Page 1
Uses
MAN
. mail
'a cash
lawa
IT
THE NEW CANADIAN
;---------- ^^tao^ &„adia„ „ Jopmeie Q
8 Vol. XXVII—No. 18
| _—
—
——
--------------------- - ---- —
^VEDNESDAY, MARCH 6. 1963
—
'
~
Toronto, Ont.
Census
Shews
J.C.
’
s
City
Dwellers
oKONTo.-Japailese c«-lba„.a.[W,.._..„.
"> wweners
chines
’, secAcme
floor.
H..T$R°NTO.—Japanese
Cananes—was of particular parison figures showed that Ja
a-ans are strictly city dwellers. interest Of
th e near 30,000 poAccording- to the census catalo
pulation of J.C s 23,316 chose the panese Canadian farmers in the
gue of tire Dominion Bureau of
'ealih
French speaking province of Que
statistics Canadians of Japanese bright lights of the city while bec were almost negligable. 1450
only 5,643 selected the peace anc lived in urban areas,”-with 1372
origin prefer the gay lights, d
posifresh
air of the country. Cities
partment stores supermarkets,
ol
over
100,000 claimed 18,956 residing- in cities of more than
I night-life,
transportation urban dwelling J.C.’s, while the 100,000—-mainly in Montreal—
d
and other modern conveniences
while just nine lived in rural
•which go a long- with life in a ot-,000 to 100,000 bracket cities areas.
'dern
were the homes of 1449. Towns T Ontario, which has the highest
metropolis to that of tran with
room
a population between 10,000 u.C. population of Canada’s ten
RU.
quility, simpleness and the earlyand
30,000 were inhabited bv
to-bed-early-to-rise tradition of
provinces with 11,870, also sport
1240
Japanese
Canadians.
rural livinged
the highest number of urban
Breakdown of the rural figures
The
' ie
” 1961 census revealed
"UNe Jtu
citizens
with 11,422. Main con
shoved 2058 eng-ag-ed in farmingthat there were 29,157 Japanese while
sentration
of J.C.’s is in Toronto
ion©
the other 3785 though liv
Canadians. However, breakdown ing in rural districts were em and Hamilton. Cities of over 100,or this figure shows many inter
ployed in occupations other than ^^ People were inhabited by
esting statistics on the Issei. Ni farming.
10,341, while cities under this fi
sei and Sansei of this country.
lat,
were homes to approximind
One of these—the rural vs'ur- . A province by province exam a tel v 1000 Ontario residents,
ination of the rural-urban com469
hural dwellers in the province
totalled just 448.
The majority of Manitoba’s
1-96 Canadians of Japanese an
cestry were “city folk” with just
TORAO. Two Japanese cor
Tokyo, appealed for an early im- 74 of this number living on farms
porations have successfully de
veloped and begun manufactur poit of the special milk for their or rural communities.
son Yoshihiro. The special milk
Saskatchewan’s total of 280
ing. a. special milk for children w-as
at that time being produced J.C. s showed 240 urban residents
suffering from a rare and dread by only two American firms.
W1 th only 40 engaged in farming.
ful disease — phenylketonuria —
. Alberta, was the only province
Toshihiro
then
received
contri
wduch makes children feeble
in
which city-lovers did not combutions
of
a
large
amount
of
minded if untreated.
‘Lfenal,ac Powder,” a special । pletely dominate. Of a populaThe
phenylketonuria
study milk produced by the Mead John |9°n ?J 3721 J.C.’s 2248 favored
committee, a group of medical son Co., from the American and city living while 1473 chose to
doctors specializing in this di Japanese Red Cross societies and reside in rural areas.
sease, has decided to freely dis many Japanese and American in
British
Columbia,
however,
tribute the special milk to all dividuals.
^MPig' back to urban dominance
babies suffering- from the disease.
.Thanks to the good help ex with twice as many city dwellers
mainly in Vancouver—as coun
Photo by Jack Hemmy
The disease drew public at tended by these people, the boy
try
inhabitans. 6679 B.C. resitention last June when Mr. and has since shown steady growth,
Ellen Tsuji Named Miss Valentine
Picked the city life, while
Mrs. Masakazu Nomura, resi well reaching- the average phy 3/45 selected
rural residence.
™”?eUn MW tVr^
(centre) was chosen Miss Valen- dents in the western suburbs of sical standard of a Japanese boy
of two years and nine months.
When his parents appealed for First Nisei Disc
help, he was unable to walk
around. But, he is now able to Jockey In 'Frisco
a,ld “the
SAN FRANCISCO.—An Amei un about and also speaks quite
freely. According to doctors, Yo iican Nisei “first” was made in
shihiro needs treatment by means San Francisco last week when
of this special milk for several Ken Kashihara went on the air
V OKOHAMA. Police said’ re■ more years until the develop as the host of an hour-long pro
cently
that Rokushiro Sugi hang ment of the brain becomes nor gram, Records at Random,” on
f!
ed himself because his wife and mal.
station KCBS.
children insisted on watching a
A graduate of San Francisco
The boy’s parents said they
female vocalist on televion inState
college where he majored
stead of letting- him turn the dial have now enough stock of the ni radio and television, Kashi
Ashida last we^vvnT?1^
Begining in 1935, Yoshida peti- to
milk for this purpose, appreciat
"The Untouchables.”
'™ & 50-year tioned five times for a retrial.
ing the goodwill extended by tire hara took over the 9 to 10 p.m.
spot on the station.
Neighbors said this was not the general public.
f a
-Cea1’ himself of a murei conviction. The 83-year-old His persistence finally won the first time Sugii, 46, had been
A native of Hawaii, the Nisei
attention of the Japan Civil Li
Doctors estimate there are at went to San Francisco one and
They
he MW c“ die ™ berties Union and' the Bar Asso overruled by his family.
he was a good husband and least 200 or 300 young children one-half years ago to study radio
ciation. Their support secured asaid'
g’ood worker, but “too demo suffering from this disease in and television work. He is the
L
ee'Haa higher court in him the retrial.
Ja^an, although only about 30 first Nisei to obtain a full-time
cratic” at home.
I
H , acquitted him of a 1913
have
so far been, discovered.
Presiding
judge
Toichi
Koba। murder for which he was senannouncing job in the San Fran
On a previous occasion, when
The Snow BranH1 KTm- n^a P cisco
zashi,
in
reversingthe
orig-in,al
area.
®
His sentence was
his family refused to let him tune On anJ T a- d M ,k
verdict, agreed Yoshida had been ii' a
urogram
bp
i
V
Ajinomoto
Co.,
both
■
21 years convicted on .perjured evid'ence.
1 o am, he kicked leading foodstuffs manufacturers
the set in.
The court’s ruling entitles him
in Japan, have jointly developed Japanese Top Fishers
'
aWe to to between 200 and 400 yen a
This time when he switched a a special milk for phenylketonu
mto court su;pJapan caught 6,700,t.
now set to "The Untouchables”
i
^vo attendants.
He day for each day in prison after and his family turned it back to ria and begun manufacturing it.
000 tons of fish in 1961, Peru
^d°in US]aVer that 116 WOUld his conviction, or in his case a
It was reported that the Daigo 5,200,000 tons and Communist
the singer, he hanged himself be
nd up and shout Banzai (long maximum of $8,750.
cause "his dignity as a husband Sangjo Co., a firm in Osaka, have China an estimated 5,000,000
) i acquitted. But when the
Yoshida’s accuser who admit- and father was ruined,” neigh
tons figures published this week
also developed a similar kind of by
nod.
Came’ a 1 he c°uld do was :ed perjury has since died’.
the United Nations Food and
bors told the police.
°
milk.
A^icuitural Organization show,
n^11da V.as c°nvicted' of murstatistics showed that in
oerin othe year—the Latest for which
merchant and robbin?
50
Rd the equivalent of
world figures are available—the
was
convicted
Union had a national catch
on
tile
ev
NEW HAVEN, Conn.—Atomic for a. girl increased if the mother
.
. xence °f two men ■who
S?
°
’
20
^000 tons, the United
fects was proportionately small.
bombs dropped on Japan in 1945 was irradiated.
