s Of
一The U^chers and II wew wtinglunch iFirst Priirmry School CWH Prぱec:ture. It iー 一-" noon'.: on ,June' 6,' :*^、saddenly gri妙ed' the ounceir of tlie:, うitdio b柳"sting club ! jiyiay, "l:ilT6p?at.It is )tfirsoTne peopiewno «„"tinft^at ther& willbe elithquake hming this
'ao迈wt Tamotsu Hara Mt of his schoolmaster's
tooni* daished into the teacぉerき' roomaiuld柳anded to know what had happened.
:れt urn ,d out illaもthe an-nouneeIVきsixth-grade bpy, j)ut 钰rt Mditionalitもm on the ai-completing the daily news program approved by his teacher. '-ぃ::.''■ .
He< only t&lkW about the rumors .-Whispered, 'among. ..:his classmates/ but the broadcast overthもschool's public address sy咖rti-::: caused'., ノa w'ide^^prefid panic ainひng thechildren.
Catastrophic Effect On J邻加ese Ch她抑
The sゅoolmaさ:ter ?u〗Viseti the .teacherきto' fellゅo w,(i
girls the. truth :"、d ('.tUn、 thtミm ■ down. .
But niany students, ospoda"jr ?'oungei:ones'i'efused to歸ev; in 、vhat their teaehers told them and.-instゃrt(i. .believod : what the radio had. Sri id.
One thii.d-gi.ade ;Wy, for examples go レ ho 川 e and told his iWotlieV,"Wi'e g《nim have a big quake cm June11.Our schん、1:i'tuJio said so." .Other mothers '、、'eiで.also stir»
'.■Thai 'a"ern"oi、,:.vrtrix)ius' .storo^ー: •.nwir the,",hoolwiM'.i、 cト'owdi、d: 、ゃi"V德U、ぃrs who bouまuj) food.c&ndles, fljishli^rhts and rli、t}u、s..: 'to'.きpjm、やrwhat, "ley .b(、Um、d:: to lnぃきiwpend-, 、np:でntii;?trophpぃ :'■':'
1《ep(nti、rs of U、o卩huktm .hにh'icHぃり、れid ノout1"、、、,'0u、 rp- '■ m齢.SI",にThey:ぉd aノloぃ、f 1,1、g、Yoik ami..learned .tWt the.:. ■I'llmm's ■ hiui .gi'a(hmlly'..,spmuし fi'om fm'th'ei' .so.uth iivふChiba.:
:A(ヌiれrft", ,irH Prim wry
School,ono' t.oiich"'' witnosaed: « ヌirls(miりit foldins:,lot; ofpji, pe:r.',miu、s'. in.'hotV classroonu一
"、Vl)y cranes," the teacher
juvんvth,ズ!、rUiquiik(s" the girレ "、pli4?d.T"hat-was June 2» ■-Most, .sti.itk、nts、of:th1、 school so"u、. <*i"zt?ns of ■ the-city:■ heard:'the. 'rumors .in:Uie.:first
■■(Cont>ゃn1*. 2)'
載,麵an
酬一56
An In dependent Organ for Conadians of
TUESDAY, JUぃ'17,1973
はe Origin
Toronto,ゅ"
Get Rid 0「 Po Hut ion By Using A Magnet?
OTO, —WanUo get rid of :? Use a magnet.'
—le method to 're加ove '"hexachromiunxきn4 poisonous heavy metals factory waste water, re^ iJmloped by Nippon is attracting .:&Uen' » * jK)tenぉally effぉtive to wibat pollution,
迈Hhod ihvolves. the .use ■ilMtism and' ferrous siil-Nip pim Etectric c】aims Hs "magnetic treatment is the wdrid's first 边etliod to Temove he^ wWs辱lmost completely. ^.»eU«>d is based々n the
Ma咖
officialsfoid fa-leれfor Man ill I
y o、f11nmomentもrected ,ド让"ali幼hen^.
