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The New Canadian — January 4, 1964

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Page 1

THE NEW CANADIAi
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 1964

\' (। i. XXVIII—N o. 1

Toronto. Ont.

Force Manufacturers To Trim Costs

|

Nisei's Best Friend

Japan Goods Help Buyer,
Says Toronto Competitor

along the way is very good. The
Institute of Electrical and Elect­
dications the tradii that education is ronic Engineers report that the
beginning
salary
median
■obably more so. Time $9750.60.
The opportunity for
ci a
\iseis were urged to interesting work, for more freeTORONTO.—Imports from Ja­ and U.S. markets.
to study although
from
suit
L

The
Japanese.

he
said,

have
Join, for more economic gain in­ pan have benefited Canadian con­
cal engine
helped the Canadian consumer;
higher levels of sumers and have forced manufac­
and up being gar- creases with
about
turers to trim their costs, accord­ let's accept that. They producer,
r t <hermen. Of course training. For University appoint­
to
a
good
article
at
a
good
price.
isei who ments the PhD is almost a must ing to Robert Ostrander, presi­ We just had to get down and
r
luxble
now.
ho
said,
alt;
dent of Wellinger and Dunn Ltd.,
lor medical and dental if one wants to secure any ad­ a Canadian producer of hockey scratch and meet their price. You
was of little help durin
iuse regardless of
two or three vears wm
can
now
buy
a
baseball
glove
of
vancements, to secure research and baseball equipment.
political climate they could
We
example, for
equal
quality,
for
Mr. Ostrander said in an in­
e ana earn money, to have an interesting
nto priv:
its
less than the
Dunn
about
15
per
cent
But when teaching assignment. The time terview that the recent pressure
There's maica
price of 10 years ago.
came ami went, uni- to secure the PhD is when one of Japanese competition has nothing seriously
supply
forced his company to shift part
actuates in
competition.
It
keeps
us
alive
and
priced
is
still
young,
that
is,
not
after
of its operation to Jamaica. But,
elvu-ivii engine«-ring, commerce
product
competitive.
t
etc., found themselves estab­ years of work experience. To go he said, the move had helped the
Mr. Ostrander said he was not
‘‘But
lished in comfortable positions. back to graduate school when company expand its total opera­
perturbed
by
the
need
to
reduce
answer
tion, and has aided the Toronto
A few Nisei even had their one has a well-established family olant in its fight against over­ direct costs to a competitive level,
•Our
e
tough some got it and other committments is diffi­ seas competition in the Canadian but was deeply worried over rtsbeing
■ in the early days cult.
cion obs were hard to
He
It
seems
that
the Niseis
ami these people just should storm the last frontiers
uate school, puttof education, the PhD degree in
jiii off the day of facing reality. large numbers. If Niseis want
incrca
TOKYO.—A Japanese woman make this proposal to console which co
Mrs. Kennedy by asking her to to supp
1- it io yet oaclc to 19-41, accoiclmore
has
proposed
that
all
women
m
to have
influence far out of
inu to the Dept, of Labour “Re- proportion to their numbers the her country contribute 10 yen fully appreciate the beautiful spending
of the Administration of
war
the tarri
easiest and the best route is (nearly 30 cents) to a fund to in­ scenery of Japan.”
Japanese Affairs in Canada 1942- through
.vim
means that
advanced training and vite Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy to
D44" there were apparently 657 education culminating in the PhD Japan in 1964.
the basic producti
unit in
male and 4113 females of Japa- degree. In the sciences, in the
more
company

