Page 1
ngth For The Bridge
rst Novel To Depict Lives Of J.C/s
TORONTO.—Popular Canadian authoress, Je-ssie L. Beattie of
Strength For The Bridge tells how a Japanese Canadian fami
ilton. Ontario has written what is probably the first Canadian ly, along with other J.C.’s, overcame great discrimination
nd
1$ depicting the life of Japanese Canadians in “Strength For difficulty with pride, grace and dignity. Novelist Beattie has at
Sferidge.” Publishers McClelland and Stewart will release the tempted to interweave the innate strength of character and the
strong family structure of the Japanese Canadians in her novel.
gfor sale across Canada on March 29th.
®he novel, which includes a complete cast of Japanese CanaK is based upon fact covering the period, of J.C. settlement
•itish Columbia, the evacuation and resettlement.
Novelist Beattie was a contributor to The New Canadian’s
special Holiday Issue last year. She is remembered by N.C. readers
as the writer of the short story, “White-Vested Stranger” and the
poem, “The Woman Toiler.”
JESSIE L. BEATTIE
THE NEW
I
^n Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
!.xxx—No. 20
SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 1966
'
■
!""'"".. ......................................................,„„„... ........... ..............
ithoress Jessie L. Beattie
|
Why I Wrote
{Strength For The Bridge
Toronto Ont
IHn„_X^
Tor. JCCA’s New President Roy Sato
Vows Strong Voice In Vital Issues
TORONTO. — “In the fields of immigration,
civil rights, welfare, and citizenship •— however
controversial the issue — the voice of the Japa
nese Canadian Citizens’ Association will not be
silent,” vowed newly elected President of the Torin the Toronto Japanese Canadian community, Mr.
onto Chapter, Mr. Roy Sato. A popular figure
Sato was elected at the T. JCCA Annual Genera!!
Meeting held on March 7th at the Toronto Bud.ly JESSIE L. BEATTIE
I vesting. I still smell the sweetdhist Church.
’ •
|en I was a small girl, my I's^ smoke curling from the chim
‘If in pre-war days our hesitancy in voicing
ai in' owned and operated two|neys °f tlle: “hot-houses” as they
opinions
concei'ning matters in a wider spectrum
and a large market garden. were then called. I- still feel the
Raised his own plants in im- touch of the warm wet earth as
of the Canadian picture was prevalent, our position
|e greenhouses and as a I learned how to separate plants
has certainly changed now,” added President Sato.
igster I was his shadow.- one from the other and to place
“In all such significant matters
n him I learned the import- them at equal distances in suit
the JCCA, with truth, courage,
|of rules in gardening, .in able flat boxes, fox' further grow^ing, transplanting, and har- ing.
and justice, will , work together
and
succeed in achieving- its
Every February, my father
aims.
made a trip to Toronto to buy
jBrewin Urges
seeds, and from the time I was
Mr. Sato, who-succeeds retir
five years old, I went with him.
CAMBELL RIVER, B.C.—A search began last week for an ing President George Imai, is the
On a stool in the seed houses, I overdue gillnetter with two men, one a Nisei, aboard. Fisherman
p To Race Bar
father of “two and a half” chil
was allowed by him to choose two
Shigeru
Matsunaga
and
partner
Ernest
Marshall
on
board
the
[TAWA, — Immigration Mi- dollars worth of flower seeds
dren and has been associated
& Jean Marchand said a which he planted and raised for 36-footer Renae, failed to return recently from fishing grounds with the Toronto’ JCCA for many,
gs must be found to remove the beautification of our country near Cape Mudge, about five miles east of Cambell River.
years.
gnunatory provisions from home.
An RCMP Patrol boat and an RCAF Albatross aircraft are
“Along with family life, re
immigration Act.
taking
part
in
the
search.
.
To produce crops on the farm
gular job, and the odd game of
Bring debate on his departand
in
the
garden
required
help.
golf,
this new position should
|s estimates in the Com
IO] s’ he said Canada should be Our men came from many dif
just about take a full 100 per
J to eliminate relics of the ferent countries, and from many Additional Grants For Japan Gardens
cent of my waking hours,” he
land accept immigrants re- walks of life. Two of my uncles
LETHBRIDGE.—Lethbridge has secured an additional grant for admitted.
were
doctors
and
two
were
mis
less of race and color.
sionaries in the Orient. When construction of its Japanese garden centennial project at Hender
Others elected to various exe
®her Andrew Brewin (NDP, they came home on furlough they son Lake.
cutive
posts are: Vice-presidents
Greenwood) called for visited us. From them, as well
The city itself will now contribute $137,968 toward the project
Kay Morita and Ritsuko Inou
r of. remaining traces of as from our men, I heard stories whose estimated total cost has risen to $174,500. Originally it
jCriminatipn in the act, about Japan ;and other Eastern was set at $149,500 and the municipal government was pledged to ye; Corresponding Secretary _
he said, allows exclusion countries, and even when I was pay $109,500.
Denise
Nishimura;
Recording
The federal and provincial governments will now pay $23,Seo?e on grounds of racial' very young I learned to love and
Secretaries
—
Fumi
Sasaki
and
by order-in-council.
appreciate Eastern peoples. When 266 each instead of the original $20,000.
^^ropeans in Canada can get my father employed men from
Under • the federal provincial centennial grants program, the E. Shirakawa; Treasurer — Ge
federal
government has undertaken to pay $1 per capita in each org’s Takahashi; Asst. Treasurer
O Relatives in more easily :ar away land's, I was always inprovince
for'approved projects of lasting “ merit, if the provincial and Membership Chairman —
* Slans and Africans can,
(Cont. on P. 8)
government and municipality will contribute another $1 each.
&re7nl said- “This double
Grace Watanabe.
should be removed.”
Marchand said a Govern- ]
TWO SHIPS
i v PaPer on immigraWblfi11
°e ready as soon as
MAIL TO JAPAN. Two ships
^fABre'dl!. said long-promiswill soon be leaving for Japan:
By JIM HENRY
of a human being regardless of their race. She the Oriana on March 21st from
rnL?f
Immigration
never
returned to the U.S.
Vancouver, and the President
The tale of Oyuki Morgan began in 1904, not
mcrwae and perhaps the
Unfortunately
Morgan
died
in
France
shortly
Wilson
on March 24th from San
S®?Paper would lead to it.
really that long ago.
Francisco.
before
World
War
I
and
in
1938
Oyuki
reluctantly
This beautiful young girl’s romance with a
member of one of America’s best known banking -returned to her own native land only to be re
F Disasters In
families was even written into a Japanese opera pudiated and reviled by her countrymen,- as
Morgan had been by his.
which is all but forgotten today.
B.C. Nisei Dr. Wins
In 1951, one of the few bright events in her
^Y° Studied By
In the year 1904, banker George D. Morgan,
nephew of American entrepreneur J. P. Morgan, life took place. Japanese playwright Kazuo Kikuta Field And Stream
was on a world tour. On visiting Kyoto in Japan wrote a comic-opera entitled “Morgan Oyuki”
he saw a beautiful young geisha named “Yukika” based on the life of the former Kyoto geisha.
The star in the original role was Miss Fubuki Fishing Contest
and immediately fell in love with her.
i
Aviation experts
He was so smitten that he wanted to marry Koshiji, then a member of the Takarazuka girls
NEW YORK. ■- Dr. Henry
hnvp-sCOU”ines began inten- her. However, Yukika was bonded to her master. troupe.
Oyuki-san
lived
out
her
days
in
seclusion
for
L
ga50ns this week fol- In order to obtain the young girl’s liberty Morgan
Tsuyuki of North Surrey, B.C.
I* d^sters in the Tokyo is said to have paid the enormous sum at that 25 years from the time of her return to Japan.
won first prize in the Open Steel
In May of 1963 the colorful life of the 81-year- head (searun rainbow) divisi on of
time of 40,000 yen (estimated at about $20,000)
-321 Persons.
old geisha came to an end. She died late at night
officials also launch- to the geisha house to which she was attached.
the annual Field and Stream
They manied and went to the United States, of pneumonia at the home of her niece, Namie
SvUdles of aviation
i new ?an and ^newed calls the land of freedom and opportunity. Both Morgan Kato, in her beloved- old city of Kyoto along with magazine fishing contest.
*
airport.
and 'his bride were snubbed by Newport (Rhode her dreams of the happy days of her youth and
His prize winning fish, a new
[oir Fm-;011 ?e lower slopes Island) society. Things became so unbearable that with the realization that she would suffer no Thompson River record, caught
Slte of a British they changed their residence from one place to more. She had moved on to a land which could last October 28th weighed in at
another and they soon fled to France, then a far not be as cruel as the ones she had known on the 29 lbs. 10 ozs. — a lot of Rain
{
Cent, on p. 8.
bow.
more civilized country in relation to ths worth earth.
Search On For Missing
B.C. Nisei Salmonman
The Geisha That Married J. P. Morgan’s Nephew
rst Novel To Depict Lives Of J.C/s
TORONTO.—Popular Canadian authoress, Je-ssie L. Beattie of
Strength For The Bridge tells how a Japanese Canadian fami
ilton. Ontario has written what is probably the first Canadian ly, along with other J.C.’s, overcame great discrimination
nd
1$ depicting the life of Japanese Canadians in “Strength For difficulty with pride, grace and dignity. Novelist Beattie has at
Sferidge.” Publishers McClelland and Stewart will release the tempted to interweave the innate strength of character and the
strong family structure of the Japanese Canadians in her novel.
gfor sale across Canada on March 29th.
®he novel, which includes a complete cast of Japanese CanaK is based upon fact covering the period, of J.C. settlement
•itish Columbia, the evacuation and resettlement.
Novelist Beattie was a contributor to The New Canadian’s
special Holiday Issue last year. She is remembered by N.C. readers
as the writer of the short story, “White-Vested Stranger” and the
poem, “The Woman Toiler.”
JESSIE L. BEATTIE
THE NEW
I
^n Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
!.xxx—No. 20
SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 1966
'
■
!""'"".. ......................................................,„„„... ........... ..............
ithoress Jessie L. Beattie
|
Why I Wrote
{Strength For The Bridge
Toronto Ont
IHn„_X^
Tor. JCCA’s New President Roy Sato
Vows Strong Voice In Vital Issues
TORONTO. — “In the fields of immigration,
civil rights, welfare, and citizenship •— however
controversial the issue — the voice of the Japa
nese Canadian Citizens’ Association will not be
silent,” vowed newly elected President of the Torin the Toronto Japanese Canadian community, Mr.
onto Chapter, Mr. Roy Sato. A popular figure
Sato was elected at the T. JCCA Annual Genera!!
Meeting held on March 7th at the Toronto Bud.ly JESSIE L. BEATTIE
I vesting. I still smell the sweetdhist Church.
