Page 1
/O, .1970
Radian
nstratioa
s AssocicUj.
disher
e Editor
ng
Editor
KJESDAY
iome Expo Problems: Prostitutes, Pickpockets, Radicals
Roads
Religions
&
Rak
UlVUiOf llUUU^y IlViluUIIO
Udlb
[OSAKA.—With hundreds of architectural wonders
Motion ever."
fender the official theme of “Progress and Harmony
Mankind” a record of more than 70 participating
gantries will be showing off their most stunning arBiiectural, cultural, industrial and scientific faces
Ball in a new bright pop style.
8 Expo officials are optimistic enough to predict a
Icord attendance of 50 million during the six-month
|They are also optimistic to say that all pavilions
and other architectural undertakings will be com
peted by the official opening date.
fBut there are a lot of problems officials can’t be
|otimistic
taiifle about.
about
TEST
“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.50
ictic”
&
Hills, the site of the biTth™
S”
’
>»??' experts have also been discussine piano to
R SraS„S ^ ’”” ™
They m afl.aid ^
of
sunstrokes before- reaching the Expo site.
Te«-ar Pre$ents a number of other problems, too.
. . Kc experts fear that drivers unable to find
parting room at the show site might lock up their
cars and leave them behind somewhere on one of th-'
nearby roads. Suppose other drivers have no choice
out to abandon their cars. too.
drivers in Osaka are already openlv saying
that they won’t take passengers bound for Expo. Thev
explain that their earnings will drop sharply once
their cars are stalled in the traffic jam around the
show site.
_ Traffic is just the beginning of problems confront
ing Expo officials.
They estimate daily attendance at 300,000 during
..... .. ...... .. .............................. "...
(Continued on Page 8)
..................... ■•■■•• •••••«>•«•! nimumini
he Dem danadian
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
By MISS J.L. BEATTIE
$5.00
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Oriain
West
ristie)
ven
anile-long-Ten-
i
., N.D.
1-1989
nosan’^V'^^
r""l""“"1..... "■''"''•"■''‘'"■■'H""*«»"""i>n«Hii>>iii>..iiiNmiimiiimIm
t.
*
They are terrified fA
Joi. XXXIV-No. 9
.......
TUESDAY, FEBKUARY 3
i'><HH«HiiHiin>iiimiiiH.niii1|li<mi|1Hllll|)lnullHlullm.1^
Hayakawa’s Statement
On Political Withdrawal
1970
.............................................................
Toronto, Ont
Japan Imperial Family Sets A
Busy Schedule For New Expo Year
Town
■
Dr. S. I. Hayakawa, colorful president of San Francisco State
TOKYO.—The ____
year tAm
1970 promises to be a busv autumn this year
receiving
in audience about 30
College, withdrew from the political stage where his hard-line op- 0116 u r
-880;
Emperor and Empress as well as other state guests, members of royalties, presidents and
gpsition to student disorders had thrust him as a possible U.S. members of the Imperial Familv because of th" other high officials of foreign countries. who will
nice)
nate candidate.
many state guests and other distinguished persons be coming to Japan for the world exposition.
“
I
am
going
to
continue
with
my
task
of
defending
and
ex™°. ar® expected to come to Japan to visit Expo Expo ’70 opens its ”
”
. Osaka
_ .
month
ft
run in
jending academic freedom and protecting the intellectual integrity 70 in Osaka.
March 15.
All members of the Imperial Family, including
of academic life,” Hayakawa told a news conference.
The Emperor, who Is well known for his bio
The 63-year-old semantics professor has become one of the Their Majesties, are in the best of health as thev logical studies, will also continue his research
fest-known figures in California since he took over at the violence- greeted the New Year which heralded the dawn of this year on hydrozoa, a species of marine life,
a new decade.
torn college 13 months ago.
and especially ferns and moss.
The Emperor will turn 69 this vear and the
The Emperor and Empress, like any other
He had been considered a possible candidate for the democratic Empress,
67.
ome
grandparents, in Japan and the world, are showing
nomination to oppose Sen. George Murphy, R-Calif., or for CaliThey will be kept extremely busy spring through. much affection and devotion toward their nine
wrnia Superintendent of Instruction to oppose Dr. Rafferty.
- grandchildren, including the three
•
Hayakawa’s statement at the recent news conference is
children of the Crown Prince and
nnted here in its entirety as follows:
i Princess—Prince Hiro, Prince
1 Aya and Princess Nori.
For many months public opinion polls have been telling me
Prince Hiro, the 9-year-old
TOKYO.
—
Japan
’
s
super-ex
Since the first trainload of pas
a YhaVe J1 chance of being elected to the United States Senate press Bullet trains are making
eldest
son of the Crown Prince
i thousands of people have been urging me, in conversation, by money in a hurry, but their own sengers sped from Tokyo to Osa and Princess, started to show
ka in three hours and 20 minutes,
n e?ra’ t° run. It is difficult to pass up such an
spending it faster.
nearly 250 million persons have interest in Bud'dhist statues and
P unity. It is given to only one hundred individuals in the ersInare
Haniwa clay images ever since
the five years since the 125r
on.e tinie’ and to °uly two in the entire populous mile-per-hour electric trains made taken the ride across a country his trip to Nara and Mie prefec
.st
side dotted with rice paddies, ture Last autumn.
L
m. California, to serve as U.S. Senator, which, except for
their debut in time for the 1964 tea farms and lakes.
2581
«
and v’ce presidency, is the highest elective office Tokyo Olympics, the line has
Prince Aya, the 4-year-old sec
During its first year of opera
ance like thisT1 C3n aspire- How can you turn your back on a grossed nearly §1.39 billion on tion,
ond
son, likes riding his bicycle
the line carried 60,000 pas
which
was presented to him as a
an initial investment of SI.06 sengers daily. In the first half
cat
now?ve?’ th$re is even more in the prospect of a senate billion.
birthday
presented in November
i™?
1S/°r
average person. Among those who are | _ Net profit for the period was of 1969, with round trip runs by his parents.
e most strongly to run are a number of Japanese-Ame-jI $305.6 million, a remarkable feat tripled from the initial 30, the
Princess Nori, who was born
-eri/p nt k ■° dxa1nd new — people who went through the ex- considering- that the Bullet trains air-conditioned coaches carried last year, will observe her first
taken from their homes and farms and businesses operated at a loss of $57 millirm 200,000 persons daily.
in April. She is expect
The line—Japanese call it Shin birthday
ln desert ‘ relocation centers” during World War H. for the first two years. And that
ed
to
start
walking this month.
kansen, literally “new trunk line”
?V0^n, mostly immigrants and second-generation the rest of Japan’s nationally- —
The
Crown
Prince and Princess
is operated by the Japan Na will be making
$he faith
^lsej) endured the relocation experience in owned railways still .are losing tional
official visit
Railways JNR, a public to Malaysia late an
in
February as
ustiep
i wartime anxieties and hysteria were over, money.
utility bronch of the national the proxies of the Emperor.
u^Tice would ultimately prevail.
Terminals of the 320-mile Bul government. JNR operates 244
To prepare for the trip, they
let line are in Tokyo and Osaka, other lines throughout the coun
.
Only 25 Years After
will
start receiving briefings on
after
turned out to be well founded. A mere 25 years host city for the 1970 World Ex try, 234 of which are losing the political and economic situa
position.
I mony.
hnd
m1011’ .JaPanese-Americans have attained a secure
tion in Malaysia as well as on
■chievement
aC^ U} the mainstream of American life. This
the history and customs of that
Cultureai d h
ge y dUe ^° their own eff°rts, of course, in agricountry in late January.
< Mlv bv thl
was helped along immeaThe Crown Pincess who under
* little of thi?n ^cord of Nisei fighting men in World War II. But
went an operation on her left
States had /t chlevement would have been possible if the United
ribs last autumn, has fully re
Year* and
a a on^ a nation capable of outgrowing racial
covered and is looking forward
3
T T P judlces of earlier times.
TOKYO. — Ingrid Bergman, of course, the theater is mar to the coming trip.
ft^isn anmh^ti^1116^11.8! as we^ as to other Americans of after seeing a modern Japanese velous — they take it for grant
Following their return to To
States SenntY
PP^hihty of my being elected to the United musical version of “Gone With ed here but theaters like that are kyo, the Crown Prince, who is
^motional
v1
shate of California is therefore a deeply The Wind,” extended her tour hard, to get in America: the the honorary president of Expo
^^eneration
xkU CTan imagine what it would mean less than a to include a classical Kabuki per lighting, the sound system, every '70, and the Princess will make
thing.”
repeated trips to the exposition.
generator)
e Japanese relocation, only a little more than formance.
She declined an opportunity to
Shining town
. e last Chinese was lynched in a California
Told of reports that she was
They are scheduled to attend
S birthriYt
r’J state represented in the U.S. Senate bv see the opening of the Tokyo interested in a possible New York the opening and closing ceremo
9 In South
beP °f the Yellow Peril!
sumo wrestling matches, however. production of “Scarlett,” she nies as well as the Japan Dav
The Swedish actress arrived laughed heartily and said: “I function.
bnto law and
Rhodesia, racial discrimination is written
oere
recently for her first visit could play the part of Mammy,
India, it
by the full force of police and military.
to Japan.
perhaps?”