1115 ac.comPHces.
tons’ Norway
Commission doctors found that i
caused a marked rise in leuke
Dr. Finch recently returned radiation caused leukemia cases ^n0^’^00 tons, Canada 1,020-a,nnestv
P^son on an mia and a probable rise in thy
°ue of tL S^da tracked down
{ from Japan after serving for two among survivors to soar to 30 to 000 tons, Spain 1,014,000 tons,
roid cancer but no increase in
had testified malformed babies, a Yale Uni ; years as chief of medicine for 50 times normal in 1951-52 Dr. South Africa L°1(W0 tons, and
Ui^ n iand
from
a
India 961,000 tons.
the U.S. _ Atomic Bomb Casualty Finch said.
’
bed in h??0?’ saying he had versity researcher said recently. Commission.
The
commission
Dr. Stuart C. Finch, associate was set up by Harry S. Truman,
The rate has declined in recent
-AAlA?testimony.
professor of medicine, said a former U.S. president, to studv jeais, but is still two or three
PEN PALS
The
study of pregnancies in Hiroshi the long-range effects of the times normal, he .added.
Dear Friend:
^°2COti ohmpics
ma showed no increase of birth
incidence of leukemia (blood can
My name is Masako Endo.
defects among babies of blast blasts in Hiroshima and Naga- cer) was related to the radiation
a ^r’’ I am sixteen vears
close
received.
survivors than among offspring
Another
Yale
faculty
member,
^nd
attend Kofu Commer
of non-exposed parents.
The
commission
examined
K5
Dr.
Dorothy
R.
Hollingsworth.
cial
High
School.
Junless the
The only genetic effect observ- |
!^Q rev V yUmpic Committee ed was a change in the boy-girl ; studied thyroid cancer in bomb about 20,000 persons exposed_to
I
would
like to have pen
radiation, as well as an unex
survivors
and
found
this
type
of
bdone^X
lts suspension on ratio among babies of bla
pals
in
Canada.
I am very
urposed control group, at least once
Ti?J9C suspended vivors
interested in
Canada and
exposed to radiation he cancer probaoly increased because every two years.
of the intense radiation.
would
Tritely because
on X
u a like to
- know much
The doctors also performed
V
burred Israel and
about
it. Please write to me at:
If
the
father
was
irradiated,
Dr.
Finch
said
the
number
of
Ayfa™ the Asian
aucopsies on deceased blast sur
the probability for a boy increas survivors who came down with vivors to see if radiation effects
15 Highasi 1 ghodoli,
” -Jakarta in 1962.
Kofu City, Yamanashi
ed, he explained. The probability cancer or suffered other after ef- naa been undetected in life.
Japan.
Special Milk To Core Rare Disease Produced
TV Channel Changed
Man Committs Suicide
Man Wins 50-year Baffle Against Muffler Rap
A-bomb Caused Rise In Leukemia
MAN
'a cash
lawa
IT
THE NEW CANADIAN
;---------- ^^tao^ &„adia„ „ Jopmeie Q
8 Vol. XXVII—No. 18
| _—
—
——
--------------------- - ---- —
^VEDNESDAY, MARCH 6. 1963
—
'
~
Toronto, Ont.
Census
Shews
J.C.
’
s
City
Dwellers
oKONTo.-Japailese c«-lba„.a.[W,.._..„.
"> wweners
chines
’, secAcme
floor.
H..T$R°NTO.—Japanese
Cananes—was of particular parison figures showed that Ja
a-ans are strictly city dwellers. interest Of
th e near 30,000 poAccording- to the census catalo
pulation of J.C s 23,316 chose the panese Canadian farmers in the
gue of tire Dominion Bureau of
'ealih
French speaking province of Que
statistics Canadians of Japanese bright lights of the city while bec were almost negligable. 1450
only 5,643 selected the peace anc lived in urban areas,”-with 1372
origin prefer the gay lights, d
posifresh
air of the country. Cities
partment stores supermarkets,
ol
over
100,000 claimed 18,956 residing- in cities of more than
I night-life,
transportation urban dwelling J.C.’s, while the 100,000—-mainly in Montreal—
d
and other modern conveniences
while just nine lived in rural
•which go a long- with life in a ot-,000 to 100,000 bracket cities areas.
'dern
were the homes of 1449. Towns T Ontario, which has the highest
metropolis to that of tran with
room
a population between 10,000 u.C. population of Canada’s ten
RU.
quility, simpleness and the earlyand
30,000 were inhabited bv
to-bed-early-to-rise tradition of
provinces with 11,870, also sport
1240
Japanese
Canadians.
rural livinged
the highest number of urban
Breakdown of the rural figures
The
' ie
” 1961 census revealed
"UNe Jtu
citizens
with 11,422. Main con
shoved 2058 eng-ag-ed in farmingthat there were 29,157 Japanese while
sentration
of J.C.’s is in Toronto
ion©
the other 3785 though liv
Canadians. However, breakdown ing in rural districts were em and Hamilton. Cities of over 100,or this figure shows many inter
ployed in occupations other than ^^ People were inhabited by
esting statistics on the Issei. Ni farming.
10,341, while cities under this fi
sei and Sansei of this country.
lat,
were homes to approximind
One of these—the rural vs'ur- . A province by province exam a tel v 1000 Ontario residents,
ination of the rural-urban com469
hural dwellers in the province
totalled just 448.
The majority of Manitoba’s
1-96 Canadians of Japanese an
cestry were “city folk” with just
TORAO. Two Japanese cor
Tokyo, appealed for an early im- 74 of this number living on farms
porations have successfully de
veloped and begun manufactur poit of the special milk for their or rural communities.
son Yoshihiro. The special milk
Saskatchewan’s total of 280
ing. a. special milk for children w-as
at that time being produced J.C. s showed 240 urban residents
suffering from a rare and dread by only two American firms.
W1 th only 40 engaged in farming.
ful disease — phenylketonuria —
. Alberta, was the only province
Toshihiro
then
received
contri
wduch makes children feeble
in
which city-lovers did not combutions
of
a
large
amount
of
minded if untreated.
‘Lfenal,ac Powder,” a special । pletely dominate. Of a populaThe
phenylketonuria
study milk produced by the Mead John |9°n ?J 3721 J.C.’s 2248 favored
committee, a group of medical son Co., from the American and city living while 1473 chose to
doctors specializing in this di Japanese Red Cross societies and reside in rural areas.
sease, has decided to freely dis many Japanese and American in
British
Columbia,
however,
tribute the special milk to all dividuals.
^MPig' back to urban dominance
babies suffering- from the disease.
.Thanks to the good help ex with twice as many city dwellers
mainly in Vancouver—as coun
Photo by Jack Hemmy
The disease drew public at tended by these people, the boy
try
inhabitans. 6679 B.C. resitention last June when Mr. and has since shown steady growth,
Ellen Tsuji Named Miss Valentine
Picked the city life, while
Mrs. Masakazu Nomura, resi well reaching- the average phy 3/45 selected
rural residence.
™”?eUn MW tVr^
(centre) was chosen Miss Valen- dents in the western suburbs of sical standard of a Japanese boy
of two years and nine months.
When his parents appealed for First Nisei Disc
help, he was unable to walk
around. But, he is now able to Jockey In 'Frisco
a,ld “the
SAN FRANCISCO.—An Amei un about and also speaks quite
freely. According to doctors, Yo iican Nisei “first” was made in
shihiro needs treatment by means San Francisco last week when
of this special milk for several Ken Kashihara went on the air
V OKOHAMA. Police said’ re■ more years until the develop as the host of an hour-long pro
cently
that Rokushiro Sugi hang ment of the brain becomes nor gram, Records at Random,” on
f!
ed himself because his wife and mal.
station KCBS.
children insisted on watching a
A graduate of San Francisco
The boy’s parents said they
female vocalist on televion inState
college where he majored
stead of letting- him turn the dial have now enough stock of the ni radio and television, Kashi
Ashida last we^vvnT?1^
Begining in 1935, Yoshida peti- to
milk for this purpose, appreciat
"The Untouchables.”
'™ & 50-year tioned five times for a retrial.
ing the goodwill extended by tire hara took over the 9 to 10 p.m.
spot on the station.
Neighbors said this was not the general public.
f a
-Cea1’ himself of a murei conviction. The 83-year-old His persistence finally won the first time Sugii, 46, had been
A native of Hawaii, the Nisei
attention of the Japan Civil Li
Doctors estimate there are at went to San Francisco one and
They
he MW c“ die ™ berties Union and' the Bar Asso overruled by his family.
he was a good husband and least 200 or 300 young children one-half years ago to study radio
ciation. Their support secured asaid'
g’ood worker, but “too demo suffering from this disease in and television work. He is the
L
ee'Haa higher court in him the retrial.
