Page 1
THE NEW CAh
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Toronto, Ont.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1965
Ont. Econ. Chief Randall Says . . . .
Japan-Canada Council
Told “Trade Is War”
ashion Expert
said Ontario
TORONTO.—-World trade is war, not a ; game,
gk
as
hit back .
Economics Minister, Stanley Randall
Ype^ ashemuch
from
at- countries which criticize Canada for not buying
them as it sells to them.
.
“It has almost reached the stage-where to have a credit,
with a country is somehow immoral, he told guests at the Canada-
By ZOE BELEK
jONTREAL. — In tne West
rrie^e often marks the end or
of being’ a career woman Japan Trade Council luncheon.
for Hanae Mori it marked
and
Attendm0- the luncheon were Amoassador H. Shimadzu
.
Veainning. Now the leadmg
Ns staff from Ottawa, Toronto Japan Consul ^ /^^
hon designer in Japan whose
President Edward Id'e of the National JCCA, 1 ublishei
ite couture clothes are worn
i
Thp New CanadiQiL
a
i
Crown Princess Michiko and
“I would also suggest that it is being woven into the cunura
■ sister-in-law Princess Hitaside of our international affairs with the light’ aspersion .hau it
of the Japanese Royal family,
For The Royal Entourage
Waiting
is not playing . the game.
i Hanae Mori was m Lion
“Gentlemen, we are not play Tokyo Is Big Explosion
Bv T. UMEZUKI
el this week as the guest of
ing
a game. We are engaged, as
ton’s. She presented her haute
VANCOUVER, B.C.—Prince Mikasa, his wife and daughter we have
always been engaged,
TOKYO. — ’“Tokyo is not a
injrf collection at special were given a big welcome here last week by Vancouver Mayor
wings in the store’s ninth Bill Rathie, Japan Consul General T. Ban, President of the Japan- in a world trade war.”
city. It’s an. explosion,” wrote a
Canada has a tiade surnlus of Japanese journalist. Its economic
>r restaurant throughout tne Canada Society, and many other dignitaries.
.
million with Japan, and the
i; Afew of the dresses are
But the forte of their visit here came when they were greeted $156
diable in Eaton’s but most of bv over 700 cheering, flag-waving Japanese Canadians at the Ja Japanese have been clamoring growth runs about 10 percent a
collection is for exhibition panese Language School. Principal, Mr. T. Sato and., his wife, for more Canadian pmvkases year—highest in the world.
_
v and will return to Japan teachers, parents, and students waved red and white Canadian to balance the books.
also complained
Britain lias
h her.
Japanese flags at the welcome.
its $626 millicn Rose Named Michiko
n an interview, through inter- and After
a tour of the classrooms, rhe Prince was presented with loudly about
te? Mrs. Fay Ishii of Mon two volumes of poems by the noted Indian poetess, Pauline Jomson. dollar; trade deficit with
LONDON.—Four dozen blooms
al, Mrs. Mori recalled how
Other points of interest during their visit here were a tour ada.
of a new rose variety, the
■ interest in clothes and fash- of the famous Nitobe Gardens, luncheon at the UBC Faculty Club,
But Mr. Randall
was flown
started when she was a very and a overnight excursion at the University. They also attended “Wc cannot rely upon sentiment “Princess Michiko,”
and tradition and old family ties to Tokyo on Sept. 20 for premg child.
a banquet at the Hotel Vancouver held by the Japan-Canada So
1 wanted to be an artist,” she ciety, visited Stanley Park, and met many J.C. senior .citizens to move our goods . . . We must
sentation to the wife of Japan’s
sell, sell, sell!”
ailed, “but my father was a
at
an
open
house
reception
at
the
residence
of
the
Japan
Consul
The Ontario cabinet minister crown prince, reported the Japan
lor and very old-fashioned.
______
said he was sure that foreign Air Lines.
wanted his daughter to be General.
. countries did not buy. from Canicaied but he did not want
r k have a career and he lookdown on women artists.” So
ponsibility".
/
' I Doctor Gets The Knife
wou
ld
be
most
naive
of
sng Hanae went to Tokyo
/ TOKYO.—Hideya Hiruma, 20- mien’s College and got a de- H
1
—J
us to think that Japan spent $330
year-old i farmer, felt he had to
ee “and then as soon as I
n”llion in Canada lasu^
cause she thought we needed the even the score • with Dr. Yoichi
satiated I married and I was
ee to start a career,’’ she said
TORONTO.—Canada’s only Japanese language radio program, business,” he said.
Seto for the pain he suffered in
th a smile.
“Yorokobi No Otozure” (Glad Tidings of Good News) with mode-Tor often,.our largest custom . a hernia operation. He attacked
Her husband, Ken Mori, man- rater. Pastor George S. Aso of the Japanese Seventh Day Adventist ensure highly^ induce
the doctor just before he was set
;e; the business end of the
Church,
will
present
taped
highlights
from
the
I
mice
Mikasa
Unitec
>
states
and
the
United
use of Hanae Mori. As a young
to leave the-hospital and stabbed
stand he agreed to his wife Banquet held! recently at the Toronto J.C. Cultural Centre.
Kingdom. They require huge dol-. him in the chest.
adying fashion design at a
This program will be heard for half an hour from 8 to 8:30 lar volumes . of raw materials
kial school in Tokyo.
’
■
a
nvpr CHWO 1250 K W
and foodstuffs . . . Witaov.t raw
_______ _______________ materials their industries cannot Nisei Gets Top Role
■’We keep our business careers a.m. this Sunday, Octobei 10th o______.
:
’
operate. Without the import of
'art as much as we can. He -------- :--------------HOLLYWOOD.— Nisei act
ns the financial end and I run
Canada can and does .fill these ress Miiko Taka gets.the top role
e. design end; We do not intwo essential needs.
rfere with each other so we
WINNIPEG, Man.—Former Winnipeg
Japan Goinul, Mx.
^ a consequence, Canada in ‘‘Run, Don’t Walk” with Gary
oid family arguments.”
the only products Grant and Samantha Eggar at
The Moris have two sons, one Noboro Takasugi will revisit Winnipeg on_ October 14u on his mu&j. buy
and one 11. Both, according way home from the 20th International Red Cross Conference Lbese COUntries have to export Columbia Studios.
“I play Samantha’s best friend
,
n
i
• • • wholly or partially manuweir mother, have leanings in Vienna.
Mr. Takasugi, who was also Consul General in Seattle, a e- fact,ured
ods„
in
a very Americanized style
ward artistic careers “and I
cently
retired
from
the
foreign
service
and
was
posted
as
head
^^
Randall
said
that
Canada
with
lots of comedy scenes,” said
ink that for a Japanese family
of
the
foreign
affairs
division.
He
will
also
visit,
Vancouver
on
h
s
a
highly-industrialized
nation
Miiko.
•
K is bad,” she sighs. The
•
.
.
which' must expand industrially
nnger one was told to make October 17th.
During his stay in Winnipeg, a reception will be nela tor n order ^o maintain a high
Netting during the summer as
him
at the residence of the present Winnipeg Japan Consul,
standard of living. He warned Epitome Of Selfishness
school project and produced
K.
Okazaki.
______
that
this country would do its
^unusual mirror with the
Little Michiko,
*
------------~
—
:
-------"
best
to
replace imported manu- a TOKYO.
Me like a man’s tie and the
six-year-old
girl,
killed
factored items with domestic recently because she was
P 0x the mirror a replica of a
was “un
products.
®,y.a?W “It was quite uniwanted.” ■
, . „ ,
, - i
r r i He listed retraining and imhis mother says.
Hei' mother, Mrs. Sumiko Fu
Their
fuel
cost
is
half
that
of
Lyg^.^on
as
tools
with
which
TOKYO. — About 60 Tokyo
huiae Mori does most of her
ruyama,
a 28-year-old divorcee,
gasoline-consuming
venic.es
,
mid
I
Q
anada
must
solve
its
skillcd"I’Niig at home “so Tm able taxis are now running with kero the kerosene provides high safe- j |abor shortage in order to com- confessed to police that she mur
M’e a home life too.” Al- sene instead of gas, thanks to ty, little odor and almost no 1
.. market
. . for
dered her daughter because the
in the° world
wgn there is a shortage of a $135 d'eVice recently developed soot, according to the Institute c i pete
manufactured! goods. And he little girl “got in the way” of
by
the
automobile
technique
re
^St1C/elp in JaPan the Mon
director and developer of the pio- sajj immigration will also ex her plans to remarry.
had no trouble finding two. search institute.
duct, Takayuki Takanashi.
pand Canada’s population, pro/LOi2aPailese girls want to
The
device,
approved
last
July
viding
a more economically feast
^as^°n business and
by
the
Ministry
of
International
ible
market
for domestic and 'Singer' Learns Japanese
^ey will have a
Trade Industry, has begun draw- imported products.
HOLLYWOOD. — Con ri i e
ance af they start out
mg
inquiries
from
Southeast
Mr.
Randall
added
that
Japan
Francis
is studying Japanese for
iiW my home/’’ Mrs- Mo’
Asia and from West Germany, js increasing exports to Canada an October personal appearance
^n^\nre ^oia fast:ions, are
Britain and the United States, faster than we are increasing tour of the Orient, her first trip
TOKYO. — The Japanese gov Kyodo News Service reported our sales to the Japanese.
to the Far East where she is the
, ern but are often ernment recently approved rhe recently.
_
.
He cited as an example of ex- No. 1 feminine vocalist.
the traditional spelling “Nippon” for use on -Ja
The only reported drawback is panding Japanese trade, !’the
? rr.iL h
. evening wrap in panese postage stamps.
Connie, who will sandwich an
a
“slight lack of power/’ Taka- Canadian youth dressed in shirt,
/kou she is showing here
Beginning Jan. 1, Japanese hashi-was quoted as saying.
appearance
at the Sahara Hotel
_ pants socks and shoes made in
a traditional Japa- stamps will bear the country’s
in
Las
Vegas
between her cur
The
device
consists
of
a
modiJapan,
riding
a
Japanese
Honda
^al garment.
name in romanized letters for fied manifold, a kerosene pump and listening to his Japanese rent MGM motion picture, “When
ow p011^ years ago brides the first time, in line with a-Uni and a few other parts, it vapor- transistor radio, a Nikon ant the Boys Meet the Girls,” and
& s4iQliierent arises and a versal Postal Union decision.
izes kerosene at 320 degrees fah- pen|ax (camera*) slung over his her trip, has always recorded
Use of the letters “Nippon” reriheit, 225 degrees above, the shoulder. . .” And he added' her hit songs in Japanese using
he
°^ each one showed.
iS 0M ^as a rich bro- does riot mean that the govern
vaporization point of gasoline. “About-the only thing Canadian a phonetic system. On her tour,
■
?° one would wear ment has finally settled the con
however, she wants to be able
The institute expects the item js the girl on the back seat”
s at once. They would troversy which had been going on to become cheaper with eventual
to carry on simple conversations
(Continued on page 8)
mass
production.
I
(Cont.
on
Page
8)
in the Japanese tongue.
Cont. on P. 8.
Prince Mikasa’s J.C. Centre
Snppph Un KRuiO 0UnQa.y
upccuil
Former Consul To Revisit Winnipeg
60 Tokyo Taxis Running On Kerosene
I
|
Is It Nippon
Or Nihon?
I
|
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Toronto, Ont.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1965
Ont. Econ. Chief Randall Says . . . .
Japan-Canada Council
Told “Trade Is War”
ashion Expert
said Ontario
TORONTO.—-World trade is war, not a ; game,
gk
as
hit back .
Economics Minister, Stanley Randall
Ype^ ashemuch
from
at- countries which criticize Canada for not buying
them as it sells to them.
.
“It has almost reached the stage-where to have a credit,
with a country is somehow immoral, he told guests at the Canada-
By ZOE BELEK
jONTREAL. — In tne West
rrie^e often marks the end or
of being’ a career woman Japan Trade Council luncheon.
for Hanae Mori it marked
and
Attendm0- the luncheon were Amoassador H. Shimadzu
.
