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The New Canadian — March 10, 1981

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Page 1

Coalition of Asians to Nix Charlie Chan beleagueres Peter Ustinov movie
HOLLYWOOD.' — - A new.
The_ American Cinema pro­ sider .the film.- an insensitive, location filming in Hollywood variety said just that, stating
:and Sah' Francisco protesting that* Ustinov "belittles his
problem' ' for
Honorable' duction,?' which
stars' Peter perpetuation of stereotype..
distinguished' career”
Chinese detective: what to do Ustinov and . Angie -Dickinson, _ Tatsukawa, said that the -the use of Caucasian actors own
his- portrayal
and aboutprotestors
whose in the title, roles, is-opening ih; ^coalition is not - protesting •for the lea ding; Oriental roles. with
‘is? "CAN
Charlie
slogan
comedy
to,
But. American Cinema Pre- compared - the
755. theaters throughout the Ustinov^ himself^-—- "He. is an
Chan.”
;actor ;iwbo wasoffered a pro­ sid e n t N or m a n Ka tz i s n ’t wo r- "weak skits in old TV variety
country. /
The title is shorthand for
. Coalition spokesman Steve- fessional.Job and: he took it. ried. "People a re : now curi- shows.”
, "Coalition of Asians;, to Nik
The Los Angeles Herald
he said.. We still - think
said'
members- sOuf . quarrel is ' with - the- pro- ous
Tatsukawa
Charlie Chan” and .members
Examiner complained -that the
have seen the movie: arid ,ducerAand writers of the film it’s ar । good movie. It may
of
the
groupf ' planned
film “has no real plot” and
read the script.; He- added: for reviving a racial carica- start., a new cycle' ot such
a ; "massive -picket . line”
added "there’s little in this
.films.”
’’the image of Charlie Chan fure.'
recently for the Hollywood
Early reviews hint that CAN frenetic comedy that in all
himself - is antiquqinted. LL
Dl
opening of "Charlie Chan and
was created 50 years ago and picture,'* however, a coalition Charlie Chan might better honesty can be seen as an at­
The Curse of ? the Dragon
resurrected recently. We con- ,of Asian actors bad .picketed have ignored the- film. Daily tack on anyone ” •
Queen.”
<
The organization;'—which
? also plans demonstrations for
New York and; San Francisco,
-is protesting. the tocia 1 stereo?
types they claim are present-'
x ed by the movie.
CAN Charlie Chan has' alrea dy clai med s ucces s in perAn Independent Orfon for Canadians of Japanese Origin
suading TV channels to refuse
commercials for the movie..
TORONTO, ONT.
TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1981
All except one San. Francisco VOL. 45 — NO. 1 8
s ta tio n. have.. d ecli n e d the ads.

Hostages in one s
own country
By SACHI SEKO

benevolent arms over me. 1
waited to receive his benedic­

First Nisei World War II veteran
Tony Kato, 80, passes away in Van
By ROY ITO^

Rupert, were able to join the

S-20 and Nisei
Veteran’s Association

Canadian forces. Others were

He received his basic train­
ing at Three Rivers, Quebec,
and went overseas to Scotland
in January; 1942. In October,
1943, he returned- with his
unit to British Columbia and
became an instructor at S-20,
Canadian
-Army
Japanese
Language School. - ?

