Page 1
Lf/akuren
Vow
To
Kill
Policemen
In
Efforts
To
Topple
Sato
Government
iengaKuren ow
t
tthc
arrested shortly before the
ed .and 319 students
and. therefore, -killing- a riot.
__
The
Chukaku
(coOKYO. ■
igata. became the seventh poliincident on charges of
radical arrested.
to
policeman is
the
I
ceman
to
be
killed
as
a
result
faction of J aparrs
o; ultra-leftist, students
followingImmediately
mst
c
nization.
Zengakuoverthrow
ore
;ers in an armed upris
asked of violence reportedly
leaders
rman Makoto Mat- and
, -- ed to kill policemen clash, Chukaku
Chukaku
eh:
a-leftist
faction
since
reporters: ‘'How many cops have by the ul
its efforts to topple the Sato
mura died in ■ a hail sue announced his
The MDP has identified some
been killed?'’
ig
a
uinistratron.
Molotov
cocktails.
of the radicals who
assaulted
The leaders then declared they of burning
days
ordin to the Metropolitan would measure the success or
the riot police, squad and murment (MDP), which
Of the ■wen policemen killed
druggie against
that we derod Aau
n°' crimes commit failure of their
five have lied in the past two —We are ashamed
attack.
inve
during
on
agreement
could kill only three policemen film taitc
Chukaku members, the the U.S.-Japan
months.
the
in the struggle against construe-( are being used to identity- the
o-roup engineered the Nov. reversion on Okinawa by
the Chukaku orGon on the New Tokyo Interna-j youths.
indent-police
clash
which number of policemen killed.
the Sato administr
Recently,
Tsuneo
Nakamura,
lllll1lll^llllllllnllllllllllllllll>llllllll |lmllllllllllllll,lll,ll"^
saimore than 40 persons injur-
i
1 '^j
i
nilllHltlllllllHlllIllHIIIIllllIllilllll!
li
“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook SI.65
WITH POSTAGE
The II® Canadian
An Independent Organ far Canadians of Japanese Origin
•A CHILD IN PRISON
CAMP”
Bv SHIZUYE
TAKASHIMA
$7.95 WITH POSTAGE
J
Toronto. Ont.
........... . .......................... .............
No. 6 |iniiiiiiiii|i^
|iuiiiiiniSiiiLiiiiiiim°iniiiii
Japanese Scientists Develop Plastic
Japanese Canadian Artists
To Eventually Replace All Glass
Subject
iiouth of a meter), its practical
is both soft and
KYOTA. __ A group of Ky-oto , transparent
heat damage. At application is said to be diffe
usceptible
de-'susceptible
University dentists' have
intermediate to low
pressures, rent.
By the. now method, non-trans
veloped a via Stic which could
win- the plastic becomes non-transpa parent. high-density polyethylene
eventually
rent but tc ugh.
is exposed to radiation so that
dow panu and bottles.
Professor Tsuji said that the
type
of
polyethylene,
its molecules can be chemically
A new
findings would be reported at a
and
transwhich is both
chemistry5 seminar to be held in “bridged” together.
been
developed
by
parent, has
When the resulting material
Boston in April.
the use :.f radioactivity at the
is heated to the melting point,
In the United States, tough,
Kyoto ।
Institute of
Chemical
By AIKO SUZUKI
■•lastic material has it turns into an elastic substance
University by Professor Kazui- trans parent
Rolling it into
:
extremely much like rubber.
Ray Moriyama
Professor Ryuzo been produced
chiro
-tenth
of
the original
because sheets, one
but
pre
By AIKO SUZUKI
Kitano mami and researcher Shu high
followed' by
cooling
is in strands, oi- has a thickness, the new transparent
Canadian. I couldn’t be any better Genton.
microns results in
food to be a Japanescproduced thickness of only5 lO
Poly ethyl one, when
ihan what I am; in fact, if I were (a white) Canadian, I would
mil- plastic.
__ I look different under high
pressure,
becomes (one micron is equal to oncalmost be forced to fall into a conventional trap
Regular high-density polycthyelastic and heat reand they- allow for these differences.
while, architecture
sistant, but the new plastic not
After talking with Moriyama for a short
vision, his concern
only5 has a melting- point of 302
appears to be secondary5 to his philosophy an
that of a
in
Hawaii.
He
was
here
six
we
70
about
vita life and its spectrum of forces. My impression » that oi a
CHICAGO. — Two Japanese ek* ago when the Illinois bureau degrees Fahrenheit
nan striving for more .awareness and m his on ?e 5 “ ^ Americans — one a crime syndi of ~ Race-track Police discovered degrees mere, than that of the
boss and the other a jockey him
unavoidably influencing the values T^.^^ wil take many cate
'
in
the jockey’s
locker regular plastic and it is 40 per
__ have been implicated in a room, talking to Kunitake, and
cent more elastic.
municates at both business and personal,leie ». _
Kick-round federal
investigation into pos
pages and many words to describe and list
Jf^M^ of sible mobster links to horserace ejected him .f rom the ti ack.
While the conventional poly
In the investigation of the al
fixing
at
three
Chicago
area
ethylene
has strong
resistance,
and professional achievments and his la yr in uni
-t lit and
tracks, it was disclosed recent y. leged fixed races, racing board
surmises: however, it is Moriyama’s perception, his vitality
A Chicago Tribune article by and* federal agents have learned against force applied only5 in one
hones which I found very moving — he is beautiful.
Ranald Kozoil and Thomas Pow that a series of $50 bets were direction, the new material main* -I'm a paradox, a'complimentarity of Zen and Roman Catao- ers disclosed that the Fed er,a made by5 two men who took ad tains strength in all directions,
vantage of the long- odds on one
licism This combination gives me a. <«™«»?’“ “^^ Bureau of Investigation is che of the horses, and enabled them is the claim.
cking the relationship of
Ken
As to why the new product
security and it took a. hell of a long time o me
result of Ito. local crime syndicate, chiet- to make a killing on the race.
- and that is a real sort of core essence of me
« W8^ tain of bolita gambling, with Jon
It w.as disclosed that the big is transparent, Professor Tsuji
nnui- suggested hat thc rolling opethat, almost a contradiction. If you look a
to "
,vikin it Kunitake, who. with live otnei ! bettors, who had inside inforjockeys and six
^-J • n^^
on the fixed races, used
and the universe, there’s a beautiful set of »5^ “ ’ ““
irradiation
: ,cr the
Illinois । ^n^ of mc55engers who show- rations
there’s love, ambiguity and complexity and «' .feeble ”*“d
t under scrutiny by5 the
Racing Board.
-led phonv identification cards to “bridging’ makes the arrangeKunitake, 29-year old Ha" aiU Internal ‘ Rev^^^ Service agents meat of t’-e molecules very regu
to put order into this. In the process of o, ei ino
’ cess that
ian-born
Nisei, rode ^sa
.P^.in declaring their tax liabilities lar.
perceive because we simplify .and the
to a $52.80 victory5 at Sports-। ^ ^
Since the plastic melts at .302
goes on in the mind is a destruct mode .
iy 5
complexity? man’s Park_ Nov.
He
y . Regardless of the outcome of
Fehrenheit,
it would not produce
contradiction and ambiguity5 — why cant we cope
‘ ‘
checked by Steward electric
.
rattle!the federal investigat.on of six
I tend to think in terms of a concept of
^^ possession, of an electric
jockevs and six. trainers, Illinois toxic gas as it would in thc case
prod,
or
“
battery.
thereby
Racin'5 Board officials have indi of polyvinyl chlorides,
uosite forces, multivarious diversity can exis . . n
hidorv
Ito.
who
commutes
between
plimentarity given by Taizo Mi aka is that at one
111 h^
cated they5 will refuse to issue preventing air pollution
when
Chicago
and Hawaii “
in khis
pro I Sn to
them
of their
as- heated, it added.
^?fi” W^
^
with
undesirables.
and place. Shakespeare was able to bring^ oge lei 1
iners
j vulgarity of the street minstrels and acrobats mi i
influenced us
I of the court and created* Shakespeare, v ucn ia
+0O-ether to
| immensely for a long time. He didn’t bring I and .
to
create I plus 2; it was not even 1 -plus 2 equals 3 but rathei,
RAYMOND
MORIYAMA
'I
si
;31
§
I
y $
Two U.S. Nisei Accused Of Race Fix
l i
I plus 2 equals A, B or C — it s a new foice.
"I’ve .always trusted my feeling and
™f* ”® ike
I my logic, believing that logic is the most illogica .in =
V ^
I human mind can rationalize anything to make i sounc p
honest. gut feel doesn’t lie to you. I may be i\ioii0 o
o
I span of time but if I’m really honest and compatible a Jta » J^
I social issues but those issues that tend to support. i e, *
that
I Tin goddamned* well right and am egocentric enou^ i °
f0
s I history will prove me right - which gives me^.s '
1
TH
Uilitary Uniforms Big Japan Fashion Fad
•
.
Various uniforms of the formost popular
TOKYO. — The military5 fa tary fashion. The
forces are
vests, over
shion, including Nazi Germany’s is ordinary suits,
coats, trousers, jackets and rain- popular among boys.
high-collar uniforms and
U.S.
in
store
At 1 department
are styled after
Army combat jackets, is one of coats
50 U.S.
Shinjuku, more than
regular military uniforms.
the most popular fads of the
are Army comb.at jackets are sold
And military5
uniforms
season.
most every5 day.
At department stores in To- themselves popular too. The and
The real
military- uniforms
nonular are U.S. Armyand
kyo. in particular, shirts
are also selling briskly5 at Ameya
| fight. Logic is not humane, it’s negative ana u eco .
jackets ‘styled
after military World War Il-type German uni Yokocho, the most popular down
countries forms, according to the depart town imported* goods, market in
putative thing.
