Page 1
Istar Trek" Actor George Takei Attacks Johnny Carson’s “Jap" Usage
nv re
the ab
tin pertinent conclusions. It could be that the so-called
prove himself an insensitive wag or indeed an artful
disguised under a cover of fa hionable gloss.
By GEORGE TAKEI
c __ “Jap” is a word' that has a way
unexpectedly, How we respond to
s mav reveal more about ourselves
x out. on il
“Jap” is usuall at our
other hand, doe not have to be in an abrasive voir
We hould be able to deal with it candidlv
with
hould be ble to disc
and
prominence.
as with
our "buddies’
many of us have smiled through
led not to make an issue of it and
go along when a non-Japanese acquainused the word in our presence. The
tar.ee
as that the word' w.as used
ition probably
giddies so it s all right or that we’re so
ion
led that we’re above petty epithets. This
cnerositv on our pait. It mat tuin out
could be bl mu
us and had drawn from
was
agi
I lu ce an apocalyptic aver ion for atrocious Agnewisms and especially for our Viee President’s “friendly" reference to a fat Jap” •eporter four vears ago.
him know what we thought of
1 think many of it
fay night (Fob. 2S) the buddy of insomniac
lowers. Johnny Carson, joined Agnew’s
iff reporter Vince Matsudaira ot the Ivafu
-ed it to me. Carson and Ed McMahon did
etch in which allusions were made to Sgt,
the last World War 11 Japanese holdon Guam. The punchline of one joke was. “How
vou lik to be stranded on an island with a
and a Jap?” The line was rewarded
raccoon
ippiause.
wer
the reason for the use
nrolessness. or
is inexcusable in a persoi
this offensive
(Continued on Page
Ln
iiiiHUiniiiiHiinniniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
lipill!!|i|!|li!!lllillllll,ll,,ni,,,l!,,,1,!,l,i,,,l,,,,,,!,,i,,,,n!,,,,l,!,,,l!,l,,llll,m
CHILD IN PRISON
CAMP”
Bv SHIZUYE
TAKASHIMA
“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook SI.65
M
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
iiiiiiiiiiiiuiin....... iiihiIiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii....... mi....... . ............................................... hi....... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiui!iiiin:iuri:iiiiiiiii<niii
„...........
Government.”
order not to
oi Lena uu
the publisher to
•eply to an inquiry made
Acs that
Department of External
“the Canadian Government would' not wish to
censor the works or opinions of any Canadian
citizen” but carefully avoids indicating whether
anv conversation took place between Canad i.an
Mkyo and the TV network that could
have given rise to the cancellation,
In other words, the question remains,: “Did
the Japanese TV network cancel the show after
indications from the Canadian
Embassy there that the Canadian
Government would rather it did
not run it?” or “Did the Japanese network assume, unasked,
that the showmight be offensive
Over a month amounts to some 5.3 million yen
TOKYO.
to Canada and cancel it on its
Shoichi so far.
passed since Sg’
own initiative?” The publisher
Yokoi of the former Imperial
For their kind encouragement . has written their agents in ToJapanese Army was found in to him, Yokoi asked’ the press kvo for more information.
the jungles of Guam Island at to convey his thanks to the pubMiss Takashima has been in
I the end of his 2S-year-old fugiti lie and handed a note of thanks
Japan for three weeks where
ve life there. He greeted the day
mderway for
negotiations
to reporters.
food
physical,
condition
at
the
in
Yokoi has been able to adapt the Japanese translation of her
First National Hospital of To
to “things modern” such as TV book. She was interviewed by
Yaremko And The Cherry Blossom Dolls
kyo, where he has been recupe
in a hospital room and seems to the Associated Press while there,
CHERRY BLOSSOMS AND JAPANESE CHARM. The Ho- rating since his return to Japan. enjoy watching it. Rut he conj- and has travelled through the
| nourable John Yaremko, Provincial Secretary and Minister of UtiAccording to doctors taking plained about difficulties of un country, On February 28th she
I zenship. enjoys the attention of Christine Hayashi (lek) ano Kat ia
she
I Udo at the opening of the eighth annual Spring Festival in the care of him, Yokoi has been re derstanding modern plays on TV visited Hiroshima which
disg
and
I Japanese Canadian'Cultural Centre, Toronto. The weekend festival covering steadily and has been and seems quite at a loss about ' found “deeply movin
| included traditional music and dancing, doll displays, art exnioi s busy making a loom .and a fire student radical movements.
■ turbing.
land Japanese cooking. A highlight was an audio visual display making instrument that he used
I promoting HERITAGE ONTARIO. Scheduled for June 2, 3 and
I 4th. HERITAGE ONTARIO will explore the multicultural character in the jungles. He also can sleep
I of the province. As special guest speaker, Mr. Yaremko congratulat- at least five to seven hours a
I cd Japanese Canadians on their unique contributions to On tai io day now.
HOUSTON. — Yoko Ono Len Lennon to visit Kyoko.
I society and encouraged them to participate in the HEKHAlrb
Cox, 34, an independent film
Well-wishers have been send non and her husband John LenONTARIO congress.
another
battle
in
maker, and Mrs. Lennon were
ing money, postcards or letters non have won
for
custody
of
8divorced in the Virgin Islands
squabble
the
of greetings to him through the
Lenin 1969. Cox received custody of
hospital and the Health and year-old Kyoko Cox, Mrs.
left
non
’
s
daughter,
but
they
Kyoko in Soli to’s court last SepWelfare Ministry, and the total
Houston without the child.
tern her after• a two-day hearing
in
which a film featuring nude
By S. I. HAYAKAWA
Mrs. Lennon, wearing a black
President, S.F. State College
beret and black and white check scenes ot John Lennon was
A lien the Viet Cong took over villages, they routinely executed
ed skirt and vest, sobbed when shown.
ire local leaders — the village officials, officers of the co-opeiathe decision was announced by
Cox has refused to disclose
hw. any one in a position of responsibility. A recurrent problem
doUTSUNOMIYA, Tochigi.
the whereabouts of his daughter
Judge Peter S. Soli to of
Ox me villages, therefore, even when the Viet Cong had been diiven A nine-year-old girl, scolded by , mestic relations court. She has and has disappeared with the
her mother for stealing pencils ! been fighting for custody of the child and his second wife.
out. lias been the lack of trained leadership.
It was this problem that led to the formation of the Na
; from a classmate, hanged her- child for three years.
framing Center for Revolutionary Training Cadres at Yung
reported police.
like
“We’re happy, but it
vnich is some two hours by car south of Saigon. (Ies, you can ,
e an accident,
when you
drive around most -parts of South Vietnam. Except foi ,
,le? chool in OtawaYou’re still in
Lennon said.
-rmed guards at all bridges and an occasional fleet of militaiv zawa
; found dead in
LETHBRIDGE, Alberta. — In
pain. We still have to find the
ecjcss. I saw few signs of war during my two weeks tlierej
a storeroom of her home recentI ung Tau is a lovely seaside town. The National -training Cen1971 more than 70,000 -persons
not idenwims a iW miles inland, occupying 1500 .acres of jungle and foied ]y, police -^aid. She was
The girl, Kyoko, was last seen visited the City’s Nikka Yoko
^nc sand dunes. It can handle up to 10,000 students at a time. Since tified.
