Page 1
Windsor Prof.: 'Nikkei Politicians in Calif .r independent minded Republicans"
prestigious became farmers. They began preneurship are the" basic in
almost as many JA’s in Cali
as farm laborers^ and though gredients of their life philo
.
fornia a’s in Hawaii; The 1970 firms. ,
sophy. Although most of thecensus reports 213^,280 JA’s in . The business orientation of their diligence and agricultur
(Univ. of Windsor)
know-how,
they
rather second and third generation
Ca 1 ifornia' and 217^0^ JA’s the JA’s. of course ha!s conside- al
During the past few years,
JA’s are no longer in agriculin Hawaii. For simplicity/ 4 am qble historical roots. When im quickly became share-cropers
I - haye be eri i nvo Ived i n a
using the following two terms migrants from Japan arrived and farm managers. Self-reCont. on page 2
"
study of Japanese American
liance
z
hard
work
2
and
entresynonymously: JA’s (Japanese J n Ca I ifor nidi most of them bepo I itici a ris i n Ca I ifam ia; There
Americans) and persons of iiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiHiii!uiiiimiiiiiBiiiiiimijiiii!iiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiHHlLiHii||.UiM,,,,,,,,|,,,,H,,,||,,,l,,,,|w^
'are now approximately thirty
Japanese ancestry.) It is conceielected
Japanese , American
vable that'such a major diffe
political officials in California.
rence in population make-up
My task was to interview them,
may account, for the rather
to gather data: on their person-’
conservative image of the J A
al background and political
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
politicians being '-shown in my
career, and to make some gen
data. .
eralizations about them. Thus
MANY REPUBLICANS
VOL. 44 — NO. 60
FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1980
TORONTO, ONT.
far I have finished interview
Ma ny . of us wou Id probab fflniBinwiiiiiiniiiiniiininniiiniiiiiiMiiiiiiBiiiiiiiRininniniiiiiiBniiiiiMiiiiiiiiiBniiii uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
ing about 89% of them.
The coVeage of7 my study is ly assume that a majority of
■limited to elected‘political' offi J A politicians in Calif ofhia are
cials. Those whom I have in Democrats. We, know that- a
terviewed q,re thirteen^ city clear majority of the most visi
councilmen, seven mayors, one ble JA politicians — .three US
county supervisor, on state senators, two: US congressmen,
a ss emb I y m a n, r ■ a n d tw o U S arid one state' governor (US
By SHOGO KOBAYASHI
congressmen. On. the other Senators Daniel .Inouye (DSpark
Matsunaga
hand, I haye excluded from Hawaii),
TORONTO. — There is still room for people to join
(D-iHdwaii), Samuel Hayakawa
the Lemon "Creek Reunion celebrations at the Prince Hotel,
commencing at 6:00 p.m. Saturday August 30, 1980. For fur
a Is, eyen if they are- elected, tR Calif.), U.S. Congressmen
ther information, please contact: — Mrs. Nicki Koyanagi, 35
those who are excluded are Norman Mineta ;(D-Calif.) and
Lehar Crescent, Willowdale, Ont. M2H 1J4 Tel. 494-2805, as z
Robert
Matsui
’
(D-Calif
.),
and
city clerks, treasurers, judges,
soon as possible.
Ani yo s hi
members of education boards,. G ove r nor ' G e o rg e
TORONTO. — For the past ” The committee announced that as part of the Reunion
(D-Hawaii).)
are Democrats.
. tax assessors, etc.
Weekend they will have the following functions at. the Japa
/'I am now in the (process of We a I s’o kno w that th e voti ng 28 beautiful years, Mamoru nese^ Canadian Cultural Centre, Don Mills commencing at
President 1:00 p.m. Sunday August 31, 1980:
analyzing the data I x have records in Hawaii and Califor (Nishi, has been the
1-00 — 2:00 p.m. Photo Display of Lemon Creek, B.C.
-gathered, and I am beginning nia over the last few decpdes of the Toronto Japanese Gard
en
Club.
Twenty-eight
years
of
2:oo _ 4:00 p.m. Entertainment and Flashbacks of Lemon
to discover a number of inter tend to suggest- that a major iesting characteristics about the ty of the J A voters are probab Japanese flower and garden Creek
4:00 —_ 6:00 p.m. Meeting your friends and intermingling.
Japanese American (JA) politi ly Democrats. In 'addition, it is culture with a close relation
ship1 between the old and the
Everyone, especially those who still, remember their sojurn
cians in California. As a1 mat generally assumed in Americoming
challenge
of
the
young
in wartime camps, is welcome.
ter, of fact2 some of these find
/
ings are quite different from Pa rty - i s a pa rty fo r m i n o r i ty with their new ideas. .
This is the Toronto Japanese
groups, and the JA^s are of
Garden Club Group. M/e are
■intrioduce some of. these surp course a minority group.
Yet according to my survey, a Toronto basedr non-profit
rise findings: (1) The JA politi
cians in 'California tend -to be of the 24 JA politicians I have organization/ of more than
■ An
animal fossil with Professor Hisayoshi
TOKYO.
than interviewed, 9 are Democrats, 200 ' members, from all seg
Republican's
ments
of Ikebana,
Bonsai, pI a n kton f oss i I b e I i eV ed to be Igo, a paleontologist and' iden
Democrats; (2) the J A ppi iti- and 15 are Republicans' Since
the oldest to be found in tified the plankton that: lived,
cians in California, tend, to the mayoral and councilmanic P1 a nts, a n d Gardens. Our pu ronly in the mid-Ordovician .
are pose is to advance The princi J apa n was d i scoved on th e
attract
strong
White . sup elections in - California
ples of Mother Nature and to Hida Mountains, Gifu Prefec ■Period.
port; and (3) the J A politicians non-partisan, we seldblm hea r
The fossil was examined by
greater
interest
in ture, by a graduate student of
back inspire
oartisan
in California tend to .be indep- about" the
Japanese culture, among the fsukuba University^ it was an a Swedish expert at the requ
" erident'of major interest groups grounds of the’se politicians.
est of Igo and Miss , Adachi.
nounced recently.
Only when we conduct a sysCont. on Page 2
Tn their communities..
The-expert confirmed that it
The
animal
plankton
lived
temati
c
fi
eld
survey,
ca
n
we
Before
explaining
these
only in the midDrdovician closely resembled Ordovician
findings further, I should em find a true and comprehen
Period which dates back to fossils found in North America
phasize that my finding's are sive picture of their partisan
million
years and Siberia.
about
480
not necessarily applicable to ship.. It is surprisingly conser
The previous oldest fossil in
university sources said. .
, .
all the J A politicians in the vative.
discoved
by
Japan
was
■
A
key
rea'son
for
this
Re
The
fossil
is
about
60
million
United States. There are two
Yoshio Onuki,
years older- than the, Silurian
reasons for this. First, my find publican. dominance -among
University
of
at
Miyagi
fish coral
.HIMEJI, Japan
fossil
which
had
ings are .based on statistical California’s JA politicians ap
peddler stabbed the mayor of previously been believed to1 be Education, in Ofunato, Iwate
pears
to
be
their
occupational
averages and not on each in
Yasutomi, a small town near the oldest fossil ever found in Prefecture.
dividual case separately. What background. Those J A s who
It was a coral fossil that
here, to death recently in a Japan, the sources said.
is true for a group of J A poli would seek public office tend
dates back to the Silurian Per- /
self-employed
and quarrel over the'mayor’s water
The discovery is attracting
ticians may or may not hold to' be
iod about 4'20 million years
buisness-oriented, ond their
the attention of paleontolo
ago.
About 11:20 p.m. Yoshio
economic philo’sophy is more
gists
arid
geologists
because
it
tidian.
/ '
said
the
latest
Morisaki, 43, called the home
compatible
with
that
of
is
.considered
valuable
in
the
Second, my data source is
discovery verified that the
of Mayor Kam ezo Taniguchi,
the
Republican
Party
than
of
the
limited to California and does
historical
research
area where the fossil waV
67. Morisaki had been drink
that
of
the
Democratic
Party.
not
extend
into;
other
development of the Japanese found had. been under the. sea
JA
Republican ing, police said.
archipelago.
states.
1
tend
to
suspect California’s
in the Ordovician Period and
Morisaki
told
police
that
he
politicians
are
engaged
in
such
that JA politics in Hawaii is
The discovery was made by later became land as a result
stabbed
the
mayor
in
a
fit
of
'quite different from that in occupations as medicine, den
Miss Shulko Adachi, a gradu- of geological upheaval.
rage
when
they
argued
about
California. .According, to the tistry, real estate, insurance,
Itaru
Koizuki,
a paleon
the need for measures to. curb ate student at Tsukuba Univernursery,
p
1970 census, the proportion of farming,
sity. The dossil was among tologist at Osaka University,-,
and
graphy,
wholesale,
JA’s to the total population in
several dozen of small fossils said it was an important
Taniguchi
had
been
.mayor
two
There
are
Hawaii is 28.2% whereas a retail.
she collected at Kamitakara, discovery for the study on the
since
1964.
