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The New Canadian — May 12, 1972

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Page 1

(Reading Japan: The Silent Emperor Hirohito And Sergeant Yokoi
resents his nation as few heads
of state do. At the same time
he symbolizes the Second World
War as no one else can.
In seventy-one years, he has
not divulged much about his
part in the history of this centu­
ry, despite the fact that he has
observed the world from a unique
angle, and certainly affected it.
He has become a collector of
hydras and seaweed.
Frank Gibney once called him
"a scientist by inclination,” but
Emperor rep- tliis is wrong, because scientists

Br MARTIN C. DAVIDSON
— Sei jo Heika, the
?r, on taking posie sacred
mirror,
oi
wel in 1926, began
hen
in the history
8>k longest12 Japan, th Era of Enlightened
I Peace. Two eras, actually, the
through 1945. wa one in
attain:cn enlightenment wa
second
came
the
I6*.oreincomphc ated task of defining
England's
Queen
H peace. Lil
® Victoria ('
S tour year

recognize a responsibility to ex-i bear scrutiny, forms the. bash much in common. Both old soldi­
amine socially useful information ! of the most popular current un ers believed in the destiny (or
and not concentrate only on what iread book among the
foreign at least the possibility) of Japan
oing and
i community here (few Japanese i rule one-third of mankind. Both
tively harmless. If only His • know or c •e about it), Japan’s | pursue extraordinary compulsive
had been frank about Imperial Conspiracy, by
i activities
without.
worrying
his rol i in Japan' conquest of Bergamini (Morrow).
i either about goals or personal
Asia — as frank
Yokoi
told
y. as Shoichi
battle I gain. And when
Yokoi.
just mustered-out minutely
i dumbfounded reporters that he
in
winner of the Battle of Guam
of Mt Ontake, he
Shimbun
i was a
he might not today be the subject i in the Guam
j
(Japan ; could hardly have eemed more
of an emotionally charged con­ Publications), reveal somethine; imperious. These words, however,
troversy. The heretofore unexa­ of Japan’s prewar state of mind I are not Yokoi’s: "1 don’t think
mined data of his life, along with and indicates that the Emperor I I am out of touch. I am very
(Cont. on Page 8)
some speculation that will not and his most loyal subject have I

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i-i

-SUKIYAKI"
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.65
WITH POSTAGE

HI

he TICK)

“A CHILD IN PRISON
CAMP”
Bv £HIZUYE
TAKASHIMA
$7.95 WITH POSTAGE

An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1972

Toronto. Ont..

llllllilHMIIllHilHMHIIlllllillllllllllillllinnlHIIHIIIIllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillliTIlilllllHHIII

It’s All In The Cards
To Relax Japanese Style
|

Jananese Canadian Cultural Centre
Bazaar Hits New Attendance High
TORONTO. — Al! attendance records were

