Page 1
1- 1969
^dian
Nation
Associstjj.
Jesday
sher
Editor
Editor
SST
ID
0-1 aana o:
“Surrounded By Enemies”
TOKYO-—The student guerrilla has come of a^e in
Tokyo, but io is questionable whether the cause of
revolution in Japan or anywhere else has been greatlyhelped thereby.
On the face of it, the radical students’ performance
hipest Japan has seen for years, was pretty7 im
p^ive. They frightened most of the business and
during left-wing demonstrations on October 21, the
government offices in central Tokyo into closin<r
The cash registers at the great department stored
those cathedrals for the growing congregation of Ja
panese consumers, did not ring up a single yen all day.
Guerrilla Tactics
The student’s new guerrilla tactics, too, were cun
ning, and if the police are to be believed, well co
ordinated. Sometimes disguised as businessmen, and
seldom armed with the helmets and staves which in
wav
attacked.
Not Ready
objectively, as the Marxists lik~
to
« « W^‘ xte £^4^
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.50
A story of J.C.’s
radical students
7 even in their own university world aie too minority
isolated from the rest of Japanese
society
first hne of defence against the
-”(entb is the riot police, and on October 21 it showin dark blue dunv
helmets and leather pads to protect
torearms’ and armed only with staves, the Not
E'hr ieeJn to Personify centuries of toughness bv
established societies against their rebels.
k.,^ny-R°man, centurion who had put down an unrulv
baibarian mob would have recognized them as thev
V! T .behTd their ta11
waiting loi the order to charge. At the
MoVtha^tl^ ha7 311 — modern gadgets'of repres
sion that the most pessimistic political science fiction
he Octo Canadian
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. XXXIII—No. 85
jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiii
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A story of J.C.’s By
$5.00
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1969
duties.
English,
i Mills}.
srtaiioi
th ki feont:ei
they
con\
ks> 031 £p°llce posts or railand withdrawing w’hen heavily7 counterb
(Continued on Page 8)
Pr
ed
Japan’s Student Radicals “Without Hone
Toronto Issei-bu Hears
History Progress Report
Could Be More Oppressive
Toronto, Ont.
iHiiifiiiiiiiiiniiiiinifiinnjijiijijiiin)
JACL Opposes New Eastland Bill
Despite Rider On Title II Repeal
, J0R?N??;TArt ameeting held at the Nikko Garden,
the Toionto JCCA Issei-bu heard a progress report on the Historv
o the Japanese Canadians given by National and Toronto JCCA I
President
Edward Ide and History Committee Chairman Cpato-s Lpnilr
t
‘«uvu i
N
----- and Eastlands
^"Ouanu a S
o.. with
with .Tith
Tanaka. Ide gave a resume of the progress o’ the National ICC aJap^ese American Citizens League
UVor a vote m the Senate;
project since its inception, including a sumni^
% may be an attempt by the Senate
the JACL will oppose S. 12 in its entiritv
expenses involved. Tanaka took a dole look at the work
Committee to incorporate the repeal of K
Cedt,1t JACL National Commkte^
some of the hopes and ambitions
11 °f the, National Security Act if 1950
Unitvalues and importance.
h P j
and lts 2^P Vin™3™ more dangerous Internal Security JACL wants Title II repealed, but not at the
mor?T repressive law,” stated Ray
eachF^v3’ Ec]json Uno and Paul Yamamoto, the
Although the general plan and outline of the proiect have
T
; re-'
Publicized from time to time, both speakers again re- TTIn 3 Jetter s?nt to a11 supporters of the Title co-chairmen for the JACL’s repeal campaign.
adthe three sections into which the History 1 ^peal campaign, the JACL National Committee
Straight-Forward Action
JPP!£_18u:19^in1migration and settlement), 1941-1945 (war- xP iepeal the Emergency Detention Act revealed
n this respect, the JACL and Senator Daniel
time evacuation and other major Rji Senator James Eastland (D.-Miss.) wants to
tary
111 complete agreement Senator Inouye
issues), and 1945-1968 (re-estab- h /epeal of litle II as an amendment to stated at a recent
•urcJACL civil rights dinner in San
lishment and recovery)
hls own intemal security bill, S. 12.
I rancisco that he will vote against S. 12, even
R R contains a Title II repeal
Ide illustrated the keen inter
for
provision.
est he felt in reading those fin
off
The JACL will continue to urgo
ished portions of the manuscript I
ince
that the repeal of Title II be
by detailing several of the histo
TOKYO.
The Japanese So- I implementing plans for a strike cousidered on its own merits,
Ser
WASHINGTON. - Imports of rical incidents and issues which cialist Partyy recently
7 condemned on Nov. 13 and exerting utmos
recently
that the straight-forward re
ials
Japanese steel to the West Coast the writer had described and an the Liberal-Democratic Party’s efforts against Sato’s visit to and
peal
bills, S. 1872 by7 Senator Da
showed a sharp drop in August, alyzed. He declared to the Issei- decision to automatically7 conti- Washington a week before his niel Inouye and 25 other senat
ccording to a Commerce Depart- bu members that he had felt him nue the Japan-U.S. Security- scheduled departure
ors, be acted upon as a separate
and
self become so enrapt in the His-I
Kent report to Congress^
item.
Treaty7 beyond 1970, as an abuse
“
Okinawanization
”
tory
that
he
“
couldn
’
t
stop
read|
a ku
kep. Sherman P. Lloyd, Rof powers infringing on democ
JACL also urges passage
£
member of the House Ad ing” from chapter to chapter.
The Japan Communist Party
racy.
tt
6
comPanion repeal bill in
Commi.ttee °n steel imports,
ten
Tanaka emphasized that the
In an appeal to the nation, also sharply7 criticized the LDP’s iioo?LUse of Representative, HR
! Tent y that the report project, despite some difficulties, the JSP termed the Government decision as an attempt at the 11825 by Congressmen Spark Ma
-21
h w a 2!'6i percent decrease had been well worth undertaking party7 decision as a step toward I Grinau anization” of all Japan, tsunaga, Chet Holifield and 125
honilX^
imports—chiefly and that he was looking forwarc militarism and imperialism aim- I ^^e minor parliamentary7 op other congressmen.
to its completion. He said that ed at making Japan “the police- | Position group again called for
“Senator Eastland probably
Said government fi- in the present time when racial man of Asia.”
I the scrapping of the security7 wants to add the Title II repeal
± 5iSh°Wed an overall in- issues and tensions were perhaps
<nr •
d i „
treaty7 and building of “an inde- er as a sweetener to his othermore widespread
-Hajor Hole
pendent, peaceful and neutral Ja- Wise bad bill in order to pick
f
Percent in steel im- sharper* and
the
t1- iaciflc Coast over than ever that the book would
The appeal said that Prime pan” in ,a statement issued in the Hi o^1 votes to pass his own
year S e’gh months of the have an added dimension of per Minister Eisaku Sato’s advocacy7 I name of its central committee bill, offered the JACL National
tinence-—in addition to its im of a “major role in Asia” for I presidium.
’committee, “but the JACL will
portance
as a multi-faceted re Japan was dangerous as it indi
RePublican said Janot fall for this kind of political
JCP
also
regarded
the
decisi
cated a sinister design violating
expediency. We will not com
the State De cord of the Japanese in Canada. the
war-renouncing Constitution on as having “the dangerous aim promise our principles.”
in it?
r
percent reduction
The response of the Issei-bu
of marking a new significant
It called on the nation to rise
to the United members was warm and appre
S. 12 Studied
up and protest against the LDP
(Continued on Page 8
ciative during the period for decision, demand dissolution of
• i.
JACL National Committee
is
wil1 teii, it
has been studying S. 12 for manv
^inTon
ihat the selT-re- questions which followed. It was the Diet and stop Sato’s visit to
months
now, ever since it was
Washington
in
November.
ed tv the 1V e exP°rts promis- stated that if there had been a
first learned that the Title H
ginnincV Japanese is finally be- few anxieties, these had com
The Socialists pledged in the
lssye may7 become involvto Show up,” Lloyd said. pletely7 disappeared.
