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The New Canadian — November 3, 1970

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Page 1

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Predict Women's Liberation Movement Will Be Big In Male-Oriented Japan
TOKYO-_Radical battlers have stood up in arms
women's rights in larger cities in Japan, too. By
f’ndicati0115’ the women’s liberation movement will
^A mid catch on in this male-orientated country.
%thou2-h the number of radicals is still limited,
housewives have already* begun learn1° manage their domestic chores systematically’
■^

_______
— time and do something more mean3 order to save
^M drop into a bookstore and you will find that
;helf after shelf is crammed with dozens of books
~ home management. Some of them are high on best-

seller lifts»
Articles on a more “rational domestic management-

appear in issue after- issue of all magazines for women.
XVhat some critics call rational domestic manage­
ment is having an increasing influence ■ among* an
increasing number of housewives.
Mrs. Tomiko Okuy-ama, a 44-year-old housewife,
puts reference numbers on all the receipts she receives
and stores them in a filing cabinet.
Unlike some careless housewives, she never* says,
“Where did I put my* pencil?” She has everything
from receipts and pens to clothes and tableware, in
complete order.
Mi’s. Teruko Noda, 43. hates confusion in her home
because it is a waste of time looking* for misplaced
things.

All the tableware in her home has blue stripes on
them for easy sorting and storing. All her kitchen
utensils are made of red enamel .and for the same.
reason.
There is a housewife who puts numbers on the eggs
she buys so that she can tell the old ones from the
new supply. Another housewife puts numbers on her
husband’s ties and stockings.
Like Americans, some housewives now go shopping
once or twice a week.
But why this sudden rationalization ?
One of the prominent advocates of rational housekeeping is Mrs. Hisako Yoshizawa, a domestic affairs
(Continued on Page 8)

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“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.50
(plus postage)

he Dew Canadian

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

Ao Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1970

Toronto, Ont

,ll|||||Illllllllll!linillllllllllIIIIHII!llhSi!>"SlhiniinillllllllHlHlllinPUIIIIIlllHII!IIUIIIIIU!i!UIHHinHiIIIinil!iniili!ill!l!lilllili!llllllllilSilll||i»!l!lllHllllilHIillilllllllll!lll!lllllllllll!ll!IIIIIUI

Japan Longevity Survey Finds Nisei Senator Of Hawaii Cut Down
Over 90’s Cheerful & Busy By Assassin’s Bullet In Heart
HONOLULU.
Five hours ya ma asked.
armed, at a football game in a
TOKYO.—Most of the people who lived more than 90 years
He cited the slaying of Francis crowded Honolulu stadium.
OTe cheerful by nature and continued to work late in their career, before an assassin’s bullet struck
it was revealed by a survey the Health and Welfare Ministry him down in his own garage, Burke, a 38-year-old ex-convict,
“Our information was that
state
Senator
Larry
Kuriyama
by
two
gunmen
on
a
busy
street
made public recently.
there was to be some kind of
Long-lived persons usually^ had brothers or sisters as well was talking -about crime at a corner in the Chinatown district confrontation,” said Capt. David
political rally.
recently. Burke had ,a police re- Shinn of the police vice squad.
as parents who also had enjoyed longevity, the survey showed.

When
is
something
going
to
cord for robbery and drug law
The survey was conducted on 1,631 persons (406 men and
Burke was reputed to be the
1,225 women) who died in their 90s during the period between be done about getting the police violations.
head of an underworld group in
The next night police arrestApril 1, 1969, and March 31 this year in eight prefectures — Mi­ off traffic detail and onto crime
conflict with another criminal
where
they
ought
to
be?

