Page 1
Kachigumi
I
Still
Believe
Bv JIM HENRY
_ It was a “Jewish merchant” who
•_______ nt, -n B,.azii believe that Ja-
Japan
War
Won
honaire. Probably even the Japanese residents in
rified at the news of the Japanese surrender.
^
know
about
this.
Aacob
E.
Yassoon
Since he thought it would take Japan longer to
hKOhA(phonetic) himself was the founder of the “kachigumi.’
surrender, he had a huge reserve of Japanese money
E
It is generally believed that the ‘kachigumi’ emerg
in yen and military scrip. The surrender meant that,
f0? -he fhdine: of writer-reporter Kageyuki Kaed under the leadership of fanatic rightist organiza
its
value would become worthless. But what if the*
*
sent bv a weekly Japanese magazine
tions. That is true. But money was the controlling
news
were of Japanese victory? Promptly he packed
American* country to learn how such a
factor behind the scene, always and in secret.
up
and
left by a (U.S.?) military plane, with a big
zo-roup who believed in the Japanese
As
far
as
I
can
see,
a
Jewish
merchant
planted
the
suitcase
filled with Japanese money.
^me hto existence and what it really was.
seeds and a group of evil Japanese people nurtured
Yassoon
first tried to sell his Japanese military
‘learned “amazing, hidden facts” according
_ni and greedily ate up all the fruit they bore.”
scrip
in
Hawaii.
He failed. He then learned there was
k %eklv which ran his article under the title:
a
rightists
organization
formed by Japanese Brazilians.
The Kajiyama Report
Evil Black Hand Which Manipulated the BraziFollowing is the startling and sensational story un
Rival Factions
r^rKajivama said he went around the country,
covered by Kajiyama, translated into English and re
Called “Shindo Renmei” (Loyalty Federation), the
Brazilian Nisei and Issei among many
vealed for the first time in the United States by this
group
was founded in Brazil toward the end of the
writer.
"
a result, I learned some surprising things,”
war.
At
that time the Japanese immigrants were
found that the ‘kachigumi’ was born under
Jewish millionaire Aacob E. Yasoon, also known as
Shanghai A assoon” or “Yassoon Zaibatsu”, was ter<evii influence of a cunning, clever Jewish mil(Continued on Page 8)
iiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiHinHiiiiiiiininiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiMHiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiijiHiiiinniiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiniiniiiiHiiiniiiiiniuiiiJiiiiiirim
CENTENNIAL
YEAR
1S67—1967
The Ueto Canadian
EXPO 67
APRIL 28—OCT. 27
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
SATURDAY, APRIL 22, 1967
Toronto, Ont.
ijniniiiiinsiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiHiiiiiisiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiinuuiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiuuiiiiiii uiiiimiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiitiniiiiiiii
Easier Regulations On Immigration
Expected To Increase Flow 25-percent
|TORONTO.—Miss Tsuneko Nakashima, a graduating student
York University, has been accepted by The Experiment in In|ational Living of Canada as a Country Ambassador to accomOTTAWA.—Easier rules and regulations on im committee gave informal approval to his new
j the American group of Experimenters who will spend the migration,
which are expected to increase the flow plans.
inier in Japan. Miss Nakashima is being sponsored by the by about 25 percent, were announced by Manpower
The easier, more flexible system was greeted
with delight by ethnic groups.
unto Council of The Experiment and community organizations Minister Jean Marchand.
It will give greater discretion by immigration
Appearing before a joint Senate-Commons com
rested in fostering international relations among youth.
officials overseas to determine an immigrant’s
mittee
that
has
been
studying
his
White
Paper
on
iMiss Nakashima, the Canadian
Immigration, issued last October, Mr. Marchand potential arid relax the present strict educational
Experiment’s first Ambassador modified many of his proposals to meet criticism and skill requirements.
Provisions by which immigrants already in Can
to Asia, will join. the American by politicians and ethnic groups.
ada
can sponsor relatives are also eased.
*
“
We
accept
many
of
the
grievances
made
before
group of ten Experimenters in
The white paper proposed to divide immigrants
the
committee,
’
Mr.
Marchand
said.
pmmunist For
San Francisco at the end of June
He said the complaints could be rectified by into three groups:
for three weeks of intensive Ja changes in regulations and administration if the
— Independents, welcome to come to Canada
leir New Mayor panese language study. In Ja
because they have a level of education- or ’a marketable skill en
fOKlO. — Tokyo’s voters pan each Experimenter will be
abling them to adjust to a hew
feed a major upset in Japa- assigned to a Japanese, family
ie politics recently by elect-' to become their “son” or “daugh
country and stand on their own
7 a Socialist and Communistfeet;
RAYMOND, Alta.—For the 10th consecutive year, a Japanese
iked candidate to the key post ter” for four weeks. With their
— Dependents of persons alGovernor (Mayor) of the “brothers and sisters” the en Canadian sugar beet farm has won top honors for the highest ready in Canada, mainly close
rid's largest city for the first tire group will travel together average crop recently at the Alberta Beet Growers Convention relatives intending to live with
ie.
and visit at least one major city here. Sunada Bros, farm was again awarded the Beet King title their families rather than seek
the success of soft-spoken for a period of two weeks. In and the Silver Tray award.
a job;
afessor, Ryoukichi Minobe, 63,
— Relatives who would need
With 82 acres of beets, the Sunada Bros. Farm averaged a
Mediately provoked apprehen- some cases the travel is replaced
a
little family help to get start
ns among the business commn- by special work and field study yield of 20% tons per acre.
ed but would be entering the
projects, ranging from teaching
Another Japanese Canadian farmer, Mr. S. Oishi of Raymond labor force.
conservative circles also fear English as a second language to was the winner in the under 30 acre beet farm class.
The paper proposed that mem
h the new Governor will use social service activities.
bers of the third group could
powers over police affairs to
be sponsored only by a Cana
The Experiment, founded in
■e the present tight limitations the United States in 1932, has Kapuskasing J.C. Student Wins $4,800 Scholarship dian citizen with five years’ re
sidence and could enter Canada
street demonstrations most of learned that acceptance into a
KAPUSKASING, Ont. — Gary rank in the Army Cadet Corps,
hh tend to be directed against family of a foreign culture is the Kaiura, a grade 13 student at as well as maintaining a sound only if they had seven years’
schooling or a job skill in de
surest method of understanding Kapuskasing District High academic record.
United States.
mand.
differences and regarding people School, has been awarded the J.
The strict classification pro
Rte was also speculation as individuals rather than mem- Edgar
requirements for entry
McAllister Scholarship in forAmong
posed
in the paper produced a
the
scholarship
is
a
mark
of
the result will weaken the mers of a racial or national engineering. This
scholarship over 80% in Grade 12 and at flood of complaints from ethnic
pal position of Prime Minvalued at 84,800 covers four years Christmas in Grade 13.
(Continued on Page R)
organizations and from MP’s
of undergraduate studies. Only
r
Esaku
Sato
of
«.
- the Consersenators on the committee.
Gary, youngest son of Mr. and and
six are awarded in the entire
h?il)eral Democratic party
Mr.
Marchand, in his state
Mrs. M. Kaiura, 11 Murdock ment recently,
province.
announced chang
Japanese
Work
Of
r X which lost control of
Street, has chosen to follow the es in regulations for all three
The eighteen-year old youth metallurgy
F capital.
and material science classes and blurred distinctions
has
been
an
outstanding
student
course
at
the
Faculty of Applied between the groups to allow
Art
To
Be
Shown
piness circles were appreall through school, taking an act Science and Engineering, Univer
K?01.01^ about Minobe’s
(Continued on Page 8)
ive part and attaining a high sity of Toronto.
।‘Sum policy in action at home At Montrea I Expo
about the effect of his
MONTREAL. — ..The wooden
sculpture of Taira No Kiyomor^Moreign confidence.
ri a noted warlord and ruler of
Japan in the 12th century, was
airfreighted to Frankfurt re
It seems that Kanakuri, on the wife, six children and 10 grand
STOCKHOLM, Sweden—Fiftycently via Lufthansa en route to
verge
of fainting from near ex children during it, and that takes
four years eight months, six
Montreal.
haustion, had been running past time, you know.”
davs,
eight
hours,
32
minutes
The wood carving, designated
a banker’s villa on the outskirts
an important cultural property and 20 3/10ths sec. after he had of Tureberg, when he spotted
Recently, Kanakuri revisited
set
out
on
the
marathon
run
in
of Japan, will make its first
people
drinking
orange
juice
in
the
villa garden and was treat
overseas appearance during Ex the 1912 Olympics, Shizuo Kana the garden. He stopped to quench ed to another glass of orange
kuri of Japan was clocked in at
po ’67 in Montreal, Canada.
his thirst and lingered at the juice by Bengt Petre, the son of
Stockholm’s Olympic Stadium.
b?XT0‘ — Robert Ken Sai
The seated wooden figure, said
Kanakuri had disappeared mid garden party for an hour, then his original host. Kanakuri also
took a train to Stockholm, where cleared up a further mystery.
5anSei student at to be made in the 13th century, way through the race, leading to he
spent the night in a hotel an l .For 54 years the Petres have
j/^ ^rk Secondary- School Kamakura era, is owned by the] rumors that he had missed his
deeply
ashamed, left on the first treasured, as.i a poetic memento
Rokuhara
Mitsuji
temple
in
Kyo
first checkpoint and was still
xor a free trip to “Exof the Olympics, a scroll with
to.
running. Indeed, his whereabouts available boat for the Orient.
Now 76, Kanakuri returned to Japanese writting on it, which
by C“ B“ C“ High
Taira No Kiyomori was the remained a mystery until 19bA
?rOgTani “Reach For leader of the Heike family dur when a Swedish newsman track Stockholm at the invitation of a they found . inside a decorative
businessmen’s committee, which box Kanakuri had sent them in
* lo? - He will
appear on ing its zenith in the feudal age. ed him down in the town of Ta is raising money to send the gratitude for their hospitality.
^ 9hannel 6 at 6 p.m.
The Heike clan was defeated mana in southern Japan, where Swedish team to the 1968 Olym When he took a look at it Kanahe was enjoying the placid life
k
h’ May iGth, May by its counterpart, the Genji, led of a pensioned geography teach pics. “It’s been a long race,” he kuri sadly informed the Petres:
by shogun Minamoto No Yoritosaid, “but then I got myself a “It is just an old customs form. ’
6^ and 13th.
er.
mo, in the late 12th century.
Japanese Canadians Win Beet King Title Again
Japan Runner Reaches Finish After 54 Years
p For Jhe Top”
I
Still
Believe
Bv JIM HENRY
_ It was a “Jewish merchant” who
•_______ nt, -n B,.azii believe that Ja-
Japan
War
Won
honaire. Probably even the Japanese residents in
rified at the news of the Japanese surrender.
^
know
about
this.
Aacob
E.
