Page 1
fokyo, World's Largest City, Has One Of The Lowest Number Of Murder?
TOKYO. -^ -T^
•istics have an unexpected, you’d
Er.believe-it quality
about
M Th^ are all the more re"kable given the
generally
high rate of casesolving achiev
ed by the police.
'
-What! In this giant metropoonly-189 murders were comJm last year? And 180 of
theSe were solved?
0Be of the world’s largest citi_ 11.6 million people — had
only 420 repoited cases of rape,
of which 378'were cleared?
in fact, run down the 19 major categories of offenses under
the penal code and you’ll discov
er that alT but five registered a
decrease in 1974, and all but one —: embezzlement — was down from its 1970 level.
And in most categories, the
clearance late last year
was
80%, or better.
By comparison, Toronto and
Montreal each with a population ’ and may, indeed, be becoming
of around 2.7 million had 35 and safer by the year.
And if it’s the bustle - of the
66 murders respectively, in-1974,.
198 and 79 cases of rape, respe city’s traffic-that worries you, ju
ctively. There were 1,554 murd st remembers that there were
ers and 4,054 rapes in New York 434 deaths and; 45,406 injuries
City/which has a population of caused by traffic accidents last
year — in a city where there
9.7 million, less than Tokyo’s.
But chuck statistics. They sim are more- vehicles, than,there are
ply confirm what every visitor people in Toronto or Montreal.'
In. fact, Tokyo is safer, in this
to Tokyo knows — though its
residents probably take too much regard than many other parts in
or granted — Tokyo is safe, Japan. What’s more, it’s , safer
today than it was five years ago.
Since
Since 1969
1969, the
the number
number of
of rere
gistered . vehicles has increased
by 33% to 2.7 million. Yet in
each of the last five years, both
the number of deaths ‘caused by
traffic accidents and the number
of injuries has decreased, until
today (1974 figures) they are
52% and 42%, .respectively, of
what they were then.
(Cont-<m P. 2)
ijiiHiiiiniHiiiiiHiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimnmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiii!
The Ueto Canadian
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. XXXIX — 75
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1975
.
Toronto, Ont.
wililiH^iil■>li■■||||llllllllllllllll^inmllllllllllilllll,ill,,lillllllli,lllllllllllllm,llm,lllllllilll,^^^
Richmond School Named After
Ex-foreign Minister Ashamed Sansei SLA’er
Early Steveston Issei Pioneer
Of Japan's Role In 3rd World; “Always For
The Underdog”
RICHMOND, B .C. — Richmond School. Trustees have named the:
district’s proposed seventh junior . secondary^ school after a promi- ;
nent long-time Issei resident of Steveston.
.'
- ‘ -
iTOKYO. — A former Japan- ! daily said.
.
ese: foreign ‘..minister : says Ke -is ^ The foreign minister until last
“ashamed” of a speech made at December visited several African
Trustee Betty Speers recommended , the name. Tomeklchi Ho-,
a recent' United Nations meet countries and was viewed as a
■SAN FRANCISCO. — Wendy mma, an early ~ Japanese Canadian * residents of Steveston, ■ who ::
ing for “lack of 'content”' and chief advocate^ of Japan’s over Masako Yoshimura, the Sansei
“strove to have Orientals naturalized as British subjects.”
;
chargesJris government'witirpro- seas economic aid.
woman arrested with Platty He
He told the Mainiehi: “Our do arst, remains one of the lesser
She said residents of Steveston had a “high regard” for -the
osing little ;to aid the develop
ing countries, the. Mainiehi" Shim-. mestic economy m!ay become he- known figures in the
man
who struggled for equal- rights for Japanese. *
bizarre
althy, but we are losing supp- history'of the SLA.
,|biin said.recently.
\
The new school will be sited on 10 acres of Board land at '
nations
' The nationally-circulated
da ort from non-aligned
Although never before recog No. 1 Road and Steveston Highway. Working, .drawings, .of the ^ *
ily said, what appears to be a and are: the least active among
nized
as a -member of the revo project-have not yet been started.
-- -; / --; . .. -, i'’/"/”
advanced
countries.
”
in
efforts
self-criticism7came during an inlutionary
group,;
Yoshimura',
32,
to
fill
the
gap
between
the
poor
terview /in ..New York with To
has been associated : with radical
;
shio Kimura .who led the Japan- and rich nations.
and
underground organizations
“We are too conservative,” Ki
ese delegation to. the U.N. Gesince
her days' as an art student
neral'Assemibly on economic mat- mura said, in questioning, the
in
Oakland,
Calif.
,
■
future of his own country which
Yoshimura’s name first came
k Kimura spoke to *the Assem has -depended on foreign trade
TORONTO. — Subject >:of a T4-year-old<Sansei:-on,;the atage
bly recently, .endorsing dialogue to develop its domestic economy.- to light -in connection with/the
romantic
- Paul Anka, song' at and serenaded her' with /“LetVMe
between the rich and^poornations ' An embittered foreign ministry Hearst case in Oct. 1974, when
the
recent"
Canadian . ^National- Get- To KnowYou/’.' She also're
and urging ■:international 'guaran official conceded there was con her. fingerprints;?along with tho
Exhibition.
show
was pretty To ceived a kiss- at - the. conclusion.
tee of; stable income of the Th flict between the
foreign and se of -Patty and SLA ‘companions.
ronto
Sansei
Joan
Murai. * - - JoanisthedaughterofYoshand;
ird eWorld-nations for -their ex finance ministries. “We ,did want Bill and Emily Harris, reported-,
During
the
show,
the Canadian Takiko Muiai of Toronto. '
ports of raw materials. to put more in ■ our speech,” he ly were found by FBI agents in
singing
;
star
Anka,
invited . the
But his speech did not mention said, -accusing other govemment a remote Pennsylvania farmhou
what; actual . role J apan i s re ad y agencies for their lack of -inter; se. allegedly used as a hideout
by the SLA..
. J '
to. undertake to help ' . develop national diplomatic' approach.
he Third World nations. It also
since
.She had been sought
fell short, of clarifying - whether
1972 for, investigation, of conspiTOKYO. ’— Shiko Munakata, ed by wood-block® print works ' at-- -•- - •
Tokyo is willing to spend one
racy to bomb the. Navy ROTC known; f or his uninhibited -works an art gallery, her gave up; pain- ; ,
per cent of its annual gross n-a-,
headquarters at Berkeley. Three of woodblock prints So th in Ja- ting and decided' to-take/up^wb-.
honal product (CrNP) for. over
men were arrested and pleaded pan an,d abroad, died. ’of liver od-block- printing. ;
i. \
,
seas: economic aid programs. ;
guilty in that case but Yoshimu c ancer' a.t .- his - h ome' in Sugin ami
Munakata * used to call- ”, his
“I received the text of
my
ra went underground.
Ward,a Tokyo, on Sept. 13.’ He works “wood-block pictures’” in-'
speech after T accepted to be
stead;of wood-block prints?..
Born in a Japanese detention was 72.
FUKUOKA. — F’our identified
the chief delegate. ; - I felt ashBorn
on
Sept.
5, 1903 in Ao
camp
in
Inyo.
County,
Calif.,
;
YoHis works have a strong inSMed and- dissatisfied as I - read seeds estimated to be about 3000
mori, Mun'akata : studied oil pa
sihimura
wa
’
s
a
prize-winning
art
fluence
ofvarious Japanese folk - 1V’; the Mainiehi -quoted Kimu- years old have sprouted recently
inting w;hile working for. a black
student
at
Fresno
High
School
arts
'
but
at the same time they
after they were planted in a gl
•s as saying.
smith aftc-r^ graduating from ah
and
later
attended
Fresno
City
have
an
atmosphere of French
ass.
jar,
archaeologists
here
rep
/‘I will-'tell Prime
Minister
College for a year. .
- < elementary 'school.
pictures.'
'
(Takeo -Miki)* how - - delegates orted.
- He came' up to Tokyo in 1919
&w>kother?: countries reacted to
Two of the sprouts later per : She then transferred, to Merr
-r l.T 1951, he won ' the best aat the age of, 22. An oil painting
wari for. work entitled “NyoWx speech;
itt College in,Oakland, where-she
I will strongly ished, the archeologists said.
of -his won in the Imperial Art
;
They
said
the
seeds
-were
dis
nin
Kanzeon” in the Lugano In-. ■;
also
studied
at'
the
California
,BaKest/that -.the
government
^J? clarify its ; overseas eco covered at Shjka -Village near College of- Arts ; and drafts.: It Contest in 1928.
ternational
Wood-block - /Print
After he got - de eply? impress/ Contest-in 'Switzerland. - / - - '
southwestern Was in Oakland, her/fabher : said,
nomic aid policy by next May Fukuoka City in
J®, the ',U.N. Conference .on Japan when .they unearthed an that “ishe met .all those’radicals.’’
„ His works- also’won'the Sao.
~a<ie. and Development (UNC ancient tomb >. ofc .the Jomon ?Pe ' Described by friends .and re
Paulo International Art Contest”
■A^); CMlvehes in Nairobi/’ ? riod which dates back, about 3000 latives as a sensitive,/talented
Brazil, in .1955 ’and in the Bienn- ..
/^ Mainiehi said various -pro- years ago. , arist turned . social activist, :,Yoale. di Venezis the next. year. ; The seeds; were among
the shimura. lived, for ^a time . in a
^feon aid were raised from
; The late Munakata'is described
?e:text of Kimura’s . speech as thousands found, during the ex women’s art collective in Berke/
BELLINGHAM? —' in ao Ta as . the; founder of ; wood-block’
pedion from the finance mi- cavation that started in Februa ley and; was active -in the wom
bata, 74-year . old Richmond, gil- print art iri Japan and was awar-'
try which puts higher priori- ry. Included in the find were en’s and antiwar movements and
netter, -: was ■ arraigned in fede ded -a Cultural Medal by- the Gomulberries the revolutionary rVencermos
y;°? solving economic difficul- walnuts, chestnuts,
ral court at Bellinham on a-cha vernment in 1970 for ,his cont- .
and beans, as well as artifacts organization.
at -home.
rge of fishing. illegally in > U.S. ribiition- to Japanese art.
.-^ora, apparently with this of the Neolothic Period. .
Her connection with
radical waters after ; his boat
Pacific
His works are numerous and
Archeologist said: they -expect
5® ^, said: “We have to chanRanger
2
was
seized
•
by
the
U.S. he once opened : an.- art gallery'
groups
was
based
.more
on
em
^the?basic„ character of our go- the seeds will be“ useful in ^study
Coast Guard cutter Point- Rich in New York.. Many .of ; his wor- )SRf?t, which misunderstands ing the extent of agricultural de otion than on reason, h^i- associ mond ; allegedly fishing a -mile,
ks are also' displayed at' the O. ® trend in world economy while velopment in; Japan before rice ates: saith “If anything,' she was and a. half inside the UiS. /boun
hara :s Art Museum nrKurashiki,
makes: excuse of do- cultivation was introduced in this
dary. .
.
Okayama Prefecture. ■
'
Coit,
m Pare 2
-;^ economic difficulties,” the country.
