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The New Canadian — June 9, 1970

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Page 1

Red Army” Leader Reveals Background Of Plane Hijacking

Japanese

K^OKYO —^^^°113 o:f Japanese watched tin* first
v o hijacking this country had ever experienced
IT-he TV screen early this month. But few of them

B

Up to the:w
concerned.
Now the Mu abW |!3s suttffllfi! in ^
touch with one of the Red Army-* ton h^n, „,„1
““E ‘ ^"^ chat with him. Here are some ithli.
lights of the interview:
Q: There's been a flood of reports about the hijack­
ing and the Red Army in newspapers am{ magazines
in the past month. What do you think of them?
A: I've read most of them. Very interesting.
Q: Interesting?
A. Yes. The police pretended to know all the names
of the hijackers ami announced them to the press.
But they proved wrong with a couple of the names.

f

V

Q: When was the hijacking planned?
A: Late last year. Or to be exact, the plan took
definite
shape last January.
the background of the incident.
Q: Who was the chief architect of the hijacking
WThou^h the hijacked plane—Japan Air Linus* 727
plan.
We assumed it was Takamaro Tamiya, the leader
Lpii “Yodo"__has long returned to its regular servof
the
hijackers.
1^ still many questions remain unanswered. Who
A: That's true he was in charge of the military
»
UHckers ? What is Sekigun or the Red Army
affairs
of the Sekigun until last December. But some­
Ihich plotted the air piracy?
body else took his place before the hijacking was car­
|^e Japanese first expected the police to come up
ried out. His name must be kept secret.
®'-h details of the incident and the radical organizaQ: How come even the police failed to detect the
hOn because detectives were supposed to keep every
hijacking plan in advance?
^e of the Sekigun under surveillance.
A: Only a limited number of the leaders even within
| Apparently, however, the police has failed to live
(Continued on Page 8)
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y®q The lltiB Canadian

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

An independent Orgsn for Canadians of Japanese Origin
U XXXIV—No. 45

TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 1970

Toronto, Ont.

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Vernon, B.C. Artist Tomiyo Sasaki
Th Etiological Significance Awarded $3,500 Canada Concil Grant

CONCLUSION . . .

Of The Family For Deliquency |
The Following seminar paper was initially presented by the
B'riler, Mr. E. S. Yohida at the Centre of Criminology, University of
Rloronto. Mr. Yoshida is a well known Nisei Probation Officer
forking out of the Scarboro Probation Office.

B

By E. S. YOSHIDA

VERNON, B.C. — Miss Tomi­
yo Sasaki, daughter of Air. and
Mrs. Yonojo Sasaki of Vernon,
has received a Canada Council
Grant of $3,500.00. This is her
second consecutive year. She will
continue her art career in New
York City where she is presently
residing.
On receiving the Helen Bitt

D. G. Lederman's “Delinquency And The Concept Of Identillcation” (Dissert. Abstr.) also supports this explanation: “The
Concept of identification provides the best overall theoretical framegork within which diverse phenomena associated with delinquency
Kiay be explained and integrated.”
H The Gluecks, too, find this hypothesis acceptable:
H ‘‘The extent to which the father of a boy was acceptable to him
TOKYO.—Two of the world’s
g as a figure for identification is revealed in the findings that oldest reigning monarchs, erst­
i. fewer than 2/10 of the delinquents, as contrasted with over H while enemies of World War II,
| of the non-delinquents, considered the father to be the kind dined together recently in the
I of man he himself would like to be.”
recesses of the Imperial Palace.
B And Andry's position is that “the prime differential feature Only a few ever will know what
Between delinquents and non-delinquents, as far as parental role the two emperors talked about.
playing is concerned, is the delinquent’s perception of his father’s
Emperor Hirohito, 69, of Japan
Side as being negative.” Applying a personality test to a number and Emperor Haile Salassie I,
|ti male delinquents 14 years and over and comparing it with the 77, of Ethiopia, brought to the
ggeneral population, he discovered that delinquents suffered from table a total of 84 years on rhe
fa low masculine identity and marked inability to take masculine oldest thrones of Asia and Afri|wial roles.
caSelassie flew into Tokyo from
.Elizabeth Wilson’s thesis, The Effect Of Father Separation Or
faulty Father Image On Juvenile Delinquent Behavior In Girls, Hong Kong aboard a special jet
study sample 105 girls from -the Ontario Training to preside at Ethiopia’s Day at
^'■T '? r
'Ebese were selected on the basis of the criteria the 1970 World Exposition and
mmilar to Chesley's. Besides, Sociometric Questionnaires were not to see the sights.
The two rulers, who have
|aarninistered to girls under 12 years, and Likes and Interest Test
known
one another since 195o
| H» not given to those under 14 years. Table G below will give
Igii!™^13^'6 Piciure °t parental deprivation among delinquent