There are some things that
told they were not wanted.
tion.
always stay at the back of
"Hostages,”
my
grand­ - TORONTO. — On-January < Tony Kato was one of the
your head. The part of your
father repeated, the word 23,~ 1981, the first .B.C. Nisei older Nisei,. born in 1901,
hea d - th a t is a n extra cl os et.
Kissing
through his teeth. to be accepted into the Cana­ three years after his parents
In it are 'stored odds and
Poor grandfather; I thought. dian army before Pearl (Har­ came - to Canada. Tony was
ends.. Things saved for - no
He remembers only the cruel­ bour
died
im Shaughnesy ^working as a: high rigger with
known reason. It is a funny
ties of another war that Hospital in Vancouver. He the Mayo Logging Company
collection,
incomprehensible
brought him to sudden man­ was Tony Shigeo A. Kato on Vancouver Island when
-to anyone else. In some ways,
On May, 1944, with the
hood. And I, superior in my (Cato). Only two other Nisei, he was accepted on July 26,
they resemble space parts of
rank of Warrant Officer,"First
faith in .country, repudiated Joe Aida of Smithers and 1941. It took him almost two
a puzzle. There is no - place his. Later, at Gila, the same
Class, Kato went to Southeast
Prince years to get into the Forestry
Harry
Tanaka
Asia Command with. Lieuten­
for them to fit.
rumors. I turned- a deaf ear,
Il hold this misshapen - piece
ant Paul Halley and Corporal
the proposition seeming so
in my mind. Its sharp, paper preposterous. Yet, the seeds
D. Jung. He served in Burma
with the British Intelligence
edge makes a clean cut. Thro­ of doubt were there. I hid
ugh the small wound, the.
NAGASAKI. — The city of Miyazaki in a letter to U.S. Corps until the end of the war.
them, away in .. my extra
seepage of blood. I remember
Nagasaki, one of two Japa­ Ambassador Mike Mansfield,
When I visited Tony in New •
closet.
cutting a. finger that after­
the officials said.
the
Westminster.
during
In June,. 1974, in a Park nese cities that suffered an
The officials said the city summer of 1979; he was al­
noon on the paper identify­
Avenue . apartment in New atomic -bombing , in 1945, re­
ing tag that was looped thro­
Nagasaki
is.
cently filed a protest against of
ready frail and tired.
statement
ugh the handle of my suit­
U.S.
to
build
the concerned about a
remember' too
‘‘I
can’t
the yet unpublished manu- the
case. My blood had .blurred
U.S.
Defense
.neutron warhead for deploy­ by
much about the army
that
the family na me a nd numiber.
.
Ca
sper
.
Wi
n
berg
er
in
Western
Europe.
"Years of Infamy, the Untold ment
he said.
the
Reagan
administration
Grandfather pulled his white
his
Story of America's Concentra­ Nagasaki is seriously concern­
with
Together,
was
in
favor
of
reactivating
handkerchief From his . pocket
tion^ Camps.”
My
grand­ ed. ?
looked
we
wife,
Doris,
the
controversial,
neutron
pro
­
and
wetting
it with
his
The protest was made to
father’s clairvoyance was con­
over his army souvenirs
the'
tongue, tried to remove
Mayor Hitoshi Motoshima and ject because it will stimulate the warrant certificate he re­
firmed. Only it was worse
accidental evidence.
- "
of
the
Nagasaki the East-West arm race.
than he imagined. Our coun­ Speaker
ceived from the government
We had left home that
-Municipal
Assembly
Toumi
appointing him a Warrant
try was not content to con­
morning and arrived at the
tain all persons of Japanese
Officer, pictures of friends in^
Tulare Assembly Center th© ancestry as “barter reserve”
Scotland, Burma, and S-20
same day. As we waited to
days, and his medals: the
be
processed,
Grandfather
enlarged it into a hemispheric
SALT LAKE CITY. — A photo cities” program with Japan, Canadian- Volunteer Service
said, “I knew it. We’re all consipiracy. \Central pnd South
and? they found the - dead_ Medal, the Victory Medal, the
album
taken
from
a
fallen
hostgoing to* be used as^
39 - 45 Star 'and the Burma
American
countries
cooper­
during soldier’s family and arranged
Japanese
soldier
ages.”
ated in rounding up and
World War II has been re­ for the photo album to be Star.
"Don’t say that,” I said.
shipping their Japanese po­ turned to his family by the hand-carried to his sister-inWilliam
McPhee,
former
"This is still America.”
pulations to this- country for American veteran who took law.
administrative officer at S-20
1 was no different
internment. The intent was
She wrote back, "It was an wrote: "Last Sundayl attend­
it.
'
?
most Japanese Americans of
clear.
“I felt it .just didn’tbelong unexpected surprise and I was ed the funeral of another of
that time. I pledged allegi­
-1 Felt Michi observing me to me, not that I’m ashamed immensely touched that some the pioneers of S-20, Tony
ance to the flag with the for­ as I read the segment in her
who
fought
so Kato, who was one of the
of it. I’m not,” Henry Eley American
fiercely^ 33; years ago -with earliest and most loved of the
.
ed that the great white father pages of the section,.she- ask said. ‘
Eley talked to American of­ our soldiers would send these people who helped create our
in his white castle in Wa'sh^
group.”
ficials who had a “sister
Continued from page 2
ingto, D.C. would spread his

Nagasaki protests Neutron bomb

Photo album of Jpnz. soldier returned

Page 2

3 Tuesday, March 10, ]98

Hostage .

