Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1965
Toronto, Ont.
Industrialists Report
jisei Medal Of
Honor Winner
fells His Story
Canadian Bizz Too
Cautious Japan
BgALLUP, NEW MEXICO. —
Kjressional Medal of Honor
Banner Hiroshi Miyamura, wellTORONTO.—A group of top-level Japanese industrialists who
resident here, remembers
toured Canada last fall say they often were approached about
^Bvidlv seeing mirages of steamforming joint ventures with Canadian businessmen—but they are
B 'tacts of pancakes oozing
less titan enthusiastic about many of the prospects.
Bth melted butter, following
A major obstacle to such partnerships, the 11-man group’s
■ie heroism for which he was
report, says, is the “conservativeness of most successful Canadian
^Braided United State’s highest
businessmen.”
“They tend to be pre-occupied with consolidating and main
Bc®tion.
taining the value of what they already have, rather than taking
Bite Korean War was on. The
a risk of starting a new venture,” the 125-page report adds.
Kinese Red armies were pushing
“They leave the field quite open to the adventurers and
United Nations forces
entrepreneurs
and will step in later to purchase stocks and de
^■juihward down the Korean
bentures
when
the business has proven to be a sure success.”
Buinsula, The Lieutenant gave
A summary of the report has
■quad leader Miyamura orders, to
been prepared by the Ontario
Kry the Chinese advance in his
department of economics, which
Kxbat sector. Miyamura’s squad
w
played host to the group when
dug in a trench, manning
TOKYO. — Japanese novelist
the industrialists visited Tor
Kree machine guns—one at each
Junichiro
Tanizaki, 79, died of
onto. The summary says the
■id of the trench and one in the
heart
failure
at his home at
report likely will influence Ja
Kiddle. He posted himself m
nearby
Yugawara
recently. He
pan
’
s
commercial
policy
toward
centre firing the middle
was one of Japan’s leading con
Canada.
Kachine gun, and had • supplied
Bimself plentifully with hand
Y. Inayama, president of Ya temporary writers.
■enades, rifles, and pistols.
wata Iron and Steel Co. and
group leader, reports a notice
■ Night had closed around his
able difference in attitude toward
Broup. Several hundred yards
Japanese business across Canada.
Kay was a tank to -whose shelVANCOUVER. — The can lain
Ber they could retreat after hold“The businessmen and the of the Japanese freighter Kochu
K off. the enemy. There was
governments
in
agricultural Maru, docked at Lapointe pier
Ken a barricade of barbed wire.
Western Canada greeted us en here, reported to police recently
Behind them through which they
thusiastically with plans for that somebody stole $.154 m
Bould wiggle through; but which
joint ventures to help them de American and Canadian currency
Bould serve to hold up the enemy.
velop more industries,” he says. from his ship.
Bs Miyamura’s squad retreated
“In
industrialized
Eastern
Bward the tank. Miyamura’s gun
Canada,
however,
people
were
Bositions commanded a good view
cautious
and
rather
sensitive
to
the hill top, so that night sky
the
prospect
of
Japanese
pene
Silhouettes of enemy soldiers as
WINDSOR. — Kenneth Akira
tration in Canadian markets.”
N.C. "Warrior Chief" Mori Visits Ojibway
■hey came over, the hill made
Yamashita,
son of
■hem visible targets.
The report notes one specific Mr. and Mrs.15-year-old
an Indian maid,
MANITO
WANING,
Ont.
—
“
There
once
was
Shige
Yamashita
■ -Then the Chinese attacked, „ shy little prairie maid!” goes a popular public school song. The request for a joint venture—a and a grade 12 student of Patter
a
■hey came over in human waves. New Canadian’s Japanese section editor, Ken Mori — on a recent Winnipeg bid to assemble cars son Collegiate in Windsor, has
KU three of Miyamura’s machine Canadian ethnic newspaper editor’s tour of Manitoulin Is.
also and trucks—and adds:
been selected as an exchange
■uns were continually firing discovers that the “shy little Indian maid’s” mother is never far
“In these durable consumer student to Sask.
Kurds as the Chinese swarmed away. Posing in front of a giant mask of the God Manitou, are goods, however, we must be
He leaves by train on August
Ker the hill. The machine gun Ojibway mother Mrs. Fisher and her two pretty daughters. They prepared for stiff competition
16th,
to experience two weeks of
one end! of Miyamura’s trench entertained the editors with Indian dances and folk tales at the from Canada’s southern neigh
life in the “wide open Prairies.”
Kent silent. He ran to see what plush Manito waning Lodge here.
bor.”
f
arid, found his man
taken off, Miyamura, returnto his own gun and went to Nisei Gillnetter Makes $1,300.00 in One Day . .
■hie other end of the trench where
other machine gun was still
pug my.
His man* called out, “It’s getpig too hot here. Let’s get the
will be more than 100,000 fish, are now,” Fraser said.
By BILL BACHOP
P outa. here!” Miyamura gave
Narukama did it despite the
STEVESTON, B.C.—Don Narukama of Steveston is only five worth over $200,000.
• ^mission to leave and feet, five inches high, but he stands tall among Fraser River salhandicap
of haying this reporter
A spokesman for the Inter
E leJ back to'his own machine
abord
his
38-foot vessel Chifishermen.
T . _ „„,, national Pacific Salmon Fish Dona.
fire was zinging mon He
netted 3,500 pounds of sockeye, worth $1,300 on July 2rai. eries Commission said the catch
bum. ®e kept firing his
Narukama and 1,000 other gillnetters hit bonanza as the for one day averaged about 300
ReEnemy figures
Cont. on P. 8.
sockeye to a boat.
gme too close. The spitting flame Quesnel iRiver sockeye run entered Frazer’s main channel.
It was a race against time. The federal fisheries department,
This represents an average
k-«fmac^n.e ^ would dishad
allowed fish to be caught for only 48 hours. _
_
. ..
catch of about 1,800 pounds,
| 5,. s.Position. He began firAll up and down the Fraser reports were coming in of similar valued about $650.
6iLlS Ies from different pocatches
—; some bigger.
.
t
Meanwhile, union- represents m the trench. When his
The federal fisheries department estimates the total catc.i atives say hundreds of “moon
led ,,Van ^ of bullets, he startlighters” — people in regular
Patois.- There was nd
TORONTO. — The Toronto
jobs who fish for gain during
reload. Then he began:
Japanese
Consulate General
their spare time—have been
band granades in every
revealed
this
week that they
lured to the Fraser trying to
F
toward the . oncoming
have
received
official word
make a quick dollar.
was a busy one-man
the
school
pulling
for
him,
he
acknowledging
the
proposed
HONOLULU. — U.S.
“And they are spoiling things' visit to Toronto of Japanese
wgs drawing second helpings in
Edwin
N.
Nakasone
recently
L
ook
enemy barely a few
for the commercial fishermen
Prince and Princess Mikasa.
has
a?^ about to overrun the oath of office to become the the chow lines and eating canciy who have not had a very good
between
meals,
to
no
avail
as
The
royal couple will be tour
h? ran. back, but in newest second lieutenant in the the Day arrived and his mass season this year,” said Homer
ing
Canada
during September
and
je, rushed into his - own Hawaii National Guard,
Stevens, secretary-treasurer of
and
October.
graduated
without
him.
Redback The^'cb^ ™ thereby dangles this tale.
the United Fishermen and Allied
They will visit the Nipponia
With a determination
more Workers’ Union.
The 20-year-old had been unsmarmed
c 1n e s e
Home and interview Japanese
dergoing
strenuous
officers
’
can
than
equal
to
the
situation,
ja
aover
and passed
Another Steveston fisherman,
Canadian pioneers. A welcome
hr stm ur^ wire. Miyamura didate school training for the kasone took a week’s leave from Tod
Sakamoto, caught an esti
is being planned by the local
««^Vaybreak a ®“se past two years, passing all re his civilian job and stayed home
mated $1,500 worth of sockeye
Japanese Canadian communi
quirements
but
one
as
gradua
drinking
water,
malts,
vitamins,
assured
cam® upon him and
in six hours.
ty.
be
English he would tion day approached. That “one_ and devouring bananas whue
Narukama’s big catch didn’t
The royal couple will be
pertained to his weight
^ taking four to six meals per cay
surprise Brian Fraser, manager
accompanied
by former Van
pounds.
As
anyone
knows
wno
the
official
aI°ag with other
Six days after
of
Nelson
Bros.
Fisheries
Ltd.
couver
Consul
General, Mr.
has
had
two
years
’
officers
’
can
was 'taken prisoner.
- if
graduation day, an elated
cannery.
Noboru
Imajo,
who is now
they were taken oh didate training, one needs, a bloated—Nakasone
105
made
serving
in
the
Imperial
House
minimum
of
>103
—
pounds
t
iai
“
Don
knows
his
business
—
^th
Ior
almost
a
for almost a
pounds took his oath shortly he’ll hit fish even when they
hold.
is
—
to
graduate.
"e to the Manchurian
With family, friends, fehow thereafter, and—presumably
are not running as good as they
Death Of Tanizaki
Ship Capt. Robbed
Sansei To Sask
J.C. Highboaters Cashing In On Frazer Salmon Bonanza
Royal Couple .
To Visit Toronto
|where Was Charles Atlas?
(Cont, on Pag® 8)
candidates and even the cooks at. fell off his banana diet.
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1965
Toronto, Ont.
Industrialists Report
jisei Medal Of
Honor Winner
fells His Story
Canadian Bizz Too
Cautious Japan
BgALLUP, NEW MEXICO. —
Kjressional Medal of Honor
Banner Hiroshi Miyamura, wellTORONTO.—A group of top-level Japanese industrialists who
resident here, remembers
toured Canada last fall say they often were approached about
^Bvidlv seeing mirages of steamforming joint ventures with Canadian businessmen—but they are
B 'tacts of pancakes oozing
less titan enthusiastic about many of the prospects.
