Page 1
FHE NEW
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
SATURDAY, MARCH 19/1966
Toronto. Qm
'. IC. Was One .
Are
You
anpaku ?
v-
TORONTO.—For the fii’st tim in JCCA history, a husband
wife team has been
arded the coveted JCCA Gold Pin for
AV YORK. —- Next time, you
n
the
organization
and the Japanese Canadian
a minute, take a look in the
communit
r at the white of your.eyes,
popular Torontonians,
and Eleanor
the white is visible between
Shirakawr
iiipil and the lower eyelid;
The Gold Pins -were awarded at the JCCA Inaugural Dinner
i out — you’re sanpaku and
and
Dance last Saturday evening at the Valhalla Inn. The pleasant
hing terrible: will.- happen
wa s
to Ritsuko Inouye.
)U.
•
—.
- oilier
least that’s what 'SakuraCCA also receiving Gold Puis were: Mr. George'Imai, former PresNoichi says." He is a 75dent of the Toronto JCCA. Janet Fujiwara, Mr. Tadasu Ide, 'Mr.
ild Japanese food .faddist
Yoriki
Iwasaki, and Mr. Boy Si
lives in Paris and'has de
to,
President
of the Toront
ed a dietary cult that should
CCA.
Over
a
dozen J.C.'s have
up gourmets of any counhonored with the JCCA.
Gold I‘in prior to these latest
at’s sanpaku ? Well,-it’s tire
additions.
st word in the American
Organizations attending this
SCARBORO, Ont.—A Scarboro
ulary and the latest fad
MONTREAL. — The world renown Bunraku Puppeteers, the occasion included members from: Nisei lias won a trip to gay Paris.
nng the country, says . Wil- classic puppet theatre of Japan, now touring the United States Toronto JCCA. Isseibu, National
He is Mr. W; Takeda, one of four
: Dufty, an American who is expected to be one of the major attractions at the Japanese
translated Sakurazawa’s Pavilion at next year’s Expo 67. Here displaying one of their JCCA. Jr. JCCA, and the Chinese winners in the Bata Contest for
uphy into .a book called huge puppets are Kazuo Sugimoto, Kamematsu Kiritake, Tamasho Canadian . Association. The inau the 1966 : Fidelity Card holders.
guration speech of the evening,
AH winners arc expected to
Are All Sanpaku.”
Yoshida, and Afonya Kiritake.
(See Page. 8)
chaired
by
N.
JCCA
President
arrive
in Paris on April 3rd.
wording to Dufty, sanpaku
Ed
Ide.
was
given
by
the
newly
£ symptom of an ancient
elected president of the Toronto
s known not only to the JaChapter, Mr. Roy Sato. Il j car
ie Zen Buddhists who coined for strong collective moral
e word but .to. the people-of
support in all future. JCCA
Mcl Testament- as well,
tivities.
hen you die your eyeballs
Mr. Mitsuo A memori, ViceNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.—
ip to the top of your head,”
president
of
the
Isseibu.
conTORONTO.—Two Toronto Nisei teenagers, brother and sister,
i explains. But. if you don’t
gratulated the Nisei executive
ight, sanpaku sets in. ■ ■ San- students of kendo will soon be seen performing their art of Japa- in their tireless efforts for the New Westminster was a member
of the United Fishermen end Al
he explains, is the gradual nese sword fighting on television. They
Ken and Chris Naka- betterment of J.C.’s in Toronto.
lied Workers Union group that
ment of your eyeball upmura
of
the
Nakamura
Kendo
Dojo
’
.
Their
performance,
already
Guest speaker for the evening recently spent a. week lobbying
5. It starts early in life and
-vas
the Japan Consul General. MP’'; m Ottawa.
: warning that tragedy is on tape, will be shown over CFTO-TV near the end of April on
S
;..
S
a
i k i ■ wh o p ra i s e d th e w o rk
to follow.
-- '
the After Four Show.
if'the
JCCA in’promoting better
heric,ans are eating them. Their- father is one of Canada's outstanding kendoka, air understanding and friendship be
> to death,” Dufty warns,
country is sick. Its people Larry Nakamura, 5th-dan, head instructor of the Nakamura Kendo tween Canada . and Japan. Miss
Kay Morita, Co-vice president of
sating too much .and this Dojo.
the
Toronto JCCA, thanked the
idulgence is a dreadful'
They are appearing together this week, along with other
Consul
General on behalf of the
>e of an affluent society.”.- students, at the Canadian National Sportsman Show in Toronto.
TORONTO.
If the distinJCCA.
: answer, according to Saguished-looking Japanese gentle
awa Noichi, as translated
man pictured. in the big Bur
ifty is the macrobiotic diet.'
roughs Business Machine ads in
simple language, this means
your ~ daily newspaper appears
ig off the meat and potafamiliar, you ’ may be right.
ind going on to herbs, tea
VANCOUVER, B.C.—If you read a news story with an .Asso and a Japanese Reader's Digest Lake away. his glasses and you
ce for the rest of your life,
editor were all pupils of Sato, will find Mr. Bob Kadoguchi,
e secret is in the yin and ciated Press Tokyo dateline, you can thank Tsutae Sato.
Director of the Japa
who has taught Japanese to Managing
says Dufty who once
nese
Canadian
Cultural Centre.
If
you
have
a
bank
account
in
Japan,
you
may
have
a
connec
second and third-generation Ja
i 190 pound' giant but now
Key
to
the puzzle is the shiny
panese Canadians in Vancouver little Centre button on his lapel.'
tion with Tsutae Sato.
s a wispy 131.
:•
for
49 years.
' If by chance you have read the Japanese version-of “My Mose
'erything in life is balancRecently on March Mth, he
opposites . are yin and- Unforgettable Character,” Tsutae. Sato was involved.
and his wife Hanako officially
rhe- ideal-balance ’is" five
The Tokyo AP managing editor, a Canadian, bank manager retired from their teaching posts
®s. of yin to one- of yang,”
at the Japanese Language School
explains.
in the Japanese Hall, 475 Alex
jhe dietary regime set forth
ander. He started teaching there
p book, the. potassium .and
in 1917 and she began in 1921.
in content of all the preTOKYO. — A -unique fluore
grand
jury
in
September,
1963.
- foods are 'neatly balanced
EL RIO, Calif.—State Board
Both were primary teachers in scent lamp dubbed, the “Plant
hyang proportions.
of Medical Examiners recently but w.as later acquitted by a trial Tokyo before being recommend Lux” has recently appeared on
iudge.
st are some of. the foods
ed to the Vancouver school by the Japanese market.
revoked the license of a 60-yearia.v eat?
Acting as a miniature artificial
the Japanese department of edu
?11’ there is soba which is old Issei physician on the basis
cation.
sun, the amazing lamp emits
heat spaghetti-that goes of testimonv that he had sought T. Yoshida Elected
Sato and his wife instruct both solar-like rays for plant cultiva
'ith clam sauce. Then there to induce abortions.
school children, who come for an tion. Light rays emitted by the
Regina J.C. President
S°’.v S0Y bean paste and
hour .after
leir Teeiilm* school Plant Lux are readily absorbed
However, execution of the order
"hich* is ground" sesame
REGINA, Sask.—Mr. Tsutomu lessens, and lulls making up for by the chlorophyll in plants and
controls systematically the ne
against Dr. Tom S. Tamura was Yoshida was elected President of time lost in their youth.
an<i takini together, stayed for 30 days to give him the Regina Japanese Canadian
“Mv ideal and purpose,” Sato cessary amounts of artificial sun
Association
at their general said, “is to build a big bridge be light required for proper growth.
•. . v’’ and you get .a nonkick which beats liquor time to appeal the - decision to meeting on March 6th. Position tween Canada and Japanese
sesn't hurt..
. the superior court.
of Vice-president will be filled friendship and culture.”
about drinking, the
by Chiyo Ohashi, and Treasurer
. The soft-spoken Sato, a youthA hearing officer recommended
plain water but~ap-| ful looking 74 years old, can re
-. °f sake, the Japanese six months suspension after, sev
call the' days before the Second
■me, and beer.
eral young women, testified Dr. American Nisei Pilot _
World War when four Japanese
THE NEW
CANADIAN
® ls made of rice and beer
Tamura
had
given
them
pills
and
schools
operated
in
Vancouver.
wishes
that
Miss
S.
H. Yama
uoni grains and these are
Awarded
Flying
Cross
da
who
wrote
the
article
manipulative
treatments.
But
the
1 m foods,” . Dufty says.
His own school
instructed
“
Footloose
In
Europe
”
back
in
'^e?J ^ if it’s yin, you’re. board, after reviewing the evi
SEATTLE. —- Lt. Arthur Kono 1,000 students a year, and was
a
December
issue
of
the
N.C.
lt s yang -— bang you’re dence, adopted a more severe of. Seattle was awarded the Dis the largest on the Pacific Coast.
get in touch with this office
able according to the matinguished Flying Cross-recently
Sato is vague about his future
penalty. .
immediately. There is a fan
ic school of thought.
for special achievement while on with one exception: “I will stay
letter
waiting for her from
1 permissible is tea, but
Dr. Tamura was indicted on duty in Vigt Nam.
in this country — my students
British Columbia.
(Cont. on P. 8)
He has been piloting a B-57. are here.”
abortion charges by the county
Bunraku Puppeteers -For. Expo z67
Toronto Brother And Sister Nisei Kendo Team
To Appear On CFTO-TV’s “After Foor” Show
Scarboro J.C. Wins
A Trip To Paris
J.C. Fisherman On
UFAWU Confab.
JC Cultural Centre Head
Models for Machine Ad
M.D. Revoked Over Abortion Charge
Miniature Artificial Sun
For Green Thumb Expert
Fan Mail
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
SATURDAY, MARCH 19/1966
Toronto. Qm
'. IC. Was One .
Are
You
anpaku ?
v-
TORONTO.—For the fii’st tim in JCCA history, a husband
wife team has been
arded the coveted JCCA Gold Pin for
AV YORK. —- Next time, you
n
the
organization
and the Japanese Canadian
a minute, take a look in the
communit
r at the white of your.eyes,
popular Torontonians,
and Eleanor
the white is visible between
Shirakawr
iiipil and the lower eyelid;
The Gold Pins -were awarded at the JCCA Inaugural Dinner
i out — you’re sanpaku and
and
Dance last Saturday evening at the Valhalla Inn. The pleasant
hing terrible: will.- happen
wa s
to Ritsuko Inouye.
)U.
•
—.
- oilier
least that’s what 'SakuraCCA also receiving Gold Puis were: Mr. George'Imai, former PresNoichi says." He is a 75dent of the Toronto JCCA. Janet Fujiwara, Mr. Tadasu Ide, 'Mr.
ild Japanese food .faddist
Yoriki
Iwasaki, and Mr. Boy Si
lives in Paris and'has de
to,
President
of the Toront
ed a dietary cult that should
CCA.
Over
a
dozen J.C.'s have
up gourmets of any counhonored with the JCCA.
Gold I‘in prior to these latest
at’s sanpaku ? Well,-it’s tire
additions.
st word in the American
Organizations attending this
SCARBORO, Ont.—A Scarboro
ulary and the latest fad
MONTREAL. — The world renown Bunraku Puppeteers, the occasion included members from: Nisei lias won a trip to gay Paris.
nng the country, says . Wil- classic puppet theatre of Japan, now touring the United States Toronto JCCA. Isseibu, National
He is Mr. W; Takeda, one of four
: Dufty, an American who is expected to be one of the major attractions at the Japanese
translated Sakurazawa’s Pavilion at next year’s Expo 67. Here displaying one of their JCCA. Jr. JCCA, and the Chinese winners in the Bata Contest for
uphy into .a book called huge puppets are Kazuo Sugimoto, Kamematsu Kiritake, Tamasho Canadian . Association. The inau the 1966 : Fidelity Card holders.
guration speech of the evening,
AH winners arc expected to
Are All Sanpaku.”
Yoshida, and Afonya Kiritake.
(See Page. 8)
chaired
by
N.
JCCA
President
arrive
in Paris on April 3rd.
wording to Dufty, sanpaku
Ed
Ide.
was
given
by
the
newly
£ symptom of an ancient
elected president of the Toronto
s known not only to the JaChapter, Mr. Roy Sato. Il j car
ie Zen Buddhists who coined for strong collective moral
e word but .to. the people-of
support in all future. JCCA
Mcl Testament- as well,
tivities.
hen you die your eyeballs
Mr. Mitsuo A memori, ViceNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.—
ip to the top of your head,”
president
of
the
Isseibu.
conTORONTO.—Two Toronto Nisei teenagers, brother and sister,
i explains. But. if you don’t
gratulated the Nisei executive
ight, sanpaku sets in. ■ ■ San- students of kendo will soon be seen performing their art of Japa- in their tireless efforts for the New Westminster was a member
of the United Fishermen end Al
he explains, is the gradual nese sword fighting on television. They
Ken and Chris Naka- betterment of J.C.’s in Toronto.
lied Workers Union group that
ment of your eyeball upmura
of
the
Nakamura
Kendo
Dojo
’
.
Their
performance,
already
Guest speaker for the evening recently spent a. week lobbying
5. It starts early in life and
-vas
the Japan Consul General. MP’'; m Ottawa.
: warning that tragedy is on tape, will be shown over CFTO-TV near the end of April on
S
;..
S
a
i k i ■ wh o p ra i s e d th e w o rk
to follow.
-- '
the After Four Show.
if'the
JCCA in’promoting better
heric,ans are eating them. Their- father is one of Canada's outstanding kendoka, air understanding and friendship be
> to death,” Dufty warns,
country is sick. Its people Larry Nakamura, 5th-dan, head instructor of the Nakamura Kendo tween Canada . and Japan. Miss
Kay Morita, Co-vice president of
sating too much .and this Dojo.
the
Toronto JCCA, thanked the
idulgence is a dreadful'
They are appearing together this week, along with other
Consul
General on behalf of the
>e of an affluent society.”.- students, at the Canadian National Sportsman Show in Toronto.