The girl, questioned by her in December with her father, Japanese gardens, 10,000 more
-if’*' some 200,000 have been graduated. The students, all adults?
are selected by their home villages and sent for training from al teacher had admitted she took Anthony D. Cox. They disap than in 1970. Paid admissions
over the country. About 10 per cent are women. Faculty, staff and TO pencils from a iriend & home, peared after Cox finished serv totaled 56,000 with about 12,000
i police said. Her mother scolded
Yil wear the traditional peasant “black pyjamas.
ing a five-day jail sentence he elementary school children visit
National Training Center is perhaps the most exciting edu ; her severely when she returned
received for failing to allow Mrs. ing free on school tours.
i home from school.
The CBC has just
CHILD
Takashima’s
rights to
PRISON CAMP for a one-hour nation-wide radio
reading of the book, publisher Tundra Books of
Montreal has just announced (Details ol time and
date are not yet known).
Meanwhile Tundra Books is still trying to find
out exactly what happened in Tokyo that caused
the Japanese national TV network to cancel its
interview with Takashima at the last minute
Sqt. Yokoi Receives Over 5 Million
Yen Goodwill Gifts And Good Health
Yoko Wins Battle, But No Daughter
Creating A Nation
Little Girl Kills
Self Over Theft
Lethbridge Japan
Gardens Popular
(Continued on Page 81
nv re
the ab
tin pertinent conclusions. It could be that the so-called
prove himself an insensitive wag or indeed an artful
disguised under a cover of fa hionable gloss.
By GEORGE TAKEI
c __ “Jap” is a word' that has a way
unexpectedly, How we respond to
s mav reveal more about ourselves
x out. on il
“Jap” is usuall at our
other hand, doe not have to be in an abrasive voir
We hould be able to deal with it candidlv
with
hould be ble to disc
and
prominence.
as with
our "buddies’
many of us have smiled through
led not to make an issue of it and
go along when a non-Japanese acquainused the word in our presence. The
tar.ee
as that the word' w.as used
ition probably
giddies so it s all right or that we’re so
ion
led that we’re above petty epithets. This
cnerositv on our pait. It mat tuin out
could be bl mu
us and had drawn from
was
agi
I lu ce an apocalyptic aver ion for atrocious Agnewisms and especially for our Viee President’s “friendly" reference to a fat Jap” •eporter four vears ago.
him know what we thought of
1 think many of it
fay night (Fob. 2S) the buddy of insomniac
lowers. Johnny Carson, joined Agnew’s
iff reporter Vince Matsudaira ot the Ivafu
-ed it to me. Carson and Ed McMahon did
etch in which allusions were made to Sgt,
the last World War 11 Japanese holdon Guam. The punchline of one joke was. “How
vou lik to be stranded on an island with a
and a Jap?” The line was rewarded
raccoon
ippiause.
wer
the reason for the use
nrolessness. or
is inexcusable in a persoi
this offensive
(Continued on Page
Ln
iiiiHUiniiiiHiinniniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
lipill!!|i|!|li!!lllillllll,ll,,ni,,,l!,,,1,!,l,i,,,l,,,,,,!,,i,,,,n!,,,,l,!,,,l!,l,,llll,m
CHILD IN PRISON
CAMP”
Bv SHIZUYE
TAKASHIMA
“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook SI.65
M
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
iiiiiiiiiiiiuiin....... iiihiIiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii....... mi....... . ............................................... hi....... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiui!iiiin:iuri:iiiiiiiii<niii
„...........
Government.”
order not to
oi Lena uu
the publisher to
•eply to an inquiry made
Acs that
Department of External
“the Canadian Government would' not wish to
censor the works or opinions of any Canadian
citizen” but carefully avoids indicating whether
anv conversation took place between Canad i.an
Mkyo and the TV network that could
have given rise to the cancellation,
In other words, the question remains,: “Did
the Japanese TV network cancel the show after
indications from the Canadian
Embassy there that the Canadian
Government would rather it did
not run it?” or “Did the Japanese network assume, unasked,
that the showmight be offensive
Over a month amounts to some 5.3 million yen
TOKYO.
to Canada and cancel it on its
Shoichi so far.
passed since Sg’
own initiative?” The publisher
Yokoi of the former Imperial
For their kind encouragement . has written their agents in ToJapanese Army was found in to him, Yokoi asked’ the press kvo for more information.
the jungles of Guam Island at to convey his thanks to the pubMiss Takashima has been in
I the end of his 2S-year-old fugiti lie and handed a note of thanks
Japan for three weeks where
ve life there. He greeted the day
mderway for
negotiations
to reporters.
food
physical,
condition
at
the
in
Yokoi has been able to adapt the Japanese translation of her
First National Hospital of To
to “things modern” such as TV book. She was interviewed by
Yaremko And The Cherry Blossom Dolls
kyo, where he has been recupe
in a hospital room and seems to the Associated Press while there,
CHERRY BLOSSOMS AND JAPANESE CHARM. The Ho- rating since his return to Japan. enjoy watching it. Rut he conj- and has travelled through the
| nourable John Yaremko, Provincial Secretary and Minister of UtiAccording to doctors taking plained about difficulties of un country, On February 28th she
I zenship. enjoys the attention of Christine Hayashi (lek) ano Kat ia
she
I Udo at the opening of the eighth annual Spring Festival in the care of him, Yokoi has been re derstanding modern plays on TV visited Hiroshima which
disg
and
I Japanese Canadian'Cultural Centre, Toronto. The weekend festival covering steadily and has been and seems quite at a loss about ' found “deeply movin
| included traditional music and dancing, doll displays, art exnioi s busy making a loom .and a fire student radical movements.
■ turbing.
land Japanese cooking. A highlight was an audio visual display making instrument that he used
I promoting HERITAGE ONTARIO. Scheduled for June 2, 3 and
I 4th. HERITAGE ONTARIO will explore the multicultural character in the jungles. He also can sleep
I of the province. As special guest speaker, Mr. Yaremko congratulat- at least five to seven hours a
I cd Japanese Canadians on their unique contributions to On tai io day now.
HOUSTON. — Yoko Ono Len Lennon to visit Kyoko.
I society and encouraged them to participate in the HEKHAlrb
Cox, 34, an independent film
Well-wishers have been send non and her husband John LenONTARIO congress.
another
battle
in
maker, and Mrs. Lennon were
ing money, postcards or letters non have won
for
custody
of
8divorced in the Virgin Islands
squabble
the
of greetings to him through the
Lenin 1969. Cox received custody of
hospital and the Health and year-old Kyoko Cox, Mrs.
left
non
’
s
daughter,
but
they
Kyoko in Soli to’s court last SepWelfare Ministry, and the total
Houston without the child.
tern her after• a two-day hearing
in
which a film featuring nude
By S. I. HAYAKAWA
Mrs. Lennon, wearing a black
President, S.F. State College
beret and black and white check scenes ot John Lennon was
A lien the Viet Cong took over villages, they routinely executed
ed skirt and vest, sobbed when shown.
ire local leaders — the village officials, officers of the co-opeiathe decision was announced by
Cox has refused to disclose
hw. any one in a position of responsibility. A recurrent problem
doUTSUNOMIYA, Tochigi.
the whereabouts of his daughter
Judge Peter S. Soli to of
Ox me villages, therefore, even when the Viet Cong had been diiven A nine-year-old girl, scolded by , mestic relations court. She has and has disappeared with the
her mother for stealing pencils ! been fighting for custody of the child and his second wife.
out. lias been the lack of trained leadership.
It was this problem that led to the formation of the Na
; from a classmate, hanged her- child for three years.
framing Center for Revolutionary Training Cadres at Yung
reported police.
like
“We’re happy, but it
vnich is some two hours by car south of Saigon. (Ies, you can ,
e an accident,
when you
drive around most -parts of South Vietnam. Except foi ,
,le? chool in OtawaYou’re still in
Lennon said.
