Page 1
1 B
e Tokyo War Crimes Trial: Victors’ Revenge Or Victors’ Justice
J#ICTORS’ JUSTICE: THE TOKYO WAR CRItf^. TRIAL by Richard H. Minear. Published
by
Charles E. Tuttle. 229 pages.
'
Reviewed by
WARREN C. HEGG
wr°te Erances Bacon, “is a kind of
viKR justice.” In the opinion of author Richard Mia young historian at the University of Masi^rasetts, it is precisely this sort of justice that
^^meted out to the 28 Japanese defendants who
accused of “crimes against peace” and “crimes
against humanity” in the Tokyo war crimes trial
vfiich lasted from May 1946 to November 1948.
he Tokyo trial, according to Minear, was chaess,
racterized by “a barely disguised revenge, not the
high ideals of international law.’ His book is an
attempt to set the record straight by systematically
analyzing the trial proceedings mid attacking the To
kyo judgment for its serious neglect of principles of
international law, accepted legal process and histo
rical perspective.
At the outset Minear admits that his study is
polemical in nature. He' contrasts the high idealism
espoused during the Tokyo trials with the legal una
ccountability of the United States for atrocities wreaked on noncombatants in Vietnam, symbolized by the
case of Lt. William Calley and the My Lai massacre,
"My major concern in writing this book has been to
challenge (the) prevailing image of the trial, to
demolish the credibility of the Tokyo trial and its
verdict.. .” he writes. “The Tokyo trial is a failure
that can instruct us. I have written this book in the
belief that an awareness of the absurdities and the
inequities of the Tokyo trial will help us to rethink
some of our assumptions about American policy in
Asia, about Japan, and about Indochina.”
Even allowing for this bias, Minear’s point-bypoint critique of the trial is devastating reading for
all but the most cynical. He calls into question the
trial’s shaky foundation in international law, argu
ing that no less than five fundamental legal principles
evoked during the Tokyo proceedings were relatively
new and not firmly established as accepted canons
(Cont. on Page S)
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on
ork
rts.
and
ton
rea
he Dctti Canadian
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
XXXVII
Toronto, unt.
TUESDAF, JANUARY 16 1973
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•roorply
•ds,
(lil
ble
wn
12.
Ben Franklin’s GreatGreat
Great-Great Grand-daughter
Is Japanese Girl
3^
after Commodore Matthew.
C.
Perry signed the first United
Benjamin Franklin’s
great- States treaty with Japan, and
great-great-great granddaughter
only eight years after’ Townsend
came to a meeting of the Descen
Harris worked out the first agre
dants of the Signers of the De_j? tIndependenci
_j-------------- j---- s
last ement.
elaration of
Within ten more years, he
spring in Philadelphia, and some
had helped to organize the Mitsui
ofAthe other- descendants were Trading Co., which was to be
surprised.
come one of Japan’s most powe
that rful business organizations.
^Phey weren’t surprised
shej came. But they were surIrwin kept in touch with his
prised that she is Japanese,
Philadelphia relatives. He came
TORONTO. — Nisei strongman, Mack Miya picks up a
^er name is Yukiko Irwin,
with a Japanese group to the $1,000.00 check for his record shattering 300-pound one — arm lift
lives now in an apart- Centennial Exhibition in 1876.
at the recent Mr. Dominion of Canada contest. Handing him the
on the upper east side
check is Mr. Guy Mastracola, F. & M. Electronic Company repre
Cultural Exchange
anhattan.
sentative. During his lift, Mighty Mack also lifted part of a heavy
•®sitors are expected to ro
Once, he sent his educator si- curtain and a table that got caught on the barbell. The show has
more their shoes on entering. sters, a box which, he wrote, con been televised over Channel 79.
sit on American-style tained a special Japanese tea that
After a few weeks rest, Mack will be entering heavy
i®rs, or Japanese-style cushi- was a favorite of the emperor. training to break his own world record again at the Mr. Ontario
The
Irwin
sisters gathe Show on June 2nd at Central Technical School auditorium.
uki, as her friends call her,
red some of their Philadelphia
SJ^ids her time practicing the
friends for a tea party. Some of
— Japanese aft of Shiatsu, in which
the powder was scooped from
tnjamb and palm pressure is apthe top of the box and carefully
plld to the same 657 points of
brewed by Miss Sophy.
thiB body that Chinese acupunctuOSAKA. — A popular thirty- University of Tokyo instructor,
But a few sips, and the la
rists poke with needles.
dies in the room were grim- five year old Japanese, known as testified on her behalf in a court
acing. Finally, Agnes Irwin put the “Queen of the Stripteasers,” packed with women’s liberationJill Prestigious Family Tree
down her cup and announced, was sentenced to one month in ists and Ichijo fans. The judge
J-Wnd she does research and wri“The company is excused from prison recently on charges that acknowledged recent liberaliza
about her grandfather, Roher farewell performance
last tion of moral standards, but he
drinking its tea.”
Walker Irwin, and his littledeclared that the law must be
May
was
obscene.
Afterward, a maid discovered
Place In the history of Jaobserved.
a small, fancy box inside the
and Hawaii.
Miss Sayuri Ichijo, the court
Miss Ochijo earned her reputa
n Franklin’s daughter, Sa- bigger one. It contained the tea. said, will have to serve a total of
tion as the striptease artist in Ja
married
Richard
Bache. The fashionable Philadelphia ma ten months behind bars because
pan
for her daring performances.
.Weir daughter; Sophia, married trons had been drinking a broth this verdict nullifies suspensi
The defense counsel asked for an
t-JBlliam Wallace Irwin, former brewed from some unknown Ja on of an earlier sentence giv
acquittal, emphasizing that Miss
lWyor °f Pittsburgh and U.S. panese packing material.
en her on a similar charge.
Ichijo was retiring from the pro
^ngressman.
Proper Japanese Wife
Several witnesses, including a fession.