TORONTO.
If the distinJCCA.
: answer, according to Saguished-looking Japanese gentle
awa Noichi, as translated
man pictured. in the big Bur
ifty is the macrobiotic diet.'
roughs Business Machine ads in
simple language, this means
your ~ daily newspaper appears
ig off the meat and potafamiliar, you ’ may be right.
ind going on to herbs, tea
VANCOUVER, B.C.—If you read a news story with an .Asso and a Japanese Reader's Digest Lake away. his glasses and you
ce for the rest of your life,
editor were all pupils of Sato, will find Mr. Bob Kadoguchi,
e secret is in the yin and ciated Press Tokyo dateline, you can thank Tsutae Sato.
Director of the Japa
who has taught Japanese to Managing
says Dufty who once
nese
Canadian
Cultural Centre.
If
you
have
a
bank
account
in
Japan,
you
may
have
a
connec
second and third-generation Ja
i 190 pound' giant but now
Key
to
the puzzle is the shiny
panese Canadians in Vancouver little Centre button on his lapel.'
tion with Tsutae Sato.
s a wispy 131.
:•
for
49 years.
' If by chance you have read the Japanese version-of “My Mose
'erything in life is balancRecently on March Mth, he
opposites . are yin and- Unforgettable Character,” Tsutae. Sato was involved.
and his wife Hanako officially
rhe- ideal-balance ’is" five
The Tokyo AP managing editor, a Canadian, bank manager retired from their teaching posts
®s. of yin to one- of yang,”
at the Japanese Language School
explains.
in the Japanese Hall, 475 Alex
jhe dietary regime set forth
ander. He started teaching there
p book, the. potassium .and
in 1917 and she began in 1921.
in content of all the preTOKYO. — A -unique fluore
grand
jury
in
September,
1963.
- foods are 'neatly balanced
EL RIO, Calif.—State Board
Both were primary teachers in scent lamp dubbed, the “Plant
hyang proportions.
of Medical Examiners recently but w.as later acquitted by a trial Tokyo before being recommend Lux” has recently appeared on
iudge.
st are some of. the foods
ed to the Vancouver school by the Japanese market.
revoked the license of a 60-yearia.v eat?
Acting as a miniature artificial
the Japanese department of edu
?11’ there is soba which is old Issei physician on the basis
cation.
sun, the amazing lamp emits
heat spaghetti-that goes of testimonv that he had sought T. Yoshida Elected
Sato and his wife instruct both solar-like rays for plant cultiva
'ith clam sauce. Then there to induce abortions.
school children, who come for an tion. Light rays emitted by the
Regina J.C. President
S°’.v S0Y bean paste and
hour .after
leir Teeiilm* school Plant Lux are readily absorbed
However, execution of the order
"hich* is ground" sesame
REGINA, Sask.—Mr. Tsutomu lessens, and lulls making up for by the chlorophyll in plants and
controls systematically the ne
against Dr. Tom S. Tamura was Yoshida was elected President of time lost in their youth.
an<i takini together, stayed for 30 days to give him the Regina Japanese Canadian
“Mv ideal and purpose,” Sato cessary amounts of artificial sun
Association
at their general said, “is to build a big bridge be light required for proper growth.
•. . v’’ and you get .a nonkick which beats liquor time to appeal the - decision to meeting on March 6th. Position tween Canada and Japanese
sesn't hurt..
. the superior court.
of Vice-president will be filled friendship and culture.”
about drinking, the
by Chiyo Ohashi, and Treasurer
. The soft-spoken Sato, a youthA hearing officer recommended
plain water but~ap-| ful looking 74 years old, can re
-. °f sake, the Japanese six months suspension after, sev
call the' days before the Second
■me, and beer.
eral young women, testified Dr. American Nisei Pilot _
World War when four Japanese
THE NEW
CANADIAN
® ls made of rice and beer
Tamura
had
given
them
pills
and
schools
operated
in
Vancouver.
wishes
that
Miss
S.
H. Yama
uoni grains and these are
Awarded
Flying
Cross
da
who
wrote
the
article
manipulative
treatments.
But
the
1 m foods,” . Dufty says.
His own school
instructed
“
Footloose
In
Europe
”
back
in
'^e?J ^ if it’s yin, you’re. board, after reviewing the evi
SEATTLE. —- Lt. Arthur Kono 1,000 students a year, and was
a
December
issue
of
the
N.C.
lt s yang -— bang you’re dence, adopted a more severe of. Seattle was awarded the Dis the largest on the Pacific Coast.
get in touch with this office
able according to the matinguished Flying Cross-recently
Sato is vague about his future
penalty. .
immediately. There is a fan
ic school of thought.
for special achievement while on with one exception: “I will stay
letter
waiting for her from
1 permissible is tea, but
Dr. Tamura was indicted on duty in Vigt Nam.
in this country — my students
British Columbia.
(Cont. on P. 8)
He has been piloting a B-57. are here.”
abortion charges by the county
Bunraku Puppeteers -For. Expo z67
Toronto Brother And Sister Nisei Kendo Team
To Appear On CFTO-TV’s “After Foor” Show
Scarboro J.C. Wins
A Trip To Paris
J.C. Fisherman On
UFAWU Confab.
JC Cultural Centre Head
Models for Machine Ad
M.D. Revoked Over Abortion Charge
Miniature Artificial Sun
For Green Thumb Expert
Fan Mail
Page 2
Managed by Liz Pearce . .
IHartial Art Review Riekes Debut S
pa«ES »S
*™ on the
paper devoted entirely to the Japanese martial
arts of judo, karate, aikido, and kendo — made
its debut here last week. This 4-page review is
run by managing editor, Liz Pearce.
Martial Arts Review is, and shall remain, im
partial toward all administrative organizations,”
fi
martial arts and their conduct from all practi
tioners and fans.
If individuals or groups feel that things are
not what they should be in any of the arts, they
TORONTO
NISEI___
TEN
PIN SUNDAY
can
use
our adds
paper as a forum to ^CUSS.
discus th.en
thoh- BOEING
■
“ LEAGUE.-MEN:
____
_____
views
” «he
'Terry Dd’ iS. S r?i»|
’ .ne aaas.
5So; . George r7CdbxnBes ■576^ (221-)?:-^
376; Brian ^Gately 554; “YukiVMd- Ji -^ ^iM
This • month’s issue shows the .Wright
LQta 538; Ken Izumi - 520; Harry ' Kado pairs 37—81; Sudn T& ri^S
great Isao Inokuma performing homa-513,-'Rod. 'Tsujimota^^
Golden Horseshoe 32~7r 9
Censt. Co. 31—55. ^
his seoi-nage. These four photos Sm sSos“ro? d??^
2B-S1.- Philco S'&°*=,»|
mecc^S^nd^n66? 50 K a^.600 persons train daily at judo’s were taken by Canadian judoka, ^^ ^
?? rtos,' ^'Lw-SM
Vern Fagan while he was train- o^*^
g S 78, Kami Insurance 18—So 4
j > Kodokan, for physical and moral well being
Tr^? Service 16—69 '^
shouM thpVh^nb^7!^
Proficient to defend themselves mg in Japan last year. Fae-an £?P?° -^\Tsrr^
^ey oe physically attacked.
86; Kawaguchi'S * MTil^rfl
nt * 34~^S; Steyns®
tob^W^T
Geesink of Holland trained from time who runs his own judo club in Joan Hamade 420; Jean’ Yoshida 411- E
^6ria ^^ 407; 2L7? /■ \ Ttro^s 2M".-j ®
before he stunned Japan’s judo world by defeating two Toronto, is listed as the editor PpTlad^
pio’S J'S’8 60 ™ the "-orld title in the 1961 world cham- of this paper.
‘ ■ ^
...
T.p. kfs 1M6 InVeSt0rs * !'4g
Some 500-600 Judoka Train
BOWLINC
SCORES
At Kodokan
~ T?ams aiready qualifetJiSi
the S”to® pS0" "" °n han" ^‘^ at the Kodokan t0 toaoh
!'H
Also included
included in this month S March
TORONTO SUNDAY'FAMILY LEAGUE, Play-off m the first hak
. 13, 1966, MEN: ’Herb- Miydsaki
are reports of the Pacific £39 L223' ,215)f M Sogawa- 566 (229);- , EPr tke, iir.st time since
was^uiH^lflSR^^
“ imP°sing seven story structure, issue
Norhliwpsl
t
n
Sonoda 520; Joe Akiyama 508; Tado League has been 'bwj
1-NOimv.est Kendo Tourney, the Tanaka 507; Frank Nikaido 507; Mils Vancouver,
t
in iyo«. it is a far cry from the old hniidinv nearby
it is with’ grX
which was constructed in 1934.
building
Vancouver Judo Club a repor*- Endo' 505; Yuki Kamedkg 5.03. ' " " i sure that our League could
The “dojo” or place of training in the Kodokan is lam
from a Canadian judoka in Ko-' ^SS S fe’l.S.^ of a perfect "450" mage
by one of our Nisei bowhto accomodate 500 persons at one time
g enough
dokan, and a Canadian judoka’s onlzukK^^ 453"^
°ur. weekly League game la.
J?’Tr'rd Frankie Nozaki i:
for foreigners awhontw»fti0tnaIi
wlSeh te special classes
impression of Tokyo . (N.C. Xmas
March 6, 1966, MEN: Min Nishino 561xr Commodore Lanes' or
foreigneTtaclutog^
JUd°- Fnise^
are 60 issue).
Sonoda 553; Yuki Kameoka' 5’42- .Mite Nozaki, and is still a t
Aki Sogawa 528; Terry Shiga 528; Jer- *^ern4. Currently, Frankie «
a 245 average this season V-i
Subscription rates are $3.00 J 3^ ^ ^’“’^^^
l®6^11 be Panting’fc£
$50.00 cheque and he will
quarters Pa°t ™K»dl?\ ^ ^°
some remuneration from ft"S
about 4,000,000 K°d°kan Said the Judo
Proprietor's Ass'n.
‘ §
oj7iA" TC^: Bob Yamaoka SF
------------’--------- - ~
—Asahi
31/); Jack Yamamoto 918 f ‘
Fiank Nozaki 816 (450);
Martial Arts
?^a £17 (326); Butch W
mixed MAJOR 10Builds Characters
(346); Greg Nishi 807 (301); M
.
4th' ^N’ Ken-Izui 633 •804; Mas Kitagawa 799; Fred Id
| I (233); Stan Coulighan '632. (276)'; Sam Jim Nishimura 788 ( 331); Jin
I
Taniwa of Kelowna was the big suJ ST^ "."^
771 (303); Nobby. Fujisawa Bi „
Bill Haraga 766 (307); Sam
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
Kh'rCent™.; ^
WOn ™eMP Position in Slu“S ®: fe^llS
LADIES: Joyce Murata Ma-r
de 679.
T
the
Central
British
Columba#
Badmington
Championships
recently
552
(204);
Clare
Ward
55
°Consult
“B" CLASS: Tosh Nakamoto
Lm a^n B™ *
^ defea*ed J. Rokosh of &ta»n mSSJV^ Miyas«k, 491, nhoda. Nishimura 682; Yutaka Ham
LADIES- Rae Nakamoto 749; J:
‘Yd
Burns of Kamloops- In the finals she won the first LoKH. "?' MEN: S^ Miike .621: Oura
674; Kim Kitagawa 629.
**C*' CLASS: Mickey Terada I
I game U-7 but dropped the last two 11-5 and 113 to Marlene Davies. (232h Mike Sakura 603 (228); Ken Ker-'
tai 595 (213); Joe Tsujimoto 584 (224);2 Bando 641; Kiyoshi Nishi 609.
Joe Doi 563; Don Martin 561 (221); Ter-’
For All Classes of
ry Hamade 551 (209).
VAN. NISEI 5-PIN BOWLINGS®
LADIES Alma Wilson 515 (204); Bet-: League, as of March 6th. "A"^
INSURANCE
Off: Tad's Sporting Goods SIHiiLy
ty Potts 482.
- Koby's Auto Repairs 49—93;:>r£i
.
.
LE. Diner * 42—115; Fraserview fcfn
By LG^ALD c. JAMES
Phone: PL. 9.2632
.40—74; Golden Horseshoe M®
_
EAST
END
NISEI
RECREATIONAL
TEN:
HAMILTON.—On Saturday, March 5
OR
Lanes 35—88; Sudd Tn J .5
Community Centre, the Second Annmi
t
• €T the Jewish PIN BOWLING LEAGUE, March 1, 1966, modore
34^
—
93
Sun Lifers'
ment took place and the results were an nvf7SK J?™01' Judo Touma- ^N:uHarry Hayashi 559; Yo Kitagawa 921/2; PhilcoNobby's
PL. 5-7317
Dist.
Co.
iB-^-b,^
Demonstrating tKe eiXsiasiTv^
SUCCess,
ro Kawaguchi 529; Monk Tana TV * 24—82; Kami Insurance B-^
ka 524; Aki Abe 505; Ed Nakamura 501. Iwata
Travel Service 20—73. pf
tADIES: .Maki Nishimura; 457; Terrie - "B" DIVISION: Broadway. RarT^
Watanabe 421; Kim Oda:416; Fudge' 93;Aki's Restaurant * 41-iii;iH
Tanaka' 402.
•
Trophiees
38—86; Stev. A*!^®
ed 370, rep”"S
’“' SM*^™^
8' 19,G6' MEN: Ed Nakamura' 36—80; ’Kawaguchi's * 36—91; fcS^
n 'w?e?J9e, Takahashi 538; Min Nishi 30—80; Karaki's 30—78; First 1:^
* ’23—74.
: 1,^1
_ Viewing the tournament were no 538; Monk Tanaka 525; Teis Seki 500. play-off
in the first hal.
• ^t
^L^IEr Rn ?d,a 482; FudSte Tana
over 400 spectators.