Scholarship in 1962, Miss Sasa­
ki studied for three years at the
Alberta College of Arts in Cal­
gary. graduating with honors in
fine arts.
She then continued to San
Francisco and obtained her bachelor of fine arts with honors.
She also studied at the College
of Arts and Crafts in Oakland

Former Enemies Hirohito, Selassie Dine

n
TABLE G
Paternal Deprivation

when Selassie visited Japan as
a state guest, met again at din­
ner recently. Others at the table
were Empress Nagako, Selassie’s
daughter, the Imperial prince
and princesses and Prime Min­
ister Eisaku Sato and his wife.
Court protocol is strict in Ja­
pan, where the emperor is a
symbol without political power,
ami it would be unthinkable, for
any of the dinner guests to dis­
close the regal conversation.
Hirohito
has
occupied
the
chrysanthemum throne for 44
years the longest rule of any
sovereign now in power, and Se­
lassie has been emperor for 40
year.

Speach-maker Inouye Makes $12,650

Maternal Deprivation
WASHINGTON. — Republican tions over $50 and honorariums
g-fpe of Path.
Pure Impure Total
Pure Impure Total leader Hugh Scott and Sens. Da­ over $300 they received last year.
Peath
9
13
9
12
11
1
niel K. Inouye, D-Hawaii, and
genu. Seph
9
McCarthy,
apostle
of
the
26
38
25
1
47
Storm
Thurmond, R-S.C., were
SeP’n
o8
youthful
dissenters,
limited
him
­
7
1
7
0
9
among the busiest senators on
l’6^ Par. Image 19
28
12
24
4
31
the lecture circuit in 1969, but self to six appearances but at
IbarprC- ^e Sro^ that reported
their Sen.
Eugene J. McCarthy, D- two of them he was paid $2,500.
separation ot
of tnetr
reported permanent
permanent separation
g80% of V31} De seen from Table G that 38 out of 47 or over Minm, commanded a higher price. They were a speech-seminar at
the Economic Club of New York
?e/ema^ delinquents had mixed paternal deprivation
With a deadline recently, Sena­ and a speech at the City of Hope
background; and 25 out of 26, or over 96%, had mixed
tors were filing with the Secre­ in Los Angeles.
He can ? eP^yabion. So Wilson aptly concludes:
Kion vdqYee “om this frequency that permanent maternal separa- tary of the Senate Public Af­
McCarthy’s appearences, which
fehin Yj^ccowanying complication in the father-child relation- fidavits listing all the contribu- included a poetry conference at
powever A ^ harmfully affect the behavior of these children.”
the University of Maryland, net­
/ slates that temporary separation for either parent
ted him $7,500, well under the
kcorp/ir
significance in the group studied. It hardly Extreme Nationalists
total figures for some other se­
background of these girls -without other parental
Are Undesirable Judges nators.
I Th°n
Dj'escnt in the parent-child relationship.
Inouye, chairman of the De­
5 iee s that the ratio of faulty father and mother
TOKYO. — From the moral
hapare tbc61^1* Pure or impure—is noteworthy. Were one to point of view, neither a Commu­ mocratic
Senatorial Campaign
Sis counter^ ^i'e cases’. the faulty father image group outnumbers nist, an anarchiist. nor an ex- Committee, made
13 speeches
J ‘All f ti"
a ra^10 °f nearly 5:1. So she postulates:
fromr natimmli.A is desirable as last year which
brought him
i father*bindings point to the fact that the inadequate 3 iiKpo 'laid Kazuto Ishida. Cbmf
>12.650.
' idmouPhf Ei?'app.ears to he of great significance in influenceing
Ko evidenr fLavi?r °f the girls under study.. Our data showed
Right behind ’was Scott, elect­
Ishida disclosed his opinion on
ficance uni
’Adequate mother image had a similar signied
Republican leader after the
the question of the relations be­
or th?
accoinPanied by divorce, desertion, death, etc.
death
of Everett M. Dirksen last
tween the freedom of thought and
0c" 0A< ima-e of the father.”
August,
who made 12 speeches
c?dsd in^aut hetrer illustrations of faulty father image is re- jud^e5 at a press conference and nicked up $11,550. His best
night was $1,500.
1 sentence Report of Sue Smith. She was convicted May 2.
“ on July 14/69, but had no previous criminal record.
Thurmond reported $10,The Chief Justice said that
;' pl?^ an intact family of five children, three boys ■judges are guaranteed the free­ 550 from 13 speeches and noted
rm?.?1, ner ^hjar has been a heavy drinker. This had dom of thought by the Constitu­ the money was used for contri­
t%~5 many jobs, move all the time, etc. He has beaten tion. Ishida, however, added tnat butions to schools and colleges
^exore, and she had to be hospitalized once. All of this the judges must approve and obey and for expenses such as postagej printing, and travel.
the Constitution.

