Page 1
An Independent Organ for Canadians of JapaneseOrigin
Toronto, Ont
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1966
Garden Proposed
As Tor. Area JC's
Centennial Project
ei Personality .
he “Cool
Nisei
HIROSHI KASHIWAGI
m grateful to Dr. Stanford
n, the sociology professor,
^plaining what “being cool”
his article “The Nisei-Fer
ity” (The New Canadian,
5, 9, 12) he says, “Being
neans character control, injn of impulses, the control
e’s personality so that it is
•evealingly expressive.”
ne years ago I was called
)ol character” and when I
the fellow what that meant
uld only give me a pained,
ssion and a lot of meaningnand motions. He assured
However, that it was not
t to be derogatory.
w that I know what being
s, I don’t think the fellow
right at all. No, I’m afraid,
t carry it off. I don’t smoke,
ore and my hands shake
Photo • by.\ JacE^Henircy
”m not above exploding in
>ne’s face. It’s terrible but
me. And if a thing is pleale I can’t help the silly grin
splits across my face. All
TORONTO.—-Chosen this year’s queen of hearts, Miss Valentine
s not to disprove Mr. Ly-_ is pretty Ada May Jean Manson. Ada May Jean won the title last
image of the cool Nisei; Saturday at the Toronto Young Buddhist Society sponsored Miss
nore to convince myself that Valentine Dance held at the J.C. Cultural Centre. She is flanked
ut a typical Nisei, that I’m by two-runners-up, Susie Lee (left) and Barbara Ada (right).
or two above (not below)
Instead of individual organizations presenting candidates as
ack. So thinking, I can read in the past, all girls coming to the dance were eligible to enter.
irticle with ■ enough detach- This dance_ is annually one of the “major” social functions of the
that I can appreciate what young JC sei.
ng said.
Miss Manson Wins Miss Valentine
deles on the Nisei personwhether appreciated or
ire read avidly by the Nisei,
re not easy to do either,
isei can’t do one without
rig himself out as some kind
super being, and if a non; does it, then there’s always
chorus of “who the hell is
i But the Nisei is a complex
al and he’s eager to find out
: he is. It’s true there have
; numerous articles on the
ant, the successful, the pious,
:he patriotic Nisei. These are
but they don’t necessarily
the total Nisei personality
eh is possible.
Three Day Affair
Canada Ethnic Press Federation Meets In Ottawa
By KEN MORI
TORONTO.—An off year exe
cutive meeting of the Canadian
Ethnic Press Federation began
last Thursday and is scheduled
to . end today.
On Thursday, Federation exe
cutives and non-voting members,
totaling more than twenty, held
discussions with members of the
Royal Commission on Bilingual
ism and Biculturalism in their
board room.
On Friday, Meeting Chairman,
Charles E. Dojak (President of
Can. Ethnic Press) officially
opened the conference. Special
guests were Hon. Jean Marchand,
Hon. John Nicholson, Hon. Jack
Pickersgill. Hon. Paul . Hellyer,
and the Hon. Judy La Marsh.
In the afternoon, an advisory
group meeting will be held with
the Centennial Commission. A
reception will • be held by the
Governor General and Madame
Vanier.
Today’s schedule / includes a
luncheon bv the Dept, of Citizen
ship and Immigration. The Hon.
Jean Marchand will speak.
The Canada Ethnic Press Fed
eration has been composed main
ly of members of the Canada
Ethnic Press Association of On
tario - and Winnipeg. Recently,
Mr. Rov Mah, editor of the China
Town in Vancouver has succeed
ed in getting eight ethnic news
papers to form an Ethnic Press
Association of British Columbia.
In Montreal, an Ethnic Press As
sociation of Quebec has been
established by Mr. Fred Waismann. also its president.
Mr. Ken Mori of The New
Canadian is a director of the
Canadian Federation.
w I like Mr. Lyman’s artiit’s a friendly piece. The. bit
i the city Nisei looking down
ie country Nisei is certainly
Somehow I can almost see
hear the group he did his
rch on. But I don’t think he
far enough. Of course he
TOKYO. — Japan’s No. 1 film
speaking before a Nisei hero,
Mifune is the first
5 and he well knows how of anToshiro
internationalcast to be
skinned the Nisei are.
signed for MGM’s “Grand Prix,”
t he makes a few shatter- a film about auto racing.
ks^yvations. For example he
This should be Mifune’s special
. Nisei appear to be highly cup of tea, as- he has always
'icanized without (necessarily kept his pulse on car racing, and
•Sj%^ey seem to represent drives around Tokyo in sports
niddle class virtues without cars.
sarily being middle class.” ■ The film will be directed by
Iso thinks that a Nisei mid- John Frankenheimer and pro
hss group -would show a duced in Cinerama this summer
r degree of psychosomatic in Europe. The role marks Mi
s than a comparable Caucas- fune’s first- appearance in an
Toup.
English language film.
’ point is that the Nisei
developed a “cool personali■s a result of a conflict in
background between family
' ine which demanded cerbehaviors and the ideal of
LOS ANGELES. — In telling Angeles, she announced, “We.
CaUed fOr Self of .the pleasant Japanese hostess hope you had a present fright
\ -the latter, according to
ociologist, is a “trans-Paci- on his flight from Tokyo, a re and will fry with us again.” Com
cent traveller said that she had
of the samurai a good command of English but mented the man: “I guess you
tnis is interesting indeed, some pronounciation trouble. would call that a case of flac(Cont. on P. 8)
When the plane landed’in Los tured English.”
Mifune In “Grand
Prix" His First
Eng. Lang. Flicker
Come Fry With Me"
By T. UMEZUKI
TORONTO.—A “Centennial” garden .at the Japanese Canadian
Cultural Centre, placement of aged Japanese stone lanterns in High
Park, and the enlargement of the annual Cherry Blossom Festival
were (discussed as possible Centennial projects for Toronto-andarea Japanese Canadians. These projects were adopted in principle
by the J.C. Centennial Committee at a meeting held at the J.C.C.
Centre on Feb. 20th.
Although no actual plan or budget was discussed for the
garden, it was estimated during the talks that such a garden migh:
cost in the area of $100,000.
An opinion was expressed' from
the floor that considering the
J.C. Cultural Centre’s current
$100,000. goal fund-raising cam
paign, it would be wiser to esti
mate a garden on a lesser* scale,
say half the amount or $50,000.
All those atTORONTO.
The meeting was held for ap tending - . this Sunday’s Spring
proval of only the basic principles Festival at the J.C. Cultural
of the various projects. ' The Centre will be met by Toyota —
the car, that is.
committee will be making a
A brand new Toyota Crown
further in-depth study of the pro will be running a shuttle service
jects and present a more con between’ Don Mills and Eglinton
crete plan, including budget es for those coming to the Centre
by bus.
timates, at the next general
meeting.
Some 60 persons attended the
meeting, chaired by Mikio Na
kamura, and approved the work
^f the committee and a list of
VanVANCOUVER, B.C.
officers and committee members. couver’s ne w e s t night-spot,
The committee of 25, compos Shanghai Junk — formerly the
has imported
ed proportionately of both Nisei Kublai Khan
five
attractive
Hawaiian
girls to
and Issei, . was enlarged to 34
entertain patrons.. One of the
with the selection of 9 more girls is Pearl Miyashiro, Hawaii
members at the meeting.
an of Japanese. ancestry.
All Bus Travellers
Sun. At Centre Fest
Hawaiian Nisei
Stars In Van. B.C
Parkin At J.C.C. Centre
Visual Order
In Cities
At the Toronto Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre’s
President’s Dinner on January 15th, 1966, renown Canadian
architect, John Cresswell Parkin, RCA, FRAIC, FRIBA, of John
B. Parkin Associates, appeared as guest speaker. Mr. Parkin,
who revealed that he has made three pleasureable trips to
Japan, has often expressed his great interest in Japanese
architecture..
The following is the conclusion of his speech at the J.C.
Cultural Centre entitled, “Visual Order in Cities.”
(Conclusion)
'
May I suggest that it is, in part, owed to our assumption
that planning alone is enough to guarantee and to assure in due
course .... “the safe, the healthy, the convenient city” . . ... the
city of excellence. But planning without care for civic design,
for visual control 'measures (not aesthetic censorship) is but a
half-job for a half-culture. Planning is the “science” of building
cities, civic design is the art.
: Planning can put concrete islands at intersections. civic design
puts trees, flowers and grass on them. Planning can approve the
building of giant office blocks in certain areas; civic design will
bring about the relating of the buildings to each other and the
area, the placing of them and the landscaping of their surround
ings to give variety and beauty to the street and interest to the eye.
As a matter of fact, you could say that.the art of civic design
is almost totally concerned with the human eye. On the other hand,
planning is more concerned with feet, with the ear and the nose.
Toronto, Ont
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1966
Garden Proposed
As Tor. Area JC's
Centennial Project
ei Personality .
he “Cool
Nisei
HIROSHI KASHIWAGI
m grateful to Dr. Stanford
n, the sociology professor,
^plaining what “being cool”
his article “The Nisei-Fer
ity” (The New Canadian,
5, 9, 12) he says, “Being
neans character control, injn of impulses, the control
e’s personality so that it is
•evealingly expressive.”
ne years ago I was called
)ol character” and when I
the fellow what that meant
uld only give me a pained,
ssion and a lot of meaningnand motions. He assured
However, that it was not
t to be derogatory.
w that I know what being
s, I don’t think the fellow
right at all. No, I’m afraid,
t carry it off. I don’t smoke,
ore and my hands shake
Photo • by.\ JacE^Henircy
”m not above exploding in
>ne’s face. It’s terrible but
me. And if a thing is pleale I can’t help the silly grin
splits across my face. All
TORONTO.—-Chosen this year’s queen of hearts, Miss Valentine
s not to disprove Mr. Ly-_ is pretty Ada May Jean Manson. Ada May Jean won the title last
image of the cool Nisei; Saturday at the Toronto Young Buddhist Society sponsored Miss
nore to convince myself that Valentine Dance held at the J.C. Cultural Centre. She is flanked
ut a typical Nisei, that I’m by two-runners-up, Susie Lee (left) and Barbara Ada (right).
or two above (not below)
Instead of individual organizations presenting candidates as
ack. So thinking, I can read in the past, all girls coming to the dance were eligible to enter.
irticle with ■ enough detach- This dance_ is annually one of the “major” social functions of the
that I can appreciate what young JC sei.
ng said.
Miss Manson Wins Miss Valentine
deles on the Nisei personwhether appreciated or
ire read avidly by the Nisei,
re not easy to do either,
isei can’t do one without
rig himself out as some kind
super being, and if a non; does it, then there’s always
chorus of “who the hell is
i But the Nisei is a complex
al and he’s eager to find out
: he is. It’s true there have
; numerous articles on the
ant, the successful, the pious,
:he patriotic Nisei. These are
but they don’t necessarily
the total Nisei personality
eh is possible.
Three Day Affair
Canada Ethnic Press Federation Meets In Ottawa
By KEN MORI
TORONTO.—An off year exe
cutive meeting of the Canadian
Ethnic Press Federation began
last Thursday and is scheduled
to . end today.
On Thursday, Federation exe
cutives and non-voting members,
totaling more than twenty, held
discussions with members of the
Royal Commission on Bilingual
ism and Biculturalism in their
board room.