Ja^an, although only about 30 first Nisei to obtain a full-time
cratic” at home.
I
H , acquitted him of a 1913
have
so far been, discovered.
Presiding
judge
Toichi
Koba। murder for which he was senannouncing job in the San Fran
On a previous occasion, when
The Snow BranH1 KTm- n^a P cisco
zashi,
in
reversingthe
orig-in,al
area.
®
His sentence was
his family refused to let him tune On anJ T a- d M ,k
verdict, agreed Yoshida had been ii' a
urogram
bp
i
V
Ajinomoto
Co.,
both
■
21 years convicted on .perjured evid'ence.
1 o am, he kicked leading foodstuffs manufacturers
the set in.
The court’s ruling entitles him
in Japan, have jointly developed Japanese Top Fishers
'
aWe to to between 200 and 400 yen a
This time when he switched a a special milk for phenylketonu
mto court su;pJapan caught 6,700,t.
now set to "The Untouchables”
i
^vo attendants.
He day for each day in prison after and his family turned it back to ria and begun manufacturing it.
000 tons of fish in 1961, Peru
^d°in US]aVer that 116 WOUld his conviction, or in his case a
It was reported that the Daigo 5,200,000 tons and Communist
the singer, he hanged himself be
nd up and shout Banzai (long maximum of $8,750.
cause "his dignity as a husband Sangjo Co., a firm in Osaka, have China an estimated 5,000,000
) i acquitted. But when the
Yoshida’s accuser who admit- and father was ruined,” neigh
tons figures published this week
also developed a similar kind of by
nod.
Came’ a 1 he c°uld do was :ed perjury has since died’.
the United Nations Food and
bors told the police.
°
milk.
A^icuitural Organization show,
n^11da V.as c°nvicted' of murstatistics showed that in
oerin othe year—the Latest for which
merchant and robbin?
50
Rd the equivalent of
world figures are available—the
was
convicted
Union had a national catch
on
tile
ev
NEW HAVEN, Conn.—Atomic for a. girl increased if the mother
.
. xence °f two men ■who
S?
°
’
20
^000 tons, the United
fects was proportionately small.
bombs dropped on Japan in 1945 was irradiated.
1115 ac.comPHces.
tons’ Norway
Commission doctors found that i
caused a marked rise in leuke
Dr. Finch recently returned radiation caused leukemia cases ^n0^’^00 tons, Canada 1,020-a,nnestv
P^son on an mia and a probable rise in thy
°ue of tL S^da tracked down
{ from Japan after serving for two among survivors to soar to 30 to 000 tons, Spain 1,014,000 tons,
roid cancer but no increase in
had testified malformed babies, a Yale Uni ; years as chief of medicine for 50 times normal in 1951-52 Dr. South Africa L°1(W0 tons, and
Ui^ n iand
from
a
India 961,000 tons.
the U.S. _ Atomic Bomb Casualty Finch said.
’
bed in h??0?’ saying he had versity researcher said recently. Commission.
The
commission
Dr. Stuart C. Finch, associate was set up by Harry S. Truman,
The rate has declined in recent
-AAlA?testimony.
professor of medicine, said a former U.S. president, to studv jeais, but is still two or three
PEN PALS
The
study of pregnancies in Hiroshi the long-range effects of the times normal, he .added.
Dear Friend:
^°2COti ohmpics
ma showed no increase of birth
incidence of leukemia (blood can
My name is Masako Endo.
defects among babies of blast blasts in Hiroshima and Naga- cer) was related to the radiation
a ^r’’ I am sixteen vears
close
received.
survivors than among offspring
Another
Yale
faculty
member,
^nd
attend Kofu Commer
of non-exposed parents.
The
commission
examined
K5
Dr.
Dorothy
R.
Hollingsworth.
cial
High
School.
Junless the
The only genetic effect observ- |
!^Q rev V yUmpic Committee ed was a change in the boy-girl ; studied thyroid cancer in bomb about 20,000 persons exposed_to
I
would
like to have pen
radiation, as well as an unex
survivors
and
found
this
type
of
bdone^X
lts suspension on ratio among babies of bla
pals
in
Canada.
I am very
urposed control group, at least once
Ti?J9C suspended vivors
interested in
Canada and
exposed to radiation he cancer probaoly increased because every two years.
of the intense radiation.
would
Tritely because
on X
u a like to
- know much
The doctors also performed
V
burred Israel and
about
it. Please write to me at:
If
the
father
was
irradiated,
Dr.
Finch
said
the
number
of
Ayfa™ the Asian
aucopsies on deceased blast sur
the probability for a boy increas survivors who came down with vivors to see if radiation effects
15 Highasi 1 ghodoli,
” -Jakarta in 1962.
Kofu City, Yamanashi
ed, he explained. The probability cancer or suffered other after ef- naa been undetected in life.
Japan.
Special Milk To Core Rare Disease Produced
TV Channel Changed
Man Committs Suicide
Man Wins 50-year Baffle Against Muffler Rap
A-bomb Caused Rise In Leukemia
Page 2
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nn
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tn bOHfliXiiaBii^iiZe-
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^•e[inesclay March 6, 1963
PAGE 7
--- --------------- —------------------------ ------------------- -------------------------
Vagaries
***„M«yPimhae Japanese Plane
I .TOKYO. — A made-in-Japan
: airliner could soon be flying- in
■ British Columbia.
"Hawaii" Production Delayed
< Sandy Welbourn. special assisSTARTING date for production
to JaPa«ese. The film
film
; rant to the president of Pacific
on “Hawaii,’’ the film version of
; V estern Airlines, said here his
h WrS rusJed into produc
rhe James Michener novel which h
tion by Jerry Bresler in an at
,
company is definitely interested
is planned as one of the most tempt io beat “Hawaii” to the
i in buying at- least one Japaneseto
the
important movie projects in l^6:. W(?ihaVe-,Played dates long
i built aircraft.
many years, is planned' for early j<.before
------ -- Hawaii - is readv for re
j But, he added, no deal will be
in 1964. Fred Zinnemann, one of ' lease.
i m.ade. unless Pacific Western
Hollywood’s great filmmakers
the plot motivations of the
; g-ets suitable routes. And this
(“High Noon,” “The Sundown film revolve around two inter, depends entirely on the federal
ers,” “Nun’s Story) will produce aacial love affairs, one concern
g overnment adopting
regional
and direct the picture which will ing Heston, as the richest and
air traffic policy in
: Canada.
be a particular interest to Japa most Powerfu! man on Kauai,
FLIGHT TESTED
nese Americans in the 50th state pith his Chinese American mis
V el bourn was in Japan last
and in both the U.S. mainland tress, played by Miss Nuyen. and
week
to inspect the first comand Canada.
the other with Miss Mimeux. as
mere ini aircraft to be built in
One reason for the delay on Heston’s young man of pure Ha
; this country since the Second
"Hawaii,” which was bought for waiian lineage.
.World
War:
films by the Mirisch Brothers for
_______________ ___ ________________________
, the- twin-engined
The dramatic incidents are
D
iturbo-prop
IS
11, a 60-passenger
United Artists release, was the stereotyped with Heston vigor
lYiiss
Kec
oocratic
Dance
Saturday
At
War
Amp
uhme
powered
by
the latest Rolls
problem encountered when Dan ously opposing his sister’s marTara dash, first assigned to write dage to a non-haole while carry
TORONTO.
music mo- . your exams and' out to let out j
ivAUAiu.—The
me magic
the screenplay, approached the ing on his own clandestine affair ment^is just a few days away all that pent-up steam, or taking . The 300-miles-per-hour plane,
Ions' novel. There are two main with an Oriental girl.
for five lovely young ladies of a break from exam studies, out i designed in Japan, is being built
: in the industrial city of Nag-oya
un lines, one involving the
this city who are vying for the
The film stresses that, al title of “Miss Club Rec Socratic.” to have that last big night be I by the Nihon APL‘Manufacturm ionary families and their
fore exams or a working- guy or
Company of Tokyo.
Chinese retainers and the other, though politically equality ls
One of the pretty misses will gal without exam worries, make
Two
maintained
in
Hawaii,
race
pre
aircraft
now being
the second half of the 937 page
wear the crown shortly after 11 it a point to attend what is sure
judice
exists
among
some
haoles
ht-tested
.and the com pan v
book, which concerns the-Saka
p.m. on Saturday, March 9th to be the biggest social event of i has
production orders for 23
gawas and the making of a dyna on a social level.
when the -judges hand down their the season.