S1' years old
q
t.° .5eb^OUs beliefs and practices thousands
“
My
husband
was
supposed
to
Miss Bergman said she has not
®neant “race.”} T
stflt word for caste is varns, which originally
^ U.S. Senator if i11050 °}Ve It to my fellow Americans to become :ome with me but had to cancel, been working since completion
^ed to be remind i Cfn 111 order to demonstrate again what we -o I came by myself,” she said. of her last film, “A Walk in The
^ca has mereh- th °” namely, that racial discrimination in Ame- ‘Twenty-two hours over the Pole Spring Rain” last June follow
TOKYO. — As of Jan. 1, 1970,
Ifhanging nation 6 san-cHon of custom — and that in this rapidly from Paris — it was the longest ing ‘Cactus Flower,” she has no
the
hoisting of the Japanese na
trip
I
’
ve
ever
made.
”
plans for the moment, she said.
J'^n from HpMHa?Sjnis change from generation to generation,
tional
flag over public buildings
A friend of Harold Rome, com
^^ai in n
to decade, so that the unthinkable becomes the
“I am going to Kyoto and will
1
Man/ne 1
°f a feW yearsposer of the music for “Scar- be there and in Osaka with will be permitted, thanks to a
feso urged
those concerned with education, have 'ett, which opened here, Miss friends,” she said. “I wanted to liberalization of the flag law
which was agreed to late last
instruction. Th;- n • ^e P°st of State Superintendent of Public Bergman said she came partly see something of Japan because month by the Japanese and Unit
to see the production. With an I have only been in Hong Kong
If15 capacity
- t°° Is a tempting idea. Dr. Max Rafferty, in all-Japanese
cast, it has played before in this part of the world.” ed States governments. Until the
l^6 many c'ou/X. rtstee °{ the State College system, has shown
announcement of the change, the
to
favorable
reviews in Tokyo’s
jy a liberal and\ * ^^ hindnesses. Nevertheless, I am educationalJapan’s current near-freezing national flag could be raised only
huge
Imperial
Theater.
।
“‘
e is an avowed conservative. Since so much that
weather presented no problem —
Japanese national holidays
“I did enjoy it very much,” she it's nothing compared to Paris on
and
the three days of the New
I
(Continued on Page 8)
said. “It was charmingly done, right now.”
Year observances.
Japan’s Bullet Train Spends Faster Than Earns
Ingrid Bergman In Japan
Banzai! Hinomaru
Rises Again!
Radian
nstratioa
s AssocicUj.
disher
e Editor
ng
Editor
KJESDAY
iome Expo Problems: Prostitutes, Pickpockets, Radicals
Roads
Religions
&
Rak
UlVUiOf llUUU^y IlViluUIIO
Udlb
[OSAKA.—With hundreds of architectural wonders
Motion ever."
fender the official theme of “Progress and Harmony
Mankind” a record of more than 70 participating
gantries will be showing off their most stunning arBiiectural, cultural, industrial and scientific faces
Ball in a new bright pop style.
8 Expo officials are optimistic enough to predict a
Icord attendance of 50 million during the six-month
|They are also optimistic to say that all pavilions
and other architectural undertakings will be com
peted by the official opening date.
fBut there are a lot of problems officials can’t be
|otimistic
taiifle about.
about
TEST
“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.50
ictic”
&
Hills, the site of the biTth™
S”
’
>»??' experts have also been discussine piano to
R SraS„S ^ ’”” ™
They m afl.aid ^
of
sunstrokes before- reaching the Expo site.
Te«-ar Pre$ents a number of other problems, too.
. . Kc experts fear that drivers unable to find
parting room at the show site might lock up their
cars and leave them behind somewhere on one of th-'
nearby roads. Suppose other drivers have no choice
out to abandon their cars. too.
drivers in Osaka are already openlv saying
that they won’t take passengers bound for Expo. Thev
explain that their earnings will drop sharply once
their cars are stalled in the traffic jam around the
show site.
_ Traffic is just the beginning of problems confront
ing Expo officials.
They estimate daily attendance at 300,000 during
..... .. ...... .. .............................. "...
(Continued on Page 8)
..................... ■•■■•• •••••«>•«•! nimumini
he Dem danadian
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
By MISS J.L. BEATTIE
$5.00
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Oriain
West
ristie)
ven
anile-long-Ten-
i
., N.D.
1-1989
nosan’^V'^^
r""l""“"1..... "■''"''•"■''‘'"■■'H""*«»"""i>n«Hii>>iii>..iiiNmiimiiimIm
t.
*
They are terrified fA
Joi. XXXIV-No. 9
.......
TUESDAY, FEBKUARY 3
i'><HH«HiiHiin>iiimiiiH.niii1|li<mi|1Hllll|)lnullHlullm.1^
Hayakawa’s Statement
On Political Withdrawal
1970
.............................................................
Toronto, Ont
Japan Imperial Family Sets A
Busy Schedule For New Expo Year
Town
■
Dr. S. I. Hayakawa, colorful president of San Francisco State
TOKYO.—The ____
year tAm
1970 promises to be a busv autumn this year
receiving
in audience about 30
College, withdrew from the political stage where his hard-line op- 0116 u r
-880;
Emperor and Empress as well as other state guests, members of royalties, presidents and
gpsition to student disorders had thrust him as a possible U.S. members of the Imperial Familv because of th" other high officials of foreign countries. who will
nice)
nate candidate.
many state guests and other distinguished persons be coming to Japan for the world exposition.
“
I
am
going
to
continue
with
my
task
of
defending
and
ex™°. ar® expected to come to Japan to visit Expo Expo ’70 opens its ”
”
. Osaka
_ .
month
ft
run in
jending academic freedom and protecting the intellectual integrity 70 in Osaka.
March 15.
All members of the Imperial Family, including
of academic life,” Hayakawa told a news conference.
The Emperor, who Is well known for his bio
The 63-year-old semantics professor has become one of the Their Majesties, are in the best of health as thev logical studies, will also continue his research
fest-known figures in California since he took over at the violence- greeted the New Year which heralded the dawn of this year on hydrozoa, a species of marine life,
a new decade.
torn college 13 months ago.
and especially ferns and moss.
The Emperor will turn 69 this vear and the
The Emperor and Empress, like any other
He had been considered a possible candidate for the democratic Empress,
67.
ome
grandparents, in Japan and the world, are showing
nomination to oppose Sen. George Murphy, R-Calif., or for CaliThey will be kept extremely busy spring through. much affection and devotion toward their nine
wrnia Superintendent of Instruction to oppose Dr. Rafferty.
- grandchildren, including the three
•
Hayakawa’s statement at the recent news conference is
children of the Crown Prince and
nnted here in its entirety as follows:
i Princess—Prince Hiro, Prince
1 Aya and Princess Nori.
For many months public opinion polls have been telling me
Prince Hiro, the 9-year-old
TOKYO.
—
Japan
’
s
super-ex
Since the first trainload of pas
a YhaVe J1 chance of being elected to the United States Senate press Bullet trains are making
eldest
son of the Crown Prince
i thousands of people have been urging me, in conversation, by money in a hurry, but their own sengers sped from Tokyo to Osa and Princess, started to show
ka in three hours and 20 minutes,
n e?ra’ t° run. It is difficult to pass up such an
spending it faster.
nearly 250 million persons have interest in Bud'dhist statues and
P unity. It is given to only one hundred individuals in the ersInare
Haniwa clay images ever since
the five years since the 125r
on.e tinie’ and to °uly two in the entire populous mile-per-hour electric trains made taken the ride across a country his trip to Nara and Mie prefec
.st
side dotted with rice paddies, ture Last autumn.
L
m. California, to serve as U.S. Senator, which, except for
their debut in time for the 1964 tea farms and lakes.
2581
«
and v’ce presidency, is the highest elective office Tokyo Olympics, the line has
Prince Aya, the 4-year-old sec
During its first year of opera
ance like thisT1 C3n aspire- How can you turn your back on a grossed nearly §1.39 billion on tion,
ond
son, likes riding his bicycle
the line carried 60,000 pas
which
was presented to him as a
an initial investment of SI.06 sengers daily. In the first half
cat
now?ve?’ th$re is even more in the prospect of a senate billion.
birthday
presented in November
i™?
1S/°r
average person. Among those who are | _ Net profit for the period was of 1969, with round trip runs by his parents.
e most strongly to run are a number of Japanese-Ame-jI $305.6 million, a remarkable feat tripled from the initial 30, the
Princess Nori, who was born
-eri/p nt k ■° dxa1nd new — people who went through the ex- considering- that the Bullet trains air-conditioned coaches carried last year, will observe her first
taken from their homes and farms and businesses operated at a loss of $57 millirm 200,000 persons daily.
in April. She is expect
The line—Japanese call it Shin birthday
ln desert ‘ relocation centers” during World War H. for the first two years. And that
ed
to
start
walking this month.
kansen, literally “new trunk line”
?V0^n, mostly immigrants and second-generation the rest of Japan’s nationally- —
The
Crown
Prince and Princess
is operated by the Japan Na will be making
$he faith
^lsej) endured the relocation experience in owned railways still .are losing tional
official visit
Railways JNR, a public to Malaysia late an
in
February as
ustiep
i wartime anxieties and hysteria were over, money.
utility bronch of the national the proxies of the Emperor.
u^Tice would ultimately prevail.
Terminals of the 320-mile Bul government. JNR operates 244
To prepare for the trip, they
let line are in Tokyo and Osaka, other lines throughout the coun
.
