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The New Canadian — June 3, 1975

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Page 1

Letter From Italy Searching For "Those Soldiers With Eastern Faces
Lake.. The media covered it, in­ USA” is explained- in the letter
cluding the news magazines Ti­ below for the Time article does
The power of the press is a me and Newsweek, which also not mention-JACL anywhere.
known ; factor but what it means publish international;editions. He -had asked us: last Decemb­
for the good ■ name of the Nisei - Costa clipped what he
saw er, for more, information, about
worldwide became tevident again in TIME —- underlining the pa­ the 442nd- RCT —- and- we ob-recently. after a .brief ., exchange ssage that “many: volunteers, liged, since he intended ■ to writf *letters with an Italian busin- from .Tule Lake and other cam­ te about- the Nisei •. soldiers in
essman; Dennis Costa ? of Carra- ps went into the 442nd Regimen­ the local papers last month on
ra; who remembers as a lad the tal Combat Team, a Japanese A- .the: 30th - anniversary of their aarrival of the 442nd RCT 30 ye­ merican fighting ; unit ■ that ■ ser­ rrivar in Carrara. We sent him
ars ago to liberate his town.
' ved in Italy and . France with reprints- from' the Congressional
It was a year ago that the extraordinary distinction?’
Record/-paying / tribute, to the
Northern California-Western Ne- -. How he thought of ’ writing Nisei in uniform •and.-'a. photoco­
vada'JACL District Council or­ to. the “Japanese American Citi­ py selection' of clippings in . our
ganized a pilgrimage to
Tule zens League. Los Angeles, Calif., files. We also- encouraged- him

By HARRY K. HONDA

to write to the-442nd■ Club, 933
Wiliwili St.,
Honolulu
96814,
for photographs, since we were
not able to sp are any. Then we
asked, in closing, how he came
to ask.

as that would have meant for us
the end of' the war.. The last
(wanning)
jnonths
with the
front line had been very bad. Wh­
en at. last the first. American
soldiers arrived, it was a surprise to—see . them with ■ eastern
faces. -.

We are very glad he provided
“I’ve always had a • pleasant
background' in reply as • we let recollection of them since- they
his ?letter. explain why he asked, were -toe/symboL of -the- beginn­
the J ACL for information about ing- of a new life. They were nice
the 442nd. "
with us. civilians : and I 7 heard
< “I was only 15 years, old when- they <were: extraordinarily -brave
I saw those', soldiers. It was a
-. ' Cont. on Page;2
long time - we - awaited - the. Allies

fiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii|iiiiNiiniiii!

The Ueto Qawiian
An Independent Organ/for Canadians of Japanese Origin
TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1975

Vol* XXXIX — 43

How Many Orientals
Is Too Many?

Tokyo
Needs
Greenery

Toronto, .Ont...