Bth melted butter, following
A major obstacle to such partnerships, the 11-man group’s
■ie heroism for which he was
report, says, is the “conservativeness of most successful Canadian
^Braided United State’s highest
businessmen.”
“They tend to be pre-occupied with consolidating and main
Bc®tion.
taining the value of what they already have, rather than taking
Bite Korean War was on. The
a risk of starting a new venture,” the 125-page report adds.
Kinese Red armies were pushing
“They leave the field quite open to the adventurers and
United Nations forces
entrepreneurs
and will step in later to purchase stocks and de
^■juihward down the Korean
bentures
when
the business has proven to be a sure success.”
Buinsula, The Lieutenant gave
A summary of the report has
■quad leader Miyamura orders, to
been prepared by the Ontario
Kry the Chinese advance in his
department of economics, which
Kxbat sector. Miyamura’s squad
w
played host to the group when
dug in a trench, manning
TOKYO. — Japanese novelist
the industrialists visited Tor
Kree machine guns—one at each
Junichiro
Tanizaki, 79, died of
onto. The summary says the
■id of the trench and one in the
heart
failure
at his home at
report likely will influence Ja
Kiddle. He posted himself m
nearby
Yugawara
recently. He
pan
’
s
commercial
policy
toward
centre firing the middle
was one of Japan’s leading con
Canada.
Kachine gun, and had • supplied
Bimself plentifully with hand
Y. Inayama, president of Ya temporary writers.
■enades, rifles, and pistols.
wata Iron and Steel Co. and
group leader, reports a notice
■ Night had closed around his
able difference in attitude toward
Broup. Several hundred yards
Japanese business across Canada.
Kay was a tank to -whose shelVANCOUVER. — The can lain
Ber they could retreat after hold“The businessmen and the of the Japanese freighter Kochu
K off. the enemy. There was
governments
in
agricultural Maru, docked at Lapointe pier
Ken a barricade of barbed wire.
Western Canada greeted us en here, reported to police recently
Behind them through which they
thusiastically with plans for that somebody stole $.154 m
Bould wiggle through; but which
joint ventures to help them de American and Canadian currency
Bould serve to hold up the enemy.
velop more industries,” he says. from his ship.
Bs Miyamura’s squad retreated
“In
industrialized
Eastern
Bward the tank. Miyamura’s gun
Canada,
however,
people
were
Bositions commanded a good view
cautious
and
rather
sensitive
to
the hill top, so that night sky
the
prospect
of
Japanese
pene
Silhouettes of enemy soldiers as
WINDSOR. — Kenneth Akira
tration in Canadian markets.”
N.C. "Warrior Chief" Mori Visits Ojibway
■hey came over, the hill made
Yamashita,
son of
■hem visible targets.
The report notes one specific Mr. and Mrs.15-year-old
an Indian maid,
MANITO
WANING,
Ont.
—
“
There
once
was
Shige
Yamashita
■ -Then the Chinese attacked, „ shy little prairie maid!” goes a popular public school song. The request for a joint venture—a and a grade 12 student of Patter
a
■hey came over in human waves. New Canadian’s Japanese section editor, Ken Mori — on a recent Winnipeg bid to assemble cars son Collegiate in Windsor, has
KU three of Miyamura’s machine Canadian ethnic newspaper editor’s tour of Manitoulin Is.
also and trucks—and adds:
been selected as an exchange
■uns were continually firing discovers that the “shy little Indian maid’s” mother is never far
“In these durable consumer student to Sask.
Kurds as the Chinese swarmed away. Posing in front of a giant mask of the God Manitou, are goods, however, we must be
He leaves by train on August
Ker the hill. The machine gun Ojibway mother Mrs. Fisher and her two pretty daughters. They prepared for stiff competition
16th,
to experience two weeks of
one end! of Miyamura’s trench entertained the editors with Indian dances and folk tales at the from Canada’s southern neigh
life in the “wide open Prairies.”
Kent silent. He ran to see what plush Manito waning Lodge here.
bor.”
f
arid, found his man
taken off, Miyamura, returnto his own gun and went to Nisei Gillnetter Makes $1,300.00 in One Day . .
■hie other end of the trench where
other machine gun was still
pug my.
His man* called out, “It’s getpig too hot here. Let’s get the
will be more than 100,000 fish, are now,” Fraser said.
By BILL BACHOP
P outa. here!” Miyamura gave
Narukama did it despite the
STEVESTON, B.C.—Don Narukama of Steveston is only five worth over $200,000.
• ^mission to leave and feet, five inches high, but he stands tall among Fraser River salhandicap
of haying this reporter
A spokesman for the Inter
E leJ back to'his own machine
abord
his
38-foot vessel Chifishermen.
T . _ „„,, national Pacific Salmon Fish Dona.
fire was zinging mon He
netted 3,500 pounds of sockeye, worth $1,300 on July 2rai. eries Commission said the catch
bum. ®e kept firing his
Narukama and 1,000 other gillnetters hit bonanza as the for one day averaged about 300
ReEnemy figures
Cont. on P. 8.
sockeye to a boat.
gme too close. The spitting flame Quesnel iRiver sockeye run entered Frazer’s main channel.
It was a race against time. The federal fisheries department,
This represents an average
k-«fmac^n.e ^ would dishad
allowed fish to be caught for only 48 hours. _
_
. ..
catch of about 1,800 pounds,
| 5,. s.Position. He began firAll up and down the Fraser reports were coming in of similar valued about $650.
6iLlS Ies from different pocatches
—; some bigger.
.
t
Meanwhile, union- represents m the trench. When his
The federal fisheries department estimates the total catc.i atives say hundreds of “moon
led ,,Van ^ of bullets, he startlighters” — people in regular
Patois.- There was nd
TORONTO. — The Toronto
jobs who fish for gain during
reload. Then he began:
Japanese
Consulate General
their spare time—have been
band granades in every
revealed
this
week that they
lured to the Fraser trying to
F
toward the . oncoming
have
received
official word
make a quick dollar.
was a busy one-man
the
school
pulling
for
him,
he
acknowledging
the
proposed
HONOLULU. — U.S.
“And they are spoiling things' visit to Toronto of Japanese
wgs drawing second helpings in
Edwin
N.
Nakasone
recently
L
ook
enemy barely a few
for the commercial fishermen
Prince and Princess Mikasa.
has
a?^ about to overrun the oath of office to become the the chow lines and eating canciy who have not had a very good
between
meals,
to
no
avail
as
The
royal couple will be tour
h? ran. back, but in newest second lieutenant in the the Day arrived and his mass season this year,” said Homer
ing
Canada
during September
and
je, rushed into his - own Hawaii National Guard,
Stevens, secretary-treasurer of
and
October.
graduated
without
him.
Redback The^'cb^ ™ thereby dangles this tale.
the United Fishermen and Allied
They will visit the Nipponia
With a determination
more Workers’ Union.
The 20-year-old had been unsmarmed
c 1n e s e
Home and interview Japanese
dergoing
strenuous
officers
’
can
than
equal
to
the
situation,
ja
aover
and passed
Another Steveston fisherman,
Canadian pioneers. A welcome
hr stm ur^ wire. Miyamura didate school training for the kasone took a week’s leave from Tod
Sakamoto, caught an esti
is being planned by the local
««^Vaybreak a ®“se past two years, passing all re his civilian job and stayed home
mated $1,500 worth of sockeye
Japanese Canadian communi
quirements
but
one
as
gradua
drinking
water,
malts,
vitamins,
assured
cam® upon him and
in six hours.
ty.
be
English he would tion day approached. That “one_ and devouring bananas whue
Narukama’s big catch didn’t
The royal couple will be
pertained to his weight
^ taking four to six meals per cay
surprise Brian Fraser, manager
accompanied
by former Van
pounds.
As
anyone
knows
wno
the
official
aI°ag with other
Six days after
of
Nelson
Bros.
Fisheries
Ltd.
couver
Consul
General, Mr.
has
had
two
years
’
officers
’
can
was 'taken prisoner.
- if
graduation day, an elated
cannery.
Noboru
Imajo,
who is now
they were taken oh didate training, one needs, a bloated—Nakasone
105
made
serving
in
the
Imperial
House
minimum
of
>103
—
pounds
t
iai
“
Don
knows
his
business
—
^th
Ior
almost
a
for almost a
pounds took his oath shortly he’ll hit fish even when they
hold.
is
—
to
graduate.
"e to the Manchurian
With family, friends, fehow thereafter, and—presumably
are not running as good as they
Death Of Tanizaki
Ship Capt. Robbed
Sansei To Sask
J.C. Highboaters Cashing In On Frazer Salmon Bonanza
Royal Couple .
To Visit Toronto
|where Was Charles Atlas?
(Cont, on Pag® 8)
candidates and even the cooks at. fell off his banana diet.
Page 2
T Of Japan’s 8 Top JudokasPicgi
-^Brazil World Championshin m
TOKYO.—Eight judokas from Japan’s
I
T
. „
■
“
judokas from Japan’s cream-I Many of Jamn’c +
• , 1
of-the-crop were selected this week at a special Inokuma would m^ r d°-^^ ^ hoi
^U1“t t° represent Nippon at the Fourth pics. However " " Geesink ^ tha^.
his senior. Akfo^kJ0'’1’’
Worla Judo On ampionships to be held at Rio De | chosen arid conseoup
aquently defeay l»*g
.Janeiro from October 14th to 20th.
sequendy
rT$RONTO. — Japanese Cana kata
The
“
Kuma
Unlimited Weight
dian Golf Club of Toronto he’d Vest'Ball Match plav: M Macalled, is the youngoS1“
ls ^5
its ’July 11th Tournament at kimoto—G. Higashi winner over )1
1S T°ky° O yEipic Heavyweight Gold Medal All Japan Judo ch^XV ^ ^
Rouge Hill Golf Course with t^e
W. Kimura—D. Miwa will meet Wmner’ the ^'eat Isao Inokuma, 5th-dan. He has twice. This 27-year-old fe®
^
tollowing results:
D.
Kimura—S
Ashikawa who expressed high hopes of meeting the current
“A” Flight.