Only 25 Years After
will
start receiving briefings on
after
turned out to be well founded. A mere 25 years host city for the 1970 World Ex try, 234 of which are losing the political and economic situa
position.
I mony.
hnd
m1011’ .JaPanese-Americans have attained a secure
tion in Malaysia as well as on
■chievement
aC^ U} the mainstream of American life. This
the history and customs of that
Cultureai d h
ge y dUe ^° their own eff°rts, of course, in agricountry in late January.
< Mlv bv thl
was helped along immeaThe Crown Pincess who under
* little of thi?n ^cord of Nisei fighting men in World War II. But
went an operation on her left
States had /t chlevement would have been possible if the United
ribs last autumn, has fully re
Year* and
a a on^ a nation capable of outgrowing racial
covered and is looking forward
3
T T P judlces of earlier times.
TOKYO. — Ingrid Bergman, of course, the theater is mar to the coming trip.
ft^isn anmh^ti^1116^11.8! as we^ as to other Americans of after seeing a modern Japanese velous — they take it for grant
Following their return to To
States SenntY
PP^hihty of my being elected to the United musical version of “Gone With ed here but theaters like that are kyo, the Crown Prince, who is
^motional
v1
shate of California is therefore a deeply The Wind,” extended her tour hard, to get in America: the the honorary president of Expo
^^eneration
xkU CTan imagine what it would mean less than a to include a classical Kabuki per lighting, the sound system, every '70, and the Princess will make
thing.”
repeated trips to the exposition.
generator)
e Japanese relocation, only a little more than formance.
She declined an opportunity to
Shining town
. e last Chinese was lynched in a California
Told of reports that she was
They are scheduled to attend
S birthriYt
r’J state represented in the U.S. Senate bv see the opening of the Tokyo interested in a possible New York the opening and closing ceremo
9 In South
beP °f the Yellow Peril!
sumo wrestling matches, however. production of “Scarlett,” she nies as well as the Japan Dav
The Swedish actress arrived laughed heartily and said: “I function.
bnto law and
Rhodesia, racial discrimination is written
oere
recently for her first visit could play the part of Mammy,
India, it
by the full force of police and military.
to Japan.
perhaps?”
S1' years old
q
t.° .5eb^OUs beliefs and practices thousands
“
My
husband
was
supposed
to
Miss Bergman said she has not
®neant “race.”} T
stflt word for caste is varns, which originally
^ U.S. Senator if i11050 °}Ve It to my fellow Americans to become :ome with me but had to cancel, been working since completion
^ed to be remind i Cfn 111 order to demonstrate again what we -o I came by myself,” she said. of her last film, “A Walk in The
^ca has mereh- th °” namely, that racial discrimination in Ame- ‘Twenty-two hours over the Pole Spring Rain” last June follow
TOKYO. — As of Jan. 1, 1970,
Ifhanging nation 6 san-cHon of custom — and that in this rapidly from Paris — it was the longest ing ‘Cactus Flower,” she has no
the
hoisting of the Japanese na
trip
I
’
ve
ever
made.
”
plans for the moment, she said.
J'^n from HpMHa?Sjnis change from generation to generation,
tional
flag over public buildings
A friend of Harold Rome, com
^^ai in n
to decade, so that the unthinkable becomes the
“I am going to Kyoto and will
1
Man/ne 1
°f a feW yearsposer of the music for “Scar- be there and in Osaka with will be permitted, thanks to a
feso urged
those concerned with education, have 'ett, which opened here, Miss friends,” she said. “I wanted to liberalization of the flag law
which was agreed to late last
instruction. Th;- n • ^e P°st of State Superintendent of Public Bergman said she came partly see something of Japan because month by the Japanese and Unit
to see the production. With an I have only been in Hong Kong
If15 capacity
- t°° Is a tempting idea. Dr. Max Rafferty, in all-Japanese
cast, it has played before in this part of the world.” ed States governments. Until the
l^6 many c'ou/X. rtstee °{ the State College system, has shown
announcement of the change, the
to
favorable
reviews in Tokyo’s
jy a liberal and\ * ^^ hindnesses. Nevertheless, I am educationalJapan’s current near-freezing national flag could be raised only
huge
Imperial
Theater.
।
“‘
e is an avowed conservative. Since so much that
weather presented no problem —
Japanese national holidays
“I did enjoy it very much,” she it's nothing compared to Paris on
and
the three days of the New
I
(Continued on Page 8)
said. “It was charmingly done, right now.”
Year observances.
Japan’s Bullet Train Spends Faster Than Earns
Ingrid Bergman In Japan
Banzai! Hinomaru
Rises Again!
Page 2
PAGE 2
Tuesday, Febr
£ IX
5
it
0
(5
6
(7)
It
(5
b
(5
£
Er
€
£
B
r
15
b
rt
03
03
5
It £
§ *
h
S
7«
£ °F
®
11.
3 it ?
- 5
?|
It
SO
ag
Hi
®i
so
%
>k
fl
^Jx^.^c.xagGA^. -
7
b
c Ebi
M
?Or <
L <50
V '>■
2>
v^
iz>
O
Ill
£
ifMj
Uft
Ijfc
fr
ft ^i
to? ft
Ft
O
kJ
F?
t
<7)
<3
Lt
#
Ift
fill
7b'
I*
1$
o
M-
I '
9
>c
<50
73
fl
3
10:
10:
HI
.^®t.
i
9
O
it
Ebi,
FJ
W t$
f?
(i
ft
7J
It
ei
10: JW
9
Ij)
/b
Bl
Lt
rjo
L
ft
VIK
It
TORONTO: I I | Richmond St.,
West Toronto I IO
364-0301
VANCOUVER: 777 Hornby St..
V ancouver
688-661 I
iSWW?
sm,
JAPAN WORLD EXPOSITION
. ^
^ **w^
Tuesday, Febr
£ IX
5
it
0
(5
6
(7)
It
(5
b
(5
£
Er
€
£
B
r
15
b
rt
03
03
5
It £
§ *
h
S
7«
£ °F
®
11.
3 it ?
- 5
?|
It
SO
ag
Hi
®i
so
%
>k
fl
^Jx^.^c.xagGA^. -
7
b
c Ebi
M
?Or <
L <50
V '>■
2>
v^
iz>
O
Ill
£
ifMj
Uft
Ijfc
fr
ft ^i
to? ft
Ft
O
kJ
F?
t
<7)
<3
Lt
#
Ift
fill
7b'
I*
1$
o
M-
I '
9
>c
<50
73
fl
3
10:
10:
HI
.^®t.
i
9
O
it
Ebi,
FJ
W t$
f?
(i
ft
7J
It
ei
10: JW
9
Ij)
/b
Bl
Lt
rjo
L
ft
VIK
It
TORONTO: I I | Richmond St.,
West Toronto I IO
364-0301
VANCOUVER: 777 Hornby St..
V ancouver
688-661 I
iSWW?
sm,
JAPAN WORLD EXPOSITION
. ^
^ **w^
Page 3
N E W
esday.
£
50
'far
it
PAGE 3
d^
a
»
ft
5
'C 0
M
£
c
(X
V'
4<
5
di
tc
tO
It
5
Pg
7
(1
CD
£
0
i*
ii
3
£>
6
O
IX
/h
IX
©
7
£ 0
d»
%
£ P^
£
IX
Ze
£
^
5
CD
IX
i’
$
$
I'
£ ©
T
IX
IX
rR
ill 11 £ ^ 0
5
y’^K h a
' IX T ^ ^
i
in*
5 §
i
6
$
zb
n
7J
ci
IX
IX
IX
t IX
815
5
Fa
it
IX
d»
4
s
w|^^rap ^ f ^ t t r
^i
V'
(X
© IX
13
P
^ft^f^^®^^ b ^ 1
d»
7
in
|pj
C'
I
K
3
z # & «g $} ^
#50
CO
pwgft
I
%
£
o
IX
V'
4
IX
7
£
IP
IX
i'
©
IX
El
in d>
5
36
©
pg
A
IC
IP 5
©
it K
IX
0
©
zb
I®
5
r$
£
3
0’
in
r
£
y
it
#
KM
CD
SB^IXS^(zK»)
^^+s®
535-5402
445-1338
Toronto
fl
X *
7
H
IZ
/t b
3&#/iS
16^0
815
Aft
4“
O ^^
© in
IS &
INSTANT COOKING BASE
Irene
466-2041
466-7962
KK
^^^OlbM GLOiA^i
^■“'M 5'-IK0S!!Wl^i
; ?<i 1 OZ (28^-1
I ^2
BAMBOO GROVE
692 No. 3 Road,
Richmond^ B. C.
Phono OR. 8-9585
(JR
8-958*
i 942 PAPE AVE.
esday.