Con- uniforms of various
ment store floor managers.
"Last February I was asked to talk at tne .
, „
are selling quite well
among
Ueno, Tokyo.
vent ion — I’d been thinking about architecture oi a e
‘
e both young men and women.
Many’ y ing women, mostly
At the
market are
many
time in terms of various levels. I wanted ‘oy'^ T^es
have been attracted
teenagers,
“We don’t know about war,
shops which specialize in selling
positively as I could the fact they're really under se =
^
Army WAG unibut it’s quite groovy to wear a by the U.S
quite t American military5 goods dispos
in the sense that most of the .architects are caug. up
look nice,
military uniform,”
one young forms. “The
ed of by U.S. military troops
do their thing — and that’s not where things are a •
different from conventional dresuniform-fan said.
creative areals that of asking why things should happen,
(Cont. on Page 8)
There are two kinds of mili- ses,” one wearer remarked.
I
I
4
40
(Continued on Page 8)
-4
T
M
Vow
To
Kill
Policemen
In
Efforts
To
Topple
Sato
Government
iengaKuren ow
t
tthc
arrested shortly before the
ed .and 319 students
and. therefore, -killing- a riot.
__
The
Chukaku
(coOKYO. ■
igata. became the seventh poliincident on charges of
radical arrested.
to
policeman is
the
I
ceman
to
be
killed
as
a
result
faction of J aparrs
o; ultra-leftist, students
followingImmediately
mst
c
nization.
Zengakuoverthrow
ore
;ers in an armed upris
asked of violence reportedly
leaders
rman Makoto Mat- and
, -- ed to kill policemen clash, Chukaku
Chukaku
eh:
a-leftist
faction
since
reporters: ‘'How many cops have by the ul
its efforts to topple the Sato
mura died in ■ a hail sue announced his
The MDP has identified some
been killed?'’
ig
a
uinistratron.
Molotov
cocktails.
of the radicals who
assaulted
The leaders then declared they of burning
days
ordin to the Metropolitan would measure the success or
the riot police, squad and murment (MDP), which
Of the ■wen policemen killed
druggie against
that we derod Aau
n°' crimes commit failure of their
five have lied in the past two —We are ashamed
attack.
inve
during
on
agreement
could kill only three policemen film taitc
Chukaku members, the the U.S.-Japan
months.
the
in the struggle against construe-( are being used to identity- the
o-roup engineered the Nov. reversion on Okinawa by
the Chukaku orGon on the New Tokyo Interna-j youths.
indent-police
clash
which number of policemen killed.
the Sato administr
Recently,
Tsuneo
Nakamura,
lllll1lll^llllllllnllllllllllllllll>llllllll |lmllllllllllllll,lll,ll"^
saimore than 40 persons injur-
i
1 '^j
i
nilllHltlllllllHlllIllHIIIIllllIllilllll!
li
“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook SI.65
WITH POSTAGE
The II® Canadian
An Independent Organ far Canadians of Japanese Origin
•A CHILD IN PRISON
CAMP”
Bv SHIZUYE
TAKASHIMA
$7.95 WITH POSTAGE
J
Toronto. Ont.
........... . .......................... .............
No. 6 |iniiiiiiiii|i^
|iuiiiiiniSiiiLiiiiiiim°iniiiii
Japanese Scientists Develop Plastic
Japanese Canadian Artists
To Eventually Replace All Glass
Subject
iiouth of a meter), its practical
is both soft and
KYOTA. __ A group of Ky-oto , transparent
heat damage. At application is said to be diffe
usceptible
de-'susceptible
University dentists' have
intermediate to low
pressures, rent.
By the. now method, non-trans
veloped a via Stic which could
win- the plastic becomes non-transpa parent. high-density polyethylene
eventually
rent but tc ugh.
is exposed to radiation so that
dow panu and bottles.
Professor Tsuji said that the
type
of
polyethylene,
its molecules can be chemically
A new
findings would be reported at a
and
transwhich is both
chemistry5 seminar to be held in “bridged” together.
been
developed
by
parent, has
When the resulting material
Boston in April.
the use :.f radioactivity at the
is heated to the melting point,
In the United States, tough,
Kyoto ।
Institute of
Chemical
By AIKO SUZUKI
■•lastic material has it turns into an elastic substance
University by Professor Kazui- trans parent
Rolling it into
:
extremely much like rubber.
Ray Moriyama
Professor Ryuzo been produced
chiro
-tenth
of
the original
because sheets, one
but
pre
By AIKO SUZUKI
Kitano mami and researcher Shu high
followed' by
cooling
is in strands, oi- has a thickness, the new transparent
Canadian. I couldn’t be any better Genton.
microns results in
food to be a Japanescproduced thickness of only5 lO
Poly ethyl one, when
ihan what I am; in fact, if I were (a white) Canadian, I would
mil- plastic.
__ I look different under high
pressure,
becomes (one micron is equal to oncalmost be forced to fall into a conventional trap
Regular high-density polycthyelastic and heat reand they- allow for these differences.
while, architecture
sistant, but the new plastic not
After talking with Moriyama for a short
vision, his concern
only5 has a melting- point of 302
appears to be secondary5 to his philosophy an
that of a
in
Hawaii.
He
was
here
six
we
70
about
vita life and its spectrum of forces. My impression » that oi a
CHICAGO. — Two Japanese ek* ago when the Illinois bureau degrees Fahrenheit
nan striving for more .awareness and m his on ?e 5 “ ^ Americans — one a crime syndi of ~ Race-track Police discovered degrees mere, than that of the
boss and the other a jockey him
unavoidably influencing the values T^.^^ wil take many cate
'
in
the jockey’s
locker regular plastic and it is 40 per
__ have been implicated in a room, talking to Kunitake, and
cent more elastic.
municates at both business and personal,leie ». _
Kick-round federal
investigation into pos
pages and many words to describe and list
Jf^M^ of sible mobster links to horserace ejected him .f rom the ti ack.
While the conventional poly
In the investigation of the al
fixing
at
three
Chicago
area
ethylene
has strong
resistance,
and professional achievments and his la yr in uni
-t lit and
tracks, it was disclosed recent y. leged fixed races, racing board
surmises: however, it is Moriyama’s perception, his vitality
A Chicago Tribune article by and* federal agents have learned against force applied only5 in one
hones which I found very moving — he is beautiful.
Ranald Kozoil and Thomas Pow that a series of $50 bets were direction, the new material main* -I'm a paradox, a'complimentarity of Zen and Roman Catao- ers disclosed that the Fed er,a made by5 two men who took ad tains strength in all directions,
vantage of the long- odds on one
licism This combination gives me a. <«™«»?’“ “^^ Bureau of Investigation is che of the horses, and enabled them is the claim.
cking the relationship of
Ken
As to why the new product
security and it took a. hell of a long time o me
result of Ito. local crime syndicate, chiet- to make a killing on the race.
- and that is a real sort of core essence of me
« W8^ tain of bolita gambling, with Jon
It w.as disclosed that the big is transparent, Professor Tsuji
nnui- suggested hat thc rolling opethat, almost a contradiction. If you look a
to "
,vikin it Kunitake, who. with live otnei ! bettors, who had inside inforjockeys and six
^-J • n^^
on the fixed races, used
and the universe, there’s a beautiful set of »5^ “ ’ ““
irradiation
: ,cr the
Illinois । ^n^ of mc55engers who show- rations
there’s love, ambiguity and complexity and «' .feeble ”*“d
t under scrutiny by5 the
Racing Board.
-led phonv identification cards to “bridging’ makes the arrangeKunitake, 29-year old Ha" aiU Internal ‘ Rev^^^ Service agents meat of t’-e molecules very regu
to put order into this. In the process of o, ei ino
’ cess that
ian-born
Nisei, rode ^sa
.P^.in declaring their tax liabilities lar.
perceive because we simplify .and the
to a $52.80 victory5 at Sports-। ^ ^
Since the plastic melts at .302
goes on in the mind is a destruct mode .
iy 5
complexity? man’s Park_ Nov.
He
y . Regardless of the outcome of
Fehrenheit,
it would not produce
contradiction and ambiguity5 — why cant we cope
‘ ‘
checked by Steward electric
.
rattle!the federal investigat.on of six
I tend to think in terms of a concept of
^^ possession, of an electric
jockevs and six. trainers, Illinois toxic gas as it would in thc case
prod,
or
“
battery.
thereby
Racin'5 Board officials have indi of polyvinyl chlorides,
uosite forces, multivarious diversity can exis . . n
hidorv
Ito.
who
commutes
between
plimentarity given by Taizo Mi aka is that at one
111 h^
cated they5 will refuse to issue preventing air pollution
when
Chicago
and Hawaii “
in khis
pro I Sn to
them
of their
as- heated, it added.
^?fi” W^
^
with
undesirables.
and place. Shakespeare was able to bring^ oge lei 1
iners
j vulgarity of the street minstrels and acrobats mi i
influenced us
I of the court and created* Shakespeare, v ucn ia
+0O-ether to
| immensely for a long time. He didn’t bring I and .
to
create I plus 2; it was not even 1 -plus 2 equals 3 but rathei,
RAYMOND
MORIYAMA
'I
si
;31
§
I
y $
Two U.S. Nisei Accused Of Race Fix
l i
I plus 2 equals A, B or C — it s a new foice.