Diamond
Head/
’
despite
soap
planes,
20 of them to be built
choice. She will be showered with
mic new society. It was suggest
That’s
Rec
opera
flavor
of
some
of
its
dra
•
for
Japan's
AU-Nippon Airways.
ed quite seriously by Max Younggifts donated by several local “M1SS REC SOCRATIC BALL,”
matic
moments,
is
a
welcome
de
Certification
is expected in Aug*.
stein, then one of the prime niomerchants and the coveted crown this Saturday, March 9 at the
parture
from
the
usual
depiction
“
I
’
m.
extremely
impressed with
will be presented to her by last War Amputation’s Auditorium,
vers of United Artists, that con
of
Hawaii
as
a
paradise
where
:
the
plane,
”
Welbourn
said after
; year’s queen Miss Marie Oye.
sideration be given to the makWellesley and Bay. See you all visiting the plant.
everyone
dances
the
hula
and
kg of two related three-hour
The five girls,
P'alm treeS 3nd 1 Okamoto®
Liiha Ami Jind'o, Kiyo there! That means you, you, you I
“It’s very well built and its
films from the book to be shown
and especially YOU!
almost no one ever seems to mi Tsuh and T.i.n Tohana, Nao
performance in
the flight test
or consecutive days. Only then work.
mi Tsuji and Lily Yoshida will
Program
is
exceedingall expeccould the full story of “Hawaii’
meet the judges between 10:30
.
tations.
”
Usually Hollywood is content and 11 p.m. and the -winner an
be told.
Toronto Dana To Hold
not ready
to
treat Hawaii as “Girls! Giris! nounced shortly thereafter.
Dalton Trumbo, who has writ | Girls!,
”
the latest Elvis Presley
Why does a Canadian airline
ten the scripts for such pictures j
The judges who will be faced Gen. Meeting Saturday
film
did,
as a sand and surf re- with
TORONTO. — The
general P0?^/0’^^
aircraft?
as “Exodus” and “Spartacus” is sort.
the difficult task of select
leported to have resolved the
- 1 .’” said Welbourn, “because
ing one winner from among- the meeting of the Toronto Dana will
Diamond Head,” however, is a five contestants are: Miss Cathy be held on Saturdav, March 9th °? P11Ce- . ™s plane, costing
problem of telling the story of
personal
story, committed to the 1 ohana, former Miss Valentine: at S p.m. at the Toronto Buddhist 5 n . a- mi!,T and a quarter
“Hawaii” in a single film. Trum
family
dilemma
of Heston’s King photographer Jack Hemmy, and Church.
| dollars, is about the same price
bo has affairmed that the script
Holland,
the
ruler
of the island. editors of the two Japanese
a similar British or AmericanMil deal with all of the major
Guest speaker for the evenin „ as
made
plane would be.
Michener
’
s
“
Hawaii
”
uses
a
much
newspapers, Vic Kitagawa, Con will be Dr. Elizabeth
story points of Michener’s masChant“
We
’re simply trying to keep
broader
canvas
to
tell
the
whole
sive work, including the situa
tinental Times, and Rick Matsu Robertson, nutritionist
at
the
up
to
date
and this is the newest
history
of
the
archipelago
in
hu
moto,
New
Canadian.
tion faced by the territory’s po
Sick
Children
’s Hospital.
man
terms.
au
K
i
j
,
turbo-prop
airplane
available.
pulation of Japanese ancestry at
Although the evening will be
AH
members
and
friends
are
We
re
not
definitely
in
the marthe time of Pearl Harbor, the
—Pacific Citizen long- to the five lovely gals your urged to attend.
I het at the moment because of
formation of a volunteer Japa
attendance at the dance is needed
------ ---------------------- Canadian air .policy.
nese American regiment and the
to make this evening a night the
“But when such policy is re
wartime record of Japanese in Isseibu Elects 1963
girls will find hard to forget.
NSC
Grad
Banquet
solved
there is every likelihood
Hawaii, as -well as the postwar Officers At Meeting
Dancing- begins at 8 p.m. and
we
ll
have
requirements for such
influence of the young Japanese
continues through to midnight.
TORONTO. — Just a reminder
TORONTO.—I. Kawashiri
------- was There will be novelty dances to that the University of Toronto an airplane.”
American lawyers who served in
the special combat team and who elected as president of the Tor- add to the excitement of the even Nisei Students’ Club Grad Ban
mi e helped mold the present po- onto JCCA Isseibu along with ing.
quet will be held this Saturday,
b ical shape of the 50th state, other table officers at the
March 9 at the China House be
Dance
to
your
favorite
record
■tins Story Will be told, of course, eral meeting held on March 3rd. ings, whether it be the big band ginning at 6:30 p.m.
a personal terms, in the long
Other officers elected were: sounds of Jimmy Dorsey, Glen
All members and friends are
journey of two generations of Mrs. T. Ikeda and M. Amemori, Miller or Artie Shaw, or to the invited to attend.
CALL YOUR RID CROS*
Ramejiro Sakagawa and his Vice-presidents:
T.
Kameoka, latest hit parade tunes of Connie
children, from the Inland Sea of secretary; Y. Kanda,, treasurer. Francis, Johnny Mathis or Ray
f?11 tovrhe era of Hie Golden Chairman of various committees Charles.
DRIVE SAFELY
-ci, as Michener calls them, in were also chosen: Z. Shin, wel
Whether you’ve just finished 1
AND LIVE!
lie"esb °f the American fare; Mrs. K. Tanaka, study; Mrs.
Mates.
T.; Nishimura, social ; U.' Naka
BOSTON, LOS ANGELES
shima, organization; T. Sumi and
*
*
*
LONDON
T. Kad'onaga, auditors.
ho hazards seen
Including the table officers 44
to° early to start members serve on the executive
f Hawaii”, although Alec
f “ess and Audfey Hepburn committee of the Isseibu.
j i been mentioned for two of
kh M-Or r°leS- But Hollywood
SATURDAY, MARCH 9, 1963
supplied with
of ,b°th talent and per" "hose Oriental names
War Amputation Hall
we 1 a box-°Hice potential as
(Wellesley at Bay)
Fraiiem°ng the ’actresses are
SCe *u^n’ who is one of the
8:00—12:00
dra?a of modern Ha$1.25
Dlam?nd Head,” which has
138472 Queen W.
k \nieilr eased’ Miyoshi Ume
sh
Tam, Tsuruko KobayaToronto —
LE. 2cin
Pat Suzuki, Nlimary other? ^U McCartihy and i
There is also James MWIHIIHMi®
"ho is one of Hawaii’s |
known sons in entertainCHINESE AND CANADIAN FOOD
aiejK Jack F
Soo, George Takei-
By LARRY TAJIRI
^ot^ Off# .OGifsg^s'
t
I Give Blood
MISS REC SOCRATIC BALL
SUNSET TERRACE
>«g#’,'
and considerable
considerable
number'
and
had mXm otHer actors -who have
vie<
roles in both mo, ln television dramas in
.' ears.
with
°f casting a film
^2_a players no longer
°£ hazzard for the
QW e r - oducer.
ernctional News Coverage
<J®*Ot#
ROOM
72^*5
*
^rracial loves’
DIAMOND HEAD”
I
Column/ j
the new
ton '■IV^drama starring CharlFrar.r-o v‘un> Yvette Mimeux.
Ceo^: ;aAE James Darren and |
* '-•iskuts, should prove of
Interesting
Accurate
See SUS NAGAI
Phone WA. 4-8427
432 Parliament Street
TORONTO
■?<^^»*®<®®®?S-zxr"5S5<J- -<5
J
‘
1
> Wedding
Receptions
►
Banquets
BIS! •
Private
Parties
Sales
Meetings
Free Parking
I
Th* Christian Science Monitor
One Norway St., Boston 15, Mass.
-Send your newspaper for the time
checked. Enclosed find my check or
money order. □ 1 year $22.
D $ months $11
0 3 months S5.50
Name
Address
CCy
ME. 5-5050-1-2
Zone
State
PB-16
r
^•e[inesclay March 6, 1963
PAGE 7
--- --------------- —------------------------ ------------------- -------------------------
Vagaries
***„M«yPimhae Japanese Plane
I .TOKYO. — A made-in-Japan
: airliner could soon be flying- in
■ British Columbia.