£
50
'far
it
PAGE 3
d^
a
»
ft
5
'C 0
M
£
c
(X
V'
4<
5
di
tc
tO
It
5
Pg
7
(1
CD
£
0
i*
ii
3
£>
6
O
IX
/h
IX
©
7
£ 0
d»
%
£ P^
£
IX
Ze
£
^
5
CD
IX
i’
$
$
I'
£ ©
T
IX
IX
rR
ill 11 £ ^ 0
5
y’^K h a
' IX T ^ ^
i
in*
5 §
i
6
$
zb
n
7J
ci
IX
IX
IX
t IX
815
5
Fa
it
IX
d»
4
s
w|^^rap ^ f ^ t t r
^i
V'
(X
© IX
13
P
^ft^f^^®^^ b ^ 1
d»
7
in
|pj
C'
I
K
3
z # & «g $} ^
#50
CO
pwgft
I
%
£
o
IX
V'
4
IX
7
£
IP
IX
i'
©
IX
El
in d>
5
36
©
pg
A
IC
IP 5
©
it K
IX
0
©
zb
I®
5
r$
£
3
0’
in
r
£
y
it
#
KM
CD
SB^IXS^(zK»)
^^+s®
535-5402
445-1338
Toronto
fl
X *
7
H
IZ
/t b
3&#/iS
16^0
815
Aft
4“
O ^^
© in
IS &
INSTANT COOKING BASE
Irene
466-2041
466-7962
KK
^^^OlbM GLOiA^i
^■“'M 5'-IK0S!!Wl^i
; ?<i 1 OZ (28^-1
I ^2
BAMBOO GROVE
692 No. 3 Road,
Richmond^ B. C.
Phono OR. 8-9585
(JR
8-958*
i 942 PAPE AVE.
Page 4
PAGE 4
/^J
IX
7?
01
K
It
S
6
It
It
lx
IX
(3
(7)
CD
0
V>
IX
oj
NJ fr'
li
H b
6
5
ft
K
IX
w
TO
G
11
NJ
At
b
IP
©
a
5
ft
I'
C'
IX
IX
b'
d*
5- u
tx
®
It
ft
SC
0
3
IX
£
i
a
ft
IX
I'
NJ
IX
z-k
5
IX
iC
^t
ft
&
-5
3
tt
-5
&
iC
50
© H
3
£
K
1
w
b
1W # -P
iz
3
* 12 i
a
5
IC
K
b' d*
&& $ 0
5 ©
a fl
11
IX
At F J
^i
®i
It
B UI
ft f$B£ £
^AA^^
- A’ ® z
0
^'2^wa
)
2AHte
a
®
®
I 4 IX
° I ULI
YUi ra
^^$1
5
0■
' lw
it
ui
##£
^AAI
®7«
T « 1
Q
^Kfi
Lff^4
n ip
S i ^
It ^
* no
TOW GOB
’’toXTbX^
telephone eXi. 6^64
/^J
IX
7?
01
K
It
S
6
It
It
lx
IX
(3
(7)
CD
0
V>
IX
oj
NJ fr'
li
H b
6
5
ft
K
IX
w
TO
G
11
NJ
At
b
IP
©
a
5
ft
I'
C'
IX
IX
b'
d*
5- u
tx
®
It
ft
SC
0
3
IX
£
i
a
ft
IX
I'
NJ
IX
z-k
5
IX
iC
^t
ft
&
-5
3
tt
-5
&
iC
50
© H
3
£
K
1
w
b
1W # -P
iz
3
* 12 i
a
5
IC
K
b' d*
&& $ 0
5 ©
a fl
11
IX
At F J
^i
®i
It
B UI
ft f$B£ £
^AA^^
- A’ ® z
0
^'2^wa
)
2AHte
a
®
®
I 4 IX
° I ULI
YUi ra
^^$1
5
0■
' lw
it
ui
##£
^AAI
®7«
T « 1
Q
^Kfi
Lff^4
n ip
S i ^
It ^
* no
TOW GOB
’’toXTbX^
telephone eXi. 6^64
Page 5
u es d ay. February 3, 1970
N
d>
PAGE g
di
ii
It
zk
O
di
di
i'f
Ft I'
d»
©
di
CD
6
Ft
©
b
FC
Ft
di
ft
ft
di
d*
di
Ft d» V'
^
ft
72
d*
n
di
Ft
cd
di
Ft
di
M
Ft
ft
u
if
£
Ft
ft
Ft
/b
5
Ft FC
Ft
V' 15
O
<D
d*
rife
zk FC
ft i
±
di
Fi
7?
di
zk
t zk
Ft
Ft
Ft
di
FC
ft
ft
di
ft Ft
©
t
ti
di
di
a
Hi'
i
zu
FC
di
5
di
di
ft
Ft di
Ft
i
di
di
zl-
Ft
-zk
O
d*
Ft ft
§ 1
31
1 ©
d* ^
b
3
di
di
di
di
i
di
<ii'
FC
b di
di
di
di
?u
di
Ft
di
r
Ft
$
5
di
cd
Ft
di
o
I'
{Fij
CD
in
©
n
Ft
X’ Ft
Ft
ft
I'
ft
tv F;
9
t
di
di
£
d*
5
di
b
di
0
di
Ft* di
FC
di
Ft
FC
Li
Ft
f Ft
FC
Ft
£
ft
di
V'
l'
5
zk
Ft
d*
i
i
zk di
5
d*
AW
*
£
di
O
O ?k
I'
*
if
$
b
FC
K P>
Ft
Ft
CD
V' 3
ft
Q
Ft
Ft
F5
5 d*
I'
I'
H
b
ft
3
©
ft
zk
Ft
Ft
CD
o
0
di
FC
/u
Ft
9
5
zk
rm
6
* 6
CD
t
6
£
ft
o
Ft
5
di
SU
co
i =
Ft ^
Afi?
y
di
ft
CD
5
FC
b
Ft
di
H
T
A
“
^OO^tg + ^ + i + ^e!B^lr
®
E £
A^IE
^e©
# it 4
^^
% tfi
72
:ft^ &
S^^
0
SO
M
^w
0 W*
“
A
£—i
*W*a*Fft»ft4-S4.SiE.t.|E^^fJ^^|®-®+^-
in
#4t
^&Hi
di
CD
^® ft
it
mso
SO
so
A
so
H
SO
left
<e?
N
d>
PAGE g
di
ii
It
zk
O
di
di
i'f
Ft I'
d»
©
di
CD
6
Ft
©
b
FC
Ft
di
ft
ft
di
d*
di
Ft d» V'
^
ft
72
d*
n
di
Ft
cd
di
Ft
di
M
Ft
ft
u
if
£
Ft
ft
Ft
/b
5
Ft FC
Ft
V' 15
O
<D
d*
rife
zk FC
ft i
±
di
Fi
7?
di
zk
t zk
Ft
Ft
Ft
di
FC
ft
ft
di
ft Ft
©
t
ti
di
di
a
Hi'
i
zu
FC
di
5
di
di
ft
Ft di
Ft
i
di
di
zl-
Ft
-zk
O
d*
Ft ft
§ 1
31
1 ©
d* ^
b
3
di
di
di
di
i
di
<ii'
FC
b di
di
di
di
?u
di
Ft
di
r
Ft
$
5
di
cd
Ft
di
o
I'
{Fij
CD
in
©
n
Ft
X’ Ft
Ft
ft
I'
ft
tv F;
9
t
di
di
£
d*
5
di
b
di
0
di
Ft* di
FC
di
Ft
FC
Li
Ft
f Ft
FC
Ft
£
ft
di
V'
l'
5
zk
Ft
d*
i
i
zk di
5
d*
AW
*
£
di
O
O ?k
I'
*
if
$
b
FC
K P>
Ft
Ft
CD
V' 3
ft
Q
Ft
Ft
F5
5 d*
I'
I'
H
b
ft
3
©
ft
zk
Ft
Ft
CD
o
0
di
FC
/u
Ft
9
5
zk
rm
6
* 6
CD
t
6
£
ft
o
Ft
5
di
SU
co
i =
Ft ^
Afi?
y
di
ft
CD
5
FC
b
Ft
di
H
T
A
“
^OO^tg + ^ + i + ^e!B^lr
®
E £
A^IE
^e©
# it 4
^^
% tfi
72
:ft^ &
S^^
0
SO
M
^w
0 W*
“
A
£—i
*W*a*Fft»ft4-S4.SiE.t.|E^^fJ^^|®-®+^-
in
#4t
^&Hi
di
CD
^® ft
it
mso
SO
so
A
so
H
SO
left
<e?
Page 6
PAGE 6
N E W
It
a
B
g
5
£
It
O
IX
Z
2
K It
6
W
3
K
It
a
fi
b
lm
It
w ir
M
(t
V'
n
6
p^
i
IX
^*
EE
3
V'
3
#
IX
b
3
It
tc
3
5
It
It
6
IX
3
it
1^^'
ii
©J
NEW
3
3
AX
?
W
H
Zp
H
IX
£
CD
It 0
3
It
Zp
Zp
a
it.
# ^ 3
4
ft
iZZ
y^^ 0
*5
VI
B
6
*
Ji!
0
5
JH
»> I'
# 5
IC
It it ic
3
f
k
D»
FC
ks®
^m^
^-^1
7)
6
/II
CANADIAN
479 Queen St. W
Toronto 133, Oni
Phone 366-5005
Second class mail
registration
number 0366
Jf|
*4t
the
D>
»*
3
B
n
Ip
3
IX
7
Z ^ £
IC
Zp ~
7
TO
i RS
IX
IX IC
b
0
*2*^**«BI15
SU
,
m!^2^w+‘
ic
3
(X
a
X^E££?Of®w*
r
it
it ^n
ft
1
B'&ffi
It
0
Zp’
IX
IC
Zp
1
£
i
FC
0
It
IC
M
3
£
3
ft.