Chances Of Big Tokyo
Earthquake Is Lessened

TOKYO.' — Most? members -th'at it’ belonged-to ah entirely
ofa- Government; 'body, bn.. earth- different 'geological^ age :compa-’
in - the - California delegation in
Bq BILL HOSOKAWA
guake forecasting agreed • recen­ red with water in-' other ' parts;
Congress together . with.. Repre­
tly that the possibility of-' a of the city.
It was another warm and soft sentative Talcott? In Mr. Tal­
violent -quake? hitting the TokyoWakita therfore; believed, the
May, fragrapt with the smells cott’s view, is Congressman Nor-;
; TOKYO. —•■ Deterioration of KaWasaki-Yokohama. area-has le­ old water had risen close to the
of spring, that the great uphea- man Mineta> damn: it, -one too
urban environment speeds up a® ssened a little.
earth’s ■ surface from ; depths se• val took place, 1942. How could many Orientals .in. toe .U.S. H'ogreenery gets scarcer with - in­
■But the area still; requires veralhundred r meters"-below the:
33 years — one • third of a cen­ use of Representatives ?
creasingly less heat absorbed by
close observations of / movements surface as a result of deep cru­
tury,— have slipped. by so swif-.
i There is a half - a world of di­ fewer trees, according to a stu­ of the earth’s crust for the.po­ stal movements.
- }*
tly ? .Yet the memories are vivid,
ff erence ■ betweenxtheiVietnamese, dy to be shortly^ 'announced.
4
(After!
hearingdifferent
'
views,
.
ssible occurrence,, of a ^severe
kindled: to life again by the cru­
refugees who are-seeking: to ma­
The
study
is
to
be.announced
mostcouncil
members"*'-agreed
eathquake,
according to' the
el, hateful remarks of a small
: minority criticizing the influx of ke new lives for themselves in by, Dr.- Iwao- Nakajima of* toe Earth qua keFore casting-Liai son that -the possibility? of’"a major toe -United-States,: and the Japa* .Forest^i-Researchv?fe
tjuake oecuiihg‘'in' the, -Tokyo- jDouncil. _
~
refugees from- Vietnam.
nese American evacuees of 1942. toeAgriculture-Foireistry/MiniTKawasaki-Yokohama area,> has
- The old fears, dormant all the- It . is not necessary to go- - into stry -.at; an- international, - sympo­ I Its views were announced .a- lessehed'a little. , ' ' ‘ _*
: se;years, are responsible for toe- toe * differences'. ; But. the. Anti- sium bn space " science, ' which fter. the council studied data;coL
lected
through - seismological
:se. remarks. The Vietnamese are Oriental; bias,’: largely, unheard will be held; in; Tokyo-,this , July.
surveys-of
the,.area byr Govern­
from for , these, many years, has , Dr. Nakajima warns that imcompetition - for American ■ -: j obs.
ment
and
-other,
research organi­
been revealed in.-recent- weeks
there are many ? unemployed ac- to be closed to—the ; surface of less, measures are - itaken; to?.pre!: zations in. the past several mon,vent further decrease- in greene­
> ross-the/land- in this year- of re­ the consciousness of some Amer ry, toe environment in a city 4jjs/^GSG|GSw^
cession and the Vietnamese,rhun- adcans.-GG?7K!G??^
which- abounds in. “artificially, .The council late last year is­ ,_ KATMANDU? —J'Two _ Japa-„/
Fortunately men of good will discharged heat’. will? worsen and sued an “earthquake warning’, nese,-climbers have died- after
gering? for opportunity, - working
making the "first successful assafor; the area,/ followingsto
with an - Oriental single-minded-: have spoken - up to-welcome; the will harm human health.
ut,
on,the' Himalayan'peak! 6t; '
The study was made 'on- toe covery? of ;an= upheavelvof/'one- to
ness; will take jobs
from A- refugees. The expresions of-ranc­
Dhaulagiri
Four, ’ toe fN«palese!'!'
or have been.mouthed by only basis of an analysis of? data - co-. four i centimeters in toe four pre­
mericans.
foreignministry?'
said/-jrecently.
ceding
years
in
areas
-within
a
a small minority. Congress, fa­ llecbed by ’ a U.S. satellite- as
Shiro
Kawazu,..32/a-chemical
ehradius^
of-five
to
10
kilometers
It is these fears that, no doubt, ced by a runaway: budget: deficit, \vell as data on- the distribution
gin'eef/
from
Moriguchi^and

Et,
of-Kawasaki-Station.
>
■;
moved California Congressman is . being asked to provide , hundr­ of trees, radiation - temperatures
surb
Yasuda,
..27,