[ The New Ganaob

Fifteen-year coal order
confirmed by Japan & B.C.

ed, “Arendt you going to say partially because oPthe~ hostr/
Eitabliihed in 193g
something?” >
age crisis, said,*.“We’ve kept
Second Cla» mail No. 0368
“I think 1 knew,” I said
our faith with our. principles
A member of Ethnic Press
- didn’t want to believe .my and our people and-as a reAssociation of Ontario
grandfather at the time.’
and Canada Federation
suit we’ve reach ed this day of I
TOKYO.'—A consortium of[ Bullmoose'property. . '
On Jan. 20, 1981, 52 Am- joy and thanksgiving.’
I 12 Japanese steel "and J gas I
In the six' mo n th s remai n g
Published on Tuesdays and
-ericans held . hostage for 444
Fridays
^e^s tolled across the land- com;panies has agreed to* buy J of fiscal 1983 (to > March,. I ’
days by Iranian revolution­ !n freedom s song. Yellowl 94 million tons of northeastern / 1984), the Japanese will im- I Publisher & Japanese Editor
aries were released. In the ribbons rippled in the wind. I b ^ coking coal over a 15-1 port
1,050,000
from J
• K®nzo Mori
tons
midst of national celebration, I cut my hand on .the razor yeor period
^English Editor
beginning
in I Quintette,
zKai Tsumura
a- strong condemnation of edge of . paper and blood I October, 1983, it ' was an-1
This will be
boosted 'to
Circulation Manager
Iran. In Plains, Georgia, the flowed from the wound. I nounced recently.
,
13,500,000 tons in
K.Sho
the second
man who lost the presidency, watched the small, red river. I
-^.s win fce boosted to I year and settle down to five

Nippon Video Centre,
1993 Danforth Ave., Toronto
[ONE BLOCK WEST OF WOODBINE]

Telephone 698-0633
Japanese video tapes ;— Beta & VHS

Cimerman Real Estate Ltd, Realtor
NORI KAKINOKI
#
^
^
a

CLASSIFIED

I cently — one day ahead of a Japanese trading firms, Mit­ ।
final deadline set'lby the B.C. sui & Co. Ltd. and Toyo Boeki,
- . HELP WANTED
, government— will involve for one million tons of steam­
'PERSON travelling to Japan
j the purchase of 69,550,000 ing coal annually from the
in March or April required to
long tons of Denison Mines Quintette mine over "the same
do some- market research with
Ltd.’s Quintette coking coal, 15-year period. No informati­
regards
to - coin-operated
rand a further 24,400,000 long on was immediately avail­
amusement, machines.
This
able on price.
work is suitable for a person

?

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TOM'S TELEVISION

familiar' with business oper­
ations. Salary and further de­
tails will be discussed. Please
contact Peter Davis, Davis
Skillgames: 657-1782.

1055 MIDLAND AVENUE (Oriole Plaza) SCARBOROUGH; ONTARIO

ItCJI

479 Queen Street West,
Toronto, Ont. M5B 2A9
PHONE 368-5005

of raw - inaterials for Nippon I shipped in fiscal 1983, and
FOR'SALE
Kokdh Ltd., Japan’s No. 2 1,700,000 tons for each of/the I
steelmaker and coordinator subsequent 14 years.
-FOR sale Yokohama chicI for B._C. coal negotiations.
Denison also is reported to kens (long tails). Phone 222I
The agreement reached re- have clinched a deal with two ■ 4449 (Toronto).

This Land is Yours! Invest Tn it!

911 Bloor. St. W., Toronto, .Ont.
Bus. 534-1124 — Res. 656-3456

SUBSCRIPTION
. $12. for 6 months
v $20. per year

71 around 11 0 million tons with I million tons for the remaining
I the, inclusion of a separatel 13 years of the contract.
•thermal
coall
The final figure is 1,500,000
contract
from the same source.
I greater than the volume or_ .
x
. I iginally offered the Japanese.
’Details were revealed in I
Tokyo by Tsuneji Nemoto, I
For Bullmoose, the arrangemahaging director in charge! ment is for 600,000 tons to be

OPEN' Mon.—Wed. 12am-9 pm
Thu. Fri. Sat. 12 am-10 pm
Sunday & Holiday Closed

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N

TOM S. I WAMOTO

EGUNTON


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PHONE: 421-6016

RESTAURANT & TAVERN

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WE CATER TO
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Gifts For Young Nikkei

DELIVERY SERVICE
7DAYSA WEEK

367-0444
Welcome Japanese Canadians
4S7-4S9 QUEEN ST. W..