. /
Toronto'Sansei Girl Serenaded And
Kissed By Singer Paul Anka At CNE
Modern Wood-block Master Dies
3,000-Year Old
Seeds In Japan '
Start To Sprout
JC Gillhetter
Caught In U.S.
TOKYO. -^ -T^
•istics have an unexpected, you’d
Er.believe-it quality
about
M Th^ are all the more re"kable given the
generally
high rate of casesolving achiev
ed by the police.
'
-What! In this giant metropoonly-189 murders were comJm last year? And 180 of
theSe were solved?
0Be of the world’s largest citi_ 11.6 million people — had
only 420 repoited cases of rape,
of which 378'were cleared?
in fact, run down the 19 major categories of offenses under
the penal code and you’ll discov
er that alT but five registered a
decrease in 1974, and all but one —: embezzlement — was down from its 1970 level.
And in most categories, the
clearance late last year
was
80%, or better.
By comparison, Toronto and
Montreal each with a population ’ and may, indeed, be becoming
of around 2.7 million had 35 and safer by the year.
And if it’s the bustle - of the
66 murders respectively, in-1974,.
198 and 79 cases of rape, respe city’s traffic-that worries you, ju
ctively. There were 1,554 murd st remembers that there were
ers and 4,054 rapes in New York 434 deaths and; 45,406 injuries
City/which has a population of caused by traffic accidents last
year — in a city where there
9.7 million, less than Tokyo’s.
But chuck statistics. They sim are more- vehicles, than,there are
ply confirm what every visitor people in Toronto or Montreal.'
In. fact, Tokyo is safer, in this
to Tokyo knows — though its
residents probably take too much regard than many other parts in
or granted — Tokyo is safe, Japan. What’s more, it’s , safer
today than it was five years ago.
Since
Since 1969
1969, the
the number
number of
of rere
gistered . vehicles has increased
by 33% to 2.7 million. Yet in
each of the last five years, both
the number of deaths ‘caused by
traffic accidents and the number
of injuries has decreased, until
today (1974 figures) they are
52% and 42%, .respectively, of
what they were then.
(Cont-<m P. 2)
ijiiHiiiiniHiiiiiHiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimnmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiii!
The Ueto Canadian
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. XXXIX — 75
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1975
.
Toronto, Ont.
wililiH^iil■>li■■||||llllllllllllllll^inmllllllllllilllll,ill,,lillllllli,lllllllllllllm,llm,lllllllilll,^^^
Richmond School Named After
Ex-foreign Minister Ashamed Sansei SLA’er
Early Steveston Issei Pioneer
Of Japan's Role In 3rd World; “Always For
The Underdog”
RICHMOND, B .C. — Richmond School. Trustees have named the:
district’s proposed seventh junior . secondary^ school after a promi- ;
nent long-time Issei resident of Steveston.
.'
- ‘ -
iTOKYO. — A former Japan- ! daily said.
.
ese: foreign ‘..minister : says Ke -is ^ The foreign minister until last
“ashamed” of a speech made at December visited several African
Trustee Betty Speers recommended , the name. Tomeklchi Ho-,
a recent' United Nations meet countries and was viewed as a
■SAN FRANCISCO. — Wendy mma, an early ~ Japanese Canadian * residents of Steveston, ■ who ::
ing for “lack of 'content”' and chief advocate^ of Japan’s over Masako Yoshimura, the Sansei
“strove to have Orientals naturalized as British subjects.”
;
chargesJris government'witirpro- seas economic aid.
woman arrested with Platty He
He told the Mainiehi: “Our do arst, remains one of the lesser
She said residents of Steveston had a “high regard” for -the
osing little ;to aid the develop
ing countries, the. Mainiehi" Shim-. mestic economy m!ay become he- known figures in the
man
who struggled for equal- rights for Japanese. *
bizarre
althy, but we are losing supp- history'of the SLA.
,|biin said.recently.
\
The new school will be sited on 10 acres of Board land at '
nations
' The nationally-circulated
da ort from non-aligned
Although never before recog No. 1 Road and Steveston Highway. Working, .drawings, .of the ^ *
ily said, what appears to be a and are: the least active among
nized
as a -member of the revo project-have not yet been started.
-- -; / --; . .. -, i'’/"/”
advanced
countries.
”
in
efforts
self-criticism7came during an inlutionary
group,;
Yoshimura',
32,
to
fill
the
gap
between
the
poor
terview /in ..New York with To
has been associated : with radical
;
shio Kimura .who led the Japan- and rich nations.
and
underground organizations
“We are too conservative,” Ki
ese delegation to. the U.N. Gesince
her days' as an art student
neral'Assemibly on economic mat- mura said, in questioning, the
in
Oakland,
Calif.
,
■
future of his own country which
Yoshimura’s name first came
k Kimura spoke to *the Assem has -depended on foreign trade
TORONTO. — Subject >:of a T4-year-old<Sansei:-on,;the atage
bly recently, .endorsing dialogue to develop its domestic economy.- to light -in connection with/the
romantic
- Paul Anka, song' at and serenaded her' with /“LetVMe
between the rich and^poornations ' An embittered foreign ministry Hearst case in Oct. 1974, when
the
recent"
Canadian . ^National- Get- To KnowYou/’.' She also're
and urging ■:international 'guaran official conceded there was con her. fingerprints;?along with tho
Exhibition.
show
was pretty To ceived a kiss- at - the. conclusion.
tee of; stable income of the Th flict between the
foreign and se of -Patty and SLA ‘companions.
ronto
Sansei
Joan
Murai. * - - JoanisthedaughterofYoshand;
ird eWorld-nations for -their ex finance ministries. “We ,did want Bill and Emily Harris, reported-,
During
the
show,
the Canadian Takiko Muiai of Toronto. '
ports of raw materials. to put more in ■ our speech,” he ly were found by FBI agents in
singing
;
star
Anka,
invited . the
But his speech did not mention said, -accusing other govemment a remote Pennsylvania farmhou
what; actual . role J apan i s re ad y agencies for their lack of -inter; se. allegedly used as a hideout
by the SLA..
. J '
to. undertake to help ' . develop national diplomatic' approach.
he Third World nations. It also
since
.She had been sought
fell short, of clarifying - whether
1972 for, investigation, of conspiTOKYO. ’— Shiko Munakata, ed by wood-block® print works ' at-- -•- - •
Tokyo is willing to spend one
racy to bomb the. Navy ROTC known; f or his uninhibited -works an art gallery, her gave up; pain- ; ,
per cent of its annual gross n-a-,
headquarters at Berkeley. Three of woodblock prints So th in Ja- ting and decided' to-take/up^wb-.
honal product (CrNP) for. over
men were arrested and pleaded pan an,d abroad, died. ’of liver od-block- printing. ;
i. \
,
seas: economic aid programs. ;
guilty in that case but Yoshimu c ancer' a.t .- his - h ome' in Sugin ami
Munakata * used to call- ”, his
“I received the text of
my
ra went underground.
Ward,a Tokyo, on Sept. 13.’ He works “wood-block pictures’” in-'
speech after T accepted to be
stead;of wood-block prints?..
Born in a Japanese detention was 72.
FUKUOKA. — F’our identified
the chief delegate. ; - I felt ashBorn
on
Sept.
5, 1903 in Ao
camp
in
Inyo.
County,
Calif.,
;
YoHis works have a strong inSMed and- dissatisfied as I - read seeds estimated to be about 3000
mori, Mun'akata : studied oil pa
sihimura
wa
’
s
a
prize-winning
art
fluence
ofvarious Japanese folk - 1V’; the Mainiehi -quoted Kimu- years old have sprouted recently
inting w;hile working for. a black
student
at
Fresno
High
School
arts
'
but
at the same time they
after they were planted in a gl
•s as saying.
smith aftc-r^ graduating from ah
and
later
attended
Fresno
City
have
an
atmosphere of French
ass.
jar,
archaeologists
here
rep
/‘I will-'tell Prime
Minister
College for a year. .
- < elementary 'school.
pictures.'
'
(Takeo -Miki)* how - - delegates orted.
- He came' up to Tokyo in 1919
&w>kother?: countries reacted to
Two of the sprouts later per : She then transferred, to Merr
-r l.T 1951, he won ' the best aat the age of, 22. An oil painting
wari for. work entitled “NyoWx speech;
itt College in,Oakland, where-she
I will strongly ished, the archeologists said.
of -his won in the Imperial Art
;
They
said
the
seeds
-were
dis
nin
Kanzeon” in the Lugano In-. ■;
also
studied
at'
the
California
,BaKest/that -.the
government
^J? clarify its ; overseas eco covered at Shjka -Village near College of- Arts ; and drafts.: It Contest in 1928.
ternational
Wood-block - /Print
After he got - de eply? impress/ Contest-in 'Switzerland. - / - - '
southwestern Was in Oakland, her/fabher : said,
nomic aid policy by next May Fukuoka City in
J®, the ',U.N. Conference .on Japan when .they unearthed an that “ishe met .all those’radicals.’’
„ His works- also’won'the Sao.
~a<ie. and Development (UNC ancient tomb >. ofc .the Jomon ?Pe ' Described by friends .and re
Paulo International Art Contest”
■A^); CMlvehes in Nairobi/’ ? riod which dates back, about 3000 latives as a sensitive,/talented
Brazil, in .1955 ’and in the Bienn- ..
/^ Mainiehi said various -pro- years ago. , arist turned . social activist, :,Yoale. di Venezis the next. year. ; The seeds; were among
the shimura. lived, for ^a time . in a
^feon aid were raised from
; The late Munakata'is described
?e:text of Kimura’s . speech as thousands found, during the ex women’s art collective in Berke/
BELLINGHAM? —' in ao Ta as . the; founder of ; wood-block’
pedion from the finance mi- cavation that started in Februa ley and; was active -in the wom
bata, 74-year . old Richmond, gil- print art iri Japan and was awar-'
try which puts higher priori- ry. Included in the find were en’s and antiwar movements and
netter, -: was ■ arraigned in fede ded -a Cultural Medal by- the Gomulberries the revolutionary rVencermos
y;°? solving economic difficul- walnuts, chestnuts,
ral court at Bellinham on a-cha vernment in 1970 for ,his cont- .
and beans, as well as artifacts organization.
at -home.
rge of fishing. illegally in > U.S. ribiition- to Japanese art.
.-^ora, apparently with this of the Neolothic Period. .
Her connection with
radical waters after ; his boat
Pacific
His works are numerous and
Archeologist said: they -expect
5® ^, said: “We have to chanRanger
2
was
seized
•
by
the
U.S. he once opened : an.- art gallery'
groups
was
based
.more
on
em
^the?basic„ character of our go- the seeds will be“ useful in ^study
Coast Guard cutter Point- Rich in New York.. Many .of ; his wor- )SRf?t, which misunderstands ing the extent of agricultural de otion than on reason, h^i- associ mond ; allegedly fishing a -mile,
ks are also' displayed at' the O. ® trend in world economy while velopment in; Japan before rice ates: saith “If anything,' she was and a. half inside the UiS. /boun
hara :s Art Museum nrKurashiki,
makes: excuse of do- cultivation was introduced in this
dary. .