By DON ESTES

Air Trip To Japan Raffle draw plus $500 ex­

I vary card game.
broken last Saturday at the Japanese Canadian penses (or £2,500). Winner was Mr. Peter
*
*
*
community’s annual biggest event, the J. C. Hazlewood of Toronto. After the embracing
B In their process of cultural
| Playing cards as we know tnem
Cultural Centre Bazaar. An estimated 5,000 and happy tears. Mr. Hazlewood and his Jap­
B development most societies so•in the West were unknown in attended.
anese wife told Managing Director Kadoguchi
oner or later arrive at a plateau
Japan until the arrival of the
which marks their progression
“We’re already preparing for next year’s that they would probably take the trip to
first Europeans in the 16th
Japan.
s from a life style that requires
century. The close tie between event,” said an enthusiatic Mr. Bob Kadoguchi,
The winning ticket was picked by the Japan
g that all their energy be directed
cards and the European influence Managing Director of the Centre. “And aim­ Consul General’s wife, Mrs. Yamaguchi. She
towards survival to a condition
which can be deduced from the ing for a new record.”
performed this chore after cooking and selling
H that provides them with a certain
Japanese
word
for
card:
KARUThe highlight of the day was the Annual all day for the bazaar.
S amount of “free” time. However
TA which may have come from
Second prize of a 1972 Dat­
it appears that this new life style
sun (1.200 coupe) was won by
H is inevitability more complicated the Portuguese CARTA or the
Dutch KAARTEN, both meaning
Toki Naruse of Toronto.
S so man turns his “free’ time
Third prize of a 19-inch color
TORONTO. — Some would call it “plain guts”. Others “Ya­
g into activities that will relax card respectively.
Among
the first games that mato Damashi”. Some even “Women’s Lib”. Call it what you may, TV set was won by Edie Rob­
g hum In these circumstances
the a 57-year-old Toronto Issei woman showed she had plenty of it ertson of Don Mill. Ont.
g man quickly discovered
the the Japanese adapted to
Fourth prize of $500 was
g playing card. Interestingly ho- newly discovered playing card last weekend.
was
a
game
called
KAI
AWASE,
won
by Dave Sunohara of
Mrs. Hanako Fujii, a grandmother, was one of the oldest
g wever, the playing card per
H se arrived fairly late on the Ja- which was played with .sea shells. Japanese women in the recent Miles For Millions walkathon. With Agincourt, Ont.
Pictures and short poems were a smile on her lips and spring in her hips she covered the entire
Fifth to Tenth prizes of $100
panese scene.
painted on the inside of the route of 27. 6 miles. Her walk was sponsored by many friends and were won by Teka Yamashi­
As with, other things the Ja­ shells which were then to be
ta of Windsor, S. M. Gordon Gt
relatives.
panese seem to have a knack for matched.
Good news awaited her at the end of the hike. Her daughter- Toronto, Art Hardy of Scarboturning even relaxation into an
Out of the combination of this in-law, Mrs. Isamu Fujii had given birth to a son at Doctor’s ro, A. A. Payne of Toronto.
intellectual experience. In
an older game and the new KARUHospital while Granny was pounding the pavement. Her son is Paul Donovan of Weston, and
earlier article we discussed the TA the Japanese developed a manager of the Japanese restaurant Taste Of Japan
C. Fontaine of Downsview.
'‘Philosophical Alphabet”; today game known as UTA GARUTA;
"e would like, to describe a hte- UTA meaning poem and GARU­
TA (being a euphonic form of the
word for card. The new game
game was based on one hundred
TANKA believed to have been
NEW YORK. — If you eat cerned with “epidemiological re­ remain on the rice even after it
selected by FUJIWARA TEIKA Japanese rice coated with talc, lationships” between cancer and has been washed and cooked, ac­
in
the
twelfth century.
A you may be
increasing your diet — specifically, how the Ja­ cording to recent research evi­
for dence.
TANKA is a' poetic form of chances
of
getting
stomach panese dietary preference
talc-covered rice may directly
thirty-one syllables divided into cancer.
Solomon believes that Japan’s
contribute
to
Japan

s
unusually
five
sections
of
5-7-5-7-7
syl
­
high
rate of stomach cancer is
This is the belief of Joan
Toronto. — ah subsribhigh
rate
of
stomach
cancer.
lables.
The
poems
are
said
to
directly linked to the Japanese
to The New
Canadian
Solomon in the March issue of
include
the
work
of
seven
em
­
Talc, which is added to Japa­ dietary preference for talc-coat­
P ease take note. If you are
perors,
one empress, twenty “The Sciences,” a magazine pu­
ed rice.
•note than 3 months overdue
blished by the New York Aca­ nese rice as a flavor and appear­
court
ladies,
fifty-seven
courti
­
m your subscription payments,
Citing evidence gathered by
ance enhancer, is known to con­
ers, and fifteen priests.
demy of Sciences.
postal regulations take away
Dr.
R. R. Merliss of Loma Linda
tain asbestos — a proven cancer­
To play the game the cards
Solomon’s article, titled
newspaper’s privilege of
Medical School, she notes that
are divided into two decks. One Geography of Cancer/’ is
causing agent. Asbestos fibers
second class mail. This rethe highest rates of stomach
deck referred to as the TORIFUQuires extra charge for mail­
cancer have been found in Ja­
ing.
DA (taking cards) is laid out
panese prefectures where people
face up between the players. On
eat talc-covered rice with every
Tl«s matter was brought
these TORIFUDA are the last
meal.
115 ln a recent visit from
half of the poetic text — one
Toronto Main Post Office
This high rate drops in those
poem per card. A reader known
TOKYO.
— A 25-year old man, his friends as being “very timid,” Japanese prefectures where peo­
inspector in a check of our
as a YOMITE (reader) recites
surprised by his fathers announ­ according to police, was reported ple eat less rice or supplement
subscription cards.
the first part of each poem with
cement that he is to inherit to have told his father that he their diets with cereal, miso,
the players attempting find, and
property valued over SI million, was “incapable of supervising vegetables and milk.
a 7 * °U- may know, mailing
pick up the TORIFUDA
that
.. P/lnt*ng
costs
have
took his life by hanging recently.
will complete the poem. The
such property and enormous
In Asian countries other than
Police sand the suicide victim
are constantlv
game
has
developed
a
number
of
Japan where talc-covered rice is
anemptmg to minimize any
fortune.”
was Yasuo Tanabe, eldest son of
modifications
over
the
years,
but
|
not popular, the rate of stomach
J?256 • and now ^k your
Y