Veainning. Now the leadmg
Ns staff from Ottawa, Toronto Japan Consul ^ /^^
hon designer in Japan whose
President Edward Id'e of the National JCCA, 1 ublishei
ite couture clothes are worn
i
Thp New CanadiQiL
a
i
Crown Princess Michiko and
“I would also suggest that it is being woven into the cunura
■ sister-in-law Princess Hitaside of our international affairs with the light’ aspersion .hau it
of the Japanese Royal family,
For The Royal Entourage
Waiting
is not playing . the game.
i Hanae Mori was m Lion
“Gentlemen, we are not play Tokyo Is Big Explosion
Bv T. UMEZUKI
el this week as the guest of
ing
a game. We are engaged, as
ton’s. She presented her haute
VANCOUVER, B.C.—Prince Mikasa, his wife and daughter we have
always been engaged,
TOKYO. — ’“Tokyo is not a
injrf collection at special were given a big welcome here last week by Vancouver Mayor
wings in the store’s ninth Bill Rathie, Japan Consul General T. Ban, President of the Japan- in a world trade war.”
city. It’s an. explosion,” wrote a
Canada has a tiade surnlus of Japanese journalist. Its economic
>r restaurant throughout tne Canada Society, and many other dignitaries.
.
million with Japan, and the
i; Afew of the dresses are
But the forte of their visit here came when they were greeted $156
diable in Eaton’s but most of bv over 700 cheering, flag-waving Japanese Canadians at the Ja Japanese have been clamoring growth runs about 10 percent a
collection is for exhibition panese Language School. Principal, Mr. T. Sato and., his wife, for more Canadian pmvkases year—highest in the world.
_
v and will return to Japan teachers, parents, and students waved red and white Canadian to balance the books.
also complained
Britain lias
h her.
Japanese flags at the welcome.
its $626 millicn Rose Named Michiko
n an interview, through inter- and After
a tour of the classrooms, rhe Prince was presented with loudly about
te? Mrs. Fay Ishii of Mon two volumes of poems by the noted Indian poetess, Pauline Jomson. dollar; trade deficit with
LONDON.—Four dozen blooms
al, Mrs. Mori recalled how
Other points of interest during their visit here were a tour ada.
of a new rose variety, the
■ interest in clothes and fash- of the famous Nitobe Gardens, luncheon at the UBC Faculty Club,
But Mr. Randall
was flown
started when she was a very and a overnight excursion at the University. They also attended “Wc cannot rely upon sentiment “Princess Michiko,”
and tradition and old family ties to Tokyo on Sept. 20 for premg child.
a banquet at the Hotel Vancouver held by the Japan-Canada So
1 wanted to be an artist,” she ciety, visited Stanley Park, and met many J.C. senior .citizens to move our goods . . . We must
sentation to the wife of Japan’s
sell, sell, sell!”
ailed, “but my father was a
at
an
open
house
reception
at
the
residence
of
the
Japan
Consul
The Ontario cabinet minister crown prince, reported the Japan
lor and very old-fashioned.
______
said he was sure that foreign Air Lines.
wanted his daughter to be General.
. countries did not buy. from Canicaied but he did not want
r k have a career and he lookdown on women artists.” So
ponsibility".
/
' I Doctor Gets The Knife
wou
ld
be
most
naive
of
sng Hanae went to Tokyo
/ TOKYO.—Hideya Hiruma, 20- mien’s College and got a de- H
1
—J
us to think that Japan spent $330
year-old i farmer, felt he had to
ee “and then as soon as I
n”llion in Canada lasu^
cause she thought we needed the even the score • with Dr. Yoichi
satiated I married and I was
ee to start a career,’’ she said
TORONTO.—Canada’s only Japanese language radio program, business,” he said.
Seto for the pain he suffered in
th a smile.
“Yorokobi No Otozure” (Glad Tidings of Good News) with mode-Tor often,.our largest custom . a hernia operation. He attacked
Her husband, Ken Mori, man- rater. Pastor George S. Aso of the Japanese Seventh Day Adventist ensure highly^ induce
the doctor just before he was set
;e; the business end of the
Church,
will
present
taped
highlights
from
the
I
mice
Mikasa
Unitec
>
states
and
the
United
use of Hanae Mori. As a young
to leave the-hospital and stabbed
stand he agreed to his wife Banquet held! recently at the Toronto J.C. Cultural Centre.
Kingdom. They require huge dol-. him in the chest.
adying fashion design at a
This program will be heard for half an hour from 8 to 8:30 lar volumes . of raw materials
kial school in Tokyo.
’
■
a
nvpr CHWO 1250 K W
and foodstuffs . . . Witaov.t raw
_______ _______________ materials their industries cannot Nisei Gets Top Role
■’We keep our business careers a.m. this Sunday, Octobei 10th o______.
:
’
operate. Without the import of
'art as much as we can. He -------- :--------------HOLLYWOOD.— Nisei act
ns the financial end and I run
Canada can and does .fill these ress Miiko Taka gets.the top role
e. design end; We do not intwo essential needs.
rfere with each other so we
WINNIPEG, Man.—Former Winnipeg
Japan Goinul, Mx.
^ a consequence, Canada in ‘‘Run, Don’t Walk” with Gary
oid family arguments.”
the only products Grant and Samantha Eggar at
The Moris have two sons, one Noboro Takasugi will revisit Winnipeg on_ October 14u on his mu&j. buy
and one 11. Both, according way home from the 20th International Red Cross Conference Lbese COUntries have to export Columbia Studios.
“I play Samantha’s best friend
,
n
i
• • • wholly or partially manuweir mother, have leanings in Vienna.
Mr. Takasugi, who was also Consul General in Seattle, a e- fact,ured
ods„
in
a very Americanized style
ward artistic careers “and I
cently
retired
from
the
foreign
service
and
was
posted
as
head
^^
Randall
said
that
Canada
with
lots of comedy scenes,” said
ink that for a Japanese family
of
the
foreign
affairs
division.
He
will
also
visit,
Vancouver
on
h
s
a
highly-industrialized
nation
Miiko.
•
K is bad,” she sighs. The
•
.
.
which' must expand industrially
nnger one was told to make October 17th.
During his stay in Winnipeg, a reception will be nela tor n order ^o maintain a high
Netting during the summer as
him
at the residence of the present Winnipeg Japan Consul,
standard of living. He warned Epitome Of Selfishness
school project and produced
K.
Okazaki.
______
that
this country would do its
^unusual mirror with the
Little Michiko,
*
------------~
—
:
-------"
best
to
replace imported manu- a TOKYO.
Me like a man’s tie and the
six-year-old
girl,
killed
factored items with domestic recently because she was
P 0x the mirror a replica of a
was “un
products.
®,y.a?W “It was quite uniwanted.” ■
, . „ ,
, - i
r r i He listed retraining and imhis mother says.
Hei' mother, Mrs. Sumiko Fu
Their
fuel
cost
is
half
that
of
Lyg^.^on
as
tools
with
which
TOKYO. — About 60 Tokyo
huiae Mori does most of her
ruyama,
a 28-year-old divorcee,
gasoline-consuming
venic.es
,
mid
I
Q
anada
must
solve
its
skillcd"I’Niig at home “so Tm able taxis are now running with kero the kerosene provides high safe- j |abor shortage in order to com- confessed to police that she mur
M’e a home life too.” Al- sene instead of gas, thanks to ty, little odor and almost no 1
.. market
. . for
dered her daughter because the
in the° world
wgn there is a shortage of a $135 d'eVice recently developed soot, according to the Institute c i pete
manufactured! goods. And he little girl “got in the way” of
by
the
automobile
technique
re
^St1C/elp in JaPan the Mon
director and developer of the pio- sajj immigration will also ex her plans to remarry.
had no trouble finding two. search institute.
duct, Takayuki Takanashi.
pand Canada’s population, pro/LOi2aPailese girls want to
The
device,
approved
last
July
viding
a more economically feast
^as^°n business and
by
the
Ministry
of
International
ible
market
for domestic and 'Singer' Learns Japanese
^ey will have a
Trade Industry, has begun draw- imported products.
HOLLYWOOD. — Con ri i e
ance af they start out
mg
inquiries
from
Southeast
Mr.
Randall
added
that
Japan
Francis
is studying Japanese for
iiW my home/’’ Mrs- Mo’
Asia and from West Germany, js increasing exports to Canada an October personal appearance
^n^\nre ^oia fast:ions, are
Britain and the United States, faster than we are increasing tour of the Orient, her first trip
TOKYO. — The Japanese gov Kyodo News Service reported our sales to the Japanese.
to the Far East where she is the
, ern but are often ernment recently approved rhe recently.
_
.
He cited as an example of ex- No. 1 feminine vocalist.
the traditional spelling “Nippon” for use on -Ja
The only reported drawback is panding Japanese trade, !’the
? rr.iL h
. evening wrap in panese postage stamps.
Connie, who will sandwich an
a
“slight lack of power/’ Taka- Canadian youth dressed in shirt,
/kou she is showing here
Beginning Jan. 1, Japanese hashi-was quoted as saying.
appearance
at the Sahara Hotel
_ pants socks and shoes made in
a traditional Japa- stamps will bear the country’s
in
Las
Vegas
between her cur
The
device
consists
of
a
modiJapan,
riding
a
Japanese
Honda
^al garment.
name in romanized letters for fied manifold, a kerosene pump and listening to his Japanese rent MGM motion picture, “When
ow p011^ years ago brides the first time, in line with a-Uni and a few other parts, it vapor- transistor radio, a Nikon ant the Boys Meet the Girls,” and
& s4iQliierent arises and a versal Postal Union decision.
izes kerosene at 320 degrees fah- pen|ax (camera*) slung over his her trip, has always recorded
Use of the letters “Nippon” reriheit, 225 degrees above, the shoulder. . .” And he added' her hit songs in Japanese using
he
°^ each one showed.
iS 0M ^as a rich bro- does riot mean that the govern
vaporization point of gasoline. “About-the only thing Canadian a phonetic system. On her tour,
■
?° one would wear ment has finally settled the con
however, she wants to be able
The institute expects the item js the girl on the back seat”
s at once. They would troversy which had been going on to become cheaper with eventual
to carry on simple conversations
(Continued on page 8)
mass
production.
I
(Cont.
on
Page
8)
in the Japanese tongue.
Cont. on P. 8.
Prince Mikasa’s J.C. Centre
Snppph Un KRuiO 0UnQa.y
upccuil
Former Consul To Revisit Winnipeg
60 Tokyo Taxis Running On Kerosene
I
|
Is It Nippon
Or Nihon?
I
|
Page 2
S''
E
Page 2
NEW
Saturday, 0^ -n
CANADIAN________
Japan’s 8 Top Judokas Leave Fi
Brazil World Championship Hiatt
Tater Takes Karate Crown
TOKYO.—Ending almost a year of / gruelling
training, Japan’s eight, cream-of-the-crop, member
judo team this week left for Rio De Janeiro where
the 4th World’s Judo Championship will be held
from October 14th to 20th.
Leading the team in the Unlimited Weight Class
is Tokyo Olympic Heavyweight Gold Medal win
ner, the gi-eat Isao Inokuma, 5th-dan. He has
expressed high hopes of meeting the current cham
pion Anton Geesink, the giant from Holland.
Inokuma is reported in perfect phv* । I
mental condition by his coach
M
With his eye on big Geesink, Mokuma\?l
training with a Japanese judoka Maida
whose size and techniques resemble ti'3
man’s, at Tokyo’s Tenrei Temple.
1
■Many of Japan’s top judo experts had J
that Inokuma would meet Geesink in rha
Olympics. However, his senior, Akio Kan J
was chosen and consequently ’ defeated ' J
- ±h?. “-Kuma” or “bear’ : |
is affectionately called
youngest man ever in
th? All Japan Judo chan
TORONTO.—Hiroshi Miyonoya, 3rd-dan, the All Japan Kendo ship. He won the title twice!
Champion competitor from Tochigi Prefecture,’ will. be in action
-year-old champion, Al
at the Nakamura Kendo Dojo on Yonge Street this Saturday most gave up jud'o because J
evening beginning 7:00 p.m.
serious back injury, is
J
Head instructor, Larry Nakamura, 5th-dan, extends a cordial cate of weight training. Fig J
invitation to all who wish to see this Japanese kendoka perform. techniques include his
seomage and taiotoshi
|
. Accompanying him in this!
TEAM MATCH
vision, and who may just he i
The United States defeated Canada in the team matches 3 to 2.
daixihorse of the whole iouni
United States
Canada
TORONTO.—A former All-Japan Kendo champion, 23-year-old, is tough Masaru Kato, 4th-u
William Adams ( whin er)
vs.