^.Eastland bill is an om
appeal to fight to the end by
nibus bill covering over 100 pag
es, and contains literally hundmany of which
e-re of doubtful constitutionality 7.
Eor example, included in the
provisions is the creation of a
. hJKYo. —
A
o
k
o
f
deap " V The Shell Oil Co. nave recently been in Somalia
new^ crime of “peace-time trea
TOKYO. — The Agricultureson,
and a sweeping lovaltv
fr°m
?P-1‘ natural liquid gas
Forestry Ministry has renewed
program for emplovees of soOnei ?° JaPa» has been Nigeria, Kenya, Indonesia, th its approval of a license contract
Middle East, Australia, N ew
called “defense facilities,” whicfT
^anv*\Ahe blggest in the Zealand, Canada, Alaska, the between Coca-Cola Co. (Japan)
rnHi?
lned S? broadly that it
and its parent company in the
could cover virtually all industry
hUo n’/ ^ory-’ It represenets U.S., Pakistan, Guinea and Eu
commercial and educational
e'®iWta“lf" 20 years’ rope. And they7 would dearly like
The reapproval, good for three
l^b^bcns.
Many observers feal
B? V T a Shell spokesman. to be in Siberia if they could.
years starting Monday, was made
that
S.
12
is
an attempt to cire Japan e;
recently7 through the Bank of
search for
cumvent
the
liberal rulings o1
This year’s estimated consump Japan’s foreign investment sec
sources ]'t is still a tiny*
the
Supreme
Court in recent
-■op.
tion of petrol fuel oils for Japan tion, acting for the ministry.
years.
8
(Above) Sat Yano of the HaWhether the Government will
^‘^™ntlJ is now in the mid- is 900 million barrels. In 1974
JACL Caution
the estimate rises to 1.65 billion reapprove the licensing contract milton-Toronto Japanese Cana
However,
the JACL Nationa)
Io- fuel e - ^eS^ global hunt barrels. Every7 one is imported, has drawn attention, in connec dian Anglers’ Club proudly dis
plays
his
prize
catch
and
likelv
writing
cautioned
against
e\ ei mounted by anv and only* 12 percent by Japanese- tion with recent charges made
Team
by members of the Diet and a winner of the THJA’s top trophy; io ??!0- senators regarding S.
* examining liquid owned companies. By 1985 they consumer organization that Coca- a 16 lb. 2 oz. rainbow trout i m ? thLS time’ The Eastland
^J ga
c°aL crude oil and predict the home-owned percen Cola contains ingredients harm caught in the lower Nottawasa- bill is such a poor piece of legisga River last week.
now visiting or tage will be trebled.
ful to health.
(Cont. on Page 8)
Coast Imports On
Japanese Steel
Show Sharp Drop
JSP Condemns “Automatic Extension” Decision
The Prize Catch
Strive For Big Fuel Strike I
•M
Cola Contract
Re-approved
^dian
Nation
Associstjj.
Jesday
sher
Editor
Editor
SST
ID
0-1 aana o:
“Surrounded By Enemies”
TOKYO-—The student guerrilla has come of a^e in
Tokyo, but io is questionable whether the cause of
revolution in Japan or anywhere else has been greatlyhelped thereby.
On the face of it, the radical students’ performance
hipest Japan has seen for years, was pretty7 im
p^ive. They frightened most of the business and
during left-wing demonstrations on October 21, the
government offices in central Tokyo into closin<r
The cash registers at the great department stored
those cathedrals for the growing congregation of Ja
panese consumers, did not ring up a single yen all day.
Guerrilla Tactics
The student’s new guerrilla tactics, too, were cun
ning, and if the police are to be believed, well co
ordinated. Sometimes disguised as businessmen, and
seldom armed with the helmets and staves which in
wav
attacked.
Not Ready
objectively, as the Marxists lik~
to
« « W^‘ xte £^4^
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.50
A story of J.C.’s
radical students
7 even in their own university world aie too minority
isolated from the rest of Japanese
society
first hne of defence against the
-”(entb is the riot police, and on October 21 it showin dark blue dunv
helmets and leather pads to protect
torearms’ and armed only with staves, the Not
E'hr ieeJn to Personify centuries of toughness bv
established societies against their rebels.
k.,^ny-R°man, centurion who had put down an unrulv
baibarian mob would have recognized them as thev
V! T .behTd their ta11
waiting loi the order to charge. At the
MoVtha^tl^ ha7 311 — modern gadgets'of repres
sion that the most pessimistic political science fiction
he Octo Canadian
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. XXXIII—No. 85
jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiii
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A story of J.C.’s By
$5.00
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1969
duties.
English,
i Mills}.
srtaiioi
th ki feont:ei
they
con\
ks> 031 £p°llce posts or railand withdrawing w’hen heavily7 counterb
(Continued on Page 8)
Pr
ed
Japan’s Student Radicals “Without Hone
Toronto Issei-bu Hears
History Progress Report
Could Be More Oppressive
Toronto, Ont.
iHiiifiiiiiiiiiniiiiinifiinnjijiijijiiin)
JACL Opposes New Eastland Bill
Despite Rider On Title II Repeal
, J0R?N??;TArt ameeting held at the Nikko Garden,
the Toionto JCCA Issei-bu heard a progress report on the Historv
o the Japanese Canadians given by National and Toronto JCCA I
President
Edward Ide and History Committee Chairman Cpato-s Lpnilr
t
‘«uvu i
N
----- and Eastlands
^"Ouanu a S
o.. with
with .Tith
Tanaka. Ide gave a resume of the progress o’ the National ICC aJap^ese American Citizens League
UVor a vote m the Senate;
project since its inception, including a sumni^
% may be an attempt by the Senate
the JACL will oppose S. 12 in its entiritv
expenses involved. Tanaka took a dole look at the work
Committee to incorporate the repeal of K
Cedt,1t JACL National Commkte^
some of the hopes and ambitions
11 °f the, National Security Act if 1950
Unitvalues and importance.
h P j
and lts 2^P Vin™3™ more dangerous Internal Security JACL wants Title II repealed, but not at the
mor?T repressive law,” stated Ray
eachF^v3’ Ec]json Uno and Paul Yamamoto, the
Although the general plan and outline of the proiect have
T
; re-'
Publicized from time to time, both speakers again re- TTIn 3 Jetter s?nt to a11 supporters of the Title co-chairmen for the JACL’s repeal campaign.
adthe three sections into which the History 1 ^peal campaign, the JACL National Committee
Straight-Forward Action
JPP!£_18u:19^in1migration and settlement), 1941-1945 (war- xP iepeal the Emergency Detention Act revealed
n this respect, the JACL and Senator Daniel
time evacuation and other major Rji Senator James Eastland (D.-Miss.) wants to
tary
111 complete agreement Senator Inouye
issues), and 1945-1968 (re-estab- h /epeal of litle II as an amendment to stated at a recent
•urcJACL civil rights dinner in San
lishment and recovery)
hls own intemal security bill, S. 12.
I rancisco that he will vote against S. 12, even
R R contains a Title II repeal
Ide illustrated the keen inter
for
provision.
est he felt in reading those fin
off
The JACL will continue to urgo
ished portions of the manuscript I
ince
that the repeal of Title II be
by detailing several of the histo
TOKYO.
The Japanese So- I implementing plans for a strike cousidered on its own merits,
Ser
WASHINGTON. - Imports of rical incidents and issues which cialist Partyy recently
7 condemned on Nov. 13 and exerting utmos
recently
that the straight-forward re
ials
Japanese steel to the West Coast the writer had described and an the Liberal-Democratic Party’s efforts against Sato’s visit to and
peal
bills, S. 1872 by7 Senator Da
showed a sharp drop in August, alyzed. He declared to the Issei- decision to automatically7 conti- Washington a week before his niel Inouye and 25 other senat
ccording to a Commerce Depart- bu members that he had felt him nue the Japan-U.S. Security- scheduled departure
ors, be acted upon as a separate
and
self become so enrapt in the His-I
Kent report to Congress^
item.