®le was appointed charge d’aAbout 1880, Inoue Keoru, a
»irs at Copenhagen by Presileading
figure in Japan’s Meiji
flpt John . Tyler, and his son,
Walker Orwin, was born government in the 19th century,
and Irwin’s friend and associate,
TOKYO. — Quick ... what is year would reach an estimated
STwo of Robert’s three
sis- went looking for a wife for Irwin
ws, Agnes and Sophia, founded — a proper Japanese lady whose the most popular selling item in 50,200 million yen, up 68 per cent
S Agnes Irwin School in Phi- ancestry would include both sa Japan after cars and television ? from last year.
^yelphia. - Sophy directed the murai and merchants.
If the guess-is jewelry, it is
The supply of diamonds is ha
The
girl
who
fit
the
requi
the right answer.
®°ol after Agnes was appoinMirroring
the
sophisticated ndled throughout the world so
W the firsts dean of Radcliffe rements and won Irwin’s heart
was
Takechi
Iki.
When
they
were
®lege in 1894.
consumer life pattern of the Ja lely by the Diamond Syndicate,
married in 1882, it was history’s panese as well as their affluency, a global organization of diamond
9
Agent to Japan
first legally sanctioned marriage people are patronizing jewelers miners in South Africa.
Oln 1866, Robert Irwin went to between an American and a Ja at a staggering pace.
This is said to give greater sta
®>an as agent for an American panese.
Customs officials say that Ja bility to the value of diamonds
iH^sbip company, only 12 years
pan’s import of diamonds this against international currencies
(Cont. on Page 8)
^f By JAMES SMART
Mack Miya Makes $1,000. On One Lift
> may
Japan's "Queen of the Stripteasers"
Last Show Puts Her In Jail For Month
Tokyo Living
Cost Is
World’s
Highest
NEW YORK. — A new
United Nations survey of the cost
of living of international officials
in 85 cities around the world
shows that Tokyo is the most
expensive of them all.
The survey, in the latest mon
thly bulletin of statistics, brings
out that Tokyo’s cost of living
is 117 pei' cent of New York’s
figures.
The only other cities on the list
more expensive than New York
are Conakry, Guinea, 111 per'
cent; Lome, Togo, 108 per cent;
and Paris, 103 per cent.
Living is cheapest in Monte
video, Uruguary, where it costs
only 52 per cent what it does in
New York.
In Santiago, Chile it costs 55
per cent; in Buenos Aires, 61 per
cent; in Damascus, Syria, 63 per
cent; and in Cairo, Egypt, 69 per
cent.
It is 76 per cent in Tel Aviv;
81 per cent in Athens and Ha
vana, 85 per cent in London; 87
per cent in Montreal and Vienna;
89 per cent in Washington; 91
per cent in Rome; and 99 per
cent in Bonn.
The U.N. uses the figures to
calculate salary differentials for
its people in the various cities to
take account of their local ex
penses.
Diamonds Are Japanese’s Best Friend
in times of inflation.
Jewelry industry sources say
that diamonds woith more than
one million yen serve as an infla
tion hedge or as a means of mo
ney making.
But they say there is no as
surance that speculative diamond
purchases would yield future pro
fits in Japan, which is devoid
of the open gem auction fairs
that are common in Europe.
e Tokyo War Crimes Trial: Victors’ Revenge Or Victors’ Justice
J#ICTORS’ JUSTICE: THE TOKYO WAR CRItf^. TRIAL by Richard H. Minear. Published
by
Charles E. Tuttle. 229 pages.
'
Reviewed by
WARREN C. HEGG
wr°te Erances Bacon, “is a kind of
viKR justice.” In the opinion of author Richard Mia young historian at the University of Masi^rasetts, it is precisely this sort of justice that
^^meted out to the 28 Japanese defendants who
accused of “crimes against peace” and “crimes
against humanity” in the Tokyo war crimes trial
vfiich lasted from May 1946 to November 1948.
he Tokyo trial, according to Minear, was chaess,
racterized by “a barely disguised revenge, not the
high ideals of international law.’ His book is an
attempt to set the record straight by systematically
analyzing the trial proceedings mid attacking the To
kyo judgment for its serious neglect of principles of
international law, accepted legal process and histo
rical perspective.
At the outset Minear admits that his study is
polemical in nature. He' contrasts the high idealism
espoused during the Tokyo trials with the legal una
ccountability of the United States for atrocities wreaked on noncombatants in Vietnam, symbolized by the
case of Lt. William Calley and the My Lai massacre,
"My major concern in writing this book has been to
challenge (the) prevailing image of the trial, to
demolish the credibility of the Tokyo trial and its
verdict.. .” he writes. “The Tokyo trial is a failure
that can instruct us. I have written this book in the
belief that an awareness of the absurdities and the
inequities of the Tokyo trial will help us to rethink
some of our assumptions about American policy in
Asia, about Japan, and about Indochina.”
Even allowing for this bias, Minear’s point-bypoint critique of the trial is devastating reading for
all but the most cynical. He calls into question the
trial’s shaky foundation in international law, argu
ing that no less than five fundamental legal principles
evoked during the Tokyo proceedings were relatively
new and not firmly established as accepted canons
(Cont. on Page S)
5iH liiniiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiHiiiiiniiiiniiHiHiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiniiEiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHm
on
ork
rts.
and
ton
rea
he Dctti Canadian
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
XXXVII
Toronto, unt.
TUESDAF, JANUARY 16 1973
_illlllllllllllllllilliiiiiiiiilllllillliiiiiliiiiilllillilllllllllllllllllllllllllillililililil llllllIlllIIIIHillllltnHIlIilllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllil iiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiimi
•roorply
•ds,
(lil
ble
wn
12.
Ben Franklin’s GreatGreat
Great-Great Grand-daughter
Is Japanese Girl
3^
after Commodore Matthew.
C.
Perry signed the first United
Benjamin Franklin’s
great- States treaty with Japan, and
great-great-great granddaughter
only eight years after’ Townsend
came to a meeting of the Descen
Harris worked out the first agre
dants of the Signers of the De_j? tIndependenci
_j-------------- j---- s
last ement.
elaration of
Within ten more years, he
spring in Philadelphia, and some
had helped to organize the Mitsui
ofAthe other- descendants were Trading Co., which was to be
surprised.
come one of Japan’s most powe
that rful business organizations.