0
It
i>
3
IC
n
It
GJ
©
it
ft M
~ a
ZK
5
IP
it
ft
B
3
V'
ZK
SI
It
Si
It 3
*
V'
It
7
i’
ft
3 3
It
a
3
n
IC
i^'
a
fX
It
V'
S‘
3
i'
3
£
$ftW
»*
It
0
z
©
b
0
3 it
S|
■
i
it
i'
t
0
it
^J
IX
3
CD
I'
^*
ds
It
It
n y»<
IX
b
IC
i»
it
IX
M
IC
d>
JS
It
^J
0
31
W
l'
3
it
3
it
©
'X
3
n
di
$
IC
ft
it
It
&
it
IC
3
3
ADI
3
RS
CIT
N E W
It
a
B
g
5
£
It
O
IX
Z
2
K It
6
W
3
K
It
a
fi
b
lm
It
w ir
M
(t
V'
n
6
p^
i
IX
^*
EE
3
V'
3
#
IX
b
3
It
tc
3
5
It
It
6
IX
3
it
1^^'
ii
©J
NEW
3
3
AX
?
W
H
Zp
H
IX
£
CD
It 0
3
It
Zp
Zp
a
it.
# ^ 3
4
ft
iZZ
y^^ 0
*5
VI
B
6
*
Ji!
0
5
JH
»> I'
# 5
IC
It it ic
3
f
k
D»
FC
ks®
^m^
^-^1
7)
6
/II
CANADIAN
479 Queen St. W
Toronto 133, Oni
Phone 366-5005
Second class mail
registration
number 0366
Jf|
*4t
the
D>
»*
3
B
n
Ip
3
IX
7
Z ^ £
IC
Zp ~
7
TO
i RS
IX
IX IC
b
0
*2*^**«BI15
SU
,
m!^2^w+‘
ic
3
(X
a
X^E££?Of®w*
r
it
it ^n
ft
1
B'&ffi
It
0
Zp’
IX
IC
Zp
1
£
i
FC
0
It
IC
M
3
£
3
ft.
0
It
i>
3
IC
n
It
GJ
©
it
ft M
~ a
ZK
5
IP
it
ft
B
3
V'
ZK
SI
It
Si
It 3
*
V'
It
7
i’
ft
3 3
It
a
3
n
IC
i^'
a
fX
It
V'
S‘
3
i'
3
£
$ftW
»*
It
0
z
©
b
0
3 it
S|
■
i
it
i'
t
0
it
^J
IX
3
CD
I'
^*
ds
It
It
n y»<
IX
b
IC
i»
it
IX
M
IC
d>
JS
It
^J
0
31
W
l'
3
it
3
it
©
'X
3
n
di
$
IC
ft
it
It
&
it
IC
3
3
ADI
3
RS
CIT
Page 7
February 3. 1970
PAGE 7
;#Ioniiji Kai General Meeting Feb. 10 At JCC Centre
Yoshisuke Kurihara:
Hawaiian Issei Hero
K it « good policy to
■an the HIGHT POLICY
Consult
WiHiam Wales Ltd
Insurance Agents
TORONTO.—The Momiji Kai will have its o-eneral
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
W Tuesday, February 10th from 10:30 to 2:30 at 1he JC Cent?
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
®eaSe brmg y0Ur OWn lunch- Tea wil1 be provided.
Phone 368-4681
*
I authenticating kind" of accept3 If transportation is required, prease phone Mrs. Aki Ide
njri v
”n)
™«- Too maiy of our Caucasian
AKLAN'D.—Communities re- ^ eil°s who like us are inclined
»0 ^^21-iS<)9 or Mrs. Kaz Umemoto at 267-3930.
quire
some history to maintain • ^y a11 a«itat°rs are “subver;
Nisei Women’s Club
taei
r
,
cohesiveness
and a sens* Slve and “anti-American.” The
lo
*
*
°1 auction. We need historians ennobling- kind of acceptance, if
. n Can recount our heritage as r *“ is w^at we want, comes
^Japanese FiIm By Wpg' Consul General Feb. 18 ”! ?? cite a hero who gather’ r 0I^ onP wbo can say an agitator
Made To Measure
fesji WINNIPEG.—The film, “Kohaku Utagassen”
U1 U- s own person the historv
-Justlce is “bitter and sore in
And Alterations
, an American way.” Kuri5Mome<) w111 be Presented by Consul General T. Hayashi
1 S g ot his people. I want to offer ?
Jo&epn Yoshisuke Kurihara ad r 'as biography raises questions
Chris Nomura
Wednesday February 18th. Time: 7:30 p.m. Place: Ma- the new hero for the 1970’s
|°f conscience: What kind of act^Bitoba Buddhist Church.
. He was .a Hawaiian Issei, born I eeDtance have we acquired?
132 Baldwin St, Toronto
ki9?- He sPent a good part of
Second, he has something to
Admission: $100 adults, 50 cents children. Open only to JCCA
Phone 368-9225
)IAN
Pis life on the mainland After ^f' 0 the Nisei veteran and all
bers and their families. —M. JCCA
P^CT:
t^T? the armed forces in , 0 ^''^^e their record1. When
w
Dnt. ’
World War 1 he was honorably I e ?Vas 4^ years old, he did not
*
*
K
AUTO — FIRE — L1FI
discharged and under took seve- pest content because he had
mail
ALL FORMS
a successful business ventures I . u» , tyranny overseas. He re^'^^ °H“S Working Girls "Newcomers Club" ,When
OF
one
failed,
he
learned
to
P^^PPi
’
essioii
here
at
home
56
^^
TORONTO.-- The City Area YWCA offers a “Newcomers Club”
navigate tuna boats.
I "ben he met it. We should see
»"™® working girls who are interested in meeting new friends
When World War II broke out
^Sej veterans join the
^"d doing things together in Toronto. The club meets reXh he was taken into custody
m-!ltant CaJ’e °f &ansei who °PSAW TM1*y"eS“,E lour downtown branch, 21 McGnf St 2 jailed without explanation ' or P^L11^^11163 here at home. It
CQQfWt
consult
i'i?J)locks south of College St. east of Yono-p
-r
• , ,
. He suffered stoning S^-a? overcome the generaKIYO TAMURA
?S"V membership $3.00 and .$3.00 per" seasmJW^ris Ud'S
i other forms of discriinina- |
m
>
TORONTO
H™,'™ °"’n KP™eS when we S° ™‘- The program costs p.ay
■ Kurihara
------’s biography
Bim, 366-5812 Res. PI. 9-8317
are tion prior to the war, but thev • ■
not leave him as embittered asks Japanese American CitizenAY e would like to invite your young readers to our club.
p ^.eaaue to appropriate that
as
the
Evacuation did.
3 MB
While
in
Manzanar
I
Ha
yaiiai1 style. They are acMiss Hayakawa,
few
riot which was perhaps one of
operate fro m
Program. Worker
Busi 824-8153
the most violent incidents of
atren»th and confidence, if not
H»m 922-1353
T S5^’
— kind in all the camps
’ assertiveness - from mainland
His life covers abouti - ^andards. It is no accident that
TORONTO JAPANESE GQSPEL CHURCH
pages in the book entitled “The
i^^ Matsui helped JACL
ERNEST JOMORI
S*- Iohns presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
Spoilage.” In
behind Dr' Thomas T. Norica’s Concentration Camps” ^is
that
Chartered Accountant
Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M
life takes ud about.
.
H^v^d Miura has helped JACL
Sil
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
in Hosokawa’s “Nisei- thePQuDt K.eep allve to the newer aggres- ,
Sult* 403
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
American” he
^i-t sive groups in Southern CaliforPhone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
130
BLOOR
ST.
W.
TORONTO
e appeals in two ma.
Both
mon
on
ma
nia. Both men come from Hawaii.
P^ssa^es! The abbreviation of his They
in the Kurihara tradi
I J - ls, n°t as bad as the failur° tion. Iarewould
.guess they would’
_ to include certain lines which take pride in that.
I fvaj?ate his character. Accordins
0^5
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
Finally, the expatriate Kuriha
Custom Picture
°
w3wh appears
ra
has something to say about
11
m
The
Spoilage
”
.
701 Dovercourt Rd.
Framing
SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 8, 1970, 11:30 A.M.
H °f B1°°r
W$A administrators familiar the small numbers of Sansei who
have
moved
to
Canada
and
1
Swe
Japanese
Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 766-5632
with Kurihara’s case were in o-en- den instaad of accepting the
NISHIMURA
Lnghsh — Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
£5
eral
sympathetic with him.& In draft. When Kurihara renounced
Church School for the children
I August, 1942, after Kurihara hac
A warm welcome to all. '
his citizenship, he left out of
I made several public speeches loyalty to democratic principles.'
1278
Street. Toronto 7, Ont.
which some listeners considered In his words, “The American De
SOUTH
OF WOODLAWN
subversive”
and
“anti-Ames
mocracy
with
which
I
was
infus
T
o
M
o
NUhirnura
SB»
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
n.can 0116 Project administrative ed1 in my childhood is still un
923-6877
I officer said he had a talk with shaken.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 8. 1970
” Expatriates have a way ।
Kurihara. “I find Joe Kurihara of adhering
10:30 A.M. Religious School Nirvana Da.y
to .a higher form
very bitter about the entire sit of patriotism. By their standards,
918 Bathurst St.
11:00 a.m. Morning Service
uation, but he is bitter and sore most of us are chauvinists and
m
quite an American way.” was bigots. We should salute their
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service
his
observation.
Telephone: 534-4302
kind of patriotism.