Mariel Lonpre
Akira Kamida, 5th-dan, is coming to Toronto this month to make Although he has not been
Terry Callis
vs.
G. Silvain (winner)
much press, this 6-feet-2Y|
•
(Incidentally one of the bloodiest .and most-disgusting matches his home here.
^^ ptund bruiser was the jj
He will .be an employee of the Japan Camera Centre here h^ who beat Anton GeesirJa
of the tourney).
Richard Lynch
Hal Henschel (winner)
vs.
r and teach the art of the sword at the Japanese Canadian Cultural a post-Olympic match. This!
Artis Sinunons (winner) Centre.
Tran Quan Ba
vs.
during the incident, reported j
Ed Miller (winner)
Shane Higashi
vs^
Judo
World reporter Donn Dii
Kamida appeared here last year- with the “Wonderful World
ger, when the Dutchman got]
NOVICE INDIVIDUALS
of Sports”.
and left the tournament ini
1. F. Bennet, Toronto
I
This young samurai sword artist comes from a family of huff.
2. J. Masse, Montreal
The
heavyweight
division
loot
kendo men. His father Yoshitaro Kamida at the age of 63, holds
3. C. Tearney, Syracuse, N.Y,
a Kendo rank of 7th-dan. Akira’s brother, Hiroto Kamid’a, 33, uncertain for Japan with Set
Sakaguchi, 4th-dan, current J
INTERMEDIATE INDIVIDUALS
holds ;a 3rd-dan.
Japan champion leading die a
1 P.- Cleroux, Ottawa
Akira Kamida achieved his high 5th-dan rank when - he was vision. Sakaguchi at 6 feet]
2 J. Hart, Toronto
inches — one of the biggest Jaw
21-years old.
3 C. Gerube, Ottawa ;
nese judokas — has as his fora
COMMENTS
only his size. He is expect!
Last Saturday’s championship must have hit a new low in Murata Blitzes Opposition With 3 Goals In Win to have rough, going with ta
Canadian karate tournaments. It was also one of the bloodiest.
top Russian fighters in th|
By MEL TSUJI
Satch Fujimoto with 2,- Paul Su division such as Anzor KiknadJ
First of all, I must extend a personal apology to all New
Canadian readers for reporting that the many karate stars and
TORONTO. — With the ach nohara and Rich Yoshida were and Parnoaz Chikviladze — bo!
sambo specialists — and Cai
personalities mentioned (such as champion Shimabukuro of Okina ing muscles gone and players right in step.
Yamada Studio outgunned Duf ada's own Doug Rogers.
|
wa) would be coining.'None of the highly rated Japanese came. rounding in shape, the goalies
ferin
Cleaners
6-3
in
a
match
Accompanying
him
in
the
sad
Visa trouble was the reason given by National Karate officials. now have problems. They must
The low point in Canadian karate tournaments was revealed be blubbering now. 30 goals found that could have gone eith°?' way. division will be Mitsuo Mats™
1
in the George Silvain vs. Terry . Callis bout. It was a regular their way between the pipes in Had it not been for the goal- ga, 5th-dan.
tending,
it
was
anybody
’
s
guess.
The
middleweight
class
Cgh
beer-parlor brawl. The sight of all that blood from eyes and nose 3 games. Satisfactory reason for
Gerry Yamashita, last year’s top ing chores will be handled bl
certainly didn’t give the public a healthy picture of karate. Both their twiddling thumbs.
goalie,
came up with a glitter Tokyo Olympic Gold Medal d
of them should have been disqualified immediately and sent to
Benny Murata blanketed the ing effort. Dufferin Cleaners ner, Isao Okano, 4th-dan. 22
the stock yards to settle the matter.
opposition with Ms skating while young- forwards repeatedly forged year-old Okano’s favorite techd
“It’s like a three ring circus,” said one karate man from leading Japan Camera to a 9-7 but Gerry repelled nearly every ques are seoinage and osotokari
Japan (H.U.) who had been attending the show. He left before victory over Mickey Sato. He thing thrown his way.' The vete
Accompanying him in the sami
the finish.
garnered 3 g'oals .and an assist ran trio of the Tani brothers and class will be Kenichi Yamanaka
Judges, who were assigned to sit in corners with flags, kept while his smooth passing line Geo. Wakayama were passing 3rd-dan, dubbed Charles Atlas."]
shouting “Ippon!” and, when disregarded, shook their heads mates Hideo Higashi and Gary sharply and cashed 2 goals. Duf
Hirofumi Matsuda, 3rd-dan, j
righteously. Competitors showed both ends of the ego stick but Sawayama netted singletons-. I lie ferins . stalwarts
top seoinage man, will be repra
Geo.
Shimono
the end results were the same. Some made great displays of friend trio ox Al Shishido, Dave Agino and Kaz Fukumoto each chipped sented in the Lightweight divR
ship and ceremony at the beginning of the match and ended up and Rich Matsumoto fared equal in one. And young Roger Ina sidn. He will be backed' up bl
shaking their heads disgustedly at the judges. Otilers, conscious ly as well with 4 goals and a moto, a potential gem, ‘pitched Hiroshi Minatoya, 3rd-dan. whoa
of the crowd, tried to gather attention by showing-off breaking befuddled opposition. They real in with another.
specialties include uchimata and
boards. Judges showed obvious bias.
ly ^clicked. For the insuraucemen,
_
_ ,
,1
In a seesaw battle, Ritz Kino osotokari.
The one highlight of the whole tournament was Artis Sim
Noticeably
missing
in
me
ugstj
shita edged Stadium Garage 3-2.
mons. His excellent sportsman attitude and martial art spirit was
It
was a game' characterized by weight group is Tokyo Oiyifl
heads above everything else in the tourney.
pretty goals, strong offensive Gold Medal winner, T?.W
u J
¥SL'^11® the tourney, a popular Nisei martial art figure
plays./ and steady goaltending. Nakatani.
Canada's team to me
asked: “V/here is all this talk of character, mind, manners, and etiGen Hamada, Gary Yoshida And World
Championships a®
- Couette one hears so much about in karate? If this is just talk to
Tom Imada banged in the goals Doug Rogers,
4Wan; >
TCRONTO NISEI MAJOR MIXED 10make karate acceptable and in good taste, you might as well train
PIN. Set. 10: Alma Wilson 529; Mita for Ritz. With dangerous Glen Johnson, lst-dan; and Mt
gorillas.”
Miyasaki 494; Dick Kimura 578—218; Katsuyama
and
good-looking ger, lst-dan, and Phil Mrons^
No comment.
Ken Kaneko 565—214.
. K.C. Tsumura
rookie Alfred Ikeno notching for
SEPT. 17: Sally Hatanaka 477; Betty
3rd-can.
Potts 466; Amy Toki 459; Ken— Izumi Stadium.
TORONTO.—An unheralded karateka from Aurora, Ill., Louis
Tater, lst-dan, took a close win over popular Artis Simmons of
Erie, Penn, to cop the Black Belt Division finals of the 4th An
nual Canadian International Karate Championship here last Satur
day.
In the quarter-finals, Tater defeated R. Linguist of Harris
burg, Ohio with two fast side kicks. He then went on to defeat
Canadian fighter, H. Hiusman of Beamsville, Ont. with munches.
Simmons, exhibiting the best sportsmanship in the, tourna
ment, earlier demolished Shane Higashi of Toronto with beautiful
counter punches that had the former champion reeling. The hand
some Negro fighter from Penn. — who last year took third place
here — scored on Higashi some 5 or 6 times. Many were unfortun
ately ruled as landing outside the ring apron much to the crowd's
chagrin.
In the finals, Tater drew the first point with a shuto. Simmons
followed with a counter punch. . Tater then took the championship point with a side kick.
J1
Miyonoya To Visit Nakamura's Sat.
Kendo Champ Coming To Live In Tor.
KEG NEWS
SHO MORI
Mutual Life of Canada — Investment and Insurance Plans
,
Personal and tax exempt pensions
Business Insurance. Group Life, Health & Accident Plans
Office: 4So-/60S
—
Res.: 261-6615
SMALL SHOE SIZES
I
NEW SHOES FOR
FALL
Ladies* shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
£
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
C-O.D. orders from coast to coast
573—216, Roger Wright 563—227; Clare
Ward 559.
■
SEPT- 24: Alma Wilson 576—201'; Mita
Miyasaki 470;
Gert
Smykowski 469;
Jean Hoshida 451; Kotch Yanagisawa
666—234, 223, 209; Rick Toki 572—200;
Dies Isoshima 571—200;
Yosh Murata
568; Tak Furukawa 563; Roger Wriaht
557—211; Sub Miike 553.
OCT. 1st: Alma Wilson 538; Marj
Izumi 478; Shirley Aihoshi 477; Ken
Izumi 620—217, 207; Rick. Toki 599—214Roger_ Wright 590—212; Terry Doi 573—
201, Ken Miyasaki o64-—211; Archie Ma
tsumoto 553—231; Sid Kondo 551—221.
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
. NOTARY PUBLIC
221 VICTORIA
EM. 3-5002
ST., TORONTO
OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
KAZUO G. OIYE
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2
36S-6388
Carlton St., Toronto
Boom 1805
293-4281 P«J
TORIC
Mary Ebata
otuerd
Takara
Jewellers
Diamonds & Watches
Watch & Jewellery Repair
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto
proprietor
OPTOMETRISTS
JON ONODERA
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
Suite 1103
HU. 9-4654 -
HU. 1-8805
Phone 363-0952
(Business)
(Residence)
Mon. — Fri. 9—6, Sat. 9—3
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi
Art Watanabe
540 Eglinton Ave. W<
Toronto
118 West Hastings SI
VAN CO U VER, B.C.
E
Page 2
NEW
Saturday, 0^ -n
CANADIAN________
Japan’s 8 Top Judokas Leave Fi
Brazil World Championship Hiatt
Tater Takes Karate Crown
TOKYO.—Ending almost a year of / gruelling
training, Japan’s eight, cream-of-the-crop, member
judo team this week left for Rio De Janeiro where
the 4th World’s Judo Championship will be held
from October 14th to 20th.
Leading the team in the Unlimited Weight Class
is Tokyo Olympic Heavyweight Gold Medal win
ner, the gi-eat Isao Inokuma, 5th-dan. He has
expressed high hopes of meeting the current cham
pion Anton Geesink, the giant from Holland.
Inokuma is reported in perfect phv* । I
mental condition by his coach
M
With his eye on big Geesink, Mokuma\?l
training with a Japanese judoka Maida
whose size and techniques resemble ti'3
man’s, at Tokyo’s Tenrei Temple.
1
■Many of Japan’s top judo experts had J
that Inokuma would meet Geesink in rha
Olympics. However, his senior, Akio Kan J
was chosen and consequently ’ defeated ' J
- ±h?. “-Kuma” or “bear’ : |
is affectionately called
youngest man ever in
th? All Japan Judo chan
TORONTO.—Hiroshi Miyonoya, 3rd-dan, the All Japan Kendo ship. He won the title twice!
Champion competitor from Tochigi Prefecture,’ will. be in action
-year-old champion, Al
at the Nakamura Kendo Dojo on Yonge Street this Saturday most gave up jud'o because J
evening beginning 7:00 p.m.
serious back injury, is
J
Head instructor, Larry Nakamura, 5th-dan, extends a cordial cate of weight training. Fig J
invitation to all who wish to see this Japanese kendoka perform. techniques include his
seomage and taiotoshi
|
. Accompanying him in this!
TEAM MATCH
vision, and who may just he i
The United States defeated Canada in the team matches 3 to 2.
daixihorse of the whole iouni
United States
Canada
TORONTO.—A former All-Japan Kendo champion, 23-year-old, is tough Masaru Kato, 4th-u
William Adams ( whin er)
vs.
Mariel Lonpre
Akira Kamida, 5th-dan, is coming to Toronto this month to make Although he has not been
Terry Callis
vs.
G. Silvain (winner)
much press, this 6-feet-2Y|
•
(Incidentally one of the bloodiest .and most-disgusting matches his home here.
^^ ptund bruiser was the jj
He will .be an employee of the Japan Camera Centre here h^ who beat Anton GeesirJa
of the tourney).
Richard Lynch
Hal Henschel (winner)
vs.
r and teach the art of the sword at the Japanese Canadian Cultural a post-Olympic match. This!
Artis Sinunons (winner) Centre.