"I’ve .always trusted my feeling and
™f* ”® ike
I my logic, believing that logic is the most illogica .in =
V ^
I human mind can rationalize anything to make i sounc p
honest. gut feel doesn’t lie to you. I may be i\ioii0 o
o
I span of time but if I’m really honest and compatible a Jta » J^
I social issues but those issues that tend to support. i e, *
that
I Tin goddamned* well right and am egocentric enou^ i °
f0
s I history will prove me right - which gives me^.s '
1
TH
Uilitary Uniforms Big Japan Fashion Fad
•
.
Various uniforms of the formost popular
TOKYO. — The military5 fa tary fashion. The
forces are
vests, over
shion, including Nazi Germany’s is ordinary suits,
coats, trousers, jackets and rain- popular among boys.
high-collar uniforms and
U.S.
in
store
At 1 department
are styled after
Army combat jackets, is one of coats
50 U.S.
Shinjuku, more than
regular military uniforms.
the most popular fads of the
are Army comb.at jackets are sold
And military5
uniforms
season.
most every5 day.
At department stores in To- themselves popular too. The and
The real
military- uniforms
nonular are U.S. Armyand
kyo. in particular, shirts
are also selling briskly5 at Ameya
| fight. Logic is not humane, it’s negative ana u eco .
jackets ‘styled
after military World War Il-type German uni Yokocho, the most popular down
countries forms, according to the depart town imported* goods, market in
putative thing.
Con- uniforms of various
ment store floor managers.
"Last February I was asked to talk at tne .
, „
are selling quite well
among
Ueno, Tokyo.
vent ion — I’d been thinking about architecture oi a e
‘
e both young men and women.
Many’ y ing women, mostly
At the
market are
many
time in terms of various levels. I wanted ‘oy'^ T^es
have been attracted
teenagers,
“We don’t know about war,
shops which specialize in selling
positively as I could the fact they're really under se =
^
Army WAG unibut it’s quite groovy to wear a by the U.S
quite t American military5 goods dispos
in the sense that most of the .architects are caug. up
look nice,
military uniform,”
one young forms. “The
ed of by U.S. military troops
do their thing — and that’s not where things are a •
different from conventional dresuniform-fan said.
creative areals that of asking why things should happen,
(Cont. on Page 8)
There are two kinds of mili- ses,” one wearer remarked.
I
I
4
40
(Continued on Page 8)
-4
T
M
Page 2
43
Tuesday, January 25. yg
T H E
A
t Zd
If
I
it
o
FIX
Oj
d’^
®i:
Ok
li
E
^
n
nC
t'
Zeo
,'C
HU
n1
E'
V'
T
<^ 'll
A
•»
<T)
yj
m e
s'
$
O)
SU
Z
CD
0
3
w
11U*
Iid
t)
Ml
15
L
# uh
E*
5
*
HI
O
H
&
IX
&
/^
n
6
d
no
If
X
CD
m
I'
ZM
t
#
4
At}
K
5
b
$
△
>0*
n
ri
If
41
n
to
to
cn
^’ b
T
2
3
©
ID
IX
/l
H
n
o
If
it
1
0
a r
ft
o
li
o 0
o cp
L>
7
*1]
D
t^^ MB
7
I'M Pl
[□1
O
Ui
im is
0A
0)
b
to
^5
CO
J]£
TH
! 7
5
E'
&
'tf
rr
7
iS^
7 %
0
5
8
It
iiS
IX
3
71^
3- ^
py
—E
IX
kn
3 it t
s®
©
4 Ml 10 El ®AM ^ ^ 9 ^ i
M If ^ -f jo±giy
<i><ij
n^^^_b^(^^is)
•• 3 TWO
^5
3 M 13 El
3 MJ 15 El
^O®Jo U (^g)-4MlH~3H
4
12 El
i®7>
^wS^
KEKMHJ
tw
1 $£^1^
-v
IiMeI
«MA4A/A/^ LINES
the worldwide airline of Japan
4 HTMM
i ORONTO: I I I
Richmond St.. West.
Toronto I I O
.
Tei 364-7226
I
I
VANCOUVER: 777 Hornby St..
V ' fA- -J < I
Vancouver
$
Tel 688- 66 I I
1
B
Tuesday, January 25. yg
T H E
A
t Zd
If
I
it
o
FIX
Oj
d’^
®i:
Ok
li
E
^
n
nC
t'
Zeo
,'C
HU
n1
E'
V'
T
<^ 'll
A
•»
<T)
yj
m e
s'
$
O)
SU
Z
CD
0
3
w
11U*
Iid
t)
Ml
15
L
# uh
E*
5
*
HI
O
H
&
IX
&
/^
n
6
d
no
If
X
CD
m
I'
ZM
t
#
4
At}
K
5
b
$
△
>0*
n
ri
If
41
n
to
to
cn
^’ b
T
2
3
©
ID
IX
/l
H
n
o
If
it
1
0
a r
ft
o
li
o 0
o cp
L>
7
*1]
D
t^^ MB
7
I'M Pl
[□1
O
Ui
im is
0A
0)
b
to
^5
CO
J]£
TH
! 7
5
E'
&
'tf
rr
7
iS^
7 %
0
5
8
It
iiS
IX
3
71^
3- ^
py
—E
IX
kn
3 it t
s®
©
4 Ml 10 El ®AM ^ ^ 9 ^ i
M If ^ -f jo±giy
<i><ij
n^^^_b^(^^is)
•• 3 TWO
^5
3 M 13 El
3 MJ 15 El
^O®Jo U (^g)-4MlH~3H
4
12 El
i®7>
^wS^
KEKMHJ
tw
1 $£^1^
-v
IiMeI
«MA4A/A/^ LINES
the worldwide airline of Japan
4 HTMM
i ORONTO: I I I
Richmond St.. West.
Toronto I I O
.
Tei 364-7226
I
I
VANCOUVER: 777 Hornby St..
V ' fA- -J < I
Vancouver
$
Tel 688- 66 I I
1
B
Page 3
PAGE 3
M
l
il
O
5
£15
ip
£*
ft
1
1
7
£
10
MJ
IX
5
it
72
I'
rz
5>
Li
72
X
7
d»
£
IX
7
5
11
3
d>
0
IX
h*
IX
ir
G
B
$
IX
3
t§>
K
i'
10
015
o
n
ra
CD
7_
O
z
IX
n
IX
it
IX
5
d»
g>J
7
1
c
a
K
IX
<5
d‘
ft
6 1
^J
K
IX
£
b
IX
i72
O
ft
c'
Ill
ft
ft i»
fa
t
o
4
O
0
H 31
3
i
IB
IX 'C?
IX
6
5
to
IX
72
^
Z
G I FT
3
S'
w
nn
5
X
B#
;
is
w
ib A*
ft ^
«|J
IX
IX
7
j&»
ft
n
i»
CD IX t
B
it
A ^
»■
A
g>
^ t ff 9!
8$
ft
ft
w<
0
•fiO
221 Spadina Ave.,
862-1082
Toronto
Japanese Restaurant
“MICHI”
328 Queen St. West,
Toronto — Tel. 863-9519
466-2041
466-7962
103 YONGE ST. TORONTO
TEL. 863-0002
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
*WT3v
42 PAPE AVE.)
V II
ft W Tfj #
M
l
il
O
5
£15
ip
£*
ft
1
1
7
£
10
MJ
IX
5
it
72
I'
rz
5>
Li
72
X
7
d»
£
IX
7
5
11
3
d>
0
IX
h*
IX
ir
G
B
$
IX
3
t§>
K
i'
10
015
o
n
ra
CD
7_
O
z
IX
n
IX
it
IX
5
d»
g>J
7
1
c
a
K
IX
<5
d‘
ft
6 1
^J
K
IX
£
b
IX
i72
O
ft
c'
Ill
ft
ft i»
fa
t
o
4
O
0
H 31
3
i
IB
IX 'C?
IX
6
5
to
IX
72
^
Z
G I FT
3
S'
w
nn
5
X
B#
;
is
w
ib A*
ft ^
«|J
IX
IX
7
j&»
ft
n
i»
CD IX t
B
it
A ^
»■
A
g>
^ t ff 9!
8$
ft
ft
w<
0
•fiO
221 Spadina Ave.,
862-1082
Toronto
Japanese Restaurant
“MICHI”
328 Queen St. West,
Toronto — Tel. 863-9519
466-2041
466-7962
103 YONGE ST. TORONTO
TEL. 863-0002
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
*WT3v
42 PAPE AVE.)
V II
ft W Tfj #
Page 4
PAGE 4
Tuesday, January 95 }J
NEW
*
Z
IX
iu
JU
L '
M «
6
15
z
fl? *>
fl
O'
p
3
(IIO
O'
If
y
K
(Hl
5
0
rz
Z
IX
B
7^
i)';
6
o
OX
0
O'
6
o
i1
z
©
R Ml
IB
pt?
#
77
7?t
5
ft
11
IX
w
ri j
w
^
Ml
b
c
IL
11
5
b
IX
0
IX
o
6
Ml Ze
0
5
III
®
0
0
IX
d»
a
Ml
in j
IX
n
Hi ^1
/L
im
B
X
0
0
5
^J n
IX
»ZJ
IX
J
6
^IJ
11
A
K
re
©
B
7
tv-
.q
4
n
2#
IX
E
E
11
d1
^u
zz
^
ft
5
RM
5
t?
(X
t‘
n 8^
It
X
K
ax
?«k
4
b
£
V' + ^J
11
^ ^ 7c B 11$ ^
* ^ ^ fig I
0
0
I
d'^ 81 ^ g
fill
0
ili
IX
^ ^ ^ i /? H O H
6
Zx
O
■’/
(S
IX
A
&
£
IX
!i
7C
<b
6
z
0
IX
M
B8
8
SB
to
ZP
(X
nn
^j
IX
O'
Pfg
It
i
7
5
IP
17
*
6
11
£5
IC
11
ig®5
iX
m
O'
lit
7JD
f^
Hili
d»
!W
f
^P
rm i
3 itfl
^ a
e
O'
M3
11 w
5
IX £t
H
3
5
(X
b
*
mu
f®
o*
/i
c»
0
ftl!