Treaty7 beyond 1970, as an abuse
“
Okinawanization
”
tory
that
he
“
couldn
’
t
stop
read|
a ku
kep. Sherman P. Lloyd, Rof powers infringing on democ
JACL also urges passage
£
member of the House Ad ing” from chapter to chapter.
The Japan Communist Party
racy.
tt
6
comPanion repeal bill in
Commi.ttee °n steel imports,
ten
Tanaka emphasized that the
In an appeal to the nation, also sharply7 criticized the LDP’s iioo?LUse of Representative, HR
! Tent y that the report project, despite some difficulties, the JSP termed the Government decision as an attempt at the 11825 by Congressmen Spark Ma
-21
h w a 2!'6i percent decrease had been well worth undertaking party7 decision as a step toward I Grinau anization” of all Japan, tsunaga, Chet Holifield and 125
honilX^
imports—chiefly and that he was looking forwarc militarism and imperialism aim- I ^^e minor parliamentary7 op other congressmen.
to its completion. He said that ed at making Japan “the police- | Position group again called for
“Senator Eastland probably
Said government fi- in the present time when racial man of Asia.”
I the scrapping of the security7 wants to add the Title II repeal
± 5iSh°Wed an overall in- issues and tensions were perhaps
<nr •
d i „
treaty7 and building of “an inde- er as a sweetener to his othermore widespread
-Hajor Hole
pendent, peaceful and neutral Ja- Wise bad bill in order to pick
f
Percent in steel im- sharper* and
the
t1- iaciflc Coast over than ever that the book would
The appeal said that Prime pan” in ,a statement issued in the Hi o^1 votes to pass his own
year S e’gh months of the have an added dimension of per Minister Eisaku Sato’s advocacy7 I name of its central committee bill, offered the JACL National
tinence-—in addition to its im of a “major role in Asia” for I presidium.
’committee, “but the JACL will
portance
as a multi-faceted re Japan was dangerous as it indi
RePublican said Janot fall for this kind of political
JCP
also
regarded
the
decisi
cated a sinister design violating
expediency. We will not com
the State De cord of the Japanese in Canada. the
war-renouncing Constitution on as having “the dangerous aim promise our principles.”
in it?
r
percent reduction
The response of the Issei-bu
of marking a new significant
It called on the nation to rise
to the United members was warm and appre
S. 12 Studied
up and protest against the LDP
(Continued on Page 8
ciative during the period for decision, demand dissolution of
• i.
JACL National Committee
is
wil1 teii, it
has been studying S. 12 for manv
^inTon
ihat the selT-re- questions which followed. It was the Diet and stop Sato’s visit to
months
now, ever since it was
Washington
in
November.
ed tv the 1V e exP°rts promis- stated that if there had been a
first learned that the Title H
ginnincV Japanese is finally be- few anxieties, these had com
The Socialists pledged in the
lssye may7 become involvto Show up,” Lloyd said. pletely7 disappeared.
^.Eastland bill is an om
appeal to fight to the end by
nibus bill covering over 100 pag
es, and contains literally hundmany of which
e-re of doubtful constitutionality 7.
Eor example, included in the
provisions is the creation of a
. hJKYo. —
A
o
k
o
f
deap " V The Shell Oil Co. nave recently been in Somalia
new^ crime of “peace-time trea
TOKYO. — The Agricultureson,
and a sweeping lovaltv
fr°m
?P-1‘ natural liquid gas
Forestry Ministry has renewed
program for emplovees of soOnei ?° JaPa» has been Nigeria, Kenya, Indonesia, th its approval of a license contract
Middle East, Australia, N ew
called “defense facilities,” whicfT
^anv*\Ahe blggest in the Zealand, Canada, Alaska, the between Coca-Cola Co. (Japan)
rnHi?
lned S? broadly that it
and its parent company in the
could cover virtually all industry
hUo n’/ ^ory-’ It represenets U.S., Pakistan, Guinea and Eu
commercial and educational
e'®iWta“lf" 20 years’ rope. And they7 would dearly like
The reapproval, good for three
l^b^bcns.
Many observers feal
B? V T a Shell spokesman. to be in Siberia if they could.
years starting Monday, was made
that
S.
12
is
an attempt to cire Japan e;
recently7 through the Bank of
search for
cumvent
the
liberal rulings o1
This year’s estimated consump Japan’s foreign investment sec
sources ]'t is still a tiny*
the
Supreme
Court in recent
-■op.
tion of petrol fuel oils for Japan tion, acting for the ministry.
years.
8
(Above) Sat Yano of the HaWhether the Government will
^‘^™ntlJ is now in the mid- is 900 million barrels. In 1974
JACL Caution
the estimate rises to 1.65 billion reapprove the licensing contract milton-Toronto Japanese Cana
However,
the JACL Nationa)
Io- fuel e - ^eS^ global hunt barrels. Every7 one is imported, has drawn attention, in connec dian Anglers’ Club proudly dis
plays
his
prize
catch
and
likelv
writing
cautioned
against
e\ ei mounted by anv and only* 12 percent by Japanese- tion with recent charges made
Team
by members of the Diet and a winner of the THJA’s top trophy; io ??!0- senators regarding S.
* examining liquid owned companies. By 1985 they consumer organization that Coca- a 16 lb. 2 oz. rainbow trout i m ? thLS time’ The Eastland
^J ga
c°aL crude oil and predict the home-owned percen Cola contains ingredients harm caught in the lower Nottawasa- bill is such a poor piece of legisga River last week.
now visiting or tage will be trebled.
ful to health.
(Cont. on Page 8)
Coast Imports On
Japanese Steel
Show Sharp Drop
JSP Condemns “Automatic Extension” Decision
The Prize Catch
Strive For Big Fuel Strike I
•M
Cola Contract
Re-approved
Page 2
PAGE 2
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NEW CANADIAN
479 Queen St. W
Toronto 133, Ont'
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Page 7
£1969
9
fue^O^w^
Dates And Doings
1
JBC To Hol
Personal Notes Across Canada
u dhism and Psychology” Lecture Adversary
WiHiam Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
TORONTO. Dr. Joseph M. Escriv, M.D who p
i u
(-take Institute, will speak on “Buddhism and PsvchofeV'A "
,*£ “b”
MIAN
St. W„
. Ont.
-5005
s mail
ion
1366
I Japan-Canada Society Dinner For November 20
I MONTREAL.—Again this year a Japanese dinnov „ m u v ,
L the Tokyo Sukiyaki Restaurant, on Thursday NoVeXr ^o'n
l-7;3O p.m. It will be open to members only 7nh^ 7 ™ 7° ^^
Lember). In the past this dinner has proven to
pei’i
IHOst successful occasions and all reservations were
onv
Lickly. Please keep this date in mind. For further
[All 935-4010.
luithei information
OCTOBER EVENT — Judo Film and Karate
I
Je would like to thank Mr. Masayuki Hisataka‘and^puni^
their excellent, demonstration of karate held on Octobers5
| skill spoke more than words the spirit of karate and wp
they will honor us again by giving another exhibition
hope that
MEMBERSHIP DUES — Last call
ship dues. Please send it in as soon as possible1-11 othmembertame will be struck off the mailing list Porm-°theU'1Se y°ur
nembers with the last newsletter. Perhaus you
Sent to
forgot to mail it?
remaps you filled it out and
I G00DWILL-TOUR-TO-JAPAN NEWS — Mr
.
I maximum for the tour to Japan has been reached^hXa ^
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone 368-4681
CARD OF THANKS
" 11 <Tuesda-V) at 8:00 p.m ^he pubHc
l ining Mr. Ito at 488-4042. Mrs. Ito^^
I ft,lie plans.
We are delighted at the response to
to assure the members that everyth .
— 50th —
TORONTO. — Three sons and
obtained by U^ a huge party for their
JtPan to finalize Parent s golden wedding anniverb^S"
[ to make it a memorable one.
