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The New Canadian — January 28, 1972

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Page 1

Mazda RX-2 Wins

Road Test” Import Oar Of The Year Award

this
vailable on any production car tions. b or
Mazda
markets
the
only
cars
■d
a
Mazda rot-ary engine
1971,
including
models
manufac
­
ill-Road Test” magazine’s selecg to studies conavailable
in
North
America
xvith
,
in 1970. and after" 50,000
of the revolutionary rotary tured by Mercedes-Benz, Porsche.;
Southern Califorrite rotary engine,
an engine I ducted by the
road testing,
Toyota. Volk
Mazda RX-2 as 1972 Im- Datsun,
nin Auto Club samplc 1971 Mazxvhich
is
noxxgenerally
conceded
running g'ear torn
ank2 Car of the Year,
?en, Opel, Alfa Romeo, and by General Motors. Ford, and da cars have even met 1974 Cali­ had the
tore
xvear. As refenced by “Road Test” publishother leading manufacturers to fornia air quality standards.
^
s. Quiiin. The coveted
While durability factors of re­
be the auto engine of the futuAccording
to
Quinn:

The
edi
­
J a unary Road lest,
1 he
^. .d is announced in the publi
ciprocating engines have.
been
tors decided upon
the' Mazda
seals were the only parts
fe<5 February issue.
,
tablished over
xv e
a
eneine xvith measuRX-2
on
its
clear
and
outstandingQuinn continued: “In the area
of
The Mazda RX-2 was chosen
vas little kno ivl edge
life
and
SMn Car of the Year by the qualities of performance, finish, of ecology, the Mazda is unique how
rotary engine would hold ruble
could be projected
|Sa-azine’s editorial and technical trouble-free operation, and su­ in offering the. only thermal re>.r the long t ?rm, under
up
perior
dollar
value.

Road
Test

fci after road test comparisons
American drix" ing condi- cess of 150.000 mile
tem
ion control
actor
also
considered
the
fact
that
^i*h 34 imported cars
during
..... ..................................................................
IIIIIIIIIHIIHHIHHHIUIIIIIIIIH

s
I

. ...............................................................

“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.65

• A. CHILD IN PRISON
CAMP”
Bv SHIZUYE
TAKASHIMA
$7.95 WITH POSTAGE

®

An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Ongin

Toronto, Ont.
FR1D AY ..JANUARY
2 8 1972
miiimmmmimmmmmmmmmmmiimiiiiiiimiiiimiiiimmimimiiiiimiiiiimmi

I

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiii........ iiiiiiiiiii........ .....

uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiuiiiiii

Threat
of
White
Racist

s
Violence
Radicalism Withering Away?
Caused IC. Evacuation, Say Papers
By S. I. HAYAKAWA