.
Okayama Prefecture. ■
'
Coit,
m Pare 2
-;^ economic difficulties,” the country.
. /
Toronto'Sansei Girl Serenaded And
Kissed By Singer Paul Anka At CNE
Modern Wood-block Master Dies
3,000-Year Old
Seeds In Japan '
Start To Sprout
JC Gillhetter
Caught In U.S.
Page 2
THE
PAGE!
Tokyo Crime
NEW
Friday, October 3, 1975
CANADIAN
(cdnt. from page 1.)
The New Gangth
they also offer- the opportunity
• One-'can' trace /Tokyo’s -.relati-’j 250-500--;officers, -• .which - have ■several sub-groups’'called “Wolf,”,
for' the release of any, pent-up
three to four patrol cars assign- “Fang”, and “Scorpion.” ' The
Association of Ontario 7
emotions, which ■ might otherwiproduction:
of
a
bombing
manu
. Second* Class nun
/
ed_ to them.
• se manifest . themselves in socia
; - The visibility of these kobans al — “Hara HaraDokei”- (Belly
No. D-0366
;
is -clearly important . to a city Clock) — by its original memb lly destructive behaviour.
pUBUSKED OMEVEHT TUESDi. ;
-Q Shame is of the utmost im
that has- the world’s - largest po ers; acted as an- agent to attract
AND FBIDAY
;
portance
;
more
so,
perhaps,
than
lice force - about .43,000-men and others to the movement.
-.Tight gun controls
zT. UMEZUKI Publisher ;
Disturbing as they are, such in most societies.: Relatives, frh
: Recent history‘offers one imp women. More important, however,
K. C. TSUMURA
ends
and
colleagues
will
feel
as
ortant source- in the tight gun is the way in which, abo'ut half groups are on the .very perip
English Section Editor'
much
shame,
perhaps,
as
the
in
KEN MORI
controlsintroduced immediately the kobans, occupants are out hery of Japanese society, their
dividual who has - strayed . from,
violence
an
aberration
and
all
'
Japanese
Section Editor 7
patroling
the
streets
at
.
any
gi
after" the'/war by, ironically, the
the accepted pattern of behavio
■ Americon - occupation forces. To ven time,- to maintain contact wi- the more noted for its being a
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
ur; neighbours will - not hesitate
day, Tokyo , still enjoys severe th' the local people and busine- part of the essentially, placid en
Toronto, Ont. M5V-2AS
to inflict abuse "on the family , of
vironment it disrupts.
restrictions on guns — and nar sses.
366-5005
In addition, and peihaps beca one who has-committed a crime.
Not only do - they offer a reacotics — .as the-number-of he
The fear of ostracism.
carries
althy bodies walking the city’s ssuring presence —- so much so, use of their relative-lack of. succ
much
weight.
ess,
within
Japan
—
as
the
in
streets attests to, though these that a policeman is refferred to
A Trust — let it never be uns are ? “statistics’’ that can hardly as “omawari-san”, or Mr. Walk? creasingly international scale of
about —. but their familiarity •the'; Red Army’s activities also derestimated — is party 'to evebe assessed.
relationship,
(Even - the racketeer groups — with the people and area tends sug'gests —- their violence often ry transaction and
Help . Wanted
works,
and
-The
honor
system.
an/ estimated - 2,700./in. / number to ensure a steady flow of infor becomes inward-directed. Extre
never
counts
works
-well.
One
EXPERIE'N.CED sewing innchine
j .with? about'll ,000 members in JaL mation vital to crime prevention mist- groups are constantly attac
one’s change in Japan.
operators wanted for sewing bl«;
pan —'have not been successful and detection. A sophisticated co king one another. They are not
Of
course,
the
Japanese
can
averse
to
trying
their
own
mem
uses
at home. Apply in person;in. obtaining - guns. - Incidentally, mmunications system also. plays
be
rude
and
vulgar
like
the
rest
Better
Blouses Co., 460 Rich.'
bers
by
kangaroo
court
—
and
. both these/ numbers in. Japan —- -a role.'/ ■, ■
of
us.
And/there
may
be
social
mond
St.
W., First Floor (To;
killing
those
found
‘
‘
guilty.
”
-But wander ■ around ; one of To
have mot been' successful -in obtrends
taking
shape
in
Japan
ronto).
■
In
attempting
to
explain
—
taining.guns .-.Incidental; both kyo’s 'major entertainment areas,
these/numbers/Jfave: /apparently such as'/Shinjuku, some Friday Japan’s low crime / rate, even today/ — rthe -move toward the UPHOLSTERS wanted for fur."
you given the march of industrializa nuclear family; the growth of
■been- decreasing/ recently; for in or; Saturday evening, and
niture - manufacturer. Must have
Zresponse/to -police ;pressures, the will realize — feel — ■ how safe. tion and within the specific con “self-centred” attitudes — that over-2 years .experience. Finch;
text' of - overcrowded, stress-rid-, may or may not augur well for,
'groupsjdhave/been-;> strengthening Tokyo is.'
Weston Rd. area. Phone ,742-7742
A policeman will advise a ca den Tokyo, one must turn- to a the-.country’s future. . “
rtheir-^mutual -ties —Zthou^ als o
or evenings .and weekends 630:
But
if
crime
.statistics
are
a
> attempting/tq;/exterid /their ill.e- reless driver, via -' the loudspeak-.- variety of inter-related forces,
3734"
(Toronto).
major
.measure
of
a
country
’
s
he
gal' activities^?into imofe- profita- er on his patrol car, how/to turn rooted-in history, . which act as
alth,
Japan-,
is
.
in
pretty
'
good
left , properly - at a junction; a powerful - determinants in main
ble^areas.)
,
AGGRESSIVETashion co-ordina-'
shape. Perhaps: growing; healthier
- So successful: are these cont lost drunk will be firmly, but taining the tight social order
ted sales-persbn wanted full ti
by'the day.
*
,
—_ FT.
rols/-in fact, if seems and act of politely; given directions;. a pede that permeates Japanese life:
me for better, ladies sportswear,
*perversity ? for, / the? police, them- strian, again wia,the loudisp'eakef, Societal - factors
West . End, Toronto. Phone 244selves'Tp /continue;/to / be. armed will .be advised to keep to the si
1238. It is a society where:
SANSEI.
”— especially since,', in the whole dewalk for. her own- safety; Such
than
O Obligations, r'ather
of. last “year, according to. police is the not /untypical intercourse rights,- tend. to ; set the . tone ■ of
(Cent, from Page Ono)
records, police. revolvers - - -were between the .police and the pu-; the/ individual’s behavior. This is
Z ~ reinforced by -the deeply instilled non-violent,” said one friend “She
used in action on only -four occa- blic in Tokyo.
was not very-mature.”
■
/But
-there
is
violence^^
ssion, and two of these/ consist
CHARTERED
respect for authority that exists: / When questioned by- reporters
Indeed,
the
1960s
and
1970s
haed of firing warning shots'in the
. ACCOUNTANT
■ f The"Individual, in fact, te about his/ daughter last' March,
;ve? been pockmarked with demo nds to submerge his individual
air. ' ' / / 2261 Lakeshore Blvd. W.
- Certainly," the-'gene rally" high' nstrations/ protests and acts of ism within several groups — the Frank Yoshimura . replied with
Toronto, Ont. M8V-1AS
- educational standards ;of the po? terrorism', for which various po- family . and . work - groups - being one sentence: “My daughter al
-ople combined swith the low- un- litical/groups/espousingavarie- Especially - ■ - important —• ' which ways has been-for the underdog,’’
Phone 252-3513
, employemeht Tate; also' helps. ’ ty' of political and/ social caus :will; in all probability, ,retain his he said. "
Z But' tlieremarkable/homogeh- es; have been responsible]
loyalty throughout his. lifetime.
ity.of-theJapanese, people is The T960’s began with, then pre These- not only -ensure/ an'adheprobably/'far more '-important. sident Eisenhower canceling ta^ •rence : to the - social /norm,;' but
’ For, apart - from-, about 1630,000 proposd visit • to /Tokyo -.because
Koreans, and, a-mere,,sprinkling of Tears /for his safety /owing
2239 Bloor St. West
of1 foreigners, the' -/country has to mass demonstrations: prompt
Buy and Sell ~ ~ Your Home
- (At - Runnymede) Toronto
110'million people'.-who have, in ed-1 by the; revision of the JapanThrougii
U.S.' Security- Treaty.
- so/many Piesperts,
Phone 766-4292
LAW OFFICE
There'have been many others.
,tiiral,_. social- and- economic exp
OPERATED BY, .
erience, 'which reaches back thro However, the mass, and more
NAMIKI
& TANOUYE
ugh. centuries to bind them to- politically ■ obvious, demonstrati
3901 Lawrence Ave. East'
MELL REAL ESTATE Ltd.
ons of the .1960s have given - a• gether. ”
- Scarborough, Ontario.
2008 Lawrience Ave. East
- , Japa^n'isa' highly closeknit so- way to more extreme acts of in
Scarboro, Ont.
J Telephone: 431-1500
perpetrated
. ciety. And 'with/ no racial, strains, dividual terrorism
757-5184
Auto-Fire-Life
there is-nonWof ./the-criminal -a^ by more' radical and politically
- All Forms Of
obscure
groups.
And
since
inno
tivity. that, racial differences —
cent
-bystanders
have
been
invol
when- accompanied ■ by .various soINSURANCE
ve d, th e trend hasn’t been- wel
; ciaL<and/economic Jdispari^
Consult
_
-these usually are .— often . give come.
'rise /to. This] ho'mogenityP is; also / In December, 1971, the-wife of
C.R.C.A. — MEMBER — OJLC.A.
/ instrumental/in/ri
Tokyo’s police superintendantBus: 449-9891
SHEET IffiTAL WORK
ce’s' relationship with the public general, Kuniyasu Tsuchida, was
FLAT ROOFING
Home:
759-8317
UGHING
EAV?
■ of ? any/dehilitatihg '“them * and killed when she . unwrapped a
SHINGLING
parcel the-postman had just de
STEECO STEEL
us” attitudes. ' - .’ ,,
ALCAN ALUMINUM
/In fact,'the police ’have esta- livered and tripped' the detonaSIDING DEALiR
. blished a- generally -.harmonious tor>of a 'powerful explosive? Af
BUS. 961-7715
— 291-1673
421-3374 —
TORONTO
relationship /with the < public,/ tho- ter 15 months and massive inve
RES. 429-6206
NISEI OWNED.
METRO LIC. B-124
•ugh it' hasn’t always been thus. stigative effort, . the police arr
-And>since the force carries' a'cer- ested. four radicals/
.
“COVERING ONTARIO”
Unfortunately, terrorist bom
tain- prestige,—f- in a country
' Chartered Accountant
where prestige is, extremely imp bings have become to familiarSuite 2306
ortant -— there, is usually little an occurrence in Japan -— 52
2 BLOOR ST. WEST
problm ■ in ; finding /a sufficient throughout- -the country in 19.74
TORONTO, ONT.