On Friday, Meeting Chairman,
Charles E. Dojak (President of
Can. Ethnic Press) officially
opened the conference. Special
guests were Hon. Jean Marchand,
Hon. John Nicholson, Hon. Jack
Pickersgill. Hon. Paul . Hellyer,
and the Hon. Judy La Marsh.
In the afternoon, an advisory
group meeting will be held with
the Centennial Commission. A
reception will • be held by the
Governor General and Madame
Vanier.
Today’s schedule / includes a
luncheon bv the Dept, of Citizen
ship and Immigration. The Hon.
Jean Marchand will speak.
The Canada Ethnic Press Fed
eration has been composed main
ly of members of the Canada
Ethnic Press Association of On
tario - and Winnipeg. Recently,
Mr. Rov Mah, editor of the China
Town in Vancouver has succeed
ed in getting eight ethnic news
papers to form an Ethnic Press
Association of British Columbia.
In Montreal, an Ethnic Press As
sociation of Quebec has been
established by Mr. Fred Waismann. also its president.
Mr. Ken Mori of The New
Canadian is a director of the
Canadian Federation.
w I like Mr. Lyman’s artiit’s a friendly piece. The. bit
i the city Nisei looking down
ie country Nisei is certainly
Somehow I can almost see
hear the group he did his
rch on. But I don’t think he
far enough. Of course he
TOKYO. — Japan’s No. 1 film
speaking before a Nisei hero,
Mifune is the first
5 and he well knows how of anToshiro
internationalcast to be
skinned the Nisei are.
signed for MGM’s “Grand Prix,”
t he makes a few shatter- a film about auto racing.
ks^yvations. For example he
This should be Mifune’s special
. Nisei appear to be highly cup of tea, as- he has always
'icanized without (necessarily kept his pulse on car racing, and
•Sj%^ey seem to represent drives around Tokyo in sports
niddle class virtues without cars.
sarily being middle class.” ■ The film will be directed by
Iso thinks that a Nisei mid- John Frankenheimer and pro
hss group -would show a duced in Cinerama this summer
r degree of psychosomatic in Europe. The role marks Mi
s than a comparable Caucas- fune’s first- appearance in an
Toup.
English language film.
’ point is that the Nisei
developed a “cool personali■s a result of a conflict in
background between family
' ine which demanded cerbehaviors and the ideal of
LOS ANGELES. — In telling Angeles, she announced, “We.
CaUed fOr Self of .the pleasant Japanese hostess hope you had a present fright
\ -the latter, according to
ociologist, is a “trans-Paci- on his flight from Tokyo, a re and will fry with us again.” Com
cent traveller said that she had
of the samurai a good command of English but mented the man: “I guess you
tnis is interesting indeed, some pronounciation trouble. would call that a case of flac(Cont. on P. 8)
When the plane landed’in Los tured English.”
Mifune In “Grand
Prix" His First
Eng. Lang. Flicker
Come Fry With Me"
By T. UMEZUKI
TORONTO.—A “Centennial” garden .at the Japanese Canadian
Cultural Centre, placement of aged Japanese stone lanterns in High
Park, and the enlargement of the annual Cherry Blossom Festival
were (discussed as possible Centennial projects for Toronto-andarea Japanese Canadians. These projects were adopted in principle
by the J.C. Centennial Committee at a meeting held at the J.C.C.
Centre on Feb. 20th.
Although no actual plan or budget was discussed for the
garden, it was estimated during the talks that such a garden migh:
cost in the area of $100,000.
An opinion was expressed' from
the floor that considering the
J.C. Cultural Centre’s current
$100,000. goal fund-raising cam
paign, it would be wiser to esti
mate a garden on a lesser* scale,
say half the amount or $50,000.
All those atTORONTO.
The meeting was held for ap tending - . this Sunday’s Spring
proval of only the basic principles Festival at the J.C. Cultural
of the various projects. ' The Centre will be met by Toyota —
the car, that is.
committee will be making a
A brand new Toyota Crown
further in-depth study of the pro will be running a shuttle service
jects and present a more con between’ Don Mills and Eglinton
crete plan, including budget es for those coming to the Centre
by bus.
timates, at the next general
meeting.
Some 60 persons attended the
meeting, chaired by Mikio Na
kamura, and approved the work
^f the committee and a list of
VanVANCOUVER, B.C.
officers and committee members. couver’s ne w e s t night-spot,
The committee of 25, compos Shanghai Junk — formerly the
has imported
ed proportionately of both Nisei Kublai Khan
five
attractive
Hawaiian
girls to
and Issei, . was enlarged to 34
entertain patrons.. One of the
with the selection of 9 more girls is Pearl Miyashiro, Hawaii
members at the meeting.
an of Japanese. ancestry.
All Bus Travellers
Sun. At Centre Fest
Hawaiian Nisei
Stars In Van. B.C
Parkin At J.C.C. Centre
Visual Order
In Cities
At the Toronto Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre’s
President’s Dinner on January 15th, 1966, renown Canadian
architect, John Cresswell Parkin, RCA, FRAIC, FRIBA, of John
B. Parkin Associates, appeared as guest speaker. Mr. Parkin,
who revealed that he has made three pleasureable trips to
Japan, has often expressed his great interest in Japanese
architecture..
The following is the conclusion of his speech at the J.C.
Cultural Centre entitled, “Visual Order in Cities.”
(Conclusion)
'
May I suggest that it is, in part, owed to our assumption
that planning alone is enough to guarantee and to assure in due
course .... “the safe, the healthy, the convenient city” . . ... the
city of excellence. But planning without care for civic design,
for visual control 'measures (not aesthetic censorship) is but a
half-job for a half-culture. Planning is the “science” of building
cities, civic design is the art.
: Planning can put concrete islands at intersections. civic design
puts trees, flowers and grass on them. Planning can approve the
building of giant office blocks in certain areas; civic design will
bring about the relating of the buildings to each other and the
area, the placing of them and the landscaping of their surround
ings to give variety and beauty to the street and interest to the eye.
As a matter of fact, you could say that.the art of civic design
is almost totally concerned with the human eye. On the other hand,
planning is more concerned with feet, with the ear and the nose.
Page 2
Canada’s Inokuma, mike dahnso
Ulins fflaclllaster Univ. Judo Till
Norm Nasu Leads JCCA Curling
TORONTO.—Canada’s version of Japan’s great
Isao Inokuma, Mike Johnson, 3rd-dan, started mff
Eastern Canada’s new season of judo tournaments
-with a dynamic display of technique and color to
capture the MacMaster University championships
in Hamilton, Ontario on February 5th. Some' 300
judoka competed.
.
Johnson, who has been training under n W
Olympic-Judo
Coach, Frank Hatahh
runner-up to Japan's Hirofumi Bmt„;,
TORONTO.—Norm Nasu with Kagawa to retain second place.
r’5, ?7™Goowi To™™t fono^:'
two of his regulars and a spare Nagano -edged Murakami to a
Worid Judo Championship last year. He ha/
miraculously upset Herb Sugie’s tight score 7-6 which ties them
through such noted international stars as 3 fit
team by a .7-5 win. Herb Sugie, for second place. Other scores
also with 2 regulars, Lily Kai were Yas Shinde over George
of Brazil, Matos of Portugal, Caceres of
and Nancy Suga, had spare Bob Takahashi 6-4; Gordon Kai over
| mala, and the highly^
Kimura
(last year’s winning Vic Suzuki 12-3; and Larry Sa
Grossain of France. Based
skip) as vice-skip. This power kauye and Ray Hinatsu tied 7-7.
team, however, met stiff opposi
this performance he was ?
Norm Nasu’s team won the
tion as Nasu guided his team Terrace’s greatest score differ-,
mated from lst-dan to 3d4
made of second. Nancy Terauchi, ence of the week by defeating
this year.
playing vice-skip, spare, Tom Vic Suzuki 15-3
VERNON,. B.C.—Two. Steveston fighters took the black belt
on February
Ashikawa, his second and Jim 11th. This is the second time honors among 180 participating in the B.C. Closed Judo Champion ...In the semi-finals at J®
Master, Johnson — who jll
Nakashima, lead, to a well-earn this year Nasu has
captured .this ships here recently.
'
:
'
ed victory;
along
the lines of his idol J'
honor. Prize ■— the Terrace nils
Tom Mukai ed'ged out Ken Yamada of Kelowna to win the Inokuma and favors the 3
>Sugie counted one in the first ener glasses.
end. However, by cautious play
black belt lightweight event while. Garth Musto defeated Horst throws, seoi-nage and tai-oi|
ing, Nasu inched his way to a
Team standings are:
Pal of Vancouver to win the black belt heavyweight .event. Steves — met fellow clubmate, Donif
five to one lead at the end of
Norm Nasu
21
ton club members took eight of the 17 titles offered.the fifth end. Sugie attempted
Clelland', 3rd-dan, a veteran J
Tosh Nagano
20
Kei
Yamada
of
Kelowna
■won-the
junior
’
s
78-114
pound
class.
a come-back by taking four in
George Imai
man. After repeated attacks®
20
Yas Shinde
the- sixth end but Nasu displac
19
Ron
Uyeyama
of
Steveston
took
the
junior
115
pounds
and
over
his two fortes, seoi-nage and|
Gordon -Kai
19
ed tough competition by counting
class. R., Yodogawa of Steveston won the lightweight senior and
Vic Suzuki
16
otoshi, Johnson ended np w
two in the seventh. Sugie failed
Sam Murakami
15
J.
Lee
of
Kelowna
took
the
senior
’
s
heavyweight
event.
Howie
Kagawa
to eleminate a rock of Nasu’s
the decision.
1
15 .
Larry Sakauye
15
which could have resulted in a
In
the
other
half
of
the
3
Herb Sugie
14 \
tie or a win.
Ray Hinatsu
11
finals,, tough Duncan Vig®
The team skipped by George
George Takahashi
7
2nd-dan — now under the co^
Imai outshot the team of Howie
N. Suga
ing of “Mr. Hanegoshi” Takd.
VAN. NISEI 5-PIN BOWLING — Sun
TORONTO NISEI TEN PIN SUNDAY 7th-dan, of the Kidokwan M
day League February 13. ”A" DIVI BOWLING LEAGUE for Sun., Feb. 13th,
SION!: Dave Koby's Auto Repairs . 32— 1966. MEN: Peter Mukai 575; Frank Wa Institute — handily laid out M
76; Tad's Sporting Goods 28—77;: Golden ' kida 572 (225);
Rod Tsujimoto 560;
25—69; Wayen Diner * 25— Roger Wright 559; Harry.. Hayashi 557;'. Harvey of the Oakville H^
By HUBERT SUGIE
and Joyce Kimura. They took the Horseshoe
98;
•
Commodore
Lanes
23
—
76;
Suda
Tex
TORONTO.—-You need plenty first game by a big' margin. The tile * 23—82; Nobby's Sun Lifers * 21— Ken Izumi 550; Yosh Murata 545; Jim shita Club with a harai mail
. 541; ; Terry Hamade536; Clare.
of energy, to keep up with the climax of the bonspiel was Gord’s 79;
Fraserview Const Co. 19—53; Philco Morita
Ward 534; George /Masuda 535; Nick <omi.
quick pace that curling is setting. last rock with all eyes. focussed Dist. Co. 18—72; Regent TV * 15—73; Nozuye
.532; George Coombes 531; HarIwata .Travel Service 12—65; Kami ■7 'Kadohama
In the - finals, Johnson t»||
This is well illustrated as local on his stone. He had last stone K.
