f^era^on ; »rk Centennial Garden” and 3 residential gardens
with
Hrw?‘r‘? x?”aKa s
garden which has been featured in Canadian
«iion of the children on the Canadian prin- said.
Homes
ana
Garden
Magazine,
Globe and Mail Magazine? and In
The set was priced at $150 for
(Continued on Page 8)
retailing in the Lnited States-..
(Continued on Page 8)

Pocket Sized T.V.
Set Manufactured
By Matsushita

Page 2

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692 No. 3 Road.
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Phone CR. 8-9585
CR. 8-9588

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Page 6

PAGE 6

Page 7

186S

Wednesday. Jlay

Whistling In The Dark
^w Japanese Film To Be Shown At T.B.C. June 1

It la a good policy to
bar* th# MIGHT POLICY
Consult

By WILLIAM MARUTANI

One whistle- in the dark to cow
TORONTO.— A newly released Japanese film from Toho. “Naer up fear and give the fal
self-inipre ion of bravery.
..mkashiki Fue to Taiko” will be shown at the Toronto Buddhist
Church on June 1 (Sat.) from 8 p.m. The showing was made posPrejudice in their rawest
j able through the courtesy of the Japanese Consulate GeneraPs perhaps
Nisei has
^ tho
office. The public is cordially invited to attend. —T.B.C.
accepteven today he
warily
speak
and
write
about ’acceptance”, rhe preservation and
Hamilton JCCA Movie At Christ Cathedral June 6 status, all the while reassuring himself promotion of this great
that he’s made it, that
By T. UMEZUKI
he-s viewing the scene from .a pinnacle.
HAMILTON.—“Eyes, The Sea And a Ball” is the title of
Such Nisei are whistling in the dark and
are onlv kidding
movie to be shown by the Hamilton JCCA — through the kind­ the"«1™i-.An<l * includes their offspring.'the Sansei.
ness of the Toronto Japan Consul General, Mr. R. Ishikawa
on "PailrX’^rnZM”' ?e’W ”
society,
Thursday, June 6th at Christ Cathedral Church starting 8 p.m.
"ains on
g
A ^ 2X1501 are prone t0 equate thm±
Ot llm,te<1 EMls rtM1
set for themselvei
A donation will be asked with all receipts going to assist the and »”
■ Xipponia Home for old aged Japanese Canadian citizens.
it Thev
r C° 1!ies they conc!ude that ;hev’« made
heh
ore

Xt";
me; in the "■
of
W««
*
*
»r M M
’ 7 P °ySter tor their wwW!
[ Kido Kwan Institute Picnic At Lynbrooks Pk. June 2 loud, 'de d

Whe”
TORONTO—The Kido Kwan Judo Institute of Toronto will
‘‘Acceptance” is degrading: it denotes subserv’ence condesbe holding their annual picnic on Sunday, June 2nd, 1968 at Lvn“i- wlT" the p-t--zi-^ indulgence of the majori^
brook Park.
loi
thmo, that belong to us .as part of our birthright. And if such
The complete spectrum of picnic fun and games will be held.
p/1Vemt0 W h6’0”5 tO US’ °nly at the
e of the majodtv
! A special “fukubiki” draw will also be held.
wiXT

*
y
-™
be
takei
'
aWay
St
their
whim
anytime thev
Let’s all get out to Lynbrook Park on June 2nd and join in
+ nn^ccept us. Thus acceptance is subject to the vagares
the fun. Please bring your friends. The more the merrier. Everyol
the
temper Oi the times, is fickle, servile . . . and gutless?
; one is cordially invited to attend the funstivities at Lynbrook Park.
Jns is why this Nisei, for one, abhors the concept of “acceutAdmission adults 50 cents and children free. — Kido Kwan
ance- and deplores hearing and seeing other Nisei extolling th*
*
*
goal of acceptance”.
Sangha Golf Tournament At Woodbridge June 6
No doubt you’ve known of a Nisei or two who have shied a wav
TORONTO—Calling all Sangha sportsmen!■ Enter
^^V W°rthy Pr°g'rams because of restraining fear
-------- now for
the Toronto Sangha golf tournament which is to be held at Wood­
_ ?
‘hakujln’ friemls and neighbors say?” This is one
bridge Golf and Country Club on the 16th of June.
of the classic symptoms of “being accepted”, readily revealing
that there are “strings” attached and invisible as those strings
The course is challenging and the weather will be fine. Why
ib%they are very ^n’ in controlling you, in causing you to
not leave this date open!
be ia\ e as your majority friends and neighors may deign. It is
members who
; v TFor non-Sangha
.
are interested, please phone an encroachment upon the fulfillment of the person as an indi: Mr. losh Hon for further information. Phone Number is 249-273? vidual, as a citizen: it is demeaning' and an insult—unless vou
enjoy being a puppet.
Address 100 Kingsview, Weston, Ontario.
And the saddest part of this entire- state
------ of “acceptance” is
Please submit your entry as soon as possible. — G.K.
that it is largely, although not entirely, self-imposed'.
Also many of us, including the Sansei, are inclined to think
that the Sansei, with all their refreshing vitality and open brashALTO - FIRE — LIFE
ness, are unfettered by these concepts. But this writer has found
ALL FORMS
otherwise, that the fetters of ‘‘acceptance’’ appear most pronounced
OF
among those Sansei who seemingly are riding high and whistling
the loudest. In some future column we’ll discuss this further.
Wiring, Installation, Repairs,
ooocult
etc.