Yassoon
Since he thought it would take Japan longer to
hKOhA(phonetic) himself was the founder of the “kachigumi.’
surrender, he had a huge reserve of Japanese money
E
It is generally believed that the ‘kachigumi’ emerg
in yen and military scrip. The surrender meant that,
f0? -he fhdine: of writer-reporter Kageyuki Kaed under the leadership of fanatic rightist organiza
its
value would become worthless. But what if the*
*
sent bv a weekly Japanese magazine
tions. That is true. But money was the controlling
news
were of Japanese victory? Promptly he packed
American* country to learn how such a
factor behind the scene, always and in secret.
up
and
left by a (U.S.?) military plane, with a big
zo-roup who believed in the Japanese
As
far
as
I
can
see,
a
Jewish
merchant
planted
the
suitcase
filled with Japanese money.
^me hto existence and what it really was.
seeds and a group of evil Japanese people nurtured
Yassoon
first tried to sell his Japanese military
‘learned “amazing, hidden facts” according
_ni and greedily ate up all the fruit they bore.”
scrip
in
Hawaii.
He failed. He then learned there was
k %eklv which ran his article under the title:
a
rightists
organization
formed by Japanese Brazilians.
The Kajiyama Report
Evil Black Hand Which Manipulated the BraziFollowing is the startling and sensational story un
Rival Factions
r^rKajivama said he went around the country,
covered by Kajiyama, translated into English and re
Called “Shindo Renmei” (Loyalty Federation), the
Brazilian Nisei and Issei among many
vealed for the first time in the United States by this
group
was founded in Brazil toward the end of the
writer.
"
a result, I learned some surprising things,”
war.
At
that time the Japanese immigrants were
found that the ‘kachigumi’ was born under
Jewish millionaire Aacob E. Yasoon, also known as
Shanghai A assoon” or “Yassoon Zaibatsu”, was ter<evii influence of a cunning, clever Jewish mil(Continued on Page 8)
iiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiHinHiiiiiiiininiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiMHiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiijiHiiiinniiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiniiniiiiHiiiniiiiiniuiiiJiiiiiirim
CENTENNIAL
YEAR
1S67—1967
The Ueto Canadian
EXPO 67
APRIL 28—OCT. 27
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
SATURDAY, APRIL 22, 1967
Toronto, Ont.
ijniniiiiinsiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiHiiiiiisiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiinuuiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiuuiiiiiii uiiiimiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiitiniiiiiiii
Easier Regulations On Immigration
Expected To Increase Flow 25-percent
|TORONTO.—Miss Tsuneko Nakashima, a graduating student
York University, has been accepted by The Experiment in In|ational Living of Canada as a Country Ambassador to accomOTTAWA.—Easier rules and regulations on im committee gave informal approval to his new
j the American group of Experimenters who will spend the migration,
which are expected to increase the flow plans.
inier in Japan. Miss Nakashima is being sponsored by the by about 25 percent, were announced by Manpower
The easier, more flexible system was greeted
with delight by ethnic groups.
unto Council of The Experiment and community organizations Minister Jean Marchand.
It will give greater discretion by immigration
Appearing before a joint Senate-Commons com
rested in fostering international relations among youth.
officials overseas to determine an immigrant’s
mittee
that
has
been
studying
his
White
Paper
on
iMiss Nakashima, the Canadian
Immigration, issued last October, Mr. Marchand potential arid relax the present strict educational
Experiment’s first Ambassador modified many of his proposals to meet criticism and skill requirements.
Provisions by which immigrants already in Can
to Asia, will join. the American by politicians and ethnic groups.
ada
can sponsor relatives are also eased.
*
“
We
accept
many
of
the
grievances
made
before
group of ten Experimenters in
The white paper proposed to divide immigrants
the
committee,
’
Mr.
Marchand
said.
pmmunist For
San Francisco at the end of June
He said the complaints could be rectified by into three groups:
for three weeks of intensive Ja changes in regulations and administration if the
— Independents, welcome to come to Canada
leir New Mayor panese language study. In Ja
because they have a level of education- or ’a marketable skill en
fOKlO. — Tokyo’s voters pan each Experimenter will be
abling them to adjust to a hew
feed a major upset in Japa- assigned to a Japanese, family
ie politics recently by elect-' to become their “son” or “daugh
country and stand on their own
7 a Socialist and Communistfeet;
RAYMOND, Alta.—For the 10th consecutive year, a Japanese
iked candidate to the key post ter” for four weeks. With their
— Dependents of persons alGovernor (Mayor) of the “brothers and sisters” the en Canadian sugar beet farm has won top honors for the highest ready in Canada, mainly close
rid's largest city for the first tire group will travel together average crop recently at the Alberta Beet Growers Convention relatives intending to live with
ie.
and visit at least one major city here. Sunada Bros, farm was again awarded the Beet King title their families rather than seek
the success of soft-spoken for a period of two weeks. In and the Silver Tray award.
a job;
afessor, Ryoukichi Minobe, 63,
— Relatives who would need
With 82 acres of beets, the Sunada Bros. Farm averaged a
Mediately provoked apprehen- some cases the travel is replaced
a
little family help to get start
ns among the business commn- by special work and field study yield of 20% tons per acre.
ed but would be entering the
projects, ranging from teaching
Another Japanese Canadian farmer, Mr. S. Oishi of Raymond labor force.
conservative circles also fear English as a second language to was the winner in the under 30 acre beet farm class.
The paper proposed that mem
h the new Governor will use social service activities.
bers of the third group could
powers over police affairs to
be sponsored only by a Cana
The Experiment, founded in
■e the present tight limitations the United States in 1932, has Kapuskasing J.C. Student Wins $4,800 Scholarship dian citizen with five years’ re
sidence and could enter Canada
street demonstrations most of learned that acceptance into a
KAPUSKASING, Ont. — Gary rank in the Army Cadet Corps,
hh tend to be directed against family of a foreign culture is the Kaiura, a grade 13 student at as well as maintaining a sound only if they had seven years’
schooling or a job skill in de
surest method of understanding Kapuskasing District High academic record.
United States.
mand.
differences and regarding people School, has been awarded the J.
The strict classification pro
Rte was also speculation as individuals rather than mem- Edgar
requirements for entry
McAllister Scholarship in forAmong
posed
in the paper produced a
the
scholarship
is
a
mark
of
the result will weaken the mers of a racial or national engineering. This
scholarship over 80% in Grade 12 and at flood of complaints from ethnic
pal position of Prime Minvalued at 84,800 covers four years Christmas in Grade 13.
(Continued on Page R)
organizations and from MP’s
of undergraduate studies. Only
r
Esaku
Sato
of
«.
- the Consersenators on the committee.
Gary, youngest son of Mr. and and
six are awarded in the entire
h?il)eral Democratic party
Mr.
Marchand, in his state
Mrs. M. Kaiura, 11 Murdock ment recently,
province.
announced chang
Japanese
Work
Of
r X which lost control of
Street, has chosen to follow the es in regulations for all three
The eighteen-year old youth metallurgy
F capital.
and material science classes and blurred distinctions
has
been
an
outstanding
student
course
at
the
Faculty of Applied between the groups to allow
Art
To
Be
Shown
piness circles were appreall through school, taking an act Science and Engineering, Univer
K?01.01^ about Minobe’s
(Continued on Page 8)
ive part and attaining a high sity of Toronto.
।‘Sum policy in action at home At Montrea I Expo
about the effect of his
MONTREAL. — ..The wooden
sculpture of Taira No Kiyomor^Moreign confidence.
ri a noted warlord and ruler of
Japan in the 12th century, was
airfreighted to Frankfurt re
It seems that Kanakuri, on the wife, six children and 10 grand
STOCKHOLM, Sweden—Fiftycently via Lufthansa en route to
verge
of fainting from near ex children during it, and that takes
four years eight months, six
Montreal.
haustion, had been running past time, you know.”
davs,
eight
hours,
32
minutes
The wood carving, designated
a banker’s villa on the outskirts
an important cultural property and 20 3/10ths sec. after he had of Tureberg, when he spotted
Recently, Kanakuri revisited
set
out
on
the
marathon
run
in
of Japan, will make its first
people
drinking
orange
juice
in
the
villa garden and was treat
overseas appearance during Ex the 1912 Olympics, Shizuo Kana the garden. He stopped to quench ed to another glass of orange
kuri of Japan was clocked in at
po ’67 in Montreal, Canada.
his thirst and lingered at the juice by Bengt Petre, the son of
Stockholm’s Olympic Stadium.
b?XT0‘ — Robert Ken Sai
The seated wooden figure, said
Kanakuri had disappeared mid garden party for an hour, then his original host. Kanakuri also
took a train to Stockholm, where cleared up a further mystery.
5anSei student at to be made in the 13th century, way through the race, leading to he
spent the night in a hotel an l .For 54 years the Petres have
j/^ ^rk Secondary- School Kamakura era, is owned by the] rumors that he had missed his
deeply
ashamed, left on the first treasured, as.i a poetic memento
Rokuhara
Mitsuji
temple
in
Kyo
first checkpoint and was still
xor a free trip to “Exof the Olympics, a scroll with
to.
running. Indeed, his whereabouts available boat for the Orient.
Now 76, Kanakuri returned to Japanese writting on it, which
by C“ B“ C“ High
Taira No Kiyomori was the remained a mystery until 19bA
?rOgTani “Reach For leader of the Heike family dur when a Swedish newsman track Stockholm at the invitation of a they found . inside a decorative
businessmen’s committee, which box Kanakuri had sent them in
* lo? - He will
appear on ing its zenith in the feudal age. ed him down in the town of Ta is raising money to send the gratitude for their hospitality.
^ 9hannel 6 at 6 p.m.
The Heike clan was defeated mana in southern Japan, where Swedish team to the 1968 Olym When he took a look at it Kanahe was enjoying the placid life
k
h’ May iGth, May by its counterpart, the Genji, led of a pensioned geography teach pics. “It’s been a long race,” he kuri sadly informed the Petres:
by shogun Minamoto No Yoritosaid, “but then I got myself a “It is just an old customs form. ’
6^ and 13th.
er.
mo, in the late 12th century.
Japanese Canadians Win Beet King Title Again
Japan Runner Reaches Finish After 54 Years
p For Jhe Top”
Page 2
Canadian Kodokan B. B. Hssoc
Ruiarded $13,430. Gov’t
TORONTO.—The Canadian Kodokan Black Belt ; ship and
Pan American Games Trials — 196
n
'ng JUd° ^^y, ha3 been ) $7,500. will be allocated to 5 Coaches Clinics and
.°. $ 3,490.00 by" the Department । $1,157. will go towards administrative assistance
Of National Health and Welfare to continue the
। and travel assistance to one annual and one exarts development and aid in its administrative end. ecutive meeting in 1967-68.
By DENNY BOYD
This was announced recently by Health and WelSome 8504,844. in grants were awarded to 45
fare Minister MacEachen.
VANCOUVER.—The Vancouver Lions footbaU ri
national sports and recreational organizations.
Of the 813,490. received by the C.K.B.B.A. whose
Almost half the money — $233,412 — goes for I a “enume/aPaneseprofessional wrestler and I for 1 ^
President is Mr. Frank Hatashita, 6th-dan, $4,833. training and development nroe-rams onpratAH hv easi6f tonight knowing that our team is in such fin/??1
and development programs operated by
Recently I came out all hives and Xw
will go towards the Canadian Judo Champion
national sports governing bodies and recreational
organizations.
