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The New Canadian — August 8, 1962

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Page 1

E NEW CANADIAN

i

I

_A*±HOr9an for Canadians of Japanese Origin
VOL. XXVI. Mo. 60

3u.mu.ra

NlbEI GOLFER, and popular
Centre Director, Mr. Roy
Shin recently realized the goifers dream: a. Hole-In- One! He
slammed tins 110-yard shot with
a wedge from an elevated tee to
an elevated green on the 17th hole at Lakeview golf course. He
ended up with a total score of
16 for 18 holes. This feat was
witnessed by fellow golfers".
Mossy Mitsui and Eddie Utsunomiya. .
When asked how it felt, he
replied: ‘With the
celebration
and all afterwards, it was at
least one of the most expensive
swings in my golfing career!”
J. G.

a

---------------------------------- '
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1962
_

TORONTO, ONTARIO

^OSts Team At Gatherin o"

Japanese fiym Team Leaves Impressions On Local Fans

TORONTO. - Sixteen
men
ana women, members of the vi- SV— and held au informal
at
bhe Toronto
shmg Japanese National Gym- n
evening
1
V
a11
»» Sunday
¥
Team Winners of the 1900 Olympics and world cham­ from
I
"the
’a-V partv
home
Niagara Falls
pionships in Prague, Czechoslo­ Hom
stopped off i„ ^novillo UMA
vakia last month, visited ToronL
1!:Om August 2 to the morning toe pernor citizens Of the Japa­
of the 6th and gave a splendid I nese community residing at the
Io"
^en ^be of
5ii?m^
demonstration which '
deep impression on J in V^Ni^ga^
Pfdhiipated
Toronto spectators.
assisted in helping the party'^
Ihej left, Ioronto on Monday
morning
’ for Winnipeg and Van­ Home?" "” 01,1 Wks “l ‘^
....NISEI THESPIANS, Grace
couver were they will give de­
Toguri and Ken Kufsukake of
monstrations
before leaving for
70 Pisons attended the
1 oronto played the leading’ roles
a‘£ die end of the week.
peering and euin a filnr titled, “Home Of Ja­
eu
. Ihe visit of these world cham­ joyed the meal .prepared bv
pan” for the Metropolitan Edu­
pions was a great stimulation to
Indies of
o
cational Television Association ■
„ _

- — • —— — —
the gymnastics game in Canada.
C‘ Rurukawn. preA
V SSei’blb Presided over
suc^ significance
gathering.
Mr. T. Umezuki
!
e
Japanese
ambassador,
TORONTO — Finishing ton- I three
The plot involves a hakujin
Mr. N. Ushiba, and his wife made publisher of the NC and
v>
,
previous
occasions.
The
school teacher, touring Japan. ehes are being applied in Japan i wend s first such tour of its a special trip from Ottawa to onhp1''
^ JCGA co,nmented
She visits the home of a typical to the v orld s only ship designed ,'ln^.';as a 1957 trip from Japan witness the demonstration at Pa­
PreSSIon wh>ch The Ja­
Japanese family. Grace and Ken especially to be a “Floating to nine
panese gym Lani* had on
local
countries of southeast lace Pier.
play
the parents;
their two
In
spite
of
the
holiday
season
Asia.
The
second
covered
11
Cento

and
tha
nkeel
children are played by Toronto Fair”, reports ihe Japan Trade tial and South American ports some 800 spectators took in tlie
A
1C)r efforts in inyoungsters, . Delano Ishida and Centre in Toronto.
in 1959 and, the next year, a magnificent exhibition of flips wtmg the team to Canada.
Connie Sugiyama. According’ to
Equipped to
display 20,000 third fail’ visited Australia, New handstands, rolls and somersaults’ Mr*-^^/1^ JanioS Pryce and
Kutsukake, one of the brightest Japanese products in *430 exhi- Zealand and seven southeastern as
champions performed -Hl. and Mrs. Dave Strain repre­
scenes of the whole film shows Sors’ booths, the
.flawlessly on the pommelled sented the YMCA at the gathe$75-million Asian countries.
the family
enjoying’ a typical ba^uia luaru was launched in
horse, the high bar, parallel bars,
‘" his ^^ress,
Japanese meal.
'
lungs and vaulting
.
- horse before
-------- emphasized the stimulation and
late June and is being readied
given an
incredible display of cbMlen.ge of the visitors to Ca
now for an October start on six*
tree
calisthenics.
Every move Padjan gymnasts and stressed the
......KARATE SENSEI, Mas Tsu­ month Our of a dozen countries
was
met
with
a
sustained
ap- ’’uportance of the exaltation of
ruoka took his boys down to De­ m the Middle and Near East and.
Plause
and
gasps
as
the
auJi
brotherhood
of mankind
troit for a friendly tournament Africa. No date has been set yet
dience
acted
as
though
they
had
Plough
sports,
lie
nresented
a
for
a
visit
to
North
America.
recently and _ massacred the
lle
,^
r
s
ee
u
gymnastics
of
this
.