,
* — Teams already qualified -M
ka 466; Kay Onizuka 458; Terrie Wata"A” CLASS: Jim Akune 1(J«
428; J.ye Tamamura 420; Maki
■Among the honored guests
376)’; Greg Nishi 921 (378);WS
Nishimura 404.
gawa 881 (304); Jim - Nishinisi®
Professor
proprietor
Bill. Miyama 822; Bill HaragaJW £j?
Mr' Sahara, 5th-dan
TFa^w^a SANGHA MIXED TEN PIN Mas Kitagawa 784; Nobby Fujisor-^s
and Mr. Umetsu, 5th-dan.
LhAGUE, Sunday, Feb. 27, 1966. MEN: (300); Sam Tanaka 761 Harry i^b
'Participating clubs were: Ren
(201); Tosh Hori 554; Sam 756 (318); Frank Nozaki 756 (31ft“X
Mayede 754;.
.Ui?
Ckv
rnn
70
Nia S’
Ont-; Manson,’ oniozaki 502. '™0 Nishikawa 511;’: Ike don
■ LADIES Geri Fujisawa 735; h«
Niagara
Falls;
East
York,
Tor
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805
LADIES: Mary Lou Yoshikuni 468; Kawagoye 716; Marie Fujisava&S
onto; London YMCA and YWCA- ean rurukawa 464; Donna Baba 417- Nozaki 694; • Mary Shinde ™@
Murata 682 (322); Satomi fc;^
Office—783-4261
(Bostnew)
, (Residence)
_ a m a, Hamilton; Willowdale’, uT1® ^ano 409; Jan© Goto 407; 676
(316).
Helen Nishimoto 401.
B?n°nt0^ Seiseikan, Burlington;
"B"' CLASS: Gordon
c„u
Unday
V^
ar
5
h
S
1966.MEN:
Larry
Res.—BE. 1-0863
Fagan, Toronto; Sakauye 542; Ike. Shiozaki 536 (202); Pat Seki 736; Tosh Nakamoto
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
N Y UY?CA’ Niagara Falls, noy Fujii 518.
a
" Ikeda 706; Yogi Ohara 652 . gyc
LADIES: Jean Yamaoka 710; kV:;£
Those In Toll Area
d <JElduk?van’ Toronto; Wei- rntADw : ^HeI(tn ..Nishimoto 450; Jane rose
695 (322); Frances HamaW«KlJ
Sir dte “'??rt Dover; Mc. S 497 vKayTFuil!l? 427' JeanFu^kd- Josie Inouye 624; Jean
Toronto
Call—RO 6-3840
"C” CLASS: Aki Hama 7I5i<^
KnJJ;v-ZL°DuYoshikuni 412' Ginny
wn?
Ujuversity,
Hamilton; Syashi
400 ; Reta °ya^a 410i Sue da 698; Mickey Terada 708; Dos«
Wilson Heights, Torontode 653; Masao Tanaka 638;:
S> Y^: h”*Mt;
.
-Nishi 636; Yuji Asai 625; Taki «
FEB. 27, 1966, Sundav Nisei Mixed B20; Harry Iwakami 602;.^shMJ
• Leaf>
Bowmanville; St
^y Shiga 481; Km OnizuF^«*tion with head- year. Write to Judo News Pub- L
lishinp" Cn PH Rnv
co. ■ •
I
Terrie Watanabe 470; Barbara
Population in Japan is m
iisnmg Go.,
Box 57, Station Nikaido 456; Rose’ Akiyama 443- 'Helen
• 19, Ont.
I Nishimoto 437.
I T., Toronto
LA
- Kelowna Girl 2nd In B.C. Badminton
RITZ KINOSHITA
370 Jr. Judokas In Rendokan's Tourney
ou/erd
Mickey S. Sato
JON ONODERA
Insurance
Buy & Sell
Your Home
Through
MITS KURODA
Catharines; Camp Borden; Lake ?J67gTe?y Fujioka 781; Bob Nishimw Tamura 685
#
S
shore YMCA, Toronto; Bramp kuJ™
733;;. Derrick TeraSCARBORO NISEI MRED ®
ton; Oshawa.
p Iwata 721; Emi^joml’^’1 (308j. ^ March
March 4
4, 1966.
1966. MEN: J^j
GoriW;
S of each division were -T.S»6.vllXd^
SS i® $ S*^
as follows: 8 year and under: 1st Fu£Sl&, &i.^
66h' Amy ry Hayashi 558; Tom Sum^
rinivo
Fagan Judo I Komatsu -602- Tulips
Ohio, 2nd — Kevin Doherty
B
1 ,Sh Ppard 600’ ■
kimoto 528; Chuck Shimizu 5M
T1?011 w^lghts;
WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE LIMITED
1444 Danforth Avenue
__
_
____ BUS: HO. 9-1151 - RES: AM Si
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
FLAT ROOFS
RA VESTROUGHING
TORONTO
TOSH NISHIJIMA
SHINGLING
421 "3374 NISEI OWNED
COVERING ONTARIO”
***** C^. PL. 9-5095 HI. 7-1100
3rd ~ Joey
zuMinO7 fU^n1^^641 Koide Shimi- jHolley 523; Ben Mori .620
784- IcL wlv 3®°u-3l?M Sat Yonemitsu I LADIES: Iso Amemon 48L^
Toule, Willowdale.
■ ■ r79RNakanishi 737; Harry Inouye, ikayama 455; Betty Hatanaka ^
Mas Kajima-703; 'Yamadura'438; Aggie Monroe.-*
9 .^J 10 year: 1st Frank Ta Adan^H^^^
^vW?Iand; 2nd ~ StlX
LADTF*
t ^Z;vTerry Fujioka 702.
(Mori 421.
.J
kafem^'ARj^1 i Yonemitsu 662;
Lily
March 11. 1966. MEN: lom ^
Sharek, Ippon; 3rd — Edward TerakHa
£da 654; ' G^ger (Roy-. Kobayashi 611; Art Tam M
Varga, Maple Leaf.
FuSa 6rw Barbara Shimizu 638; Marg -Kataoka 579; Fred Holley^
9 -Matsumoto - 578; Ed Nobufo^
ri J1 ? 12 years= 1st — R, Mor Fiyimoto -607. ,
R^lrl6*1 Kaide Shimizu 825 (304)- Mkmemori:'560;
___ Harry ™r <aiA
ns, Manson; 2nd — Anthonv ’ye 77f±U^ 819<<33£); Harry S
553; Gene Shinya^
Fora, Hamilton Kodokan; 3rd __
721 ^[Yonemitsu 763; Roger Kimo- iM.ori ooo;
^ Min Nishino
79q74p ?°bT Suzuki 732; Mas Isoshima Fjzu . 532; Mits Kuroda 524; «i
Jim Brown, Willowdale.
729; <Ernie. Jomori 711.
^psnima .'ro-e-52i_j
„ 13 4^ A4 years: 1st — Alex -LADIES: Mitsi Burr«l
n
■ LADIES: -Gloria Wabda ® Coelbe
I mamura 500; Gw
en ^^u^1'
Qwen
Sgi
^P1® Leaf; 2nd — gawa681; Lily Katsumi^!
'
5
sumi 621; Joy Chow -Eleanor Ogaki 451; Aggie no—
R.0^Furman, Ippon; 3rd — Den 605.
.Ccrthy Sunohara 430.
I
nis Ebata, Kidokwan.
I
15 and 16 years: 1st — Bill
M!"M!VWi,son H«shts; 2nd SAY IT WITH
- Bm5^’ WUcwdalc;. 3rd
FLowns
JAMES KAMINO
LiU Slomp, Ippon.
new^A^® permission, the
SHARON'S FIOKST
son Mitchell? Mr"kI^
I
Judo
°f 7£he ^^kan
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
fXKWan (Japan) Self Deby Mr. Har?v Et5,?”±^
“StS ^ host at I
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY ’
Bns: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
^J^*? W TORONTO
T.V. Service
EM. 4-9913
(TORONTO)
IHartial Art Review Riekes Debut S
pa«ES »S
*™ on the
paper devoted entirely to the Japanese martial
arts of judo, karate, aikido, and kendo — made
its debut here last week. This 4-page review is
run by managing editor, Liz Pearce.
Martial Arts Review is, and shall remain, im
partial toward all administrative organizations,”
fi
martial arts and their conduct from all practi
tioners and fans.
If individuals or groups feel that things are
not what they should be in any of the arts, they
TORONTO
NISEI___
TEN
PIN SUNDAY
can
use
our adds
paper as a forum to ^CUSS.
discus th.en
thoh- BOEING
■
“ LEAGUE.-MEN:
____
_____
views
” «he
'Terry Dd’ iS. S r?i»|
’ .ne aaas.
5So; . George r7CdbxnBes ■576^ (221-)?:-^
376; Brian ^Gately 554; “YukiVMd- Ji -^ ^iM
This • month’s issue shows the .Wright
LQta 538; Ken Izumi - 520; Harry ' Kado pairs 37—81; Sudn T& ri^S
great Isao Inokuma performing homa-513,-'Rod. 'Tsujimota^^
Golden Horseshoe 32~7r 9
Censt. Co. 31—55. ^
his seoi-nage. These four photos Sm sSos“ro? d??^
2B-S1.- Philco S'&°*=,»|
mecc^S^nd^n66? 50 K a^.600 persons train daily at judo’s were taken by Canadian judoka, ^^ ^
?? rtos,' ^'Lw-SM
Vern Fagan while he was train- o^*^
g S 78, Kami Insurance 18—So 4
j > Kodokan, for physical and moral well being
Tr^? Service 16—69 '^
shouM thpVh^nb^7!^
Proficient to defend themselves mg in Japan last year. Fae-an £?P?° -^\Tsrr^
^ey oe physically attacked.
86; Kawaguchi'S * MTil^rfl
nt * 34~^S; Steyns®
tob^W^T
Geesink of Holland trained from time who runs his own judo club in Joan Hamade 420; Jean’ Yoshida 411- E
^6ria ^^ 407; 2L7? /■ \ Ttro^s 2M".-j ®
before he stunned Japan’s judo world by defeating two Toronto, is listed as the editor PpTlad^
pio’S J'S’8 60 ™ the "-orld title in the 1961 world cham- of this paper.
‘ ■ ^
...
T.p. kfs 1M6 InVeSt0rs * !'4g
Some 500-600 Judoka Train
BOWLINC
SCORES
At Kodokan
~ T?ams aiready qualifetJiSi
the S”to® pS0" "" °n han" ^‘^ at the Kodokan t0 toaoh
!'H
Also included
included in this month S March
TORONTO SUNDAY'FAMILY LEAGUE, Play-off m the first hak
. 13, 1966, MEN: ’Herb- Miydsaki
are reports of the Pacific £39 L223' ,215)f M Sogawa- 566 (229);- , EPr tke, iir.st time since
was^uiH^lflSR^^
“ imP°sing seven story structure, issue
Norhliwpsl
t
n
Sonoda 520; Joe Akiyama 508; Tado League has been 'bwj
1-NOimv.est Kendo Tourney, the Tanaka 507; Frank Nikaido 507; Mils Vancouver,
t
in iyo«. it is a far cry from the old hniidinv nearby
it is with’ grX
which was constructed in 1934.
building
Vancouver Judo Club a repor*- Endo' 505; Yuki Kamedkg 5.03. ' " " i sure that our League could
The “dojo” or place of training in the Kodokan is lam
from a Canadian judoka in Ko-' ^SS S fe’l.S.^ of a perfect "450" mage
by one of our Nisei bowhto accomodate 500 persons at one time
g enough
dokan, and a Canadian judoka’s onlzukK^^ 453"^
°ur. weekly League game la.
J?’Tr'rd Frankie Nozaki i:
for foreigners awhontw»fti0tnaIi
wlSeh te special classes
impression of Tokyo . (N.C. Xmas
March 6, 1966, MEN: Min Nishino 561xr Commodore Lanes' or
foreigneTtaclutog^
JUd°- Fnise^
are 60 issue).
Sonoda 553; Yuki Kameoka' 5’42- .Mite Nozaki, and is still a t
Aki Sogawa 528; Terry Shiga 528; Jer- *^ern4. Currently, Frankie «
a 245 average this season V-i
Subscription rates are $3.00 J 3^ ^ ^’“’^^^
l®6^11 be Panting’fc£
$50.00 cheque and he will
quarters Pa°t ™K»dl?\ ^ ^°
some remuneration from ft"S
about 4,000,000 K°d°kan Said the Judo
Proprietor's Ass'n.
‘ §
oj7iA" TC^: Bob Yamaoka SF
------------’--------- - ~
—Asahi
31/); Jack Yamamoto 918 f ‘
Fiank Nozaki 816 (450);
Martial Arts
?^a £17 (326); Butch W
mixed MAJOR 10Builds Characters
(346); Greg Nishi 807 (301); M
.
4th' ^N’ Ken-Izui 633 •804; Mas Kitagawa 799; Fred Id
| I (233); Stan Coulighan '632. (276)'; Sam Jim Nishimura 788 ( 331); Jin
I
Taniwa of Kelowna was the big suJ ST^ "."^
771 (303); Nobby. Fujisawa Bi „
Bill Haraga 766 (307); Sam
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
Kh'rCent™.; ^
WOn ™eMP Position in Slu“S ®: fe^llS
LADIES: Joyce Murata Ma-r
de 679.
T
the
Central
British
Columba#
Badmington
Championships
recently
552
(204);
Clare
Ward
55
°Consult
“B" CLASS: Tosh Nakamoto
Lm a^n B™ *
^ defea*ed J. Rokosh of &ta»n mSSJV^ Miyas«k, 491, nhoda. Nishimura 682; Yutaka Ham
LADIES- Rae Nakamoto 749; J:
‘Yd
Burns of Kamloops- In the finals she won the first LoKH. "?' MEN: S^ Miike .621: Oura
674; Kim Kitagawa 629.