"Hawaii" Production Delayed
< Sandy Welbourn. special assisSTARTING date for production
to JaPa«ese. The film
film
; rant to the president of Pacific
on “Hawaii,’’ the film version of
; V estern Airlines, said here his
h WrS rusJed into produc
rhe James Michener novel which h
tion by Jerry Bresler in an at
,
company is definitely interested
is planned as one of the most tempt io beat “Hawaii” to the
i in buying at- least one Japaneseto
the
important movie projects in l^6:. W(?ihaVe-,Played dates long
i built aircraft.
many years, is planned' for early j<.before
------ -- Hawaii - is readv for re
j But, he added, no deal will be
in 1964. Fred Zinnemann, one of ' lease.
i m.ade. unless Pacific Western
Hollywood’s great filmmakers
the plot motivations of the
; g-ets suitable routes. And this
(“High Noon,” “The Sundown film revolve around two inter, depends entirely on the federal
ers,” “Nun’s Story) will produce aacial love affairs, one concern
g overnment adopting
regional
and direct the picture which will ing Heston, as the richest and
air traffic policy in
: Canada.
be a particular interest to Japa most Powerfu! man on Kauai,
FLIGHT TESTED
nese Americans in the 50th state pith his Chinese American mis
V el bourn was in Japan last
and in both the U.S. mainland tress, played by Miss Nuyen. and
week
to inspect the first comand Canada.
the other with Miss Mimeux. as
mere ini aircraft to be built in
One reason for the delay on Heston’s young man of pure Ha
; this country since the Second
"Hawaii,” which was bought for waiian lineage.
.World
War:
films by the Mirisch Brothers for
_______________ ___ ________________________
, the- twin-engined
The dramatic incidents are
D
iturbo-prop
IS
11, a 60-passenger
United Artists release, was the stereotyped with Heston vigor
lYiiss
Kec
oocratic
Dance
Saturday
At
War
Amp
uhme
powered
by
the latest Rolls
problem encountered when Dan ously opposing his sister’s marTara dash, first assigned to write dage to a non-haole while carry
TORONTO.
music mo- . your exams and' out to let out j
ivAUAiu.—The
me magic
the screenplay, approached the ing on his own clandestine affair ment^is just a few days away all that pent-up steam, or taking . The 300-miles-per-hour plane,
Ions' novel. There are two main with an Oriental girl.
for five lovely young ladies of a break from exam studies, out i designed in Japan, is being built
: in the industrial city of Nag-oya
un lines, one involving the
this city who are vying for the
The film stresses that, al title of “Miss Club Rec Socratic.” to have that last big night be I by the Nihon APL‘Manufacturm ionary families and their
fore exams or a working- guy or
Company of Tokyo.
Chinese retainers and the other, though politically equality ls
One of the pretty misses will gal without exam worries, make
Two
maintained
in
Hawaii,
race
pre
aircraft
now being
the second half of the 937 page
wear the crown shortly after 11 it a point to attend what is sure
judice
exists
among
some
haoles
ht-tested
.and the com pan v
book, which concerns the-Saka
p.m. on Saturday, March 9th to be the biggest social event of i has
production orders for 23
gawas and the making of a dyna on a social level.
when the -judges hand down their the season.
Diamond
Head/
’
despite
soap
planes,
20 of them to be built
choice. She will be showered with
mic new society. It was suggest
That’s
Rec
opera
flavor
of
some
of
its
dra
•
for
Japan's
AU-Nippon Airways.
ed quite seriously by Max Younggifts donated by several local “M1SS REC SOCRATIC BALL,”
matic
moments,
is
a
welcome
de
Certification
is expected in Aug*.
stein, then one of the prime niomerchants and the coveted crown this Saturday, March 9 at the
parture
from
the
usual
depiction
“
I
’
m.
extremely
impressed with
will be presented to her by last War Amputation’s Auditorium,
vers of United Artists, that con
of
Hawaii
as
a
paradise
where
:
the
plane,
”
Welbourn
said after
; year’s queen Miss Marie Oye.
sideration be given to the makWellesley and Bay. See you all visiting the plant.
everyone
dances
the
hula
and
kg of two related three-hour
The five girls,
P'alm treeS 3nd 1 Okamoto®
Liiha Ami Jind'o, Kiyo there! That means you, you, you I
“It’s very well built and its
films from the book to be shown
and especially YOU!
almost no one ever seems to mi Tsuh and T.i.n Tohana, Nao
performance in
the flight test
or consecutive days. Only then work.
mi Tsuji and Lily Yoshida will
Program
is
exceedingall expeccould the full story of “Hawaii’
meet the judges between 10:30
.
tations.
”
Usually Hollywood is content and 11 p.m. and the -winner an
be told.
Toronto Dana To Hold
not ready
to
treat Hawaii as “Girls! Giris! nounced shortly thereafter.
Dalton Trumbo, who has writ | Girls!,
”
the latest Elvis Presley
Why does a Canadian airline
ten the scripts for such pictures j
The judges who will be faced Gen. Meeting Saturday
film
did,
as a sand and surf re- with
TORONTO. — The
general P0?^/0’^^
aircraft?
as “Exodus” and “Spartacus” is sort.
the difficult task of select
leported to have resolved the
- 1 .’” said Welbourn, “because
ing one winner from among- the meeting of the Toronto Dana will
Diamond Head,” however, is a five contestants are: Miss Cathy be held on Saturdav, March 9th °? P11Ce- . ™s plane, costing
problem of telling the story of
personal
story, committed to the 1 ohana, former Miss Valentine: at S p.m. at the Toronto Buddhist 5 n . a- mi!,T and a quarter
“Hawaii” in a single film. Trum
family
dilemma
of Heston’s King photographer Jack Hemmy, and Church.
| dollars, is about the same price
bo has affairmed that the script
Holland,
the
ruler
of the island. editors of the two Japanese
a similar British or AmericanMil deal with all of the major
Guest speaker for the evenin „ as
made
plane would be.
Michener
’
s
“
Hawaii
”
uses
a
much
newspapers, Vic Kitagawa, Con will be Dr. Elizabeth
story points of Michener’s masChant“
We
’re simply trying to keep
broader
canvas
to
tell
the
whole
sive work, including the situa
tinental Times, and Rick Matsu Robertson, nutritionist
at
the
up
to
date
and this is the newest
history
of
the
archipelago
in
hu
moto,
New
Canadian.
tion faced by the territory’s po
Sick
Children
’s Hospital.
man
terms.
au
K
i
j
,
turbo-prop
airplane
available.
pulation of Japanese ancestry at
Although the evening will be
AH
members
and
friends
are
We
re
not
definitely
in
the marthe time of Pearl Harbor, the
—Pacific Citizen long- to the five lovely gals your urged to attend.
I het at the moment because of
formation of a volunteer Japa
attendance at the dance is needed
------ ---------------------- Canadian air .policy.
nese American regiment and the
to make this evening a night the
“But when such policy is re
wartime record of Japanese in Isseibu Elects 1963
girls will find hard to forget.
NSC
Grad
Banquet
solved
there is every likelihood
Hawaii, as -well as the postwar Officers At Meeting
Dancing- begins at 8 p.m. and
we
ll
have
requirements for such
influence of the young Japanese
continues through to midnight.
TORONTO. — Just a reminder
TORONTO.—I. Kawashiri
------- was There will be novelty dances to that the University of Toronto an airplane.”
American lawyers who served in
the special combat team and who elected as president of the Tor- add to the excitement of the even Nisei Students’ Club Grad Ban
mi e helped mold the present po- onto JCCA Isseibu along with ing.
quet will be held this Saturday,
b ical shape of the 50th state, other table officers at the
March 9 at the China House be
Dance
to
your
favorite
record
■tins Story Will be told, of course, eral meeting held on March 3rd. ings, whether it be the big band ginning at 6:30 p.m.
a personal terms, in the long
Other officers elected were: sounds of Jimmy Dorsey, Glen
All members and friends are
journey of two generations of Mrs. T. Ikeda and M. Amemori, Miller or Artie Shaw, or to the invited to attend.
CALL YOUR RID CROS*
Ramejiro Sakagawa and his Vice-presidents:
T.
Kameoka, latest hit parade tunes of Connie
children, from the Inland Sea of secretary; Y. Kanda,, treasurer. Francis, Johnny Mathis or Ray
f?11 tovrhe era of Hie Golden Chairman of various committees Charles.
DRIVE SAFELY
-ci, as Michener calls them, in were also chosen: Z. Shin, wel
Whether you’ve just finished 1
AND LIVE!
lie"esb °f the American fare; Mrs. K. Tanaka, study; Mrs.
Mates.