costs
3
Miss Kawase of Nishinomiya
so rigin who had 13 years of humanities, in the social scien­
Canada than it doe
City made her proposal in a let­
mg or more. Just how
It
States or Jamaie:
were mere senior matricu- ces, the PhD’s are the top people ter to the editor of the multi­
he
said,
the
Jamaican
(Govern­
OSAKA. — Feeding antibio­ ment provides other incentives
how many were graduates and they are the ones who teach million circulation Asahi Shim­
university students, conduct
lachelors degrees, masters our
tics to their oysters, Japanese
the research, and .advise govern- bun. She wrote:
or Ph D's was not recorded. Howexport
scientists
are succeeding in grow­ duty
Proportional
to their
“Everyone in our family burst
ex er it probably would be safe merits.
cl
us
tri
numbers they wield more in­ into tears before the TV set . . . ing bigger and better pearls.
sav that the number of PhD's
directly and indirect1 y
fluence
Four years of tests with a
counted on one hand
when news of the assassination
than
any
other segment of the
two missof John F. Kennedy was tele­ new product has shown that the
educated population.
That wa
increases the
new
technique
cast. . . .
since that time a steady
“Moon tear”
“We were most sorry because yield of perfect
university graduates
per
cent.
the late president and Mrs. Ken­ pearls about 30
l ave entered the scene. Exact
antibiotics is the outstatistics are not available and
The
nedy would have visited Japan
to (wen hazard a guess would
disof a 12-year-old
LOS ANGELUS.—A des lie. il­
next spring. We had been eagerly growth
be difficult. However if one were
Cent
31-ve:iroki mother ls r-covery that minute amounts of
looking forward to their visit.
get an impression from the
covering
in the Prison Ward of
“The world has lost a really the dim g help stimulate livestock I..A. Genera! Hospital after fail­
p ipes of the New Canadian a
TOKYO.—The
Mitsui'Bussan
and poultry growth.
cool number have graduated but
ing in an attempted murder-sui­
Company
in
Toronto
this week precious person ... I hereby
still
very
number of PhD s is
cide recently.
true for disclosed that they have bought
Mrs. June Omori. 2u2o Brown­
$500,000.00 dollars worth of On­
s regardless of the ethtario tobacco for the Japanese
ing St., stubbed her four-yenrn
government.
ing static electricity will greatly old daughter in the abdomen,
TOKYO.

The
dream
of
the
war time research
Agents for the Japanese and police has come true—that is, the simplify the work of fingerprim and then turivd the kn:fe on ■lorfantastic
Canadian governments concluded taking of finger-prints without taking and thus speed up the self.
ciubnogical breakthrough oc- their agreement on New Year’s staining fingers, the Mainichi arrest of criminals. Fingerprints
are taken by having fingers tomb
rred in many areas and oppor- Day. This Ontario tobacco grown Shimbun reported.
specially treated sensitive paper, Omori's Issei mother rushed
imties for those with advanc in 1962, and bought and stored
The scientists of the Police which is then developed with a Hie room ind found both
Agency, the vernacular said, have
1 training multiplied so raptddaughter
and
granddnu;
by the Canadian government, recently completed two types or special solution.
bleeding on tiie floor.
The Police Agency has report
th.it now there is an acute
was bought in its entirety by the electronic fingerprint-taking ap­ edly received an inquiry from the speak English, she
hurt age of personnel at the
Japanese. This is the first time paratus after more than two United States Federal Bureau of bors home who in
Investigation about the appara­ police.
the Japan government has bought years of research.
'he mere possession of
tus.
These
portable
devices
utilizThe
empted
Canadian tobacco leaves.
rpraduate degree is not
took place at approximately )
It is as common as beinga.m. according
Univcrsitv
school graduate was a
cinct police report
is ago. It appears chat
pondent mother w
on to
hould
9:45 a.m.
hool .
even try
TOKYO. — Soviet Russia ap­ 1966 will mark the 10th anniver- Moscow.
w .1 s
No apparent rea
pealed recently for closer rela­ sary of the establishment of dipThe Soviets have warned that
for the sudden "i
’it it
a
reasonable tions with Japan and expressed lomatic relations between the So- if Japan does not scrap the treaty
which
fm-tunately did not pr ■
viet Union and Japan.
and expel American troops, it
■ telligence and per- hope all “pending issues” between
Though
wunc
the two nations would be settled
The two nations have yet to would never get back the islands fatal.
shmiidn't be such a oy 1966.
of
Habomai
and
Shikotan,
just
abdomen
was
deeply
cut.
non
sigri a peace treaty, one of
tsk. At the present
* “All that is required at this
off Japan’s northeast coast. Rus­ the vital organs were damn
major “pending issues’’ the So- sia seized the islands after World
- so much financial stage.” it said, “is responsive
viet broadcast referred to.
War II but promised to return and she is expected to recc
a liable that a scho- steps by leaders of the Japanese
Hansm Hathaw
And it is likely the issue will them when a peace treaty was a<vo rd; n
government as it establishes its
nv, have to worrv foreign policies.”
remain unsettled unless the
signed.
viets retract a pre-condition
government
as
striven
to
the signing of a peace treaty; word in an effort to interfere
VP’ ■
relations
with
rove
diplomat!
the abrogation of the Japan-U.S. with the ratification of the Se­
•s to
troubl
Japanese gove
Security Treaty and the expulsion curity pact by the Japanese Par­
. one
■ oulu talk
The Soviet overture was made of American troops stationed in liament in 1961. But the Russian
rhe m:
in a Japanese-language radio Japan.
at nights. Ho
move backfired.
re Moscow broadcast beamed to Ja­
Japan Must Take “Steps”
It touched off widespread in­
Tw
SWT
pan and monitored here. No sig­
li
He told p<>!
This apparently would be one dignation among the Japanese
nificance was seen in its timing.
he PhD
ok her to so
of the “responsive steps” the Ja­ pres; and the people themselves
Anniversary Is Noted
9*
high sc
panese Ero-vernment would have to And the Secunty Treat
her problem.
The broadcast noted the year take for closer relations with