’ •
|en I was a small girl, my I's^ smoke curling from the chim
‘If in pre-war days our hesitancy in voicing
ai in' owned and operated two|neys °f tlle: “hot-houses” as they
opinions
concei'ning matters in a wider spectrum
and a large market garden. were then called. I- still feel the
Raised his own plants in im- touch of the warm wet earth as
of the Canadian picture was prevalent, our position
|e greenhouses and as a I learned how to separate plants
has certainly changed now,” added President Sato.
igster I was his shadow.- one from the other and to place
“In all such significant matters
n him I learned the import- them at equal distances in suit
the JCCA, with truth, courage,
|of rules in gardening, .in able flat boxes, fox' further grow^ing, transplanting, and har- ing.
and justice, will , work together
and
succeed in achieving- its
Every February, my father
aims.
made a trip to Toronto to buy
jBrewin Urges
seeds, and from the time I was
Mr. Sato, who-succeeds retir
five years old, I went with him.
CAMBELL RIVER, B.C.—A search began last week for an ing President George Imai, is the
On a stool in the seed houses, I overdue gillnetter with two men, one a Nisei, aboard. Fisherman
p To Race Bar
father of “two and a half” chil
was allowed by him to choose two
Shigeru
Matsunaga
and
partner
Ernest
Marshall
on
board
the
[TAWA, — Immigration Mi- dollars worth of flower seeds
dren and has been associated
& Jean Marchand said a which he planted and raised for 36-footer Renae, failed to return recently from fishing grounds with the Toronto’ JCCA for many,
gs must be found to remove the beautification of our country near Cape Mudge, about five miles east of Cambell River.
years.
gnunatory provisions from home.
An RCMP Patrol boat and an RCAF Albatross aircraft are
“Along with family life, re
immigration Act.
taking
part
in
the
search.
.
To produce crops on the farm
gular job, and the odd game of
Bring debate on his departand
in
the
garden
required
help.
golf,
this new position should
|s estimates in the Com
IO] s’ he said Canada should be Our men came from many dif
just about take a full 100 per
J to eliminate relics of the ferent countries, and from many Additional Grants For Japan Gardens
cent of my waking hours,” he
land accept immigrants re- walks of life. Two of my uncles
LETHBRIDGE.—Lethbridge has secured an additional grant for admitted.
were
doctors
and
two
were
mis
less of race and color.
sionaries in the Orient. When construction of its Japanese garden centennial project at Hender
Others elected to various exe
®her Andrew Brewin (NDP, they came home on furlough they son Lake.
cutive
posts are: Vice-presidents
Greenwood) called for visited us. From them, as well
The city itself will now contribute $137,968 toward the project
Kay Morita and Ritsuko Inou
r of. remaining traces of as from our men, I heard stories whose estimated total cost has risen to $174,500. Originally it
jCriminatipn in the act, about Japan ;and other Eastern was set at $149,500 and the municipal government was pledged to ye; Corresponding Secretary _
he said, allows exclusion countries, and even when I was pay $109,500.
Denise
Nishimura;
Recording
The federal and provincial governments will now pay $23,Seo?e on grounds of racial' very young I learned to love and
Secretaries
—
Fumi
Sasaki
and
by order-in-council.
appreciate Eastern peoples. When 266 each instead of the original $20,000.
^^ropeans in Canada can get my father employed men from
Under • the federal provincial centennial grants program, the E. Shirakawa; Treasurer — Ge
federal
government has undertaken to pay $1 per capita in each org’s Takahashi; Asst. Treasurer
O Relatives in more easily :ar away land's, I was always inprovince
for'approved projects of lasting “ merit, if the provincial and Membership Chairman —
* Slans and Africans can,
(Cont. on P. 8)
government and municipality will contribute another $1 each.
&re7nl said- “This double
Grace Watanabe.
should be removed.”
Marchand said a Govern- ]
TWO SHIPS
i v PaPer on immigraWblfi11
°e ready as soon as
MAIL TO JAPAN. Two ships
^fABre'dl!. said long-promiswill soon be leaving for Japan:
By JIM HENRY
of a human being regardless of their race. She the Oriana on March 21st from
rnL?f
Immigration
never
returned to the U.S.
Vancouver, and the President
The tale of Oyuki Morgan began in 1904, not
mcrwae and perhaps the
Unfortunately
Morgan
died
in
France
shortly
Wilson
on March 24th from San
S®?Paper would lead to it.
really that long ago.
Francisco.
before
World
War
I
and
in
1938
Oyuki
reluctantly
This beautiful young girl’s romance with a
member of one of America’s best known banking -returned to her own native land only to be re
F Disasters In
families was even written into a Japanese opera pudiated and reviled by her countrymen,- as
Morgan had been by his.
which is all but forgotten today.
B.C. Nisei Dr. Wins
In 1951, one of the few bright events in her
^Y° Studied By
In the year 1904, banker George D. Morgan,
nephew of American entrepreneur J. P. Morgan, life took place. Japanese playwright Kazuo Kikuta Field And Stream
was on a world tour. On visiting Kyoto in Japan wrote a comic-opera entitled “Morgan Oyuki”
he saw a beautiful young geisha named “Yukika” based on the life of the former Kyoto geisha.
The star in the original role was Miss Fubuki Fishing Contest
and immediately fell in love with her.
i
Aviation experts
He was so smitten that he wanted to marry Koshiji, then a member of the Takarazuka girls
NEW YORK. ■- Dr. Henry
hnvp-sCOU”ines began inten- her. However, Yukika was bonded to her master. troupe.
Oyuki-san
lived
out
her
days
in
seclusion
for
L
ga50ns this week fol- In order to obtain the young girl’s liberty Morgan
Tsuyuki of North Surrey, B.C.
I* d^sters in the Tokyo is said to have paid the enormous sum at that 25 years from the time of her return to Japan.
won first prize in the Open Steel
In May of 1963 the colorful life of the 81-year- head (searun rainbow) divisi on of
time of 40,000 yen (estimated at about $20,000)
-321 Persons.
old geisha came to an end. She died late at night
officials also launch- to the geisha house to which she was attached.
the annual Field and Stream
They manied and went to the United States, of pneumonia at the home of her niece, Namie
SvUdles of aviation
i new ?an and ^newed calls the land of freedom and opportunity. Both Morgan Kato, in her beloved- old city of Kyoto along with magazine fishing contest.
*
airport.
and 'his bride were snubbed by Newport (Rhode her dreams of the happy days of her youth and
His prize winning fish, a new
[oir Fm-;011 ?e lower slopes Island) society. Things became so unbearable that with the realization that she would suffer no Thompson River record, caught
Slte of a British they changed their residence from one place to more. She had moved on to a land which could last October 28th weighed in at
another and they soon fled to France, then a far not be as cruel as the ones she had known on the 29 lbs. 10 ozs. — a lot of Rain
{
Cent, on p. 8.
bow.
more civilized country in relation to ths worth earth.
Search On For Missing
B.C. Nisei Salmonman
The Geisha That Married J. P. Morgan’s Nephew
Page 2
,
BOWLING
SCORES
NEW
Saturday, fe, t;
Japan Research Reveals Ke
Rest For Kids Mental Deuelonni
Kendo (Japanese i zaki, chief secretary of the To- I
"
"“^>_wuex beueiary of . the To-I He said j-l Ti
*e.nds to improve the kyo Educational and Medical
Medial Re- the emS
.said that
kendo
^M^
j mental ability of students, ac search Association in Kuwayama, mental dev^^6 ^
NISEI 5-PIN BOWLING—SUNTORONTO NISEI TEN PIN SUNDAY cording to research bv Dr. Kinileague, Feb. 20th. ”A" DIVISISuginami-ku.
, “^opment,
BOWLING LEAGUE, Feb. 27th. MEN:
P?v® Koby's Auto Repairs 34— Ken Nakanishi 639 (225)- Ha?—r ->-<''- | tsu Hirata, head of 'the Hirata
The doctor examined 2,492 stu- runnin^S^^ M
/«; lad s Sporting Goods 33—82; Wayeri
v (2w1; Jos- ^-^^ S31’*(2’15, Research Institute in Tokyo.
dents who took part in the 1958 mintom’
b e M^
??n^ * 32—105; Golden Horseshoe 30— 214);6CJim
Morita 3/4 (224)T-.,----:
Dr. Hirata’s findings on the National Games and confirmed
7 Commodore Lanes 28—81; Suda Tex- 569 (213); Terry Di
306;
ev?‘
?°‘nted «
relationship between sports and
25—84; Fraserview Const. Co 24— 553 (203), .
oou izu/)were beneficial to
lobby's Sun Lifers ' * 21—21—79; Wakida. 541 (224).; Ken Doi S*0 (Wi- school records were confirmed by that sports
health and to mental develop io ca Pist' Co. 20—74; Kami Insurance Roger Wright -535; Mas Kawabata 531a xollow-up study by Kohei Yama- ment.
18—69; Regen TV * 15—73; K. Iwata K?
n Kateri 530; Shig Mitsuki 525; Clare
rugby, softbail or ^1
travel Service 14—67/
Ward 518 (209).
one DIVISION: Aki's Restaurant *
Joyce Tatebe 495; Jean VoThis was true of
—106; Broadway Florist 31—81; Ka- //qLADIES:
46^ n®7 Miteu~ ^i Kav Morita
an^ yachting, the do£
^agcUocM> * 29—84; Stev. Auto-Marine o48/^
t?aJ°! Doi 44S; Shirley AihSshi 443;
^T®8' Barry s Trophies 22—70; Hara- V31 Kadohama
He said this was probaK
Rhoda Masuda 433ga s 21—71; First Investors * 19—70; Anne Osada 413;441;
Haru
Kondo
413;
Grace
cause
the students ®
Karaki's 18—66.
TalLak<^7V,Te^ Doi 402; Jaan Ha the U?^ ~T ' Kodokan Jud0 Institute, Mecca of Judo, is still more time to these spory
/ — Teams already qualified for the made
400; Karen Nakata 400.
the leading power in promoting the spread of good judo all over
P "T”,
’n th® first helf.
j Hirata’s
conch®*
♦
»
,
T-D- ?'”r d; gently the Asahi Shinbun published a list of their ,
Koichi Kitagawa 829
tracted the attention op
wo): Jim Nishimura 817 (300); Kiichi
Kumagai 795 (303); Ken Yada 778; Toe n TORONTO SUNDAY FAMILY LEAGUE,
icial Instructors” working in other countries. They arezaki who made a study off
Kuramoto 763; Jim Akune 762 (365)- ^7 w Y mGS' MeN= Akira Soga 693,
lationship
between spoit
~ Ey°ai Koba-1 mental ability/
548, 255; Tak Sono yasH.'SU
Sln .Tamagi 762; Frank Nozaki 761;
da 543; Jerry Ohki ^12.