(Continued on Page 8)

Tomiyo Sasaki
where she gained her masters
degree in fine arts in 1969. Dur­
ing that time she had received a
$5,300 fine art fellowship from
the college. She was one of four
Canadian winners of Eagle Fine
Arts Scholarship for $300.
Miss Sasaki was born and edu­
cated in Vernon and graduated
from Vernon Senior Secondary
School.
Presently her work of 7 figur­
es, life-size, made from papiermache plus mixed media-papier
entitled “Great American Pas­
time” was displayed in Montreal
Museum of Fine Arts, May 8 Io
June 7, 1970, in “Survey 70-Rcalisms” also at Art Gallery of On­
tario August 7-September
6,
1970.

Vancouver Bound
Solo Voyager
Caught In Storm
CHOSHI, Japan. — A 22-yearold Japanese electrician on a solo
voyage to Vancouver in a small
sailboat encountered a storm in
the Pacific May 21 and sought
shelter at a Japanese fishing
port. Maritime Safety Agency of­
ficials reported recently.
Minoru Nagayoshi, from Osa­
ka, Japan, left recently aboard
his sailboat Calypso II for Van­
couver from, the nearby fishing
port of Kujukuri where he had
made an unscheduled stop for
a fresh supply of dinking water
and oil, the officials said. He
lost most of his drinking water
and oil in the storm'.

Page 2

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Page 7

I

i

B.

ff

^y.Jtwe 9, 1970

PAGE 7

pates And Doings
an. JCCA Bon Odori Slated Civic Plaza July 11

The Effects Of Expo 70
On The Japanese People

WINNIPEG.__ All members of the Manitoba J.C.C.A. are inBy BILL HOSOKAWA
4 to participate in the “Centennial Bon Odori” — summer
QLOTE—Jolm Canaday in the New York Times: “Things will
dance — sponsored by the Manitoba Buddhist Church,
F^held on July IE 1970, tentatively7 at the Civic Plaza.
nexer be quite the same again for countless Japanese farmers and
i ^j a2;es. female and male, (even if you’ve never danced be- villagers who are being exposed to a world they could not have
Practices will be announced shortly. Bring vour imagined, a world recognizing none of the traditions they have
fore)
lh ed by, including the traditions that have made them a power­
■ends. —Outlook
ful conservative group in Japan’s politics. Every day the coun*
tiy people pour into Expo in dozens of organized groups running
up to 500 each. For many, perhaps the majority
lictorian Order Of Nurses Mean Care At Home city is a once-or twice-in-a-lifetime experience, and some have
: TORONTO. — The Victorian Order nurse is a graduate re- been say ing for years to make a trip . . . They7 arrive in chartered
p,-rered nurse, and usually7 she has also taken a public health buses, each group a community7 project. Descending en masse,
Bourse at university. She is familiar with the community7 resources they7 follow a leader who carries high a banner visible from a dis­
hich may7 help her patient. For example she knows what special tance by any7 member who gets separated from a flock . . . Imluipment will make the patient’s convalescence easier, and she mened in sights and sounds they7 have never known, thev crowd
through pavilion after pavilion . . . For these countrv people,
nows where the patient may7 borrow or rent it.
Expo must be one vast transfiguring phenomenon that, once enA telephone call to the Metropolitan Toronto Branch, Victorian
countered, cannot be put aside. The more you see of the fair, the
Brder of Nurses will bring one of these specially7 qualified nurses
less presumption is involved in the conclusion that years after
o vour home. Call 363-5621. A participant in the United Appeal.
it closes and an assessment is possible, its effect on these people’s
way7 of thinking .about the world must surely7 turn out to be Expo’s
most potent contribution—whether for good or ill.”
*

