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The New Canadian — October 28, 1969

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Page 1

1969

ian
03

oaa«

Japanese Government Clamps Down On Foreign Political Militants
By ALBERT AXELBANK

r

TOKYO.-—Premier Eisaku Sato’s government, which
w3? previously tolerant and even lackadaisical towards
:he activities of foreign antiwar pacifists in Japan,
h now cracking down hard on such visitors at the same
time as it seeks to enact a new Immigration Control
Law that gives the justice minister extremely broad
powers to arrest, punish or deport “undesirable*aliens.”

ito:

“Get Tough” Policy

iitor

Five foreigners — four Americans and one English­
man _ have recently felt the sting of the new°gettough policy against foreigners’ political activities "m

r

Japan.

At Hiroshima University last month, during a police
attack on militant students who barricaded several
buildings, 10 persons were .arrested including Cris
Cowley, -31, a British pacifist, and his 22-year-old

said the couple ignored “repeateaVe lheir perch at°P the faculty of
education building.
ioTlley Yei'e charged with trespassing although Cowei'ed
he WOre a “Pi-ess” armband and
XXerrK Japans university chaos for British
ed^varX"’^

Cowley, who has been released but is still beine°’ came t0 Japan two years ago and has
“World^FA
as the Pacifist-operated
1 d . Fyendship Centre" in Hiroshima. Cowlev
sympathized with anti-government student rebels ami
according to news reports, was often seen on his
Dicycle accompanying student demonstrators.
Ex-Marine Now Pacifist
TeeksYg0’ Japanese police in Tokyo arrest­
ed militant pacifist Donald Paton. 41, a former U S

had distributed antiwar handbills in front of the U.S
Embassy and joined in a hunger strike in opposition
io the proposed Immigration Control Law. Apparently.
1 aton s passport had expired and he was arrested
for refusing^ to show his alien registration card to
police, but of course the American’s anti-war activities
put the police on his heels.
, uUring
few months, three Americans have
ielt tae knucides of Japan’s immigration officials'
All are anti-w.ar pacifists.
They are: Dr. Earle Reynolds, a 58-vear-old Quaker
and skipper of the anti-war yacht “Phoenix”; Rev
Brian Victoria 29, a Buddhist priest; and Roger Scott
OO, a teacher The trio attempted to sail the “Phoenix”
OiU good,wl! yisit 10 Cbi”a last June but were foroidden to land by the Chinese and on return to Japan,

.. .............................................. ''■HHHinimiHiiiniiumiimin.i.j.S^S

“SUKIYAKI”
Cookbook By
MISS STELLA ITO

(Continued on Page 8)

rhe Deto Canadian

STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A story of J.C/s Bv
JESSIE L. BEATTIE

An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. XXXIII—No. 83

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1969

Port Credit Nisei
Landscape Architect
Wins Double Award

Toronto, Ont
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiHin<iii«iiniii(iii

