Page 1
fter 37 Years, U.S
Nisei Child Actor Views First Movie Role
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif.—A soft spoken JapaEUo°Pjan RntEe Prevented him from attending.
tese m erican landscape artist and a one-time, oneby £aramount Pictures 37 years agoj PucA star finally got to see, for the first time,
Jsfor.. movie
Butterfly” starred Grant at Lt. Pinker
film in which he played, “Madam Butterfly,” __
ton,
Silvia
Sidney
as Cho Cho . San and Fields as Miss
rears after it had been produced.
Sidney
’
s
son,
“
Trouble.
”
Whillip Fields, his wife, Evelyn; ’ and their four
Presi^nt of Plaza Landscape, Inc., Santa
pldren, who live in Villa Park, were “flabbergast® during the recent surprise film showing by his
JVa£l sheeted for the film as a toddler bv
Hollywood director Marion Gerrying, after interviewBlends with William Lyon Homes, Inc., 4463 Birch
Newport Beach, at the firm’s offices.
Japanese-American 3-vear-olds to
play the pivotal role.
festive occasion took Fields and his family
. Jt was
chance that he was finallv select^completely by surprise,” he said. “I didn’t know it
eel,
said
Bill
Dodge,
spokesman for William Lyons
planned. And I don’t know what prompted it
Homes, Inc.
Sept the biggest heartwarming thing is that people
saW. “His mother had been told by a friend
m work with would do something like this.”
a talent scouts at Paramount Studios were looking
fields also was greeted with a telegram from Gary
°I.a ^?^nFs^r t° essay the key and1 tragic role.”
Grant in New York, who expressed1 regret that a
He added, “So, together with her son, she boarded
K
a trolley car from downtown Los Angeles and made
the long- trip to the Melrose Avenue studio of ParanRPnt Pictures, but she was turned away by a casting
office secretary on the grounds that, they had seen
enough children.”
Dodge continued, “Disappointed, the pair turned
and was walking down the street when the director,
on his way back from lunch at a nearby restaurant,
spotted Phil and invited him and his mother to return
to the studio for an interview.”
He said, “The rest was film history. And movie
critics hailed Fields as “the eighth wonder of th°
world.’ ”
The hit motion picture found Fields being offered
a long-term contract by one producer
'
of the “Our
Gang” comedy series, but his mother' refused to sign
(Continued on Page 8)
ui inm
“SUKIYAKI”
Cookbook By
MISS STELLA ITO
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A story of J.C.’s By
JESSIE L. BEATTIE
An Independent Organ far Canadians of Japanese Origin
|1. XXXIII—No. 15
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiniiiii
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1969
.iHirmniniiiiininiiiininijmiii HnHiHiininiiiiHnHiiHiiiiniiiiiiiiiinniHimiiiiiiiHiiiiiiHiiiniiiiiiiiiinimiiiniiniiiniiiiiinn^
I Reagan Lauds Hayakawa
S SAN FRANCISCO.—Gov. Ronald Reagan is willing to abide
g^Dr. S. I. Hayakawa’s handling of the teachers strike at troubled
San Francisco State College.
W A Negro state assemblyman charged, however, that Hayakawa
Hgnd other campus administrators -were responsible for radicals
ging over control of the Black Student Union.
I The conflicting views were offered recently at the annual
convention of the California
Newspapers Publishers Associa
tion which also heard from Ha
yakawa and U.S. Senator Alan
Cranston.
Governor Reagan gave Haya
kawa his unqualified support
during a question period1 follow
ing his speech.
“Haru No Matsuri” To Be Opened
By Acting Consul General March 1st
TORONTO. — Japanese Canadians val is the Centre's own version of
in the Toronto area will offically wel welcoming spring based on the Hinacome spring with "Haru No Matsuri" matsuri, or Girl's Doll Festival, ob
on March 1st and 2nd at the J.C. Cul served in Japan on March 3rd with
tural Centre. It will be officially open parents of daughters celebrating the
ed by Acting Consul General of Ja future happiness of their daughters.
pan, Mr. Katsuhisa Yamada at 2:00 Elaborate displays of dolls are one
p.m. Saturday.
of the presentations.
"Haru No Matsuri" or Spring Festi
Hinamotsuri has now developed
into a festive occasion symbolic
of Japanese arts and customs.
At the J.C. Cultural Centre,
He said he found “Hayakawa’s
SAPPORO.—Japanese medical researchers said they have de besides the displays of festival
quarterbacking pretty good.”
veloped ,a new process to cure stomach ulcers.
dolls, guests will be introduced
About 200 teachers had only
Masayoshi Namiki, assistant professor at Hokkaido Univ., said to the interesting and varied
a few days to apply for rein the process calls for injecting into the troubled spot a combina
statement. They were consider tion drug with a syringe needle, attached to a medical fiber cultural programs which are
ed automatically resigned after scope.
available at the Centre — Japa
missing classes for five days in
Namiki said he and his team had successfully applied the nese songs and dances, Chanoye
a row.
process to more than 50 cases of gastric ulcers.
(tea ceremony), Ikebana (floral
The development of the process, he said, will be officially
“The strikers are not getting announced late in March when a conference of the Japan Society art), Sumie (brush painting),
off scot free after all . . . They’re of Endoscopy is convened in Tokyo.
Origami (paper craft), Judo and
The process could be administered in three minutes at one Karate.
losing their salary,” said Reagan.
time, he said.
Tempura, teriyaki and other
Hayakawa and Assembly De
More than 20 mild ulcer cases were cured in about three weeks
mocratic minority whip Willie L. after three or four injections were given every other week, he said. tasty Japanese dishes will be
Brown Jr. engaged in a heated
He said about 80 percent of 30 chronic cases were also healed served throughout the day com
debate on the college issue.
in one month.
mencing at 1:00 p.m. prepared
The process was found useful also to pinpoint exact location on the spot by the expert mem
Brown said militants were able of stomach
cancers, Namiki said.
to assume control of the Black
bers of our Women’s Auxiliary.
Students Union only because colThe program this year is or
ege officials rejected* “legitimate
ganized
and presented solely by
proposals on non-militants.”
the Centre personnel — instruc
The San Francisco lawmaker
tors and their students.
said “non-militants were unable
UNIVERSITY PARK, Penn. — be dramatic and aggressive in
The J.C. Cultural Centre is
to make ■ San Francisco State Research on violence in a study thought and action, while their
located
at 123 Wynford Drive in
move one iota” and therefore lost going on at Pennsylvania State Argentine counterparts withdrew
Don
Mills,
Ont. —J.C.C. Centre
control of radical blacks.
