1 1,029 Japanese and 470 Negroes according to the Census of Canada 1961.
2.
Forrest E. LaViolette, The Canadian Japanese and World War II (Toronto, University of Toronto Press, 1948), pp. 8-9.
3.
Frederick Mosteller, et al., Probability With Statistical Applications ( Reading, Mass., Addison-Wesley, 1961), pp. 360 ff.
4.
In a 1963 study, 13 percent of a cross section of Negroes in the United States reported that discrimination had not affected them at all: William Brink and Louis Harris, The Negro Revolution in America (New York, Simon and Schuster, 1964), p. 53. In a 1966 study in Britain, 39 per cent of the West Indians, 19 per cent of the Indians, 13 per cent of the Pakistanis and 8 per cent of the Cypriots surveyed reported one or more personal incidents of discrimination in relation to housing: Political and Economic Planning, Racial Discrimination (London, P.E.P., 1967), p. 74a. These figures can be compared to 48 per cent of the Negroes and 13 per cent of the Japanese in the present study (personal incidents in Ontario since 1948). In employment the figures from the two studies are as follows: West Indians 45 per cent; Indians 35 per cent; Pakistanis 34 per cent; Cypriots 6 per cent; Negroes 33 per cent; Japanese 12 per cent (figures from both studies for males only): ibid., p. 20a.