.number:’of high-qualaty-, recruits alone. The most vicious to diate
each. year. .This, is in, stark con- took place / at Mitsubishi Heavy
/trasf/to^/Japan’s /“Self-Defense Industries Ltd;- in the MarunouForces,” ■ which /lead/ a father :di- chi business centre, of
Tokyo
LATEST STYLES
? spirited existence and suffer from last August. The/noon-time exJAPANESE
ALL E M3 HEIGHTS
chronically low morale.
,plosion leftweight■ dead and 380
RESTAURANT
./‘.Much - of .the, hai^
de injured/
LADIES 2 andup
rives] from crime : prevention 'me
About- 'another dozen .similar
MENS 4 and ip.
asures,./which/ are-highly . effec bombings followed, but after a459 Church St
MEDIUM
& WIDE FITTINGS
tive. ‘ ,
nother massive . police investiga
. Phone 924-1803
Throughout Tokyo • are to be tion, seven /radicals were arrest
, - 428 Queen St. W.
found -about' 1,250 police boxes ed in May (eight were originally
— or kobans, as; they are called arrested but one committed .su
■
Phone 863-9519
1328 Queen St. West
--- which are’ -- manried.' 24 / hours
icide upon arrest).
: "
Toronto
/ per day by from- one to 10 pb- /The suspects
proved to be
Phone 531 -1931 Toronto
Closed On Monday
. lice /officers. They - supplement .members of the East Asia' Anti
the 94 police stations; -.with their Japan Armed Front, which -had
• vely crime-free existence' — and
alsoitssuccessfulcontrol.oftrafie — to a -number of factors,
though ; unraveling-; cause and. eff
ect “isn’t always easy.
CLASSIFIED
JUNN KASHIN0
KIMURA &
GADSBY
JNT Auto Service
TQM OMURA
ALL-WAY ROOFING LIMITED
KIYO TAMURA
ERNEST JOMOH
SMALL
SHOE SIZES
••"MICHI"
Albert’s Shoe Store
PAGE!
Tokyo Crime
NEW
Friday, October 3, 1975
CANADIAN
(cdnt. from page 1.)
The New Gangth
they also offer- the opportunity
• One-'can' trace /Tokyo’s -.relati-’j 250-500--;officers, -• .which - have ■several sub-groups’'called “Wolf,”,
for' the release of any, pent-up
three to four patrol cars assign- “Fang”, and “Scorpion.” ' The
Association of Ontario 7
emotions, which ■ might otherwiproduction:
of
a
bombing
manu
. Second* Class nun
/
ed_ to them.
• se manifest . themselves in socia
; - The visibility of these kobans al — “Hara HaraDokei”- (Belly
No. D-0366
;
is -clearly important . to a city Clock) — by its original memb lly destructive behaviour.
pUBUSKED OMEVEHT TUESDi. ;
-Q Shame is of the utmost im
that has- the world’s - largest po ers; acted as an- agent to attract
AND FBIDAY
;
portance
;
more
so,
perhaps,
than
lice force - about .43,000-men and others to the movement.
-.Tight gun controls
zT. UMEZUKI Publisher ;
Disturbing as they are, such in most societies.: Relatives, frh
: Recent history‘offers one imp women. More important, however,
K. C. TSUMURA
ends
and
colleagues
will
feel
as
ortant source- in the tight gun is the way in which, abo'ut half groups are on the .very perip
English Section Editor'
much
shame,
perhaps,
as
the
in
KEN MORI
controlsintroduced immediately the kobans, occupants are out hery of Japanese society, their
dividual who has - strayed . from,
violence
an
aberration
and
all
'
Japanese
Section Editor 7
patroling
the
streets
at
.
any
gi
after" the'/war by, ironically, the
the accepted pattern of behavio
■ Americon - occupation forces. To ven time,- to maintain contact wi- the more noted for its being a
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
ur; neighbours will - not hesitate
day, Tokyo , still enjoys severe th' the local people and busine- part of the essentially, placid en
Toronto, Ont. M5V-2AS
to inflict abuse "on the family , of
vironment it disrupts.
restrictions on guns — and nar sses.
366-5005
In addition, and peihaps beca one who has-committed a crime.
Not only do - they offer a reacotics — .as the-number-of he
The fear of ostracism.
carries
althy bodies walking the city’s ssuring presence —- so much so, use of their relative-lack of. succ
much
weight.
ess,
within
Japan
—
as
the
in
streets attests to, though these that a policeman is refferred to
A Trust — let it never be uns are ? “statistics’’ that can hardly as “omawari-san”, or Mr. Walk? creasingly international scale of
about —. but their familiarity •the'; Red Army’s activities also derestimated — is party 'to evebe assessed.
relationship,
(Even - the racketeer groups — with the people and area tends sug'gests —- their violence often ry transaction and
Help . Wanted
works,
and
-The
honor
system.
an/ estimated - 2,700./in. / number to ensure a steady flow of infor becomes inward-directed. Extre
never
counts
works
-well.
One
EXPERIE'N.CED sewing innchine
j .with? about'll ,000 members in JaL mation vital to crime prevention mist- groups are constantly attac
one’s change in Japan.
operators wanted for sewing bl«;
pan —'have not been successful and detection. A sophisticated co king one another. They are not
Of
course,
the
Japanese
can
averse
to
trying
their
own
mem
uses
at home. Apply in person;in. obtaining - guns. - Incidentally, mmunications system also. plays
be
rude
and
vulgar
like
the
rest
Better
Blouses Co., 460 Rich.'
bers
by
kangaroo
court
—
and
. both these/ numbers in. Japan —- -a role.'/ ■, ■
of
us.
And/there
may
be
social
mond
St.
W., First Floor (To;
killing
those
found
‘
‘
guilty.
”
-But wander ■ around ; one of To
have mot been' successful -in obtrends
taking
shape
in
Japan
ronto).
■
In
attempting
to
explain
—
taining.guns .-.Incidental; both kyo’s 'major entertainment areas,
these/numbers/Jfave: /apparently such as'/Shinjuku, some Friday Japan’s low crime / rate, even today/ — rthe -move toward the UPHOLSTERS wanted for fur."
you given the march of industrializa nuclear family; the growth of
■been- decreasing/ recently; for in or; Saturday evening, and
niture - manufacturer. Must have
Zresponse/to -police ;pressures, the will realize — feel — ■ how safe. tion and within the specific con “self-centred” attitudes — that over-2 years .experience. Finch;
text' of - overcrowded, stress-rid-, may or may not augur well for,
'groupsjdhave/been-;> strengthening Tokyo is.'
Weston Rd. area. Phone ,742-7742
A policeman will advise a ca den Tokyo, one must turn- to a the-.country’s future. . “
rtheir-^mutual -ties —Zthou^ als o
or evenings .and weekends 630:
But
if
crime
.statistics
are
a
> attempting/tq;/exterid /their ill.e- reless driver, via -' the loudspeak-.- variety of inter-related forces,
3734"
(Toronto).
major
.measure
of
a
country
’
s
he
gal' activities^?into imofe- profita- er on his patrol car, how/to turn rooted-in history, . which act as
alth,
Japan-,
is
.
in
pretty
'
good
left , properly - at a junction; a powerful - determinants in main
ble^areas.)
,
AGGRESSIVETashion co-ordina-'
shape. Perhaps: growing; healthier
- So successful: are these cont lost drunk will be firmly, but taining the tight social order
ted sales-persbn wanted full ti
by'the day.
*
,
—_ FT.
rols/-in fact, if seems and act of politely; given directions;. a pede that permeates Japanese life:
me for better, ladies sportswear,
*perversity ? for, / the? police, them- strian, again wia,the loudisp'eakef, Societal - factors
West . End, Toronto. Phone 244selves'Tp /continue;/to / be. armed will .be advised to keep to the si
1238. It is a society where:
SANSEI.
”— especially since,', in the whole dewalk for. her own- safety; Such
than
O Obligations, r'ather
of. last “year, according to. police is the not /untypical intercourse rights,- tend. to ; set the . tone ■ of
(Cent, from Page Ono)
records, police. revolvers - - -were between the .police and the pu-; the/ individual’s behavior. This is
Z ~ reinforced by -the deeply instilled non-violent,” said one friend “She
used in action on only -four occa- blic in Tokyo.
was not very-mature.”
■
/But
-there
is
violence^^
ssion, and two of these/ consist
CHARTERED
respect for authority that exists: / When questioned by- reporters
Indeed,
the
1960s
and
1970s
haed of firing warning shots'in the
. ACCOUNTANT
■ f The"Individual, in fact, te about his/ daughter last' March,
;ve? been pockmarked with demo nds to submerge his individual
air. ' ' / / 2261 Lakeshore Blvd. W.
- Certainly," the-'gene rally" high' nstrations/ protests and acts of ism within several groups — the Frank Yoshimura . replied with
Toronto, Ont. M8V-1AS
- educational standards ;of the po? terrorism', for which various po- family . and . work - groups - being one sentence: “My daughter al
-ople combined swith the low- un- litical/groups/espousingavarie- Especially - ■ - important —• ' which ways has been-for the underdog,’’
Phone 252-3513
, employemeht Tate; also' helps. ’ ty' of political and/ social caus :will; in all probability, ,retain his he said. "
Z But' tlieremarkable/homogeh- es; have been responsible]
loyalty throughout his. lifetime.
ity.of-theJapanese, people is The T960’s began with, then pre These- not only -ensure/ an'adheprobably/'far more '-important. sident Eisenhower canceling ta^ •rence : to the - social /norm,;' but
’ For, apart - from-, about 1630,000 proposd visit • to /Tokyo -.because
Koreans, and, a-mere,,sprinkling of Tears /for his safety /owing
2239 Bloor St. West
of1 foreigners, the' -/country has to mass demonstrations: prompt
Buy and Sell ~ ~ Your Home
- (At - Runnymede) Toronto
110'million people'.-who have, in ed-1 by the; revision of the JapanThrougii
U.S.' Security- Treaty.
- so/many Piesperts,
Phone 766-4292
LAW OFFICE
There'have been many others.
,tiiral,_. social- and- economic exp
OPERATED BY, .
erience, 'which reaches back thro However, the mass, and more
NAMIKI
& TANOUYE
ugh. centuries to bind them to- politically ■ obvious, demonstrati
3901 Lawrence Ave. East'
MELL REAL ESTATE Ltd.
ons of the .1960s have given - a• gether. ”
- Scarborough, Ontario.
2008 Lawrience Ave. East
- , Japa^n'isa' highly closeknit so- way to more extreme acts of in
Scarboro, Ont.
J Telephone: 431-1500
perpetrated
. ciety. And 'with/ no racial, strains, dividual terrorism
757-5184
Auto-Fire-Life
there is-nonWof ./the-criminal -a^ by more' radical and politically
- All Forms Of
obscure
groups.
And
since
inno
tivity. that, racial differences —
cent
-bystanders
have
been
invol
when- accompanied ■ by .various soINSURANCE
ve d, th e trend hasn’t been- wel
; ciaL<and/economic Jdispari^
Consult
_
-these usually are .— often . give come.