^Phey weren’t surprised
shej came. But they were surIrwin kept in touch with his
prised that she is Japanese,
Philadelphia relatives. He came
TORONTO. — Nisei strongman, Mack Miya picks up a
^er name is Yukiko Irwin,
with a Japanese group to the $1,000.00 check for his record shattering 300-pound one — arm lift
lives now in an apart- Centennial Exhibition in 1876.
at the recent Mr. Dominion of Canada contest. Handing him the
on the upper east side
check is Mr. Guy Mastracola, F. & M. Electronic Company repre
Cultural Exchange
anhattan.
sentative. During his lift, Mighty Mack also lifted part of a heavy
•®sitors are expected to ro
Once, he sent his educator si- curtain and a table that got caught on the barbell. The show has
more their shoes on entering. sters, a box which, he wrote, con been televised over Channel 79.
sit on American-style tained a special Japanese tea that
After a few weeks rest, Mack will be entering heavy
i®rs, or Japanese-style cushi- was a favorite of the emperor. training to break his own world record again at the Mr. Ontario
The
Irwin
sisters gathe Show on June 2nd at Central Technical School auditorium.
uki, as her friends call her,
red some of their Philadelphia
SJ^ids her time practicing the
friends for a tea party. Some of
— Japanese aft of Shiatsu, in which
the powder was scooped from
tnjamb and palm pressure is apthe top of the box and carefully
plld to the same 657 points of
brewed by Miss Sophy.
thiB body that Chinese acupunctuOSAKA. — A popular thirty- University of Tokyo instructor,
But a few sips, and the la
rists poke with needles.
dies in the room were grim- five year old Japanese, known as testified on her behalf in a court
acing. Finally, Agnes Irwin put the “Queen of the Stripteasers,” packed with women’s liberationJill Prestigious Family Tree
down her cup and announced, was sentenced to one month in ists and Ichijo fans. The judge
J-Wnd she does research and wri“The company is excused from prison recently on charges that acknowledged recent liberaliza
about her grandfather, Roher farewell performance
last tion of moral standards, but he
drinking its tea.”
Walker Irwin, and his littledeclared that the law must be
May
was
obscene.
Afterward, a maid discovered
Place In the history of Jaobserved.
a small, fancy box inside the
and Hawaii.
Miss Sayuri Ichijo, the court
Miss Ochijo earned her reputa
n Franklin’s daughter, Sa- bigger one. It contained the tea. said, will have to serve a total of
tion as the striptease artist in Ja
married
Richard
Bache. The fashionable Philadelphia ma ten months behind bars because
pan
for her daring performances.
.Weir daughter; Sophia, married trons had been drinking a broth this verdict nullifies suspensi
The defense counsel asked for an
t-JBlliam Wallace Irwin, former brewed from some unknown Ja on of an earlier sentence giv
acquittal, emphasizing that Miss
lWyor °f Pittsburgh and U.S. panese packing material.
en her on a similar charge.
Ichijo was retiring from the pro
^ngressman.
Proper Japanese Wife
Several witnesses, including a fession.
®le was appointed charge d’aAbout 1880, Inoue Keoru, a
»irs at Copenhagen by Presileading
figure in Japan’s Meiji
flpt John . Tyler, and his son,
Walker Orwin, was born government in the 19th century,
and Irwin’s friend and associate,
TOKYO. — Quick ... what is year would reach an estimated
STwo of Robert’s three
sis- went looking for a wife for Irwin
ws, Agnes and Sophia, founded — a proper Japanese lady whose the most popular selling item in 50,200 million yen, up 68 per cent
S Agnes Irwin School in Phi- ancestry would include both sa Japan after cars and television ? from last year.
^yelphia. - Sophy directed the murai and merchants.
If the guess-is jewelry, it is
The supply of diamonds is ha
The
girl
who
fit
the
requi
the right answer.
®°ol after Agnes was appoinMirroring
the
sophisticated ndled throughout the world so
W the firsts dean of Radcliffe rements and won Irwin’s heart
was
Takechi
Iki.
When
they
were
®lege in 1894.
consumer life pattern of the Ja lely by the Diamond Syndicate,
married in 1882, it was history’s panese as well as their affluency, a global organization of diamond
9
Agent to Japan
first legally sanctioned marriage people are patronizing jewelers miners in South Africa.
Oln 1866, Robert Irwin went to between an American and a Ja at a staggering pace.
This is said to give greater sta
®>an as agent for an American panese.
Customs officials say that Ja bility to the value of diamonds
iH^sbip company, only 12 years
pan’s import of diamonds this against international currencies
(Cont. on Page 8)
^f By JAMES SMART
Mack Miya Makes $1,000. On One Lift
> may
Japan's "Queen of the Stripteasers"
Last Show Puts Her In Jail For Month
Tokyo Living
Cost Is
World’s
Highest
NEW YORK. — A new
United Nations survey of the cost
of living of international officials
in 85 cities around the world
shows that Tokyo is the most
expensive of them all.
The survey, in the latest mon
thly bulletin of statistics, brings
out that Tokyo’s cost of living
is 117 pei' cent of New York’s
figures.
The only other cities on the list
more expensive than New York
are Conakry, Guinea, 111 per'
cent; Lome, Togo, 108 per cent;
and Paris, 103 per cent.
Living is cheapest in Monte
video, Uruguary, where it costs
only 52 per cent what it does in
New York.
In Santiago, Chile it costs 55
per cent; in Buenos Aires, 61 per
cent; in Damascus, Syria, 63 per
cent; and in Cairo, Egypt, 69 per
cent.
It is 76 per cent in Tel Aviv;
81 per cent in Athens and Ha
vana, 85 per cent in London; 87
per cent in Montreal and Vienna;
89 per cent in Washington; 91
per cent in Rome; and 99 per
cent in Bonn.
The U.N. uses the figures to
calculate salary differentials for
its people in the various cities to
take account of their local ex
penses.
Diamonds Are Japanese’s Best Friend
in times of inflation.
Jewelry industry sources say
that diamonds woith more than
one million yen serve as an infla
tion hedge or as a means of mo
ney making.
