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The New Canadian — January 27, 1970

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Page 1

1970

Hob

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Not Sleep

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By ALBERT E. KAFF
AKA.—If you ve never slept in a Buddhist temple,
may get your chance if you come to Osaka for
txpp 70—Japan’s 1970 World Exposition.
'^Executives getting ready for opening of the giant
fa&?on March 15 found a problem—a shortage of beds
-for‘‘..the anticipated flood of visitors.
' ./Which is where the temples enter the picture.
;<“Right now, we are short 30,000 beds for peak periodSj” Nobuo Imaeda, director of the press center- at
the//$540 million exposition, said recently.
•j'-’But we will take care of everyone. We can put
l^Q00 people in Buddhist temples' and we can use
tents for another 10,000 people. Companv dormitories
^.'.accommodate 5,000 beds, and we' expect 1,200
visitors to be accommodated in private homes.”
4Buddhist temples? Not so strange in the Orient.
A%#

S

A Buddhist Temple

On

For centuries, Chinese and Japanese monks have been
making a business of renting cells for floor space to
weary travelers.
Private houses? The Japan National Tourist Organi­
zation already is preparing leaflets for foreigners on
how to live in a Japanese house without committing
social blunders.
Sample tip: ‘‘The Japanese bath. Always wash your
body completely before getting into the water. All
soap should be rinsed off on the floor before entering
the bath tub. Also do not pull the plug when you
get out.” (Others use the same bath water after vou
in this crowded land.
Actually most foreign visitors to the first World
Exposition ever staged in Asia will find hotel rooms
they book early through a travel agent or an
airline, fair officials contend. Hotels refuse direct

requests for reservations.
“Within one hour of the site, commercial hotels
have 117,000 beds,” Imaeda reported.
3 he big problem with Expo 70 is that the planners
underestimated their own power. When construction
started in 1967, officials estimated that 30 million
people would come to the fair. They rechecked their
calculations this year and have upped the estimate
to 50 million, including about 400,000 visitors from
foreign countries.
Abaut SO nations are expected to exhibit at the
fair, built on 815 acres of land carved from bamboo
groves and rice lands in the Senri (thousand leagues)
hills north of Osaka, Japan’s second largest city
(population 4 million).
Participants include nations of East and West

That

Expo

Visit

(Continued on Page 8)

‘(^“’"‘"'"‘‘"‘"'"""'""‘’""’""‘""’""’""'"’"""’""""••‘‘"•"•’’HH’WHHHiniHiHiiHiiiiiiHimiimiiiiHiiiiiiiiiinjiiiimiiiiiiiniimiiniiiimHiiuiiiiiiiiiimiiHim

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“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.50

Sadie'
befe

STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
By MISS J.L. BEATTIE
$5.00

An independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol- XXXIV—No. 7
<lHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuihiiiilB^

r

TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1970

I A Look At Vancouver's
if
“Nihoiunachi” Today

.

.

Toronto, Ont

MPPs Consider Ending Special Voting
Status For Commonwealth Immig
OTTAWA.—A special committee studying Onta­
rio’s election laws may propose ending the privi­
leged voting status of future immigrants from
the Commonwealth.
And it may recommend that all immigrants be
permitted to vote in provincial and municipal
elections after three years of residency.
At present, Commonwelth immigrants who are
therefore British subjects can vote after a year.
Other immigrants like those from Japan, must
wait five years and take out Canadian citizen­
ship before they can become electors.
These possibilities emerged from interviews with