-rmed guards at all bridges and an occasional fleet of militaiv zawa
; found dead in
LETHBRIDGE, Alberta. — In
pain. We still have to find the
ecjcss. I saw few signs of war during my two weeks tlierej
a storeroom of her home recentI ung Tau is a lovely seaside town. The National -training Cen1971 more than 70,000 -persons
not idenwims a iW miles inland, occupying 1500 .acres of jungle and foied ]y, police -^aid. She was
The girl, Kyoko, was last seen visited the City’s Nikka Yoko
^nc sand dunes. It can handle up to 10,000 students at a time. Since tified.
The girl, questioned by her in December with her father, Japanese gardens, 10,000 more
-if’*' some 200,000 have been graduated. The students, all adults?
are selected by their home villages and sent for training from al teacher had admitted she took Anthony D. Cox. They disap than in 1970. Paid admissions
over the country. About 10 per cent are women. Faculty, staff and TO pencils from a iriend & home, peared after Cox finished serv totaled 56,000 with about 12,000
i police said. Her mother scolded
Yil wear the traditional peasant “black pyjamas.
ing a five-day jail sentence he elementary school children visit
National Training Center is perhaps the most exciting edu ; her severely when she returned
received for failing to allow Mrs. ing free on school tours.
i home from school.
The CBC has just
CHILD
Takashima’s
rights to
PRISON CAMP for a one-hour nation-wide radio
reading of the book, publisher Tundra Books of
Montreal has just announced (Details ol time and
date are not yet known).
Meanwhile Tundra Books is still trying to find
out exactly what happened in Tokyo that caused
the Japanese national TV network to cancel its
interview with Takashima at the last minute
Sqt. Yokoi Receives Over 5 Million
Yen Goodwill Gifts And Good Health
Yoko Wins Battle, But No Daughter
Creating A Nation
Little Girl Kills
Self Over Theft
Lethbridge Japan
Gardens Popular
(Continued on Page 81
Page 2
T H E
o nn oa
&m
ak
Budokan Against Foste
I? ^
TOKYO. -- April Pools’ Day
ir is gom
to be a special occasion for the .
In h
who is becoming
I hat s the day the one and only Muhammad Ali
the ex-heavywe!gnt champ, will take on Mac J Ut'l’gC‘11 ilin in seven
mds in Zurich on Dec
1 osier Ui a la-round bout in Tokyo.
■ stopped ex-1
n
'ampion. Bepi Ros
hth round on
ime card.
x
scheduled for the Budokan (Martial in
J ne managers
•Ans 1
hi the heart of the capital. Ali is to
liters, Herber Mu
rtft AZthc
'vork #nd r°s“'r hammad’ amf Get
in Tokyo when
th t
w;
formally
. near the end
TORONTO. — The Profes- Delorme-Brockville, Bill GrThe Japan Roxi^ Commi Sion waived its ride of January.
ional Golfers Association
of wood-Georgetown, Gar V??
The drums
be beaten for the
against two loreign boxers ighting in Japan to
right a wav a Bost er
predicted Ontario headed by Harry Allard Chinguacousy,
open the way for the Tokve. bout.
Al
Patter^
a knockout victory for 1: s boy if Ali doesn’t keep
Rolling'
Hills
Golf
Club
have
Whitevale,
Dave
Clayton-D^
1 contender for the world title running away. Of coin e, nobodv took Stassi
abandoned their golf clubs for da, John Service-Summit
( _ i ne InuioKan sea
14,000 and hockey sticks.
George Clifton-Pine Valley.
I V oshio Kou. chief
On
Saturday.
The Canadian Japanese 1^
March
2a
at
1
Say it with flowers!
I < ITime Organization
•ht^saTd^he ;
at George Bell Arena, the Star team is the one that b
SHARON'S FLOR1SI
T.V. Service
CITY-WIDE
364-9913
(TORONTO)
942
DELIVERY
Bus:
RO.
Kes:
HO.
6-7902
PAPE
AVE.,
TORONTO
SMALL
W\
s' s
\
SPRING
shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
xpected a capacity crowd. TheP'^'A- °f Ontario will once ag.a- veiled to Jcipan ni February
ight will be televised in Japan, ■ in lace up their skates to do bat last
year playing exhibit
ot course.
d may be cast tle in a benefit game for the games in Tokyo, Osaka, Sh^
satellite.
Tickets
tlie match went “Jim Vipond Fund for Retarded ka, Kyoto and other cities, i;
the Canadian the trip came to a close the ter
on sale in rmd-February at prices Children
ranging from 30,000 yen which
ipanese All-Stars.
had played 11 games, winniu
quite near 8100. The 30.000
1 he P.G.A. of Ontario hockey 8 and losing 3. This is one tb
more than twice the
a ticket to any boxing team con si s'ts of such well known that the players will never ®
professionalIs as Harry Allard- get.
.An and. roster are scheduled Rolling Hills,
So come on out and see th
Girard-for' to arrive in Tokyo in mid-March
■ — two weeks before their match. , meiiy of Summit G. C. but now “PROS” in action, the P.G.A.s
< ! And no doubt they will get plen-I aead
professional of London Ontario golf professionals.
• i ty of attention. '
°
I Hunt, Leon “Deke” DeCaireAdmission for this game s
Hero in Japan. Ali is a well j Buttonville. Ke
Duggan-Mark- 81.00 for adults and .75c k
ilthough by the;
children.
that he has dis- land Woods, Bob nd Bill BreenJapanese
Could you please put this ins
newspapers Malton, Gordon DeLaat-Weston,
John Henricks-Brampton, Phil soon as possible. Thank You,
besides reading about Ali. who
John
Robert Masukaw
gets pienty of ink here, Japanese Brownlee-Dentonia Park
b1 PS eins ^av9 seen a number of
Ali s oouts via satellite, inckiding the one he lost to Frazier
there is hardlv
■ Tims.
,,
x.miuv a soul
final standings
1
l country who doesn't know
who Ali
Who
All iIS. with the possible ex
CANADIAN JAPANESE HOCKEY LEAGUE
ception of Shoichi Yokoi, the
ex-army sergeant who has re
W
T
GF
turned to Japan after hiding out URABE
11
7
3
m Guam jungles for 28 years. YAMADA
21
9
8
4
22
64
And i onoi will hpar about Ali
TURF
21
soon enough.
7
9
5
19
63
JAPAN
8
2
11
18
48
MAR
Ex-S u moists
12:00 P.M. — 1:00 P.M. YAMADA vs JAPAN
vilV^
b°ut actually
ini! not be tue first heavyweight 1:00 P.M. — 2:00 P.M. URABE vs TURF
boxing match held in Japan. °
Japan had heavyweight boxmM-fe
r‘ M1'iM' "' tbe
Urabe Taps Can. Japanese Hockey
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
4,
KAMPAI
TOUR
16-day group tour of Orient $999.00
Departures from Vancouver
Includes: Twin
aring hotel accoinmodni ion.
M<‘a Is.
iriare. Service (.barge and Gratuities
i* Room
and open return at additional charge,
in
2Uimo '^■es^ers fought
pi tin nrsL heavyweight fight'in
^country in September^95G.
And Roboru Kataoka, a six-font
man'- Japan’s
vTt t
champion bv
4 n<\. °L a Rl-round decision
^95^'^ X:^!ka^ on M^y
i ite for Color Brochure and Fu
Information.
K. iwata Travel Service
Toronto
254-5101
w.
Toronto. Ont.
However, Jam
division had
-about four
fighters and d- were
so inept
that the
V
class
died
out
soon a fterward
Vancouver
V a neon ver 6.