**C*' CLASS: Mickey Terada I
I game U-7 but dropped the last two 11-5 and 113 to Marlene Davies. (232h Mike Sakura 603 (228); Ken Ker-'
tai 595 (213); Joe Tsujimoto 584 (224);2 Bando 641; Kiyoshi Nishi 609.
Joe Doi 563; Don Martin 561 (221); Ter-’
For All Classes of
ry Hamade 551 (209).
VAN. NISEI 5-PIN BOWLINGS®
LADIES Alma Wilson 515 (204); Bet-: League, as of March 6th. "A"^
INSURANCE
Off: Tad's Sporting Goods SIHiiLy
ty Potts 482.
- Koby's Auto Repairs 49—93;:>r£i
.
.
LE. Diner * 42—115; Fraserview fcfn
By LG^ALD c. JAMES
Phone: PL. 9.2632
.40—74; Golden Horseshoe M®
_
EAST
END
NISEI
RECREATIONAL
TEN:
HAMILTON.—On Saturday, March 5
OR
Lanes 35—88; Sudd Tn J .5
Community Centre, the Second Annmi
t
• €T the Jewish PIN BOWLING LEAGUE, March 1, 1966, modore
34^
—
93
Sun Lifers'
ment took place and the results were an nvf7SK J?™01' Judo Touma- ^N:uHarry Hayashi 559; Yo Kitagawa 921/2; PhilcoNobby's
PL. 5-7317
Dist.
Co.
iB-^-b,^
Demonstrating tKe eiXsiasiTv^
SUCCess,
ro Kawaguchi 529; Monk Tana TV * 24—82; Kami Insurance B-^
ka 524; Aki Abe 505; Ed Nakamura 501. Iwata
Travel Service 20—73. pf
tADIES: .Maki Nishimura; 457; Terrie - "B" DIVISION: Broadway. RarT^
Watanabe 421; Kim Oda:416; Fudge' 93;Aki's Restaurant * 41-iii;iH
Tanaka' 402.
•
Trophiees
38—86; Stev. A*!^®
ed 370, rep”"S
’“' SM*^™^
8' 19,G6' MEN: Ed Nakamura' 36—80; ’Kawaguchi's * 36—91; fcS^
n 'w?e?J9e, Takahashi 538; Min Nishi 30—80; Karaki's 30—78; First 1:^
* ’23—74.
: 1,^1
_ Viewing the tournament were no 538; Monk Tanaka 525; Teis Seki 500. play-off
in the first hal.
• ^t
^L^IEr Rn ?d,a 482; FudSte Tana
over 400 spectators.
,
* — Teams already qualified -M
ka 466; Kay Onizuka 458; Terrie Wata"A” CLASS: Jim Akune 1(J«
428; J.ye Tamamura 420; Maki
■Among the honored guests
376)’; Greg Nishi 921 (378);WS
Nishimura 404.
gawa 881 (304); Jim - Nishinisi®
Professor
proprietor
Bill. Miyama 822; Bill HaragaJW £j?
Mr' Sahara, 5th-dan
TFa^w^a SANGHA MIXED TEN PIN Mas Kitagawa 784; Nobby Fujisor-^s
and Mr. Umetsu, 5th-dan.
LhAGUE, Sunday, Feb. 27, 1966. MEN: (300); Sam Tanaka 761 Harry i^b
'Participating clubs were: Ren
(201); Tosh Hori 554; Sam 756 (318); Frank Nozaki 756 (31ft“X
Mayede 754;.
.Ui?
Ckv
rnn
70
Nia S’
Ont-; Manson,’ oniozaki 502. '™0 Nishikawa 511;’: Ike don
■ LADIES Geri Fujisawa 735; h«
Niagara
Falls;
East
York,
Tor
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805
LADIES: Mary Lou Yoshikuni 468; Kawagoye 716; Marie Fujisava&S
onto; London YMCA and YWCA- ean rurukawa 464; Donna Baba 417- Nozaki 694; • Mary Shinde ™@
Murata 682 (322); Satomi fc;^
Office—783-4261
(Bostnew)
, (Residence)
_ a m a, Hamilton; Willowdale’, uT1® ^ano 409; Jan© Goto 407; 676
(316).
Helen Nishimoto 401.
B?n°nt0^ Seiseikan, Burlington;
"B"' CLASS: Gordon
c„u
Unday
V^
ar
5
h
S
1966.MEN:
Larry
Res.—BE. 1-0863
Fagan, Toronto; Sakauye 542; Ike. Shiozaki 536 (202); Pat Seki 736; Tosh Nakamoto
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
N Y UY?CA’ Niagara Falls, noy Fujii 518.
a
" Ikeda 706; Yogi Ohara 652 . gyc
LADIES: Jean Yamaoka 710; kV:;£
Those In Toll Area
d <JElduk?van’ Toronto; Wei- rntADw : ^HeI(tn ..Nishimoto 450; Jane rose
695 (322); Frances HamaW«KlJ
Sir dte “'??rt Dover; Mc. S 497 vKayTFuil!l? 427' JeanFu^kd- Josie Inouye 624; Jean
Toronto
Call—RO 6-3840
"C” CLASS: Aki Hama 7I5i<^
KnJJ;v-ZL°DuYoshikuni 412' Ginny
wn?
Ujuversity,
Hamilton; Syashi
400 ; Reta °ya^a 410i Sue da 698; Mickey Terada 708; Dos«
Wilson Heights, Torontode 653; Masao Tanaka 638;:
S> Y^: h”*Mt;
.
-Nishi 636; Yuji Asai 625; Taki «
FEB. 27, 1966, Sundav Nisei Mixed B20; Harry Iwakami 602;.^shMJ
• Leaf>
Bowmanville; St
^y Shiga 481; Km OnizuF^«*tion with head- year. Write to Judo News Pub- L
lishinp" Cn PH Rnv
co. ■ •
I
Terrie Watanabe 470; Barbara
Population in Japan is m
iisnmg Go.,
Box 57, Station Nikaido 456; Rose’ Akiyama 443- 'Helen
• 19, Ont.
I Nishimoto 437.
I T., Toronto
LA
- Kelowna Girl 2nd In B.C. Badminton
RITZ KINOSHITA
370 Jr. Judokas In Rendokan's Tourney
ou/erd
Mickey S. Sato
JON ONODERA
Insurance
Buy & Sell
Your Home
Through
MITS KURODA
Catharines; Camp Borden; Lake ?J67gTe?y Fujioka 781; Bob Nishimw Tamura 685
#
S
shore YMCA, Toronto; Bramp kuJ™
733;;. Derrick TeraSCARBORO NISEI MRED ®
ton; Oshawa.
p Iwata 721; Emi^joml’^’1 (308j. ^ March
March 4
4, 1966.
1966. MEN: J^j
GoriW;
S of each division were -T.S»6.vllXd^
SS i® $ S*^
as follows: 8 year and under: 1st Fu£Sl&, &i.^
66h' Amy ry Hayashi 558; Tom Sum^
rinivo
Fagan Judo I Komatsu -602- Tulips
Ohio, 2nd — Kevin Doherty
B
1 ,Sh Ppard 600’ ■
kimoto 528; Chuck Shimizu 5M
T1?011 w^lghts;
WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE LIMITED
1444 Danforth Avenue
__
_
____ BUS: HO. 9-1151 - RES: AM Si
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
FLAT ROOFS
RA VESTROUGHING
TORONTO
TOSH NISHIJIMA
SHINGLING
421 "3374 NISEI OWNED
COVERING ONTARIO”
***** C^. PL. 9-5095 HI. 7-1100
3rd ~ Joey
zuMinO7 fU^n1^^641 Koide Shimi- jHolley 523; Ben Mori .620
784- IcL wlv 3®°u-3l?M Sat Yonemitsu I LADIES: Iso Amemon 48L^
Toule, Willowdale.
■ ■ r79RNakanishi 737; Harry Inouye, ikayama 455; Betty Hatanaka ^
Mas Kajima-703; 'Yamadura'438; Aggie Monroe.-*
9 .^J 10 year: 1st Frank Ta Adan^H^^^
^vW?Iand; 2nd ~ StlX
LADTF*
t ^Z;vTerry Fujioka 702.
(Mori 421.
.J
kafem^'ARj^1 i Yonemitsu 662;
Lily
March 11. 1966. MEN: lom ^
Sharek, Ippon; 3rd — Edward TerakHa
£da 654; ' G^ger (Roy-. Kobayashi 611; Art Tam M
Varga, Maple Leaf.
FuSa 6rw Barbara Shimizu 638; Marg -Kataoka 579; Fred Holley^
9 -Matsumoto - 578; Ed Nobufo^
ri J1 ? 12 years= 1st — R, Mor Fiyimoto -607. ,
R^lrl6*1 Kaide Shimizu 825 (304)- Mkmemori:'560;
___ Harry ™r <aiA
ns, Manson; 2nd — Anthonv ’ye 77f±U^ 819<<33£); Harry S
553; Gene Shinya^
Fora, Hamilton Kodokan; 3rd __
721 ^[Yonemitsu 763; Roger Kimo- iM.ori ooo;
^ Min Nishino
79q74p ?°bT Suzuki 732; Mas Isoshima Fjzu . 532; Mits Kuroda 524; «i
Jim Brown, Willowdale.
729; <Ernie. Jomori 711.
^psnima .'ro-e-52i_j
„ 13 4^ A4 years: 1st — Alex -LADIES: Mitsi Burr«l
n
■ LADIES: -Gloria Wabda ® Coelbe
I mamura 500; Gw
en ^^u^1'
Qwen
Sgi
^P1® Leaf; 2nd — gawa681; Lily Katsumi^!
'
5
sumi 621; Joy Chow -Eleanor Ogaki 451; Aggie no—
R.0^Furman, Ippon; 3rd — Den 605.
.Ccrthy Sunohara 430.
I
nis Ebata, Kidokwan.
I
15 and 16 years: 1st — Bill
M!"M!VWi,son H«shts; 2nd SAY IT WITH
- Bm5^’ WUcwdalc;. 3rd
FLowns
JAMES KAMINO
LiU Slomp, Ippon.
new^A^® permission, the
SHARON'S FIOKST
son Mitchell? Mr"kI^
I
Judo
°f 7£he ^^kan
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
fXKWan (Japan) Self Deby Mr. Har?v Et5,?”±^
“StS ^ host at I
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY ’
Bns: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
^J^*? W TORONTO
T.V. Service
EM. 4-9913
(TORONTO)
Page 3
M arch... 19 , _1 9.6.6
*
it
2
£>
It
it
It
IX
Page 3
a
^j
& it
c
It
9
*'
b
3
0
£
it
7
3
X
6
3
5
uF & tf
IX £
I'
©
^
d»
IX .$
W o
&
51
£
5
(X b
■: "A"
JM
Mby^
siilsS
-75; t
Ms
M
WI?.
ip
u
rt^
3
IX
£
^1
;9; Air
•Uto-Jk
M;^
In]
7
«
IX
&
lx
3
died k
.IM
Koichi
liinura
a 877,
ujiset:
[iry I
(3141;
15; I
na S
689; ’
■Han
IX
IX
d>
o
L A T b G.
t K it & ^
5
5
£
c
(X
T0
An'
4ft
.4$
b 3
i)^ ^
ti u ^J
n
OMSIP
52
56;
ffd
?
ip c-
£ 1^#
b
ip
It
bMiSt. < ^%/t^W^9tiO^i%!)t U 5 o cntit:
^ ©rto
x^r^^fe©/^^
^tOThfeK!
3 It
Ri
fc B
0
♦x
it'&'foE&'&x
it
it .
^^tij^t^i^^j, ftiKffiii'iV't^^tis UliWf
pT-fe^t ^^iCili-t®^H^o ^4H>AtX$OW^T^4<
Ua * A-C^/j 5 i £>&A ©MW^ AOfWi OMSIP ^ a)5>t < it* fo
IW©tV»fAT©^|j|]AtS2ti!tHto «X0»XO'flAi:&
ww^tsm^o^
It
It
ip
v>
f I Zt ,
w -^ 1 5? n li’ f> ^
ho r x. Hl < *■ /b zt
i' i t ' T 2 & 9 X
' « • E • -t i AIL '
B L i' :
5 L 3 i
« _h 5 *>'
K fc ^ 3
- ^^OttBli^ft^toB^iOt-K^^^^lito
^t5D5it©U--x^nBi>Mto
BtKi 5f@«<t^5i>r!) ^©Sffli>XAA'lBl»i:iiiM^ Dt^Ao
A£L ^4)j'»i©t--e^^gBj^9#s!iit:®RtTto
OMSIPHt7 7 $ 9 _. f^ ^r - Rtf «>4 A0 W^-tTfe ^ Mot- Kx#
^(inr^Mto
£^ttAt4#jigSK^gSt52t^tHto
Sun
55s
ii
3 *
» SB SEE M t
72 £* W z. o j> &
* & o i -c • li
I; Ms?
ikaw
liEOJ:
Mod
Si
585;
55; J
;P
524;
IX
effSiSSt^ :
^❖tT?0
a S
3;
N
rNi
725;;
it
5
linia
;GS
Don
IX
ix
5
note 73
toHss
749; C
625.
ada ft-’
500. .
60-$
-«J
v Cast
40-84;
da I ’
fers'
41-.
ce
3. .
'Floris
-115;:
Atle
31;
tz
ip
/^i #-
aoka §
18 (311,
Kois
laaafe
11); E
■red Its
; Jin '
va 751
n Tani
Marf.
LING
"A"
h
V' (X
D
RI
d>
•the VE
S-ilreales! d
>uld Mx
* being
bowlers
e Iasi’S?
ahi is.