T.; Nishimura, social ; U.' Naka
BOSTON, LOS ANGELES
shima, organization; T. Sumi and
*
*
*
LONDON
T. Kad'onaga, auditors.
ho hazards seen
Including the table officers 44
to° early to start members serve on the executive
f Hawaii”, although Alec
f “ess and Audfey Hepburn committee of the Isseibu.
j i been mentioned for two of
kh M-Or r°leS- But Hollywood
SATURDAY, MARCH 9, 1963
supplied with
of ,b°th talent and per" "hose Oriental names
War Amputation Hall
we 1 a box-°Hice potential as
(Wellesley at Bay)
Fraiiem°ng the ’actresses are
SCe *u^n’ who is one of the
8:00—12:00
dra?a of modern Ha$1.25
Dlam?nd Head,” which has
138472 Queen W.
k \nieilr eased’ Miyoshi Ume
sh
Tam, Tsuruko KobayaToronto —
LE. 2cin
Pat Suzuki, Nlimary other? ^U McCartihy and i
There is also James MWIHIIHMi®
"ho is one of Hawaii’s |
known sons in entertainCHINESE AND CANADIAN FOOD
aiejK Jack F
Soo, George Takei-
By LARRY TAJIRI
^ot^ Off# .OGifsg^s'
t
I Give Blood
MISS REC SOCRATIC BALL
SUNSET TERRACE
>«g#’,'
and considerable
considerable
number'
and
had mXm otHer actors -who have
vie<
roles in both mo, ln television dramas in
.' ears.
with
°f casting a film
^2_a players no longer
°£ hazzard for the
QW e r - oducer.
ernctional News Coverage
<J®*Ot#
ROOM
72^*5
*
^rracial loves’
DIAMOND HEAD”
I
Column/ j
the new
ton '■IV^drama starring CharlFrar.r-o v‘un> Yvette Mimeux.
Ceo^: ;aAE James Darren and |
* '-•iskuts, should prove of
Interesting
Accurate
See SUS NAGAI
Phone WA. 4-8427
432 Parliament Street
TORONTO
■?<^^»*®<®®®?S-zxr"5S5<J- -<5
J
‘
1
> Wedding
Receptions
►
Banquets
BIS! •
Private
Parties
Sales
Meetings
Free Parking
I
Th* Christian Science Monitor
One Norway St., Boston 15, Mass.
-Send your newspaper for the time
checked. Enclosed find my check or
money order. □ 1 year $22.
D $ months $11
0 3 months S5.50
Name
Address
CCy
ME. 5-5050-1-2
Zone
State
PB-16
Page 8
Shopkeepers Win First Round
^ains* Supermarkets
।
pW/s
K®n Mori to Head
"™1C Press Ass’n Directors
„™EOWo-The annual „n.
I THE NEW CANADIAN
'mnirpr g ^ The endian wade strong pleas that internal
OHS- Dep«S^
won
"S I £ fact flmb there’s also a growthnic Press Association in On- disagreements unthin a national
4“9 QUEEN ST. WEST
SUS Shopkeeper “Up™k^ verL X
Pub|ic feeling in tauo was held at the Police 41- 'group not be brought before tTe
E
^niC Tress Association. He I
™
f the supermarkets.
weekeaRreSf
T°r°nto last
probaeblvh^k:XL™
Said l sucb matters among the I
Empire 6-5005
Asull anneX- Japanese Lousewife, it
a °f ^s 28 member nub- I members
of the association wer!
hcations represented.
P
at
A temporary but beefstea1- ™
Juicy Kobe
check thl
y Ve managed to tasted
the lociation .
in cellophane|
Guests and observers attend |I itself. He stated that
.the aim of
cneck the advancing tid’e for
«
A
’
V^
t
and
time being.
r
the association is to promote
wh^
started recently lMheWsfii”'”e h^ for a shinM a l tmal of persons at the meet- friendly relationships among the
m& to more than fifty.
pen Ja,pan s shopkeepers
f/ this country
r-?er wheels,
wav
an Ug!y report that Sale- 'She‘ want?5 w
Reports of the President’s—Mr and not to inject problems which *
wants, wide aisles and dis
ay Stores the huge American tag
and ^condition-’ Frank Glogowski—and the chair stem from old country disagree
?o
"’as pla^ AKand P^Ped-in
|
music instead man of the executive committees ments and prejudices.
imade the Japanese markpt ° Anri .tradition of yesterday.
edko? a
Ja^anese section EADY. 23-351?l^~W—
:ss<
m^Sh^K*-Japan’s Su before she’Sb»?rJ be tog ’ h^ ^ and aCCepted as was
n“no
/.f^rtising manager
the auditors report.
mmo Snoji Kaisha.
I
• ^ev Canadian and one of office cieY L ; ’———__
bne gets what she wants.
2y
Glogowski,
i„
his
report,
for
SSTtt
16 association «on. Phone" 368&(^
ANGRY protest
-os:
Lc 14a jwas retained
aJCfN'tt aia™eT thousI ao lit director for 1963.
f . ial1 retailers staged
P°?hy ?ffi«rs elected were- -^hmondjLj^
a
of Tokvo ^^
in the ciSes
S
’i *?de?‘’ K’ J' B-aier; pit
/ U ’ Osaka and Kobe.
rr3^\2
—
Ja
P
a
n
will
ask
.
UniM^r Pn W1H ask the of the war.
ce
J.
Frank Glogowski- First
s
d Nations not to call her
And, envisioning their
Alee President, Daniel la inuzzi *
S®? baing “about to £ a former enemy countrv” A
in
Japanese
Ambassador
to
U.N.
central
swallowed up by hungry biy I «;« the Tokv/S’ neS £SU? Okazaki, who is in To-’ Second Vice-President, T M
bath, liberal ti^tt^e rooa
busmess, the shopkeepers stub PaTer Sa]d recently.
cli
M o for consultations with the I hnsehmamn; Third Vice-Presi- ta>01£afteiJ5_p^T^
BU.
‘E J;?r?
f-W to the"
Clause 2, Article’ 53 of the UN government, will campaign to MrS ’
1Laur’’ Treasur'eI, £ noIsEKEEmXCU—f—
:ti
Secretary. V basis, call Mrc w
asked
e ^^t where thev Charter provides that Xri. eliminate the clause upon return- Mauko
' Wo?!: "'eeth(Toronto).
S
'
Wa
™er,
HU.
9
-ofe
The°
hlS
POSt
’
the
paper
said
'
hy
Mr
’
Sri
f
r
e
headed
call?-5 in World
M be|
a^rnv • O1 Protection.
■ by
enemy countries.”
wheneiSumitnrtS w®re rewarded
■
the
Enem
7
countries
”
means,
the
u bumitomo abruptly drono and Mrs.
Margaret Janossy.
■ tioi
!^:
r
sai
<
Japan,
Germany
and
wS^ft^^
pan
*uPer™a^ Plan for Ja■ to
£ ?? shopkeepers retired beTom Maiobe, CH l-%m Y?nted- Phone E less
mnd their counters and a uneasy
.^if"*
Spvernment
feels
i
(Toronio)
.'ff’Pmiese government feels I
ebmmate the clause.
I Use
»
■ Ont
truce was declared
■ T
How long it will last is anv I
For Best Result,:s
eighteen
■ e(® -1
?nV riUeSS but the feeling seems
■ k°n
e^ntualW
SUpermarkets will
| are
SKI
RENTALS
mv i 7
lerge ™torious.
I a?e'
BLEAK OUTLOOK
I H
, ^°r’ in sLarp contrast to Hip
E ken
COIF ’ SS, " “'“"^
™^rn techniques .and smooth
I and
OSCAR'S
Disconlinued & HaAl^CTICE
^Xythf ?e-™st Ja~ foreign birth ».. kS“S. "f Spain
I lowe
pain and
and Great
Great Britain
Britain.
1500
Dundas
(at
DufferinJ-LE.