OTTAWA. — At the Canadian wa for project “Expo ’67 Parc
Society of Landscape Architects’ Isle Notre Dame, Montreal” and
Thirty-fifth Annual Meeting held Landscape
Architect J. Austin
at the Chateau Laurier Hotel in Floyd, Toronto for project “Chil­
Ottawa on October 16 to 19, drens Playground, Regent Park
L%9, the society held their first South, Toronto”.
'Annual Landscape Architecture
The Society’s Landscape Archi­
Design Competition”. Submissions
tecture
Design Competition
to the professional competition
"'ere made by landscape archi­ awards were held at the Chateau
Laurier Banquet Hall on Satur­
tects from across Canada.
Three top awards in “Excel­ day, October 18, with over one
hundred members and their wives
lence in Design” were made in
le competition of which two attending, the members repres­
enting landscape architectural of­
"■ere received by Landscape Ar­ fices from British Columbia, Al­
chitect George Tanaka of Port
Credit, Ontario. George Tanaka’s berta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba,
Ontario and Quebec.
"inning submissions were pro«.4X
The awards were made by the
'vCA: '^le Residence of James
L Crothers. Toronto” and “The Chairman of the Society’s Design
r v
Stratford Confederation Competition Committee, Mr. Ro­
Set For November
Park’.
man Fodchuk who stated, “In the
The third top award for “Ex­ presentation of these awards, it
cellence in Design” was received is the highest compliment that , VANCOUVER. — Lord Byng
r ect PLanning Associates can be received by a profession­ Secondary School band members
wet., Landscape Architects, Tor- al, in the recognition of his com­ are eating their way to Japan
Mio for project “Universitv of petence by his fellow profes­ on a diet of rice and fruit juice.
TOKYO. — Prime Minister Sa­
sional members”.
For three days the 44 band to’s forthcoming itinerary to the before returning home via An­
Guelph .
chorage Nov. 26.
members are existing on the rice
(.J^, flowing four awards for
Accompanying him will be his
The theme of the Canadian So- to raise money to send the gi-oup United States was finalized re­
-lent in Design” were received siety of Landscape
deputy cabinet
Architects’ to Japan next Easter for Expo cently. He and his entourage will wife, Hiroko;;
leave here Nov. 17 for Washing­ secretary Toshio Kimura, who
£rn?cape Architect Cornelia four day Annual Meeting was
70.
ton, D.C.
vlA!J^er °f Vancouver for pro- “Man, Land and Environment”.
will serve as spokesman; Foreign
“Their friends pledge certain
, Sato will confer with President Minister Kiichi Aichi, Deputy
f°r Creative Play, Seminars were held as related to amounts of money for every rice
a
' apcouver”;
Landscape the discipline of landscape archi­ meal they eat,” school principal Nixon at the White House Nev. Foreign Minister Haruki Mori
Akhitect Professor M i c h a e 1
19-21. After the meeting. Sato and Director General Fumihiko
tecture on the subjects of Soci­ W. L. Baseley explained
will visit New York Nov. 21-22, Togo of the Foreign Ministry’s
r,v61T°^ Michael Hough Asso- ology, Education and Research,
The diet started recently the rest in San Francisco Nov. 23-24
Ln" ?ronto for “Street- Housing, Air Photo and MappAmerican Affairs bureau.
band members are living, study­
..Kal Ontario Museum, ing, Computers, Highways, Pol­ ing and eating in the school gym­
n A10,’ Randscape Architects lution and Urban Ecology and nasium to avoid being tempted
O Mr. Du-be, They ve Cast You A-way,
' • Graham Associates, Otta- Regional Land Plannin
to raid the ice box at home.
Now Isn't it Sad, (Tra-la?)
They are sleeping on mats on
the gymnasium fLor as they may
VANCOUVER. — Claude Du­
Mr. Dube said he has posses­
have to do in Japan.
be, manager of 90 girls who last sion of the 75 bicycles, 10 tents
Cost of sending the band to week completed a 3,500-mile bi­ and four converted school buses,
Expo 70 for 13 days will be at cycle trek across Canada, has used on the trip and expects to
least $27,000 which includes *16,- found himself without a job.
sell them to pay debts he has
500 for air fare, said Baseley.
“The girls had a meeting and incurred.
“So our money-raising Project decided they wanted to run the
But he hasn’t given up on the
Japan will have many different whole thing by themselves, Mr. girls.
events this fall.” he stated.
Dube said in an interview.
“After a couple of nights sleep
He said he was not very en- they might change their minds,”
Philippine Paper Scores chusiastic about the action after he said.
he had spent four years of his
Japanese Behavior
life organizing the trip, picking
MANILA. — The Manila Cro- the girls and helping them on
nicle recently suggested that the their tour.
government treat Japanese ap­
Mr. Dube, from
Riviere du
TORONTO.—The “Nisei Gold­
plicants for Philippine visas ;n Loup, Que., got the idea for the fish to Expo /0” project, initiatthe same fashion Filipinos are trip when he cycled to Vancou­ ec! bY Wiliam Tough of Toronto,
treated — with “arrogance” and ver- from Newfoundland in 1966 will reach its conclusion todav as
“discourtesy.”
and met numerous girls who said 180 of the fish will be flown to
The nationalist newspaper’s at­ they were interested.
Osaxa. The project was under­
tack against the Japanese was
He chose the 90 girls, whose taken with the co-operation of
the second during the week. Re­ average age is 2-5, representing the federal government.
cently.
the Cronicle in an editori­ each of the 10 provinces except
ford
'a^0ve^ shows Tanaka’s — “The City of StratMr. Tough was scheduled to
al
called
Japanese “the most B.C., from about 800 applicants.
^^ x^Hf^deratio0 Park. Stratford, Ontario”. (Above aggressivethepeople
sort
the fish at 4:00 a.m. for
in Asia.”
The arrived here to look for their
departure at 9-25
this
It was commenting then on the jobs to help finance them on the
J ri'ate Golf Course, Residence of James F.
morning.
They
will
be
shipped
Filipino final st„„._
J.,
reported slapping of
tage of their
journey to m 30 large containers, each car­
Toronto”.
visitor, j Expo 70 in Japan.
secretarv bv a Janam
rying 6 fish.