a;cobk^at'
toe
L'
eds
of
:
millions
to
help
resettle!
Burt L. Talcott, Republican, to
near the ? ground 7 and -; air • pollut­
.Seismologists' reported' to the RoyaL Hotel in Osaka, reported
-toe
refugees,,
and
;
chiaces
;
are
:
that
say -what he did; -The Associated
ion in the Metropolitan Tokyo council- recently that there had
reaching; toe, summit. TKeir bo- 7 “
Press repeated that’ he said in when the shouting and tumult Jis
been no'lateral istrain in 'the
dies-'have, been spotted through
Washington he was “pleased: to ended toe administration will ,get
According to toe study, 100 .earth’s ..crust, , which usualy pre­
. announce” that : neither
Camp most of -what it has- asked for. per cent!.of : the areas near To­ cedes a major quake, and that1 a telescope,, hut have- not been 5'V
Roberts ■ n or - Gamp Sah - Luis ; Ob- ' There is a lesson in all this kyo’s- border? •.with ' Yamanashi: there Wad been no-quakes origi­ recovered.''';- .
spo/in his; district, will be used for those - of,us^whoise. faces mark Prefecture- are covered- with? gre? nating'at depths close to- - the
to shelter the-refugees.
" - _ »’ '; ;earth’s' surface "in: re cent-months.
our Oriental antecedents. Indivi­ enery.
J
The
rates
of greenery get sma­
“Generally, my district was mo­ dually we ? may, have made it, se­
The surveys - also J.ound /tliat
re positive, understanding
and cure in social aridGeconomic- po-, ller/toward the -center? of* Tokyo : toe- level of .underground water
compasionate than some
other sitions- painfully arrived at. But with a .total amount pf-Tsulfur, in.Kawasaki-has risen since Apareas,”'the Associated Press re-" as a - group we. are- still, vulnera­ nitrogen/? hydrocarbon, ;"/carbon" 'ril last year in',.,proportion to" a
JTOBA'/—/ Queen „ Elizabeth II
ported'he said." “But-there is a- ble b ecause. th e angry, frighte­ • monoxide < and'?5- other. • pollutants sl^p<drop • in jtoe-avbjume-^
of , Britain -?recently. visited . toe. nother-feeling that, damn it, we ned/ unthinking- person isn’t go!, •reaching 10,000 - to 30,600. tons dergroundwwater^ pumped^up ■ in; toriheconsecratedr^’to-toeGgod-J <
.have too. many . Orientals.’,’. The ing to - distinguish (between-a/for a^ year-in the'center of’Tokyo.
dess who, according<to< > legend,"
the city.’“Associated/Press'; went, o
Meanwhile, radiation heat is
urth generation American, of ? Ja­
founded;Japari’sJlmp^al/TamilyG
This led most expert'members
. port. Talcott’s office / explained panese ; or Chinese. extraction. and absorbed" increasingly’-less?, as
of the council!to-believe' that the - A -priest!took' thte_queen?/intojthis - was the" view’ of some ' of a .Vietnamese - fresh / off an. eva­ toe; greenery rate?:d
marked rise; in the level of _un£ t^unp^nt^^oodai’Stiwu^
-. his / constituents and - not * those cuation airlift. They‘ are, in -his the. city, center.
"
! '
dergr ound .water ■ was due to inc- whiclf~is?!rebuilt'~eveTy. 2O years.'
of the: Congressman, a prudent view," all, damn it, Orientals. , rV
Temperatures in areas ?: with -reased - restrictions; on, the ■ pump­ The last time^was.in/1973.
■’ if :not- especially convincingidiscr
greenery
rates,!of
50'
to

80
"per
" We will continue to be vuL
ing-up ?ofx subterranean water ra­ ! ,She did!not "view .the^minwr '
laimer."
nebableuntilthe-great-, U.-S.pub- cent rise.twice a-s fast as- those ther than to 'movements of, the said"fo .actually Have ^been!han­
- . How many Orientals is too ma- lic accepts the fact that Ame­ hear w ater surface,—:. and tempe­ earth’s crust.
■• \ - - '- ~ - ded: to/the! first/ emperor? byjthe
®y? Is one too many A hund- rica is made up of-. immigrants ratures -rise four times :as- fast; in
/However,;a.survey?by .someex- sun goddess and/which^'isJ .not
ted? A thousand ? .Should. there from all points; of the -Compalsls ( areas • where . greenery
accounts perts/ including/ Hiroshi? Wakita, shown to! toe public/ - - * ...........
he a quota-on the number of — not.-just Europe alone — and j for. less than • 10,per .cent of. the
an assistant / at University of \ Some grbups-of .Christians, had
Orientals tpermitted;.to live, Volte all1 shades of skin color and • fa- total area.
Tokyo,found --that' some ^.under­ protested: toe queen’s// visit to
and make; a~ living in. any cong­ cial configuration, and‘those who ' Dr. Nakajima warned, that greground- water s in. .an • area "east of the Shinto■ shrine, r saying- it was
ressional district? And, what a- set, foot on" these shores yester- .eenery is getting scarce'not only
the ’ Toyoko _ Railway „ Line was • discrimination/against/other - res,
bout an American of Oriehtal exmore
than 16,000 years /old and ligions.! , .
(Cont. on P; 2)'.

