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The New Canadian — March 13, 1970

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Page 1

Can;

fc“"

c2
' hess
;®h.

^t. feKwok

J---- *’
-....... ' L
He affe
describes
his
three 16-foot-hi eh pyramid
a
clean Barnum and Bailey,
-io judge from photograuhs,
when seen in conjunction
with Erickson and Massev's
spectacular pavilion, that
o something of an understatement.
When he began playing
. n
~ around with the scale
Of the space allotted. Kiyooka was still th,#/ t
am of the .lust-completed plexiglass sculptures. Afi
^eie seen last year at the Douglas GaU-v
I
had gradually and reluctantly, tf ahandon dr

> VAKCOUVER-—Boy Kiyooka, is back in Vancouver
years. Poet, sculptor and important painter
J
yo-M. Kivooka has had great influence
iar 'nd teacher on a generation of artists which
1011 Site.
j^^ Claude Breeze, Brian Fisher and Glen Top£ Publish
Wlgja py
;rtiii^
w

?nos
COEiy

He t3iigk at the University of Saskatchewan in

Itedha. before coming■ to Vancouver in 1959. For the
last se\t’i years he n ; been in Montreal, teaching
t Sir George A iillianf; University, and he spent the
,^t four months in Japan.
With?”' being specially interested in large scale
ork k took a was commissioned “to do something for

DCs

!T. ^
Ont.
•5005

Returns

™' h W"1—' ilieas- A"(l "he>> I got tl .ihn
e rhuig went though at least three chan^i
Ihe space available to me was a triangle in one

To

Vancouver

.
:he open
m i rro r-wa lied trune a ted
pyramid, which h
the form of the Pavilion.
Tii
<0 high, Gordon Smith'; very fine re­
t umbrella s of color dominate the centre. I had
io
io uu will i something- that would stand up to.
wnh, the environment.
'•When I saw th uwartmg context, and realized
ever I mad would be reflected from mirrorcd floor and mirrored walls, I knew that anythingmonochromalic would be rmieulous. I decided to make
it belong bv i
and actually
isn’t too
much interesting use of color on the Expo site.”
of colored
red, blue and vellow(Continued on Page 8)
el

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RED



“SUKIYAKI”

Practical Japanese
-? Cookbook Sx.oO
Wanted s
(plus postage)
Hilde-’ 1

STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
By MISS J.L. BEATTIE
$5.00 (plus postage)

An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
20

enters
?hor.s

FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1970

Toronto, Ont
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c.®«i:
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idle ei
1 az—
essea-j

Hirohito Plans
"Canada
Visit

Nisei Geneticist Predicts Carbon Copy
of Any Man Available In 30 Years

By DAVID VAN PRAAGH

By MARILYN DUNLOP
chromosomes .or inherited material that makes
1ORON1O. — A geneticist from the Univer­
:
OSAKA.

When
Emperor
Hirohito
of
Japan
steps
into
.a
person what he is—short, tall, bright or dull__
the
: 361
sity of British Columbia said recently that by the and control his body functions.
set
‘dazzling Canadian pavilion at Expo 70 here it will be important
end of the century scientists will be able to pro­
wtsimply because it will be the first time his imperial majesty
Like tapes, storing- infinite amounts of infor­
duce the identical twin of any living person.
mation about a person, they are found in the
Han has entered a totally foreign presence.
What’s more, said Dr. David Suzuki, within a nucleus of each body cell.
suits Accompanied by Empress Nagako and other members of the decade . they may be able to change
persons
Suzuki spoke
National Cancer Institute
Japanese royal family after formally opening the first official
genes by using a virus
of
Canada
seminar
for
science writers at the
world exposition since Montreal’s Expo 67, the Emperor in visit­
in new information.
Princess Margaret Hospital.
ing Car.acia” will also dramatize a special relationship between
Thousands of genes strung together form tlm
In an interview,
Suzuki
said
an identical
e two countries in this year of Japan.
ET®
twin might be formed by taking
(v
Canada First
/% 4 4!
a skin cell from the person some­
/^though he will return to Osaka from Tokyo later to see other
one wanted to duplicate and put­
TORONTO. —- The American The magazine,, which
P-^
IS the °nly national Presentation the Emperor
which claim;
claims 24 ting it into an egg cell from
million readers around the world,
scheduled to see on opening day in addition to the Japanese newsmagazine, Time
told readers that the 21st centu­ sam, “from transistor radios to which the nucleus (.and thus all
ry may be the century of Japan.
whole steel mills, the Japanese the genes from the “mother”)
'?.\?fiZK > series of Canadian firsts in authorizing, dIn a long cover story on the have been able to sell the rest of had been removed.
itJ“"E ”d tiniSh"’S a
“ Expo 70. Bv®1 Far Eastern nation, Time said: the world just about everything,
That way only material from
yaws
“No country has a stronger fran­ except themselves.
the
skin-cell donor would be in­
-d^-H’Sf Expo depicted the striking chise on the future than Japan.
sthurst i
A Hate-Japan Wind,’ as it is herited and his double could be
“No developed nation is grow­ called in Tokyo has been rising
: out Japanese-Canadian link in i07n
ing faster. Its economy quadrupl­ as legions of Japanese tourists formed.
SATO ®d-of
the Second WorM w
19/°—a generation after the ed in the past decade and will
Suzuki said he feared that this
and
hard-bargaining
salesmen
'fe U~tad
ar ” ^ ^ “® Japanese triple again in the next.”
ance
swarm into the rest of Asia. ‘Once ability to engineer genes would
The magazine noted that “Ja­ it was the Ugly American who
wt.much deeper.