Band Eats Rice
To Raise Funds

Sato Finalizes U.S. Itinerary

The Nisei Goldfish

Page 2

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VANCOUVER, 777 HORNBY ST.
TEL. 6SS-6611
TORONTO, 111 RICHMOND ST. WEST
TEL. 364-7226

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

OR. 8-9586

I 942 Pape Ave.

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Toronto 133, Ont'
Phone 366-5005

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Page 7

Tuesday. October 28.. 1969
PAGE 7

Room Shortages Forseen

Dates And Doings

B to a good policy to
«▼• th* RIGHT POLICY
Consul!

By LEON DANIEL

William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents

TOKYO—If you show up in Tokvo without a
I
"
;,„ may have to settle for a park bench.
1mW lese™™'
“‘^'^ To H°M Vear End Dinner & Dance"
Foreign businessmen who find there is no room atjT°L7Mem^^
of the Women's Auxiliary r
T
have been known to sign up for tours they didn't want
S i nW win Canadian. Cultural Centre, a congenial nm,
? V Japa’
a place to sleep. Then they have to travel as much as Kll
n T community and fund raising effort^
business conferences in the city.
nnle& for to the success of the Cultural Centre
nt^Uted greatly
Last summer’s International Convention
m u
then- busy schedule of workiim for tho
'J116 °ut from
varied 13,000 foreign visitors, nS?"^ haj to “to ah ?fCW *
f™UM 'h« w'^V",’

2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-4681

MEN'S SUITS
among the wonderful people"of tVe^ V
TA™6 1W’
evening
There is a serious hotel shortage in Osaka and
c
Dance only from g;Oy
n . .
' J e\\nne 1S w^ome.
site of the 1972 winter Olympics.
apporo, girls and give them the time of their Ffe
}> not join the
One reason for the shortage of Western style hotel rooms in
'
"ta bet"“ 9:30 3,li 4:30 PJ"- The Date Sail X ST’
Japan is that an increasing number of Japanese prefer then to ..
*
*
.
ryokans, Japanese style inns.
p
menu >-0 "iut
i
T
tj.

- The Japan Travel Bureau, the government agency that sPPL-J
HaPP1 Goat Orders Being Taken
to lure foreign tourists, doesn’t recommend rvokans'e k
TOKI O.—Orders are now
f
r
n
K6n
from abroad unless they have “a profound interest in Japanese Happi Coat” sp°nsored bv the Maule Leaf c\ ^ i ^^ ^^
culture and other things Japanese.’'
Japanese Por
j
P
LeaI Cultural Association.
What the bureau means by this is that rvokon
i
j
>
teiested in obtaining further information or nl-irimr
,fefpiekled vegetables, raw fish, boiled
in§ slelpM Z ”^^
Leaf Cuiturai Association, to
Hotel

AN
W„
)nt.