He
announced
_on
who
comparable " proportion
in JA Republican politicians
geological development of the
JunelO that he would rup for Gifu Prefecture.
but
are'
full-time
employee's,
California is only 1.1%. ('Nu
Miss Adachi studied the Japanese archipelago.
another four-year term.
both
of
them
occupy
mariagemerically, however^. there are
By AKIRA. KUBOTA
THE NEW CANADIAN
Lemon Creek Reunion on
Toronto
Japanese Aug. 30th at Prince Hotel
Garden Club
1952 to 1980
Animal plankton fossil believed
to be oldest im Japan discovered
Drunken fish
peddler stabs
mayor to death
prestigious became farmers. They began preneurship are the" basic in
almost as many JA’s in Cali
as farm laborers^ and though gredients of their life philo
.
fornia a’s in Hawaii; The 1970 firms. ,
sophy. Although most of thecensus reports 213^,280 JA’s in . The business orientation of their diligence and agricultur
(Univ. of Windsor)
know-how,
they
rather second and third generation
Ca 1 ifornia' and 217^0^ JA’s the JA’s. of course ha!s conside- al
During the past few years,
JA’s are no longer in agriculin Hawaii. For simplicity/ 4 am qble historical roots. When im quickly became share-cropers
I - haye be eri i nvo Ived i n a
using the following two terms migrants from Japan arrived and farm managers. Self-reCont. on page 2
"
study of Japanese American
liance
z
hard
work
2
and
entresynonymously: JA’s (Japanese J n Ca I ifor nidi most of them bepo I itici a ris i n Ca I ifam ia; There
Americans) and persons of iiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiHiii!uiiiimiiiiiBiiiiiimijiiii!iiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiHHlLiHii||.UiM,,,,,,,,|,,,,H,,,||,,,l,,,,|w^
'are now approximately thirty
Japanese ancestry.) It is conceielected
Japanese , American
vable that'such a major diffe
political officials in California.
rence in population make-up
My task was to interview them,
may account, for the rather
to gather data: on their person-’
conservative image of the J A
al background and political
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
politicians being '-shown in my
career, and to make some gen
data. .
eralizations about them. Thus
MANY REPUBLICANS
VOL. 44 — NO. 60
FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1980
TORONTO, ONT.
far I have finished interview
Ma ny . of us wou Id probab fflniBinwiiiiiiniiiiniiininniiiniiiiiiMiiiiiiBiiiiiiiRininniniiiiiiBniiiiiMiiiiiiiiiBniiii uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
ing about 89% of them.
The coVeage of7 my study is ly assume that a majority of
■limited to elected‘political' offi J A politicians in Calif ofhia are
cials. Those whom I have in Democrats. We, know that- a
terviewed q,re thirteen^ city clear majority of the most visi
councilmen, seven mayors, one ble JA politicians — .three US
county supervisor, on state senators, two: US congressmen,
a ss emb I y m a n, r ■ a n d tw o U S arid one state' governor (US
By SHOGO KOBAYASHI
congressmen. On. the other Senators Daniel .Inouye (DSpark
Matsunaga
hand, I haye excluded from Hawaii),
TORONTO. — There is still room for people to join
(D-iHdwaii), Samuel Hayakawa
the Lemon "Creek Reunion celebrations at the Prince Hotel,
commencing at 6:00 p.m. Saturday August 30, 1980. For fur
a Is, eyen if they are- elected, tR Calif.), U.S. Congressmen
ther information, please contact: — Mrs. Nicki Koyanagi, 35
those who are excluded are Norman Mineta ;(D-Calif.) and
Lehar Crescent, Willowdale, Ont. M2H 1J4 Tel. 494-2805, as z
Robert
Matsui
’
(D-Calif
.),
and
city clerks, treasurers, judges,
soon as possible.
Ani yo s hi
members of education boards,. G ove r nor ' G e o rg e
TORONTO. — For the past ” The committee announced that as part of the Reunion
(D-Hawaii).)
are Democrats.
. tax assessors, etc.
Weekend they will have the following functions at. the Japa
/'I am now in the (process of We a I s’o kno w that th e voti ng 28 beautiful years, Mamoru nese^ Canadian Cultural Centre, Don Mills commencing at
President 1:00 p.m. Sunday August 31, 1980:
analyzing the data I x have records in Hawaii and Califor (Nishi, has been the
1-00 — 2:00 p.m. Photo Display of Lemon Creek, B.C.
-gathered, and I am beginning nia over the last few decpdes of the Toronto Japanese Gard
en
Club.
Twenty-eight
years
of
2:oo _ 4:00 p.m. Entertainment and Flashbacks of Lemon
to discover a number of inter tend to suggest- that a major iesting characteristics about the ty of the J A voters are probab Japanese flower and garden Creek
4:00 —_ 6:00 p.m. Meeting your friends and intermingling.
Japanese American (JA) politi ly Democrats. In 'addition, it is culture with a close relation
ship1 between the old and the
Everyone, especially those who still, remember their sojurn
cians in California. As a1 mat generally assumed in Americoming
challenge
of
the
young
in wartime camps, is welcome.
ter, of fact2 some of these find
/
ings are quite different from Pa rty - i s a pa rty fo r m i n o r i ty with their new ideas. .
This is the Toronto Japanese
groups, and the JA^s are of
Garden Club Group. M/e are
■intrioduce some of. these surp course a minority group.
Yet according to my survey, a Toronto basedr non-profit
rise findings: (1) The JA politi
cians in 'California tend -to be of the 24 JA politicians I have organization/ of more than
■ An
animal fossil with Professor Hisayoshi
TOKYO.
than interviewed, 9 are Democrats, 200 ' members, from all seg
Republican's
ments
of Ikebana,
Bonsai, pI a n kton f oss i I b e I i eV ed to be Igo, a paleontologist and' iden
Democrats; (2) the J A ppi iti- and 15 are Republicans' Since
the oldest to be found in tified the plankton that: lived,
cians in California, tend, to the mayoral and councilmanic P1 a nts, a n d Gardens. Our pu ronly in the mid-Ordovician .
are pose is to advance The princi J apa n was d i scoved on th e
attract
strong
White . sup elections in - California
ples of Mother Nature and to Hida Mountains, Gifu Prefec ■Period.
port; and (3) the J A politicians non-partisan, we seldblm hea r
The fossil was examined by
greater
interest
in ture, by a graduate student of
back inspire
oartisan
in California tend to .be indep- about" the
Japanese culture, among the fsukuba University^ it was an a Swedish expert at the requ
" erident'of major interest groups grounds of the’se politicians.
est of Igo and Miss , Adachi.
nounced recently.
Only when we conduct a sysCont. on Page 2
Tn their communities..
The-expert confirmed that it
The
animal
plankton
lived
temati
c
fi
eld
survey,
ca
n
we
Before
explaining
these
only in the midDrdovician closely resembled Ordovician
findings further, I should em find a true and comprehen
Period which dates back to fossils found in North America
phasize that my finding's are sive picture of their partisan
million
years and Siberia.
about
480
not necessarily applicable to ship.. It is surprisingly conser
The previous oldest fossil in
university sources said. .
, .
all the J A politicians in the vative.
discoved
by
Japan
was
■
A
key
rea'son
for
this
Re
The
fossil
is
about
60
million
United States. There are two
Yoshio Onuki,
years older- than the, Silurian
reasons for this. First, my find publican. dominance -among
University
of
at
Miyagi
fish coral
.HIMEJI, Japan
fossil
which
had
ings are .based on statistical California’s JA politicians ap
peddler stabbed the mayor of previously been believed to1 be Education, in Ofunato, Iwate
pears
to
be
their
occupational
averages and not on each in
Yasutomi, a small town near the oldest fossil ever found in Prefecture.
dividual case separately. What background. Those J A s who
It was a coral fossil that
here, to death recently in a Japan, the sources said.
is true for a group of J A poli would seek public office tend
dates back to the Silurian Per- /
self-employed
and quarrel over the'mayor’s water
The discovery is attracting
ticians may or may not hold to' be
iod about 4'20 million years
buisness-oriented, ond their
the attention of paleontolo
ago.
About 11:20 p.m. Yoshio
economic philo’sophy is more
gists
arid
geologists
because
it
tidian.
/ '
said
the
latest
Morisaki, 43, called the home
compatible
with
that
of
is
.considered
valuable
in
the
Second, my data source is
discovery verified that the
of Mayor Kam ezo Taniguchi,
the
Republican
Party
than
of
the
limited to California and does
historical
research
area where the fossil waV
67. Morisaki had been drink
that
of
the
Democratic
Party.
not
extend
into;
other
development of the Japanese found had. been under the. sea
JA
Republican ing, police said.
archipelago.
states.
1
tend
to
suspect California’s
in the Ordovician Period and
Morisaki
told
police
that
he
politicians
are
engaged
in
such
that JA politics in Hawaii is
The discovery was made by later became land as a result
stabbed
the
mayor
in
a
fit
of
'quite different from that in occupations as medicine, den
Miss Shulko Adachi, a gradu- of geological upheaval.
rage
when
they
argued
about
California. .According, to the tistry, real estate, insurance,
Itaru
Koizuki,
a paleon
the need for measures to. curb ate student at Tsukuba Univernursery,
p
1970 census, the proportion of farming,
sity. The dossil was among tologist at Osaka University,-,
and
graphy,
wholesale,
JA’s to the total population in
several dozen of small fossils said it was an important
Taniguchi
had
been
.mayor
two
There
are
Hawaii is 28.2% whereas a retail.
she collected at Kamitakara, discovery for the study on the
since
1964.