524 (223); Ken Kaneko
Insurance 11—62.
’
5z6; Mas Kawabata 521; Mike Doi 518- only 15 seconds to win a cleaii|||
J.C.’s gain good experience
and up 8-6 in his favour. His
"B" DIVISION: Aki's Restaurant
(224); Tad; Wakabayashi 515.- entering bonspiels and hand out opponent had two shot rocks 29—
103; Broadway Florist 26—76; Kawa
LADIES: Mary Mitsuki 534; Shirley pon and the Black Belt Cifi
stiff competition while doing so. between two guards. Gord threw guchi's * 25—80; Barry's Trophies 20—68; Aihoshi 466; Jean Yoshida 465; Kay pionship from Vignalle with
Two mixed teams curled at St. a perfect rock between the two Stev. Auto-Marine 19—-63; Haraga's- 19— Morita 483; Gloria Wakida 455;' Terrie
First Investors * 15—66; Araki's Doi 451; Virginia Hayashi 446; Anne tai-otoshi.
Catharines’ Lincoln Rink
on guards, bumped his opponent’s 69;
15—63.
439;' Joan Hamade 428; Toyoko
IN the Green, Blue, and B®
Saturday, Feb. 12. Both teams rock back, and rolled to the but , * — Teams ..already qualified ofr the Okada
Sameshima 420;
Rhoda Masuda 415made fine performances as they ton. It was unfortunate, however, play-off in the 1st. half.
Betty Aihoshi 407; Carol Doi 400
Belt categories (3rd, 2nd,
T.D.
CLASS: Harry Tomiye 856 (326);
won all their games. The team, that the. Molson’s ■ trophy was
1st ’Kyu) Hubert Theriault
Miffy Ogawa. 803;- Frank Nozaki 768;
skipped by Tosh' Nagano met presented to the winner of the Jim
TORONTO SUNDAY FAMILY LEAGUE, Hatashita Home Club came
Akune 755; Nobby Yamamoto 749;
stiff competition but backed' by other half of the 28 team bon- Kiichi Kumagai 747; Sam Sugie 739 * Feb. 6, 1966, MEN: Aki Sogawa 565;'
018); Joe Kuramoto 737; Tom Nomura Min Nishino: 564; Tak Sonoda 559; Shig champion.
Tosh’s wife Louise, Herb Sugie, spiel.
729;
Geri Fujisawa 814 (305, 301); Joyce Onizuka 548; Terry Shiga 541; Tado
and Mary Obana, played solid
IN the White, Yellow,
*
*
*
Murata 705; Irene Sugie 688; Frances Tanaka 532; Yuki Kameoka 529;- Joe
■games to take their two wins.
Gda J18; Jerry Ohki 510; - Bob..: Akaye Orange Belt categories (6th,®
Kqwagoye
657;
Etsuko
Ogawa
655.
A couple of men’s teams have
However, due to the low scoring
B'
CLASS: Gordon Shimizu 830; 508; Kaye Akiyama 508;. Koji Kari 529.
. LAD1ES: Kim Onizuka 498; Terrie Wa and 4th Kyu) R. Harper of
games, they placed fourth. This entered the Parkway Bonspiel, Ken ; Nishimura 680; Irene Kitimura 818 tanabe
464; Tosh Sogawa 450; Amy Master took top honors.
Feb.
19.
(374); Jean Yamaoka 680; Kim Kitaga
J
■team is no stranger to bonspiels
wa 674; Kiyomi Hamaguchi 649; Frances Shiga 446; Jeanne./ Akaye ' 446;. Toshi
for they have curled together
Yamashita
442;
Shirl
Miyasaki
435.
IN the team chanipionw||
Mukuyama 635.
for a year. They placed second
"C" .CLASS: Kiyoshi Nishi 708; . Ma crn^Y 13'.?966' MEN: Akira Sogawa Hatashita Home Club defealtsjj
Second Annual Nisei Men’s
in the Terrace Bonspiel last Bonsniel will be held again at sao Tanaka 677; Harry Murakami 670; bUO; Herb Miyasaki 558; Joe Oda 543Don Mayede 666; Tom Haraga 647; Yuji Kats Jsoshima 543;. Tak Sonoda 541; Hatashita Kitchener to the to
month.
the Broom and' Stone ‘ Curling Asai. 611; Harry Kawaguchi 683 (304). ,
Y£Hasbita 517-' Shig- Onizuka 510.
A First Place win was made Club. Deadline for all entries is
I LADIES: Yosh Oda - 527; Terrie Wa of 35 to 0 to take the title./
tanabe' -516; Shirl Miyasaki 516; Kim
by tlie team of Gord Kai (skip), March 12. Further information
pUNDAY NISEI MIXED 5-PIN — Feb. Onizuka 446; Jeanne Akaye 442; Helen
Sumi Yoshida, Sam Murakami, can be obtained from G. Kai.
6, 1966. MEN: Harry Inouye 871 (321)- Nishimoto 438; Barbara Nikaido 433; iiijiiiiiiiiiiiS
i
2 Steveston Judokas, Mukai & Musto
Win B.C. Closed Judo Championship
• BOWLING
SCORES
J.C. Curlers Entering Tough Bonspiels
Martial Arts Featured At Guelph Univ.
Ron Matsumoto 315; Kaide Shimizu 758;
Jim Minamata 731; Rich Sakauye 705.
LADIES: Ginger Terakita 643; Ann
Ninaka631; Connie Kondo 621; GerryAoki 617; Bessie Komatsu 610; Ruby
Nakagawa 603; Joy Chow 602.
FEB. 13. 1966 Kaide Shimizu 834 (321)Terr7Woka 825 (305); Bob Nishimura 783; Kaz Kuroda 738; Amy Fukusaka 648; Marg Fujimoto 618.
1966, Kaide Shimizu 875
U46); Harry Inouye 766; Ron Matsu
moto 74; Bob Nishimura 726; Kaz KulodH725; I°e Oda 719; Roger KimoBarbara Shimizu 638; Gerrv
6p0; Amy Fukusaka 622; Joy Chow
b07; Marg Fujimoto 606.
Toshi Yamashita 430.
Toronto Sunday
Healthy Body & Mino
Through the Martial
t fT^^TO saNGHA MIXED TEN PIN
' Sunday, February 13; 1966. iiininiiniiniiimniiiiiunniiiiB^
^Jjy Sakauye 533; Sam Baba 512
Family
League
By MARGARET HAUSER
(202); Aki Hayashi 511 (201): Sam Ka__
TORONTO.—Guelph University hosted an evening of Oriental
Sur?n, 5I0; Tosh Horf - 502; Tom Oha
’Martial Arts on campus recently, that had close to 700 students
ra 501.
.
cheering from their seats.
. ^PJFS: Marie-Kawano 508; Jane Go
to 460; -Ginny Kawasaki 415; Donna
,
The University’s months-old Karate and Judo Clubs are to
-3;_ Misao. Nishikawa 405; Helen
be congratulated on a team-spirit that organised a comfortable
1I?oto
Mary, Lou Yoshikuni
4U3; Jean Furukawa 402.
entertaining, and fast-moving program. Youthful Karate Club
Sunday Feb. • 20, 1966. MEN: George
President, Stephen Shore had managed to snag two of Canada’s
Oyama 540; Sam Baba 533; Larry Sa
leading Japanese Martial Art instructors for the evening.
kauye 504;- Ike Shiozaki 502.
From Toronto came Canada’s “Father of Canadian Karate” Mas „ J.?^03^7^ NISEI SUNDAY TEN PIN
LADIES: Mary Lou Yoshikuni 446; Re444; Hedy Fujii 430; Kay
Tsuruoka, 6th-dan, with a crack team of Toronto students. A dis BOWLING LEAGUE, Beb. 20. MENino, 419; Marie Kawano 409/ Jane
play of karate basics, sparring and kata drew many “ohs” and “ahs” Joe Tsujimoto 603 (213); Ken Doi 579- P4
M,orita 555- Frank Wakida551; Tad boto 402.
from a rapt audience. The young Guelph Karate Dojo operates k?\
Wakabayashi 548; Mas Kawabata 545under the eye of Tsuruoka sensei.
George^ Coombes 527; Yuki Murata 525; DTBAnLEND nisei RECREATIONAL TEN
Brian Gately 525; Ken Izumi 524; Geor- L^3?.771^0 LEAGUE, FEB. 1, 1966.
Toronto’s 5 th-dan Kendo instructor, Larry Nakamura also 9®
M?s.u.d“„52I1' Ken- Katai 517; Ken 543NFHTegS Si?klRoo66trHarley Hatanaka
1 xH Sasaki ,538; Harry Hayashi 534;
brought a team from Toronto. Bamboo shinai thwacked, swords Nakanishi 517; Harry Hayashi 515; Stan
glinted, and hakamas flew.
-ouhghan 512 (222); Terry Doi 511- Ed Nakamura 524; ; Tosh Iwai 509; Roy
^“made^ S!!; Herby Hamade 506; Y<TjnrFy 509- Hiro Kawaguchi 500.
During an exhibition of kendo-no-ikata using centuries old, Shiq Mitsuki 501.
c
Nishimura 438; Marg
;
420' Terrie' Watarazor-sharp steel swords, Dick Tsuruda, nidan, Toronto, came g
gloria Wakida 487; Hedy
,.e
: Sue Kitagawa 408; Fumi Savery close to an unplanned hair-cut; but the opposing sword was Sakai 486; Kay. Morita 486; Jean Yo- n
„P 476; Mary Mitsuki 464; Terrie yekl402?; Fudge Tmaka 406; fean Aka‘
ah the capable hands of Nakamura sensei — and the only hairs Doi. a453;
Grace Tanaka 435; .Joan HaFEB .8, 1966. MEN: Tets Seki 553;
raised were on those heads close enough'to have seen the action!
^crcie 426; Virginia Hayashi 421; Shirley
^OSxm 420; Haru Kondo '413; Carol p2Y cYa^mcUnroa 532: Monk Tanaka 516;
Sasaki 500.
Don Lathie, President of the Guelph Y.M.C.A. and Universitv Doi 407; Starlene Detlor , 414- Jovc°
w-^^IEu: ^?ki T Nishimura 445; Terrie
y
Judo Clubs contributed .an instructive exhibition of randori free Tatebe 400.’
426; Tomi
T.D. Baba 419; Kim Oda Akaye
falls and basic judo techniques.
’
401.
The Guelph Clubs were gracious hosts to their Toronto visitors
- ------ and .afterwards placated the keenest martial arts’ annetite^with
Furuya Travel presents . . . .
a buffet party and celebration.
This type of exhibition, where several of the martial arts are
displayed in one evening, is all too rare. This particular evening would
have been ideal had aikido-been included too. The art had not
Three national holidays within a
■
been overlooked, but .an exhibition had not been possible due to
Japan a most colorful time to visit. W„ the touted
a slight injury to Toronto’s sandan instructor, Mr. Tetsunari Fujita.
the many Spring festivities of Japan
The different arts seen together can only enhance each other.