Jpnz Climbers
Die After Climb

®B|iiBlS^^

~ tra^on~ who ~ shares * a-> ^

(Gout, on F. 2)

Page 2

THE

PAGE 2

Soldiers . . .
3>al-

ww
sfe
^
Is

it

C;
is
4

(CanUfremPageODe)

NEW

CANADIAN

Tuesday, June 3, 1975

A Good Guide To
Japanese Antiques

Tin New Canadian
A member of Ethnic Preas
Association ; of Ontario
’ ■ ’ Second Class mall
No. D-0366

\ in combat.'But it had all the ti- le the’ 232nd Engineers' (also of
me been, a mystery who actua- the ’442nd) -were behind trying
iiO8i0|l^iS^^
to open up^ Highway TYrom Ma; ssa ' d^
S PUBUSHEB ON EVEHT TUZSDA'T irig supplies. The road had been
/ /talked /about/them
AND . HUDAT ,
were Filipinos and evep. in some ingeniously mined by" the retie- . JAPANESE ANTIQUES, by -j flated times. Though the -author,
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
ating Germans.' 'I'
'
' Patricia Salmon, Tokyo, Art In­ who quite wisely
includes no
K. C. TSUMURA
mention of possible prices at all;
them/; they-.are called Filipinos.
Carrara .served as, regimental ternational -Publishers.,; 256 pp
English Section Editor ; ;
is not,, precisely discouraging' re­
KEN MORI .
- command post and was - soon plates, -112; maps, 8. ¥2,250.
SSadlSijmin^^omgS^CTimii subjected to enemy artillery. For
- Japanese Section Editor
garding the possibility of the big
By DONALD RICHIE
bargain^ one should not, I think
. .sources to make that sure.
’ 479 QUEEN -ST/ ^
:
: actioh.'iriya^
except
to find it. Rather, perh­
“In'the years-after the-.war, ■ (April ^-ld) the' 442nd Infantry
Toronto, ■ Ont; ■ «M5V-2 A9 /
This is, a .book -for which ’ resicontent to
and the 232nd Engineers were dent and^. tourist alike; have long aps, one should. be
366-5005
pay.
what
the
object
is
worth

ffre^ea^rm^^
iateri/awarded'fe
been waiting.' It is ,a knowled?^n§jii5®8^v|^i^
Unit Citation.
■ geable,. organized- and handy gu­ or maybe a bit more. •.
■-'(Ifwon’der/ifthe-Y
'<?A'.?Svee.Rv lat^
(<ajnd,.-,;now - ide to Japanese antiques’' and / • Certainly; the pickings are ge­
Broke”, was fever‘ distiite
U.S. Senator) Inouye led _his where in Japan to acquire them. tting, /slimmer by the day. Japan,
swaps
Italy.’-- E^)
Co. ;E .platoon in .-an^ assault, of
Antique hunting has, of cour- is no longer a big attic filled
Help Wanted___
with antiques, for the • talcing.
Mt.
Nebbione
where
his
actions
s^lsBifi^in^^
s6, long ;been a: ppp^
§jj£;#ai^in1®^
culminatedjnclearing^^
tion here. From the earliest on, Generations have .made;their - di­ NIGHT : care-taker’ waited, 6 to
of German /observation/: ^
to travelers have - departed1 in. - tri­ nt and: the postwar visitors ’have 12 o’clock; Ask for Sam Hagino,
merit . the ; pistiniguished ;. Service umph waving their ' purchases scrapped the barrel all but,'bare. 429-0676, Japanese Canadian Cul­
///(furilikjrfy/fthere/K^y^^
Cross '('(second to'; the/ M
■ iCertainly the author does not tural Centre.. .
aloft. 7‘Some, indeed, ca^me <app
WjS#;Uni^/:^/Y^^
Honor.) He had Continued
to arently'only to shop.
think . too highly of acquiring a
EXPERIENCED sewing machine
' > remained.
. - ''
- - : fire7at:'eriemy-/^e
Henry. Adamis, here in the 18- collection as an - investment. Her
55;
til his right 'arm ,was'shattered 80’s i and hating every moment- grounds are rightly . and firmly operators for sewing blouses at
Apply in'
by-a grenade. In spite of pain of jt, found respite in Yamana- ethical and aesthetic,
///infTIMEf^/whiehleiicl^
but I home
person
to
Better Blouse,; Go.; 460
ah£|r«fSising|tey^^
think she is‘"oh equally strong
ka’s-antique "s^
itiS^iiNlg^
Richmond
St. W. Toronto (First
irectodAtfe^
very much in business) and. the economic ground as well. It is
'//■pilgrimage/repo^)'^
Floor)
;
-,
' z
.
carried .'the -ridge.'

