Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. XXVII —■ No. 58
WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1963
toey’j
Corner
Toronto, Ont.
$92,000. To Collect
J.C. Cultural Centre’s
Fund Drive Moves Slowly
I -by- C- J-iMnwruxTODAY (this is being written
on Saturday morning) is eclipse
day. We sit at our desks looking
hopefully out the window. We
must not miss it. The leaden
skies look bad. A wind slants fat
beads of rain against the glass.
The big drops burst on contact
and trickle down. We are still
hopeful for clear weather.
te?
TORONTO. — The J. C. Cul
tural Centre’s drive to collect the
balance of pledges amounting to
$92,000. is still moving at a snails
pace, according to secretary, Ken
Kutsukake.
"But we are still optimistic,”
he said.
Approximately $150,000. is
needed by this coming September.
Payment requirements for a fast
completing building and slow
reaction to pledges are report
edly the cause of this critical si
tuation.
The balance of $92,000. remains
2 to 4 years after tlie pledges were made, revealed Kutsukake.
“We can understand
that
among those who have pledged
there will be some who are comfronted with a situation whereby
they are forced to either reduce
or cancel their pledges. But sur
ely, this cannot be the majority.
“The tardiness of those who
pledged have created the present
critical financial situation,” he
added. “Tardy pledges have crea
ted further work for those who
have accepted the responsibility
(on behalf of all who pledged)
of seeing the project through. We
are now' forced to personally con
tact all those who have neglected
their obligations.”
At the end of this month, the
J. C. Cultural Centre will send
a delegation to Ottawa to see if
tax exemption can be obtained
on all contributions. If this is
successful, a fund drive will be
started among the occidentals —
with great emphasis put on big
business corporations.
A NEW HALL behind the
Nikko Gardens (Dundas & Spadma) is now open for rent. This
Photo—Ontario Dept, of Health.
room has a capacity of 100
people and should prove excellent
Before setting out — know your lake, and know your boat
for Nisei club meetings, small
N. C. Holidays
group dancing and so forth.
TORONTO. — Please take
Holiday Near The Water
Any Nisei-Sansei group inte
note that (his paper will be on
rested shold contact the follo
TORONTO.
The boating and fishing season is now upon us.
a week’s holiday begining next
wing: Mr. T. Uyeda. Phone EM. Soak in the sun and have fun. But remember your (water safety
6-5589: or Mr. Tomojiro Kadonaweek. There will be no newrules. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
ga. Phone EM.6-2164.
papers on July 31st and Aug
*
*
*
ust 3rd. Publishing will begin
THE RAIN HAS STOPPED!
again on the August 7th issue.
The New Canadian staff is going
wild with cheers! Even Ken Mori,
INDEPENDENCE, Mo. — Ma Library here.
of the Japanese section, is jum
ping up and down on top of his ny students from all around the
The former President often
disk clicking his heels in gay world*, touring America this sum
stops
at the library to meet with
abandonment. Mr. Umezuki is mer, stop .at the Harry S. Truman
them and answer their questions.
swinging a golf club. His eyes
are gleaming. Frankly, I don’t
Recently a Japanese student
think he’s thinking about the
asked him “Why d'id you drop
eclipse at all. It is still cloudy.
the atom bomb?”
TOKYO.
Kyu
Sakamoto,
“To save you and 125,000 other
CANADA’S brightest Judo whose recording of
'Sukiyaki” Japanese youths from being kil
star for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics
is probably 22-year-old, Doug until recently held first place in led,” Truman replied.
Rodgers. Now studying at Kodo- the list of America’s top 20 tunes
“I gave you .an ultimatum to
k-n ?n JaPan, this graduate of will fly to the United States next surrender. You didn’t. We had to
HcGill university has been des- month, to appear on the Steve
stop the war to keep all of you
ciibed in the Kodokan magazine Allen Show.
from being killed.”
in such glowing terms as “The
The Japanese jazz singer will
Hope^ Of Canada” and “Succes“But think of the people who
• or Io Geesink.” (Geesink being leave Tokyo on Aug. 13 by Pan- are still suffering from the
the current World’s Judo Cham American. He ■will be accom
bombs,” the student persisted.
pion).
panied by Masao Manae, his ma
"They are just casualties of
He is the son of a Canadian
war,” Truman said.
uimister and is extremely popular nager, and Mrs. Manae.
LOS ANGELES.—Three Ame
^^ JaPailese. So popular in
rican Sansei boys were ap
het, that he has been given many
pointed to the famed West Point
^'P^5 hi Japanese movies.
Military Academy in New York
.Rodgers is a big Judoka stanrecently.
nmg around 6 feet 4 inches and
TORONTO. — Liz Pearce — for the future.
weighing between 230 and 240 frequent New Canadian sports
The young men Glen Yuguchi,
All those New Canadian reapounds. He holds a 3rd-dan Black contributor — this week appears ders who have wondered what Dean Kunihiro, and Mike Kishi'Pit degree. For the past couple as the subject for an article on Liz looks like will see her in 3
yama will undergo 2 months of
°h ^eai'5 he has been training Judo in the Toronto Star Weekly color shots and 1 in black and
orientation
when upper-classmen
'' uh Japan’s best and has held (July 27th).
white.
own.
The piece entitled, “Who Says As expected, she hopes the story will lead them through a rigorous
. t,^‘'^nown Judo senseis Daigo Judo’s Not For Girls?”, reveals will
In September
Makes Album
attract more women to the training period.
1
re^ar^ ^™ as one of how Liz got interested in this art of Judo — especially some the Academic year- gets under
■'oiias top Judo prospects.
art, her progress, and her hopes Nisei and Sansei ones.
way.
Kimio Eto, one of the world’s
*
*
*
foremost kotoist, has just re
11
J -XTCH of blue has shown
leased a new' album on the Elek
the clouds! The staff is
tra label. It is entitled, “Art of
tan ng for the afternoon. Everythe Koto” — The Music of Japan.
fni ‘
’s each other to be careLast year he gave a joint re
"hen watching the eclipse.
cital
with Miss Miyoko Watanabe
? .ri s^ests I look at it
TORONTO — Canadian machi quiries and leads which will re which will be held in 1965.
a reflection in a bucket nery buyers have shown new en sult in future sales,” he said, “but
Mr. Azuma says that the ma- a noted Kabuki dancer, at Eaton’s
.aTI; J look at him to see if thusiasm for equipment from- Ja seldom do we make the sale right nufacturers in Japan are interes Auditorium in Toronto.
IAi
He’s dead serious, pan and manufacturers in Japan on the spot.”
Eto is now living in Los An
ted in Canada as a long term
jmx briefcase with im- are happy with the development.
market
for
theix
’
machines
and
He said that visitors to the
geles. He is blind.