'rise /to. This] ho'mogenityP is; also / In December, 1971, the-wife of
C.R.C.A. — MEMBER — OJLC.A.
/ instrumental/in/ri
Tokyo’s police superintendantBus: 449-9891
SHEET IffiTAL WORK
ce’s' relationship with the public general, Kuniyasu Tsuchida, was
FLAT ROOFING
Home:
759-8317
UGHING
EAV?
■ of ? any/dehilitatihg '“them * and killed when she . unwrapped a
SHINGLING
parcel the-postman had just de
STEECO STEEL
us” attitudes. ' - .’ ,,
ALCAN ALUMINUM
/In fact,'the police ’have esta- livered and tripped' the detonaSIDING DEALiR
. blished a- generally -.harmonious tor>of a 'powerful explosive? Af
BUS. 961-7715
— 291-1673
421-3374 —
TORONTO
relationship /with the < public,/ tho- ter 15 months and massive inve
RES. 429-6206
NISEI OWNED.
METRO LIC. B-124
•ugh it' hasn’t always been thus. stigative effort, . the police arr
-And>since the force carries' a'cer- ested. four radicals/
.
“COVERING ONTARIO”
Unfortunately, terrorist bom
tain- prestige,—f- in a country
' Chartered Accountant
where prestige is, extremely imp bings have become to familiarSuite 2306
ortant -— there, is usually little an occurrence in Japan -— 52
2 BLOOR ST. WEST
problm ■ in ; finding /a sufficient throughout- -the country in 19.74
TORONTO, ONT.
.number:’of high-qualaty-, recruits alone. The most vicious to diate
each. year. .This, is in, stark con- took place / at Mitsubishi Heavy
/trasf/to^/Japan’s /“Self-Defense Industries Ltd;- in the MarunouForces,” ■ which /lead/ a father :di- chi business centre, of
Tokyo
LATEST STYLES
? spirited existence and suffer from last August. The/noon-time exJAPANESE
ALL E M3 HEIGHTS
chronically low morale.
,plosion leftweight■ dead and 380
RESTAURANT
./‘.Much - of .the, hai^
de injured/
LADIES 2 andup
rives] from crime : prevention 'me
About- 'another dozen .similar
MENS 4 and ip.
asures,./which/ are-highly . effec bombings followed, but after a459 Church St
MEDIUM
& WIDE FITTINGS
tive. ‘ ,
nother massive . police investiga
. Phone 924-1803
Throughout Tokyo • are to be tion, seven /radicals were arrest
, - 428 Queen St. W.
found -about' 1,250 police boxes ed in May (eight were originally
— or kobans, as; they are called arrested but one committed .su
■
Phone 863-9519
1328 Queen St. West
--- which are’ -- manried.' 24 / hours
icide upon arrest).
: "
Toronto
/ per day by from- one to 10 pb- /The suspects
proved to be
Phone 531 -1931 Toronto
Closed On Monday
. lice /officers. They - supplement .members of the East Asia' Anti
the 94 police stations; -.with their Japan Armed Front, which -had
• vely crime-free existence' — and
alsoitssuccessfulcontrol.oftrafie — to a -number of factors,
though ; unraveling-; cause and. eff
ect “isn’t always easy.
CLASSIFIED
JUNN KASHIN0
KIMURA &
GADSBY
JNT Auto Service
TQM OMURA
ALL-WAY ROOFING LIMITED
KIYO TAMURA
ERNEST JOMOH
SMALL
SHOE SIZES
••"MICHI"
Albert’s Shoe Store
Page 3
T H E
Friday,jOctob^^
Japanese Film
Personal Notes
At Poor Alex Theatre
/ 286 Brunswielc ^t Bloor
Toronto
Friday & Saturday 8:30 pm
$1.50,
SHINJI TEN-NO- AMIJIMA
Oct. 3 & 4, fM. Shinoda
Births
N E W
PAGE 3
CAN A DIAN
Dates And Doings
Face Of Tiger
And A Body Mont. Japan Society Wine & Cheese
Of A Lion
MONTREAL. —The October event of the Japan. Society Of
TORONTO. — Dr. Gordon and
Canada
on October 25, 1975; at 7 p.m. will be a .wine and cheese,
Loirinne Chong of Toronto beca
party
at
the Military, fort on St;. Helen’s Island. The party will be
me proud parents for the third
preceded
.by
a visit to the Montreal Military: Maritime museum ac
time- with the birth of Wendy
By KAY TATEISHI
companied
by
an informal lecture. Cost will, be- $2.00 (members)
yojimbo
Tirina on September 3, 1975. A
and
$2.50
(non-members).
- : TOKYO.
—
“
It
’
s
face
resem
sister, for Russell and Jeffrey.
Oct. IO & 11, Kurosawa
~
Please
reserveby
phoning
Miss
Therese
Normandin
at 932bles
a
tiger,
its
body
a
lion,
”
.the
’. IKIRU
Proud grandparents are Mr. and
—
Mont.
Bull.
1610
evenings.
zoo
director
-said
recently
as
he
Mrs. Jack Matsui.
Oct. 17 & 48, Kurosawa
proudly described his 1 and half
pound “liger” cub, a cross bet
ween a lion and a tigress.
“If my records are ' correct
this liger is the only living lion
. TORONTO. — The British Columbia Revenue. Tax receipt
tiger hybrid in captivity.” - - ? :
No. 128711 says “Received from Jap No. 8 the sum of Three dol
. Before World War II, . ligers lars, being the .amount. due for Provincial Revenue Tax-from 2nd:.
were born in three zoos, inclu January, 1901, to 31st December, 1901. / Signed W.L: Ferguson,
ding the Munich , Zoo in- West Collector, Westminister- District. Date May 10, 1.901.”
,. .
At the Prince Hotel — Toronto
Germany.,
<
This was the country that'the Issei-came to, forty years before
- In 1948 a liger was born in they all -lost- almost everything, in the great upheaval called the
on Saturday, October 18, 1975
the. Salt Lake City Zoo in Utah, “Evacuation”.
but it died three years ago,'di-,
The public is invited to the First'Exhibit of Japanese Canadian
Cocktails 6:30 pan.
Dinner 7:00 p.m.
rector Michiro Nakagawa of O- Archives at the J.C. Cultural - Centre, 123 Wynf ord Drive, ■ Don
saka’s Tennoji Zoo said.
Mills, Ont. on Sunday, October 5th, 1975 from 1 to 8 pm dona' Dancing to music of Archie Ginsberg’s Orchestra
Recently, Tama, a 4 and a half tions only.
— R.T.R.
old tigress sharing a ;cage with
®r tickets please phone Kunio Suyama 461-2384 and
Takeo, a 4 and a half year old
/
Harry Yonekura .447-6666
lion, gave birth to three cubs,
N'akagawa said.
• . ; '
: ..
$20.00 per person
' Nakagawa said the firsts cub
TORONTO. — Saturday, October 4, will be the date of.'the
was born shortly after 3 p.m., one-day colour' tour of northern Ontario to be sponsored: by. the
followed by: another two .hours Scarborough Asian Institute, which opened its doors to -teach En-:
later, and the third two hours glish to new immigrants. from the Asian-Pacific, nations for the
after the second cub.. All were 7th consecutive year on September-22nd.
'
'
females born prematurely and
Special Tour Bus will leave- from 1355 Warden Avenue, Scar
weighted about a pound apiece. borough, at 9:30 a.m. and return about .5:00 p.m. Each family or
THE JAPANESE GARDEN CLUB OF TORONTO
A normal lion or tiger cub wei person is expected to bring their “bento’’ to be shared Potluck
ghs about twice that. ■.
PRESENTS ITS
style with others. Hot bey erage .will be supplied by the school, but
But
he
said
both
died.
So
zoo
TWENTY-THIRD HORTICULTURAL
utensils and serviettes should also" be brought.
officials placed. the third liger
EXHIBITION
Cost of the entire day is only $1.00 per person or $2.00 per fa
in an incubator where .she is be mily. Interested tourists should phone the S.A.I. a '425-6760 quickly.
. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER .1, ,1975 i—- jl PM Ito £ PM
ing fed milk at .two hour inter
Information is also available and there as more, room for new
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1975 — 1 PM to « fPM
vals, and so far has gained half students at SA.I.
— E.S.Y.
.
iJ IC.C. (CENTRE BUILDING
\
a pound.
123 WYNFORD (DRIVE, |DON MILLS >
He said chances of the liger
Leaside Bus (leaving lEglinton (Subway ’Station (every
surviving are good and “we ho
Uialf hour) will take,you right to the Centre.’
pe she can ' meet the public in
early October. Late next jweek
^Gardens Targe and -sm
Interesting
TORONTO, -j- The Three-Schools, a non-profit independent
we hope we’ll definitely know.”
“Chrysanthemums in gay land colorful array
“alternative in education”, will be presenting this fall a series- of
Nakagawa said the
• liger’s seminars on Japanese culture. Titled “$47 Tour ■ of-Japan and Her
’ Continuous demonstrations |of Ikebana, (Bonsai etc. parents
were
both
born
in the Culture,” This will be a tour made while you stay in .Toronto,, dis
^Feature films /and/other (related movies will be" shown 12 ([lays.
Osaka,
300
mi- covering, some aspects of the Japanese culture,- such- as arts, craft
Tennoji
Zoo
in
//
GUEST SPEAKERS:
of
Tokyo.
:
Theyles
southweast
smanship, theatre, religion, history, customs and habits, people.
JIM FLOYD, B.L.A. Landscape Architect, “Technology
were placed in the same cage The basic idea is- not to touch anyone of the -true picture of Japan,
' of^planting” •
,
.
,
when they were about four mon but: rather presenting some different ■ approaches to different as
As/ROY SUlMIjAH^^
of British Coths old and grew up together. pects by inviting a different speaker each-session. The seminars
ilumbia'.“Japanese Garden & Bonsai”
He said'-he had hoped they, would
will include slides, films, .visits, demonstrations, and discussion. '
'
.And Other Speakers
mate and produce a hybrid off
- Among' the speakers are Dr. Toyomasa: Fuse of York’ Univer
/sChildrens under. 12 free ,..? < ;
Admission Adults $2.00
spring.
sity;
Rev. Ishiura of -Toronto Buddhist ' Church/ Mr. Mamoru-Nishi,
- Parking-'Availalble
- '<
Refreshments
Nakagawa; said last year Tama
President of Japanese Garden' Club; Mr. David Pepper; artist with .
and Takeo were quite intimate,
ROM; Prof. Frank Hoff of U. T., and'Mir. Marty Gross, potter film/
and last February zoo attend maker. Some of. the topics will be: “Image of Man and Society in.
ants began /noticing' that Tama
Japan”, “Japanese Buddhism”,' “Craftsmanship ini Japan’.?,/“Jhpan’s"
had acquired a bigger-than nor
Traditional Theatres?’; -“Chanoyu — < ah:;art;of;Zen’>^Japanese Art ?
mal appetite.
■ - - — Theme; Symbol . and Legend”, “Blood, Silk/andi Steel; -/* ’Brief s
- The attendant" told. Nakagawa
history of samurai and their. place in- Japanese /culture?’, “Man and
that^she must^be pregnant. She.