But they say there is no as
surance that speculative diamond
purchases would yield future pro
fits in Japan, which is devoid
of the open gem auction fairs
that are common in Europe.
Page 2
Tuesday, January 16 1975
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IMPOTRERS — DISTRIBUTORS
SHIMIZU INDUSTRIES LTD
Mail Address: P.O. Box 5569, Vancouver 12, B.C.
344 East Hastings Street, Vancouver 4. B.C.
(606>-687-5445 or 687-5016
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Page 7
Jaes day, January 16 19/3
PAGE 7
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
St. John's Presbyterian. Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
Tuesday; Prayer and Study Fellowship S:00 P.M.
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128. Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1666.
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
701 DOVERCOURT RD.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 21, 1973
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 782-5257
English Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
o
SUNDAY, JANUARY 21, 1973
10:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service
Si8 Bathurst St.
Telephone: 534-4302
Wedding Specialists
General Photography
PHOTOGRAPHY
Exclusive Coverage
T.B. Matsuda
677-1467
Estimates & Samples
Toronto
The Two World’s Of Jim Yoshida
(Written by Jim Yoshida and Bill Hosokawa)
By OLGA MUCCI
This book is written in an easy style and compels one to
keep on reading to the end. It gives an insight to an area about
the Second World War that many people, would rather forget —
the plight of the American citizens of Japanese ancestry.
Jim Yoshida was a football playing, apple-pie
A merican, yet due to unknown circumstances he was also considered
a citizen of Japan. He becomes stranded in Japan at the outbreak
of the war and gets drafted into the Imperial Japanese Army,
From the day he is .issued his uniform everything goes wrong,
he’s too tall and his feet are much too big to fit the standard
army boot sizes. He’s5 not much of a soldier and his sergeant
heckles and mistreats; him to the point where Jim swears he
will beat him to a pulp when the war
over. However, Jim
Yoshida turns out to be a very human person, bewildered and
angered by the turn fate has taken. I believe tht lust for revenge
may have made many of us act differently if we had been in Jim’s
position when he again meets his ex-sergeant.
It is a very warm and humane book and reveals again the
endurance of man when he is forced into conditions against his
nature and free will.
This book is good reading for almost any age level, especially during a time when, as is mentioned in the foreword by
Senator Inouye, many people are disdainful of their citizenship
and patriotism is almost a dirty word.
Published by William Morrow & Co. N.Y.
Olga Mucci
When Buying Oi Selling A Home
Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yonge Street. Toronto 7. Out
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
923-6877
Tokio Nishimura
Japan's
Specialty Shop
Specializing in
Authentic Oriental
Gift Items, Kimonos
& Noritakes China
463 Eglinton Ave. W.
Phone 489-8611
KINO'S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Cail: KEN HORI
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
ftteaffi^
Phone 355-2211
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perivale Cres,
Phone: 261-5194
SUN LIFE BAY AGENCY
Scarborough
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO
RCA — ZENITH
SALES & SERVICE
1055 MIDLAND AVE. (ORIOLE PLAZA)
SCARBORO
Phone 759-1583
Between EgHnton & Lawrence Ave. ^ast
Repairs To All Makes
Requires self starter. Aggressive, success
ful people, who in the next few years will develop into high income bracket.
SKATES, HOCKEY
1202 Danforth Ave.
At Greenwood.
George fuKusaku
We would
like to have the opportunity to discuss
463-7400
OPEN FHI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
with you, our new marketing top quality products. For
a
personal
interview
contact.
Messrs.
Eddie
Pitch
445-9500, Harry Wolle, 445-9500.
OFTORONTO
Takara Jewellers
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
Mon. — Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1291. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
* FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Suits
Made To Measure
Bus: 961-5511
Res: 922-1353
& Trouscrf
SUITS FOR MEN
C. NOMURA
ERNEST JOMORI
Phone 694-9553
Chartered Accountant
Will call on you”
(Within Toronto)
Suite 403
130 BLOOB ST. W.
TORONTO
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
DANFORTH GARDENS
Famous Chinese Foods
TAVERN
3212 Danforth Ave. (at Pharmacy)
RESTAURANT
One free order of WUN-TUN
and
iTASTr
One pair of chopsticks with orders over $5.00
Free local delivery over $3.00
10% off on pick-up orders over $2.00
Phone 699-1171
i
FULLY LICENSED
SUKIYAKI
TEMPURA
TATAMI ROOM
PXb7>
ALL MAJOR CREDIT
CARDS HONOURED
103 YONGE
(Between King & Adelaide)
863-0002
Read Stella Ito's
"SUKIYAKI
A Japanese Cookbook For Cosmopolitan Gourmets
‘Over 60 Favorite Recipes'
Available At The New Canadian For Only $1.65
479 Queen St. West — Toronto 2B, Ont.
MRS. W.T. GRAHAM
WILLOWDALE, ONT.
No. 202
SUPPORT US WITH
YOUR MEMBERSHIP
FOR 1973
Single $8.00*—Family $15.00
Japanese Canadian
Cultural Centre
123 Wynford Drive
Don Mills, Ont.
a£
£
PAGE 7
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
St. John's Presbyterian. Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
Tuesday; Prayer and Study Fellowship S:00 P.M.
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128. Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1666.
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
701 DOVERCOURT RD.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 21, 1973
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 782-5257
English Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
o
SUNDAY, JANUARY 21, 1973
10:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service
Si8 Bathurst St.
Telephone: 534-4302
Wedding Specialists
General Photography
PHOTOGRAPHY
Exclusive Coverage
T.B. Matsuda
677-1467
Estimates & Samples
Toronto
The Two World’s Of Jim Yoshida
(Written by Jim Yoshida and Bill Hosokawa)
By OLGA MUCCI
This book is written in an easy style and compels one to
keep on reading to the end. It gives an insight to an area about
the Second World War that many people, would rather forget —
the plight of the American citizens of Japanese ancestry.