DI. SITARR"

Japan Women Start Mrs. J. F. K. Fund

Antibiotics Make
Pearls G-R-O-W

Amerkan Nisei
Woman Fails !n
Hara-kiri Bid

Japanese Buy
$500,000. worth
Ont. Tobacco

Stainless Fingerprinting In Japan

Soviet Russia Wants Closer Japan Ties

Page 2

THE

PAGE 2

^^^R^f^^WWMMMVMWMWmfvWWWRRRRRFVWMRF

Cosmopolitan Cuisine
By STELLA ITO

Apples
When you shop for apples, consider the use you have in mind,
e are best for cooking, some for eating . . . some are dual

Ing red

apple.

NEW

KEG NEWS
ALL BOWLING SCORES MUST BE
or
TYPED AND DOUBLE - SPACED
they will be directed straight into the
closest
wastepaper
basket. Please
follow- the good
examples of the
scores sent in below.
TORONTO NISEI TEN PIN BOWLING
LEAGUE
13, 1
MEN: 1
Do: 594
ce Ts
oto 593 (
en Izumi 577
■s
70 ( 22:2); Kotch Ya-3 (213);
550;
ibe 537 (
Sab Seki
•2; Clare Ward 530
Doi
16 (219);
LADIES:
Poits
rar
YoTov
asmzume 452.
M. Kobayashi
*

*

MIXED BOWLING LEAGUE, Dec. 15th.
MEN: Herb-.- M rino 574 (204,
570; Ken Katai 542 (215);
30 (206); Terry Hamade 531:

Oran

X ike

Sakura 51b.
Sakai 519; Jean YoLucy Coombes 483476; Sally Iden
44; Joan Hama,
451; Alice Nagam
de 434; Shirley H
kava 433; Mar:
Mitsuki 418; Kay
kasaki 410; Vir
ginia Hayashi 410.

lemon juice

LADIES: Hew
iida 508 (211

1
h tsp. salt
dash of pepper

1
chopped chives
cup croutons (bread cubes diced and
one-third cup crumbled blue cheese
Method:

Greetings Omitted
Due To Bereavement

toasted)

apples, unpeeled, cored and cut
and sliced cucumber; oranges
and
and sectioned grapefruits.
salad oil, lemon juice, honey, mustard,
rcestershire sauce and chives.
pour enough dressing over the whole
istem Add croutons and blue cheese, and

dicea

J ust

Tins

accompany a meal with rich, robust
stuffed pork chops or thick plank of steak,
of good fresh ton itoes from the market,
citrus fruits is a welcome change in the