:nt
pen

on
which
was
inranks. Even his Brown Belters
lA-90-ton ship, with overscribed the YMCA World Seiwice
OTTAWA — More people are cahbre before.
took on adn defeated many of aL . length of 508 feet, is
receptions
given
n
?oto’ as momenta of this occaDetroit’s Black Belts. This con­ I equipped with ail major com- leaving Canada than are entering them by the YMCA and the A.
the tea)u members and
according
to
a
Dominion
Bureau
test really proved tire high cal­ foits. There are tines escalators
a. U. of Canada and a gardeiir^J officials.
of
Statistics
report
published
re
­
iber of Tsuruoka’s teaching.
and an . elevator, a swimming cently.
Partyrat the residence of Japa- , ^ a
reply thanking their
pool,
accomodation for more than
He has now begun work on a
nese Consul K. Komuro much of hosts, Mr. Takashi Kondo, Chief
In the year ended June 1, Ca- the social
book about Karate with the as- oOO passengers when necessarv,
entertaining of this
Continued on page seven-)
and
a
variety
of
business
facili
­
nada
’s natural increase of popu­ team was done by the executive-------------------sistence af a personal diary of
the great lOth-dan, Dr. Chitose. ties such as offices, negotation lation — births minus deaths — members of the
National and I
This master learned Karate di­ rooms, . lounges and reception was “about 335,000.”.
But
the
S/S4


TWO SHIPS
capacities of up to
rectly from the originators in halls with
actual increase in the country’s
Okinawa, and' Tsuruoka was 500 people.
was 332,000 — or once again
showing
thought by him in Japan.
The funnel-less ship’s diesel population
and
organization as c-Lo
cisco OJ
on Au J ,s t' 3
^? Y";
3,000
fewer.
need
of
this
organisation
engines are operated by remote
*
*
*
Wilson1 resident
they
took
the
Japanese
team
on
Wilson*
The 332,000 increase in Cana­
CHAMPION WEIGHTLIFTER control by officers on the bridge.
They
^
ave
a
cr
uising
radius
of
da’s population was the smallest
Mack Miya will give a two-week
barbell demonstration at the Ca- 17,700 sea miles, and can reach 111 any 12-month period diming
nadian National Exhibition this speeds up to 19.4 knots. Officers the last 12 years. It brought the
\ear;I ®e will be performing at and crew will total only 76 on June 1. 1962, total to 18,570,000
exhibition voyage, although against 18,238,000 on June 1,
the whipper Billy Watson booth an
'
with Mr. Universe, Ken Togawa total capacity is up’ to 1,069 1961.
About 70,000 people came inand beautiful model and Mack’s people.
J
Japanese
ships
have
been
used
to the country during the year
(Continued on Page 8)
,
VANCOUVER. — Purse sei­
temporarily as floating fairs on I ended Junel, while 73,000 left.
extended the opening to five
ners
,
.. on the
. - B. C.
-- north coast are (lays because of the abundance of
naming in one million fish a day fish.
m the biggest pink salmon bona­
L^c total catch so far of 7.8
nza in the province’s history.
nullion
fish represents $3.4 mil... Three . hundred
boats landed
,
to
,
dreds* of

Hun- | says that for tax purposes pro- I was never the intent of Congress)' ii\ e .million fish during one week officials.fishermen, said fisheries
its are determined by the dif- in passing the claim act, t? to of fishing from Monday to Fri­
The pinks average four pounds
day. The previous week’s catch
tern-0
J