Fcm3111 ^,'n»s to be finished at
Shuhichi Azuma, Executive show ■were impressed by the are therefore making sure that
Hke a half-eaten nigeri Director of the Japan Trade Cen quality of the products of Japan any machines shipped to Canada
* 11 vrice-ball), an unfinished tre in Toronto says that compa and by the close tolerance of work can be assembled and serviced
PUzzle, and the weekly nies from Japan which exhibited possible with the machines.
properly. Sales staffs and groups
, comic section from the machines at the recent National
of
technicians will probably be
“Ability to work within close
NOSHIRO, Akita. — A truck
‘^ar* ^ shall view the Industries Production Show are
estblished
in Canada by some
tolerance
and
general
good
design
1 Rpse at home.
driver
commited suicide recently'
gratified with the results.
are generally more important companies to- provide such ser by swallow’ing a large amount of
vice.
Twenty-five Japanese compa than price to industrial buyers,”
«-’:!1?iX?SEI KARATE club nies exhibited more than 100 dif he said. “And on this basis, and
“We are particularly happy to a contraceptve medicine at his
in Kairagebuchi, Noshiro.
c/°smg for- the summer. ferent products at the show and on the basis of price as well, we be involved in this type of trade home
It
was
not oral.
2C opening again some- most of the* products, ranging are quite able to compete with since most of the Canadian ma
Police investigation indicatea
Jy
‘-Member at a new lo- from huge vertical lathes to small imports from any other country.” chine market is now’ held by im
ports from other countries,” said that the dead driver, Tetsu taro
precision instruments, were sold
Manufacturers from Japan who Mr. Azuma. “New machines from
YT*?Elie member's are urged during the show.
collaborated
with the Japan Japan, which are fast and highly Matsuhashi, 27, was particularly
^.good condition by pracAccording to one of the major
nervous because of his marriage
?’: ^ofne or by joining one exhibitors, sale of equipment Trade Centre to create one uni automated, should also give Ca failure.
fied
display,
were
the
largest
:?y 7;^;2clu^s. Two of the best from the floor of a show’ is highly single exhibitor at the show. An nadian manufacturing firms a
better chance to produce products
loronto are: Tsuruoka’s unusual.
The contraceptive medicine he
e\ en larger display space has I which wall compete on domestic swallowed contained a high per
(Continued on page 8)
“We generally expect to get in
Explain Use of A-bomb
Kyu To U.S
West Point
Liz Pearce Stars In Star
Japan Production Exhibit Successful
been reserved for the next show I and world markets.”
centage of mercury’.
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. XXVII —■ No. 58
WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1963
toey’j
Corner
Toronto, Ont.
$92,000. To Collect
J.C. Cultural Centre’s
Fund Drive Moves Slowly
I -by- C- J-iMnwruxTODAY (this is being written
on Saturday morning) is eclipse
day. We sit at our desks looking
hopefully out the window. We
must not miss it. The leaden
skies look bad. A wind slants fat
beads of rain against the glass.
The big drops burst on contact
and trickle down. We are still
hopeful for clear weather.
te?
TORONTO. — The J. C. Cul
tural Centre’s drive to collect the
balance of pledges amounting to
$92,000. is still moving at a snails
pace, according to secretary, Ken
Kutsukake.
"But we are still optimistic,”
he said.
Approximately $150,000. is
needed by this coming September.
Payment requirements for a fast
completing building and slow
reaction to pledges are report
edly the cause of this critical si
tuation.
The balance of $92,000. remains
2 to 4 years after tlie pledges were made, revealed Kutsukake.
“We can understand
that
among those who have pledged
there will be some who are comfronted with a situation whereby
they are forced to either reduce
or cancel their pledges. But sur
ely, this cannot be the majority.
“The tardiness of those who
pledged have created the present
critical financial situation,” he
added. “Tardy pledges have crea
ted further work for those who
have accepted the responsibility
(on behalf of all who pledged)
of seeing the project through. We
are now' forced to personally con
tact all those who have neglected
their obligations.”
At the end of this month, the
J. C. Cultural Centre will send
a delegation to Ottawa to see if
tax exemption can be obtained
on all contributions. If this is
successful, a fund drive will be
started among the occidentals —
with great emphasis put on big
business corporations.
A NEW HALL behind the
Nikko Gardens (Dundas & Spadma) is now open for rent. This
Photo—Ontario Dept, of Health.
room has a capacity of 100
people and should prove excellent
Before setting out — know your lake, and know your boat
for Nisei club meetings, small
N. C. Holidays
group dancing and so forth.
TORONTO. — Please take
Holiday Near The Water
Any Nisei-Sansei group inte
note that (his paper will be on
rested shold contact the follo
TORONTO.
The boating and fishing season is now upon us.
a week’s holiday begining next
wing: Mr. T. Uyeda. Phone EM. Soak in the sun and have fun. But remember your (water safety
6-5589: or Mr. Tomojiro Kadonaweek. There will be no newrules. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
ga. Phone EM.6-2164.
papers on July 31st and Aug
*
*
*
ust 3rd. Publishing will begin
THE RAIN HAS STOPPED!
again on the August 7th issue.
The New Canadian staff is going
wild with cheers! Even Ken Mori,
INDEPENDENCE, Mo. — Ma Library here.
of the Japanese section, is jum
ping up and down on top of his ny students from all around the
The former President often
disk clicking his heels in gay world*, touring America this sum
stops
at the library to meet with
abandonment. Mr. Umezuki is mer, stop .at the Harry S. Truman
them and answer their questions.
swinging a golf club. His eyes
are gleaming. Frankly, I don’t
Recently a Japanese student
think he’s thinking about the
asked him “Why d'id you drop
eclipse at all. It is still cloudy.
the atom bomb?”
TOKYO.
Kyu
Sakamoto,
“To save you and 125,000 other
CANADA’S brightest Judo whose recording of
'Sukiyaki” Japanese youths from being kil
star for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics
is probably 22-year-old, Doug until recently held first place in led,” Truman replied.
Rodgers. Now studying at Kodo- the list of America’s top 20 tunes
“I gave you .an ultimatum to
k-n ?n JaPan, this graduate of will fly to the United States next surrender. You didn’t. We had to
HcGill university has been des- month, to appear on the Steve
stop the war to keep all of you
ciibed in the Kodokan magazine Allen Show.
from being killed.”
in such glowing terms as “The
The Japanese jazz singer will
Hope^ Of Canada” and “Succes“But think of the people who
• or Io Geesink.” (Geesink being leave Tokyo on Aug. 13 by Pan- are still suffering from the
the current World’s Judo Cham American. He ■will be accom
bombs,” the student persisted.
pion).
panied by Masao Manae, his ma
"They are just casualties of
He is the son of a Canadian
war,” Truman said.
uimister and is extremely popular nager, and Mrs. Manae.
LOS ANGELES.—Three Ame
^^ JaPailese. So popular in
rican Sansei boys were ap
het, that he has been given many
pointed to the famed West Point
^'P^5 hi Japanese movies.
Military Academy in New York
.Rodgers is a big Judoka stanrecently.
nmg around 6 feet 4 inches and
TORONTO. — Liz Pearce — for the future.
weighing between 230 and 240 frequent New Canadian sports
The young men Glen Yuguchi,
All those New Canadian reapounds. He holds a 3rd-dan Black contributor — this week appears ders who have wondered what Dean Kunihiro, and Mike Kishi'Pit degree. For the past couple as the subject for an article on Liz looks like will see her in 3
yama will undergo 2 months of
°h ^eai'5 he has been training Judo in the Toronto Star Weekly color shots and 1 in black and
orientation
when upper-classmen
'' uh Japan’s best and has held (July 27th).
white.
own.