:. various ’emporia . of .“
ll^tSil^^
difficult to imaginej antique' pri­
ces higher than they are: now. ■
'< 'served in Italy and thought that 7/lri/t^
Nikkb./His; letter
aignt»7c^Pture-Mt:;F^
the bargains he discovered thoNonetheless, the lure is strong
for 30; years'I
unsuccessfully before' .the/move -into? -.
ugh’ ’ just'v^
and ;rib longer > w
.Tf^/Spc^:^^
//;riied;/to71aiiow;/alPab
he acquired remains a mystery. ■ antiquehunter shave to venture
of the ^
Anythingtoobig/to^
/•///to
out : uriarmed; / Patricia; ’ Salmon’s
so moie wll! live
'j//:^
squad pinned under a . barrage lied “a Chinese vase.”
'
excellent -'book,-; attractive to aS.niaiMne^n^
/•///jUCep/^
mateur and afficiando alike, tells
Yeteyensuch-to
//f|/irij^iie|same^
re.Oneurie^^^
sitors , of RudyardvKiplihg were how to get what you ’want,’ what
£^ja^nese&^^
uncbd from; his^
soon shopping'for- prints
and it' is,-where to find if,-and-hdtw
ed’towaid two helpless7^ comra­ brocades and carrying . home a to care, for it after it is yours.
|iflllj|i)||^^
des- in ,a - shell crater. He' rose, number of objects -the original
BfiOiilflo^a&bni’OWfi#®^^
into, the;withering fire, dived for use of which they had not the
the grenade and smothered the slightest 'idea. In , the
^gS^Cos^giiil^^
decades
blastysrith- his own body.. This he^ that followed possibly hundreds
: (Cont. from-Page One)
, .^in .hopes’ of^writing with-someone r»ic action, ofApril 5. hel ped. cle- of incense boxes-came to hold
(ar/'the/'pat^
paper .clips and rubber
bands dlay are just as much entitled
B.uy1 & Sell Your Home *
||i||||l|My|§f^^
advances iNunemori' was posthu- and perhaps thousands of small to the opportunity of making
mously^
awarded
thei
.Medal
of
/Bgthe7entir^3rd
hibachi became ash trays.
their' way in this land as those
. , Through
Honor. >
i I
S^gstpmps^es^^Ijl^^
One attractive item for the who have been here for nume­
iSMWiii®^
There is a small church, the beginner - in Patricia ' Salmon’s rous' generation®..
,j|^®i^aitterea^
Chapelqf/St.Lucia.ontopof book is that she. begins by telling
The plight and confusion of
a'^Hili,'af; the ;fobt-bf : ^
you ,what everything isand sho- the - Vietnamese . refng
Representing
J^^XlEmlil^^
(fmi^Cbsto'Sliye$^^
wingapicftureofit.S^
processed through miliitary cam­
dershands' that some 442nd GIs of the' objects are mysterious .to p's; humane as the intent may be,
Robert Owen/ Realtor
(Idst^heif/jiiyesV^^^
clBi|l3j|i<!«^
the''West(andto;youngJap^ is all too ' painfully ' reminiscent
;Sgi^it||^i^
as;wel^
< w 2685 Eglinton Ave. East
even after all these-years. What
cated with a marble piqque ,.pCa- good to know that you have ac­ are we as a group doing to give
Phone 266-4501 Res. 261-2581
ced in'meriiory of the 442nd men’. quired a chopstick holder or a them a hand? ’