MRS. KANAME MORI
MR. ROY MORI
MR. & MRS. GEORGE MORI
MR. & MRS.
REGINALD MORI
MR. & MRS. GORDON MORI
MR. & MRS. RODNEY
KUWABARA

MR. & MRS.
NATSUO KISHIMOTO
And FAMILY
1063 Weston Road,
Toronto 9, Ont.
Phone 766-7992

WALDORF SALAD
cubed red

apples

someone

in the
skin on), 1 cup
y Add one-third

walnut s.
on the Theme: For the Waldorf Salad. toss in half
?f marshmallows cut up in quarters. (Be sure to
hi water before cutting them . . . same with knife).

clip

I'SC’

chunks in place of walnuts . . . add a
er seedless black
t to go further . . a can of those lovely red tangeI. anil added leaves little to"be

red in the way

Culinary Cue:
Tradition and traini

ert. Euru*

Through

MTTS KURODA
Representing

WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE
LIMITED,
1444 Danforth Ave.,
Toronto
Bus. — HO. 9-1151
Res. — AM. 1-2581

For All Classes of

INSURANCE

MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.

FLAT ROOFS
EAVESTR OUGHING

FIRE — THEFT — AUTO

RITZ KINOSHITA

ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD,

TOSH NISHIJIMA

Your Home

Consult

*

*

CLIP OCT AND SAVE FOR FUTURE USE

TORONTO

Buy & SeU

s us to place the salad bowl on the
along with the meal, especially for
off

ing. light
often.

Phone: PL. 9-2632

SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK

421-3374 NISEI OWNED

Hibakusha
By DAVID PERLMAN
HIROSHIMA.—How long do the scars of violence endure in the
minds and souls of human beings—and in the societies they have
created ?
An anthropologist with a profound and personal concern for the
violence-torn humans of Hiroshima offered a partial answer here.
Indefinitely, said Dr. Erle L. Rexmolds, a dedicated pacifist, a
former professor of anthropology’ at Antioch College, and now a
teacher and researcher at Hiroshima’s Institute of Peace Science.
Although Dr. Reynolds talked about the aftermath of a single
incident of mass violence in a distant country, his remarks bore a
special relevance to America today.
For here in America violence has just touched the lives of every­
one. A single assassin has slain a President; it was an act perform­
ed within a growing nationwide climate of violence. And a man bent
on vengeance has also slain; he must have felt society would con­
done his act.
>
Studied Hiroshima
i
Anthropologists study situations like these, and Dr. Reynolds
has studied the legacy of a special act of violence that occurred 18
years ago.
At Hiroshima 67,000 were killed by the first atomic weapon:
90,000 survived.
And today, as Dr. Reynolds quoted one survivor, the Hiroshima
victims say:
“We are a lost tribe in the jungle of the modern world”
The survivors have a special name: hibakusha, and they have
a special status: isolated from the community, often ostracized,
filled with guilt and shame at being alive.
There is controversy over their medical status: Are they more
susceptible to infectious disease ? Do they recover more slowly from
illness ? Do they carry within their reproductive cells hidden here­
ditary defects caused by massive radiation exposure.
Hibakusha Suspected
Because of these questions, Dr. Reynolds said, the “normal’’
population of Hiroshima suspects the hibakusha; it is difficult for
the survivors to find marriage partners outside their own group;
they find it hard to get jobs, and their jobs are menial—at the
“bottom of the economic pyramid.”
In the early postwar- years, Dr. Reynolds said, there was no
social stigma in being a survivor of the atomic bomb. But today this
stigma is growing—even to the extent of outright social ostracism
by a bitter, hostile majority in the city.
Apparently, Dr. Reynolds said, the hibakusha “have committed
the outrageous offense of remaining alive when they should be dead."
The survivors themselves feel “strange feeling of guilt and
shame,” Dr. Reynolds noted. They are preoccupied with the theme
of death—as psychiatric researchers have seen—and their thoughts
are permeated with “residual terror.” They have entered “a special
category of existence.” They are “a dazed and miserable remnant
of the original population.”
Gangs Gain Status
Curiously, Dr. Reynolds said, there is a special high status that
still clings to the members of two criminal gangs that were operat­
ing in the Hiroshima underworld at the time of the atomic attack.
These gangs were the only well-organized segment of society
immediately after the city was pulverized. They pitched in and help­
ed continue the city’s essential services. They actually controlled
and ran the. municipal water distributing system—a critically important service.
The gang members still shoot each other on the streets “in typi­
cally civilized fashion," Dr. Reynolds said, but they are surrounded
now by “a residue of respect.”
Dr. Reynolds called upon his fellow scientists to conduct a mas­
sive program of detailed research into the Hiroshima survivors and
the society around them.
“This new group of human beings was created not by physical
isolation, or inbreeding for generations but by an instantaneous man­
made catastrophe, resulting in a new variety of social isolation,
with unique medical and social effects and as yet unknown genetic
consequences,” Dr. Reynolds said.
Bitterly, Dr. Reynolds noted that Hiroshima now provides a
“living laboratory’' in which to study the disastrous social and
human consequences of violence. Nor can anthropologists evade the
responsibility to study in this laboratory, he said.
“Highly developed techniques of mass human slaughter, par­
ticularly as refined by radiation effects, have added a new dimen­
sion, and urgency to the study of man,” Dr. Reynolds said.
“The logical place to begin a study of the science of survival is
in a study of humans who have survived.”
Dr. Reynolds presented his arguments at a closing session of
the American Anthropological Association meeting here. Nearly
1500 anthropologists have attended) the four-day gathering at the
Sheraton-Palace Hotel.