Nature — through Japanese -Gardens and Bonsai”, and an even
was, but Nakagawa said' she had
ing of Japanese food.
"
’
* /
a miscarriage in July.
.
The course starts':-Wednesday, October'8th,. at- 8' p.m.' at the
■ “We’re' keeping our
fingers
Three Schools at 296 Brunswick at Bloor ((920-8370); and will be
crosse d,” ,Nakagawa -told newsheld every ‘Thursday evening for 10 sessions. Tuition fee/is $47,
men.. “If- qur'liger grows
into
plus annual membership-fee of $5. - , ? ~
an adult she should become lar; The Three' Schools, Un; conjunction with this /course, ^
: Come .fly with us to the Orient on our beautiful Super- . ger than 'her parents.” .
present a “Festival. of /Films by Japanese Directors?’*at/its Poor
• The liger’s parents each weigh
Alex Theatre' at the. same -location (Telephone: '920*8373). Starting
about 440 pounds. Their cub - has
PI can'’whisk you from Vancouver on Wednesday, Frion the/ weekend of- Sept. 26, 27, a total of 13 ' of/the best Japane-'.not yet-been named. .
•
, -.
se' film available in. Canada will, be shown,.every Friday and Sa
/Joy, or Sunday* Nonstop to Tokyo* And "on .to Hong Kong-.
turday, at - 8:30 p.m. Admission is > $1.50 ($1 ;00 for - Three Schools
We‘ll show you iwarm; friendly attention by multi-lingu-;/
members).
Students in the above “Japan” course will receive two
.?hfi«ght professionals who care about you as an indivi-/
free
tickets
to the films.
'
' . * 'dual*. And; not' just another,passenger*
*
*
J.C. Archives Show At Cultural Centre
Toronto Sangha-Dana Presents
Second Annual Momiji Ball
Scarboro Asian Institute North Tour
Fall '75 Flower and "Garden Show
3 Schools Seminar On Jpn. Culture r
Only CP-Air offers 747 noristops
from Toronto to Vancouver/
then nonstop to Tokyo. And
on to Hong। Kong.
. We’ll serve you international cuisine twice as you cross
foe Pacific*
We'll be oh hand in the Orient as well* To help you^at ’
any time, in any way we can* •
>
^ call your travel pgent* Or CP Air*
. . Ask for SuperOange 747 sevice to the Orient*
Jhen. come taste -the difference* /
<
1
.JO THE ORIENT — ORANGE IS BEAUTIFUL —
CPAir n
Japanese restaurant/tavon
OMN MINBAY
.
Reservations: 366-21B4
173 DUNDAS SOEBT WEST. TORONTO
Seven Days A Week
OUR 8HSTOMHB AV IGF LOY PARKING EOT. (SO UTH OP MCHEB GARDENS)'
Friday,jOctob^^
Japanese Film
Personal Notes
At Poor Alex Theatre
/ 286 Brunswielc ^t Bloor
Toronto
Friday & Saturday 8:30 pm
$1.50,
SHINJI TEN-NO- AMIJIMA
Oct. 3 & 4, fM. Shinoda
Births
N E W
PAGE 3
CAN A DIAN
Dates And Doings
Face Of Tiger
And A Body Mont. Japan Society Wine & Cheese
Of A Lion
MONTREAL. —The October event of the Japan. Society Of
TORONTO. — Dr. Gordon and
Canada
on October 25, 1975; at 7 p.m. will be a .wine and cheese,
Loirinne Chong of Toronto beca
party
at
the Military, fort on St;. Helen’s Island. The party will be
me proud parents for the third
preceded
.by
a visit to the Montreal Military: Maritime museum ac
time- with the birth of Wendy
By KAY TATEISHI
companied
by
an informal lecture. Cost will, be- $2.00 (members)
yojimbo
Tirina on September 3, 1975. A
and
$2.50
(non-members).
- : TOKYO.
—
“
It
’
s
face
resem
sister, for Russell and Jeffrey.
Oct. IO & 11, Kurosawa
~
Please
reserveby
phoning
Miss
Therese
Normandin
at 932bles
a
tiger,
its
body
a
lion,
”
.the
’. IKIRU
Proud grandparents are Mr. and
—
Mont.
Bull.
1610
evenings.
zoo
director
-said
recently
as
he
Mrs. Jack Matsui.
Oct. 17 & 48, Kurosawa
proudly described his 1 and half
pound “liger” cub, a cross bet
ween a lion and a tigress.
“If my records are ' correct
this liger is the only living lion
. TORONTO. — The British Columbia Revenue. Tax receipt
tiger hybrid in captivity.” - - ? :
No. 128711 says “Received from Jap No. 8 the sum of Three dol
. Before World War II, . ligers lars, being the .amount. due for Provincial Revenue Tax-from 2nd:.
were born in three zoos, inclu January, 1901, to 31st December, 1901. / Signed W.L: Ferguson,
ding the Munich , Zoo in- West Collector, Westminister- District. Date May 10, 1.901.”
,. .
At the Prince Hotel — Toronto
Germany.,
<
This was the country that'the Issei-came to, forty years before
- In 1948 a liger was born in they all -lost- almost everything, in the great upheaval called the
on Saturday, October 18, 1975
the. Salt Lake City Zoo in Utah, “Evacuation”.
but it died three years ago,'di-,
The public is invited to the First'Exhibit of Japanese Canadian
Cocktails 6:30 pan.
Dinner 7:00 p.m.
rector Michiro Nakagawa of O- Archives at the J.C. Cultural - Centre, 123 Wynf ord Drive, ■ Don
saka’s Tennoji Zoo said.
Mills, Ont. on Sunday, October 5th, 1975 from 1 to 8 pm dona' Dancing to music of Archie Ginsberg’s Orchestra
Recently, Tama, a 4 and a half tions only.
— R.T.R.
old tigress sharing a ;cage with
®r tickets please phone Kunio Suyama 461-2384 and
Takeo, a 4 and a half year old
/
Harry Yonekura .447-6666
lion, gave birth to three cubs,
N'akagawa said.
• . ; '
: ..
$20.00 per person
' Nakagawa said the firsts cub
TORONTO. — Saturday, October 4, will be the date of.'the
was born shortly after 3 p.m., one-day colour' tour of northern Ontario to be sponsored: by. the
followed by: another two .hours Scarborough Asian Institute, which opened its doors to -teach En-:
later, and the third two hours glish to new immigrants. from the Asian-Pacific, nations for the
after the second cub.. All were 7th consecutive year on September-22nd.
'
'
females born prematurely and
Special Tour Bus will leave- from 1355 Warden Avenue, Scar
weighted about a pound apiece. borough, at 9:30 a.m. and return about .5:00 p.m. Each family or
THE JAPANESE GARDEN CLUB OF TORONTO
A normal lion or tiger cub wei person is expected to bring their “bento’’ to be shared Potluck
ghs about twice that. ■.
PRESENTS ITS
style with others. Hot bey erage .will be supplied by the school, but
But
he
said
both
died.
So
zoo
TWENTY-THIRD HORTICULTURAL
utensils and serviettes should also" be brought.
officials placed. the third liger
EXHIBITION
Cost of the entire day is only $1.00 per person or $2.00 per fa
in an incubator where .she is be mily. Interested tourists should phone the S.A.I. a '425-6760 quickly.
. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER .1, ,1975 i—- jl PM Ito £ PM
ing fed milk at .two hour inter
Information is also available and there as more, room for new
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1975 — 1 PM to « fPM
vals, and so far has gained half students at SA.I.
— E.S.Y.
.
iJ IC.C. (CENTRE BUILDING
\
a pound.
123 WYNFORD (DRIVE, |DON MILLS >
He said chances of the liger
Leaside Bus (leaving lEglinton (Subway ’Station (every
surviving are good and “we ho
Uialf hour) will take,you right to the Centre.’
pe she can ' meet the public in
early October. Late next jweek
^Gardens Targe and -sm
Interesting
TORONTO, -j- The Three-Schools, a non-profit independent
we hope we’ll definitely know.”
“Chrysanthemums in gay land colorful array
“alternative in education”, will be presenting this fall a series- of
Nakagawa said the
• liger’s seminars on Japanese culture. Titled “$47 Tour ■ of-Japan and Her
’ Continuous demonstrations |of Ikebana, (Bonsai etc. parents
were
both
born
in the Culture,” This will be a tour made while you stay in .Toronto,, dis
^Feature films /and/other (related movies will be" shown 12 ([lays.
Osaka,
300
mi- covering, some aspects of the Japanese culture,- such- as arts, craft
Tennoji
Zoo
in
//
GUEST SPEAKERS:
of
Tokyo.
:
Theyles
southweast
smanship, theatre, religion, history, customs and habits, people.
JIM FLOYD, B.L.A. Landscape Architect, “Technology
were placed in the same cage The basic idea is- not to touch anyone of the -true picture of Japan,
' of^planting” •
,
.
,
when they were about four mon but: rather presenting some different ■ approaches to different as
As/ROY SUlMIjAH^^
of British Coths old and grew up together. pects by inviting a different speaker each-session. The seminars
ilumbia'.“Japanese Garden & Bonsai”
He said'-he had hoped they, would
will include slides, films, .visits, demonstrations, and discussion. '
'
.And Other Speakers
mate and produce a hybrid off
- Among' the speakers are Dr. Toyomasa: Fuse of York’ Univer
/sChildrens under. 12 free ,..? < ;
Admission Adults $2.00
spring.
sity;
Rev. Ishiura of -Toronto Buddhist ' Church/ Mr. Mamoru-Nishi,
- Parking-'Availalble
- '<
Refreshments
Nakagawa; said last year Tama
President of Japanese Garden' Club; Mr. David Pepper; artist with .
and Takeo were quite intimate,
ROM; Prof. Frank Hoff of U. T., and'Mir. Marty Gross, potter film/
and last February zoo attend maker. Some of. the topics will be: “Image of Man and Society in.
ants began /noticing' that Tama
Japan”, “Japanese Buddhism”,' “Craftsmanship ini Japan’.?,/“Jhpan’s"
had acquired a bigger-than nor
Traditional Theatres?’; -“Chanoyu — < ah:;art;of;Zen’>^Japanese Art ?
mal appetite.
■ - - — Theme; Symbol . and Legend”, “Blood, Silk/andi Steel; -/* ’Brief s
- The attendant" told. Nakagawa
history of samurai and their. place in- Japanese /culture?’, “Man and
that^she must^be pregnant. She.
Nature — through Japanese -Gardens and Bonsai”, and an even
was, but Nakagawa said' she had
ing of Japanese food.
"
’
* /
a miscarriage in July.
.