OSCAR'S
J
propriety
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j
JON ONODERA
489-4654
SKI
Today, the niiddlewei-ht a-'
ywi remains the hrarist rii
IFDpnnese boxing.
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o nn oa
&m
ak
Budokan Against Foste
I? ^
TOKYO. -- April Pools’ Day
ir is gom
to be a special occasion for the .
In h
who is becoming
I hat s the day the one and only Muhammad Ali
the ex-heavywe!gnt champ, will take on Mac J Ut'l’gC‘11 ilin in seven
mds in Zurich on Dec
1 osier Ui a la-round bout in Tokyo.
■ stopped ex-1
n
'ampion. Bepi Ros
hth round on
ime card.
x
scheduled for the Budokan (Martial in
J ne managers
•Ans 1
hi the heart of the capital. Ali is to
liters, Herber Mu
rtft AZthc
'vork #nd r°s“'r hammad’ amf Get
in Tokyo when
th t
w;
formally
. near the end
TORONTO. — The Profes- Delorme-Brockville, Bill GrThe Japan Roxi^ Commi Sion waived its ride of January.
ional Golfers Association
of wood-Georgetown, Gar V??
The drums
be beaten for the
against two loreign boxers ighting in Japan to
right a wav a Bost er
predicted Ontario headed by Harry Allard Chinguacousy,
open the way for the Tokve. bout.
Al
Patter^
a knockout victory for 1: s boy if Ali doesn’t keep
Rolling'
Hills
Golf
Club
have
Whitevale,
Dave
Clayton-D^
1 contender for the world title running away. Of coin e, nobodv took Stassi
abandoned their golf clubs for da, John Service-Summit
( _ i ne InuioKan sea
14,000 and hockey sticks.
George Clifton-Pine Valley.
I V oshio Kou. chief
On
Saturday.
The Canadian Japanese 1^
March
2a
at
1
Say it with flowers!
I < ITime Organization
•ht^saTd^he ;
at George Bell Arena, the Star team is the one that b
SHARON'S FLOR1SI
T.V. Service
CITY-WIDE
364-9913
(TORONTO)
942
DELIVERY
Bus:
RO.
Kes:
HO.
6-7902
PAPE
AVE.,
TORONTO
SMALL
W\
s' s
\
SPRING
shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
xpected a capacity crowd. TheP'^'A- °f Ontario will once ag.a- veiled to Jcipan ni February
ight will be televised in Japan, ■ in lace up their skates to do bat last
year playing exhibit
ot course.
d may be cast tle in a benefit game for the games in Tokyo, Osaka, Sh^
satellite.
Tickets
tlie match went “Jim Vipond Fund for Retarded ka, Kyoto and other cities, i;
the Canadian the trip came to a close the ter
on sale in rmd-February at prices Children
ranging from 30,000 yen which
ipanese All-Stars.
had played 11 games, winniu
quite near 8100. The 30.000
1 he P.G.A. of Ontario hockey 8 and losing 3. This is one tb
more than twice the
a ticket to any boxing team con si s'ts of such well known that the players will never ®
professionalIs as Harry Allard- get.
.An and. roster are scheduled Rolling Hills,
So come on out and see th
Girard-for' to arrive in Tokyo in mid-March
■ — two weeks before their match. , meiiy of Summit G. C. but now “PROS” in action, the P.G.A.s
< ! And no doubt they will get plen-I aead
professional of London Ontario golf professionals.
• i ty of attention. '
°
I Hunt, Leon “Deke” DeCaireAdmission for this game s
Hero in Japan. Ali is a well j Buttonville. Ke
Duggan-Mark- 81.00 for adults and .75c k
ilthough by the;
children.
that he has dis- land Woods, Bob nd Bill BreenJapanese
Could you please put this ins
newspapers Malton, Gordon DeLaat-Weston,
John Henricks-Brampton, Phil soon as possible. Thank You,
besides reading about Ali. who
John
Robert Masukaw
gets pienty of ink here, Japanese Brownlee-Dentonia Park
b1 PS eins ^av9 seen a number of
Ali s oouts via satellite, inckiding the one he lost to Frazier
there is hardlv
■ Tims.
,,
x.miuv a soul
final standings
1
l country who doesn't know
who Ali
Who
All iIS. with the possible ex
CANADIAN JAPANESE HOCKEY LEAGUE
ception of Shoichi Yokoi, the
ex-army sergeant who has re
W
T
GF
turned to Japan after hiding out URABE
11
7
3
m Guam jungles for 28 years. YAMADA
21
9
8
4
22
64
And i onoi will hpar about Ali
TURF
21
soon enough.
7
9
5
19
63
JAPAN
8
2
11
18
48
MAR
Ex-S u moists
12:00 P.M. — 1:00 P.M. YAMADA vs JAPAN
vilV^
b°ut actually
ini! not be tue first heavyweight 1:00 P.M. — 2:00 P.M. URABE vs TURF
boxing match held in Japan. °
Japan had heavyweight boxmM-fe
r‘ M1'iM' "' tbe
Urabe Taps Can. Japanese Hockey
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
4,
KAMPAI
TOUR
16-day group tour of Orient $999.00
Departures from Vancouver
Includes: Twin
aring hotel accoinmodni ion.
M<‘a Is.
iriare. Service (.barge and Gratuities
i* Room
and open return at additional charge,
in
2Uimo '^■es^ers fought
pi tin nrsL heavyweight fight'in
^country in September^95G.
And Roboru Kataoka, a six-font
man'- Japan’s
vTt t
champion bv
4 n<\. °L a Rl-round decision
^95^'^ X:^!ka^ on M^y
i ite for Color Brochure and Fu
Information.
K. iwata Travel Service
Toronto
254-5101
w.
Toronto. Ont.
However, Jam
division had
-about four
fighters and d- were
so inept
that the
V
class
died
out
soon a fterward
Vancouver
V a neon ver 6.
OSCAR'S
J
propriety
SPORT SHOP
j
JON ONODERA
489-4654
SKI
Today, the niiddlewei-ht a-'
ywi remains the hrarist rii
IFDpnnese boxing.
BENEFIT DANCE
1201 Bloor Street 'Vest
LE. 2-4267
ALL-WAV' ROOFING LTD,
"Ml
MEMBER OF C.E.C.A
flat roofs
$ <<®i
SHINGLING
eavestroughing
SHEET METAL WORK
ALCAN SIDING DEALER
e
RONTO
:30 A.M.
tours—Hotel—Sightseein
Travellers Cheques
421-3374
NISEI OWNED
Covering Ontario
Obtainable
person
Sponsored bv the T T.
with
support
co-operation by the Shin l.iin
i
, consists
, . of new
arrivals from Japan
A. welcome this opportunity for a joint ventur
•A*<
SPECIALIST
481-8805
h * ? .AT
saA Ali could
Tt A^ * whole di-
Toronto Japanese Language School
Jj
and Baggage Insurance
and
reservations or
the
— EM 8-9934
COME ONE — COME ALL
(transportation win be available from the Esso
Don Mills Road and Wynford Dr. to the Centre 'iaiion on
8:00 P.M.
I
*
OPEN SUNDAY
10 A.M. TO 6 P.M
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
EM. 4-7692
Page 3
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PHONE: Office 533-1167
HOME 535-8959
533-1168
Page 5
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Page 6
Friday, March 17, 1979
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Page 7
_ -
_
-.
.
....
•-------------------------------------------------------
I Dates And Doings
ri practices To Start March 21st At T.B.C.