Travel Arrangements

It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY

"COVERING ONTARIO

Night Calls: PL. 9-5095

KAZUO G. OIYE

HI. 7-1100
Air—Ship—B us—Rail
*

SMALL

Saturday, January 4, 1964

CANADIAN

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LATEST FALL STYLES
Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11

Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
and Baggage insurance

1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto

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Phone WA. 1-3171

FOR WORRY-FREE TRAVEL
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By Air, Sea and Land

Passage arranged by Steamer or A

Call for Reservations or

Inlcrmation—EM. 8-9934

Selected Snow Boots

ALBERTS SHOE STORE

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INSURANCE AGENTS

BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Carlton St.. Toronto
Room 1805
366-6388
421-9983 (Res.)

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Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14

Consult

Call
4

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365 SPADINA AVE., TORONTO 2-B ONT.

K. Iwata Travel Service

PHONE EM. 6-1075
H

Page 3

Saturday, Januaiy 4, 1964

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W. K. GARDENS

Crown Life Insurance Co.

127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquete
Private Dining Rooms

Frank G. Yada
1550 West Georgia St.
Vancouver, B.C.

Page 4

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Page 7

T H E

; Satu r d a y, J a nu ary 4, 19 6 -1-

PAGE 7

C A N A D IAN

NEW

Fujimoto Stars Rs East Rll-Stars
Wallop West In Nisei Hockey lilt

provement, particularly in “newaza
” or ground technique. Thus
TOKYO. — Holland's
Anton
the
Japanese
should try their atGeesink, who won the last world
most
to
prevent
him from win­
judo championship held in Paris
ning
by