..
Iliiii^iKfli^^
" Costa' siaysLthe priest-who-was sKeilg^e ji^'x when that ,is what
'at the'Church wheh .it .was shell­ you have done. The owner of an
||||||ai|i||^^
ed - died last year.. He had been old-fashionedsewing bo'x, so muunsuccessful ’in
his _ inquiries ch.like-a new Louise Nevelson,
with’ the. American' government ■might well jbe -baffled , if not in(Cont from Page One)
to. learn .more about the /442nd. formed.
in large cities but also in local
I
At -Evergreen - Cemetery I here . There are over 90 categories urban ’areas; /He/said//^
&.-f>j^
'on-/-theV:eas^
of antiques in this book
and that - it would not be impossible
is/a/ro
while a; tansu .is. apparent;to - all, to check the trend. ,
^fe
.from Carrara before the section who but the' initiated cou’d; ma­ - He suggests that the rate of
ke -anything out of a juibako ? greenery.: can be raised1 to 40 per
wheresomei.'o^^
area Nisei GIs' of the 442nd lie Each is well explained, possib­ cent- in the heart of Tokyo by
burri^.;;^
le. points of; excellence, iri the ex­ planting trees on roofs: of buil­
#1000 WEEKLY DRAW
a<(statue. of' Pfc.' Munemori. The ample you. have in mind.are in: dings.
MAY 28th WINNER
letter • from' Dennis.' Costa - - (42, dicated, and its ' care and s mainMR. PHIL STEIN
rVia./'.CavMala<^^
; tenance . are explained.: All/ of us
;Oa^ara/:54Q3i;i^
do not have. the
quickness, of
DON MILLS, ONT.
have ^oine at ,a more . propitious, Jean Cocteau who, here in the
NO. 906
1930’sfourid;a/ma'rvelous;:/;b^
occasion-as/the/^^
mysterious cage-like ^ ^ structure,
Memorial' Day on May 26.’
and then — with the lightness
associated with that poet — po­
JUNE 10, 8. P.M.
221' Kennedy Road, Scarboro pped in a cricket.
CENTRE’S GENERAL
■Tel 261-7040 Free Delivery,/
Where to acquire - what
you
MEETING
have.'by now/.identified' is ■ next
ORDERS FOR OBENO
JAPANESE CANADIAN
taken up by the author^ and an
.
CULTURAL CENTRE

ACCEPTED.
entire appendix : is / given .. oyer
tormaps/indicating (the' location
123 WYNEORD DRIVE
OPEN SEVEN DAYS WEEK
RCA — ZENITH
DON MILLS. ONT.
asOBM® of bona-fide antique -. stores / in
the,/Tokyo,. Kyoto, and Kamaku­
ra areas.'/ Not included are thoCOLOR T.V.
^ap;
^Oillllii se in Ueno,, Asakusa, and 'ShiWhen Buying Or Selling A Home
rijuku/fbut th^e are really junk
Stereo , Components s shop’s\by now/.arid/ m
CaU KEN HORI
all/reliable/antique hierchants 'in
1955 MIDLAND AVE.
Pk«m >;8tore443-S42l
the city appear.
’ ^ORtoLE ^
Even the junk shops /charge
SCARBORO
Phone
759-15M
W
MEMBER OR TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
now what the- trade will' bear.
(Itetwe^/El^irtoif^
L7r> Japans /Food s?s
14
Perivale
Cree
Phone: 431.9191 '
Henry Adams, ,cries of . jubila­
®5*y^W“®wss
,z ;- '■
Scarborough, Ontario/'
tion at'Yl for this or Y2 for
that ; sounds but dimly in pur. in-;

CLASSIFIED

HEART
FUND

^5

Hosokawa

Mits Kuroda

Tokyo...