KENJI ELECTRIC

INSURANCE

KIYO TAMURA

Kenji Tsuruda
Phone 489-3341

TORONTO

Your Home
Through

TOSH

When Buying Or Selling A Home

.RealtoR

IWAI

Call: KEN HORI

PRESIDENT

K. HORI
REAL ESTATE

MELL REAL ESTATE LTD

14 member

°F TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
'",™l9Cr“Phone: 261-5194

1527 O’Connor Dr., Toronto, Ont.
Phone 757-5184 — Res. 757-7578

Scarborough

Takara Jewellers

H s Private! No Time Limit!
the most enjoyment from your wedding

920 Clinton W. Toronto

"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment

house

k^mar music shop |
3»« Dundas St. West, Toronto
Phone 763-6276

Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone 921-3171

824-8153

Hm:

922-1353

ERNEST JOMOR1
Chartered

Accountant

Suita

403

130 BLOOR ST. W.

TORONTO

Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yonge Struct. Toronto 7, Ont
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
Toicio

Niahimu

923-6877

KINO'S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Slocan

Phone 355-2211

DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Fishing Tackle and
Golf Equipment
Dew Worms
551 Danforth Ave^
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka

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

Formal
Rentals
Roterit
Now Fur
Weddings
Dances Etc.

ALNA
Of Toronto

Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE.
PHONE: 463-8104

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

RU. 1-9123

I

464

CUSTOM MADE SUIT

reception or anniversary
^enty of delicious food!
Plenty of free parking!

CHINA

William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents

$

Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe

Lichee

Garden

(Dining Lounge)
118 Elizabeth St.

Toronto. Canada

Phone 364-3481

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

(4 Lines To Serve You)
CATERING SERVICE — ‘TAKE-OUT” ORDERS

G ^ng in Popular Sheet Music
lection of Guitar, Piano, Accordion,
u’ &an and Music Books.

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

Travel Office

Wellington
Est.

W. Toronto
1923

Page 8

PAGE 8

N E W

History of J.C. United Church . . .

Cont. from Page One

S'll'tam™ Su2V«Se,S‘ Points. People were encouraged to

The New Canadian

it could not immediately produce any clear cut evidence of its
results.
In 1923, criticisms c.ame from conservatives, trade union­
to reaW“ in
attempts of the
and for payment of postage >^
ThJLS’LS pS^'6 °riental Chi‘dren “ the shoots. ists, and co-operative movement people. The latter, in particular,
criticised deficiencies in its idealistic, superficial, and un-reasistic
way7 of dealng wth problems. Rev. Akagawa agreed wth the criti­
home’ref°rm was a point strongly impressed on the
cisms
and there was evidence to indicate that he contemplated
to the' Canadian ^
knowledge of hoVe-keeping “cording
devoting himself to either the labor, or co-operative movement.
And Advertising.
organizations to
"°me^ attended many classes and
Secondly, the movement had been limited to the urban Japa- j
elothi g ta^e and many rt P”g"e “' Cookin- bedmaking,
SUBSCRIPTION
these learnSk >
vher thln^s ™’e taught. Underiving nese community of Vancouver where the Japanese community
6 “’^
peTmanX” 5^
to. bea Philosophy which stressed the was self-contained. In Steveston and New Westminster where six
87.00 per year
thousand
Japanese
had
lived