IC
?
rK
5
a
0
It
'1
0
pg
. IX
Ml
i
A
IX
Jo
It
5
E
iff
6
£
»
n
IX
^J
i»
(X
h
3
Ml
IX
0
E
*
Al
?t!KKO awn
7L
5
a
^1
SB
0
£
O'
d»
ZP
B
IS
fe
'^M
£
X
6
0
± 8g a
|
3
0
460 DUNDAS STREET WEST
TORONTO 2-R ONT
TELEPHONE EM. 6-2164
IC
THE PLACE
HAPPY HOLIDAY ;
50
0
Tuesday, January 95 }J
NEW
*
Z
IX
iu
JU
L '
M «
6
15
z
fl? *>
fl
O'
p
3
(IIO
O'
If
y
K
(Hl
5
0
rz
Z
IX
B
7^
i)';
6
o
OX
0
O'
6
o
i1
z
©
R Ml
IB
pt?
#
77
7?t
5
ft
11
IX
w
ri j
w
^
Ml
b
c
IL
11
5
b
IX
0
IX
o
6
Ml Ze
0
5
III
®
0
0
IX
d»
a
Ml
in j
IX
n
Hi ^1
/L
im
B
X
0
0
5
^J n
IX
»ZJ
IX
J
6
^IJ
11
A
K
re
©
B
7
tv-
.q
4
n
2#
IX
E
E
11
d1
^u
zz
^
ft
5
RM
5
t?
(X
t‘
n 8^
It
X
K
ax
?«k
4
b
£
V' + ^J
11
^ ^ 7c B 11$ ^
* ^ ^ fig I
0
0
I
d'^ 81 ^ g
fill
0
ili
IX
^ ^ ^ i /? H O H
6
Zx
O
■’/
(S
IX
A
&
£
IX
!i
7C
<b
6
z
0
IX
M
B8
8
SB
to
ZP
(X
nn
^j
IX
O'
Pfg
It
i
7
5
IP
17
*
6
11
£5
IC
11
ig®5
iX
m
O'
lit
7JD
f^
Hili
d»
!W
f
^P
rm i
3 itfl
^ a
e
O'
M3
11 w
5
IX £t
H
3
5
(X
b
*
mu
f®
o*
/i
c»
0
ftl!
IC
?
rK
5
a
0
It
'1
0
pg
. IX
Ml
i
A
IX
Jo
It
5
E
iff
6
£
»
n
IX
^J
i»
(X
h
3
Ml
IX
0
E
*
Al
?t!KKO awn
7L
5
a
^1
SB
0
£
O'
d»
ZP
B
IS
fe
'^M
£
X
6
0
± 8g a
|
3
0
460 DUNDAS STREET WEST
TORONTO 2-R ONT
TELEPHONE EM. 6-2164
IC
THE PLACE
HAPPY HOLIDAY ;
50
0
Page 5
Tuesday, January 25, 1972
PAGE 5
9
I'
O'
&
w
4
©
fl
it
fl
(X
i'
a
b
O'
.O'
IX
IS
A
IM
£
b
IX
O'
IX
d'
X
It
It
£
G «i:
Wf
6
5
A
£
/
IS
11
A
5
' (X
B
t
5
Zx
O'
cn
it
^ nW .
KJ O'
KJ
5
It
5
3
O'. ^
0)
Q
B$
IX
2U
tS
KJ
^J
n O<
Ze
a
t'
A
I'
O'
6
4'
IX
i'
O'
no
¥U i
9 O'
IX
fA
'MJ
A
a
(X M
H
v
6
11
IX
0* A
9
(X 0*
It
re
IX
&
It
$
b
fl
t*
#
1
6
B
5
IX
IX
t'
73
0
&
It
ic
zb {fp i
ft
it
li $0
o
M
1^
UI
it
it
a W
ZH
It
3
<0
h
IX
it
0
It
It It
?
A
re
ix S
2
(X
>
it
It
IC
6
A
& ®
£
fri
n
7j
a
o
IP
It
Zc
It
5
M Zx
IC
co
IX
O'
It
A
3
It
A
ic
A
a
O'
5
f^
3 a
3
It
It
♦t
i'
it it
¥0
a
$
It
w
O'
IC
a
(A
O'
a
a
Zx It
I'
5o
n
O'
flit
A
g
5
i'
a it
It
it
it
Ba
It
O' It
Zj
) It
ic
9 A’
It
119
It
9
A
O'
Ali^
I 71
a
n
0 M
<
a .
o
O'
ic
pm
o it
A
9
O'
A
L b ^fffi < O Zc 0 =
b
mWr ^^IIO'^V'MJII
z
nA >» tW- »__ r? x. .
****** "^ • lf 9
It
'L'
t
3
^
TO
It
(X
It
IX
It
H
W
/»J
A
b
it
Z)
L
Ze
IC
£
5
Tn
it
I'
I'
It
O' ^
- I
It
IX
^ It
O'
It
A’
PAGE 5
9
I'
O'
&
w
4
©
fl
it
fl
(X
i'
a
b
O'
.O'
IX
IS
A
IM
£
b
IX
O'
IX
d'
X
It
It
£
G «i:
Wf
6
5
A
£
/
IS
11
A
5
' (X
B
t
5
Zx
O'
cn
it
^ nW .
KJ O'
KJ
5
It
5
3
O'. ^
0)
Q
B$
IX
2U
tS
KJ
^J
n O<
Ze
a
t'
A
I'
O'
6
4'
IX
i'
O'
no
¥U i
9 O'
IX
fA
'MJ
A
a
(X M
H
v
6
11
IX
0* A
9
(X 0*
It
re
IX
&
It
$
b
fl
t*
#
1
6
B
5
IX
IX
t'
73
0
&
It
ic
zb {fp i
ft
it
li $0
o
M
1^
UI
it
it
a W
ZH
It
3
<0
h
IX
it
0
It
It It
?
A
re
ix S
2
(X
>
it
It
IC
6
A
& ®
£
fri
n
7j
a
o
IP
It
Zc
It
5
M Zx
IC
co
IX
O'
It
A
3
It
A
ic
A
a
O'
5
f^
3 a
3
It
It
♦t
i'
it it
¥0
a
$
It
w
O'
IC
a
(A
O'
a
a
Zx It
I'
5o
n
O'
flit
A
g
5
i'
a it
It
it
it
Ba
It
O' It
Zj
) It
ic
9 A’
It
119
It
9
A
O'
Ali^
I 71
a
n
0 M
<
a .
o
O'
ic
pm
o it
A
9
O'
A
L b ^fffi < O Zc 0 =
b
mWr ^^IIO'^V'MJII
z
nA >» tW- »__ r? x. .
****** "^ • lf 9
It
'L'
t
3
^
TO
It
(X
It
IX
It
H
W
/»J
A
b
it
Z)
L
Ze
IC
£
5
Tn
it
I'
I'
It
O' ^
- I
It
IX
^ It
O'
It
A’
Page 6
T H E
H’ X
IC
b
fl?
2
T
V'
O
CD
IT#
ft
tn
1.1
X
a
T
^ r ^ ^ ft
Th Ha ® #> « ?
^ b to R
6 Hil «11 71
*7
kt *
an 3c u(|J a' ^ o ® £
5 Ai fi ? 1? JUD
SI ' 0 ^
ft IS: j[i i' fl ^
£ « ® T
A El MJ -X ft b
-it- (NJ 18 A ^ IX
c
b “ X 0
7j
t a? 77 foi
ft ® OU $ $
h'PJ
#
5
5
£
IM
3
in
z^
P
IX
7)
w
R
b
tj
PM
IX
IE
It
l'
IT
H
£
It
IX
IX
li
in Th CD
^
1$
fl
n
Ml
a-
5
h
Ze 7
in
06
$15 &
in
b
71
PH
M
ze
InJ
it
XSJX
&
to
k
H
i-
M
ze
in
1$
Ilk
co
I Ze
18J
CO
X
n
ft
tie
5>
n
IX
iff
7
$ in
k
IX
F
N
Zj
in rd
D
5
IX
Ft O'
XX
IX
6
CD
W %
IX
b
on
IJ1
b
to
IX
v>
k
1
n
t
in
6
Iff
Qi
Zn
fl
o
i’
ft o
M-
®
t
£
ft
It
Ik
fl
X
IS
5
b
IE
It
S
tn
IX
It
rr
IX
o:
i"
®
IX
f^
IX
It
6
^j
fit
7>
ze
5
ff£
IX
it
in
7
1 ••
d»
6
0#
^Y= 1J
HU
ns
ze
6
t
c
X
it
b
in d*
Pl 'J 7V ?IJ
rZ
fl
Ml
IX
I®
IX
Ze
XX
£11
1 H E
NEW CANADIAN
479 Queen Si. W ,
Toronto 133, Ont.
Phone 366-5005
Second class mail
registration
number 0366
ip
7c
mi
t
h
n
SU
V'
a ^ ^ <a ® &
°
n W K 5 ri
/\
t A « (Hi ^
ft O X
Tf
7 i £ .X
CD 7 A o - b
&
& • uta
^
M
v ' ® m a 1 %1 s -f
O Tit 11! o ft >'
6 X It ? ^ 10 $■ ® ;x
on
«X
R
ft
#
31
?ll ^
# ^i
TS
6
E
IX
Pl
O
o
NE W
ifi
in
1$
ft
SU
HU
j|l
&
9
tX
t
Ht
§?