Kuri’
ed six of Burke’s associates, all
yagi, Chiba, Toyama, Mie, Kyoto, Tottori, Kagawa and Saga.
faction.
The ministry obtained information from family members or
“The police are spending their
their character, tastes in food, relationship with others in the
time on the wrong things,” Ku­
family, mode of living, and other items.
riyama said before he left the
TOKYO.
The average Ja- ard as regards vitamins A, Bl
The results of the survey proved to be consistent with the
political
rally . “Crime is what
hypothesises of both gerontology and geriatrics which indicates panese is nourished by sufficient and B2.
protein and fat, but needs more
Compared with 1958 statistics, they ought to be working on.”
that there is a heredity factor in longevity and that working calciumi and vitamins, a 1968
the Japanese now take 3.5 times
Kuriyama, a Democrat unop­
prolongs life, the ministry officials said.
Health and Welfare Ministry more fruit, 2.7 times more milk posed in the Nov. 3 election,
As for physical conditions, 86 percent of the men .and 80 per- survey showed.
and 2.5 times more meat and
turned down a friend’s invitation
survey was con- fat.
The annual
(
cent of the women were described as having been above average
over
five
days
on
16,500
ducted
On the other hand, the intake for coffee and drove to his hill­
in health.
households in 346 districts in of rice dropped by 13 percent top home overlooking Pearl Har­
Only 8 percent of the men and 10 percent of the women were Japan.
during the past 10 years, show­ bor.
constitutionally infirm. Six percent of the men and 10 percent of
It showed that through his ing an important change in eat­
He parked his station wagon
&e women were bedridden during the whole year previous to daily diet the average Japanese ing habits over the past decade.
in
the garage. A gunman step­
t
took
2,214
calories,
74.9
grams
their death.
A considerable gap between ped from the darkness and fired
| of protein, 44.6 grams of fat,
These results correspond to findings bn men aged between 65 375 grams of carbohydrate and well-fed and ill-fed families was
shown to exist in Japan. About five shots.
and 69 and women between 70 and 74 determined by a nationwide 529 grams of calcium.
Kuriyama, 49, a father of five,
The-figures showed that, com­ 15 percent of Japanese house­
survey on elderly- persons conducted in 1968.
holds had less than 2,000 calories died 30 minutes later at hospipared
with
10
years
ago,
the
Ja
­
Although hearing and walking ability’- was consistent with
panese now took 91 percent more a day, 500 calories below the, tai with a bullet in his heart.
their age, more than 90 percent of these long-lived persons had animal protein.
standard here, the survey show-'
Police Chief Francis Keala
normal memory. Less than 3 percent suffered from retarded me­
They also showed that the Ja­ ed. In marked contrast, 20 per­
cent
of
families
took
more
than
mory.
said no motive for the slaying
panese had attained the target
3,000 calories a day.
level
set
for
1975
by
the
Nutri
­
could
be learned.
Ninety-two percent of the men and 87 percent of the women
tion
Council
of
the
Health
and
Rural
households
ate
consider
­
Burial with military honors
had no food restrictions and ate both meat and vegetables. Sixty-six Welfare Ministry as regards ably less fruit, meat and milk
was
set at the National Memori­
percent of the men and 71 percent of the women preferred sweet calories, protein, vitamin C and than urban families, according
iLored food while 27 percent of the men and 24 percent of the fats, but fell short of the stand- to the survey.
al Cemetery of the Pacific.
"Omen preferred salty tastes. Most of the men and women avoided
oily iood, the survey* showed.
Those who were idle at home were 25 percent of the men
^ 27 percent of the women, but about 60 percent of both men
^i Momen had kept busy at light housekeeping chores.
By FREDERICK H. MARKS
but even smaller less ostenta- ing, because the
the Japanese
Japanese themth
Fifty-three percent of the men and 51 percent of the women
tious
apartments
here
start
at
selves have a rough
housing
The
diminutive
TOKYO.
portrayed as optimistic, talkative and sociable. Most of the Japanese real estate agent slip­ $250.
time in Tokyo.
The monthly rent here is only
J‘er> were described as strong-minded and methodical. Those who ped the key in the d'oor and with
“Horrendous”
s® ^iC1’^ed as somber and misanthropic registered less than one a deep bow escorted the Ameri­ the start. Real estate agents get
The Japanese are the first to
at least 50 percent of the rent
can inside.
as .a fee for showing the apart­ admit that the housing problem
>‘®®6 the surveyed, those whose parents’ age was traceable
“This is a very nice aparto.
^ 88). Both parents of 16 percent of these had lived more than
ment or house, and landlords can in their capital city is horrenTwo bedrooms. Only 300,000 yen
require as much as six months dous.
''w' ^^' ^ Percent of them had parents who died under 60.
plus heat,” the real estate agent
Ryokichi Monobe, Governor of
rent as deposit, plus one month’s
^.^‘’th’e percent had more than half of their brothers or
announced.
Tokyo, said recently:
Tokyo
rent in advance.
hved beyond the age of 70. Thirty-six percent had all
The
American
immediately
people
p.ay
higher rents for
So for a 300,000 yen apart­
brothers or sisters who lived more than 70 years old. This
started converting yen into dol­ ment, a foreigner must pay 2,- worse houses than in other cities.
‘it
with the heredity factor hypothesis of longevity,
lars and asked: “What else have 250,000 yen to move in—which Tn a survey a couple of years
^Aj'and Welfare Ministry officials pointed out.
you got?” The monthly rent converts to a $6,200 admission ago> 44.7 percent of the people
converted to nearly $830, which ticket.
still needed houses or felt their
Wo POLICEWOMEN NIX MIDI UNIFORMS
is the going price a foreigner
One alternative is to find a present houses were below their
^KYO—
}:i ft '
m^ls^rt hasn’t representativi■res of the policewo- has to pay if he lives in the style tiny* Japanese apartment, but standards.”
with communal toilets and no
Part of the problem is that
* ,e. approval of Tokyo’s men ended