The piece entitled, “Who Says As expected, she hopes the story will lead them through a rigorous
. t,^‘'^nown Judo senseis Daigo Judo’s Not For Girls?”, reveals will
In September
Makes Album
attract more women to the training period.
1
re^ar^ ^™ as one of how Liz got interested in this art of Judo — especially some the Academic year- gets under
■'oiias top Judo prospects.
art, her progress, and her hopes Nisei and Sansei ones.
way.
Kimio Eto, one of the world’s
*
*
*
foremost kotoist, has just re
11
J -XTCH of blue has shown
leased a new' album on the Elek
the clouds! The staff is
tra label. It is entitled, “Art of
tan ng for the afternoon. Everythe Koto” — The Music of Japan.
fni ‘
’s each other to be careLast year he gave a joint re
"hen watching the eclipse.
cital
with Miss Miyoko Watanabe
? .ri s^ests I look at it
TORONTO — Canadian machi quiries and leads which will re which will be held in 1965.
a reflection in a bucket nery buyers have shown new en sult in future sales,” he said, “but
Mr. Azuma says that the ma- a noted Kabuki dancer, at Eaton’s
.aTI; J look at him to see if thusiasm for equipment from- Ja seldom do we make the sale right nufacturers in Japan are interes Auditorium in Toronto.
IAi
He’s dead serious, pan and manufacturers in Japan on the spot.”
Eto is now living in Los An
ted in Canada as a long term
jmx briefcase with im- are happy with the development.
market
for
theix
’
machines
and
He said that visitors to the
geles. He is blind.
Fcm3111 ^,'n»s to be finished at
Shuhichi Azuma, Executive show ■were impressed by the are therefore making sure that
Hke a half-eaten nigeri Director of the Japan Trade Cen quality of the products of Japan any machines shipped to Canada
* 11 vrice-ball), an unfinished tre in Toronto says that compa and by the close tolerance of work can be assembled and serviced
PUzzle, and the weekly nies from Japan which exhibited possible with the machines.
properly. Sales staffs and groups
, comic section from the machines at the recent National
of
technicians will probably be
“Ability to work within close
NOSHIRO, Akita. — A truck
‘^ar* ^ shall view the Industries Production Show are
estblished
in Canada by some
tolerance
and
general
good
design
1 Rpse at home.
driver
commited suicide recently'
gratified with the results.
are generally more important companies to- provide such ser by swallow’ing a large amount of
vice.
Twenty-five Japanese compa than price to industrial buyers,”
«-’:!1?iX?SEI KARATE club nies exhibited more than 100 dif he said. “And on this basis, and
“We are particularly happy to a contraceptve medicine at his
in Kairagebuchi, Noshiro.
c/°smg for- the summer. ferent products at the show and on the basis of price as well, we be involved in this type of trade home
It
was
not oral.
2C opening again some- most of the* products, ranging are quite able to compete with since most of the Canadian ma
Police investigation indicatea
Jy
‘-Member at a new lo- from huge vertical lathes to small imports from any other country.” chine market is now’ held by im
ports from other countries,” said that the dead driver, Tetsu taro
precision instruments, were sold
Manufacturers from Japan who Mr. Azuma. “New machines from
YT*?Elie member's are urged during the show.
collaborated
with the Japan Japan, which are fast and highly Matsuhashi, 27, was particularly
^.good condition by pracAccording to one of the major
nervous because of his marriage
?’: ^ofne or by joining one exhibitors, sale of equipment Trade Centre to create one uni automated, should also give Ca failure.
fied
display,
were
the
largest
:?y 7;^;2clu^s. Two of the best from the floor of a show’ is highly single exhibitor at the show. An nadian manufacturing firms a
better chance to produce products
loronto are: Tsuruoka’s unusual.
The contraceptive medicine he
e\ en larger display space has I which wall compete on domestic swallowed contained a high per
(Continued on page 8)
“We generally expect to get in
Explain Use of A-bomb
Kyu To U.S
West Point
Liz Pearce Stars In Star
Japan Production Exhibit Successful
been reserved for the next show I and world markets.”
centage of mercury’.
Page 2
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Page 7
\Vendnesday,_July^U^l
PAGE 7
Uates ana JSotngs i
sa
Second Annual Spiritual Retreat For Adventists
TORONTO. — The second an brom Catholid Clergv to Adven
nual Japanese Spiritual Retreat, tist Minister": Pastor Ward Hill
sponsored by the Toronto Seventh
SDA Church:
dav Adventist Church will be held Peter: M hy His Repentance Ac
at beauiiful Camp Frenda from cepted” and “Judas: Why Hie
August. S to 11.
Repentance Rejected”; Marshal
“One Thing Thou
The Pastor George S. Aso an Longaard:
nounces that the prime objective Lackest”; Pastor George S. Aso
of the encampment is to empha is preparing several studies on
size the mature Christian expe the Book of Hosea on the theme
rience to the attending individuals of “Amazing- Love of God1”.
rather than mere physical rest. __The cost of the Retreat is only
The speakers who will participate $5.00 per person. Anyone who
at the Retreat and' their topics wish to attend may contact the
are as follow: Pastor Daniel Slo- Pastor at once:BA.5-0626.
ictz. Director of Evangelism of
Ontario — Quebec Conference:
I
I
t
CBC-TV Records "Five Day Plan To Quit Smoking
TORONTO. — Who would not
want to quit smoking now, after
the lung cancer scare has spread
to such an alarming extent the
world over!
This Sunday night, on “Docu
ment", the CBC televises the hour
long program “Three on a
March” from 9 p.m. on Channel
6.
The CBC staff has prepared
the show with the assistance of
die Seventh - day Adventist
Church’s Department of Medical
Research in Canada. The church’s
Loma Linda. Medical University
was first to mention the dangers
of the possible link between ci-
5
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J A UTO
I
(
J
FIRE
—
—
garet smoking- and lung cancer
some ten years ago.
The CBC’s photographic staff
members went to Boston last
month to record the “Five Day
Plan to Stop Smoking-” which was
developed by the Adventist me
dical researchers. In Boston and
other major U.S. cities where
this plan was (put in effect, sixty
to eighty percent of participants
®YECeec*,ec^ in eliminating the
“filthy weed”, .as in the words of
Denver Post city editor who him
self averaged three packs .a day.
Pastor George S. Aso of the Ja
panese SDA Church announces
that in September, the Ontario
Quebec Conference of his church
will sponsor the pilot training
program of the “Five Day Plan”
in Toronto. Details of the plan
will be released later.
LIFE
ALL FORMS
OF
INSURANCE
■
F. A, BREWIN, Q,C,
Barrister & Solicitor
Cameron, Weldon
Brewin & McCallum
consult
KITO TAMURA
TORONTO
Bus. 366-5812
G. S. A.
Res. Pl. 9-8317
372 Bay St.
—
Toronto
EM. 3-4331
CONTINENTAL FAMILY CO-OP
fresh meat and fish
order Thurs. and Fri..