e
In
"
ference
between the award and J theawards.
apiece
and sell to canneries for
ternal Revenue Seiwice. it was the purchase
was
2.8
million
fish.
price of the home
A San Francisco IRS spokes­
cents
a pound.
learned this week.
There’s no end in sight to the
or business that was lost.
man said the Nisei “should have
The
pink
run, by the time it
battle was touched off by
Nisei contend that the ; made sure that Congress put a i un which is pressing through
ends,
could
rival
'record Fraser
an IRS move to tax “profits” got eminent has ignored the fair tax-exempt clause in its original Fitz. Sound, 270 miles northwest
Kiver
sockey
runs.
of
Vancouver.
^•om the award money granted market value of their properties act.” But an official of the JACL
The biggest-ever salmon ■ run
to^tiie Nisei as partial. compen- at the time of the evacuation. summed it up differentlv:
Fisheries
officials just back
^vion for financial losses during They complain further that it just call it a dirty trick.” Let’s from the area said that it is the was the 1958 Adams River sock­
eye run when 12 million fish
their forced evacuation from the
biggest pink run by far ever were
landed.
recorded.
'test Coast in World War II.
“They’ve actually had to limit
Officials of the Japanese Ame­
the
fleet to a million fish a dav First Nisei Law Office
rican Citizens League
(JACL)
because that’s all the industry
here have termed the IRS action
can handle,’’ said fisheries pro­
incredible” and threatened an
tection
officer M. P. Houghton.
SEATTLE. — Kiyoshi Patrick Miura, Long Beach, secratary to
VANCOUVER. — The first
immediate appeal to Congress.
He said every available packer nisei to open his own law office
Okura,
of
Omaha.
Neb.,
was
un
­
,
an IRS agent said, “We’re
the board; Kumeo Yoshinari. on the coast has been put into
animously
elected president of
in Vancouver, Thomas Hara, will
n^ these evacuation cases the
Chicago,
treasurer; and William service hauling the pinks to jI do so shortly under partnership
National JACL to succeed
me same way we’re treating con­
Prince Rupert of Vancouver can- with Gordon Dixon, in the Ford
demnation of properties for free­ Frank F. Chuman at the 17th Matsumoto, Sacramento, 1000 nenes.
Building, as a lawyer and notary
ways and schools. That’s invo- biennial national convention held Club chairman.
The long- hauls are necessary public.
here
from
July
25th
to
August
Four
members
of
the
Van^inary conversion and taxable 1st.
because the cannery at Namu
Hada, who speaks fluent Japa­
couver JCCA,
represented the burned down last winter and
“ any profit was realized.”
nese, graduated with honors from
Okura, who is chief probation National JCCA as observers at hasn’t -been replaced.
°T. the Japanese-Ameri- officer of juvenile court in Dou­ this convention. They were: A.
UBC and has been with the law
Most canneries here and at firm of Cowan, Twinhing and
VsWere evacuated in 1942 glas county, Neb. will have as Kamitakara, President VJCCA,
Y--a ™ compensation awards in his cabinet members: Jerry Eno­ George Fujisawa, Arthur Hara Prince Rupert are working to Collins.
capacity around the clock to keep

under the national JafJaT moto. San Francisco, first vice j---During his years at UBC he
iCI1 uvacxvawun
andx,Joe
Ohori. Their observation abreast of the harvest, said
jp^ ^’acuation Claims Act. The president; Takeshi Kubota, Seat- i will be reported to the National
was
selected as an exchange stu­
-yis concedes that “in a number tie, second vice-president; Wil- headquarters in Toronto and stu- Houghton.
dent to Keio University in To­
The sound originally was to be kyo.
ACaSes ’ the awards may not 1 i a m Marutani, Philadelphia, died by the NJ CCA executive
open for fishing only four days
aave equalled actual losses but third vice-president: Dr. David members.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
a week,
but fisheries officials S. Hara of Vancouver.

»™cBc^

World Tour in October

More Leaving, Than
Entering Canada

B,C. Fishermen Strike
Pink Salmon Bonanza

Japanese-Americans Hit With “Tax Bite”

JCCA Observers Attend Confab;
Okura New JACL President

Page 2

PAGE 2
Wednesday, Aug^ I962

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Continental Family Co-op

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460 Dundas St. W., Toronto

HO. 6-2041
HO. 6-7962

EM. 6-5589 — EM. 6-5711

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W^,S^JXU.CKS ’ SH,PS • PLANES • HOTELS • TELECOMMUNICATIONS

.WORLD S MOST COMPLETE TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM

942 Pape Ave.

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Y. UCHIDA & CO.
615 West Pender Street
VANCOUVER 2, B.C.

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HIRATA-MADE

H^W^tHLm ^It^b^t^ffl^Tjv
Sales: Manryo Corkline, Leadline
Big Stock Just Arrived

b
217 Dunlevy Ave., Vancouver 4, B.C.

Phone MU. 4-7623

Page 4

PAGE 4
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MAGILL EXPORT & IMPORT LTD

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2909 Grandview Highway
H + ^A

Page 6

PAGE I
W^nesday^August 8

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Page 7

Wednesday, August 8, 1962

CANADIAN CITIES

Quebec City

PAGE 7
I
I

Dates and Doings

FISHING TACKLE
Live Bait



Rod and R9el

By Thomas H. Whs er
Repairs
N
S
i

^J
Md
Summer
Dance
Sat.
TORONTO (Canadian Scene) — Overlooking the north b-mk
of the St. Lawrence River, ISO miles northeast of Montreal is thannual, Midsummer’s Nite’s Da- i able
anyone
capital of Canada’s largest province. Quebec Citv
Founds
1S00 Dundas (at Dufferin)—LE. 2-4257
ace
will
be
held
Saturday
Night
!
Sheike^wA^H
1
}
1168
from
1608, and named by Samuel de Champlain, today’ it is
m
“A Midsummer’s
ling metropolis of 246,727 people.


b a spia"- August 11th from 8:00 to
at
the door will
at
the
WaiAmputation

s
Audi-I
be
^admitted
The name, Quebec, is said to have come from the
Bay * ^na<hMtted free of charge,
word for stall a narrow body of water). The aimsS ±
g in a
Dance, m rhe Summer- those hearty generous mood ’all
rows almost 1200 yards, opposite Cape Diamond as it n- ’ ses the
souls in “Bellbottime; Never! They said it could toms
city’s deep ^nd spacious harbor.