Univ., has disclosed that people from people and work, showing
of different nationalities tend marked apathy and lapsing into
Hayakawa countered by saying to react in different ways to the trance-like states,” said Draguns,
“if the BSU had only permitted same stimuli.
an associate professor of clinical
it we would have had a black
psychology.
The university said recently,
studies program this month
in
about the research, that
In other case studies, the re
(when the spring semester be Dr.telling
Juris
G. Draguns spent the searchers learned that a Japa
gins) leading to a degree.”
past five years studying the re nese mental patient and an Ame- ■
of hospitalized mental rican mental patient with similar
_ “The rate at which San Fan- actions
•
‘quite different
cisco State has moved on this patients in Argentina, Japan, diagnosis had
NEW YORK. — While youth
symptoms.”
question of black studies impres- Israel, Mexico and Hawaii.
dominate
the nominations for
ses me,” said Hayakawa. “Ad
The research “may someday
Said Draguns: “The Japanese
ministrations before my own enable psychologists to predict patient may be emotionally un the “Record of the Year” in the
coming Grammy Awards, young
were not sitting on their hands.’’ and
pinpoint
outbreaks of stable or changeable, while his Japanese conductor Seiji Ozawa
violence or aggression long be
counterpart consistent has been nominated twice in the
Hayakawa returned the com fore they happen,” the university American
ly
shows
aggression directed classical music field.
tote photo by
pliment to Governor Reagan by said.
Jack Hemmy
against
specific
people in speci
Ozawa has been named for his
sayjng _ the governor’s hardline
fic
situations.
”
baton
conducting of Stravinski’s
Working
with
Dr.
Leslie
Phil
^iss Valentine 1969
legislative proposals for controll
“Rite of Spring,” and again for
lips
of
Boston
College,
Draguns
ing
student
disorders
were
“
pret
He
suggested
the
reason
for
K^IiJ0* Ri
°f this
matched individuals from dif the difference might be because his conducting of Messiaen’s
ty helpful.”
ferent cultures on a person-to- Japanese culture emphasizes in “Turangalia” and Toku TakemiBrown rejected that notion, person basis as determined by trospection and self-understand tsu’s “November.”
however, saying,
‘persons who
Grammy winners will be an
education, occupation ing less than does the culture of
seek to deal with situations on | and other data.
nounced on the evening of March
12 in ceremonies in Los Angeles,
Sansei re- college campuses should offer i They found, for example, that
‘’Our next tep,” said the psy- New
more than repression.”
York, Nashville and Chica
Argentine patients are more pas chologist is to take our stud go.
contpsf
• Ch,urch spoil
said using police to break sive to stress than Americans into the area of norma] behavior
Record Academy’s annual tele
er. and M^ g ^edaughter upHe
unruly student demonstrations are and1 “endure a situation so that someday psychologists vision spectacular, “The Best on
ratorc
Nakamura,
not dealing with the “sick stoically, gracefully and patient may be able to predict, and fore Record — The Grammy Show”
I in ¥.'f. to' Swan Clean! was
ness in our society” that leads ly letting come what may.”
stall, deviant psychopathic be will be telecast over NBC on
“American psychotics tended to havior.”
to student strikes.
Monday, May 5, 8 to 9 p.m.
Japan Researchers Claim Ulcer Cure
Japan Mental Patients Differ In Reaction
Nominated For
Grammy Award
i
Nisei Child Actor Views First Movie Role
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif.—A soft spoken JapaEUo°Pjan RntEe Prevented him from attending.
tese m erican landscape artist and a one-time, oneby £aramount Pictures 37 years agoj PucA star finally got to see, for the first time,
Jsfor.. movie
Butterfly” starred Grant at Lt. Pinker
film in which he played, “Madam Butterfly,” __
ton,
Silvia
Sidney
as Cho Cho . San and Fields as Miss
rears after it had been produced.
Sidney
’
s
son,
“
Trouble.
”
Whillip Fields, his wife, Evelyn; ’ and their four
Presi^nt of Plaza Landscape, Inc., Santa
pldren, who live in Villa Park, were “flabbergast® during the recent surprise film showing by his
JVa£l sheeted for the film as a toddler bv
Hollywood director Marion Gerrying, after interviewBlends with William Lyon Homes, Inc., 4463 Birch
Newport Beach, at the firm’s offices.
Japanese-American 3-vear-olds to
play the pivotal role.
festive occasion took Fields and his family
. Jt was
chance that he was finallv select^completely by surprise,” he said. “I didn’t know it
eel,
said
Bill
Dodge,
spokesman for William Lyons
planned. And I don’t know what prompted it
Homes, Inc.
Sept the biggest heartwarming thing is that people
saW. “His mother had been told by a friend
m work with would do something like this.”
a talent scouts at Paramount Studios were looking
fields also was greeted with a telegram from Gary
°I.a ^?^nFs^r t° essay the key and1 tragic role.”
Grant in New York, who expressed1 regret that a
He added, “So, together with her son, she boarded
K
a trolley car from downtown Los Angeles and made
the long- trip to the Melrose Avenue studio of ParanRPnt Pictures, but she was turned away by a casting
office secretary on the grounds that, they had seen
enough children.”
Dodge continued, “Disappointed, the pair turned
and was walking down the street when the director,
on his way back from lunch at a nearby restaurant,
spotted Phil and invited him and his mother to return
to the studio for an interview.”
He said, “The rest was film history. And movie
critics hailed Fields as “the eighth wonder of th°
world.’ ”
The hit motion picture found Fields being offered
a long-term contract by one producer
'
of the “Our
Gang” comedy series, but his mother' refused to sign
(Continued on Page 8)
ui inm
“SUKIYAKI”
Cookbook By
MISS STELLA ITO
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A story of J.C.’s By
JESSIE L. BEATTIE
An Independent Organ far Canadians of Japanese Origin
|1. XXXIII—No. 15
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiniiiii
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1969
.iHirmniniiiiininiiiininijmiii HnHiHiininiiiiHnHiiHiiiiniiiiiiiiiinniHimiiiiiiiHiiiiiiHiiiniiiiiiiiiinimiiiniiniiiniiiiiinn^
I Reagan Lauds Hayakawa
S SAN FRANCISCO.—Gov. Ronald Reagan is willing to abide
g^Dr. S. I. Hayakawa’s handling of the teachers strike at troubled
San Francisco State College.
W A Negro state assemblyman charged, however, that Hayakawa
Hgnd other campus administrators -were responsible for radicals
ging over control of the Black Student Union.
I The conflicting views were offered recently at the annual
convention of the California
Newspapers Publishers Associa
tion which also heard from Ha
yakawa and U.S. Senator Alan
Cranston.