'
° P°SSlble wiI1 be done
Mr. Nishikawa. 7
and his
CONGRATULATIONS __ To Mrs Ttn
wife Koma, 72, were- married on
president of the Montreal Japanese Folk PancT^S^ elected
‘
-• 18, 1919
in Japan. The
VOLUNTEERS WANTED — A typist to
\
made this occasion
monthly newsletter. Please call Mists R
°ut on the J0Jful one for their parents
.r <47.5511, ex. 323/460
3 K Mly“kl 321-3043 (home) be China House, inviting
many
| Wanted — a poster desismer Uava
a
-elatives and friends.
you are dying to try out? cfll Mr. P. Mineo^S* 6010
- Whkh
Congratulatory messages we^e
Circle Friday, December 12 on ^ou Cal nd! S
7 P‘nL n ceived
Canada’s Governor
"HI be held at the Japanese Community C«^ ?£“ K^i^li 5?^
X
It k a good policy to
»▼« th» RIGHT POLICY
Consult
Dear Friends.
In case some letters or
thanks have gone astray or
oeen addressed wrongly, the
family of the late Mrs.' Amv
asunioto wishes to convey
thanks to all her friends who
paid tribute to her by attendnig the funeral held at the
Toronto Japanese U n i 1 e d
Church, October 26.
Throughout Amy's illness
since May,
. , she
—v received
.count
less bouquets of flowers, gifts
and cards of encouragement
from so many of her friends,
one was hoping to the very
end that she would regain
enough strength to be able
to acknowledge each one perS0^HN- She was not able.
family is extremely
grateful and appreciative of
the considerate expressions o<
encouragement sent to Amv I
during her stay in the hospital
and expressions of sympathy I
directed to if during the I
funeral and interment Thanh
you.
Gratefully yours
D. Washi mot o
Delia and Cary
M. Washimoto
£Jr- & Mrs- 8. Uchikura
Nobby Uchikura
u1’ £ ^vs- ^Ku') Nash
-li. & Mrs. Tucker Uchikura
Mr. & Mrs. Cml
MEN'S SUITS
Made To Measure
And Alterations
Chris Nomura
132 Baldwin St., Toronto
Phone 368-9225
AUTO
re Elliott Trudeau, and Jamn
Ambassador to Canada, ShiS
Kondo.
OFFSET AND LETIERPRESS
.
Nishikawa came to Canada OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHEADS
in 190b and worked in Vancouver
k
S01,’e the yar- The eldest son
Reply: Re — Montreal Japanese Garden
Hishikawa has been
with the Japanese Embassy in
Bear Sir:
The completion of the Metro the Jttaw a for over twenty vears.
627 BAY ST., TORONTO
Phone 368-9768
v
Rhone cal1 fr°m construction of Expo 67 ’ sit' Lbata ,concerning your
right m the middle of the St
le a” ^'c16 submitted to Lawrence River, the building of
the campaign
T0^?^0 JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
chairman of the Montreal Japa- a maze of expressways, throughways
and
ancillary
roadwavs
services!’
S PreSbyteHan' Broadview at Simpson Ave.
£«rC»m tte? for.c™tennial
’
ex
Piessmg his personal leading to Montreal, civic beauti
Sunday: Sund“Y School and Worship Services 2:00 PM
*05.
fication, and a host of other gi
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P M
gantic projects. Of course, the
Ebata • , reQuested that I federal and provincial govern- i
Y°Ung Pe°P!es Christian Fellowship 8:00 PM
■ 51pn'nU W-th background maPhone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-’1686.
ments
assisted
financially
in
most
c«Tiing the delay in the
of these alone. And the resulting
Sr0'1) °f an lentic Ja- vast outlay of funds depleted the
beallw ai^e? 'V1thin the Mon- Citv’s finances.
■
anical Garden complex
We hoped that in the Spring
70. d°BO^° JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
/UI Dovercourt Rd.
of 1968 the first phase of the
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9. Il:3o A.M.
S°Ulh °f B'°°r
garden project would be launch
ed-, but Man and His World took
Japanese
Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 76S-5632
precedence, and this resulted in
English — Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
further delays. This exposition
Church School lor the children
IF
A warm welcome to all.
?^eW over 12 million people |
U'^^^
^
prothrough
the
turnstiles,
but
resultf
I •)1M m„ an?tcape architect
ed in a substantial loss to the
City.
In retrospect, the City dis
hra' ™7^^
by
covered that, it was treading on
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
I
been
t . 1 would
I ^iks and w10Ved through the shaky financial grounds. Man and
SUNDAY NOVEMBER 9, 1969
His World was only one of many
aHoca- factors contributing to the emptv
10:3C A. M. Religious School
flr-st Phase of the coffers.
918 Bathurst S
11:00 A. M. Morning Service
$-1 3r .W
the survp?n lnit^ated: name2:00
P.
M. Japanese Service
During 1967, all eyes were
Telephone: 534-4302
of ’“he comnlpv 'in^ and staking of
«« *7",i ‘P bulldozing. focused on Expo 67. The internal
I Frequently" ..ents turned out affairs of the City, though dyna- I
remained comparatively sta
Si Si »“h,- b “Ablated pro- mic,
tic,
and
first rumblings of
When Buying Or Selling A Home
H *Kl* 15 been suspended discontentthe started
with
the
^d have h at Ieast a start strike of the civic employees, es
Call: KEN HORI
P direction
made in the pecially the blue collar workers, I
followed by the white collar 1
a^sumption on the workers, and finally bv the poli
RedkOR
cemen
and
firemen.
These
and
1
other contributing factors result
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
Sr|
ed in an austerity directive bring
14 Perivale Cres.
Phone: 261-5194
ing to a standstill all approved I
*
Scarborough
>
uupre and. new projects. Only those
F« were _Lj J6 °t Expo 67. If projects considered vital and urg- '
^ was ^t li V?ke while the ent were approved under the
;Md not harp n
perhaPs we Parks and Playgrounds alloca
-idlHma
been faced with tion.
I discussed the matter with the
^^iinatnha? stated S1’ °Ur coramit- director of the Montreal Botani
‘han 5
6 ?’e were cal Garden yesterday, and he is
.hl just as anxious as we are to see
s-^ied nr^
i IInnn? ae- the project started. We agreed
but i ' ?2? y our garden that unless the financial picture
^,,5,i Pa’A-' ' a*any other ap- eases substantially, the expenses I
a”d Playgrounds accepted in principle under the
Parks and Ploygrounds budget
J^ the 7
Mon. — Friday 9—6. Sat. 9—1.
will
have be held in abeyance.
^ 6“
Preceding
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1402. Phone 363-0952
I am not compelled to make ex
T^th und^?- ccmp’eted
cuses on behalf of the City, for
Eve. By Appointment
in
spite of the difficulties the
°f nio^ n&ei-ed ^e imagHiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
•wnicipa] leaders:
(Continued on P. 8)
—
all forms
OF
LIFE j
INSURANCE
।
consult
t
KJYO TAMURA
}
TORONTO
j
Bus. 366-5812
Bwi
Res. Pl. 9-8317 j
824-8153
Be*»
922-1353
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered
|
-------------------- ------- ---------------
FIRE
—
Accountant
Suite 403
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
Japan-Canada Society
PRIMING
I
| J co
I
I
kFF*^
14
I
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
Takara Jewellers
Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
1278 Yong. Street, Toronto 7, Ont
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
^okio
Nkhiinura
823-6877
KINO’S MARKET
R©d & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C.
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
SKATES
Hockey Equipment
Skate Sharpening
551 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlow)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
s¥&t<Z
OF TORONTO
* FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Suits
& Trousers
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
9
fue^O^w^
Dates And Doings
1
JBC To Hol
Personal Notes Across Canada
u dhism and Psychology” Lecture Adversary
WiHiam Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
TORONTO. Dr. Joseph M. Escriv, M.D who p
i u
(-take Institute, will speak on “Buddhism and PsvchofeV'A "
,*£ “b”
MIAN
St. W„
. Ont.