‘‘gainst them—is broader than Expo if
pan whistled past Britain in gross proved most conspicuous around be applied by the wrong kind of
people who
nationally product in 1967, then
would
think that
§“Okw2,1"'ai!hUHiil’Iy energetic and burgeoning France in 1968. Last year it sur­ here,’ says a Jananese corres­

what
the
pondent in Bangkok.
world needs is an
B both countries cominv
It has to do passed West Germany.
identical twin to someone

Now
it

s
the
Ugly
Japanese,
“With a GNP that is expected
® exerting, or hvin. ? f
espeeially with both of
to reach $200 million this year, And wherever he goes, bribery, Wacky Bennet (Premier W. A.
es. If thore U a on °
Independence from the United Japan now ranks third in the the kickback routine, dumping C. Bennett of B.C.).”
^Japanese have\nod®nomil^or, perhaps it is what world, behind only the LLS. ($932 practices, golfing and sex crazes
He said he had “agonized” over
go with him/ ”
6 long considered the positive attribute of self- billion)
and the Soviet Union
Time quoted Thailand’s Econ­ such possibilities to the extent
(8600 billion).”
omic
Affairs Minister Bunchana that he had considered giving up
hn.
Time quoted Herman
Atthakor
as saying: “The people genetic research.
“Obsessed With U.S.”
founder of America’s Hudson Infeel
that
we are being invaded,
« Canadians, too
,
Tt
would
not
stitute, as
He said if scientists provided
observed Michio 'agUe,y m search °( a new kind of be surprising if the 21st century this time economically.
genetic
engineering tools for
^«i editorial write- < ^ai’ 47’ soclolo8'ist and ex-soldier jus: turned out to be the Japanese
The magazine added’: “To the
steamy, sleepy cities of Asia the leaders of powerful countries
a^ is obsessed
pan s leading newspaper Asahi. “Can- century.”
However, Time also noted that Japanese bring the fast-paced they would control large numbers
« Japan is.
" he Lnited States—but not nearly as much
Japan’s economic
invasion has temperament of Tokyo, and it is of the population and cause in­
not
been
without
its troubles. overwhelming.”
calculable harm.
remains to be <PP11
e
^forced bv the\o
a
°r 1Wt this ^^^ parallel will
Gene-changing viruses “could
Wring a
‘ 61(1 Canadian palace of mirrors at Expo
be sprayed all over the world to
= a country
times Japan’s size with a fifth its popufa^on. D.scoyery h '
cause changes in people’s minds
- theme of Canada’s pavilion—and it is aimed
and bodies,” he said.
peoMo.
Dressed in mod style clothing,
A Inked StafA«
36,883 (2. 29,541)
TOKYO. — The Tax Admin­
maintain
an
extraordinarily
low,
the
long-haired, goateed scientist
fO^ed postur
3. Kajima Construction
istration Agency recently reveal­
aa“orm and "
Pavilion—but with come-ons like Babe
8,946 (4. 7,406) said how people look isn’t imed that the declared earnings of
A1* the Jup-p.'
e Slzed facsimile of the first moon landing
portant.
4. Matsushita Electric Works
i56 corporations capitalized at
listen le,
>e ai? ^Y”^ Primarily to discover for the
“There
are
people in this
6,716 (5. 5,780)
100 million yen. Or more for the
are themselves.
room
who
don

t
like
the way I
5. Sanyo Electric
semi-annual business period end­
»w
look,

he
said.
Animal Not Beast
6,542 (3. 8,211)
ing last November totaled 188.“Let me, a Japanese, make the
6. Shiscido
5,841 (6. 5,233)
^?&n^ us democracy and freedom of speech 600 million yen.
^* -se war bu
decision
on how people look,” he
I523 I
7. National Cash Register
o”o '^ ^espo^s^’'^es that go with them,” said
This represents a handsome
said, “and everyone would have
4,275 (8.
Fhe p
. aPan?s leading economists and advisers gain of 15.8 percent over the
yellow skin and slant eyes.”
Minister Eisaku S.ato. “Japan is an urevious half-year period.
8. Toyo Toki 3,314 (1(J. 2,330)
Suzuki said genetic engineering
kj The bea;. c
e Lrying not to become an economic beast.”
9. Dai Nippon Printing
The top 10 firms and their
has vast potential for good.
as one Zf ?dt "ken Canada, for example, is thought earnings as reported to the tax
3,268 (7.
,174)
It could
extend man’s life
fei ‘--4 most -vr-,,./1 mimber of natural-resource suppliers — authorities follow (in minions
10. Brother Industries
span by 20 years in a single
J?r,n\’?an^ actually, after the United States and .ven):
everyone could
2,644 (
2,192; generation and
^■■•-en: way
P’oJigiously growing economy. It comes in
live
to
be
over
80.
To do this,
1. Matsushita Electric Indus­
(Parenthetical figures are
H
some Japanese, both in business and diplo- trial
he
said,
geneticists
would
select
48.151 (1. 39,816) rankings and amounts in the pre­
ceding period.)
(Continued on Page 8)
2. Toyota Motor
|

neat

Time" Says 2lst Century Is Japan's

:o.