He
announced
_on
who
comparable " proportion
in JA Republican politicians
geological development of the
JunelO that he would rup for Gifu Prefecture.
but
are'
full-time
employee's,
California is only 1.1%. ('Nu
Miss Adachi studied the Japanese archipelago.
another four-year term.
both
of
them
occupy
mariagemerically, however^. there are
By AKIRA. KUBOTA
THE NEW CANADIAN
Lemon Creek Reunion on
Toronto
Japanese Aug. 30th at Prince Hotel
Garden Club
1952 to 1980
Animal plankton fossil believed
to be oldest im Japan discovered
Drunken fish
peddler stabs
mayor to death
Page 2
PAGE 2
Politicians .
Cont. from Page 1,.
Established inl939
- ture, some of them are bound the overall proportion of JA’s •- In the case of Mayor Gedge. way in which some, of the de
Second Class mail - No. 0368
to California’s population is Ige, (Monterey ’ Park),' he was cisions are made by. their local
A member of Ethnic^ Press
more 1.1 %. Obviously relying opposed and defeated -by a governments. It is then inevi: Association of Ontario
-table
that
some
of
these
busi
and Canada Federation _
be anti-DemOcratic. 'They tend 'solely on the JA votes' is ' not. Phillipino American candidate
ness
grodps
want
to
influence
to "frown upon such --qualities a very parctical way to win apparently ': because he* lost
Published on Tuesdays and
city
g
overn
menf
/Among
..these,
;not
holy
most
of
the
Pi
1
1
ipi
no
as idleness, dependency, and. -public office.
Fridays
by
far
the
most
important
votes
but
also
much - of
welfare support, and they
iH ow; about for mi ng d coa 1 iPublisher & Japanese Editor
...and group are developers-;. (An ex
tend to blame the Democrafic tion of nonwhite^voters? If the. the ‘ non-JA - Asian
" Kenzo Mori
When
the ception to this pattern in Gar
Party as the source of these s ize of J A vote rs is so h ope- White - votes*
English Editor
dena,
where
the
porker
clubs
size
of.
a
:
given
minority
undesirable traits and practi lessly'small, isn’t it more pra
Kei TsUmura
wield
strong
political
influence;
sufficiently
ces.
\ , gmatic for. all the nonwhite to group ; becomes
Circulation Manager
Three
White
politicians
receive
large, - it understandably /pre
K. Sho
Nonetheless, California’s JA get: together, x Jo : b rg hize. a
SUBSCRIPTION '
fers to elect one-of its own ra political funds "from these clubs
majority
are majority /or ' near
.Republican - politicians
$12.-for 6 months
ther “than to - continue to sup and support them . 'politically.
generally not staun'ch or■ re- coalition, and to- defeat the
$20. per year
The ; remaining two JA politiport
.
.
one
of
a
nof
her
mi
no
rity
actionary conservatives. (Pro~I
White candidate? In theory it
479 Queen Street West,
not receive any
v clans
group such as. the JA’s.
Toronto/ Ont. M5B 2A9
bably the sole exception to may make sense to, dl sous s a
A fairly large minority group money from the card clubs
PHONE 366-5005
this general rule is US Senator nonwhife majority coalition to.
.and
take
a
critical
political
which have^yet to ■mobilize" its.
Hayakawa.)
They are,
for elect a JA candidate, but in
full political potential are th'e. -position against them) - Since
example,, quite liberal in the practice this seems to occur
Mexicans. In many communiti many “communities in Califon
civil rights, field. Perhaps" it is very, rarely in California. The
Cont. from Page 1
es where the JA’s have alrea n i a a re expo n d i n g very rapid
inevitable. Many of them have general parameters of - thedy elected their own city coun- ly, and since a great deal, of younger "'geheration and the
personally told me about a ethnic composition- Jn Ca 1 iforoilmen, -the Mexicans have not, money can be .made • in real community ak large, in the 28
great deal of racial discrimi ni a I a rg e ly e I i m i note that. p os although their.size may be as estate, it is hard not for deve years, - our members have ex
nation /they have experienced, sibility. In the kind of com-,
I a r g e a s 2 0 %, 3 0 %, o r - ev e n lopers to attempt to influence panded and - various Ikebana
over the course of their - life m u n iti e s wh e re J A p o I i t i ci a n s
more; Many of these tend to j the 'city planning commission schooIs n o w comp ri se of seve rhistory.. One of them' Council are active, a total of all the
be rural agricultural communi and even the city council it al groups in Toronto and be
man 'Toru
Miyoshi -(Santa no nw h i t e vot e rs are ’usually
65 ra^er than urban industri- self. Not infrequently develo yond. Come and pin us at
Maria) /has been a civil .-rights well below the majority,- and'^
<
rn|iv'd communities.. According to pers can succeed in" recruiting our 28th annuql Flower and
activist for. some time on be- i a clear majority - are- normally
many. 'J A
politicians,
.the some politicians: and making Ga rd en . Show e nt it I ed, Fr i e n d half of not'only the JA’ s but, Whites, Thus an optimum 'stra
Mexican community.tend to be them, their agents at- “the ship ’ With Flowers, on - Satur
also the Mexican-Americans. tegy for a J A candidate is- to
day, October "28 and Sunday,
badly divided' into factions: city hall. _ -.
Most -of California’s JA Repu- appeal to the White voters. In
October- 29, 1 980, from 1:00 to
the Mexicans are poorly regis
In’ addition, we often -find
blican politicians support a other words, whenever a JA
6-00 p.m. at / the Jo pa n ese
tered and infr'equenty;particip
proposal to seek some type of w^ins public office, he or she
a reformist group in - many
Canadian Cultural Centre,-' 123
ate in the electoral process;
remedies for the forced reloc usually receives a large part
communities
in
California.
Wynford Drive, Don Mills. For
and they are not an effective
ation and internment _of the of a' majority of the White
There activists are generally
fu rth er i nfo rma ti on tel eph one:
voting bloc. A possible excepti
interested in preserving envi
JA’s during World War II.- z votes with or without strong
368-9898,
or
769-5327,
on is Oxnard (where, we find
support from each of the mino
ron m_erit, control I i ng/rea I estate
a JA mayor (Dr. Tsujio Kato)
225- 7836-.
ST RONG WHITE SUPPORT _ rity groups.
d eve I op m e nts a n d cl ea n i n g up
Board of Governors '1 980:
and a JA city councilman (Nao
the
“
corruption
”
in
city
govern
in Gardena where...the size Takasugi). A fair number of
Acco rd i ng : to . th e
1 97 0
Nishi
President - Mamoru
ment.
Thus'
many'communities
census, the ethnic composition of nonwhite is quite-large —. JA politicians insisted that
Vice Presidents Midori Iwa
in
California
are
divided
_oetAsians
20.5%,
Blacks
1
7.5°/o,
' of California’s population is
saki, Toshi Oikawa
Cea sa r Chavez had I itt I e in
ween two opposing groups —
as
follows: Whites
78.0% Mexicans 16.2%, and Whites
Secretary Michiyo Tamura
fluence among the grass rootsrelatively old politicians who
Mexico ns 11 -.0%, .BI a cks 7.0%', 45.8% -(1974 data) — it may
Treasurer Tomi Nishimera
Mexicans.
_ teTvd
to
cooperate
with
1
develo
Indians 0.5%, Japanese 1-1%, seem, possible, to put together
/Public Relations Hanae Ni
i N DEPEND ENT —; MINDED . pers and relatively new poli
Chinese 0.9%,- Phillipino .0.7%, a winning coalition of non
•
ticians who often represent re shi
■POLITICIANS '
all others 0.8%. If we assume white .voters* Yef there is no
Governors:.
formists
and
environmenta
the population were ethnical evidence that it has been actu
Thus far 1 have shown that
Kay Goto; Kay Hayashi,
ly evenly distributed,, then the ally
successfully .organized. most .victorious JA. politicians lists. Most JA politicians ap Toyoski ''Hiramatsu; Sueko Ishii;
whites would be. by far the Two recent J A council men, are "receiving strong/ Whiter el pear to belong to - the' latter
Yae Iwata; Harumi Inouye;
group.
most numerous group in every Mas Fukai and .Vincent Oka ectoral support. But how is it.
Susumu - Koyama; Tsurukichi
community in Californio; If so, moto, received a great deal of possible? One common reason
"in the-context of this politic Kusano; Toshio Kotani; Ghiyakj
California’s ' JA
politicians White votes as well as non that I have found among al power equation, California’s Katsuno; Chiyoji Matsuo ; Taye
would have nof choice but to white votes.- When a - former California’is JA politicians is JA politicians, appear to enjoy Miyamoto; Joe Miyauchi; Sah
get a large part of the White J A mayor (Ken Nakaoka) was that they maintain a fairly
us- el Nishikawa; Gloria Sumiya;
'several advantages.
votes in order to win public defeated by a White candidate favorable image among the ually the extent of conflict bet Wilma Swain;.. Shigeu Seko;
he apparently lost large votes general • electorate and. es ween - the ' oId-poIitician-deve Chiyo
office.
Umezuki; /Masayuki
from
both
the
JA
and
White
pecially among the White, loper group and newpolitician Yano.
However, the ethnic make
; •.
up is not really?upiform Jh communities in. Gardena. At voters/ The JA. politicians are -environmentalist group is so
California. Some communities the present moment, the voter widely considered to be fair, intense that the White-and-non
may have a relatively large appeal of the JA politicians neutral and honest. More sper whlte?~disti notion is often rein California is not. very well
proportion of JA’s whereas
duced to a secondary or margOn
split along the White-nonwhite are regarded a’s independent inal. issue* Second, it is easier
others may have a large pro-:
of the special interests in the Jo r th e r efo rm i st g r d up to s e l 1
portion of Blacks or Mexicans. racial division.