-5005
s mail
ion
1366
I Japan-Canada Society Dinner For November 20
I MONTREAL.—Again this year a Japanese dinnov „ m u v ,
L the Tokyo Sukiyaki Restaurant, on Thursday NoVeXr ^o'n
l-7;3O p.m. It will be open to members only 7nh^ 7 ™ 7° ^^
Lember). In the past this dinner has proven to
pei’i
IHOst successful occasions and all reservations were
onv
Lickly. Please keep this date in mind. For further
[All 935-4010.
luithei information
OCTOBER EVENT — Judo Film and Karate
I
Je would like to thank Mr. Masayuki Hisataka‘and^puni^
their excellent, demonstration of karate held on Octobers5
| skill spoke more than words the spirit of karate and wp
they will honor us again by giving another exhibition
hope that
MEMBERSHIP DUES — Last call
ship dues. Please send it in as soon as possible1-11 othmembertame will be struck off the mailing list Porm-°theU'1Se y°ur
nembers with the last newsletter. Perhaus you
Sent to
forgot to mail it?
remaps you filled it out and
I G00DWILL-TOUR-TO-JAPAN NEWS — Mr
.
I maximum for the tour to Japan has been reached^hXa ^
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone 368-4681
CARD OF THANKS
" 11 <Tuesda-V) at 8:00 p.m ^he pubHc
l ining Mr. Ito at 488-4042. Mrs. Ito^^
I ft,lie plans.
We are delighted at the response to
to assure the members that everyth .
— 50th —
TORONTO. — Three sons and
obtained by U^ a huge party for their
JtPan to finalize Parent s golden wedding anniverb^S"
[ to make it a memorable one.
'
° P°SSlble wiI1 be done
Mr. Nishikawa. 7
and his
CONGRATULATIONS __ To Mrs Ttn
wife Koma, 72, were- married on
president of the Montreal Japanese Folk PancT^S^ elected
‘
-• 18, 1919
in Japan. The
VOLUNTEERS WANTED — A typist to
\
made this occasion
monthly newsletter. Please call Mists R
°ut on the J0Jful one for their parents
.r <47.5511, ex. 323/460
3 K Mly“kl 321-3043 (home) be China House, inviting
many
| Wanted — a poster desismer Uava
a
-elatives and friends.
you are dying to try out? cfll Mr. P. Mineo^S* 6010
- Whkh
Congratulatory messages we^e
Circle Friday, December 12 on ^ou Cal nd! S
7 P‘nL n ceived
Canada’s Governor
"HI be held at the Japanese Community C«^ ?£“ K^i^li 5?^
X
It k a good policy to
»▼« th» RIGHT POLICY
Consult
Dear Friends.
In case some letters or
thanks have gone astray or
oeen addressed wrongly, the
family of the late Mrs.' Amv
asunioto wishes to convey
thanks to all her friends who
paid tribute to her by attendnig the funeral held at the
Toronto Japanese U n i 1 e d
Church, October 26.
Throughout Amy's illness
since May,
. , she
—v received
.count
less bouquets of flowers, gifts
and cards of encouragement
from so many of her friends,
one was hoping to the very
end that she would regain
enough strength to be able
to acknowledge each one perS0^HN- She was not able.
family is extremely
grateful and appreciative of
the considerate expressions o<
encouragement sent to Amv I
during her stay in the hospital
and expressions of sympathy I
directed to if during the I
funeral and interment Thanh
you.
Gratefully yours
D. Washi mot o
Delia and Cary
M. Washimoto
£Jr- & Mrs- 8. Uchikura
Nobby Uchikura
u1’ £ ^vs- ^Ku') Nash
-li. & Mrs. Tucker Uchikura
Mr. & Mrs. Cml
MEN'S SUITS
Made To Measure
And Alterations
Chris Nomura
132 Baldwin St., Toronto
Phone 368-9225
AUTO
re Elliott Trudeau, and Jamn
Ambassador to Canada, ShiS
Kondo.
OFFSET AND LETIERPRESS
.
Nishikawa came to Canada OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHEADS
in 190b and worked in Vancouver
k
S01,’e the yar- The eldest son
Reply: Re — Montreal Japanese Garden
Hishikawa has been
with the Japanese Embassy in
Bear Sir:
The completion of the Metro the Jttaw a for over twenty vears.
627 BAY ST., TORONTO
Phone 368-9768
v
Rhone cal1 fr°m construction of Expo 67 ’ sit' Lbata ,concerning your
right m the middle of the St
le a” ^'c16 submitted to Lawrence River, the building of
the campaign
T0^?^0 JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
chairman of the Montreal Japa- a maze of expressways, throughways
and
ancillary
roadwavs
services!’
S PreSbyteHan' Broadview at Simpson Ave.
£«rC»m tte? for.c™tennial
’
ex
Piessmg his personal leading to Montreal, civic beauti
Sunday: Sund“Y School and Worship Services 2:00 PM
*05.
fication, and a host of other gi
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P M
gantic projects. Of course, the
Ebata • , reQuested that I federal and provincial govern- i
Y°Ung Pe°P!es Christian Fellowship 8:00 PM
■ 51pn'nU W-th background maPhone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-’1686.
ments
assisted
financially
in
most
c«Tiing the delay in the
of these alone. And the resulting
Sr0'1) °f an lentic Ja- vast outlay of funds depleted the
beallw ai^e? 'V1thin the Mon- Citv’s finances.
■
anical Garden complex
We hoped that in the Spring
70. d°BO^° JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
/UI Dovercourt Rd.
of 1968 the first phase of the
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9. Il:3o A.M.
S°Ulh °f B'°°r
garden project would be launch
ed-, but Man and His World took
Japanese
Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 76S-5632
precedence, and this resulted in
English — Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
further delays. This exposition
Church School lor the children
IF
A warm welcome to all.
?^eW over 12 million people |
U'^^^
^
prothrough
the
turnstiles,
but
resultf
I •)1M m„ an?tcape architect
ed in a substantial loss to the
City.
In retrospect, the City dis
hra' ™7^^
by
covered that, it was treading on
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
I
been
t . 1 would
I ^iks and w10Ved through the shaky financial grounds. Man and
SUNDAY NOVEMBER 9, 1969
His World was only one of many
aHoca- factors contributing to the emptv
10:3C A. M. Religious School
flr-st Phase of the coffers.
918 Bathurst S
11:00 A. M. Morning Service
$-1 3r .W
the survp?n lnit^ated: name2:00
P.
M. Japanese Service
During 1967, all eyes were
Telephone: 534-4302
of ’“he comnlpv 'in^ and staking of
«« *7",i ‘P bulldozing. focused on Expo 67. The internal
I Frequently" ..ents turned out affairs of the City, though dyna- I
remained comparatively sta
Si Si »“h,- b “Ablated pro- mic,
tic,
and
first rumblings of
When Buying Or Selling A Home
H *Kl* 15 been suspended discontentthe started
with
the
^d have h at Ieast a start strike of the civic employees, es
Call: KEN HORI
P direction
made in the pecially the blue collar workers, I
followed by the white collar 1
a^sumption on the workers, and finally bv the poli
RedkOR
cemen
and
firemen.
These
and
1
other contributing factors result
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
Sr|
ed in an austerity directive bring
14 Perivale Cres.
Phone: 261-5194
ing to a standstill all approved I
*
Scarborough
>
uupre and. new projects. Only those
F« were _Lj J6 °t Expo 67. If projects considered vital and urg- '
^ was ^t li V?ke while the ent were approved under the
;Md not harp n
perhaPs we Parks and Playgrounds alloca
-idlHma
been faced with tion.
I discussed the matter with the
^^iinatnha? stated S1’ °Ur coramit- director of the Montreal Botani
‘han 5
6 ?’e were cal Garden yesterday, and he is
.hl just as anxious as we are to see
s-^ied nr^
i IInnn? ae- the project started. We agreed
but i ' ?2? y our garden that unless the financial picture
^,,5,i Pa’A-' ' a*any other ap- eases substantially, the expenses I
a”d Playgrounds accepted in principle under the
Parks and Ploygrounds budget
J^ the 7
Mon. — Friday 9—6. Sat. 9—1.
will
have be held in abeyance.