almost
equal
to
Vancouver

s
po
­
r
f their homes in Canada. To bring the children uu
Canadians was made a responsibility of the homes
' pulation of 6,699, people did not heed the Vancouver movement
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
movement
hfe was anJotder important category in the very much. Steveston was conservative, and New Westminster was
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
the common burden *Cfon™n.c hardship and long hard labour were more for the Trade Union Movement. The farmers in the Fraser
EMpire 6-5005
tuberculosis am onw
i
emigrants, a high death rate from Valley7 and in Okanagan were indifferent or for the co-operative
Japanese Dr Shim ^ Japanese immigrants was feared bv all movement. The miners .and the sawmill workers on the northern
to educate DeoJe
1“ the.group of Japanese doctors coast and on the Island were more for the trade unionists. There­
fore, the movement in Vancouver appeared either too progressive
clean
°f proper ancl nutritious diet,
clean clothing, punctual life, and proper and sanitary housekeeping, or was blamed on the impractical idealism of “petit bourgeois’
to the people outside of the city.
I
Male Help Wanted
aim of thVmXJ^
in order to accomplish the
Thirdly, although the adaptation of Canadian culture had ap­
m
r r s movement, the economic expansion of the Japanese
EXPERIENCED man for shipping u—
thTnnL4°M^^
They feared becoming similar to peared to be progressing, the integration of the whites and Ja­ standmg English and Ja^^
>
1 Negroes on the North American Continent panese people had not been successful except for the public school 20 years of age. Ask for' Mr. fcfc
Japanese met white only7 at their place of occupation. Without or Jkank Omoto, Dominion £uto f--"
X .?^
TJey T' determined to win the
inf
h th
h-e Canadians by raising their standard of liv- social mingling of both groups, integration could never be achiev- sones, 250 Helens Ave., (Toronto^"
?’aS b’onical that the suspicion of the white race increased I
ehlract^^
th?S showing their industrious eck
hnn hSo^^
nomcal that as the expansion of the Japanese when the Japanese were being assimilated into Canadian culture Japanese Make First
suSouT
essential industries progressed, the more and were prosperous in business and industry7.
expand of
?Came on the ^0U!ld that the
Fourthly, as the result of this movement, the tendency" of the Remote-control Bulldozer
paU’lVeLXnX’XrtW
Penetration of Ja- people to identify themselves with Christianity 7 and Canadian culTOKVO. — Komatsu Man­
or frequently7 Canada itself — became firmly established. ufacturing Co. of Japan has suetoward the_ white’s unjust treatment
iu of the Ja- । needed
coiistructin®'
x
held
“ Z Often, criticisms
b-ainiel nn the ?rrch’ Christianity was professed to reported to be the world’s fir4
’ “hallow and hypocritical religion. Many7 became bulldozer to be operated bv reS
to become better Canadians, but at the same time many mote control.
‘ -------------- - ----------- - ----------------- personnel0 J STODk'lX'Y'm the w°men’s Organizations, and of Christians returned to their old beliefs.
churT nr
";as recruited frequently in the
Fifthly, it was the tendency7 amongst the promoters of thw
t i
s’ ^‘ Osterhout and the W.M.S. workers were willino- movement
to pay little heed to Japanese traditional cXes They
to help the movement in many ways. Durin- the period of th!
m°,Se
educational movement in 1923—1924^ Rev 4ka
y
doctrine which decreed that Christians
(Cont. from Page One)
eie civilized and heathens were barbarians.
wit!??? ed U|On a5 r cb^T planner of the movement, coincidhio
e completion of the Gymnasium of the Vancouver
In the meantime, the New Westminster Japanese Mission from Louisiana and of French, 1U? VKleed had become the center of community Edu^ Th«-busy openi”S "e"' /missions under its care in the Fraser Valiev Irish-Indian extraction. Known to
tion in the Japanese community in Vancouver.
t™
'
‘eldership of Rev. Yutaka Ogura X came her as “Frenchy” Kelly, he land- ed in Japan for a tour of dutv
ersit^of^^
Japanese, Canadian student in the Univ, from Japan in 1920 to succeed Rev. Ozawa Rev C
Ogura
was
a 111
in J-^t
1947 ami
and met
met ner
her me
the next
next
graduate
of
Kwansai
Gaknin
n


-o

w x
Columbia, obtained an M. A. degree and made

CLASSIFIED

Xa.XS

WestX «^^^

The whereabouts of W

p»® axx^s?*ot «*Jai—
SB B5—£
the young people in aiding the -process ^T a ZilaSn
‘OI
sonal contact with over
v
a^iinuiauon ... In our perwo were impressed by the fact that ^h^tiJ^?9110111
province'

Thus, the church had been
in which to plant the
lo Iurtn
V thTr neiV y ad°pted country. It was supported bv a chu^rin
the atmosphere of the Japanese political scene, a good reputation
m the community, and able personnel. Indeed, it contributed a neat
t ktO he
of the Japanese is approved
by the above sociologists.
ocneian\
the accu;|uration movement had its short"” As inevitable as any other social educational movement.