M:
Al:
Tr
s
■ ®3ii®Kraraiiow
Japan Women Lib
Personal
Holds A Doozer
11M®«
Of A Jamboree
Births
TOKYO. — Japan h
mded wiih Western Irenes
T0 _ Bon Odori practices will commence on Tuesday,
World
S p.m. with the next practice scheduled for Sunday, and
•Tier lunch. Subsequent practices will be on Tuesdays, War 11. In most case; these
een adoptee oy
Fridays and Sunday afternoons except on special trend
i a passion and an
■ through emergencies. When in doubt, please phone the J apanese
the oriimen si tv
mbaud'or consult the local papers.
nd half-hearted
in new numbers will be. given from the first night.
bv comparison
_ TBC.
Row, it seems, they hav
entered the realm of women
*
lib in
•
SAPPORO
ICHIBAN
Notes
=
221
Spadina Ave., Toronto
S62-10S2
Ont.
Mr. and Air
Imppy to announ
son. Andrew ■
ce the birth of
^zs.)
on Feb. ■
Robert (10 lbs.
pital. Brothei' ;
23. 1972 at local
!
Both tiding fine.
fo r
Tachibana Gives Outstanding Show
KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C.
BARRISTER. SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Carlton St.. Toronto
180b
Room
368-6388
' wish to express our sinthanks to our t rieuds and
kindness,
for
sympat hy
; tributes
and beautiful
r
recent
bereavement
during our
father and
of our b
Gennosuke
grandfather.
293-4281
(R—-»
JAPANESE
RESTAURANT
ho burn
i
?
PnNT0 — The weekend of March 3rd through 5th was a bras and parade banner appear j
T: one for the Toronto Buddhist Church ^Bon Oaon comthe two
the crowd that witnessed another outstanding peifoi
es"
who
mt tee
i
Tachibana, it wasn't long enough. Prior hundred or n • ueieg:
nance rhTiXm Tachibana gave instructions in Bon Odon cathereJ at a recent four-day
Ont.
and Hamilton instructresses .and in spite of het women's lib jamboree in Liyama,
To ronto
Mr. and Mr
schedule,
gave
a
performance
that
had
first
comen
hteialh
and Family
Phone S63-9;>19
1
in the province of Nagano.
t
Mr.
and
Mr
The women who answered the
ki and Family
i
call came from Tokyo and el
Mrs
sewhere. by train and road — but
Mr. and Mrs. Il at sum
many walked.
zuki
; ind Family
Rm and is danced in many different versions.
Much of the. time, these female
Mr.
• T'idiihuis flair for comic miming was displayed in
Mr. and Mrs
p ...R^'R-jlti-roled dance requiring quick headband changes anc militants attacked not just the
Family
present
structure
of
society
but
and
the audience in a constant uproar.
I amura
•.
and Mrs.
in between costume changes, two numbers, one
a the whole concept of ‘ the male .
and
Family
Sundav School students and another by 2 teenaged sister
Sometimes, the seminars degeI^ wsented'and very veil weivea.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Arai
nerated into
and Family
All in all. it was a performance not to be. missed.
prepared
matches. The
HataSHOP
Mr. and Mrs.
specially for the occasion conta
naka and Family
ined such extremist exhortations
•‘Kill your men and leave
a
ng your passions, t out
Toronto
them.
your discontent, your
RES. 231-0863
BUS. 783-4261
11 Ivy Loa Cros.
3101 Bathursl St.
let
them
all
'burn
up
Phone Store 463-3426
craving:
Home 469-0293
here . ..
MRS.
SATOKO
SATO
The fires of resentment burned
high. On the third evening, a
All types of insurance
Japanese Food
Compiete Care
Deliver Evenings
huge, blazing bonfire was lit, and
and Saturdays
CROWN LIFE
the women indulged in a display
For Your Eyes
of frenzied dancing. They libe
INSURANCE CO.
their
rated
themselves from
F
clothes as well as their men.
INSURANCE
M-Wffi^^®t'
There was not a dreaded bra in
*
Office, 43 Eglinton Ave. East
118 West Hastings St.
sight — and soon there were
not many other articles of cloth
Phone 485-5087
VANCOUVER, 6.C
J
Home phone: 449-9293
ing either.
Those among the delegates
Chartered Accountants
who were mothers were encou
LAW
OFFICE
460 Dundas St. W
raged' to bring their children and
4 ti
babies. So the monosexual gath
w
Toronto 2B. Ont.
t
215 Victoria St.
t
ering was infiltrated by a small
3601
Lawrence
Ave.
East
(
® RETAIL STORE 386^5451
Room 301
number of males
all, foitu4
I
Scarborough,
Ontario.
1
Travel Service 363-0655
nately, too young to know what
363-7441
Store 366-5451
I
Toronto.
i Open 7 days a week
was
going
on.
Telephone: 431-1500
i
• Furuva Springtime
4 to serve you
in Japan
The women seemed determined
i
1972
Variety of Japanese Foods
Departing Api
4
to abandon all semblance of gmi
Fully escorted
Kikkoman products
ce and delicacy. They shouted
i 9 Kokuho rice
12 day comprehensive
, • swore, put their feet
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friend*
tour of Japan
Ajinomoto products
i
I
9 Panasonic rice cookers
oh the furniture, filled the
t I
• Plan now for
Gift wares: magazines
I
ashtrays with butts to over-flowsummer and fall
i
ing, and slept on mats on the
I February lucky prize
vacation
I winners
floor.
4
• Call ns for charter
I Mr. Isao Namiki
and Group travel
4
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
4
information.
"MICHI
TORIC
OPTICAL
KIMURA &
CADSBY
F
Kashino &
Weinberg
KUT
OONGCHOW
CHO? SOEY TAVERN
I
Auto-Fire-Life
Telephone (604)273-5696
Catering to Wedding Banquets Shower# *nd Partie.
KIYO TAMURA
Seating Capacity 240
Bus. 366-5811
Home 759-8317
you
Sefec' your
unxniesc rcstpunnu uncin
C0,0'05ue o(
Reservations: 366-2164
Seven Days A Week
460 Dundas St. West,
Toronto, Ont.
PLACE TO START YOUR HAPPY HOLIDAY
EM 2-4322
Consult
March 19 Hawaii Cherry Blossom Tour
April 2 Japan SAKURA Toui'
May 13 Japan KANKO Tour
June 25 Special Group Tour — SUMMER
VACATION IN EUROPE —
YOUNG JAPAN for YOUNG
CANADIAN
Reasonable Group Tour to Japan for
Young 2nd or 3rd Generations.
Visit Japan’s Top Companies, and
Leading Universities.
Other Special Departure to Japan:
August 12, Sept. 9, October 8 and November
Please contact for detail information.
For reservations
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas. Toronto
INSURANCE
□
EM. 2-0029
All Forms Of
Ont.
_
-.
.
....
•-------------------------------------------------------
I Dates And Doings
ri practices To Start March 21st At T.B.C.
M:
Al:
Tr
s
■ ®3ii®Kraraiiow
Japan Women Lib
Personal
Holds A Doozer
11M®«
Of A Jamboree
Births
TOKYO. — Japan h
mded wiih Western Irenes
T0 _ Bon Odori practices will commence on Tuesday,
World
S p.m. with the next practice scheduled for Sunday, and
•Tier lunch. Subsequent practices will be on Tuesdays, War 11. In most case; these
een adoptee oy
Fridays and Sunday afternoons except on special trend
i a passion and an
■ through emergencies. When in doubt, please phone the J apanese
the oriimen si tv
mbaud'or consult the local papers.
nd half-hearted
in new numbers will be. given from the first night.
bv comparison
_ TBC.
Row, it seems, they hav
entered the realm of women
*
lib in
•
SAPPORO
ICHIBAN
Notes
=
221
Spadina Ave., Toronto
S62-10S2
Ont.