|
When I was in graduate school at the University of Wisconsin
’ of subversion or sabotage.
By STANLEY McDOWELL
in the 1930’s, some of my fellow students were Communists and
The Cabinet, minutes up to the end of 1941,
OTTAWA — Fear of possible racist hysteria,
Vnv were what were then known as fellow-travelers
What 1
'
along
with related and until now secret memo­
^member most vividly about the Communists of those days is that not fear of subversion, led to the government’s randums and letters, were released at the Nationa.
wartime expulsion from British Columbia, accoieSev loved to argue, far into the night if necessary, to convince you
ing to documents made public this week.
|f the rightness of their views and the wrongness of yours.
The minutes are recorded in eight thick looseleaf
Minutes of meetings of the Cabinet War Com­
I
For this purpose they read avidly. They had facts and figures mittee and of the full Cabinet during the first binders, each matched by a binder of related do­
t -d historical citations and learned references at hand for every years of the Second World War show that ^at no cuments, with an index covering only the year
tension. Thev were exceedingly skillful arguers — which is why, time did the Government believe th,at British 1940.
fl suppose, they gathered up many converts and fellow-traveleis. Columbia’s population of Japanese origin, -many
The last mention of the Japanese issue comes
of them Canadian citizens, created.' .a serious risk
in the minute of a meeting on
I
The radicals of today are profoundly different from the ComDec. 29, 1941, attended by a.
Immists of the 30’s. Nowadays they don’t argue. They simply tiy
special visitor,^ Prime Minister
shout doxvn the opposition with chanted slogans.and obscenities.
Winston Churchill.
“The U.K. Prime Minister enIflhev “demand,” for example, that industrial and military recrui eis
quired'
as to the Japanese po­
Re kept off campus. If the administration invites the recruiters
pulation in British Columbia.
tanvwav, thev make no attempt to persuade their fellow-students
Some years ag’o they had caused
CHICAGO. —
A
Japanese federal grand jury. At least 70 a good' deal of trouble.
| ct to' be interviewed. Instead they simply attempt to d'rive away
American patrolman, Masanobu are under scrutiny, federal sour­
“The Chief of the General
li e recruiters by force.
Noro, xvas suspended by the Chi­ ces have disclosed.
Staff
replied that he had just
cago police department recently
A disciple of professor H. Bruce Franxlm the avow-ed Maoist while two federal grand juries
“Investigation of the
South returned from the Pacific^ Coast.
"ho led that group that broke up the meeting at Stanford Uni- investigate alleged police iiivoi- Side payoffs began alter federal Members of the special Govern­
committee, us
xvell
as
illegal agents, in a raid on the gambling ment
versitv at xvluch former ambassador Henry Cabo' ; . Lodge was vement in organization
military,
police
and
local
autho
­
operation at a Prairie Ave. liquor
activities.
scheduled to speak, justified the disruption
rities,
xvere
concerned
less
at
store, found a list of P0]^^11^’
Noro was the first of nine with dollar amounts up to $400 the possibility of subversive ac'principle of freedom of speech does not induce gr. o oe s
jx4ty by Japanese than at the
officers suspended after U.S. noted after each name.
edem to lie
langer of serious anti-Japanese
District Judge Richard J. Aus­
outbreaks
by the white popula“
The
federal
agents
believe
the
tin
ruled
the
department
could
Donald Bail', headmaster of Dalton School in New Tork Citj,
legally take disciplinary action- figures denoted monthly payoit tion.”
has described in McCall’s the mentality .so often found m the
at
a
Three weeks earlier,
The grand jury investigations totals because surveillance of tne
present generation of radicals. “I xvill always remembei, re ami es,
store
before
the
raid
had
disclos
­
day
of
have centered around payoffs to ed that many of the. policemen meeting on Dec. 7 the
Pearl
“one moment of casual conversation between tv.o boys in ie se o
on
policemen bv Southside gamblers listed regularly made brief visits the Japanese attack
I run. Alan was an able, well-pulled-together Marxist of 16, the and alleged corruption
Harbor,
the
Cabinet
had
talked
among
to the place — some of them about the. need to protect the
son of a liberal professional couple who admired um e'°u V vice and gambling squad detec­ while in uniform.
safety of “loyal residents of Jaan intense, blinking 17-year-old leftish rather than tives and their superiors in the
ichael was
West and Northside districts.
“The suspicion of the justice panese race.
interdepartmental
S
A
special
Noro and his fellow officers department probers that police­ committee,
set
up
earlier
to
men were receiving payoffs to
“It was during the 1968 presidential campaign, and Michae under suspicion refused to testify allow the gambling operation to draft contingency plans for use
when called by grand juries on
ked Alan. Tf you xvere head of the government, would you let the Fifth Amendment
against i continue was; heightened by the in the extent of xvar xvith Japan,
Prime
Wallace speak?’ Alan: ‘Certainly not.’ Michael; ‘Well, now, possible incrimination.
fact that the liquor store had had recommended that
Minister
Mackenzie
King
xvrite
I
been
raided'
only
four
days
before
Alan, ou’re always talking about how repressive this some > i-,
to Premier Duff Pattullo of B.C.,
70
Under
Scrutiny
i
by
the
Chicago
force

s
ousted
but it eems to me that if guys like you were in power, you would
chief internal investigator John asking him to take tne necessary
The Daily News, in a copy
be more repressive.’ Alan: You don't under.-tand, J iciae.
Yet the federal men precautionary ster-s.
But the Cabinet decided not
to xv.ait for the arrival of a let­
subpoenaed to .appear before the still running full tilt.
SI
Argument rests on the assumption that the fel oxx ax o
ter, or even a telegram, in Vic­
toria. Instead Mr. King “would
agrees xvith you is nevertheless a rational being, whose mine can
make reference to this matter in
ue changed by facts and logic. Even if people become tea e in
a public statement” that night.
^
argument, so long as they are responding to each other s al^me1^^’
At the start the hostility in
Aey are continuing to acknoxx’ledge each others rational j and
B.C. xvas directed generally at
people of Asian origin, Chinese
camanitv.
sary to produce samisens.
as well as Japanese.
TOKYO.

Nine
lives
is
far
him
s
However,
to
shout
the
other
fellow
down
oi
to
piexen
The
snatchers
are
so
enthu
­
At a meeting on
Sept.
26,
w
too few for cats of Japan.
1940,
Mr.
King