asuo
was
to
receive
the
fam
­
the
rules
remain
basically
the
Hamazo
Tanabe,
a
wealthy
। cancer is not very high.
*™»n h. this matter.
ily’s five-story mansion and the
same.
property
owner
and
operator
of
§et . a11 subscription
j Moreover, diet rather
than
The players of the game must
en s paid in advance.
a public bath in Kawasaki citj 7000 square yard plot of land . heredity seems to be the crucial
of necessity master all one
on which it stands, according to factor involved in the high rate
— T. Umezuki hundred poems of the HYAKU- near here.
I of stomach cancer in Japan.
Yasuo, who was considered by authorities.

H

Issei Grandmother Finishes Walkathon

Talc-Soated Rice Found To Cause Stomach Cancer

All Overdue
Subscribers
Asked To Pay

Inherits $Million, Kills Self

(Cont. on Page 8)

Page 2

Friday,. Mav 19

Japanese Wins Ont. Gymnstic Title
Though Hampered By Knee lujury
University sports complex where the championMaasaki Naosaki from limping up to the podium ship w
held, Naosaki built up an early lead
to receive his first place medal .as the three-day with a first, in the floor exercise and still rings.
Ontario gymnastics championship
ended1 here
Then, in the third of his five routines, he was
recently.
trying a three-quarter twist on the sidehorse and
-year-old Japanese student attend- landed awkwardly on the mat.
versit .’, hobbled through his final
The. judges still gave him .a third-place finish in
two
after stretching ligaments in his
Shinobu Sekine, shared third place.
TOKYO.
left knee but still scored a decisive win in the the sidehorse event.
28-year-old policeman and thirdMajor Results:
After being checked over by doctors, Naosaki place finisher in the open class
men’s senior competition.
Winner
Loser
A favorite with the crowd at the Queen’s went through the final two routines, scoring a division of last year’s world
(1st
round)
surprising- first in the parallel judo championships,
won
the
bars and a second in the horizon- 1972 national judo championship
Iwatsuri (Yokoshiho) Kawae
tai bar.
recently at the Nippon Budokan
Murai (Yusei) Endo
Naosaki finished the competi­ Hall in Tokyo.
Bv KEN MORI
Shinoniaki (Yusei) Sonoda
tion with a first-place score of
Sekine beat Hisakazu Iwata in Nishimura (Yusei) Seki
• RONT O. — One of Toronto's top Nisei anglers, Joe Shimoda 100, 25 points, well ahead of
a
close
match.
Takagi (Sasaetsurikomi) Fujii
landed all lb. 12 oz. Rainbow trout on the opening- day of the
Steve Mitruk of Hamilton and
In the first-round prelimina- Iwata (Yusei) Ninomiya
season at Thornbury, Ontario. Before the end of the day, he also
Bill Mackie of Thunder Bay, who ries, both
Sumio Endo and
landed another S 'pounder.
(2nd round)
tied for second place with 96.10 Kazuhiro Ninomiya, favorites in
Murai
(Yusei)
Iwatsuri
Last weekend, Joe, ah
with his wife Clara and ‘‘highliner’ points.
heavyweight class, were elimi-. Shinoniaki (Awasewaza) X^
Kaz Kato, caught a few trout near Highway 90 at
Wife
Naosaki, who came to Canada nated.
gawa
Clara caught two using ;
the largest weighing- 6 pounds. last summer, said he. hopes his
In another upset, Kaneo Iwat­ Iwata (Yusei) Masaki
All indications for this weekend’s fishing is “Go". Water level injury won’t prevent him from suri, last year’s champion, was
(Quarterfinals)
reported lower and clear ideal conditions prevail.
competing in the Canadian cham- also beaten in the second round Sekine (Yusei) Murai
pionships in Calgary on Mav of the preliminaries.
Nishimura (Yusei) Shinoniaki
19-22.
The biggest surprise came in Sato (Okurierijime) Kawahara
The national team, to repre­ the. quarterfinals as Masatoshi Iwata (Seoinage) Nakamura
By T. UMEZUKI
sent Canada in the Olympics at Shinomaki, open class champion
(Semifinal)
Munich,
will
be
of
the
world,
was
defeated
by
selected
at
the
Sekine
(Yusei) Nishimura
TORONTO. — The Toronto Shoko Kai’s (Toronto Japanese
Calgarv
meet.
Masaki
Nishimura
in
a
close
Iwata
(Yusei)
Sato
Association of Commerce and Industry) first golf tournement of
match.
the season was played at Georgetown Golf and Country on May
Naosaki, Mitruk, Mackie, Bru­
Nobuyuki Sato and Nishimura Sekine (Yusei) Iwata
7th. Results were as follows: 1 — T. Saijo, 2 — S. Kato, 3 — M. ce Medd of Ottawa, and Tom
Nakamura. 4 — Iwasaki, 5 — T. Suzuki, 6 — Narahashi, '7 __ M. Kinsman of Toronto were named
9 — K. Okuvama
to the Ontario team for the
Calgarv meet.