Within The Barbed Wire Fence
by Takeo Ujo Nakano S 10.30
in hardback, postage included

>

Please find enclosed S

BE BLOOB
DONORS

BOOKS OF INTEREST TO
JAPANESE CANADIANS

for which

JAPANESE CANADIAN HISTORY
*THE ENEMY THAT NEVER WAS”
by Ken Adachi
$15.00 (Postage 50 Cents)
In psperback $8.50 (postage included)

GIVE TOGETHER

l^™'?^ °F ISSEI PIONEER, RYUICHI YOSHIDA
A Man of Our Times” by Rolf Knight and Maya Koizumi,
$4.00 (Paper back with postage)

A

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Concourse Level
Toronto 928-33^

THE EXODUS OF THE JAPANESE
BY JANICE PATTON
$2.50 POSTAGE INCLUDED
CITY

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SAKURA GIFTS

porcelainware
■WfJapanese silk-?screens
-^Hakata bolls
Mon-Fri. 10:00-6:30 p.m.
Sat.
10:00-5:30 p.m.

A CHILD IN PRISON GAMP
By SHIZIIE TAKASHIMA
$4.50 with Postage

The New Canadian

Hakata Ningyo temporarily
out of stock.
Cloisonne
Vases
available
(Shippo

479 QUEEN STREET WEST
TORONTO. ONT. M5V-2A9 ’
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Page 3

-Tuesday, March 10, 1981

Page 3

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
918 BATHURST ST., TORONTO

B
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Telephone: 534-4302
SUNDAY, MARCH 15th, 1981 /
1'1:00. a.m. English Qnd Japanese
Lunch & Entertainment
, : .
Spring Ohigan Service and Keiro-Kai, Guest Speaker Rev.
Takamichi Takabatake, Montreal Buddhist Church.

SEICHO-NO-IE
TRUTH OF LIFE CHURCH
English Service & Sunday School on Sundays at 10:30 a.m.

666 Victoria Park Ave., At Danforth Toronto, Ont

Toronto Japanese Gospel Church
. ' ST. JOHN’S PRESBYTERIAN,
BROADVIEW AT SIMPSON AVE.
SUNDAY School and WORSHIP Service; 2 p.m;
Thursday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 7:45 pari.

\ Friday Youth Group
Pastor S. Yokota 265-3386, Mr. H. Yoshida, 461-1686

TORONTO JAPANESE SEVENTH-DAY
ADVENTIST CHURCH
Saturday

9:30 a.m. ~- Bible Study
11:00. a.m.— Worship Preaching Service

19 Mortimer Ave., Toronto — Tel. 491-6740 .

/

ALL WELCOME

!

ST. ANDREW’S JAPANESE CONGREGATION

ANGLICAN CHURCH
HOWLAND AT BARTON STREETS
Church School & Family Worship 11:30 \a.m.
TEL. 654-5657-CHURCH OFFICE 536-5557
REV. ROLAND M. KAWANO

When Buying Or Selling A Home
Call KEN HORI

K. HORI REAL ESTATE
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE ROAM

I! 14 PerWe Cm

Phone: 431.9191

Buying or Selling of Homes
Arranging or Buying of MORTGAGES

Call: MITS KURODA
MGM REALTY LIMITED
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Member of Toronto Real Estate Board and Photo MLS Service
678 Kennedy Rd. 267-1179 Res. 261-2581

Group Tour to Florida '
® Special flight to Florida in April for one week.
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Train & Hotel Packages

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City. Please call us. We’ll make special Train & Hotel
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Please ask us for your Vaction to Japan, Europe, Hawaii
or anywhere you wish to go.

K. awat<s Travel Service
Toronto' Office 162 Spadinu Ave. 869-1291
KEN KUTSUKAKE

PHONE 869-1291

U.S.-Japan ties
in Reagan's eyes

have the Right Policy

INSURANCE AGENTS

2 Carlton St. 6th. floor
Toronto MSB 1J3

By-BILL HOSOKAWA

Straits, of Malacca, thus as'Nd one should doubt that curing safe ^access to' the
the federal government is Indian Ocean.
*
*
serious business. As . Exhibit A,:
we " present a book titled
With regard to Japan, on
“Mandate for
Leadership,"' page 591: "The Uniter States
running somewhere in the should .encourage Japan to
neigborhood of 1,100 pages, raise its defense spending
which landed' with a . loud from the present, level of 0.9
thud on my desk this past percent of its gross nation al
week. It is a blueprint for product. The present compro­
government action in a con­ mise of a 9.7 percent defense
servative (read that Reagan) budget increase for fiscal year
ad m i n is tra tio h
’ research ed, 1982 is insufficient to deal
written and published by the
Heritage Foundation, a con­ problems faced by Japan’s
servative Washington
think Self-iDefense Force . , . The
tank.,,
U.S. should' establish a re­