osaekomi
” or holdingrh 1961, has served as the
technique.
TORONTO. — The East All- the cage with less than two mi­ before made, in the history of
sparring mate of 12 Japanese
In the training at Tenri Uni­ stars, paced by the outstanding nutes remaining in the game to hockey—when he traded Marion
Candidates for. the Olympic team
versity, Geesink has also shown play of Satch Fujimoto walloped make the final score read 8-3 in Hiramatsu and two hockey sticks
next year.
that
his throwing technique is their Western counterparts S-3 in
Daily for a two-week period,
to the opposition for their star
the Toronto Japanese Hockey favor of the East.
sharper
titan ever.
the top Japanese judo athletes
*
*
#
forward
Sandra Version, between
tackled the 29-year-old 6 ft. 5
It is ironical, indeed that the League’s Third Annual All-star
In the girl's game proceeding the first and second periods. l.el‘:;
in. Dutch champion on the mat of likeable Geesink, who first came game at George Bell Arena.
The win, the first for the East, the East-West encounter, the no­ see you better this one. Punch
the Tenri University Dojo (train- to Japan when only 22 years old
ing hall) in Nara prefecture, to learn judo, should be in what ties the annual contest at one vice Japanese gals were no match Imlach!
for the powerful ladies from
may be interpreted as a coach­ win apiece plus a tie.
_West Japan.
Humberside Collegiate and suf­
Although
completely
outplayed
Latest word from the J.C. gal's
ing
capacity
for
Japanese
ju
­
•: The training was part of the
fered
a
9-1
loss.
during
the
game,
the
West
drew
doists.
dressing
room is that they are
Japanese Judo Federation’s deHowever, the J.C. gals tried going to form a pernmnem umm
He arrived here last month at the first blood as George Shimo­
termined program to win all four
gold medals in this first judo the invitation of the Tenri Uni­ no netted a fluke goal from the hard and added lots of fun and and practise ail winter, in order
competition
of
the
Olympic versity to coach its students tak­ corners on the first play of the spills to the All-star Show.
to avenge their defeat next year.
ing up judo.
Tenri University game. The puck caroned into the
Games.
Coach Ted Kaki no made an un­ Good Luck, Gals!
net
when
Shimono

s
attempted
has
always
been
one
of
the
coun
­
• It was, of course, training for
Geesink, himself, who hopes to try's strongest collegiate teams pass-out struck goalie Ted Mia- precedented move—-.a move never
hishi’s stick and caught, tire far
participate
in
the
Olympic in judo.
corner.
In
the
first
world
judo
cham
­
Games.
The game was fairly close dur­
But the uppermost question is pionships held in Tokyo in 1956,
whether Geesink, who runs a judo Geesink was eliminated in the ing tlie remainder of the first
school in Holland, will be barred semi-finals by Yoshihiko Yoshi­ period, until Glen Katsuyama
GOING INTO BUSINESS
matsu, one of the two Japanese picked up a holding penalty with
as a professional.
FOR YOURSELF?
| Geesink, himself, has said, “I coaches for next year’s Olympic two minutes left in the period.
This
was
a
sign
for
the
East
to
Team.
Then
in
the
Second
World
will take part in the Tokyo
Olympic Games next year if the Championships in Tokyo in 1958, come alive, and Satch Fujimoto
OPTOMETRISTS
TBm maybe it's time to caff
International Olympic president Geesink was beaten in the quar­ netted the picture goal of the
j(Avery) Brundage still gives me ter-finals by Akio Kaminaga, a । afternoon when he skated and
Complete Care
candidate for the Olympic team. deked his way through the en­
the amateur status.'’
MICHAEL
OTSUKA
It is interesting that Shozo
Geesink, however, was far from tire West team before deposit­
For Your Eyes
Chartered Accountant
Matsumoto, one of the Japanese being discouraged. He came to ing the rubber behind goalie Al
judo coaches, said that he hoped Japan several times in the fol­ Lewis.
HU. 9-3592
Less than a minute later the
Geesink would compete in the lowing years, training at the Ko^Olympic Games.
dokan (mecca of judo) and at the East went out in front to stay
' Matsumoto admitted that Gee- Metropolitan Police Judo Hall. when Johnny Kitamura scored
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
118 West Hastings St
_smk was a formidable foe but These efforts were fruitfull and with help from Al Masukawa and
Fujimoto.
that it was “not impossible” for in the Paris World Champion­
VANCOUVER, B.C.
COMPANY OF CANADA
the Japanese judo athletes to ships in 1961, he defeated Japan’s
The East counted early in the
beat him.
powerful representatives to be­ second period as Rich Yoshida
U Isao Inokuma, 1963 Japanese come world champion.
intercepted a stray pass in the
^champion, said it was a mistake
Geesink has no complaints West’s zone and skated in alone
for Japanese judoists to believe about his present life at Tenri to beat Lewis. However, the Wes­
that Geesink is invincible.
University. He has been treated terners were still in the contest
at this stage of the game and
3 “There is a chance to beat Gee~ as a royal guest.
sink if we train hard and tackle
The university had special Ja­ they tied up the game on goals
him with the conviction that he panese clothes built for him be­ by Ray Hinatsu from Ted Kaki(can be beaten,” Inokuma said. cause of his bulky size. Special no and Sam Tanaka from brother
“This is no time for us to have long futon (Japanese mattress) Tak.
an inferiority complex.’'
was also ordered for him.
However, the West could not
NOW SERVING BUSINESSMEN ’S LUNCHEONS
But the judoists who have seen
The university’s kitchen has keep pace wth the flyng EastenONLY $1.00
Geesink in action have all admit­ seen to it that he gets the best ers and the roof began to fall in
12
NOON
TO 4 P.M.
ted that he has shown great im- of food.
on them. Kitamura fired his sec­
SPECIAL ATTENTION FOB TAKEOUT ORDERS
ond goal of the afternoon with
Open Noon to 3 ctm.