Jim Yoshida was a football playing, apple-pie
A merican, yet due to unknown circumstances he was also considered
a citizen of Japan. He becomes stranded in Japan at the outbreak
of the war and gets drafted into the Imperial Japanese Army,
From the day he is .issued his uniform everything goes wrong,
he’s too tall and his feet are much too big to fit the standard
army boot sizes. He’s5 not much of a soldier and his sergeant
heckles and mistreats; him to the point where Jim swears he
will beat him to a pulp when the war
over. However, Jim
Yoshida turns out to be a very human person, bewildered and
angered by the turn fate has taken. I believe tht lust for revenge
may have made many of us act differently if we had been in Jim’s
position when he again meets his ex-sergeant.
It is a very warm and humane book and reveals again the
endurance of man when he is forced into conditions against his
nature and free will.
This book is good reading for almost any age level, especially during a time when, as is mentioned in the foreword by
Senator Inouye, many people are disdainful of their citizenship
and patriotism is almost a dirty word.
Published by William Morrow & Co. N.Y.
Olga Mucci
When Buying Oi Selling A Home
Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
1278 Yonge Street. Toronto 7. Out
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
923-6877
Tokio Nishimura
Japan's
Specialty Shop
Specializing in
Authentic Oriental
Gift Items, Kimonos
& Noritakes China
463 Eglinton Ave. W.
Phone 489-8611
KINO'S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Cail: KEN HORI
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
ftteaffi^
Phone 355-2211
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perivale Cres,
Phone: 261-5194
SUN LIFE BAY AGENCY
Scarborough
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO
RCA — ZENITH
SALES & SERVICE
1055 MIDLAND AVE. (ORIOLE PLAZA)
SCARBORO
Phone 759-1583
Between EgHnton & Lawrence Ave. ^ast
Repairs To All Makes
Requires self starter. Aggressive, success
ful people, who in the next few years will develop into high income bracket.
SKATES, HOCKEY
1202 Danforth Ave.
At Greenwood.
George fuKusaku
We would
like to have the opportunity to discuss
463-7400
OPEN FHI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
with you, our new marketing top quality products. For
a
personal
interview
contact.
Messrs.
Eddie
Pitch
445-9500, Harry Wolle, 445-9500.
OFTORONTO
Takara Jewellers
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
Mon. — Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1291. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
* FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Suits
Made To Measure
Bus: 961-5511
Res: 922-1353
& Trouscrf
SUITS FOR MEN
C. NOMURA
ERNEST JOMORI
Phone 694-9553
Chartered Accountant
Will call on you”
(Within Toronto)
Suite 403
130 BLOOB ST. W.
TORONTO
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
DANFORTH GARDENS
Famous Chinese Foods
TAVERN
3212 Danforth Ave. (at Pharmacy)
RESTAURANT
One free order of WUN-TUN
and
iTASTr
One pair of chopsticks with orders over $5.00
Free local delivery over $3.00
10% off on pick-up orders over $2.00
Phone 699-1171
i
FULLY LICENSED
SUKIYAKI
TEMPURA
TATAMI ROOM
PXb7>
ALL MAJOR CREDIT
CARDS HONOURED
103 YONGE
(Between King & Adelaide)
863-0002
Read Stella Ito's
"SUKIYAKI
A Japanese Cookbook For Cosmopolitan Gourmets
‘Over 60 Favorite Recipes'
Available At The New Canadian For Only $1.65
479 Queen St. West — Toronto 2B, Ont.
MRS. W.T. GRAHAM
WILLOWDALE, ONT.
No. 202
SUPPORT US WITH
YOUR MEMBERSHIP
FOR 1973
Single $8.00*—Family $15.00
Japanese Canadian
Cultural Centre
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a£
£
Page 8
the
PAGE 8
NEW
CANADIAN
i
Revenge
(Cont. from Page One)
(Cont. from Page One)
Tuesday, January 16 1973
The New Canadian
instinctive
children were edu- ( As part of her
er
law. That they
PUBLISHED ON EVERT TUESDAY
;
bridging
of
two
cultures,
Yuki
AND FRIDAY
United States. But
were sufficient to convict 25 of basis of its historical veracity,
A
member
oi
Ethnic Pre# Assoaotis,
Irwin
practices
Shiatsu.
She
s.
both
Princeton
the 27 defendants maintains Mi-1 For the layman, maintains the the two
of Ontario.
”
has
a
Shiatsu
license
from
the
near, is an example of how legal / author, the validity or the To- graduates, went back to Japan
Second close marl registration
number 0365
Japanese government and a maprinciples were made to conform i kyo trial depends in large part .nd married Japanese girls.
ssage
license
from
the
state
of
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
conveniently to political expedi-; on the historical worth of its >
Samurai and DAR
K. C. TSUMURA
ency.
j verdict. “Does that verdict, we ;
English
Section Editor
Several
Manhattan
doctors
sts of hischarge of conspiracy, tor । ask, meet minimal
KEN
MORI
ukiko
Irwin.
That
makes
a
p?
refer patients to her. and she
Even
the
accuracy?
example, was founded on the lorica!
Japanese
Section
Editor
tite practitioner of Shiatsu in won’t treat anyone without
a
most biased panel of justice.
precedent set at the Nurei
479
QUEEN
ST.
WEST
. descendant of both referral.
Toronto
133,
Ont.
war c imes trial where Minear invoking the most questionable Manhattan
tne samurai and the signers of
Shiatsu was originated about
EMpire 6-5005
points out only b or 22 act end interpretation of international the Declarat on: in her veins me40
years
ago.
Pressure
is
put
the
most
law
and
following
found guilty, while 21
the blood of the founding on the same points as in acupun
of 25 of the Japanese defend dubious procedures. might have
of two very different na- cture, but needles are never used.
accu- fathers
ants were so convicted in To-! arrived at a reasonably
;
tions.
Yuki learned Shiatsu in Japan
i rate picture of prewar events in
Irwin
first
came
to
the
from a man who was treating
Help Wanted
individual re Japan and in the Pacific. But United States in 1953.
her
aunt
for
migraine
headaches.
i
if
the
verdict
cannot
his‘
sponsibility
war crimes
had been a high school
OPERATORS experienced on
“T never thought I would do
even i torical scrutinv'. then for us the • tudent during World War II,
committed bv tne state).
single
needle machines to work
the prosecution admitted to be trial lose: xt last claim to our j; and saw her family lose every it as a profession,” she says. on dresses, blouses, and shirts.