Tran Quan Ba
vs.
during the incident, reported j
Ed Miller (winner)
Shane Higashi
vs^
Judo
World reporter Donn Dii
Kamida appeared here last year- with the “Wonderful World
ger, when the Dutchman got]
NOVICE INDIVIDUALS
of Sports”.
and left the tournament ini
1. F. Bennet, Toronto
I
This young samurai sword artist comes from a family of huff.
2. J. Masse, Montreal
The
heavyweight
division
loot
kendo men. His father Yoshitaro Kamida at the age of 63, holds
3. C. Tearney, Syracuse, N.Y,
a Kendo rank of 7th-dan. Akira’s brother, Hiroto Kamid’a, 33, uncertain for Japan with Set
Sakaguchi, 4th-dan, current J
INTERMEDIATE INDIVIDUALS
holds ;a 3rd-dan.
Japan champion leading die a
1 P.- Cleroux, Ottawa
Akira Kamida achieved his high 5th-dan rank when - he was vision. Sakaguchi at 6 feet]
2 J. Hart, Toronto
inches — one of the biggest Jaw
21-years old.
3 C. Gerube, Ottawa ;
nese judokas — has as his fora
COMMENTS
only his size. He is expect!
Last Saturday’s championship must have hit a new low in Murata Blitzes Opposition With 3 Goals In Win to have rough, going with ta
Canadian karate tournaments. It was also one of the bloodiest.
top Russian fighters in th|
By MEL TSUJI
Satch Fujimoto with 2,- Paul Su division such as Anzor KiknadJ
First of all, I must extend a personal apology to all New
Canadian readers for reporting that the many karate stars and
TORONTO. — With the ach nohara and Rich Yoshida were and Parnoaz Chikviladze — bo!
sambo specialists — and Cai
personalities mentioned (such as champion Shimabukuro of Okina ing muscles gone and players right in step.
Yamada Studio outgunned Duf ada's own Doug Rogers.
|
wa) would be coining.'None of the highly rated Japanese came. rounding in shape, the goalies
ferin
Cleaners
6-3
in
a
match
Accompanying
him
in
the
sad
Visa trouble was the reason given by National Karate officials. now have problems. They must
The low point in Canadian karate tournaments was revealed be blubbering now. 30 goals found that could have gone eith°?' way. division will be Mitsuo Mats™
1
in the George Silvain vs. Terry . Callis bout. It was a regular their way between the pipes in Had it not been for the goal- ga, 5th-dan.
tending,
it
was
anybody
’
s
guess.
The
middleweight
class
Cgh
beer-parlor brawl. The sight of all that blood from eyes and nose 3 games. Satisfactory reason for
Gerry Yamashita, last year’s top ing chores will be handled bl
certainly didn’t give the public a healthy picture of karate. Both their twiddling thumbs.
goalie,
came up with a glitter Tokyo Olympic Gold Medal d
of them should have been disqualified immediately and sent to
Benny Murata blanketed the ing effort. Dufferin Cleaners ner, Isao Okano, 4th-dan. 22
the stock yards to settle the matter.
opposition with Ms skating while young- forwards repeatedly forged year-old Okano’s favorite techd
“It’s like a three ring circus,” said one karate man from leading Japan Camera to a 9-7 but Gerry repelled nearly every ques are seoinage and osotokari
Japan (H.U.) who had been attending the show. He left before victory over Mickey Sato. He thing thrown his way.' The vete
Accompanying him in the sami
the finish.
garnered 3 g'oals .and an assist ran trio of the Tani brothers and class will be Kenichi Yamanaka
Judges, who were assigned to sit in corners with flags, kept while his smooth passing line Geo. Wakayama were passing 3rd-dan, dubbed Charles Atlas."]
shouting “Ippon!” and, when disregarded, shook their heads mates Hideo Higashi and Gary sharply and cashed 2 goals. Duf
Hirofumi Matsuda, 3rd-dan, j
righteously. Competitors showed both ends of the ego stick but Sawayama netted singletons-. I lie ferins . stalwarts
top seoinage man, will be repra
Geo.
Shimono
the end results were the same. Some made great displays of friend trio ox Al Shishido, Dave Agino and Kaz Fukumoto each chipped sented in the Lightweight divR
ship and ceremony at the beginning of the match and ended up and Rich Matsumoto fared equal in one. And young Roger Ina sidn. He will be backed' up bl
shaking their heads disgustedly at the judges. Otilers, conscious ly as well with 4 goals and a moto, a potential gem, ‘pitched Hiroshi Minatoya, 3rd-dan. whoa
of the crowd, tried to gather attention by showing-off breaking befuddled opposition. They real in with another.
specialties include uchimata and
boards. Judges showed obvious bias.
ly ^clicked. For the insuraucemen,
_
_ ,
,1
In a seesaw battle, Ritz Kino osotokari.
The one highlight of the whole tournament was Artis Sim
Noticeably
missing
in
me
ugstj
shita edged Stadium Garage 3-2.
mons. His excellent sportsman attitude and martial art spirit was
It
was a game' characterized by weight group is Tokyo Oiyifl
heads above everything else in the tourney.
pretty goals, strong offensive Gold Medal winner, T?.W
u J
¥SL'^11® the tourney, a popular Nisei martial art figure
plays./ and steady goaltending. Nakatani.
Canada's team to me
asked: “V/here is all this talk of character, mind, manners, and etiGen Hamada, Gary Yoshida And World
Championships a®
- Couette one hears so much about in karate? If this is just talk to
Tom Imada banged in the goals Doug Rogers,
4Wan; >
TCRONTO NISEI MAJOR MIXED 10make karate acceptable and in good taste, you might as well train
PIN. Set. 10: Alma Wilson 529; Mita for Ritz. With dangerous Glen Johnson, lst-dan; and Mt
gorillas.”
Miyasaki 494; Dick Kimura 578—218; Katsuyama
and
good-looking ger, lst-dan, and Phil Mrons^
No comment.
Ken Kaneko 565—214.
. K.C. Tsumura
rookie Alfred Ikeno notching for
SEPT. 17: Sally Hatanaka 477; Betty
3rd-can.
Potts 466; Amy Toki 459; Ken— Izumi Stadium.
TORONTO.—An unheralded karateka from Aurora, Ill., Louis
Tater, lst-dan, took a close win over popular Artis Simmons of
Erie, Penn, to cop the Black Belt Division finals of the 4th An
nual Canadian International Karate Championship here last Satur
day.
In the quarter-finals, Tater defeated R. Linguist of Harris
burg, Ohio with two fast side kicks. He then went on to defeat
Canadian fighter, H. Hiusman of Beamsville, Ont. with munches.
Simmons, exhibiting the best sportsmanship in the, tourna
ment, earlier demolished Shane Higashi of Toronto with beautiful
counter punches that had the former champion reeling. The hand
some Negro fighter from Penn. — who last year took third place
here — scored on Higashi some 5 or 6 times. Many were unfortun
ately ruled as landing outside the ring apron much to the crowd's
chagrin.
In the finals, Tater drew the first point with a shuto. Simmons
followed with a counter punch. . Tater then took the championship point with a side kick.
J1
Miyonoya To Visit Nakamura's Sat.
Kendo Champ Coming To Live In Tor.
KEG NEWS
SHO MORI
Mutual Life of Canada — Investment and Insurance Plans
,
Personal and tax exempt pensions
Business Insurance. Group Life, Health & Accident Plans
Office: 4So-/60S
—
Res.: 261-6615
SMALL SHOE SIZES
I
NEW SHOES FOR
FALL
Ladies* shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
£
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
C-O.D. orders from coast to coast
573—216, Roger Wright 563—227; Clare
Ward 559.
■
SEPT- 24: Alma Wilson 576—201'; Mita
Miyasaki 470;
Gert
Smykowski 469;
Jean Hoshida 451; Kotch Yanagisawa
666—234, 223, 209; Rick Toki 572—200;
Dies Isoshima 571—200;
Yosh Murata
568; Tak Furukawa 563; Roger Wriaht
557—211; Sub Miike 553.
OCT. 1st: Alma Wilson 538; Marj
Izumi 478; Shirley Aihoshi 477; Ken
Izumi 620—217, 207; Rick. Toki 599—214Roger_ Wright 590—212; Terry Doi 573—
201, Ken Miyasaki o64-—211; Archie Ma
tsumoto 553—231; Sid Kondo 551—221.
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
. NOTARY PUBLIC
221 VICTORIA
EM. 3-5002
ST., TORONTO
OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
KAZUO G. OIYE
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2
36S-6388
Carlton St., Toronto
Boom 1805
293-4281 P«J
TORIC
Mary Ebata
otuerd
Takara
Jewellers
Diamonds & Watches
Watch & Jewellery Repair
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto
proprietor
OPTOMETRISTS
JON ONODERA
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
Suite 1103
HU. 9-4654 -
HU. 1-8805
Phone 363-0952
(Business)
(Residence)
Mon. — Fri. 9—6, Sat. 9—3
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi
Art Watanabe
540 Eglinton Ave. W<
Toronto
118 West Hastings SI
VAN CO U VER, B.C.
Page 3
Page 3
K October
d*
ft
|U
o
i
0
±
It
x.
3$
5
5
it
Ft
£
it
0
V'
9
3
it
Ft
g
3
IS
h it
ft
it
O
d»
ft
3
it
it
0
#*
0
d*
9
Ft
6
3
d*
PI
0
r^
It
it
i»
it
it
Ft
m
a
5
4±Bn»?s*«®
'^^SS^*”^^3!?^
if iSi'^b® 'BliiS^ ’JB& i © ®XH55*l^»T->.
H^ttSt±®ft«0« 'HS:|rtS + »»?’go
¥»rii 4 8 'Tit !*C ® a Xff^Kt^^ASBc^ f gjH
•C$jH'rK«5l>#
^^...- K^^w
co
CH
#^
Kjw
$1 I6j ic«c«d
pg
©
It 3
^^ ^
^ ffi w
CD
t ite^^
012
^6
CO H
tO Q
woo
W y P
tn
CD
co
3
i^
EH I
L
i»W 58^
* # 55 8
CP150H.
I IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
Authorized Agent for AU Airlines
p
B OTfflB
A AUTH0REED AGENT FOR
“a 0 LINES, AMERICAN PRESIDENT LINES
W. K. GARDENS
Crown Life Insurance Co.
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
Frank G. Yada
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquets
co
H
it
a
1550 West Georgia St.
Vancouver, B.C.
101
y
CQ
Uto
Q tO
5 ®
5°
M 05
■
O S'
ci to
3 s
y^S^li^
Uto
a
V'
it.
Co
0
to o
^?
co
to co
^®^
Si
s ffl ® rr
^^
fj
o
s ta
® x
it
1 ^ ii ^« r;
U ^ # t it ^
a^it^f
rfa S
41 a
4
>4®!®
K October
d*
ft
|U
o
i
0
±
It
x.
3$
5
5
it
Ft
£
it
0
V'
9
3
it
Ft
g
3
IS
h it
ft
it
O
d»
ft
3
it
it
0
#*
0
d*
9
Ft
6
3
d*
PI
0
r^
It
it
i»
it
it
Ft
m
a
5
4±Bn»?s*«®
'^^SS^*”^^3!?^
if iSi'^b® 'BliiS^ ’JB& i © ®XH55*l^»T->.
H^ttSt±®ft«0« 'HS:|rtS + »»?’go
¥»rii 4 8 'Tit !*C ® a Xff^Kt^^ASBc^ f gjH
•C$jH'rK«5l>#
^^...- K^^w
co
CH
#^
Kjw
$1 I6j ic«c«d
pg
©
It 3
^^ ^
^ ffi w
CD
t ite^^
012
^6
CO H
tO Q
woo
W y P
tn
CD
co
3
i^
EH I
L
i»W 58^
* # 55 8
CP150H.
I IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
Authorized Agent for AU Airlines
p
B OTfflB
A AUTH0REED AGENT FOR
“a 0 LINES, AMERICAN PRESIDENT LINES
W. K. GARDENS
Crown Life Insurance Co.
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
Frank G. Yada
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquets
co
H
it
a
1550 West Georgia St.
Vancouver, B.C.
101
y
CQ
Uto
Q tO
5 ®
5°
M 05
■
O S'
ci to
3 s
y^S^li^
Uto
a
V'
it.