Administrative I ? aPPaJent progress being made by the Lions
grants
total $125,186, while they had lost a bunch of veteran plavers a
Ritzmen Even Finals With Dufferin
$S2 307
has been earmarked for cruit and an assistant coach and then ask^ri
f
■ ww
ctaT"sl*- ri’te to do to recoup some of these losses
at ^”5
By BUD MADOKORO
mura with a rising shot. Thei $63,939 goes to support interi
'
Ritz team didn’t quit however,
,
^.was hardly *y on the question when A — A “fired-up” as they continued to press and; national competition, including I
lutz Kinoshita team, led bv Al
sending Canadian teams to the came streaking into the office in the form of a f u^
ct^t3’"^
hat-trick,
evened got a goal when Al Masukawa Pan American Games in Winni- P^ss release. Breathlessly, it announced
vJ.H.L. finals at one game scored on a screened shot. Bob PU5%e .rant - $40 apiece when they trimmed Duf- Hirano earned an assist on the
ferm Cleaners 5-3. The Insur goal. Moments later, almost on 000 — awarded to the Canadiak J™St “ wh° 1S so“ewhat of a hybrid, being six feet thr^
anceman emulated Dufferin’s ear- an identical play, Al Masukawa Amateur
Hockey Association
and Whmg 220 pounds. Usually, it takes th™
fired his second goal to tie the will assist in the staging of five to fill-those dimensions.
JapanS;s
Aer "[^ by rallying strongly in score.
the third neriod to earn their
leadership
institutes j
Around the wrestling* cireniFe
f
The third period began quicklv regional
victory.
(coache’s clinics). They are to never plaved fnnfhaii f
u ^ th Y Ca hm Big&-^
as Dufferin’s Ben Murata, on a
f PlaYed football, but he has wrestled a lot and has fe
3 S’oal out-burst pass from Al Shishido, scored be held in August at Vancouver,
Fort
William,
Kingston,
nine
lo^^
deal of rugby. He is also a good friend of Lio/
.
^sukawa; Paul Sunohara to give his team the lead once
scored
goals: the winner and more. During a power-play; Al cations in Quebec and one Mari- manager Denny Veitch, which helps.
*^
the insurance goal. Frank Shirai Masukawa back-handed in the time centi'e to be named later.
shi sparkled for tlie losers while equalizer as Kelly Toyota earn
The Royal
Canadian Legion
BIG KU’S AN EXPERIMENT
r" Murata added the other ed an assist.
was awarded $38,935 to support
v
,
. .. .
Duffenn goal. This sets the stage
v ^usatsu is Veitch’s baby, if you’ll pardon the M
The Ritz team was in com its annual national track and
“ GaelP}1- M°re than
Vertch met him during a rugby tour in Japan a few ve/
lor
Sunday’s game—the mand of the game from that
crucial game of the season!
jTZT8?' ^ have “^“^ frequently. • .
point on as Paul Sunohara, from this “s 2^5 1“
Dufferin Cleaners scored the a goal-mouth scramble, got the September 1.
L w ^j e ^me ^ caught up with Veitch recently, he had J
OIly ^ °^ ^e Hrst period winning goal. Dufferin pulled
The Canadian Olympic Associa- 7^/ day being alternately laughed at and sneered at Sol
v hen Fiank Shiraishi scored their goalie in favour of a sixth
‘”s
! I™?3 c*e£"ilr’ he said- "F“-» ^ ‘ri J
from Ken Davie. It was a wide- attacker but the strategy back wriS^Tri"
u । J
open period with both teams en fired when Paul Sunohara blast- 953. Thirty thousand dollar’s goes suggested that we should bra-noh mil
toward maintenance of the COA’s to see if wp could f r
*
1 Ulternataa1^
joying numerous scoring chanc ed a long shot into the empty national
office, and the remain- K
We C0U d find a Potential footbball supply. So Sid
es.
net.
der will assist in sending 468 ath- 2? an exPeriment in the non-Canadian, non-import classified
Dufferin team increased
D and\ 20 -staff members to
Ku may be a test case, on behalf of all rugby plaveis c3
Play-off Schedule
their lead to two goals when
the Pan American Games.
| y he is the fastest Mg man I have ever seen and I taw ted
April 23rd, 1967
r iank Shiraishi stole the puck
.The Canadian Amateur Swim to hit. When they line them all up at training camp, he’ll give 3
from a Ritz Kinoshita defender;
1 p.m. Dufferin Cleaners vs.
ming Association receives $50,- of them a going-over.” 1
walked in and beat Matt Naka- Ritz Kinoshita.
712, part, of which rill assist in
I would like to point out that the signing of a Japanese J
the staging of the National
Swimming and Diring Cham er by the B.C. Lions does not set a complete precedent. Ind
pionships and Pan Am trials, the o yoae, they had a wrestler and a Japanese, although not in i
FOR WORRY-FREE TRAVEL
National Outdoor Water Polo same person.
Championships
and coaching
ARRANGEMENTS
For a short period, the Lions had a Hawaiian tackle J
clinics in water polo and syn
chronized swimming.
^s (Bineapples) laukea, who also wrestled on the side, id
By Air, Sea and Land
e. ected from the club because, sensitive soul, he couldn’t d
Call
being yelled at by Wayne Robinson.
And of course there was the time when Doug Hepburn«
between careers, after winning the world weight-lifting chand
ship and before becoming a wgestler. Annis Stukus, who cd
MTorLOnX Nisei
Major Mixed 10-pin smell a promotion two provinces away, signed him for a tiyd
365 SPADINA AVE., TORONTO 2-B, ONT
Vancouver Lions Hire Japanese lit
KEG NEWS
March
Horita 615; Bob Nishi
mura 594; Herb Miyasaki 582; Akira
Sogawa 573; Jack Watanabe 573; Jim
Nakanishi 569; Rick
Herb Morita 555; Sam Haya
shi 555; .Terry Doi 554; Clare Ward 553^?? D°i 553; Yuki Murata 552; Alma
EtoSO^ ^ Ebata 532;Rose Fu'
PHONE EM. 6-1075
TORIC
OPTICAL
OPTOMETRISTS
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
E-^-^ffl ^ iz B f
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
SMALL
YAMAUCHI WAS ON THE SPOT
ri
Poor Hepburn bombed out. Although he was billed as 3
strongest man in the world, he had one lame leg. which re®
so many braces, splints, belts and gantries that Granny Cl®^
I
He* Masaki 588; Ken could have knocked Hepburn over with a blind-side block.
J"?®.1
Stan Coulighan 581; Herb
oivers
And back in the late Fifties, stumpy Joe Yamauchi, Gw
ta°565
KV?U«O574; Iim Mori‘
“,5“' Sam Hayashi 559; Ken Nakani football’s last Kamikaze kid, used to hustle back punts fcj
shi 557; Miki Cimcola 551; Ken Doi 551Amy Shiga 587; Alma Wilson 537; Beri Lions. Joe, an eternally-cheerful Japanese Canadian, also ?M
m ^H.l59^ Nancy Morino 513.
proprietor
the odd moment of fullback for the Leos.
J
u;^arcL 7rh-' Sam Hayashi 614; Sub
^ ^e
Lin Hudda-t 599; Dick KiOne of those moments occured the first time that the m
5S Ken I:umi 561; Stan CoulJON ONODERA
’^an 555; Shirl Miyasaki 530; Alma tetic Al Dorow quarterbacked the Lions. Dorow joined the dub3
TaWOrh7529; Ncncy M°rino 527; Amy in time to suit up and take one fast look through the plara
1 OKI OU/.
As a result, he spent the night making up plays in the
HU. 9-1654 - HU. 1-8805 kSS.’^’SM
Late in the game, he was working- with an All-Canadian bactf-j
including Yamauchi at fullback.
I
J I Mon 561; Ed Utsunomiya 556; Roy NaI Mma‘nJ53;CinRicllard Sakauye 552Dorow knelt in the huddle, diagramming a play 011 ^’ H
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
with
his finger.
I
JI
K1® Onizuka 518; Alma
J
509; Shirl Miyasaki 506
Toronto
It was to be .a delayed buck, with Dorow handing oil ll’J
I
Doi
Ed Utsunomi!
^i^ra 590; Chuck Ges- mauchi after two fakes. Jabbing his finger into the grass, ^
J
7 5Watanabe 584; Yosh Mu- said. And Joe, you stand here until I give you the balk
“
Poi 554; Miki CinicoDorow took the snap from centre, faked twice, whirls
7 I FkS?k c--7; ^OD Nishimura
K8: ^ank Mi555; Mary
F^oto^ “^ ^
5547 Rose looked for Yamauchi. And there was Joe, 10 yards back, ^
right over the spot where Dorow had jabbed his finger ink3
I
*
*
*
grass.
.
fl
SHOE
SIZES
NEW SPRING
STYLE SHOES
Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
ALBERTS SHOE STORE
W
■
A01??*0
Sunday Nisei Mixed
5-
P' 1967'
Oda 87S <331. 306);
7q°£ v?^-814 (3S; Kk Kuroda
/So, Moise Kashimura 777 (315); Harry
I???-,e ;®Pi Don Sheppard 738; Terrv
EE°kCcoP:nPe7 ^rakiia 634; Nomi
S 1. '^ Fukusa^ 612; Connie
n ApcL ^ 19S7. Min Sasaki 761 (335)m3 nhf^ 75-4 (344h Hrnie Jomori
_’’-J?9-?^ Lerasi fa /02; Kaide ShimiMim^ SOS^" OnCShi 62I; Barbca Shi___________
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD,
FLAT roofs
mkmber of ^^
shingling
EAVESTROUGHING
SHEET METAL WORK
T.N.
ALCAN SIDING DEALER
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
- C‘O,D: orders from coast to coast
Healthy Body & Mind
Through the Martial Arts
TORONTO
421-3374
NISEI OWNED
COVERING ONTARIO
TOSH NISHIJIMA
Night Calk: PL. 9-5095 Hl. 7-1100
Ruiarded $13,430. Gov’t
TORONTO.—The Canadian Kodokan Black Belt ; ship and
Pan American Games Trials — 196
n
'ng JUd° ^^y, ha3 been ) $7,500. will be allocated to 5 Coaches Clinics and
.°. $ 3,490.00 by" the Department । $1,157. will go towards administrative assistance
Of National Health and Welfare to continue the
। and travel assistance to one annual and one exarts development and aid in its administrative end. ecutive meeting in 1967-68.
By DENNY BOYD
This was announced recently by Health and WelSome 8504,844. in grants were awarded to 45
fare Minister MacEachen.
VANCOUVER.—The Vancouver Lions footbaU ri
national sports and recreational organizations.
Of the 813,490. received by the C.K.B.B.A. whose
Almost half the money — $233,412 — goes for I a “enume/aPaneseprofessional wrestler and I for 1 ^
President is Mr. Frank Hatashita, 6th-dan, $4,833. training and development nroe-rams onpratAH hv easi6f tonight knowing that our team is in such fin/??1
and development programs operated by
Recently I came out all hives and Xw
will go towards the Canadian Judo Champion
national sports governing bodies and recreational
organizations.