On the other hand, there are communities whereas, many of a JA candidate to the general
Stereo’s, Microwave
Let us look at the real existing
mostly .pub 1 i c. Si n ce"a J A ca n d i da te
ethnic distribution and analyze actual cases where victorious their opponents
Ovens, Video Cassette
the/JA politician’s’ ability to JA candidates failed, to get White candidates — are not. tends to be new and is non
Recorders, and TV
In
today
’
s.
American
‘
electoral
strong
support
from
some
garner votes on that basis.
white, he appears less tied to
Converters
process, integrity is a relatively the establishment in the com
In general, JA’s do not cons
Admiral, Lloyds,
are
State
Assembly
man
potent
.
factor.
Against
the
munity. In many instances, a
titute q -significant minority iples
Panasonic, Quasar,
E
(R-Gardena
and
backdrop
of
'Wategate.
group in most, communities in Paul Bannai
J A ca n d i date I ooks ‘ ‘ cl ea ri er”
Toshiba, Zenith,
Vicinity) vis-a-vis . Black iKoreagate, and other scandals, than mahy White candidates.
California. Probably the heavi-' its
Councilman
Frank one can not underestimate, the Third,, unlike other minorities,
est concentration of JA s — voters,
(Oakland)
vis-a-vis significance of such qualities a J A candidate tends to be
approximately
20% ——.. ’s Ogawa
found in Gardena, but this is Black voters, and County -Sup as fairness, neutrality, and well educated and profession
Member MTTSA
an exception rather than the ervisor Richard Yoshikawa (San hone'sty in assessing the vote al, or at least quite diligent.
Fast T.V. Service
rule, Bven’Jn these commun Joaquin) vis-g-vis Phillipino gathering - ability of. a given -Thus the J A candidate looks
.
ities * where one or more JA voters. . In all the above three political candidate.
more qualified than most min
741-4236
cases,
the
JA
politicians
could
In
many
communities
in
ority candidates.
|
politicians occupy public office,
2625 Islington Ave.
' H size of JA’s" rarely exceeds offset this loss by strong sup Ca 1 ifornia, we f i nd va r i ou s -It would be of course naive
. (At Albion)
port
from
the
White
and
other
business g r oups . who s e i n tere st
' 1'0% or even, 5%. Probably it
Shig Aoki Prop'.\
(CONT. ON PAGE 3)
are profoundly affected by the
/ should be expected, because minority voters.'
Gardens club . ..
Low Low Prices
New Color TV's
SHIG'S T.V.
Sales & Service
Politicians .
Cont. from Page 1,.
Established inl939
- ture, some of them are bound the overall proportion of JA’s •- In the case of Mayor Gedge. way in which some, of the de
Second Class mail - No. 0368
to California’s population is Ige, (Monterey ’ Park),' he was cisions are made by. their local
A member of Ethnic^ Press
more 1.1 %. Obviously relying opposed and defeated -by a governments. It is then inevi: Association of Ontario
-table
that
some
of
these
busi
and Canada Federation _
be anti-DemOcratic. 'They tend 'solely on the JA votes' is ' not. Phillipino American candidate
ness
grodps
want
to
influence
to "frown upon such --qualities a very parctical way to win apparently ': because he* lost
Published on Tuesdays and
city
g
overn
menf
/Among
..these,
;not
holy
most
of
the
Pi
1
1
ipi
no
as idleness, dependency, and. -public office.
Fridays
by
far
the
most
important
votes
but
also
much - of
welfare support, and they
iH ow; about for mi ng d coa 1 iPublisher & Japanese Editor
...and group are developers-;. (An ex
tend to blame the Democrafic tion of nonwhite^voters? If the. the ‘ non-JA - Asian
" Kenzo Mori
When
the ception to this pattern in Gar
Party as the source of these s ize of J A vote rs is so h ope- White - votes*
English Editor
dena,
where
the
porker
clubs
size
of.
a
:
given
minority
undesirable traits and practi lessly'small, isn’t it more pra
Kei TsUmura
wield
strong
political
influence;
sufficiently
ces.
\ , gmatic for. all the nonwhite to group ; becomes
Circulation Manager
Three
White
politicians
receive
large, - it understandably /pre
K. Sho
Nonetheless, California’s JA get: together, x Jo : b rg hize. a
SUBSCRIPTION '
fers to elect one-of its own ra political funds "from these clubs
majority
are majority /or ' near
.Republican - politicians
$12.-for 6 months
ther “than to - continue to sup and support them . 'politically.
generally not staun'ch or■ re- coalition, and to- defeat the
$20. per year
The ; remaining two JA politiport
.
.
one
of
a
nof
her
mi
no
rity
actionary conservatives. (Pro~I
White candidate? In theory it
479 Queen Street West,
not receive any
v clans
group such as. the JA’s.
Toronto/ Ont. M5B 2A9
bably the sole exception to may make sense to, dl sous s a
A fairly large minority group money from the card clubs
PHONE 366-5005
this general rule is US Senator nonwhife majority coalition to.
.and
take
a
critical
political
which have^yet to ■mobilize" its.
Hayakawa.)
They are,
for elect a JA candidate, but in
full political potential are th'e. -position against them) - Since
example,, quite liberal in the practice this seems to occur
Mexicans. In many communiti many “communities in Califon
civil rights, field. Perhaps" it is very, rarely in California. The
Cont. from Page 1
es where the JA’s have alrea n i a a re expo n d i n g very rapid
inevitable. Many of them have general parameters of - thedy elected their own city coun- ly, and since a great deal, of younger "'geheration and the
personally told me about a ethnic composition- Jn Ca 1 iforoilmen, -the Mexicans have not, money can be .made • in real community ak large, in the 28
great deal of racial discrimi ni a I a rg e ly e I i m i note that. p os although their.size may be as estate, it is hard not for deve years, - our members have ex
nation /they have experienced, sibility. In the kind of com-,
I a r g e a s 2 0 %, 3 0 %, o r - ev e n lopers to attempt to influence panded and - various Ikebana
over the course of their - life m u n iti e s wh e re J A p o I i t i ci a n s
more; Many of these tend to j the 'city planning commission schooIs n o w comp ri se of seve rhistory.. One of them' Council are active, a total of all the
be rural agricultural communi and even the city council it al groups in Toronto and be
man 'Toru
Miyoshi -(Santa no nw h i t e vot e rs are ’usually
65 ra^er than urban industri- self. Not infrequently develo yond. Come and pin us at
Maria) /has been a civil .-rights well below the majority,- and'^
<
rn|iv'd communities.. According to pers can succeed in" recruiting our 28th annuql Flower and
activist for. some time on be- i a clear majority - are- normally
many. 'J A
politicians,
.the some politicians: and making Ga rd en . Show e nt it I ed, Fr i e n d half of not'only the JA’ s but, Whites, Thus an optimum 'stra
Mexican community.tend to be them, their agents at- “the ship ’ With Flowers, on - Satur
also the Mexican-Americans. tegy for a J A candidate is- to
day, October "28 and Sunday,
badly divided' into factions: city hall. _ -.
Most -of California’s JA Repu- appeal to the White voters. In
October- 29, 1 980, from 1:00 to
the Mexicans are poorly regis
In’ addition, we often -find
blican politicians support a other words, whenever a JA
6-00 p.m. at / the Jo pa n ese
tered and infr'equenty;particip
proposal to seek some type of w^ins public office, he or she
a reformist group in - many
Canadian Cultural Centre,-' 123
ate in the electoral process;
remedies for the forced reloc usually receives a large part
communities
in
California.
Wynford Drive, Don Mills. For
and they are not an effective
ation and internment _of the of a' majority of the White
There activists are generally
fu rth er i nfo rma ti on tel eph one:
voting bloc. A possible excepti
interested in preserving envi
JA’s during World War II.- z votes with or without strong
368-9898,
or
769-5327,
on is Oxnard (where, we find
support from each of the mino
ron m_erit, control I i ng/rea I estate
a JA mayor (Dr. Tsujio Kato)
225- 7836-.
ST RONG WHITE SUPPORT _ rity groups.
d eve I op m e nts a n d cl ea n i n g up
Board of Governors '1 980:
and a JA city councilman (Nao
the
“
corruption
”
in
city
govern
in Gardena where...the size Takasugi). A fair number of
Acco rd i ng : to . th e
1 97 0
Nishi
President - Mamoru
ment.
Thus'
many'communities
census, the ethnic composition of nonwhite is quite-large —. JA politicians insisted that
Vice Presidents Midori Iwa
in
California
are
divided
_oetAsians
20.5%,
Blacks
1
7.5°/o,
' of California’s population is
saki, Toshi Oikawa
Cea sa r Chavez had I itt I e in
ween two opposing groups —
as
follows: Whites
78.0% Mexicans 16.2%, and Whites
Secretary Michiyo Tamura
fluence among the grass rootsrelatively old politicians who
Mexico ns 11 -.0%, .BI a cks 7.0%', 45.8% -(1974 data) — it may
Treasurer Tomi Nishimera
Mexicans.