15
nail

5
1

r

Shortage

government believes ford^cS | ^^J

eai^Ly'^w^

Li!"«

illustrations
bv coljilt, Bme “fat
Globe and Mail

nS

reshyierian,

Broadview at Simpson Ave.

Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
F uesd vy: PraYev and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
nung Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
_A" C»'« M„ s. Yokota 425.6I2S, Mr. H. Yoshida <tl.BBt.

Go To Church Of Your I
Choice This Sunday

CARD OF THANKS

701

South of Bloor

cttxtts w

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1969, 11:30 A.M.
Japanese — Rev. C. Y Horikoshi, 766-5632
ng ish
Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
Church School for the children
A warm welcome to all.

YOUR
BLOOD

I hank 3011 for letting’ us
bask in the warmth of vour
kindness and lean upon your
protective strength during- our
bereavement.
We gratefully
thank you.
Our sincere appreciation to
Dr. E. H. Kuwabara.
Elsie and Katsu Iguchi
Musuko and Hideyo

A Japanese Canadian story
Available at The New Canadian For $5.50
479 Queen Street West
Toronto 2-B, Ontario

iHiiiiiniiiiiiiimiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiniiiiiiniiiniiiiiiiii

IPs Private! No Time Limit!

10:30

2:00

s r •
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1969
Religious School
A.M. Morning Service
Service
■M. Japanese Service
Monthly Memorial

918 Bathurst St.

Telephone:

INSURANCE
TORONTO

Bur. 366-5812

Bwi

Res. Pl. 9-8317

824-8153

H»«i

822-1353

ERNEST JOMORI
Suita

Accountant
403

ISO BLOOR ST. w.

TORONTO

Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
1278 Yons. Stre.t, Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
To Ho Nishimura
923-6877

UNO'S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C.
Phone 355-2211

Get the most enjoyment from your wedding

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
11:00

LIFE

Io Our Friends,

Read Jessie L. Beattie's

I



ALL FORMS
OF

K/YO TAMURA


accompanying- text by

STRENGTH FOR THE BRIDGE
S,^° JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH

FIRE



Chartered

the greatest
gift of ail

IOW? JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH

AUTO

recently

The number of foreign visitors to Japan increases bv about
0 percent each year and totaled 520,000 least year Japan AhLines says jumbo jets carrying up to 350 passengers efch will
be in service by next spring.
eacn win necessarv.
°
e ^S^h language is not
are eFected t0 be completed in time for Ex-no
for aw3 teiS,'ed !'S ’ gift b00k a"d is available at bookstor
private homes available for visitors
P
S t0 make
The government has asked hoteliers to give priority to resor ■
nation applications from foreign visitors to Expo ’70
Some hotel men are skeptical about the government’s
estimates
man> roo,Fs JV1U be nee^ed in the future Tliey point out
£ 5S
telS We virtMlly empty f01- months
after the
. Jen^overnnient estimates that 17,774,000 visitors
will
M la ctose nTgVt^
"“
ns stay
that
foreigners will ntd tn100
lncluding an estimated 4,100
available rooms.
d
the Osaka area> There are 02,800

132 Baldwin St., Toronto
Phone 368-9225

commit

More Needed

There are 8,400 such rooms in Tokyo and the Jan™
Associate estimates that at least 5,000 more are needed
H

Chris Nomura

A™OUnCes Publication Of New Book

the Jubn?at™T^^

SERVICES-

Made To Measure
And Alterations

reception or anniversary

DANFORTH

Plenty of delicious food! Plenty of free parking.'