Co
0
to o
^?
co
to co
^®^
Si
s ffl ® rr
^^
fj
o
s ta
® x
it
1 ^ ii ^« r;
U ^ # t it ^
a^it^f
rfa S
41 a
4
>4®!®
Page 4
Saturday, Qetnhg^ 9
PageJ
D
tZ
1^
ft
d^ UM * « 9
72 *1*
o 3
5 ^
i
n it
(X
It IX
0 &
b
o>
Vv
IX
2V
Jr
w
v»
it
M h
2
±&
it
X t^
£ M R
It
Ip
o
o
d*
I/' u- b MB w
tz
i¥
SB
0
1$
It
iuU
d» ^^
^D
M
i
o
it
u
G
&$
sr *^* 0 72 Xp M
PS 4
#
©
s rtf
ft n" 3 it t
£> ft It
° £
i
#
it It
A
1#
<
IX
0
©
Ira
~f*
72
0
It
o
F
ft UM
IX
^fc^^’
it
X 72- & ft & n ^ & $ 5
f
H
0
a^A^Bi: ^^MJ> 0 L7?faM
i 5
i Afe^$
^t0t<T'/b (X M^K
4> fill 24< M n t ^’
3
IX
tTr
IX
5 IX
& IX
0
jf
IX
on
yj
6 tc
6
ft ?^iS
i- 'H
ft
K
©
7
3
SU
n
*>
It
Arfeu
0
SU
aS
i»
# 3 It
It
fa
IX
5
M
ft
3
it
ra 'P
0
flu 0
IX
0
ri
5
IX
ft
3
B
IX H£
IX
(X
ft
it
.a
3
It
ti
X
b
0
«
ft
t
ft
IX
i
0
b
b b
MIXM $ f®^A _
ft z. ^ Kt ' I ix ^ S -RJ
-£#
v* ^fil
T £ K ^ t T’ IH^$f ^ ^ ^ 1^ t
t
0
0
1 A IX t’
lx
it
$&$®T^fc*£> U ^- L>1
<KK
B* £@ ft it
■JAofSff^
co
oo
03
co
os
VI
■' r;
wO^ '*0
W
2 Z
=s;u
it
IX
4
i
AUK
“woa v
OF zsa •*
«±fSSi!X.
PageJ
D
tZ
1^
ft
d^ UM * « 9
72 *1*
o 3
5 ^
i
n it
(X
It IX
0 &
b
o>
Vv
IX
2V
Jr
w
v»
it
M h
2
±&
it
X t^
£ M R
It
Ip
o
o
d*
I/' u- b MB w
tz
i¥
SB
0
1$
It
iuU
d» ^^
^D
M
i
o
it
u
G
&$
sr *^* 0 72 Xp M
PS 4
#
©
s rtf
ft n" 3 it t
£> ft It
° £
i
#
it It
A
1#
<
IX
0
©
Ira
~f*
72
0
It
o
F
ft UM
IX
^fc^^’
it
X 72- & ft & n ^ & $ 5
f
H
0
a^A^Bi: ^^MJ> 0 L7?faM
i 5
i Afe^$
^t0t<T'/b (X M^K
4> fill 24< M n t ^’
3
IX
tTr
IX
5 IX
& IX
0
jf
IX
on
yj
6 tc
6
ft ?^iS
i- 'H
ft
K
©
7
3
SU
n
*>
It
Arfeu
0
SU
aS
i»
# 3 It
It
fa
IX
5
M
ft
3
it
ra 'P
0
flu 0
IX
0
ri
5
IX
ft
3
B
IX H£
IX
(X
ft
it
.a
3
It
ti
X
b
0
«
ft
t
ft
IX
i
0
b
b b
MIXM $ f®^A _
ft z. ^ Kt ' I ix ^ S -RJ
-£#
v* ^fil
T £ K ^ t T’ IH^$f ^ ^ ^ 1^ t
t
0
0
1 A IX t’
lx
it
$&$®T^fc*£> U ^- L>1
<KK
B* £@ ft it
■JAofSff^
co
oo
03
co
os
VI
■' r;
wO^ '*0
W
2 Z
=s;u
it
IX
4
i
AUK
“woa v
OF zsa •*
«±fSSi!X.
Page 5
Fage_o
11
CD
B
H
0
IX
It
S’]
11
3
IX
$
ix
KB
(D
3
d*
^n'- n
I* ? ? it
CD
it
it
d\
3
>i
3t
i» t
IX -
6
^
IX
<h
15
X
6
H
It
A
It
it
CD
^j
1
*: 5
6 0 t * ^
£
IX
n
-t
CD
©
It
IX
It
5
it
It IX
5
tl
5 IX
Mi I
i5 b a
fl
t
li o it
1
w
0
IX
BSiAf
CD
o
©
•'ll
CD
^ IX*
CD
CD
3 ^ ^>
IX
• gK
•»5; -*°!!>
* ®. ^
n
MB*-?#® W4®®®®*1 Jli®
^i:5 5H®g B|gKtxSTflK®=RT
IX
It
IX
-CS IffiffitfiS
IX
5 tfct^an's
Pl
b
CD
5
CD
C^
it
3
8
(X
CD
B0
9
&£ ftft®^
d» 3
IX
H
a0
° IX
it
6
$i 4 A E
3
If
it
? OM^i^ ^ t
o
^A
IS IO h5^W««'JKK55&Ml!;S. n
LiaaM^K
®
A*-^ii^* As«OSAft^M«u
zR
^ L4©ffl?J
*±«i/2$Si
PlW
ffl IM 111
£ ft5E^=H
A LC B%
it. i lrJ^
^®^^X^
bB^ t!?
b MJiS
ga rx ^tfzfe^
ij f
17
1
±«®-»
W«i®tS
K£
ifioi
'k»j® • X
_• V S
IX 7 tt Hl ft ft 0 t K eg
S^ifti ' 5ftfii>»B*#»1:*IH'u
^gra^SAR
® L H It 0 MP
^Tm’^o^* i FRi^il^
ra w
w. ra *
^ ^ is « a ^SBE??^*^ ^
h
jHiftK+Sftni^tTl^iffi.Y
7
'Mt ' t f
5 7K A^
^^tS^Ax #®ll£%^M
cd e> *®m a n«^^ <
+
X
fi£/m# A,
'•^'^
a□y®ffl^t
»
a .
u
S»^^ IJE^ T ^
fflii
^ ^ v ^ j-
b ^
^ot:
^
^t^a#
oo
s
„»«^<««p„
CD
f B0 "
^ 1 #^t$3
2
n
o
§
to 0
wI
*’ W ^ I
* F®«M
®an®—- ^® ?ts
5
11
CD
B
H
0
IX
It
S’]
11
3
IX
$
ix
KB
(D
3
d*
^n'- n
I* ? ? it
CD
it
it
d\
3
>i
3t
i» t
IX -
6
^
IX
<h
15
X
6
H
It
A
It
it
CD
^j
1
*: 5
6 0 t * ^
£
IX
n
-t
CD
©
It
IX
It
5
it
It IX
5
tl
5 IX
Mi I
i5 b a
fl
t
li o it
1
w
0
IX
BSiAf
CD
o
©
•'ll
CD
^ IX*
CD
CD
3 ^ ^>
IX
• gK
•»5; -*°!!>
* ®. ^
n
MB*-?#® W4®®®®*1 Jli®
^i:5 5H®g B|gKtxSTflK®=RT
IX
It
IX
-CS IffiffitfiS
IX
5 tfct^an's
Pl
b
CD
5
CD
C^
it
3
8
(X
CD
B0
9
&£ ftft®^
d» 3
IX
H
a0
° IX
it
6
$i 4 A E
3
If
it
? OM^i^ ^ t
o
^A
IS IO h5^W««'JKK55&Ml!;S. n
LiaaM^K
®
A*-^ii^* As«OSAft^M«u
zR
^ L4©ffl?J
*±«i/2$Si
PlW
ffl IM 111
£ ft5E^=H
A LC B%
it. i lrJ^
^®^^X^
bB^ t!?
b MJiS
ga rx ^tfzfe^
ij f
17
1
±«®-»
W«i®tS
K£
ifioi
'k»j® • X
_• V S
IX 7 tt Hl ft ft 0 t K eg
S^ifti ' 5ftfii>»B*#»1:*IH'u
^gra^SAR
® L H It 0 MP
^Tm’^o^* i FRi^il^
ra w
w. ra *
^ ^ is « a ^SBE??^*^ ^
h
jHiftK+Sftni^tTl^iffi.Y
7
'Mt ' t f
5 7K A^
^^tS^Ax #®ll£%^M
cd e> *®m a n«^^ <
+
X
fi£/m# A,
'•^'^
a□y®ffl^t
»
a .
u
S»^^ IJE^ T ^
fflii
^ ^ v ^ j-
b ^
^ot:
^
^t^a#
oo
s
„»«^<««p„
CD
f B0 "
^ 1 #^t$3
2
n
o
§
to 0
wI
*’ W ^ I
* F®«M
®an®—- ^® ?ts
5
Page 6
g
Page 6
NEW
^2£Sfe_October 9-
0
ix &
It
1$
it
r
it
5
It
®
Pn
i'
it
(X
L>
3
IX
IX
s’
3
i>
t
l>
K
It IX
11
£
5
<
Pl
RE
d*
6
IX
IX
0
£
IX
o
H
IX
£ fL
IX
nn
fit
TO
i'
£
IX
n»
IX IC
ft
NEW
It
0
9
t
it
Ze
©
CANADIAN !
479 Queen St. W„
Toronto 2-B, Ont.'
Phone EM. 6-5005
IX
5
* He
*
©
IX
IX
IX ^' IX
IX
1
^ 3
IX
5
d»
XP
a
ft
i
ffi
IX
1$
M
3
6
59
IX
it
IX
TO
it
2
3
it
3
n
IX'
I £
I IX
/p
IX
ft it
IX
1?
5
IX
IX
0
3
IX
(X
to!
9
TO
H
^
it
H
IX
it
IX
0
IE
5 IX *
It
IX
0
?i
IX
Hit
I'
IX
■M r
IX
ffi
it
TO
G1
7 B A
i 3
IX
i»
6
# #s
P!
£
IX
& M
0
5
It
IX
3
(X
IX
&
IX
(X
&
ar
0
d»
It
d*
9
Ze
3
ex
i
it
'L> IX
^ M®
IX
3
SB
M
©
IX
3
0
H 11
l#i
5
It
IX £
5
IX
H IX
W ®£
T II
i
L
5
3P01
ii’
It
$J i
it *
(X
It
5'
n
V'
UH
»*
5
3
IX I'
17
3
IX
9
li
3
Page 6
NEW
^2£Sfe_October 9-
0
ix &
It
1$
it
r
it
5
It
®
Pn
i'
it
(X
L>
3
IX
IX
s’
3
i>
t
l>
K
It IX
11
£
5
<
Pl
RE
d*
6
IX
IX
0
£
IX
o
H
IX
£ fL
IX
nn
fit
TO
i'
£
IX
n»
IX IC
ft
NEW
It
0
9
t
it
Ze
©
CANADIAN !
479 Queen St. W„
Toronto 2-B, Ont.'
Phone EM. 6-5005
IX
5
* He
*
©
IX
IX
IX ^' IX
IX
1
^ 3
IX
5
d»
XP
a
ft
i
ffi
IX
1$
M
3
6
59
IX
it
IX
TO
it
2
3
it
3
n
IX'
I £
I IX
/p
IX
ft it
IX
1?
5
IX
IX
0
3
IX
(X
to!
9
TO
H
^
it
H
IX
it
IX
0
IE
5 IX *
It
IX
0
?i
IX
Hit
I'
IX
■M r
IX
ffi
it
TO
G1
7 B A
i 3
IX
i»
6
# #s
P!
£
IX
& M
0
5
It
IX
3
(X
IX
&
IX
(X
&
ar
0
d»
It
d*
9
Ze
3
ex
i
it
'L> IX
^ M®
IX
3
SB
M
©
IX
3
0
H 11
l#i
5
It
IX £
5
IX
H IX
W ®£
T II
i
L
5
3P01
ii’
It
$J i
it *
(X
It
5'
n
V'
UH
»*
5
3
IX I'
17
3
IX
9
li
3
Page 7
Page-T
L„oetob«KMh£_—^^
Tor. Kotobuki Kai
Personal Notes Across Canada
Celebrates 15th Yr
Engagements
I^TchurchVariety Concert On Oct. 16 At J.C.C. Centre
CARD OF THANKS
'iates and Doings
Our sincere gratitude to all
TORONTO. — Mr. and Mrs.
our
relatives,
friends
and
TORONTO. — Over 500 people Akihei Kohara of Toronto are
neighbours ‘for the kindness,
^S8*^^
directed by Mr' Mickey attended the Toronto Kotobuki happy to announce tiie engage
svnipathv and flowers receiv
kai’s 15th Anniversary at the ment of their daughter, Francos
ed during the recent loss of
our dear husband and father.