_ teTvd
to
cooperate
with
1
develo
Indians 0.5%, Japanese 1-1%, seem, possible, to put together
/Public Relations Hanae Ni
i N DEPEND ENT —; MINDED . pers and relatively new poli
Chinese 0.9%,- Phillipino .0.7%, a winning coalition of non
•
ticians who often represent re shi
■POLITICIANS '
all others 0.8%. If we assume white .voters* Yef there is no
Governors:.
formists
and
environmenta
the population were ethnical evidence that it has been actu
Thus far 1 have shown that
Kay Goto; Kay Hayashi,
ly evenly distributed,, then the ally
successfully .organized. most .victorious JA. politicians lists. Most JA politicians ap Toyoski ''Hiramatsu; Sueko Ishii;
whites would be. by far the Two recent J A council men, are "receiving strong/ Whiter el pear to belong to - the' latter
Yae Iwata; Harumi Inouye;
group.
most numerous group in every Mas Fukai and .Vincent Oka ectoral support. But how is it.
Susumu - Koyama; Tsurukichi
community in Californio; If so, moto, received a great deal of possible? One common reason
"in the-context of this politic Kusano; Toshio Kotani; Ghiyakj
California’s ' JA
politicians White votes as well as non that I have found among al power equation, California’s Katsuno; Chiyoji Matsuo ; Taye
would have nof choice but to white votes.- When a - former California’is JA politicians is JA politicians, appear to enjoy Miyamoto; Joe Miyauchi; Sah
get a large part of the White J A mayor (Ken Nakaoka) was that they maintain a fairly
us- el Nishikawa; Gloria Sumiya;
'several advantages.
votes in order to win public defeated by a White candidate favorable image among the ually the extent of conflict bet Wilma Swain;.. Shigeu Seko;
he apparently lost large votes general • electorate and. es ween - the ' oId-poIitician-deve Chiyo
office.
Umezuki; /Masayuki
from
both
the
JA
and
White
pecially among the White, loper group and newpolitician Yano.
However, the ethnic make
; •.
up is not really?upiform Jh communities in. Gardena. At voters/ The JA. politicians are -environmentalist group is so
California. Some communities the present moment, the voter widely considered to be fair, intense that the White-and-non
may have a relatively large appeal of the JA politicians neutral and honest. More sper whlte?~disti notion is often rein California is not. very well
proportion of JA’s whereas
duced to a secondary or margOn
split along the White-nonwhite are regarded a’s independent inal. issue* Second, it is easier
others may have a large pro-:
of the special interests in the Jo r th e r efo rm i st g r d up to s e l 1
portion of Blacks or Mexicans. racial division.
On the other hand, there are communities whereas, many of a JA candidate to the general
Stereo’s, Microwave
Let us look at the real existing
mostly .pub 1 i c. Si n ce"a J A ca n d i da te
ethnic distribution and analyze actual cases where victorious their opponents
Ovens, Video Cassette
the/JA politician’s’ ability to JA candidates failed, to get White candidates — are not. tends to be new and is non
Recorders, and TV
In
today
’
s.
American
‘
electoral
strong
support
from
some
garner votes on that basis.
white, he appears less tied to
Converters
process, integrity is a relatively the establishment in the com
In general, JA’s do not cons
Admiral, Lloyds,
are
State
Assembly
man
potent
.
factor.
Against
the
munity. In many instances, a
titute q -significant minority iples
Panasonic, Quasar,
E
(R-Gardena
and
backdrop
of
'Wategate.
group in most, communities in Paul Bannai
J A ca n d i date I ooks ‘ ‘ cl ea ri er”
Toshiba, Zenith,
Vicinity) vis-a-vis . Black iKoreagate, and other scandals, than mahy White candidates.
California. Probably the heavi-' its
Councilman
Frank one can not underestimate, the Third,, unlike other minorities,
est concentration of JA s — voters,
(Oakland)
vis-a-vis significance of such qualities a J A candidate tends to be
approximately
20% ——.. ’s Ogawa
found in Gardena, but this is Black voters, and County -Sup as fairness, neutrality, and well educated and profession
Member MTTSA
an exception rather than the ervisor Richard Yoshikawa (San hone'sty in assessing the vote al, or at least quite diligent.
Fast T.V. Service
rule, Bven’Jn these commun Joaquin) vis-g-vis Phillipino gathering - ability of. a given -Thus the J A candidate looks
.
ities * where one or more JA voters. . In all the above three political candidate.
more qualified than most min
741-4236
cases,
the
JA
politicians
could
In
many
communities
in
ority candidates.
|
politicians occupy public office,
2625 Islington Ave.
' H size of JA’s" rarely exceeds offset this loss by strong sup Ca 1 ifornia, we f i nd va r i ou s -It would be of course naive
. (At Albion)
port
from
the
White
and
other
business g r oups . who s e i n tere st
' 1'0% or even, 5%. Probably it
Shig Aoki Prop'.\
(CONT. ON PAGE 3)
are profoundly affected by the
/ should be expected, because minority voters.'
Gardens club . ..
Low Low Prices
New Color TV's
SHIG'S T.V.
Sales & Service
Page 3
iHiS6S$iK»8g38tasi«8^^^
PAGE 3
• Friday, August, 15, 1980
(Cout. from Page 2)
Politicians ...
Fer Berit Results
to assume, that all the J A poli politicians, who seem to have
ticians are -completely clean. : a—very difficult ti me in susta i nThere must be- many tempta ing^thei r - popu la rity. For ’ them;
aiHiiiinimiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiiim^^
tions in politics,- and one needs, rnerely being a politician is . a
to raise poI iticaI funds. cpnti nu- ■maiJor 1 iab i 1 ity. Senator John
ously if . he .or. she wants do Tunney had- 'such a problem;
stay in- politics. Soorier Tor vis-a-vis his challenger Samuef
s
1
BARBARA'S
I
|
Flower Shop
=
later -at least -a few J A politi Hayakawa tn 1976. Hayakawa
cians will inevitably be linked was apparently successful in '
to some scandals. (The -recall -Imposing an image of “a dirty
politican”
on
movement- against' a JA city ^professional
councilman (Sak Yamamoto) in Tunney white effectively, pos
f BARBARA NIKAIDO |
S
1232 Danforth Ave.
= Toronto, Ontario M4J 1M6
=
•
Tel. (416) 465-9939
E
:
:
But I wasn t
By BILL MARUTANI
.
First, the Nazis went’after the Jews,
But I wasn’t a Jew,
so I did not react.
Then they went after, the Catholics,
■ so I didn’t stand up.
<
so I didn’t object;
;
' Then they went after the worker,
.
~
but I wasn’t a worker,
’
so I didn't stand up.
Then they went after the' Protestant Clergy ;
and by then it was too late
■- for anybody to stand up. ■
Carson apparently succeeded ing himself as "a clean politicMmuiiiiiiiniiiiiniinnmii’iiiinih
in October 1979.) • But on the a lx a m ateu r” b efo re Ca 1 ifo raverage,. it may- be -fair to nia’s electorate.. In a two-way
a rg>u e that m an y J A p'o 1 i ti cia ns election fight between d J A
>
MARTIN NIEMOELLER
deserve the image of a clean and. a White candidate, the JA
'
Pastor, Theologian
pol iti ci a n. Most of Ca I i fo rn i a’ s was considered “clean”; whileJA politicians appear to have the White considered “sus- , And so it was that the unspeakable holocaust was perpet
proprietor
men,,
a sufficient' and<stabIe income. pcect. ” It was obvi o us I y i n co n - rated against some six million fellow human beings,
JON ONODERA
Some of them have accumu ceivable in California a few women, children, the elderly, infants, — who worshipped the
lated considerable assets be-' decades ago2 but it is now Almighty under the Old Testament. The Jews.
489-4654 — 481-8805
(Business)
(Residence)
fore -.going into"politics. Alth possible.
It didn’t start with those now-infamous gas ovens. Rather
ough it is risky to generalize, • tt may' be premature to it began with restrictions,, followed by special’ decrees j wear
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
the crime rate among the JA's conclude that the kind of in ing of a special Jewish badge, forced labor, establishment of
Toronto
. Jewish Councils - the ”Judenrat“), incarceration, and then
is probably-lowest among all
tense anti-Japanese
feeling systematic elimination. All supplemented -with accelerating
the ethnic groups in the United
that existed in California in propagahda of hate. And all the. while as the world stood by,
(
States.
JAPANESE '
the 1930’s and 1940’s. has essentially silent and inactive. Silent and, inactive-world nati
'Before conduing this article, been completely eradicated. It ons. Silent and inactive world churches and religions. Silent
RESTAURANT >
and inactive world peoples.
T
-10 ,-me.cite two more examples
may also be too early to con
It is unpleasant, to say the least, to think, let alone speak,
to shed further light on the
clude that racism in other
favorable image of^the J A areas such as school integrati- about this horrible chapter in the history of mankind; rather,
‘ - 459 Church St.'
politicians in California. When on^ employment, social relati -it is easier to forget about the enormity of this program, per
Phone 924-1303
•I interviewed' US Congressman on has been thoroughly re haps to think somehow it didn't, happen, that it could not
THE NEW RESTAURANT
•Robert Matsui [D-Sa cram onto), moved. However^ at least in have happened, that it won't happen. Again. That we are not
—
“MASA”
Jews, and so . . . it can’t happen to us. Surely, not in America,
I wa s -struck - by . h i s n o n -poI iti the electoral process in Cali
At 195 RICHMOND ST. W.
ci an appearance. After being
fornia, the JA’s are now ap- -not today.