both Conservative and Liberal members of the
committee
recently. NDP members are known to
./ ’•
favor any such change.
Ah Powell St. in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, is a street
The interviews followed the committee’s meet­
ing with members of the federal standing com­
that brings back pleasant memories to the minds of many Japanese
mittee on privileges and elections here. The federal
Canadians. It was what East First St. is to Los Angeles Japanese,
Committee is also undertaking a review of federal
arid Main St. to Seattle Japanese. For along Powell St., there
election procedures, although it is not as far along
.once existed the largest concentration of Japanese Canadian enas the provincial committee.
terprises in Canada—larger, in fact, than any in San Francisco
The provincial committee’s revision work re­
of; Seattle because pre-World War II Vancouver had1 a larger
sulted last session in a new provincial election
^apanese population than the two American cities. That was
V fa’^ong time ago.
law. The committee is carrying out further stud­
ies, including a new controverted election law,
In 1941, the Dominion- of - Canada had approximately 23,600
lowering the voting age and pos­
Japanese, of whom 22,096 lived in British Columbia, in which
sible control of election expenses.
PJPvince Vancouver is located. World War II and the Evacuation,
Both deputy Liberal leadei’
.how^r, took its toll and by 1951 there were only 7169 Japanese
Vernon
Singer- (Downsview) and
'in* the province. The 1961 census showed a slight growth with
Leo
Bernier
(PC, Kenora) said
'10,424 Japanese accounted for in British Columbia.
TOKYO. — The annual New
The 10 prize-winning poems their party members
on the com­
o Prior to World War II, the Japanese were the largest Asiatic Year Imperial Poetry Party was which had been selected out of
mittee
would
be
prepared
to ac­
"'group in the province. Today, however, the Chinese have forged held recently at the Imperial 30,000 entries were first recited cept the two changes, although
ahead. In 1961, the Chinese numbered 24,227. The Japanese are
Mr. Bernier said the Conserva­
npw the second largest Asiatic group in British Columbia, and Palace in the presence of the twice each, both in solo and uni­ tives would prefer to wait for
Emperor and Empress and other on in a traditional manner. One
^ . East Indians (primarily Sikhs) rank third.'
Ottawa to make similar changes
iB Along with the general decline in the Japanese population members of the Imperial Family. of them was by Dr. Yasumasa in federal voting law.
About 100 persons including Miyakuni, 54, a private practi• --. British Columbia and Vancouver, Powell St. has shown a
In discussions with federal
similar decline. Today, Vancouver’s Nihonmachi is concentrated on 10 winners in the poetry contest tioner from Okinawa who was committee members, the two men
, <pne block of Powell St. between Gore and Dunlevy Sts. The busi- on the theme of “Flower” at­
the first Okinawan to be so reported a favorable reaction to
Jesses, all along the southside of the street, consist of three
the idea of ending Commonwealth
tended
the
party.
honored.
'grocery stores, two Japanese restaurants, a fish market, a Japanese
privilege and lowering the period
BWod market, a barber shop, a curio shop, and a commercial fishing
Then the special entry by Dr. of time other immigrants must
■supply house from Japan.
Senichi
Hisamatsu, professor wait before qualifying foi' citi­
rt, ®ne block east of Nihonmachi on the corner of Jackson St.
emeritus of Japanese language zenship and voting rights.
,and Powell St. stands the Vancouver Buddhist Church. About two
Committee Chairman, Edward
at the University of Tokyo, was
■ ?P?ks northeast of Nihonmachi is the Japanese Hall, where classes
Dunlop agreed that five years
recited followed by the recitation was perhaps too long. He said
n 0 ant^ Japanese language are held Two blocks directly south
J.?! Powell St. is East Hastings St.,, where there is s scattering
of entries by the Imperial Fami­ also he wouldn’t object to ending
sot Japanese businesses.
ly members.
the Commonwealth privilege, so
' ?'. Along Powell St. there are a great many religious missions
TOKYO.
The
National
as it was made to apply to
The Emperor’s and Empress’ long
-and salvage and thrift stores. Also noticeable are quite a few Tax Office reported Hitachi, Ltd'.,
future immigrants and not to
'-drunken men. Because there are a growing number of Chinese Japan’s largest electrical ma­ poems were recited three times take away voting rights from
_?»businesses in Nihonmachi, Chinese are seen in frequent numbers, chinery and appliance manufac­ end twice, respectively, before British subjects already in Can­
’.especially older Chinese men. This could be attributable to the turer, was the top money maker the party came to an end.
ada.
v^ln^ quarters atop the businesses along Powell St. Surprisingly among Niponese industrial firms
However, Mr. Dunlop said it
The Imperial Household Agen­
^there are few Nisei women about, and only occasionally do you for the first half of the 1969 fiswould
be. “neater” if Ontario
cy, meanwhile,
announced the
b<isei couples and their children. What few Japanese vou cal year.
changed its requirements for
“do see are usually Issei.
theme would be franchise in provincial and mun­
The Tax Office said Hitachi next year’s
;B^ _
Nihonmachi, there are still a great many vacant units reported an income of $76,066,- “Ie,” meaning either “House or icipal elections in concert with
^•available. However, Chinese real estate firms are renting them
a similar change in federal fran­
^out. Already there are almost as many Chinese businesses as there 667 for the April through Sept- Home.”
chise
and citizenship.
??e Japanese businesses on Powell St. Since Chinese are tradi- ember period. Japan’s fiscal year
Agency officials said the word
Both
Mr. Singer and Mr. Ber­
r+i,Ona k more small business-inclined than Japanese, it’s conceivable runs from April to March 31.
could be used in either meaning.
nier
said
the matter would de­
rtnat they may predominate in Nihonmachi some day.
The over-all income leader, it
Following are unofficial trans­
finitely be reopened by the com­
The Chinese population in ) ancouver has grown steadilv in said was the Bank of Japan with
lations of the poems of the EmPuSt 20 years t° where it is about 19,000 while World War II an income of $112,433,333.
mittee, and likely result in a
peror and Empress introduced
the Evacuation disrupted Vancouver’s Japanese population, the
Listed at third was Tokyo El­
new
recommendation
putting
' in^e population continued on uninterrupted. With a steady ectric Power Co. with $47.1 mil­ at the party.
future
Commonwealth
immig­
. ’ owth, plus immigration of Cantonese-speaking Chinese from Hong lion.
Emperor