^
show all Toronto Japanese Canadians should not Japanese Canadian Cultural Cen Takako to Roy Susumu Orida,
tre or. Sunday, October 3rd.
A special thanks to Lev. A.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Itsuo Orida
Is
Roy Sato
This association was formed of Oakville, Ontario.
S. McGuire, G.S.P.
15 years ago to encourage good
Mrs. Seitaro Fujimoto
The engagement was hold on
fellowship among the senior J.C.
and family
I ,„Ni«ei Women's Club Starts OH With Meet citizens. During the years, this October 2, 1965.
Mr. & Mrs. J. McCabe
^n 0
Toronto Nisei Women’s: Club started their group has organized three Japan
*
*
*
*NTOrThe T“oet^ ^ on September 22nd, 1965. group tours. Membership has in
STEVESTON, B.C—Miss Safeon ®th *® 1 ~ r(jCeived from Consul General and Mrs. creased from 250 in 1955, when
dayo
Oura, daughter of Mr. and
the association became incorpo
It is a good policy to
Wh a kind
their .lovely residence.
Mrs.
Yoshiichi
Oura
of
Stcvesrated
and
registered
with
the
have
the RIGHT POLICY .
$the ^V^^Hviiness period, Mrs Saiki spoke on a pastime
ton,
B.C.,
and
Mr.
Sam
Masami
government,
to
its
present
total
^V^ri^Japan'She spoke of the-pleasures of tsukiConsult
Hayashi, son of Mr. and Mrs.
’^tfmno- and old. The members were also shown a of 650. .
WALES and DUNCAN
During the initial part of the Casey Genji Hayashi of Toronto,
*i&dsiof Japan”, depicting the various ways festivals
announced
their
engageiaent
here
program, President T. Ide ad
INSURANCE AGENTS
Vibrated in different ^^ d Out jn the “moon shaped” dressed the party saying that on September 9th, 1965 at the
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
?TmSX^ by tiie hostess and the Central this celebration was held to ex Oura home.
Wedding
is
expected
to
take
press
thanks
to
all
the
member
jgnmentb
Phone WA. 1-3171
ship for their support down place sometime in March of next
a of the club.
g.k.
through the years. There was year.
*
*
*
a message by the Toronto Consul
ICC.A. Graduates & Students Tea Oct. 23rd General, S. Saiki, represented by
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
^vviDwr Man__ What- the Manitoba JCCA considers as his assistant, I. Sakagami. Other- Go To Church Of Your
WINNIPEG; M '...
i- program of the association, the speakers included M. Amemori,
Choice This Sunday
Consult
.most significant__________ P P J1 ^ b held on Saturday. rep. of the Toronto JCCA IsseiSK^B^ hSiNo-Edmonton Street begin- bu, and Secretary T. Tanada
RESIDENCE
who gave a brief history of the
OFFICE
2 Vesta Drive EM. 4-1394
Kotobuki
kai.
HUdson 5-1365
g8P-“'
Hip M JCCA, and fellow students will
EM. 4-1395
A presentation of a letter and
s ch
such as -U. of Man.,radiates
United fit* »f thanks was .made to the
For All Classes of
ta Man Teachers’ College, Nursing Schools, and graduates I former president o± tne KotoA. E. McKague, Q«C.
INSURANCE
.equested to attend. Parents and old- tuki tai,^ ^ W
'grades 11 and 12.
Barrister and Solicitor
^KS^i^ted to attend to give encourageNOTARY PUBLIC
Phone: PL. 9-2632
gram was filled with, entertainii their children to continue their education. A, social and ino- songs, dances and shibai by
OR
1008 Northern Ontario Building
Sansei', Nisei and Issei. Notables
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
see is to follow.
M. JCCA
PL. 5-7317
were the Sansei Choir of the J.C.
TORONTO
Cultural Centre, and music and
songs by Roy Kusano and Veriternational Institute pf Metro To Hold Can. Week non
Hakkaku.
TORONTO—The International Institute of Metropolitan TorMany senior citizens attend
i at 709 College Street holds its annual Canadian Week with ing expressed their tremendous
acai and artistic performances between October 16th and 24, . enjoyment of the afternoon.
■ncert, the main feature of the week, begins at 3 p.m. on Sraday,
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
Sober 17th in the Auditorium and will be followed by a h-ecepin and a floor show in the Cabaret. French, Scottish, Ukrainian,
j SHINGLING
SAY IT WITH
PLAT ROOFS
anish. Italian, Polish, German, Irish, Indian and Dutch soloists
SHEET METAL WORK
FLOWERS
EAVESTROUGHING "
airs and dancers will perform at the concert and tne show,
ak Brudell will be Master of Ceremonies.
/
, K
SHARON'S FLORIST
Art exhibit will be held throughout the entire week between
TORONTO
NISEI OWNED
p.m. and 10 p.m on week days and between
P
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Sundays, after the official opening on Sunday, Oct. 17tn at -5 p-i •
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
? Canadian dances depicting various nationality themes will e
COVERING ONTARI O
TOSH NISHIJIMA
Bus HO. 6-2041
H on Saturdays, October 16th and October 23rd.’ at 9 p.m.
'Films on Canada on Sunday, October 24th at 3 p.m., end t e
Res: HO. 6-7962
Night Calls: PL. 9-5095- HZ. 7-1100
aadian Week 1965 at the International Institute.
942 PAPE AVE.. TORONTO
TorOnto Buddhist Church will hold a
P^^fo^ October 16tK from 3.30 p.m. to celebrate tne
By T. UMEZUKI
RITZ KINOSHITA
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
421"3374
Everyone welcome!
I.I. M.T
.VANCOUVER.—The Department, of - University Extension at
iC would like to bring to your attention a non-credit evening
Ke which you may find of special interest.
_
This will be given by the eminent sociologist _ Professop Ka
ko Asurumi and is entitled “Literature and Society in Modern
pan”.. Miss Tsurumi will discuss the major authors ana literary
nds in relation to social changes that took place from the Meiji
boration in 1868 to the present. The persistent problems o
oamization since Meiji and the newly rising issues of postwar
nod will be special points of' focus.
_
j
Ihe series, which started Oct. 7th will continue each Thursday
Wfor eight sessions commencing at 8 pun. in Room 2230 of .tne
??nan Building at UBC. The fee for, the course is $1^.00 per
indual, with a husband and wife rate of $19.00. A read ng n?t
available from the Extension Department, and for further mWn please call 228-2181.
Tsurumi, who is a visiting' lecturer in the Department
Asian Studies at UBC and Research Assistant at Princeton
j 11 be leaving the campus in. January, and this course
L i a sPecial opportunity to its" participants to hear her
we her departure.
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
.
SUNDAY. OCTORER 10, 1965
11 A.M. World wide * communion Service
The Rev. Minoru Stephan Takada. B.A.. B-D.
WELCOME TO ALL
—
701, Dovercourt Hd.. Toronto
W'l<ey S. Sato
Insurance
New Luck Inn
Chop Suey House
°Hice—783-4261
Special
Through
M1TS
Cantonese Dishes
llMQ
COMPAHI
Gertrude Urabe
1444 Danforth Avenue:
Home phone: HI. 7-8905
Toronto, Ontario
BUS: HO. 9-1151 — RES: AM. 1-2581
Office — 3101 Bathurst St.
Phone: 783-4261
4*
GOLDEN DRAGON
Chop Suey House
Travel Arrangements
Anywhere — Anytime
Air—Ship—Bus—Rail
Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel. Accident
and Baggage Insurance
Passage arranged by Steamer or Air
Call for Reservations or
Information — EM. 8-9934
T. KAMEOKA
^"BE. 1-0863
Phone 528-2219
K. Iwata Travel Service
In Toll Area
^RO 6-3840
21
HAMILTON,
WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE LIMITED
AGENCY
Free Home Delivery
John St. N.
KURODA
Representing
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
Modern
Your Home
Buy & Sell
iterature In Modern Japan" Course At U.B.C
113 McCauI St., TORONTO
ONT.
L**w***********^*
CATERING FOR ANY OCCASION
ONLY AUTHENTIC CHINESE FOODS SERVED
SPECIAL BUSINESSMEN’S LUNCHEON
1M
FROM 11:30 A M. TO 4 P.M.
DAILY MONDAY TO FRIDAY
131A Dundas St. W.
For Reservations
Toronto 2,
Take Out Service
Ontario
EM. 8-2475
11:30 A.M. TO 3 A.M.
SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 1 A M.
M
»
L„oetob«KMh£_—^^
Tor. Kotobuki Kai
Personal Notes Across Canada
Celebrates 15th Yr
Engagements
I^TchurchVariety Concert On Oct. 16 At J.C.C. Centre
CARD OF THANKS
'iates and Doings
Our sincere gratitude to all
TORONTO. — Mr. and Mrs.
our
relatives,
friends
and
TORONTO. — Over 500 people Akihei Kohara of Toronto are
neighbours ‘for the kindness,
^S8*^^
directed by Mr' Mickey attended the Toronto Kotobuki happy to announce tiie engage
svnipathv and flowers receiv
kai’s 15th Anniversary at the ment of their daughter, Francos
ed during the recent loss of
our dear husband and father.
^
show all Toronto Japanese Canadians should not Japanese Canadian Cultural Cen Takako to Roy Susumu Orida,
tre or. Sunday, October 3rd.
A special thanks to Lev. A.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Itsuo Orida
Is
Roy Sato
This association was formed of Oakville, Ontario.
S. McGuire, G.S.P.
15 years ago to encourage good
Mrs. Seitaro Fujimoto
The engagement was hold on
fellowship among the senior J.C.
and family
I ,„Ni«ei Women's Club Starts OH With Meet citizens. During the years, this October 2, 1965.
Mr. & Mrs. J. McCabe
^n 0
Toronto Nisei Women’s: Club started their group has organized three Japan
*
*
*
*NTOrThe T“oet^ ^ on September 22nd, 1965. group tours. Membership has in
STEVESTON, B.C—Miss Safeon ®th *® 1 ~ r(jCeived from Consul General and Mrs. creased from 250 in 1955, when
dayo
Oura, daughter of Mr. and
the association became incorpo
It is a good policy to
Wh a kind
their .lovely residence.
Mrs.
Yoshiichi
Oura
of
Stcvesrated
and
registered
with
the
have
the RIGHT POLICY .
$the ^V^^Hviiness period, Mrs Saiki spoke on a pastime
ton,
B.C.,
and
Mr.
Sam
Masami
government,
to
its
present
total
^V^ri^Japan'She spoke of the-pleasures of tsukiConsult
Hayashi, son of Mr. and Mrs.
’^tfmno- and old. The members were also shown a of 650. .
WALES and DUNCAN
During the initial part of the Casey Genji Hayashi of Toronto,
*i&dsiof Japan”, depicting the various ways festivals
announced
their
engageiaent
here
program, President T. Ide ad
INSURANCE AGENTS
Vibrated in different ^^ d Out jn the “moon shaped” dressed the party saying that on September 9th, 1965 at the
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
?TmSX^ by tiie hostess and the Central this celebration was held to ex Oura home.
Wedding
is
expected
to
take
press
thanks
to
all
the
member
jgnmentb
Phone WA. 1-3171
ship for their support down place sometime in March of next
a of the club.
g.k.
through the years. There was year.
*
*
*
a message by the Toronto Consul
ICC.A. Graduates & Students Tea Oct. 23rd General, S. Saiki, represented by
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
^vviDwr Man__ What- the Manitoba JCCA considers as his assistant, I. Sakagami. Other- Go To Church Of Your
WINNIPEG; M '...
i- program of the association, the speakers included M. Amemori,
Choice This Sunday
Consult
.most significant__________ P P J1 ^ b held on Saturday. rep. of the Toronto JCCA IsseiSK^B^ hSiNo-Edmonton Street begin- bu, and Secretary T. Tanada
RESIDENCE
who gave a brief history of the
OFFICE
2 Vesta Drive EM. 4-1394
Kotobuki
kai.