“It’s so tiring.”
an innovation.” notes rhe au respects.”
Excellent working conditions and
thing because of the war. It wa:
thor. “Official representatives of
In Minear’s view, those si : a disturbing■ time for a Japanese
Healing Art of Shiatsu
top wages.
Apply 22 Benton
the American
Government at ting in judgment at Tokyo fail- • descendant
of Benjamin FrankDoctors send her people suf Road, Keele & Lawrence area
in 1919 had rejected ed miserably in their attempt! Hn,
fering from rheumatism, muscle (Toronto).
liability for acts of to reconstruct the history of the :
spasms, migraine headaches and
so aiso did the French events leading up to World War :
Pride in America
A FOREMAN for produce pa
nervous
tension. For a while, she cking lines. Knowledge of pro
at
London in j II. Citing more recent scholar“I was always brought
up worked on the aches and pains
1945.”
duce an asset, also a few wor
i ship dealing with Japan’s deci being told that our American
of a New York ballet company. kers for packing lines. Apply
Furthermore.
asks
Minear, ion to
war. the author ancestor was one of the form
This way,” she
says,
“I’m
“Was aggressive war a crime ?
casts
considerable doubt on ders of America, and we should bringing the East to this country, Herman Cothran. Netkin Foods,
No. said the Un
Chatham & Frid Street, Hamil
whether any tribunal — let alone be proud of it,” she says.
not in terms of trade or mate- ton, Ontario.
Great Britain in 1944 and ! one whose bias was so patently J
So, axtex jiudyng Japanese rials, but in a wav to help people
France in 1945. Was the Tokyo obvious as the Tokyo court — is
literature
in college in Japan, Restore their health.
Room For Rent
Charter (establishing the iuris- capable of
such an she came here.
«j.m
very
happy
doing
it.
and
ion
ne court) ex post
and historically accuROOM for rent to responsible
“I thought I would like tojt helps to eliminate my search
said the French in rate judgment. . . . The pro
business person. Bath. Downtown
come to school to find the root for a sense of belonging.
Did negative criminal
cesses of history are too com$100. furnished. Parking $12.
culture.
exist Ao. s:
e
••Belonging
to
the
Society
of
o be subjected to the adShe :udied s ocial work at the
Phone 925-6294 (Toronto).
tes in 1919.”
judica ion of any tribunal. His- ! University of Indiana, and Bo : the Descendants of Signers of
Minear also find
proce- torical proce. does not yield to
the Declaration of Independence
ton University. She went
to
Paul K. Asada, D.C., NJ).
dural side of the Tokyo trial to adjudication:
j
(
helped also, because thev welcoand the attempt i New Yo
and
married
an
Ame■
__
j
■,
,
\
.
,
have been sadly
“Doctor of Chiropractic”
parhistory justiciable is ■ rican. They lived in Europe and ; med me and showed that racial
ticularlv with
rt
to such aoomea from the start.
। boundaries do not really exist,
728A St. Clair Ave. West
The > the Middle East. There
were
matters as the selection of jus|
Family
Mission
(14
block West of Christie)
of
t ices: As .11 the judges came butable in partTokyo were attri-. marital difficulties and a JanaTORONTO
s
to
bias
and
to
;
nese
divorce.
She
came
back
to
651-8060
Res.
621-1989
from vic to nations their impar- restrictions on
xdnussable evi- ; New A ork in 1961. working for । “We have always had the tratiali
w
dence. But the anger share of ; a time for a Japanese investment I ditic-n in our family that our
Defense
mission was for the sake of
the blame must fall on the b
tirm.
?s was to
humanity. The family tradition
Buy and Sell .
Your Home
sic misconception that the even!
at
Research on Grandfather
“the mem- at issue could be adjudicated
E
has kept me in trying moments,
Through
n
She has spent much time and especially in coming to this counthe
hard to rind fault with travel doing research on her try ail by myself. My grandfa
ons wno
Th]
nations
turbing
findings, grandfather's life.
ther had tnis dream that America
MELL REAL ESTATE Ltd.
His well
the
arched study, of
With Univer
of Pennsylva- and Japan should meet. Without
2008 Lawrence Av. East
io:, ur.cer the circum stances course, f
n the face of such
ry Conroy, she this sort of philosophy, I don’t
heir anno
re
vision
i;
Scarboro, Ont.
imparinterpretations
ot
produced one essay in a new think I would have survived.
757-5184
or
rewar
history
e men
as book C:
;t Across
the
“Everybody in my family had
appointed to the
in
ationa! that ot David Bergamini whose
of essays about Benjamin Franklin’s down-tomilitary tribunal, onl one had book “Japan's Imperial
Con- Japanese
ants. It details earth character and peasant
spiracy" ai
had previous backgro
Emperor
stock. The samurai bushido and
the prime mover ; the movement of Japanese
Rad Hirohito w
io the Philadelphia old gentlemen
h&biaod Pal of India. who
■e militari: m ana Hawaii
of
the
19th
are sort of identical — the way
irom should have
wrath of centurv.
they have a sense of honor, the
cou
tv oni- me Tokyo ti
with Tojo
ather did more for importance of hard work. That’s
Mines Us
sober
ownsend Harris or my discovery.
As to
scapegoats Commodore
Perry.” she says.
L- I had my way, I would
procedure
wx
itor tr
chapter in 0
ins r
irobaoh like to be born just ?