OCCIDENTAL FOODS
JAPANESE AND
=
=
FREE PARKING AT
REAR OF STORE
460 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
Phone EM. 6-5589
•
EM. 6-5711
FREE DELIVERY EVERYDAY
I
The modern way to be
traditionally correct
The Bouquet
Invitation Line
Wedding Invitations
Thermo-engraved (Raised lettering
Thermo-Engraving looks and feels like
hand engraving, but costs about half as
much—and it s ready within the week.
Thermo-Engraving eliminates the cop
per plate that makes hand engraving
so costly and time consuming. Select
from our giant catalogue of flawlessly
Il distinctive styles of
correct p
lettering. Weddings priced as low as
$9.00 for 50 and $13.50 lor 100. completewith double envelopes and tissues.
Come in and see our complete cata
logue! Matching announcements, at
home cards, enclosure cards, etc.
THE NEW CANADIAN
-79 QUEEN STREET WEST, TORONTO 2-B, ONTARIO
Cosmopolitan Cuisine
FISHING TACKLE
Live Bait
Rod and Roel
—
Repairs
by STELLA ITO
OTHER CHICKEN DISHES
OSCAR'S
CHICKEN INTRIGUE
1500 Dundas (at Dufforin)—LE. 2-4287
Ingredients:
2 tbsp, butter
2 tbsp, flour
salt and peppe
114 cups milk
It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult
WALES and DUNCAN
INSURANCE AGENTS
Hi cups cooked diced
boiled rice
grated cheese
14 tsp. Ajinomoto
Method:
Melt butter and flour salt and pepper to taste and mix well,
Add milk gradually
. ;mid bring to boiling point. Remove Iron
tire, add oeaten egg and season with Ajinomoto.
Add chicken. Pour all in bottom of small baking dishes
may use one large one). Cover with a layer of hot rice
with grated' cheese.
Hake in moderate oven until cheese is melted.
464 Yonge Streep Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
Lucien C Kurata
PINEAPPLE CHICKEN
(4 servings)
Ingredients:
2 breasts of fryer, sliced
4 cup salad oil
1 medium can pineapple slice
Ah cup water
1 tbsp, cornstarch
2 tbsp, shoyu
2 cloves garlic
1
tsp. Ajinomoto
salt
1 tsp. sugar
Method:
Soak chicken slices with shoyu, sugar, salt, A jinomoto for half
■an hour. Heat oil over high flame. Throw in garlic cloves till brown,
then remove. While oil is still red hot, put in meat mixture and nan
brown, stirring vjg-orously.
,
Add water and pineapple chunks (if slices, then cut them in 1
inch pieces), braise for couple of minutes.
Take % cup of pineapple juice and mix with cornstarch and 1
tbsp, shoyu and salt to taste. Turn down heat and quickly stir the
cornstarch mixture. When sauce thickens smoothlv, turn’ heat off
completely.
This is a Chinese dish, very popular and verv easily made Trv
substituting brown sugar for white.
'
~
’
Couple of water chestnuts diced, or few slices of fresh ringer
gives a refreshing variety.
° &
16 Japanese Giris Entertained In Calgary
CALGARY. — Sixteen Japa
nese girls touring Western Cana
da, the United States and Hawaii
think Alberta is “big and beauti
ful.”
The girls, all students at a To
kyo cooking- school, were enter
tained recently by Calgary’s Ja
panese — Canadian residents at
.a reception in the Allied Arts
Centre.
Mrs. Alice Naito, wife of the
cooking society’s president, Taka
shi Naito, said, “This is the first
trip abroad for these girls. It’s
a pleasure trip — to promote
goodwill -with Canadians and
Americans.”
Airs. Naito, a petite brunette,
accompanying her husband and
the girls on the trip is acting as
interpreter.
“We will tour the U.S. to the
east coast,” she said. “From there
we will travel to Honolulu where
the girls can spend about four
days in the islands.”
George Matsuoka, of Calgary
introduced the visiting girls to
their Calgary hosts, and presen-
ted them -with Stampede coins
as souvenirs.
Wearing beautiful Japanese
kimonos, slippers, and their hair
piled high on their heads, the
girls d'id a folk dance for the
group.
The dance was followed by a
Japanese dinner and, in keeping
with the customs of their home
land, the men were served first.
Susumu Nagai of Calgary said
the girls were slated to perform
their folk dances “at the Stam
pede, in front of the Corral, but
they were delayed and didn’t
make it in time.”
THIMK!
BOUT
sim
BE WATER 7^
WISE!
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
Office Hours Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO
EM. 6-3323
Ros: RO. 7-3427
OFFICE
RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
HUdson 5-1365
EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395
A. E. McKague, Q.C.
Barrister & Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO
:WW«2
1384!/2 Queen W.
Toronto
LE. 2-6378
For Complete
Real Estate Service
Call
TOSH IWAI
WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE
LIMITED,
1444 Danforth Avc.,
Toronto
Bus. IIO. 9-1151
Res. PL. 7-7578
Member Toronto Real Estate Board
and Photo Co-op
DANFORTH
SPORTING
GOODS
Fishing Tackle g Live Bait
Baseball, Tennis and Goll
Equipment
547 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
SUNSET
TERRACE
l
CHINESE AND CANADIAN FOOD
THE JADE
ROOM
&
ME, 5-5050-1-2
• Wedding
Receptions
• Banquets
• Private
Parties
• Sales
Meetings
Free Parking
Open Thur, and Fri. Until 9 p. m.
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii
WO niKAIDO
TORONTO
For the very best in
wedding casuals. . .
For those who wish to
treasure the present in
the future
71 Tansiey Avenue
Scarboro, Ontario
AM. 5-8446
iniiiniiiiiiiiiinHiniinnniiiiinnnu
PAGE 7
Uates ana JSotngs i
sa
Second Annual Spiritual Retreat For Adventists
TORONTO. — The second an brom Catholid Clergv to Adven
nual Japanese Spiritual Retreat, tist Minister": Pastor Ward Hill
sponsored by the Toronto Seventh
SDA Church:
dav Adventist Church will be held Peter: M hy His Repentance Ac
at beauiiful Camp Frenda from cepted” and “Judas: Why Hie
August. S to 11.
Repentance Rejected”; Marshal
“One Thing Thou
The Pastor George S. Aso an Longaard:
nounces that the prime objective Lackest”; Pastor George S. Aso
of the encampment is to empha is preparing several studies on
size the mature Christian expe the Book of Hosea on the theme
rience to the attending individuals of “Amazing- Love of God1”.
rather than mere physical rest. __The cost of the Retreat is only
The speakers who will participate $5.00 per person. Anyone who
at the Retreat and' their topics wish to attend may contact the
are as follow: Pastor Daniel Slo- Pastor at once:BA.5-0626.
ictz. Director of Evangelism of
Ontario — Quebec Conference:
I
I
t
CBC-TV Records "Five Day Plan To Quit Smoking
TORONTO. — Who would not
want to quit smoking now, after
the lung cancer scare has spread
to such an alarming extent the
world over!