=b
#f
4
5
IX
CD
IX
I'
fl
in
I®
IX a
i» I?
kJ
'7
IX
MO
to
0
n
I* 5
It B
p
6 ^M v
fn
k'
2 O
5
IK
s
It
I* ft
I'
Ji
•5 IS U
x
o
7)
i-
CM
in
5
t
in
I' <h
PT
X HI-
IX
43]
riii b
X
AH
& Hl
iw
l
5 «
fl
5 & IX $J
¥1 !$ ^i & b M*
0
* 0 o# h^is a t
5
1'
W
in
6 B
£
^ it.
b
O'
f?
■k
IX
I »J
5 tt ^ ^ It W #
H’ X
IC
b
fl?
2
T
V'
O
CD
IT#
ft
tn
1.1
X
a
T
^ r ^ ^ ft
Th Ha ® #> « ?
^ b to R
6 Hil «11 71
*7
kt *
an 3c u(|J a' ^ o ® £
5 Ai fi ? 1? JUD
SI ' 0 ^
ft IS: j[i i' fl ^
£ « ® T
A El MJ -X ft b
-it- (NJ 18 A ^ IX
c
b “ X 0
7j
t a? 77 foi
ft ® OU $ $
h'PJ
#
5
5
£
IM
3
in
z^
P
IX
7)
w
R
b
tj
PM
IX
IE
It
l'
IT
H
£
It
IX
IX
li
in Th CD
^
1$
fl
n
Ml
a-
5
h
Ze 7
in
06
$15 &
in
b
71
PH
M
ze
InJ
it
XSJX
&
to
k
H
i-
M
ze
in
1$
Ilk
co
I Ze
18J
CO
X
n
ft
tie
5>
n
IX
iff
7
$ in
k
IX
F
N
Zj
in rd
D
5
IX
Ft O'
XX
IX
6
CD
W %
IX
b
on
IJ1
b
to
IX
v>
k
1
n
t
in
6
Iff
Qi
Zn
fl
o
i’
ft o
M-
®
t
£
ft
It
Ik
fl
X
IS
5
b
IE
It
S
tn
IX
It
rr
IX
o:
i"
®
IX
f^
IX
It
6
^j
fit
7>
ze
5
ff£
IX
it
in
7
1 ••
d»
6
0#
^Y= 1J
HU
ns
ze
6
t
c
X
it
b
in d*
Pl 'J 7V ?IJ
rZ
fl
Ml
IX
I®
IX
Ze
XX
£11
1 H E
NEW CANADIAN
479 Queen Si. W ,
Toronto 133, Ont.
Phone 366-5005
Second class mail
registration
number 0366
ip
7c
mi
t
h
n
SU
V'
a ^ ^ <a ® &
°
n W K 5 ri
/\
t A « (Hi ^
ft O X
Tf
7 i £ .X
CD 7 A o - b
&
& • uta
^
M
v ' ® m a 1 %1 s -f
O Tit 11! o ft >'
6 X It ? ^ 10 $■ ® ;x
on
«X
R
ft
#
31
?ll ^
# ^i
TS
6
E
IX
Pl
O
o
NE W
ifi
in
1$
ft
SU
HU
j|l
&
9
tX
t
Ht
§?
=b
#f
4
5
IX
CD
IX
I'
fl
in
I®
IX a
i» I?
kJ
'7
IX
MO
to
0
n
I* 5
It B
p
6 ^M v
fn
k'
2 O
5
IK
s
It
I* ft
I'
Ji
•5 IS U
x
o
7)
i-
CM
in
5
t
in
I' <h
PT
X HI-
IX
43]
riii b
X
AH
& Hl
iw
l
5 «
fl
5 & IX $J
¥1 !$ ^i & b M*
0
* 0 o# h^is a t
5
1'
W
in
6 B
£
^ it.
b
O'
f?
■k
IX
I »J
5 tt ^ ^ It W #
Page 7
Tuesday, January_25, 1972
Dates And Doings
Work Of Author On Hirohito
Oalied Paranoid & Dishonest
Japanese Canadian Archive Project Gets JC Help
VANCOUVER. — The Japanese Canadian Archives project
has had a generous and enthusiastic reception from the Japanese
Canadian communities in British Columbia and Ontario. Over one
hundred individuals have contributed or loaned materials to the
library. Since the summer, we have received over forty books,
•on"directories and three hundred and fifty pictures, none of which
known to be available in any archives. The Library has also
deceived files of three newspapers and three bulletins, and is receivfour gift subscriptions to newspapers and bulletins. In the
archives, the Library has received
memoirs,
correspondence and other
.bout fifteen cartons of diaries,
personal documents.
Among the contributors to the project have been many well& Mrs. T. Sate have donated files
known Japanese. Canadian
of newspapers, and have offered much helpful advice and informathn: Mrs/Hide Shimizu has kindly consented to the copying- of the
Varies of her late, husband, the Rev. Shimizu; many important
documents and pictures have been contributed by Mr. Tokikazu
Tanaka, the Rev. Yoshio Ono, and Air. Sasaki; books of great histo
rical interest have been provided by Air. T. Kadoguchi, Airs. A.
Tsuji. Air. J. Yamake, Air. Tagashira, and Air. Miyamoto.
With the help of these supporters and many others, the basis
of a Japanese Canadian Archives has been well established. Dr.
M. Shimpo of the University of .Waterloo, and Air. T. Gonnami of
U.B.C. Library are continuing their work of contacting- members
of the community and obtaining their cooperation in these develop
ments. The University Library is seeking- assistance from a Cana
dian foundation, in order to expedite and accelerate the growth of
fee archives.
B. Stuart-Stubbs
University Librarian
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th fiwir
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone 368-4681
led Japan into war again the West, by David Bergamini. 1239
is. $14.95.
On Sept. 26. 1945, Hirohito. Emperor of Japan, came, hat. in
hand to call on the conqueror of his country, Gen. Do las MacArthur. In open-neck uniform, MacArthur greeted th formerlv
powerful monarch with a democratic handshake.
Hirohito had heard that most of his ministers and
ervants were to be indicted as war criminals. Pale and
his pal
said. “I come to vou. Gen. MacArthur, to offer myself
nervou
to the judgment of the powers you represent as the one to bear sole
responsibility for every political .and military decision made and
action taken by my people in the conduct of the war.”
MacArthur felt
Emperor's assumption of responsibility
imply a chivalrous
belied the fact
He accepted the statement
ure. and so it was interpreted by most
Author’s Thesis
Now comes David Bergamini with what purports to be copious
evidence that the Emperor had not only stated the truth about his
responsibility but had understated it. According to Perga mini, thc
Emperor had been plotting- against the West throughout his adult
life.
If this book fails to transform the Emperor from a.
scholarly, gentle, well-meaning' man into a. two-fisted,, unscrupulous
his swav over the. entire
militarist bent on i
earth, it is from no lack of zeal from the author.
In establishing’ the appropriate setting- for the .Emperor, thc3
author uses various demagogic gimmicks. Under the g’uise of af
device to the reader, names are mistranslatesI
fording
and given a. sinister hue: Abe Masahiro becomes “Flattery-Depart
ment Legal-Latitude.’’ Others are given identifying nicknames
Maj, Gen. Tatekawa Yoshiji becomes the ‘‘’.Peerless Pimp.”
s
to solve
from being- dedicated patriots
besetting their country, those surrounding- Hirohito are members
of a. “cabal” or “tong.” To further the alleged conspiracy, they set
up “cells.”
1
When Buying Oi Selling A Home
Call: KEN HORI
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
Phone: 261-5194
14 Perivais Cres.
tl ii a good polity to
kava the RIGHT PCUCT
Conouii
Scarborough
TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO
Conclusions Questioned
In establishing his thesis, the author uses English sources
■available for verification. Often when he quotes, or refers to such
sources, he draws erroneous conclusions from them. Sometimes his
conclusion seems irrelevant to the material drawn upon.
In addition, he purports to draw upon Japanese language
sources unavailable for verification. Often he uses the available
source side by side with the unavailable, the available giving- the
hue of respectability to conclusions drawn from the unavailable.
A case in point is thc use to which he puts Japan’s Decision
For War: Records of thc 1941 Policy Conferences, translated and
edited by Nobutake Ike (Pacific Citizen, Apr. 27, 1967). In Ike’s
book, the records begin Sept. 19, 1940 and continue through Dec.
4, 1941. It was at the Policy Conferences that the actual decision
for war with America was made.
In his notes, Bergamini says Ike’s book is based on the Sugiya
ma Memo, the papers of Japan’s wartime Army Chief of Staff,
Gen. Hajime Sugiyama, unavailable for verification.
RCA — ZENITH
SALES & SERVICE
1055 MIDLAND AVE. (ORIOLE PLAZA)
SCARBORO
Phone 759-1583
Between Eglinton & Lawrence Ave. East,
Repairs To All Makes
HAMILTON SANGHA AND DANA
PRESENTS
BENEFIT DANCE
Un verifiable Note
Into a discussion of these conferences, Bergamini introduces a
statement purportedly from another source: “As for the United
States, she would remain nominally independent sifter her surrender
and would retain sovereignty east of the Rockies, but the Alaska
Government-General of Japan’s Co-Prosperity Sphere would ‘include
Alberta, British Columbia, and the state of Washington.’ ”
One may search Ike’s book in vain for verification. Ike’s book
shows Japan’s leaders wanted to avoid war with America, and that
they entered it because they felt it was the only way to break out
of the economic noose with which America was strangling them.
Further, none of them expected America to surrender; their highest
hopes were simply to expel America from Asia.