s
Poem
rants on the same basis as others
, Chmese population in Vancouver has made its presence
Nikko lilies bloom
111 almost every facet of the city’s life.
and deciding on a compromise
in profusion
C- ^eedie55 ,to say, the Chinese are associated in large numbers
three-year period of residency for
Turning the marshy field
.^n._.e field in which they are best known—their world famous
provincial franchise.
■cuisine — which accounts for a large number of restaurants all
golden at the foot of
Exactly when the committee
.^pr, . e city* The. style of cooking is almost always Cantonese
will
deal with the matter will
Mt. Shirasasa
^ i,ekljg’ Shanghai and Szechaum styles of cooking being almost
TOKYO.—The newspaper Asa­ With the air laden
depend on finding a time opening
:junneard of here. Aside from the numerous restaurants, Chinese
in its agenda. The committee
•??ane engaged in. the small, independent grocery operation. Almost hi Shimbun says there were 331
with fragrance
meets again to hear a submission

small, independent groceries in or around the downtown people living in Japan on New
from the Committee on Justice
Empress

Poem
.^s rea °* Vancouver are run by Chinese.
Year’s day who were at least 100
and Liberty objecting to com­
Vancouver’s Chinatown is located on East Pender St. about years old. Asahi said 261 of the Every morn
pulsion in union political dona­
'310ur blocks southwest of Nihonmachi. Although not as large or centenarians were women and I pick a bouquet of roses
tions. Then it goes into private
'^5 colorful as San Francisco’s Chinatown, Vancouver’s Chinatown
session to discuss its forthcom­
of manifold colors
■^b being touted as a tourist attraction. In this they are being the oldest of all, believed to be
ing visit to Australia and New
To
dedicate
them
to
116, was a lady living in the west
Zealand
to examine voting laws
.4
(Continued on Page 8)
the Emperor on his desk
Japan state of Hyogo.
there.

By E. T. SUGURO
(Rafu Shinpo)

Imperial Poetry Party On “Flower” Theme Held

Hitachi Electric Is
Japan's No. 1
Money Maker

Japan Has 331
Citizens Over 100

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692 No. 3 Road,
Richmond, B. C.
Phone CR 8-95R5