Dennis Koyanagi 754 (381. Tadasil Koike, 6th-dan; Switzerland —
Yamazaki is an
LADIB: Pat No2aId 7i4; Geri Fuji
LADIES: Shirl Miyasaki 585- Kim Oni- Kazuhiro Mik/ ■
"”^ ’" i isgovern,
sawa 685; Marie Fujisawa 684 (331)- r^oo96^ T°sh Soga 474; Mary Tana- - Smatak- V*\?d Mih™ Kondo, 5th-dan; Mexico 'metropolitan
‘ TS?,®® Kawagoye 682; Irene Sugie 651.' ka 432; Yosh Oder 430.
laguoh1’ 5th-dan; Malaysia — Masami Nishi- charge of juvenile problem
j
„ CLASS: Gordon Shimizu 696; Gor- _ Feb. 27,q MEN: Kats Isoshima 608; Tak mura,'Tth-da'n.
T»JrarJwa 690; Tad Ikeda 650.
He confirmed that imp
LADIES: Kim Kitagawa 665; Frances So£odca 384; Joe Oda 553; Herb Miyaw
;
Mui
Nishino
546;
Shig
Oni
sports
such as kendo ant
b^^0'^,^ instructors are working on an individual
664; Jean Minamimaye
zuka 521; Larry Nishimoto 506/
required quick reflexes s’
„ c '__CLASS: Don Mayede 724 (330);
B-^PIESr Rose Akiyama 501; Shirl Mi- tries.
?ar7 Kawaguchi 647; Kiyoshi Nishi 614;
’
lgand’ Ca*ada, U.S. and 10.other coun- tense concentration, util?
makAn7u Barbara Nikaido 461; Yosh
Susie Tamura 699 (343).
(muscles of the body, ani
toabe isi®7 Ta^aka 445; Terrie Wa■beneficial to mental de
PIN°-RrO?T^nL SEI MIXED MAJOR 10
ment.
J
J.A
PIN, Feb. 11th, MEN: Don Martin 600;
Yamazaki experimented
. Ken Izumi 589; Roger Wright 571; Mas
MM°mor! 5rci S™ Hayashi 565; Archie
his son Yasuhiko, 18, 1‘
Matsumoto 565; Dick Isoshima 560; Keith ™ BOWLING LEAGUE, Feb. 15, 1966
,™
N,
T
n
T
t
S
t
S
e
^
x
r
Hcrley
Hatanaka
year high school stud®
8; Tosh iwa^sss/'M^S^TaSa”^
TORONT^
The league championship v
-r a rent ooo. ■
v
h
Wa
u.
5
^
M°nk
Tanaka
555;
,
,
.
will
weighed
only 121 pounds.5?
HUson 589; Mary Ebata Hiro
Kawaguchi
rAmp^
agTCh^ 521.
52^
' _TORONTO.—With the curling P
r°bably not
•the
probably
not be
be decided
decided until
until
da 505er Smykowski 518; Jean Yoshiuixuix
Luc
।
The
boy
was coached hi
Wannabe 479; Kim season coming to a close, we have last league scheduled game. We gymnastics and weight^
ra
d
403
7
°
;
Fudge
Tana
ka
411;
Marg
SoKTeb<
Ken ^umi 601; Jim
been getting keener curlino- as nave George Imai’s team back on with the result that he at
KimurarC55493; R°ger Wright 557<’ Wayne Sek^SK?'
Nakamura 564; Teis m°SL °^ -^e following- scores first place, leading the pack by veloped into a strongly*
562;cJoh!i Kawaguchi 544; Roy would indicate: Sugie 5 over'Sa
LADIES: Alma Wilson 557; Gert Smva
1 P01?^ with Tosh Nagano | young man weighing 150m
miW482 507' Ka? Morita 492; Marj Izu- Ushijima 531; Tuck Maruyama 501.
kauye 4; Shinde tied 6-6 with and Norm Nasu, tied for second
Moreover, his school recoit'
a ^o^Tr^® Yamamura 446;
446; Marg
Marg
Hinatsu also tied 9-9 place with 23 points.
proved remarkably'-.
nnf8^ 25, MEN: Ken Miyasaki 611, 220, $°-T 4335 Kim Oda 425; Jean Akaye 423^
l? '^Hmakami; Nasu 8 over Ta-,
2
9 :
rP^o5.94' 224; Ken Katai 583, Terne Watanabe 406.
over Ta3
i
,
Yamazaki’s studies provedz •'f 1P01, 581; Riger Wright 578, 223;
kahashi 4; Nagano 6 over Su offThe
will ^
the mostefi
& Ks° ^ ^ * W
SUNdTyufS
piN bowling zuki 5; and Imai 12 over Kai 4.
April 1 and
sport in contributing to ass
799?GrE' ^N: ,Jim Morita
t
Wilson 528; Mary Eba- 615 (233
dav
x?00d Fri~ improvement.
i
1233. 222); Roger Wright 590 (258)^•j504'^,^110 Miyasaki 487; Jean Yo H,
y falls on April 8, the league!
j
nM
586 (238); Brian Gately
shida 480; Amy Toki 479.
¥as Kawabata 574 (228); Georae
will not curl that night.
I—
••
J
-asuda 571 (205); Ken Izumi 552 (211)SCARBORO NISEI MIXED TEN PIN,
,
curlins banquet has been
C^4; Ioe Tsujimoto 547Peter Mukai 543 (204); Terry Doi 530^
Tom' Md1?66' ^N: Fred Holley 634; ftp
m
d
at PePPio’s Restaurant
Yosh°Mmai
Ken Katai 5^
Tom Madokoro 599; Min Nishino’ 597j
net
Tavern
to be held on Satur91VY M^urat,a 521 <213>; Ken Doi
k-Sa‘°
hts Makimoto 562;
&e r h/ny? 5
U£ank Wakida 549; S:f9nn? nakanwhi 516; SHig Mitsuki
30- Any members
Insurance I
WnrL Kataoka 546; Eddie Sasaki 535; Tsli mS C^e n°rd 509 (203); Rodney
wishing to bring guests are askHarrY Hayashi 534; Tom Sumi 532g Ge- TakS To^
Coombes 504;
scon notlfy1 'Nancy Suga at 787orge Wakayama 524.
LADIES: Gloria Wakida 501; Gwen
8820 on or before April 15. This
vH^IES: Gloria Wakida 526; Jean YoTOKYO. — A 20-year-old Ja- also applies to spares.
Tvf
483; Amy Wakayama 474;
46S; Mary Mitsulye Yamamura 429; .Agaie Monroe 426- b^ Shrey Aihoshi 461; Rhoda Mo
Sr
«^
IGJ- sidings
Sa.460; kyce Tatebe 440,’ J^n Brown
CathySunohara 421.
are as follows:
Mfr^Rd-?25^1^^^ Nobuto 655; Sho D40/’ V
L Nakata 434; Hedy Sakai 431Office—783-4261
Stn ™ NTUr-n^ashi 631; Sat KinoKA>ohjain<ln413; Joan Hamade 40924 points
Furukawa 595; Roy Ta- Anne Okada 407; Grace Tanaka 400.
23
Res.—BE. 1-0863 |
"°ka 594; Tom Madoko 580; Tets Seki
Giants.
“ ^““'O Norm Nasu
23
Ta™ TqCk ka ?n°ka 577; Fred Holly 571;
PI^JA^Sth^MFNM^^^ 10^ TEN
Those In Toll Area j
21
Geno
nen Nakamichi 551; nw JAM. 28th.. MEN: Les Doi 636 (237)- wa?ii?5M°K Yoshinari, who Gordo^
-m Mfr!,21?/ “ “«SLADrFgnY£i 545; Wn. Matsumoto 536.
21
Call—RO 6-3840
Giants of e^ ^
Yomiuri I Sam Murakami
n i
» ?oc^ona Wakida 507; Hideko
Utsunomiya 5SJ K.n
18
Nakata 486; Gwen Cockburn 468; Cathy- toUSl ®i)
fess
oLl
r
Ws
Central
P
r0
Howie
Kagawa
Sunohara 461; Aggie Monro 439
18
League last summer Herb Sumo
H™sisB",!- Po,*s 543 “’>’ Alma Xw
Tye
17
Kotan Announces List Of Overseas Instructors
™SSXW2TS|G’ lmai Leads In JCCA Curling Race
Ambidextrous Japanese
Pitcher Joins The San
Francisco Giants 0r&
Buy & Sell
Your Home
Through
MITS
KURODA
Representing
WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE LIMITED
1444 Danforth Avenue
__
«
Toronto, Ontario
t
Mickey S. Soft
Tl" scheduled game.
Lairy Sakauye
15
r/i„.1“u!LGla,lts signed up ®ay Hihatsu
12
uatton from ’“^ his ^ George Takahashi
1
\X ’ ? “ hlSh school in
ithern Japan. He appeared in
L5™? °-f the “eastern” o?
minor circuit of the Central
KAZUO G. OIYE
y“
" *
Giant?
• x 6an hiancisco
wants, v as interested in Yoshi
nan’s ambidextrous mound per’
X”ce' ,He sa'-' him a test
relearn ^yZ
afte hfe
FIRE — THEFT - AW
J
i
Consult
RITZ KINOM
For All Classes of
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY* PUBLIC
2 Carlton St., Toronto
INSURANCE
Phone: PL. 9-2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
Room 1805
366-6388
293-4281
(Res.)
sub. HO. 9-1151 — RES: AM. 1-2581
»MS qlub.that the JapanSe
Pitcher be given a trvout mese
Retirement Income
through Life insurance?
Ron Marks
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
COMPANY OF CANADA
n rXK11? &at Yoshinathe Sa“ Fran'° c„ r®^ from
EM. 6-3323
TORONTO
—
Hess RO. 7-3427
Travel Arranges
Anywhere — Anyli^
]
Air—Ship—Bus—Bail
Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
and
DUNDAS UNION STORE
your shopping list
sukiyaki meat
Residence 925-9636
BARRISTER emd SOLICITOH
NOTARY PUBLIC
Office Hours Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
March inoan KJerts to >^ve on
SAKURA RICE
Office 364-5141
Lucien C. Kurata, Q.C.
_ mS .T MARUJaN SHOYU
VINEGAR — MANJU __ STtfap
VARIETIES OF ARARE
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
Baggage Insurant
BRINGING SOMEONE 0*^
Passage arranged by Steam--
Call for Reservation5^
Information — EM. 8 ’<
T. KANEO®
K. Iwata Travel $^1
113 McCaul St, T0^ |
BOWLING
SCORES
NEW
Saturday, fe, t;
Japan Research Reveals Ke
Rest For Kids Mental Deuelonni
Kendo (Japanese i zaki, chief secretary of the To- I
"
"“^>_wuex beueiary of . the To-I He said j-l Ti
*e.nds to improve the kyo Educational and Medical
Medial Re- the emS
.said that
kendo
^M^
j mental ability of students, ac search Association in Kuwayama, mental dev^^6 ^
NISEI 5-PIN BOWLING—SUNTORONTO NISEI TEN PIN SUNDAY cording to research bv Dr. Kinileague, Feb. 20th. ”A" DIVISISuginami-ku.
