Page 1
p
196?
Poll
nan
i 52 percent of Americans believe
ree in Asia, only 45 percent feel
[worthy ally, a recent poll in the
i
of Britons questioned in a similar
’< industrial products when they
m," but seven out of 10 have no
understand the political system
J
J
and
are
Reports
Americans
Distrust
A total of l,o03 American adults and 2.002 B’-'tLh
Japan
As
An
Ally
16
°’d Were rationed in
conducted oy investigators employed by George Gallon.
mere were anti-American demonstrations in Japan and that Japan is not helping the U.S. in Vietnam,
American Poll
Some of the results of the Gallup polls:
United Stares—The national average was 45 percent
tty-two percent felt that Japan was a stable force
16 percent said
Of those who
percent gave as them reason the fact
that
rong economically.
-ali% whiV
^"b Japan WaS a Uustworthv
cent
theSe W1° answered’ "No’’ tolled 32 per-
some results obtained from Gallup
the United States and Britain on
Public Information and Cultural
Japan's foreign ministry this past
Among those with little education and among fre
aged many replied that Japan could not be trusted'
Ao for the reasons for untrustworthiness, thev cred
urs Bure
pa*t events, particularly the case of the Pearl Harbor
surprise attack, that Japan is controlled by communists,
wnniiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii........... '"""iiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiniinuunnmnm
in
Products Rated
In
g Japanese products
percent of the
Americans polled said they
excellent, while 29
percent fen they were good and 36 percent said quali
ty was ordinary. They total 71 percent.
Twenty-one percent said Japanese products were
(Continued on Paco
............................................................... ........................ ................ ..... ........................................................................ .............................................
CENTENNIAL
YEAR
EXPO 67
1867—1967
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
pl. XXXI—Xo. 66
hiiiiiiiAHiiiiiii'iiiiiHiiiniiiniii;
SATURDAY, AUGUST 26
_
----------------------------------------------------------------------
1967
................................. '''"'"'''"'"'"""'"'"'HinHnmunnnmmH.J^
11 *11111 * ■ * ■ ■ 11111 i 1111111111 m f 1{111 j
—
haw Enjoys Floating Fair PaPanese
Nobel Prize Winner's Wife
Stresses Women's Role In Mont
ly CHARLES M. DEFIEUX
hibit in the Japanese Industrial
VANCOUVER. — Superlatives Floating Fair- in Vancouver re
rere inadequate to describe the cently.
AO widely varied items on exThat applies equally to Sakura
SHEILA ARNOPOULOS
buila-up they should feel free to campaign against
Maiu, the ship
which houses
AIOiN IREAL.—Women can play an important war :
them.
role in promoting ideas of world peace through which and for a more, powerful United Nations
Built in 1962 specifically for «or d law, said Mrs. Sumi Yukawa, now in Mon- world. could bring peace and order to a tangled
husband Professor Hideki Yukawa.
floating fair use, Sakura Maru,
T!hCrS’ women must teach their children
^°be Prize winner in physics who spoke
12,600 tons gross, is a beautv. at Expos. DuPont Auditorium recently.
p A A future war
could extinguish the race
live throu^h the war have
Hei’ white and blue hull sets off
Mis. Yukawa, president of tlie 5,000-member U71 dUn
A
about
the
horrors
and grief wrought bv
fine streamlining as she lies at Japan Women Council of World Federation So mu. Their mothers must educate
them,” she said.'
IODO.—All artificial pearls Centennial Pier. She cruises at cieties, explained in a recent interview that be- I
Yukawa,
who
have
been active in
cause most women throughout the world are not
F? produced in Japan will be 17.5 knots.
directly concerned
properly identified to wipe out
Mitsui-OSK Line operates the
growing complaints that imitaand for a strengthened central
3® pearls are becoming harder vessel which, between the fair
world- organization shortly after
io di Aguishi from genuine voyages, is in Japan-Brazil pasWorld War II.
senger service. Exhibit space
I Lie, decision was reached here then becomes quarters for 250
after the war,” said
OTTAWA.—The Quarterly Immigration Bulletin issued recently
Y.
s
Xukawa,
“we visited Albert
ht!!lb?n a cooperative meeting
by the Department of Manpower and Immigration reveals that 424
r.^cials of the government’s second class passengers. Luxury Japanese have immigrated to Canada during the first, half of Einstein at the Institute for Ad^ncGd Studies
at Princeton.
pg trade Commission and ^e- accommodation is provided for
196(.