Governor Reagan gave Haya
kawa his unqualified support
during a question period1 follow
ing his speech.
“Haru No Matsuri” To Be Opened
By Acting Consul General March 1st
TORONTO. — Japanese Canadians val is the Centre's own version of
in the Toronto area will offically wel welcoming spring based on the Hinacome spring with "Haru No Matsuri" matsuri, or Girl's Doll Festival, ob
on March 1st and 2nd at the J.C. Cul served in Japan on March 3rd with
tural Centre. It will be officially open parents of daughters celebrating the
ed by Acting Consul General of Ja future happiness of their daughters.
pan, Mr. Katsuhisa Yamada at 2:00 Elaborate displays of dolls are one
p.m. Saturday.
of the presentations.
"Haru No Matsuri" or Spring Festi
Hinamotsuri has now developed
into a festive occasion symbolic
of Japanese arts and customs.
At the J.C. Cultural Centre,
He said he found “Hayakawa’s
SAPPORO.—Japanese medical researchers said they have de besides the displays of festival
quarterbacking pretty good.”
veloped ,a new process to cure stomach ulcers.
dolls, guests will be introduced
About 200 teachers had only
Masayoshi Namiki, assistant professor at Hokkaido Univ., said to the interesting and varied
a few days to apply for rein the process calls for injecting into the troubled spot a combina
statement. They were consider tion drug with a syringe needle, attached to a medical fiber cultural programs which are
ed automatically resigned after scope.
available at the Centre — Japa
missing classes for five days in
Namiki said he and his team had successfully applied the nese songs and dances, Chanoye
a row.
process to more than 50 cases of gastric ulcers.
(tea ceremony), Ikebana (floral
The development of the process, he said, will be officially
“The strikers are not getting announced late in March when a conference of the Japan Society art), Sumie (brush painting),
off scot free after all . . . They’re of Endoscopy is convened in Tokyo.
Origami (paper craft), Judo and
The process could be administered in three minutes at one Karate.
losing their salary,” said Reagan.
time, he said.
Tempura, teriyaki and other
Hayakawa and Assembly De
More than 20 mild ulcer cases were cured in about three weeks
mocratic minority whip Willie L. after three or four injections were given every other week, he said. tasty Japanese dishes will be
Brown Jr. engaged in a heated
He said about 80 percent of 30 chronic cases were also healed served throughout the day com
debate on the college issue.
in one month.
mencing at 1:00 p.m. prepared
The process was found useful also to pinpoint exact location on the spot by the expert mem
Brown said militants were able of stomach
cancers, Namiki said.
to assume control of the Black
bers of our Women’s Auxiliary.
Students Union only because colThe program this year is or
ege officials rejected* “legitimate
ganized
and presented solely by
proposals on non-militants.”
the Centre personnel — instruc
The San Francisco lawmaker
tors and their students.
said “non-militants were unable
UNIVERSITY PARK, Penn. — be dramatic and aggressive in
The J.C. Cultural Centre is
to make ■ San Francisco State Research on violence in a study thought and action, while their
located
at 123 Wynford Drive in
move one iota” and therefore lost going on at Pennsylvania State Argentine counterparts withdrew
Don
Mills,
Ont. —J.C.C. Centre
control of radical blacks.
Univ., has disclosed that people from people and work, showing
of different nationalities tend marked apathy and lapsing into
Hayakawa countered by saying to react in different ways to the trance-like states,” said Draguns,
“if the BSU had only permitted same stimuli.
an associate professor of clinical
it we would have had a black
psychology.
The university said recently,
studies program this month
in
about the research, that
In other case studies, the re
(when the spring semester be Dr.telling
Juris
G. Draguns spent the searchers learned that a Japa
gins) leading to a degree.”
past five years studying the re nese mental patient and an Ame- ■
of hospitalized mental rican mental patient with similar
_ “The rate at which San Fan- actions
•
‘quite different
cisco State has moved on this patients in Argentina, Japan, diagnosis had
NEW YORK. — While youth
symptoms.”
question of black studies impres- Israel, Mexico and Hawaii.
dominate
the nominations for
ses me,” said Hayakawa. “Ad
The research “may someday
Said Draguns: “The Japanese
ministrations before my own enable psychologists to predict patient may be emotionally un the “Record of the Year” in the
coming Grammy Awards, young
were not sitting on their hands.’’ and
pinpoint
outbreaks of stable or changeable, while his Japanese conductor Seiji Ozawa
violence or aggression long be
counterpart consistent has been nominated twice in the
Hayakawa returned the com fore they happen,” the university American
ly
shows
aggression directed classical music field.
tote photo by
pliment to Governor Reagan by said.
Jack Hemmy
against
specific
people in speci
Ozawa has been named for his
sayjng _ the governor’s hardline
fic
situations.
”
baton
conducting of Stravinski’s
Working
with
Dr.
Leslie
Phil
^iss Valentine 1969
legislative proposals for controll
“Rite of Spring,” and again for
lips
of
Boston
College,
Draguns
ing
student
disorders
were
“
pret
He
suggested
the
reason
for
K^IiJ0* Ri
°f this
matched individuals from dif the difference might be because his conducting of Messiaen’s
ty helpful.”
ferent cultures on a person-to- Japanese culture emphasizes in “Turangalia” and Toku TakemiBrown rejected that notion, person basis as determined by trospection and self-understand tsu’s “November.”
however, saying,
‘persons who
Grammy winners will be an
education, occupation ing less than does the culture of
seek to deal with situations on | and other data.
nounced on the evening of March
12 in ceremonies in Los Angeles,
Sansei re- college campuses should offer i They found, for example, that
‘’Our next tep,” said the psy- New
more than repression.”
York, Nashville and Chica
Argentine patients are more pas chologist is to take our stud go.
contpsf
• Ch,urch spoil
said using police to break sive to stress than Americans into the area of norma] behavior
Record Academy’s annual tele
er. and M^ g ^edaughter upHe
unruly student demonstrations are and1 “endure a situation so that someday psychologists vision spectacular, “The Best on
ratorc
Nakamura,
not dealing with the “sick stoically, gracefully and patient may be able to predict, and fore Record — The Grammy Show”
I in ¥.'f. to' Swan Clean! was
ness in our society” that leads ly letting come what may.”
stall, deviant psychopathic be will be telecast over NBC on
“American psychotics tended to havior.”
to student strikes.
Monday, May 5, 8 to 9 p.m.