, “^opment,
BOWLING LEAGUE, Feb. 27th. MEN:
P?v® Koby's Auto Repairs 34— Ken Nakanishi 639 (225)- Ha?—r ->-<''- | tsu Hirata, head of 'the Hirata
The doctor examined 2,492 stu- runnin^S^^ M
/«; lad s Sporting Goods 33—82; Wayeri
v (2w1; Jos- ^-^^ S31’*(2’15, Research Institute in Tokyo.
dents who took part in the 1958 mintom’
b e M^
??n^ * 32—105; Golden Horseshoe 30— 214);6CJim
Morita 3/4 (224)T-.,----:
Dr. Hirata’s findings on the National Games and confirmed
7 Commodore Lanes 28—81; Suda Tex- 569 (213); Terry Di
306;
ev?‘
?°‘nted «
relationship between sports and
25—84; Fraserview Const. Co 24— 553 (203), .
oou izu/)were beneficial to
lobby's Sun Lifers ' * 21—21—79; Wakida. 541 (224).; Ken Doi S*0 (Wi- school records were confirmed by that sports
health and to mental develop io ca Pist' Co. 20—74; Kami Insurance Roger Wright -535; Mas Kawabata 531a xollow-up study by Kohei Yama- ment.
18—69; Regen TV * 15—73; K. Iwata K?
n Kateri 530; Shig Mitsuki 525; Clare
rugby, softbail or ^1
travel Service 14—67/
Ward 518 (209).
one DIVISION: Aki's Restaurant *
Joyce Tatebe 495; Jean VoThis was true of
—106; Broadway Florist 31—81; Ka- //qLADIES:
46^ n®7 Miteu~ ^i Kav Morita
an^ yachting, the do£
^agcUocM> * 29—84; Stev. Auto-Marine o48/^
t?aJ°! Doi 44S; Shirley AihSshi 443;
^T®8' Barry s Trophies 22—70; Hara- V31 Kadohama
He said this was probaK
Rhoda Masuda 433ga s 21—71; First Investors * 19—70; Anne Osada 413;441;
Haru
Kondo
413;
Grace
cause
the students ®
Karaki's 18—66.
TalLak<^7V,Te^ Doi 402; Jaan Ha the U?^ ~T ' Kodokan Jud0 Institute, Mecca of Judo, is still more time to these spory
/ — Teams already qualified for the made
400; Karen Nakata 400.
the leading power in promoting the spread of good judo all over
P "T”,
’n th® first helf.
j Hirata’s
conch®*
♦
»
,
T-D- ?'”r d; gently the Asahi Shinbun published a list of their ,
Koichi Kitagawa 829
tracted the attention op
wo): Jim Nishimura 817 (300); Kiichi
Kumagai 795 (303); Ken Yada 778; Toe n TORONTO SUNDAY FAMILY LEAGUE,
icial Instructors” working in other countries. They arezaki who made a study off
Kuramoto 763; Jim Akune 762 (365)- ^7 w Y mGS' MeN= Akira Soga 693,
lationship
between spoit
~ Ey°ai Koba-1 mental ability/
548, 255; Tak Sono yasH.'SU
Sln .Tamagi 762; Frank Nozaki 761;
da 543; Jerry Ohki ^12.
Dennis Koyanagi 754 (381. Tadasil Koike, 6th-dan; Switzerland —
Yamazaki is an
LADIB: Pat No2aId 7i4; Geri Fuji
LADIES: Shirl Miyasaki 585- Kim Oni- Kazuhiro Mik/ ■
"”^ ’" i isgovern,
sawa 685; Marie Fujisawa 684 (331)- r^oo96^ T°sh Soga 474; Mary Tana- - Smatak- V*\?d Mih™ Kondo, 5th-dan; Mexico 'metropolitan
‘ TS?,®® Kawagoye 682; Irene Sugie 651.' ka 432; Yosh Oder 430.
laguoh1’ 5th-dan; Malaysia — Masami Nishi- charge of juvenile problem
j
„ CLASS: Gordon Shimizu 696; Gor- _ Feb. 27,q MEN: Kats Isoshima 608; Tak mura,'Tth-da'n.
T»JrarJwa 690; Tad Ikeda 650.
He confirmed that imp
LADIES: Kim Kitagawa 665; Frances So£odca 384; Joe Oda 553; Herb Miyaw
;
Mui
Nishino
546;
Shig
Oni
sports
such as kendo ant
b^^0'^,^ instructors are working on an individual
664; Jean Minamimaye
zuka 521; Larry Nishimoto 506/
required quick reflexes s’
„ c '__CLASS: Don Mayede 724 (330);
B-^PIESr Rose Akiyama 501; Shirl Mi- tries.
?ar7 Kawaguchi 647; Kiyoshi Nishi 614;
’
lgand’ Ca*ada, U.S. and 10.other coun- tense concentration, util?
makAn7u Barbara Nikaido 461; Yosh
Susie Tamura 699 (343).
(muscles of the body, ani
toabe isi®7 Ta^aka 445; Terrie Wa■beneficial to mental de
PIN°-RrO?T^nL SEI MIXED MAJOR 10
ment.
J
J.A
PIN, Feb. 11th, MEN: Don Martin 600;
Yamazaki experimented
. Ken Izumi 589; Roger Wright 571; Mas
MM°mor! 5rci S™ Hayashi 565; Archie
his son Yasuhiko, 18, 1‘
Matsumoto 565; Dick Isoshima 560; Keith ™ BOWLING LEAGUE, Feb. 15, 1966
,™
N,
T
n
T
t
S
t
S
e
^
x
r
Hcrley
Hatanaka
year high school stud®
8; Tosh iwa^sss/'M^S^TaSa”^
TORONT^
The league championship v
-r a rent ooo. ■
v
h
Wa
u.
5
^
M°nk
Tanaka
555;
,
,
.
will
weighed
only 121 pounds.5?
HUson 589; Mary Ebata Hiro
Kawaguchi
rAmp^
agTCh^ 521.
52^
' _TORONTO.—With the curling P
r°bably not
•the
probably
not be
be decided
decided until
until
da 505er Smykowski 518; Jean Yoshiuixuix
Luc
।
The
boy
was coached hi
Wannabe 479; Kim season coming to a close, we have last league scheduled game. We gymnastics and weight^
ra
d
403
7
°
;
Fudge
Tana
ka
411;
Marg
SoKTeb<
Ken ^umi 601; Jim
been getting keener curlino- as nave George Imai’s team back on with the result that he at
KimurarC55493; R°ger Wright 557<’ Wayne Sek^SK?'
Nakamura 564; Teis m°SL °^ -^e following- scores first place, leading the pack by veloped into a strongly*
562;cJoh!i Kawaguchi 544; Roy would indicate: Sugie 5 over'Sa
LADIES: Alma Wilson 557; Gert Smva
1 P01?^ with Tosh Nagano | young man weighing 150m
miW482 507' Ka? Morita 492; Marj Izu- Ushijima 531; Tuck Maruyama 501.
kauye 4; Shinde tied 6-6 with and Norm Nasu, tied for second
Moreover, his school recoit'
a ^o^Tr^® Yamamura 446;
446; Marg
Marg
Hinatsu also tied 9-9 place with 23 points.
proved remarkably'-.
nnf8^ 25, MEN: Ken Miyasaki 611, 220, $°-T 4335 Kim Oda 425; Jean Akaye 423^
l? '^Hmakami; Nasu 8 over Ta-,
2
9 :
rP^o5.94' 224; Ken Katai 583, Terne Watanabe 406.
over Ta3
i
,
Yamazaki’s studies provedz •'f 1P01, 581; Riger Wright 578, 223;
kahashi 4; Nagano 6 over Su offThe
will ^
the mostefi
& Ks° ^ ^ * W
SUNdTyufS
piN bowling zuki 5; and Imai 12 over Kai 4.
April 1 and
sport in contributing to ass
799?GrE' ^N: ,Jim Morita
t
Wilson 528; Mary Eba- 615 (233
dav
x?00d Fri~ improvement.
i
1233. 222); Roger Wright 590 (258)^•j504'^,^110 Miyasaki 487; Jean Yo H,
y falls on April 8, the league!
j
nM
586 (238); Brian Gately
shida 480; Amy Toki 479.
¥as Kawabata 574 (228); Georae
will not curl that night.
I—
••
J
-asuda 571 (205); Ken Izumi 552 (211)SCARBORO NISEI MIXED TEN PIN,
,
curlins banquet has been
C^4; Ioe Tsujimoto 547Peter Mukai 543 (204); Terry Doi 530^
Tom' Md1?66' ^N: Fred Holley 634; ftp
m
d
at PePPio’s Restaurant
Yosh°Mmai
Ken Katai 5^
Tom Madokoro 599; Min Nishino’ 597j
net
Tavern
to be held on Satur91VY M^urat,a 521 <213>; Ken Doi
k-Sa‘°
hts Makimoto 562;
&e r h/ny? 5
U£ank Wakida 549; S:f9nn? nakanwhi 516; SHig Mitsuki
30- Any members
Insurance I
WnrL Kataoka 546; Eddie Sasaki 535; Tsli mS C^e n°rd 509 (203); Rodney
wishing to bring guests are askHarrY Hayashi 534; Tom Sumi 532g Ge- TakS To^
Coombes 504;
scon notlfy1 'Nancy Suga at 787orge Wakayama 524.
LADIES: Gloria Wakida 501; Gwen
8820 on or before April 15. This
vH^IES: Gloria Wakida 526; Jean YoTOKYO. — A 20-year-old Ja- also applies to spares.
Tvf
483; Amy Wakayama 474;
46S; Mary Mitsulye Yamamura 429; .Agaie Monroe 426- b^ Shrey Aihoshi 461; Rhoda Mo
Sr
«^
IGJ- sidings
Sa.460; kyce Tatebe 440,’ J^n Brown
CathySunohara 421.
are as follows:
Mfr^Rd-?25^1^^^ Nobuto 655; Sho D40/’ V
L Nakata 434; Hedy Sakai 431Office—783-4261
Stn ™ NTUr-n^ashi 631; Sat KinoKA>ohjain<ln413; Joan Hamade 40924 points
Furukawa 595; Roy Ta- Anne Okada 407; Grace Tanaka 400.
23
Res.—BE. 1-0863 |
"°ka 594; Tom Madoko 580; Tets Seki
Giants.