1
wi
11
also
be addicted foidone- Y et here it is “ A
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
Twenty-one years after its founding, the townsite still had Midsummer’s Nite’s Dance’” Al free.
NOTARY PUBLIC
only two permanently settled families. However in 1663
t welcome .change from picnic:
mid fellows, couples
S
^
a

S

and
dreamers,
the capital of the colony of New France. By'that time all
^eifice
Hours Saturday
ants, charred barbecues anl sun­
October to April Inclusive
settlement’s buildings straggled around the base of the cliff/ a burns. ,
S j
‘^ unempoyed, young
^^ 0 d’
snre to mark this
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
road, up the hill, was flanked by Indian huts (cabane*) Bv 166There will be no door
tliis dance
dares to be JibS^J d?e , °n your Social
Suite 513 Temple Building
^.were seveTa! clmrches and two convents in the “Upper because this
'
TORONTO
fowm. Notre Dame de Victoires. constructed in 1688 in the Lower known by good music alone! But1 Summed ^ ^ ’eSt tlme °f ^
and ^.Episcopal Palace (1693-97) gave Qubec the dis­
EM. 6-3323

r8B. rq. 7-3427
tinction of having more fine public buildings than any colonial
capital north of Mexico City.
'
1 TmHBe Sh'’™ By Church In September
Hovevei, the city was destined to chang-e hands and the foil
li is a good policy Io
show
the £ “IKURU’?on sTpU
HYLAND
have Ihe RIGHT POLICY
of Quebec to the English marked the end of French rule iRCa
FLOWERS.
KWONG CHOW
nada. The most renowned battle in North American hittorv tool­
Consult
place September 18th, 1759 On that day the British uttX^ tember 21 and 22. Tickets will CHOP SUEY HOUSE. MAIN
soon be available.
AUTO BODY, MARGUERITE
James Wotte routed Montcalm’s French forces on the Plains of
WALES and DUNCAN
Abraham. Wolfe made use of a powerful naval squadron to triASTYLIST, MIKE’S
INSURANCE AGENTS
Adversary Dance
Montcalm in^
attack the latter’s camp below u-in1!6
MARKETER!A. NATIO­
Quebec. Ships, m full view of the French, lowered their boa^ w ''ill be held at the King Edward NAL STATIONERS LIMITED,
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
N
and THEATERS
S CONTRACTORS
if to attempt a landing and started a furious bombardment Re^ -tiotel, on September 28th Net ODEON
(C^^^
Phone VTA. 1-3171
Lzing, too late, that Wolfes grenadiers had scaled the citvW cliffs H?ce®d® will go to the Sunday
School
Expansion
Fund.
Those
RAH LIMITED. PARAMOUNT
Montcalm rushed Iris troops, in small units to the battle field.’
who attended the 15th Anniver- RtEl SHOP, SAI WOO CHOP,
bV tdae close-order fire of the British miy Dance and enjoyed it, can
SOFT,
SEA-Hl CHOP SUEY
AUTO — FIRE — LIFE;
inottally’ wounded?^ ^ 16 engagement’ and Montcalm was be
assured of even better things RESTAURANT, SHARON’S
ALL FORMS
this time. Plow
kU1775-76; sixteen years after the British capture of Quebec plans to come, about making FLORISTS, UYENO GROCERY,
OF
and tell your TAMADA
STUDIO PHOTON
City, it was unsuccessfully besieged by American soldiers The freinds
about this wonderful GhAPHERS. YEE-ON TRAAmerican General, Montgomery, was killed in the battle.
evening.
OO„ NIKKO GARDENS,
Today, Quebec City is a bustling- manufacturing center of
TT ENGRAVING (Winnipeg)
machinery, cutlery gunpowder, musical instruments, ropes steel
consult
«
Finial tallies indicated, this TOTES
CARPET SERVICE
boots and shoes. The natural resources of the province provide
KIYO
TAMURA
f
i
and P°wer to operate the Anglo-Canadina Pulp and Paper year’s Buddhist Picnic at Erin, SANDOWN GROCERY.
TORONTO
|
one- of the largest
*
*
*
.
Mill one ot the most modern in the world, which is located in Ont. drew
PL. 9-8317
J
Quebec City. Waterfalls. at Montmorency and Shawinnigan gene- crowds in recent years. Some
Tills year’s Bon Odori Festi­
1000
adults
and
over
450
children
val at Dufferin Plaza drew a
la eJ!mPp Power for the city’s lights, streetcars and industry.
• i
?°^aiP Catholic Church, to which nine-tenths of Quebec’s rJ05 cads’ and OKe bus rolled wonderful crowd
of about 900
thed^iT^
controls Laval University, which was founded tifty miles to Erin in spite of people, plus over 120 participants
skies and a downpour in colorful yukatas, kimonos, and
de 1JI 1633 A1S? m Quebec City is the oldest chartered insti- black
THE
curing the mid-moming.
happis. Odori groups represented
the Literary and Historical Society,
Our thanks go to the may v/re:
founded by Lord Dalhousie in 1824
Toronto Budhis Church
The original French fort, called the Citadel, was rebuilt bv business people who donated so Mitsuba-kai,
Sakura-kai,
and
the English during the decade, 1823-32. This year, its batteries generously to the Picnic. They many individuals. For the first
made possible the three cash
Wa-CL 3 million tons of shipping move up bmgos.. and the over fifty free time in Toronto, a “Yagura”, the
83 RIVER ST.. TORONTO
traditional elevated stand, was
mid down the St. Lawrence River. With its roots deem in Canaprizes in the binge and fukubiki
Open Saturdays and Sundays
el?0Ws with a modern society, Quebec programs. The donors were: built, under Mr. Koyanagi’s di­
rection.