Mr. and Air
Imppy to announ
son. Andrew ■
ce the birth of
^zs.)
on Feb. ■
Robert (10 lbs.
pital. Brothei' ;
23. 1972 at local
!
Both tiding fine.
fo r
Tachibana Gives Outstanding Show
KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C.
BARRISTER. SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Carlton St.. Toronto
180b
Room
368-6388
' wish to express our sinthanks to our t rieuds and
kindness,
for
sympat hy
; tributes
and beautiful
r
recent
bereavement
during our
father and
of our b
Gennosuke
grandfather.
293-4281
(R—-»
JAPANESE
RESTAURANT
ho burn
i
?
PnNT0 — The weekend of March 3rd through 5th was a bras and parade banner appear j
T: one for the Toronto Buddhist Church ^Bon Oaon comthe two
the crowd that witnessed another outstanding peifoi
es"
who
mt tee
i
Tachibana, it wasn't long enough. Prior hundred or n • ueieg:
nance rhTiXm Tachibana gave instructions in Bon Odon cathereJ at a recent four-day
Ont.
and Hamilton instructresses .and in spite of het women's lib jamboree in Liyama,
To ronto
Mr. and Mr
schedule,
gave
a
performance
that
had
first
comen
hteialh
and Family
Phone S63-9;>19
1
in the province of Nagano.
t
Mr.
and
Mr
The women who answered the
ki and Family
i
call came from Tokyo and el
Mrs
sewhere. by train and road — but
Mr. and Mrs. Il at sum
many walked.
zuki
; ind Family
Rm and is danced in many different versions.
Much of the. time, these female
Mr.
• T'idiihuis flair for comic miming was displayed in
Mr. and Mrs
p ...R^'R-jlti-roled dance requiring quick headband changes anc militants attacked not just the
Family
present
structure
of
society
but
and
the audience in a constant uproar.
I amura
•.
and Mrs.
in between costume changes, two numbers, one
a the whole concept of ‘ the male .
and
Family
Sundav School students and another by 2 teenaged sister
Sometimes, the seminars degeI^ wsented'and very veil weivea.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Arai
nerated into
and Family
All in all. it was a performance not to be. missed.
prepared
matches. The
HataSHOP
Mr. and Mrs.
specially for the occasion conta
naka and Family
ined such extremist exhortations
•‘Kill your men and leave
a
ng your passions, t out
Toronto
them.
your discontent, your
RES. 231-0863
BUS. 783-4261
11 Ivy Loa Cros.
3101 Bathursl St.
let
them
all
'burn
up
Phone Store 463-3426
craving:
Home 469-0293
here . ..
MRS.
SATOKO
SATO
The fires of resentment burned
high. On the third evening, a
All types of insurance
Japanese Food
Compiete Care
Deliver Evenings
huge, blazing bonfire was lit, and
and Saturdays
CROWN LIFE
the women indulged in a display
For Your Eyes
of frenzied dancing. They libe
INSURANCE CO.
their
rated
themselves from
F
clothes as well as their men.
INSURANCE
M-Wffi^^®t'
There was not a dreaded bra in
*
Office, 43 Eglinton Ave. East
118 West Hastings St.
sight — and soon there were
not many other articles of cloth
Phone 485-5087
VANCOUVER, 6.C
J
Home phone: 449-9293
ing either.
Those among the delegates
Chartered Accountants
who were mothers were encou
LAW
OFFICE
460 Dundas St. W
raged' to bring their children and
4 ti
babies. So the monosexual gath
w
Toronto 2B. Ont.
t
215 Victoria St.
t
ering was infiltrated by a small
3601
Lawrence
Ave.
East
(
® RETAIL STORE 386^5451
Room 301
number of males
all, foitu4
I
Scarborough,
Ontario.
1
Travel Service 363-0655
nately, too young to know what
363-7441
Store 366-5451
I
Toronto.
i Open 7 days a week
was
going
on.
Telephone: 431-1500
i
• Furuva Springtime
4 to serve you
in Japan
The women seemed determined
i
1972
Variety of Japanese Foods
Departing Api
4
to abandon all semblance of gmi
Fully escorted
Kikkoman products
ce and delicacy. They shouted
i 9 Kokuho rice
12 day comprehensive
, • swore, put their feet
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friend*
tour of Japan
Ajinomoto products
i
I
9 Panasonic rice cookers
oh the furniture, filled the
t I
• Plan now for
Gift wares: magazines
I
ashtrays with butts to over-flowsummer and fall
i
ing, and slept on mats on the
I February lucky prize
vacation
I winners
floor.
4
• Call ns for charter
I Mr. Isao Namiki
and Group travel
4
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
4
information.
"MICHI
TORIC
OPTICAL
KIMURA &
CADSBY
F
Kashino &
Weinberg
KUT
OONGCHOW
CHO? SOEY TAVERN
I
Auto-Fire-Life
Telephone (604)273-5696
Catering to Wedding Banquets Shower# *nd Partie.
KIYO TAMURA
Seating Capacity 240
Bus. 366-5811
Home 759-8317
you
Sefec' your
unxniesc rcstpunnu uncin
C0,0'05ue o(
Reservations: 366-2164
Seven Days A Week
460 Dundas St. West,
Toronto, Ont.
PLACE TO START YOUR HAPPY HOLIDAY
EM 2-4322
Consult
March 19 Hawaii Cherry Blossom Tour
April 2 Japan SAKURA Toui'
May 13 Japan KANKO Tour
June 25 Special Group Tour — SUMMER
VACATION IN EUROPE —
YOUNG JAPAN for YOUNG
CANADIAN
Reasonable Group Tour to Japan for
Young 2nd or 3rd Generations.
Visit Japan’s Top Companies, and
Leading Universities.
Other Special Departure to Japan:
August 12, Sept. 9, October 8 and November
Please contact for detail information.
For reservations
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas. Toronto
INSURANCE
□
EM. 2-0029
All Forms Of
Ont.
Page 8
N E W
MGE 8
To
(Continued From Page I)
j cational project I nave ever seen, Students are organized into
Second clan mail r*gistraiiea
I ••battalions..” Each lattalion has the task of building' a hamlet on
number 0363
trained
in
village
government,
i the Center grounds The students are
j road building, con traction, public health. improved’ methods of
member of Ethnic Press Assoc^
(Author of Hawaiian Tales)
of Ontario.
"*
; agriculture and m: ceting. and above all in village self-defense,
and
often
marked
for
of Hand and
BFDDHA-ITELDS:
Graduates of the Center are feared —
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAr
At the community hall of the
E. Tuttle
bv Lafcadio Hearn.
Soul in the Ear
assassination — by the Viet Con
AND FRIDAY
a
long
list
of
on
which
there
is
is
a
memorial
altar
paperback 296 PPCenter there
SUBSCRIPTION
killed in defense of their villages.
" Hud uni
volume. in ms
S9.00 a Year
uudents keep coming by the thousand's, apparently actuated
tdden Li edit , whun
Folk Song, Hearn quotes irom Rosen
$5.00 for Six Mqnths
kind of missionary zeal.
thought
bewitches us "chiefly through the pencil
And
where does this zeal come from Basically it comes from
htecn hundred
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
anathematized bv all our orthodoxies fi;
1
the
founder
and
director
of
the
Center,
Nguyen
.Be.