Administrative I ? aPPaJent progress being made by the Lions
grants
total $125,186, while they had lost a bunch of veteran plavers a
Ritzmen Even Finals With Dufferin
$S2 307
has been earmarked for cruit and an assistant coach and then ask^ri
f
■ ww
ctaT"sl*- ri’te to do to recoup some of these losses
at ^”5
By BUD MADOKORO
mura with a rising shot. Thei $63,939 goes to support interi
'
Ritz team didn’t quit however,
,
^.was hardly *y on the question when A — A “fired-up” as they continued to press and; national competition, including I
lutz Kinoshita team, led bv Al
sending Canadian teams to the came streaking into the office in the form of a f u^
ct^t3’"^
hat-trick,
evened got a goal when Al Masukawa Pan American Games in Winni- P^ss release. Breathlessly, it announced
vJ.H.L. finals at one game scored on a screened shot. Bob PU5%e .rant - $40 apiece when they trimmed Duf- Hirano earned an assist on the
ferm Cleaners 5-3. The Insur goal. Moments later, almost on 000 — awarded to the Canadiak J™St “ wh° 1S so“ewhat of a hybrid, being six feet thr^
anceman emulated Dufferin’s ear- an identical play, Al Masukawa Amateur
Hockey Association
and Whmg 220 pounds. Usually, it takes th™
fired his second goal to tie the will assist in the staging of five to fill-those dimensions.
JapanS;s
Aer "[^ by rallying strongly in score.
the third neriod to earn their
leadership
institutes j
Around the wrestling* cireniFe
f
The third period began quicklv regional
victory.
(coache’s clinics). They are to never plaved fnnfhaii f
u ^ th Y Ca hm Big&-^
as Dufferin’s Ben Murata, on a
f PlaYed football, but he has wrestled a lot and has fe
3 S’oal out-burst pass from Al Shishido, scored be held in August at Vancouver,
Fort
William,
Kingston,
nine
lo^^
deal of rugby. He is also a good friend of Lio/
.
^sukawa; Paul Sunohara to give his team the lead once
scored
goals: the winner and more. During a power-play; Al cations in Quebec and one Mari- manager Denny Veitch, which helps.
*^
the insurance goal. Frank Shirai Masukawa back-handed in the time centi'e to be named later.
shi sparkled for tlie losers while equalizer as Kelly Toyota earn
The Royal
Canadian Legion
BIG KU’S AN EXPERIMENT
r" Murata added the other ed an assist.
was awarded $38,935 to support
v
,
. .. .
Duffenn goal. This sets the stage
v ^usatsu is Veitch’s baby, if you’ll pardon the M
The Ritz team was in com its annual national track and
“ GaelP}1- M°re than
Vertch met him during a rugby tour in Japan a few ve/
lor
Sunday’s game—the mand of the game from that
crucial game of the season!
jTZT8?' ^ have “^“^ frequently. • .
point on as Paul Sunohara, from this “s 2^5 1“
Dufferin Cleaners scored the a goal-mouth scramble, got the September 1.
L w ^j e ^me ^ caught up with Veitch recently, he had J
OIly ^ °^ ^e Hrst period winning goal. Dufferin pulled
The Canadian Olympic Associa- 7^/ day being alternately laughed at and sneered at Sol
v hen Fiank Shiraishi scored their goalie in favour of a sixth
‘”s
! I™?3 c*e£"ilr’ he said- "F“-» ^ ‘ri J
from Ken Davie. It was a wide- attacker but the strategy back wriS^Tri"
u । J
open period with both teams en fired when Paul Sunohara blast- 953. Thirty thousand dollar’s goes suggested that we should bra-noh mil
toward maintenance of the COA’s to see if wp could f r
*
1 Ulternataa1^
joying numerous scoring chanc ed a long shot into the empty national
office, and the remain- K
We C0U d find a Potential footbball supply. So Sid
es.
net.
der will assist in sending 468 ath- 2? an exPeriment in the non-Canadian, non-import classified
Dufferin team increased
D and\ 20 -staff members to
Ku may be a test case, on behalf of all rugby plaveis c3
Play-off Schedule
their lead to two goals when
the Pan American Games.
| y he is the fastest Mg man I have ever seen and I taw ted
April 23rd, 1967
r iank Shiraishi stole the puck
.The Canadian Amateur Swim to hit. When they line them all up at training camp, he’ll give 3
from a Ritz Kinoshita defender;
1 p.m. Dufferin Cleaners vs.
ming Association receives $50,- of them a going-over.” 1
walked in and beat Matt Naka- Ritz Kinoshita.
712, part, of which rill assist in
I would like to point out that the signing of a Japanese J
the staging of the National
Swimming and Diring Cham er by the B.C. Lions does not set a complete precedent. Ind
pionships and Pan Am trials, the o yoae, they had a wrestler and a Japanese, although not in i
FOR WORRY-FREE TRAVEL
National Outdoor Water Polo same person.
Championships
and coaching
ARRANGEMENTS
For a short period, the Lions had a Hawaiian tackle J
clinics in water polo and syn
chronized swimming.
^s (Bineapples) laukea, who also wrestled on the side, id
By Air, Sea and Land
e. ected from the club because, sensitive soul, he couldn’t d
Call
being yelled at by Wayne Robinson.
And of course there was the time when Doug Hepburn«
between careers, after winning the world weight-lifting chand
ship and before becoming a wgestler. Annis Stukus, who cd
MTorLOnX Nisei
Major Mixed 10-pin smell a promotion two provinces away, signed him for a tiyd
365 SPADINA AVE., TORONTO 2-B, ONT
Vancouver Lions Hire Japanese lit
KEG NEWS
March
Horita 615; Bob Nishi
mura 594; Herb Miyasaki 582; Akira
Sogawa 573; Jack Watanabe 573; Jim
Nakanishi 569; Rick
Herb Morita 555; Sam Haya
shi 555; .Terry Doi 554; Clare Ward 553^?? D°i 553; Yuki Murata 552; Alma
EtoSO^ ^ Ebata 532;Rose Fu'
PHONE EM. 6-1075
TORIC
OPTICAL
OPTOMETRISTS
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
E-^-^ffl ^ iz B f
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
SMALL
YAMAUCHI WAS ON THE SPOT
ri
Poor Hepburn bombed out. Although he was billed as 3
strongest man in the world, he had one lame leg. which re®
so many braces, splints, belts and gantries that Granny Cl®^
I
He* Masaki 588; Ken could have knocked Hepburn over with a blind-side block.
J"?®.1
Stan Coulighan 581; Herb
oivers
And back in the late Fifties, stumpy Joe Yamauchi, Gw
ta°565
KV?U«O574; Iim Mori‘
“,5“' Sam Hayashi 559; Ken Nakani football’s last Kamikaze kid, used to hustle back punts fcj
shi 557; Miki Cimcola 551; Ken Doi 551Amy Shiga 587; Alma Wilson 537; Beri Lions. Joe, an eternally-cheerful Japanese Canadian, also ?M
m ^H.l59^ Nancy Morino 513.
proprietor
the odd moment of fullback for the Leos.
J
u;^arcL 7rh-' Sam Hayashi 614; Sub
^ ^e
Lin Hudda-t 599; Dick KiOne of those moments occured the first time that the m
5S Ken I:umi 561; Stan CoulJON ONODERA
’^an 555; Shirl Miyasaki 530; Alma tetic Al Dorow quarterbacked the Lions. Dorow joined the dub3
TaWOrh7529; Ncncy M°rino 527; Amy in time to suit up and take one fast look through the plara
1 OKI OU/.
As a result, he spent the night making up plays in the
HU. 9-1654 - HU. 1-8805 kSS.’^’SM
Late in the game, he was working- with an All-Canadian bactf-j
including Yamauchi at fullback.
I
J I Mon 561; Ed Utsunomiya 556; Roy NaI Mma‘nJ53;CinRicllard Sakauye 552Dorow knelt in the huddle, diagramming a play 011 ^’ H
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
with
his finger.
I
JI
K1® Onizuka 518; Alma
J
509; Shirl Miyasaki 506
Toronto
It was to be .a delayed buck, with Dorow handing oil ll’J
I
Doi
Ed Utsunomi!
^i^ra 590; Chuck Ges- mauchi after two fakes. Jabbing his finger into the grass, ^
J
7 5Watanabe 584; Yosh Mu- said. And Joe, you stand here until I give you the balk
“
Poi 554; Miki CinicoDorow took the snap from centre, faked twice, whirls
7 I FkS?k c--7; ^OD Nishimura
K8: ^ank Mi555; Mary
F^oto^ “^ ^
5547 Rose looked for Yamauchi. And there was Joe, 10 yards back, ^
right over the spot where Dorow had jabbed his finger ink3
I
*
*
*
grass.
.
fl
SHOE
SIZES
NEW SPRING
STYLE SHOES
Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
ALBERTS SHOE STORE
W
■
A01??*0
Sunday Nisei Mixed
5-
P' 1967'
Oda 87S <331. 306);
7q°£ v?^-814 (3S; Kk Kuroda
/So, Moise Kashimura 777 (315); Harry
I???-,e ;®Pi Don Sheppard 738; Terrv
EE°kCcoP:nPe7 ^rakiia 634; Nomi
S 1. '^ Fukusa^ 612; Connie
n ApcL ^ 19S7. Min Sasaki 761 (335)m3 nhf^ 75-4 (344h Hrnie Jomori
_’’-J?9-?^ Lerasi fa /02; Kaide ShimiMim^ SOS^" OnCShi 62I; Barbca Shi___________
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD,
FLAT roofs
mkmber of ^^
shingling
EAVESTROUGHING
SHEET METAL WORK
T.N.
ALCAN SIDING DEALER
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
- C‘O,D: orders from coast to coast
Healthy Body & Mind
Through the Martial Arts
TORONTO
421-3374
NISEI OWNED
COVERING ONTARIO
TOSH NISHIJIMA
Night Calk: PL. 9-5095 Hl. 7-1100
Page 3
92 1967
PAGE 8
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Authorized Agent for All Airlines
AUTHORIZED agent fob
W. K. GARDENS
Frank G. Yada
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Crown Life insurance Co.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
1550 West Georgi* St.
Vancouver, B.C.
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquete
Private Dining Rooms
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Authorized Agent for All Airlines
AUTHORIZED agent fob
W. K. GARDENS
Frank G. Yada
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Crown Life insurance Co.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
1550 West Georgi* St.
Vancouver, B.C.