!S‘ owe
a Hi
he is'
on. Ve
ig his;
ill also
the
ip
^
3 ^
1Ua® i^^
5
^^®
AAA^-t^ —H^C, M3*t£ OMSIP JCIiS^-BtfMAtT^^
4^#^X^$OSli*m^f^o#ffii^tU»l)Mt0
3
W €
tb
/L 72 ^ 7e
(X V' w L
' A,$<O
t x-1 «
4X -^ 'I •
^ ^ ft
Z3
Bfc© V 1
* far t
^ <h ^ 1
L^ • ©
• ir & &
3 •
^ t y> ^
V* + Jt Zb
1!® »> f
71 IX *- ©
«
A t t
If zb • ^ j&J
t # ^ ^ L
3 Jb5 ^ ^ V*
° ® » t ^
3 7x © “C
L S IX L
X I' I' I
SO * tc 5
V
± to
ft
bill
ywsiP/
ONTARIO MEDICAL SERVICE INSURANCE PLAN
g
TS
1 tt
®
3
> iw v> 1 T t>
CH
*
it
2
£>
It
it
It
IX
Page 3
a
^j
& it
c
It
9
*'
b
3
0
£
it
7
3
X
6
3
5
uF & tf
IX £
I'
©
^
d»
IX .$
W o
&
51
£
5
(X b
■: "A"
JM
Mby^
siilsS
-75; t
Ms
M
WI?.
ip
u
rt^
3
IX
£
^1
;9; Air
•Uto-Jk
M;^
In]
7
«
IX
&
lx
3
died k
.IM
Koichi
liinura
a 877,
ujiset:
[iry I
(3141;
15; I
na S
689; ’
■Han
IX
IX
d>
o
L A T b G.
t K it & ^
5
5
£
c
(X
T0
An'
4ft
.4$
b 3
i)^ ^
ti u ^J
n
OMSIP
52
56;
ffd
?
ip c-
£ 1^#
b
ip
It
bMiSt. < ^%/t^W^9tiO^i%!)t U 5 o cntit:
^ ©rto
x^r^^fe©/^^
^tOThfeK!
3 It
Ri
fc B
0
♦x
it'&'foE&'&x
it
it .
^^tij^t^i^^j, ftiKffiii'iV't^^tis UliWf
pT-fe^t ^^iCili-t®^H^o ^4H>AtX$OW^T^4<
Ua * A-C^/j 5 i £>&A ©MW^ AOfWi OMSIP ^ a)5>t < it* fo
IW©tV»fAT©^|j|]AtS2ti!tHto «X0»XO'flAi:&
ww^tsm^o^
It
It
ip
v>
f I Zt ,
w -^ 1 5? n li’ f> ^
ho r x. Hl < *■ /b zt
i' i t ' T 2 & 9 X
' « • E • -t i AIL '
B L i' :
5 L 3 i
« _h 5 *>'
K fc ^ 3
- ^^OttBli^ft^toB^iOt-K^^^^lito
^t5D5it©U--x^nBi>Mto
BtKi 5f@«<t^5i>r!) ^©Sffli>XAA'lBl»i:iiiM^ Dt^Ao
A£L ^4)j'»i©t--e^^gBj^9#s!iit:®RtTto
OMSIPHt7 7 $ 9 _. f^ ^r - Rtf «>4 A0 W^-tTfe ^ Mot- Kx#
^(inr^Mto
£^ttAt4#jigSK^gSt52t^tHto
Sun
55s
ii
3 *
» SB SEE M t
72 £* W z. o j> &
* & o i -c • li
I; Ms?
ikaw
liEOJ:
Mod
Si
585;
55; J
;P
524;
IX
effSiSSt^ :
^❖tT?0
a S
3;
N
rNi
725;;
it
5
linia
;GS
Don
IX
ix
5
note 73
toHss
749; C
625.
ada ft-’
500. .
60-$
-«J
v Cast
40-84;
da I ’
fers'
41-.
ce
3. .
'Floris
-115;:
Atle
31;
tz
ip
/^i #-
aoka §
18 (311,
Kois
laaafe
11); E
■red Its
; Jin '
va 751
n Tani
Marf.
LING
"A"
h
V' (X
D
RI
d>
•the VE
S-ilreales! d
>uld Mx
* being
bowlers
e Iasi’S?
ahi is.
!S‘ owe
a Hi
he is'
on. Ve
ig his;
ill also
the
ip
^
3 ^
1Ua® i^^
5
^^®
AAA^-t^ —H^C, M3*t£ OMSIP JCIiS^-BtfMAtT^^
4^#^X^$OSli*m^f^o#ffii^tU»l)Mt0
3
W €
tb
/L 72 ^ 7e
(X V' w L
' A,$<O
t x-1 «
4X -^ 'I •
^ ^ ft
Z3
Bfc© V 1
* far t
^ <h ^ 1
L^ • ©
• ir & &
3 •
^ t y> ^
V* + Jt Zb
1!® »> f
71 IX *- ©
«
A t t
If zb • ^ j&J
t # ^ ^ L
3 Jb5 ^ ^ V*
° ® » t ^
3 7x © “C
L S IX L
X I' I' I
SO * tc 5
V
± to
ft
bill
ywsiP/
ONTARIO MEDICAL SERVICE INSURANCE PLAN
g
TS
1 tt
®
3
> iw v> 1 T t>
CH
Page 4
Page.,4
7
s
IC
6,’
IC
it-
<9 IC IX±
so
so
^
7>‘
3
Z
£
jj^
IC
e
T
7^
b
ft
4
7^
Jr
■ A'
>-
0
CD
&
IC
0 IX
*
^-
3
Z 0
6
3 ^
3B
IX .O
ri
KT
Of
'
6 {III
M
ft
L-J
SO
ft
IC
X
3
i IC
0
B*
5
Us
4)
3
y
•7
ic IB!
(7)
7c
i
X.
IX’
15
B io
l1^
0
IX
t ft
jj
3
(X
0
Jr*
a
£
IX fg $
ft t
IX
7/
IX
T-
4?’
FJH.
6
& IC
V' IC
IX
3'
IX
IX V1 6
$
i
I*
6 $
a n
IX
X
#>
0
6
5
to
O
li
5
rB
d*
3
cd < >
5
fe s$
3'
i'
3
CD
sm
EH
41
o©
fi#
^9
ic
3
w
I n
0
tei
te
IX
Jo
.0 £
‘ 3 J. IC
3?
RS IX
ic
IC
0
d» ic © ic
^
IX
7E
5
IC
vs
3
fa
5
3
fl*
£ *1
KO
□
® ©111
IS]'4
3 H
M
(X
^ eg M $ =
3 ;^> t
/JU ---- —
I'
3
5
.3
n
^E
H W
IX
5 3 it is
IX
n
lx
3 1
UTT M E
aS X
#
V'
ft
©
£>
^m
7^
-
ft
A MM ?' 0 O 4* ^ /i
S® 1 ^
1f
^3g
'
?$
r
7 7kl
i^ip!1
HA^1
^B^^
0 £ 3
^^ Z IX
&
; b
VMfc X
ic
Mil ix' x
5 nth
IX £
O -hBI |H >& 3:
>
s
8
55
B> ^
5
b
-fr zk &
b
t® #
a
ii as i
IS
SJZ
Of 2
p* 7
nn
B
3 1^^
£
1
'C
IK
<£
uC’
7
s
IC
6,’
IC
it-
<9 IC IX±
so
so
^
7>‘
3
Z
£
jj^
IC
e
T
7^
b
ft
4
7^
Jr
■ A'
>-
0
CD
&
IC
0 IX
*
^-
3
Z 0
6
3 ^
3B
IX .O
ri
KT
Of
'
6 {III
M
ft
L-J
SO
ft
IC
X
3
i IC
0
B*
5
Us
4)
3
y
•7
ic IB!
(7)
7c
i
X.
IX’
15
B io
l1^
0
IX
t ft
jj
3
(X
0
Jr*
a
£
IX fg $
ft t
IX
7/
IX
T-
4?’
FJH.
6
& IC
V' IC
IX
3'
IX
IX V1 6
$
i
I*
6 $
a n
IX
X
#>
0
6
5
to
O
li
5
rB
d*
3
cd < >
5
fe s$
3'
i'
3
CD
sm
EH
41
o©
fi#
^9
ic
3
w
I n
0
tei
te
IX
Jo
.0 £
‘ 3 J. IC
3?
RS IX
ic
IC
0
d» ic © ic
^
IX
7E
5
IC
vs
3
fa
5
3
fl*
£ *1
KO
□
® ©111
IS]'4
3 H
M
(X
^ eg M $ =
3 ;^> t
/JU ---- —
I'
3
5
.3
n
^E
H W
IX
5 3 it is
IX
n
lx
3 1
UTT M E
aS X
#
V'
ft
©
£>
^m
7^
-
ft
A MM ?' 0 O 4* ^ /i
S® 1 ^
1f
^3g
'
?$
r
7 7kl
i^ip!1
HA^1
^B^^
0 £ 3
^^ Z IX
&
; b
VMfc X
ic
Mil ix' x
5 nth
IX £
O -hBI |H >& 3:
>
s
8
55
B> ^
5
b
-fr zk &
b
t® #
a
ii as i
IS
SJZ
Of 2
p* 7
nn
B
3 1^^
£
1
'C
IK
<£
uC’
Page 5
sturday,
MarchJJ^-lSGS
It
CD
PAGE 5
t
V'
n
o
f)
#
z
n
Ft
(ck
L'
£1]
®
Z
Zp
k’
■5
9
JJ It
b
n
it
V'
O
A
t
T
11
V'
Iff
CD
IX
T
d»
1
ft t,
° CD
5
T
V'
T
5
Ft
5
Zp
&
O
r
IX
IX
I)
Ft
t
In
L
o
L
1*
c
it
®
a
Ze i‘
IX
T
0)
fl
It
[pI
0
"c
d5
—w-
r
3
IX
11
4
jbH
Ze
Fl
n
T
V* CD
IIO
(X
O
in
ra
7
ft
«
t
6
ft
®
£
It
Iff
IX
IX
c
i
Ze
JU"
ft
tz
It
w
ix
a
X
%
Ze
H
It
cd
It
'
l>
ZP
Ft ^
a
6
It
3
&
Zp
IX
c■
n
it
(X
CD
Jie
tX
n
it
1
CD
IX
9
n
ft
it
Cj
It
g'J
Zp
It
Z»
z 3U CD
5
O
CD
0
CD
Zp
it
i>
i
5
h
i’
5
Ze
X
5
p.
x
5
ft
6
Zp*
6
11
It
i
li
Z
£
i:
11
5
(X
9
IX"
5
0
#»J
n
Zp
r 3
° o
&
$
5
3
CD
It It
'fnT
(-
2.
It
ft'S
?IJ
It. CD
3
^.
E
$
CD
f£
V'
B>J
FC
J®
it
0
IX
IX
6 .
CD
ft
co
C'
IX CD
a
It
IX
Zp
Zp i
IX
fnj
V'
li
□
5
^
Ft
5
CD
S3
S< ?i^a bj±
IXif V
Kk fn] ctctcwtdcS
® <R
tJ
^ fW
b i'
JU
IX
3
22 i
f
^
w
& U
K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
W. K. GARDENS
Authorized Agent for AU Airline#
AUTHORIZED: AGENT for
LINES, AMERICAN PRESIDENT LINES
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
It
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquet#
Private Dining Rooms
PsndO
to
g
ft
a
#
c
O to
S O>
tM>
ss
o S
3 J?
ci tn
3
It
©
o'
o
3
to rn
CD
CO
M^-c^l
^^^'lif rH#
i ©
^
a a
$
It
co 55
°S®g
gttl»
tX « '
O^
5
oo
1550 Wept Georgi* St
. Vancouver, B.C.
KI
P
CD
SO
M tn
®
Crown Life insurance Co
Frank G. Yada
S3 £
^^jStb^ft
T®
^Olig
MarchJJ^-lSGS
It
CD
PAGE 5
t
V'
n
o
f)
#
z
n
Ft
(ck
L'
£1]
®
Z
Zp
k’
■5
9
JJ It
b
n
it
V'
O
A
t
T
11
V'
Iff
CD
IX
T
d»
1
ft t,
° CD
5
T
V'
T
5
Ft
5
Zp
&
O
r
IX
IX
I)
Ft
t
In
L
o
L
1*
c
it
®
a
Ze i‘
IX
T
0)
fl
It
[pI
0
"c
d5
—w-
r
3
IX
11
4
jbH
Ze
Fl
n
T
V* CD
IIO
(X
O
in
ra
7
ft
«
t
6
ft
®
£
It
Iff
IX
IX
c
i
Ze
JU"
ft
tz
It
w
ix
a
X
%
Ze
H
It
cd
It
'
l>
ZP
Ft ^
a
6
It
3
&
Zp
IX
c■
n
it
(X
CD
Jie
tX
n
it
1
CD
IX
9
n
ft
it
Cj
It
g'J
Zp
It
Z»
z 3U CD
5
O
CD
0
CD
Zp
it
i>
i
5
h
i’
5
Ze
X
5
p.
x
5
ft
6
Zp*
6
11
It
i
li
Z
£
i:
11
5
(X
9
IX"
5
0
#»J
n
Zp
r 3
° o
&
$
5
3
CD
It It
'fnT
(-
2.
It
ft'S
?IJ
It. CD
3
^.
E
$
CD
f£
V'
B>J
FC
J®
it
0
IX
IX
6 .
CD
ft
co
C'
IX CD
a
It
IX
Zp
Zp i
IX
fnj
V'
li
□
5
^
Ft
5
CD
S3
S< ?i^a bj±
IXif V
Kk fn] ctctcwtdcS
® <R
tJ
^ fW
b i'
JU
IX
3
22 i
f
^
w
& U
K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
W. K. GARDENS
Authorized Agent for AU Airline#
AUTHORIZED: AGENT for
LINES, AMERICAN PRESIDENT LINES
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
It
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquet#
Private Dining Rooms
PsndO
to
g
ft
a
#
c
O to
S O>
tM>
ss
o S
3 J?
ci tn
3
It
©
o'
o
3
to rn
CD
CO
M^-c^l
^^^'lif rH#
i ©
^
a a
$
It
co 55
°S®g
gttl»
tX « '
O^
5
oo
1550 Wept Georgi* St
. Vancouver, B.C.