read
a
letter
I "win speaking by disruption or violence is to treat him as e~s^ an I The Kyodo news agency car- siastic that cat
owners have
unman. It is ironical that radicals who so vehemently eery
deluged
police
stations
and pu­ from the Premier of British Co­
'ried a dispatch recently xvhich
lumbia, urging strongly that Ca­
“dehumanizing” effects of modern industrial society ma^e a iaxi
! cited a shortage, of cats in Ja­ blic health offices to complain nadians of Japanese or Chinese
of dehumanizing their opposition.
I origin should not be called up for
pan as one reason foi the lisin^ about their missing pets.
family
I military training under the pre­
“Hoxx- can you
tell
expense of the “samisen,” the
In the U.S. both White and black radicals refei to
o.e
sent training scheme, and expres­
:^j authority as the “pig power structure/' Japanese ladica su en~ stringed instrument which
ac­ from stray cats while they are sing grave concern as to conse­
IS
Ml the police “dogs.” Events of the 60’s have caused me ° °°' companies the traditional Kabuki loafing around on the street?,” quences if this xvere done.”
The Cabinet clearly
disliked
the news agency said one sna­
oack xvith a touch of nostalgia at my Communist associa es o
i plays.
Mr.
Pattullo

s
request.
■1 s, who compared with the dogmatic zealots of the kin we
The shortage of cats has driven tcher replied.
“It was pointed out that it
! the cost of one samisen up to
Some of the snatchers even was difficult to discriminate in
Aday, appear to be real nice guys.
suggested that by catching the favor of or against racial groups
radicalism
that $2,272.
Fortunately, the anti-rational, anti-intolleetual
-----_
who possessed Canadian citizen­
The news agency said Japane­ cats they are contributing to the ship . . . The Japanese involved
iumphed on so many American campuses after, the x ici.ory o
“ee Speech movement at the University of California in ei 'e e. se skinneries are sending cat preservation of the art of Ka­ were all Canadian citizens, mostutehers into the back streets . in rhe fall of 1964, has jus t about died out on colleges campuses of Tokyo to get catskins neces- j buki.
(Cont. on Page 8)

Chicago Nisei Police Suspended As
Federal Grand Juries Investigate Vice

(Continued on Page 8)

Page 2

K

Friday, January 28. 1979

E W

World Ready To View Sapporo Winter

$

4
r ^

Japanese Still Too Weak
For World Baseball Series

games. They made their
> a
i
1928. sent comparatively
ior two vear
1,
squads
to
subsequent
winding' over
as host to the. Winter Olympics
and
have
had
only one
anil the millions who watch the ways and gaziing at construction i meets
a
murmured, ! medal winner—Chiharu “Chick”
on
ar■enas.
NBC color coverage of the fes­ work
Igaya. second in the slalom in
tival on sm>w and ice (via satcl- ‘‘They’ll never
I After the Orioles swamped th-®
1956. He learned io ski on the
By LESLIE NAKASHIMA
when the day
L Yomiuri Giants 8-4, S-2 and 10-B
dazzling opening ceremony, there New Hamshire hills as a student
TOKYO.