Japan Researchers Claim Ulcer Cure
Japan Mental Patients Differ In Reaction
Nominated For
Grammy Award
i
Page 2
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Page 7
February_26, 1969
PAGE
I Many U.S, Sansei Nabbed On Dope Charges |
it b a good policy to
hart th* RIGHT POLICY
Consult
"The Art Of Hat-Making'' At T.B.C. February 27th
TORONTO.—Hat! Hats! Hats! — A fascinating parade of
ats will be displayed at the close of the evening when Messrs.
!elcher and Smith will demonstrate “The Art of Hat-Making” at
fie Toronto Buddhist Church on Thursday, February 27th
:00 p.m.
The experts will show, step by step, how they create hats
or every type of wardrobe. They’ll be somethin ultra-feminine,
iomething sporty, something for the g-o-go-young” and someEhing for the matronly.
I
For the spring bride, a wealth, of ideas for the bridal party
awaits you. For those who are eagerly planning their new spring
Outfits, complete it with a, hat for that “total” look.
|
This exciting evening is sponsored by the Toronto Dana
pickets are available from the members for $1.00. There will be
plucky door prizes and refreshments will also be served. __ T.K.
*
*
Edmonton's JC 4th Annual Bonspiel Mar. 28, 29, 30
I
EDMONTON, Alta.—All Japanese curlers are invited to the
^Edmonton Japanese Community Club’s 4th Annual Bonspiel at the
[Thistle Curling Club, 6940 — 114 Avenue, with the first draws
[slated for 7:00 p.m. Friday, March 28, and on through Saturday
land Sunday, March 29 and 30. This will be the largest ’Spiel to
|be undertaken by the club as it will be a 32 rink, 4 events bonspiel.
kith plans for 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and* 4th in each event.
I
Regulations governing rink entry:
I
b A link MUST consist of two Japanese or regular members
[of an organized Japanese Curling Club.
I
2. A Japanese or a regular member of an organized Japanese
[Curling Club MUST Skip the Rink and throw Skip Rock.
I
3. The entry fee is $40.00 per rink. A minimum deposit of $20.^00 must be submitted with each rink entry prior to March 14. 1969.
।
A banquet is scheduled for Saturday evening commencing- about
[6:00 p.m. with assorted entertainment to round-off an evening
tof social merriment.
[
Direct all inquiries, entries, and cheques to Mr. Shiro Koya
nagi, 10040—87 Ave., Edmonton 63, Alta., Phone 439-7234. _ J.T.
*
*
By KATSUMI KUNITSUGU
t
F By co^cjdence, almost the exact perAmericans wno attend Gardena, California
n
1S a S°' the percentage of Japanese
d
we^e arrested on dope charges Iasi
d^105^ by Mas Fukai, vice-chairman of
tile Los Angeles, County Narcotics Commission, during- his address
e
a Gardena Valley JACL chapter installation dinner recently.
U i .underlined the impact of raw statistics bv reading two
s S,27 went out to Nisei parents of two offended - a
WiS n/ri,? "n t'’'?1?”11! eW “
John J Hunt,
piincipal of Gaidena High School, and the girls - vice urmcinai
of thote^etVe^
tO imagine that they were the recipients
Hu-h SehLf
•Americans
veai
ou could very well be/' he churned.
had maintained a B-plus average through
in
b/ng expelled from schooTfor violatsateof
* ^catoon lave forbiding the possession, use or
t>ale oi nai cotics on school grounds.
suspei]ded for being under the influence of alh /ml Emitting to the possession, sale and use of narcotics.
to resist
Amedcan students being strong enough
attentive
&
At the same time, he cautioned them to remember that thpioblem is not exclusive to Gardena High School. The fact that
rpL/t
newspaper prints the names of all persons ar
LnXl , / L?S Angel®s \ernacular newspapers often pick up the
ones may focuse attention on Gardena, but narcotics problems
Fuka^said^^ ^ a”y L°S AnSeleS senior or .junior high school,
nnik/ne'half °f v11 crimes committed in the Los Angeles metro
politan area can be traced to narcotics,” he said.
?at' the.Problem is not confined to so-called “ghetto schools”
SU™\Se? ^'oui the fact that of the youths arrested in
m0/ had
m°del cars> wore expensive clothes and
had plenty of money, he said.
A ^aiLSeL
at Gardena High School who reported to the
11S- "a let Aad been stolen from his locker also
admitted to the principal that he had “about $65” in it.
i
maintains that students from the fourth grade level
be taught about dope addiction and its dangers. “They arc
lot stupid and should know in case they are urged to Uy it bv
friends and pushers,” he said.
‘
'
Fukai pointed out the “contagious” nature of drug addiction
progressing from alcohol to smoking marijuana, then trying- bar??fWkand gomg- on to heroin in a search for stronger .kicks
*
Heart Fund Drive Aims To Protect Everyone
’
T0R0^TT0.—It is important for everyone to realize that the
heart b und, conducted here and throughout Canada during Februarv
is something more than ‘just another health drive’.
I
Heart Fmid is nationwide fight against a great complex
lot diseases and disorders — heart attack, stroke, high blood pres|?U1\ a™ hardening of the arteries, rheumatic fever and inborn
near detects to., mention only a few. Diseases of the heart and
[circulation, which your Heart Fund dollars help to fight, are res
I!
ponsible
for more than 75,000 deaths in Canada each year. That
sis more than the combined total, resulting from all other diseases
causes of death. In fact these cardiovascular diseases accoum
for over oO percent of all deaths.
'
hea*’t problem is no distant abstraction. Although national
ln- scoPe’ it exists as a painful and costly reality
eie 111 • s c^y- If V°u have doubts, examine the obituaries
111 °Ur daily newsPapers. You will find that our
° .lty exPerience closely parallels national figures: that,
average, about half our death notice will mention ‘hear!
L
,,or heart disease’.. All too often these terms are
I t0 family breadwinners in the prime of life — men in
pie
to 6u year-bracket.
L
only one practical way to fight heart disease, namely
Tin?-y°Ur Heart Foundation’s balanced programs of reHeirf
ana information. You can'do’this by contributing
the
/ dollars. Truly, the Heart Fund, deserves a place at
to
M£ua* giving for health’ list. Send your contribution
Hie Canadian Heart Fund, 247 Davenport Road, Toronto 5.
f°F frying anFthmg once, but the decision to
? ?S ^ decidmg to jump off a 12-storev building,
P0"1^ °Yt- ^ou can't change your mind about it at the
eighth-floor level as you’re falling.”
nnM ^j-e- reasons
using drugs are complex and differ with
’ cominon causes are lack of constructive home and
reli0ious influence, wrong environment and wrong friends, relief
npja?iai-d fatigue, idle curiosity and the urge to try something
new, Fukai explained.