This Sunday night, on “Docu
ment", the CBC televises the hour
long program “Three on a
March” from 9 p.m. on Channel
6.
The CBC staff has prepared
the show with the assistance of
die Seventh - day Adventist
Church’s Department of Medical
Research in Canada. The church’s
Loma Linda. Medical University
was first to mention the dangers
of the possible link between ci-
5
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For Best Results
Use New Canadian Ads
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniHiiijiiiiiijjjinniiiiiiii ।
J A UTO
I
(
J
FIRE
—
—
garet smoking- and lung cancer
some ten years ago.
The CBC’s photographic staff
members went to Boston last
month to record the “Five Day
Plan to Stop Smoking-” which was
developed by the Adventist me
dical researchers. In Boston and
other major U.S. cities where
this plan was (put in effect, sixty
to eighty percent of participants
®YECeec*,ec^ in eliminating the
“filthy weed”, .as in the words of
Denver Post city editor who him
self averaged three packs .a day.
Pastor George S. Aso of the Ja
panese SDA Church announces
that in September, the Ontario
Quebec Conference of his church
will sponsor the pilot training
program of the “Five Day Plan”
in Toronto. Details of the plan
will be released later.
LIFE
ALL FORMS
OF
INSURANCE
■
F. A, BREWIN, Q,C,
Barrister & Solicitor
Cameron, Weldon
Brewin & McCallum
consult
KITO TAMURA
TORONTO
Bus. 366-5812
G. S. A.
Res. Pl. 9-8317
372 Bay St.
—
Toronto
EM. 3-4331
CONTINENTAL FAMILY CO-OP
fresh meat and fish
order Thurs. and Fri..
OCCIDENTAL FOODS
JAPANESE AND
=
=
FREE PARKING AT
REAR OF STORE
460 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
Phone EM. 6-5589
•
EM. 6-5711
FREE DELIVERY EVERYDAY
I
The modern way to be
traditionally correct
The Bouquet
Invitation Line
Wedding Invitations
Thermo-engraved (Raised lettering
Thermo-Engraving looks and feels like
hand engraving, but costs about half as
much—and it s ready within the week.
Thermo-Engraving eliminates the cop
per plate that makes hand engraving
so costly and time consuming. Select
from our giant catalogue of flawlessly
Il distinctive styles of
correct p
lettering. Weddings priced as low as
$9.00 for 50 and $13.50 lor 100. completewith double envelopes and tissues.
Come in and see our complete cata
logue! Matching announcements, at
home cards, enclosure cards, etc.
THE NEW CANADIAN
-79 QUEEN STREET WEST, TORONTO 2-B, ONTARIO
Cosmopolitan Cuisine
FISHING TACKLE
Live Bait
Rod and Roel
—
Repairs
by STELLA ITO
OTHER CHICKEN DISHES
OSCAR'S
CHICKEN INTRIGUE
1500 Dundas (at Dufforin)—LE. 2-4287
Ingredients:
2 tbsp, butter
2 tbsp, flour
salt and peppe
114 cups milk
It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult
WALES and DUNCAN
INSURANCE AGENTS
Hi cups cooked diced
boiled rice
grated cheese
14 tsp. Ajinomoto
Method:
Melt butter and flour salt and pepper to taste and mix well,
Add milk gradually
. ;mid bring to boiling point. Remove Iron
tire, add oeaten egg and season with Ajinomoto.
Add chicken. Pour all in bottom of small baking dishes
may use one large one). Cover with a layer of hot rice
with grated' cheese.
Hake in moderate oven until cheese is melted.
464 Yonge Streep Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
Lucien C Kurata
PINEAPPLE CHICKEN
(4 servings)
Ingredients:
2 breasts of fryer, sliced
4 cup salad oil
1 medium can pineapple slice
Ah cup water
1 tbsp, cornstarch
2 tbsp, shoyu
2 cloves garlic
1
tsp. Ajinomoto
salt
1 tsp. sugar
Method:
Soak chicken slices with shoyu, sugar, salt, A jinomoto for half
■an hour. Heat oil over high flame. Throw in garlic cloves till brown,
then remove. While oil is still red hot, put in meat mixture and nan
brown, stirring vjg-orously.
,
Add water and pineapple chunks (if slices, then cut them in 1
inch pieces), braise for couple of minutes.
Take % cup of pineapple juice and mix with cornstarch and 1
tbsp, shoyu and salt to taste. Turn down heat and quickly stir the
cornstarch mixture. When sauce thickens smoothlv, turn’ heat off
completely.
This is a Chinese dish, very popular and verv easily made Trv
substituting brown sugar for white.
'
~
’
Couple of water chestnuts diced, or few slices of fresh ringer
gives a refreshing variety.
° &
16 Japanese Giris Entertained In Calgary
CALGARY. — Sixteen Japa
nese girls touring Western Cana
da, the United States and Hawaii
think Alberta is “big and beauti
ful.”
The girls, all students at a To
kyo cooking- school, were enter
tained recently by Calgary’s Ja
panese — Canadian residents at
.a reception in the Allied Arts
Centre.
Mrs. Alice Naito, wife of the
cooking society’s president, Taka
shi Naito, said, “This is the first
trip abroad for these girls. It’s
a pleasure trip — to promote
goodwill -with Canadians and
Americans.”
Airs. Naito, a petite brunette,
accompanying her husband and
the girls on the trip is acting as
interpreter.
“We will tour the U.S. to the
east coast,” she said. “From there
we will travel to Honolulu where
the girls can spend about four
days in the islands.”
George Matsuoka, of Calgary
introduced the visiting girls to
their Calgary hosts, and presen-
ted them -with Stampede coins
as souvenirs.
Wearing beautiful Japanese
kimonos, slippers, and their hair
piled high on their heads, the
girls d'id a folk dance for the
group.
The dance was followed by a
Japanese dinner and, in keeping
with the customs of their home
land, the men were served first.
Susumu Nagai of Calgary said
the girls were slated to perform
their folk dances “at the Stam
pede, in front of the Corral, but
they were delayed and didn’t
make it in time.”
THIMK!
BOUT
sim
BE WATER 7^
WISE!
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
Office Hours Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO
EM. 6-3323
Ros: RO. 7-3427
OFFICE
RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
HUdson 5-1365
EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395
A. E. McKague, Q.C.
Barrister & Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO
:WW«2
1384!/2 Queen W.
Toronto
LE. 2-6378
For Complete
Real Estate Service
Call
TOSH IWAI
WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE
LIMITED,
1444 Danforth Avc.,
Toronto
Bus. IIO. 9-1151
Res. PL. 7-7578
Member Toronto Real Estate Board
and Photo Co-op
DANFORTH
SPORTING
GOODS
Fishing Tackle g Live Bait
Baseball, Tennis and Goll
Equipment
547 Danforth Ave.,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
SUNSET
TERRACE
l
CHINESE AND CANADIAN FOOD
THE JADE
ROOM
&
ME, 5-5050-1-2
• Wedding
Receptions
• Banquets
• Private
Parties
• Sales
Meetings
Free Parking
Open Thur, and Fri. Until 9 p. m.