14 ‘,°mr £2Sf °2 P'“S “" ^ departing April 24,
They give the potential student a splendid basis for his choice for
study. Too, few will deny that there is no more inspiring''sight
1966. For further information, please call
than team-spirit working not only within dojos and their affiliates,
but between the dojos of the different arts.
Furuya Travel Service
This type of team-spirit can do wonders not only for the pro
365 Spadina Ave., Toronto
motion of the Japanese martial arts on this continent, but, more
Tel. '366-1075
important perhaps — for their public image.
Golden Week in Japan" '
It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY- ,
Consult
Bill Wales
Insurance Agency
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
JAMES KAMINO
T.V. Service
EM. 4-9913
(TORONTO)
Mickey S. Saw]
Insurance
Office—783-4261
Res.—BE. 1-0863
■ Those In Toll Area
CaH—RO 6-3840
Ulins fflaclllaster Univ. Judo Till
Norm Nasu Leads JCCA Curling
TORONTO.—Canada’s version of Japan’s great
Isao Inokuma, Mike Johnson, 3rd-dan, started mff
Eastern Canada’s new season of judo tournaments
-with a dynamic display of technique and color to
capture the MacMaster University championships
in Hamilton, Ontario on February 5th. Some' 300
judoka competed.
.
Johnson, who has been training under n W
Olympic-Judo
Coach, Frank Hatahh
runner-up to Japan's Hirofumi Bmt„;,
TORONTO.—Norm Nasu with Kagawa to retain second place.
r’5, ?7™Goowi To™™t fono^:'
two of his regulars and a spare Nagano -edged Murakami to a
Worid Judo Championship last year. He ha/
miraculously upset Herb Sugie’s tight score 7-6 which ties them
through such noted international stars as 3 fit
team by a .7-5 win. Herb Sugie, for second place. Other scores
also with 2 regulars, Lily Kai were Yas Shinde over George
of Brazil, Matos of Portugal, Caceres of
and Nancy Suga, had spare Bob Takahashi 6-4; Gordon Kai over
| mala, and the highly^
Kimura
(last year’s winning Vic Suzuki 12-3; and Larry Sa
Grossain of France. Based
skip) as vice-skip. This power kauye and Ray Hinatsu tied 7-7.
team, however, met stiff opposi
this performance he was ?
Norm Nasu’s team won the
tion as Nasu guided his team Terrace’s greatest score differ-,
mated from lst-dan to 3d4
made of second. Nancy Terauchi, ence of the week by defeating
this year.
playing vice-skip, spare, Tom Vic Suzuki 15-3
VERNON,. B.C.—Two. Steveston fighters took the black belt
on February
Ashikawa, his second and Jim 11th. This is the second time honors among 180 participating in the B.C. Closed Judo Champion ...In the semi-finals at J®
Master, Johnson — who jll
Nakashima, lead, to a well-earn this year Nasu has
captured .this ships here recently.
'
:
'
ed victory;
along
the lines of his idol J'
honor. Prize ■— the Terrace nils
Tom Mukai ed'ged out Ken Yamada of Kelowna to win the Inokuma and favors the 3
>Sugie counted one in the first ener glasses.
end. However, by cautious play
black belt lightweight event while. Garth Musto defeated Horst throws, seoi-nage and tai-oi|
ing, Nasu inched his way to a
Team standings are:
Pal of Vancouver to win the black belt heavyweight .event. Steves — met fellow clubmate, Donif
five to one lead at the end of
Norm Nasu
21
ton club members took eight of the 17 titles offered.the fifth end. Sugie attempted
Clelland', 3rd-dan, a veteran J
Tosh Nagano
20
Kei
Yamada
of
Kelowna
■won-the
junior
’
s
78-114
pound
class.
a come-back by taking four in
George Imai
man. After repeated attacks®
20
Yas Shinde
the- sixth end but Nasu displac
19
Ron
Uyeyama
of
Steveston
took
the
junior
115
pounds
and
over
his two fortes, seoi-nage and|
Gordon -Kai
19
ed tough competition by counting
class. R., Yodogawa of Steveston won the lightweight senior and
Vic Suzuki
16
otoshi, Johnson ended np w
two in the seventh. Sugie failed
Sam Murakami
15
J.
Lee
of
Kelowna
took
the
senior
’
s
heavyweight
event.
Howie
Kagawa
to eleminate a rock of Nasu’s
the decision.
1
15 .
Larry Sakauye
15
which could have resulted in a
In
the
other
half
of
the
3
Herb Sugie
14 \
tie or a win.
Ray Hinatsu
11
finals,, tough Duncan Vig®
The team skipped by George
George Takahashi
7
2nd-dan — now under the co^
Imai outshot the team of Howie
N. Suga
ing of “Mr. Hanegoshi” Takd.
VAN. NISEI 5-PIN BOWLING — Sun
TORONTO NISEI TEN PIN SUNDAY 7th-dan, of the Kidokwan M
day League February 13. ”A" DIVI BOWLING LEAGUE for Sun., Feb. 13th,
SION!: Dave Koby's Auto Repairs . 32— 1966. MEN: Peter Mukai 575; Frank Wa Institute — handily laid out M
76; Tad's Sporting Goods 28—77;: Golden ' kida 572 (225);
Rod Tsujimoto 560;
25—69; Wayen Diner * 25— Roger Wright 559; Harry.. Hayashi 557;'. Harvey of the Oakville H^
By HUBERT SUGIE
and Joyce Kimura. They took the Horseshoe
98;
•
Commodore
Lanes
23
—
76;
Suda
Tex
TORONTO.—-You need plenty first game by a big' margin. The tile * 23—82; Nobby's Sun Lifers * 21— Ken Izumi 550; Yosh Murata 545; Jim shita Club with a harai mail
. 541; ; Terry Hamade536; Clare.
of energy, to keep up with the climax of the bonspiel was Gord’s 79;
Fraserview Const Co. 19—53; Philco Morita
Ward 534; George /Masuda 535; Nick <omi.
quick pace that curling is setting. last rock with all eyes. focussed Dist. Co. 18—72; Regent TV * 15—73; Nozuye
.532; George Coombes 531; HarIwata .Travel Service 12—65; Kami ■7 'Kadohama
In the - finals, Johnson t»||
This is well illustrated as local on his stone. He had last stone K.
524 (223); Ken Kaneko
Insurance 11—62.
’
5z6; Mas Kawabata 521; Mike Doi 518- only 15 seconds to win a cleaii|||
J.C.’s gain good experience
and up 8-6 in his favour. His
"B" DIVISION: Aki's Restaurant
(224); Tad; Wakabayashi 515.- entering bonspiels and hand out opponent had two shot rocks 29—
103; Broadway Florist 26—76; Kawa
LADIES: Mary Mitsuki 534; Shirley pon and the Black Belt Cifi
stiff competition while doing so. between two guards. Gord threw guchi's * 25—80; Barry's Trophies 20—68; Aihoshi 466; Jean Yoshida 465; Kay pionship from Vignalle with
Two mixed teams curled at St. a perfect rock between the two Stev. Auto-Marine 19—-63; Haraga's- 19— Morita 483; Gloria Wakida 455;' Terrie
First Investors * 15—66; Araki's Doi 451; Virginia Hayashi 446; Anne tai-otoshi.
Catharines’ Lincoln Rink
on guards, bumped his opponent’s 69;
15—63.
439;' Joan Hamade 428; Toyoko
IN the Green, Blue, and B®
Saturday, Feb. 12. Both teams rock back, and rolled to the but , * — Teams ..already qualified ofr the Okada
Sameshima 420;
Rhoda Masuda 415made fine performances as they ton. It was unfortunate, however, play-off in the 1st. half.
Betty Aihoshi 407; Carol Doi 400
Belt categories (3rd, 2nd,
T.D.
CLASS: Harry Tomiye 856 (326);
won all their games. The team, that the. Molson’s ■ trophy was
1st ’Kyu) Hubert Theriault
Miffy Ogawa. 803;- Frank Nozaki 768;
skipped by Tosh' Nagano met presented to the winner of the Jim
TORONTO SUNDAY FAMILY LEAGUE, Hatashita Home Club came
Akune 755; Nobby Yamamoto 749;
stiff competition but backed' by other half of the 28 team bon- Kiichi Kumagai 747; Sam Sugie 739 * Feb. 6, 1966, MEN: Aki Sogawa 565;'
018); Joe Kuramoto 737; Tom Nomura Min Nishino: 564; Tak Sonoda 559; Shig champion.
Tosh’s wife Louise, Herb Sugie, spiel.
729;
Geri Fujisawa 814 (305, 301); Joyce Onizuka 548; Terry Shiga 541; Tado
and Mary Obana, played solid
IN the White, Yellow,
*
*
*
Murata 705; Irene Sugie 688; Frances Tanaka 532; Yuki Kameoka 529;- Joe
■games to take their two wins.
Gda J18; Jerry Ohki 510; - Bob..: Akaye Orange Belt categories (6th,®
Kqwagoye
657;
Etsuko
Ogawa
655.
A couple of men’s teams have
However, due to the low scoring
B'
CLASS: Gordon Shimizu 830; 508; Kaye Akiyama 508;. Koji Kari 529.
. LAD1ES: Kim Onizuka 498; Terrie Wa and 4th Kyu) R. Harper of
games, they placed fourth. This entered the Parkway Bonspiel, Ken ; Nishimura 680; Irene Kitimura 818 tanabe
464; Tosh Sogawa 450; Amy Master took top honors.
Feb.
19.
(374); Jean Yamaoka 680; Kim Kitaga
J
■team is no stranger to bonspiels
wa 674; Kiyomi Hamaguchi 649; Frances Shiga 446; Jeanne./ Akaye ' 446;. Toshi
for they have curled together
Yamashita
442;
Shirl
Miyasaki
435.
IN the team chanipionw||
Mukuyama 635.
for a year. They placed second
"C" .CLASS: Kiyoshi Nishi 708; . Ma crn^Y 13'.?966' MEN: Akira Sogawa Hatashita Home Club defealtsjj
Second Annual Nisei Men’s
in the Terrace Bonspiel last Bonsniel will be held again at sao Tanaka 677; Harry Murakami 670; bUO; Herb Miyasaki 558; Joe Oda 543Don Mayede 666; Tom Haraga 647; Yuji Kats Jsoshima 543;. Tak Sonoda 541; Hatashita Kitchener to the to
month.
the Broom and' Stone ‘ Curling Asai. 611; Harry Kawaguchi 683 (304). ,
Y£Hasbita 517-' Shig- Onizuka 510.
A First Place win was made Club. Deadline for all entries is
I LADIES: Yosh Oda - 527; Terrie Wa of 35 to 0 to take the title./
tanabe' -516; Shirl Miyasaki 516; Kim
by tlie team of Gord Kai (skip), March 12. Further information
pUNDAY NISEI MIXED 5-PIN — Feb. Onizuka 446; Jeanne Akaye 442; Helen
Sumi Yoshida, Sam Murakami, can be obtained from G. Kai.
6, 1966. MEN: Harry Inouye 871 (321)- Nishimoto 438; Barbara Nikaido 433; iiijiiiiiiiiiiiS
i
2 Steveston Judokas, Mukai & Musto
Win B.C. Closed Judo Championship
• BOWLING
SCORES
J.C. Curlers Entering Tough Bonspiels
Martial Arts Featured At Guelph Univ.