HUdson 5-1365
g8P-“'
Hip M JCCA, and fellow students will
EM. 4-1395
A presentation of a letter and
s ch
such as -U. of Man.,radiates
United fit* »f thanks was .made to the
For All Classes of
ta Man Teachers’ College, Nursing Schools, and graduates I former president o± tne KotoA. E. McKague, Q«C.
INSURANCE
.equested to attend. Parents and old- tuki tai,^ ^ W
'grades 11 and 12.
Barrister and Solicitor
^KS^i^ted to attend to give encourageNOTARY PUBLIC
Phone: PL. 9-2632
gram was filled with, entertainii their children to continue their education. A, social and ino- songs, dances and shibai by
OR
1008 Northern Ontario Building
Sansei', Nisei and Issei. Notables
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
see is to follow.
M. JCCA
PL. 5-7317
were the Sansei Choir of the J.C.
TORONTO
Cultural Centre, and music and
songs by Roy Kusano and Veriternational Institute pf Metro To Hold Can. Week non
Hakkaku.
TORONTO—The International Institute of Metropolitan TorMany senior citizens attend
i at 709 College Street holds its annual Canadian Week with ing expressed their tremendous
acai and artistic performances between October 16th and 24, . enjoyment of the afternoon.
■ncert, the main feature of the week, begins at 3 p.m. on Sraday,
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
Sober 17th in the Auditorium and will be followed by a h-ecepin and a floor show in the Cabaret. French, Scottish, Ukrainian,
j SHINGLING
SAY IT WITH
PLAT ROOFS
anish. Italian, Polish, German, Irish, Indian and Dutch soloists
SHEET METAL WORK
FLOWERS
EAVESTROUGHING "
airs and dancers will perform at the concert and tne show,
ak Brudell will be Master of Ceremonies.
/
, K
SHARON'S FLORIST
Art exhibit will be held throughout the entire week between
TORONTO
NISEI OWNED
p.m. and 10 p.m on week days and between
P
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Sundays, after the official opening on Sunday, Oct. 17tn at -5 p-i •
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
? Canadian dances depicting various nationality themes will e
COVERING ONTARI O
TOSH NISHIJIMA
Bus HO. 6-2041
H on Saturdays, October 16th and October 23rd.’ at 9 p.m.
'Films on Canada on Sunday, October 24th at 3 p.m., end t e
Res: HO. 6-7962
Night Calls: PL. 9-5095- HZ. 7-1100
aadian Week 1965 at the International Institute.
942 PAPE AVE.. TORONTO
TorOnto Buddhist Church will hold a
P^^fo^ October 16tK from 3.30 p.m. to celebrate tne
By T. UMEZUKI
RITZ KINOSHITA
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
421"3374
Everyone welcome!
I.I. M.T
.VANCOUVER.—The Department, of - University Extension at
iC would like to bring to your attention a non-credit evening
Ke which you may find of special interest.
_
This will be given by the eminent sociologist _ Professop Ka
ko Asurumi and is entitled “Literature and Society in Modern
pan”.. Miss Tsurumi will discuss the major authors ana literary
nds in relation to social changes that took place from the Meiji
boration in 1868 to the present. The persistent problems o
oamization since Meiji and the newly rising issues of postwar
nod will be special points of' focus.
_
j
Ihe series, which started Oct. 7th will continue each Thursday
Wfor eight sessions commencing at 8 pun. in Room 2230 of .tne
??nan Building at UBC. The fee for, the course is $1^.00 per
indual, with a husband and wife rate of $19.00. A read ng n?t
available from the Extension Department, and for further mWn please call 228-2181.
Tsurumi, who is a visiting' lecturer in the Department
Asian Studies at UBC and Research Assistant at Princeton
j 11 be leaving the campus in. January, and this course
L i a sPecial opportunity to its" participants to hear her
we her departure.
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
.
SUNDAY. OCTORER 10, 1965
11 A.M. World wide * communion Service
The Rev. Minoru Stephan Takada. B.A.. B-D.
WELCOME TO ALL
—
701, Dovercourt Hd.. Toronto
W'l<ey S. Sato
Insurance
New Luck Inn
Chop Suey House
°Hice—783-4261
Special
Through
M1TS
Cantonese Dishes
llMQ
COMPAHI
Gertrude Urabe
1444 Danforth Avenue:
Home phone: HI. 7-8905
Toronto, Ontario
BUS: HO. 9-1151 — RES: AM. 1-2581
Office — 3101 Bathurst St.
Phone: 783-4261
4*
GOLDEN DRAGON
Chop Suey House
Travel Arrangements
Anywhere — Anytime
Air—Ship—Bus—Rail
Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel. Accident
and Baggage Insurance
Passage arranged by Steamer or Air
Call for Reservations or
Information — EM. 8-9934
T. KAMEOKA
^"BE. 1-0863
Phone 528-2219
K. Iwata Travel Service
In Toll Area
^RO 6-3840
21
HAMILTON,
WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE LIMITED
AGENCY
Free Home Delivery
John St. N.
KURODA
Representing
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
Modern
Your Home
Buy & Sell
iterature In Modern Japan" Course At U.B.C
113 McCauI St., TORONTO
ONT.
L**w***********^*
CATERING FOR ANY OCCASION
ONLY AUTHENTIC CHINESE FOODS SERVED
SPECIAL BUSINESSMEN’S LUNCHEON
1M
FROM 11:30 A M. TO 4 P.M.
DAILY MONDAY TO FRIDAY
131A Dundas St. W.
For Reservations
Toronto 2,
Take Out Service
Ontario
EM. 8-2475
11:30 A.M. TO 3 A.M.
SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 1 A M.
M
»
Page 8
Saturday, p^u.
Page 8
™^wc®ii
One Year Later
Authorised as 8emnJ
®Ld tor Payment oi
^ ad
Post Office DepOig»^
A Look At Tokyo Olympic Village Today
By RENE-GEORGES INAGAKI
TOKYO.—Spari’ows twitter undisturbed and crickets chirrup
lustily in the weeds grown over what had been the gay and bust
ling Olympic Village of the 18th. Olympiad — now lying still anci
abandoned in the midst of a noisy and busy capital.
The long awaited Tokyo Olympic Games which opened glam
ourously on Oct. 10, 1964 were the climax to an extraordinary Ja
panese effort—some three billion dollars in terms of money spent.
They transformed the city, left a sensational super express,
a unique monorail, a fine network of roads, many new buildings
—-.and helped trigger a serious economic recession.
To the fast moving citizenry of Tokyo, the games are already
a fast fading memory and the word Olympics is no longer heard
or seen anywhere.
Still thousands of Japanese tourists from the provj nces —
sometimes 10,000 a day■— regularly swarm in to look in awe
at the magnificent Olympic sports facilities where the athletic
battles they had followed on television had taken placeTo keep the memory alive; and further promote interest in
sports, athletic officials have named Oct. 10 “Sports Day” and
asked the government to make it a national holiday.
Ceremonies resembling the Olympiad’s opening ceremony with
torch runner, model track and field exhibitions, and a soccer
match are to be staged at the 80,000-seat National Stadium.
TSUMURA^ ^“S^ 11
Simultaneously, ceremonies and sports meets are to be held E*tor, KEN fe
in each of the country’s 46 prefectural capitals with a national Section Editor ?AdS
marathon in Fukuoka City, Kyushu Island.
The soccer game was planned for the Tokyo memorial appar
SUBSCRIPTIob
ently to help popularize a- game which until the Olympiad had.
^^ ^ « Boathi
only a limited following in this country. A. soccer league has
^•Wysryie
been formed since the Tokyo games and interest has picked up
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
slightly, sports official reported.
Yoyogi Village, originally built as a U.S. military depmident
housing area immediately after World War II and known as Wash
ington Heights, housed 8000 athletes and officials in its 2o0 wood
en cottages and 16 concrete barracks.
x
,
Toronto J.^ ^
Empire 6-5005
The Village was used only once after the games to stage
the Paralympics, the Olympics of the athletes in wheel chairs.
It has been left vacant since and the 250 cottages are awaiting
the demolisher’s hammers later, this year under a .Tokyo city
plan to remodel the entire area into a wooded .public park. _
The 16 apartment-type, barracks, once U.S bachelor officer
Male Help Wanted
quarters, have been made the dormitories of the Olympic Memorial
DISH washer. Youna
481-2285 (Toronto)
5 0" ol(
Youth Centre.
'
i ,
The centre will serve as the village for the Universiad to
W?SNG1 ^an Vfor genera!
be held in Tokyo in 1967.
’
fur business
The three major sports monuments left by the games, placed wholesale
necessary. Apply 254 Sm
on the itinerary of city tourist bus tours, are the NationalStadium, (Toronto).
the indoor pool, object of international superlatives and .the Ko
MAN wanted to wk in
mazawa sports complex.
.
Experience not
The pool has been opened to the public and long queues or
Phone
7 p.m,
ME
EM. after
2-3672
tGeoS?fe
(Cont. From Page 1)
Fashion Expert . . . .
formed during the season waiting for their turn to get in.
Various swimming competitions have been staged there since
be too heavy so I trim a bridal
Hanae Mori now shows ner
Female Help Wanted
the
Olympics.
.
coat with many bands of differ collections twice a year in the
In winter, the Olympic pool is to be converted into a skat- JAPANESE Canadian Cultural Fl
ent colored slik satins.”
Unites States and' sells to sevwants a full-time Girl Friday wid
rink.
’
.
In Japan, Hanae Mori makes eral of the better known stores ing The
to . assist in the office. Stenaj’ut&
bouse, which had lodged some 1000 foreign news typing
experience essential '
mainly daytime clothes, suits such as Bergdorf Goodman in men, haspress
J
returned to the housing corporation and is now Phone — 429-0676.
and coats of wool or raw silk New York and Neiman-Marcus filled withbeen
Japanese
families
who
could
afford
to
pay
$20,000
and printed silk or brocade in Dallas. In Canada Eaton’s is
Cars For Sale
or so for an apartment.
cocktail dresses. Her American so far her only customer.
The
press restaurant, originally meant to be a temporary 1961 RED MGA sportscar. Hard tone
collection includes many evening
“My clothes are much more ex
top. Radio, heater’
gowns and coats. “In Japan,” she pensive here,” she admits. A structure still stands as it was with kitchen counters and all— convertible
921-0082
after
6 p.m. (Toronto). ;
explains “women often weai black and white evening dress but has become the stadium’s pingpong club.
The
steeply
banked
Velodrome
built
at
Hachioji
was
dis
Western clothes by day but in worn by a model would re
the- evening they like kimonos tail for about $1,000 in New mantled despite appeals from Japanese amateur cyclers.
The fine Toda rowing course at the outskirts of. Tokyo —
— so I make them kimonos.” York. “In. Japan I would make
whose
only major flaw was being exposed to cross winds—has
She designs most of her own a short version for cocktail wear
been
the
subject of a tug of war between commercial speed boat
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
prints. Because she likes simple and it would cost about $300.”
racing
interests
and the rowing federation. The federation seems
NOTARY PUBLIC
fashions she prefers “elaborate
Mrs. Mori is currently trying
Office Hours Saturday
fabrics with intricate prints.
to learn English but at the mo to have won out land the course is being constantly utilized by
October to April Inclusive
Recently she has been kept ment understands more than she university oarsmen for training and competitions.
The games did not trigger a tourist boom. During the two
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
busy creating a maternity war can talk. “Both I and my hus
Suite 513 Temple Building
drobe for Crown Princess Michi band find it very hard. Especial- months of the Olympiad—September and October—only 50,600
ko.
ly the writing. In Japan we write foreigners, including 9200 athletes, officials and newsmen came
TORONTO
“I am constantly fitting and up and. down and you write here. This was 30 percent less than expected.
EM. 6-3323
—
Res: BO. 7-3©
For hotels and shops, it was a letdown. The numerous hotels
adjusting,” she says. The Crown across. Our sons are
much
Princess expects her baby in a better than we are with Eng that sprouted hi the capital before the games are feeling the
pinch of oversupply of rooms.
month and Hanae Mori has made lish,” she admits.
eight new nightgowns for her to
While in Montreal she hoped
take-to the hospital. “After that to see some of the sights and Nihon-Nippon . . . .