Matsushita Top Japan Earner

(Cont. on Page 8)

Page 2

PAGE 2

Friday, AIarch ,

Hamada find Urabe Ulin In Semi
Finals Of Nisei Hockey Action

/
4/

By GEORGE SHIMONO
Cleaners to win the series by a 6-3 margin. The
TORONTO.—The saving “class will tell in
highlight of the game was the spectacular per­
end” held true in the second half of
rormance put. on by the Dufferin goalie M:
two game total point semi-fin
series. Both pen- Nakamura who made
numerous difficult stops
nant-winning Y’amada Studio
nd second place to keep 1his over-matched team in contention Government has changed its mind States.
1
be Insurance came back strongly after a me­ throughout. He had no chance on the two goals and will issue an entry visa to . Japanese jockeys
v
En
i
lan
4
France
diocre first
£
re win convincingly which went by him. The first was scored by Dave Sueo
Masuzawa,
a
Japanese New Zealand and
over the two
s
the league, Dufferin Okamura after Nakamura had first stopped Ro­ jockey.
States. One is now vVn;,.^
A Foreign Ministry spokesman land.
and Japan Camera.
1
V
ger Inamoto and then Bud Madokoro from point said word was received from Ja­
Sports in South Africa r
Yamada won
game
over Dufferin blank range with the Dufferin defence nowhere
pan’s consul-general in Johannes­ ly is strictly racially
m sight to clear the rebounds. burg that the government had Non-whites are not ate
The second was accomplished on “reconsidered and will issue the compete against whites ’ 4
a. real beautiful effort by de­ entry permit.” He said he did
country in anv circun-?fenceman Y oshi Hanabusa who not know when the visa will be but there have been ca^V
I ORONTO. — In Friday night
Michi Ashikawa trailed Hide split the Dufferin defence and issued.
.0
foreign non-whites who action at
A vonlea
Masuzawa had been invited by of a visiting team have P
Hirowatari 7-6 after 7 ends of passed it over to the uncovered
Club, Vic Suzuki made a cold play but counted 2 in the Sth Dave Okamura who promptly a South African sport club. Wheii lowed to play against So>
0
put it into the net for his second his visa was d'enied Masuzawa rican whites.
o’raw to the 4-foot circle with end to take the game 8-7.
it
goal of the game.
said he was “very unhappy” and
Earlier this year, the G-Ins last stone to come from be­
Tosh Omoto
The whole Yamada team played indicated that he might refuse went refused a visa m AnU“
rink skipped by
hind and tie Gord Kai 6-6 in the
George Ogino counted 4 in the their usual strong checking- game a second invitation. He was not Negro tennis star AithuNisei Curling League.
to compete in the comm S
last end and shellacked Dick Ki- to give ample support to Andy available for comment.
Knox, who had little difficultyAfrican Open Tennis Cha^i
Bob Tako
mura’s rink 15-6.
in recording his shutout. Y’oshi
In Tokyo earlier, the Japan ships. It said, however he f
’ with 3 ends player! and it
Hanabusa in particular stood out facing Association secretary ex­ come to South Africa as a 4
for the studiomen with his rush- pressed displeasure at the South ber of the United State?'Fanother upset for
ing
and
aggressive checking. African Government’s refusal to Cup team.
Shinde but he came back with
' '
Suzuki
24
Hanabusa
also
picked' up the issue visas for him and a Japa­
a 6-ender in the 4th endI and
Non-whites
also
have
beeShinde
24
game’s only two penalties to nese jockey invited to ride in lowed to come to South M
didn't look back, taking the game
round out a full day.
Ashikawa
21
South Africa Feb. 28 and March where “traditional sporting v
Dave Mitobe, Ron Kishi and 7 th.
tionships” are involved V
20
Jerry Ohashi gave their best in
YMshitaka YMshimura, 34, ste­ ample of this will be the n
Omoto
Suzuki and 0111 tide now 1
19
a losing- cause for Dufferin.
ward-secretary at the Nakayama later this year by the New Z-^
24 points each but Suzuki k
T.akashiba
16
Urabe 4 vs. Japan 1
Race Course outside Tokyo,' said land rugby team,'which is as­
with a point difference of
Hirowatari
14
Urabe also took their series he and leading jockey Sueo Ma­ certain to include Maoris.
over Japan Camera, with a 6-3 suzawa were to go to Johannes­
Kimura
to Shinde’s 38.
14
South Africa has few J3p2:;
score by trouncing the Camera­
- V.S. men 4-1 in their second match burg at the invitation of the residents and many of thesetop businessmen. For purpo;
after being held to a two all tie