Fukai concluded by urging his audience to go bevond dealing
with the symptoms and deal with the causes. Parents should punish
then, offsprings when they do wrong and praise them when they
do right, as the Issei did with their Nisei children, he said.
“Pam and fatigue are not necessarily physical. The loneliness
conimg; bmne to an empty hose, the frustration of noc being
able to talk to and be heard by one’s parents — this is pain, too ”
rukai said.
’
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCli
Nisei Service and Church School — Sun.
11:30 A.M.
English — Rev. G. S. Imai, 444-5159
~
, Japanese — Rev. Y. C. Horikoshi, 766-5622
1 Dovercourt Rd.
A warm welcome to all.
S. of Bloor
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
SUNDAY, MARCH 2, 1969
10:30 A.M. Religious School
a lfR7; TakaaW Nagatani, Steveston Buddhist Church
?ev' Ohrai ^jikawa, Lethbridge, Alberta
2:00 P.M. Memorial Service — Buddhist Churches of Canada
Rev. Daijun Yakumo, Vancouver Buddhist Church.
„
AI! BCC Ministers in Attendance
918 Bathurst St.
Telephone: 534-4302
It’s Private! No Time Limit!
Get the most enjoyment from your wedding
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
Plenty of delicious food I Plenty of free parking!
925 Eglinton W. Toronto
St. John s Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School 2:00 P.M. Worship Service 3:00 P.M.
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-8128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
HOUSE
—
RU. 1-9123
Lichee Garden 4
Takara Jewellers
F Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
das S^ Toronto, Suite 1402. Phone 363-095
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art .Watanabe
Residential Painting
By
KAZ KATO
Cail 221-7841
AUTO
—
FIRE —
LIFE
ALL FORMS
or
consult
KIYO TAMURA
TORONTO
Bus. 366-5812
BUS!
Res. Pi. 9-8317
824-8153
922-1353
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered
Accountant
Suit*
403
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
1278 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
Tokjo Niihimuri
923-6877
KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Sloccm City, B.C.
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
SKATES
Hockey Equipment
Skate Sharpening
K
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
Formal
Rentals
Phone 364-3481
Reserve
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc,
(4 Lines To Serve You)
CATERING SERVICE — “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
ALMA
Banquet Facilities
Of Toronto
(Dining Lounge)
118 Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
21
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone 368-4681
551 Danforth Ave,
reception or anniversary
CHINA
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
For Business Or Private Parties
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
DINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY
n
CUSTOM' MADE SUIT
Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE,
PHONE: 463-8104
PAGE
I Many U.S, Sansei Nabbed On Dope Charges |
it b a good policy to
hart th* RIGHT POLICY
Consult
"The Art Of Hat-Making'' At T.B.C. February 27th
TORONTO.—Hat! Hats! Hats! — A fascinating parade of
ats will be displayed at the close of the evening when Messrs.
!elcher and Smith will demonstrate “The Art of Hat-Making” at
fie Toronto Buddhist Church on Thursday, February 27th
:00 p.m.
The experts will show, step by step, how they create hats
or every type of wardrobe. They’ll be somethin ultra-feminine,
iomething sporty, something for the g-o-go-young” and someEhing for the matronly.
I
For the spring bride, a wealth, of ideas for the bridal party
awaits you. For those who are eagerly planning their new spring
Outfits, complete it with a, hat for that “total” look.
|
This exciting evening is sponsored by the Toronto Dana
pickets are available from the members for $1.00. There will be
plucky door prizes and refreshments will also be served. __ T.K.
*
*
Edmonton's JC 4th Annual Bonspiel Mar. 28, 29, 30
I
EDMONTON, Alta.—All Japanese curlers are invited to the
^Edmonton Japanese Community Club’s 4th Annual Bonspiel at the
[Thistle Curling Club, 6940 — 114 Avenue, with the first draws
[slated for 7:00 p.m. Friday, March 28, and on through Saturday
land Sunday, March 29 and 30. This will be the largest ’Spiel to
|be undertaken by the club as it will be a 32 rink, 4 events bonspiel.
kith plans for 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and* 4th in each event.
I
Regulations governing rink entry:
I
b A link MUST consist of two Japanese or regular members
[of an organized Japanese Curling Club.
I
2. A Japanese or a regular member of an organized Japanese
[Curling Club MUST Skip the Rink and throw Skip Rock.
I
3. The entry fee is $40.00 per rink. A minimum deposit of $20.^00 must be submitted with each rink entry prior to March 14. 1969.
।
A banquet is scheduled for Saturday evening commencing- about
[6:00 p.m. with assorted entertainment to round-off an evening
tof social merriment.
[
Direct all inquiries, entries, and cheques to Mr. Shiro Koya
nagi, 10040—87 Ave., Edmonton 63, Alta., Phone 439-7234. _ J.T.
*
*
By KATSUMI KUNITSUGU
t
F By co^cjdence, almost the exact perAmericans wno attend Gardena, California
n
1S a S°' the percentage of Japanese
d
we^e arrested on dope charges Iasi
d^105^ by Mas Fukai, vice-chairman of
tile Los Angeles, County Narcotics Commission, during- his address
e
a Gardena Valley JACL chapter installation dinner recently.
U i .underlined the impact of raw statistics bv reading two
s S,27 went out to Nisei parents of two offended - a
WiS n/ri,? "n t'’'?1?”11! eW “
John J Hunt,
piincipal of Gaidena High School, and the girls - vice urmcinai
of thote^etVe^
tO imagine that they were the recipients
Hu-h SehLf
•Americans
veai
ou could very well be/' he churned.
had maintained a B-plus average through
in
b/ng expelled from schooTfor violatsateof
* ^catoon lave forbiding the possession, use or
t>ale oi nai cotics on school grounds.
suspei]ded for being under the influence of alh /ml Emitting to the possession, sale and use of narcotics.
to resist
Amedcan students being strong enough
attentive
&
At the same time, he cautioned them to remember that thpioblem is not exclusive to Gardena High School. The fact that
rpL/t
newspaper prints the names of all persons ar
LnXl , / L?S Angel®s \ernacular newspapers often pick up the
ones may focuse attention on Gardena, but narcotics problems
Fuka^said^^ ^ a”y L°S AnSeleS senior or .junior high school,
nnik/ne'half °f v11 crimes committed in the Los Angeles metro
politan area can be traced to narcotics,” he said.
?at' the.Problem is not confined to so-called “ghetto schools”
SU™\Se? ^'oui the fact that of the youths arrested in
m0/ had
m°del cars> wore expensive clothes and
had plenty of money, he said.