KI
P
CD
SO
M tn
®
Crown Life insurance Co
Frank G. Yada
S3 £
^^jStb^ft
T®
^Olig
Page 6
PAGE 6
': it
g
it
It
tx
WJ
*T
i
O1
ix
H
6
s/u
R
fD
5
0
HI
ph
it
it A
#> i»
0
it
5
it
3
it
WB
IX
it
IX
it
6
3
n
o
i»
it
3
it
M
?IJ
THE
NEW CANADIAN
479 Queen St. W,
Toronto 2-B, Ont,'
Phone EM. 6-5005
& (X
0
it
H
m^i
0
5
6
6
5
IX
ft
nin 2
1W
0^
it
K 1 3
rn
3
it
D»
tz
IX
§
it
9
I
6
ti
it
E
B 7 ix
5
5
*>
*
3
^ M
i»
6
ft
d*
HI £
fZ
it
it
01
5J
IX
IX
0
it
3
0
3
(X
it
it
IX
TO
(X
6
A*
3
t
it
5
it
3
it
o
3
PR
it
.(X
IX
ix
it
IX
ffiffi
It
IX
IX
3 h
IX
it
it
#J
3
<5
«
t*
TO
it
it
it
3
H
IX
it
*
it
it
»»
IX
G'
#7
IX
it
fl
3
*«
IX
IX
¥
^' 4b
3
£
li
i
5
tz
IX
a
dir
2
o
b
mb
n
©
3
£
.5
6
it
9
a
3
I
I
ex
lb
IX
IX
3
m
3
3
0 £
3
d*
Wie
^nd
Blind
IX
it
t'
(X
d*
3
£
JI
V'
3
7k
IX
fX
IX
9
(X
fit H
ex
it
IX
3
$ X
it It
6'
3
IX
bib
^i
fisi
id
'ak
ar
ft
jh
1
IX
it
it
x
&
IX
B
5
d>
IX
an;
O
«
it ^
IX it
W
': it
g
it
It
tx
WJ
*T
i
O1
ix
H
6
s/u
R
fD
5
0
HI
ph
it
it A
#> i»
0
it
5
it
3
it
WB
IX
it
IX
it
6
3
n
o
i»
it
3
it
M
?IJ
THE
NEW CANADIAN
479 Queen St. W,
Toronto 2-B, Ont,'
Phone EM. 6-5005
& (X
0
it
H
m^i
0
5
6
6
5
IX
ft
nin 2
1W
0^
it
K 1 3
rn
3
it
D»
tz
IX
§
it
9
I
6
ti
it
E
B 7 ix
5
5
*>
*
3
^ M
i»
6
ft
d*
HI £
fZ
it
it
01
5J
IX
IX
0
it
3
0
3
(X
it
it
IX
TO
(X
6
A*
3
t
it
5
it
3
it
o
3
PR
it
.(X
IX
ix
it
IX
ffiffi
It
IX
IX
3 h
IX
it
it
#J
3
<5
«
t*
TO
it
it
it
3
H
IX
it
*
it
it
»»
IX
G'
#7
IX
it
fl
3
*«
IX
IX
¥
^' 4b
3
£
li
i
5
tz
IX
a
dir
2
o
b
mb
n
©
3
£
.5
6
it
9
a
3
I
I
ex
lb
IX
IX
3
m
3
3
0 £
3
d*
Wie
^nd
Blind
IX
it
t'
(X
d*
3
£
JI
V'
3
7k
IX
fX
IX
9
(X
fit H
ex
it
IX
3
$ X
it It
6'
3
IX
bib
^i
fisi
id
'ak
ar
ft
jh
1
IX
it
it
x
&
IX
B
5
d>
IX
an;
O
«
it ^
IX it
W
Page 7
tnrday, March 19, 1966
PAGE 7
Rev. T. Nakayama
Personal
of Alta. Appointed
Obituaries
lonotions Welcomed For J.C.C.C. Bazaar Apr. 30 To Seattle/Wash.
Dates and Doings
TORONTO.—The J.C. Cultural Centre’s Annual Bazaar will
> held on April 30th this year and hopes are high to exceed its
forts of Inst y^ar.
Donations of ALL kinds of items, large or small, suitable for
Je at our Gifts, Handicrafts or White Elephant sections would
* most welcome from now until April. Please phone the Centre
at 428-0676.
'
E
J.C. Cultural Centre
iSecond Annual Nisei Men's Bonspiel March 19th
EALGARY. — The Rev. Timo
thy Makoto Nakavama has been
appointed vicar of St. Peter’s
Episcopal Church, Seattle, by the
Bishop of the diocese of Olvmpia
(the Episcopal Church in West
ern Washington, U.S.A.) The
Bishop of Calgary has accepted
Mr. Nakayama’s resignation with
regret.
Ji TORONTO.—What is hoped to be the biggest J.C. curling
For the past four years Mr.
invent in Eastern Canada, the Second Annual Nisei Men’s Bon- Nakayama has been rector of the
feiel is to be held at the Broom and Stone Curling Club (Lawrence Lampton parish. He is the son of
the Rev. and Mrs. Gordon G.
Wild Midland) Toronto, on Saturday, March 19th.
S First Draw 11:00 a.m. There will be three Draws — eight Nakayama, vicar of the Church
of the Ascension in Coaldale, Al
spends each.
■M Address all entries to Gord Kai, Apt. 801, 220 Woolner Ave., berta.
Toronto 9 (Telephone 769-4068); or phone Vic Suzuki at 787-7104.
Mr. Nakayama, was born in
^20.00 per rink. Make cheque payable to Gord Kai. All single
Vancouver,
B.C., Oct. 5, 1931, and
^Applications will be accepted and placed ori a team and notified.
educated
in
schools at Vancou
I Trophies and prizes will be awarded with Buffet Dinner.
ver, Slocan City, B.C., and Coal
|
.
T. Nagano
dale, : Alberta.
a
*
*
*
_ He graduated from the Univer
Mont. Buddhists Plan To Attend Art Treasure Tour sity
of BE. in 1953 and from
I MONTREAL.—One of the highlights for all Montreal Buddhists he Anglican Theological College,
Iho will be travelling to Toronto for the first Eastern Canada Vancouver, in 1956.
guddhist Conference on the Victoria Day weekend should be a
In June, 1958 he was sent by
gisit to the Royal Ontario Museum where the priceless Art Treathe
Bishop to be “travelling
Iures of Japan will be showing.
priest
” of a five-point mission
This show, which includes some 189 national treasures, will
(Foremost,
Bow Island, AdenWe in Toronto from April 27th to the first week in June. Toronto
Knappen-St.
Hilda, Coutts, and
Swill be the only Canadian city in which these treasures will be
Warner) in a 5,000 square mile
g In anticipation of this event, the Montreal Buddhist Church area which he organized into the
Southern Alberta Mission, and
Announces:
Served
it for foux* years. While
a) Chartered Greyhound buses will be requisitioned foT in
there,
in
1961, he married Lois
^wrested parties who wish to attend the exhibition or travel to
Keiko
Furumoto
(daughter of the
Toronto over the holiday weekend.
Rev.
Paul
Masao
' Furumoto, of
b) Fares—$12.75 per person, all ages, including children.
St.
Timothy
’
s
Church,
Tokushima
Leave Montreal from 5250 St. Urbain at 6:30 p.m. on May
City,
Japan).
In
June,
1962
20th, Friday. Returning to Montreal from Toronto Buddhist
he
came
to
live
and
work
at
the
Church at 1:30 p.m. May 23i*d, Monday.
Lamerton
parish.
d) Hotel accommodations will be furnished upon request;
For further information, kindly- contact, No Later Than
He has been active in the fields
May 5th: Mr. S. Ito, WE. 5-7844; Mr. G, Nakano, RA. of youth and adult work, parti
7-3428; Mrs. M. Ishihara, DU. 1-2865.
cularly in Christian education.
M.B.C.
*
*
He represented Canada Inter
nationally as head of the 20The Hon pa Buddhist Church Of Alta. member Canadian delegation to
First ’Ecumenical Youth As
| The new Buddhist Movement in' Alberta, which, was started the
sembly
in Europe, held in Lau
gn March 8, 1965 under the direction of Bishop Shinsho Kana sanne, Switzerland
in the sum
yama of America and Rev. Ryokan Nishimura of. Wiimipeg, mer of 1960, and has
attended
was accepted at the Buddhist Churches of Canada meeting held on conferences at Evergreen,
Colo
9’ 1965. The Hqnpa Buddhist Church of Alberta is the of rado and the North American
ficial title of the Society. This is the name which appears in the Ecumenical Youth Assembly in
Society’s constitution developed after maiiy laborious hours of
August 1961.
work by the Temporary Steering Committee comprised of elected
people from Buddhist members, at large who were given moral
The Rev. Nakayama and his
support by the ministers of Canada, present at the March 9th wife and baby daughter Christina
Meeting, (The former Alberta Kyoku was officially dissolved by Megumi are to take up residence
members on March, 1965.)
at St. Peter’s Vicarage, 1601 S.
1
May 1> 1965 a meeting of representatives from Raymond, King St., Seattle, Washington,
|oalaale, Rosemary, Taber, Lethbridge, Picture Butte, and Cal- 98144, U.S.A, (across the street
gary was held and the Constitution was ratified. On May 22, 1965 from St. Peter’s, Seattle), this
Erectors who were elected from the various districts met and month.
fleeted their executives. This was the official birth date of the
onpa Buddhist Church of Alberta. Thus, the core for the pro
pagation of Jodo Shin Shu in Alberta was established.
The Rev. Yutetsu Kawamura became the temporary resident
b
°^- p0a^ale and. Rev. Leslie Kawamura retained his status
tiie resiaent minister of Raymond. They carried on the work.
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
; Propagating the Dharma among the followers in Alberta.
NOTARY PUBLIC
i ne regret very much that Rev. Yutetsu Kawamura, who workOffice Hours Saturday
‘ ,as a V1^ or®an °1 ^e whole organization since March 8th
October to April Inclusive
nth^n min.^ter of Alberta for the past 31 years, was transferred
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
ac"ai- ^^a.n- He left for his new post in January.
Saito 513 Temple Building
llbert s Society which is registered under the Societies Act of
TORONTO
^nas taken. upon themselves to support the minister both
Rea: RO. 7-3427
EM. 6-3323
morally. Although we were -not able to harmonize
Alberta, those people who wished to help each other
each other have gathered in the hope that a brighter
M hapPier Buddhism could be established.
Notes
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A.
. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
KIKUCHI
EDMONTON, Alta.—Mr. Matao Kikuchi, 84, of Edmonton, Alberta passed away on Sunday,
March 13th, 1966. '
Funeral service was held on
Marcli 14th in Edmonton.
*
*
*
HIRAKI
TORONTO. — Mr. Chikai Hi
raki, aged 78, passed away on
March 13th at Doctor’s Hospital
in Toronto.
Funeral service was held on
March 16th at the Toronto Bud
dhist Church.
221 VICTORIA
EM. 3-5002
ST.. TORONTO
OX. 1-3388 (Ras.)
OFFICE
EM. 4-1334
EM. 4-1395
RESIDENCE
2 Vesta
HUdson 5-1365
Ort*
A. E. McKague, Q.C.
Barrister and Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO
Furuya Travel presents . . . .
"Golden Week in Japan"
Three national holidays within a week in late April makes
Japan a most colorful time to visit. Join the tour and enjoy
the many Spring festivities of Japan.
14 day tour ($259.00) plus air fare, departing April 24,
1966. For further information, please call
Furuya Travel Service
365 Spadina Ave., Toronto
Tel. 366-1075
DUNDAS UNION STORE
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
SUKIYAKI MEAT — VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
EM. 4-7692
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVERN
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
Lucien C. Kurata, Q.C.
.
Gassho, .
Honpa Buddhist Church of Alberta
olln^ executives and directors for the year 1966-1967 are as
hi
Rev. Leslie Kawamura; Chairman: Mr. Naomiiishim
Secretary: Mr. Kinji - Takeda; Treasurer: Mr. J ack
Mr. Takeshi Koyata.
iichi
School Department: Rev. Leslie Kawamura, Mr. NaoTakeshi Koyata. Directors: Raymond — Mr.
Coaid i v Maomichi Sugimoto, Mr. Jack Nishiyama
akeda 3 61 AIr‘ ^an,y Hoyano, Mr. Mutsuo Nishiguchi, Mr. Kinji
Travel Arrangements
Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
and Baggage Insurance
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
1 Yoshida6 ^utte: Mr. Takeshi Koyata, Mr. Eiji Takeda Mr. Mino-
Passage arranged by Steamer or Air
anaka^r^“e: Mr. Ichio Ibuki, Mr. Dick Kanashiro, Mr. Yoshio
Call for Reservations or
Toronto Japanese united church
* HEARrv
SUNDAY, MARCH 20, 1966
11:30 A.M. English Language Service
he ^ M"®™ Stephan Takada, B.A., BJ.
t--.____ WELCOME TO
all .
_
TOI Dowcwurt Rd., Torente
284-A YONGE ST.
EM. 6-2411
Anywhere — Anytime
Marunoemarj: ^r‘ Roichi Matoba, Mr. Kaz Kinoshita, Mr. Teru
ADVT.
MW
Information — EM. 8-9934
Educational Funds
through Life Insurance ?
CONTACT
Ron Marics'
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
COMPANY OF CANADA
T. KAMEOKA
K. Iwata Travel Service
713 McCaul St., TORONTO
Office 364-5141
Residence 925*9636
PAGE 7
Rev. T. Nakayama
Personal
of Alta. Appointed
Obituaries
lonotions Welcomed For J.C.C.C. Bazaar Apr. 30 To Seattle/Wash.