Who
do
you
think
would
in
­
of
convenience, Japanese in i;
It is a good polli.7 to
in the first game.
vite men and then withdraw the country usually are regarded
Score the HIGHT POLICY
The game, started out with a invitation without showing them
honorary whites” and are me­
Consult
bangboth teams came out any specific reasons?” Yoshimura ed the same facilities as wfe
skating and checking with fierce said. He called Johannesburg’s
William Wales Ltd
For this reason, racing offty
determination in an effort to take refusal “another Arthur Ashe here had expected that Hass
Insurance Agents
an
early
lead.
Consequently, case.”
wa would be allowed to ev
there were numerous hard bod'-,
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Ashe has been refused a visa South Africa.
checks handed out at full speec
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
VANCOUVER. — The Japa­ with bodies flying- left and right “because he is a Negro,” Y'oshiNewspaper Dagbreek. expir­
Phone 36S-4681
mura said.
ing
the
Government posynese gymnastic team will work as a result. The unusually tough
The Japan Racing Association, said: “The official attitude;
out at the North Vancouver Me­ checking was indicative of the a government-supported organi­
that South Africa does not re­
morial Gym, Wednesday, March high pitch that the players hat zation, received a cable from the tain traditional sporting reiav
built up for this important con- club , which read: “Visa refus­
IS. from 5:15 to 7:15 p.m. with test. Urabe’s Hugh Goryo manships with Japan. There n
ed. All .arrangements canceled. earlier a Japanese swmr
the local Flicka club.
aged to pot the goal of this Letter follows.”
team whose admission (to S
rather hectic period.
. High-ranking association offi­
Two days later, the JapaneseThings continued
much the cials were not immediately avail­ Africa) caused a great deal:
team consisting of five men and same w.ay in the second period. able for comment. They made upheaval.”
It said the race meeting? we:
five women, who are considered The inevitable happened as three two urgent telephone calls to dis­
not
considered internal'
the best in the world, will put on players sustained injuries in on* cuss the matter with the club.
events
like
the Davis Cup :
particular
play
sequence. Al­
c
Yoshimura said1 he and jockey Canada Cup. in which it had be
a display at UBC’s War Memo­ though they were badly shaker
Masuzawa were earlier- asked by stated non-whites could comK
rial Gym at 8:15 p.m. as part up, the players
showed' their the club to leave Tokvo for Jo­
o
of their Canadian
tour. They I -treat competitive spirit by con- hannesburg Feb. 19 but that visas in South Africa.
5 N
Masuzawa would have tee­
will put on displays in Toronto t:.nuinV°
thein ob- had not reached them in time.
the
first Japanese sportsman
v
1
4 r
.
vious discomforts. The two teams
Masuzawa, the Japan Derby compete here since the se
agency
m Edmonton before arriving exchanged goals in the period
-s^s
winner for 1967, had been in­ ming team in 1962.
m
Vancouver.
with
Urabe

s
Rick
Mori
and
JaOffice, 43 Eglinton Ave. East
vited to compete with an inter­
According to information ten
Tanaka
being the national field selected from EngThe visitors will be given full pan’s Tak
a he
is ranked fourth in the Jan
Phone 485-5087
marksmen.
bnd, Ireland,
Italy, Australia, nese jockey list, having had ■
use of four Toyota auto’s durrThe game settled down some- New Zealand and the United
Home phone: 449-9293
mg their brief stay here.
winners last year on 436 mos
what in the final period as both
15 5 =
teams started to tire of the
ft
the heavy going. Urabe’s Brian
Yasui put the game out of reach
for the Cameramen when he converted a tray pass from a Japan defenceman into a go:
O,
Chuck Saito added another go:
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
for the Lrabe cause late in tl
game to round out the scoring
- EGGS ~ MARUK1N SHOW
WMAaM MEAT _ VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
Dan Higashi led the way -for
Urabe while goalie Rick Matsu
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
moto ulus Tak Tanaka and Dave
Takashima were real stand outs
for the Camera crew.

Suzuki And Shinde Still Tied In Curling

Japan Gymnasts
To Demonstrate
At. Van. & U.B.C.

DUNDAS UNION STOKE

NOW AVAILABLE AT THE NEW CANADIAN

“JAPAN UNMASKED"
Ambassador To Argentina

ICHIRO KAWASAKI
ge) ( loth Bound

1 he New Canadian
4<9 Queen St. West
Toronto 133. Ont.