^ 6“
Preceding
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1402. Phone 363-0952
I am not compelled to make ex
T^th und^?- ccmp’eted
cuses on behalf of the City, for
Eve. By Appointment
in
spite of the difficulties the
°f nio^ n&ei-ed ^e imagHiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
•wnicipa] leaders:
(Continued on P. 8)
—
all forms
OF
LIFE j
INSURANCE
।
consult
t
KJYO TAMURA
}
TORONTO
j
Bus. 366-5812
Bwi
Res. Pl. 9-8317 j
824-8153
Be*»
922-1353
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered
|
-------------------- ------- ---------------
FIRE
—
Accountant
Suite 403
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
Japan-Canada Society
PRIMING
I
| J co
I
I
kFF*^
14
I
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
Takara Jewellers
Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
1278 Yong. Street, Toronto 7, Ont
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
^okio
Nkhiinura
823-6877
KINO’S MARKET
R©d & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C.
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
SKATES
Hockey Equipment
Skate Sharpening
551 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlow)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
s¥&t<Z
OF TORONTO
* FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Suits
& Trousers
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
Page 8
PAGE 8
NEW
Japan Students .
Cont. from p. 1
^ffidfeemfoj^
19M
jllhe New Canadian
Too Soon? . . . Too Late?
winter could imagine — Lum
a heli- Cans n-ay complain about their
closed circuit television and
I
Second class man r
respective - establishments,
------------ but
c^Pters t° armoured cars equipp nere the atmosphere
- member
,
seems more
II A
ofnumber
Et^ (M
?rrr s frahca
.
.
ed with watercannon and com- oppressive, the chances
of
escape
|
of
Ontario
^^
’5’5
i Piatforms that are raised from a lifetime of dark business
and lowered with a threatening
buzz.
0 ?uits Yar less good. Partly this
By A. B. HOTTA
of this society even if they were
is because the present Japanese
About 17 months ago, the yvrit- racist. (The yy-riter asked whether
Students — No Chance
system is, to the .angry students .
Clearly, the students have no at least, so irritatingly success er became involved in the initi- her parents yy-ould object if she A. B. HOTTA Acting
iSuCe against a force like this. ful, partly because Japanese so ation of a young Japanese Cana- n-a™ed a Negro causing the first
While the other components of ciety- now, as before, exerts ex dian human rights organization, I hesitation in the floyy- of her ar- I
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
s New Left, the anti-war ceptionally- heavy- pressures on its | the likes of which doesn’t exist ^ument. Apparently- she hadn’t I
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
youth committee of young break members to abide by- the rules. | in Canada. This organization yy-as I considered this possibility- be- |
Wire S-5005
to be an expression of the con- f°re.)
’
I
away- trades unionists and breth£in, an anti-Vietnam war organi
cern
for
human
rights
drayving
cqa
ah
,
I
“Wrong Track”
yvhatever insight into the
groups, even those out- I
zation like Britain’s old cam
The
message
the students from
matter young J.C.’s had acquir- . e > - L whlte majority have ’
paign for nuclear disarmament, are telegraphingthat
to the rest of cd, and translating this concern | equa rights to self-determination. |
do seem to have some chance of Japan in their angry,
and often
growing, the revolutionary- stu
(4) The idea of self-pity is ^
-----incomprehensible,
jargon,
that into political action.
dents are likely to remain a the country is on the iswrong
This organization yvas to be based on the desire for accept- 46^968^
ond G=ria%p?^
small, exclusive group.
~
‘ °nto)track; that profit-making should initially recruited from the ranks ance and possible assimilation
Yet, however far out on a not be the criterion by' which
uennlT1'^1Slt7 n studenfs’ with
Tt also reveals an amount of
Female
Hein
limb they- may- be from the rest everything is judged. The violence people,
hopefully m the social misunderstanding about minority-1
„----------- PjVanteq
^
ien
^
on
the
Panning
commitgroup
members
being
able
to
do
I
Live-in.
f° t h°usehold duties,
of Japanese society, and unable the students themselves use, aii'l
I Start Nov. 15
^-'Lhough they- are to communicate their own stifling little organiza- | tee. The mam stumbling blocks their oyy-n thinking.
with niany- of their own contem tions are a measure of their fear seemed to be (1) the ever popular
1
,
-------- — '
(Don 2;“ls)
references to
uj
w
‘--------poraries at university, they- do of the huge enemy thev are con apathy (2) misinformation or^n®
pre-war attitudes toyvards conethnics as well as the —------ ------ ^PjVanted
have a very special role. It is not fronting.
structive ethnicity- (3) desire for u’lwllliPon^s toface the realities S?, '70-Restaurant Managers -J
what they think it is. They- are
seem to ®d ^
not going to be the shock-troops
At the end of another student security-and assimilation (4) non- 2
existent
attitudes
toyvard
selfc
e
?,
ndl
.
c
atn
e
of
a
desire
for as- I provided. app1vF in writina™^^ ।
of. revolution. Rather they are demonstration earlier this month
™d qualifications to: u^-.' 1
doing what students have done I watched group after group of determination, and the ability of S1™latlon Wlth a dominant group.
in many- societies before, sending- students assemble in tight col minorities to take ' independent L BelHncl the idea of assimila- LtZ 1
up signals of distress before other umns put their arms around each s tands. But as far as some of bion. there are a feyy- basic as- I vab Quebec.
' ^L *^' -3' I
people can see what the trouble *others’ shoulders, and sing The the people in social sciences I sumptions:
,I
------ —---|
is about.
.
I
Red Flag, swaying to the rhythnn were concerned, there yvas
the side issue of the clash of
should all be alike (2)
few hundred yards ayy-ay- yy-ere values
“Favoured” Students Revolt
and
pessimism
Minority
groups
yvho cause dis
rich streets of the “Ginza, I
Ihe key- paradox in the troubl
Ie
comfort
must
change
(3) If only!,
its cinemas, shops and res-i As a member of the recruiting
ed world of the Japanese stu with
the minority- groups yvould change
dent is that it is the most favor aurants, which they- yy-ould have I committee it yvas necessary- for and pursue our overriding aims,
?ass °n t!leir ^^ home. iL
It was
ed members of the society- that
"aa |■ me to
n phone a number of young and not theirs, maybe in time
are in revolt. Once a young man I Ik.-- °U^ 1i they
V felt bhat without. | J.C.
J.C.’’ss yy-ho yvere in the
we could come to accept them.
Protective rite of soli- I sciences (viz anthronoloow
gets into Japanese university he i.
might
get sucked in-I ciology etc.) One of ^he^trends
But what casts doubt on the
^S I°°I firmly- on yy-hat is
■TOI
to
that
dangerous
and
corrupt-1
that
could
be
observed
yvas
assumptions is that any and all
tlie career* “escalator” bs j “z'ity %■
e
—
ryic:
a
aboriginal groups in
which barring very rare accid
Aorth America are poachers and
duc it is they- yvho look like students at U of T yvere
ents, should carry- him comfort ,
ably- upyvards, through the yvorld 5'taS°it Vd fe"“,S ™d in fc “act or i>hysi^l set land-grabbers. To concede that
West
Read the Pulitzer Prize
pf government or business, for — and that 72
h defensive ences or professions. This yvas minorities must accede to the
Wry
needs of the majority- group is
the rest of his life.
tinn ?n.
S a
bad Posi- slightly surprising..
winning Christian Science
liien
to
concede
that
might
is
right;
Young- Europeans and Ameri- otherwise, U be in ’
Monitor.
Rarely
more
than
*
*
„
a dangerous concession. Perhaps
20 pages, this easy-toIn recruiting —there yvere a mukl5g a!1 icIeal of peaceful assi
tally,
number of hairoyy-ing experieiwtl0n 1S .a means of masking . read daily newspaper gives
fl)'
Montreal Garden . . . Cont. from p. 7
you a complete grasp of
es, one of which included a-con- "1S con£ess*on.
be 1
city- fathers are capable of look our objective by- almost
national and world affairs.
I ^’saticm yy-ith a person yvho had - 4® ^ar as the dormancy of the
Our
commit,
TwX^
can
'"Vr
1
^
R
Om
R
01
^
“
12‘ ■
ing after their affairs, but once
Plus fashion, sports, busi
farma
they- instituted the guideline all not force the City- to have thJ>P^e main points of her argu- p?ess.ion °I the independent asness, and the arts. Read
fed in
))®.can do yvil] be to ayvait the garden completed within
ran aS follows:
nations of young Japanese Cathe newspaper that 91%
Ilie n
lifting of the austerity- restric cd period of time, since their ind) I consider mvself a citizen dueTa
11 iS Hkely
of Congress reads.
tion.
p), ’
terest represent 90% or more of of the yvorld.