Open Class Judo Crown

Shimoda Lands 11 lb, 12 oz. Rainbow

Shoko Kai's First Golf Results

J NT Auto Service

Thos. T. Onizuka, Q.C.

KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C.

BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and

BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Carlton St., Toronto
Room 1805
<86-6388
293-4281 (Rea.)

NOTARY PUBLIC
121 RICHMOND ST. W.
TORONTO 1
363-5002
691-3388 (Res.)

JAPANESE
RESTAURANT

Auto-Fire-Life

MICHI"

Consult

328 Queen St. West,
Toronto 133, Ont.
Phone S63-9519

All Forms Of

INSURANCE

KIYO TAMURA
Bus. 366-5811
Home 759-8317

The junior girls nationals was
a two-way struggTe between
Kathy Chamberlain and little
Midori Fujiwara, both of Winstonettes.

Kathy, a Grade 10 student at
Markham District High School,
won with 66.40 points, compared
to 66 for .Midori. Kathy competed
in the Ontario championships last
year for the first time but fi­
nished well behind the leaders.
Kathy, Midori. Mona Johnston
of Ottawa, Barb Clemes of Eto­
bicoke and Kathy Babineau of
East York were named to the
province s junior g-irls team.

2239 Bloor St. West

HOTEL RATES?

733 Danforth Ave
Toronto
Phone Store 463-3426
Home 469-0293
Japanese Food
Deliver Evenings
and Saturdays

Write to: Mr. S. Koby
363 Churchill Blvd..
Greenfield Bark, P.Q,

Mothers Day (May 14, Sunday)
Best Wishes To Your Mother And Her Familv

DEUVEBY

Sesak'
HO. 6-2041

Bus
Res: HO. 6-7M62
942

PAPE

AVE.,

TORONTO

TRAVEL
Arrangements
Anywhere — Anytime
tours—Hotel—Sightseein
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel. Accident
and Baggage Insurance

ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.

flat roofs

Restaurant & Tavern

SHINGLING

EAVESTROUGHING

SHEET METAL WORK

ALCAN SIDING DEALER

421-3374

NISEI OWNED
Covering Ontario'

Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends

KWONGCHOW CHOP
SUEY TAVERN
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
362-0029 Tor Reservations 362-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
Catering to Wedding Banquets. Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240

TORIC
OPTICAL
OPTOMETRISTS

"Welcome To A Quiet And Exotic Atmosphere

Open 5:00 p.m. To 10:00 p.m.
For Reservations: 863-0002

TORONTO:

SHARON'S FLORIST
Peter Sasaki

SHOP

364-9913

NAMIKI & TANOUYE

Tosh Nishijima

CITY-WIDE

apartment for rent in
Montreal. Ideal for vacation
or stopover in Montreal. Fully
equipped. bachelor or one
bedroom apartment. Swimm­
ing
pool. Reasonable rate.
Daily, weekly, monthlv.

T.V. Service

(At Runnymede) Toronto
Opposite Tsukawa Barber
Phone 766-4292

TORONTO

WHY PAY

JAMES KAMINO

Information

368-9934

COMPLETE CARE
FOR YOUR EYES

T. KAMEOKA

Taste Of Japan

K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE

103 Yonge St.

SS9 Dundas St. W..