“ ^““'O Norm Nasu
23
Ta™ TqCk ka ?n°ka 577; Fred Holly 571;
PI^JA^Sth^MFNM^^^ 10^ TEN
Those In Toll Area j
21
Geno
nen Nakamichi 551; nw JAM. 28th.. MEN: Les Doi 636 (237)- wa?ii?5M°K Yoshinari, who Gordo^
-m Mfr!,21?/ “ “«SLADrFgnY£i 545; Wn. Matsumoto 536.
21
Call—RO 6-3840
Giants of e^ ^
Yomiuri I Sam Murakami
n i
» ?oc^ona Wakida 507; Hideko
Utsunomiya 5SJ K.n
18
Nakata 486; Gwen Cockburn 468; Cathy- toUSl ®i)
fess
oLl
r
Ws
Central
P
r0
Howie
Kagawa
Sunohara 461; Aggie Monro 439
18
League last summer Herb Sumo
H™sisB",!- Po,*s 543 “’>’ Alma Xw
Tye
17
Kotan Announces List Of Overseas Instructors
™SSXW2TS|G’ lmai Leads In JCCA Curling Race
Ambidextrous Japanese
Pitcher Joins The San
Francisco Giants 0r&
Buy & Sell
Your Home
Through
MITS
KURODA
Representing
WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE LIMITED
1444 Danforth Avenue
__
«
Toronto, Ontario
t
Mickey S. Soft
Tl" scheduled game.
Lairy Sakauye
15
r/i„.1“u!LGla,lts signed up ®ay Hihatsu
12
uatton from ’“^ his ^ George Takahashi
1
\X ’ ? “ hlSh school in
ithern Japan. He appeared in
L5™? °-f the “eastern” o?
minor circuit of the Central
KAZUO G. OIYE
y“
" *
Giant?
• x 6an hiancisco
wants, v as interested in Yoshi
nan’s ambidextrous mound per’
X”ce' ,He sa'-' him a test
relearn ^yZ
afte hfe
FIRE — THEFT - AW
J
i
Consult
RITZ KINOM
For All Classes of
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY* PUBLIC
2 Carlton St., Toronto
INSURANCE
Phone: PL. 9-2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
Room 1805
366-6388
293-4281
(Res.)
sub. HO. 9-1151 — RES: AM. 1-2581
»MS qlub.that the JapanSe
Pitcher be given a trvout mese
Retirement Income
through Life insurance?
Ron Marks
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
COMPANY OF CANADA
n rXK11? &at Yoshinathe Sa“ Fran'° c„ r®^ from
EM. 6-3323
TORONTO
—
Hess RO. 7-3427
Travel Arranges
Anywhere — Anyli^
]
Air—Ship—Bus—Bail
Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
and
DUNDAS UNION STORE
your shopping list
sukiyaki meat
Residence 925-9636
BARRISTER emd SOLICITOH
NOTARY PUBLIC
Office Hours Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
March inoan KJerts to >^ve on
SAKURA RICE
Office 364-5141
Lucien C. Kurata, Q.C.
_ mS .T MARUJaN SHOYU
VINEGAR — MANJU __ STtfap
VARIETIES OF ARARE
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
Baggage Insurant
BRINGING SOMEONE 0*^
Passage arranged by Steam--
Call for Reservation5^
Information — EM. 8 ’<
T. KANEO®
K. Iwata Travel $^1
113 McCaul St, T0^ |
Page 3
Paye 3
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8 81K OF
11 SCOTM
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K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
Authorized Agent for All Airlines
AUTHORIZED AGENT FOR
P and O LINES, AMERICAN! PRESIDENT LINES
^^5^^(; b p y ),
w
It
se^iBtTzix#®
^PA^^^
5.
*K OF NOVA SCOTIA
44 king ST W
Toronto’ i
’
866-6080
W to
® 00
W. K. GARDENS
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
CATERING TO
Wedding, dub Banquet*
Private Dining Rooms
Crown Life Insurance Co.
Frank G. Yada
1550 We?t Georgi* St.
Vancouver, B.C.
p
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8 81K OF
11 SCOTM
IX
K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
Authorized Agent for All Airlines
AUTHORIZED AGENT FOR
P and O LINES, AMERICAN! PRESIDENT LINES
^^5^^(; b p y ),
w
It
se^iBtTzix#®
^PA^^^
5.
*K OF NOVA SCOTIA
44 king ST W
Toronto’ i
’
866-6080
W to
® 00
W. K. GARDENS
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
CATERING TO
Wedding, dub Banquet*
Private Dining Rooms
Crown Life Insurance Co.
Frank G. Yada
1550 We?t Georgi* St.
Vancouver, B.C.
p
^ S
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® On
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^ifrif X> IX
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Page 4
Page 4
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Page 7
1966
Saturday, March 12, 1966
PAGE 7
Oates and Doings
Refreshing Re-run
Personal Notes Across Canada
Is Gwen Terasaki’s
Camera Club Starts At Toronto Buddhist Church Bridge to the Sun Engagements
Births
TORONTO—The Cultural Division of the Toronto Buddhist
HAMILTON. — Mr. Yoshito
By Paul St. Pierre
^^Church introduces their Amateui Camera Club on Wednesday
WILLOWDALE, Ont. — Fred
'diarch 16th beginning 8:00 p.m. at the Church on 918 Bathurst" Sf ’
Ohata
is
happy
to
announce
the
anct
Irene Miyasaki are happy
As a -candidate for the quality
411 those interested are cordially invited to attend. '
to
announce
the birth of their
engagement
of
his
daughter,
Tam
class, of film, I offer a recent tedaughter,
Donna
Naomi on Feb
T.B.C.
levision re-run called Bridge to my Tamiko to Mr. Harry Yoshi
ruary
11th,
1966
*
Ine Sun. Unless all my critical aki Hikida, son of Mr. and Mrs. General Hospital. at the Toronto
faculties were eroded togethei
6th Ann. Nisei 1 O-Pin Tourney On Easter Weekend with my enthusiasms, here was Gihei Hikida of Hamilton.
The announcement was made
a good story, well told, about
CASTLEGAR, B.C. — Mr. and
TORONTO—The 6th Annual Nisei 10-Pin Tournament will real people.
on February 27, 1966 at Grange
Mrs.
Morio Ito of Castlegar, B.C.
be held on Easter Weekend, April 8 and 9th. Entries for mixed
The central character of Bridge Tavern in Hamilton.
became parents to a son on
team and mixed doubles, men’s and ladies’ doubles, men’s and. to The Sun was a girl from the
*
*
*
March 1st, 1966. Birth at Boun
ies’ singles will be held at Shea’s Cedarbrae. Entrv deadline southern American states who
dary
Hospital.
VANCOUVER.—Mr. and Mrs.
March 24th. Teams are expected from as far as Hamilton and married a Japanese shortly be
Takeo
Yoshida
of
Steveston,
B.C.
Montreal. Those interested should contact: Mary Ebata, 2523 Sharon fore the Second World War, and
Cr, Cooksville, Ont. 227-2490.
spent the war years with him in are happy to announce the en Obituaries
gagement
of
their daughter.
Japan.
*
*
* ■
HOWE
Betty
Mitsuko
to
Mr. Robert YuThis is not a usual role for a
taka
Yoneda,
first
son
of
Mr.
TORONTO.—James “Cowboy”
MWpg. Storm Re-schedules Man. JCCA Gen. Meet southern white girl.
and Mrs. Hiroshi Yoneda of
In the literature of recent Richmond, B.C., on February Howe, well known to many Tor
|
WINNIPEG.—Due to the worst storm ever to hit Winnipeg, years, only two types of southern 26th, 1966.
Announcement was onto Japanese Canadians iis the
|he Manitoba JCCA’s Annual General Meeting, -which was scheduled girls have been prominent.
made
at
the
W.K. Gardens in proprietor of Cowboy Fish Mar
or March 6th, has been .tentatively .rescheduled for Sunday, April
ket in Chinatown, passed a wav
One. smells of magnolias and Vancouver, B.C.
3rd, 1:30 p.m. at the Manitoba Buddhist Church Hall.
on
Wednesday, March 9th, 1966
lives in a house with Grecian
J Cancellation of the meeting followed on advice from the pillars at the porch; the other
at the Riverdale Hospital.
Public Safety Council.
is barefoot and nourishes un
Funeral will be held this Satur
< The Manitoba JCCA extends its apologies to all those who healthy feelings about her father.
Cards
Of
Thanks
day morning at 10:30 a.m. at
?^may not have caught our public service announcements on radio
I suspect there are large num
and TV for any inconvenience.
Thompson
Funeral Home on Carl
We wish to express our sin
bers of quite ordinary, human
Wally Shibata
ton
Avenue.
cere
appreciation
to
our
many
girls in the southern states, in
friends, far and near, for all
*
*
*
cluding a girl such as this one,
their acts of kindness, expres
who happened to have a strongly
sions
of sympathy, and many
Tor. JCCA Isseibu Announces New Exec. At Meet developed sense of duty — one tributes
SAY IT WITH
received during our
of the things that distinguishes
By T._ UMEZUKI
recent loss of our beloved
FLOWERS
ladies from tramps.
wife
and
mother.
TORONTO.—-The Toronto JCCA Isseibu elected them new of
Having never visited Japan,
SHARON'S FLORIST
T. Shimotakahara,
ficers at the first meeting of the new executive on March 5th. my opinion on the fidelity of
Lloyd
and
Donnie
Shimo
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Earlier on Feb. 20th a General Meeting was held.
the Japanese actors may be worth
takahara,
Peter
Sasaki
little.
But
when
a
movie
producer
K. Sasaki
New officers are: I. Kawashiri, president; M. Amemori and
Katherine & Janies Suzuki
Mrs. T. Ikeda, Vice-president; T. Kameoka, secretary; Y. Kanda, can present me characters who
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Lillian & Charles Kadota
carry on conversation in a total
treasurer.
Margaret & Ryo Otsuki
Res: HO. 6-7962
incomprehensible language
Various department chairmen and convenors include: H. Ha- ly
Hazel
&
Satoru
Watanabe
942
PAPE AVE., TORONTO
Hayashi, welfare; Mrs. K. Tanaka, study; Mrs. T. Nishimura, so- without my missing- the mean
ing
of
what
they
say,
then
I
sug■
gcial; Y. Kimura, membership; R. Yoneyama and U. Nakashima.
gest that he is talented', and so
auditors.
OFFICE
are
his actors.
RESIDENCE
Including the above, the group has some 55 active executive
EM. 4-1394
2 Vesta Drive
There
were
moments
of
im
EM. 4-1395
gcommittee members and 9 honorary executive members.
HUdson 5-1365
JAMES KAMINO
mense .drama — the American
*
*
*
girl sewing a stitch in the scarf
A. E. McKague, Q.C
of the Kamikaze pilot for the
T.V. Service
Calgary Japanese Canadian Ass. Names Officers repose of his soul, her brief en
Barrister and Solicitor
counter with the starving Ameri
E
CALGARY, Alta.—On the 26th of February at the Okazaki can war prisoners outside Tokyo.