Ike says: “(The Emperor) never made personal decisions,
but always followed a-dvice given him by his ministers and military
leaders . . . the Chiefs of Staff were responsible to no one but
•themselves ...”
Unevenly written, paranoid, and dishonest, Bergamini’s work
obscures rather than illuminates the causes of the war. It may
contribute to deepening misunderstanding, seiwing .as a snare to the
uninformed and fostering distrust and hatred for Japan.
at Peter Banquet Hall
345 Queenston Road, Hamilton
FEBRUARY 12, 1972, 8:30 to 12:30
$2=50 per person- Everyone welcome
DANFORTH GARDENS
Famous Chinese Foods
3212 Danforth Ave. (at Pharmacy)
Free local delivery over $3.00
10% off on pick-up orders over $2.00
Call now 699-1171 or 699-1172
Your Home
Buy and Sell
TOSH IWAI
2006 Lawrence Ave. East
Scar bo ro. Ont.
757-5184
Bus: 924-8153
Res: 922-1353
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered
Suit e
Accountant
403
130 BLOOR ST. W.
RES. 231-0863
11 Ivy Loa Cres.
TORONTO
BUS. 733-4261
3101 Batburst St.
MRS. SATOKO SATO
All types of insurance
CROWN LIFE
INSURANCE CO.
Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH
Tolcio
OF
Nishimura
WOODLAWN
923--6877
KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C.
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Hockey Equipment,
Skate Sharpening
551 Danforth Ave,
(neat
Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
463-7400
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
OFTORONTO
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
St. John's Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
• Tuesday:
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
?
I
Takara Jewellers
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
♦ FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Suits
& Trousers
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
SUNDAY, JANUARY 30. 1972
JI on. — Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1294. Phone 363-095
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
I
10:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service
918 Bathurst St.
Telephone: 534-4302
WORSHIP WHERE EAST MEETS VCST
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
Dates And Doings
Work Of Author On Hirohito
Oalied Paranoid & Dishonest
Japanese Canadian Archive Project Gets JC Help
VANCOUVER. — The Japanese Canadian Archives project
has had a generous and enthusiastic reception from the Japanese
Canadian communities in British Columbia and Ontario. Over one
hundred individuals have contributed or loaned materials to the
library. Since the summer, we have received over forty books,
•on"directories and three hundred and fifty pictures, none of which
known to be available in any archives. The Library has also
deceived files of three newspapers and three bulletins, and is receivfour gift subscriptions to newspapers and bulletins. In the
archives, the Library has received
memoirs,
correspondence and other
.bout fifteen cartons of diaries,
personal documents.
Among the contributors to the project have been many well& Mrs. T. Sate have donated files
known Japanese. Canadian
of newspapers, and have offered much helpful advice and informathn: Mrs/Hide Shimizu has kindly consented to the copying- of the
Varies of her late, husband, the Rev. Shimizu; many important
documents and pictures have been contributed by Mr. Tokikazu
Tanaka, the Rev. Yoshio Ono, and Air. Sasaki; books of great histo
rical interest have been provided by Air. T. Kadoguchi, Airs. A.
Tsuji. Air. J. Yamake, Air. Tagashira, and Air. Miyamoto.
With the help of these supporters and many others, the basis
of a Japanese Canadian Archives has been well established. Dr.
M. Shimpo of the University of .Waterloo, and Air. T. Gonnami of
U.B.C. Library are continuing their work of contacting- members
of the community and obtaining their cooperation in these develop
ments. The University Library is seeking- assistance from a Cana
dian foundation, in order to expedite and accelerate the growth of
fee archives.
B. Stuart-Stubbs
University Librarian
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th fiwir
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone 368-4681
led Japan into war again the West, by David Bergamini. 1239
is. $14.95.
On Sept. 26. 1945, Hirohito. Emperor of Japan, came, hat. in
hand to call on the conqueror of his country, Gen. Do las MacArthur. In open-neck uniform, MacArthur greeted th formerlv
powerful monarch with a democratic handshake.
Hirohito had heard that most of his ministers and
ervants were to be indicted as war criminals. Pale and
his pal
said. “I come to vou. Gen. MacArthur, to offer myself
nervou
to the judgment of the powers you represent as the one to bear sole
responsibility for every political .and military decision made and
action taken by my people in the conduct of the war.”
MacArthur felt
Emperor's assumption of responsibility
imply a chivalrous
belied the fact
He accepted the statement
ure. and so it was interpreted by most
Author’s Thesis
Now comes David Bergamini with what purports to be copious
evidence that the Emperor had not only stated the truth about his
responsibility but had understated it. According to Perga mini, thc
Emperor had been plotting- against the West throughout his adult
life.
If this book fails to transform the Emperor from a.
scholarly, gentle, well-meaning' man into a. two-fisted,, unscrupulous
his swav over the. entire
militarist bent on i
earth, it is from no lack of zeal from the author.
In establishing’ the appropriate setting- for the .Emperor, thc3
author uses various demagogic gimmicks. Under the g’uise of af
device to the reader, names are mistranslatesI
fording
and given a. sinister hue: Abe Masahiro becomes “Flattery-Depart
ment Legal-Latitude.’’ Others are given identifying nicknames
Maj, Gen. Tatekawa Yoshiji becomes the ‘‘’.Peerless Pimp.”
s
to solve
from being- dedicated patriots
besetting their country, those surrounding- Hirohito are members
of a. “cabal” or “tong.” To further the alleged conspiracy, they set
up “cells.”
1
When Buying Oi Selling A Home
Call: KEN HORI
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
Phone: 261-5194
14 Perivais Cres.
tl ii a good polity to
kava the RIGHT PCUCT
Conouii
Scarborough
TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO
Conclusions Questioned
In establishing his thesis, the author uses English sources
■available for verification. Often when he quotes, or refers to such
sources, he draws erroneous conclusions from them. Sometimes his
conclusion seems irrelevant to the material drawn upon.
In addition, he purports to draw upon Japanese language
sources unavailable for verification. Often he uses the available
source side by side with the unavailable, the available giving- the
hue of respectability to conclusions drawn from the unavailable.
A case in point is thc use to which he puts Japan’s Decision
For War: Records of thc 1941 Policy Conferences, translated and
edited by Nobutake Ike (Pacific Citizen, Apr. 27, 1967). In Ike’s
book, the records begin Sept. 19, 1940 and continue through Dec.
4, 1941. It was at the Policy Conferences that the actual decision
for war with America was made.
In his notes, Bergamini says Ike’s book is based on the Sugiya
ma Memo, the papers of Japan’s wartime Army Chief of Staff,
Gen. Hajime Sugiyama, unavailable for verification.
RCA — ZENITH
SALES & SERVICE
1055 MIDLAND AVE. (ORIOLE PLAZA)
SCARBORO
Phone 759-1583
Between Eglinton & Lawrence Ave. East,
Repairs To All Makes
HAMILTON SANGHA AND DANA
PRESENTS
BENEFIT DANCE
Un verifiable Note
Into a discussion of these conferences, Bergamini introduces a
statement purportedly from another source: “As for the United
States, she would remain nominally independent sifter her surrender
and would retain sovereignty east of the Rockies, but the Alaska
Government-General of Japan’s Co-Prosperity Sphere would ‘include
Alberta, British Columbia, and the state of Washington.’ ”
One may search Ike’s book in vain for verification. Ike’s book
shows Japan’s leaders wanted to avoid war with America, and that
they entered it because they felt it was the only way to break out
of the economic noose with which America was strangling them.
Further, none of them expected America to surrender; their highest
hopes were simply to expel America from Asia.
Ike says: “(The Emperor) never made personal decisions,
but always followed a-dvice given him by his ministers and military
leaders . . . the Chiefs of Staff were responsible to no one but
•themselves ...”
Unevenly written, paranoid, and dishonest, Bergamini’s work
obscures rather than illuminates the causes of the war. It may
contribute to deepening misunderstanding, seiwing .as a snare to the
uninformed and fostering distrust and hatred for Japan.
at Peter Banquet Hall
345 Queenston Road, Hamilton
FEBRUARY 12, 1972, 8:30 to 12:30
$2=50 per person- Everyone welcome
DANFORTH GARDENS
Famous Chinese Foods
3212 Danforth Ave. (at Pharmacy)
Free local delivery over $3.00
10% off on pick-up orders over $2.00
Call now 699-1171 or 699-1172
Your Home
Buy and Sell
TOSH IWAI
2006 Lawrence Ave. East
Scar bo ro. Ont.
757-5184
Bus: 924-8153
Res: 922-1353
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered
Suit e
Accountant
403
130 BLOOR ST. W.
RES. 231-0863
11 Ivy Loa Cres.
TORONTO
BUS. 733-4261
3101 Batburst St.
MRS. SATOKO SATO
All types of insurance
CROWN LIFE
INSURANCE CO.
Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yonge Street, Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH
Tolcio
OF
Nishimura
WOODLAWN
923--6877
KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C.
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Hockey Equipment,
Skate Sharpening
551 Danforth Ave,
(neat
Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
463-7400
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
OFTORONTO
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
St. John's Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
• Tuesday:
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
?
I
Takara Jewellers
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
♦ FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Suits
& Trousers
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
SUNDAY, JANUARY 30. 1972
JI on. — Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1294. Phone 363-095
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
I
10:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service
918 Bathurst St.
Telephone: 534-4302
WORSHIP WHERE EAST MEETS VCST
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
Page 8
Tuesday, January 25, 1972
Cent, from Page One
Moriyama . . .
to touch is aroused, rm indivdual-can be nm-
The New Canadian
Second class mail registration
number 0385
I member of Ethnic Press Associatio:
of Ontario.
thing’s, when, where and all of the other elements that come with hatWin some sense of freedom. In
manipulates people - but our mampulataon u
it. money, economics and so on.