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SUITE 505
TORONTO, ONT.
757-5184

Japan's
SL^ shop
Authentic Oriental Gifts

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•In other words, advice for gular parliamentary exhange
Kimonos & Accessories
the administration, although program with Japan as the
Noritake China
many of the ideas -proposed U.S. currently runs with West- I
463 Eglinton Ave.W.
I
by the Heritage Foundation ern European parliaments."
phone 489-8611
There is a bit more in a
already have found their way
into for, perhaps more occur-/conclusion, but it doesn’t say
ately, reflect. the thinking of) much more. The point we a re
the inner councils of theJ^Q’^ make is that in a
blueprint for action that must
Reagan transition team.
The report is divided into run several hundred thousanc
CUSTOM SHOP FOR
। three parts: the cabinet de- words, there is little more
LADIES & MEN’S
than passing mention of our
pd rtments;
independent re­
MADE TO MEASURE SUITS
relations with our most im­
gulatory agencies such as the
SLACKS, SKIRTS
portant friend in the Pacific.
Civil Aeronautics Board and
GROUP BLAZERS ETC.
'President .Reagan repairec
the Federal Communications-.
129 SPADINA AVE , 6th
Commission; and other agen­ our ties with South Korea anc
6th FLOOR
cies such as the Office of it would seem he is. very much
TORONTO, ONT. M5V 2L3
Ma na g e m en t and B u d g et and
PHONE 368-8472
aware of the need for a strong
the En viron men tdl .Protection
WALLY H. KAYAMA
East Asian policy. But so often
Agency.
TOM BATTISTA
in v. the past American ad­
Of course,, an overview- of
thee n tire repo rt is top m uch ministrations have paid no
to attempt in a ^single column more, than lip service to better
— not that I intend to -read ties/with Japan.
the whole thirig — but ; let’s
•U.S.-Japan ■.-•relations' are as
take a look at one area! which complex , as
any
between
interests k us _ as an ethnic friends, -complicated by in­
group,./the Stgte Department tense trade rivalries, cultural

TREND
Custom Tailors

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differences

past misunderthe Far East?
competing
inj
On page 590 the report terests,' etc., ..etc. Yet it is to
I.says, "U.S. air and naval for- the ddvantage of both to wo hk
I ces in< the iPacific^hould be

numerically increased to ob-Japanese
Americans - by
I tain parity with our forces in themselves don’t have nearly
the Atlantic and x Western enough 'clout to influence the
I Europe.
Such
an
increase thinking in an administration,
I would allay the fears of Asian or even in a think tank like
I and Pacific leaders that the the Heritage Foundation. But
I United. States is withdrawing they have far more friends
I into a neo-isolationist iposi- than they did 40 years ago,
I tion ; . . Such an upgrading of and they’ve acquired a^ lot of
I American forces in the Pacific know-how’
about
utilizing
I would assure our allies, of those cantacts. That may not
I our commitment to keep open be much assurance, but we
I at
all
times.
The can keep pecking away.

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Siding; Doors; Thermal Windows
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ALCAN AUTHORIZED DEALER

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733 Danforth Ave.
Toronto
Phone Store 463-3426
Home 469-0293
-

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Deliver Evenings
and Saturday

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All Canada Headquarters

Shitoryu Itosukai
Karate Dojo
3751 Bloor St. Wesi
(Westwood Theatre PHza)
. Phone 23^-3478

Eastern Toronto
Headquarters

J.C. Cultural
Centre
Shitoryu KarcfeDojo
123 Wynford Dr.,
Don Mills, Ont.

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Page 4

4 -

TH E

Tuesday,-'March 10, 1981

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Page 5

Tuesday, March 10, 1981

Page 5-

£ Tx

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Page 6

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Page 6

Tuesday,, March' 70, 1981 / '

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On March 19th, e/ect your Davis candidate
Vote Progressive Conservative.
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Larry Grossman
MPP
Working for you

Page 8

Tuesday, 'March JI 0, 1981

IX

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