NOTARY PUBLIC
EM. 4-9913
residence, the. following personnel of the Calgary Japanese Cana They were the strongest forms
1008 Northern Ontario Building
dian Association were elected to office for the fiscal 1966 term: of drama. No one shouted, nor
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
(TORONTO)
Pjes*dent and Advisor —- Mr. J. S. Okazaki; President beat his bosom, nor quoted
TORONTO
~ w t S' Sa^a; Vice Ptesideht — Mr. H. Kuwahara; Chairman Shakespeare, nor kissed flags.
Mr. J T. Iori; Treasurer — Miss Amy Okazaki; Secretary — The intensity was all in the
Japanese — Dr. Y. Hiratsuka; Secretary English — Mr. R. M. Na- quietness of it.
• Pr2£r?m Conveners •— Mr. T. Takahashi, Mr. K. Kawamura;
*
*
*
Liaison Officer — Mr. J. M. Nagata; Councillors — Mr. J. M.
rukunioto, Mrs. S. Nagai, Mr. M. Matsuoka, Mr. S. Odagaki, Mr.
■Bridge to The Sun is, I supou/er*
S. Nagai, Mrs. J. S. Okazaki.
y
pose, a sentimental thing.
a ™ C-J-C-A. extend their heartfelt vote of confidence to Mr.
No one turns to heroin, or even
K Okazaki and the past executives for their unstinting dilligent hops into bed with somebody
proprietoi
services provided for the betterment of fellow Calgarians.
else’s wife. And the motivations
S94 ;LJapanese movie “Akaho Rojih” will be shown on March of its characters are unrealistic,
i
JON ONODERA
at the Allied Art Central Hall, by the Association unless one can believe that there
Complete Care
Plough the courtesy of Consul Okazaki of Winnipeg.
can be forces in people’s lives
Everyone welcome.
For Your Eyes
which, although invisible, are
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805
stronger than background or
C.J.C.A.
®B*^±
■ hard circumstances.
(Business)
(Residence)
It happens that in my few
years, I keep meeting such people
in ordinary life, unspectacular
540 Eglinton Ave. W
118 West Hastings St.
men and. women of immense and
often puzzling hidden strengths.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Toronto
They are much more interesting
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
than other people.
FLAT roofs
It also happens that Bridge to
SHINGLING
EAVESTROUGHING
The Sun is a true story, being
. Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
. SHEET METAL WORK
based upon the book ■written by
Mrs. Gwen Terasaki. But the
truth of the story somehow* takes
second place to the vividness of
TOSH NISHIJIMA
characterization and the restrain
^COVERING ONTARIO
ed excellence of the acting.
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
What might Hollywood ac
N^hf Callst PL. 9-5095 HI. 7-1100
complish if it promoted movies
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
such as these ?
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
TORIC
OPTICAL
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD,
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVERN
SHOE
Catering to Wedding Banqaets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
SIZES
NEW SPRING STYLE
ARRIVED
Ladies’ shoes from
1 np to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
ALBERTS SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Phone IE, 1-1931, Toronto
C O.D. orders from coast to coast
CROWN LIFE
ISME
Gertrude Urabe
AGENCY
Office — 3101 Bathurst St.
Phone: 783-4261
Home phone: HI. 7-8905
Saturday, March 12, 1966
PAGE 7
Oates and Doings
Refreshing Re-run
Personal Notes Across Canada
Is Gwen Terasaki’s
Camera Club Starts At Toronto Buddhist Church Bridge to the Sun Engagements
Births
TORONTO—The Cultural Division of the Toronto Buddhist
HAMILTON. — Mr. Yoshito
By Paul St. Pierre
^^Church introduces their Amateui Camera Club on Wednesday
WILLOWDALE, Ont. — Fred
'diarch 16th beginning 8:00 p.m. at the Church on 918 Bathurst" Sf ’
Ohata
is
happy
to
announce
the
anct
Irene Miyasaki are happy
As a -candidate for the quality
411 those interested are cordially invited to attend. '
to
announce
the birth of their
engagement
of
his
daughter,
Tam
class, of film, I offer a recent tedaughter,
Donna
Naomi on Feb
T.B.C.
levision re-run called Bridge to my Tamiko to Mr. Harry Yoshi
ruary
11th,
1966
*
Ine Sun. Unless all my critical aki Hikida, son of Mr. and Mrs. General Hospital. at the Toronto
faculties were eroded togethei
6th Ann. Nisei 1 O-Pin Tourney On Easter Weekend with my enthusiasms, here was Gihei Hikida of Hamilton.
The announcement was made
a good story, well told, about
CASTLEGAR, B.C. — Mr. and
TORONTO—The 6th Annual Nisei 10-Pin Tournament will real people.
on February 27, 1966 at Grange
Mrs.
Morio Ito of Castlegar, B.C.
be held on Easter Weekend, April 8 and 9th. Entries for mixed
The central character of Bridge Tavern in Hamilton.
became parents to a son on
team and mixed doubles, men’s and ladies’ doubles, men’s and. to The Sun was a girl from the
*
*
*
March 1st, 1966. Birth at Boun
ies’ singles will be held at Shea’s Cedarbrae. Entrv deadline southern American states who
dary
Hospital.
VANCOUVER.—Mr. and Mrs.
March 24th. Teams are expected from as far as Hamilton and married a Japanese shortly be
Takeo
Yoshida
of
Steveston,
B.C.
Montreal. Those interested should contact: Mary Ebata, 2523 Sharon fore the Second World War, and
Cr, Cooksville, Ont. 227-2490.
spent the war years with him in are happy to announce the en Obituaries
gagement
of
their daughter.
Japan.
*
*
* ■
HOWE
Betty
Mitsuko
to
Mr. Robert YuThis is not a usual role for a
taka
Yoneda,
first
son
of
Mr.
TORONTO.—James “Cowboy”
MWpg. Storm Re-schedules Man. JCCA Gen. Meet southern white girl.
and Mrs. Hiroshi Yoneda of
In the literature of recent Richmond, B.C., on February Howe, well known to many Tor
|
WINNIPEG.—Due to the worst storm ever to hit Winnipeg, years, only two types of southern 26th, 1966.
Announcement was onto Japanese Canadians iis the
|he Manitoba JCCA’s Annual General Meeting, -which was scheduled girls have been prominent.
made
at
the
W.K. Gardens in proprietor of Cowboy Fish Mar
or March 6th, has been .tentatively .rescheduled for Sunday, April
ket in Chinatown, passed a wav
One. smells of magnolias and Vancouver, B.C.
3rd, 1:30 p.m. at the Manitoba Buddhist Church Hall.
on
Wednesday, March 9th, 1966
lives in a house with Grecian
J Cancellation of the meeting followed on advice from the pillars at the porch; the other
at the Riverdale Hospital.
Public Safety Council.
is barefoot and nourishes un
Funeral will be held this Satur
< The Manitoba JCCA extends its apologies to all those who healthy feelings about her father.
Cards
Of
Thanks
day morning at 10:30 a.m. at
?^may not have caught our public service announcements on radio
I suspect there are large num
and TV for any inconvenience.
Thompson
Funeral Home on Carl
We wish to express our sin
bers of quite ordinary, human
Wally Shibata
ton
Avenue.
cere
appreciation
to
our
many
girls in the southern states, in
friends, far and near, for all
*
*
*
cluding a girl such as this one,
their acts of kindness, expres
who happened to have a strongly
sions
of sympathy, and many
Tor. JCCA Isseibu Announces New Exec. At Meet developed sense of duty — one tributes
SAY IT WITH
received during our
of the things that distinguishes
By T._ UMEZUKI
recent loss of our beloved
FLOWERS
ladies from tramps.
wife
and
mother.
TORONTO.—-The Toronto JCCA Isseibu elected them new of
Having never visited Japan,
SHARON'S FLORIST
T. Shimotakahara,
ficers at the first meeting of the new executive on March 5th. my opinion on the fidelity of
Lloyd
and
Donnie
Shimo
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Earlier on Feb. 20th a General Meeting was held.
the Japanese actors may be worth
takahara,
Peter
Sasaki
little.
But
when
a
movie
producer
K. Sasaki
New officers are: I. Kawashiri, president; M. Amemori and
Katherine & Janies Suzuki
Mrs. T. Ikeda, Vice-president; T. Kameoka, secretary; Y. Kanda, can present me characters who
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Lillian & Charles Kadota
carry on conversation in a total
treasurer.
Margaret & Ryo Otsuki
Res: HO. 6-7962
incomprehensible language
Various department chairmen and convenors include: H. Ha- ly
Hazel
&
Satoru
Watanabe
942
PAPE AVE., TORONTO
Hayashi, welfare; Mrs. K. Tanaka, study; Mrs. T. Nishimura, so- without my missing- the mean
ing
of
what
they
say,
then
I
sug■
gcial; Y. Kimura, membership; R. Yoneyama and U. Nakashima.
gest that he is talented', and so
auditors.
OFFICE
are
his actors.
RESIDENCE
Including the above, the group has some 55 active executive
EM. 4-1394
2 Vesta Drive
There
were
moments
of
im
EM. 4-1395
gcommittee members and 9 honorary executive members.
HUdson 5-1365
JAMES KAMINO
mense .drama — the American
*
*
*
girl sewing a stitch in the scarf
A. E. McKague, Q.C
of the Kamikaze pilot for the
T.V. Service
Calgary Japanese Canadian Ass. Names Officers repose of his soul, her brief en
Barrister and Solicitor
counter with the starving Ameri
E
CALGARY, Alta.—On the 26th of February at the Okazaki can war prisoners outside Tokyo.
NOTARY PUBLIC
EM. 4-9913
residence, the. following personnel of the Calgary Japanese Cana They were the strongest forms
1008 Northern Ontario Building
dian Association were elected to office for the fiscal 1966 term: of drama. No one shouted, nor
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
(TORONTO)
Pjes*dent and Advisor —- Mr. J. S. Okazaki; President beat his bosom, nor quoted
TORONTO
~ w t S' Sa^a; Vice Ptesideht — Mr. H. Kuwahara; Chairman Shakespeare, nor kissed flags.
Mr. J T. Iori; Treasurer — Miss Amy Okazaki; Secretary — The intensity was all in the
Japanese — Dr. Y. Hiratsuka; Secretary English — Mr. R. M. Na- quietness of it.
• Pr2£r?m Conveners •— Mr. T. Takahashi, Mr. K. Kawamura;
*
*
*
Liaison Officer — Mr. J. M. Nagata; Councillors — Mr. J. M.
rukunioto, Mrs. S. Nagai, Mr. M. Matsuoka, Mr. S. Odagaki, Mr.
■Bridge to The Sun is, I supou/er*
S. Nagai, Mrs. J. S. Okazaki.
y
pose, a sentimental thing.
a ™ C-J-C-A. extend their heartfelt vote of confidence to Mr.