” Z V“~^Z !±^1^«^ J-om HoUaS gave up judo because of a serious”i> w ’
: J" Kekoda (80-12)
®fe«ll weight tZs r ’
*• Hatanaka (79-10) 69; H August 8th.
“
~
——-----————————
®s De$j i
-Nakamura (18-9) 69; J Rogers “B” Flight.
IT
1
rx
r
n m
niques include his
(78-8) 70; S. Baba (81”11)
, mage and taiotoshi
.^^Oross: D. Kimura, 75: H. 67"oZmit^d^^
Accompanying him
i^b 75; W. Kimura, 76; S. Taclass will be tou-h
< 4th-dau.
“h ^
I
Japanese Canadian Golf Club
Tournament Action In Full Swing
Soft-ball Tourney ”
Dutch Judo Group «) S16) 71; J-Shi=etomi (ss- olated ror September 4&5
Tn the heav
S1:
TORONTO, .The Second Annual Labor Dav
T
Vweig-ht daT. Kataoka, 81; M. Mori, 84; L ment sponsored bv the Canadian
ji
la2'abe, 86.
- - I slated for Sept. 4th X^”
AtUet“ Actuation is AUSakaguchi,
Japan
Tth-dan,1 b CD
Again this
this year
year the
ihp snoinre
hampion. Will C
Best. Ball: M.‘ Fukumoto—M.
Again
X0?.6311^311 over T. Kawabe—C. I Kew Gardens baseball ground's Arran^ e games
. at the ?ete for world Judo laurel
best technic is ^
McDowell will meet S. Ikeda__ ^dth the city parks denai'tiiiprd
e?1GL7tS
Sh*|?etpnu who were winners]
The tournament dance will be held^
f
°/ T Takeshi Koga, one
Accompanying him in
^o^ta.
Plural Centre on Saturday evening Sept ^
top JU<1° men, indi ‘‘C’’r F^
same
division win Wa.
1 etab te^K^
Chatham
cated willingness recently in actsunaga, 5th-dan.
TnHnnr ?n offer from the Dutch
Judo federation to be its coach J \?-6J k Kutsukake (86-19) 67; At least two Torontofe te °“ '^te the “lament,
The middleweight class J,
sible
team
from
Hamiltote
°
KP
"
W
’
alon
S
with
*
P«over a two-year stretch.
(92-24) 68’ A Havau3’ who was eliminated by
world judo champion Anton Gee- -U) (0; Al. ivlorivama (90-20) 70 tournament.. Se abetter ot ItnX Wlshing..to enter this yearns 1 okyo Olympic Gold Medal
^ President of ner, Isao Okano, 4th-dan
sin‘\ oi the Netherlands in the
Low Gross: F. Wakida, 84; K the CJAA, Mr. Allan MMita-.PPq?m'
Sec.-Treas.,
Mr.
Ke
“
“
22,
M,
h
X'
semi-finals of the 1961 world Kagawa, 87; B. Nozaki, 88- T
yeai-old Okano’s favorite't
’
championships at Paris, said he Iwai, 89.
niques are seoinage and oso
cou d not make his decision im^eSJ Kall: H. Kawaguchi—D.
ae abs°tate dead-- kari.
lately because he would have Kutsukake -winners over G NiAccompanying Mm in the sa
with his employer,
Masukawa will meet F.
£k€: ^a"ata Steel Works, and of ) akida S.. Sora -who won over
class will be Kenichi Yaman
ficials of the Japan Judo federa ■U. A’cLKciniUrP-------T PniT77»n-i,«
3rd-dan.
tion.
TORONTO. _ M1. Mas TsuAugust Sth is the date for ^he
Hirofumi Matsuda, Srd-dan,
li. a telephone statement from'
v ‘ J°ld a Srd-dan rank
* ournament. Please note
of
Can
adian
Ka
Japan’s south- that Summer Rules will be en rate this week revealed that a fiom Mr. Tsuruoka. He advanc• top seoinage man, will be repi
1S an9’ Koga said the forced for this Tournament. If I,0'1"’®! student, ,a Bob Dalegleish ed only as far as a 3rd-kyu sented in the Lightweight di
Ohm /^°in^he, Ha^ue of the
has Been parading across the Green Belt.
sion. He will be backed up
Dutch .federation’s decision came any golfers are in doubt about
nJ11’, Woodhouse revealed that
their starting time please get in £?ry a<ja karate instructor
Hiroshi Minatoya, 3rd-dan, whi
Dalegleish had presented a. Srdto ^lu because
“A” W* Kimura, WA. I holding a 3rd-dan Black Belt de dan certificate to him supposed specialities include uchimata
hrd -CH no development
°vS‘ Tabata, WA. 1-2719. gree supposedly awarded by Air ly signed by Air. Tsuruoka when osotokari.
since Geesink mentioned the
Nozaki, LA. 5-7133. “C”| Isuruoka.
coaching- proposition to him
' "
Noticeably missing in
Latest jarring note came from acquiring the job.
r^
0
^"
13’ CH> 94525 °r F. Wa
fete te w oi5'mpic ^»«
The
highest
award
Air.
Tsuru
lightweight group is Tok
kida,
PL.
7-3054.
;railc°uv^ where Mr. L. W oka has given is the 2nd-dan and
last October.
Brampton Brick? W codhouse, who operates the ?k™l t0 “'• Shane Higashi Olympic Gold Medal winner, T
r° 'eve °f ^e^ Defence at 3420
kehide Nakatani.
SnIbleM Street in Vancouver or Toronto.
Canada’s team to the 4th Woe
te
Tsuruoka that the nJ^.ma^aJ art men and dojo
wners
should
be
warned
that
Championships include Don
£
Dalegleish was
tt hSho!0/'6!^ for niisconduct Dalegleish — who is slim, 6 feet Rogers, 4th-dan; Mike Johns
. inch with tatoos on his chest —S r
»Snd?nt®. and company tyo11^ ^^^ of the Tsuruoka 1st-dan; and Pat Bolger, is
“c™c^ Dalegleish could not be S ?lDaJO’ the A11 Japan Kadan.
r found.
aildof iSthose
n0t
5uru^a wishes to an- grSp? ^ from any
*KOM 11:30 A.M Tn A P xr
•
Bob Dalegleish vias
'
It is a good policy to
For Reserved “AY
,
* LT w
Tsuruoka Ka“All dojo owners, should Be'
have the RIGHT POLICY
the AI1 JapanTake Out Service
131A Dundas St.
^ National Karate
I Kai ate Association some years
Consult
EM. 8-2475
Toronto 2,
^®so“atl°n cannot be.responsiBle
11 ago
for
conduct
unbecomim
a martial art man’’. PalegFeish I Sd T.^^
°f Dale^leish,”
WALES and DUNCAN
Ontario
11:30 A.M. TO
A Ar
SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 1A.M.
INSURANCE AGENTS
Wants Japanese
For Head Coach
Dojos Warned Of Phony Karate Sensei
^ GOLDEN DRAGON
Chop Suey House
2
I “SaSSs”
3
Japanese "Rog Lolling" Champs Visiting Canada
DUNDAS UNION STORE
TO7JE SHOPPING LEST
S SAIUBA rice
9 marukin sho yd
• VINEGAR
• SUGAR
• EGGS
• sukiyaki meat
• MANJU
• MANY varieties of aharb
EM. 4-7692
173 DUNDAS STHEET WEST, TORONTO
SMALL
shoe sizes
new shoes for
Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 ud to 14
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Phoae EE. 1-1931, Toront<)
C.O-D. orders from const to coast
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
By AL SHEEHAN
8 ?w V°? hs ,ciwvn last May
aH?^-1 Nakajima is .a nation’ at y>> deJeating three contestants'
al Jiero in Japan.
Lop-Pnl^11^^ Friendship
Will It®4 so.that his marriage kvd’^ M11-^
in T<>YuL Be carried on television ^°s Meiji Shrine Pool.
throughout that countiy.
The event was staged and
^aSe, you haven’t heard of
Insurance
Takaaki, he is the log-rollii^ a’nFX by C“^ Me
Commeice department in-’
champion of Japan.
°
lo^V^^^K tric-k an<> ^ncy connection with the sixth Tokyo’
7 J
r°.hng champions
Hitoshi International Trade Fair.
Adaclu -and Tsutomu Ito Sa
ENTER CONTEST
Sr ”^'" VancouUi^:
Office—783-4261
235
and
Ito
’
S5.:’n.5e i'™^ 1?. the world
X ’
hl^n invited by the
Res.—be. 1-0863
, in HlywXrd, wT
ng C°nteSt Canadian government to enter
Those In Toll Area
consin°rld ^n^T’ioiisbip in Wis-’
Included in the party f
Call—RO 6-3840
- Tokyo were 10 Japanese bus?
messmen - TakaaS che£
the « fair
[LSdl’5
plan *° insPect S . ^K-roIlmg demonstraions
-by WOrld champion Jube
: ’here d
Umber industry while
Wickheim, of Sooke, EC and
fc^T' ^ « t^ Can”d
TTie three losr birlpTQ’
uidjx pavilion.
the^Caiia^111^ S Performance,
1 S&^Se SS
°f its ^end- to^ S fete?
S’ ^lade ana travel program that- L - t /r^t0 SO mucn
with Japan.
Si” fe Personal congratulations
to them.
ON TELEVISION
Ja^ x ??^ was ^^ new to I
mcE/L.Ob
typ^ °f logs used ■ ithe trio said Toi- i? ,r for byP the
kear^’ k
Takaaki, the 26- The hTonCanadian brothers- were.