Orders to Take Out
assists going to Rick Matsumoto
and
Masukawa,
and
Masukawa
Kashino & Weinberg
EM. 8-2475
131A Dundas St W., Toronto
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A netted one himself with help
Chartered Accountants
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
from Kitamura and Fujimoto to
ice the game for the East.
NOTARY PUBLIC
221 Victoria St.
Suite 303
In the third stanza Stadium
221 VICTORIA ST., TORONTO
Toronto, Ontario
Garaged
outstanding rookie, Roy
EM.
3-5002

OX.
1-3388
(Res.)
PHONE 363-7441
Umeno, went to work and notched
two goals in succession. He was
assisted on the first goal by Hi­
YOUR SHOPPING LiST
deo Higashi and Gord Ashikawa,
O SAKURA RICE
9 EGGS
while Bob Masukawa picked up
* MARUKIN SHOYO
9 SUKIYAKI MEAT
an assist on the second.
* VINEGAR
® MANJU
Then to add insult to injury
# SUGAR
0 MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
defenceman George Anzai bounc­
ed a 85-foot shot past Lewis into
By LESLIE NAKASHIMA

TORIC
OPTICAL

WELCOME JAPANESE CANADIANS

GOLDEN DEMON
CHOP SUEY HOUSE

DUNDAS UNION STOBE

EM. 4-7692

PRINTING

173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
OFFSET AND LETTERPRESS

OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHEADS
^Z/ZA /JcMi/ty^Mtti&z&nnS Vcn&c match es

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627 BAY ST., TORONTO

OFFICE
EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395

Phone 368-9768

RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
HUdaon 5-1365

A. E. McKague, Q.C.
Tokyo s largest, and leading dealer in the heart of Ginza.
a maker’s show-room (only in Tokyo), on the 2nd
^lad to send y°u a T-AX FREE PRICE LIST
and CATALOGUE at your request.

Barrister & Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO

Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.

P

OPT. DEPT. STORE ,

3-chome, Ginza, Tokyo

Tel. 535-3451/5,

Chircpiactor, Naturopath.
Rheumatism, Discs, Sciatica
Lumbago, Arthritis, Migraine
Nerve Conditions

728A St. Clair Ave. West

For Taxi Driver:

0,2 block west of Christie)

Telephone: LE. 6-8220
if no answer call — 233-3869
TORONTO

X

Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends

c

|
I

KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVEBN

I
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Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322

a

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126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto

X

©

Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties

a

Seating Capacity 240

»

s

Page 8

Saturday, January 4, 19gj

Japan Makes Auto-jack
Powered By Battery

HARAKO
KOBAYASHI

JURY PRIZE
.CAN N E S FE STIVAL
1963

THE NEW CANADIAN

automobile
TOKYO.
jack powered by the car battery
and light enough (7.5 kilograms
or 16.5 pounds) for a woman to
carry has been developed by a
Japanese company.
The firm, Imura Denko of Hi­
tachi City,- claims this is the first
such jack in the world. It will be
exported to the United States
and other countries. The Jspanese price is 9,800 yen ($27).
Powered with a small 12-voJt,
150-watt
motor, the jack will
raise as much as two tons, -which
| means it can lift all but the
| largest passenger cars.