2-4267
are in the i
extrac«<>n who
I Hunt
naustry, the business and mar tel And'
C
inter
esting
highlight
of
the
h°tel, mo_^Chft°n’s Golf School
! burg
ers X fir, of s,Ml1 retail1 fooc service industry
i»ettSPe S !’ antiquated and
much of interest at the
heW Mo*Sav,
f LCTe^on and exhibition Marchal
I born
PAUL Y. TOKIWA,
J died.
i 25/ in the Royal V0A
V Canadian Restaurant As
^akes the outlook even
.For Complete
bleaker for the shopkeepers Is sociation, to be held in
I static
a +
"enera^nuhr111 be °pen to the
Real Estate Service
^eiieiai public.
motive Building. Toronto
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
March 25 to 28
’ f Om
Call
AND NOTARY PUBLIC
Princess Michiko Said
More international in
I Cen
M1<!lc!i & Alexander Bus IA 8 11RR
scope
Suite 901
na„ WW „ B-U86
Expecting Second Child than ever before
I “Y°i
v
7
Res- Fu- 3-3545
CLASSIFIED
^Sd
?™fi T“Ch* Formsr Enemy Clause
3^«e^;rm4rx&^ 'ft'.®!*-**
SKIS
JS “"’ A’ Restaurant Show At Ex
SKATES
b^S
MS
chiTo^0’^1'0^1 Princess Mitood service show.
Sin
¥ her second
n^any
parSS
1
f^m
] ' :d n September or early Octofor Crown E?glLX G?CkSWb
I
Sat?^ 1c5untries will demon- I
this week
ltO S ^“^ta said
dashes. C°OVlllg their favourite
Yasuhide Toda, Akihito’s perfrna ckamberlain, said a report
admtX^har^^
or
Oom the 28-year-old priS
rim cthej 1CHA®
cnaige indllstr
to members
w„ I ing
S”'s 'n<ilCaM she "A preg- the German Restaurant and The
V attend
tel Association win a“j
exhibition
’
“”''“t™ and
forn^1 announcement will
not be made until around early AJW>ximateh.ai5on4n e!^ll>^ I
h hen the Pnnc®ss’ condition
will have progressed to a point i
hiiU S°rS^r! absolutely cer fetai?«n»f Hoteliers,
OLD COUNTRY READER
tain. Toda added.
and ADVISOR
3. M.chiko has a sou, Prince Hiro, "’ill also attend'. They yM^lerS
Italy. TeSSw^T 3 K0!’^:
Fortune teller will tell vour fortune
by card or hand, tell you
t 3
ueiniany, Austria, Japan, 11 no
present,
qu^^
Steve Parker Breaks
I if satisfied.
36 Cecil St. Phone WA. 1-4038
SSMrievdMc^fc?iCiaI
BO iHo^gV™"
;:&tj£""
Bus. 755-7371
Res. PL. 7-7578
48 GALBRAITH AVE.
TRmuT° REAL ESTATE
board photo co-op
Mrs. Gertrude Urabe
Open 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.
T.
JAUTO
fIRe
—
—
L!FE
--------------------~
.
ALL FORMS
OF
>
f
INSURANCE
j
WALES and DUNCAN
r
consult
I
K1YO TAMURA
J
1
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
TORONTO
J
L^*?«2Res. Pl. 9-S31-f
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
Hours Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO
EM. 6-3323
—
Bes: EO 7.3437
RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
HUdson 5-1365
A. E. McKague, Q.C.
Barrister & Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
365 SPADINA AVE., TORONTO 2-B ONT
PHONE EM. 6-1075
HiiiiiiiiiijnniiHiininnniiiiiiininn
fresh meat and fish
order Thurs. and Pri„
HI-FI — STEREO
OFFICE
EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395
1008 Northern Ontario Buildin?
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TOHONTO
CONTINENTAL FAMILY CO-OP
SADAO niKAIDO
=
TORONTO
“w
Se?^
JAPANESE
AND 8
°'™ed by r. Gord Xakamur
?
1344 Gerrard S
Bus. HO. 5-6218
Toronto
Kes. 461-0148
I== ^
PARHNG
REAR OF STORE
460 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
Phone EM. 6-5589
•
mg ™,
free delivery everyday
I T0K
E nese hu
I age ad
Insurance Co.
Furuya Travel Service
i
insurance agents
Lucien C. Kurais
Call
I or Api
| dates).
1 “Inh
this Si
Consult
Crown Life
FOR WORRY-FREE TRAVEL
ARRANGEMENTS
•By AL, Sea and Land
Bg boTOI
” w
I shown
II two
has be
la
is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
representative
METRO-AUDIO VISION
TV.
" Kjng St. W-.
Hamilton, Ont.
___J__^_J183OaJdand 4, Calif.
“Wire
Tbe official said the extent of
k e lnju7y 'vas n°t immediately
v
?^Use he bas not yet
returned here.
• et
Real Estate Broker
office: 505 Eglinton Ave. W
Phone: HU. 1-6877
home: 11 Valentine Dr.
Don Mills, Ont.
phone: HI. 7-8905
donation accepted
Modern
TOKI O. — Steve Parker pro
ducer ducer of “Holidaying
lee whill “v^ sho'vs> broke ‘a
®n hJ&"S 5,1
famed
Tokyo, Keck"a- Mth *
TOSH IWAI
For the very best in
wedding casuals. . .
For those who wish to
treasure the present in
the future
AM. 5-8446
/I Tansley Avenue
Scarboro, Ontario
Jiiininnnnnnnninnniinniinnnn
■ -More th
I io be “;
■
at
■ panese "
I women
■ Lniono
I
Lap
I supprisir
I survey:
I butts qi
I c;de on a
I hi; 85 ]
I shoes; 82
I own brea
| “he child
I cent mint
| cays and
shop and
| ^'e prioi
; when int
Simone
Paris F<
PARIS.
^ a Ei
^red in £
Presenting
?r -Hrs. C
^r creatic
Jhy khn0
l0n-’ and c
[^s an<
'“^t wit}
, -Nrs. l
^hter c
^bassad01
direct;
- aPan.
?e] "’as"
^1 m<>del
^ains* Supermarkets
।
pW/s
K®n Mori to Head
"™1C Press Ass’n Directors
„™EOWo-The annual „n.
I THE NEW CANADIAN
'mnirpr g ^ The endian wade strong pleas that internal
OHS- Dep«S^
won
"S I £ fact flmb there’s also a growthnic Press Association in On- disagreements unthin a national
4“9 QUEEN ST. WEST
SUS Shopkeeper “Up™k^ verL X
Pub|ic feeling in tauo was held at the Police 41- 'group not be brought before tTe
E
^niC Tress Association. He I
™
f the supermarkets.
weekeaRreSf
T°r°nto last
probaeblvh^k:XL™
Said l sucb matters among the I
Empire 6-5005
Asull anneX- Japanese Lousewife, it
a °f ^s 28 member nub- I members
of the association wer!
hcations represented.
P
at
A temporary but beefstea1- ™
Juicy Kobe
check thl
y Ve managed to tasted
the lociation .
in cellophane|
Guests and observers attend |I itself. He stated that
.the aim of
cneck the advancing tid’e for
«
A
’
V^
t
and
time being.
r
the association is to promote
wh^
started recently lMheWsfii”'”e h^ for a shinM a l tmal of persons at the meet- friendly relationships among the
m& to more than fifty.
pen Ja,pan s shopkeepers
f/ this country
r-?er wheels,
wav
an Ug!y report that Sale- 'She‘ want?5 w
Reports of the President’s—Mr and not to inject problems which *
wants, wide aisles and dis
ay Stores the huge American tag
and ^condition-’ Frank Glogowski—and the chair stem from old country disagree
?o
"’as pla^ AKand P^Ped-in
|
music instead man of the executive committees ments and prejudices.
imade the Japanese markpt ° Anri .tradition of yesterday.
edko? a
Ja^anese section EADY. 23-351?l^~W—
:ss<
m^Sh^K*-Japan’s Su before she’Sb»?rJ be tog ’ h^ ^ and aCCepted as was
n“no
/.f^rtising manager
the auditors report.
mmo Snoji Kaisha.
I
• ^ev Canadian and one of office cieY L ; ’———__
bne gets what she wants.
2y
Glogowski,
i„
his
report,
for
SSTtt
16 association «on. Phone" 368&(^
ANGRY protest
-os:
Lc 14a jwas retained
aJCfN'tt aia™eT thousI ao lit director for 1963.
f . ial1 retailers staged
P°?hy ?ffi«rs elected were- -^hmondjLj^
a
of Tokvo ^^
in the ciSes
S
’i *?de?‘’ K’ J' B-aier; pit
/ U ’ Osaka and Kobe.
rr3^\2
—
Ja
P
a
n
will
ask
.
UniM^r Pn W1H ask the of the war.
ce
J.