Japanese restaurant lawm

Reservations: 366-2164

Seven Days A Week
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.

460 Dundas St. West,
Toronto, Ont.

Page 3

aP

V

TH: E N E W

1972

May 12


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JAPANESE DISHES

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“MICHI” RESTAURANT

328 Queen St. W., Toronto
PHONE 863-9519

Frank G. Yada
Crown Life Insurance Co
1550

West Georgia St.
Vancouver. B.C.

W^ < ^'
© NJ

WM^^^t^^ ^g!^

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^■^^TSi-o ^li^St^
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619 Bloor Street West, Toronto, Ont.
PHONE: Office 533-1167 _

HOME 535-8959

533-1168

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RAIL TICKETS AT
FURUYA TRAVEL SERVICE
C.N. RAILWAY AUTHORIZED
TRAVEL AGENT

3
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and The Safety Associations, Ontario

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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

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1972

May

Demo and Dinner May 15 For Mont. Ikenobo
will be
Montreal Ikenobo Ikebana
Masayuki Nagura and Miss T. Kashima from the
>
Headquarter.
Dinner and demonstration by Professor
Franc
f-ke place May 15th, Monday, and the workshop the
n-i W
evening at the Japanese Community Centre, S155 RousMontreal. For further information please call Mrs. M. Ikedrs. M. Mayeda.
— M. M.
*

*

T.B.C. Parent's Day Service May 14th
— The children and youth members under the
t Church are busily preparing for the Parents-’
to be held on Sunday, May 14th at 11 A.M. The entire
planning and arrangemet: >. including the refreshments to
I following the. service, will be done by the enthusiastic
xmle. All parents and friends are welcome. Please come!

Pay

HYLAND
FLOWERS

Kashino &
Weinberg
Chartered

propnew;-

Accountants

JON ONODERA

215 Victoria St.
Room 301

481-8805

(Business)

(Residence)

540 Eglinton Ave. W.,
Toronto

363-7441

Toronto.

489-4654

i

^OOIIVA
l H

460 Dundas St. W.
Toronto 2B, Ont.

® RETAIL STORE 366-5451
Store 366-5451
Open 7 days a week
to serve you

Travel Service 363-06&5

Variety of Japanese Foods
Kikkoman products
Kokuho rice
Ajinomoto products
Panasonic rice cookers
Gift wares: magazines

April lucky prize winners

Mr. S. Suzuki
Mr. T. Ozaki
Miss S. Date

SMALL
PIW^'

• Summer tour to Japan
Departing July 6, 1972
• Autumn grand tour of
Europe
Departing mid Sept, for
three weeks

Thinking of visiting Vanco­
uver this summer? Call us
for Domestic Travel Arran­
gement.

SHOE

SIZES

NEW SPRING
STYLES
Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14

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

Test-drive TOYOTA!
Corolla - Sprinter - Corona
Mark II - Crown
At your SCARBORO Test-a-Toyota
Centre. Metro's Fastest-Growing
Dealership.

Movie Producer
Bares "Threat"
From U.S. N isei
columnist
Bacon.
commenting; on a recent move bv
to have O
t in
Oriental parts i
the
musical
version
of
Horizon
the following:
'S Hunter, who
oaucer
has given more work to Oriental
actors than a fortune cookie fac­
tory, is under fire from a Japa­
nese American group for eastingSir John Gielgud as
one
of the. key roles in ‘Lost Horizon.’
contained
ease its
a veiled threat to
contents to the printed media if j
no reply was made within 10
davs. Hunter apparently beat
them to the’ punch.
Gielgud’s
“Hunter says to
part: ‘That particular character
is an Oxford-educated man. part
part Oriental, but the
British accent is imperative in
the role.

Mifune Considered
“ ‘At one point 1 had offered
the part to Toshiro Mifune, but
he was unable to take the role
because of a previous commit­
ment. Even if Mifune had done
it. 1 would have, dubbed his voice
with a British accent.’
he appreciates
minority groups fighting for
their image on the screen, but
believes in this case the Japagroup
acted
nese
American
without knowing all the facts.”
“ ‘Why would they go after
me ? askcs Hunter. ‘I ve always
been one of the strongest boost­
ers of Oriental talent in the
movies.’