Baseball
com
­
1 in the first three games, the®
chunk of at Dartmouth.
with an
1 wasn’t a misplaced
missioner
Bowie
Kuhns
state
­
general reaction among Japanese^
deterrent to the determined, ima­ asphalt in sight.
It's safe to assume the hosts
ment
that
he
had
taken
the
first
baseball
experts and fans waji
Competitively.
the Japanese will be prepared for an all-out
ginative Japanese.
steps
toward
creating
an
inter
­
: that the Orioles were too stroisl
in
i haven’t
effort in the competition.
It’s
national World Series of base­ for the Giants. They dismissedB
significant that in tne 1964 sum­
ball between the champions of . as far fetched any talk , about a g
mer games the Japanese thrilled
the United States and Japan was । World Series between the cham-S
their partisan home spectators
cooly received in Japan.
l pions of the U.S.' and Japan,
by reaping 63 medals, 31 of them
New York reports on Kuhn’s
Some Japanene baseball coit.§
gold.
statement, received only a couple
mentators
said it was like e^I
In Sapporo, they will have 92 of paragraphs space in the
match between the AmericaiW
entries, and preparations for a
Japanese newspapers.
heavyweight and Japanese lighi-^
showing began in
The reason is realization anew
weights—too much difference il
Austrian
luge
1969 when an
I by Japanese baseball- fans that
i
coach, Karl Festmanti, was hired Japanese professional baseball power.
Complete Cara
The
experts
admitted
that
the
|
to work w i th the J ap a nese teams are still far too weak for
For Your Eyes
Orioles not only had too muchl
U.S. major league clubs.
power
for the Giants but that I
A bobsled team was sent to
This undoubtedly came from they were superior in technique®
the Swiss Alps in 1968, and
INSURANCE
the inability of
the
Yomiuri and' fundamentals of the game. |
mm -ejM^KBrswitched its training program to
Giants,
pride
of
Japanese
base­
Office, 13 Eglinlon Ave. 1
The experts said that the|
Sapporo when the course was
118 West Hastings Sb
ball fans, to score a single vic­
Phone 485-5087
Orioles not only had too muci|
completed a year later.
VANCOUVER, B.C
tory in 11 games with the Balti­
Horne phone: 4 19-9293
power
for the Giants in their®
Hias Leitner, an
Australian more Orioles who came to Japan
slalom specialist, worked with i in October
2 batting but were better in field-ft
the Japanese in Austria for three team because they were beaten mg. As for pitching, they said®
weeks in November, 1970, and in the World Series by the Pitts- the Orioles’ staff of four 20-g
game winners in Mike Cuellar,®
has been coaching the skiers on
Pirates.
Pat Dobson, Dave McNally and®
the Olympic scene
since last
The Orioles beat the Giants
February.
eight times and were tied in Jim Palmer was simply too muchg
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
for the Giants.
A Norwegian speed-skating tu- three in 11 games. The Giants power
1
Some
experts said it was high
tor, Th or mod Mourn, joined the who this year won their seventh
UKI YA KI . MEAT
■■'faculty" in June.
straight Central Leagme pennant time that Japanese baseball play-i
ers should realize that they have
ARARE
are and the Japanese version of the
Obviously, the Japanese
World Series as well over their not made the great improvement
Leaving nothing to chance.
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
rival Pacific League champions, attributed them in the past by
tried hard to win at least one what they termed the diplomatic
EM. 4-7632
game against the Orioles but talk of visiting major league club
managers.
failed.
The fact that the 12 Japanese
Overall, the Orioles finished
professional
baseball teams need
their IS game post-season series
the reinforcement of former U.S.
in Japan with 12
wins.
two
losses and four draws. A com- major league players is definite
bined Yomiuri Giants and Han- proof of their weakness. Two
the greatest
kyu Braves team defeated the foreigners are permitted' to play
Orioles S-2 and a combined team for each of the Japanese clubs.
gift of oil
Tokyo - Atami - Kyoto - Taipei - Hongkong
of the Giants and Chunichi Dra­
durdny Departure from Vancouver
gons beat the Orioles 9-1.
Twin sharini'' hot
accommodation, sight:
KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C.
Before his departure on Nov.
Most Meals.
Charge and Gratuities
7 from Tokyo, Kuhn had :a talk
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
'Single Room
open return at additional charge.
NOTARY PUBLIC
with Japanese Baseball Commis­
2 Carlton St., Toronto
sioner Nobutomo Ohama and JaPhone or Write for Color Brochure and Further
Room 1805
!panese
newspapers
reported
Information.
293-4281 (B368-6388
i they ’'ad talked about a real
World Series between the com­
SKI
missioners of the two countries.
Toronto
/ancouver
.They had merely agreed to study
Thos. T. Onizuka, Q.C.
. SPECIALIST
5 1-5101
the matter.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
w.
Kulm’s statement in New York
Toronto. Ont
1201 Bloor Street V
Vancouver 6.
NOTARY PUBLIC
is nothing new because his pre­
LE. 2-4267
121 RICHMOND ST. W.
decessor Ford Frick
discussed
TORONTO 1
the same matter’ with Chama’s
363-5002
— 691-3388 (R^>
t; a
predecessor. Toshiyoshi Miyaza­
wa several years ago. They agree-d to study the possibilities
D is a good polluj io
i ravel Arrangements ct bringing to a realization the
bar* th* BIGHT POLICE
dream of the late Matsutaro Sho^
CoMUll
Telephone (804)273-5696
riki, who organized Japan’s first
Air—Ship—Bus—Rail
William Wales ^c
professional
baseball
team
in
February 26 Special Group to Japan
Insurance Agents
Anywhere — Anytime
1934. for what he called a “real
March 19 Hawaii Cherry Blosscm Tour
2 Carlton St. 10th flw’
tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
World
Series”
between
the
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
March 19 Hawaii Cherry Blossom Tour and
champions of Japan and the U.S.
Travellers Cheques
Phone 368-4681

Japan

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Page 3

PAGE 3
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Page 4

PAGE 4

Friday, January 28, 1979

THE

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619 Bloor Street West, Toronto, Ont.
PHONE: Office 533-1167
533-1168

HOME 535-8959

Page 5

Friday, January 28, 1972

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NEW CANADIAN
479 Queen St. W.,
Toronto 133, Ont.
Phone 366-5005
Second class mail
registration
number 0366

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Page 7

iimis®

Dates And Doings

Immigrant Raises
$90. To $300,000.
TOKYO. — Somewhere around
1962. Dlasavoshi Ikeda received

a milt

Go To Church Of Your

Personal Notes

Fhoinn Thic ^iinrtav

rasiEiEEaiM®
EES. 231-0863
11 Ivy Lea Cres.

Obituaries

BUS. 783-4261
3101 Bathurst St.