*
su^^bo1 S
in pur‘
panesi
|
i i % th? goaI ?f lts formation
Concerning the Garden Project the total outlay.
lie ef
Please
send
me
the
Monitor
for
Japanese are racists aCOuld indicate that the
1 feel grateful that the Montreal
As a member of the Centennial
?denin
□ 1 year $26
□ 6 mos. $13
Japanese Committee for Centen l ioject Committee, and as a
y hakujin. (viz. intermar- earlV—o^to^lSte2^^ WaS tO°
Japai
□ 3 mos. $6.50
nial Project was able to fulfill member of the Japanese commu- nage)'
the promise of making available Ilay ?f Montreal, I hope the Cih
□ Check or money order
(3) I’m against all ethnic forth^oming)^^^^ attempt is
[The n
to the City .a blueprint for an
enclosed
be able to resolve the up- groups
babe
authentic Japanese Garden, by tight financial picture ;and ~o
□ Bill me
'
Re a 1
an internationally known land toryvard yvith the project as soon
name,
1 old
nJ4)
YOU -Gt a bunch of ja- JSP Condemns
scape architect. We owe a tre as permissible.
panese together they’d just
'
. . .
W fa
mendous vote of thanks to our
street,
1' ours truly,
01\v^acB other’s shoulders.
(Continued from Page 1')
pack ai
campaign chairman for topping
n hat she would not take into st0P toyy-ard intensifying the hoH. R. Okuda
city__
B to
consideration was:
S?’esslve character’ of the Japanstate_
zip---------b-S. military alliance and reviv. (1) To say the world is
PB 18
is to gjloss over instead'of "com- peHaETt^’lS5"1 and im~
The
It’s Private! No Time Limit!
mg to threaten
grips with
which
it. the divisions uaitop
^C aim-ed that revival of Ja-
Action Complements Insight
T
£ \SiPkr-allS? and mibtarism
(2) Japanese presently have no ?? stdI ^
. 7“^
° kept in
in check
cneci bv
power to affect the vahm svstem the
nP
'^^
—
ConstS “ P°st?v" Japanese
constitution and the people’s democratic struggles.
p s ae
Get the most enjoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food! Plenty of free parking!
CHINA
925 Eglinton W. Toronto
RU. 1-9123
BE DARING! — SURPRISE THEM!
(MAINLY, SEND THEM GIFT
SUBSCRIPTIONS TO:)
The New Canadian
479 QUEEN STREET WEST, TORONTO 133. ONT.
Please find enclosed S _
#
,
-! Send Gift Subscription for
" v -ar/
n °r WhlC^
S5.00 for six monk ^ "S £ i^
recipient
I
(Cont. from Page One)
I Jation that it stand little chance
if passage, especially- if there
'S a singular lack of public inerest. The JACL fears that it
loo much public .attention be
comes focused on S. 12, it mav
■ould
P°Wer’ which
ou|u be disastrous.
Rather than commenting on the
| dangers of S. 12, the JACL Na
tional Committee asked all sun"nnrn? HtO C°nt‘"Ue the Positive
approach or urging Congress fo-an early repeal of Title II bv
passage of the Inouye and Ma'.^“^a-Holifield repeal bills. The
believes that sufficient
public support can be generated
»or a straight-forward repeal.
(Pacific Citizen)
Buy and Sell
Your Home
(Tosh Iwai)
757-5184
Lichee Garden
w
,
(Dining Lounge)
zabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
Phone 364-3481
ADDRESS_________ _______
CITY _____
ZONE NO.
r?ewing ^fchines Vacuums,
F °r P”I'?Bers- Typewriters.
D
T.V.s, Stereos
represented by:
Mrs. R. Tsujimura
BY0
r c°
pH who
hgiiiltj:
R drive
rally
bs a ci
MELL REAL ESTATE LTD.
SINGER COMPANY
B)'
Re jud
p wea
H bench
'’she.
MAS (Ron) MENDE
1527 O'Connor Dr.
I
R met
F hearir
Through
Name (MR. AIRS. MISS)
province
Box 125, Astor Station
Boston, Massachusetts 02123
JACL . . .
HOUSE
—
Christian Science
Monitor^
(4 Lines To Serve You)
CATERING SERVICE — ‘TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
l^ih aui
h®!ly t
helions j
r shoul<
R ‘he
r^ ar
r ^tch r€
4 ‘he s;
,-^i true
der
^ers c
V ion's a
^ one
B th- ? K.:5n<
F^t'etlio
^■®ui
Banquet Facilities
Dor Business Or Private Parties
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
_
dinner music nightly
R’
;. , r eac
NEW
Japan Students .
Cont. from p. 1
^ffidfeemfoj^
19M
jllhe New Canadian
Too Soon? . . . Too Late?
winter could imagine — Lum
a heli- Cans n-ay complain about their
closed circuit television and
I
Second class man r
respective - establishments,
------------ but
c^Pters t° armoured cars equipp nere the atmosphere
- member
,
seems more
II A
ofnumber
Et^ (M
?rrr s frahca
.
.
ed with watercannon and com- oppressive, the chances
of
escape
|
of
Ontario
^^
’5’5
i Piatforms that are raised from a lifetime of dark business
and lowered with a threatening
buzz.
0 ?uits Yar less good. Partly this
By A. B. HOTTA
of this society even if they were
is because the present Japanese
About 17 months ago, the yvrit- racist. (The yy-riter asked whether
Students — No Chance
system is, to the .angry students .
Clearly, the students have no at least, so irritatingly success er became involved in the initi- her parents yy-ould object if she A. B. HOTTA Acting
iSuCe against a force like this. ful, partly because Japanese so ation of a young Japanese Cana- n-a™ed a Negro causing the first
While the other components of ciety- now, as before, exerts ex dian human rights organization, I hesitation in the floyy- of her ar- I
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
s New Left, the anti-war ceptionally- heavy- pressures on its | the likes of which doesn’t exist ^ument. Apparently- she hadn’t I
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
youth committee of young break members to abide by- the rules. | in Canada. This organization yy-as I considered this possibility- be- |
Wire S-5005
to be an expression of the con- f°re.)
’
I
away- trades unionists and breth£in, an anti-Vietnam war organi
cern
for
human
rights
drayving
cqa
ah
,
I
“Wrong Track”
yvhatever insight into the
groups, even those out- I
zation like Britain’s old cam
The
message
the students from
matter young J.C.’s had acquir- . e > - L whlte majority have ’
paign for nuclear disarmament, are telegraphingthat
to the rest of cd, and translating this concern | equa rights to self-determination. |
do seem to have some chance of Japan in their angry,
and often
growing, the revolutionary- stu
(4) The idea of self-pity is ^
-----incomprehensible,
jargon,
that into political action.
dents are likely to remain a the country is on the iswrong
This organization yvas to be based on the desire for accept- 46^968^
ond G=ria%p?^
small, exclusive group.