BEBLOOD

SANDOWN
MARKET

iwwoi
TELEVISION
a RADIO

GIFT

K. HORI REAL ESTATE

Page 3

Tuesday, June 3, 1975

THE

- TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL GHURGH
A •
■ St. John's Presbyterian. Broadriaw at Simpson Ave.
- SERVICES:
. ? - • Sunday Sunday -School and .Warship Services 2:00 P.M.
Tuesday: Ptayer and Study Fellowship 8:1)0 P.M.
F-lday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 PJ4.
;;? :/ Phone intact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-8128, Mr. H. Yoshida 481-1686.

JUNE 8, 1975

10:30 A.M. Religious School :
11:00 AM-. Memorial Service for
Sangha-Dana Members
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service ■
-

Specialty
Shop

918 Bathurst St..
Telephone: 534-4302

Y. Glen Katsuyama
BARRISTER & SOLICITOR
37 MAIN ST. N.

/. Authentic Oriental Gifts
Kimonos & Accessories '
Noritake China

MARKHAM; ONTARIO

PHONE (416) 294-5230

NEW

CANADIAN

PAGE 3
It la a . good policy, to
have the RIGHT POLICY

Dates And Doings

CoiMU

Tokyo Pavilion At J.C. Cultural Centre
TORONTO. 7— 'Caravan; the annual event devoted to Canada’s
various ethnic cultures 'and heritages,-' will bi held throughout Me­
tropolitan Toronto from -June 22,- which, is Sunday, through. July 1,
Tuesday. As -it was the ease last year, your Centre will be directly
involved in CARAVAN 1975.; It will be known officially as TOKYO
PAVILION where Japanese dances will be performed,- arts and
crafts put on display and foods and drinks served. Plans also - call7
for an outdoor beer garden with lots of Japanee. beer to quench
one’s thirst.
.Memories' of CARAVAN 1974 still are vivid. About 30,000
.people visited uis during, that year’s Caravan. Tn all, it was- a suecess ■thanks to the generosity, untiring effarts' and-patience of those who volunteered. We believe the same success awaits us this'
year. .Activities' toward,.that end already were underway as the
NEWSLETTER neared its deadline. Much still needs to be done
■before the. door to TOKYO PAVILION opens at 3 pin on June 22.
\ Ed Sano who heads a special committee organizing the acti­
vities says he looks forward to hearing from those who would like
to volunteer, in \heiping out with the activities at this year’s CA­
RAVAN 1975. The .Pavilion needs 200‘ volunteers for the duration

of CARAVAN 1975.

Z Carlton St. 10th flour
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-4681

Custom Picture
Framing
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
127# Tenet Street. Toronto 7, Oat.,
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
T«Ho NiaMmura
923-6877

SUITS FOR MEN

C. NOMURA
“Will call on you”
Made To Measure*

— J.C.C. Centre

Phone 694-9553

Residence 294-5950 '

’ 463 E g 1 i n t o ri Ave. W.
phone 489'-8611 '

(Within Toronto)

"Parent's Day" At Toronto Buddhist
Church Becomes Unique Service

(

Joronto Japanese Language
School And Kotobuki-Kai

PICNIC
No. Orde Street Public School(Central) 'No. '2 Wexford Collegiate (Scarboro)
No. ,3 'Jackman Public School /Associate)
; At High Park Area. l(No;. 3) {near Bloor St. Entrance
SUNDAY, (JUNE 8, 1975 h 10 AM. v (ADMISSION $1.00 per Family
Game's, {Races/ Bingo, Prizes, Refreshments
( Parents planning to enrol children in the Language {School in
: the Fall ;are {especially invited, to join us together with their
children. Public welcome
'
' '
- . SPONSORED BY PTA, IJIKAI and KOTBUKI-KAI

'