The final play-off game on
Sunday promises to be an excit­
ing one. Also, the public address
system will be utilized, so spec­
tators should find it especially
good viewing. The game will
। consist of three twenty minute
। periods with
the third period
played with st
Sudden
overtime will be played.
should a t ie exist at the end1 off
regulation time. Yamada held a
. ^K . 0d?e in regular season
P-jy with a wins, 2 losses 3nd 2
ties against Urabe Insurance . . .
Anyone interested in attending
annual banquet i:
i asrreci to c< itact Y ayne Kimur;
■ at 922-199'.' ny Sunday March
1 15. Admissi■011 i? 82.00 per person
Hid is onen to the public.
_ FINAL GAME: March 15 —
re Bell Arena:
Insurance.

Invitation
Line

a ,

f b
'a
U.

. . taste needn t be expensive. Our beautiful Bovcjud
nvitation Line proves this with the most exquisite papers,
faces and workmanship you could wish fad K
eo^res Therrno‘En9rav<ng—rich raised lettering—elegonf
as the finest craftsmanship — yet costing $0 little! Come
see our unusual selection.
.

Me to

two

wee.

ivery.

THE NEW CANADIAN

479 Queen St West

Toronto 2-B, M J

c

Page 3

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Frank G. Yada
Crown Life instance Co

®t $

W. K. SARDENS
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—©45 5

1550 West Georgia St
Vancouver, B.C,

IC ^ 0

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EXPO 70

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CATERING TO
Wadding, Club Banquet#

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Page 7

is. I®-

1970

PAGE 7

National Ballet's
PropS/ Costumes

Personal Notes Across Canada

tilual Dana Fishion Show Slated April 4 At T.B.C.
■felrOEONTO-The new decade brings forth many bold and exoffering the fashion world great challenge and varietv.
iting
v on hems, rhe close-to-the-body look, the fluid lines in
colors: all these will be portrayed at the annual Dana
Show to be held at the Toronto Buddhist Church on Satur&ayl AP- ! 4th from S:00 p.m.
^Please reserve vour tickets with Mrs. Barbara Nikaido (HO.
S#-;l or Mrs. Peggy Ohara (766-7519). Tickets are $1.25 each.
Toronto Dana

TORONTO. — Fifty thousand
Ot-SeTS' prop$ and eostum£ belonging to rhe National Bal"et ot, Cana«^ s Romeo and Juliet
andtwo other productions re­
cently left Toronto. This mater­
ial is headed for New York
on the firs:
Li
ot a 10,000 mile
I-'
trip.
Bound for Osaka. Japan, these
sets, props and costumes will be
I ^^
$
*
*
used by the company when it
i» Misao Ito To Speak In Toronto On March 16th appears at the international UK
if ^TORONTO —Mrs. Misao Ito, prominent member of the Mon- May 24 to 29. The National Bal­
Jauvrese community and' leader of the Buddhist women’s let of Canada will perform Ro­
anti Juliet. Four Tempera­
'Icircle w 11 k in Toronto on March 16 (Monday) to discuss Eastern meo
ments^ Le Loup and Solitaire
ICasadun Buddhist women’s viewpoint in relation to the forth- and will be the only ballet com­
Jcomhg -th World Buddhist Women’s conference scheduled to be pany in the world to perform at
'■ Si
Expo ’70.
field ” K' ho next month.
The cargo which left Toronto
- - Mi- Bo will show slides of her recent trip to India, especial- in two tractor trailers is bound
a \
l ly the pa i res of her Buddhist pilgrimmage.
for New York City docks. There
[ /Pretested1 public men and women, are welcome to attend this the cab and wheels will be re­
Qj^pvl meeting which starts at 8 p.m., in the Buddhist Church moved and the 40 feet containers
will be loaded on the Japan
Lines' ship, the ‘Richmond Ma­
ru’. Sailing- date is March 13.
Six
weeks later, after passing
Ethnic Press Association Of Ontario Holds Confab through
the Panama Canal and
By KEN MORI
crossing the Pacific Ocean the
TORONTO.—The Ethnic Press Association of Ontario holo ‘Richmond Maru’ is due in the
j & theii general meeting of 1970 last week at Mayfair Inn Tavern Japanese port of Kobe.
It was necessary to ship from
* Marthe Queensway. More than thirty representatives of member
New
York to Kobe as neither
[ ^newspapers attended. Before the meeting officially opened, films
the Toronto nor the Osaka har­
'hfl?f‘ teat’s “Editors Tour” of Northern Ontario were shown by bours are large enough to load
hetmg-Pre-ident, Mr. V. Mauko.
40 feet
containers. When the
F Reading of minutes of the previous general meeting was cargo reaches Kobe it will be
। adapted rs read. Confirmation of by-laws and resolutions passed unloaded and driven to Osaka
where it will be stored until the
Uynthe Boaid of Directors were also passed. Election of new of- company arrives a month later.
bficers directors and auditors were unanimously approved.
As would
expected the
|
The Editors Tour will be conducted late this spring and plans length of the trip required spe­
fare” in progress, it was reported. The tour’s destinations are the cial care in packing. Nearly a
full week was taken to pack the
(Lake of the Woods and Thunderbay areas.
two 40 feet containers and for
LA fhe Canada Ethnic Press Federation’s Biannual meeting will weeks before
that costumes,
beheld in Toronto during the middle of April. Representatives from shoes and props were being pack­
Western Provinces, and also from Eastern Provinces, will gather ed into smaller cases.
Sets and* costumes being used
7 here for this event.
during' the National Ballet of
Canada’s Toronto Spring Season
S
(April 16 to 25) and needed in
FURUYA TRAVEL EXPO TOUR TO JAPAN
Osaka will be flown to Japan
during the first week in May.
I
All arrangements for the trans­
portation of sets and costumes
ere being made bv Kuehne and
For further information and reservations contact
Nagel (Canada) Ltd.