CATERING TO
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Page 7
j
tirday,^Pru-
22,’—
1967
-
___________________________________________ PAGE 7
Singer Nagisa Kai
Personal Notes Across Canada
Introduced To
Marriages
TCCA Needs Volunteers For Fund Campaign Press At Party
Change Of Address
^TORONTO.—The Toronto JCCA urgently requires volunteer
•
H AMAOKI- UYEDA
DONSVIEW, Ont. — Mr. and
Mrs. Senji Sano announced their
KAMLOOPS, B.C.—Miss Irene new address as 242 Calvington
Rumei Hamaoki, daughter of Mr. Drive, Downsview, Ontario. Their
and Ylrs. Ihachi Hamaoki of telephone number is 249-55 6 5
Kamloops, B.C., became the bride
of Mi-. Henry Ichiro Uyeda, son
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A.
of Mr. and Mrs. Tsunehiko Uye
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
da also of Kamloops, on April
NOTARY PUBLIC
8th, 1967 at North Kamloops
St. George Church. The cere
221 VICTORIA ST., TORONTO
EM. 3-5002' —
OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
mony7 was officiated by the Rev.
Atkinson. A reception followed
at Highlander1 Restaurant.
more than 5,000 appeal letters in its current $2,000.
al drive,
; Please call Archie 239-7829 or George 461-8686. Your assistwill be greatly’ appreciated. — A.N.
♦
♦
♦
or Japanese Canadian Centennial Meet May 1st
TORONTO._ The Toronto Japanese Canadian Centennial Com.„ will be holding a general meeting on Monday, May7 1st
^Spm Place is the Kameoka Hall, 411 Dundas Street West.
Process reports from the various committees of the J.C.
aitenuial group will be heard. All members and representatives
~JC Centennial are requested to make a special effort to at-
TAI-IIBOSHI
nd. —
apuskasing J.C/s Hold Canada Birthday "Party
Nagisa Kai
KAPUSKASING, Ont.—A “Canada’s Birthday Party” was
eld earlier tins year by the Japanese Canadian groups in Kapuskasine; The evening included group singing and a variety of games
Ind contests, some of which were educational while others, involv^ costumes, caused much merriment. Prizes were awarded to
lie winners, and losers recieved Centennial pencils as consolation
lifts. Buffet lunch included an assortment of Japanese delicacies
|nd a birthday cake decorated with Centennial motifs.
By GILLIAN ROBERTSON
A Japanese cocktail party7 was
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Kennedy7, Rowanwood
Ave., this week. It heralded the
beginning of the Canadian Opera
Company’s 1967 subscription ser
ies campaign, and honored the
Company’s new star, Miss Na
gisa Kai who will sing Madame
Butterfly7 this coming fall.
Guests were intrigued by7 the
Japanese floral arrangements,
that traditional drink of hospi
tality, sake, and the interesting
hors d’oeuvres of chicken kushiyaki, kurimaki (stuffed rolled
cucumber with crab), namani no
crackers age (fish balls) and
harusame tempura (shrimp cov
ered with dry7 yam noodles). The
sake finally7 ran out and the
dishes were left bare by7 the time
the last guest left.
Jor. Buddhist Church Centennial Fashion Show
I TORONTO.—It’s that time of year again at Toronto Buddhist
Church when little girls turn into sweet lovelies and boys become
Serious and poker-faced as they walk down the ramp all wear
ing fashions their mothers have worked over their sewing machines
for the last few weeks.
The theme is Centennial and there is an air of excitement
End surprise in store. Mrs. Rosie Nobuto, chairman of the committee, promises a fine evening- of distinctive fashions and en
tertainment. Bring a friend and we’ll see you on Saturday, April
22nd at 8:00 p.m. at 918 Bathurst Street. — Toronto Dana
Japanese POW Speaker Spellbinds Seicho-No-Ie
By MARGARET HAUSER
TORONTO.—The true story of two Japanese prisoners of war
twho escaped almost certain death by applying techniques of
philosophy and mind-training given to them at the eleventh hour,
held members of the Toronto English Study Group of Seicho-NoJe spellbound at a special meeting held last week.
The story was told recently in Los Angeles by7 survivor Mr.
.Yoshio Endo. It has been written in Japanese and English, and a
.special tape recording sent to Toronto was brought to the English
: Study Group by Mr. Utaro Tomimoto, President of the Toronto
ihei Seicho-No-Ie.
Twenty-one years rolled away7 as the story unfolded, and two
-Japanese prisoners of war stood in a Chinese courtroom and heard
; Ae chief judge sentence them to the death penalty for alleged
^ar crimes. They7 were Yoshio Endo and Toshiaki Nakajima, and
A^ey had pleaded fnot guilty’ maintaining that the charges against
em were false. Both had been under detention in China for a
; ®g time, and were emaciated. As they returned to their jail
j cell, they took with them only the bleak outlook of death at the
j ands of a firing squad in a day, a week — a month; they knew
when.
d ^7e^er ^d then heard of Dr. Masaharu Taniguchi and his
. «uine of Seicho-No-Ie. When, incredibly, the teachings were
: P ced in then.’ hands — they were applied out of sheer desperal~°n’ • men w^° had nothing to lose.
. ,e aa^henticated story is movingly told in Japanese by the
^to^R11^ ^' ^do. It is also written in Japanese and translated
^ ^ nglisht Seicho-No-Ie plans to make the recording available
Crested groups in Toronto within the next few weeks.
IN KIMONO
EM 4-9913
(TORONTO)
Toronto Japanese united church
_
SUNDAY, APRIL 23, 1967 11:30 A.M.
Nisei Service — Rev. Wm. Morris
Issei Service — Rev. M. Norisue
,
Church School for the children
COae to everyone
. . 701
COMPAHI
^ A
^ a
AGENCY
Office — 3102 Bathurst St.
Phone: 783-4261
Dovercourt Rd.
INSURANCE
Phone: PL. 9-2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
^iiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiinniiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiuiL
=Ml
Buy & Sell
—
I
—
Your Home
Through
MITS
—
KURODA
=
■■
=
|
=
Representing
| WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE LIMiTED |
E
E
1444 Danforth Avenue
—
Toronto, Ontario
BUS: HO. 9-1151 — RES: AM. 1-2581
=
|
!
SUMMER HOLIDAY TOUR TO JAPAN
|
=
Departure: June 30, 1967
=
x Tour Fare:
= Air Fare Vancouver-Tokyo Return
= 8 Days Land Tour in Japan
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
TORONTO
For All Classes of
DUNDAS UNION STORE
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
AVE.,
RITZ KINOSHITA
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVERN
SHARON'S FLORIST
942 PAPE
Consult
TORONTO. — Toronto Japa
nese United Church on January7
21st, 1967 was the setting for
the marriage of bliss Yoshiko
Iiboshi, daughter of Mr. Louis
Inouye, to Mr. Yasuharu Tai of
Japan. The ceremony7 was offici
ated by7 tire Rev. M. Norisue. A
reception was held at the Golden
Dragon on April Sth.
Miss Kai, who’s tall, slender
and very attractive wore a Ja -(imiiiiiiiiiniimniiiiniiiniin^^
panese kimono for the occasion.
That she’s here in Toronto at
all is lucky. She’s 27 and alrea
Welcome Jcipcmeoe Canadian Friend#
dy7 a well-known opera singer in
Japan. Her aunt and uncle, Mt.
and Mrs. Masami Tsuruoka, of
Indian Rd., live in Toronto and
in 1965 she decided to take a
trip to visit them.
She liked Canada and decided
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
to stay and study for a few
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
months at the Royal Conservatory of Music. When Mr. Howell
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas. Toronto
Glvnne heard her sing for the
first time, he was so impressed
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
he called in general director of
Seating Capacity 240
the COC Herman Geiger-Torel
and opera conductor Maestro Er
nesto Barbini. Both were en
chanted by her voice and per
sonal charm, and recently when
she auditioned for the Company s
four-and-a-half week season, she
won the role of Cio-Cio-San in
Madame Butterfly.
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
IN ITALIAN
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
SUKIYAKI
MEAT — VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR.
Her aunt doesn’t know what
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
she’ll do when it’s over, but re
ported that she loved Canada.
In the meantime, she’s learning
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
the role in Italian from Maestro
Barbini, and spending three
EM. 4-7692
hours a day at the local YMCA
learning English. Mrs. Tsuruoka
is enjoying having another wo
man around their house. Hei two ............................................
"I111..........
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ’-teen-age boys are too
to ifie
point of fighting over their
pretty cousin, says their mothei.
SAY IT WITH
FLOWERS
T.V. Service
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
?
Home phon.e: HI. 7_8905
=
$652.00 ^
216.00 E
=
=
Can arrange extention to Shikoku, Kyushu
Hong Kong, Manila, Taipei, Okinawa.
z
=
Contact
=
|
K. Iwata Travel Service
|
=
=
=
Vancouver Main Office or Toronto Branch
461 E. Hastings St., Vancouver, B.C.
113 McCauI St., Toronto, Ont.
=
^
=
=
^iiiiiniiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiHiiiiiJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiir
tirday,^Pru-
22,’—
1967
-
___________________________________________ PAGE 7
Singer Nagisa Kai
Personal Notes Across Canada
Introduced To
Marriages
TCCA Needs Volunteers For Fund Campaign Press At Party
Change Of Address
^TORONTO.—The Toronto JCCA urgently requires volunteer
•
H AMAOKI- UYEDA
DONSVIEW, Ont. — Mr. and
Mrs. Senji Sano announced their
KAMLOOPS, B.C.—Miss Irene new address as 242 Calvington
Rumei Hamaoki, daughter of Mr. Drive, Downsview, Ontario. Their
and Ylrs. Ihachi Hamaoki of telephone number is 249-55 6 5
Kamloops, B.C., became the bride
of Mi-. Henry Ichiro Uyeda, son
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A.
of Mr. and Mrs. Tsunehiko Uye
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
da also of Kamloops, on April
NOTARY PUBLIC
8th, 1967 at North Kamloops
St. George Church. The cere
221 VICTORIA ST., TORONTO
EM. 3-5002' —
OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
mony7 was officiated by the Rev.
Atkinson. A reception followed
at Highlander1 Restaurant.
more than 5,000 appeal letters in its current $2,000.
al drive,
; Please call Archie 239-7829 or George 461-8686. Your assistwill be greatly’ appreciated. — A.N.
♦
♦
♦
or Japanese Canadian Centennial Meet May 1st
TORONTO._ The Toronto Japanese Canadian Centennial Com.„ will be holding a general meeting on Monday, May7 1st
^Spm Place is the Kameoka Hall, 411 Dundas Street West.
Process reports from the various committees of the J.C.
aitenuial group will be heard. All members and representatives
~JC Centennial are requested to make a special effort to at-
TAI-IIBOSHI
nd. —
apuskasing J.C/s Hold Canada Birthday "Party
Nagisa Kai
KAPUSKASING, Ont.—A “Canada’s Birthday Party” was
eld earlier tins year by the Japanese Canadian groups in Kapuskasine; The evening included group singing and a variety of games
Ind contests, some of which were educational while others, involv^ costumes, caused much merriment. Prizes were awarded to
lie winners, and losers recieved Centennial pencils as consolation
lifts. Buffet lunch included an assortment of Japanese delicacies
|nd a birthday cake decorated with Centennial motifs.
By GILLIAN ROBERTSON
A Japanese cocktail party7 was
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Kennedy7, Rowanwood
Ave., this week. It heralded the
beginning of the Canadian Opera
Company’s 1967 subscription ser
ies campaign, and honored the
Company’s new star, Miss Na
gisa Kai who will sing Madame
Butterfly7 this coming fall.