Colonel
Be
(the
K. C. TSUMURA
before —
able
to
lecture
and
write
eloa
English -Section Editor
But when or how 1 cannot tell:
quently in Vietnamese, French or English. He is a true intellectual,
KEN MORI
door.
beyond tl
but he is no follower of intellectual fashions. He has a philosophy
Japanese Section Editor
education
and
action
rooted
profoundly
in
the
folk
experience
ot
479 QUEEN ST. W
of
the
Vietnamese
people.
b
Hearn
Born June 27, 1850
Toronto 133, Ont.
Eii- : he believes that the real culture of Vietnam is in the
esult of school-day
as
estranged from the Roman
EMpire 6-5005
and' hamlets. "To restore and develop the cream of our
Japan in 1890. he
experiences in France and'
doctrine of Karma 1 culture, he writes, "we must not depend on the educated people
turned towards Buddhism,
of the cities . . . we must look to the village people . . . After the
with the role of heredity in the theory of evolution.
family, the hamlet represents the purest Vietnames culture we can
is bringing
‘act ion.
The dictionary defines Karma
find. People in the hamlet avoided foreign influence . . . They posthis life or
upon oneself inevitable results, goo
spirit of self-reliance and contentment . . . They closed
that he was the
in a reincarnation.” Hearn was fom
Female Help Wanted
to outsiders... They remained truly Vietnamese.”
: tn
result of acts of mvrimls of ances
Vietnam has a vays been a collection of villages, never united ALTERATION and counter girl
for dry cleaning store. Phone
except when resist ig a common enemy, such as the Chinese or 536-2989
(Toronto).
acts was inhenteu. io French. How. then can Vietnam become a nation? “We can only
He believed that memory of ann
ic Vietnamese communities DOMESTIC. Private room and
position to be plausible.
e a national smrit bv makin
a slight degree, many might find such
I memory. They might, prosperous. Sufficient prosperity mean that the hamlets have a bathroom for business girl or
They might concede instinct to be in
student in exchange light duties,
lie ability of a bird to surplus of manpower and resources . . . Which will stimulate social Adult
family
485-7433
as anv that might be and economic intercourse between neighboring communities. Only (Toronto).
l he
build a
when we reach this stage will a national spirit manifest itself.”
Male Help Wanted
So there is room for foreign influence after all, but mostly in
practical matters such ,as medicine, public health, engineering' -YOUNG man to train as machine
ie essay in this voluim
engraver, knowledge of basic
' had observed in the imperial and the improvement of agriculture. Basically Vietnamese must mathematics.
tells o 1 a wontier ef calligraphy
Phone
767-5912
poem
done in
summer nalace. The writing, o
remain Vietnamese.
(Toronto).
The military security of Vietnam, Colonel Be argues, rests in
Rooms To Let
sur- the villages. "We must . . . teach the people to accept full respon
poem
room
flat separate
sibility for their own protection . . . Each community must have THREE
entrance,
one
block
to Shopper's
He
till, i
local autonomy, and must learn the value of communication with World Plaza. Phone 3 63-7606,
he weird, c
which impressed me. but
indubitable each other.”
after 6, phone 444-3290 (Toron
proof it. afforded of an inlu ited memorv
students from dnterent provinces are therefore placed in to).
dead work teams and camps together, so that they7 can develop a sense
equal to the recollect ion i>
. G ('neral io ns
in the fin
tiny hand...
of identity with their fellow countrymen from distant villages.
Thos. T« Onizuka, Q.C.
he the compound .ancestral
French colonialism did much to tear apart Vietnamese society.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
i d'id Communism, which encouraged people to betray and denounNOTARY PUBLIC
each other. What Colonel Be sees as necessary, therefore, is to
A Child Remembers
121 RICHMOND ST. W.
store traditional village unity — the sense of “responsibility to
In another
"The Rebirth of l<
Muces
TORONTO 1
ose things which are most s,acred to them, such as their families.
nheriled memorv. IK
the
based
691-3388 (Res.)
363-5002
their gradens and fields, their ancestral graves ... To defend these
things people will do their utmost without fear or mental reserva< name, mime
ami former
pu t
test, the child
a visit to tion.”
the
In short. Colonel Be is articulating an ideology of Vietnamese
From H cam's
ion of the accumulation of ancestral nationhood to counteract Communist ideology. To fight the Comone
t be more revolutionary than they.
memories
airy theory that Occidentals are unable mum
s
theory
of
revolution,
unlike that of the Communists
because of the difference in accumulated
on
love
rather
than
hatred.
”
memories. He h
theme, but his harping fails to restrain
him from trvim
i he insists cannot be done. He not only
Japanese, he labors mightily to render Carson
(Coni, from Pag« One?
them intelligibl
occupying a position of such to make a public statement on
Hearn's most brilliant enormous influence. Johnny Car- it.
writing to him, we could
and prolific period while he was teaching
son as a popular celebrity and a
i neg-ative into what could
of Tokyo. The book is a collection of 11
potent opinion marker can stamp be an enlightening- experience
It !■ a good i»M to
iwr# the KGH? POUC’
Besides the titles alreadv noted, he includes a
a the word Jap with a certain tone for a person who could share
village headman, de
pectability
should that newly gained' knowledge
another based on a
an account of a not respond, our silence can add and perhaps an apology with a
William Wales ua.
sense of acceptability.
a punnet grave:
large viewing audience. Like the
Insurance Agent?
proverbial
reformed
whore,
he
mage has been done but
2 Carlton St. 10th floor,
There is an essa on tl
hen the most
com this could be turned into an op- could be turned into at least an
Toronto 2-A, Ord.
metvhil city in Japan
Gwana. the Bo
Phone 368-4681
abstainer if not
crusading
portunity to correct it. If
can
the release from the
carnation with its consequent
saint. He can be written to at:
communicate
something
o.t
suffering: and one ei
-Within Tl
d'ream of the
Johnny Carson
birth
: history of derogatory conthe ignorant
NBC Television Center
For Sale
remain condemned.”
IC
3000 b cst Alameda Ave.
Drawn from a lit
we can encourage him Burbank. Calif. 91505
Ladies Coats,
vations of Hearn arc
illuminating
mme. wiien he
Suits & Skirts
by comparing
• "The face of
Greek art repre
an
Tiie seeminglv
inexpensive face
Sol Swartz Garments
living, the actual
I Vietnam . . .
Musings Of A 19th Century Japanophiie
the greatest
gift of all
A Child In Prison Camp
Read Stella Ito's
SUKIYAKI
copies of Takashima’s
CHILD
PRISON CAMP at $7.95 per copy. Enclosed is my cheque or
money order for... . ...... .
ante.
12th Floor
119 Spadina Ave.
Toronto, Ont.
J NT Auto Service
A Japanese Cookbook For Cosmopolitan Gourmets
Address......
2239 Bloor St. West
(At Runnymede) Toronto
Opposite Tsukawa Baibet
479 Queen St. West — Toronto 2B. Ont.
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
Phone 766-4292
Also U.S. orders add $1.00
NAMIKI & TANOUE
MGE 8
To
(Continued From Page I)
j cational project I nave ever seen, Students are organized into
Second clan mail r*gistraiiea
I ••battalions..” Each lattalion has the task of building' a hamlet on
number 0363
trained
in
village
government,
i the Center grounds The students are
j road building, con traction, public health. improved’ methods of
member of Ethnic Press Assoc^
(Author of Hawaiian Tales)
of Ontario.
"*
; agriculture and m: ceting. and above all in village self-defense,
and
often
marked
for
of Hand and
BFDDHA-ITELDS:
Graduates of the Center are feared —
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAr
At the community hall of the
E. Tuttle
bv Lafcadio Hearn.
Soul in the Ear
assassination — by the Viet Con
AND FRIDAY
a
long
list
of
on
which
there
is
is
a
memorial
altar
paperback 296 PPCenter there
SUBSCRIPTION
killed in defense of their villages.