No one turns to heroin, or even
K Okazaki and the past executives for their unstinting dilligent hops into bed with somebody
proprietoi
services provided for the betterment of fellow Calgarians.
else’s wife. And the motivations
S94 ;LJapanese movie “Akaho Rojih” will be shown on March of its characters are unrealistic,
i
JON ONODERA
at the Allied Art Central Hall, by the Association unless one can believe that there
Complete Care
Plough the courtesy of Consul Okazaki of Winnipeg.
can be forces in people’s lives
Everyone welcome.
For Your Eyes
which, although invisible, are
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805
stronger than background or
C.J.C.A.
®B*^±
■ hard circumstances.
(Business)
(Residence)
It happens that in my few
years, I keep meeting such people
in ordinary life, unspectacular
540 Eglinton Ave. W
118 West Hastings St.
men and. women of immense and
often puzzling hidden strengths.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Toronto
They are much more interesting
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
than other people.
FLAT roofs
It also happens that Bridge to
SHINGLING
EAVESTROUGHING
The Sun is a true story, being
. Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
. SHEET METAL WORK
based upon the book ■written by
Mrs. Gwen Terasaki. But the
truth of the story somehow* takes
second place to the vividness of
TOSH NISHIJIMA
characterization and the restrain
^COVERING ONTARIO
ed excellence of the acting.
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
What might Hollywood ac
N^hf Callst PL. 9-5095 HI. 7-1100
complish if it promoted movies
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
such as these ?
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
TORIC
OPTICAL
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD,
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVERN
SHOE
Catering to Wedding Banqaets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
SIZES
NEW SPRING STYLE
ARRIVED
Ladies’ shoes from
1 np to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
ALBERTS SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Phone IE, 1-1931, Toronto
C O.D. orders from coast to coast
CROWN LIFE
ISME
Gertrude Urabe
AGENCY
Office — 3101 Bathurst St.
Phone: 783-4261
Home phone: HI. 7-8905
Page 8
PAGE 8
Saturday, March 12
J.C. Novel . .
(Cont. From Page 1)
terested and pleased.
The New Canadj
thousands of others in Canada, to a noble inheritance, they were
1 Ours was a congenial little
When I became a woman, I look upon our Japanese as other
s yet unwelcome. It was the company until. December 7th.
engaged in library work, and than loyal Canadian citizens, a
”pd fO’ pay“eBtS»iCOpos)^E J*
ambition
of many Occidentals to 1941. But from that date, two
here again I found myself turn Some people among us
„
however,
keep
this
vast
country for them- chairs were vacant at our table.
Post. Office Departs Q^;
ing to books about Asian peoples (for. underlying reasons far from . selves,
’
Other
।
------minority
groups
Captain
and
Mrs.
S.
now
dined
and feeling more and more as admirable), were &lad
8
glad of
or the
The were treated coldly ialso, and
T. UMEZUKI, Public
in the privacy of their room, TSUMURA,
one wjth them. This feeling was
8
"
Shl
effort to I some squeezed out entirely.'
whether by choice or by request Editor, KEN MORI ji?3
encouraged by cousins born in
the Orient who came home to ly in the West. Today I am sure ■
. WOUM not have been strange of the management, I never learn Section
and A^
attend boarding school in Ameri that many of those very people ^ Tii'es of resentment had burn- ed, but soon they left the hotel
!I
I
ca, arid* one to become a profes realize how wrong they were, as ed high in Japanese hearts, even and I never saw them again. I
•SUBSCRIPTION
sor in the University of Califor they point proudly to the achieve- ^ the point of willingness to heard later that relatives of Mrs.
S4S7O0Per G m°nths
f
W.O0 per year
nia where many of her most ad ments of the Canadian Japanese. glve aid to their native land, in S. were among the first evacuees
I
to a ghost town. I believe that
mired students were Japanese.
.
tae case of the older generation.
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
Ine Dominion of Canada cen- But in spite of cruel discrimina- she accompanied one of them
T was pursuing library work in
Toronto 2-B, 0n!t
Vancouver in December, 1941. At sus for that year listed the num- tion on the part of Occidental there.
Japanese in Canada as Canadians, during the tense, difEMpire 6-5005
that time I was the author of
Canadians we tried to justi
only four books but I was plann 33,^4. Of these, 14,119 were ficult years from 1941 to 1946, fy As
an unjustifiable act.’ We spoke
Canadian born and 3,159 were not a single Canadian Japanese
ing to write more.
of
the attempt at good care,
1Zed Canadians. More than was found guilty of either saboOn the seventh of December,
comparing
the relocation centres
were Canadian citizens tage or treason. What a proud
1941, Pearl Harbor was attack
with the .internment camps of
by
birth
or
naturalization.
Those
record
for
a
people
in
travail!
ed and we knew that Japan had born in Canada certainlv conthe East. In so doing we glibly
t
entered the war against America sidered this country to be them Lt,1 Was residlng in Vancouver, .quoted “an eye for an eye and a
Female Help Wanted
which meant Canada as well. But homeland. Yet, although honest T?eU’ ln .a small private hotel, tooth for a tooth” but this was
it did not occur to me, and I am industrious, law-abiding people
we gathered, not good enough. Thinking Cana PAYROLL clerk. Must be eXM-i-X'
sure that it did not occur to of commendable enterprise and S tables f°r five. Among those dians rose up in protest and PermanentM-BlO6 (Toronto)
------ ---- ---------------- ---I at my table were a young Ger- cried “shame”. Their voices were; PRESSER. Part time for dry ch- u
man engineer and an Italian eventually heard. “The test of"
onto) °r° district AfP'Y 267-5791 ji I
engineer, although a democracy is how well civil liber-;
Kids Get Drunk On Alcoholic Bon Bons CanadianThe citizen
admitted to ties survive in a time of crisis,” SKIRT operators. Must be
i k
I
me
that
his
parents,
from the wrote one. By our blundering we, Apply Holiday Knitware 9'1'
NAGOYA. — Police here bar
,^
beled
.
f
°r
adults
only,
”
Batherland,
were
pro-German
in as Canadian Occidentals, knew1 Ave., (Toronto).
red the sales of chocolate bon
but
the
retail
stores
ignoring
the
feeling.
The
Italian
was
not
yet
that we had failed the test.
bons containing alchohol follow
EXPERIENCED single needle and syS’i
label
sell
them
to
children
and
naturalized
in
Canada.
Yet
both
ing reports of grade school pupils
machine operators. Ladies sports V- I
Long long years before 1941, Sany Wo^' ^P1^ Mi« Sun VaE
bec°me a fad among °f these young men whose native
frequently seen acting “tipsy”
tne
students.
lands
were
at
war
with
the
Ala
similar
injustice was perpetrat 7th .floor, 96 ■ Spadina Ave. (Toronto);
after eating them.
ed
on
the
Acadians in Lower RELIABLE cashier wanted. 5 day w«4
The
alcohol
i
v
HeS
’
e
PJ°
ye
d
complete
liberty
to
A police spokesman said the is
t h 90
h
A
? ”1 Come 85
"-ished and Canada, suspected while inno . Pleasant
surroundings. Downtown Ir
chocolate bars containing alcohol
.tion. Will train for position. Reena
IS saio to be 20 percent strong. showed no sign of apprehension. cent, rejected while loyal.
i%T^telyl >For aPFointment cal! &
Two other chairs at my table
44ZZ (Toronto).
1
wrote
STRENGTH
| were occupied by a retired Brit FOR THE BRIDGE because as
ish marine officer and his charmMale Help Wanted
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
the sweet
P1^ wife, daughter of a merchant lVANGELINE over
SHIPPER.
Experienced in dress factor?
who wandered
SUNDAY. MARCH' 13, 1966
n? fokyo- They had met at a so for years through the land in Permanent. 368-6106 (Toronto). A
cial function, in Japan when the search of her lover, who was
11:30 A.M. English Language Service
HELP WANTED
Captain’s ship was in port, and lost to her when that first eva
The Rev. Minoru Stephan Takada, B.A., B.D.
for ten years had resided in Ja luation from Acadia took place. COOKSVILLE Port Credit Ara ■
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
701 Dovercourt Rd.. Toronto
pan. Now they planned to build
an attempt was made. Woman for light housework.™
a letirement home on Vancouver F
T
families
together—to be days, a week. Call 277-089?™
Island.
•
■
civilized
”
while
being
cruel. But Cooksville, Ont.
Mis. S. was a favorite among
so, I think-. I wrote
the guests at our hotel and dear- STRENGTH
FOR THE BRIDGE
Amateur Camera Club
I ly thought of by me. She spoke more especially
because of Mrs.
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A,
English fluently and said she
(photo course study)
1 pVe^,,Panacla- She dressed as a S., one of the most rarely beautiBARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
V. cultured women whom I
Canadian woman except on fes haYeanever
And perhaps
NOTARY PUBLIC
1
tive occasions when she delighted because of known.
Wednesday, March 16th at 8 p.m.
E us
those'far away days
by wearing elegant kimono to "hen I was a little girl trans221 VICTORIA ST., TORONTO
at
.
— dinner, stopping at the door of P-x?ing flowers side by side
EM. 3-5002
OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
the dining-room to bow with
with
a
gentle
old
man
from
ToToronto Buddhist Church Hall
i charming grace.
Kyo in my father’s greenhouse.
Sponsored by T.B.C. Cultural Division
=
Air Crashes ....
(Cont. From Page 1)
LEAD HAND
Everyone is cordially invited
=
Overseas Airways
Corporation
Tokyo harbor and kill
iiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiniiiiiii^^^
i
1 last Saturday that killed all
Excellent opportunity in down
ed
all
133
persons
aboard. It was
A aboard, hampered studies
town Toronto for the man ex
being made of the twisted wreck the worst crash in history inperienced in set-up and super
VO;W a single plane.
age.
vision of light assembly lines.
Furuya Travel presents
Eighteen Canadian residentPhotographs of the BOAC jet
Reply stating age, experience,
?hose who Perished
which-spun out of a clear skv
education, and salary. Box 10,1
“Golden Week in Japan”
crash- Theodore
showed the plane began disinThe New Canadian.
F as^evich, 53-year-old engineer
e
^
a
i
U1
?
while
falling.
Smoke
Three national holidays within a week in late April
tiailed from the full length of “om Toronto was the only Cana
Japan a most colorful time to visit. Join the tour mid enioy
dian listed among the BOAG
both wings.
the many Spring festivities of Japan.
J
Pieces of the Canadian Pacific crash victims, who included 89
It is a good policy to
14 dayJ°“H$259 °0^
^rez departing April 24,
Airlines Douglas DC-8 jet that Americans.
have the RIGHT POLICY
^
e
investigators
arriving
here
crashed, recently in a fog at the
1966. For further information, please call
Consult
iokyo airport were being pick- E/ron\cw’ the Unfted
States
and
Britain.