ended" ii.
in unanimous agree
­ he is accustomed to in Tokyo.
policewoman

Housing in Tokyo must be heat, that takes a huge adjust- Tokyo received heavy destruction
rvneewomen, at least not ment that the hemline on new
uniforms.
the
most expensive in the world. ment multiplied by the number during World War II.
uniforms coming out next year,
^’hour discussion among must be above the knee, officials The apartment described above of members in the family. It
The war damage, coupled with
" Apartment officers and reported recently.
was very comfortable, to be sure, also takes a good d"eal of search(Cont. on Page 8)

Japanese Need Vitamins & Calcium

S830 Monthly Aparto’ Rent For ‘Gaijin’ In Tokyo

Page 2

Tuesday, November?!

PAGE 2
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' ALL YOU EXPECT JAPAN TO BE^

TORONTO: I I I Richmond St.. Wes

Toronto I I 0
Tel 364-7226
VANCOUVER: 777 Hornby StVancouver
Tel 688-661 I

Page 3

^Avjovember 3, 1970

N E W

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INSTANT COOKING BASE

“!90^UZ hime

^HS.n.^fei! •CA4:-ffl5tfti^4jy, Ui'li^ti*. ^^<» «<o<^#T»

COOKMQ

BAMBOO GROVE
692 No. 3 Rood,
Richmond, B. C.
Phone CR. 8-9585
CR. 8-9586

Page 4

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TELEPHONE EM. 6-164

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Phone 356-5Ciu$
Second class ^aj]
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Page 7