SPORTING GOODS

534-4302

When Buying Or Selling A Home

CHINA

HOUSE

925 Eglinton W. Toronto

RU. 1-9123



Fishing Tackle and Golf
Equipment, Dew Worms
and Fishing Licenses
551 Danforth Ave,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka

Call: KEN HORI

K. HORI

MEMRPK 0F real
estate
TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough

Phone: HO. 3-7.400
OPEN FBI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
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TORONTO 133,

ONT.

OFTORONTO

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□ Send Gift Subscription for
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• S9.00 per year.

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Custom Made Suits

NAME (MR. MRS. MISS)
ADDRESS

21

Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
Tor™to’ Suite 1402. Phone 363-0952

tve. By Appointment
_Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe

CITY__
PROVINCE

ZONE NO.

437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104

I

Page 8

PAGE 8 _______

NEW

-Tuesday, October^ 19g

Foreign Political Militants

The New Canadiar

were told they would be barred I
Perhaps the
j- main worrv. as
from re-entry. All are appealing1—
'
Title II and Hoover Slap
the justice ministry’s decision to stated by legal specialists?- is the
, T14 iayisr*.
bill s vagueness. The trouble with
deport them.
the bill’s regulations aimed at
One of them, Victoria, whose curbing the activities of indivi­
head is shaved Buddhist style duals is that they can easily inrecently squatted on Japan’s Jy^nge upon fundamental human
Ginza (a maj’or Tokyo shopping rights especially when thev are
SAN FRANCISCO.—The Chi­
On Hoover Slur
centre) in a hunger strike against enforced by a blindly ‘over- nese American Citizens Alliance,
Parker Chin, president of the
the ministry's decision. He has zealous
official at the* low»r at its 30th biennial convention
Salinas
CACA Lodge, found it
wed in Japan for 10 years and level.
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
held in Chicago during the week
heartwarming
and gratifying to
speaks Japanese fluently.
°f Aug. 6, voted to support re­
Toronto 2-B, Ont<
More Government Control
see JACL publicly rebut the J.
Opposition Blasts New Bill
. The director of the immigra­ peal of Title II of the 1950 In­ Edgar Hoover testimony ques­
EMpire 6-5005
The proposed new immigration tion bureau told the Diet (Par­ ternal Security Act, JACL Head­
tioning
the
loyalty
of
Chinese
law makes it easier for certain liament) in June that all aliens quarters was advised recently.
foreigners to visit Japan, and al­ in Japan will be strictly prohibit­
Recalling that Japanese Ameri­ Americans.
In a letter' to Jerry Enomoto,
lows longer periods of stay. For ed from political acts that are cans were denied their rights and
example, a simple tourist visa incompatible with Japan’s nation­ □laced in detention camps during national president, the Salinas
j
would be valid for 90 rather than al interests and security. The of- World War II, the CACA said Chinese American said:
60 days. Also there would be less
'this
outrage
may
occur
to
any
“In the day that the word ‘toalso said that foreigners
• i
for short-term visitors, ftl . be banned from organizing, person of diverse nationality, in­ ??efneSS-> 1S ?Sed S,° °ften’ your I FOUR ROOMS With
including businessmen, entertain­ Participating in, or speaking at cluding the Chinese, during times 1 ecent action has shown that it I Conveniently located1
Gnd
ers and athletes.
IS much more than just a word stoA East end- Phone ho h S,
rallies or demonstrations and of crises.”
It was also resolved that its with you. Your defense of our1
'
But as Japan’s mass-circula- from distributing literature or
Grand
Lodge