A ^aiLSeL
at Gardena High School who reported to the
11S- "a let Aad been stolen from his locker also
admitted to the principal that he had “about $65” in it.
i
maintains that students from the fourth grade level
be taught about dope addiction and its dangers. “They arc
lot stupid and should know in case they are urged to Uy it bv
friends and pushers,” he said.
‘
'
Fukai pointed out the “contagious” nature of drug addiction
progressing from alcohol to smoking marijuana, then trying- bar??fWkand gomg- on to heroin in a search for stronger .kicks
*
Heart Fund Drive Aims To Protect Everyone
’
T0R0^TT0.—It is important for everyone to realize that the
heart b und, conducted here and throughout Canada during Februarv
is something more than ‘just another health drive’.
I
Heart Fmid is nationwide fight against a great complex
lot diseases and disorders — heart attack, stroke, high blood pres|?U1\ a™ hardening of the arteries, rheumatic fever and inborn
near detects to., mention only a few. Diseases of the heart and
[circulation, which your Heart Fund dollars help to fight, are res
I!
ponsible
for more than 75,000 deaths in Canada each year. That
sis more than the combined total, resulting from all other diseases
causes of death. In fact these cardiovascular diseases accoum
for over oO percent of all deaths.
'
hea*’t problem is no distant abstraction. Although national
ln- scoPe’ it exists as a painful and costly reality
eie 111 • s c^y- If V°u have doubts, examine the obituaries
111 °Ur daily newsPapers. You will find that our
° .lty exPerience closely parallels national figures: that,
average, about half our death notice will mention ‘hear!
L
,,or heart disease’.. All too often these terms are
I t0 family breadwinners in the prime of life — men in
pie
to 6u year-bracket.
L
only one practical way to fight heart disease, namely
Tin?-y°Ur Heart Foundation’s balanced programs of reHeirf
ana information. You can'do’this by contributing
the
/ dollars. Truly, the Heart Fund, deserves a place at
to
M£ua* giving for health’ list. Send your contribution
Hie Canadian Heart Fund, 247 Davenport Road, Toronto 5.
f°F frying anFthmg once, but the decision to
? ?S ^ decidmg to jump off a 12-storev building,
P0"1^ °Yt- ^ou can't change your mind about it at the
eighth-floor level as you’re falling.”
nnM ^j-e- reasons
using drugs are complex and differ with
’ cominon causes are lack of constructive home and
reli0ious influence, wrong environment and wrong friends, relief
npja?iai-d fatigue, idle curiosity and the urge to try something
new, Fukai explained.
Fukai concluded by urging his audience to go bevond dealing
with the symptoms and deal with the causes. Parents should punish
then, offsprings when they do wrong and praise them when they
do right, as the Issei did with their Nisei children, he said.
“Pam and fatigue are not necessarily physical. The loneliness
conimg; bmne to an empty hose, the frustration of noc being
able to talk to and be heard by one’s parents — this is pain, too ”
rukai said.
’
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCli
Nisei Service and Church School — Sun.
11:30 A.M.
English — Rev. G. S. Imai, 444-5159
~
, Japanese — Rev. Y. C. Horikoshi, 766-5622
1 Dovercourt Rd.
A warm welcome to all.
S. of Bloor
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
SUNDAY, MARCH 2, 1969
10:30 A.M. Religious School
a lfR7; TakaaW Nagatani, Steveston Buddhist Church
?ev' Ohrai ^jikawa, Lethbridge, Alberta
2:00 P.M. Memorial Service — Buddhist Churches of Canada
Rev. Daijun Yakumo, Vancouver Buddhist Church.
„
AI! BCC Ministers in Attendance
918 Bathurst St.
Telephone: 534-4302
It’s Private! No Time Limit!
Get the most enjoyment from your wedding
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
Plenty of delicious food I Plenty of free parking!
925 Eglinton W. Toronto
St. John s Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School 2:00 P.M. Worship Service 3:00 P.M.
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-8128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
HOUSE
—
RU. 1-9123
Lichee Garden 4
Takara Jewellers
F Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
das S^ Toronto, Suite 1402. Phone 363-095
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art .Watanabe
Residential Painting
By
KAZ KATO
Cail 221-7841
AUTO
—
FIRE —
LIFE
ALL FORMS
or
consult
KIYO TAMURA
TORONTO
Bus. 366-5812
BUS!
Res. Pi. 9-8317
824-8153
922-1353
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered
Accountant
Suit*
403
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
1278 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
Tokjo Niihimuri
923-6877
KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Sloccm City, B.C.
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
SKATES
Hockey Equipment
Skate Sharpening
K
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
Formal
Rentals
Phone 364-3481
Reserve
Now For
Weddings
Dances Etc,
(4 Lines To Serve You)
CATERING SERVICE — “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
ALMA
Banquet Facilities
Of Toronto
(Dining Lounge)
118 Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
21
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone 368-4681
551 Danforth Ave,
reception or anniversary
CHINA
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
For Business Or Private Parties
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
DINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY
n
CUSTOM' MADE SUIT
Sus Nagai
437 DANFORTH AVE,
PHONE: 463-8104
Page 8
PAGE 8
Wednesday, February 2£iq^
Yellow Power
The New Canadian
Another Look At “One Yellow Student's Opinion”
and tor payment^ postage^’
P h
'
S KUXITSUGU
r°n?t }Yant to
a photo copy of a white man with yellow
k
heard the expression “Yellow Power” a vear and a SMn' m Je”°w and Im going to be proud . .
half ago June when UCLA Extension sponsored a svmpo ium on
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESnsv
At
Ij of his Pint's generation, heartlv applaud
AND FRIDAY BEGINNING W
apanT Elation of World War II Some young people were
Miles and shout 'Bravo!” for his spirit.
*
„ , L
,
MARCH, 1969
■
n^ bUtt°n-S Wlth the legend at the meeting, and we
But
however
and
nevertheless,
before
we
get
carried
awav
T
UMEZUKI
Public
sensible suit
amUSmg to sport
on the laPd of our good, gray we must point out to Miles that his heady declaration of i^ ™ TSUMURA EkIMm.
™ MORI Japanese Etfitor
v i J think to most of us who were middle-aged, the Yellow Power it o. nThi w hindsight, and whether he wants to recognize
’“ °“
that his parent’s
And Advertising,
d!tLh^hanklnd of intellectual joke, similar to wearing a “Fro teneradon m»X
.eneiauon made.