HORI
S a n gh a - D a iia B en ef i i
MRS. SATOKO SATO
that, his mother was
critically
:30 p.m at Peter’s ill. He had a suspicion that it
MiOna.
All types of insurance
blocks from Parkdale could be a pretense to call him Julia Toshiko Hori.
•T
back to Japan.
, pass- xi away on
CROWN LIFE
He had been there after mak­ Mr. Ken Hot
Admittance fee i $2.d0 per person. Refreshments
:it Sea rboro Gene­
January
18th
ing a promise to his parents that
INSURANCE CO.
he would return home in a year. ral Hospital, j
When he received the telegram, held at Toronto Japanese United
he was jobless. Moreover, ■ 1,000,- Church officiated by the Rev.
sMont.
000 yen . (nearly’ $3,000). which
The Winnipeg Consulate-General of Japan j he hud received before leaving C.Y. Horikoshi and the Rev. Ken
at H bland
n. held each ■ Japan, almost had been used up. Matsugu. 1 nternient
showing of the Annual Kohaku Utaga
B will sponsor
idle is uroct..'era
Eve In Japan, on Wednesday, February 16th, 1972. at I He finally decided not to re­ Memorial Gardens,
turn. Instead, he wrote a letter vived
husband.
her
by
s
P.M at the Manitoba Buddhist Church.
aving “If my I daughters, and a son.
to his
propxietoi
mother is realiv in a critical siAll those interested are invited to attend'. Admission free.
tuation,
please
take
good
care
j

P
of her and convey my thanks'
jON ONODERA
for what she has done for me.” j
.After mailing the letter, he.
481-8805
489-4654
TORONTO. — “Th Powell Street Review is new” begins the went to the United States with |
(
Business)
(Residence
)
(introductory editorial of Canada’s newest Japanese Canadian San- only $90.
We wish to express
our
j
Lei publication. The first edition of the journal which was organized
Though he luckily found a job < sincerest appreciation to our
540 Eglinton Ave. W.,
at
a Japanese-style restaurant in ' many relatives and iriends for
"la month ago, reached a number of Toronto distributors on Monday
Toronto
New York, he was fired in three' their many acts of kindness,
week). A wide range of material i presented in the eight days, as he could not cook rice
floral tributes and kind ex­
spread which includes editorials, essays, poetry and news properly.
I pressions of sympathy during
our recent loss of beloved hus­
One day he took a Japanese to
fitem related to the Japanese Canadian identity.' Among the topics
band and father.
[disci ed are: the need fo community togetherness; the Sansei 47th Street West, known as “the
received
Diamond street
is well as a S.ansei girl’s controversial commission from a jewelry shop
Dlrs. Haruno Horiuchi,
fartist and community
Tomi II oriuchi.
Mr.
■views on intermarriage. '
to which he introduced the tra­
Mrs T. Mini
and
Mr.
veler.
i^
For further information:
Mr. Lind Mrs A. Oka
This was the start of his bu­
^
The Powell Street Review, P.O. Box 865, Station “K”, Toronto
Mr. and
733 Danforth Ave.,
siness as a jeweler.
R. Umezuki
Mr. and
»2, Ontario.
Now Ikeda, 35, has an annual
Toronto
and grandchildren
income of some $300,000 (roughly
100,000,000 yen).
Phone Store 463-3126
i
He concurrently is a. proprietor
Home 469-0293
of a transport firm. Having start­
ed with one truck which he
Japanese. Food
bought for $2,000, his firm deals
Deliver Evenings
mainly with Japanese, and car­
Wedding, Passport Etc
our
We wish to
ries commodities and even furni­
heartfelt thanks to our friends
ture and other household goods
and relatives for their many
COLOR AND
for moving.
Chartered Accountants
and
acts of kindness, card
“Wives of Japanese residents
BLACK & WHITE
floexpressions
of
sympathy,
there seemingly like to ask Japa­
and
Fully Licenced
ral
tributes,
offerings
nese to pack their household
215 Victoria St.
DAN EZAKI
telegrams
of
condolences
dur
­
goods when they move.
ing our recent, breavement in
This is probably because of
Room
301
Badgerow Ave., Toronto
the loss of beloved wife and
delicate consideration, an atmother.
Phone 463-8263
363-7441
Toronto.