The course starts':-Wednesday, October'8th,. at- 8' p.m.' at the
■ “We’re' keeping our
fingers
Three Schools at 296 Brunswick at Bloor ((920-8370); and will be
crosse d,” ,Nakagawa -told newsheld every ‘Thursday evening for 10 sessions. Tuition fee/is $47,
men.. “If- qur'liger grows
into
plus annual membership-fee of $5. - , ? ~
an adult she should become lar; The Three' Schools, Un; conjunction with this /course, ^
: Come .fly with us to the Orient on our beautiful Super- . ger than 'her parents.” .
present a “Festival. of /Films by Japanese Directors?’*at/its Poor
• The liger’s parents each weigh
Alex Theatre' at the. same -location (Telephone: '920*8373). Starting
about 440 pounds. Their cub - has
PI can'’whisk you from Vancouver on Wednesday, Frion the/ weekend of- Sept. 26, 27, a total of 13 ' of/the best Japane-'.not yet-been named. .
•
, -.
se' film available in. Canada will, be shown,.every Friday and Sa
/Joy, or Sunday* Nonstop to Tokyo* And "on .to Hong Kong-.
turday, at - 8:30 p.m. Admission is > $1.50 ($1 ;00 for - Three Schools
We‘ll show you iwarm; friendly attention by multi-lingu-;/
members).
Students in the above “Japan” course will receive two
.?hfi«ght professionals who care about you as an indivi-/
free
tickets
to the films.
'
' . * 'dual*. And; not' just another,passenger*
*
*
J.C. Archives Show At Cultural Centre
Toronto Sangha-Dana Presents
Second Annual Momiji Ball
Scarboro Asian Institute North Tour
Fall '75 Flower and "Garden Show
3 Schools Seminar On Jpn. Culture r
Only CP-Air offers 747 noristops
from Toronto to Vancouver/
then nonstop to Tokyo. And
on to Hong। Kong.
. We’ll serve you international cuisine twice as you cross
foe Pacific*
We'll be oh hand in the Orient as well* To help you^at ’
any time, in any way we can* •
>
^ call your travel pgent* Or CP Air*
. . Ask for SuperOange 747 sevice to the Orient*
Jhen. come taste -the difference* /
<
1
.JO THE ORIENT — ORANGE IS BEAUTIFUL —
CPAir n
Japanese restaurant/tavon
OMN MINBAY
.
Reservations: 366-21B4
173 DUNDAS SOEBT WEST. TORONTO
Seven Days A Week
OUR 8HSTOMHB AV IGF LOY PARKING EOT. (SO UTH OP MCHEB GARDENS)'
Page 4
.THE
PAflli
■i^po^hs^^
SAY IT
WITH FLOWERS -
SHARON'S FLORIST
M^’ fluakl.
CITY-WIDZ DEMVBBY
TEL. 425-2122
NEW-
.CANADIAN
Terrorist Okamoto Describes
Role In Red Army
Friday, October 3, 1975
\
GROUP TOURS TO JAPAN
Departures
NOV. 01NOV. 15
DEC. 13
DEC. 27
JAN. 1st
JAN.;24 7 .
Periods
4 — Weeks
4 — Weeks
5 — Weeks
4 — Weeks
4-Weeks
,5-Weeks
.
His mentor, he recalls, was his
older brother, Takeshi ■ Okamoto,
TOKYO. —' The only member who took part in the highjacking
Of the internationally notorious* of a Japan Air Lines Boeing 727
Japanese “Red Army” to .be cap on a domestic flight in the spri
tured and still being held , in pri ng of 1970. ordering it . to go to
son says 'rhe has- found- peace of North Korea.
mind in religion and declares he
The EWorld . Red Army,” he
now believes in an almighty God. was told, had a role to play in
Kozo Okamoto, 26, . who took each country. That role was to
part in the-Tel Aviv airport ma stage 0 “preliminary "armed upVancouver
Toronto
ssacre on May 30, 1972; writes of Hsing.”. Those 'Who -took part in
JON ONODERA
254-5101
869-1291
his conversion from a/radical re such action had to be ready ,to
1115
East
Hastings.
St.
cpinTVA
489-4654 — 481'8805 volutionary-in the Shukan Shin- die-for-the cause.
Vancouver 6. B.C.
162 SPADINA AVE.
(Business) 7 .(Residence)
'cho, and describes how he now
■ Okamoto, who was an agricul
spends most of his time -reading ture student at Kagoshima Uni
' 540 Eglinton Ave.W.,
the Old and - New
Testaments, versity, ■Writes he was ’ contac
'Toronto.
and: studying Hebrew and Eng ted in January 1971, by what he
lish in his cell...,
describes as a “trained Red Ar
460 Dundas St W.
Okamoto, together with Take my soldier,” without giving fur
Toronto 2B, ©nt.
shi- Okudaira and Yasuyuki Yasu ther details.
da, killed 26 persons and injur
After receiving: his instructs
TRAVEL SERVICE
FURUYA TRADING
ed. 72 others as they
sprayed ons and money he went to To
363-0655
STORE 366-5451.
machine gun bullets and -hurled kyo where he obtained additional
hand grenades into the crowded travel funds from another brot
TOURS TO JAPAN
LUCKY PRIZE NUMBERS
■arrival
lobby of/-the airport,; in her and 'Koji Wakamatsu, direc
—
’■ skis' '
one ' of the bloodiest guerilla 'co tor of a propaganda film entitled
- Sept. 29 — one month
JULY DRAW .
ups in; recent times.“
The
Red
Army
—
PFLP
—
a
“ Oct. 4 — 4 weeks
^‘1201 Bloor Street West
Today he asserts he. feels re Declaration of Worldwide Revo
1st PRIZE* TV SET 16670
Oct. 13 — 3 weeks
Toronto, Ont.
morse for .his terrorist actions. lutionary War.”
2nd PRIZE’AIR POT 15140
Dec. 19 — 3 weeks
'
. In a lengthy article, the first
To
go
to
Beirut,
he
’
traveled
532-4267
3rd PRIZE RADIO 15455
* Now is the time to book
-of two parts, -Okamoto, - who - is via Vancouver, Toronto, Montre-.
: your X’mas/New Year and
now serving a life sentence in Ra- al, New’York, Paris and-Milan. *
AUGUST DRAW
winter break travel.
mlah Prison in Israel,. tells how.
In the Lebanese
capital, he
he - was .recruited into -,the Red was taken in tow by Okudaira,
1st PRIZE TV SET 23495
We sell all the ITC’S to CariArmy, how -he -traveled, to Leba who* had preceded him there to
bbean,-Hawaii
and Europe,
2nd
PRIZE
AIR
POT
25267
non to undergo guerilla training gether with his wife,
Nobuko
so
let
us
do
the
booking for
3rd
PRIZE
RADIO
20075
in.a People’s/Front for the Liibe- Shigenobu,’ who is - credited with:
you.
ration of Palestine (PFLP) . ca master-minding “Red Army” omp, and of the roundbout trip perations.
he - and*-h
companions - took in
■ Acc ordingr to. his aec ount, Oka
Western Europe-before boarding,
moto underwent guerilla train-'
an airliner that flew them to Tel
ing near. Baalbeck, .a Lebanese
^Aviv.
resort famed -for . its ancient ru
INSURANGE
He explains how he was att ins. For weopons,’ he was given
racted - by the Red Army theory, the Soviet Krasnikov assault ri
calling for» the creation. of a “Wo fle, • a - Czech ; revolver known as
181 EglintonAve. East'
rld Red -Army” that iwould give a Grant, and a Bren' machine
j .
'Suite201 ‘ r~':
■ universality to the leftist move gun.
" \
r
TorMito, Ont. M4P 1J9 •'
ments in various countries. •
Every
day-he
spent
two hours
'Phone' 485-5087 '
in
physical
exercises
that
includ
- Home ' 449-9293 - •
ed
70
pushups.
Paul K: Asada, D.C., N.D. | ' On May 23, 1973, . Okamoto
“Doctor of Chiropractic/”'
and Okudaira left Beirut by. air
.
*
«
728A St.'Clair Ave. West
for Paris. .There "they ' spent a
(^j block West of Christie)
few days
sight-seeing.
They
?
TORONTO
then moved bn' to, Frankfurt- by
651-8060 . Res. 621-1989 train,where they were, joined by Open 7 days a week
769 Yonge St.
Yasuda who had come from Be
Cat Bloor) . ,
irut via' Zurich.
£ . . .
Free parking atrear
The trio proceeded to Milan
Reservations .923-7102-3
: SALES & SaaVICE
by train and then continued on
to Rome; . Again they spent, some
cqwrt
days sightseeing/ including a vi
sit to the Vatican and the cata uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKX"
ORDERS FOR OBENTO
StereoComponents
combs. ' _ •
'
- ACCEPTED
Yasuda had $2,000 on. ; him
TIMES SQUARE TRAVEL CENTRE LTI
/ 1 (OMQLR PJ4W
jwhile Okamoto had only $200.
221 Kennedy Road, Scarboro
672 NO. 3 ROAD. RICHMOND,^BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANAt
^ SGARBQKD »«ae Wl-im
Early on May 30, the day they
Tel 261-7040 Free Delivery
BMweaa^lintflaALawreMa
were to stage their coup at Lod
OPEN SEVEN DAYS WEEK Airport, Okudaira and Yasuda
GROUP DEPARTURE TO JAPAN
left the pension in which, they
-----------RETURNs
had been staying to dispose, of
all documents-that could lead-to
Nov. 12
' '
Oct. 16.
their identification.
. ^.
Nov. 28
"Nov.7'.
1%e New @aiiadian
Dec. ,5
Nov. .8
The weapons/which had-been
■‘^ 479 QUEER iT. WEST, TORONTO, ONT. M5V 2A9
; Dec. 15
Nov. ;13
brought in some days previously,
Jan. 28
Nov. 29
were packed and wrapped in she
Please find endosed 8..^................................ for which
Dec. 18
Jan. 14
ets and .towels. Each, was’ allott
- # Renew my ' subscription. J
Jan. 4
Dec. 121
ed a Krasnikov rifle with four
l ■ *.
.?#-Enter,my.'new‘ subscription for . ... . year/months
magazines containing 25 catrid S: ., ■< \ Fall Mexico Tour Oct. 17 to Oct. 31.
ges each^ aiidjthree hand grena ■
. Japanese Canadian’s Reno San Francisco
- /f
$9.00 for 6 Months
$14.00' per year
des.
SKanko Tours Oct. 19 for a week; . .
Using , counterfeit
passports,Times Square Travel Centre Ltd. ?
they boarded an Air France air =
name (MR.' MRS. MISS)—!------------- :_______ ______
672 No. 3 Rd„
_ —
Richmond, RC.
liner later'in the .day to head for i
E
1157 MELVILLE ST. VANCOUVER
Tel Aviv.
Okudaira and Yasuda died in
executing their “mission.” Acc
•FIT _____________ :______ ___
BMy‘
ording to Okamoto, they dropp
ed hand grenades and then threw
THE PLACE TO START'YOUR HAPPY HOLIDAY
METALyttlR,' —______ ____
themselves on .them as they ex
iiiniiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii |lllllll,>
ploded.
•
.
, _ By BOB HORIGUCHI
. Ml PAR AV&. TORONTO
HYLAND
FLOWERS
K. Iwata Travel Service
FURUYA
Oscar's Ski
And Sports
Authentic
Japanese
Cuisine
Gertrude Urabe
S-
-
v
TOM'S
MriBiSill
*
^.