H is * good policy to
bare the RIGHT POU CT

Coaralt

William Wales Ltd
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-46S1

MEN'S SUITS
Made To Measure
And Alterations
Chris Nomura
132 Baldwin St, Toronto
Phone 368-9225

AUTO

FIRE





LIFE;

AXL FORMS
OF

INSURANCE
. commit

KIYO TAMURA
TORONTO

Res. Pl. 9-8317 j

Bm. 366-5812

Idont. Dana Offers Scholarships For J.C. Students

EVALUATION—The above certainly must be considered a
thoughtful observation on a side of Expo that few
I MONTREAL. — Application forms for the Montreal Dana
But rural Japan is
and has been changing ever since
Scholarship valued at $50.00 and $25.00 to be awarded in September
the end of World War II. I can see it in what’s been happening
BiO are available for Japanese boys and girls living in Montreal
to my cousin, Michizume Fukeda, who lives about an hour’s ride
Ind surrounding areas.
by bus out of Hiroshima. I first met him in 1950. He was, to put
1) Any student who is completing his or her final high school it bluntly7, hardly more than a country7 bumpkin even though he
year and who intends to pursue his oi’ her study7 at any had enough education to be a rice inspector in the department
university, CEGEP, college or equivalent is eligible to apply. of agriculture. Good-hearted, good-natured, good to his family
It must be that both of the student’s parent or either parent but almost totally7 unaware of the world outside of his little village.
I saw him again a year ago. He owns a television set and
be of Japanese origin.
Application forms may7 be obtained by phoning any7 one of he had been watching it, the educational programs that Japanese
TV excels in as well as baseball and sumo wrestling- and American
the following members:
Westerns with the dialogue dubbed in, and the samurai dramas
Mrs. J. Okimura 747-5215
of derring-do. He was more sophisticated this time. He could even
Mrs. T. Okada
488-1134
talk politics, and he would argue with his son who, like a good
Mrs. M. Hayashi 728-3796
many7 young Japanese, was disillusioned with the conservative Sato
4) Deadline date- application forms must be filled and re­ government and saw promise of a political Utopia in the left.
Both Fukeda and his son knew what was going
on in the
turned by August 31, 1970 in order to be eligible.
world, the boy7 more than his father. They7 were aware of events

*
abroad that would affect their own lives, of the explosion of
nuclear devices in Red China and the development of Chinese
(Travel The World While In Toronto With Caravan rockets
which would put their home in the shadow of nuclear death.
They
7 talked vaguely7 of perhaps going up to Osaka to see
TORONTO.—You can be a world traveller from June 24th to
July 1st — without vaccinations, air-sickness, lost baggage, custom Expo "’70, but not with any7 great enthusiasm because they7 knew
pearances. Without even leaving Metro. You sleep in the best bed the fair- would be crowded and they7 are country7 people not par­
ticularly7 fond of congested places. But they7 knew others who were
an town — your own.
planning to go, and it is likely that when their friends returned
The whole massive caper is called Metro International Caravan
from viewing the bright lights and the wonders of the pavilions
|~ a festivity prepared in association with the Metropolitan Tor­
from around the world, they7 would sit and talk and be impressed.
onto Community Folk Art Council.
And, as John Canaday indicates, rural Japan never would be quite
I Tour key to the action: a $3.00 passport that lets you into 35 the same after Expo. But Expo would only be accelerating a process
^orld centres from Athens to Zagreb.
already7 well under way, part of a world-wide movement launched
■ Community centres, church halls and foreign language clubs by the magic of radio and the wonders of instant visual commu­
being transformed into world cities — crammed with exotic nication through television. And whether all the information now
food and drink, singing to international tunes, ablaze with brilliant available can be absorbed and digested and understood, and utiliz­
ed for the betterment of our society, is something we won’t know
lostumes.
until a lot of time has passd. And what happens over there in­
The Japanese present Tokyo in their superb cultural centre at evitably7 must affect us over here.
p Mynford Drive, They7 will show their delicate arts: flower
ranging, brush painting, paper crafts, calligraphy. And their
so gentle arts: judo and karate. Gay7 umbrellas and Japanese
merns. Sake and Japanese beer. Dainty things to eat. Tickets
^n be obtained at the J.C. Cultural Centre.

s Private! No Time Limit!