';Snk
champ from Nagova
will be married when he returns’
,^ iMm ^
tt
AGENCY
fo? thrtafef^53" «P«ialIy
'said? ^al^H^8^0"’" he
Office.— 3101 Bathurst a
national h^ 1S OM of « japSr sz“ i?« |
Phone: 783-4261
Mickey S. Sato
j XS y’aS^,^
Gertrude Urate
championships, official
’
Home phone: HL 7'89^
-^Brazil World Championshin m
TOKYO.—Eight judokas from Japan’s
I
T
. „
■
“
judokas from Japan’s cream-I Many of Jamn’c +
• , 1
of-the-crop were selected this week at a special Inokuma would m^ r d°-^^ ^ hoi
^U1“t t° represent Nippon at the Fourth pics. However " " Geesink ^ tha^.
his senior. Akfo^kJ0'’1’’
Worla Judo On ampionships to be held at Rio De | chosen arid conseoup
aquently defeay l»*g
.Janeiro from October 14th to 20th.
sequendy
rT$RONTO. — Japanese Cana kata
The
“
Kuma
Unlimited Weight
dian Golf Club of Toronto he’d Vest'Ball Match plav: M Macalled, is the youngoS1“
ls ^5
its ’July 11th Tournament at kimoto—G. Higashi winner over )1
1S T°ky° O yEipic Heavyweight Gold Medal All Japan Judo ch^XV ^ ^
Rouge Hill Golf Course with t^e
W. Kimura—D. Miwa will meet Wmner’ the ^'eat Isao Inokuma, 5th-dan. He has twice. This 27-year-old fe®
^
tollowing results:
D.
Kimura—S
Ashikawa who expressed high hopes of meeting the current
“A” Flight.
” Z V“~^Z !±^1^«^ J-om HoUaS gave up judo because of a serious”i> w ’
: J" Kekoda (80-12)
®fe«ll weight tZs r ’
*• Hatanaka (79-10) 69; H August 8th.
“
~
——-----————————
®s De$j i
-Nakamura (18-9) 69; J Rogers “B” Flight.
IT
1
rx
r
n m
niques include his
(78-8) 70; S. Baba (81”11)
, mage and taiotoshi
.^^Oross: D. Kimura, 75: H. 67"oZmit^d^^
Accompanying him
i^b 75; W. Kimura, 76; S. Taclass will be tou-h
< 4th-dau.
“h ^
I
Japanese Canadian Golf Club
Tournament Action In Full Swing
Soft-ball Tourney ”
Dutch Judo Group «) S16) 71; J-Shi=etomi (ss- olated ror September 4&5
Tn the heav
S1:
TORONTO, .The Second Annual Labor Dav
T
Vweig-ht daT. Kataoka, 81; M. Mori, 84; L ment sponsored bv the Canadian
ji
la2'abe, 86.
- - I slated for Sept. 4th X^”
AtUet“ Actuation is AUSakaguchi,
Japan
Tth-dan,1 b CD
Again this
this year
year the
ihp snoinre
hampion. Will C
Best. Ball: M.‘ Fukumoto—M.
Again
X0?.6311^311 over T. Kawabe—C. I Kew Gardens baseball ground's Arran^ e games
. at the ?ete for world Judo laurel
best technic is ^
McDowell will meet S. Ikeda__ ^dth the city parks denai'tiiiprd
e?1GL7tS
Sh*|?etpnu who were winners]
The tournament dance will be held^
f
°/ T Takeshi Koga, one
Accompanying him in
^o^ta.
Plural Centre on Saturday evening Sept ^
top JU<1° men, indi ‘‘C’’r F^
same
division win Wa.
1 etab te^K^
Chatham
cated willingness recently in actsunaga, 5th-dan.
TnHnnr ?n offer from the Dutch
Judo federation to be its coach J \?-6J k Kutsukake (86-19) 67; At least two Torontofe te °“ '^te the “lament,
The middleweight class J,
sible
team
from
Hamiltote
°
KP
"
W
’
alon
S
with
*
P«over a two-year stretch.
(92-24) 68’ A Havau3’ who was eliminated by
world judo champion Anton Gee- -U) (0; Al. ivlorivama (90-20) 70 tournament.. Se abetter ot ItnX Wlshing..to enter this yearns 1 okyo Olympic Gold Medal
^ President of ner, Isao Okano, 4th-dan
sin‘\ oi the Netherlands in the
Low Gross: F. Wakida, 84; K the CJAA, Mr. Allan MMita-.PPq?m'
Sec.-Treas.,
Mr.
Ke
“
“
22,
M,
h
X'
semi-finals of the 1961 world Kagawa, 87; B. Nozaki, 88- T
yeai-old Okano’s favorite't
’
championships at Paris, said he Iwai, 89.
niques are seoinage and oso
cou d not make his decision im^eSJ Kall: H. Kawaguchi—D.
ae abs°tate dead-- kari.
lately because he would have Kutsukake -winners over G NiAccompanying Mm in the sa
with his employer,
Masukawa will meet F.
£k€: ^a"ata Steel Works, and of ) akida S.. Sora -who won over
class will be Kenichi Yaman
ficials of the Japan Judo federa ■U. A’cLKciniUrP-------T PniT77»n-i,«
3rd-dan.
tion.
TORONTO. _ M1. Mas TsuAugust Sth is the date for ^he
Hirofumi Matsuda, Srd-dan,
li. a telephone statement from'
v ‘ J°ld a Srd-dan rank
* ournament. Please note
of
Can
adian
Ka
Japan’s south- that Summer Rules will be en rate this week revealed that a fiom Mr. Tsuruoka. He advanc• top seoinage man, will be repi
1S an9’ Koga said the forced for this Tournament. If I,0'1"’®! student, ,a Bob Dalegleish ed only as far as a 3rd-kyu sented in the Lightweight di
Ohm /^°in^he, Ha^ue of the
has Been parading across the Green Belt.
sion. He will be backed up
Dutch .federation’s decision came any golfers are in doubt about
nJ11’, Woodhouse revealed that
their starting time please get in £?ry a<ja karate instructor
Hiroshi Minatoya, 3rd-dan, whi
Dalegleish had presented a. Srdto ^lu because
“A” W* Kimura, WA. I holding a 3rd-dan Black Belt de dan certificate to him supposed specialities include uchimata
hrd -CH no development
°vS‘ Tabata, WA. 1-2719. gree supposedly awarded by Air ly signed by Air. Tsuruoka when osotokari.
since Geesink mentioned the
Nozaki, LA. 5-7133. “C”| Isuruoka.
coaching- proposition to him
' "
Noticeably missing in
Latest jarring note came from acquiring the job.
r^
0
^"
13’ CH> 94525 °r F. Wa
fete te w oi5'mpic ^»«
The
highest
award
Air.
Tsuru
lightweight group is Tok
kida,
PL.
7-3054.
;railc°uv^ where Mr. L. W oka has given is the 2nd-dan and
last October.
Brampton Brick? W codhouse, who operates the ?k™l t0 “'• Shane Higashi Olympic Gold Medal winner, T
r° 'eve °f ^e^ Defence at 3420
kehide Nakatani.
SnIbleM Street in Vancouver or Toronto.
Canada’s team to the 4th Woe
te
Tsuruoka that the nJ^.ma^aJ art men and dojo
wners
should
be
warned
that
Championships include Don
£
Dalegleish was
tt hSho!0/'6!^ for niisconduct Dalegleish — who is slim, 6 feet Rogers, 4th-dan; Mike Johns
. inch with tatoos on his chest —S r
»Snd?nt®. and company tyo11^ ^^^ of the Tsuruoka 1st-dan; and Pat Bolger, is
“c™c^ Dalegleish could not be S ?lDaJO’ the A11 Japan Kadan.
r found.
aildof iSthose
n0t
5uru^a wishes to an- grSp? ^ from any
*KOM 11:30 A.M Tn A P xr
•
Bob Dalegleish vias
'
It is a good policy to
For Reserved “AY
,
* LT w
Tsuruoka Ka“All dojo owners, should Be'
have the RIGHT POLICY
the AI1 JapanTake Out Service
131A Dundas St.
^ National Karate
I Kai ate Association some years
Consult
EM. 8-2475
Toronto 2,
^®so“atl°n cannot be.responsiBle
11 ago
for
conduct
unbecomim
a martial art man’’. PalegFeish I Sd T.^^
°f Dale^leish,”
WALES and DUNCAN
Ontario
11:30 A.M. TO
A Ar
SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 1A.M.
INSURANCE AGENTS
Wants Japanese
For Head Coach
Dojos Warned Of Phony Karate Sensei
^ GOLDEN DRAGON
Chop Suey House
2
I “SaSSs”
3
Japanese "Rog Lolling" Champs Visiting Canada
DUNDAS UNION STORE
TO7JE SHOPPING LEST
S SAIUBA rice
9 marukin sho yd
• VINEGAR
• SUGAR
• EGGS
• sukiyaki meat
• MANJU
• MANY varieties of aharb
EM. 4-7692
173 DUNDAS STHEET WEST, TORONTO
SMALL
shoe sizes
new shoes for
Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 ud to 14
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Phoae EE. 1-1931, Toront<)
C.O-D. orders from const to coast
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
By AL SHEEHAN
8 ?w V°? hs ,ciwvn last May
aH?^-1 Nakajima is .a nation’ at y>> deJeating three contestants'
al Jiero in Japan.
Lop-Pnl^11^^ Friendship
Will It®4 so.that his marriage kvd’^ M11-^
in T<>YuL Be carried on television ^°s Meiji Shrine Pool.
throughout that countiy.
The event was staged and
^aSe, you haven’t heard of
Insurance
Takaaki, he is the log-rollii^ a’nFX by C“^ Me
Commeice department in-’
champion of Japan.
°
lo^V^^^K tric-k an<> ^ncy connection with the sixth Tokyo’
7 J
r°.hng champions
Hitoshi International Trade Fair.
Adaclu -and Tsutomu Ito Sa
ENTER CONTEST
Sr ”^'" VancouUi^:
Office—783-4261
235
and
Ito
’
S5.:’n.5e i'™^ 1?. the world
X ’
hl^n invited by the
Res.—be. 1-0863
, in HlywXrd, wT
ng C°nteSt Canadian government to enter
Those In Toll Area
consin°rld ^n^T’ioiisbip in Wis-’
Included in the party f
Call—RO 6-3840
- Tokyo were 10 Japanese bus?
messmen - TakaaS che£
the « fair
[LSdl’5
plan *° insPect S . ^K-roIlmg demonstraions
-by WOrld champion Jube
: ’here d
Umber industry while
Wickheim, of Sooke, EC and
fc^T' ^ « t^ Can”d
TTie three losr birlpTQ’
uidjx pavilion.
the^Caiia^111^ S Performance,
1 S&^Se SS
°f its ^end- to^ S fete?