942 PAPE AVE.

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Page 7



luesday, January 27, 1970
PAGE 7

| Dates And Doings

MEMORIES OF A NISEI IMMIGRANT

Il h « good policy to
Boro th* RIGHT POLICY
CoZMUlt

By M. SITARR
William Wales Ltd.
AV hen I started school there the school yard. We hung- around I
Canadian Heart Fund Needs Eeveryone's Help were
Insurance Agents
so many things to learn, pai tly hidden in the weeds until I
^ TORONTO.—Over the years, Canada has shown the wav to
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
like learning to speak English. we saw our teacher come runnToronto 2-A, Ont.
V°rld 111 many asPects of medical research. It was here 'that But there were thing's I learned
out of the school house and I
Phone 368-4681
on
the
way
to
and
from
school,
’insulin, the life-blood of the diabetic, was discovered; it was
jump into the car. We watched I
too, for example, kissing- girls. as the hugging and kissing took
^^ ^ie Salk vaccine for poliomyelitis was developed.
-^t home I had never seen mv place. I think this was the point I
■^ We should be Proud f^at we have in Canada, doctors and parents kissing each other or any­ when I finally understood the
-medical scientists who can provide the leadership, inspiration and body else. I suppose the topic was word from an intellectual visual
brought up eventually when 1 point of view. However, it was I
imagination to the world of medicine. Today, many of these men walked to school with some other somewhat
later that I knew it
Made To Measure
and "omen are engaged in an all-out fight against heart disease kids because I can’t recall when from practical experience.
I
Tfy are fortunate to have at their disposal the facilities o^f I learnt the word. It did not
I sometimes used1 to walk to
And Alterations
our medical schools which are among the finest in the world mean much to me until it was school with my older sister who I
dramatized foi- me by one of my w as about 14 and her girl friend I
i-^^^d' much of their effoit has been crowned with success
Chris Nomura
second or third grade teachers.
Beatrice who probably was about
132 Baldwin St., Toronto
, >^» Repeat ch on heait disease in Canada need know no bounds.
It was the custom at this one- 12. Beatrice was big for her ago I
Phone 368-9225
Hj!e?s ^ is limited by the lack of funds. During- next month, Febru- room country school to have a and the truck drivers who some- I
times passed us would honk at |
young
girl,
a
recent
graduate
of
ary, the Canadian Heart Fund is conducting a drive to ensure
Normal School in Vancou­ her and she would blow a kiss at •
that the research may continue uninterrupted. Funds are needed the
ver, to come and teach. She them. One day as we were on ।
to_meet expenses incidental to the work and to maintain the doctors usually lasted one year, that was the way to school she made up I j AUTO — FIRE — LIFE
ALL FORMS
ami medical scientists on fellowships.
probably all that she could take. a game in which we had to tell ,

*
OF
the
dream
we
had
had
the
prei
teacher boarded at the home
w'' -^^ °i us have a vital stake in the fight against heart disease The
the school trustee who lived vious night. I innocently told
Our support of the Canadian Heart Fund wifi help our medical of
about a mile from the school. her that a didn’t have any d'ream
SQjpptists to conquer jet .another enemy of mankind. Remember.’ She would walk to school carry­ to report. Well, I was told that
consult
ing a sack lunch packed for her in punishment I had to kiss her.
Give From the Heart — To Help Your Heart!
Before
I
could
protest
and
come
as a part of her board1.
KITO TAMURA
up with some defense she was
One day some of us who hung bending
TORONTO
over me. (She was much
around
_ the school yard after taller than I, a third grader or.)
B
ur
.
366-5812
Res. PI. 9-831J <
FOR ICE FISHING FUN
school instead of g-oing straight The most that I could muster up I '
home saw a strange touring car was a slight peck, but after that I
with canvas on the sides and I managed not to be conned into
Rosy celuloid windows drive into Ikissing her .again.
Church Road, Port Bolster, Ont.
Busi 824-8153
R«=i 922-135;

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Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.

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Page 8

PAGE 8

_Tuesday, January 27 ^

f

dh

er T°day . , .

f M

(cont. from page 1.)

The New

guided by the city’s Chamber of Commerce.
i
m
,
Canadia,w
Japanese
newspapers.
Today,
there
is
none.
(Chinatown
here
has
Because the Chinese have show:
n a steady growth in popula- tnree papers plus a monthly news magazine.) However, ther^ are
Second class man ,
has been expanding in all
oil directions
---- a, Alon^Ma^
.
two japanese papers published in Toronto.
Street, which connects E. Pender to Powell St., Chinese businesses
.
number 0366
pl .
.
While the population of Vancouver is growing and hu^e A member of ofEthinc
alTg-toward' Nihonmachi. Already there art
Ontario!
Ass°^: >5
quite a few Chinese businesses along Powell St and thev mav skyscrapers give evidence of a booming and bustling city, some" of
Powel^S?
JaPa+nese district. It’s possible that the Japanese have forsaken the city to move into suburbia. There
T. UMEZUKI Public
now appears to be quite a few Japanese in the suburbs surrounding
Canada began trading with Comnw™^
ago when Pn whlch Japanese faces are appearing more and more.
feelings have been smoothed over and theiMdoIsn’Fsee^Tt^
Columbia a few miles south of Vanany controversy over selling Communist Chinese goods Thereare Island ’nf cM ^ flshn^??Ilap of Steveston, sort of a Terminal
several stores which sell Communist goods exclusively includka
vf^J-0 dd\h\S
a Chinese Communist bookstore in Nihonmachi while most oAt bl Jears, and about 155 miles northeast of Vancouver lies the
Chinatown stores balance their wares with ^cods from both
« °f Kamloops, which has also maintained a Japanese colony
Kong and Taiwan and Communist Chka/Because of
years Last year’s Miss Kamloops in the Miss Canada