Get the mosf enfoymenl from your wedding
reception or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food! Plenty of free parking!

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
SUNDAY.
10:30 A.M.
11:00 a.m.

Religious

JUNE

14,

1970

Brun

824-8153

822-1353

ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered

Accountant

Suita

483

130 BLOOR ST. W.

TORONTO

Custom Picture
Framing

1278 Tongt Stroat. Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
ToHo Niihlmura
823-6877

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

DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Fishing Tackle
Dew Worms and
Fishing Licenses
551 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka

Phone: HO. 3-7400
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.

918 Bathurst St.

School

Morning Service
2:00 P.M. Japanese
Service

Telephone:

534-4302

CHINA

HOUSE
RU. 1-9123

925 Eglinton W. Toronto

OFTORONTO

TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
S^BVICES^'' ^^S

^res^er’M'

Broadview

at

Simpson Ave.

Your Home

Buy and Sell

~u-.de,: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Bi . ”^a-: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
-~o=e Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1689.

* FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Sults

Through

& Trousers

MAS (Ron) MENDE
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
R-.
SUNDAY. JUNE 14, 1970. 11:30 A.M,
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi. 766-5632
— Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
Church School for the children
y7 ■
A warm welcome to all.

South of Bloor

(Tosh Iwai)

1527 O'Connor Dr
—.

__

437 Danforth Ave. Toronto

757-5184

Tel. 463-8104

Page 8

PAGE 8

Red Army . .

(Continued From Page 1)

Delinquency

(Continued from Page I1)

li in
The New Canadlja

the Sekigun knew about it. Or- I
A: No. Shiomi was to go to
?erS-i?° r^ise funds were issued Cuba because his job was to help bad led the parents to separate temporarily once before, and
-members °f the Sekigun organize the World Communist they are not living together now. Since quitting school, Sue admits
spending a lot of time in Yorkville. And more recently, she has A
without any explanation. I su- Party.
spect even a number of the hiQ: Could you explain the mili- been living with her boy friend at Rochdale College and is reporter
°i Osorio
pregnant.
jacking group got aboard the j tary set-up of the Sekigun?
published on every
plane without
knowing what | A: We have a Central Arm\
CONCLUSIONS
S0I'no to do. under the command of the Centra
From the outset of this paper, the etiological significance o;
nny other Sekigun I Military
Affairs
Committee.
members to go with the nine There were about 50 officers be- the family for delinquency has been pre-supposed. To what degree
MuRl Japane5e
hijackers ?
I fom the Yodo affair.
and in what way was it significant were just two of the questions
And Advertise
that
it
sought
to
explore.
Along
with
Nye
and
others,
it
quickly
A: Originally 15 men ■were ex-1
Q: Officers?
peeled to take part in the hijack-1
A: They are to become officers learned that there is no single cause “to explain the whole of the
ln&- Three of them were arrest- of the World Red Army once phenomena.” And in agreement with M. Staak, Anti-Social Juveniles
English Section Editur
ed and three others dropped out the World
Communist Party From Stable Families, it has to admit that “Though the familial
hijacking. I comes into existence as we plan.
atmosphere is very important in the development of human be­
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
Q: W.as Takanari Shiomi, chairQ: What are they doing now? havior, it cannot be regarded as a 'causal’ factor in the scientific
Toronto 2-B, ont.
man of the Sekigun, also expect-1 A: There are some 90 officers sense of “cause and effect.’ ”
EMpire S-5005
ed to participate? He was ar- now.'They’ve cut off all relations
Nevertheless, it feels that a number- of summations can be
rested on March 15.
with their families, friends and made:
A: I don t know. But I can say I universities. They are preparing
this. If he had been among the I for our struggle, moving from 1) There is a considerably higher incidence of delinquency among
juveniles from broken homes.
hijackers,
the hijacking would I one place to another every day.
Girls suffering from parental deprivation and/or intra-family
have gone more smoothly.I Some groups of officers are on
conflicts are more susceptible to anti-social behavior than boys
Q: Did his arrest affect the I long marches.
from the some conditions.
Help Wanted
P'anI
Q: Like Chairman Mao’s Long
3) Intra-family conflicts—whether marital or parent-child —ploy a EXPERIENCED
A: It .hastened the carrving I March ?
role even more significant than the fact of a broken home in boutique. Arr’v 7g
out of the plan. Shiomi was to I A: Yes. They are recruiting
Phc2®J$5-1677AToront^
$
influencing delinquent behavior.
have talks with the Black Pan- soldiers and organizing district
thers and West German radical I branches of the Sekigun, all 4) Children who were victims of maternal deprivation in their
Female Help Wanted
infancy are more apt to become delinquents than those separated
students in Cuba next June. He I across the country.
in
later
childhood