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii
WO niKAIDO
TORONTO
For the very best in
wedding casuals. . .
For those who wish to
treasure the present in
the future
71 Tansiey Avenue
Scarboro, Ontario
AM. 5-8446
iniiiniiiiiiiiiinHiniinnniiiiinnnu
Page 8
PAGE 8________ _______ _______________
T I
^’•■■•i^niiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiniimummiuiiip
| Dateline:
=
WINNIPEG I
by Wally Shibata
Small Wonder
THE HEW CANADIAN
Authorized cs second cl
Post OffiU^ej^L^
From Time Magazine
=
i
American market look o tical, useful items.”
li ™BH, PuMishe-T
WINNIPEG. — The July meeting of rhe Manitoba JCCA Exe promising' io Tokyo's Son Corp
I s L AID Ra.
Tn 0-1
‘
After
U.S.
scientists
at
Bell
Te
all but think
cutive Council was held on the 3rd at the Manitoba Buddhist Church which makes
Editor,
lephone
Laboratories
developed
big, that it ha; •ent
KEN
MORI,
co_TounJ,
i with President G. Hirose acting as Chairman.
to Manhattan
tay two the transistor, Sony became the Section Editor and A
M. Koga reported on the canvassing for membership, The Ou
years. Th U.S. already absorbs rirst non-U.S. company to make
SUBSCRIPTION
Sool , picnic ticket and rat fie sales, and the Citizenship census r;
hall of the company’s export. 1 transistor radios. Older and big
S4.00
per S =o^
one Y"Q ‘b
Japanese consulate. Cut off date for this canvas wa
a, 12^\Fear-brought in 20 per ger Japanese companies soon be$7.00 per -.’e—r
tor Wednesday, July 17. Accumulation from the drive shoti
u-enu oi its sales of S63 million. gan competing- with the upstar
b
479 queen st. w
but Sony held it own by succes;'°,^’ Koga at 688 Arlington St. 'Those desiri
|our Go
.ponation s bould' ask fellow members.
sfully
invading
t
e
U.S.
market
intends to raise Sony's volume,
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
the world’s -best-known uespite a 12.5 per cent tariff. It
l.tu.c Commit vee Cnairman, N. Shimizu reported' that olan.
EMpire 6-5005
nmg and preparations for the annual picnic-to be held this ear on !Pa^®- °f transistor radios, shins now turns out oO models or ra~
July 28th still require the aid of more volunteers. The race, are to / 00,000 tiny sets a year to more dios and a broad line of highly
than 70 countries, and has helped original tape—recorders, microbe run-off early to avoid the heat of the day.
phones, semicondustors.
. Mr AL Yoshida, of the Japan Consulate has asked JCCA Com- ic turn a generation of teen-agers
into strolling jukeboxes.
"
Instant Action
Spb Matsuo whether the MJCCA would take ov^
„
Addicted
to
quality,
Sony
has
Helped by new products. Ibuka
Ja2,an^ language school. The MJCCA will give partial
acsistance. Lack of?"teachers was the main problem. It was recom none as much as any company to expects Sony's . sales to rise 25 per
mended that, the classes be held until September. Further classes on oemolish the cheap and imitative cent this year. Sony is working
image of Japanese goods, and is on a miniature color TV set and’
a full time basis will depend on the students.
Male Help Wanted
being widely imitated itself. An
. B “'.ervaiiun of the Fort Gary Hotel for Saturday, December Italian ^manufacturer for a while
—-.m. io. ,he Annual MJCCa Christmas Banquet and* Ball was con- sold a Sony-looking transistor ra Ueo-tape recorder that turns but Y OUN
Sony
lirmed. Also, the upper gymnasium of Knox United Church will b* dio called “Somy.” Back home, instant movies.
delivered its first rec
rs
to
used for the MJCCA’s Annual Kiddies Party.
rt^trical companies from Mitsu- US. customers. The co.
|K?.
msni to Matsushita this year ru
i&h (§10,900), but Sony expects YOUNG MAN
shed out portable TV sets to com
r
notified the MJCCA of the formation pete with Sony’s battery-powered c sell a thousand by next June in cutting ro
oi a uUU Club (Koyen Kai). An appeal for this membership will ’^-^sistorizeQ models, which come — mostly in the U.S. — to Apply Berger
be started in September.
research labs, .and even 4-4 King Sire;
with 5-in. or 8-in. screens and schools,
race
tracks.
bequest by president, G. Hirose, rhe motion that past weigh only 8 lbs. General Elec
presidents serve on the Executive Committee was ratified. This tric also started thinking small,
BUTTON SEWER lor
/
J-™ new president(s) to become familiar with operations last month introduced an 11-in'
si
'plv
O1 VL past term' T° enable a guarantee of hating a chairman plug-in TV set listed at S$99.95
at imure meetings, in the event the president is unable to attend —- about half of what the portfemale operators
the meeting dates were changed to the first Tuesdays of every a?Le Sony set discounts for in the
month. This will be altered in case it falls on a holiday or if un
1 orseen business necessitiates calling a meeting at an alternate date. I
East Meet- Wp
FEMALE OPER.
T0K10. — Financial and bu:
The meeting adjorned with notification that the next meeting
i
T
C
makinq skirts sS/^ST” ness circles here expressed fea
that the new
measure. on
' __________ ________________________
es rate of 15,000 midget TV
foreign
stocks
HOMEWORKERS
and bonds would blouses.
sets per_month, President Masaru
Avo’v c
Casey’s Corner . . .
(Continued from page one*)
■ ku’ 5^’ an engineer, plans to affect Japan’s international paynone
nr
1 1
X
,
aouble production bv late autumn ment position.
'66'’
Karate Dojo at 1499 Queen St. ^eekL
’ a story about her Judo and points out that he has ove^
In the first place it will beand the Yoseikan Karate Dojo activities appears. There is also come hurdles before After snpY
come
difficult for Japan for the
at 736 Danforth Avenue.
a picture of her taken by Star ding the war trvinT t0 cohort L>
APARTMENT
time
being
to raise funds in
contest Arinner, Mr. Larry Naka- heat-ray gun for the Japanese
nor. Nev.’lv
*
*
*
- -c- issuance
mura. The article is written by armed forces, Ibuka. along with Cm ted States
■oon
THE WEATHER is getting an Oriental. That s the July 2 /th Morita, assembled 8530 and eigM ox stocks and bonds, they said.
better all the time. Zero-hour for
,
F
e
Emiicis
Japan
has
been
MODERN
displaced technicians in a bomb
the eclipse is slated at 4:30 P.M. issue now on sale.
pie
to
raise
in
the
United
States
raraawn Manor, 3’7
*
*
. *
Stitted department store
Tbev
Toronto IS.
I put down my paperback book
nave amounted' to about 8200
THE
BUILT-IN
alarm
clock
in
St
M
ted
^o
STar.