Minear ci
the rules of eper- ■ world h
it to
mple Japanese or American
ation adc
of
by the tribunal
SHOP
i place in J
n
Y
ukiko
Irwin
and
not
be
of the defendants ; sciousiy warping the flow of hu- storv.
torn between two cultures.”
and the r
of evidence ore- j man events to their own
Thi
733 Danforth Ave
Benjamin Franklin would pro
vailing du1
’ the Tokyo trial ; ends. Instead he opts fo a no domin
personabably be quite pleased, and not
Toronto
i tess compelli: g review of the
a
little
intrigued,
by
his
great• doubtful assui ptions which rePhone Store 463-3426
East and VS est Linkage
j suited in the one-sided verdict
t-great-grand
daughHome 469-0293
ter.
j handed down
“
I
am
in
the
process
of
wr
T
do
Japanese Food
ting a sort of autobiograohv
Deliver Evenings
! hold a b;
and Saturdays
how I have
to
It is a yood policy to
come
myself, espehere the RIGHT POLICY
ciallv now that E; st and West
a harsh judgment, but a
Cwuat
t judgment is called for. It is onlv
My families
William Wales Ltd
| i^fCk ^-^gation that in. puni- are sort of pion
in this area.;
Insurance Agents
leaders we and I wanted t
rite it down ■
tor
deceived ourselve:
2 A^toa St 10th floor
thi
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
the future.*
Phone 35S4681
CLASSIFIED
TOSH IWAI
s
YOUR
BLOOD
COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED
MONEY
MANAGEMENT
the greatest
gift of all
Buy & Sell — Your Home
Yamaha Music Course
Mils Kuroda
4 to S years — nearlv
two million graduates.
Free film demonstration, or
visit a class anytime.
231 Danforth Ave. 461-2467
2645 Eglinton E.
2 61-614 4
RobU Owen,
Realtor
LLoyd Edwards
Phone 266-4501 - Re*. 261-35^1
t i
annual clearance sale
For Limited Time Only
On Made-to-Measure Trousers
Lewis Men's Wear
298 SPADINA AVE. TORONTO
Income Tax Reduction
Retirement Income
Family Protection
Disability Pay Cheques
Mortgage Redemption
College Tuition Fund
— O —
MITS TANOUYE
NATIONAL LIFE
OF CANADA
923-0916
Toronto
447-8936
11
PAGE 8
NEW
CANADIAN
i
Revenge
(Cont. from Page One)
(Cont. from Page One)
Tuesday, January 16 1973
The New Canadian
instinctive
children were edu- ( As part of her
er
law. That they
PUBLISHED ON EVERT TUESDAY
;
bridging
of
two
cultures,
Yuki
AND FRIDAY
United States. But
were sufficient to convict 25 of basis of its historical veracity,
A
member
oi
Ethnic Pre# Assoaotis,
Irwin
practices
Shiatsu.
She
s.
both
Princeton
the 27 defendants maintains Mi-1 For the layman, maintains the the two
of Ontario.
”
has
a
Shiatsu
license
from
the
near, is an example of how legal / author, the validity or the To- graduates, went back to Japan
Second close marl registration
number 0365
Japanese government and a maprinciples were made to conform i kyo trial depends in large part .nd married Japanese girls.
ssage
license
from
the
state
of
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
conveniently to political expedi-; on the historical worth of its >
Samurai and DAR
K. C. TSUMURA
ency.
j verdict. “Does that verdict, we ;
English
Section Editor
Several
Manhattan
doctors
sts of hischarge of conspiracy, tor । ask, meet minimal
KEN
MORI
ukiko
Irwin.
That
makes
a
p?
refer patients to her. and she
Even
the
accuracy?
example, was founded on the lorica!
Japanese
Section
Editor
tite practitioner of Shiatsu in won’t treat anyone without
a
most biased panel of justice.
precedent set at the Nurei
479
QUEEN
ST.
WEST
. descendant of both referral.
Toronto
133,
Ont.
war c imes trial where Minear invoking the most questionable Manhattan
tne samurai and the signers of
Shiatsu was originated about
EMpire 6-5005
points out only b or 22 act end interpretation of international the Declarat on: in her veins me40
years
ago.
Pressure
is
put
the
most
law
and
following
found guilty, while 21
the blood of the founding on the same points as in acupun
of 25 of the Japanese defend dubious procedures. might have
of two very different na- cture, but needles are never used.
accu- fathers
ants were so convicted in To-! arrived at a reasonably
;
tions.
Yuki learned Shiatsu in Japan
i rate picture of prewar events in
Irwin
first
came
to
the
from a man who was treating
Help Wanted
individual re Japan and in the Pacific. But United States in 1953.
her
aunt
for
migraine
headaches.
i
if
the
verdict
cannot
his‘
sponsibility
war crimes
had been a high school
OPERATORS experienced on
“T never thought I would do
even i torical scrutinv'. then for us the • tudent during World War II,
committed bv tne state).
single
needle machines to work
the prosecution admitted to be trial lose: xt last claim to our j; and saw her family lose every it as a profession,” she says. on dresses, blouses, and shirts.
“It’s so tiring.”
an innovation.” notes rhe au respects.”
Excellent working conditions and
thing because of the war. It wa:
thor. “Official representatives of
In Minear’s view, those si : a disturbing■ time for a Japanese
Healing Art of Shiatsu
top wages.
Apply 22 Benton
the American
Government at ting in judgment at Tokyo fail- • descendant
of Benjamin FrankDoctors send her people suf Road, Keele & Lawrence area
in 1919 had rejected ed miserably in their attempt! Hn,
fering from rheumatism, muscle (Toronto).
liability for acts of to reconstruct the history of the :
spasms, migraine headaches and
so aiso did the French events leading up to World War :
Pride in America
A FOREMAN for produce pa
nervous
tension. For a while, she cking lines. Knowledge of pro
at
London in j II. Citing more recent scholar“I was always brought
up worked on the aches and pains
1945.”
duce an asset, also a few wor
i ship dealing with Japan’s deci being told that our American
of a New York ballet company. kers for packing lines. Apply
Furthermore.
asks
Minear, ion to
war. the author ancestor was one of the form
This way,” she
says,
“I’m
“Was aggressive war a crime ?
casts
considerable doubt on ders of America, and we should bringing the East to this country, Herman Cothran. Netkin Foods,
No. said the Un
Chatham & Frid Street, Hamil
whether any tribunal — let alone be proud of it,” she says.
not in terms of trade or mate- ton, Ontario.
Great Britain in 1944 and ! one whose bias was so patently J
So, axtex jiudyng Japanese rials, but in a wav to help people
France in 1945. Was the Tokyo obvious as the Tokyo court — is
literature
in college in Japan, Restore their health.