with
the
quality
and
lenght
of
the
depriva
­
designer foTfeTUV
was careless to get arrested.
I Q: More than 200 Sekigun
tion
to
be
considered.
and
Misses
dresses, Mu^
^hy did you choose North I members have been arrested in
Korea as the destination of the I less than a year. Some say the 5) Paternal deprivation—whether pure or mixed—probably has ed. 364-7948 (Toronto).
greater significance on the delinquency of children, especially

Sekigun has been crushed to
Articles For Sale
girls.
A: they would have gone pieces.
RECONDITIONED
rental TV
6)
Faulty parental image and/or- parental inadequacy are a greater
they would be acceptA: That’s true, some members
able console, from $50. un or
negative
influence
on
the
behavior
of
delinquents
than
the.
fact
211 coPstaut touch I of the organization are now in
Phone 755-9291 (Toronto). *
of parental separation. Usually, faulty parental image and
w ith all the Communist countries I jail. But most of the organizers
physical separation arc intertwined in the background of the
except Russia. We could have remain intact. We are more deep-I
delinquents.
chosen the destination from a- ly rooted among
amonsr college dropdron-II
mong China, Albania, North Ko­ outs, high school graduates and
rea, North Vietnam and Cuba. even juvenile delinquents.
diiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
China was eliminated from the
Q: Will there be further hilist heause we learned some ra­ jacking cases ?
Read Jessie L. Beattie’s
dical students of other sects had
A: You can’t expect me to
smuggled . themselves into the answer that question. But
our
China mainland and have never
present
objective
is
to
organize
been heard of since.
A Japanese Canadian story
Q: Were you sure North Ko­ the World Communist Party. So
we
have
to
go
abroad
to
have
rea would accept the hijackers?
Available at The New Canadian For $5.50
A: We were in touch with talks with foreign revolutionaries.
North Korea, although indirectly. If we can’t leave Japan legally,
479 Queen Street West
Toronto 2-B, Ontario
In fact, we had obtained a gua­ is there any other means than
hijacking?
uuiM£iHiiiniHiiiiiii!iiiiiiiinniihnH!iiiiiiiHi.Miiiii!inm
rantee in advance that North
Q: What is the Sekigun plan­
Korea would let Shiomi proceed
ning- to do in the months to come ?
to Cuba.
A: There will be an interna­
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHLADS
Q: That means the final desti­
nation of the hijackers was Cuba ? tional uprising next fall.
Q.* Are you kidding?
.A' ?es‘ The real aim of the
A: No. We mean it. A simul­
hijacking’ was to let Shiomi go
HARR-1 S. KONOO Ms^^M
Pjeiised t° aiuiounce the opening of JNT Auto Service
to Cuba for talks with American taneous uprising in America and
at 2239 Bloor Street West (West of High Park) for general
here.
627 BAY. ST, TORONTO Phone 36S-9K
and West German revolutionaries.
car repairs. Your car will be promptly looked after with
Q:
Who
belivcs
it?
1 don’t now if Tamiya has been
licenced mechanics.
A: You remember the Black
allowed to go to Cuba in place
Proprietors: Namiki Isao and Kazumi Tanouye
of Shiomi. I here was no guaran­ Panther leaders came to Japan
last year. We’ve been in constant
BUS. 7B3-42S1
RES. 231-0863
tee about him.
(Open from 7 A.M. to 7 P.M.)
3101 Bathurst St
11 Ivy Lea Cres.
Q All told, you sound as if touch with them after they left
you have given up your move­ here.
ment at home.
MRS. SATOKO SATO
(Shukan Asahi) (A.O.)
2239 Bloor St. West, Toronto. Phono 766-4292
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