Guests were intrigued by7 the
Japanese floral arrangements,
that traditional drink of hospi
tality, sake, and the interesting
hors d’oeuvres of chicken kushiyaki, kurimaki (stuffed rolled
cucumber with crab), namani no
crackers age (fish balls) and
harusame tempura (shrimp cov
ered with dry7 yam noodles). The
sake finally7 ran out and the
dishes were left bare by7 the time
the last guest left.
Jor. Buddhist Church Centennial Fashion Show
I TORONTO.—It’s that time of year again at Toronto Buddhist
Church when little girls turn into sweet lovelies and boys become
Serious and poker-faced as they walk down the ramp all wear
ing fashions their mothers have worked over their sewing machines
for the last few weeks.
The theme is Centennial and there is an air of excitement
End surprise in store. Mrs. Rosie Nobuto, chairman of the committee, promises a fine evening- of distinctive fashions and en
tertainment. Bring a friend and we’ll see you on Saturday, April
22nd at 8:00 p.m. at 918 Bathurst Street. — Toronto Dana
Japanese POW Speaker Spellbinds Seicho-No-Ie
By MARGARET HAUSER
TORONTO.—The true story of two Japanese prisoners of war
twho escaped almost certain death by applying techniques of
philosophy and mind-training given to them at the eleventh hour,
held members of the Toronto English Study Group of Seicho-NoJe spellbound at a special meeting held last week.
The story was told recently in Los Angeles by7 survivor Mr.
.Yoshio Endo. It has been written in Japanese and English, and a
.special tape recording sent to Toronto was brought to the English
: Study Group by Mr. Utaro Tomimoto, President of the Toronto
ihei Seicho-No-Ie.
Twenty-one years rolled away7 as the story unfolded, and two
-Japanese prisoners of war stood in a Chinese courtroom and heard
; Ae chief judge sentence them to the death penalty for alleged
^ar crimes. They7 were Yoshio Endo and Toshiaki Nakajima, and
A^ey had pleaded fnot guilty’ maintaining that the charges against
em were false. Both had been under detention in China for a
; ®g time, and were emaciated. As they returned to their jail
j cell, they took with them only the bleak outlook of death at the
j ands of a firing squad in a day, a week — a month; they knew
when.
d ^7e^er ^d then heard of Dr. Masaharu Taniguchi and his
. «uine of Seicho-No-Ie. When, incredibly, the teachings were
: P ced in then.’ hands — they were applied out of sheer desperal~°n’ • men w^° had nothing to lose.
. ,e aa^henticated story is movingly told in Japanese by the
^to^R11^ ^' ^do. It is also written in Japanese and translated
^ ^ nglisht Seicho-No-Ie plans to make the recording available
Crested groups in Toronto within the next few weeks.
IN KIMONO
EM 4-9913
(TORONTO)
Toronto Japanese united church
_
SUNDAY, APRIL 23, 1967 11:30 A.M.
Nisei Service — Rev. Wm. Morris
Issei Service — Rev. M. Norisue
,
Church School for the children
COae to everyone
. . 701
COMPAHI
^ A
^ a
AGENCY
Office — 3102 Bathurst St.
Phone: 783-4261
Dovercourt Rd.
INSURANCE
Phone: PL. 9-2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
^iiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiinniiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiuiL
=Ml
Buy & Sell
—
I
—
Your Home
Through
MITS
—
KURODA
=
■■
=
|
=
Representing
| WM. FYSH REAL ESTATE LIMiTED |
E
E
1444 Danforth Avenue
—
Toronto, Ontario
BUS: HO. 9-1151 — RES: AM. 1-2581
=
|
!
SUMMER HOLIDAY TOUR TO JAPAN
|
=
Departure: June 30, 1967
=
x Tour Fare:
= Air Fare Vancouver-Tokyo Return
= 8 Days Land Tour in Japan
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
TORONTO
For All Classes of
DUNDAS UNION STORE
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
AVE.,
RITZ KINOSHITA
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVERN
SHARON'S FLORIST
942 PAPE
Consult
TORONTO. — Toronto Japa
nese United Church on January7
21st, 1967 was the setting for
the marriage of bliss Yoshiko
Iiboshi, daughter of Mr. Louis
Inouye, to Mr. Yasuharu Tai of
Japan. The ceremony7 was offici
ated by7 tire Rev. M. Norisue. A
reception was held at the Golden
Dragon on April Sth.
Miss Kai, who’s tall, slender
and very attractive wore a Ja -(imiiiiiiiiiniimniiiiniiiniin^^
panese kimono for the occasion.
That she’s here in Toronto at
all is lucky. She’s 27 and alrea
Welcome Jcipcmeoe Canadian Friend#
dy7 a well-known opera singer in
Japan. Her aunt and uncle, Mt.
and Mrs. Masami Tsuruoka, of
Indian Rd., live in Toronto and
in 1965 she decided to take a
trip to visit them.
She liked Canada and decided
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
to stay and study for a few
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
months at the Royal Conservatory of Music. When Mr. Howell
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas. Toronto
Glvnne heard her sing for the
first time, he was so impressed
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
he called in general director of
Seating Capacity 240
the COC Herman Geiger-Torel
and opera conductor Maestro Er
nesto Barbini. Both were en
chanted by her voice and per
sonal charm, and recently when
she auditioned for the Company s
four-and-a-half week season, she
won the role of Cio-Cio-San in
Madame Butterfly.
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
IN ITALIAN
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
SUKIYAKI
MEAT — VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR.
Her aunt doesn’t know what
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
she’ll do when it’s over, but re
ported that she loved Canada.
In the meantime, she’s learning
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
the role in Italian from Maestro
Barbini, and spending three
EM. 4-7692
hours a day at the local YMCA
learning English. Mrs. Tsuruoka
is enjoying having another wo
man around their house. Hei two ............................................
"I111..........
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ’-teen-age boys are too
to ifie
point of fighting over their
pretty cousin, says their mothei.
SAY IT WITH
FLOWERS
T.V. Service
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
?
Home phon.e: HI. 7_8905
=
$652.00 ^
216.00 E
=
=
Can arrange extention to Shikoku, Kyushu
Hong Kong, Manila, Taipei, Okinawa.
z
=
Contact
=
|
K. Iwata Travel Service
|
=
=
=
Vancouver Main Office or Toronto Branch
461 E. Hastings St., Vancouver, B.C.
113 McCauI St., Toronto, Ont.
=
^
=
=
^iiiiiniiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiHiiiiiJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiir
Page 8
ri a n p «
N E W
Saturd
Kachigumi . . .
(Cont. From Page 1)
Ambassador . .
(Continued From Page 1)
divided into two rival factions. lieve it either. Thus they became
One was engaged in growing more fanatic in supporting the group. It is ,the
the Ambassador
Ambassador’’ss | are considered bv The Exneri
peppermint .and
raising silk l.dea of Japan’s victory and in
t0 PrePar^.himself I ment to be basic‘to understandAuthorized
herself to represent his -spon- ing another culture.
worms, at the request of Ameri righting against the “makeguTho Pvy>q •
T
can capitalists. The other group nu (group who believed in the sois by taking a fresh and thorIntema'
consisting of patriots to Japam Japanese surrender). The anta ough look at his own communitv, tional Livkl
Diving of Canada was orHep will
considered such business treach- gonism developed into a “war of high school or college. H
■ ?n a nabonal scale in
need to present an accurate pic
^ous;. Their resentment against reprehensible literature.”
ture of life in his home country 1966, with headquarters in Lon
the first group was intensified
For example, the “kachigumi” to his new friends abroad. An don, Ontario. Dr. Harry Taylor
after the rumor spread that the
And Advert4^
explained
the photo showing attitude of sharing and an eager-- University of Western Ontario
silk worms they grew were to be
<79 QUEEN
used to produce silk for making Gen. MacArthur and the Em- ness to learn are essential to the ms president and Mrs. Helen
Tucker, University of Toronto,
American parachute material. At peioi thus: “This is a clue to Ambassador.
prove the Japanese victory War
is first vice-president and chair-’
LMpwe 6-5005 ’
. Sa3e time /be Peppermint prisoner Gen. MacArthur is
When
Miss
Nakashima
returns
°f Outbound Programs. Mr.
a» a bomb-making ingredient.
1 he organization was formed to standing with the Emperor. That to Canada, she will be expected 7;icb^ri Mathieu is president of
crush these traitors. It is said is why the American general is to report to her sponsoring the Toronto Council of EIL
to have numbered over 100,000 wearing a military uniform but groups and to make use of her . The EIL of Canada will receJapanese Brazilians Issei and the Emperor is wearing an ordi experiences to enrich her teach 1Ve ^ts first Ambassador from
ing curriculum. She will also en an East European country in
Nisei ,at one time. The news of nary suit.”
courage
other young Canadians August of Centennial year, the
The
“
makegumi
”
once
disput
Japan’s
surrender
bewildered
these patriots. By then their an ed copies of a photo showing to go abroad the “Experiment’’ ski champion of Czechoslovakia
tagonism against the traitors Gen. MacArthur, the Empress way and learn about people. He will have homestay in Toron Phone 463-7831 (Toron^
Language study and homestay to for three ■weeks.
was even stronger, since those and a mixed-blood child.
who cooperated: with the
/Meanwhile, Shindo Renmei ofA FEW garden®i7^vnX^w^
during the war were rich and SC1^L? began to sell some South
Immigration
.
.
.
^ey, poor.
(Continued
from
Page
I
1
)
Bacific islands which were “oc
cupied by Japan.” There were nioie flexibility in administra
Secret Meeting
GARDENING helner •
Strength of demand for the °A
elY- Phone 769-5565,7;
lassoon secretly approached a ene^ S°me families which sold tion.
'
occupation the immigrant in (Toronto).
all
their
property
to
buv
the
in
The
paper,
proposed
that
per•
^of this rightist bodv, ask
tends
to
follow,
which
will
per
ing Don’t you wish to make land property so they could em;- nt.an?j^ residents of Canada mit some relatively unskilled
grate there.
Moonglow Restaurant'll
should be able to sponsor and workers to enter at times, such ply
money ?”
St.,J>hone 481-2235 evenings^
bring
in
as
a
matter
of
right:
Suicide Corps
as miners .and farm laborers;
do you mean?” asked
UNIVERSITY
student a$~72
the leader.
In January 1946, the Shindo husband or wife; unmarried sons
helper during summer
,,
with
preference
for
or
daughters
under
21;
parents
ordered its “suicide
“I have a lot of Japanese Kenmei
LE. 4-4366, Mr. Sada (Toronaj.v
’ grandparents not entering those below the middle 30’s;
money. I’ll sell it at half price.” corps consisting of young Nis-d °^
Skill in the immigrant’s oc LEADING Japanese trading
the labor force; orphaned rela
vren 1° as$assinate the “Seven- tives
cupation.
“But didn’t Japan lose the Man
under
16.
quires, sales helu and
Group”. Their first success
war?”