“Hunter made ‘Flower Drum
Song, with an all-Oriental cast.
He’s also the producer who
brought Anna May Wong back
to the -screen in ‘Partrait in
Black.’
“He said that his new musical
version of the James Hilton clas­
sic is set in Tibet, but so far
he hasn’t found any members of
the Screen Actors Guild from
Tibet.
“That’s why he just signed
James Shigeta to play the Ti­
betan monk, a
starring role.
Shigeta, who has worked
for
Hunter before, is a Nisei singer
who will introduce one of the
new Bacharach-David tunes in
the movie.”

mary
hemmy
Representative

NICK bozian

1302 Ellesmere Rd. at Brimley

293-3643

express our
heartfelt thank to oui- friends
their many
and relatives for
I
cards, ex­
of kindne
ympathy.
floral
pressions of
ings. and teletribute
of
condolence
during
e ra ms
our recent loss of a beloved
wife.
mother.
sister
and
daughter Aimee
Mr William Aoki and Family
Mr and Mrs. Tamoo Aoki.
Mr
Mr and Mrs. Dick Aoki.
Mr Toshiaki Snefuji.
Mr and
Mr and Mrs. James Ohara.
and Mrs. Harrow Haruta.

RES. 231-0863
11 Ivy Lea Cres.

our
to
We
sincere thanks to our friends
and relatives for their acts of
Kindness, beautiful floral ~triCards, in the sudden
bate
our beloved
Plouffe,
Michiko
of
Michelle.
mother
Mr. : Mrs. Jinzo Tsuchida
and son Bill.

BUS. 783-4261
3101 Bathurst Si

MRS. SATOKO SATO

Gertrude Urabe

.Ail types of insurance

INSURANCE

CROWN LIFE
INSURANCE CO.

Office, 43 Eglinton Ave. I
• Phone 485-5087
Home phone: 449-9293

DUNDAS UNION STORE
OPEN SUNDAY

- 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
EM. 4-7692

KAMPAI
TOUR
16-day group tour of Orient $999.00
Tokyo - Atami - Kyoto - Taipei - Hongkong
* Weekly Saturday Departures from Vancouver
* Includes: Twin sharing hotel accommodation, sightseeing.
Most Meals. Airfare. Service Charge and Gratuities
*Single Room and open return at additional charge.

Phone or Write for Color Brochure and Further

K. Iwata Travel Service
Toronto
Ph: 368-9934
889 Dundas St. W.
Toronto. Ont.

254-5101
1115 East. 11 ast ings St.
Vancouver 6, B.C.

Telephone (604)273-5696
June 19 HOLIDAY IN EUROPE. Escorted tours
for Japanese Canadians. Whole price ;
from Vancouver $999.00 Available from
Winninetr: Toronto and
Mon-

• RESIDENTIAL
• INDUSTRIAL

• COMMERCIAL

Sbrocchi
REAL ESTATE

3828 BLOOR ST. W.
ISLINGTON, ONT.

BRIMELL Toyota Ltd
tom hoita

Personal Notes Across Canada

239-4361
Res. 621-6067

__ May 13, June 29, August 4, Septem­
ber 9, October 8, and November 4.
Please ask for detailed pamphlet.
June 29 YOUNG JAPAN FOR YOUNG CANA­
DIANS. Seats are still available. Beautiful
brochure is available by request.
SUMMER HOLIDAY IN JAPAN FOR
24
June
CHILDREN. Fully escorted with our full
responsibility for your children. For child­
ren between 2 years and 11 years old.

THE PLACE TO START YOUR HAPPY HOLIDAY

Page 8

Friday, May 12 1979

PAGE 8

The Inland Sea
THE INLAND SEA, by Donald Richie, with photographs by
Yoichi Midorikawa, Weatherhill, 290 pp., $6.95.
*
*
*
When the author began the journey recorded here, in 1962, he
was 46, unhappily^ married, and void of inhibitions against engaging
in extramarital affairs. He had first arrived in Japan iir 1-945, just
after the end of the war. He learned to speak the language, though
not to read it. As Japan developed into an industrial power, he
observed the desecration of the countryside, through pollution and
waste.
A purpose of his journey was to find himself, and to find
people who would accept him as himself, despite his foreignness
anti the resistance of the Japanese to making close friendships.
Famous for its beauty, the 240 mile long Inland Sea in south­
west Japan, enclosed by the country's islands of Honshu, Shikoku,
and Kyushu, is rich in historical associations, and studded with
islets and islands. Though sensitive and appreciative of the setting
in which his adventure was to take place, the .author was primarily
interested in the people he would meet — particularly in the women.
“Certainly a part of my7 quest is devoted to seducing the natives.”
The book includes a map on which his wanderings can be
followed from the time he arrives, cynical and disillusioned, in
Kobe, :at the northern end of the. Inland Sea, until he reaches his
ostensible destination,Miyajima, ear the southern end.