Ron Matsumoto 315; Kaide Shimizu 758;
Jim Minamata 731; Rich Sakauye 705.
LADIES: Ginger Terakita 643; Ann
Ninaka631; Connie Kondo 621; GerryAoki 617; Bessie Komatsu 610; Ruby
Nakagawa 603; Joy Chow 602.
FEB. 13. 1966 Kaide Shimizu 834 (321)Terr7Woka 825 (305); Bob Nishimura 783; Kaz Kuroda 738; Amy Fukusaka 648; Marg Fujimoto 618.
1966, Kaide Shimizu 875
U46); Harry Inouye 766; Ron Matsu
moto 74; Bob Nishimura 726; Kaz KulodH725; I°e Oda 719; Roger KimoBarbara Shimizu 638; Gerrv
6p0; Amy Fukusaka 622; Joy Chow
b07; Marg Fujimoto 606.
Toshi Yamashita 430.
Toronto Sunday
Healthy Body & Mino
Through the Martial
t fT^^TO saNGHA MIXED TEN PIN
' Sunday, February 13; 1966. iiininiiniiniiimniiiiiunniiiiB^
^Jjy Sakauye 533; Sam Baba 512
Family
League
By MARGARET HAUSER
(202); Aki Hayashi 511 (201): Sam Ka__
TORONTO.—Guelph University hosted an evening of Oriental
Sur?n, 5I0; Tosh Horf - 502; Tom Oha
’Martial Arts on campus recently, that had close to 700 students
ra 501.
.
cheering from their seats.
. ^PJFS: Marie-Kawano 508; Jane Go
to 460; -Ginny Kawasaki 415; Donna
,
The University’s months-old Karate and Judo Clubs are to
-3;_ Misao. Nishikawa 405; Helen
be congratulated on a team-spirit that organised a comfortable
1I?oto
Mary, Lou Yoshikuni
4U3; Jean Furukawa 402.
entertaining, and fast-moving program. Youthful Karate Club
Sunday Feb. • 20, 1966. MEN: George
President, Stephen Shore had managed to snag two of Canada’s
Oyama 540; Sam Baba 533; Larry Sa
leading Japanese Martial Art instructors for the evening.
kauye 504;- Ike Shiozaki 502.
From Toronto came Canada’s “Father of Canadian Karate” Mas „ J.?^03^7^ NISEI SUNDAY TEN PIN
LADIES: Mary Lou Yoshikuni 446; Re444; Hedy Fujii 430; Kay
Tsuruoka, 6th-dan, with a crack team of Toronto students. A dis BOWLING LEAGUE, Beb. 20. MENino, 419; Marie Kawano 409/ Jane
play of karate basics, sparring and kata drew many “ohs” and “ahs” Joe Tsujimoto 603 (213); Ken Doi 579- P4
M,orita 555- Frank Wakida551; Tad boto 402.
from a rapt audience. The young Guelph Karate Dojo operates k?\
Wakabayashi 548; Mas Kawabata 545under the eye of Tsuruoka sensei.
George^ Coombes 527; Yuki Murata 525; DTBAnLEND nisei RECREATIONAL TEN
Brian Gately 525; Ken Izumi 524; Geor- L^3?.771^0 LEAGUE, FEB. 1, 1966.
Toronto’s 5 th-dan Kendo instructor, Larry Nakamura also 9®
M?s.u.d“„52I1' Ken- Katai 517; Ken 543NFHTegS Si?klRoo66trHarley Hatanaka
1 xH Sasaki ,538; Harry Hayashi 534;
brought a team from Toronto. Bamboo shinai thwacked, swords Nakanishi 517; Harry Hayashi 515; Stan
glinted, and hakamas flew.
-ouhghan 512 (222); Terry Doi 511- Ed Nakamura 524; ; Tosh Iwai 509; Roy
^“made^ S!!; Herby Hamade 506; Y<TjnrFy 509- Hiro Kawaguchi 500.
During an exhibition of kendo-no-ikata using centuries old, Shiq Mitsuki 501.
c
Nishimura 438; Marg
;
420' Terrie' Watarazor-sharp steel swords, Dick Tsuruda, nidan, Toronto, came g
gloria Wakida 487; Hedy
,.e
: Sue Kitagawa 408; Fumi Savery close to an unplanned hair-cut; but the opposing sword was Sakai 486; Kay. Morita 486; Jean Yo- n
„P 476; Mary Mitsuki 464; Terrie yekl402?; Fudge Tmaka 406; fean Aka‘
ah the capable hands of Nakamura sensei — and the only hairs Doi. a453;
Grace Tanaka 435; .Joan HaFEB .8, 1966. MEN: Tets Seki 553;
raised were on those heads close enough'to have seen the action!
^crcie 426; Virginia Hayashi 421; Shirley
^OSxm 420; Haru Kondo '413; Carol p2Y cYa^mcUnroa 532: Monk Tanaka 516;
Sasaki 500.
Don Lathie, President of the Guelph Y.M.C.A. and Universitv Doi 407; Starlene Detlor , 414- Jovc°
w-^^IEu: ^?ki T Nishimura 445; Terrie
y
Judo Clubs contributed .an instructive exhibition of randori free Tatebe 400.’
426; Tomi
T.D. Baba 419; Kim Oda Akaye
falls and basic judo techniques.
’
401.
The Guelph Clubs were gracious hosts to their Toronto visitors
- ------ and .afterwards placated the keenest martial arts’ annetite^with
Furuya Travel presents . . . .
a buffet party and celebration.
This type of exhibition, where several of the martial arts are
displayed in one evening, is all too rare. This particular evening would
have been ideal had aikido-been included too. The art had not
Three national holidays within a
■
been overlooked, but .an exhibition had not been possible due to
Japan a most colorful time to visit. W„ the touted
a slight injury to Toronto’s sandan instructor, Mr. Tetsunari Fujita.
the many Spring festivities of Japan
The different arts seen together can only enhance each other.
14 ‘,°mr £2Sf °2 P'“S “" ^ departing April 24,
They give the potential student a splendid basis for his choice for
study. Too, few will deny that there is no more inspiring''sight
1966. For further information, please call
than team-spirit working not only within dojos and their affiliates,
but between the dojos of the different arts.
Furuya Travel Service
This type of team-spirit can do wonders not only for the pro
365 Spadina Ave., Toronto
motion of the Japanese martial arts on this continent, but, more
Tel. '366-1075
important perhaps — for their public image.
Golden Week in Japan" '
It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY- ,
Consult
Bill Wales
Insurance Agency
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
JAMES KAMINO
T.V. Service
EM. 4-9913
(TORONTO)
Mickey S. Saw]
Insurance
Office—783-4261
Res.—BE. 1-0863
■ Those In Toll Area
CaH—RO 6-3840
Page 3
rday. February 26, 1966
Page 3
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K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
W. K. GARDENS
Crown Life Insurance Co.
Authorized Agent for All Airline*
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
Frank G. Yada
Authorized agent for
P and O LINES, AMERICAN PRESIDENT LINES
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquete
Private Dining Rooms
= #><#
B^XTO
IM^
V>4
1550 West Georgi* St.
Vancouver, B.C.
Page 3
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K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
W. K. GARDENS
Crown Life Insurance Co.
Authorized Agent for All Airline*
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
Frank G. Yada
Authorized agent for
P and O LINES, AMERICAN PRESIDENT LINES
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquete
Private Dining Rooms
= #><#
B^XTO
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1550 West Georgi* St.
Vancouver, B.C.
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Page 7
^ay. February 2'6, 1966
PAGE 7
IltllllllllllllllllHilllllllllilllllHIIIIIII
Late Shinji S. Sato PersonalNotesAcrossCanada
UllllllllllllllllllllllllllHllllilllllllH'
ares
Was Outstanding
CARD OF THANKS
| JCCA Annual Meeting Scheduled Mar. 6th J.C. Issei Leader
and Doings
WINNIPEG, Man.—The Annual Meeting of the Manitoba
L will be held on Sunday, March 6th starting 1:30 p.m. at
Manitoba Buddhist Church Hall, 825 Winnipeg Avenue (near
mshe).
.
^eryone is urged to attend. Refreshments will be served.
i ‘
M.J.C.C.A.
By I. HIRAYAMA
WINNIPEG.—Mr. Shinji Ste
phan Sato, 6'7, died suddenly from
a heart attack on February 12th,
while attending a conference on
Indian arid Eskimo problems, at
tlie Royal Alexander Hotel where
*
*
he was scheduled to speak on the
Sier Stevestonites Get-together At Centre Mar. 6 subject.
KORONTO.—Former Steveston and area residents' are planning . Born in Nishikiori-mura in
.a Issei-Nisei Shimbokukai on Sunday, . March 6th at the Japan, Mr. Sato came to Canada
mese Canadian Cultural Centre. Guests of honor will be former in 1917 landing in Vancouver..
Epals of the Japanese school Mr. Matsuzaki and Mr. Kajiro He had resided in Winnipeg since
Hheir wives, and Mrs. Shimizu (nee: Hyodo) who taught at 1942. .
Always a defender of injust
®rd Byng School.
fee program will be: 3 to 4 p.m. — “get acquainted”; 4 to 5 ices against Japanese Canadians,
opening address, introduction etc; 5 to 6:30 p.m. — Japa- he served J.C.’s for many years
^inner. 6:30 p.m. and on — entertainment (film, odori, songs organizing a J.C. coordinating
free, including dinner, will be $2.50 per person. Children over committee and later aided in
the birth of the Manitoba JCCA.
®ais $1. and under 10- years free.
He was active as an elder in
pill reservations should be made by March 2nd, 1966 by conKnox
United Church, ,the largest
any of the following:Mamoru Nishi — 225-783 6, Ted Nishi
in
Winnipeg.
He was also a
59-6973, Shizuo Matsuba — 532-7440, Yutaka Kobayashi —
member
of
the
Logan Constitu
B128, Tsugio Mineoka — 536-0547, or Yoshio Kanda — 532-8356.
ency of the New Democratic
Party, a delegate to tlie Winni
ffi> United Church Announces New Executives peg District and Labour Council
^WINNIPEG.—The Man. Japanese United Church announces for Local 338 of the Brewery
and Soft Drink Workers. (Grain
Sfficers of the Official board and of the United Church Women: Division),
and executive member
Board of Stewards: Chairman and Treasurer — David R. Sa- of the Red River Co-op.
S Envelope Secretary — S. Yoshino; Building Fund — K. ShiHe was hoping to devote his
Ministers salary— J. Kakumasu; Secretary — H. Morita; full time to tlie NDP and the
Mi’ge — Takao Nakasato, Henry Ozamoto.
Manitoba s JCCA on his retire
Kession: Elder — Kunizo Mori; Clerk — T. Nakai; Annual ment from active work. This
Mating delegate — S. Nishioka; Church Calendar — M. Shibuya; writer was planning to ask him
Bous Education — H. Kobayashi; Visitation — C. Hosaka, to serve as teacher of tlie Japa
l&iiaii. T. Nawata, S. Koga, K. Matsubara; Group chairmen: nese Language School and aid in
SnK. Mori (b) T. Kawata (c) T, Nakai.
the Manitoba JCCA’s bulletin
Sjnited Church Women Councillors — Miss Blanche Megaffin, “Outlook”. We had also planned
® Aiko Furuya; President — Mrs. M. Nakai; Vice-President — to write the history of tlie Ja
Shimozawa; Recording Secretary — Mrs. T. Hirayama; panese Canadians in Manitoba.