Taikos

(drums)
were
)
I ^FuTL’Gds of thousands of tourists. Their spending will pro- CONTINENTAL FAMILY CO­
12 Noon to 10 P.M.
lapaneso Food Will Bo Served
°aPltal °f F1'ench Canada
a <luarter of its animal OP, COLLEGE GROCERY. COR­ beat in masterful style by Mrs
Doi. “Goshu Ondo” was rendered I
Sushi and Tempura
RY CLEANERS, DALCO PRINT by Md. Shikatani, with “Haya­
For Homo or Picnics
DANFORTH CLEANERS, DAY- shi” by Mr. Matsuyama, Mr. DoTON
SIGNS,
DUNDAS
UNION
Japanese Gym Team . . . Continued from page 1
dama, Mr. S. Tsuji and others.
EM. 8-5602
STORE,
MRS.
EDAMURA,
For
the great siicess of this fe­
de Mission, of the Japanese team,
CHERRY CLEANERS, EGLIN- stival^ may htnks to chairman
they became world Champions.
pointed out that ever since the
He expressed the hope that in WOOD SHOP, FURUYA TRA­
Lome Olympics Canada had at­ the coming Tokyo Olympics, Ja­ DING, FRANK’S GROCERY, Mr. Kunio Suyama and odori
instructress Mrs. Seko.
tempted to have the Japanese pan would capture all Hie gold
earn visit the country and much medals in gymnastics. As a team
ot the success in bringing over they have won gold medals in
Sunday evening gathering at the every department, but individual­
Jo 7am was due to the hard
efforts of Consul Mr. Tanabe in ly they are still second. In order
to realize their hopes of winning
Vancouver. both the individual and team
,
a^so Posited out that prior championships, Mr. Kondo said
TOKYO — A superspeed train, with a 700-pound thrust.
i • Rome Olympics many that continued great efforts
13841/2 Queen W.
covering the 500-kilometer To­
people in the gymnastic world would be neccesary.
After a “countdown,” the mo­
thought it unthinkable that Jakyo-Osaka
run
on
the
new
Todel
sped
through
square
wooden
The gathering lasted for over
Toronto
LE. 2-6378
S 1 conld win over European three hours, and included the kaido trunk line in three hours, frames placed every 15 feet and
ountnes who have had this singing of Japanese songs by has undergone intial tests suc­ supported 3% feet above ground.
?s part °^ their national team members, who sang- as cessfully, pointing toward com­ The model recorded a speed of
CUtit1CUt!^
years.
For Complete
chorus as well as individually pletion and operation before the a little over 25 miles per hour.
Mr. Kondo stressed that it was The harmonious and gay get-to­ 1964 Olympic Games here.
The
Ozawa “trains” hurtled
Real Estate Service
e iesu.lt of daily training and gether concluded with the sin­
But this train is nothing in about 350 feet of a 600-foot-long
Call
comparison to the “sonic glid­ test distance in the “test that
_ earnest effort to improve that I ging of Auld Lang Syne.
ing’’ train designed and tested counted,” and was hailed, how­
by Prof. Hisanojo Ozawa, a uni­ ever cautiously as “higlily suc­
versity scientist in Western Ja­ cessful heralding early possibi­
FOR WORRY-FREE TRAVEL
pan, near Nagoya, the country’s lities af operability.”
Real Estate Broker
third city.
ARRANGEMENTS
Higher Speed Sought
Bus. 755-7371
This “sonic glider” will carry
{
Profesor
Ozawa
next
intends
1,000
passengers
300
miles
in
30