For
the
independent
immigrant
in mid-tvventies. Minimum hid Ai
Mr. Marchand’s new policy
ful victim was retired Army
education. Japanese faau^P
“Well yes. But if you tell vour captain Jinsaku Wakiyama. The confirms this arrangement and seeking admission to Canada knowledge of accounting h^&
u^ sponsorship, these factors salary. Apply Box 442, The NsvS
people that Japan actually won, Brazilian police had to
assign makes three new concessions. In will be assessed and, in addi dian (Toronto).
■ ~
n
they’ll buy it to return to Ja- policement as
bodyguards for addition to the relatives mention tion, the officer will consider: ’
pan.”
the remainin:g six men.
ed, others will be eligible on
order cook, -§125. weeHfig
— Whether the immigrant has SHORT
one salad and sandwich -4 g
“But how can I do such a
After mid-1947, the rivalry de- compassionate grounds.
a job to come to;
weekly. From June 12 to Sept, Kg
thing ?”
The requirement that the spon
war of “selling-each
Whether he can speak En ford Manor,. Melford Bay, ttfei
particulars phone Roy YosbisohS
Youk can do ^ eaS'ly Use the other to the police.” In Sao Paulo sor show financial ability to look- glish or French or both;
Japanese were after the newcomer will be abol . ~ Whether he has relatives .6-1870 (Toronto).
news bulletin method you used alone, 6,000
ished.
during the war. We can both thrown into jail.
in Canada who, while not sponFor Sale
i1
Ots of money. It’s a 50-50 iIhlS situation lasted until 1950
“To impose financial stand soiing him, may provide impor
deal.”
POODLE, beautiful silver,' regisS
although some people seriously ards smacks of paternalism,” Mr. tant help in getting settled;
Does not shed hair. - Phone- MS
‘‘Let me think about it.”
began to believe in the Japanese Marchand said. “If a man wants
> k$
— Whether the immigrant is (Toronto).
to take his old grandmother into I?omg to an area of the country
. A short while after this secret surrender.
A BABY carriage and enb naSX
Then rightist Kawasaki dim i US ^°USe’ ^ *s not ^or Live Gov- where labor demand is high and Excellent
inteiview, the rumor spread acondition. Also two. ails;®
mong Japanese Brazilians that ed up the air again. With Kameo bp1™®} t0 Say that he doesn’t he can expect to get a job even two highchairs. Reasonable. Phase S1
™°m-°r ca^^°t afford it.”
if his qualifications are marginal. 8963 (Toronto).
nUP£Th ^ad Woni the war aftei' Harada, he beg n ’to' thumpmup
the
victory
for
Japan
from
a
new
mstead
of
stipulating
an. that was why an American
The nine point for assessment
n?s here
buy Japanese monev. angle. “Japan people would have tbab Parents and grandparents of a. prospective immigrant are
le Shjndo Renmei distrib- a
^me ruling their colonies r ^^ n°b seek a job, these rela- the key to the new procedure. *
l,be . a spemM bulletin carrvin'r 8o they appealed to the Emperor’ .ive? W1U be regarded as retired
They replace the rigid require
they are over 60. This means
T °jieL °f the Japanese victory ror 'verld peace, the Emperor
ments
in the paper, allowing
Led by former intelligence of mercifully took a drastic mea- aey w^! be able to enter with
ficer Sanzo Kawasaki, the ri"-ht- T^k’ bhat is, allowing Gen. Mac- I aa question about whether they more discretion to the official .
lb3 onfinn paper began to carrv Arthur to announce that Japan ln^end bo wor^ and they will be m the field interviewing pros
pective immigrants and to the
a framed-up story of the victory ??1 defeated. “This is the whole free to take J°bs if they wish,
Excellent opportunity for»
?ne after .another. Patriots madly ruth, he said.
_ The paper, proposed that cit- minister at headquarters judg- I bright lady- as assistants
bought the paper as well as the
-uY35?^ bard to make these ^ens ^th five yeai-s’ residence mg the needs of the economy. I general
manager. Typing
Japanese monev.
??1 hole Japanese people believe sb?^d be able to sponsor, as a
Depending
on
the
state
of
the
I
short hand an asset. Phow
S°nie welI-educated and sen that kind of story. He only had Pr!vilege and subject to the re- economy, as disclosed by infor
368-4886
(Toronto).
*
sible Japanese tried to awaken to point out to them that Brazi- Omrement of having seven years’ mation flowing in from Man
pans
looted
a
German
town
a
£
schooling
or
a
required
skill:
the ignorant people to face the
power officers across Canada,
fact of the Japanese surrender,
nG"kS °f bhe German sur- san^ or daughters of any agn the
weight to be attached to
they issued a translation of the render but didn’t even hurt Ja- Wlth accompanying spouses and each of the nine points ’can be
edict declaring- the end panese property when the new^ anmarried children under 21: revised.
of the war, together with the of the Japanese surrender was ™ers and sisters with spouses
signatures of seven prominent lePorted. In fact, Brazilian auth- and children; parents or grand- _ Without putting artificial ceil
ordered the- people
.
r.j not to I Parents; unmarried nephews or ings on immigration, this should
Japanese Brazilians. This was orities
help to insure that the inflow
excite
the
ultrapatriotic
Jam- I meces under 21.
the birth of the so-called “ShichiDate Changed ;
nese
people.
responds
to the situation in
ningumi" or “Seven-Man Group.”.
Air. Marchand is adding to Canada.
The Kawasaki-Harada team these groups; nephews and niec
The rightist leaders vigorous
cheated their fellow men more. es over 21; uncles, aunts and
Andrew Brewin (NDP, Green
ly fought against it. as they m an amazingly fantastic
Toronto Buddhist Churf
grandchildren.
wood)
and other members of
way.
?a'v .furt^er chances of exploit Some victims became beggers
wishes
to announce that th®
oMaking a major concession to n camiarittee urged Mr. Maring the innocent people and at went out of their minds
Annual Picnic will be held m
as a critics, Mr. Marchand is striking c^a . . bo remove all reference
,®aPle rime feare^ that thev result.
out the requirement that all of citizenship in the sponsorship
Sunday, June 18th, 1967 in;
would be mauled by their victims,
^et to
writer
these classes of relatives can be legislations and to provide onlv
if they ever came to know the wonder,
stead of June 25th. Pl^
swindler Kawasaki is sponsored only by a citizen.
for five years’ residence. They
real racts.
still enjoying life in Brazil as
take note.
£T°unds for denying citizen
Applications from citizens to
“It ca“’t be a genuine Imperial a free man.
ship
are
not
disclosed
and
may
sponsor relatives will get pref
e^!Ct’ slnce it is cheaply mimeGn n’°re ^O his
bis surprise. erence, but non-citizens with five sometimes be frivolous.
ographed,’ they said. “The Sev
Mr. Marchand replied that he
ar? sorae People who stil years’ residence will be able to
en-Man Group is not the Jauastubbornly
refuse
to
accept
tip
would
consider the issue.
a
PPly
under
the
revision.
nese Prime Minister. Yet thev idea oi Japan’s surrender
iSTd 3Uch 3 false edlcL
Whether the application comes
This minority forms an ex from a citizen or a non-citizen
P‘°bring together with the United
clusive group, living in the thick- will be one of several factors as
• lhose men should be kdl- Jungles
of Brazil.
KAZUO G. OIYE
sessed by immigration officers
The
wheels
of
justice
have
Hard Losers
”\ ^e decision on granting the
Anywhere — Anytime
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
Those who bought the Japa Wh^t^n k°"' f°r KaxvasakU privilege of sponsorship.
NOTARY PUBLIC
Air—Ship—Bus—Rcxil
nese money didn’t want to be- tu£iiv m befome of him evenHe is also changing the mea
® C®ltoa St., Toronto
tuallv, only time can tell.
surement of education or skill.
Roons 1805
Travellers Cheques
Instead of the rigid requirement I 366-6388
2S3-4281
(B
m
.)
Obtainable
ior seven years’ schooling or a
Travel, Accident
skill in demand, officers will be
| supposed by alI J.C. orga„i2otions, churches, dubj
| able to take into account, in ad
and Baggage tosurasce
dition to schooling:
I
।
The Centre's Centennial Year
I . — Personal qualities of initia
BRINGING SOMEON
Mickey S. Sato
tive and willingness to work;
c Mj
Passage arranged ay S'
i
Bazaar
i
Call for Reservations m
Travel Arrangements!
,„„. M„b I
I»1,„
served Throughout
=
I;
.
It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
El
1 — 7 PM 51
Also Air Trip to Japan Draw" it ik. n
.. ...................................
Information — EM. 8-9934
Consall
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
464
Yonge Street.
Toronto
Phone 921-3171
Office—783-4261
Ree.—BE. 1-0863
Those In Toil Are*
Call—RO 6-3840
K. Iwata Travel Se^-6 |j
113 McCaul St., TORO-'J
I
N E W
Saturd
Kachigumi . . .
(Cont. From Page 1)
Ambassador . .
(Continued From Page 1)
divided into two rival factions. lieve it either. Thus they became
One was engaged in growing more fanatic in supporting the group. It is ,the
the Ambassador
Ambassador’’ss | are considered bv The Exneri
peppermint .and
raising silk l.dea of Japan’s victory and in
t0 PrePar^.himself I ment to be basic‘to understandAuthorized
herself to represent his -spon- ing another culture.
worms, at the request of Ameri righting against the “makeguTho Pvy>q •
T
can capitalists. The other group nu (group who believed in the sois by taking a fresh and thorIntema'
consisting of patriots to Japam Japanese surrender). The anta ough look at his own communitv, tional Livkl
Diving of Canada was orHep will
considered such business treach- gonism developed into a “war of high school or college. H
■ ?n a nabonal scale in
need to present an accurate pic
^ous;. Their resentment against reprehensible literature.”
ture of life in his home country 1966, with headquarters in Lon
the first group was intensified
For example, the “kachigumi” to his new friends abroad. An don, Ontario. Dr. Harry Taylor
after the rumor spread that the
And Advert4^
explained
the photo showing attitude of sharing and an eager-- University of Western Ontario
silk worms they grew were to be
<79 QUEEN
used to produce silk for making Gen. MacArthur and the Em- ness to learn are essential to the ms president and Mrs. Helen
Tucker, University of Toronto,
American parachute material. At peioi thus: “This is a clue to Ambassador.
prove the Japanese victory War
is first vice-president and chair-’
LMpwe 6-5005 ’
. Sa3e time /be Peppermint prisoner Gen. MacArthur is
When
Miss
Nakashima
returns
°f Outbound Programs. Mr.
a» a bomb-making ingredient.