^gsponding Secretary —' Mrs. Takada; Treasurer — Mrs. M.
Funeral was held at the Thom
Bashi; Social — Mrs. T. Sakade chairman, Mrs. M. Takatsu; son Funeral Chapel with the Rev.
IlSttion — Mrs. C. Shibuya, Mrs. K’. Hikida, Mrs. H. Furutani; D. B. Macdonald officiating on
Committee.— Mrs. T. Mizuno, Mrs. S. Matsubara; Annual Feb. 16th. Honorary bearers in
Bazaar — Mrs. U. Miyamoto; Nisei Department — S. Kawata, cluded Stanley E. Knowles, M.P.,
Asae; Groups Chairman — (a) Mrs. S. Kubota (b) Mrs. L. Harris, M.L.A., Magnus Eli
Mwpbuchi (c) Mrs. F. Morita.
ason, Rev. Y. Ogura, I. Hiraya
M. J.U.C.
ma and Harold A. Hirose. Active
*
*
bearers were Messrs. H. Koba
M. Shibuya, H. W. Sa
gjprful Kimonos, Odoris, etc. Sun. At JCC Centre yashi,
saki, A. H. Mackling, J. W. Hall
&0R0NT0.—'Spring conies early to the. Cultural Centre this and W. W. Kenney.
— the Spring Festival will be held at the Cultural Centre
His wife Masae predeceased
Bunday, February 27th. from 2— 8 p.m. ,
him in 1943. Surviving are two
B®A.lthough using the theme of the Hinamatsuri (Girls’ Doll daughters, Miss Nobu Sato of
®val) the Centre’s Spring Festival is intended for the whole Winnipeg and Mrs. John (Amie)
&ly. The color will not be restricted to displays of beautiful Roller of Orangeville, Ontario;
gmatsuri -dolls, for, there will be the actual participation of one son Akira Sato of Calgary,
Sansei girls in colorful kimonos performing dances and and seven grandchildren; one
brother Jishiro Sato of Winni
Mering songs.
SThere will be a display, of art objects — a part of the $10,000 peg and one sister Mrs. Ayoko
from Japan — as well as displays of Sumi (ink painting), Sasaki in Japan.
Mana (flower arrangement), Origami (paper folding). The teachgand pupils of the Centre’s - art classes will give demonstraspecial added attraction will be the Mochitsuki or ricecake
Iffiding. Mochi-tsuki is usually done during the last week in
^mber, in readiness for the New Year. The Japanese always
Hirate the New Year with their mochi using usu (mortar) and
(pestles). It is quite a thrilling sight to see the mochi^ders pound away at The steaming rice.. The eating of the
By made mochi will be an experience, for you, too.
^There will be other surprises. Keep February 27th open for
family outing to the Cultural Centre from 2 — 8 p.m. for the
Bal Spring Festival.
RThe admission charge of 50 cents will be used to further
wren’s and young people’s projects at the Centre:. To add color
®nis festivity, anyone wearing a kimono will be admitted free.
r
J.C.C. Centre
icien C. Kurata, Q.C.
|.BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
|
NOTARY PUBLIC
I
Office Hours Saturday
I October to April Inclusive
| 62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
I Suite 513 Temple Building '
ITORONTO
L 6-3323
—
Res: HO. 7-3427
SAY IT WITH
FLOWERS
SHARON'S FLORIST
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Peter Sasaki---- K. Sasaki
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
942 PAPE AVE TORONTO
, a ^ ^
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
Commit
A. E. McKague, Q.C.
Barrister and Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
We wish to express our sin
cere appreciation to our many
friends, far and near, for all
their acts of kindness, expres
sions of sympathy, and many
tributes received during the
recent loss of our father and
brother.
Akio Sato,
Mr. & Mrs. Jishiro Sato
Nobu Sato,
Mrs. John (Amie) Roller,
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO
CROWN LIFE
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to extend our
heartfelt thanks and apprecia
tion for the acts of kindness,
messages of sympathy, and
beautiful floral offerings re
ceived from our many friends
on the sudden passing of a
dear wife and mother, Moyo
Nagao.
K. Nagao
and family
Toronto, Ont.
rgro
Gertrude Urabe
AGENCY
Office — 3101 Bathurst St
Phone: 783-4261
Home phone: Hl. 7-8905
Down with Hauser!
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27. 1966
'
11:30 A.M. English Language Service
The Rev. Minoru Stephan Takada. B.A., B_D.
701 DotkcouiI Rd.. Toronte
A HEAHTY WELCOME TO ALL
owerd
OPTICAL
proprietor
JON ONODERA
Complete Care
HU. 9-4654 - HU. 1-8805
(Businew)
Ofi5g±
(Residence)
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Toronto
Buy & Sell
Your Home
Through
MITS KURODA
WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE LIMITED
For AH Classes of
Toronto, Ontario
1444 Danforth Avenue
BUS: HO. 9-1151 — RES: AM. 1-2581
INSURANCE
Phone: PL. 9.2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
DUNDAS UNION STORE
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
Travel Arrangements
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHO YU
SUKIYAKI MEAT—VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
Anywhere — Anytime
EM. 4-7692
■ Air—Ship—Bus——Hail
Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel. Accident
and Baggage Insurance
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVEBN
Passage arranged-by Steamer or Air
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
2 Vesta Drive
HUdson 5-1385
Representing
RITZ KINOSHITA
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friend#
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
tM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
OFFICE
EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
‘
"Call for Reservations or
Information — EM. 8-9934
T. KAMEOKA
K. Iwata Travel Service
113 McCaul St., TORONTO
^^■.■j .ex > * x* >».j eeeeJ
l
PAGE 7
IltllllllllllllllllHilllllllllilllllHIIIIIII
Late Shinji S. Sato PersonalNotesAcrossCanada
UllllllllllllllllllllllllllHllllilllllllH'
ares
Was Outstanding
CARD OF THANKS
| JCCA Annual Meeting Scheduled Mar. 6th J.C. Issei Leader
and Doings
WINNIPEG, Man.—The Annual Meeting of the Manitoba
L will be held on Sunday, March 6th starting 1:30 p.m. at
Manitoba Buddhist Church Hall, 825 Winnipeg Avenue (near
mshe).
.
^eryone is urged to attend. Refreshments will be served.
i ‘
M.J.C.C.A.
By I. HIRAYAMA
WINNIPEG.—Mr. Shinji Ste
phan Sato, 6'7, died suddenly from
a heart attack on February 12th,
while attending a conference on
Indian arid Eskimo problems, at
tlie Royal Alexander Hotel where
*
*
he was scheduled to speak on the
Sier Stevestonites Get-together At Centre Mar. 6 subject.
KORONTO.—Former Steveston and area residents' are planning . Born in Nishikiori-mura in
.a Issei-Nisei Shimbokukai on Sunday, . March 6th at the Japan, Mr. Sato came to Canada
mese Canadian Cultural Centre. Guests of honor will be former in 1917 landing in Vancouver..
Epals of the Japanese school Mr. Matsuzaki and Mr. Kajiro He had resided in Winnipeg since
Hheir wives, and Mrs. Shimizu (nee: Hyodo) who taught at 1942. .
Always a defender of injust
®rd Byng School.
fee program will be: 3 to 4 p.m. — “get acquainted”; 4 to 5 ices against Japanese Canadians,
opening address, introduction etc; 5 to 6:30 p.m. — Japa- he served J.C.’s for many years
^inner. 6:30 p.m. and on — entertainment (film, odori, songs organizing a J.C. coordinating
free, including dinner, will be $2.50 per person. Children over committee and later aided in
the birth of the Manitoba JCCA.
®ais $1. and under 10- years free.
He was active as an elder in
pill reservations should be made by March 2nd, 1966 by conKnox
United Church, ,the largest
any of the following:Mamoru Nishi — 225-783 6, Ted Nishi
in
Winnipeg.
He was also a
59-6973, Shizuo Matsuba — 532-7440, Yutaka Kobayashi —
member
of
the
Logan Constitu
B128, Tsugio Mineoka — 536-0547, or Yoshio Kanda — 532-8356.
ency of the New Democratic
Party, a delegate to tlie Winni
ffi> United Church Announces New Executives peg District and Labour Council
^WINNIPEG.—The Man. Japanese United Church announces for Local 338 of the Brewery
and Soft Drink Workers. (Grain
Sfficers of the Official board and of the United Church Women: Division),
and executive member
Board of Stewards: Chairman and Treasurer — David R. Sa- of the Red River Co-op.
S Envelope Secretary — S. Yoshino; Building Fund — K. ShiHe was hoping to devote his
Ministers salary— J. Kakumasu; Secretary — H. Morita; full time to tlie NDP and the
Mi’ge — Takao Nakasato, Henry Ozamoto.
Manitoba s JCCA on his retire
Kession: Elder — Kunizo Mori; Clerk — T. Nakai; Annual ment from active work. This
Mating delegate — S. Nishioka; Church Calendar — M. Shibuya; writer was planning to ask him
Bous Education — H. Kobayashi; Visitation — C. Hosaka, to serve as teacher of tlie Japa
l&iiaii. T. Nawata, S. Koga, K. Matsubara; Group chairmen: nese Language School and aid in
SnK. Mori (b) T. Kawata (c) T, Nakai.
the Manitoba JCCA’s bulletin
Sjnited Church Women Councillors — Miss Blanche Megaffin, “Outlook”. We had also planned
® Aiko Furuya; President — Mrs. M. Nakai; Vice-President — to write the history of tlie Ja
Shimozawa; Recording Secretary — Mrs. T. Hirayama; panese Canadians in Manitoba.
^gsponding Secretary —' Mrs. Takada; Treasurer — Mrs. M.
Funeral was held at the Thom
Bashi; Social — Mrs. T. Sakade chairman, Mrs. M. Takatsu; son Funeral Chapel with the Rev.
IlSttion — Mrs. C. Shibuya, Mrs. K’. Hikida, Mrs. H. Furutani; D. B. Macdonald officiating on
Committee.— Mrs. T. Mizuno, Mrs. S. Matsubara; Annual Feb. 16th. Honorary bearers in
Bazaar — Mrs. U. Miyamoto; Nisei Department — S. Kawata, cluded Stanley E. Knowles, M.P.,
Asae; Groups Chairman — (a) Mrs. S. Kubota (b) Mrs. L. Harris, M.L.A., Magnus Eli
Mwpbuchi (c) Mrs. F. Morita.
ason, Rev. Y. Ogura, I. Hiraya
M. J.U.C.
ma and Harold A. Hirose. Active
*
*
bearers were Messrs. H. Koba
M. Shibuya, H. W. Sa
gjprful Kimonos, Odoris, etc. Sun. At JCC Centre yashi,
saki, A. H. Mackling, J. W. Hall
&0R0NT0.—'Spring conies early to the. Cultural Centre this and W. W. Kenney.