Frank Glogowski- First
s
d Nations not to call her
And, envisioning their
Alee President, Daniel la inuzzi *
S®? baing “about to £ a former enemy countrv” A
in
Japanese
Ambassador
to
U.N.
central
swallowed up by hungry biy I «;« the Tokv/S’ neS £SU? Okazaki, who is in To-’ Second Vice-President, T M
bath, liberal ti^tt^e rooa
busmess, the shopkeepers stub PaTer Sa]d recently.
cli
M o for consultations with the I hnsehmamn; Third Vice-Presi- ta>01£afteiJ5_p^T^
BU.
‘E J;?r?
f-W to the"
Clause 2, Article’ 53 of the UN government, will campaign to MrS ’
1Laur’’ Treasur'eI, £ noIsEKEEmXCU—f—
:ti
Secretary. V basis, call Mrc w
asked
e ^^t where thev Charter provides that Xri. eliminate the clause upon return- Mauko
' Wo?!: "'eeth(Toronto).
S
'
Wa
™er,
HU.
9
-ofe
The°
hlS
POSt
’
the
paper
said
'
hy
Mr
’
Sri
f
r
e
headed
call?-5 in World
M be|
a^rnv • O1 Protection.
■ by
enemy countries.”
wheneiSumitnrtS w®re rewarded
■
the
Enem
7
countries
”
means,
the
u bumitomo abruptly drono and Mrs.
Margaret Janossy.
■ tioi
!^:
r
sai
<
Japan,
Germany
and
wS^ft^^
pan
*uPer™a^ Plan for Ja■ to
£ ?? shopkeepers retired beTom Maiobe, CH l-%m Y?nted- Phone E less
mnd their counters and a uneasy
.^if"*
Spvernment
feels
i
(Toronio)
.'ff’Pmiese government feels I
ebmmate the clause.
I Use
»
■ Ont
truce was declared
■ T
How long it will last is anv I
For Best Result,:s
eighteen
■ e(® -1
?nV riUeSS but the feeling seems
■ k°n
e^ntualW
SUpermarkets will
| are
SKI
RENTALS
mv i 7
lerge ™torious.
I a?e'
BLEAK OUTLOOK
I H
, ^°r’ in sLarp contrast to Hip
E ken
COIF ’ SS, " “'“"^
™^rn techniques .and smooth
I and
OSCAR'S
Disconlinued & HaAl^CTICE
^Xythf ?e-™st Ja~ foreign birth ».. kS“S. "f Spain
I lowe
pain and
and Great
Great Britain
Britain.
1500
Dundas
(at
DufferinJ-LE.
2-4267
are in the i
extrac«<>n who
I Hunt
naustry, the business and mar tel And'
C
inter
esting
highlight
of
the
h°tel, mo_^Chft°n’s Golf School
! burg
ers X fir, of s,Ml1 retail1 fooc service industry
i»ettSPe S !’ antiquated and
much of interest at the
heW Mo*Sav,
f LCTe^on and exhibition Marchal
I born
PAUL Y. TOKIWA,
J died.
i 25/ in the Royal V0A
V Canadian Restaurant As
^akes the outlook even
.For Complete
bleaker for the shopkeepers Is sociation, to be held in
I static
a +
"enera^nuhr111 be °pen to the
Real Estate Service
^eiieiai public.
motive Building. Toronto
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
March 25 to 28
’ f Om
Call
AND NOTARY PUBLIC
Princess Michiko Said
More international in
I Cen
M1<!lc!i & Alexander Bus IA 8 11RR
scope
Suite 901
na„ WW „ B-U86
Expecting Second Child than ever before
I “Y°i
v
7
Res- Fu- 3-3545
CLASSIFIED
^Sd
?™fi T“Ch* Formsr Enemy Clause
3^«e^;rm4rx&^ 'ft'.®!*-**
SKIS
JS “"’ A’ Restaurant Show At Ex
SKATES
b^S
MS
chiTo^0’^1'0^1 Princess Mitood service show.
Sin
¥ her second
n^any
parSS
1
f^m
] ' :d n September or early Octofor Crown E?glLX G?CkSWb
I
Sat?^ 1c5untries will demon- I
this week
ltO S ^“^ta said
dashes. C°OVlllg their favourite
Yasuhide Toda, Akihito’s perfrna ckamberlain, said a report
admtX^har^^
or
Oom the 28-year-old priS
rim cthej 1CHA®
cnaige indllstr
to members
w„ I ing
S”'s 'n<ilCaM she "A preg- the German Restaurant and The
V attend
tel Association win a“j
exhibition
’
“”''“t™ and
forn^1 announcement will
not be made until around early AJW>ximateh.ai5on4n e!^ll>^ I
h hen the Pnnc®ss’ condition
will have progressed to a point i
hiiU S°rS^r! absolutely cer fetai?«n»f Hoteliers,
OLD COUNTRY READER
tain. Toda added.
and ADVISOR
3. M.chiko has a sou, Prince Hiro, "’ill also attend'. They yM^lerS
Italy. TeSSw^T 3 K0!’^:
Fortune teller will tell vour fortune
by card or hand, tell you
t 3
ueiniany, Austria, Japan, 11 no
present,
qu^^
Steve Parker Breaks
I if satisfied.
36 Cecil St. Phone WA. 1-4038
SSMrievdMc^fc?iCiaI
BO iHo^gV™"
;:&tj£""
Bus. 755-7371
Res. PL. 7-7578
48 GALBRAITH AVE.
TRmuT° REAL ESTATE
board photo co-op
Mrs. Gertrude Urabe
Open 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.
T.
JAUTO
fIRe
—
—
L!FE
--------------------~
.
ALL FORMS
OF
>
f
INSURANCE
j
WALES and DUNCAN
r
consult
I
K1YO TAMURA
J
1
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
TORONTO
J
L^*?«2Res. Pl. 9-S31-f
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
Hours Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO
EM. 6-3323
—
Bes: EO 7.3437
RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
HUdson 5-1365
A. E. McKague, Q.C.
Barrister & Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
365 SPADINA AVE., TORONTO 2-B ONT
PHONE EM. 6-1075
HiiiiiiiiiijnniiHiininnniiiiiiininn
fresh meat and fish
order Thurs. and Pri„
HI-FI — STEREO
OFFICE
EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395
1008 Northern Ontario Buildin?
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TOHONTO
CONTINENTAL FAMILY CO-OP
SADAO niKAIDO
=
TORONTO
“w
Se?^
JAPANESE
AND 8
°'™ed by r. Gord Xakamur
?
1344 Gerrard S
Bus. HO. 5-6218
Toronto
Kes. 461-0148
I== ^
PARHNG
REAR OF STORE
460 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
Phone EM. 6-5589
•
mg ™,
free delivery everyday
I T0K
E nese hu
I age ad
Insurance Co.
Furuya Travel Service
i
insurance agents
Lucien C. Kurais
Call
I or Api
| dates).
1 “Inh
this Si
Consult
Crown Life
FOR WORRY-FREE TRAVEL
ARRANGEMENTS
•By AL, Sea and Land
Bg boTOI
” w
I shown
II two
has be
la
is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
representative
METRO-AUDIO VISION
TV.
" Kjng St. W-.
Hamilton, Ont.
___J__^_J183OaJdand 4, Calif.
“Wire
Tbe official said the extent of
k e lnju7y 'vas n°t immediately
v
?^Use he bas not yet
returned here.
• et
Real Estate Broker
office: 505 Eglinton Ave. W
Phone: HU. 1-6877
home: 11 Valentine Dr.
Don Mills, Ont.
phone: HI. 7-8905
donation accepted
Modern
TOKI O. — Steve Parker pro
ducer ducer of “Holidaying
lee whill “v^ sho'vs> broke ‘a
®n hJ&"S 5,1
famed
Tokyo, Keck"a- Mth *
TOSH IWAI
For the very best in
wedding casuals. . .
For those who wish to
treasure the present in
the future
AM. 5-8446
/I Tansley Avenue
Scarboro, Ontario
Jiiininnnnnnnninnniinniinnnn
■ -More th
I io be “;
■
at
■ panese "
I women
■ Lniono
I
Lap
I supprisir
I survey:
I butts qi
I c;de on a
I hi; 85 ]
I shoes; 82
I own brea
| “he child
I cent mint
| cays and
shop and
| ^'e prioi
; when int
Simone
Paris F<
PARIS.
^ a Ei
^red in £
Presenting
?r -Hrs. C
^r creatic
Jhy khn0
l0n-’ and c
[^s an<
'“^t wit}
, -Nrs. l
^hter c
^bassad01
direct;
- aPan.
?e] "’as"
^1 m<>del