Dates and Doings
TORONTO.—The J.C. Cultural Centre’s Annual Bazaar will
> held on April 30th this year and hopes are high to exceed its
forts of Inst y^ar.
Donations of ALL kinds of items, large or small, suitable for
Je at our Gifts, Handicrafts or White Elephant sections would
* most welcome from now until April. Please phone the Centre
at 428-0676.
'
E
J.C. Cultural Centre
iSecond Annual Nisei Men's Bonspiel March 19th
EALGARY. — The Rev. Timo
thy Makoto Nakavama has been
appointed vicar of St. Peter’s
Episcopal Church, Seattle, by the
Bishop of the diocese of Olvmpia
(the Episcopal Church in West
ern Washington, U.S.A.) The
Bishop of Calgary has accepted
Mr. Nakayama’s resignation with
regret.
Ji TORONTO.—What is hoped to be the biggest J.C. curling
For the past four years Mr.
invent in Eastern Canada, the Second Annual Nisei Men’s Bon- Nakayama has been rector of the
feiel is to be held at the Broom and Stone Curling Club (Lawrence Lampton parish. He is the son of
the Rev. and Mrs. Gordon G.
Wild Midland) Toronto, on Saturday, March 19th.
S First Draw 11:00 a.m. There will be three Draws — eight Nakayama, vicar of the Church
of the Ascension in Coaldale, Al
spends each.
■M Address all entries to Gord Kai, Apt. 801, 220 Woolner Ave., berta.
Toronto 9 (Telephone 769-4068); or phone Vic Suzuki at 787-7104.
Mr. Nakayama, was born in
^20.00 per rink. Make cheque payable to Gord Kai. All single
Vancouver,
B.C., Oct. 5, 1931, and
^Applications will be accepted and placed ori a team and notified.
educated
in
schools at Vancou
I Trophies and prizes will be awarded with Buffet Dinner.
ver, Slocan City, B.C., and Coal
|
.
T. Nagano
dale, : Alberta.
a
*
*
*
_ He graduated from the Univer
Mont. Buddhists Plan To Attend Art Treasure Tour sity
of BE. in 1953 and from
I MONTREAL.—One of the highlights for all Montreal Buddhists he Anglican Theological College,
Iho will be travelling to Toronto for the first Eastern Canada Vancouver, in 1956.
guddhist Conference on the Victoria Day weekend should be a
In June, 1958 he was sent by
gisit to the Royal Ontario Museum where the priceless Art Treathe
Bishop to be “travelling
Iures of Japan will be showing.
priest
” of a five-point mission
This show, which includes some 189 national treasures, will
(Foremost,
Bow Island, AdenWe in Toronto from April 27th to the first week in June. Toronto
Knappen-St.
Hilda, Coutts, and
Swill be the only Canadian city in which these treasures will be
Warner) in a 5,000 square mile
g In anticipation of this event, the Montreal Buddhist Church area which he organized into the
Southern Alberta Mission, and
Announces:
Served
it for foux* years. While
a) Chartered Greyhound buses will be requisitioned foT in
there,
in
1961, he married Lois
^wrested parties who wish to attend the exhibition or travel to
Keiko
Furumoto
(daughter of the
Toronto over the holiday weekend.
Rev.
Paul
Masao
' Furumoto, of
b) Fares—$12.75 per person, all ages, including children.
St.
Timothy
’
s
Church,
Tokushima
Leave Montreal from 5250 St. Urbain at 6:30 p.m. on May
City,
Japan).
In
June,
1962
20th, Friday. Returning to Montreal from Toronto Buddhist
he
came
to
live
and
work
at
the
Church at 1:30 p.m. May 23i*d, Monday.
Lamerton
parish.
d) Hotel accommodations will be furnished upon request;
For further information, kindly- contact, No Later Than
He has been active in the fields
May 5th: Mr. S. Ito, WE. 5-7844; Mr. G, Nakano, RA. of youth and adult work, parti
7-3428; Mrs. M. Ishihara, DU. 1-2865.
cularly in Christian education.
M.B.C.
*
*
He represented Canada Inter
nationally as head of the 20The Hon pa Buddhist Church Of Alta. member Canadian delegation to
First ’Ecumenical Youth As
| The new Buddhist Movement in' Alberta, which, was started the
sembly
in Europe, held in Lau
gn March 8, 1965 under the direction of Bishop Shinsho Kana sanne, Switzerland
in the sum
yama of America and Rev. Ryokan Nishimura of. Wiimipeg, mer of 1960, and has
attended
was accepted at the Buddhist Churches of Canada meeting held on conferences at Evergreen,
Colo
9’ 1965. The Hqnpa Buddhist Church of Alberta is the of rado and the North American
ficial title of the Society. This is the name which appears in the Ecumenical Youth Assembly in
Society’s constitution developed after maiiy laborious hours of
August 1961.
work by the Temporary Steering Committee comprised of elected
people from Buddhist members, at large who were given moral
The Rev. Nakayama and his
support by the ministers of Canada, present at the March 9th wife and baby daughter Christina
Meeting, (The former Alberta Kyoku was officially dissolved by Megumi are to take up residence
members on March, 1965.)
at St. Peter’s Vicarage, 1601 S.
1
May 1> 1965 a meeting of representatives from Raymond, King St., Seattle, Washington,
|oalaale, Rosemary, Taber, Lethbridge, Picture Butte, and Cal- 98144, U.S.A, (across the street
gary was held and the Constitution was ratified. On May 22, 1965 from St. Peter’s, Seattle), this
Erectors who were elected from the various districts met and month.
fleeted their executives. This was the official birth date of the
onpa Buddhist Church of Alberta. Thus, the core for the pro
pagation of Jodo Shin Shu in Alberta was established.
The Rev. Yutetsu Kawamura became the temporary resident
b
°^- p0a^ale and. Rev. Leslie Kawamura retained his status
tiie resiaent minister of Raymond. They carried on the work.
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
; Propagating the Dharma among the followers in Alberta.
NOTARY PUBLIC
i ne regret very much that Rev. Yutetsu Kawamura, who workOffice Hours Saturday
‘ ,as a V1^ or®an °1 ^e whole organization since March 8th
October to April Inclusive
nth^n min.^ter of Alberta for the past 31 years, was transferred
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
ac"ai- ^^a.n- He left for his new post in January.
Saito 513 Temple Building
llbert s Society which is registered under the Societies Act of
TORONTO
^nas taken. upon themselves to support the minister both
Rea: RO. 7-3427
EM. 6-3323
morally. Although we were -not able to harmonize
Alberta, those people who wished to help each other
each other have gathered in the hope that a brighter
M hapPier Buddhism could be established.
Notes
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A.
. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
KIKUCHI
EDMONTON, Alta.—Mr. Matao Kikuchi, 84, of Edmonton, Alberta passed away on Sunday,
March 13th, 1966. '
Funeral service was held on
Marcli 14th in Edmonton.
*
*
*
HIRAKI
TORONTO. — Mr. Chikai Hi
raki, aged 78, passed away on
March 13th at Doctor’s Hospital
in Toronto.
Funeral service was held on
March 16th at the Toronto Bud
dhist Church.
221 VICTORIA
EM. 3-5002
ST.. TORONTO
OX. 1-3388 (Ras.)
OFFICE
EM. 4-1334
EM. 4-1395
RESIDENCE
2 Vesta
HUdson 5-1365
Ort*
A. E. McKague, Q.C.
Barrister and Solicitor
NOTARY PUBLIC
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO
Furuya Travel presents . . . .
"Golden Week in Japan"
Three national holidays within a week in late April makes
Japan a most colorful time to visit. Join the tour and enjoy
the many Spring festivities of Japan.
14 day tour ($259.00) plus air fare, departing April 24,
1966. For further information, please call
Furuya Travel Service
365 Spadina Ave., Toronto
Tel. 366-1075
DUNDAS UNION STORE
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
SUKIYAKI MEAT — VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
EM. 4-7692
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVERN
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
Lucien C. Kurata, Q.C.
.
Gassho, .
Honpa Buddhist Church of Alberta
olln^ executives and directors for the year 1966-1967 are as
hi
Rev. Leslie Kawamura; Chairman: Mr. Naomiiishim
Secretary: Mr. Kinji - Takeda; Treasurer: Mr. J ack
Mr. Takeshi Koyata.
iichi
School Department: Rev. Leslie Kawamura, Mr. NaoTakeshi Koyata. Directors: Raymond — Mr.
Coaid i v Maomichi Sugimoto, Mr. Jack Nishiyama
akeda 3 61 AIr‘ ^an,y Hoyano, Mr. Mutsuo Nishiguchi, Mr. Kinji
Travel Arrangements
Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
and Baggage Insurance
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
1 Yoshida6 ^utte: Mr. Takeshi Koyata, Mr. Eiji Takeda Mr. Mino-
Passage arranged by Steamer or Air
anaka^r^“e: Mr. Ichio Ibuki, Mr. Dick Kanashiro, Mr. Yoshio
Call for Reservations or
Toronto Japanese united church
* HEARrv
SUNDAY, MARCH 20, 1966
11:30 A.M. English Language Service
he ^ M"®™ Stephan Takada, B.A., BJ.
t--.____ WELCOME TO
all .
_
TOI Dowcwurt Rd., Torente
284-A YONGE ST.
EM. 6-2411
Anywhere — Anytime
Marunoemarj: ^r‘ Roichi Matoba, Mr. Kaz Kinoshita, Mr. Teru
ADVT.
MW
Information — EM. 8-9934
Educational Funds
through Life Insurance ?
CONTACT
Ron Marics'
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
COMPANY OF CANADA
T. KAMEOKA
K. Iwata Travel Service
713 McCaul St., TORONTO
Office 364-5141
Residence 925*9636
Page 8
PAGE 8
.Saturday, March_jo j
^^^ppmept And History-
The New Canad?
Japan’s Bunraku Puppet Theatre
mJwS“K.“f?!,e cIassic Bunraku Puppet Theatre to other actino- cnl't^Uw
1,
niinnpf thoon
z- 1 • classic bunraku Puppet Theatre to other acting^put the 'tale-.fold, by the joruri narrator in -musical chant
fact
itfound in. many countries of .the world, lies in the
tact that it is not a marionette or a fingertvpe puppet.
' ing or in-dramatic dialogues to the accompaniment of the samisem Editor, Ay ^ £
It is a puppet manipulated by three persons.
- .
- Sensitive Narrator
Section Editor and
is sa^^thaS^ the Japanese - puppet show is not. clear,' but it
... The life of the Bunraku-puppet theatre depends on how ’sen1 . .*. that theie existed from about one thous-md vonvc
n Mtively and skillfully the joruri narrator tells the tale and how
SUBSCRIPTION - - d
£tVe ^ °f puppet show- Probably introduced to "japan from . ehcately the puppet manipulators express in the visual motion^
- S4.00 per 6 ’
of the puppets.
. Jus,t as the Bunraku -puppet theatre is composed" of these
Sefms that the manipulator, carried small
479 .QUEEN ST. WESI?
and went around the villages, giving iri66!.-6
so there are three persons who macle-great con
Toronto 2-B, Ol]1 - mi
peifoimancLb whenever he could gather an audience There wer? tributions to the development of the puppet theatre • into such
i ml^
shr^es and tern 1“^
BMpire 6-5005
fine dramatic art.
7"
ma days would give performances. These wer- imainly
* '
I?ne
16 Z3
sb, 1S
^,'Ikemoto
b'a^1?0^0 Gidayu, boi
born- in Osaka around T650,
based
. ~
lirst
shriieVand tap* S“tS and m“les attribute
ited to these ’'™°,1?ei—ctedj ^.e
Gidayu
•
school
of
j
zh
M joruri,
which today is' the
established form of narration for the puppet theatre. He brought
Unique Culture
together this versatile, art of story-telling with the puppet pergenerationsheritage, inherited' from the past
enSo^
Jts . long history, . the native culture was
Tales of Love
•
Female Help Wanted
imported
and through absorption of new ideas - JHis fine rendering not only of historical plays, but also of the
j a
.
na’ ^rea and other parts of Asia
^n5tCeS ianC! taJes of ioye-suicides^of the ordinary people appeal PRESSER. Pa:t
w on- c
lected to suit in someAcases the exquisitely refined ' taste of
J ed strongly to the merchant class audience of Osaka. Their im Scarboro district
•V 267-679!
onto).
aristocracy or dramatically colored to please the
more plebeian mediate -interest mlosely associated with their daily lives, greatly
imagination of the general populace.
popularized the Bunraku puppet theatre.
5 EXPERIENCEDTTngle
: needle and
fluldarts’ in spatial art, and in the. performing
• Jakenioto Gidayu has an excellent collaborator in the plav- machine operators. I-adies seo*
-.its, Japan has developed a culture unique to it.
Steady
work.
Apply"
?fht’ Chikamatsu , Monzaemon (1653-1724), often called ' the 7th floor, 96 SpadiY' -^ss Sun'
Japan has offered to the world woodblock prints' To list a few.
2 Ave. (To;
Japan,, who wrote various plays for Gidavu and
its simple but
wlmmffcZ fY'’.tei'c™«y and
‘flower
___ Ma*e Help Wanted
of the
the subiect
th0
5^1*^’ Y “last1 perhaps tie tataZ""
^^■RDENER help wani^H p^n nn
OnizukaJToro^to).
'
z4L
to the Western
;
From One to Three
driver- and^d3
„ i J be puppets, too, were further developed from the' one-mam-I
.
During Shogunate
l-2U5UTo^.Wa9^
During the . Yedo period (1603-1867) when h
We
tO the ^^e-^anipulator-type puppets which
was maintained by the Tokugawa Shogunate 'the peaceful reign
™P' En9lish speaking
flourished. ”'' ^ "’’’ “d under *>«*•'TMAmas merchant class nwnilninr ,Y°shida Bunzaburo who first introduced the threp- SYO
e, various arts' manip.ulatoi.-typ.-} puppets in . 1734. Complicateddoll-heads' wi'h erded lOr s^PPing and S
duties Phone 364-2261 (Toronto) movable
^OW? aid mouth aS' well as hands With joined
enactionalso devised. These Imade .them':capable ?of ____
Cars For Sale
enacting
enacting then loles with greater sensitivity.