Ikeda
tribute of the Japanese,
Until 9:00 p.m.
Reservations: 366-2164
said.
Mr. Toyonori Namba,
He used to drive a truck with
Pierrefonds, Que.
For best arrangements
of Japan’s national
drawings
Miss Grace Namba,
standard.
Reserve ahead of time.
Vancouver, B.C.
“Although the vehicle looked
Mr.
and
Dlrs.
Minoru
Namba,
Wslcoma soponese Ctxaadian Fn&nds
somewhat like it belonged to a
Dominion City, Man.
right-wing organization, it -was
•^
the best way, I think, to appeal
Mr. and Mrs. Akira Namba,
Mon.—Fridavs Noon to 12 p.m.
to the minds of overseas Japa­
Duvcrnay, Que.
p.m.
Saturdays 4 p.m. to
nese -residents,” he remarked.
Mr. and Dlrs. Arthur Naruse,
p.m.
10
Sundays
4
p.m.
to
Ikeda, who made a two-week
Dundas, Ont.
visit here recently, said he asks
460 Dundas St- w.
himself occasionally if he is liv- , Mr. and Dlrs. Wallace Suzuki,
Seeded Attention.on Take Out.Orders
Toronto
ing in a. right way. For, he added'. 1 Pierrefonds, Que.
EM 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
he is not completely
satisfied
although he attained his main ■
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
objective of going overseas, and <
making a fortune.
]
Veddir.g Banq sets, • Shower® and Parties
New
York
is
growing
restless
,
Seating Capacity 240
SHOE
these days. Often people are kill- i
ed on “the Diamond street.”
I
So, he said, he recently bought ,
JANUARY
life insurance for 600,000,000 yen
1
his mother'
The beneficiary
SALE
ATTENTION NISEI!
alive and well in Tsu City, Mie
Ladies’ ehoes from
Prefecture.
The Hamilton
Ont.
held on Feb. 12th, 19/2
?. 345 Queenston Road, t

PARAMOUNT
Gift Shop

Dan’s Photo Service

NIKKO GARDEN

CHOP SWT TlWli

SIZES

SMALL

1 up to 11

For Limited Time Only
On Made-to-Measure Trousers

SAPPORO
ICHIBAN

Lewis Men's Wear

221 Spadina Ave., Toronto
862-1082

8
#
1^

Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14

Albert’s Shoe Store
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto

298 SPADINA AVE., TORONTO
Say it with flowers!

The New Canadian
U9 QUEEN STREET WEST, TORONTO 133, ONT.
J 4*"
1

r

Kashino &
Weinberg

K 1

Please find enclosed S.........................

for which

b Renew my subscription.
u Enter my new subscription for
S5.00 for six months
0

year/months

*AME (MR.

Sasaki
Peter Sasaki
Sus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962

JW''

f*-^®
complete

"MICHI
CITY .
1

7

PROVINCE
s

ZONE NO.

328 Queen St. West
Toronto 133, Ont.
Phone 863-9519

S'

"^flsi^
^1

JAPA.NESE
RESTAURANT

se/ec/ your

:?

?Wf

S9.00 per year.

MRS. MISS).

'“ « ^/p you

CITY-WIDE DELIVERY

or<""«- O,tf.

Page 8

Friday, January 28. 1979 |

FA GE 8

Radicalism . . .

(Continued from Page 19

| Evacuation . .

(Continued From Cage 1)

Second class mail registrar B
number 0365
*
nd
educated,
of
their
own
P^P^'
ly Canadian-born 2
as of the academic year of 1971-72
aid
the
The
Prime
Minister
A
member
of
Ethnic
Press
and possibly not .amounting to
excellent.
of Ontario.
decl'me of radicalism.
There are several reasons for
more than a couule of thousand, report
PUBLISHED
ON EVERY TUESDU
,
nv
Associate
Minister
of
difficult to exclude
The/
gone out of fashion. As self righteous
AND FRIDAY
*
National
Defence
had
one
small
from he same treatment
from sit-ins and
lissidents went from one extreme to a no th
accorded other
Cana- deletion to suggest before the
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
Hsruptions to arson and bombings and wholesale destruction
J report was tabled^ as planned in
cuans.'
K. C. TSUMURA
1
radical leaders lost their liberal following. Al San Francisco St
Commons:
‘It
! But the Cabinet also agreed the House of
English
Section
Editor
an that provincial viev s must oe might be well to omit any public
'or example, there
KEN MORI
i treated with respect And so it ’ reference to an intention to iniounce a rally, no one come
Japanese
Section Editor
immediate tern Japanese in the event of
today is the serious- : w.as agreed
Another reason for the (juicier :
: measure, to omit Japanese and war.
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
standards. long Chinese, in
’’Cis of intellectual life on campu
accepted.
British Columbia,
The suggestion
Toronto 133, Ont.
without i n tel 1 ec tu a 1 from
t call for military
neglected, .are being
A letter to the Prime Minister,
EMpire 6-5005
from Air. Keenleyside.
reveals
content — no required ladings, no exams, just groovy rap sessions
that year the Govern- the committee’s attitude toward
eliminated.
Loose
and encounter groups — hare largely been
decided it was unfair the whole issue.
had
;
ment
grading practices have een tightened up. All this has driven away
nt
contract
to
• to re
He suggested Professor H. F.
Ihc unmotivated and’ indolent — both among- students and faculty. |under the Department of MuniAngus of Vancouver,
Lt.-Col.
Opportunity
. — ---Business
; . - . —-- —----------------- —
Supplv. to Canadians Macgregor Macintosh, a Conser­
Finally the students who are in college now arc those who, as ’ lions
SMALL
Japanese
restaurant
or
Italian
ancestry
of
German
vative member of the B.C. Le! igh school students, witnessed on television the campus uproar of
expressed
that