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY
will
they
AND FRIDAY
people
who
say
them up a little, bit. Then, if a>- a
“Our society doesn’t know how to cope with
them,
to
loosen
inner space, so that somehow, in their own indivi“no it should not be done”. If you join the system you’re rewarded
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
nd their relationship
and in the architectural case, if we build, we are paid and if we dual wav. they will start to see themselves <
K. C. TSUMURA
to
take into
with
people
who
with
the
in
another
way,
to
be
able
English
Section Editor
don’t build, we don’t get paid. Society cannot cope
breeze
and
sunshine
If one comes up with a positive new
KEN MORI
perceive in a <llff
account . iov. jov of appreciating air,
Japanese
Section Editor
concept, society responds negatively to bloci< it ay
~ <
An exmnle of the truth of Moriyama’s beliefs was demonstrarAn
CAmpiv
01
I
e
environmental
tistics to prove it. How can you prove joy, quality, vitality, honesty.
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
ed LaM vear when ne was a^ed to cnau
factor^ at the Mid-Canada Conference, a non-governmen M
•
integrity and s]
Toronto 133, Ont.
"1 know thi: wstem enough to know how to play their game of which participant ; v.-ere all Canadians and people, with American
EMpire 6-5005
a good constraint because ultimately my mam affiliations were not invited. The question they posed was whet-hei
and I use money
kind of
is necessary for the development of the North,
the shortage of time to do thin
concern
a policy in planning
humanity
has
and
and
his
group
believed the question should Be more
in mv
time 1
Moriyama
Pm
that
how would the public participate? how would the
term thing". 1 ieel, in some c
relevant especially
lor
government
direct it? He met with 16 specialists (lanitaF planbuying time for the new perception to catch up —
the next, generation of people. If they don’t meet the challenge, 7,er. recreation expert, ecologist, zoologist, young students ic )
Business Opportunity
then there’s no hopt and the world will collapse — and possible ami after initiallv studying the million square miles ot Ure loitn,
’ve concluded that money can only buy two thev quickly realized it was necessary to look at the. rational scene SMALL Japanese restaurant for
be a L
things: mobility .and time. Mobility is for the birds in this era -'then the whole world - and finally concluded our woild was sale in downtown Montreal low
ir sphere knows no national boundaries so 1 m buying time. too small and a start could be made only with our universe a? the rent with a 5 years lease. Will
leave Canada soon, and would
to think, feel and <lo tilings that will, somehow, in my small way,
known factor.
.
, ,. ■ sell to a reasonable offer. Ideal
contribute to the expansion of the perception more than in the
“It was electrifying, sparks were flying, people crowed disci for young couple. 3451 Saintplines and we evolved until we started with the sun, the base of Denis Montreal 842-5555
physical erection of things.
the
the essence of energy and life, then translated that into a chemical
”1 can’t play the politician's politics but I’m good at
Male Help Wanted
idea
A
good
me.
process — life, death, growth. Naturally it wasn’t important to
politics of ideas and that’s more important to
beyond the politics of politicians and 1 retuse to polarize follow the conventions of meetings so I let the thing go. . -er EXPERIENCED color television
technician. Must speak English
or the other because 1 know, at gut level, its not the 3 days, we didn’t reach a conclusion and I sensed it would be and Japanese. Apply Box 10, The
alnswer. Our■ society may go one way or the other but it s got to destructive to sum it up. Everyone returned home with their own New Canadian (Toronto).
inside of people. 1 don’t feel I have the ego to ma background, trigger mechanism — memory bank and so on and I
come from i
nipulate others te mv wav of thinking, my way of feeling, my way felt confident each would reach their own conclusion. After a short
of life. I’m re y pushing for inner-direction and I don’t know time, calls poured in, sparks flying again' across Canada and we
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
how people re: i that but once they do. they will perceive the regrouped. Essentially everyone had. concluded that the basic ques
“Doctor of Chiropractic”
ahead of a situation and it will tion is one of how to support life.
728A St. Clair Ave. West
more of a humanistic situation — which i s far better than what
of the Conference accused us of using nasty tactics
The
leader
(i/
2 block West of Christie)
now. 1 also believe there should be1 discontent because if
at all. We were just presenting what
TORONTO
to
kill
it
—
we
didn
’
t
kill
it
ot to be dead or he has no
believed
was
truth
and
Res. 621-1989
truth
and
what
we
real!
651-8060
perceived a
for
restraint
—
not
to,
fall
into
the
in the end we were- pushing“Architecture is a very secondary issue to me and even when hysterical trap of ‘we gotta
in there and develop it before
ir more and try
. we look at the spiritual a
someone else will come in and do it That kind of hysteria is an
joy of discovery equally valid reason to practise restraint, to research and find out
and measure such qualities
i which comes from discovering a little, more taking into account all of the indigenous people there,
in the looking, that sense of
beautiful potent curiosity that’s questioning Southern notions and, in terms of the. world as a whole,
Chinese Foodt
within yourself that you have
s, we did a lot of experimenting
trying
Canada could take a leadership in the natural management of
..ried
to give people a sense of
on the
At that particular time, 1 felt nature."
469 Queen St. W.
A major base of Moriyama’s philosophy is nature — his retranscendence of the spirit
Toronto, Ont.
cently rebuilt home was designed “to celebrate nature”, trees on
0 1 used not only the eye, but
the Science Centre site were tagged and1 a penalty noted in a conTake Out Service
use of people to feel things — tract with the construction company for any of these, trees felled
verv much relied on the tactile
Free Delivery
1 can touch and I want to touch'. Once that happens, when (none were) and he has a retreat near Orangeville, encouraging
in Central only
his .associates to ponder problems or meditate in a large, acreage
Tel. 367-0444
(Continued From Page 1)
of earth and open sky —
“The beautiful thing about appreciating temporariness can
an in the U.S. several rears
stationed in Japan
i as a part oi if .anti-war move- only be demonstrated by nature which is very stable out in order
arc
combat
Popular
items
to be stable, it has to cycle. Man puts up what are termed perma
for enlisted i meat of Drome ive young Ame- nent buildings but in terms of the totality of time, it’s a microcosm.
jackets, uniforms
ricans.
men and officers.
In Japan the uniforms are Nature is unchangeable and if it does change, we go with it ......
and
popular pure' as a new fashion,” I see truth in nature and so I think it is important for people.
other
Ameva Yokocho 1 learned about nature during the war, being located in the moun
explained on
tains. One day, mountain climbing, a climber froze and I fell 60’
uniform
shop own??
mi'.i
— a tree broke my fall, saving my life. In falling that 60’ one can
think a hell of a lot and when I looked back up at that tree. I
realized that man need's nature but nature doesn’t need man. This exTORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
i perience, among others, played a lot on my development, including
Income Tax Reduction
701 Dovorcoutt Rd.
South of Bloor
Retirement Income
the meditative thing.’’
SUNDAY. JANUARY 30. 1972
Family Protection
And finally on culture:
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 782-5287
Disability Pay Cheques
Sunday Service and Sunday School
art being a living thing — life should be a piece of
“
jl
’
m
for
Mortgage
Redemption
English Rev. Ken Matsugu
College Tuition Fund
A
art. Unless :in art object, does something to me, it acts to alienate
welcome to all.
in the ease of ‘I am art and that is not art’. Basically I don’t see
culture ymbolized by an object encased in a museum or home,
Yamaha Music Course Culture i s the quality of the interactive process between an object
Specializing In Japanese
NATIONAL LIFE
and the person or between an object, and people; in the latter case,
For Children
OF CANADA
“The object should enhance the relationship between people
4 to 8 years
10 St. Mary St.,- Toronto
and. as a result, promote inner growth add expansion. You’ve got
World Fam on
over 1
923-0916
44/-b.’b»
to have THE cup to achieve the unity of a tea ceremony.”
million graduates.
Free Film demonstration or.
Current architectural projects are a 810 million Civic Centre
a
in
operation
<k Town Square for Scarboro now under construction and a build221 Kennedy Rd. (between
any day.
ing for Brock University with a budget of Si.5 million — both
Danforth & Kingston Rd.)
LLoyd Edwards
enormous projects headed by a man who is a spiritual evolutionist.
Yamaha
“I listen to people and weigh their words very carefully what
Nancy Ariza 261-7040
Music Academy
I look for is that quality of hope and aspiration which show s the
On Thurs.. Fri. & Saturdays
231 Danforth Ave.
essence of the good side of man — but which is very difficult to
Open Sundays 10 A.M.-6 P.M.
461-246S
Enrol tod
find.”
O.K. CAFE
COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED
MONEY
MANAGEMENT
* 3
i
MITS TANOUYE
Sandown
Market
ft
I
&
1
SHOP
Auto-Fire-Life
All
Forms
Of
Insurance
Consult
Buy & Sell — Your Home
BUSINESS FOR EVERYONE
Through
Mits Kuroda
Representing
Kiyo Tamura
Robt. Owen,
Realtor
— 759-8317 —
2685 Eglint on Ave. East
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-25S1
8
JANUARY SALE
Those who wish to start their own businesses
Those who wish to have their chance in business.
A big opportunity in an International Business firm extended
in eight countries and ready to open in Japan soon. Please
contact, with your name, address and telephone number,
the following.
B
g
Mr. Fred H. Yano,
TORONTO
192S East 39th Ave.. Vancouver 15, B.C. Tel. (604) 324-3301
Phone 463-3426
Cent, from Page One
Moriyama . . .
to touch is aroused, rm indivdual-can be nm-
The New Canadian
Second class mail registration
number 0385
I member of Ethnic Press Associatio:
of Ontario.
thing’s, when, where and all of the other elements that come with hatWin some sense of freedom. In
manipulates people - but our mampulataon u
it. money, economics and so on.