I960 TR 3. lor sale. B.R^G~0ne'^r
!W
' No Body
not havei’S
that-the , doll itself .docs
K
5 The do11 consists merely of a shoulder' board
arms from® S ^“"“J through which the neck’ part is inserted
takes fc n?
Ye Y"1 less from the
dot™. A
tbe place, of the hips, all dangling from
Le
sboulder ooard. The female puppets do not strings attached
even have these
Sanpaku . . .
(Cont. From Page 1)
^
No Feet
kind that
,not
r . the
T
- — - comes in a C°up, .and Marilyn Monroe a deftfv'V^^
bem- of Hie kimono are
it has to be a. ginseng tea tragic beauty.
swished1 arounc
’ ;
made of a weed, grown in the
Among victims' of- Sanpaku now
•_ or mu-tea, a mixture of
n
n<g\are Anna Kashfi and J; the hoie «e‘^^ ^peVi?^
16 herbs.
t
aul
Getty, says Dufty.
. bufty_ swears that the diet, if
points OUC Ho Chi left, tad’Z lh”
ngidlj followed, will bring your
hT1' S .T1?
inserts his
Minh,
leader
of the North Viet
°'' w^'s back where thev belong.
ino- and
j
and holds - it upright while sutainnamese Communists, is not san- right-hand.
Who is sanpaku?
- * ■ e bead. His right hand manipulates the puppet’s
p,uku,
•
'
r ..
rAccording to Dufty, John F.
“The endurance of his VietKennedy Ayas sanpaku and so are
™
n
Z followers is fantastic. It’s
his two brothers Bobby and Ted- their
diet. All they eat is rice, KtastS.
nSht elb°"‘ “^ gainst the main maniAiso sanpaku were Ngo Dinh
manisalt
and
manioc
leaves,
”
says
Diem, killed in the Vietnamese । Dufty.
,
'
Complete Coordination
half 0?%™^
?0W the movement of the
I pulator’s body.1'
felt,-tinough ^he movement of the main upper
maniessential,P and fn^heMm^
Hie three manipulators is
proches the sublime.
■
1 11 of thls coordination their art apmanipStoVb^^^
™"S the three
NEW SPRING STYLE
narrator and the SX
^Jteer;, the joruri
ARRIVED
Puppet
performance
can
be
2
f'X
1S
^Wufed.
The Bunraku
. Ladies' shoes from.
complex form V l™^
t0 b-e on* of «ie '™*s
1 up to 11
^ChaM'3l^hS,.C^,lb,• ^^
tfao’-’ffh‘Patient
A?Z??F'^
SMALL
SHOE
SIZES
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
ALBERTS SHOE STORE
but inanimate objects the,- V ral11!^- Though the puppets are
of a truly taleXd an??™)^
» the hands
the power to deeply moJe the atE’
a"d C°ms t0 haw
1328 Queen St. West
Business Opportunities
S- OR EFT hot dog stand. Gs
location in Port Dover town. Good^
come. Reasonable. Write to-Mr « &
bayashi,. Box 546, Port Dover, Ont
For Best Results
^se New Canadian Adi
KAZUO G. OIYE
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Carlton St..- Toronto
Boom 1805
3S6-S388
293-4281 (Rei)
‘It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult
BUI Wales
Insurance Agency
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
OPTICAl
Permanents
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
SUMMERHILL BEAUTY SALON
118 West Hastings SI.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
1208 Yonge;Sr., Toronto
Phone 922-3224
e;
o
rf
ir
he
ss
i:
o
ei
t
ie<
oi
d
Of
of
an
tv
re
I 01
k
feni
«^8
CO/q/o9u.
S
s'
. Including hair pieces of gemiine Jiuma-n hair
$20. and up
«e to,
n:
o:
OPTOMETRISTS
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
C.O.D. orders from coast to coast
owner; excellent condition, low
ne^Jires-. Hr-_ 7-9495 (Toronto)?,,?
Notice off Meeting
pla
Id
I bi
THE NEW CANADIAN
479 Queen.S.t. W.
Toronto 2-B, Orit.
n.L Meeting o£ MemWest, Toronto ntt
lkko Gardens, 460 ■ Dundas Strret.
‘
Thursday, March 3Ist, 1966 at
the election of directors ™Y\n8 Y'11™111^ an’<’11S others;
of other general business’
llOrs for 1966. and discussion
March'll. 1966.
"
ma terS °f ^e -Association.
Toronto, Canada.
Saisei-kai, Incorporated?
ImMOWb^
AGENCY
Office — 3101 Bathurst St
“Phone: 783-4261
Home phone: HI. 7*8903
r01
I T
|.~sh
hr ;
[ow
I of
he;
.Saturday, March_jo j
^^^ppmept And History-
The New Canad?
Japan’s Bunraku Puppet Theatre
mJwS“K.“f?!,e cIassic Bunraku Puppet Theatre to other actino- cnl't^Uw
1,
niinnpf thoon
z- 1 • classic bunraku Puppet Theatre to other acting^put the 'tale-.fold, by the joruri narrator in -musical chant
fact
itfound in. many countries of .the world, lies in the
tact that it is not a marionette or a fingertvpe puppet.
' ing or in-dramatic dialogues to the accompaniment of the samisem Editor, Ay ^ £
It is a puppet manipulated by three persons.
- .
- Sensitive Narrator
Section Editor and
is sa^^thaS^ the Japanese - puppet show is not. clear,' but it
... The life of the Bunraku-puppet theatre depends on how ’sen1 . .*. that theie existed from about one thous-md vonvc
n Mtively and skillfully the joruri narrator tells the tale and how
SUBSCRIPTION - - d
£tVe ^ °f puppet show- Probably introduced to "japan from . ehcately the puppet manipulators express in the visual motion^
- S4.00 per 6 ’
of the puppets.
. Jus,t as the Bunraku -puppet theatre is composed" of these
Sefms that the manipulator, carried small
479 .QUEEN ST. WESI?
and went around the villages, giving iri66!.-6
so there are three persons who macle-great con
Toronto 2-B, Ol]1 - mi
peifoimancLb whenever he could gather an audience There wer? tributions to the development of the puppet theatre • into such
i ml^
shr^es and tern 1“^
BMpire 6-5005
fine dramatic art.
7"
ma days would give performances. These wer- imainly
* '
I?ne
16 Z3
sb, 1S
^,'Ikemoto
b'a^1?0^0 Gidayu, boi
born- in Osaka around T650,
based
. ~
lirst
shriieVand tap* S“tS and m“les attribute
ited to these ’'™°,1?ei—ctedj ^.e
Gidayu
•
school
of
j
zh
M joruri,
which today is' the
established form of narration for the puppet theatre. He brought
Unique Culture
together this versatile, art of story-telling with the puppet pergenerationsheritage, inherited' from the past
enSo^
Jts . long history, . the native culture was
Tales of Love
•
Female Help Wanted
imported
and through absorption of new ideas - JHis fine rendering not only of historical plays, but also of the
j a
.
na’ ^rea and other parts of Asia
^n5tCeS ianC! taJes of ioye-suicides^of the ordinary people appeal PRESSER. Pa:t
w on- c
lected to suit in someAcases the exquisitely refined ' taste of
J ed strongly to the merchant class audience of Osaka. Their im Scarboro district
•V 267-679!
onto).
aristocracy or dramatically colored to please the
more plebeian mediate -interest mlosely associated with their daily lives, greatly
imagination of the general populace.
popularized the Bunraku puppet theatre.
5 EXPERIENCEDTTngle
: needle and
fluldarts’ in spatial art, and in the. performing
• Jakenioto Gidayu has an excellent collaborator in the plav- machine operators. I-adies seo*
-.its, Japan has developed a culture unique to it.
Steady
work.
Apply"
?fht’ Chikamatsu , Monzaemon (1653-1724), often called ' the 7th floor, 96 SpadiY' -^ss Sun'
Japan has offered to the world woodblock prints' To list a few.
2 Ave. (To;
Japan,, who wrote various plays for Gidavu and
its simple but
wlmmffcZ fY'’.tei'c™«y and
‘flower
___ Ma*e Help Wanted
of the
the subiect
th0
5^1*^’ Y “last1 perhaps tie tataZ""
^^■RDENER help wani^H p^n nn
OnizukaJToro^to).
'
z4L
to the Western
;
From One to Three
driver- and^d3
„ i J be puppets, too, were further developed from the' one-mam-I
.
During Shogunate
l-2U5UTo^.Wa9^
During the . Yedo period (1603-1867) when h
We
tO the ^^e-^anipulator-type puppets which
was maintained by the Tokugawa Shogunate 'the peaceful reign
™P' En9lish speaking
flourished. ”'' ^ "’’’ “d under *>«*•'TMAmas merchant class nwnilninr ,Y°shida Bunzaburo who first introduced the threp- SYO
e, various arts' manip.ulatoi.-typ.-} puppets in . 1734. Complicateddoll-heads' wi'h erded lOr s^PPing and S
duties Phone 364-2261 (Toronto) movable
^OW? aid mouth aS' well as hands With joined
enactionalso devised. These Imade .them':capable ?of ____
Cars For Sale
enacting
enacting then loles with greater sensitivity.
I960 TR 3. lor sale. B.R^G~0ne'^r
!W
' No Body
not havei’S
that-the , doll itself .docs
K
5 The do11 consists merely of a shoulder' board
arms from® S ^“"“J through which the neck’ part is inserted
takes fc n?
Ye Y"1 less from the
dot™. A
tbe place, of the hips, all dangling from
Le
sboulder ooard. The female puppets do not strings attached
even have these
Sanpaku . . .
(Cont. From Page 1)
^
No Feet
kind that
,not
r . the
T
- — - comes in a C°up, .and Marilyn Monroe a deftfv'V^^
bem- of Hie kimono are
it has to be a. ginseng tea tragic beauty.
swished1 arounc
’ ;
made of a weed, grown in the
Among victims' of- Sanpaku now
•_ or mu-tea, a mixture of
n
n<g\are Anna Kashfi and J; the hoie «e‘^^ ^peVi?^
16 herbs.
t
aul
Getty, says Dufty.
. bufty_ swears that the diet, if
points OUC Ho Chi left, tad’Z lh”
ngidlj followed, will bring your
hT1' S .T1?
inserts his
Minh,
leader
of the North Viet
°'' w^'s back where thev belong.
ino- and
j
and holds - it upright while sutainnamese Communists, is not san- right-hand.
Who is sanpaku?
- * ■ e bead. His right hand manipulates the puppet’s
p,uku,
•
'
r ..
rAccording to Dufty, John F.
“The endurance of his VietKennedy Ayas sanpaku and so are
™
n
Z followers is fantastic. It’s
his two brothers Bobby and Ted- their
diet. All they eat is rice, KtastS.
nSht elb°"‘ “^ gainst the main maniAiso sanpaku were Ngo Dinh
manisalt
and
manioc
leaves,
”
says
Diem, killed in the Vietnamese । Dufty.
,
'
Complete Coordination
half 0?%™^
?0W the movement of the
I pulator’s body.1'
felt,-tinough ^he movement of the main upper
maniessential,P and fn^heMm^
Hie three manipulators is
proches the sublime.
■
1 11 of thls coordination their art apmanipStoVb^^^
™"S the three
NEW SPRING STYLE
narrator and the SX
^Jteer;, the joruri
ARRIVED
Puppet
performance
can
be
2
f'X
1S
^Wufed.
The Bunraku
. Ladies' shoes from.
complex form V l™^
t0 b-e on* of «ie '™*s
1 up to 11
^ChaM'3l^hS,.C^,lb,• ^^
tfao’-’ffh‘Patient
A?Z??F'^
SMALL
SHOE
SIZES
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
ALBERTS SHOE STORE
but inanimate objects the,- V ral11!^- Though the puppets are
of a truly taleXd an??™)^
» the hands
the power to deeply moJe the atE’
a"d C°ms t0 haw
1328 Queen St. West
Business Opportunities
S- OR EFT hot dog stand. Gs
location in Port Dover town. Good^
come. Reasonable. Write to-Mr « &
bayashi,. Box 546, Port Dover, Ont
For Best Results
^se New Canadian Adi
KAZUO G. OIYE
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Carlton St..- Toronto
Boom 1805
3S6-S388
293-4281 (Rei)
‘It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult
BUI Wales
Insurance Agency
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
OPTICAl
Permanents
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
SUMMERHILL BEAUTY SALON
118 West Hastings SI.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
1208 Yonge;Sr., Toronto
Phone 922-3224
e;
o
rf
ir
he
ss
i:
o
ei
t
ie<
oi
d
Of
of
an
tv
re
I 01
k
feni
«^8
CO/q/o9u.
S
s'
. Including hair pieces of gemiine Jiuma-n hair
$20. and up
«e to,
n:
o:
OPTOMETRISTS
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
C.O.D. orders from coast to coast
owner; excellent condition, low
ne^Jires-. Hr-_ 7-9495 (Toronto)?,,?
Notice off Meeting
pla
Id
I bi
THE NEW CANADIAN
479 Queen.S.t. W.
Toronto 2-B, Orit.
n.L Meeting o£ MemWest, Toronto ntt
lkko Gardens, 460 ■ Dundas Strret.
‘
Thursday, March 3Ist, 1966 at
the election of directors ™Y\n8 Y'11™111^ an’<’11S others;
of other general business’
llOrs for 1966. and discussion
March'll. 1966.
"
ma terS °f ^e -Association.
Toronto, Canada.
Saisei-kai, Incorporated?
ImMOWb^
AGENCY
Office — 3101 Bathurst St
“Phone: 783-4261
Home phone: HI. 7*8903
r01
I T
|.~sh
hr ;
[ow
I of
he;