~
‘ °nto)track; that profit-making should initially recruited from the ranks ance and possible assimilation
Yet, however far out on a not be the criterion by' which
uennlT1'^1Slt7 n studenfs’ with
Tt also reveals an amount of
Female
Hein
limb they- may- be from the rest everything is judged. The violence people,
hopefully m the social misunderstanding about minority-1
„----------- PjVanteq
^
ien
^
on
the
Panning
commitgroup
members
being
able
to
do
I
Live-in.
f° t h°usehold duties,
of Japanese society, and unable the students themselves use, aii'l
I Start Nov. 15
^-'Lhough they- are to communicate their own stifling little organiza- | tee. The mam stumbling blocks their oyy-n thinking.
with niany- of their own contem tions are a measure of their fear seemed to be (1) the ever popular
1
,
-------- — '
(Don 2;“ls)
references to
uj
w
‘--------poraries at university, they- do of the huge enemy thev are con apathy (2) misinformation or^n®
pre-war attitudes toyvards conethnics as well as the —------ ------ ^PjVanted
have a very special role. It is not fronting.
structive ethnicity- (3) desire for u’lwllliPon^s toface the realities S?, '70-Restaurant Managers -J
what they think it is. They- are
seem to ®d ^
not going to be the shock-troops
At the end of another student security-and assimilation (4) non- 2
existent
attitudes
toyvard
selfc
e
?,
ndl
.
c
atn
e
of
a
desire
for as- I provided. app1vF in writina™^^ ।
of. revolution. Rather they are demonstration earlier this month
™d qualifications to: u^-.' 1
doing what students have done I watched group after group of determination, and the ability of S1™latlon Wlth a dominant group.
in many- societies before, sending- students assemble in tight col minorities to take ' independent L BelHncl the idea of assimila- LtZ 1
up signals of distress before other umns put their arms around each s tands. But as far as some of bion. there are a feyy- basic as- I vab Quebec.
' ^L *^' -3' I
people can see what the trouble *others’ shoulders, and sing The the people in social sciences I sumptions:
,I
------ —---|
is about.
.
I
Red Flag, swaying to the rhythnn were concerned, there yvas
the side issue of the clash of
should all be alike (2)
few hundred yards ayy-ay- yy-ere values
“Favoured” Students Revolt
and
pessimism
Minority
groups
yvho cause dis
rich streets of the “Ginza, I
Ihe key- paradox in the troubl
Ie
comfort
must
change
(3) If only!,
its cinemas, shops and res-i As a member of the recruiting
ed world of the Japanese stu with
the minority- groups yvould change
dent is that it is the most favor aurants, which they- yy-ould have I committee it yvas necessary- for and pursue our overriding aims,
?ass °n t!leir ^^ home. iL
It was
ed members of the society- that
"aa |■ me to
n phone a number of young and not theirs, maybe in time
are in revolt. Once a young man I Ik.-- °U^ 1i they
V felt bhat without. | J.C.
J.C.’’ss yy-ho yvere in the
we could come to accept them.
Protective rite of soli- I sciences (viz anthronoloow
gets into Japanese university he i.
might
get sucked in-I ciology etc.) One of ^he^trends
But what casts doubt on the
^S I°°I firmly- on yy-hat is
■TOI
to
that
dangerous
and
corrupt-1
that
could
be
observed
yvas
assumptions is that any and all
tlie career* “escalator” bs j “z'ity %■
e
—
ryic:
a
aboriginal groups in
which barring very rare accid
Aorth America are poachers and
duc it is they- yvho look like students at U of T yvere
ents, should carry- him comfort ,
ably- upyvards, through the yvorld 5'taS°it Vd fe"“,S ™d in fc “act or i>hysi^l set land-grabbers. To concede that
West
Read the Pulitzer Prize
pf government or business, for — and that 72
h defensive ences or professions. This yvas minorities must accede to the
Wry
needs of the majority- group is
the rest of his life.
tinn ?n.
S a
bad Posi- slightly surprising..
winning Christian Science
liien
to
concede
that
might
is
right;
Young- Europeans and Ameri- otherwise, U be in ’
Monitor.
Rarely
more
than
*
*
„
a dangerous concession. Perhaps
20 pages, this easy-toIn recruiting —there yvere a mukl5g a!1 icIeal of peaceful assi
tally,
number of hairoyy-ing experieiwtl0n 1S .a means of masking . read daily newspaper gives
fl)'
Montreal Garden . . . Cont. from p. 7
you a complete grasp of
es, one of which included a-con- "1S con£ess*on.
be 1
city- fathers are capable of look our objective by- almost
national and world affairs.
I ^’saticm yy-ith a person yvho had - 4® ^ar as the dormancy of the
Our
commit,
TwX^
can
'"Vr
1
^
R
Om
R
01
^
“
12‘ ■
ing after their affairs, but once
Plus fashion, sports, busi
farma
they- instituted the guideline all not force the City- to have thJ>P^e main points of her argu- p?ess.ion °I the independent asness, and the arts. Read
fed in
))®.can do yvil] be to ayvait the garden completed within
ran aS follows:
nations of young Japanese Cathe newspaper that 91%
Ilie n
lifting of the austerity- restric cd period of time, since their ind) I consider mvself a citizen dueTa
11 iS Hkely
of Congress reads.
tion.
p), ’
terest represent 90% or more of of the yvorld.
*
su^^bo1 S
in pur‘
panesi
|
i i % th? goaI ?f lts formation
Concerning the Garden Project the total outlay.
lie ef
Please
send
me
the
Monitor
for
Japanese are racists aCOuld indicate that the
1 feel grateful that the Montreal
As a member of the Centennial
?denin
□ 1 year $26
□ 6 mos. $13
Japanese Committee for Centen l ioject Committee, and as a
y hakujin. (viz. intermar- earlV—o^to^lSte2^^ WaS tO°
Japai
□ 3 mos. $6.50
nial Project was able to fulfill member of the Japanese commu- nage)'
the promise of making available Ilay ?f Montreal, I hope the Cih
□ Check or money order
(3) I’m against all ethnic forth^oming)^^^^ attempt is
[The n
to the City .a blueprint for an
enclosed
be able to resolve the up- groups
babe
authentic Japanese Garden, by tight financial picture ;and ~o
□ Bill me
'
Re a 1
an internationally known land toryvard yvith the project as soon
name,
1 old
nJ4)
YOU -Gt a bunch of ja- JSP Condemns
scape architect. We owe a tre as permissible.
panese together they’d just
'
. . .
W fa
mendous vote of thanks to our
street,
1' ours truly,
01\v^acB other’s shoulders.
(Continued from Page 1')
pack ai
campaign chairman for topping
n hat she would not take into st0P toyy-ard intensifying the hoH. R. Okuda
city__
B to
consideration was:
S?’esslve character’ of the Japanstate_
zip---------b-S. military alliance and reviv. (1) To say the world is
PB 18
is to gjloss over instead'of "com- peHaETt^’lS5"1 and im~
The
It’s Private! No Time Limit!
mg to threaten
grips with
which
it. the divisions uaitop
^C aim-ed that revival of Ja-
Action Complements Insight
T
£ \SiPkr-allS? and mibtarism
(2) Japanese presently have no ?? stdI ^
. 7“^
° kept in
in check
cneci bv
power to affect the vahm svstem the
nP
'^^
—
ConstS “ P°st?v" Japanese
constitution and the people’s democratic struggles.
p s ae
Get the most enjoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food! Plenty of free parking!
CHINA
925 Eglinton W. Toronto
RU. 1-9123
BE DARING! — SURPRISE THEM!
(MAINLY, SEND THEM GIFT
SUBSCRIPTIONS TO:)
The New Canadian
479 QUEEN STREET WEST, TORONTO 133. ONT.
Please find enclosed S _
#
,
-! Send Gift Subscription for
" v -ar/
n °r WhlC^
S5.00 for six monk ^ "S £ i^
recipient
I
(Cont. from Page One)
I Jation that it stand little chance
if passage, especially- if there
'S a singular lack of public inerest. The JACL fears that it
loo much public .attention be
comes focused on S. 12, it mav
■ould
P°Wer’ which
ou|u be disastrous.
Rather than commenting on the
| dangers of S. 12, the JACL Na
tional Committee asked all sun"nnrn? HtO C°nt‘"Ue the Positive
approach or urging Congress fo-an early repeal of Title II bv
passage of the Inouye and Ma'.^“^a-Holifield repeal bills. The
believes that sufficient
public support can be generated
»or a straight-forward repeal.
(Pacific Citizen)
Buy and Sell
Your Home
(Tosh Iwai)
757-5184
Lichee Garden
w
,
(Dining Lounge)
zabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
Phone 364-3481
ADDRESS_________ _______
CITY _____
ZONE NO.
r?ewing ^fchines Vacuums,
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MAS (Ron) MENDE
1527 O'Connor Dr.
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Box 125, Astor Station
Boston, Massachusetts 02123
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