479 queen gT
do Lives button, certainly not to be taken seriouslv.
the stadent activists ‘recent!v and
f°r the ^^ration gap, he cannot conceive of the hvstera
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
f
aS.C e -by A5- eS Eamada (New Canadian, S.at Feb.
wPiL a ^aiL+?\an^AC0 Glty College student majoring in social
miS
Yellow Student’s Opinion,” I think the
militant oansei take the expression seriouslv.
-ense I
a.lc Help Wanted
Miles Hamada’s treatise is too long to quote entirelv in this of helplessness that yve can really” EXFLAIN w '
’±«b“‘ S°me “CCrPtS
Sive you In idea rfX he out to Miles that in complying we affirmed’that we^vante^tcH SE^
P^hine operators. Fa^s sS~ ■ a- 3»S8 5«mM
“When I was young I wanted to be white
I had built
h “S
He
squinchi-evod
)k. 1 PTe stereotype of the “buck-toothed,
I
Male Help Wanted
' f -P’ ^e sneaky yellow man with cruel intentions”
I technician
TELEVISION
and apoliance s»nh
sons^at
?aH
even learned in historv leswanted. Must be fully' «
sons at school . felt so inferior that I had to take out
rlen«i Phone 259-3102, Mr. Youm
aggressions and inferior feelings on my Chinese brothers ...”
5 of SoTand not “fT T^11 ™ °"ly "'k' ^”" atmosphere P®
feS te^5i^"^
by the road are (Toronto).
countiV^u?"^
in this countrX and I know only tins
®°pe experience in shin®:
vep‘-t.tAbl®
speak Japanese. Good:
T
‘
fc dld Ebis country do to me. It is no wonder that
I see many of my yellow brothers trying to be white Th?
oeneiits. Apply Dominion Auto
w
Xo^E^*8* °iS“ « ~ t^i^
sones, 250 St. Helen Ave. (Toronto)?
[
Business Opportunity
Profitable West End Gardening Busin=«
For. Sale, Phone 536-8345, or 531-1053.
Domestic Help Wanted
g=in; xaS •» x ssSF-W® sg;~
A ^=^^
white man,
states
charges
^•>per mon‘h- Someone who-most of'
all likes children and secondly enjoys
cooking both Japanese and * western
rood. To work with family with 3 chil
dren in centrally' located home. Otis'
help kept.
Very comfortable liviaj
quarters with phone and TV (Toronto)
Box 10, The New Canadian
Flat For Rent
WARM bright three room flat to rent.
Good kitchen and bathroom. Phone 9237825 (Toronto).
Child, Actor . . .
SPRING TOUR TO JAPAN, 1969
*
However, it
For detailed information contact
^omPass Travel Service Ltd.,
Buy and Sell
Phone 6S2.2241
Your Hom
Through
MELL REAL ESTATE LTD.
MAS. (Ron) MENDE
Tosh Iwai
1527 O'Conner Dr.
757-5184
Toronto 16
When Buying Or Selling A Home
Call: KEN HORI
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
M Perivale Cres.
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough
File
company would^onl^ allow f£ I th™??1?
company
to see her son on «efi. H^’V^
Yilm career came to
FEBRUARY 23rd, (Sunday)
MARCH 30th, (Sunday)
MAY 11th, (Sunday)
515 Main Street, Vancouver
(Cent. ^ Pag> u
Burglary — Bonds — Automobile
Liability — Glass
GENERAL INSURANCE
Phone 964-9000 William R. Bell
Special Discounts on Store and Business
Package Policies
Ensign Insurance Service, 2 College St,, Tor.
didn’t
PhilosoPhical and
«
fong aT^
4vUlgS as a chlld; or even to- f^'^ily was together — that was
Ar ,
Fe important thing. The other
e»eV ^Pmber mak- miportant thing was coming back
fl mJ he Pushed’ but it
lth a better outlook and a be^"as his understanding that
tiiab the ter sen.se of~ values. It makes vou
Personnel picked him.
----- up I aPPisciate this life a lot more.”
at ms home every morning and ________ ______
returned him. This went on da
ly for six months.
He agrees with
“who told me many times, ‘every-
GIVE ■■■
^I
wf1?
had a dl3m to
5 8
movie earlier in his life
because by the time I grew up
Th« W >‘“"j h'™® ^own:
but ' T ml
s °" . clKision once. I
our i missed it.
I
t fields. 38, is the son of the
Horim°to. who died
fVof’j
^n^iae SchaefS of La Puente, who remanded
^v The
Sbai1 had Hnssed
Vame change for the
Villa Park landscape artist was
by-M ^ “^ed nS
ln Ca]ifornia vears
^o. a law no longer in existence"
thmhe took his ^othei ;. maiden name because th*
old mixed marriage law white
Xe^ Ingo’S
or mulattos
/ fga ;and Voii Thc la%v
J'1'611 constitutional in
and vas repealed in 19jo
However, the most drannrt
bktt" ^ieRi *H^ -as pS£
bL the three years he and his
family endured at the Amach;Canip in Colorado for Japanese
Americans during World War U
Ife
“I can sav this truthfullv
hurt his ?nd &hoa^^
good judgment. I have no regrets
about, missing a film career be
cause everything else has been
so good in my life.”
J i-J7\a^Was
taction as he
I reflected on the movie?
;
^..^as ldnd Of interesting.”
he said, adding, “my family was
very surprised and enjoved V
immensely. It wasn’t reallv late
to SeTit“S'
Childre’n S°t
Articles For Sale
SPECIAL Sale of SINGER Zigzag Sew
ing Machines, Vacuum Cleaners — fa
demonstration call Mrs. Tsujimura ••
621-0684 (Toronto).
SO more will live
SHIPPING
to Japan & all Ports
By Air, Rail,
Land & Sea
Overseas
Packing Crating t
All Custom Papers
Arranged
Fully Insured
Call
CANADIAN
HEART FUND
Arrow World Wide
Shipping
889-6269
Metro Toronto
For Ice Fishing Fun
arts fish huts
p
Highway 4S
At Port Bolster
ropane Heated and Lighted Huts To Accommodate 24-6
Phone Pefferlaw 189
TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO
Sales - Service
Franchised Dealer For
RCA. Victor — Color & B.W.
Television — Stereo — Etc.
2893 Lawrence Ave. East At
Brimlej Rd.
loni Iwamoto
°
Scarborough
"
Phone 759-1583
Tosh Murata
* 1
Wednesday, February 2£iq^
Yellow Power
The New Canadian
Another Look At “One Yellow Student's Opinion”
and tor payment^ postage^’
P h
'
S KUXITSUGU
r°n?t }Yant to
a photo copy of a white man with yellow
k
heard the expression “Yellow Power” a vear and a SMn' m Je”°w and Im going to be proud . .
half ago June when UCLA Extension sponsored a svmpo ium on
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESnsv
At
Ij of his Pint's generation, heartlv applaud
AND FRIDAY BEGINNING W
apanT Elation of World War II Some young people were
Miles and shout 'Bravo!” for his spirit.