— the Spring Festival will be held at the Cultural Centre
His wife Masae predeceased
Bunday, February 27th. from 2— 8 p.m. ,
him in 1943. Surviving are two
B®A.lthough using the theme of the Hinamatsuri (Girls’ Doll daughters, Miss Nobu Sato of
®val) the Centre’s Spring Festival is intended for the whole Winnipeg and Mrs. John (Amie)
&ly. The color will not be restricted to displays of beautiful Roller of Orangeville, Ontario;
gmatsuri -dolls, for, there will be the actual participation of one son Akira Sato of Calgary,
Sansei girls in colorful kimonos performing dances and and seven grandchildren; one
brother Jishiro Sato of Winni
Mering songs.
SThere will be a display, of art objects — a part of the $10,000 peg and one sister Mrs. Ayoko
from Japan — as well as displays of Sumi (ink painting), Sasaki in Japan.
Mana (flower arrangement), Origami (paper folding). The teachgand pupils of the Centre’s - art classes will give demonstraspecial added attraction will be the Mochitsuki or ricecake
Iffiding. Mochi-tsuki is usually done during the last week in
^mber, in readiness for the New Year. The Japanese always
Hirate the New Year with their mochi using usu (mortar) and
(pestles). It is quite a thrilling sight to see the mochi^ders pound away at The steaming rice.. The eating of the
By made mochi will be an experience, for you, too.
^There will be other surprises. Keep February 27th open for
family outing to the Cultural Centre from 2 — 8 p.m. for the
Bal Spring Festival.
RThe admission charge of 50 cents will be used to further
wren’s and young people’s projects at the Centre:. To add color
®nis festivity, anyone wearing a kimono will be admitted free.
r
J.C.C. Centre
icien C. Kurata, Q.C.
|.BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
|
NOTARY PUBLIC
I
Office Hours Saturday
I October to April Inclusive
| 62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
I Suite 513 Temple Building '
ITORONTO
L 6-3323
—
Res: HO. 7-3427
SAY IT WITH
FLOWERS
SHARON'S FLORIST
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Peter Sasaki---- K. Sasaki
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
942 PAPE AVE TORONTO
, a ^ ^
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
Commit
A. E. McKague, Q.C.
Barrister and Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
We wish to express our sin
cere appreciation to our many
friends, far and near, for all
their acts of kindness, expres
sions of sympathy, and many
tributes received during the
recent loss of our father and
brother.
Akio Sato,
Mr. & Mrs. Jishiro Sato
Nobu Sato,
Mrs. John (Amie) Roller,
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO
CROWN LIFE
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to extend our
heartfelt thanks and apprecia
tion for the acts of kindness,
messages of sympathy, and
beautiful floral offerings re
ceived from our many friends
on the sudden passing of a
dear wife and mother, Moyo
Nagao.
K. Nagao
and family
Toronto, Ont.
rgro
Gertrude Urabe
AGENCY
Office — 3101 Bathurst St
Phone: 783-4261
Home phone: Hl. 7-8905
Down with Hauser!
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27. 1966
'
11:30 A.M. English Language Service
The Rev. Minoru Stephan Takada. B.A., B_D.
701 DotkcouiI Rd.. Toronte
A HEAHTY WELCOME TO ALL
owerd
OPTICAL
proprietor
JON ONODERA
Complete Care
HU. 9-4654 - HU. 1-8805
(Businew)
Ofi5g±
(Residence)
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Toronto
Buy & Sell
Your Home
Through
MITS KURODA
WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE LIMITED
For AH Classes of
Toronto, Ontario
1444 Danforth Avenue
BUS: HO. 9-1151 — RES: AM. 1-2581
INSURANCE
Phone: PL. 9.2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
DUNDAS UNION STORE
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
Travel Arrangements
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHO YU
SUKIYAKI MEAT—VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
Anywhere — Anytime
EM. 4-7692
■ Air—Ship—Bus——Hail
Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel. Accident
and Baggage Insurance
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVEBN
Passage arranged-by Steamer or Air
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
2 Vesta Drive
HUdson 5-1385
Representing
RITZ KINOSHITA
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friend#
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
tM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
OFFICE
EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
‘
"Call for Reservations or
Information — EM. 8-9934
T. KAMEOKA
K. Iwata Travel Service
113 McCaul St., TORONTO
^^■.■j .ex > * x* >».j eeeeJ
l
Page 8
PAGE 8
Saturday, Febr
Visual Order In Cities
r« NEW U«g
(Cont. From Page 1)
Amongst other thing, civic design would help reclaim our cities do not, of course, prevail here and now. The creation of a new
Authorized aa Mmm m
I
.ron} the automobile and give it back to the pedestrian for his environment of• excellence will demand bold hew solutions. Julian
and for payment of post™*11 ’ll
Post OffiCe DepaS’^
-on’ Relaxation and interest. Let us stop and consider our Huxley has- called- this, “our next’ step in civilization” — and has
syndrome”. That city, the ugliest of North American defined it . as the “necessity of a positive attempt to make our
479 QUEEN ST. ^j
cities, has given over three-quarters of its area to the automobile environment a work of art.”. '
. '
(expressways, parking lots and service stations), while humans
Toronto 2-B, Out,
Perhaps this objective is the answer to no less a critic than
a1? : wedged into the remaining quarter. Toronto’s unprecedented
EMpire 6-5005 J
increase in vehicle registration suggests we are moving in the Walter Lippman, who has claimed that “North America is lack
ing in great and clearly defined objectives.” In terms meaningful
same direction.
for both the United States and Canada, Mr. Lippman has said:
-1954
290,000 vehicles
1965
650,000 vehicles
“The critical weakness of our., society is that, for the time
1970
300,000 vehicles
being, our people do not have great purposes which they are
1980
-united in wanting, to achieve. The public mood 'of the country
I believe civic design would, ensure the Toronto of the future
is defensive, .to hold on and conserve, not to push forward
Female Help Wyldas an exciting vital c^ty to live in. It would also help make it a city
and create. We talk about ourselves as if we were a completed
of excellence — a city to whom all English-speaking Canadians
society, one which has. -achieved its purposes and has no ^^st’^
766-1®$;
might affix loyalty and pride along with, the envy. But civic de
great further business to transact.”sign without leadership', is impossible. It is surely from groups
such as this that leadership must come. (It was from groups such’ lies Perhaps Mr. Lippman’s “great further business to transact” EXPERIENCED operators Inin the challenge inherent in. the massive urbanization ahead.
as this that responsible civic leadership camo in the past.)
Surely, after the primacy of “peace or war”, the intelligent con
If any of you 'may be concerned with cost, let me hasten to trol of. urbanization is civilization’s “second problem” — in fact,, PENTAL office assistant, exoe-Ur.■assure you the beauty costs little more, if anything, than the ugly. one might say, a “synonymous problem”. Cities must exist for necessary. Will train. Phoned
'
The only rare commodity in- the process is the thought- and con man’s benefit alone — how obvious this must be! — not ■ for a (loronto).
sideration inherent in a combination of civic design and-planning.
perpetuation of the present' uneasy partnership of cars, aircraft RELIABLE cashier wanted 5 day .
peasant; surroundings. Downtow'
— even missiles — and —- man.
. Again, quoting.Mumford might be apt:
hon. Will: train for position.
Edmund Burke once said:
“If society is paralyzed today, it is not for lack of means,
For appointment cal!
. ?
but for lack of purpose.”
“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for.' 4427 (Toronto).
good men to do nothing.
Surely we in this dynamic society of ours do not lack purpose?
Male Help W a n i p.4
The . leaders of our social system are increasingly aware of MAN-to; learn sheet metal worl &
We, and our forefathers, have lived in North America for
almost 500 years. During that period we have built many things urban, problems. Your generous invitation to me today, and yoar haye xhaufieur's licence. East^B
ferred-. ’ Steady work. Phoned!
— buildings, roads, machinery, objects of all kinds. Tn the remain “hearing me out” attest that you share that concern.
(Toronto).
ing years of this century — 34 years — we must duplicate every
object that now exists in. North America — building’s, roads,
GARDENER experienced and
in flower bed design and layout
machinery, objects of all kinds.
sonal plant requirement,. and
How well we build —• or rebuild our total environment, will
.fawn,.. trees, and shrubs. Must heH
/KOBE, Japan.
Police are but she continued to live in Ko to assume responsibility for: coM
determine the quality of our nation — the- ultimate test of the
baffled about what to do with be. She was naturalized as a maintenance ' of garden area ci iB
things wo cherish in our peaceful association.
trial . plant. Permanent position.: Ai™
On a less profound note I am reminded that beauty and care some 80,000,000 yen ($221,600) Japanese citizen in 1963.
employment ofice, Canada Packers'^®
. 978. St. Clair. Ave. V7. (Toroutoj.4^^
do start in small ways — “God is in the details” — as a famous worth of property left by a na
turalized white Russian widow
architect once said.
<
who died' recently without relaI am reminded of a wonderful street sign in Edinburgh: tives. ■
“The Amenity of our Streets is recommended to your Care.”
Three policemen guarded the
The amenity of not only our streets, but our parks, our buildings, personal effects all d'ay recently
and the way they are put together.
' of Mrs. Keiko Sahob, 67,. who
On an even less profound note, yet forceful enough in its truth, Ted" of a heart ailment, and
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
was Ogden Nash who irreverently wrote:
diabetes.
FLAT ROOFS
SHINGLING
Felice entered the case when
“I think, that I shall never see,
friends of the widow began ap
A billboard lovely as a tree,
EAVESTROUGHING
SHEET METAL WORK
plying for her property saying
Perhaps, unless the billboards fall,
she had made verbal promises. .
I”H never see a tree at all.”
TORONTO
NISEI OWNED
Billboards, smog, overhead wiring, details all admittedly, but
The Russian wom.an gathered
surely these are a matter for your concern to be commended to all her valuable papers in a hand
Your Care.
TOSH NISHIJIMA
"COVERING ONTARIO'
bag when she entered the hos
I doubt, that Canadians and Americans have any less pride pital for treatment. In it police
Wight Cm!Is-. PL. 9-5095 HI. 7-1100
or imagination than that which must have stirred Venetians, found 4,000,000 yen’ ($11,080) in
Florentines or Romans, or more recently the Parisians, to create cash, a hank book showing a de
their beautiful cities. The conditions which formed those cities posit of 3 million yen ($36,010),
and' 22 pieces of jewellry,. worth
about 8 million yen ($22,160).
She also was the owner of a
two story foreign style building,
estimated to be worth about 55
Issei-Nisei Come Meet Your Friends
million yen ($152,350).
Whole Families Welcome!
.It. was reported that she had
through Life insurance?
Sunday, March 6th at J.C. Cultural Centre at 3 p.m.
signed a will in March last year,
Guests: Former principals Mr. Kajiro, Mr. Matsuzaki, their
written by a foreigner in En
CONTACT
wives, and Mrs. K. Shimizu (Hyodo).
glish, in which she directed that
Fee. including Japanese dinner. S2.50 per person
all her property be deposited in
Children over 10 — S1.00
Children under 10 — free
a bank after- payment of her
Entertainment includes films, songs, odori, etc.
funeral expenses for the estab
Reservation deadline — March 2nd. Contact any of followinglishment of a “Sahob Fund” to
Mamoru Nishi — 225-7836, Ted Nishi — 259-6973, Shizuo
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
help the underpriviliged in Japan.
Matsuba - 532-7440, Yutaka Kobayashi — 225-3128, Tsugio
She doubted the legality of
COMPANY OF CANADA
Mineoka — 536-0547, or Yoshio Kanda — 532-8356.
the will and had' been thinking
of making it legal shortly before
she died, it was reported.