1 he organization was formed to standing with the Emperor. That to Canada, she will be expected 7;icb^ri Mathieu is president of
crush these traitors. It is said is why the American general is to report to her sponsoring the Toronto Council of EIL
to have numbered over 100,000 wearing a military uniform but groups and to make use of her . The EIL of Canada will receJapanese Brazilians Issei and the Emperor is wearing an ordi experiences to enrich her teach 1Ve ^ts first Ambassador from
ing curriculum. She will also en an East European country in
Nisei ,at one time. The news of nary suit.”
courage
other young Canadians August of Centennial year, the
The
“
makegumi
”
once
disput
Japan’s
surrender
bewildered
these patriots. By then their an ed copies of a photo showing to go abroad the “Experiment’’ ski champion of Czechoslovakia
tagonism against the traitors Gen. MacArthur, the Empress way and learn about people. He will have homestay in Toron Phone 463-7831 (Toron^
Language study and homestay to for three ■weeks.
was even stronger, since those and a mixed-blood child.
who cooperated: with the
/Meanwhile, Shindo Renmei ofA FEW garden®i7^vnX^w^
during the war were rich and SC1^L? began to sell some South
Immigration
.
.
.
^ey, poor.
(Continued
from
Page
I
1
)
Bacific islands which were “oc
cupied by Japan.” There were nioie flexibility in administra
Secret Meeting
GARDENING helner •
Strength of demand for the °A
elY- Phone 769-5565,7;
lassoon secretly approached a ene^ S°me families which sold tion.
'
occupation the immigrant in (Toronto).
all
their
property
to
buv
the
in
The
paper,
proposed
that
per•
^of this rightist bodv, ask
tends
to
follow,
which
will
per
ing Don’t you wish to make land property so they could em;- nt.an?j^ residents of Canada mit some relatively unskilled
grate there.
Moonglow Restaurant'll
should be able to sponsor and workers to enter at times, such ply
money ?”
St.,J>hone 481-2235 evenings^
bring
in
as
a
matter
of
right:
Suicide Corps
as miners .and farm laborers;
do you mean?” asked
UNIVERSITY
student a$~72
the leader.
In January 1946, the Shindo husband or wife; unmarried sons
helper during summer
,,
with
preference
for
or
daughters
under
21;
parents
ordered its “suicide
“I have a lot of Japanese Kenmei
LE. 4-4366, Mr. Sada (Toronaj.v
’ grandparents not entering those below the middle 30’s;
money. I’ll sell it at half price.” corps consisting of young Nis-d °^
Skill in the immigrant’s oc LEADING Japanese trading
the labor force; orphaned rela
vren 1° as$assinate the “Seven- tives
cupation.
“But didn’t Japan lose the Man
under
16.
quires, sales helu and
Group”. Their first success
war?”
For
the
independent
immigrant
in mid-tvventies. Minimum hid Ai
Mr. Marchand’s new policy
ful victim was retired Army
education. Japanese faau^P
“Well yes. But if you tell vour captain Jinsaku Wakiyama. The confirms this arrangement and seeking admission to Canada knowledge of accounting h^&
u^ sponsorship, these factors salary. Apply Box 442, The NsvS
people that Japan actually won, Brazilian police had to
assign makes three new concessions. In will be assessed and, in addi dian (Toronto).
■ ~
n
they’ll buy it to return to Ja- policement as
bodyguards for addition to the relatives mention tion, the officer will consider: ’
pan.”
the remainin:g six men.
ed, others will be eligible on
order cook, -§125. weeHfig
— Whether the immigrant has SHORT
one salad and sandwich -4 g
“But how can I do such a
After mid-1947, the rivalry de- compassionate grounds.
a job to come to;
weekly. From June 12 to Sept, Kg
thing ?”
The requirement that the spon
war of “selling-each
Whether he can speak En ford Manor,. Melford Bay, ttfei
particulars phone Roy YosbisohS
Youk can do ^ eaS'ly Use the other to the police.” In Sao Paulo sor show financial ability to look- glish or French or both;
Japanese were after the newcomer will be abol . ~ Whether he has relatives .6-1870 (Toronto).
news bulletin method you used alone, 6,000
ished.
during the war. We can both thrown into jail.
in Canada who, while not sponFor Sale
i1
Ots of money. It’s a 50-50 iIhlS situation lasted until 1950
“To impose financial stand soiing him, may provide impor
deal.”
POODLE, beautiful silver,' regisS
although some people seriously ards smacks of paternalism,” Mr. tant help in getting settled;
Does not shed hair. - Phone- MS
‘‘Let me think about it.”
began to believe in the Japanese Marchand said. “If a man wants
> k$
— Whether the immigrant is (Toronto).
to take his old grandmother into I?omg to an area of the country
. A short while after this secret surrender.
A BABY carriage and enb naSX
Then rightist Kawasaki dim i US ^°USe’ ^ *s not ^or Live Gov- where labor demand is high and Excellent
inteiview, the rumor spread acondition. Also two. ails;®
mong Japanese Brazilians that ed up the air again. With Kameo bp1™®} t0 Say that he doesn’t he can expect to get a job even two highchairs. Reasonable. Phase S1
™°m-°r ca^^°t afford it.”
if his qualifications are marginal. 8963 (Toronto).
nUP£Th ^ad Woni the war aftei' Harada, he beg n ’to' thumpmup
the
victory
for
Japan
from
a
new
mstead
of
stipulating
an. that was why an American
The nine point for assessment
n?s here
buy Japanese monev. angle. “Japan people would have tbab Parents and grandparents of a. prospective immigrant are
le Shjndo Renmei distrib- a
^me ruling their colonies r ^^ n°b seek a job, these rela- the key to the new procedure. *
l,be . a spemM bulletin carrvin'r 8o they appealed to the Emperor’ .ive? W1U be regarded as retired
They replace the rigid require
they are over 60. This means
T °jieL °f the Japanese victory ror 'verld peace, the Emperor
ments
in the paper, allowing
Led by former intelligence of mercifully took a drastic mea- aey w^! be able to enter with
ficer Sanzo Kawasaki, the ri"-ht- T^k’ bhat is, allowing Gen. Mac- I aa question about whether they more discretion to the official .
lb3 onfinn paper began to carrv Arthur to announce that Japan ln^end bo wor^ and they will be m the field interviewing pros
pective immigrants and to the
a framed-up story of the victory ??1 defeated. “This is the whole free to take J°bs if they wish,
Excellent opportunity for»
?ne after .another. Patriots madly ruth, he said.
_ The paper, proposed that cit- minister at headquarters judg- I bright lady- as assistants
bought the paper as well as the
-uY35?^ bard to make these ^ens ^th five yeai-s’ residence mg the needs of the economy. I general
manager. Typing
Japanese monev.
??1 hole Japanese people believe sb?^d be able to sponsor, as a
Depending
on
the
state
of
the
I
short hand an asset. Phow
S°nie welI-educated and sen that kind of story. He only had Pr!vilege and subject to the re- economy, as disclosed by infor
368-4886
(Toronto).
*
sible Japanese tried to awaken to point out to them that Brazi- Omrement of having seven years’ mation flowing in from Man
pans
looted
a
German
town
a
£
schooling
or
a
required
skill:
the ignorant people to face the
power officers across Canada,
fact of the Japanese surrender,
nG"kS °f bhe German sur- san^ or daughters of any agn the
weight to be attached to
they issued a translation of the render but didn’t even hurt Ja- Wlth accompanying spouses and each of the nine points ’can be
edict declaring- the end panese property when the new^ anmarried children under 21: revised.
of the war, together with the of the Japanese surrender was ™ers and sisters with spouses
signatures of seven prominent lePorted. In fact, Brazilian auth- and children; parents or grand- _ Without putting artificial ceil
ordered the- people
.
r.j not to I Parents; unmarried nephews or ings on immigration, this should
Japanese Brazilians. This was orities
help to insure that the inflow
excite
the
ultrapatriotic
Jam- I meces under 21.
the birth of the so-called “ShichiDate Changed ;
nese
people.
responds
to the situation in
ningumi" or “Seven-Man Group.”.
Air. Marchand is adding to Canada.
The Kawasaki-Harada team these groups; nephews and niec
The rightist leaders vigorous
cheated their fellow men more. es over 21; uncles, aunts and
Andrew Brewin (NDP, Green
ly fought against it. as they m an amazingly fantastic
Toronto Buddhist Churf
grandchildren.
wood)
and other members of
way.
?a'v .furt^er chances of exploit Some victims became beggers
wishes
to announce that th®
oMaking a major concession to n camiarittee urged Mr. Maring the innocent people and at went out of their minds
Annual Picnic will be held m
as a critics, Mr. Marchand is striking c^a . . bo remove all reference
,®aPle rime feare^ that thev result.
out the requirement that all of citizenship in the sponsorship
Sunday, June 18th, 1967 in;
would be mauled by their victims,
^et to
writer
these classes of relatives can be legislations and to provide onlv
if they ever came to know the wonder,
stead of June 25th. Pl^
swindler Kawasaki is sponsored only by a citizen.
for five years’ residence. They
real racts.
still enjoying life in Brazil as
take note.
£T°unds for denying citizen
Applications from citizens to
“It ca“’t be a genuine Imperial a free man.
ship
are
not
disclosed
and
may
sponsor relatives will get pref
e^!Ct’ slnce it is cheaply mimeGn n’°re ^O his
bis surprise. erence, but non-citizens with five sometimes be frivolous.
ographed,’ they said. “The Sev
Mr. Marchand replied that he
ar? sorae People who stil years’ residence will be able to
en-Man Group is not the Jauastubbornly
refuse
to
accept
tip
would
consider the issue.
a
PPly
under
the
revision.
nese Prime Minister. Yet thev idea oi Japan’s surrender
iSTd 3Uch 3 false edlcL
Whether the application comes
This minority forms an ex from a citizen or a non-citizen
P‘°bring together with the United
clusive group, living in the thick- will be one of several factors as
• lhose men should be kdl- Jungles
of Brazil.
KAZUO G. OIYE
sessed by immigration officers
The
wheels
of
justice
have
Hard Losers
”\ ^e decision on granting the
Anywhere — Anytime
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
Those who bought the Japa Wh^t^n k°"' f°r KaxvasakU privilege of sponsorship.
NOTARY PUBLIC
Air—Ship—Bus—Rcxil
nese money didn’t want to be- tu£iiv m befome of him evenHe is also changing the mea
® C®ltoa St., Toronto
tuallv, only time can tell.
surement of education or skill.
Roons 1805
Travellers Cheques
Instead of the rigid requirement I 366-6388
2S3-4281
(B
m
.)
Obtainable
ior seven years’ schooling or a
Travel, Accident
skill in demand, officers will be
| supposed by alI J.C. orga„i2otions, churches, dubj
| able to take into account, in ad
and Baggage tosurasce
dition to schooling:
I
।
The Centre's Centennial Year
I . — Personal qualities of initia
BRINGING SOMEON
Mickey S. Sato
tive and willingness to work;
c Mj
Passage arranged ay S'
i
Bazaar
i
Call for Reservations m
Travel Arrangements!
,„„. M„b I
I»1,„
served Throughout
=
I;
.
It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
El
1 — 7 PM 51
Also Air Trip to Japan Draw" it ik. n
.. ...................................
Information — EM. 8-9934
Consall
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
464
Yonge Street.
Toronto
Phone 921-3171
Office—783-4261
Ree.—BE. 1-0863
Those In Toil Are*
Call—RO 6-3840
K. Iwata Travel Se^-6 |j
113 McCaul St., TORO-'J
I