(Steinbeck’s “Travels With Char
000,000 annually
'
(S. Tsumura
ley”) feeling pleasantly tired. my subconscious goes off to awa. r 7any,°/ei’ Japanese tried and
Banking circles here said that
same thing, but Sony txesidenv John F, Kennedy’s
I shall take a quick 40 winks and ken me. It is never wrong. Some- ai ea a ,
wake up refrashed to see this how it has always kept me out s,uc^e?aed Uy blending Eastern in_ newly proposed measures will
of trouble. Often it has saved my aus/ousness with modern West aufect Japan’s international pavmiracle of nature.
I Give Blood I
life.
Today
it
has
did
it
again.
It
em
/
smess
technique.
The
comment position in the field of
*
has saved me from a serious case I L n~ favors hard-seH advertising, tapltil transaction and account.
| CALL YOUR RED CROSS g
Canadian of eclipse-blindness for mv wrist cnan . s about 4.5 per cent of
writer, Liz Pearce i also a com- watch tells me it is 10:00 P.M. !aJes/n^° research- and is quick Ine new measures will have a
pc tent
Brown Belt Judbistess. They tell me that the next com- „LaQd.lts °"m twist to -what more far-reaching affect on JaShe is a student at Frank Hata- plete eclipse to be seen in Toron- । ers invent- Bra^s Ibuka: “We pans economy than the restric
tion of offshore procurements,
shita’s dojo.
to will be in another 181 years. 1£n e aIways been the first to see the same circles declared.
In this week’s
Toronto Star I can wait. Hell, I’m in no hurrv. I
'
CLASSIFIED
Position Will Weaken
“ * Man- B"«4*A
3 Western Canada Bible Camps
OKANAGAN BIBLE CAMP
WOODS LAKE (Approx. 10 Miles N. of Kelowna, B.C.)
BOW VALLEY FAMILY CAMP
for the whole faniily
August 17 — 24
BOW VALLEY YOUTH CAMP
from age 15 yrs. and up
CANMORE, ALTA.
only 15 miles E. of Banff Nat. Park.
For further information write to:
31 r. Nori Kanashiro, 1107
Lethbridge, Alta.
CANADIAN JAPANESE MISSION
Metro-Audio Vision
Dutch Youths To Stag©
A-bomb Victim Drama
Japan. — Dutch
youths in Amsterdam this Sepember will form the cast in a
stage drama about a 12-year-old
Hnoshima girl who died in 1955
trom radiation effects of the first
atomic bomb explosion over thU
city on August 6, 1945.
I Hiroshima Mayor Shinzo Ha
mai learned this from Dutch play
wright Lex De Rooi. who dramaa novel about Sadako SasaKi by Austrian winter Karl Briwkoer titled /'Sadako Will Leben”
voadako will live on).
I Sadako was two when the bomb
exploded over Hiroshima. Her pa
rents were killed and she was
placed in a welfare institute.
, . She Was found to be suffering
,a^er effects of radiation in
February. 1955. and placed in the
Hiroshima Atomic Bomb Hospi
tal.
F
There one day she was told <he
would be cured if she folded 1.000
paper cranes. She had folded 966
। cranes, using wrappers from
drugs and gifts that were sent
to her, when she died.
Playwright Rooi wrote Mavor
Hamai tnat he dramatized the
ewhich has been transla
ted into many languages __ so
the world would know more about
he horror of nuclear weapons.
, . ^eT as^ the mayor to send
■aim Japanese furniture and what
ever else he thought would fit th*
play.
Sales & Service
T.V. — HI-FI — STEREO
Owned by I. Gord Nakamura
Sadako’s 966 paper cranes, her
diary and her medical bulletin
have been offered to the Hiroshi
ma Atomic Bomb Museum by her
teacher.
1344 Gerrard St. East,
Toronto
Bus: HO. 5-6213
Res: 4=1
Industrious Worker
WANTED
Ranted for responsible posi
tion in expanding manufactur
ing firm.
Tire Builder
Experienced. Excellent Salary
Phone 421-8800
Phone 421-8800
Toronto
i
Toronto
FOR WORRY-FREE TRAVEL
ARRANGEMENTS
By Air, Sea and Land
Can
Furuya Travel Service
365 SPADINA AVE.. TORONTO 2-B ONT.
PHONE EM. 6-1075
T I
^’•■■•i^niiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiniimummiuiiip
| Dateline:
=
WINNIPEG I
by Wally Shibata
Small Wonder
THE HEW CANADIAN
Authorized cs second cl
Post OffiU^ej^L^
From Time Magazine
=
i
American market look o tical, useful items.”
li ™BH, PuMishe-T
WINNIPEG. — The July meeting of rhe Manitoba JCCA Exe promising' io Tokyo's Son Corp
I s L AID Ra.
Tn 0-1
‘
After
U.S.
scientists
at
Bell
Te
all but think
cutive Council was held on the 3rd at the Manitoba Buddhist Church which makes
Editor,
lephone
Laboratories
developed
big, that it ha; •ent
KEN
MORI,
co_TounJ,
i with President G. Hirose acting as Chairman.
to Manhattan
tay two the transistor, Sony became the Section Editor and A
M. Koga reported on the canvassing for membership, The Ou
years. Th U.S. already absorbs rirst non-U.S. company to make
SUBSCRIPTION
Sool , picnic ticket and rat fie sales, and the Citizenship census r;
hall of the company’s export. 1 transistor radios. Older and big
S4.00
per S =o^
one Y"Q ‘b
Japanese consulate. Cut off date for this canvas wa
a, 12^\Fear-brought in 20 per ger Japanese companies soon be$7.00 per -.’e—r
tor Wednesday, July 17. Accumulation from the drive shoti
u-enu oi its sales of S63 million. gan competing- with the upstar
b
479 queen st. w
but Sony held it own by succes;'°,^’ Koga at 688 Arlington St. 'Those desiri
|our Go
.ponation s bould' ask fellow members.
sfully
invading
t
e
U.S.
market
intends to raise Sony's volume,
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
the world’s -best-known uespite a 12.5 per cent tariff. It
l.tu.c Commit vee Cnairman, N. Shimizu reported' that olan.
EMpire 6-5005
nmg and preparations for the annual picnic-to be held this ear on !Pa^®- °f transistor radios, shins now turns out oO models or ra~
July 28th still require the aid of more volunteers. The race, are to / 00,000 tiny sets a year to more dios and a broad line of highly
than 70 countries, and has helped original tape—recorders, microbe run-off early to avoid the heat of the day.
phones, semicondustors.
. Mr AL Yoshida, of the Japan Consulate has asked JCCA Com- ic turn a generation of teen-agers
into strolling jukeboxes.
"
Instant Action
Spb Matsuo whether the MJCCA would take ov^
„
Addicted
to
quality,
Sony
has
Helped by new products. Ibuka
Ja2,an^ language school. The MJCCA will give partial
acsistance. Lack of?"teachers was the main problem. It was recom none as much as any company to expects Sony's . sales to rise 25 per
mended that, the classes be held until September. Further classes on oemolish the cheap and imitative cent this year. Sony is working
image of Japanese goods, and is on a miniature color TV set and’
a full time basis will depend on the students.