She arrived in Japan about 40
years ago with her husband,
Office 364-5141
who
was engaged in foreign
trade. He died “in Kobe in 1934
-CLASSIFIES
Russian Lady Leaves Large Legacy
ALL-WAY MS Lli
421-3374
Steveston Get-Together
ducational Funds
Ron Marks
JUNIOR JUDO CHAMPIONSHIP
ON SATURDAY, MARCH 5th, 6:30 P.M.
A; Jewish Community Centre
Cor. Sanford and Delaware, Hamilton.
RENDOKAN JUDO ACADEMY.
SMALL
SHOE
SIZES
MID-WINTER
CLEARANCE SALE
Ladies' shoes from
1 up to 11
Men's Scott McHales
4 up to 14
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
13X8 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
C.O.D. orders from coast to coast
Residence 925-9636
Cool Nisei ....
(Cent. From Page 15
and I suppose flattering if true.
There are such traits as stoicism
and endurance that reflect the
samurai
character.
Although
these are not named by Mr. Ly
man, I think they are definitely
part of the Nisei personality.
While I don’t deny the cool bit,
I would hope that the Nisei are
more than that.
2nd ANNUAL
NISEI MEN’S BONSPIEl III
MAR. 19th
SAT.
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
221 VICTORIA
EM. 3-5002
ST., TORONTO
OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
BROOM & STONE
LAWRENCE
CURLING CLUB soc"
AND MIDLAND
TROPHIES • PRIZES • BUFFET DINNER
KAZUO G. OIYE
BARRISTER. SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Carlton St., Toronto
Room 1805
366-6388
293-4281 (Bm.)
$200“ per rink
FIRST DRAW 11:00 A.M-
3 DRAWS—8 ENDS EACH.
SEND
ENTRY
AND CHEQUE PAYABLE TO
CLOSING ENTRY DATE MAR. 14*h
k
b
■
GORDON S. KAI
220 WOOLNER AVE.. APT- 801
TORONTO 9, ONTARIO
Saturday, Febr
Visual Order In Cities
r« NEW U«g
(Cont. From Page 1)
Amongst other thing, civic design would help reclaim our cities do not, of course, prevail here and now. The creation of a new
Authorized aa Mmm m
I
.ron} the automobile and give it back to the pedestrian for his environment of• excellence will demand bold hew solutions. Julian
and for payment of post™*11 ’ll
Post OffiCe DepaS’^
-on’ Relaxation and interest. Let us stop and consider our Huxley has- called- this, “our next’ step in civilization” — and has
syndrome”. That city, the ugliest of North American defined it . as the “necessity of a positive attempt to make our
479 QUEEN ST. ^j
cities, has given over three-quarters of its area to the automobile environment a work of art.”. '
. '
(expressways, parking lots and service stations), while humans
Toronto 2-B, Out,
Perhaps this objective is the answer to no less a critic than
a1? : wedged into the remaining quarter. Toronto’s unprecedented
EMpire 6-5005 J
increase in vehicle registration suggests we are moving in the Walter Lippman, who has claimed that “North America is lack
ing in great and clearly defined objectives.” In terms meaningful
same direction.
for both the United States and Canada, Mr. Lippman has said:
-1954
290,000 vehicles
1965
650,000 vehicles
“The critical weakness of our., society is that, for the time
1970
300,000 vehicles
being, our people do not have great purposes which they are
1980
-united in wanting, to achieve. The public mood 'of the country
I believe civic design would, ensure the Toronto of the future
is defensive, .to hold on and conserve, not to push forward
Female Help Wyldas an exciting vital c^ty to live in. It would also help make it a city
and create. We talk about ourselves as if we were a completed
of excellence — a city to whom all English-speaking Canadians
society, one which has. -achieved its purposes and has no ^^st’^
766-1®$;
might affix loyalty and pride along with, the envy. But civic de
great further business to transact.”sign without leadership', is impossible. It is surely from groups
such as this that leadership must come. (It was from groups such’ lies Perhaps Mr. Lippman’s “great further business to transact” EXPERIENCED operators Inin the challenge inherent in. the massive urbanization ahead.
as this that responsible civic leadership camo in the past.)
Surely, after the primacy of “peace or war”, the intelligent con
If any of you 'may be concerned with cost, let me hasten to trol of. urbanization is civilization’s “second problem” — in fact,, PENTAL office assistant, exoe-Ur.■assure you the beauty costs little more, if anything, than the ugly. one might say, a “synonymous problem”. Cities must exist for necessary. Will train. Phoned
'
The only rare commodity in- the process is the thought- and con man’s benefit alone — how obvious this must be! — not ■ for a (loronto).
sideration inherent in a combination of civic design and-planning.
perpetuation of the present' uneasy partnership of cars, aircraft RELIABLE cashier wanted 5 day .
peasant; surroundings. Downtow'
— even missiles — and —- man.
. Again, quoting.Mumford might be apt:
hon. Will: train for position.
Edmund Burke once said:
“If society is paralyzed today, it is not for lack of means,
For appointment cal!
. ?
but for lack of purpose.”
“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for.' 4427 (Toronto).
good men to do nothing.
Surely we in this dynamic society of ours do not lack purpose?
Male Help W a n i p.4
The . leaders of our social system are increasingly aware of MAN-to; learn sheet metal worl &
We, and our forefathers, have lived in North America for
almost 500 years. During that period we have built many things urban, problems. Your generous invitation to me today, and yoar haye xhaufieur's licence. East^B
ferred-. ’ Steady work. Phoned!
— buildings, roads, machinery, objects of all kinds. Tn the remain “hearing me out” attest that you share that concern.
(Toronto).
ing years of this century — 34 years — we must duplicate every
object that now exists in. North America — building’s, roads,
GARDENER experienced and
in flower bed design and layout
machinery, objects of all kinds.
sonal plant requirement,. and
How well we build —• or rebuild our total environment, will
.fawn,.. trees, and shrubs. Must heH
/KOBE, Japan.
Police are but she continued to live in Ko to assume responsibility for: coM
determine the quality of our nation — the- ultimate test of the
baffled about what to do with be. She was naturalized as a maintenance ' of garden area ci iB
things wo cherish in our peaceful association.
trial . plant. Permanent position.: Ai™
On a less profound note I am reminded that beauty and care some 80,000,000 yen ($221,600) Japanese citizen in 1963.
employment ofice, Canada Packers'^®
. 978. St. Clair. Ave. V7. (Toroutoj.4^^
do start in small ways — “God is in the details” — as a famous worth of property left by a na
turalized white Russian widow
architect once said.
<
who died' recently without relaI am reminded of a wonderful street sign in Edinburgh: tives. ■
“The Amenity of our Streets is recommended to your Care.”
Three policemen guarded the
The amenity of not only our streets, but our parks, our buildings, personal effects all d'ay recently
and the way they are put together.
' of Mrs. Keiko Sahob, 67,. who
On an even less profound note, yet forceful enough in its truth, Ted" of a heart ailment, and
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
was Ogden Nash who irreverently wrote:
diabetes.
FLAT ROOFS
SHINGLING
Felice entered the case when
“I think, that I shall never see,
friends of the widow began ap
A billboard lovely as a tree,
EAVESTROUGHING
SHEET METAL WORK
plying for her property saying
Perhaps, unless the billboards fall,
she had made verbal promises. .
I”H never see a tree at all.”
TORONTO
NISEI OWNED
Billboards, smog, overhead wiring, details all admittedly, but
The Russian wom.an gathered
surely these are a matter for your concern to be commended to all her valuable papers in a hand
Your Care.
TOSH NISHIJIMA
"COVERING ONTARIO'
bag when she entered the hos
I doubt, that Canadians and Americans have any less pride pital for treatment. In it police
Wight Cm!Is-. PL. 9-5095 HI. 7-1100
or imagination than that which must have stirred Venetians, found 4,000,000 yen’ ($11,080) in
Florentines or Romans, or more recently the Parisians, to create cash, a hank book showing a de
their beautiful cities. The conditions which formed those cities posit of 3 million yen ($36,010),
and' 22 pieces of jewellry,. worth
about 8 million yen ($22,160).
She also was the owner of a
two story foreign style building,
estimated to be worth about 55
Issei-Nisei Come Meet Your Friends
million yen ($152,350).
Whole Families Welcome!
.It. was reported that she had
through Life insurance?
Sunday, March 6th at J.C. Cultural Centre at 3 p.m.
signed a will in March last year,
Guests: Former principals Mr. Kajiro, Mr. Matsuzaki, their
written by a foreigner in En
CONTACT
wives, and Mrs. K. Shimizu (Hyodo).
glish, in which she directed that
Fee. including Japanese dinner. S2.50 per person
all her property be deposited in
Children over 10 — S1.00
Children under 10 — free
a bank after- payment of her
Entertainment includes films, songs, odori, etc.
funeral expenses for the estab
Reservation deadline — March 2nd. Contact any of followinglishment of a “Sahob Fund” to
Mamoru Nishi — 225-7836, Ted Nishi — 259-6973, Shizuo
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
help the underpriviliged in Japan.
Matsuba - 532-7440, Yutaka Kobayashi — 225-3128, Tsugio
She doubted the legality of
COMPANY OF CANADA
Mineoka — 536-0547, or Yoshio Kanda — 532-8356.
the will and had' been thinking
of making it legal shortly before
she died, it was reported.
She arrived in Japan about 40
years ago with her husband,
Office 364-5141
who
was engaged in foreign
trade. He died “in Kobe in 1934
-CLASSIFIES
Russian Lady Leaves Large Legacy
ALL-WAY MS Lli
421-3374
Steveston Get-Together
ducational Funds
Ron Marks
JUNIOR JUDO CHAMPIONSHIP
ON SATURDAY, MARCH 5th, 6:30 P.M.
A; Jewish Community Centre
Cor. Sanford and Delaware, Hamilton.
RENDOKAN JUDO ACADEMY.
SMALL
SHOE
SIZES
MID-WINTER
CLEARANCE SALE
Ladies' shoes from
1 up to 11
Men's Scott McHales
4 up to 14
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
13X8 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
C.O.D. orders from coast to coast
Residence 925-9636
Cool Nisei ....
(Cent. From Page 15
and I suppose flattering if true.
There are such traits as stoicism
and endurance that reflect the
samurai
character.
Although
these are not named by Mr. Ly
man, I think they are definitely
part of the Nisei personality.
While I don’t deny the cool bit,
I would hope that the Nisei are
more than that.
2nd ANNUAL
NISEI MEN’S BONSPIEl III
MAR. 19th
SAT.
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
221 VICTORIA
EM. 3-5002
ST., TORONTO
OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
BROOM & STONE
LAWRENCE
CURLING CLUB soc"
AND MIDLAND
TROPHIES • PRIZES • BUFFET DINNER
KAZUO G. OIYE
BARRISTER. SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Carlton St., Toronto
Room 1805
366-6388
293-4281 (Bm.)
$200“ per rink
FIRST DRAW 11:00 A.M-
3 DRAWS—8 ENDS EACH.
SEND
ENTRY
AND CHEQUE PAYABLE TO
CLOSING ENTRY DATE MAR. 14*h
k
b
■
GORDON S. KAI
220 WOOLNER AVE.. APT- 801
TORONTO 9, ONTARIO