Res. PL. 7-7578
By Air, Sea and Land
minutes, the
distance between to step up the speed of his mo­
48 GALBRAITH AVE.
Tokyo and Osaka, Japan’s sec- del to Mach 0.6, or six-tenths of
Call
ond city and its industrial heart­ the speed of sound.
TORONTO REAL ESTATE
land, it is claimed.
He sees the proposed “sonic
BOARD PHOTO CO-OP
gliding train”- as shaped like a
Forecast Backed Up
Transportation
Ministry- au­ pencil, like the prototype, a unit -ll«8lffl»
365 SPADINA AVE., TORONTO 2-B ONT.
thorities backed up
Professor that will be powered by four KPHONEEM. 6-1075 ’
Ozawa’s prediction on the basis type jet engines capable of a
of a succesful
test run of a total thrust of well over 8,000
scale model, 35 to 40 feet in pounds.
The sonic train will measure
length and a half foot in diameter.
It was,
the
professor some 650 feet in length and will
a diameter of approxi­
pointed out, one twentieth the have
size of his “sonic train of the mately 15 to 18 feet. It will not
JAPANESE AND
run on rails, as do ordinary
future.
express
trains programed by the
The
iny prototype uses a
OCCIDENTAL FOODS
government
’s National Railways
pencil-shaped cylinder made of
Corporation,
but will pass on
fresh meat and fish
plastic and weighing- about 225
rollers, flicked along through
pounds.
It
is
powered
by
rockets
order Thurs. and Fri„
large
square frames.
These
REAR OF STORE
frames will be set up at inter­
vals of about every 320 feet.
See SUS NAGAI
460 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
The powered rollers will re­
Phone WA. 4-8427
Phone EM. 6-5589

EM. 6-5711
volve more than 70 times each
432 Parliament Street
second, adding impetus to the
ft RED CROSS
FREE DELIVERY EVERYDAY
sonic gliding express as it rushes
TORONTO
througd the square frames.

Lucien C. Kurata

INSURANCE

KITCHEN

Japanese Testi
Train of Future*

TOSH IWAI

Furuya Travel Service

Blood

;

Page 8

PAGE 8

W^nesdo^August 8

96?

^?X?e Japanese Males, Women Take Over At Universities! THE Mg^ Canadian

nese
meeklv
Post Office
accepted
Plie
”in s^tThas
broke^toS Zn”^' iS Wobably around scholarships in literature courses still further.
■'‘a
have been taken by girls.
one.

What
happens
with
a
girl
stuS4.00
per
6
months
thc lands best-defended male
Already in the arts faculties r l°P?ia University, a Roman
a university official askS7.00 per vear
fortresses.
u
<(
^
e
Probably gets married
oi
many
universities,
girls
faxCatholic
institution
with
a
large
479 AAEN ST- w
Men don’t mind that most of
after- graduation. Her
then- barbers are women, Oi’ that outnumber men. One professor, foreign faculty was opposed to shortly
ENlprre 6-5005
husband
probably went to an­
writing
only
half-humourously,
the
idea
of
co-education.
The
the breweries
attribute rising said recently: “Japan is facing
other university and can hardly
profits largely to women drink- „
!Uluira doom because girls are Hood of applications received be expected to contribute to the
imminent