The
view
was
gfstature, and Mayor Fred Hume sale in downtown Montreal IwH
the past few years. They arc determined that their life on campus
unwarranted', of New Westminster as members rent with a 5 years lease. AVil^^
this
wholly
is going to be different. Warned by the unhapyy events of the
and that, in view of the loyalty of a committee to supervise the leave Canada soon, and voiiHta
: nd faced with an economic recession and a tight job market, thev of the overwhelming proportion registration of people of Japa- sell to a reasonable offer.
for young couple. 3451 Saijt.Bg
| of such groups and particularly nese origin.
want to make their education count.
g|
!in the old established sections,
“Angus is known as the out­ Denis Montreal 842-5555
As one of our deans said the'other day, “I've never seen
i the lowest tenderer should not be standing- advocate of fair* treat­
Male Help Wanted O
studious students!”
; refused in such cases unless po- ment for the Orientals in British
EXPERIENCED
color televisii||
: lice, inquiry indicated sympathy Columbia,” he wrote. “Macintosh
with the enemy.”
is one of the. leaders of the anti­ technician. Must speak EiigfeiM
At two more Cabinet meetings Oriental movement (but is fun­ and Japanese. Apply Box 10JM
on Oct. 1 and Oct. 3, 1940, there damentally’ a decent and honest New Canadian (Toronto).
j was more discussion of military7 man), and Mayor Hume is sen­
highly
Female Help Wanted ®
; training for “persons of Japa­ sible, level-headed, and
TOKYO
The second post- married during 1967.
respected.
nese
and
Chinese
racial
origin

EXPERIENCED
sewing machine opermr^S
The Welfare Ministry said that in B.C. and a decision to set up
baby boom” started this
war
“Such a combination for ap­ for men's ' clothing factory. Apply
year, as many people born in the the second “baby boom” which a special committee to “report pointments would, in my opinion, Adelaide Street West (3rd floor), |h.g 1
on the general problem of Ja­ ensure that the Government will ronto). ~
boom” of 1947-49
panese and Chinese racial origin be well advised, it will indicate
a ml bore children ly to continue for several
18
with the •i nitial total of births in British Columbia, from the to the Japanese that they are
during
; point of view of internal securi- getting a fair deal,
it
will
two million
a report exceeding
■ ty, and with particular reference disarm the
“White
Canada”
JAMES KAMINO
- to the question of military train- crusaders (and possibly’ end in
on population increases in 1971,
[ the conversion of one of their
“This '3 because people who !
o
which was published by the WclI two most prominent leaders) and
firM
Ou
Oct.
8
the
Cabinet
were
married
in
fare Ministry recently.
.
f : back again to the subject
of it will satisfy’ public opinion.”
postwar 'baby boom’ na\ e reach- anf-j_japanese feelings on the
'The ministry estimate
It seemed to for a time.
cd the marriageable ige and will ; West Coast.
M
many as 1.975.000 babies were
On July 15, Mr. King told' a
364-9913
wed in the ;
to come,” a ;
Defence Minister J. L. Ralston, Cabinet meeting “he w.as satisfi­
born this year.
arguing for establishment of the ed that there was now no seriousspokesman dt
(TORONTO)
“The babies were born at in­
....
.,
armed forces cited its support anti-Japanese agitation going on
“And there will be another-<the internal situation in
seconds.” the min­
the
‘baby boom’ '
children born province nd the fear of Japane- in British Columbia.”
Bi*
Shortly after the Japanese
in
the
earreiit
year
reach
anti-Japanese
the
<
se
and
activity
The number, which is 41,000
attack on Pearl Habor, Cana­
■ there.”
mati imonial age.
dian
authorities began takingmore than the number recorded
J NT Auto Service
The Prime Minister said the

The
cycle
will
probably
precautionary
7
measures
along
in 1970. is about the same as
con‘ . organization of local anti-Japatinue during the next 100 years, ; nes groups—one called the Fly- the West Coast, impounding Ja­
the popukit-'c.n of Nagano prefec2239 Bloor St. West H
at in- : ing Column—“showed that the panese-owned fishing boats, in­
tore.
(At Runnymede) Toronto
! local internal danger was greater terning- ^allegedly dangerous peThi
ople. and closing
a
Japanese
s that
this
year tervals of 25 years.”
■ than .any immediate