He began his career in Japan as critic of Japanese films, and
has written such books as Japanese Movies and 1 he Films of Akira
Kurosawa (PC, July 16, 1971). Also a novelist, he is not bound by
strict accuracy in his reportage of the journey. The chronology and
people are real, but he has woven into the account reminiscences
of incidents occurring in other parts of Japan.
He sees the Inland Sea as an unspoiled frontier, though already7
yielding to the encroaching blight, of industrialization. But he
writes of its still largely unspoiled islands and people with humor,
and love. With unusual, though sometimes guarded
candor, h writes of his own feelings and actions.
11 is portraits and analyses of the people with whom he is
good. He evokes the
thrown— particularly of the women
sadness and loneliness of the seaside of Naoshima where he makes
friends with a 15-year-old schoolgirl. He writes vividly7 of a waitadmires in a teashop in Tomo. With the skill of the trained
critic, he dissects the artistic, elements of a striptease p e rfo r m a n c e
at Onomichi.
s only enough bawdiness to give it
he .falls in love with a bar hostess, though his
relationship with her, during the one evening of their acqaintance
is platonic. With her. at least momentarily, he feels he has over­
stepped the barrier that had kept him a foreigner to the other
J a pa nese.
“I realized that, for the last some minutes, for the first time
in my journey, .1 had forgotten that I was speaking to a Japanese...
the very distinction between “they’ and ’me’ was gone.”
At Miyajima he views the famous, anicient shrine that seems
to float on the incoming tide. The spectacle by moonlight evokes
some of his best prose. “We were all silvered, our hands, our
faces, and in this cold light the illuminated shrine turned warm,
an ornamental cavern with red and orange lights.”
of a middle-aged man
This unusually well-written Odys
differs from the usual travel account. There is originality
and charm in this penetrating travelogue.

The

Read Stella Ito's

SUKIYAKI
A Japanese Cookbook For Cosmopolitan Gourmets

Available At The New Canadian For Only $1.65
479 Queen St. West — Toronto 2B, Ont.

The .New Canadian
>79 QUEEN STREET WEST, TORONTO 133, ONT.

Please find enclosed S

for which

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name (MR. MRS. MISS) —

(Cont. from Page One)
keen on television.” Rather they man said at the time Yokoi vas
to make suits, “were
came from the mouth of trie lea riling
Emperor, who sounds as if he born through the. august power
Whoever we A
had spent the postwar decades of the Emperor.
old or young, we bathe in
sewing buttonholes on his jacket. ■
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESD4T
Perhaps the national Japanese his glory.”
AND FRIDAY