May 17th, 1970

FURUYA TRAVEL SERVICE
’460 Dundas St. W.
Toronto 133, Ontario
Tel. 363-0655

Fully Licenced

Si
ft

J NIKKO GARDEN
Reservations: EM. 6-2164
Tor best arrangements
Reserve ahead of time.

Night Tel.:
Tsuyuki 535-9935
Uyeda LE. 6-1403

TORIC
OPTICAL

BARRISTER. SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Carlton St., Toronto
Room 1805
293-4281 (Res.) [
366-6388

RAMEN
or
UDON
ONCE A DAY

Complete Care

535-5402
445-1338
Toronto

j

Toronto

118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.

5e
1

shoe

sizes

NEW SPRING
STYLES
Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14

ALBERTS SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto

We
to
: our
heartfelt thanks to our many
friend and relatives for their
kindness, floral tributes and expressions of sym­
pathy extended to us in our
recent bereavement of our be
loved husband and father, Ma>aji Butch Inamoto.

Mrs. Chiyo Inamoto.
Rickey, Glenn & Darryl
Mr. & .Mrs. Umetaro
Inamoto.
Gabby & Kana Inamoto,
Kiyoshi & Joan Ono,
Bill & Dorothy Fujino,
Mateo & Lucky PagtaccoT
nan.
Slim & Sally Kondo,
Mr. & Mrs. Shintaro Sasaki,
Eddy & Kay Sasaki,
Kyo Sasaki,
Sanzo Sasaki,
Shiro & Suzu Sasaki,
Bill & Jean Tanaka

Air—Ship—Bid1—Rail

Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
and Baggage Insurance

BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?

Passage anttnjed by Steam©* or Air

Call for Reservations or
Information ■— EM. 8-9934

T. KAMEOKA

DOWNSVIEW. Ont. — Elaine
and Donald Kimura are happy
to announce the birth of a son.
Scott Mori, 6 pounds .10 ozs. on
March 10. .1970 at York-Finch
Hospital, Downsview. Both doing
fine.

Obituaries
HASEGAWA

EDMONTON, Alberta.
On
February 23. Mrs Itoyo Hasegawa passed away at the
of
o68. On February
were conducted by Reverend W.
K
Harms at Park
Memorial
Chapel. Interment Beechmount

She is survived bv three sons
and four
Henry of
Ottawa, <
of Edmonton.
Mrs. John Yamamoto
(June) of Edmonton,
Mrs. Tim Wong (Carol) of Calgary, Gloria and Mary of Van­
couver, and a sister, Mrs. Uye­
hara of Edmonton.

V^V^"V**,V"*'^r^f**'V*^|P^^J*^F*^Wr^l

SAY IT WITH
FLOWERS

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CKY-W1DE DEI.(VERY
Peter Sasaki
K. Sasaki

Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
M2 PAPE AVE.. TORONTO

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otuera
proprietor

JAMES KAMINO

JON ONODERA
HU. M654 — HU. 1-8801
(Business)

EM. 4-9913

(Residence)

540 Eglinton Ave. W
Toronto

(TORONTO)

ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD,
MEMBER OF C.R.C-A.

FLAT ROOFS

SHINGLING

eavestroughing
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Anywhere — Anytime

small

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KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C.

AND OTHER JAPANESE
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FAMILY PARTIES

<60 Dundas St. W.

M e wish to express our
gratitude and appreciation to
Ollr. f^nds and relatives for
their acts of kindness, expres­
sions of sympathy and beautitul floral tributes during our
recent loss of dear mother,
Mrs. Kiku Yamada.
-Mr. & Mr. Hideo Yamada,
Mr. & :
Masakazu
Yamada
Mr
: Mrs. Harry Yamada
Akiko Yamada,
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various kinds of sushi

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Pres- -^ Ml;?aJ7lta^a^ra’ Manager Airs. Michiko Kadota,
olo Alain Street, Vancouver 4, B.C. Tel. 682-2241

Page 8

fAGE 8

r h e

"Canada" Visit

* •

5i^y. M

(Cont. from Page One)