SANDOWN
MARKET
M^^KSSiB
^S^Eiffli^^^S^^^^^KHI^^K^^^^MM^M^HMISM^MHMB^MMHnKisiBisiHsraHmBSB
PAflli
■i^po^hs^^
SAY IT
WITH FLOWERS -
SHARON'S FLORIST
M^’ fluakl.
CITY-WIDZ DEMVBBY
TEL. 425-2122
NEW-
.CANADIAN
Terrorist Okamoto Describes
Role In Red Army
Friday, October 3, 1975
\
GROUP TOURS TO JAPAN
Departures
NOV. 01NOV. 15
DEC. 13
DEC. 27
JAN. 1st
JAN.;24 7 .
Periods
4 — Weeks
4 — Weeks
5 — Weeks
4 — Weeks
4-Weeks
,5-Weeks
.
His mentor, he recalls, was his
older brother, Takeshi ■ Okamoto,
TOKYO. —' The only member who took part in the highjacking
Of the internationally notorious* of a Japan Air Lines Boeing 727
Japanese “Red Army” to .be cap on a domestic flight in the spri
tured and still being held , in pri ng of 1970. ordering it . to go to
son says 'rhe has- found- peace of North Korea.
mind in religion and declares he
The EWorld . Red Army,” he
now believes in an almighty God. was told, had a role to play in
Kozo Okamoto, 26, . who took each country. That role was to
part in the-Tel Aviv airport ma stage 0 “preliminary "armed upVancouver
Toronto
ssacre on May 30, 1972; writes of Hsing.”. Those 'Who -took part in
JON ONODERA
254-5101
869-1291
his conversion from a/radical re such action had to be ready ,to
1115
East
Hastings.
St.
cpinTVA
489-4654 — 481'8805 volutionary-in the Shukan Shin- die-for-the cause.
Vancouver 6. B.C.
162 SPADINA AVE.
(Business) 7 .(Residence)
'cho, and describes how he now
■ Okamoto, who was an agricul
spends most of his time -reading ture student at Kagoshima Uni
' 540 Eglinton Ave.W.,
the Old and - New
Testaments, versity, ■Writes he was ’ contac
'Toronto.
and: studying Hebrew and Eng ted in January 1971, by what he
lish in his cell...,
describes as a “trained Red Ar
460 Dundas St W.
Okamoto, together with Take my soldier,” without giving fur
Toronto 2B, ©nt.
shi- Okudaira and Yasuyuki Yasu ther details.
da, killed 26 persons and injur
After receiving: his instructs
TRAVEL SERVICE
FURUYA TRADING
ed. 72 others as they
sprayed ons and money he went to To
363-0655
STORE 366-5451.
machine gun bullets and -hurled kyo where he obtained additional
hand grenades into the crowded travel funds from another brot
TOURS TO JAPAN
LUCKY PRIZE NUMBERS
■arrival
lobby of/-the airport,; in her and 'Koji Wakamatsu, direc
—
’■ skis' '
one ' of the bloodiest guerilla 'co tor of a propaganda film entitled
- Sept. 29 — one month
JULY DRAW .
ups in; recent times.“
The
Red
Army
—
PFLP
—
a
“ Oct. 4 — 4 weeks
^‘1201 Bloor Street West
Today he asserts he. feels re Declaration of Worldwide Revo
1st PRIZE* TV SET 16670
Oct. 13 — 3 weeks
Toronto, Ont.
morse for .his terrorist actions. lutionary War.”
2nd PRIZE’AIR POT 15140
Dec. 19 — 3 weeks
'
. In a lengthy article, the first
To
go
to
Beirut,
he
’
traveled
532-4267
3rd PRIZE RADIO 15455
* Now is the time to book
-of two parts, -Okamoto, - who - is via Vancouver, Toronto, Montre-.
: your X’mas/New Year and
now serving a life sentence in Ra- al, New’York, Paris and-Milan. *
AUGUST DRAW
winter break travel.
mlah Prison in Israel,. tells how.
In the Lebanese
capital, he
he - was .recruited into -,the Red was taken in tow by Okudaira,
1st PRIZE TV SET 23495
We sell all the ITC’S to CariArmy, how -he -traveled, to Leba who* had preceded him there to
bbean,-Hawaii
and Europe,
2nd
PRIZE
AIR
POT
25267
non to undergo guerilla training gether with his wife,
Nobuko
so
let
us
do
the
booking for
3rd
PRIZE
RADIO
20075
in.a People’s/Front for the Liibe- Shigenobu,’ who is - credited with:
you.
ration of Palestine (PFLP) . ca master-minding “Red Army” omp, and of the roundbout trip perations.
he - and*-h
companions - took in
■ Acc ordingr to. his aec ount, Oka
Western Europe-before boarding,
moto underwent guerilla train-'
an airliner that flew them to Tel
ing near. Baalbeck, .a Lebanese
^Aviv.
resort famed -for . its ancient ru
INSURANGE
He explains how he was att ins. For weopons,’ he was given
racted - by the Red Army theory, the Soviet Krasnikov assault ri
calling for» the creation. of a “Wo fle, • a - Czech ; revolver known as
181 EglintonAve. East'
rld Red -Army” that iwould give a Grant, and a Bren' machine
j .
'Suite201 ‘ r~':
■ universality to the leftist move gun.
" \
r
TorMito, Ont. M4P 1J9 •'
ments in various countries. •
Every
day-he
spent
two hours
'Phone' 485-5087 '
in
physical
exercises
that
includ
- Home ' 449-9293 - •
ed
70
pushups.
Paul K: Asada, D.C., N.D. | ' On May 23, 1973, . Okamoto
“Doctor of Chiropractic/”'
and Okudaira left Beirut by. air
.
*
«
728A St.'Clair Ave. West
for Paris. .There "they ' spent a
(^j block West of Christie)
few days
sight-seeing.
They
?
TORONTO
then moved bn' to, Frankfurt- by
651-8060 . Res. 621-1989 train,where they were, joined by Open 7 days a week
769 Yonge St.
Yasuda who had come from Be
Cat Bloor) . ,
irut via' Zurich.
£ . . .
Free parking atrear
The trio proceeded to Milan
Reservations .923-7102-3
: SALES & SaaVICE
by train and then continued on
to Rome; . Again they spent, some
cqwrt
days sightseeing/ including a vi
sit to the Vatican and the cata uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKX"
ORDERS FOR OBENTO
StereoComponents
combs. ' _ •
'
- ACCEPTED
Yasuda had $2,000 on. ; him
TIMES SQUARE TRAVEL CENTRE LTI
/ 1 (OMQLR PJ4W
jwhile Okamoto had only $200.
221 Kennedy Road, Scarboro
672 NO. 3 ROAD. RICHMOND,^BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANAt
^ SGARBQKD »«ae Wl-im
Early on May 30, the day they
Tel 261-7040 Free Delivery
BMweaa^lintflaALawreMa
were to stage their coup at Lod
OPEN SEVEN DAYS WEEK Airport, Okudaira and Yasuda
GROUP DEPARTURE TO JAPAN
left the pension in which, they
-----------RETURNs
had been staying to dispose, of
all documents-that could lead-to
Nov. 12
' '
Oct. 16.
their identification.
. ^.
Nov. 28
"Nov.7'.
1%e New @aiiadian
Dec. ,5
Nov. .8
The weapons/which had-been
■‘^ 479 QUEER iT. WEST, TORONTO, ONT. M5V 2A9
; Dec. 15
Nov. ;13
brought in some days previously,
Jan. 28
Nov. 29
were packed and wrapped in she
Please find endosed 8..^................................ for which
Dec. 18
Jan. 14
ets and .towels. Each, was’ allott
- # Renew my ' subscription. J
Jan. 4
Dec. 121
ed a Krasnikov rifle with four
l ■ *.
.?#-Enter,my.'new‘ subscription for . ... . year/months
magazines containing 25 catrid S: ., ■< \ Fall Mexico Tour Oct. 17 to Oct. 31.
ges each^ aiidjthree hand grena ■
. Japanese Canadian’s Reno San Francisco
- /f
$9.00 for 6 Months
$14.00' per year
des.
SKanko Tours Oct. 19 for a week; . .
Using , counterfeit
passports,Times Square Travel Centre Ltd. ?
they boarded an Air France air =
name (MR.' MRS. MISS)—!------------- :_______ ______
672 No. 3 Rd„
_ —
Richmond, RC.
liner later'in the .day to head for i
E
1157 MELVILLE ST. VANCOUVER
Tel Aviv.
Okudaira and Yasuda died in
executing their “mission.” Acc
•FIT _____________ :______ ___
BMy‘
ording to Okamoto, they dropp
ed hand grenades and then threw
THE PLACE TO START'YOUR HAPPY HOLIDAY
METALyttlR,' —______ ____
themselves on .them as they ex
iiiniiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii |lllllll,>
ploded.
•
.
, _ By BOB HORIGUCHI
. Ml PAR AV&. TORONTO
HYLAND
FLOWERS
K. Iwata Travel Service
FURUYA
Oscar's Ski
And Sports
Authentic
Japanese
Cuisine
Gertrude Urabe
S-
-
v
TOM'S
MriBiSill
*
^.
SANDOWN
MARKET
M^^KSSiB
^S^Eiffli^^^S^^^^^KHI^^K^^^^MM^M^HMISM^MHMB^MMHnKisiBisiHsraHmBSB
Page 5
THE
PAGEJ*
Friday, Octobar ■ 3, 1975
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AUTHENTIC JAPANESE DISHES
"MICHI" RESTAURANT
; ' 459 CHURCH STREET,
j 328 QUEEN ST. WEST,
. *.. -:r:»:J;:'.’:i'.l • • •■■.'’ J - s.A ' 1 ••• '-SV
. .
PHONE 924-1303
PHONE 863-9519
CROWN LIFE
„ Frank G. Yada, '
'
Mickey Yada,-B. Comm. ,
' 1050 ’West Pender Street
Vancouver, B.C.
, Phone 682-6511
- ^
Res. 325-2528, 685-5886 ^
GINZA
RESTAURANT
7^«I«©•
5130 Dundas Street West,
Islington, Ontario
231-4000
'
: TORONTO. ONTARIO
<4^
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PAGEJ*
Friday, Octobar ■ 3, 1975
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AUTHENTIC JAPANESE DISHES
"MICHI" RESTAURANT
; ' 459 CHURCH STREET,
j 328 QUEEN ST. WEST,
. *.. -:r:»:J;:'.’:i'.l • • •■■.'’ J - s.A ' 1 ••• '-SV
. .
PHONE 924-1303
PHONE 863-9519
CROWN LIFE
„ Frank G. Yada, '
'
Mickey Yada,-B. Comm. ,
' 1050 ’West Pender Street
Vancouver, B.C.
, Phone 682-6511
- ^
Res. 325-2528, 685-5886 ^
GINZA
RESTAURANT
7^«I«©•
5130 Dundas Street West,
Islington, Ontario
231-4000
'
: TORONTO. ONTARIO
<4^
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Page 6
Friday, October 3, 1975
PAGE «
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