Authorized as second class serf]
and for payment of postage in* c—;
Post Office Department, Ottawa4*

otuem

i

proprietor

>
t
*

JON ONODERA

»

T. UMEZUKI, Publisher, K r
TSUMURA,
English
SecH0Editor, KEN MORI, Japanese
Section Editor and Advertising

O‘

479 QUEEN ST. WEST
Toronto 2-B. Ont.
EMpire 6-5005

HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805
(Business)

(Residence)

>

CLASSIFIED

540 Eglinton Ave. W.
Toronto

Domestic Help Wanted

Use New Canadian Ads
For Best Results

DOMESTIC help. Live in. Japa-r
spoken. Own room. Good salarv ~
working conditions. Two small *47
ren. Write: Mrs. Mitsuko Gagnon, wi
Addington Ave., Montreal, P.

*i

PAUL Y. TOKIWA

ATTENTION NISEI!

BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
AND NOTARY PUBLIC
Millar S Alexander Bus. JA. 8-1186
Suite 901
Res. FU. 3-3545
15 King St. W.
Hamilton, Ont.

al Clearance Sale
For Limited Time Only
On Made-to-Measure Trousers

Lewis Men’s Wear

SAY IT WITH
FLOWEBS
SHARON'S FLORIST

298 Spadina Ave., Toronto

CITY-WIDE DELIVERY

ADULT

Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki

entertainment

Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
SUNDAY, JANUARY 5, 1964
10:30 A.M.—Religious School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Service
2:00 P.M.—Japanese Language Service
EVERYONE CORDIALLY INVITED

942 PAPE AVE., TORONTO

651Y0NGE ST.

JACK

WA 5 ■ 2565

Lucien C. Kurata
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH

BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
Office Hours Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO
EM. 6-3323
Bes: BO. 7-3427

for your wedding candids
home portraits
and special events

A

SUNDAY, JANUARY 5, 1964
11:30 A.M. English Language Service
11:30 A.M. Sunday Church School
The Rev. Minoru Stephan Takada, B.A., B.D.
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
701 Dovercourt Rd.. Toronto

179 East Pender VANCOUVER 4, B,C. MU. 2-4641
For Repairs On

REAL

< ► T.V. — RADIO — HI-FI

I HEM MY

91C Bathurst St.

i

22 Peterlee Crescent
Islington, Ontario
BElmont 3-3095

ESTATEiong&kami realty ltd

kami insurance agencies ltd

JAMES KAMINO
T.V. SERVICE

INSURANCE

1 article KamitakakaXa^- CYpress 9-5345

EM. 4-9913

1171 Dunlop, North Burnaby
(or leave message at AL. 5-1743)

J\agmoncl J^eong

(TORONTO)

res: HE. 3-3692

Our January Sale Is “Now On”
20% Off Regular Prices of All Giftware
Lacquerware Of All Description — Porcelain Tea Sets And Dinnerware — Table­
ware for Japanese Cuisine (Nihonshoku^ — Bamboo Trays — Plates — Ornaments

— Tableware Of Glass Or Cut Glass —Xmas Cards Both Japanese and Canadian
— Scrolls — Framed pictures (Embroider ed

or

Dolls — Flower Arrangement Accessories—

Table

painted)



Lamps

Japanese Costumed



Lamp

Shades

Of

Oriental Motif — Panelled Screens Of Silk Or Shoji Style — Cast Iron and Bronze

Statuettes and Ornaments. Kimonos, Tabis, Settas, Pilot Fountain Pens & Pencils.

ASK FOR OUR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE

MAIL ORDERS RECEIVE SPECIAL ATTENTION

PARAMOUNT GIFT SHOP
B»A«»OS»*HIS
TEL: HO. 3-7831
Stere

Open:
9

9

a.m.

a.m.

to 5 p.m. Mon.,

to

p.m.

9

Thurs.,

733 DANFORTH AVE., TORONTO
Tues., Wed.

Fri.,

Sat.

(1

Block East of Pape Ave.)