. ^-ei’oes do not only embody a
Sansei in Canada and Sweden. I
history of a people, thev repre
we
salute you! Parents of these I
sent what a people are called to
youth,
be proud! Your sons have
become. Joe Kurihara speaks
mt
deep
into the conscience of I
quite a wide spectrum of people.
-heir peers. When their story is I
:old, we might be able to reduce
First, for the oldest and most the festering, blind patriotism
Slocan City, B.C.
successful among us who have which fosters bigotry among the
Phone 355-2211
worked their way into and up the Nisei.
established structures, he offers
Joe Kurihara, a hero for the 1
a challenge to work for an 1970’s.
MEN’S SUITS
INSURANCE
■
1 is
KINO'S MARKET
Rod & White
Food Store
NOW AVAILABLE AT THE NEW CANADIAN
“JAPAN UNMASKED
w
By Japan's Controversial
^x"Ambassador To Argentina
as
ICHIRO KAWASAKI
^^3
>o (Includes Postage) Cloth Bound
The New Canadian
479 Queen St. West
Toronto 133, Ont.
When Buying Or Selling A Home
DANFORTH
Call: KEN HORI
SPORTING GOODS
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perivale Cres.
Phone: 26).5]94
Scarborough
I
I
SKATES
Hockey Equipment
Skate Sharpening
551 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
m?E DAR,NG! — SURPRISE THEM!
Phone: HO. 3-7400
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
91 SrnlnLY’ SEND THEM GIFT
|l subscriptions too
11
s^&ea
Canadian
I 479
fl
1970 EXPO TOUR
QLEEN STREET WEST, TORONTO 133, ONT.
P!^9 find enclosed $ _______________
So
fOr “....... y<mr/months
Sx m<>nths
Hi
•
S9.00 per year.
11
recipient
Il name (mr. mrs. miss)___
11
II CITY
ADDRESS
11 province
for which
ZONE NO.
Special Low Cost Tours
Special Group Tours
Monthly Departures During Expo. (March 15th — Sept. 13)
Make Your Plan With
For Detail Information, Contact
OFTORONTO
* FORMAL RENTALS
Cusfom Made Suite
& Trousers
V.I.P. Travel Ltd
— To “Very Interesting Places” __
n!5 Main Street, Vancouver 4
682-2241
BC
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
PAGE 7
;#Ioniiji Kai General Meeting Feb. 10 At JCC Centre
Yoshisuke Kurihara:
Hawaiian Issei Hero
K it « good policy to
■an the HIGHT POLICY
Consult
WiHiam Wales Ltd
Insurance Agents
TORONTO.—The Momiji Kai will have its o-eneral
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
W Tuesday, February 10th from 10:30 to 2:30 at 1he JC Cent?
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
®eaSe brmg y0Ur OWn lunch- Tea wil1 be provided.
Phone 368-4681
*
I authenticating kind" of accept3 If transportation is required, prease phone Mrs. Aki Ide
njri v
”n)
™«- Too maiy of our Caucasian
AKLAN'D.—Communities re- ^ eil°s who like us are inclined
»0 ^^21-iS<)9 or Mrs. Kaz Umemoto at 267-3930.
quire
some history to maintain • ^y a11 a«itat°rs are “subver;
Nisei Women’s Club
taei
r
,
cohesiveness
and a sens* Slve and “anti-American.” The
lo
*
*
°1 auction. We need historians ennobling- kind of acceptance, if
. n Can recount our heritage as r *“ is w^at we want, comes
^Japanese FiIm By Wpg' Consul General Feb. 18 ”! ?? cite a hero who gather’ r 0I^ onP wbo can say an agitator
Made To Measure
fesji WINNIPEG.—The film, “Kohaku Utagassen”
U1 U- s own person the historv
-Justlce is “bitter and sore in
And Alterations
, an American way.” Kuri5Mome<) w111 be Presented by Consul General T. Hayashi
1 S g ot his people. I want to offer ?
Jo&epn Yoshisuke Kurihara ad r 'as biography raises questions
Chris Nomura
Wednesday February 18th. Time: 7:30 p.m. Place: Ma- the new hero for the 1970’s
|°f conscience: What kind of act^Bitoba Buddhist Church.
. He was .a Hawaiian Issei, born I eeDtance have we acquired?
132 Baldwin St, Toronto
ki9?- He sPent a good part of
Second, he has something to
Admission: $100 adults, 50 cents children. Open only to JCCA
Phone 368-9225
)IAN
Pis life on the mainland After ^f' 0 the Nisei veteran and all
bers and their families. —M. JCCA
P^CT:
t^T? the armed forces in , 0 ^''^^e their record1. When
w
Dnt. ’
World War 1 he was honorably I e ?Vas 4^ years old, he did not
*
*
K
AUTO — FIRE — L1FI
discharged and under took seve- pest content because he had
ALL FORMS
a successful business ventures I . u» , tyranny overseas. He re^'^^ °H“S Working Girls "Newcomers Club" ,When
OF
one
failed,
he
learned
to
P^^PPi
’
essioii
here
at
home
56
^^
TORONTO.-- The City Area YWCA offers a “Newcomers Club”
navigate tuna boats.
I "ben he met it. We should see
»"™® working girls who are interested in meeting new friends
When World War II broke out
^Sej veterans join the
^"d doing things together in Toronto. The club meets reXh he was taken into custody
m-!ltant CaJ’e °f &ansei who °PSAW TM1*y"eS“,E lour downtown branch, 21 McGnf St 2 jailed without explanation ' or P^L11^^11163 here at home. It
CQQfWt
consult
i'i?J)locks south of College St. east of Yono-p
-r
• , ,
. He suffered stoning S^-a? overcome the generaKIYO TAMURA
?S"V membership $3.00 and .$3.00 per" seasmJW^ris Ud'S
i other forms of discriinina- |
m
>
TORONTO
H™,'™ °"’n KP™eS when we S° ™‘- The program costs p.ay
■ Kurihara
------’s biography
Bim, 366-5812 Res. PI. 9-8317
are tion prior to the war, but thev • ■
not leave him as embittered asks Japanese American CitizenAY e would like to invite your young readers to our club.
p ^.eaaue to appropriate that
as
the
Evacuation did.
3 MB
While
in
Manzanar
I
Ha
yaiiai1 style. They are acMiss Hayakawa,
few
riot which was perhaps one of
operate fro m
Program. Worker
Busi 824-8153
the most violent incidents of
atren»th and confidence, if not
H»m 922-1353
T S5^’
— kind in all the camps
’ assertiveness - from mainland
His life covers abouti - ^andards. It is no accident that
TORONTO JAPANESE GQSPEL CHURCH
pages in the book entitled “The
i^^ Matsui helped JACL
ERNEST JOMORI
S*- Iohns presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
Spoilage.” In
behind Dr' Thomas T. Norica’s Concentration Camps” ^is
that
Chartered Accountant
Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M
life takes ud about.
.
H^v^d Miura has helped JACL
Sil
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
in Hosokawa’s “Nisei- thePQuDt K.eep allve to the newer aggres- ,
Sult* 403
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
American” he
^i-t sive groups in Southern CaliforPhone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
130
BLOOR
ST.
W.
TORONTO
e appeals in two ma.
Both
mon
on
ma
nia. Both men come from Hawaii.
P^ssa^es! The abbreviation of his They
in the Kurihara tradi
I J - ls, n°t as bad as the failur° tion. Iarewould
.guess they would’
_ to include certain lines which take pride in that.
I fvaj?ate his character. Accordins
0^5
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
Finally, the expatriate Kuriha
Custom Picture
°
w3wh appears
ra
has something to say about
11
m
The
Spoilage
”
.
701 Dovercourt Rd.
Framing
SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 8, 1970, 11:30 A.M.
H °f B1°°r
W$A administrators familiar the small numbers of Sansei who
have
moved
to
Canada
and
1
Swe
Japanese
Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 766-5632
with Kurihara’s case were in o-en- den instaad of accepting the
NISHIMURA
Lnghsh — Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
£5
eral
sympathetic with him.& In draft. When Kurihara renounced
Church School for the children
I August, 1942, after Kurihara hac
A warm welcome to all. '
his citizenship, he left out of
I made several public speeches loyalty to democratic principles.'
1278
Street. Toronto 7, Ont.
which some listeners considered In his words, “The American De
SOUTH
OF WOODLAWN
subversive”
and
“anti-Ames
mocracy
with
which
I
was
infus
T
o
M
o
NUhirnura
SB»
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
n.can 0116 Project administrative ed1 in my childhood is still un
923-6877
I officer said he had a talk with shaken.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 8. 1970
” Expatriates have a way ।
Kurihara. “I find Joe Kurihara of adhering
10:30 A.M. Religious School Nirvana Da.y
to .a higher form
very bitter about the entire sit of patriotism. By their standards,
918 Bathurst St.
11:00 a.m. Morning Service
uation, but he is bitter and sore most of us are chauvinists and
m
quite an American way.” was bigots. We should salute their
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service
his
observation.
Telephone: 534-4302
kind of patriotism.
. ^-ei’oes do not only embody a
Sansei in Canada and Sweden. I
history of a people, thev repre
we
salute you! Parents of these I
sent what a people are called to
youth,
be proud! Your sons have
become. Joe Kurihara speaks
mt
deep
into the conscience of I
quite a wide spectrum of people.