Room For Rent
Charter (establishing the iuris- capable of
such an she came here.
«j.m
very
happy
doing
it.
and
ion
ne court) ex post
and historically accuROOM for rent to responsible
“I thought I would like tojt helps to eliminate my search
said the French in rate judgment. . . . The pro
business person. Bath. Downtown
come to school to find the root for a sense of belonging.
Did negative criminal
cesses of history are too com$100. furnished. Parking $12.
culture.
exist Ao. s:
e
••Belonging
to
the
Society
of
o be subjected to the adShe :udied s ocial work at the
Phone 925-6294 (Toronto).
tes in 1919.”
judica ion of any tribunal. His- ! University of Indiana, and Bo : the Descendants of Signers of
Minear also find
proce- torical proce. does not yield to
the Declaration of Independence
ton University. She went
to
Paul K. Asada, D.C., NJ).
dural side of the Tokyo trial to adjudication:
j
(
helped also, because thev welcoand the attempt i New Yo
and
married
an
Ame■
__
j
■,
,
\
.
,
have been sadly
“Doctor of Chiropractic”
parhistory justiciable is ■ rican. They lived in Europe and ; med me and showed that racial
ticularlv with
rt
to such aoomea from the start.
। boundaries do not really exist,
728A St. Clair Ave. West
The > the Middle East. There
were
matters as the selection of jus|
Family
Mission
(14
block West of Christie)
of
t ices: As .11 the judges came butable in partTokyo were attri-. marital difficulties and a JanaTORONTO
s
to
bias
and
to
;
nese
divorce.
She
came
back
to
651-8060
Res.
621-1989
from vic to nations their impar- restrictions on
xdnussable evi- ; New A ork in 1961. working for । “We have always had the tratiali
w
dence. But the anger share of ; a time for a Japanese investment I ditic-n in our family that our
Defense
mission was for the sake of
the blame must fall on the b
tirm.
?s was to
humanity. The family tradition
Buy and Sell .
Your Home
sic misconception that the even!
at
Research on Grandfather
“the mem- at issue could be adjudicated
E
has kept me in trying moments,
Through
n
She has spent much time and especially in coming to this counthe
hard to rind fault with travel doing research on her try ail by myself. My grandfa
ons wno
Th]
nations
turbing
findings, grandfather's life.
ther had tnis dream that America
MELL REAL ESTATE Ltd.
His well
the
arched study, of
With Univer
of Pennsylva- and Japan should meet. Without
2008 Lawrence Av. East
io:, ur.cer the circum stances course, f
n the face of such
ry Conroy, she this sort of philosophy, I don’t
heir anno
re
vision
i;
Scarboro, Ont.
imparinterpretations
ot
produced one essay in a new think I would have survived.
757-5184
or
rewar
history
e men
as book C:
;t Across
the
“Everybody in my family had
appointed to the
in
ationa! that ot David Bergamini whose
of essays about Benjamin Franklin’s down-tomilitary tribunal, onl one had book “Japan's Imperial
Con- Japanese
ants. It details earth character and peasant
spiracy" ai
had previous backgro
Emperor
stock. The samurai bushido and
the prime mover ; the movement of Japanese
Rad Hirohito w
io the Philadelphia old gentlemen
h&biaod Pal of India. who
■e militari: m ana Hawaii
of
the
19th
are sort of identical — the way
irom should have
wrath of centurv.
they have a sense of honor, the
cou
tv oni- me Tokyo ti
with Tojo
ather did more for importance of hard work. That’s
Mines Us
sober
ownsend Harris or my discovery.
As to
scapegoats Commodore
Perry.” she says.
L- I had my way, I would
procedure
wx
itor tr
chapter in 0
ins r
irobaoh like to be born just ?
Minear ci
the rules of eper- ■ world h
it to
mple Japanese or American
ation adc
of
by the tribunal
SHOP
i place in J
n
Y
ukiko
Irwin
and
not
be
of the defendants ; sciousiy warping the flow of hu- storv.
torn between two cultures.”
and the r
of evidence ore- j man events to their own
Thi
733 Danforth Ave
Benjamin Franklin would pro
vailing du1
’ the Tokyo trial ; ends. Instead he opts fo a no domin
personabably be quite pleased, and not
Toronto
i tess compelli: g review of the
a
little
intrigued,
by
his
great• doubtful assui ptions which rePhone Store 463-3426
East and VS est Linkage
j suited in the one-sided verdict
t-great-grand
daughHome 469-0293
ter.
j handed down
“
I
am
in
the
process
of
wr
T
do
Japanese Food
ting a sort of autobiograohv
Deliver Evenings
! hold a b;
and Saturdays
how I have
to
It is a yood policy to
come
myself, espehere the RIGHT POLICY
ciallv now that E; st and West
a harsh judgment, but a
Cwuat
t judgment is called for. It is onlv
My families
William Wales Ltd
| i^fCk ^-^gation that in. puni- are sort of pion
in this area.;
Insurance Agents
leaders we and I wanted t
rite it down ■
tor
deceived ourselve:
2 A^toa St 10th floor
thi
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
the future.*
Phone 35S4681
CLASSIFIED
TOSH IWAI
s
YOUR
BLOOD
COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED
MONEY
MANAGEMENT
the greatest
gift of all
Buy & Sell — Your Home
Yamaha Music Course
Mils Kuroda
4 to S years — nearlv
two million graduates.
Free film demonstration, or
visit a class anytime.
231 Danforth Ave. 461-2467
2645 Eglinton E.
2 61-614 4
RobU Owen,
Realtor
LLoyd Edwards
Phone 266-4501 - Re*. 261-35^1
t i
annual clearance sale
For Limited Time Only
On Made-to-Measure Trousers
Lewis Men's Wear
298 SPADINA AVE. TORONTO
Income Tax Reduction
Retirement Income
Family Protection
Disability Pay Cheques
Mortgage Redemption
College Tuition Fund
— O —
MITS TANOUYE
NATIONAL LIFE
OF CANADA
923-0916
Toronto
447-8936
11