Advertising
K. c. tsumurL
English Section Elinor

Cl

PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY

AND FRIDAY

; ■w

479 QUEEN ST. WEST
Toronto 2-B. Ont.
EMpire 5-5005 ’

i

i

Japan Announce
has con^S "tto SL^S b“oOhr^
the LtTpXn^S™
Epoch-making
The sight of Japanese cars like Toyotas® DatsX/MeS^
such as the late contralto Aiko SaiU
Isuzu Beliefs are seen all over the city; and Japan-made cameras San FranXJ/ S. rT"’ actor (in Japan) Satoshi Nakamura, Development
transistor radios, phonographs, pianos, sporting goods, and other cS-cmln Dr ?£,„ M T President Dr. S. I. Hayakawa, and
^1“”° flies ,e“'v””

? bYr™Md its a,vi™s f»

111

items too numerous to mention are sold at stores. everywhere
Inf
u JJ®'1”'
Because of the acceptance of Japanese in Vancouver today it's VawS toZ.
11 “ ud "it ^“ti™ "’ere setbacks for
hard to believe that there was a great deal of anti-Jananese feeling lion and the
5 community, the general lack of discriminain pre-World War II Vancouver. The Chinese weM also vSim^
f
Jeehn^ existing today have given the
of such sentiment. The situation was aggravated bv Japan’s
ere ^e opportunity to meet their potential and to do
taristic ventures in Asia, climaxed by th? bombing of Pearl Mor
of the community.
°