te
,
r
1
1
h
changed
this
policy
so
mg more beer. There is no more ; pushing
upkeep of two universities. Anythan the universal male preju-! sities ” men out of its univer- frightened the administration " ay, girls are not so sentimental
that
a
rigid
framework
was
imdice against women driving their i Education ’experts sav the
P°F? — 110 matter what the about their old schools as men
results of the entrance examina- are.
Female Help Wanted
Cynical Japanese male stu­
x
ar€- 110 niore than half the
men more iand more jobs as
selves
in
a
male
world,
are
stud
­
dents say a university education OFFICE girl, no exscr?2-D7F7'
company car drivers, television ying harder than men and are students admitted can be girfs.
is
merely another feminine ac- permanent position.
producers, and senior civil ser-1 getting better- marks.
FINANCES HAMPERED
'
cessory
to the average girl stu- (Toronto)
vants.
,
The present, situation disturbs
Most girls entering univer­
But the most spectacular- in- sities major in English literature, not only the male student, but ' ^^ ~ no nxore important than
a lipstick ox- handbag. As a re\asion is in the nation’s univer- French literature or aesthetics’ since
]AiVei?ie! themselves, I suit, the current
nickname for
Brondwcy Floris IS
“Girls are particularly good at FncF A has a direct bearing on I girl students at Japanese uni-'
thenfinancial
situation.
Fees
at
'
Before the war there were no pronouncing English ox- French,”
/ •'Flowers For Every Occas
co-educational universities in Ja­ says one teacher, “iand boys in even the most fashionable pri- I versifies is “handbags.”
ion’
Delivered locally
pan. Some special women’s col­ the same class with a group of vate universities in Japan are ' „ Fere is where a crumb of cornTelegraphed out-of-town
leges catered fox- the relatively glnls generally end up with an very low, the institution relying i . ^ *s ^^ tor boys, There is
private contribul i stdl some reluctance by comfew women who wished to ex­ inferiority complex.” But it is heavily upon
M innie H. Taguchi
tend their education beyond high also the overhelming numerical tions. Before the war, the old ' nie,rcial companies to hire girl
691 West Broadwav
graduates
because
school. Opening Japanese univer­ superiority of gix-1 students that Zaibatsu cax-tels and the aristo- university
Vancouver 9, B.C.
sities equally to men and women adds to the crashed feeling of cracy patronized the universities, they feel on the one hand they
Bus. Phone TR. 6-3848
w.one ol the first reforms in- the miale.
In the fashionable but since the wax* the pattern of are too superior to do the usual
Home Phone FA. 5-9046
troduced by the Allied occupation Peers School University, fox- ex­ support has changed and uni­ menial office girl tasks, and on
forces.
The former “Imperial” ample. the second year English versities today have to rely on the other hand, too likely to go
universities in Tokyo, Kyoto, literature class has only one boy the generosity of parents' and off and get married to be given
Hokkaido, Nagoya, Sendai and and 76 girls. In the third year alumni. This has sharply cut in­ more responsible 'positions.
A-l brick, cement and roof
Kyushu and the leading- private French caurse there are one boy come in any case. The growing
London Observer
universities are the source of and 50 girls.
work. Complete repairs to the
Japan's “establishment5' — the
DISLIKE TREATMENT
Casey’s Corner
home. Phone OX. 4-7548.
counterpart of Oxford and Cam­
(Continued from page one)
One
student
has
remarked
bit-I
Gym
hostess,
Diane
Dufort
__
bridge and the Ivy League. To­
day,
many are finding them­ terly: “When a few-girls enter a I ^hp is “WOW” in any lano-uave! I on his nightclub tour of Japan
Wm, Goldfinch
large class of boys they are I ’ Along- with his plush gymFori - - . Larry Nakamura of Maria
selves overrun by .girls.
treated considerately. But when I O’Connor Drive, Mack plans to Street and Henry Nishizeki of
2136 Gorrard St. East
COMPETITION KEEN
a. boy enters a large class of I open another in the west end of Ossingfon Avenue in Toronto
Entrance to major- universities girls he is treated with arro-| Toronto. This new gym will also
TORONTO
J’ave Won awards in the Toronto
is decided by competitive exam­ gance and disdain.
wall plush cai-pe- Daily .Star’s Newspaper Snap­
inations set by the university it­
At Ilosei University, the least png’’ steam baths, sun lamps and shot Awards Competition . . .
self and competition is keen. In “feminized” of major Japanese ™e works. Rumor has it that
tHiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiniiHniiiHiiinii
sonic cases, the ratio of studentss I universities, 30 per cent of the Ar-V
Anastadias — a 2nd-dan Loew’s new Cinerama theatre in
sitting- for an entx-ance examina--I overall student- body are g-irls. | ^ack Belt Karate holder- — will New York has a $70,000.00 Japa­
be gbdng lessons at the nese garden. . . The Civic Square
xheatre closes . . . Who is Jerry
JConnox- Drive gym.
F.Shixa anyhow? IVell fox- one
*
*
1^>/^Z?^
thing, he’s sales manager of Ca­
THE EMBASSY OF JAPAN’S nadian Extruders Limited And
VANCOUVER. — Hampered and Taiyo Gyogyo of Japan Tvo |S27J^ 011 two.^rJa- for another he’s axx Ex-New Ca­
by extremely poor weather the of the six catcher boats manned cZX that'off^
TORONTO
nadian editor. . . I am writing
total catch of the newly formed by
Japanese captain-gunners S
°S CanadiaAs an this beside a little Ontario lake
Western
Canada. Whaling Co. along with Japanese officers and lidon in Knah
For ike very best in
^^ re' on my vacation.
The name of
had been running below the last are leading the catch with al °“Ciiidp TA^Qhia r t
» •
wedding casuals. . .
this virgin piece of water- which
production
year of 1959.
415 combined total of 160 whales In Fa U* i ^ Stttdy In Japan- is is set in typically wild Ontario
For those who wish to
gulde for forei^
whales have been harpooned as addition, seven technki^xs arJ
bush-country is called Grenadier
treasure the present in
?I Jas^ Friday and company of­ supervising the processing at the pan ^Thi^b^lT' tO
Pond. Ah well! Another game of
T Th b r IS Publlsbedby shuffleboard, take down the tent,
ficial are highly optimistic of plant which employs about 80
the future
P“reaching the 700 intended catch workers. The plant is 1S at H^*’a^
and back to fixe putred city. A
AM. 5-8446
as the normal summer- weather Coal Harbour of Vancouver Is- ^F^^0.11 beHlce’A?’ lj 2-chonie, man can’t waste all his life com­
71
Tansley
Avenue
To’ muning with nature.
is coming around. The Western land and will be shipping frozen ^“1^
Scarboro. Ontario
Canada 'Whaling Co. is a joint whale meat to Japan for human
r ,4 m m!
t
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifnniHifiHininn i
venture between B. C. Packers consumption. .
®> • fe
The JaPa:
I ^TF I e°P^ is ia 102-ipage book
with 26 photos
(that’s all it
I says!) and
available from the
Society for International CultuOTTAWA. — The full force tail measuring more than 97 raJ Filiations, 55, 1-chome, Shiof legislative action is being- feet in length.'
|
Famous Chinese Foods
,
. No. Price is $3.00.
used in Japan to preserve some
Ineir hens lay only about 60
*
*
*
1994 Lawrence Avenue East
kinds of rare birds, many of
(near Warden Ave. at Colony Plaza)
eggs a year, with the result that
SHORT SHORTS ... Nisei
which are found only in the one there are only some 200 left on Arts and Letters Group at 132
\
Phone: 755-2206
nation, reports the Japanese Em­ the isle, ox* fox- that matter, in I ^r3^ Avenue is still looking for
bassy in Ottawa.
the whole world
I more short stories, poems, artiBring The Entire Family
Another
fles etc., for their first publica- .
_ The nation’s Cultural Proper­
Dine
At Our Modern Dinning Room
Aiiotiiex rare creature is the tion, . . Judo World writer
ties Protection Law has been ex­
the Pa- Pearce is voting a bS on her
We cater to Banquets, Parties and
tended to provide distinct classi­ £ 3
Fast
Take-Out Orders — Fx-ee Delivery
spread