ipiesday. Xovember_3}_1970
CANADIAN

Home Care For Aged
Aimed At Ethnic Groups
By ROBERT KREEM

PAGE 7
B to a good policy to
k®w th« 1IQHT POLICY
Consult

Man. JCCA Annual Kiddies Xmas Party Dec 5th

; The Private Home Care program allows ethnic groups to
SCreen*
Teip develop appropriate service for their own people, with the
T S°me CoIourful shots °f the Japanese festival scene-'
:E« or the Aged as the main resource behind them. Development fV
landscapes’ and the., eyes can feast on the stunning Q
^rsuch a piogiam lequnes no large sums of money and can be
^C°^Umfs WOrn by the courtesans of the Edo period*
^demented in a short time.
townsnX
°n Banzuiin Chobeh ^e famous Kvokaku or
This program should be investigated through officials of
L
°f chn;arOUS sPirit, a skillful swordsman,
who became
Municipal Homes for the Aged and provincial representatives b I of
amon= Jownsmen, and engaged in a feud with a band
Metropolitan Toronto contact the office of the Commissi
'
°°un s retainer. There is a tender subplot of a
|W A. W. Varcoe, 4th Floor, East ToXr" Cit^^^
I
?nd .
foremost courtesan, love between
Komurasaki
«i-S53O. Other contacts are: Vladimir Mauko, Chairman Ontarnhs a
S^ Wh° 1S °Ut t0 avenge her father’s death. There
fer-Group Committee, c/o Tiroler House, 1115 Bay Street Tor- 1 running timA T^ SU^pe^^’ act1011’ and dreams in its 120 minute’s
>olS1’ telephone 923-7021; Lawrence Crawford, director, Office I of the vear
° ^^ thlS 0116 °f the m°St outstanhhig offerings
,o Aging and Homes for the Aged Branch, Ontario Demrfmmu
X’ J? ■
(Social and Family Services, Sth Floor, Hepburn Block ParliJ sone lltmm “a TW ? ?' Vet'™ directM' o£ ji^i-geki, OhBuildings Toronto 182, telephone 365-5103, or 365-5336 Masahiko Tsu *
r
V° MatSUmOt° 38 Banzui« Chobei.
^IKreem is Consultant on Services, Homes for the Aged Branch’
t7
G°npach1’ and Michiko Saga as Komurasaki.
^Department of Social and Family Services, Hepburn Block Par’Lm
'v”1’
N° Banzuiin” wiH be shown at 3:00 and 8:00
fluent Buildings, Toronto.)
' P-™- on November 8. —J.C.C. Centre
*

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1970
10:30

A.M. Religious School
A.M. Morning Service
P.M. Japanese Service

918 Bathurst St.
Telephone: 534-4302

T0RP^J° Japanese gospel church

SEBVICES- ’

° n S

Presb^enan'

^ Csrlton St. 10 th floor
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-4681



Christmas
the M.J.C.C.A. will be held this vear on December 5th
TORONTO.—Those who need the care of a Home for the vn°x United Church. The party will start at 1:30 p.m. and will
Aged need not always go there. Municipal Homes for Ao-ed may b fm children up to and including those of 8 years of age
se private homes in the community for ambulator'y people. This t
atcH your mailbox for application forms the first part of
:??sld mean that Italians, Greeks, Finns, LT7n^nS’ DaneS’
F"rther ’formation can be obtained from Gail Ku2® whose cultures, customs, languages and food are different, sano-—wPS- Outlook.
®a!d live in the homes of the people who share these values.
I
|
*
*
*
- The Homes for the Aged allows six people to be placed in
* t
^ private homes.
They are considered
t
,
officially as Home fori
a No Banzuin JaPan Movie at Centre Nov. 8
P,he Aged Residents and are entitled to the same services as resident®
TORONTO.—A iidai--eki or n
a
+
ironies for the Aged. Hostesses .are guaranteed pavmen ! rarity here. So it is welcome news to d
Ph
iS 3
^gh the administration of the Homes for the Aged, and are Canadian Cultural Centre Film SoXt^tl
the Japanese
^ted to prepare meals for their residents, wash clothes, and tion ^ Shochiku’s "Hana No BanZ2”t h
h
c sel^c
" 3:00 ^‘^~ 7 ^Ti^

11:00
22:00

William Wnlga T.M
Insurance Agents

Broadview at Simpson Ave.

Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
p -j163 °v
raYer “4 Study Fellowship 8:00 P M
Y°Ung PeopIes Christian Fellowship 8:00 PM
J»C-“ «* *• Vokota 423-8.28. Mr. H. Y^U" «"iSB6.

«“° JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 8. 1870 ,I;00 AM

S'U“‘ °‘ Bl°"

EX ~
S' Y-. Honkoshi, 782.5267
Su^Re«
Matsugu,. 444-5159
Sunday School for children
A warm welcome to all.