TOKYO.
An epoch-niakim
ma^netic semi-conductor elemer
with resistor characteristics h
been developed by the elects
technical laboratory of the h
pan Industrial Science and Ted■
nology Agency.
>
and
m 3 ^ouver’s Population was generally unsympathetic T
,
and hostile to Japanese immigrants and their children, the Ja- Temple . .
The government laboratory(Continued from Page 1*>
inSSCes of discrimination in employ­
spokesman
announced that tV <11
ment, housing and1 education. The situation was as bad as, if not Europe, Africa, the Americas, lion square meters (5 million semi-conductor
was manufacture!
tlie. Middle East, Asia and the
worse than, in the United States prior to World War II.
square feet) of space for people through a novel process that ^
^rom Alaska to Australia. to stand, so that works out to 3 enable low cost mass production
The anti-Japanese feeling could not long endure and didn’t
as t bearS "?nt V f011°™g World War II. The Issei faded into The Australian pavilion, one of square meters (10.5 square feet)
As a xesult of the developmer? ”^
he first to be completed, is
background and the Nisei came of age to prove themselves
per person. But the problem is of the high efficiency magnet '^
shaped
like
a
giant
wave
cascadAnother thing that happened was that in Vancouver there were'
that some exhibits will be more resistor, contactless volume ad ^
tar fewer Japanese than there had been before World War TT mg over a mountain.
popular than others, so expec justment and switching for aif
Immediately following World War II, the Japanesewho returned
. ^e Soviet Union built its pa- queues.”
riety of appliances rainging froa
0 Vancouver almost became an unnoticed minority.
into the sk^ but the Unit­
fairgrounds will include radios and TV sets to compute!
the Evacuation brought about another change in that Van- ed States went underground.
onnrA seaks 031 which to rest, models has become feasible,
Dedicated to the 100th birth- ^0,000 seats at whch to eat in­ explained.
no lono.er has the largest Japanese population in Canada
-■ay of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, the cluding one underwater restau­
a?°- ^n® that distinction. Like Chicago in the U S
Dramatic miniaturization 4™
Toi onto attracted large numbers of Japanese after the war and >teel sheath red and white tower rant), 21,500 parking spaces for
h°id on to them. This was in contrast to Chicago whose if the Soviet pavilion soars up- automobiles, two subways which electronics parts has also becont K
wl?Thad hoped to compete on nearly equal terms, population-wise ’\ar^s 328 feet, topped by a giant can deliver 100,000 persons to th* possible due to discovery of ths
f^nge eS’ However, a huge drop rather than a general rise nckle and hammer painted red airgrounds each hour, and 70 revolutionary process, the spoke*
fnU
JaPai^ese population of Chicago made the Nisei there pain­ and visible for miles. It is the rest rooms. Planners fear they man added.
fully aware that the Japanese population “boom” thev ha/°x- .allest building on the expo underestimated the need
Basic research on the develop
fox
peiienced would quickly turn to “bust.” On the other hand* Tor grounds and the most costly for toilets, as well as beds.
ment project was started in IM
Sw Todav1
stabilized quickly and continued to a foreign nation, $20 million.
Expo architects note that they by a selected staff group of tie
m Canada
?
° ’S 16 ce31ter of Japanese Canadian activity
The United States went in the will not need beds for all vi si- laboratory.
®0S1.ie. dii'ection to build its tors. “We expect about 49 mil­
Study is still being conW^B
e m°St JaPa”ese communities on the West Coast of the *>10 million pavilion—three floors lion Japanese to attend the fair” for application of the newly de-^
U.S. have surpassed the pre-World War II levels numerically and undergi'ound covered by a silver xmaeda said. “Of these, 27.5 mil­ veloped semi-conductor to vari^
economically, this does not appear too obvious in Vancouver’s Ja­ roof and looking a bit like a lion will be from the Kinki (Osa­ ous devises, including encodes S
panese community. I opulation-wise there are still fewer Jananp^p bomb shelter.
ka) district. They will spend the for computer.
n^ ancouver that there were prior to World War II 4 fio-nre
The
mathematics
of
Expo
70
day
at Expo and then go home
S’"! 4“ T 5000 is Si” b’ so™ local Japanese residSts a
The laboratory has obtained S
’.ndeed are astounding.
to bed. The remaining 21.4 mil­ patients in Japan and five inferthe rein lent Japanese population of Vancouver.
j^11 tke peak days between 2 lion will come from outside Kinki
lign countries, including the U.S.
- Although Vancouver’s Japanese population is the second law^ and 3 p.m., we expect to have for overnight stops.”
per
Britain and West Germany.
'Ji®
in Canada and is still growing, it has fewer Japanese professional about one half million people in­
kaz
people than cities like Fresno, California, and Portland Oie^on side the expo at the same time,”
Theie aie only about four doctors, four dentists two harriXyc Imaeda said. “We have 1.5 mil- 'iiiHHiiHiiiiiiniiiniiiiHiiiiiiiiiiniinnHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiinmiiiiiiiiniiiiiii pre
Kaj
Read Jessie L. Beattie’s
Sure? ThS
Japanes’e communitv of
.'Nev
\ ancouxei. this small number could be due
“ n
i-nMM' °* -UCr Pr?fessional schools in Canada as "well as to^he
iace discrimination in education which existed before World War if '
A Japanese Canadian story
St. S'^e “p^^^
Available at The New Canadian For $5.50
479 Queen Street West
Toronto 2-B, Ontario
to feeling more comfortable and trusting anion- theii oS kS
JuniiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiHiiniiiiniHiuniiiiiiiuiiiMiimiuuMnunnimninum
this is no longer the case today.
b Wen ow Rum,
JapJS’dS «' fhTlTj^
"Tra"“
best price, quality- and service.
P
"
businesses but to the
Iino
opeXfh,
in
M?1
Read the Pulitzer Prize
not append to the A-ounger 'enel?ti™
obviously does
ther<
winning
Christian Science
crow
There' S
Monitor. Rarely more than
MJ

STRENGTH FOR THE BRIDGE

tap up on
current
affairs
tbs easy way

to small businesses' and ,
multitude of businesses 1here
is b™aVernon"^

‘l'etolhe,r ha,< «em to take
P ’ “‘ a”d “ “»<! in a
existed on Powell St.

so noticeable in Vancouver is >1',^ 6 Population that once was
War II, because of the large Japanese "uEitt^fe

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