S’ ^lade ana travel program that- L - t /r^t0 SO mucn
with Japan.
Si” fe Personal congratulations
to them.
ON TELEVISION
Ja^ x ??^ was ^^ new to I
mcE/L.Ob
typ^ °f logs used ■ ithe trio said Toi- i? ,r for byP the
kear^’ k
Takaaki, the 26- The hTonCanadian brothers- were.
';Snk
champ from Nagova
will be married when he returns’
,^ iMm ^
tt
AGENCY
fo? thrtafef^53" «P«ialIy
'said? ^al^H^8^0"’" he
Office.— 3101 Bathurst a
national h^ 1S OM of « japSr sz“ i?« |
Phone: 783-4261
Mickey S. Sato
j XS y’aS^,^
Gertrude Urate
championships, official
’
Home phone: HL 7'89^
Page 3
kr August X, 1965
NEW
3
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^ IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
W. K. GARDENS
Crown Life Insurance Co
Authorized Agent for All AItUm
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
Frank G. Yada
AUTHORIZED AGENT FOB
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquete
P
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1550 West Georgia St.
Vancouver, B.C.
NEW
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W. K. GARDENS
Crown Life Insurance Co
Authorized Agent for All AItUm
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
Frank G. Yada
AUTHORIZED AGENT FOB
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquete
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1550 West Georgia St.
Vancouver, B.C.
Page 4
"age 4
Saturd ay, August 7
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Page 7
S^n-day, August 7, 1965
Pa^e 7
Dates and Soinas | v^sanu lUQuy I rips
Personal Notes Across Canada
Light Fantastic In
Manitoba JCCA Picnic Commands Rain To Stop Watusi & Frug Stylg Births
Marriages
WINNIPEG, Man.—The min stopped long enough to give the
By STUART GRIFFIN
OTTAh A. — Dr. and Mrs.
simual Manitoba JCCA Picnic some sunshine on Julv 25th. Am
BABA-FUJIMOTO
tendance comparable to last year came out to enjov the race’
i
^^^ traditional -Roy S. Yamasaki (nee Miye Fu
TORONTO. — The Toronto
geisha girl has grown taller and jimoto) are happy to announce
food entertainment, games, and other picnic fun.
Buddhist Church on July 17th,
Jminier,
The
kimono
is
still
de
the
birth
of
a
daughter.
Jamie
The Manitoba JCCA wishes to thank all those who attended
196o was the setting for the
heloed out and especially all the kind donors. First prize of a iigueur, but the once hiu-1 Igth I Norine, a sister for Sheri Deny- marriage of Miss Gloria Hamahair is not only bobbed but i se, on July 11. 1965 at the Otta
■ Polaroid camera was won by Mr. C. Teranishi of Newman Street
ko Baba, daughter of Mr. and
tinted.
And the habits of emm- wa General Hospital.
L Winnipeg.
Mrs.
Sadajiro Baba of Toronto,
somng only the lower lip "and
to
Mr.
Sachi Sumio Fujimoto,
? k^e^ng the Iower row of
CHANGE OF ADDRESS
soil
ot
Mr.
and Mrs. Shigetaro
*
*
*
teeth have gone too. Today’s
Fujimoto
also
of Toronto. The
geisha would laugh if you called
TORONTO. — Mr. and Mr
ceremony
was
officiated
by the
Late Nisei Artist Kiyo Fujiwaras Paintings Hang tnese
‘‘beauty-mark:
Dick Tsuruda, and mother Mr
Ishiuna.
Reception
TORONTO—An informal showing of paintings by the late . Geishas, meaning accomplish- K. Tsuruda, formerly of 35 Rown- was hold :
the Golden Mile
Toronto Nisei artiso, Kiyoshi (Kayo) Fujiwara will be shown at the ed persons still qua m.ck on . tree Avenue. Toronto, wish to j Restaurant.
their heels on the rice-straw
Brush and Palette Gallery, 2587 Yong-e- Street in Toronto.
mats, hands- folded gently on1। announce their new .address as 1 The couple left for a honey
moon to United States.
A sports car fan, Mr. Fujiwara -was killed last year in a
their silken laps. But when thev,
Marblehead Road in Weston
; head-on collision.
..
.
rise it is to the beat of the tran- Ontario.
Mr. Don Burnham, of the Brush and Palette Gallery, has sistor radio, not to the old haunt
kindly donated space for this first showing of a few of Kivo’s ing hand-drum and flute notes:
paintings.
.
;
and when they dance it is not
The paintings on display at this time have been loaned to solo to the classical Four Seasons ,'
the Gallery by Mrs. A. Fujiwara, Kiyo's mother, and also by of the Wistaria Maiden, but to ’
1
friends of Kiyo, who were closely acquainted with him through the cha cha cha, twist, frug or
tennis and skiing.
F
6 Watusi — not alone or with
Diamonds A iWatches
The Gallery is open till 8 p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays another geisha, but with anv.
Watch & Jewellery Repair
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
I
till 9 p.m. on Thursdays and Fridays, and till 6 p.m. on Saturday. ’ man in sight.
‘ j
4
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto
NOTARY PUBLIC
Suite 1103
1 esterday’s favourite tunes are
Office Hours Saturday
opiy ^or yesterday. Nobody sing’s
Phone
363-0952
October to April Inclusive
Tor. Japanese Language School Enrolment Opens J ou are my Sunshine, or Deep
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Mon. — Fri. 9—^6, Sat. 9—3.
in the Heart of Texas. Geishas
Suite 513 Templo Building
Evo. By Appointment
TORONTO.—The Toronto Japanese Language School an dig the “cool” Ray Charles, Nat
TORONTO
nounces the beginning of enrolment for the coming semester to “King” Cole, Elvis Presley, Sam
Hiro Kawaguchi
EM. 6-3323
—
Res: RO. 7-3427
| begin Sept. 4th in our three schools.
Art Watanabe
my Davis Jr., • Pat Boone and
For children (7 years and up) classes will be held at Orde (Ella Fitzgerald.
School (College and McCaul).on Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. I Entertainers’ status has changand at the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre on Saturday:s from ed too. Girls no longer come in
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and on Mondays from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
i tearfully from debt-imprisoned
SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 19S5
A special school for adults will be held at the Nikko Garden. farm villages, sold into virtual
i
bondage,
to
help
poor
parents.
460 Dundas Street West on Tuesdays from 7 p.m. to 9 mm and
11:20 A.M. English Lauguago Sorvico
11:30 A.M. Sunday Church School '
Geishas have their unions which
on Thursdays from 8 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
The Rev. Minoru Stephan Takada. B.A., B D.
command
top
wages.
Information sheets and application forms are available at
i
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
701 Dovexcourt Rd., Toronto
Geishas still follow the “'pat
the J.C. Cultural Centre. Or contact: Ken Saito — 54 Simpson
Ave., Tor. 6 — HO. 1-5318; Mr. C. Shishido — 487 Evans, Tor. ron” system: livelihood ensured
by wealthy Japanese men, some
14 - 251-9555.
of them famous politicians and
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
$
T.J.L.S.
industrialists.
*
*
*
Girls in top districts like To
kyo’s Shimbashi, Tsukiji and Ya
Tor. JCCA Membership Drive Wants Your Names nagihashi; Osaka’s Sumiyoshi;
Kyoto’s Gion and Ponta-cho 9
t
Nay we remind all Japanese Canadians that the and
have
rigid ethics, and arc dis
loronto JCCA Annual Membership Drive is now under way.
creet,
Their sisters, in lowerSpecial Attention on Take Out Orders
Iver sly hundred people have now registered their 1965-66 mem
class district, are more promis
bership.
EM. 2-0029 For .Reservations EM. 2-4322
a
■
J°ur membership fee ($2.00 per person) will enable us to cuous.
But the geisha is as Japanese
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
X
i
suPP°rt to such worthy projects as the National as Mount Fuji and cherry blos
I
Project, Japanese Language School, Nipponia Home som, and like these she seems
Catering to Wedding Bang acts. Sho wers and Parties
I
Aged, welfare for sick and indigent at Christmas and destined to stay.
Seating Capacity 240
I
lmesl Through the JCCA, you may take part in the eurI J.y?®??, .nS conducted by such.organizations as the CanaI L' 1V1 Ar ,r^ies Association; the Folk Arts Council, the Negro
I Ontin/SS H einS Association, the Human Rig'hts Commission of
KAZUO G. OIYE
■ ‘™c110’ “he Committee for Social Action and Community ReJaOct. Is Festival Time
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
I Canadians)
^ernati°nal Institute (for fellowship among all
Tahara
JeweHers
Lucien C. Kurata, Q. C
*
- KWOWCHOW
OTCP SUET WE8N
the past year, the JCCA members have worked in
as ^e ^: Cultural Centre Bazaar, the J.C. Cultural
r
h>avid King Farm Fun-O-Rama (for the rew°ni.° wle ease(^ convicts) and the International Institute’s
I
eerU W6 a?e a^so working on the Immigration Committee
I ‘ _ Ration of increased immigration from Japan.