(Continued from Page One)
JAMES KAMINO
I will make her a whole new she plaimed to visit some fur
wardrobe.” Her royal client usu- riers. “I’m very interested in for years and years—-should the formed in the premier’s office,
ally chooses Western styles “but Canadian mink. I might even be country be called “Nippon” or in 1961 to make, official selec
they must be in Japanese fab- able to go home with a Canadian “Nihon?”
tions, but no final results have
rics.”
fur for myself.”
The government announcement
been
announced.
on the spelling to be used on the
EM. 4-9913
stamps said the move did not
Premier Eisaku Sato also urg
bind pronunciation or spelling of ed that these problems be settled
(TORONTO)
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
the country’s name in other in as early as possible.
I
stances.
The Japanese characters for
sun or “nichi” and for origin or
“hon” have been pronounced
either way since ancient times
CLASSIFIED
Lucien C. Kuraia, Q.C.
T.V. Service
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUET TAVERN
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth’Street art Dundas, Toronto
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
DUNDAS UNION STORE
YOUR SHOPPING LEST
• SAKURA RICE
• EGGS
• MARU KIN SHOYU
© SUKIYAKI MEAT
• VINEGAR
• SUGAR
• MANJU
• MANY VARIETIES OF ARAB*;
EM. 4-7692
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
FOR WORRY-FREE TRAVEL
ARRANGEMENTS
By Air, Sea and Land
j Designer's Assistant
Also Flag and Anthem
Labor Minister Hisao Kodaira
at a cabinet meeting recently
stressed the need for an early
decision on which one to use.
Japan also does not have an
official flag although the “hinomaru” is generally used and has
no national
anthem although
“Kimigayo” is usually played.
An official . study group was
Trade Is War ... .
(Cont. From Page 1)
Air. Randall said it is too early
to speculate on ‘rumblings” that
Canada may soon enter into
special agreements with countries
like Japan, similar to the car
parts agreement with the U.S.
Bur. he said there are great
possibilities for both countries in
this direction.
“It is possible that when the
GATT negotiations are conclud
ed next year, our two countries
may find even closer1 trade ties
than we enjoy at the present
time.’
17 DAY SUMMER TOUR TO JAPAN
Call
365 SPADINA AVE^ TORONTO 2-B. ONT
PHONE EM. 6-1075
PAUL Y. TOKIWA,
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
AND NOTARY PUBLIC
^llar, Alexanaer and Tokiwa
Suite 901 15 King St. W.
Hamilton, Ont.
Bus. JA. 8-1186 Res. FU. 3-3545
For Ladies’ Coats and Suits
Must have ability to supervise
the finishing of best garments
■
Apply Primrose Garments Co. Ltd.
.119 Spadina Ave.
West York Motors (Canada) Ltd.
Cordially invites you
to it’s
Premier Showing of the 1966
Chevrolet, Corvair, Chevy 2
Chevelle and Oldsmobiles
Featuring
The All New Caprice and Tornado Models
Oct. 6, 7. 8 and 9
Harry Fukushima
Phone RO. 2-8171
Home BU 2*
Page 8
™^wc®ii
One Year Later
Authorised as 8emnJ
®Ld tor Payment oi
^ ad
Post Office DepOig»^
A Look At Tokyo Olympic Village Today
By RENE-GEORGES INAGAKI
TOKYO.—Spari’ows twitter undisturbed and crickets chirrup
lustily in the weeds grown over what had been the gay and bust
ling Olympic Village of the 18th. Olympiad — now lying still anci
abandoned in the midst of a noisy and busy capital.
The long awaited Tokyo Olympic Games which opened glam
ourously on Oct. 10, 1964 were the climax to an extraordinary Ja
panese effort—some three billion dollars in terms of money spent.
They transformed the city, left a sensational super express,
a unique monorail, a fine network of roads, many new buildings
—-.and helped trigger a serious economic recession.
To the fast moving citizenry of Tokyo, the games are already
a fast fading memory and the word Olympics is no longer heard
or seen anywhere.
Still thousands of Japanese tourists from the provj nces —
sometimes 10,000 a day■— regularly swarm in to look in awe
at the magnificent Olympic sports facilities where the athletic
battles they had followed on television had taken placeTo keep the memory alive; and further promote interest in
sports, athletic officials have named Oct. 10 “Sports Day” and
asked the government to make it a national holiday.
Ceremonies resembling the Olympiad’s opening ceremony with
torch runner, model track and field exhibitions, and a soccer
match are to be staged at the 80,000-seat National Stadium.
TSUMURA^ ^“S^ 11
Simultaneously, ceremonies and sports meets are to be held E*tor, KEN fe
in each of the country’s 46 prefectural capitals with a national Section Editor ?AdS
marathon in Fukuoka City, Kyushu Island.
The soccer game was planned for the Tokyo memorial appar
SUBSCRIPTIob
ently to help popularize a- game which until the Olympiad had.
^^ ^ « Boathi
only a limited following in this country. A. soccer league has
^•Wysryie
been formed since the Tokyo games and interest has picked up
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
slightly, sports official reported.
Yoyogi Village, originally built as a U.S. military depmident
housing area immediately after World War II and known as Wash
ington Heights, housed 8000 athletes and officials in its 2o0 wood
en cottages and 16 concrete barracks.
x
,
Toronto J.^ ^
Empire 6-5005
The Village was used only once after the games to stage
the Paralympics, the Olympics of the athletes in wheel chairs.
It has been left vacant since and the 250 cottages are awaiting
the demolisher’s hammers later, this year under a .Tokyo city
plan to remodel the entire area into a wooded .public park. _
The 16 apartment-type, barracks, once U.S bachelor officer
Male Help Wanted
quarters, have been made the dormitories of the Olympic Memorial
DISH washer. Youna
481-2285 (Toronto)
5 0" ol(
Youth Centre.
'
i ,
The centre will serve as the village for the Universiad to
W?SNG1 ^an Vfor genera!
be held in Tokyo in 1967.
’
fur business
The three major sports monuments left by the games, placed wholesale
necessary. Apply 254 Sm
on the itinerary of city tourist bus tours, are the NationalStadium, (Toronto).
the indoor pool, object of international superlatives and .the Ko
MAN wanted to wk in
mazawa sports complex.
.
Experience not
The pool has been opened to the public and long queues or
Phone
7 p.m,
ME
EM. after
2-3672
tGeoS?fe
(Cont. From Page 1)
Fashion Expert . . . .
formed during the season waiting for their turn to get in.
Various swimming competitions have been staged there since
be too heavy so I trim a bridal
Hanae Mori now shows ner
Female Help Wanted
the
Olympics.
.
coat with many bands of differ collections twice a year in the
In winter, the Olympic pool is to be converted into a skat- JAPANESE Canadian Cultural Fl
ent colored slik satins.”
Unites States and' sells to sevwants a full-time Girl Friday wid
rink.
’
.
In Japan, Hanae Mori makes eral of the better known stores ing The
to . assist in the office. Stenaj’ut&
bouse, which had lodged some 1000 foreign news typing
experience essential '
mainly daytime clothes, suits such as Bergdorf Goodman in men, haspress
J
returned to the housing corporation and is now Phone — 429-0676.
and coats of wool or raw silk New York and Neiman-Marcus filled withbeen
Japanese
families
who
could
afford
to
pay
$20,000
and printed silk or brocade in Dallas. In Canada Eaton’s is
Cars For Sale
or so for an apartment.
cocktail dresses. Her American so far her only customer.
The
press restaurant, originally meant to be a temporary 1961 RED MGA sportscar. Hard tone
collection includes many evening
“My clothes are much more ex
top. Radio, heater’
gowns and coats. “In Japan,” she pensive here,” she admits. A structure still stands as it was with kitchen counters and all— convertible
921-0082
after
6 p.m. (Toronto). ;
explains “women often weai black and white evening dress but has become the stadium’s pingpong club.
The
steeply
banked
Velodrome
built
at
Hachioji
was
dis
Western clothes by day but in worn by a model would re
the- evening they like kimonos tail for about $1,000 in New mantled despite appeals from Japanese amateur cyclers.
The fine Toda rowing course at the outskirts of. Tokyo —
— so I make them kimonos.” York. “In. Japan I would make
whose
only major flaw was being exposed to cross winds—has
She designs most of her own a short version for cocktail wear
been
the
subject of a tug of war between commercial speed boat
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
prints. Because she likes simple and it would cost about $300.”
racing
interests
and the rowing federation. The federation seems
NOTARY PUBLIC
fashions she prefers “elaborate
Mrs. Mori is currently trying
Office Hours Saturday
fabrics with intricate prints.
to learn English but at the mo to have won out land the course is being constantly utilized by
October to April Inclusive
Recently she has been kept ment understands more than she university oarsmen for training and competitions.
The games did not trigger a tourist boom. During the two
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
busy creating a maternity war can talk. “Both I and my hus
Suite 513 Temple Building
drobe for Crown Princess Michi band find it very hard. Especial- months of the Olympiad—September and October—only 50,600
ko.
ly the writing. In Japan we write foreigners, including 9200 athletes, officials and newsmen came
TORONTO
“I am constantly fitting and up and. down and you write here. This was 30 percent less than expected.
EM. 6-3323
—
Res: BO. 7-3©
For hotels and shops, it was a letdown. The numerous hotels
adjusting,” she says. The Crown across. Our sons are
much
Princess expects her baby in a better than we are with Eng that sprouted hi the capital before the games are feeling the
pinch of oversupply of rooms.
month and Hanae Mori has made lish,” she admits.
eight new nightgowns for her to
While in Montreal she hoped
take-to the hospital. “After that to see some of the sights and Nihon-Nippon . . . .
(Continued from Page One)
JAMES KAMINO
I will make her a whole new she plaimed to visit some fur
wardrobe.” Her royal client usu- riers. “I’m very interested in for years and years—-should the formed in the premier’s office,
ally chooses Western styles “but Canadian mink. I might even be country be called “Nippon” or in 1961 to make, official selec
they must be in Japanese fab- able to go home with a Canadian “Nihon?”
tions, but no final results have
rics.”
fur for myself.”
The government announcement
been
announced.
on the spelling to be used on the
EM. 4-9913
stamps said the move did not
Premier Eisaku Sato also urg
bind pronunciation or spelling of ed that these problems be settled
(TORONTO)
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
the country’s name in other in as early as possible.
I
stances.
The Japanese characters for
sun or “nichi” and for origin or
“hon” have been pronounced
either way since ancient times
CLASSIFIED
Lucien C. Kuraia, Q.C.
T.V. Service
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUET TAVERN
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth’Street art Dundas, Toronto
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
DUNDAS UNION STORE
YOUR SHOPPING LEST
• SAKURA RICE
• EGGS
• MARU KIN SHOYU
© SUKIYAKI MEAT
• VINEGAR
• SUGAR
• MANJU
• MANY VARIETIES OF ARAB*;
EM. 4-7692
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
FOR WORRY-FREE TRAVEL
ARRANGEMENTS
By Air, Sea and Land
j Designer's Assistant
Also Flag and Anthem
Labor Minister Hisao Kodaira
at a cabinet meeting recently
stressed the need for an early
decision on which one to use.
Japan also does not have an
official flag although the “hinomaru” is generally used and has
no national
anthem although
“Kimigayo” is usually played.
An official . study group was
Trade Is War ... .
(Cont. From Page 1)
Air. Randall said it is too early
to speculate on ‘rumblings” that
Canada may soon enter into
special agreements with countries
like Japan, similar to the car
parts agreement with the U.S.
Bur. he said there are great
possibilities for both countries in
this direction.
“It is possible that when the
GATT negotiations are conclud
ed next year, our two countries
may find even closer1 trade ties
than we enjoy at the present
time.’
17 DAY SUMMER TOUR TO JAPAN
Call
365 SPADINA AVE^ TORONTO 2-B. ONT
PHONE EM. 6-1075
PAUL Y. TOKIWA,
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
AND NOTARY PUBLIC
^llar, Alexanaer and Tokiwa
Suite 901 15 King St. W.
Hamilton, Ont.
Bus. JA. 8-1186 Res. FU. 3-3545
For Ladies’ Coats and Suits
Must have ability to supervise
the finishing of best garments
■
Apply Primrose Garments Co. Ltd.
.119 Spadina Ave.
West York Motors (Canada) Ltd.
Cordially invites you
to it’s
Premier Showing of the 1966
Chevrolet, Corvair, Chevy 2
Chevelle and Oldsmobiles
Featuring
The All New Caprice and Tornado Models
Oct. 6, 7. 8 and 9
Harry Fukushima
Phone RO. 2-8171
Home BU 2*