” '
' ‘
threat
Opposite Tsukawa Barber

of
ministry estimated
that attack from without.”
school.
there
19 newborn babies
Phone 766-4292
1.085,000 couples were married
Toward the end of February,
in
_ C. G. Dower, the Minister of
an
in 1971. aa increase of 56.000 National Defence for Air. warn— 1942,
.... executive order desigdesig­
Japan.
NAMIKI & TANOUYE
nated
a
strip
of
territory

about
over
the
previous
year,
In
an
­
ed
that
the
danger
of
anti-JapaThe rate is far below the re­
<___ t
other statistic, it meant con j) les nese violence in B.C. was serious. 100 miles wide, along the coast
cord 34.3 recorded' in 1947 but is
as
a
protected'
area
from
which
He
said
many
people were,talk­
married every 29 s econds in 1971
origin
the second
195(1ing of “mass internment and all people of Japanese
as compared to 3
were
ordered
removed.
seconds
in deportation of all Japanese
in
m the
1970.
the province.”
The B.C. Security- Commission
year of "fiery horse.”
Couples who decided to divor­
The Cabinet also learned at was set up to take charge of
'I he birth rate was unusually
ce in 1971 numbered 102.000. It that meeting that latest intelli- the removal by- September, 1942.
STARTING FROM
to
road
high in 1967 because many peo­
“upon
alleged It moved 2,000 men
FEBRUARY
1st, 1972,_ ®
was the first time that the yearly- gence reports
ple. who refrained from marry­
Japanese activities in scarcely construction camps in the B.C.
DUNDAS UNION STORE
total exceeded the 100.000 mark. populated area (the Queen Char­ interior and 3,700 people in fa­
ing in the previous year. got
WILL OPEN ON t M
number
about one- lotte Islands) had tended to show mily: groups to the sugar-beet
SUNDAYS
FROM 10 A.M.
es recorded that there had been great exag­ areas of the Prairie Provinces
TO 6 P.M.
geration of any possible menan- and Ontario.
in the same year.
ce that might exist in the way
In addition to 4,000
people
DUNDAS UNION
Divorces took place al the in­ ot assistance to the enemv by permitted to relocate voluntarily
STORE
tervals of five minutes and nine local Japanese.”
in Eastern Canada or settle in
seconds. In 1970, it w.as five min­
the
Meanwhilie the special com­ self-supporting projects in
173 Dundas Street W., Toronto
utes and 29 seconds.
mittee. made up of H. L. Keen­ B.C. interior, nearly7 12,000 pe­
Phone 364-7692, 366-3663 gg
Tile Welfare Ministry also re­ leyside of External Affairs and ople were sent to rehabilitated
J. ghost towms of the Slocan Valley
ported that 6(3.000 persons died Assistant Commissioner F.
LAW OFFICE
Mead of the RCMP. was prepar­ i of British Columbia and to a
during Cie year. The number ing its recommendations.
specially- built
settlement • at
Tashme, near Hope, about 100
’ was 40.000 less than in 1970,
They went to the Cabinet on
revealing- t! e improved health of Jan. 6, 1941. recommending the miles east of Vancouver.
After tlie war, some Japanese
Suite 4
the nation’: population.
registration of all B.C. residents
accepted
Government offer’s of
Scarboroug h, Ontario.
,
er of deaths has been oi Japanese origin. In the event free transportation
ROOFING,
to Japan and
^I’/vith Japan, the RCMP I others
Telephone:
439-221?
•s
settled
in
various
parts
should mtern wtat the commit-| of Canada. WaiSime'^S
EAVESTROUGH,
aw as “the small number of
gradually lifted but it was
’• who, in their opinion, were
BRICK WORK,
not until April, 1949, that all
should b e interned for cause.”
rights were restored.
CHIMNEY CLEANING
Mr. Keenleyside said
B.C.
Fishing boats, real estate and
residents of Japanese origin liked other property seized from the
the idea of registration “and had Japanese were sold by the Go­
CALL ANYTIME,
expressed the view that such a vernment and the former owners
step would be desirable in tlie received only .a fraction of their
interests and for the protection value in most cases.

g

Japanese In Middle Of Baby "Boomu"

I

Announcement

w

KIMURA &
CADSBY

A-L Handy Man

t lease send rue—.
copies of Takashima’s A CHILD IN
PRISON CAMP at $7.95 per copy. Enclosed is my cheque or
money order for.____ _

ante.

TORONTO SANGHA BINGO NITE

TRAVEL?

^or 5, niS^t of enjoyment and relaxation,
come to
Toronto Sangha Bingo Nite at the
Buddhist Church.

Can you speak Japanese.
We are looking for a sin? 9
girl who can type and wiUnt
to learn travel business.

Address.

time is S P.M.
Toronto 2-R Ont.

Also U^. orders add-$1.00



For a admission fee of $1.00
games.

star tinCT
you get 20 free

Refreshments will be served. ___ T.B.C.

FURUYA TRAVEL
SERVICE
460 Dundas Sb West
Tel. 363-0655