John
G.
Furuya Travel Service
ed
more exPerts. That
Bill Wales
Adams,
a
member
of
the
U.S
T
3h
?
1Iled
64
of
the
72
persons
365 Spadina Ave., Toronto
Insurance Agency
aboard.
Board, said he
Tel. 366-1075
-^
e
three
crashes,
On Feb. 4. a Boeing 727 jet
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
A 1Ch lnVoIved Americanoperated by All Nippon Airways mnd/
made jets.
Phone WA. 1-3171
I
^IllllllllllllllllllllllllllillflllllllllllllJ
CLASSIFY
It s Private I No Time Limit 1
Get the most enjoyment from
your wedding reception or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food! Plenty of free pa^
Receive your guests in a personal wayl - We stm« . „
Enjoy oil the singing and dancing with your dear
-A.il This Is Available At Our Beautifully Decorated
CHINA HOUSE
c
925 Eglinton Ave. W., Toronto, Ont
1
RU. 1-9123
c
c
Saturday, March 12
J.C. Novel . .
(Cont. From Page 1)
terested and pleased.
The New Canadj
thousands of others in Canada, to a noble inheritance, they were
1 Ours was a congenial little
When I became a woman, I look upon our Japanese as other
s yet unwelcome. It was the company until. December 7th.
engaged in library work, and than loyal Canadian citizens, a
”pd fO’ pay“eBtS»iCOpos)^E J*
ambition
of many Occidentals to 1941. But from that date, two
here again I found myself turn Some people among us
„
however,
keep
this
vast
country for them- chairs were vacant at our table.
Post. Office Departs Q^;
ing to books about Asian peoples (for. underlying reasons far from . selves,
’
Other
।
------minority
groups
Captain
and
Mrs.
S.
now
dined
and feeling more and more as admirable), were &lad
8
glad of
or the
The were treated coldly ialso, and
T. UMEZUKI, Public
in the privacy of their room, TSUMURA,
one wjth them. This feeling was
8
"
Shl
effort to I some squeezed out entirely.'
whether by choice or by request Editor, KEN MORI ji?3
encouraged by cousins born in
the Orient who came home to ly in the West. Today I am sure ■
. WOUM not have been strange of the management, I never learn Section
and A^
attend boarding school in Ameri that many of those very people ^ Tii'es of resentment had burn- ed, but soon they left the hotel
!I
I
ca, arid* one to become a profes realize how wrong they were, as ed high in Japanese hearts, even and I never saw them again. I
•SUBSCRIPTION
sor in the University of Califor they point proudly to the achieve- ^ the point of willingness to heard later that relatives of Mrs.
S4S7O0Per G m°nths
f
W.O0 per year
nia where many of her most ad ments of the Canadian Japanese. glve aid to their native land, in S. were among the first evacuees
I
to a ghost town. I believe that
mired students were Japanese.
.
tae case of the older generation.
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
Ine Dominion of Canada cen- But in spite of cruel discrimina- she accompanied one of them
T was pursuing library work in
Toronto 2-B, 0n!t
Vancouver in December, 1941. At sus for that year listed the num- tion on the part of Occidental there.
Japanese in Canada as Canadians, during the tense, difEMpire 6-5005
that time I was the author of
Canadians we tried to justi
only four books but I was plann 33,^4. Of these, 14,119 were ficult years from 1941 to 1946, fy As
an unjustifiable act.’ We spoke
Canadian born and 3,159 were not a single Canadian Japanese
ing to write more.
of
the attempt at good care,
1Zed Canadians. More than was found guilty of either saboOn the seventh of December,
comparing
the relocation centres
were Canadian citizens tage or treason. What a proud
1941, Pearl Harbor was attack
with the .internment camps of
by
birth
or
naturalization.
Those
record
for
a
people
in
travail!
ed and we knew that Japan had born in Canada certainlv conthe East. In so doing we glibly
t
entered the war against America sidered this country to be them Lt,1 Was residlng in Vancouver, .quoted “an eye for an eye and a
Female Help Wanted
which meant Canada as well. But homeland. Yet, although honest T?eU’ ln .a small private hotel, tooth for a tooth” but this was
it did not occur to me, and I am industrious, law-abiding people
we gathered, not good enough. Thinking Cana PAYROLL clerk. Must be eXM-i-X'
sure that it did not occur to of commendable enterprise and S tables f°r five. Among those dians rose up in protest and PermanentM-BlO6 (Toronto)
------ ---- ---------------- ---I at my table were a young Ger- cried “shame”. Their voices were; PRESSER. Part time for dry ch- u
man engineer and an Italian eventually heard. “The test of"
onto) °r° district AfP'Y 267-5791 ji I
engineer, although a democracy is how well civil liber-;
Kids Get Drunk On Alcoholic Bon Bons CanadianThe citizen
admitted to ties survive in a time of crisis,” SKIRT operators. Must be
i k
I
me
that
his
parents,
from the wrote one. By our blundering we, Apply Holiday Knitware 9'1'
NAGOYA. — Police here bar
,^
beled
.
f
°r
adults
only,
”
Batherland,
were
pro-German
in as Canadian Occidentals, knew1 Ave., (Toronto).
red the sales of chocolate bon
but
the
retail
stores
ignoring
the
feeling.
The
Italian
was
not
yet
that we had failed the test.
bons containing alchohol follow
EXPERIENCED single needle and syS’i
label
sell
them
to
children
and
naturalized
in
Canada.
Yet
both
ing reports of grade school pupils
machine operators. Ladies sports V- I
Long long years before 1941, Sany Wo^' ^P1^ Mi« Sun VaE
bec°me a fad among °f these young men whose native
frequently seen acting “tipsy”
tne
students.
lands
were
at
war
with
the
Ala
similar
injustice was perpetrat 7th .floor, 96 ■ Spadina Ave. (Toronto);
after eating them.
ed
on
the
Acadians in Lower RELIABLE cashier wanted. 5 day w«4
The
alcohol
i
v
HeS
’
e
PJ°
ye
d
complete
liberty
to
A police spokesman said the is
t h 90
h
A
? ”1 Come 85
"-ished and Canada, suspected while inno . Pleasant
surroundings. Downtown Ir
chocolate bars containing alcohol
.tion. Will train for position. Reena
IS saio to be 20 percent strong. showed no sign of apprehension. cent, rejected while loyal.
i%T^telyl >For aPFointment cal! &
Two other chairs at my table
44ZZ (Toronto).
1
wrote
STRENGTH
| were occupied by a retired Brit FOR THE BRIDGE because as
ish marine officer and his charmMale Help Wanted
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
the sweet
P1^ wife, daughter of a merchant lVANGELINE over
SHIPPER.
Experienced in dress factor?
who wandered
SUNDAY. MARCH' 13, 1966
n? fokyo- They had met at a so for years through the land in Permanent. 368-6106 (Toronto). A
cial function, in Japan when the search of her lover, who was
11:30 A.M. English Language Service
HELP WANTED
Captain’s ship was in port, and lost to her when that first eva
The Rev. Minoru Stephan Takada, B.A., B.D.
for ten years had resided in Ja luation from Acadia took place. COOKSVILLE Port Credit Ara ■
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
701 Dovercourt Rd.. Toronto
pan. Now they planned to build
an attempt was made. Woman for light housework.™
a letirement home on Vancouver F
T
families
together—to be days, a week. Call 277-089?™
Island.
•
■
civilized
”
while
being
cruel. But Cooksville, Ont.
Mis. S. was a favorite among
so, I think-. I wrote
the guests at our hotel and dear- STRENGTH
FOR THE BRIDGE
Amateur Camera Club
I ly thought of by me. She spoke more especially
because of Mrs.
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A,
English fluently and said she
(photo course study)
1 pVe^,,Panacla- She dressed as a S., one of the most rarely beautiBARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
V. cultured women whom I
Canadian woman except on fes haYeanever
And perhaps
NOTARY PUBLIC
1
tive occasions when she delighted because of known.
Wednesday, March 16th at 8 p.m.
E us
those'far away days
by wearing elegant kimono to "hen I was a little girl trans221 VICTORIA ST., TORONTO
at
.
— dinner, stopping at the door of P-x?ing flowers side by side
EM. 3-5002
OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
the dining-room to bow with
with
a
gentle
old
man
from
ToToronto Buddhist Church Hall
i charming grace.
Kyo in my father’s greenhouse.
Sponsored by T.B.C. Cultural Division
=
Air Crashes ....
(Cont. From Page 1)
LEAD HAND
Everyone is cordially invited
=
Overseas Airways
Corporation
Tokyo harbor and kill
iiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiniiiiiii^^^
i
1 last Saturday that killed all
Excellent opportunity in down
ed
all
133
persons
aboard. It was
A aboard, hampered studies
town Toronto for the man ex
being made of the twisted wreck the worst crash in history inperienced in set-up and super
VO;W a single plane.
age.
vision of light assembly lines.
Furuya Travel presents
Eighteen Canadian residentPhotographs of the BOAC jet
Reply stating age, experience,
?hose who Perished
which-spun out of a clear skv
education, and salary. Box 10,1
“Golden Week in Japan”
crash- Theodore
showed the plane began disinThe New Canadian.
F as^evich, 53-year-old engineer
e
^
a
i
U1
?
while
falling.
Smoke
Three national holidays within a week in late April
tiailed from the full length of “om Toronto was the only Cana
Japan a most colorful time to visit. Join the tour mid enioy
dian listed among the BOAG
both wings.
the many Spring festivities of Japan.
J
Pieces of the Canadian Pacific crash victims, who included 89
It is a good policy to
14 dayJ°“H$259 °0^
^rez departing April 24,
Airlines Douglas DC-8 jet that Americans.
have the RIGHT POLICY
^
e
investigators
arriving
here
crashed, recently in a fog at the
1966. For further information, please call
Consult
iokyo airport were being pick- E/ron\cw’ the Unfted
States
and
Britain.
John
G.
Furuya Travel Service
ed
more exPerts. That
Bill Wales
Adams,
a
member
of
the
U.S
T
3h
?
1Iled
64
of
the
72
persons
365 Spadina Ave., Toronto
Insurance Agency
aboard.
Board, said he
Tel. 366-1075
-^
e
three
crashes,
On Feb. 4. a Boeing 727 jet
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
A 1Ch lnVoIved Americanoperated by All Nippon Airways mnd/
made jets.
Phone WA. 1-3171
I
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It s Private I No Time Limit 1
Get the most enjoyment from
your wedding reception or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food! Plenty of free pa^
Receive your guests in a personal wayl - We stm« . „
Enjoy oil the singing and dancing with your dear
-A.il This Is Available At Our Beautifully Decorated
CHINA HOUSE
c
925 Eglinton Ave. W., Toronto, Ont
1
RU. 1-9123
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