*
„ , L
,
MARCH, 1969
■
n^ bUtt°n-S Wlth the legend at the meeting, and we
But
however
and
nevertheless,
before
we
get
carried
awav
T
UMEZUKI
Public
sensible suit
amUSmg to sport
on the laPd of our good, gray we must point out to Miles that his heady declaration of i^ ™ TSUMURA EkIMm.
™ MORI Japanese Etfitor
v i J think to most of us who were middle-aged, the Yellow Power it o. nThi w hindsight, and whether he wants to recognize
’“ °“
that his parent’s
And Advertising,
d!tLh^hanklnd of intellectual joke, similar to wearing a “Fro teneradon m»X
.eneiauon made.
479 queen gT
do Lives button, certainly not to be taken seriouslv.
the stadent activists ‘recent!v and
f°r the ^^ration gap, he cannot conceive of the hvstera
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
f
aS.C e -by A5- eS Eamada (New Canadian, S.at Feb.
wPiL a ^aiL+?\an^AC0 Glty College student majoring in social
miS
Yellow Student’s Opinion,” I think the
militant oansei take the expression seriouslv.
-ense I
a.lc Help Wanted
Miles Hamada’s treatise is too long to quote entirelv in this of helplessness that yve can really” EXFLAIN w '
’±«b“‘ S°me “CCrPtS
Sive you In idea rfX he out to Miles that in complying we affirmed’that we^vante^tcH SE^
P^hine operators. Fa^s sS~ ■ a- 3»S8 5«mM
“When I was young I wanted to be white
I had built
h “S
He
squinchi-evod
)k. 1 PTe stereotype of the “buck-toothed,
I
Male Help Wanted
' f -P’ ^e sneaky yellow man with cruel intentions”
I technician
TELEVISION
and apoliance s»nh
sons^at
?aH
even learned in historv leswanted. Must be fully' «
sons at school . felt so inferior that I had to take out
rlen«i Phone 259-3102, Mr. Youm
aggressions and inferior feelings on my Chinese brothers ...”
5 of SoTand not “fT T^11 ™ °"ly "'k' ^”" atmosphere P®
feS te^5i^"^
by the road are (Toronto).
countiV^u?"^
in this countrX and I know only tins
®°pe experience in shin®:
vep‘-t.tAbl®
speak Japanese. Good:
T
‘
fc dld Ebis country do to me. It is no wonder that
I see many of my yellow brothers trying to be white Th?
oeneiits. Apply Dominion Auto
w
Xo^E^*8* °iS“ « ~ t^i^
sones, 250 St. Helen Ave. (Toronto)?
[
Business Opportunity
Profitable West End Gardening Busin=«
For. Sale, Phone 536-8345, or 531-1053.
Domestic Help Wanted
g=in; xaS •» x ssSF-W® sg;~
A ^=^^
white man,
states
charges
^•>per mon‘h- Someone who-most of'
all likes children and secondly enjoys
cooking both Japanese and * western
rood. To work with family with 3 chil
dren in centrally' located home. Otis'
help kept.
Very comfortable liviaj
quarters with phone and TV (Toronto)
Box 10, The New Canadian
Flat For Rent
WARM bright three room flat to rent.
Good kitchen and bathroom. Phone 9237825 (Toronto).
Child, Actor . . .
SPRING TOUR TO JAPAN, 1969
*
However, it
For detailed information contact
^omPass Travel Service Ltd.,
Buy and Sell
Phone 6S2.2241
Your Hom
Through
MELL REAL ESTATE LTD.
MAS. (Ron) MENDE
Tosh Iwai
1527 O'Conner Dr.
757-5184
Toronto 16
When Buying Or Selling A Home
Call: KEN HORI
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
M Perivale Cres.
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough
File
company would^onl^ allow f£ I th™??1?
company
to see her son on «efi. H^’V^
Yilm career came to
FEBRUARY 23rd, (Sunday)
MARCH 30th, (Sunday)
MAY 11th, (Sunday)
515 Main Street, Vancouver
(Cent. ^ Pag> u
Burglary — Bonds — Automobile
Liability — Glass
GENERAL INSURANCE
Phone 964-9000 William R. Bell
Special Discounts on Store and Business
Package Policies
Ensign Insurance Service, 2 College St,, Tor.
didn’t
PhilosoPhical and
«
fong aT^
4vUlgS as a chlld; or even to- f^'^ily was together — that was
Ar ,
Fe important thing. The other
e»eV ^Pmber mak- miportant thing was coming back
fl mJ he Pushed’ but it
lth a better outlook and a be^"as his understanding that
tiiab the ter sen.se of~ values. It makes vou
Personnel picked him.
----- up I aPPisciate this life a lot more.”
at ms home every morning and ________ ______
returned him. This went on da
ly for six months.
He agrees with
“who told me many times, ‘every-
GIVE ■■■
^I
wf1?
had a dl3m to
5 8
movie earlier in his life
because by the time I grew up
Th« W >‘“"j h'™® ^own:
but ' T ml
s °" . clKision once. I
our i missed it.
I
t fields. 38, is the son of the
Horim°to. who died
fVof’j
^n^iae SchaefS of La Puente, who remanded
^v The
Sbai1 had Hnssed
Vame change for the
Villa Park landscape artist was
by-M ^ “^ed nS
ln Ca]ifornia vears
^o. a law no longer in existence"
thmhe took his ^othei ;. maiden name because th*
old mixed marriage law white
Xe^ Ingo’S
or mulattos
/ fga ;and Voii Thc la%v
J'1'611 constitutional in
and vas repealed in 19jo
However, the most drannrt
bktt" ^ieRi *H^ -as pS£
bL the three years he and his
family endured at the Amach;Canip in Colorado for Japanese
Americans during World War U
Ife
“I can sav this truthfullv
hurt his ?nd &hoa^^
good judgment. I have no regrets
about, missing a film career be
cause everything else has been
so good in my life.”
J i-J7\a^Was
taction as he
I reflected on the movie?
;
^..^as ldnd Of interesting.”
he said, adding, “my family was
very surprised and enjoved V
immensely. It wasn’t reallv late
to SeTit“S'
Childre’n S°t
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RCA. Victor — Color & B.W.
Television — Stereo — Etc.
2893 Lawrence Ave. East At
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loni Iwamoto
°
Scarborough
"
Phone 759-1583
Tosh Murata
* 1