I
°f building up a keen and earnest Junior JCCA group
r
USj .
inany more points of concern, such as school
I the
delinquency lie ahead of us. You see us at
I
Cherry Blossom Festival, at the Christen as
f
an^ a^ °^her times, but there is much important
I
_
° aons at countless ■ meetings throughout the year.
f •'taMl’Sj'^11 encourage us and enable us to attain
T.V. Service
RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
HUdson 5-1365
A. E. McKague, Q.C.
t°sh Nishijima
(Business)
(Residence)
Complete Care
SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK
For Your Eyes
^^±
421-3374 ™ OWNED
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
"COVERING ONTARIO
Ntgbi Calls-. PL. 9-5095
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805
TORIC
OPTICAL
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
TORONTO
Furuya Autumn Tour
DEPARTING SEPTEMBER 26
AIR FARE $847.00 FROM VANCOUVER
12 DAY TOUR $161.00.
Buy & Sell
Your Home
Through
MITS KURODA
Representing
WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE LIMITED
1444 Danforth Avenue
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD
FLAT ROOFS
^VESTROUGHING
Join The Fun And Travel On
proprietor
Toronto
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO
(TORONTO)
^
Furuya Travel: 365 Spadina, Toronto EM 6-1075
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
Barrister and Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
EM. 4-9913
owerd
JON ONODERA
Roy Sato (T. JCCA’)
OFFICE
EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Carlton St., Toronto
Room 1805
293-4281 (Res.)
36G-6388
Hl. 7-1100
A
BUS: HO. 9-1151
Toronto, Ontario
I
I
x
Pa^e 7
Dates and Soinas | v^sanu lUQuy I rips
Personal Notes Across Canada
Light Fantastic In
Manitoba JCCA Picnic Commands Rain To Stop Watusi & Frug Stylg Births
Marriages
WINNIPEG, Man.—The min stopped long enough to give the
By STUART GRIFFIN
OTTAh A. — Dr. and Mrs.
simual Manitoba JCCA Picnic some sunshine on Julv 25th. Am
BABA-FUJIMOTO
tendance comparable to last year came out to enjov the race’
i
^^^ traditional -Roy S. Yamasaki (nee Miye Fu
TORONTO. — The Toronto
geisha girl has grown taller and jimoto) are happy to announce
food entertainment, games, and other picnic fun.
Buddhist Church on July 17th,
Jminier,
The
kimono
is
still
de
the
birth
of
a
daughter.
Jamie
The Manitoba JCCA wishes to thank all those who attended
196o was the setting for the
heloed out and especially all the kind donors. First prize of a iigueur, but the once hiu-1 Igth I Norine, a sister for Sheri Deny- marriage of Miss Gloria Hamahair is not only bobbed but i se, on July 11. 1965 at the Otta
■ Polaroid camera was won by Mr. C. Teranishi of Newman Street
ko Baba, daughter of Mr. and
tinted.
And the habits of emm- wa General Hospital.
L Winnipeg.
Mrs.
Sadajiro Baba of Toronto,
somng only the lower lip "and
to
Mr.
Sachi Sumio Fujimoto,
? k^e^ng the Iower row of
CHANGE OF ADDRESS
soil
ot
Mr.
and Mrs. Shigetaro
*
*
*
teeth have gone too. Today’s
Fujimoto
also
of Toronto. The
geisha would laugh if you called
TORONTO. — Mr. and Mr
ceremony
was
officiated
by the
Late Nisei Artist Kiyo Fujiwaras Paintings Hang tnese
‘‘beauty-mark:
Dick Tsuruda, and mother Mr
Ishiuna.
Reception
TORONTO—An informal showing of paintings by the late . Geishas, meaning accomplish- K. Tsuruda, formerly of 35 Rown- was hold :
the Golden Mile
Toronto Nisei artiso, Kiyoshi (Kayo) Fujiwara will be shown at the ed persons still qua m.ck on . tree Avenue. Toronto, wish to j Restaurant.
their heels on the rice-straw
Brush and Palette Gallery, 2587 Yong-e- Street in Toronto.
mats, hands- folded gently on1। announce their new .address as 1 The couple left for a honey
moon to United States.
A sports car fan, Mr. Fujiwara -was killed last year in a
their silken laps. But when thev,
Marblehead Road in Weston
; head-on collision.
..
.
rise it is to the beat of the tran- Ontario.
Mr. Don Burnham, of the Brush and Palette Gallery, has sistor radio, not to the old haunt
kindly donated space for this first showing of a few of Kivo’s ing hand-drum and flute notes:
paintings.
.
;
and when they dance it is not
The paintings on display at this time have been loaned to solo to the classical Four Seasons ,'
the Gallery by Mrs. A. Fujiwara, Kiyo's mother, and also by of the Wistaria Maiden, but to ’
1
friends of Kiyo, who were closely acquainted with him through the cha cha cha, twist, frug or
tennis and skiing.
F
6 Watusi — not alone or with
Diamonds A iWatches
The Gallery is open till 8 p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays another geisha, but with anv.
Watch & Jewellery Repair
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
I
till 9 p.m. on Thursdays and Fridays, and till 6 p.m. on Saturday. ’ man in sight.
‘ j
4
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto
NOTARY PUBLIC
Suite 1103
1 esterday’s favourite tunes are
Office Hours Saturday
opiy ^or yesterday. Nobody sing’s
Phone
363-0952
October to April Inclusive
Tor. Japanese Language School Enrolment Opens J ou are my Sunshine, or Deep
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Mon. — Fri. 9—^6, Sat. 9—3.
in the Heart of Texas. Geishas
Suite 513 Templo Building
Evo. By Appointment
TORONTO.—The Toronto Japanese Language School an dig the “cool” Ray Charles, Nat
TORONTO
nounces the beginning of enrolment for the coming semester to “King” Cole, Elvis Presley, Sam
Hiro Kawaguchi
EM. 6-3323
—
Res: RO. 7-3427
| begin Sept. 4th in our three schools.
Art Watanabe
my Davis Jr., • Pat Boone and
For children (7 years and up) classes will be held at Orde (Ella Fitzgerald.
School (College and McCaul).on Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. I Entertainers’ status has changand at the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre on Saturday:s from ed too. Girls no longer come in
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and on Mondays from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
i tearfully from debt-imprisoned
SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 19S5
A special school for adults will be held at the Nikko Garden. farm villages, sold into virtual
i
bondage,
to
help
poor
parents.
460 Dundas Street West on Tuesdays from 7 p.m. to 9 mm and
11:20 A.M. English Lauguago Sorvico
11:30 A.M. Sunday Church School '
Geishas have their unions which
on Thursdays from 8 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
The Rev. Minoru Stephan Takada. B.A., B D.
command
top
wages.
Information sheets and application forms are available at
i
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
701 Dovexcourt Rd., Toronto
Geishas still follow the “'pat
the J.C. Cultural Centre. Or contact: Ken Saito — 54 Simpson
Ave., Tor. 6 — HO. 1-5318; Mr. C. Shishido — 487 Evans, Tor. ron” system: livelihood ensured
by wealthy Japanese men, some
14 - 251-9555.
of them famous politicians and
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
$
T.J.L.S.
industrialists.
*
*
*
Girls in top districts like To
kyo’s Shimbashi, Tsukiji and Ya
Tor. JCCA Membership Drive Wants Your Names nagihashi; Osaka’s Sumiyoshi;
Kyoto’s Gion and Ponta-cho 9
t
Nay we remind all Japanese Canadians that the and
have
rigid ethics, and arc dis
loronto JCCA Annual Membership Drive is now under way.
creet,
Their sisters, in lowerSpecial Attention on Take Out Orders
Iver sly hundred people have now registered their 1965-66 mem
class district, are more promis
bership.
EM. 2-0029 For .Reservations EM. 2-4322
a
■
J°ur membership fee ($2.00 per person) will enable us to cuous.
But the geisha is as Japanese
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
X
i
suPP°rt to such worthy projects as the National as Mount Fuji and cherry blos
I
Project, Japanese Language School, Nipponia Home som, and like these she seems
Catering to Wedding Bang acts. Sho wers and Parties
I
Aged, welfare for sick and indigent at Christmas and destined to stay.
Seating Capacity 240
I
lmesl Through the JCCA, you may take part in the eurI J.y?®??, .nS conducted by such.organizations as the CanaI L' 1V1 Ar ,r^ies Association; the Folk Arts Council, the Negro
I Ontin/SS H einS Association, the Human Rig'hts Commission of
KAZUO G. OIYE
■ ‘™c110’ “he Committee for Social Action and Community ReJaOct. Is Festival Time
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
I Canadians)
^ernati°nal Institute (for fellowship among all
Tahara
JeweHers
Lucien C. Kurata, Q. C
*
- KWOWCHOW
OTCP SUET WE8N
the past year, the JCCA members have worked in
as ^e ^: Cultural Centre Bazaar, the J.C. Cultural
r
h>avid King Farm Fun-O-Rama (for the rew°ni.° wle ease(^ convicts) and the International Institute’s
I
eerU W6 a?e a^so working on the Immigration Committee
I ‘ _ Ration of increased immigration from Japan.
I
°f building up a keen and earnest Junior JCCA group
r
USj .
inany more points of concern, such as school
I the
delinquency lie ahead of us. You see us at
I
Cherry Blossom Festival, at the Christen as
f
an^ a^ °^her times, but there is much important
I
_
° aons at countless ■ meetings throughout the year.
f •'taMl’Sj'^11 encourage us and enable us to attain
T.V. Service
RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
HUdson 5-1365
A. E. McKague, Q.C.
t°sh Nishijima
(Business)
(Residence)
Complete Care
SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK
For Your Eyes
^^±
421-3374 ™ OWNED
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
"COVERING ONTARIO
Ntgbi Calls-. PL. 9-5095
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805
TORIC
OPTICAL
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
TORONTO
Furuya Autumn Tour
DEPARTING SEPTEMBER 26
AIR FARE $847.00 FROM VANCOUVER
12 DAY TOUR $161.00.
Buy & Sell
Your Home
Through
MITS KURODA
Representing
WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE LIMITED
1444 Danforth Avenue
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD
FLAT ROOFS
^VESTROUGHING
Join The Fun And Travel On
proprietor
Toronto
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO
(TORONTO)
^
Furuya Travel: 365 Spadina, Toronto EM 6-1075
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
Barrister and Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
EM. 4-9913
owerd
JON ONODERA
Roy Sato (T. JCCA’)
OFFICE
EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Carlton St., Toronto
Room 1805
293-4281 (Res.)