" Hud uni
volume. in ms
S9.00 a Year
uudents keep coming by the thousand's, apparently actuated
tdden Li edit , whun
Folk Song, Hearn quotes irom Rosen
$5.00 for Six Mqnths
kind of missionary zeal.
thought
bewitches us "chiefly through the pencil
And
where does this zeal come from Basically it comes from
htecn hundred
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
anathematized bv all our orthodoxies fi;
1
the
founder
and
director
of
the
Center,
Nguyen
.Be.
Colonel
Be
(the
K. C. TSUMURA
before —
able
to
lecture
and
write
eloa
English -Section Editor
But when or how 1 cannot tell:
quently in Vietnamese, French or English. He is a true intellectual,
KEN MORI
door.
beyond tl
but he is no follower of intellectual fashions. He has a philosophy
Japanese Section Editor
education
and
action
rooted
profoundly
in
the
folk
experience
ot
479 QUEEN ST. W
of
the
Vietnamese
people.
b
Hearn
Born June 27, 1850
Toronto 133, Ont.
Eii- : he believes that the real culture of Vietnam is in the
esult of school-day
as
estranged from the Roman
EMpire 6-5005
and' hamlets. "To restore and develop the cream of our
Japan in 1890. he
experiences in France and'
doctrine of Karma 1 culture, he writes, "we must not depend on the educated people
turned towards Buddhism,
of the cities . . . we must look to the village people . . . After the
with the role of heredity in the theory of evolution.
family, the hamlet represents the purest Vietnames culture we can
is bringing
‘act ion.
The dictionary defines Karma
find. People in the hamlet avoided foreign influence . . . They posthis life or
upon oneself inevitable results, goo
spirit of self-reliance and contentment . . . They closed
that he was the
in a reincarnation.” Hearn was fom
Female Help Wanted
to outsiders... They remained truly Vietnamese.”
: tn
result of acts of mvrimls of ances
Vietnam has a vays been a collection of villages, never united ALTERATION and counter girl
for dry cleaning store. Phone
except when resist ig a common enemy, such as the Chinese or 536-2989
(Toronto).
acts was inhenteu. io French. How. then can Vietnam become a nation? “We can only
He believed that memory of ann
ic Vietnamese communities DOMESTIC. Private room and
position to be plausible.
e a national smrit bv makin
a slight degree, many might find such
I memory. They might, prosperous. Sufficient prosperity mean that the hamlets have a bathroom for business girl or
They might concede instinct to be in
student in exchange light duties,
lie ability of a bird to surplus of manpower and resources . . . Which will stimulate social Adult
family
485-7433
as anv that might be and economic intercourse between neighboring communities. Only (Toronto).
l he
build a
when we reach this stage will a national spirit manifest itself.”
Male Help Wanted
So there is room for foreign influence after all, but mostly in
practical matters such ,as medicine, public health, engineering' -YOUNG man to train as machine
ie essay in this voluim
engraver, knowledge of basic
' had observed in the imperial and the improvement of agriculture. Basically Vietnamese must mathematics.
tells o 1 a wontier ef calligraphy
Phone
767-5912
poem
done in
summer nalace. The writing, o
remain Vietnamese.
(Toronto).
The military security of Vietnam, Colonel Be argues, rests in
Rooms To Let
sur- the villages. "We must . . . teach the people to accept full respon
poem
room
flat separate
sibility for their own protection . . . Each community must have THREE
entrance,
one
block
to Shopper's
He
till, i
local autonomy, and must learn the value of communication with World Plaza. Phone 3 63-7606,
he weird, c
which impressed me. but
indubitable each other.”
after 6, phone 444-3290 (Toron
proof it. afforded of an inlu ited memorv
students from dnterent provinces are therefore placed in to).
dead work teams and camps together, so that they7 can develop a sense
equal to the recollect ion i>
. G ('neral io ns
in the fin
tiny hand...
of identity with their fellow countrymen from distant villages.
Thos. T« Onizuka, Q.C.
he the compound .ancestral
French colonialism did much to tear apart Vietnamese society.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
i d'id Communism, which encouraged people to betray and denounNOTARY PUBLIC
each other. What Colonel Be sees as necessary, therefore, is to
A Child Remembers
121 RICHMOND ST. W.
store traditional village unity — the sense of “responsibility to
In another
"The Rebirth of l<
Muces
TORONTO 1
ose things which are most s,acred to them, such as their families.
nheriled memorv. IK
the
based
691-3388 (Res.)
363-5002
their gradens and fields, their ancestral graves ... To defend these
things people will do their utmost without fear or mental reserva< name, mime
ami former
pu t
test, the child
a visit to tion.”
the
In short. Colonel Be is articulating an ideology of Vietnamese
From H cam's
ion of the accumulation of ancestral nationhood to counteract Communist ideology. To fight the Comone
t be more revolutionary than they.
memories
airy theory that Occidentals are unable mum
s
theory
of
revolution,
unlike that of the Communists
because of the difference in accumulated
on
love
rather
than
hatred.
”
memories. He h
theme, but his harping fails to restrain
him from trvim
i he insists cannot be done. He not only
Japanese, he labors mightily to render Carson
(Coni, from Pag« One?
them intelligibl
occupying a position of such to make a public statement on
Hearn's most brilliant enormous influence. Johnny Car- it.
writing to him, we could
and prolific period while he was teaching
son as a popular celebrity and a
i neg-ative into what could
of Tokyo. The book is a collection of 11
potent opinion marker can stamp be an enlightening- experience
It !■ a good i»M to
iwr# the KGH? POUC’
Besides the titles alreadv noted, he includes a
a the word Jap with a certain tone for a person who could share
village headman, de
pectability
should that newly gained' knowledge
another based on a
an account of a not respond, our silence can add and perhaps an apology with a
William Wales ua.
sense of acceptability.
a punnet grave:
large viewing audience. Like the
Insurance Agent?
proverbial
reformed
whore,
he
mage has been done but
2 Carlton St. 10th floor,
There is an essa on tl
hen the most
com this could be turned into an op- could be turned into at least an
Toronto 2-A, Ord.
metvhil city in Japan
Gwana. the Bo
Phone 368-4681
abstainer if not
crusading
portunity to correct it. If
can
the release from the
carnation with its consequent
saint. He can be written to at:
communicate
something
o.t
suffering: and one ei
-Within Tl
d'ream of the
Johnny Carson
birth
: history of derogatory conthe ignorant
NBC Television Center
For Sale
remain condemned.”
IC
3000 b cst Alameda Ave.
Drawn from a lit
we can encourage him Burbank. Calif. 91505
Ladies Coats,
vations of Hearn arc
illuminating
mme. wiien he
Suits & Skirts
by comparing
• "The face of
Greek art repre
an
Tiie seeminglv
inexpensive face
Sol Swartz Garments
living, the actual
I Vietnam . . .
Musings Of A 19th Century Japanophiie
the greatest
gift of all
A Child In Prison Camp
Read Stella Ito's
SUKIYAKI
copies of Takashima’s
CHILD
PRISON CAMP at $7.95 per copy. Enclosed is my cheque or
money order for... . ...... .
ante.
12th Floor
119 Spadina Ave.
Toronto, Ont.
J NT Auto Service
A Japanese Cookbook For Cosmopolitan Gourmets
Address......
2239 Bloor St. West
(At Runnymede) Toronto
Opposite Tsukawa Baibet
479 Queen St. West — Toronto 2B. Ont.
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
Phone 766-4292
Also U.S. orders add $1.00
NAMIKI & TANOUE