*



Tom’s Television
AndRCA
Radio
Sales — Service
2893 Lawrence Ave. East
At Brimley Rd. Scarborough
Phone 759-1583

AUTO

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-

ALL FORMS
OF

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consult

KZYO TAMURA
TORONTO

Bus. 366-5812 Res. PL. 9-8317

Bus:

824-8153

Res:

922-1353

ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered Accountant
Suite

403

130 B1OOB ST. w.

TORONTO

-Successful "Happening" at Tor. Buddhist Church
TORONTO.—From the experience of a teenager, it was "hanpemng at the Toronto Buddhist Church on
on September
September 29th
29th—
—aa
stranger, even a ‘ regular” at the Morning Service who had come
come
°f "^ WaS t0 take pIace m^ht have been stunned
| to disbelief. That was Sunday, September 29th, 1970.
The Junior YBA, so to speak was asked by the church to
plan this "Graduates’ Sunday Service” and that was all it took
/ '
^ thei’e fully aSSUred of 110 interference I
X
community to plan a service the way they would

In came the electronic musical equipment ... out went the
^le° ype f^cinf the altar chair arrangement. Instead a stage
m he Centre °f the mVe’ Hke a theatre in the ^und.
For this service, even the Bishop had to be "cued in” for the
Junirai.
c
The theme however, was mature, centering on LIFE,
LIFE, with folk
music and rock which communicates to today’s youth On two I
large screens, flashes of slides depicting birth, youth,’
old age, I
death, war, destruction, happiness, peace . : . all '
a reminder for
man to start thinking positively about our environment and peace
During the service, Toronto Buddhist Church-Dana Scholarships
a™ied to TerrN Watada and Linda Koyanagi. Terry at­
tends Scarborough College and Linda is at Western Universitv in
-London.
..J™6 D’“ men,bers Se™d lu"ch to the Spates after th-,

Custom Picture

NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
Toho Nishimura
923-6877

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

DANFORTH

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SPORTING GOODS

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Invtafion
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551 Danforth Ave.,

Businessmen Luncheon

We Cater To Parties And Banquets
TAKE OUT SERVICE
Phone: EM. 3-7646 — EM. 8-0035
123A Dundas St. West

Toronto 2, Ont.
Parking At Bay & Dundas

^ Une
f’^?^- ^ h*^ “^
^ kces and wo
^ "^ ^^ P°P*^
r WOrl:manship you could wish fad It

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^ ^ unusual selection. 'P — yet costing so Rttle! Come

0

the NEW CANADIAN

«»^ St. West

Toronto 2-B, Ont

(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka

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

s^&ta.
OF TORONTO

Takara Jewellers
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment

weeks

Fishing Tackle
Dew Worms and
Fishing Licenses

Mon. — Friday 9—6, Sat 9—1
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1204.’ Phone 363-0952

Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe

* FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Suits
& Trousers

437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104

Page 8

PAGE 8

Tuesday, Ko'-emi^l

“I Tell Ya\ Sometimes
You Just Can't Win”

Gals Lib

(Cont. from Page One?

The New CanadJ

do I do with the time saved ? Of
commentator.
Second class mm! . •
S
number 0368 ^^^i’fl
Says she, “Houses are still course, I look for more ways for
A member of Ethnic Pres, .J
small in Japan. At the same better housekeeping.”
=1 Ontario
^’^
time, however, Japan is an afflu­
Prof. Ta-dao Uneme of Kyoto
PUBLISHED ON EVERV
H
fl
ent society. Housewives want to University, who has written
and FT® ^a|
know how to reconcile these two many articles on rational houseA«
By BILL MARUTANI
contradictory phenomena.
hold management, says, “It is
PHILADELPHIA.—FEMALE LOGIC.—Earlier this week the
“In other words, Japanese easy to laugh at these houseThe
the secretaries in our office banded together and circulated a pe- housewives
face
what their wives. But you can look at it in
b
ci
479 QUEEN ST. J
tition seeking the right to wear pant-suit outfits to the office. mothers never experienced. Now another way.
p?
(I subsequently learned that ours was not the only law office they want to know how to pur
Toronto 133, Ont.
8 I Frir
“I think that spending time m
EMpire 6-5005 ’
H berth
involved.) Their professed reason was that it gets mighty cold things in order and put new
thinking how to put things in
pera
in winter (granted) although I was tempted to raise, but did products in their small houses.”
ksti
order at home is a kind of crea­
not, the question “Why-then-did-you-insist-upon-wearing-those- abSome critics, however, say tive self-expression of house­
breviated-mini-skirts-all-winter ?” Logic does not always enjoy a that there is something wrong