36G-6388
Hl. 7-1100
A
BUS: HO. 9-1151
Toronto, Ontario
I
I
x
Page 8
Atomic Diplomacy: Hiroshima & Potsdam . . . .
THE
A-Bomb Used On Japan To Impress Russia ?
rsinS^0, w^9' 1 c
W
WASHINGTON.—A newly-published book suggests a new and I truthful in their accounts of the decision to use the bomb,” Andev- Editor, ^
controversial answer
to
. the question of why the United States son wrote.
Section Edito, and A^
lopped two atomic bombs on Japan in 1945.
|
“On the basis of my personal knowledge of men and events
W^ ST. ^
Officially the reason has been straight and simple: It was the and my later examination of the available evidence, I am forced to
omy way to bring about the unconditional surrender of Japan say that the author of this bok has obviously reached a false con
Toronto 2-B. Ont,
clusion.”
without a bloody invasion of the Japanese homeland.
EMpire 6-5005
In reply, Alperovitz said that Anderson’s position in the
Former President Harry S. Truman, the man who made the
cabinet as agriculture secretary—did not make him privy to the
decision to use nuclear weapons, put it this way:
“The dropping of the bombs stopned the war, saved millions formulation of policy on this highly secret matter.
of lives.”
Cites Many Statements
A different explanation is offered in “Atomic Diplomacy: Hiro
In
an
attempt
to
prove his point, the authoi’ offers some 1400
shima and Potsdam.”
citations,
some
ofwhich
he claims have never before been publish ___ ^^iH Wa»t(d ■
The evidence, according to author Gar Alperovitz, strongly ed. Among them:
suggests the weapons were used primarily to impress Russia with
—Leo Szilard, the late nuclear scientist who wrote of his
American power and thereby gain a diplomatic advantage in the
^^
conversation
with Byrnes in May, 1945: “Mr. Byrnes did not w^ue 291-1673 (Toronto).
postwar world.
that it -was necessary to use the bomb against the cities of Jaunn
On 20th Anniversary
in order
to win
the war had
. . . Mr. Byrnes’ view (was) that our
By
5:30 p.m.
Narukama
possessing
and
demonstrating
. Fublication of che book by Simon and Shuster recently co-yarded in 380 fish and was con the bomb would make Russia more °PE¥TOBS experieMeOH
in more
Europe.
” 500
ers, _ button sewing, button
incidedwiZh both the 20th anniversary of the first atomic test exfident
manageable
of catching
than
serging machines for £
Secretary
Stimson
who
said
the
bomb
would
be
the
“
master
plosion atpAlamogordo, New Mexico, and the start of the Potsdambefore —
the night was out.
manufacturer.
J &te?
card” in dealing with Stalin.
conference.
round work. Du^X
—Gen. Curtis LeMay, who commanded the B-29 raids oover|
”— Ru; 74871 (Toronto?.11 anQ
Alperovitz contends tnat 'with tire end of the war against
even
w
_.
Germany, American officials feared domination of Eastern Eurooe Japan, was quoted in a newspaper as saying unthat
even without
----- :
f® clinic.
:o: 2
by Russia. They felt a U.S.-Soviet confrontation at Potsdam was the atomic bomb and without Russia’s entry into the Pacific war I “
sage
clinic 438-2001
Japan would , have surrendered in two weeks.”
I""
11
——^L—,
unavoidable and that the Big Three conference should be delayed
until it could be determined whether the atomic bomb really worked.
—pen. Dwight D Eisenhower who once said the bombing of
Domestic Hein Wan^
Sofessional~^C~7~——
If it explodes, as I think it well, I’ll certainly have a hammer Hiroshima was completely unnecessary.”
strategic bombing survey after the war stated I E°nent housekeeper* ph™.^
on those boys,” Truman is quoted as saying.
AV ??an Tld Vve sun'endei*ed even if the atomic bombs No iLndr^ !%.a ^^
Attacked by Senator
mid not been dropped, even if Russia had not entered the war an J « S,"
Alpci ovitz main point has already come under fire from one e.en if no invasion had been planned or contemplated.”
I.:—
---^--705 (iq.-q^
prominent figure, Sen. Clinton Anderson (D-N.M.). Anderson is
To Prevent New War
former chairman of the Joint Congressional Atomic Energy Com
Thos. T. Onizuka, B,A,
. makers had decided “with the best intentions
mittee and a member of the Truman cabinet at the time the bombs
ana
highest
ideais,
”
according
to
Alperovitz,
that
tile
only
wav
were dropped.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
dominating Eastern Europe, gaining a footIn a review for the New York Times, Anderson conceded the ^ii(C^P ^USva
NOTARY PUBLIC
author had done a thorough job of investigating available eviden*?e ! c2n the Far East and of preventing a third World War was
° °?ef a tough diplomatic approach to be unveiled at Potsdam
221 VICTORIA ST., TORONTO
Lut he disagrees with the conclusion Alperovitz draws from thtic
cnese
EM. 3-5002
—
OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
“ "P by
> ’»■»& over
facts. The senator said the author’s judgments of World Wa?- II Hiroshima an “^^^
leaders are “shocking and inaccuraate.”
„ iTbe United States presented a. hard line, at Potsdam and did
Refutes Arguments
informS^h?^^^^^
meeting with Stalin, Truman had been
Befoie one can accept Mr. Alperovitzs view, one must be
1
Alamagordo test was a success, the book claims
prepared to state that President Truman. Secretary of War (Hemv x
worked m the Far East,and though Russia managed
L.) Stimson and Secretary of State (James F.) Byrnes were not Untn l?eA a/ainst^
five days before it ended, the Soviet
churia.
KeP frOm ^'g her influence in Japan and Man- L
YOUR
BLOOD
resent ^™;.^ i^
Modern
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
New Luck Inn
Consult
Special Cantonese Dishes
Free Home Delivery
Phone 528-2219
21
Frazer Bonanza
RITZ KINOSHITA
Chop Suey House
For All Classes of
INSURANCE
I
Phone: PL. 9-2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
John St. N.
HAMILTON, ONT.
KIDOKWAN JUDO INSTITUTE
328 Dupont St,
Toronto
QUALIFIED NISEI BLACK BELT INSTRUCTORS
Special Instructors For Children On
Friday Evenings ^nd Sunday Afternoons
(Cont. From Page 1)
Signals from federal fisheries
sight?”
patrol, vessels sounded off StevesI helped him pitch fish into
ton to open the 48-hour scramble the hold with a fork, and I’ve
at noon on July 27th.
got sore muscles to prove it.
^Nearby boats also were busy.
Narukama’s radio crackled con
stantly as fishermen chattered
oout their hauls.
“It’s hard work but it doesn’t
Last long,” he grunted.
,
You’ve got to hit them when
they are coming. There’s no time
to lose.”
As the day continued, small
te“Ie
cannery
pick-up
SUMMER HOLIDAYS
FROM JULY 26TH TO
AUGUST 7TH
SHARON'S FLORIST
CITY-WIDE
942
We Cater To Parties And Banquets
TAKE OUT SERVICE
Phone: EM. 3-7646 — EM. 8-0035
3A Dundas St. West
Toronto 2, Ont.
Parking At Bay & Dundas
FULLY LICENCED
For Family or Friendly
Gatherings
Dine at
NIKKO GARDENS
Wo
Gwjeh
460 Dundas St. W.
Toronto
Reservations: EM. 6-2164
For best arrangements
Reserve ahead of time.
CUISINE AVAILABLE FORFAmS pXSJAPMESE
s
voe Grant Masaoka, JACL UCLA
PAPE
AVE.,
TORONTO
T. HAMASAKI, W
Medal of Honor . , , ,
Businessmen Luncheon
DELIVERY
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
boats started
. (Cent. From Page 1)
boarder. In a village they passed
he bartered his personal History Project administrator,
she now knows why pancakes are
^or some salt which he his
favorite food.
ribbed ^to his open wounds to
n'
Mi
Zamui'a was a prisoner of
sterilize them.
Commu
nists for 27 months
His ration was a handful o± When he was
finally freed and
meal made of ground wheat, rice i eturned to America, he founc
S nTk ?°Ugh Ws stomacb
awarded the Congressi
lebelled, he forced himself to eat ae
onal Medal of Honor. Miyamura
it and grew accustomed to the operates a service station, <nc
primitive diet. Some of the comes from a family long estab
younger prisoners disdained the lished in Gallup.
coarse food. He and the older
prisoners advised them to eat.
Later the younger men in theii Noted Japan Mystery
weakened condition could not
down this fare. They could see Story Writer Dies
the younger men night by night
— Ranpo Edogawa,
dropping by the waVsid'e. They r
never heard of them afterward. no*ed mystery story writer who
his pen name from Edgar
During the month of nirtt ~got
iaiL ^oe’ recently died of cereb
0 ius?h
he recalls bow ral hemorhage. He was 71.
just beyond his reach there were
Edogawa, whose real name,
visions of platters of steaming
Il
aS
T ro ?ai’ was President of
00zing With hot butter the Japan
00kPTUP' A Says the Yood Association.Mystery Story Writers
ooked so real. Todav back -n
civilian hfe, his wife Terrv had , HTeT 7^ graduated from Wase
ho^ ’V Hiroshi^isW ca Univ, m Tokyo in 1916 and
worked on various jobs, includ
neve<tired eatin? ing newspaper reporting, before
eiacks ox them. After hearing
fc”t"r ^^ tasband™;
a Professional writer
in 1922.
wartme mirages to ~
?a^ been in semi-retire
ment during the past two vears,
a:
er
G
42
Ca
h
^
m
as
tor
rtn
v y y v vw v v v ▼ vi
"
taking the fish off the gillnetters. Narukama put 375 fish
aboar a tender on its first visit,
then . gunned Chi-Dona’s diesel
A”““int0“e
“Look at them come”
^.^.A'Periodxin which
buckled. “Isn’t that a beautiful 1 off tte hoaft ^ ““«
Specializing In Chinese Food
the greatest
gift of ail
111
PHONE 924-2237
27 HILLSBORO AVE.
TORONTO
1
Travel Arrangements
Anywhere — Anytime
5ir—Ship—Bus—Rail
Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
' .