2‘ mm°??’ Poi't Hanev and Mission. The work was supported ‘bv has rema^ed unknown until remany .able and active Christians, particularly the fZ
an
centTy when the search Michi had
steadily. It was even suggested in 1923 bv a Z been ^Kin- ever since she can
fraccommod^
*° separate the charge into two remember, came to an end. She
in the agricultural community,"because “"eit Missta"£ found her father.
32 St KJ’i lo°ked after?y one mlnVfe
J“
His full name is Narcise Kelly
and he now lives in Mesquite,

u
early to dlvlQe the Mission. In 1924 when Texas. He is without a doubt the
A ^ eat changeabout among Japanese Ministm-c
former GI known as “Frenchy”
while he was in Japan, according
to the confirmation of Michi’s
mother. He has written several
letters to Michi and talked with
her via international telephone.
■Michi has been overcome with
emotion ever since she made her
discovery and can hardly keep
her mind on business. She wants
to see her father as soon as poset an eyeful,

=5:S=S

x-uaubcupe nniSt . . .
(Continued From Page 1)
Garden Club Tours. The Exhibit will be on diswlav v
r
S th2 I?tel B°navei^e> and the following week hi Nia-fn Falls
Of the
Society of LanSe X? S^S &^n Cil’y ? .N^ They'were X
Although she claims to be not
g’ °'} t0 travelling exhibit for 2 veaK Jo art
too particularly7 pleased with her
oallciics, universities and museums under the auspices of the CMHC
generous figure, she is clever
enough
to realize that the extra
to became full, S
that « th children were
adopt ChriSty

‘'""1! they shouW be allowed to attention she has received be­
cause it has helped boost her
^oshinosuke Yoshioka came to
to prominence.
Franklin graduating from the same Universi™ with
vn 1
after
Liu, Mount Koval Park in Montreal in 1877 -iand7 his
7 " influence
Michi’s work schedule with
several months in Vancouver
Rew Ogura He spent
inspired the deeding of lands to Toronto to c^
Crown
record’s has not given her
1
ail ?ss’stant to Rev. Akathe
development of Vancouver’s Stanley
Park
k
dI gawa and went to 9
the
chance
to fly’ to Texas K‘
Stanley Park.
to determine whether beZuse^Fbis of6 M1®sion* 17 was difficult
the cmteur'this then^'thXwZ? p£ri°t«iin”e”- 'Vithin. in conservative Steveston
- hls/^'acter or his experience but by the time this reaches
thinking put him in\ diffipnltSei-tedrattltULe toward liberalistic publication, her agents may haw
the Vancouver MisXn in S Sltuatl0n whe« be succeeded at arranged the trip she has long
awaited and she may be m 1 e
states.
™<jd L"uver
Luc: sudden
She turned 19 on Feb. < ^
man’s a warness. I a^ain became the center of in Japan, and the Japanese community
of his ability to destruction and attrition of the natural
a power struggle between the right this is her seventh year 111 ^
mgs. ana die affect to his well-behm- 7 ... ’
ktl aJ surround- and the left factions.
will be a subject of concern I
entertainment world. She s hop. ~
to the landscape architects. The ‘legislator
the economist, socio- I
“Red” and “White”
it will be a lucky seven for wlegist, planner, engineer and others^ will be
and the church, 1924—1926
involved in the con- I
Whether
for
a
personal
mixed-blood, a
corns of tne Congress on such matters a<
“Yes, I’m
reason or because of his principles
Akagawa wanted to
landscape, planning the natural legislation affecting Kev.
pleased
to
be
one
”, say Michi.
- desire to ii3Sd 3City chu7ch He ^
presented
h

region,
the
economic
ihtu ’-cation for conservation of the natural
k •" ^T'6 ruraI community
landscape, the evolu- at tne Official Board at
tion Ox leisure tune, etc.
of Vancouver. It aXlrs ^
Slnce he took the pastorate
from his desire ZS
tO resi=n May h^e stemmed
trouble within the church
I
community and not due to
caused the resignation of ika^wp
an ^ernal trouble which
T°R°NTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
who succeeded Akagawa wouln'nM 1?^
Rev' ^osbioka.
/OI Dovercourt Rd.
adjusting himself to the con
™ S ?ad su?h trouble in
South of Bloor.
SUNDAY. JUNE 2. ISbS. 11:00 A.M.
some reluctancv to go aloiw with* the
because he had shown
Sunday Service and Church School — 11:30 A.M.
xv x"
he Akasawa-hne of liberalism.
English
®ev- C. Imai 444-5159
the Vancouvl™ejapanXC^
J?0-31 1:eIa11ti°nship in 1924 at
Japanese ■
Hev. M. Norisue 785-5632
fcvarm welcome to all.

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
SUNDAY.

SIS Batburst

St.

JUNE

2.

19SS

Jl£'1^ous School
"j^ ^ /^^ Service
scries c Service
Memorial
Telephone:

534-4302

of the congregation
church. Th resentment■
n
the Vancouver
felt by the congregation at the’deparVurro?
shioka’s strenuous attempt to im-vl
' Akagawa. Y otion in the strengthening of the ChnVhT
°f the con^a'
I growth
accused
I they* mistook his
h-PhS *^ the^chuSh 'X^i^V to
divert their intere. t. which was quite untrue. *
1

GIVE TOGETHER