wives.
high priority once these gals make up their minds.
with housewives who are interest­
“Another thing. When we were
B- :
Anyway, we said “okay”. And in the next ensuing days, with ed in rational domestic manage­
Help Wanted
SMJ
poorer,
we
did
not
have
to
think
the current record heat-wave we’ve been having (I pulled my ment.
: to
BETTER Blouses has
of how to put things in order. street to Foster Blda.,
n
summer suits out again) these gals show up in pant-suit outfits.
These critics point out that
need experienced
Willi
We
did
not
have
many
things.
Quite chic I must admit, but in this weather? As I was saying rational household management
at home. We pick uo’and deiiThe Japanese have become rich
B1°uses Co., 460 Ei?.
about “logic” . . .
w.as originally based on two
W., Toronto.
enough to have to worry about
principles—to eliminate domestic
EXPERIENCED s,,,ing ^
about housekeeping in a real ors
operate
on blouses to work « ‘7
chores as much as possible and
ply Better Blouse Co ' (Hrs^
RUSSIAN WOMEN—This women’s “lib” movement reminds to throw away as many unneces­ sense.”
Richmond West, Toronto. '
me of an old “saw” that went something like this: In Russia,
“What Prof.
Uneme savs
sary things as possible.
SERVICE station attendant Stave q>c
women do men’s work and get men’s pay; in America, women get
They emphasize that the aim makes me feel easy,” says Ta- no's Esso, Phone 691-5691”( Torcntojs
men’s pay.
of all this is to make time and kashi Kobayashi, a 32-year-old SHIPPER-assistant. Must
All of which should be good for a one-way ticket for me into
5pplr £T“ =™»< E> IB®
do something other than domestic bank clerk.
any dog-house where the woman rules the roost and a sense of
dina, 7th floor. (Toronto)
S

I

ve
been
annoyed
whenever
chores.
#1111
humor (that’s humor?) is nonsense. Which this mav be.
Articles For Sale S
“But some housewives have my wife says with a sigh, ‘House­
*
forgotten these principles and keeping is just a repetition of ARTICLES for sale. Boutiaue s'o~^
tures, plate glass, doors, shslvinq'S
RIGHTIST AND REDS—Speaking of Russia and the com- aims and are just sinking deep­ trivials day after- day.’
cases, six drawer storing
Phone 244-9229 (Toronto).
3

But
if
she
can
really
become
er
and
deeper
into
domestic
tri
­
munist threat, I as a middle-of-the-roader American am more
interested in domestic chores
concerned over the communist influence from the Far Right in viality,” they say.
In fact, Mrs. Noda says, “I’m like some housewives, I’ll welour country than from the so-called Radical Left. Let me explain.
raiwJ
busy
reading books on rational I come it for her and me. I don’t
The Far Right is so preocupied by what the Communists
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHeS
do, planning and gearing their action and beliefs on what the housekeeping. I enjoy applying . care if it’s rational or irration^w:3^a4/><7 J^ivUaA'cni^en/ft it’S
Communists do, may do or may be thinking, that the Far Right hints I pick up in these books al.”
But what happens if rational
to my housekeeping.
is letting the Communists “call the tune”.
■ 1 (
becomes a real thing HARRY S. KONOO
housekeping

So,
I
don

t
even
have
time
I’ve often wondered what ever happened to our good ole'
■fee
American Constitution and spending a little time, affirmatively to watch TV or take a nap. I’m in the future ?
627 BAY ST., TORONTO Phone 368 MItai,”
Prof.
Hidetoshi
Kato
of
Kyoto
busy.