(Continued from Page I1)

matic fields, consider (
But while Janan'
formally
vember,
partnersnip

awa merely an adjunct of Washington.
toie;gn policy is oased first of all, and
n-^ato Washington communique last Nowith the United State; in Asia and th
leadership savs
for something much

orange are lashed on to a white- down what they apprehended in
painted metal framework. The a way that they hoped would
—ua class man
base of each of the three pyra­ make it plausible. Nature was
mids measures 16’xl6’xl6,. Inside the correlation-criterion for what A member oi Ethiac ^6
they are lined with fluorescent they did. A lot of abstraction,
Catano,
s
ka is obviously inchiding my
own paintings,
more.
i
naPpy with the night-time ef- didn’t need a consensus from the
fects.
world around, its plausibilitv
Heading Off Revolt
“The pyramids are dematerial­ c.ame from inside.
It is avowedly
to K
m t
great economic power ized. and yet reflected. Made
English Section
“The total lack of objective
without becoming
mil
translucent,
the
colors
glow
like
power to retain what some
criteria, or perspective on the i
observers call its superpower statu
jewels, and change depending on
act of painting', is explained bv
Western Pacific with- your angle of vision.
fe
out resorting to militarism.
the
fact
that,
painting
had
be
­
^i
“But the work is over and fin­
It realizes Japan’s internal
problems are increasing witn ished for me. I don’t think about come a very interior thing.”
“i advance
growing prosperity .and pollution. But it hopes
1 asked Kiyooka for his reac- I
PUBLISHED ON EVFrv
^
to head off a it any more.”
tion to 955,000 at the Vancouver I
student revolt
Kiyooka
acquired his first
dle-class society that for all the atcamera in Japan, and in four Art Gallery, and ‘conceptual art
tention paid t
09 QUEEN ST. ^ L
indent demonstration:
in general.
months
took several thousand
happened here as in North America and Europe.
Toronto 2-B, Ont
i
“I wasn’t interested in that |
photographs
T discovered that
_ Ja?nneSe identhy has
been a greater problem. But Exoo “lie camera
EMpirg
5-5005
'
a consensus show as such but it started me
L ^ Japan, in a lai ger >ense, what the Canadian pavilion with the eye, that it can be a thinking about art in general and' I
'r 7 Ca^aca even after Expo (.'7. In the words of theme co-or- perfect extension of the ind'i- mine in particular. It made me
classified
dinator Mairuth Hodge of Montreal: ■‘We had one job to d'o—to ddual eye. I resist the tempta­ do a different take on the act
of
painting.
I*,
tion to organize the subject, but
make a positive statement that
we exist without comparison
I do organize the camera in re“The ultimate concept art is
him
ation to it.
the
activity
inside
your
head,
to
Share Common Bond
. "It’s too bad that the camera get it across to anyone else you
This
concept, that Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau at
‘emis itself so easily to sentiment have to give it some kind of SEVERAL g.ar(
‘S
driver wanted,
pears to oe trying to prove as a head of government, and he may and nostalgia. The Japanese are form, or document it in some da
(Toronto).
elaborate on it when he visits Japan and Expo in late Mav There particularly good at that, with way. Maybe my forms will
TRUCK driver or
ns great sensitivity here about the “ugly Japanese*’ image, anr. mother or uncle or sweetheart change, I don’t know. I don’t 364-7692
or Up •3c
nosed
under
the
cherry
blossom.
^’aye. anV opinions any longer;
it will be hard to convince other Asians that Japanese are
noWhat interested me most on opinions are cheap, momentary
t
WE HAVE c in
jus-, as aggie&she as businessmen as they were .as soldiers.
'he Expo site wasn’t the archi- decisions, my own opinions I find Canada for five -i-„.a.e OEeri".
transistor ss- c
t
But if Japan somehow manages to fall into a humanizing
cians to service radios
ecture and design,
but the particularly uninteresting.
T
and
otner
elect
;Vo
doves dropped by the workmen
“Art is a seismograph of the
mold, Canada is bound to be interested. Both countries are pro
Person must 1
I
.mi
who
wore
them
out
at
a
terrif
;
mind,
of
the
brainwaves.
You
can
nimum supervision
tected by the United States while trying to be different from it. ■ ate.”
employees. EngHse
be
amused,
bemused,
entertain
­
Ihe snow reflected in Canada’s mirrors here when young Canadian
"
Kiyooka now has a lot of glove ed, provoked by what goes on helpful.
hosts and hostesses arriving in futuristic silver uniforms oh’d ami photos, shot from above, singly in
Reply
in
writing
to;
I
.... any man’s head, and the wav
Japan Solid
ah d over the pavilion for the first time might have been a signi­ or in groups, worn, torn half- he lavs it out on wall, flooi’ or
221 Victoria S’
ouried m dust and dirt. Thev in a book ... or you may not
ficant omen.
Toronto 205, Ont.
m e spare and eerie, you react be any of those, things. It depends
Or, phone for a mo m ent
to them first in your ’hand. He on your own head.”
mlks of working through thU
Kiyooka talked about Japan, “a
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
obsession in various ways; one is abyrinthine world. It is dense.
o publish a selection ' with the
“Doctor of Chiropractic”
Female Help Wanted
Buy & Sell — Your Home
poems he is now writing. These ' ertical. where Canada is sequ- OPERATORS experienced on mtial, horizontal. Of course you
728A St. Clair Ave. West
too are spare, sometimes down
apply Miss Sun Valle- T j is fk
(h block West of Christie)
nave to multiply Canada’s popu­ dresses
Through
o lour words.
aina Ave.,- "th floor (Tcror/oi
t
lation five and' a half times’to
TORONTO
“I have become an impres- get Japan’s. The same for the SEWING machine operator evse-r
651-8060
Res. 621-1989
nomst. The impressionists set arts, multiply everything that’s a
Hdent
Apply 8e-‘e- S
Go., 457 Richmond St. V,’. (To-c-t:
aping on in Canada five and a
■ domi
Representing
half times.
Jse New Canadian As
1 Thos. T. Onizuka, Q.C
^Eut there’s a vivacity in the
Robt. Owen,
(Continued From Page 1)
For Be^t Result? ’ tury
I -V’eets, a unifying liveliness.
j BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
Realtor
| 1 nere is . nothing
comparable
that
genes of long-living people re- I mie, nor in much of Europe anv
I
NOTARY PUBLIC
2685 Eglinton Ave. East
^
north'
sistent to diseases such as cancer. I ,on^r. V nat coherence we have
121 RICHMOND ST W
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-2581
By manipulating genes, scien­ m North America is created bv
TORONTO 1
a
1
363-5002
691-3388 (Res.)
tists could also wipe out diseases -he media at a very trite level.”
feyR
meh as diabetes and inherited
Kiyooka ha~
leven
ught land here, an essential
-moimalties such as mongoloid- I
ig, Japan
nomad wouldn’t mind being in
ism.
Kb
THEFT — AUTO
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Vancouver for a while.
Suzuki said he “hit the roof"'
B
’witie
One of Kiyooka’s paintings h
Consult
Alien he read reports from EngSales