Bergamini’s vicious condemnacharacter is the self-hypnotized,
subscription
self-negating common denomi­ tion of the Emperor camoufla$9.00 a Year
nator of these two, the most ges the weakness of his book’
$5.00 for Six- Months
famous living Japanese, who are central argument. By7 the time
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
not likely ever to confront one decision to begin the wax’ with
- K. C. TSUMURA
another. If they7 did, each might America is brought up, tnreeEnglish Section Editor
And what have quarters of the waythrough,
ask the other:
KEN MORI
the Emperor has already7 been
vou been doing while I
Japanese Section Editor
rying out my duties? Touring portrayed as a first-class stra­
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
the tegist, a leader whose power is
Vacationing in
Europe ?
Toronto 133, Ont.
innocent unequaled even by7 Hitler’s. But
tropics ?
EMpire 6-5005
it is when Bergamini
asserts
that
shellfish?’ To imagine
“Hirohito alone had full access
enough, or too much.
Transcripts of Yokoi’s manic to Army planning, Navy7 plann­
and
the
policymaking
press conferences have been ing.
published, but little is known of thoughts of .all
his
intimate
the Emperor’s
early
decades. advisers,” he raises doubts be­
Male Help Wanted
Leonard Mosley’s Hirohito, the cause truly7 powerful men never SHIPPER, receive- for men's clot
necessary.
Must
only full-length biography,
allow themselves to be surround- Experience
chauffer's licence. Applv in «
sugary as a Walt Disney docu- ed by scared little helpers who 312 Adelaide St. West, 3rd floor
ronto. Feldman Bros.. & Wise Ltd. I
slave inevitably bring the great man 366-6278
mentary on the African
(Toronto).
called
trade. The sacred mirror is
down.
His
sanctuary;
the Imp
The transcripts of the 1941
Majesty’s breakfast is reported Imperial Conferences are availto be bacon and eggs (though able to everyone in
Nobutaka
people in the know say he likes Ike’s Japan’s Decision for War
porridge .and coffee); and Japan (Stanford
University).
From
in 1941 is seen
through
the these, any sensible person can
diaries
of Ambassador Grew, see that the Emperor, as editor
who had been kept
blissfully Ike put it, “was opposed to war
ignorant both by the Japanese with the United States because
and his own State Department. of the high risks involved. He
Mosley preaches: "To lose face tried to use his personal influence
in Japan is to lose everything.” to avoid war
Forced to preA happily
wealthy,
faceless sent material damaging to his
SAPPORO
flower arranger of some repute hypothesis, Bergamini says the
ICHIB AN
might disagree.
Emperor belly-talked Japan into
An attempt was made, after war.
like
Bergamini
221 Spadina Ave., Toronto
Sounds
862-1082
the war, to learn about how it double-talk.
all began, but politics interfered
The Emperor’s wish to spare
and the Emperor’s courageous his subjects, and his advisers’
responsi- perverse commitment to
offer “to bear sole
It is a good policy to
toss
have the RIGHT POLICY
bility fox7 every7 political and
them into the ocean wins sym­
UOMtU
military decision made and ac- pathy for the antiquated views
tion taken by7 my- people in the of Richard Ponsonby Fane, the
William Wales Ltd.
conduct of this war” was reInsurance Agents
Emperor adulator, who, on wit­
jected.
nessing His Majesty’s enthrone­
2 Carlton St. 10th hOpinions that were once some­ ment w,as moved to comment:
Toronto 2-A, Ont
Phone 368-4681
what. clear have been obscured “Alas, absolute rule. is prac­
not by time but by the misguided tically abolished.’
intentions of historians. Reput­
Yokoi’s eloquent demand that
able. scholars of the Pacific War
the Emperor not be treated like
Researsh Society wrote just a
a toy can be taken the other
few years ago that the Imperial
wav. too, that His Majesty
Army, being “the dominant force
ought to respect
the
world’s
in Japanese public life” after
wishes. Enlightenment is never
1931, was the sole guilty party.
achieved by7 total silence. There
ADIDAS,
The truth is far more com­ is still time for him to tell what
plex. Otto D. Tolischus, Tokyo he knows of the era that bears
TENNIS,
correspondent for The New York his auspicious name.
FISHING.
Times in 1941 convincingly7 ac­
cuses the Emperor of failing to
1201 Bloor Street West
oppose the “rape” of Nanking, Cards
532-4267
though he praises him for trying
(Cont. from Page One)
to prevent the Pearl Harbor at­ NIN ISSHU so thoroughly that
tack. This early7 judgment is on the basis of the first or
supported by later evidence. Some second word the. whole poem is
prewar correspondents (notably suggested immediately. Coupled
Richard Sorge)
had excellent with this is the development of
contacts. Through Japanese Eyes. a retentive memory, and quick
Tolischus’s wartime book of sav- reflexes.
also stands the test of
Whoever said learning and
LAW OFFICE
time. "We who exist toda
one
intellectual development can’t be
fun has never had much contact
3601 Lawrence Ave. East
with Japan. Today, UTA GARUTA has become one of the. tradi­
Scarborough, Ontario.
tional games played during the
Telephone: 431-1500
new year’s celebrations of Japa­
nese families.

The New Canadian

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KIMURA &
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Third Annual Flower & Bonsai Exhibition
Sponsored by: The Toronto Japanese Garden Club
The Toronto Bonsai Society
The General Support Staff Association, v

OISE BUILDING 252 BLOOR STREET WEST
• A varied program of Japanese culture and of natures beauty

ZONE NO.

PHONE
621-6067

Saturday, May 20 — 1 p.m. — 9 P«m'
Sunday, May 21 — 12 p.m. — 5 P*m*

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