Obtainable
Travel, Accident ^ -^
and Baggage Insurance .;-,^,
BRINGING SOMEONE O©?
Passage arranged by Steamer o- -^
Call for Reservations or
Information — EM. 8-9934.
T. KAMEOKA
K. Iwata Travel Service
113
McCaul St, TORONTO ,
5?
Woi
ont
nes(
me
li
®
he 1
canij
chi.
ipal.
th
ed C
his (
mg
she
mire
wit
ft ■
easy
on h
lemer
(C<
THE
A-Bomb Used On Japan To Impress Russia ?
rsinS^0, w^9' 1 c
W
WASHINGTON.—A newly-published book suggests a new and I truthful in their accounts of the decision to use the bomb,” Andev- Editor, ^
controversial answer
to
. the question of why the United States son wrote.
Section Edito, and A^
lopped two atomic bombs on Japan in 1945.
|
“On the basis of my personal knowledge of men and events
W^ ST. ^
Officially the reason has been straight and simple: It was the and my later examination of the available evidence, I am forced to
omy way to bring about the unconditional surrender of Japan say that the author of this bok has obviously reached a false con
Toronto 2-B. Ont,
clusion.”
without a bloody invasion of the Japanese homeland.
EMpire 6-5005
In reply, Alperovitz said that Anderson’s position in the
Former President Harry S. Truman, the man who made the
cabinet as agriculture secretary—did not make him privy to the
decision to use nuclear weapons, put it this way:
“The dropping of the bombs stopned the war, saved millions formulation of policy on this highly secret matter.
of lives.”
Cites Many Statements
A different explanation is offered in “Atomic Diplomacy: Hiro
In
an
attempt
to
prove his point, the authoi’ offers some 1400
shima and Potsdam.”
citations,
some
ofwhich
he claims have never before been publish ___ ^^iH Wa»t(d ■
The evidence, according to author Gar Alperovitz, strongly ed. Among them:
suggests the weapons were used primarily to impress Russia with
—Leo Szilard, the late nuclear scientist who wrote of his
American power and thereby gain a diplomatic advantage in the
^^
conversation
with Byrnes in May, 1945: “Mr. Byrnes did not w^ue 291-1673 (Toronto).
postwar world.
that it -was necessary to use the bomb against the cities of Jaunn
On 20th Anniversary
in order
to win
the war had
. . . Mr. Byrnes’ view (was) that our
By
5:30 p.m.
Narukama
possessing
and
demonstrating
. Fublication of che book by Simon and Shuster recently co-yarded in 380 fish and was con the bomb would make Russia more °PE¥TOBS experieMeOH
in more
Europe.
” 500
ers, _ button sewing, button
incidedwiZh both the 20th anniversary of the first atomic test exfident
manageable
of catching
than
serging machines for £
Secretary
Stimson
who
said
the
bomb
would
be
the
“
master
plosion atpAlamogordo, New Mexico, and the start of the Potsdambefore —
the night was out.
manufacturer.
J &te?
card” in dealing with Stalin.
conference.
round work. Du^X
—Gen. Curtis LeMay, who commanded the B-29 raids oover|
”— Ru; 74871 (Toronto?.11 anQ
Alperovitz contends tnat 'with tire end of the war against
even
w
_.
Germany, American officials feared domination of Eastern Eurooe Japan, was quoted in a newspaper as saying unthat
even without
----- :
f® clinic.
:o: 2
by Russia. They felt a U.S.-Soviet confrontation at Potsdam was the atomic bomb and without Russia’s entry into the Pacific war I “
sage
clinic 438-2001
Japan would , have surrendered in two weeks.”
I""
11
——^L—,
unavoidable and that the Big Three conference should be delayed
until it could be determined whether the atomic bomb really worked.
—pen. Dwight D Eisenhower who once said the bombing of
Domestic Hein Wan^
Sofessional~^C~7~——
If it explodes, as I think it well, I’ll certainly have a hammer Hiroshima was completely unnecessary.”
strategic bombing survey after the war stated I E°nent housekeeper* ph™.^
on those boys,” Truman is quoted as saying.
AV ??an Tld Vve sun'endei*ed even if the atomic bombs No iLndr^ !%.a ^^
Attacked by Senator
mid not been dropped, even if Russia had not entered the war an J « S,"
Alpci ovitz main point has already come under fire from one e.en if no invasion had been planned or contemplated.”
I.:—
---^--705 (iq.-q^
prominent figure, Sen. Clinton Anderson (D-N.M.). Anderson is
To Prevent New War
former chairman of the Joint Congressional Atomic Energy Com
Thos. T. Onizuka, B,A,
. makers had decided “with the best intentions
mittee and a member of the Truman cabinet at the time the bombs
ana
highest
ideais,
”
according
to
Alperovitz,
that
tile
only
wav
were dropped.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
dominating Eastern Europe, gaining a footIn a review for the New York Times, Anderson conceded the ^ii(C^P ^USva
NOTARY PUBLIC
author had done a thorough job of investigating available eviden*?e ! c2n the Far East and of preventing a third World War was
° °?ef a tough diplomatic approach to be unveiled at Potsdam
221 VICTORIA ST., TORONTO
Lut he disagrees with the conclusion Alperovitz draws from thtic
cnese
EM. 3-5002
—
OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
“ "P by
> ’»■»& over
facts. The senator said the author’s judgments of World Wa?- II Hiroshima an “^^^
leaders are “shocking and inaccuraate.”
„ iTbe United States presented a. hard line, at Potsdam and did
Refutes Arguments
informS^h?^^^^^
meeting with Stalin, Truman had been
Befoie one can accept Mr. Alperovitzs view, one must be
1
Alamagordo test was a success, the book claims
prepared to state that President Truman. Secretary of War (Hemv x
worked m the Far East,and though Russia managed
L.) Stimson and Secretary of State (James F.) Byrnes were not Untn l?eA a/ainst^
five days before it ended, the Soviet
churia.
KeP frOm ^'g her influence in Japan and Man- L
YOUR
BLOOD
resent ^™;.^ i^
Modern
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
New Luck Inn
Consult
Special Cantonese Dishes
Free Home Delivery
Phone 528-2219
21
Frazer Bonanza
RITZ KINOSHITA
Chop Suey House
For All Classes of
INSURANCE
I
Phone: PL. 9-2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
John St. N.
HAMILTON, ONT.
KIDOKWAN JUDO INSTITUTE
328 Dupont St,
Toronto
QUALIFIED NISEI BLACK BELT INSTRUCTORS
Special Instructors For Children On
Friday Evenings ^nd Sunday Afternoons
(Cont. From Page 1)
Signals from federal fisheries
sight?”
patrol, vessels sounded off StevesI helped him pitch fish into
ton to open the 48-hour scramble the hold with a fork, and I’ve
at noon on July 27th.
got sore muscles to prove it.
^Nearby boats also were busy.
Narukama’s radio crackled con
stantly as fishermen chattered
oout their hauls.
“It’s hard work but it doesn’t
Last long,” he grunted.
,
You’ve got to hit them when
they are coming. There’s no time
to lose.”
As the day continued, small
te“Ie
cannery
pick-up
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CUISINE AVAILABLE FORFAmS pXSJAPMESE
s
voe Grant Masaoka, JACL UCLA
PAPE
AVE.,
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T. HAMASAKI, W
Medal of Honor . , , ,
Businessmen Luncheon
DELIVERY
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
boats started
. (Cent. From Page 1)
boarder. In a village they passed
he bartered his personal History Project administrator,
she now knows why pancakes are
^or some salt which he his
favorite food.
ribbed ^to his open wounds to
n'
Mi
Zamui'a was a prisoner of
sterilize them.
Commu
nists for 27 months
His ration was a handful o± When he was
finally freed and
meal made of ground wheat, rice i eturned to America, he founc
S nTk ?°Ugh Ws stomacb
awarded the Congressi
lebelled, he forced himself to eat ae
onal Medal of Honor. Miyamura
it and grew accustomed to the operates a service station, <nc
primitive diet. Some of the comes from a family long estab
younger prisoners disdained the lished in Gallup.
coarse food. He and the older
prisoners advised them to eat.
Later the younger men in theii Noted Japan Mystery
weakened condition could not
down this fare. They could see Story Writer Dies
the younger men night by night
— Ranpo Edogawa,
dropping by the waVsid'e. They r
never heard of them afterward. no*ed mystery story writer who
his pen name from Edgar
During the month of nirtt ~got
iaiL ^oe’ recently died of cereb
0 ius?h
he recalls bow ral hemorhage. He was 71.
just beyond his reach there were
Edogawa, whose real name,
visions of platters of steaming
Il
aS
T ro ?ai’ was President of
00zing With hot butter the Japan
00kPTUP' A Says the Yood Association.Mystery Story Writers
ooked so real. Todav back -n
civilian hfe, his wife Terrv had , HTeT 7^ graduated from Wase
ho^ ’V Hiroshi^isW ca Univ, m Tokyo in 1916 and
worked on various jobs, includ
neve<tired eatin? ing newspaper reporting, before
eiacks ox them. After hearing
fc”t"r ^^ tasband™;
a Professional writer
in 1922.
wartme mirages to ~
?a^ been in semi-retire
ment during the past two vears,
a:
er
G
42
Ca
h
^
m
as
tor
rtn
v y y v vw v v v ▼ vi
"
taking the fish off the gillnetters. Narukama put 375 fish
aboar a tender on its first visit,
then . gunned Chi-Dona’s diesel
A”““int0“e
“Look at them come”
^.^.A'Periodxin which
buckled. “Isn’t that a beautiful 1 off tte hoaft ^ ““«
Specializing In Chinese Food
the greatest
gift of ail
111
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TORONTO
1
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Woi
ont
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me
li
®
he 1
canij
chi.
ipal.
th
ed C
his (
mg
she
mire
wit
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easy
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