Toronto, Phone 977-9519
briefly exposed to his youth. We have but to look Jo, Southeast Asia, where today, again,
hundreds of thousands of fellow human beings have been
ful look* slender physique, and
evaluated by the general pub
and are being systematically exterminated. As you read those
gentle mannerism, I -could Trot
lic. (I. must once again em very words; thiS'-moment. Again, while the worlds nations,
prevent myself from telling
phasize that my study deals churches and peoples ineffectually stand by, at best weak
b'ms.that he does- not really
only with California arid not ly protesting. This time different victims,-different regimes,
look like a politician. Con
with other states of the union. different methods! But with the same- end result: systematic
gressman Matsui shot me back
mass homicide of helpless men, women, children,, the eldery .
It appears that as an electoral
by saying that not looking like
and infants. Today. Now.
:
> a' politician is -a major, asset factor, race' is more importdint
But we cannot concern ourselves with, these repulsive
Barristers & Solicitors
in Hawaii than in California.
horrors: It is again too unpleasant; to consider; we are not
nowdays in America and that
The
latest
example
of
this
is
the victims; it cannot happen to other minorities, it could not
155 MAIN ST. W.
people can trust such a person
Ar iyos hi -Fa sig ub en ato ri a I co n - have happened in America.: Perliaps. Those , of you who have
Stouffville, Ontario LOH 1L0
and would vote for him.
read Michi Weglyn’s book ’’Years'of Infamy" learned for the
test
in1978.)
.
There
are.
some
non-JA
Telephone: 640-5454
first time some of the proposals submitted by those in the
HYLAND
FLOWERS
"MICHI"
KIMURA,
CADSBY
& TAYLOR
c
TASTE OF CHINA
RESTAURANT & TAVERN
.
INSURANCE
DELIVERY SERVICE
7 DA YS A WEEK
Gertrude Urabe
463 Eglinton Ave. W.
Toronto, Ont.z M5N 1A7
phone 489-8611
WE CATER TO
RESIDENTIAL, MOTELS,
HOTELS, OFFICES, CLUBS, FACTORIES ETC.
467-469 QUEEN ST. W. 1
367-0444
highest places of our Government for the ’’solution" of the
115,000 Japanese Americans and /heir parents who were in- _
carcerated in concentration camp in the United States during
World War II: ship them ’’back" to Japan; propose an ”exchlange" of ten Japanese Americans for every prisoner-of-war
that the Japanese Imperial Government releashed; and so on.
First the Nazis went after the Jews, but I wasn’t a Jew ...
Vacation closing
July 19 to Aug. 5th
SHARON'S
I
|
JUNN KA SHINO
AND ASSOCIATES
FLORIST
942 PAPE AVE.
TORONTO. ONT.
TEL: 425-2122
City wide delivery
Peter Sasaki
_
CHARTERED
ACCOUNTANTS
523 THE QUEENSWAY
TORONTO, ONT. M8Y 1J7
PHONE 255-7342
Home 449-9293 \
SALES ENGINEER
Don- Mills manufacturer of- steel mill instrumentation,
requires a Japanese speaking sales engineer. Electrical/
electronic training and rolling mill experience preferred
Fluent English essential.
_ljapanese nratauranty^BMem
Reservations: 977-2164
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
460 Dundas St. West,
Toronto, Ont.
Please mail resume- to R.G. Powers,I Sales Manager.
KELK
48 Lesmill Road.
Don Mills, Ontario
Canada M3B 2T5
FURUYA
460 Dundas St. W.
Toronto 2B ,Ont.
Travel Service — Tel: 977-7655
^Frequent Group Departures to Japan by JAPAN
AIR LINES and CP AIR
Take advantage of special group departures July
5 and September 27, 1980
Telephone
(416) 445-5850
For further information regarding all your travel
needs, contact FURUYA TRAVEL today I I I
!
s
r
PAGE 3
• Friday, August, 15, 1980
(Cout. from Page 2)
Politicians ...
Fer Berit Results
to assume, that all the J A poli politicians, who seem to have
ticians are -completely clean. : a—very difficult ti me in susta i nThere must be- many tempta ing^thei r - popu la rity. For ’ them;
aiHiiiinimiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiiim^^
tions in politics,- and one needs, rnerely being a politician is . a
to raise poI iticaI funds. cpnti nu- ■maiJor 1 iab i 1 ity. Senator John
ously if . he .or. she wants do Tunney had- 'such a problem;
stay in- politics. Soorier Tor vis-a-vis his challenger Samuef
s
1
BARBARA'S
I
|
Flower Shop
=
later -at least -a few J A politi Hayakawa tn 1976. Hayakawa
cians will inevitably be linked was apparently successful in '
to some scandals. (The -recall -Imposing an image of “a dirty
politican”
on
movement- against' a JA city ^professional
councilman (Sak Yamamoto) in Tunney white effectively, pos
f BARBARA NIKAIDO |
S
1232 Danforth Ave.
= Toronto, Ontario M4J 1M6
=
•
Tel. (416) 465-9939
E
:
:
But I wasn t
By BILL MARUTANI
.
First, the Nazis went’after the Jews,
But I wasn’t a Jew,
so I did not react.
Then they went after, the Catholics,
■ so I didn’t stand up.
<
so I didn’t object;
;
' Then they went after the worker,
.
~
but I wasn’t a worker,
’
so I didn't stand up.
Then they went after the' Protestant Clergy ;
and by then it was too late
■- for anybody to stand up. ■
Carson apparently succeeded ing himself as "a clean politicMmuiiiiiiiniiiiiniinnmii’iiiinih
in October 1979.) • But on the a lx a m ateu r” b efo re Ca 1 ifo raverage,. it may- be -fair to nia’s electorate.. In a two-way
a rg>u e that m an y J A p'o 1 i ti cia ns election fight between d J A
>
MARTIN NIEMOELLER
deserve the image of a clean and. a White candidate, the JA
'
Pastor, Theologian
pol iti ci a n. Most of Ca I i fo rn i a’ s was considered “clean”; whileJA politicians appear to have the White considered “sus- , And so it was that the unspeakable holocaust was perpet
proprietor
men,,
a sufficient' and<stabIe income. pcect. ” It was obvi o us I y i n co n - rated against some six million fellow human beings,
JON ONODERA
Some of them have accumu ceivable in California a few women, children, the elderly, infants, — who worshipped the
lated considerable assets be-' decades ago2 but it is now Almighty under the Old Testament. The Jews.
489-4654 — 481-8805
(Business)
(Residence)
fore -.going into"politics. Alth possible.
It didn’t start with those now-infamous gas ovens. Rather
ough it is risky to generalize, • tt may' be premature to it began with restrictions,, followed by special’ decrees j wear
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
the crime rate among the JA's conclude that the kind of in ing of a special Jewish badge, forced labor, establishment of
Toronto
. Jewish Councils - the ”Judenrat“), incarceration, and then
is probably-lowest among all
tense anti-Japanese
feeling systematic elimination. All supplemented -with accelerating
the ethnic groups in the United
that existed in California in propagahda of hate. And all the. while as the world stood by,
(
States.
JAPANESE '
the 1930’s and 1940’s. has essentially silent and inactive. Silent and, inactive-world nati
'Before conduing this article, been completely eradicated. It ons. Silent and inactive world churches and religions. Silent
RESTAURANT >
and inactive world peoples.
T
-10 ,-me.cite two more examples
may also be too early to con
It is unpleasant, to say the least, to think, let alone speak,
to shed further light on the
clude that racism in other
favorable image of^the J A areas such as school integrati- about this horrible chapter in the history of mankind; rather,
‘ - 459 Church St.'
politicians in California. When on^ employment, social relati -it is easier to forget about the enormity of this program, per
Phone 924-1303
•I interviewed' US Congressman on has been thoroughly re haps to think somehow it didn't, happen, that it could not
THE NEW RESTAURANT
•Robert Matsui [D-Sa cram onto), moved. However^ at least in have happened, that it won't happen. Again. That we are not
—
“MASA”
Jews, and so . . . it can’t happen to us. Surely, not in America,
I wa s -struck - by . h i s n o n -poI iti the electoral process in Cali
At 195 RICHMOND ST. W.
ci an appearance. After being
fornia, the JA’s are now ap- -not today.
Toronto, Phone 977-9519
briefly exposed to his youth. We have but to look Jo, Southeast Asia, where today, again,
hundreds of thousands of fellow human beings have been
ful look* slender physique, and
evaluated by the general pub
and are being systematically exterminated. As you read those
gentle mannerism, I -could Trot
lic. (I. must once again em very words; thiS'-moment. Again, while the worlds nations,
prevent myself from telling
phasize that my study deals churches and peoples ineffectually stand by, at best weak
b'ms.that he does- not really
only with California arid not ly protesting. This time different victims,-different regimes,
look like a politician. Con
with other states of the union. different methods! But with the same- end result: systematic
gressman Matsui shot me back
mass homicide of helpless men, women, children,, the eldery .
It appears that as an electoral
by saying that not looking like
and infants. Today. Now.
:
> a' politician is -a major, asset factor, race' is more importdint
But we cannot concern ourselves with, these repulsive
Barristers & Solicitors
in Hawaii than in California.
horrors: It is again too unpleasant; to consider; we are not
nowdays in America and that
The
latest
example
of
this
is
the victims; it cannot happen to other minorities, it could not
155 MAIN ST. W.
people can trust such a person
Ar iyos hi -Fa sig ub en ato ri a I co n - have happened in America.: Perliaps. Those , of you who have
Stouffville, Ontario LOH 1L0
and would vote for him.
read Michi Weglyn’s book ’’Years'of Infamy" learned for the
test
in1978.)