Male Help Wanted
being widely imitated itself. An
. B “'.ervaiiun of the Fort Gary Hotel for Saturday, December Italian ^manufacturer for a while
—-.m. io. ,he Annual MJCCa Christmas Banquet and* Ball was con- sold a Sony-looking transistor ra Ueo-tape recorder that turns but Y OUN
Sony
lirmed. Also, the upper gymnasium of Knox United Church will b* dio called “Somy.” Back home, instant movies.
delivered its first rec
rs
to
used for the MJCCA’s Annual Kiddies Party.
rt^trical companies from Mitsu- US. customers. The co.
|K?.
msni to Matsushita this year ru
i&h (§10,900), but Sony expects YOUNG MAN
shed out portable TV sets to com
r
notified the MJCCA of the formation pete with Sony’s battery-powered c sell a thousand by next June in cutting ro
oi a uUU Club (Koyen Kai). An appeal for this membership will ’^-^sistorizeQ models, which come — mostly in the U.S. — to Apply Berger
be started in September.
research labs, .and even 4-4 King Sire;
with 5-in. or 8-in. screens and schools,
race
tracks.
bequest by president, G. Hirose, rhe motion that past weigh only 8 lbs. General Elec
presidents serve on the Executive Committee was ratified. This tric also started thinking small,
BUTTON SEWER lor
/
J-™ new president(s) to become familiar with operations last month introduced an 11-in'
si
'plv
O1 VL past term' T° enable a guarantee of hating a chairman plug-in TV set listed at S$99.95
at imure meetings, in the event the president is unable to attend —- about half of what the portfemale operators
the meeting dates were changed to the first Tuesdays of every a?Le Sony set discounts for in the
month. This will be altered in case it falls on a holiday or if un
1 orseen business necessitiates calling a meeting at an alternate date. I
East Meet- Wp
FEMALE OPER.
T0K10. — Financial and bu:
The meeting adjorned with notification that the next meeting
i
T
C
makinq skirts sS/^ST” ness circles here expressed fea
that the new
measure. on
' __________ ________________________
es rate of 15,000 midget TV
foreign
stocks
HOMEWORKERS
and bonds would blouses.
sets per_month, President Masaru
Avo’v c
Casey’s Corner . . .
(Continued from page one*)
■ ku’ 5^’ an engineer, plans to affect Japan’s international paynone
nr
1 1
X
,
aouble production bv late autumn ment position.
'66'’
Karate Dojo at 1499 Queen St. ^eekL
’ a story about her Judo and points out that he has ove^
In the first place it will beand the Yoseikan Karate Dojo activities appears. There is also come hurdles before After snpY
come
difficult for Japan for the
at 736 Danforth Avenue.
a picture of her taken by Star ding the war trvinT t0 cohort L>
APARTMENT
time
being
to raise funds in
contest Arinner, Mr. Larry Naka- heat-ray gun for the Japanese
nor. Nev.’lv
*
*
*
- -c- issuance
mura. The article is written by armed forces, Ibuka. along with Cm ted States
■oon
THE WEATHER is getting an Oriental. That s the July 2 /th Morita, assembled 8530 and eigM ox stocks and bonds, they said.
better all the time. Zero-hour for
,
F
e
Emiicis
Japan
has
been
MODERN
displaced technicians in a bomb
the eclipse is slated at 4:30 P.M. issue now on sale.
pie
to
raise
in
the
United
States
raraawn Manor, 3’7
*
*
. *
Stitted department store
Tbev
Toronto IS.
I put down my paperback book
nave amounted' to about 8200
THE
BUILT-IN
alarm
clock
in
St
M
ted
^o
STar.
(Steinbeck’s “Travels With Char
000,000 annually
'
(S. Tsumura
ley”) feeling pleasantly tired. my subconscious goes off to awa. r 7any,°/ei’ Japanese tried and
Banking circles here said that
same thing, but Sony txesidenv John F, Kennedy’s
I shall take a quick 40 winks and ken me. It is never wrong. Some- ai ea a ,
wake up refrashed to see this how it has always kept me out s,uc^e?aed Uy blending Eastern in_ newly proposed measures will
of trouble. Often it has saved my aus/ousness with modern West aufect Japan’s international pavmiracle of nature.
I Give Blood I
life.
Today
it
has
did
it
again.
It
em
/
smess
technique.
The
comment position in the field of
*
has saved me from a serious case I L n~ favors hard-seH advertising, tapltil transaction and account.
| CALL YOUR RED CROSS g
Canadian of eclipse-blindness for mv wrist cnan . s about 4.5 per cent of
writer, Liz Pearce i also a com- watch tells me it is 10:00 P.M. !aJes/n^° research- and is quick Ine new measures will have a
pc tent
Brown Belt Judbistess. They tell me that the next com- „LaQd.lts °"m twist to -what more far-reaching affect on JaShe is a student at Frank Hata- plete eclipse to be seen in Toron- । ers invent- Bra^s Ibuka: “We pans economy than the restric
tion of offshore procurements,
shita’s dojo.
to will be in another 181 years. 1£n e aIways been the first to see the same circles declared.
In this week’s
Toronto Star I can wait. Hell, I’m in no hurrv. I
'
CLASSIFIED
Position Will Weaken
“ * Man- B"«4*A
3 Western Canada Bible Camps
OKANAGAN BIBLE CAMP
WOODS LAKE (Approx. 10 Miles N. of Kelowna, B.C.)
BOW VALLEY FAMILY CAMP
for the whole faniily
August 17 — 24
BOW VALLEY YOUTH CAMP
from age 15 yrs. and up
CANMORE, ALTA.
only 15 miles E. of Banff Nat. Park.
For further information write to:
31 r. Nori Kanashiro, 1107
Lethbridge, Alta.
CANADIAN JAPANESE MISSION
Metro-Audio Vision
Dutch Youths To Stag©
A-bomb Victim Drama
Japan. — Dutch
youths in Amsterdam this Sepember will form the cast in a
stage drama about a 12-year-old
Hnoshima girl who died in 1955
trom radiation effects of the first
atomic bomb explosion over thU
city on August 6, 1945.
I Hiroshima Mayor Shinzo Ha
mai learned this from Dutch play
wright Lex De Rooi. who dramaa novel about Sadako SasaKi by Austrian winter Karl Briwkoer titled /'Sadako Will Leben”
voadako will live on).
I Sadako was two when the bomb
exploded over Hiroshima. Her pa
rents were killed and she was
placed in a welfare institute.
, . She Was found to be suffering
,a^er effects of radiation in
February. 1955. and placed in the
Hiroshima Atomic Bomb Hospi
tal.
F
There one day she was told <he
would be cured if she folded 1.000
paper cranes. She had folded 966
। cranes, using wrappers from
drugs and gifts that were sent
to her, when she died.
Playwright Rooi wrote Mavor
Hamai tnat he dramatized the
ewhich has been transla
ted into many languages __ so
the world would know more about
he horror of nuclear weapons.
, . ^eT as^ the mayor to send
■aim Japanese furniture and what
ever else he thought would fit th*
play.
Sales & Service
T.V. — HI-FI — STEREO
Owned by I. Gord Nakamura
Sadako’s 966 paper cranes, her
diary and her medical bulletin
have been offered to the Hiroshi
ma Atomic Bomb Museum by her
teacher.
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Toronto
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