establish
a
com
­
people
was
certainly
a
benevolent
I
Female
pictures
that
are
against
govern
­
da,'.Iy Asahi Shimbun said
editorially the new immigration ment policies or aimed at harm- mittee to supplement and facili­ and a most welcome statement.---------- male Help Wanted
control bill is not merely a per- *nF Japan’s international ties or tate the participation of other It was heartwarming to have SUS * Lawrence y0U!w ,
ethnic groups and individuals in someone in your position speak- house-Sin?
functory piece of legislation to friendship.
this action."
1
so sincerely on our behalf.
onto).
n“
(^
Simplify procedures for foreign­
?ey Provision of the bill
Copies
of
the
CACA
resolution
ers; it poses a real question of tnat has evoked criticism authorAll the Chinese living in the
Japans basic political and diplo­ 1Z!Slv i immigration bureau to for repeal of Title II were also Uh. owe you and the JACL a
Help Wanted
matic posture. Most of the op­ establish. a “list of conditions” sent to congressmen represent­ cebt of gratitude and we shall expo
p----ing districts which have local not forget what has been done Bo?k'keePer wanted M^n^s
position parties have blasted the
r!1 a^e? bo abide by (“Junshu CACA
lodges.
bill.
Ion our behalf.”_______________
Jikoj. This is intended to preveiu
for
example, a visiting I
~
Perience and qualifications■ to- ^
scholar or a businessman from
engaging in political propagan­
da. Critics of the proposed law
By ROBERT CRABBE
say that it will strengthen gov­
ed.
ernment control over foreigners i TOKI O. —■ “Only God can
JSL may not have the field
SINGER COMPANY
■i. Japan. They object to Article make a tree,” sighed American to itself for long. The big Showa
OF CANADA LIMITED"
un„r '^ich a reward of al­ poet Joyce Kilmer.
Denko Chemical Co. recently tied
CLOVERDALE MALL,
most $150 is provided for infor­
The nature-loving poet never up with a French firm said to
mation leading to a successf’il met the chemists of the Japan
ISLINGTON, ONTARIO
nave a synthetic wood process
deportation.
Sewing Alachines Vacuums,
Synthetic Lumber Co. (JSL) or more versatile than JSL’s.
ore
Floor
Polishers, Typewriters,?
No Political Asylum Offered
the famous line might have come
cen
The International Trade Min­
T.V.’s, Stereos
1
obJecti™ is that the out differently.
Kin
istry hopes that as much as 20
Represented by:
1
bill fails to provide for political Tc,?acked by government subsidv,
sen'
percent of Japan’s lumber may
Mrs. R. Tsujimura?
government thinking is
of t
scientists are turning crude be made this way by the end of
that because of Japan’s location oil into a substance so much like the 1970’s.
the
|
621-0684 (Evenings)!
near ideologically split nations, wood that most people can’t t^U
es.
While
Kilmer

s
verdict
that
gn mg asylum would be courtin0' the difference. And the U.S. tim­
only God can make a tree still
no end of political and social ber exporters are concerned.
’Me
I problems.)
aero
“You can saw JSL’s “wood”, stands, it would save a lot of
SPECIAL DISCOUNT SALE
strei
As. a result, the government’s you can drive nails through it, valuable foreign exchange in the
■Sire
new immigration Control Bill is you can even burn it. If grain is process.
being damned by the opposition what you like, thev’ll give vou
W
as suppressive legislation.” For­ ’wood” with grain.* While JSL’s
ors
eign anti-war critics of the bill odoiless product lacks the plea­
SAPPORO ICHBANl
app«
*ay that it ‘puts a price on the sant smell of fresh wood, the Use New Canadian Ads
gotf
'iad °f 7ery forei^ner in Japan ersatz stuff is a lot lighter and
Immediate Delivery
ly o:
who speaks out against the Viet­ easier to carry around.
in Metro Toronto (Mizuno)
For
Best
Results
$100nam war or who criticizes Tokvo
Far from ? chemist’s prank,
535-5402?
445-1338
Your local newspaper keeps you in­
ti th
government
policy.