William Wales Ltd
Insurance Agents

TORONTO.— Reeenty at the Toronto Buddhist Church,'Pa? rents’; Day was observed on May 11th. Ordinarilly, it w ould be a
routine seryice... In most churches, the theme for? the day would be
“Mothers’ Day”,: but • unlike . others, it has been a. long tradition at
TBC to call it,' “Parents Day”.
,,
; ;; u What’s so unique about this service?' It was a total* partici­
pation by the young people of the church who planned and direct­
ed the: servicerto. honour the “niisei” parents. The sentiments were
aptly expressed by Lloyd Komori who. was the speaker and whose
words reflected the sentiments of his peers.
The service--was mc’d by Larry Wakisaka and scriptural re­
ading? by Connie Nishimurla. In place* of the. normal playing of
prelude by the organist, Doug Kawasaki,- Carthy: Kagawa and: Ju­
lie Suyama gave instrumental" and vocal presentation.
The members of the youth department pinned carnation butonniere to; the morning service worshippers jand; p rovided the ush­
ers too. Following' the^ service refreshments were served to the
■congregation. .
- T.B.C.

Buy and Sell
'Your Homo
Through

TOSH IWAI
MELL REAL ESTATE' Ltd.
2008 Lawxence Av. East
Stations Ont..
757-5184
,1 ~

DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
FISHING TACKLE
&WORMS
i
1202 Danforth Ave.
' At Greenwood.
CRetoe SUtanika

4j53«7400 OPEN FHL UNTIL I P.M.

200 CARS IN STOCK
/ For Immediate Delivery

"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment

'

_

VEGA — MONZA — 2x2 — NOVA — CHEVELLE

Mon. — Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto Suite 120A Phone 363-0952

CHEV — CUTLASS — OLDS 88 & 98

Eve. By-Appointment
Art Wttanbe

;

TORANADO & TRUCKS

'

/

OF TORONTO

•FORMAL RENTALS
;

“7 Cuttom Mode Suit* -

* TrouMr* ?

WE BUY, SELL, & LEASE

West York Chev-Olds
1785 St. Clair Ave., :^Tordnto,Qnt.

Harry Fukushima — 762-8171

BOOKS OF INTEREST TQ
JAPANESE CANADIANS

THE JAPANESE AND THE JEWS

1 -437 Danforth Ave. Toronto

/

BY ISAIAH BEN-DASAN
$7.50 POSTAGE INCLUDED

^oL443-Bi04

X CHOICE OF DREAMS
.

KISARAGI CLUB'S
25th Anniversary DinnerADance
'



'at prince hotel
June 14thy 1975 -

- 7 - p.m. to 1 a.m.

(Bar opens at 6:30 p.m.) Gus Armitage" and his • Band .
Admission $15.00 per person, a
For tickets please contact Executives of. Kisaragi Club

By JOY KOGAWA
$3.25 POSTAGE INCLUDED

COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED

"EXODUS OF JAPAWH"
By Janice Paton

money

- A Pictorial narrativoJof Tho Japanoso Canadian - Evacua. ’
Hon. during World War II.
’ $2.00 postage included

MANAGEMENT
' Income - Tax/Reduction
. Retirement Income
Family Protection

STELLA ITO'S "SUKIYAKI"
'Over 60 favorite recipes^ ;
$1^5 postage included
A CHILD IN PRISON CAMP
By SHIZUYE TAKASHIMA*
, $8.00-POSTAGE INCLUDED
THE NEW CANADIAN PUBUSHER
479_Quoen Street ' West; Toronto, Grit. : M5V/2A9

MITSTANOUYE
NATIONALLIFE
OFCANADA
:
.

522 UNIVERSITY1 AV*,' /
SUrrRTOR.TORONTO

Page 4

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221Kennedy-Road,Scarboro,
Tel. 261-7040 — WeDeliver

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-4S RICHMOND ST. WEST



SUITE'301



TORONTO

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942 PAPE AVE.
[TORONTO, ONT. a

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GINZA,
RESTAURANT ;
5130 -Dundas. Street West,
Islington, Ontario
~
231-4000

AUTHENTIC JAPANESE DISHES
"MICHI"RESTAURANT
459 CHURCH STREET,
328-QUEEN ;ST. WEST,

_
J

PHONE 924-1303
PHONE 863-9519

Toronto, Ont

Page 6

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Toronto;; M5V2A9
Tel. 366-5005
Second class < m
No
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