Their
fa
^
ber
.
wh
°
is
famous
marathon
fications for various birds. Some
are categorized as “rare birds”, be reduced as
~° STOI™» coheir, Pat Roach. Her
? as 1603 when cousinxs Winnie Roach, the first;
and some as “extraordinarilv q 4nnn„f ]
4 5
hunters landed to Canadian to swim the English
rare”, with punishments scaled make
a
fox-tune
out of albatross Channel. Liz is famous too She’s i
. FIND OUT HOW
to match the offence for viola- Plumage for quilting,
and sub- the only hakujin ^ to be an
Pacific
^exxti^e ™ a Jap^ Cana- ,
One example of their rarity is bers to
NUCe<i
Citizen’s Association! .
j
the long-t?ailed cock, developed
lieved
to
be^lOO*
pi
*
entIy
be
'



A
?
sei
photographer,
Jim
on
Shikoku Island some 300
n
'
Hayashi is now Assistant Sales :
years ago and found last year
i
ly
about
100
Japanese
Manager of Japan Camera. . .
In Less Than 4 'A Months
at the. age of 10 or the equiva­ storks ai-e believed to be alive Once
top Canadian student archilent of 100 human-years, had a to<iaytect, Gene Kinoshita now back
designing fox- J. B. Parkin after
I P A P M IM /^ A^en(^ classes at night. Schools in California
a year at Yale will marry a UniLtA
In ] in
anj Pennsylvania.
I

versify
of
Toronto
Medical
stu
­
Get Your. Friend To Subscribe To. . . .
dent, Dorothy Tukui in VanImmediately after graduation.
1
couvex- on Septenxbex- 1st. . . NiThe New Canadian
qt a n tqAii expert sexor earns $6.00-$15.00 an horn at
I
sei
dancer,Bobby
Ito
is
now
par479 QUEEN STREET WEST
I
1 J hatcheries.
forming- in Las Vegas . . . Joev
TORONTO 2-B, ONT.
Hollingsworth hopes to take some
1 Karate lessons from Dr. Chitose
Please find enclosed §
' V 1\ 1
For free school bulletin and information)
for which
D Renew my subscription.
Extended Payment Flan. No ObhI

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Bad Weather Leaves Whalers Behind ’59 Total

Bare Birds Survive Under State Protection

Scorbor© Terrace

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Chick Sexing School
Home Office: 214 Line St.,
Lansdale, Pa.
„ S. John Nitta, Gen. Mgr.
•branch School: Harry Nishino,
Director
2500 Delta Ave., Long Beach,
Calif.

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