.
There
are.
some
non-JA
Telephone: 640-5454
first time some of the proposals submitted by those in the
HYLAND
FLOWERS
"MICHI"
KIMURA,
CADSBY
& TAYLOR
c
TASTE OF CHINA
RESTAURANT & TAVERN
.
INSURANCE
DELIVERY SERVICE
7 DA YS A WEEK
Gertrude Urabe
463 Eglinton Ave. W.
Toronto, Ont.z M5N 1A7
phone 489-8611
WE CATER TO
RESIDENTIAL, MOTELS,
HOTELS, OFFICES, CLUBS, FACTORIES ETC.
467-469 QUEEN ST. W. 1
367-0444
highest places of our Government for the ’’solution" of the
115,000 Japanese Americans and /heir parents who were in- _
carcerated in concentration camp in the United States during
World War II: ship them ’’back" to Japan; propose an ”exchlange" of ten Japanese Americans for every prisoner-of-war
that the Japanese Imperial Government releashed; and so on.
First the Nazis went after the Jews, but I wasn’t a Jew ...
Vacation closing
July 19 to Aug. 5th
SHARON'S
I
|
JUNN KA SHINO
AND ASSOCIATES
FLORIST
942 PAPE AVE.
TORONTO. ONT.
TEL: 425-2122
City wide delivery
Peter Sasaki
_
CHARTERED
ACCOUNTANTS
523 THE QUEENSWAY
TORONTO, ONT. M8Y 1J7
PHONE 255-7342
Home 449-9293 \
SALES ENGINEER
Don- Mills manufacturer of- steel mill instrumentation,
requires a Japanese speaking sales engineer. Electrical/
electronic training and rolling mill experience preferred
Fluent English essential.
_ljapanese nratauranty^BMem
Reservations: 977-2164
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
460 Dundas St. West,
Toronto, Ont.
Please mail resume- to R.G. Powers,I Sales Manager.
KELK
48 Lesmill Road.
Don Mills, Ontario
Canada M3B 2T5
FURUYA
460 Dundas St. W.
Toronto 2B ,Ont.
Travel Service — Tel: 977-7655
^Frequent Group Departures to Japan by JAPAN
AIR LINES and CP AIR
Take advantage of special group departures July
5 and September 27, 1980
Telephone
(416) 445-5850
For further information regarding all your travel
needs, contact FURUYA TRAVEL today I I I
!
s
r
Page 4
Friday, August 15, 1980
PAGE 4
hour and1 a half of prime time editors and staff of The Be'st
reto a documentary .titled “If of Business^ a semiannual
• A
"If. the cuckoo won’t sing,
the Xerox
Japan Gan Do It . . . Why
kill it." That was the philosop-,
distributed
Can't We?’’ an in-depth analy Corporation ' and
hy of Oda Nobunaga± a 16th
busines's
to., selected
sis of the way Japan industry •free
Century warlord who conquer■leaders.
is operated.
.
zed central Japan and ruled his
Noda explains that Ameri ' The -editors of The - Best of
fiefdom with a mailed fist. ,
can busines's is:still run about Business,
examine
about
"If the cudkoo won’t sing,
the way Oda Nobunaga treat 500
periodicals
published
make it sing.’’ Oda' Nobunaed the cuckoo: If -you don’t in
the ' United States
ga’s_ successor Toyotomi Hide
produce, off goes your head. and "abroad in their sea rch for
yoshi, took this approach, em
This leads to worry and, Noda materia I forf each is s u e. About
ploying coercion, intimidation
says,
Japanese
managers 1,000 articles were set aside
and threats to. gain his ends.
contend worry is not good; for as candidates Tor possible re"" "If the cudkoo won’t sing,,
either the employee or his • printing,;. and Noda’s piece
let’s wait until it does.” Toku
company.
; was ’ one of them. Gradually
gawa leyasu was the patient
iBy contrast, Japanese /man the list Was reduced to 90 and
philosopher • and this thought
agement today takes, the posi N o d a ’ s '' B u s i n e s s M a n ag e m e n t
' became the basis fo the
tion' that the average person ■in Japan” continued to survive.
modern
Japanese
business
"finds work natural and jpleaFourteen articles were final
management system.
‘
sant, is productive, and will
ly selected for - the Spring,
This is the way Mitz Noda,
exercise self-control"- provided
J 980 issue. They came from
a senior staff engineerLat Hughe is 'given reasonable motiv
such prestigious
magazines
hes Aircraft. Co. in Culver City
ation rather than threats.
•as Atlantic Fortune, - Harvard
Calif., captures the attention of
About a year ago Noda Business Review, New- Repub
American- businessmen when
he talks to them about the ex wrote an article' about Japa- lic,. Forbes and Industry Week.
tremely .successful - Japanese ne'se managerial, philosophy Noda's was among them.
management techniques which, for Technology Review, publi
Who is Mitz Noda? Noda is
suddenly, have begun to attr-. shed by the Alumni Associaton
act a great deal of interest in of the Massachusetts Institute
ated from Hiroshima Technical
U.S. business circles. Late in of Technology. It stirred up a College. He returned to the
June, for example, the NBC great deal of attention. Among
United
States,. enrolled at
television network devoted an those who read it were the UCLA and ' earned / bachelor's
and
master's
degrees
in
WCSXSX5
S’
engineering. He is in demand
as a lecturer on Japanese man
I
x
Presents \
3 agement techniques and has
written two books on the sub'ject. Another Noda ar^ide,
"Leadership —> the Japanese
Way,” is scheduled to appear
5
„ Bonsai
8 in the summer issue of the
i
■
Indoor Plants
_
a Executive published by Cornell
I
Exhibits
» University. '
I •
Sunday, August 17, 1980 \ 8
For as long as mo'st Nisei
I
•
10 a.m. — 4:30 p.m.
J
8
can remember, they’ve been.
■
at the
j
5
Prince Hotel
.
/ bridges of undestanding betr.
5
900 York Mills Road, Don Mills
8 ween Eest andT West, between
l$»«S»XXXS3»3»WS3KS3S^^
Japan and the<United States.
This was a noble ideal but
By BILL HOSOKAWA
Toronto Japanese Garden Club
|
|
|
for most of them it was a
mis'sion
impossible/ because
they
didn't
know
enough
about Japan and: Japanese
culture- to interpret them to
their fellow Americans.
< BOOKS OF INTEREST TO
JAPANESE CANADIANS
JAPANESE CANADIAN HISTORY
‘THE ENEMY THAT NEVER WAS”
$15i00 (Postage 50 Cents)
by Ken Adachi
A BIOGRAPHY OF ISSEI PIONEER. RYUICHI YOSHIDA,
“A Man of Our Times” by Rolf Knight and Maya Koizumi,
$4.00 (Paper back with postage)
THE EXODUS OF THE JAPANESE
BY JANICE PATTON
$2.50 POSTAGE INCLUDED,
The New Canadian
479 QUEEN STREET WEST,
TORONTO, ONT. M5V-2A9
3
• Noda has the advantage of
both American and Japanese
educations, and the ability to
interpret one to the; other. He
is indeed a bridge at a time
when a bridge between the
two largest economies of the
free world is badly 'needed.
"MISTER
ALUMINUM"
Installations^• Siding Soffit & Fascia
• Rairiware
• Storm, windows/doors
Metro Toronto Lie. B1971
Mas Aida — 755-6505
[OJOIR’J)
\
40 Melf^ Prive,Unit 1
Scarborough.Ontafo
M1B 2G2
298-3333
TENNIS
ATHLETIC SHOES .
1201 Bloor St. W.
Toronto7 Ont.
532-4267
KEN MURATA
Home*’ 291-0952
HOME
INSULATION
CHIP
using
T
program
Please call
~
HOM ESULATI ON
535-0659
9 to 12 a m.
o
*
Sa,ye fuel — Be warm *
Typical price $40. total
M&HNisKi
'
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
2 to 4 p.m.
■ GARDEN.
> ENTERPRISES LTD.
FOUR SEASONS LANDSCAPING
GARDENS OF THE WORLD
Planning, design and construction by \
Japanese landscape architects and
horticulturists, x
Commercial, industrial, large estatesand
residential including townhouses'.
Indoor and outdoor
'
Stone lanterns
■
Tree pruning and spraying
Maintenance service
Government licensed weed control x
225-7836
Member: Landscape Ontario
-
Extra Short 34 to 46 / Short 36 to.46
ForAll Gentlemen Shorter Than Average
Short Man
b,
BRoturzs
-r
MENS CLOn-BERS SMCE1928
545 Queen St.W
368-593
ri Daily 0:30-8-30 Thirs.4 Fri.Till 8p.m.
L
Municipal Parking, Acroes The Street
DUNDAS UNION STORE
OPEN SUNDAY
-10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.-
|
A Mid-Summer Delight
Asagao (Morning Glory)
A CHILD IN PRISON CAMP
By SHIZUE TAKASHIMA
$4.50 with Postage
Agincourt
.Roofing
__Limited—2
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
977-3761 & 977-3765
ONE HOUR FREE PARKING FOR
OUR CUSTOMERS, AT JOT LOY
PARKING LOT (SOUTH OF LICHEE GARDENS)
SMALL SHOE SIZES
ALL HEEL HEIGHTS
LATEST STYLES
MENS 4 and up
LADIES 2 and up
MEDIUM & WIDE FITTINGS
ALBERTS SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Phone -531-1931 Toronto
f
fliiiiiiiiiiiihiiiiihiiiiiiiiiiitmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim
TIMES SSUARE TRAVEL CENTRE LT©.