Ya咖bucM, also: :fo加er prime minis-
^^f^5*^'6n1、set at n
in the shape of塞 •T the ashes of thも by tbe'Jー "nt at « cost of SO
to encourmfe the a sewtljれf
ばかan Me hap^rW
!^〗
"most exp«siT«
comp印y'8 ferromagnetic "su; per-nきferrite', prひduction process :'developed , by:the company with the cooperation 'of - Kyoto Ui^versity,s Instはiite of Chem-'icalResearch.
■■It .is.so'simple .that allはrequires is.to.:put ferrous'suばa.te ,.itiU....polluted - water, neutralize the 'water with alkali and. force ■oxygen'in-to'it to oxi4)z.e.,it.
The '.lieavy met alie 'さIements in the' waterl;um into ferrite by combining .with— the i^ron in the ferrous: sulfate — ari.d deposits at the..bottom■:of.■■ the drain.
Th.e 4ej?osUe.d heavy metals are.tIiei;i.remoVed by..meims of msgneti-sm..
Nippoiij.'ぉIecti'ic,s centrallab-orator^ said 'the process cpuld ぉducel,きQO pp. (partspeビiiiiレ ■1km) .cadmium'to.'below、,0.1 ppm. ーnd 2>00^'ppm.' of.hexach-—迈iumtobelow O.lppm.
The必vantages cla—d . by tbゃ.,coLinpねy ノ.-'8re .that:.large. iamoiiT>ts of, i?rast.e \ya;er c, t^infiT咖T)y1^, of h"vy meUIa caiv be treated and th^t ferix)us sulfate, a waste iiズoduc-€id in1aigゃquantities by steもl millS} can be- used.- Ferrit?ゃpト i&te4 from化もwas,e water can " used as magnets, it
The: cost of th«r new. method' is almost the same as those of C(mマen"onalmethods, tbe、 cora-pany..sitid^
Homes Expensive
Hookers Co161 5 Toぉpanese^ Clients Only
ROMR 一 Police repo— the do sin豕of n high-price <1brothel •eiriBg Jap*ntee tourist« excla-•hrdy recently,
》olk« Mid prostitntes rcfdar-Ijr »i>ffrMch6d Japanese tonrists on tb« Vi* Vencto *n41"them to tb« biDthel.
化加d tbe
TOKYO. (News). — U seems impossible, for most Japanese .to acquire adequate 'housing ' unless they borrow a, bほsum of monにv, according to a .survey by t he. Finance .》 I in ist.ry.
About>90 per cent of the1500 Japanese covered by :,he po】lsaid that they could hardlyliavQ purchased houses' or haye .th。"' bi"U without boi'nyvving aでorLsiderable amount, of money.' Only/.1ひper ■icerit. saidは.、v as: noいnecessary ■to borrow' any mone^'y-
'The1500 persons, coy ere d勿 the survey wei"e'thi>se.who rocen-tlypui"cJias.ed houses oi-had them built and.'t:h0se.wh0 had planned to have them built shortly. The ministry coridiuctedゅe survey 'in of the growing —!ic dissatisfaction 、vith '.ho—ng bans offered by the govemmen"finan, ced financing- institution,., such, as thS Housing Loan Corp" and private financing institutions.
According tothefindingゃmost of th兮people who si^はthey c6uld not have afforded .to have their tiQUse$ built'unless th"' borrowed
ねbetwee"ive to seven mUlion yen or frbmぉ9,00b to冬26,700. The sums proved td be twi6e to 2.もtimes as much 'as th今r ay" rage annu" income;
Forれe re pay iilent of the mo» i^ey borrowed, mo St of them said thit让ey had to puにaside幼to 30 per cent <?《their annual earnings. 1.*
The average construe"on cost
of houses柳12 to15 milliご yen per unほ,inchis:'ve of the cost of or ranging roughly between $45,800 to 58,. In the case of suburban apartment hou. aes, costsvaried from fiveず10 mimon yen per hou^, orむ加 about $19,000 to 138'100. _
Nisei Charges Bias At Univ. Of California, Berkeley
SAX FRANCISCO. — A Nisei profes?or has., told the Calif. StateノAdvisoi-y CommitU?e to the U.S. Commission .on 。vil'KigMs thatthe Univ. ofO\!if.,Berke-■〗ey, d:iscriminah、sヌp:ninst Asian Americans in - adn"Vくicms and ■hirinp, .、vhi1an other Japanese American speaker 'questioned、 the validity. oP:th(^. Comn"'tjlee's 'hea—' r'inp on :《sian American, 'prob-' Icms.