making- this American system of government work? If you’ll
wadi le
Mrs. Okuyama has also fallen University, says, “Women believe
pardon my “nihongo”. The hell with the Communists.
111 in f
that housekeeping- is their job
into a similar pitfail.
|»ns
Buy & Sell — Your Home’ |ri e'
“I plan how to deal with my deep in their hearts. So when
S HI FT IN G STA ND AR D S—Since by now I’ve alienated jus- home chores days ahead and they put everything in order
|1M l,i
Through
about every segment of our- populace, we might as well comment write it down in my diary.
I My
and save a lot of time, thev
on a segment of our rebellious youth.
“I feel depressed when I can't might feel they have lost, their
IliDOK :
Some youths assume a self-righteous, uncompromising posture carry out every item of my plans aim in life and feel at a loss.”
Fr Idose to
fb l^ertise
toward just about everything the “older generation” does thinks because somebody visits me oi
Hiroshi Nakano, a social com­
Representing
I
or says, rejecting almost everything that is associated with the I become sick.”
mentator, says, “Because the
r 1I Ever
Robt.
Owen,
1 Ml
so-called older generation.
A 27-year-old housewife, Mrs. real aim of rational domestic
| meh Ei
Realtor
Yet, if one calls attention to something that the young people Kayoko Sakamoto, says beaming, management is to minimize do­
| me. 1
are doing that s wrong—and they know it—they immmediately “It’s good to see my husband mestic chores ’or eliminate them
2685 Eglinton Ave. Easts lav strei
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-25811
take shelter in the older generation’s standards by retorting: finding his own things easily all if possible, it will lead to a
laianer
“Well, you do the same thing’!”
Itatsu” (
because I have them arranged natural question. Do men need
I tell ya’, sometimes you just can’t win.
just so in the wardrobe. What wives ? ”
I The

CLASSIFIED

PRINTING

Mils Kuroda H

lb I ca
RES. 231-0863
II Ivy Lea Cres.

BUS. 783-4261
3101 Bathurst St.

MRS. SATOKO SATO
All types of insurance

CROWN LIFE
INSURANCE CO.

YOUR
BLOOD
the greatest
gift of all

When Buying Oi Selling A Home
Call: KEIS HORI

SR
RealtoR

K. HORI
REAL ESTATE

MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perivale Cres.
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough

OPEN HOUSE

Toronto Japanese Language Schoo!
— At Orde Street School

the fantastic growth of Tokyo
into the world
ci tv
with more than 11 million res­
idents, has left the city with an
extreme shortage of both houses
and land.
“The accumulation of capital
in Tokyo brought a vast popula
lion (and) preparations to house
it have been make-shift,” Mino­
be says. “Prices of land in To­
kyo have skyrocketed.”
One solution is public hous­
ing, but government officials are
finding tney can’t keep up with
the demand.
The Japan Housing Corpora­
tion has built 510.000 units in
the country in the past year,
but for every one they build,
there are 30 applicants clamov’n5 to move in. Tokyo now has
more than 300.000 public housing units.
Tiie hou;
hortage combincd with a
g population m

(Continued from Page 19
the sprawling metropolis is re­
sulting in an outward spread of
the capital area, which adds a
commuting problem to harried
residents.

COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED
MONEY
MANAGEMENT
Income Tax Reduction
Retirement Income
Family Protection
Disability Pay Cheques
Mortgage Redemption
College Tuition Fund

MITS TANOUYE
NATIONAL LIFE
OF CANADA
10 St. Alary St., Toronto
923-0916
447-S986

1050 Pharmacy. Scarborough On November 28. 1970

Time — 9 a.m. to 12 noon
b)

Classroom Observation
General Discussion
Individual Interview Wit Teachers

Public Is Welcome

rfthe la;
I wed fr
ht, tai

Wch b
Bated, thi
fey do ;

lilies foi
m mean

iv i ni

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f3: just to

The v<

name------------—

IS Orde Street. Toronto On November 7. 1970

— At Wexford Collegiate

Keep up oh
current I
affairs |
the easy waj|

ai
3 Amei

street

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Your Home
Through

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757-5184

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THE
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