—672 No. 3 Rd., Richmond, BIC.
1157 Melville St.. Vancouver, B.C.
Phone 273-5696
Phone 681-7251
Weekly Group To Japan By Japan Air Lines
and C.P. AIR is now available
For More Information Concerning All Your
Travel Needs, Please Contact us as Soon As Possi
ble .
-
\
We Will Be Happy To Serve You.
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIII
Nisei bridges cultural gap in explaining
in depth analysis of Japanese business
Please contact us.
For information concerning all your Travel needs,
THE PLACE T© START YOUR HAPPY HOLIDAY
'uuiiinniiiiiiiiiinniiiiimiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiinuiii
PAGE 4
hour and1 a half of prime time editors and staff of The Be'st
reto a documentary .titled “If of Business^ a semiannual
• A
"If. the cuckoo won’t sing,
the Xerox
Japan Gan Do It . . . Why
kill it." That was the philosop-,
distributed
Can't We?’’ an in-depth analy Corporation ' and
hy of Oda Nobunaga± a 16th
busines's
to., selected
sis of the way Japan industry •free
Century warlord who conquer■leaders.
is operated.
.
zed central Japan and ruled his
Noda explains that Ameri ' The -editors of The - Best of
fiefdom with a mailed fist. ,
can busines's is:still run about Business,
examine
about
"If the cudkoo won’t sing,
the way Oda Nobunaga treat 500
periodicals
published
make it sing.’’ Oda' Nobunaed the cuckoo: If -you don’t in
the ' United States
ga’s_ successor Toyotomi Hide
produce, off goes your head. and "abroad in their sea rch for
yoshi, took this approach, em
This leads to worry and, Noda materia I forf each is s u e. About
ploying coercion, intimidation
says,
Japanese
managers 1,000 articles were set aside
and threats to. gain his ends.
contend worry is not good; for as candidates Tor possible re"" "If the cudkoo won’t sing,,
either the employee or his • printing,;. and Noda’s piece
let’s wait until it does.” Toku
company.
; was ’ one of them. Gradually
gawa leyasu was the patient
iBy contrast, Japanese /man the list Was reduced to 90 and
philosopher • and this thought
agement today takes, the posi N o d a ’ s '' B u s i n e s s M a n ag e m e n t
' became the basis fo the
tion' that the average person ■in Japan” continued to survive.
modern
Japanese
business
"finds work natural and jpleaFourteen articles were final
management system.
‘
sant, is productive, and will
ly selected for - the Spring,
This is the way Mitz Noda,
exercise self-control"- provided
J 980 issue. They came from
a senior staff engineerLat Hughe is 'given reasonable motiv
such prestigious
magazines
hes Aircraft. Co. in Culver City
ation rather than threats.
•as Atlantic Fortune, - Harvard
Calif., captures the attention of
About a year ago Noda Business Review, New- Repub
American- businessmen when
he talks to them about the ex wrote an article' about Japa- lic,. Forbes and Industry Week.
tremely .successful - Japanese ne'se managerial, philosophy Noda's was among them.
management techniques which, for Technology Review, publi
Who is Mitz Noda? Noda is
suddenly, have begun to attr-. shed by the Alumni Associaton
act a great deal of interest in of the Massachusetts Institute
ated from Hiroshima Technical
U.S. business circles. Late in of Technology. It stirred up a College. He returned to the
June, for example, the NBC great deal of attention. Among
United
States,. enrolled at
television network devoted an those who read it were the UCLA and ' earned / bachelor's
and
master's
degrees
in
WCSXSX5
S’
engineering. He is in demand
as a lecturer on Japanese man
I
x
Presents \
3 agement techniques and has
written two books on the sub'ject. Another Noda ar^ide,
"Leadership —> the Japanese
Way,” is scheduled to appear
5
„ Bonsai
8 in the summer issue of the
i
■
Indoor Plants
_
a Executive published by Cornell
I
Exhibits
» University. '
I •
Sunday, August 17, 1980 \ 8
For as long as mo'st Nisei
I
•
10 a.m. — 4:30 p.m.
J
8
can remember, they’ve been.
■
at the
j
5
Prince Hotel
.
/ bridges of undestanding betr.
5
900 York Mills Road, Don Mills
8 ween Eest andT West, between
l$»«S»XXXS3»3»WS3KS3S^^
Japan and the<United States.
This was a noble ideal but
By BILL HOSOKAWA
Toronto Japanese Garden Club
|
|
|
for most of them it was a
mis'sion
impossible/ because
they
didn't
know
enough
about Japan and: Japanese
culture- to interpret them to
their fellow Americans.
< BOOKS OF INTEREST TO
JAPANESE CANADIANS
JAPANESE CANADIAN HISTORY
‘THE ENEMY THAT NEVER WAS”
$15i00 (Postage 50 Cents)
by Ken Adachi
A BIOGRAPHY OF ISSEI PIONEER. RYUICHI YOSHIDA,
“A Man of Our Times” by Rolf Knight and Maya Koizumi,
$4.00 (Paper back with postage)
THE EXODUS OF THE JAPANESE
BY JANICE PATTON
$2.50 POSTAGE INCLUDED,
The New Canadian
479 QUEEN STREET WEST,
TORONTO, ONT. M5V-2A9
3
• Noda has the advantage of
both American and Japanese
educations, and the ability to
interpret one to the; other. He
is indeed a bridge at a time
when a bridge between the
two largest economies of the
free world is badly 'needed.
"MISTER
ALUMINUM"
Installations^• Siding Soffit & Fascia
• Rairiware
• Storm, windows/doors
Metro Toronto Lie. B1971
Mas Aida — 755-6505
[OJOIR’J)
\
40 Melf^ Prive,Unit 1
Scarborough.Ontafo
M1B 2G2
298-3333
TENNIS
ATHLETIC SHOES .
1201 Bloor St. W.
Toronto7 Ont.
532-4267
KEN MURATA
Home*’ 291-0952
HOME
INSULATION
CHIP
using
T
program
Please call
~
HOM ESULATI ON
535-0659
9 to 12 a m.
o
*
Sa,ye fuel — Be warm *
Typical price $40. total
M&HNisKi
'
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
2 to 4 p.m.
■ GARDEN.
> ENTERPRISES LTD.
FOUR SEASONS LANDSCAPING
GARDENS OF THE WORLD
Planning, design and construction by \
Japanese landscape architects and
horticulturists, x
Commercial, industrial, large estatesand
residential including townhouses'.
Indoor and outdoor
'
Stone lanterns
■
Tree pruning and spraying
Maintenance service
Government licensed weed control x
225-7836
Member: Landscape Ontario
-
Extra Short 34 to 46 / Short 36 to.46
ForAll Gentlemen Shorter Than Average
Short Man
b,
BRoturzs
-r
MENS CLOn-BERS SMCE1928
545 Queen St.W
368-593
ri Daily 0:30-8-30 Thirs.4 Fri.Till 8p.m.
L
Municipal Parking, Acroes The Street
DUNDAS UNION STORE
OPEN SUNDAY
-10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.-
|
A Mid-Summer Delight
Asagao (Morning Glory)
A CHILD IN PRISON CAMP
By SHIZUE TAKASHIMA
$4.50 with Postage
Agincourt
.Roofing
__Limited—2
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
977-3761 & 977-3765
ONE HOUR FREE PARKING FOR
OUR CUSTOMERS, AT JOT LOY
PARKING LOT (SOUTH OF LICHEE GARDENS)
SMALL SHOE SIZES
ALL HEEL HEIGHTS
LATEST STYLES
MENS 4 and up
LADIES 2 and up
MEDIUM & WIDE FITTINGS
ALBERTS SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Phone -531-1931 Toronto
f
fliiiiiiiiiiiihiiiiihiiiiiiiiiiitmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim
TIMES SSUARE TRAVEL CENTRE LT©.
—672 No. 3 Rd., Richmond, BIC.
1157 Melville St.. Vancouver, B.C.
Phone 273-5696
Phone 681-7251
Weekly Group To Japan By Japan Air Lines
and C.P. AIR is now available
For More Information Concerning All Your
Travel Needs, Please Contact us as Soon As Possi
ble .
-
\
We Will Be Happy To Serve You.
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIII
Nisei bridges cultural gap in explaining
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THE PLACE T© START YOUR HAPPY HOLIDAY
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LOBBY OF HOLIDAY INN — DOWNTOWN
89 CHESTNUT STREET,
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EGLINTON
(416J363:6363
137 Yonge St., Arcade Bldg. Ste. 253,
Toronto, Ont. M5C 1W3
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Sun. thru Wed. IOam-6pm
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2627 Yonge St. Toronto
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TELEPHONE 481-8928
, AUTHENTIC JAPANESE DISHES
'MICHI'RESTAURANT
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439 CHURCH STREET,
PHONE 924-1393
TORONTO, ONTARIO
LOBBY OF HOLIDAY INN — DOWNTOWN
89 CHESTNUT STREET,
TORONTO, ONTARIO M5G 1R1
TEL: (416) 977-3026
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195 RICHMOND ST. WEST — PHONE 977-9519
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5130 Dundas Street West,
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Tel. 231-4000
Page 6
Friday, August 15, 1980
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