Service
I
; R
Se r0V?r Of a Special Issue
land that the first test-tube bab v oi Studio International, the art
ifFWD <
is being planned.
journal published in England, de2893 Lawrence Ave. Easi'Rcentur
SKI, FISHING
Canadia^ Art Today. It
Scientists have run out of
At Brimley Rd. Sfarboroiifli^P®'
be
0,1 Kale in Vancouver
1 ,r Adi Classes of
he
said,
for
saying
they
have
Specialists
Phone 759-1583
> .
" ithin a month.
1
great moral decisions to make
insurance
NEW
Hand! b;
m the future about genetic en­
Ito
Eo!
LOCATION
KURA
gineering. “It is an accomplish­
Phone: PL. 9-2632
I
'
Tc
1201 Bloor Street West
ed fact.”
OR
Suzuki said he had decided
PL. 5-7317
LE. 2-4267
The
against leaving his field of
gin thei
study partly because without re­
search “I would go insane” and
scientists who dropped out would
*makur Talent Night “Shiroto Nodo lion, m
he ineffective. There must be
t>e held on March 27th starting 7:00 these.
"esponsible people in genetics to
e , apanese Canadian Cultural Centre.
counter damage done by irres| today
lonsible decision b he said.
h°T ba
■nslrumenSt’ "dlncTU0 'f1*'1" (no ase limil) — sinners,
decide to conEMTo^gA!Fnn°n °n Taks
Orders
Wi
the following, vf Hhh- -'.— are rMuesletl '» “”“" |
mue advancing genetic knowlOta
t9I
,ii
:
M
«'^
feTS"

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E

I;
people
For reservations EM. 2-4322
cm the ba
t if thev
12S Ehzabetn Street at Dundas, Toronto
fealUoug
don't do it somebody else
Nil—
i silence
I said.
^^ to Wedding Banquet. Showers and p^
W ith that reasoning,*’ he said
• Ainu h
“during World War II in
'-Ain.
p,
many we could have said if i
L®be/;
on t kill the Jews somebody eh



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Mits Kuroda

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Tom’s Television
And Radio

nil KINOSHITA

OSCAR'S
Sport Shop

AMATEUR TALENT CONTEST

II Th

KWONGCHOW
chop SUEY TAVERN

Established Nursery & Landscapin
Business

• f°r two skilled
*"? ^lulseaping business in Sydnev. v
.
...u .’IHMTV
-'ova >cotia preferre-d
‘ 1 ?pp 'fants "’I’o are married and
ano her »amilx depend™, ran,,™ not under 25. Wife or
S employed if desired.
T bursery stock and
n ^°nS’b' Ify of Hquity position in
period.
after a trial

Sydney River

current
research is
designed to find out how to turn
genes on and off. He's working
<,uuais

nd lowering temperatv
turning oft and on" a
re necessary for the
t ro
it

some

tients n;
treat men

raisim
=—th a
?s tha

nas oi cancer
iperatures of
sometir
other

Will Annual Nisei Ten-Pin Tournament

Son

has t>se
are in at

Date: March 27th and 28th
Hords o

idee: Sheas Cedarbrae Bowi
Teams, Mix Doubles, Men’s and Women's

The

i

;s^ j£

Doubles and Singles

Entry Deadline March 17th —- Mary Ebata
Phone 277-2490

V
effo
and