Dr. PaulTa"れTC Berkeley professor of' sociology, said gta-Hstics .indicate 'Asian Americans often are. not .given 'preference 'in admissions', in contrast to o-. ther minority groups. He "id., many -As;an American, students with high gr,de —point, aTera(tぉ have'been .rejected by —the. Berke''. ley graduate .sc.h60!8.
In the area of empl6yment,:Div jTakaj^i saW tFie univ-ersjly's re-.spo.nミe'was,. "'SurVv-、ve'11.hire I'-Asia-ns, but we.ぐaTi,tィ:ind .any. ,、.vho a?"e .quれ'fied."
lie:'adds, '"There 'is.'a pecuUaii phenomeiion一ゅe .As,an Aine-. r'i"Ti -ぉ'.vi.ewed-as' compete.n〖,.bu,t not quaJifi?d.,'.
Th-e-'lacJr.of qualiぉ.ie(J .Asian Americans,:, he國said, .is directly -aもti;ibu-tab!eゃ.ゅeケsmall-numl^ ers:in Berkley.ゆiiuate schools,.
:saidlie was .'one' of'only, two ! A si an. American socialstudies .professors on the ca'mpus,.
The—hear in JIT was. held rocぼly, with chairman: Herman Sill".
■-'.An of her ape alter,' Shほゅtム.Su-yamV told the Committer, "Y赠repo" willJu8t豕ather duRt' and g.o... unrcftd. ,n file dr".er in \^"hingt, it ,nat adds to :our fru"r象tion ..to spill our guts when no thin豕h難ppens."
.'Si,】as assured Sugiyama and:. 0tりers ■ present' that化6で01«加1'3-.sion's: record "in getting :lawぉ: pass(?—d ..is good,. The proce«s of chanifing】egi3,at0rs, a"itudea is not so easy.".
Revi V al:'of'.an U-As , a TV ■■ stereotypes :,aMesseni fig-in the cd^j^jji^"^ mもnt to .'equalopportunity in higher ed'vica"on, .and :ini:reiwing;' frustrations枉nd.milU-a-ncy ani onお the younger generation of Aai翼Ti 扭ericans-...were other, :facts brdught...oiit by individuals tc«W, fying before the ComijMttee.
Costly Forgetfulness
TOKYO. — Japanese traマe^ere l€ft nearlyおmillion in »sh "….—"ri *t railway
i34 Million Japan By TheYear2>000
NEW YORK» — The1072 Unit;&i ^C靠tion多linnuilpublished July1,whichlists a variety of internationalstatistics - .for' th.e years1971,hjuJ tbe foJlowing pointi n[ialce regarding J»p<ian:
■-■—1.If present population trends conUnne, Jap^n will have a pO" pala Uon of134.ねil!ion people by the year 2,000; 2> "p幼contin-nes to topきeloped nations in the rate of increase in industrial pro^nclion; 3. J塞pan riTiks second in merchant TMrine 8hij>« ping, fiれh in publishing幼d third in tAe加mber of newsp** pers perl,OOO popd"ioTi.
On thft oth枕hand, the rate of
ToyofciWon't Go Rotary Until1974
TOKYO. — ToyoUi Motor Sales Co" jthe :rnarketinf.亀nn .of: the Toyotf Motor O" Mid
ぉne dira willbeぉayed trnt" October1974.
InUほlpi,nr called f<]^f the io-troduction. of such models ...this. 辱utumrL.
O"icmls cited bArgmininに 曹Uh Toyo Ko訂o Co., which pect«d to tupplヌT070U with'rcK tary enぉnc9 to be mounted on ToyotA'» Crown, models, for the-delay.
Lilt year, ToyひUi reached an arreement in principle to purchase roUry en^nes from Toyo Ko^o,- bnt <i«Ui!* stillneed to be worked (rat»
Eftrlier, >i'kun Motor'Co. of
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