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY
will
they
AND FRIDAY
people
who
say
them up a little, bit. Then, if a>- a
“Our society doesn’t know how to cope with
them,
to
loosen
inner space, so that somehow, in their own indivi“no it should not be done”. If you join the system you’re rewarded
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
nd their relationship
and in the architectural case, if we build, we are paid and if we dual wav. they will start to see themselves <
K. C. TSUMURA
to
take into
with
people
who
with
the
in
another
way,
to
be
able
English
Section Editor
don’t build, we don’t get paid. Society cannot cope
breeze
and
sunshine
If one comes up with a positive new
KEN MORI
perceive in a <llff
account . iov. jov of appreciating air,
Japanese
Section Editor
concept, society responds negatively to bloci< it ay
~ <
An exmnle of the truth of Moriyama’s beliefs was demonstrarAn
CAmpiv
01
I
e
environmental
tistics to prove it. How can you prove joy, quality, vitality, honesty.
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
ed LaM vear when ne was a^ed to cnau
factor^ at the Mid-Canada Conference, a non-governmen M
•
integrity and s]
Toronto 133, Ont.
"1 know thi: wstem enough to know how to play their game of which participant ; v.-ere all Canadians and people, with American
EMpire 6-5005
a good constraint because ultimately my mam affiliations were not invited. The question they posed was whet-hei
and I use money
kind of
is necessary for the development of the North,
the shortage of time to do thin
concern
a policy in planning
humanity
has
and
and
his
group
believed the question should Be more
in mv
time 1
Moriyama
Pm
that
how would the public participate? how would the
term thing". 1 ieel, in some c
relevant especially
lor
government
direct it? He met with 16 specialists (lanitaF planbuying time for the new perception to catch up —
the next, generation of people. If they don’t meet the challenge, 7,er. recreation expert, ecologist, zoologist, young students ic )
Business Opportunity
then there’s no hopt and the world will collapse — and possible ami after initiallv studying the million square miles ot Ure loitn,
’ve concluded that money can only buy two thev quickly realized it was necessary to look at the. rational scene SMALL Japanese restaurant for
be a L
things: mobility .and time. Mobility is for the birds in this era -'then the whole world - and finally concluded our woild was sale in downtown Montreal low
ir sphere knows no national boundaries so 1 m buying time. too small and a start could be made only with our universe a? the rent with a 5 years lease. Will
leave Canada soon, and would
to think, feel and <lo tilings that will, somehow, in my small way,
known factor.
.
, ,. ■ sell to a reasonable offer. Ideal
contribute to the expansion of the perception more than in the
“It was electrifying, sparks were flying, people crowed disci for young couple. 3451 Saintplines and we evolved until we started with the sun, the base of Denis Montreal 842-5555
physical erection of things.
the
the essence of energy and life, then translated that into a chemical
”1 can’t play the politician's politics but I’m good at
Male Help Wanted
idea
A
good
me.
process — life, death, growth. Naturally it wasn’t important to
politics of ideas and that’s more important to
beyond the politics of politicians and 1 retuse to polarize follow the conventions of meetings so I let the thing go. . -er EXPERIENCED color television
technician. Must speak English
or the other because 1 know, at gut level, its not the 3 days, we didn’t reach a conclusion and I sensed it would be and Japanese. Apply Box 10, The
alnswer. Our■ society may go one way or the other but it s got to destructive to sum it up. Everyone returned home with their own New Canadian (Toronto).
inside of people. 1 don’t feel I have the ego to ma background, trigger mechanism — memory bank and so on and I
come from i
nipulate others te mv wav of thinking, my way of feeling, my way felt confident each would reach their own conclusion. After a short
of life. I’m re y pushing for inner-direction and I don’t know time, calls poured in, sparks flying again' across Canada and we
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
how people re: i that but once they do. they will perceive the regrouped. Essentially everyone had. concluded that the basic ques
“Doctor of Chiropractic”
ahead of a situation and it will tion is one of how to support life.
728A St. Clair Ave. West
more of a humanistic situation — which i s far better than what
of the Conference accused us of using nasty tactics
The
leader
(i/
2 block West of Christie)
now. 1 also believe there should be1 discontent because if
at all. We were just presenting what
TORONTO
to
kill
it
—
we
didn
’
t
kill
it
ot to be dead or he has no
believed
was
truth
and
Res. 621-1989
truth
and
what
we
real!
651-8060
perceived a
for
restraint
—
not
to,
fall
into
the
in the end we were- pushing“Architecture is a very secondary issue to me and even when hysterical trap of ‘we gotta
in there and develop it before
ir more and try
. we look at the spiritual a
someone else will come in and do it That kind of hysteria is an
joy of discovery equally valid reason to practise restraint, to research and find out
and measure such qualities
i which comes from discovering a little, more taking into account all of the indigenous people there,
in the looking, that sense of
beautiful potent curiosity that’s questioning Southern notions and, in terms of the. world as a whole,
Chinese Foodt
within yourself that you have
s, we did a lot of experimenting
trying
Canada could take a leadership in the natural management of
..ried
to give people a sense of
on the
At that particular time, 1 felt nature."
469 Queen St. W.
A major base of Moriyama’s philosophy is nature — his retranscendence of the spirit
Toronto, Ont.
cently rebuilt home was designed “to celebrate nature”, trees on
0 1 used not only the eye, but
the Science Centre site were tagged and1 a penalty noted in a conTake Out Service
use of people to feel things — tract with the construction company for any of these, trees felled
verv much relied on the tactile
Free Delivery
1 can touch and I want to touch'. Once that happens, when (none were) and he has a retreat near Orangeville, encouraging
in Central only
his .associates to ponder problems or meditate in a large, acreage
Tel. 367-0444
(Continued From Page 1)
of earth and open sky —
“The beautiful thing about appreciating temporariness can
an in the U.S. several rears
stationed in Japan
i as a part oi if .anti-war move- only be demonstrated by nature which is very stable out in order
arc
combat
Popular
items
to be stable, it has to cycle. Man puts up what are termed perma
for enlisted i meat of Drome ive young Ame- nent buildings but in terms of the totality of time, it’s a microcosm.
jackets, uniforms
ricans.
men and officers.
In Japan the uniforms are Nature is unchangeable and if it does change, we go with it ......
and
popular pure' as a new fashion,” I see truth in nature and so I think it is important for people.
other
Ameva Yokocho 1 learned about nature during the war, being located in the moun
explained on
tains. One day, mountain climbing, a climber froze and I fell 60’
uniform
shop own??
mi'.i
— a tree broke my fall, saving my life. In falling that 60’ one can
think a hell of a lot and when I looked back up at that tree. I
realized that man need's nature but nature doesn’t need man. This exTORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
i perience, among others, played a lot on my development, including
Income Tax Reduction
701 Dovorcoutt Rd.
South of Bloor
Retirement Income
the meditative thing.’’
SUNDAY. JANUARY 30. 1972
Family Protection
And finally on culture:
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 782-5287
Disability Pay Cheques
Sunday Service and Sunday School
art being a living thing — life should be a piece of
“
jl
’
m
for
Mortgage
Redemption
English Rev. Ken Matsugu
College Tuition Fund
A
art. Unless :in art object, does something to me, it acts to alienate
welcome to all.
in the ease of ‘I am art and that is not art’. Basically I don’t see
culture ymbolized by an object encased in a museum or home,
Yamaha Music Course Culture i s the quality of the interactive process between an object
Specializing In Japanese
NATIONAL LIFE
and the person or between an object, and people; in the latter case,
For Children
OF CANADA
“The object should enhance the relationship between people
4 to 8 years
10 St. Mary St.,- Toronto
and. as a result, promote inner growth add expansion. You’ve got
World Fam on
over 1
923-0916
44/-b.’b»
to have THE cup to achieve the unity of a tea ceremony.”
million graduates.
Free Film demonstration or.
Current architectural projects are a 810 million Civic Centre
a
in
operation
<k Town Square for Scarboro now under construction and a build221 Kennedy Rd. (between
any day.
ing for Brock University with a budget of Si.5 million — both
Danforth & Kingston Rd.)
LLoyd Edwards
enormous projects headed by a man who is a spiritual evolutionist.
Yamaha
“I listen to people and weigh their words very carefully what
Nancy Ariza 261-7040
Music Academy
I look for is that quality of hope and aspiration which show s the
On Thurs.. Fri. & Saturdays
231 Danforth Ave.
essence of the good side of man — but which is very difficult to
Open Sundays 10 A.M.-6 P.M.
461-246S
Enrol tod
find.”
O.K. CAFE
COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED
MONEY
MANAGEMENT
* 3
i
MITS TANOUYE
Sandown
Market
ft
I
&
1
SHOP
Auto-Fire-Life
All
Forms
Of
Insurance
Consult
Buy & Sell — Your Home
BUSINESS FOR EVERYONE
Through
Mits Kuroda
Representing
Kiyo Tamura
Robt. Owen,
Realtor
— 759-8317 —
2685 Eglint on Ave. East
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-25S1
8
JANUARY SALE
Those who wish to start their own businesses
Those who wish to have their chance in business.
A big opportunity in an International Business firm extended
in eight countries and ready to open in Japan soon. Please
contact, with your name, address and telephone number,
the following.
B
g
Mr. Fred H. Yano,
TORONTO
192S East 39th Ave.. Vancouver 15, B.C. Tel. (604) 324-3301
Phone 463-3426