synthetic wood is in comformed of what’s happening in your
to P:
mercial use. The coffee tables,
area —community events, public
cepte
meetings, stories about people in
niagazine racks and chair le^s
of St
your vicinity. These you can’t —and
in thousands of Japanese apart“mas,
shouldn t — do without.
I?en^s ah’eady are made from
fare
Just Arrived!
the stuff.
SMff COMPLEMENTS
'to G

Chinese Laud JACL Efforts

classified

Japanese Chemists Turning Out Synthetic WooiF^ ^ *

Why
The
Christian
Science
Monitor
recoin mends
you read
your local
newspaper

FRESH RAMEN I

I Sony Corp. Share
First $10 Stock

Managing director Goro Aka^le S°nY Corporation
-naieo became Japan’s first $10 bori sees an unlimited market for
stock as the price rose bv 300 ]1ls product. He thinks that with.ven compared with the previous i11 three years 10 percent of the
lumber used in Japan will bp
MarkU^ W St0ck
synthetic.
The price stood at 3755 ven
, So far, only the light wood
surpassing the highest record* a t- aeveloped by Akahori’s firm is
on Sept. 17 — 3550 vend competitive with natural wood
J Shin® the maximum limit fix-1? Heavy timbers required for buildThe Christian Science Monitor
"
eh for its rise in a dav.
I "?£hoyses can be produced synOne Norway Street
I thetically, but they cost five or
Meanwhile,
the
Dow
Jones
Boston, Massachusetts, RSA 02115
as niuch as wood pro­
change reacK aX
f?ase
HIX Monitor subscription for
^COrd hlgh the same dav duced from trees.
the period checked below, i eclose
$ —-------------- .(U.S. funds).
vitn the commencement of th-'I , Until the late 1950’s, Japan, a
□ 1 YEAR $24
finns
neSS 5ear '" se«»iV country well endowed with tim□ 6 months $u
□ 3 months $6
nu\"'aS able to Produce almost
the
Vn
Demand in
Name
1960 s outstripped the sup­
It's Finger Ricking Good the
lies of wood available in JanaStreet______ __
- Directors "!Se ^'ts, and in Japan this
City___________
of Kentucky Fried Chicken Corp >eai will come from overseas.
an agreement
State
.ZIP Cod#_________ in/re 0P ,franchises in Japan
°f overseas timber
Di 1964, Japan paid
_____ PB-17
and to accelerate the companv’* j)n?pir.a
/°r f°Pign wood.
program in England.
* "
&iJ9Srhe flgUre has risen to
$1.16 billion.
The Monitor specializes in analyzing
and interpreting national and world
news . . . with exclusive dispatches
from one of the largest news bu­
reaus in the nation’s capital and
from Monitor news experts in 40
overseas countries and all 50 states.
TRY THE MONITOR — IT’S A PAPER
FAMILY WILL ENJOY

NOW AVAILABLE AT THE NEW CANADIAN

“JAPAN UNMASKED"
By lapan s Controversial

ICHIRO KAWASAKI
*5.50 (Includes IWage) Cloth Bound

The Xe» Canadian

4^9 Queen St. West
Toronto 133, Ont.

United States remains JaSS 3a^frjniber supplier with
' n’’lllOn in TSGSaK° b?VS exten5ivelv from
arge concessions in
the Philippines, and is develop
msr new ones in Malaysia and
Indonesia.

1

pensive imports of
With her ne«i for a
I substitute for costly timber pur$£“’ W- Japan is onf of
»J "'or r! Ja^est oil consumers
• / A ref'mng process in her oil
industry turns out larsre quaWizT 7 ar chemical called ABS
b\c^ni r'l Buthadiene Stwr.e) Chemists
found
that* bv
kWkunin!r -ABS and blowing air
°?blesjnt° it a satisfactory-sub­
stitute for wood could be obtain-

New Shipment of
Stella Ito’s Cook-book

TORONTO HUB
CHURCH

Fall Bazaar!

SUKIYAKI"
LATEST EDITION

November 8th

Available at New Canadian

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