-heir peers. When their story is I
:old, we might be able to reduce
First, for the oldest and most the festering, blind patriotism
Slocan City, B.C.
successful among us who have which fosters bigotry among the
Phone 355-2211
worked their way into and up the Nisei.
established structures, he offers
Joe Kurihara, a hero for the 1
a challenge to work for an 1970’s.
MEN’S SUITS
INSURANCE
■
1 is
KINO'S MARKET
Rod & White
Food Store
NOW AVAILABLE AT THE NEW CANADIAN
“JAPAN UNMASKED
w
By Japan's Controversial
^x"Ambassador To Argentina
as
ICHIRO KAWASAKI
^^3
>o (Includes Postage) Cloth Bound
The New Canadian
479 Queen St. West
Toronto 133, Ont.
When Buying Or Selling A Home
DANFORTH
Call: KEN HORI
SPORTING GOODS
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perivale Cres.
Phone: 26).5]94
Scarborough
I
I
SKATES
Hockey Equipment
Skate Sharpening
551 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
m?E DAR,NG! — SURPRISE THEM!
Phone: HO. 3-7400
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
91 SrnlnLY’ SEND THEM GIFT
|l subscriptions too
11
s^&ea
Canadian
I 479
fl
1970 EXPO TOUR
QLEEN STREET WEST, TORONTO 133, ONT.
P!^9 find enclosed $ _______________
So
fOr “....... y<mr/months
Sx m<>nths
Hi
•
S9.00 per year.
11
recipient
Il name (mr. mrs. miss)___
11
II CITY
ADDRESS
11 province
for which
ZONE NO.
Special Low Cost Tours
Special Group Tours
Monthly Departures During Expo. (March 15th — Sept. 13)
Make Your Plan With
For Detail Information, Contact
OFTORONTO
* FORMAL RENTALS
Cusfom Made Suite
& Trousers
V.I.P. Travel Ltd
— To “Very Interesting Places” __
n!5 Main Street, Vancouver 4
682-2241
BC
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
Page 8
PAGE 8
Tuesday, Febrnar
Hayakawa
affects the future of education
espKialh^inle ^o ‘manr^ser^
een urging me to run.
•
(cont. from page 1.)
_
/I s™^ ^
W ^3^
!° ®° about soW”S Ble”-
the"^^ I
S as "e^ as liberals have!
Opportunities
I
Second class mi
'
Exciting Campus
«XCT 1
There
present
job. remains
Some~ mV b^u??^
nameiy, staving at mv ^X°ar fnd ViolTe of a year a^> there are dozens of' con*
many ways quite as challenging^ekhei^of u sa>; that this is in work beL^do^
Some may feel that there is fittip
f thf- other Possibilities, ing, drama fiV™
t
r C°Ile°e iike San ^n isco S 1P njge to attending a onlv last September are «
such aJ supporting- the educational
as chlId development, teacher train^ecreafcion’ and the development
h I influence these' P^SSS a^
"ays happening __
j
eie exciting new things are H-।’ed, nurtured, ami supported wifhd
same sdIy- Tt is possible to^ craw It^101'?16’ some “spired,
« VO^Ut at leaSt "' ^e “ bSoredF1'anC^ State’ and scholarly and educational intemhthe important work to be done here
.
- | .MenVTf™^^^^^
a little over thirteen ”m bnth^lgo
thrust suddenly into this
job
sixteen to sixu U
a fascmatii
'
of all
shanT 8 ' student
of its kind in tfe UnitedSt«S®
4-L
Sir
i
V
iXlcL I iuca
°* ^
"^
4™ QUEEN ST. WEST
Toronto 2-B Ont
Empire S-5005
^'*
they must be watchJ?!!pW'anted
? insure their
EEXT
——■
1S
^ n° end to homesewers
Wer and pick up
ca^ w°uses- ^
363-4588
(Toronto)P' C
Mary pho.
and
I®
?e b? teaching institution
-^^ go, but thanks
OX
RES. 231-0863
U Ivy Lea Cres.
BUS. 783-4261
3101 Bathurst St
leagues, in order to carry out W^
their striking col-1 Expo Problems
MRS. SATOKO SATO
< ?rVe Iearned to admire and love mvb pSp^0”3 to. their students.
(Continued from Page T)
w?° hav.e somehow or other’ heM63^5 ln„the adminis- ^ ®how ^nd predict double the I onlv
«e^
obstocles ha^Tee^r^
cm.d
‘ a year ago. So there are
All types of insurance Eg
many swamps around, it.
CROWN LIFE
Expo officials fear that these
r
r
Academic Freedom
i
—, win become the breedINSURANCE CO.
~X'°'^
a vast pubjko^th-^
nWHf0Und °f numerous harmful
moths and even mosquitoes that
^^"Xe^
about ,4 tap"'; ^&d
cause
Japanese encephalities.
^°?e A£ency has already
free play of id^ttt&^^ni^^
^“^1 nstributed a list of 3,000 Japa- H?PO
were surprised
SINGER SEWING
Pickpocket jjT ]hat 2 Visitors died on
r
dU
T
g
Expo
67
in
MonMACHINES
- outu as me zenga- I ml 1 tl0ns Moar the Expo site,
versions
of the SDS. L.-A e.cbv®s .^ that the list. tieal, Canada.
™™ieeiSii^
BStfaSokir.
Straight & Zig-Zag
Ihey expect 30 deaths during
lf «^^o^ Pickpockets
For home demonstration
Sh?r They anticipate
Pa*!
^"arrested
call — 621-0684 (res.)
a lot of trouble because each
activists, wherever they have S th • h te,Ver ~ °f the violent I
Mrs. R. Tsujimura
addltion, as many as 300 country has its own kind of funedimunition of freedom/The assauV^V^ ^^ has been a ■mekZ-natlOnal” Pr°fessional pickfervre- Alld officials 'are
SINGER COMPANY fi®'1
cessful that at the most prX^^
has be^ so suc- Osi? aie eXpected to come to ices' fai?9 lai^ with Buddhist serv
the present time, it is imuOtiMa
universities in the U.S. at
ices. —(Sunday Mainichi, A 0 )
OF CANADA
^5
And there are only 100 police
United States himself to lecture bp
invibe the. President of the
men specializing in detecting
of his speech, to say nothing of thrS;
J^^ disruptions ( | mckpockets
in the Osaka area."
■fen
I ask you, .!« kind of ftee 8X^iVs%^
safety,
1 •
pollce officials are busv
the feSS^iS'^^ ae Iifef’1 *"• ™versitv. and
announcement
if®?'5
JW
p’18’ °Ut pIans t0 keeP Pros
to the defense of academic freedom th.Tu' T° dedicate oneself tt ?ay ?’°m °Saka clLwing
#195;
in a position to do so, is pSD ’’ fl’ " J61-1 you find yourself
q
'“T^nt months.
educator can do.
perhaps the most important thing an I
Some 500 -women are on thp
tarn not^n/tT g^^
seat in the U.S. Senate. I iictCthatStiieP°liCl officials pre®6(
Wishes to Announce a Change
' ’ 000 w
^lbT ^^ -ia^P
tmue with my task of defending and
1 am£OinS to con-I -ets’ ui ? the Sh°w officials
W61
of Address to
and protecting the intellectual 1nte<^
academic freedom ,ets under way m 60 days,
W6S
aches*
°1- th-e highest head460 Dundas Street West
96-1
965
' isUmpsP
1S the ultl’a-lefU
TORONTO 133, ONTARIO
FURUYA TRAVEL SERVICE
hFar the radicals, the exno
>itmn is the Governments X
n° n ed the attention of the JaL
for ICE fishing fun
art s fish huts
Propane Heafed^ruX^
„
FOR ICE FISHING FUN
’
a
mrnxT!?03^ F°'t Foist er, Ont
PHONE PEFFERLAW 185
w'moJlT6 Japanese Christi-
Get the most enjoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
Henty of delicious food!
Plenty of free parking!
^i ^SS. Sata
30 Years Experience - Lines Supplied
—
-
CHINA
notber specific target will
?£”" bUiIt b5' ll" KepibHc
925 Eglinton W. Toront
:o
Spe.ciali.zmg In Chinese Food
Businessmen Luncheon
We Cater To Parties And Banquets
IPs Private/ No Time Limit!
been'
WALLY'S FISH HUTS
19
Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
bX8™*6-1402’ Phone 363-0952
Sell
Your Home
Through
MAS (Ron) MENDE
Banquet Facilities
fh™^n^.,,thV -e the
wHiiX".V ,
hundreds of
visitors? tV^” i0,!ed
come u enl mm,'^1^0" "«' I
he Mte was just a wilderness I
MELL REAL ESTATE LTD.
(Tosh Iwai)
1527
jcgnd i
®' 111
®o*i
•■
T
»ocalin
we"’ Pl
Evi
uve. By Appointment
Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
I fecial '^talentsPande*V°^
Hip specialist
d% d J
training.
1100
as ,Iess And
than
Phone 364-3481
J
fef!
T1
■»« a
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
urotect on: IJR31’^' eil°^
vi^T bvn or three VIP.
^ the exposition on the same
lav
SI
ff01’ ‘
gapar
tf
I
Soffice
ST141
| Asia
Exp° to be held in 11
llooBeeme^
some 400 11
CWBRKr JL^^ T° ^ You)
^ SERVICE - -TAKE-OUT- ORDEf
pinner MUSIC (^ S“«l>
RU. 1-9123
I&sis
Ba( t
®>M
»eiis,
w^e s
®f ?la
21 Dundas^Sa"*
v
(Fining Lounge)
US Elizabeth St.
T
Toronto, Canada
HOUSE
I I Jananesp Ca,--,
^uect that the I i
hiiS n Government has com- I
I 1I Thiner
DekinoCI(me gainst the I I
1
r 1me by allowing thp 1I
Phone: EM. 3-7646 — EM. 8-0035
123A Dundas St.
p
.
est
—
Toronto 2, Ont
Parkmc At Bay & Dundas
4 jy^Jiee Garden ^
968
70
Japan Securitv Treatv
hsnXX t0 their theo^’ io
bpA P-t ,tbe ^Position is in th.-- I
«le,"tereStS of fc d~
-----
i
New Telephone No. 363-0655
757-5184
Bis! 0J'°ta
from t
Jofal ii
l^ic ;
Fs inct
Ip oidc
?!°ns f(
&ep in
Hr^bor
Tuesday, Febrnar
Hayakawa
affects the future of education
espKialh^inle ^o ‘manr^ser^
een urging me to run.
•
(cont. from page 1.)
_
/I s™^ ^
W ^3^
!° ®° about soW”S Ble”-
the"^^ I
S as "e^ as liberals have!
Opportunities
I
Second class mi
'
Exciting Campus
«XCT 1
There
present
job. remains
Some~ mV b^u??^
nameiy, staving at mv ^X°ar fnd ViolTe of a year a^> there are dozens of' con*
many ways quite as challenging^ekhei^of u sa>; that this is in work beL^do^
Some may feel that there is fittip
f thf- other Possibilities, ing, drama fiV™
t
r C°Ile°e iike San ^n isco S 1P njge to attending a onlv last September are «
such aJ supporting- the educational
as chlId development, teacher train^ecreafcion’ and the development
h I influence these' P^SSS a^
"ays happening __
j
eie exciting new things are H-।’ed, nurtured, ami supported wifhd
same sdIy- Tt is possible to^ craw It^101'?16’ some “spired,
« VO^Ut at leaSt "' ^e “ bSoredF1'anC^ State’ and scholarly and educational intemhthe important work to be done here
.
- | .MenVTf™^^^^^
a little over thirteen ”m bnth^lgo
thrust suddenly into this
job
sixteen to sixu U
a fascmatii
'
of all
shanT 8 ' student
of its kind in tfe UnitedSt«S®
4-L
Sir
i
V
iXlcL I iuca
°* ^
"^
4™ QUEEN ST. WEST
Toronto 2-B Ont
Empire S-5005
^'*
they must be watchJ?!!pW'anted
? insure their
EEXT
——■
1S
^ n° end to homesewers
Wer and pick up
ca^ w°uses- ^
363-4588
(Toronto)P' C
Mary pho.
and
I®
?e b? teaching institution
-^^ go, but thanks
OX
RES. 231-0863
U Ivy Lea Cres.
BUS. 783-4261
3101 Bathurst St
leagues, in order to carry out W^
their striking col-1 Expo Problems
MRS. SATOKO SATO
< ?rVe Iearned to admire and love mvb pSp^0”3 to. their students.
(Continued from Page T)
w?° hav.e somehow or other’ heM63^5 ln„the adminis- ^ ®how ^nd predict double the I onlv
«e^
obstocles ha^Tee^r^
cm.d
‘ a year ago. So there are
All types of insurance Eg
many swamps around, it.
CROWN LIFE
Expo officials fear that these
r
r
Academic Freedom
i
—, win become the breedINSURANCE CO.
~X'°'^
a vast pubjko^th-^
nWHf0Und °f numerous harmful
moths and even mosquitoes that
^^"Xe^
about ,4 tap"'; ^&d
cause
Japanese encephalities.
^°?e A£ency has already
free play of id^ttt&^^ni^^
^“^1 nstributed a list of 3,000 Japa- H?PO
were surprised
SINGER SEWING
Pickpocket jjT ]hat 2 Visitors died on
r
dU
T
g
Expo
67
in
MonMACHINES
- outu as me zenga- I ml 1 tl0ns Moar the Expo site,
versions
of the SDS. L.-A e.cbv®s .^ that the list. tieal, Canada.
™™ieeiSii^
BStfaSokir.
Straight & Zig-Zag
Ihey expect 30 deaths during
lf «^^o^ Pickpockets
For home demonstration
Sh?r They anticipate
Pa*!
^"arrested
call — 621-0684 (res.)
a lot of trouble because each
activists, wherever they have S th • h te,Ver ~ °f the violent I
Mrs. R. Tsujimura
addltion, as many as 300 country has its own kind of funedimunition of freedom/The assauV^V^ ^^ has been a ■mekZ-natlOnal” Pr°fessional pickfervre- Alld officials 'are
SINGER COMPANY fi®'1
cessful that at the most prX^^
has be^ so suc- Osi? aie eXpected to come to ices' fai?9 lai^ with Buddhist serv
the present time, it is imuOtiMa
universities in the U.S. at
ices. —(Sunday Mainichi, A 0 )
OF CANADA
^5
And there are only 100 police
United States himself to lecture bp
invibe the. President of the
men specializing in detecting
of his speech, to say nothing of thrS;
J^^ disruptions ( | mckpockets
in the Osaka area."
■fen
I ask you, .!« kind of ftee 8X^iVs%^
safety,
1 •
pollce officials are busv
the feSS^iS'^^ ae Iifef’1 *"• ™versitv. and
announcement
if®?'5
JW
p’18’ °Ut pIans t0 keeP Pros
to the defense of academic freedom th.Tu' T° dedicate oneself tt ?ay ?’°m °Saka clLwing
#195;
in a position to do so, is pSD ’’ fl’ " J61-1 you find yourself
q
'“T^nt months.
educator can do.
perhaps the most important thing an I
Some 500 -women are on thp
tarn not^n/tT g^^
seat in the U.S. Senate. I iictCthatStiieP°liCl officials pre®6(
Wishes to Announce a Change
' ’ 000 w
^lbT ^^ -ia^P
tmue with my task of defending and
1 am£OinS to con-I -ets’ ui ? the Sh°w officials
W61
of Address to
and protecting the intellectual 1nte<^
academic freedom ,ets under way m 60 days,
W6S
aches*
°1- th-e highest head460 Dundas Street West
96-1
965
' isUmpsP
1S the ultl’a-lefU
TORONTO 133, ONTARIO
FURUYA TRAVEL SERVICE
hFar the radicals, the exno
>itmn is the Governments X
n° n ed the attention of the JaL
for ICE fishing fun
art s fish huts
Propane Heafed^ruX^
„
FOR ICE FISHING FUN
’
a
mrnxT!?03^ F°'t Foist er, Ont
PHONE PEFFERLAW 185
w'moJlT6 Japanese Christi-
Get the most enjoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
Henty of delicious food!
Plenty of free parking!
^i ^SS. Sata
30 Years Experience - Lines Supplied
—
-
CHINA
notber specific target will
?£”" bUiIt b5' ll" KepibHc
925 Eglinton W. Toront
:o
Spe.ciali.zmg In Chinese Food
Businessmen Luncheon
We Cater To Parties And Banquets
IPs Private/ No Time Limit!
been'
WALLY'S FISH HUTS
19
Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
bX8™*6-1402’ Phone 363-0952
Sell
Your Home
Through
MAS (Ron) MENDE
Banquet Facilities
fh™^n^.,,thV -e the
wHiiX".V ,
hundreds of
visitors? tV^” i0,!ed
come u enl mm,'^1^0" "«' I
he Mte was just a wilderness I
MELL REAL ESTATE LTD.
(Tosh Iwai)
1527
jcgnd i
®' 111
®o*i
•■
T
»ocalin
we"’ Pl
Evi
uve. By Appointment
Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
I fecial '^talentsPande*V°^
Hip specialist
d% d J
training.
1100
as ,Iess And
than
Phone 364-3481
J
fef!
T1
■»« a
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
urotect on: IJR31’^' eil°^
vi^T bvn or three VIP.
^ the exposition on the same
lav
SI
ff01’ ‘
gapar
tf
I
Soffice
ST141
| Asia
Exp° to be held in 11
llooBeeme^
some 400 11
CWBRKr JL^^ T° ^ You)
^ SERVICE - -TAKE-OUT- ORDEf
pinner MUSIC (^ S“«l>
RU. 1-9123
I&sis
Ba( t
®>M
»eiis,
w^e s
®f ?la
21 Dundas^Sa"*
v
(Fining Lounge)
US Elizabeth St.
T
Toronto, Canada
HOUSE
I I Jananesp Ca,--,
^uect that the I i
hiiS n Government has com- I
I 1I Thiner
DekinoCI(me gainst the I I
1
r 1me by allowing thp 1I
Phone: EM. 3-7646 — EM. 8-0035
123A Dundas St.
p
.
est
—
Toronto 2, Ont
Parkmc At Bay & Dundas
4 jy^Jiee Garden ^
968
70
Japan Securitv Treatv
hsnXX t0 their theo^’ io
bpA P-t ,tbe ^Position is in th.-- I
«le,"tereStS of fc d~
-----
i
New Telephone No. 363-0655
757-5184
Bis! 0J'°ta
from t
Jofal ii
l^ic ;
Fs inct
Ip oidc
?!°ns f(
&ep in
Hr^bor