Of
this
total
269
came
here
during
the
months
April,
May
It
was
felt
that
if
another Hiro150
in
first
class
R^ffives of three national
and you can
’
suma was to be avoided in the
Facial pearl organizations and emphasize luxury, in the public and June.
accessory manufacturers.
In comparison, during the first six months of 1966 only 197 luture there would have to be a
rooms especially.
^’'oh* global authority which
| Among the organizations was
Japanese immigrated to this country.
*
*
*
could
keep world order and preArtificial Pearl and
i
ent
extinction
of the race by
Sakura
Maru
left
Tokyo
May
Ha. Giass Articles Manufacturnuclear
war.
”
Association of Tokyo.
4 to visit San Francisco, Los An
Japanese Pearls
Fo Be Properly
Identified by Gavzt
424 Japanese Immigrated Here In 6 Months
Japan !s 1971 Site Of Scout Jamboree
formed sources said the IFC geles, Houston, New Orleans,
Mr. Yukawa, the mother of
SEATTLE. — Boy scout of Fujiyama national park will be two grown-up boys, attended the
N?en. In • contact with the New York, Montreal, Portland
Oslo conference of the World
S^A?aniZa;ions since last
and Seattle in that order, She ficials have selected Japan as available to the scouts, including Association of World Federal
G
l° A0^^ the increasthe site of the 1971 world jam- the use of five lakes, and the in ists earlier this month. She quot
^PJ^caLon of artificially gets home Aug. 30.
boree.
An
estimated
15,000 evitable climb of Japan’s highest ed a number of the resolutions
:5; Japanese
pearls.
Such
After such a voyage and
passed by the 100-member womscouts
will
camp
and
learn
in peak.
j’lsufficieiit mark- public visitation you’d think the
en s committee of which she has
the
foothills
of Mount Fuji.
The 1967 jamboree, an event been
r
or'®’!1 accordin
ship would show signs of wear
chairman for four years
‘-JWc complaint.
The jamboree site is about one held every four years, ended re
and
tear.
Not
Sakura
Maru.
meeting recently apAmong them was the resolu
^'afted by indus- Captain Toshio Kambayashi has hour’s drive from Tokyo in the cently at Farragut state park in tion to develop new children’s
i^A:”^ concerned, to clearly her looking sparkling fresh. This Asakiri highlands, August Naru Idaho.
programs which could give youn^
Japan was also awarded the: people the concept of one world&
Pearls and is applicable to every exhibit in mi, a Japanese delegate to the
ucis and have the comshe
in
1971 boy scout world conference I . - An J^Pan./’ —
- continued
'-''“v..iuvu ju
conference, said.
;~Sion
an amazing show.
ume responsibility in
Id 1
by
approximately
400
delegates
halting
English
while
she
fanntrie
Captain Kambayashi, veteran
Japan’s own national jamboree
enforced as
ed heiself with a pink and gold
y Possible.
mariner, is making his first call scouts will test the site accommo meeting here.
fan “more than 250 cities—in
hei*e. The
Mitsui-OSK skipper dations in 1970.
Japanese delegates said Kyoto cluding Tokyo—have ‘mundializhas been at sea 27 years, the last
has been selected as a tentative ^ ’” -nhis means that more than
“About 30,000 scouts are ex “but not definite” location for 50 million Japanese have endors
12 as master. He is a graduate
pected to come to help iron out the meetings, to be held some ed the idea of world citizenship
of Japan’s highly efficient mer
supported by a strong UN. The
chant service schools and univ all the bumps,” Narumi said.
time after the jamboree winds ‘mundialized’ cities fly the' UN
Four thousand acres of the up in August.
ersities.
(Continued on Paso 8)
as
Ship lovers who dote on models
JOKYO.
Canada has ten are not overlooked in the ex
■‘Yuag^
-J^s
or
schools hibits. The huge Japanese shipbuilding industry has seen to
J States has
11 New Zealand, that. There must be a dozen or
^^.lu breat
_ One of the oldest simple toys . is considered to be a good omen j tesque. There are Daruma dolk
^n six. Alto- more of all types.
m Japan the Daruma coll ,s al- ; ay the Japanese hence its value I less than half an in™ hri*
rits there are
so considered to be one of this as a good luck charm. The tradi- | and there are others up to S
*
*
The language
P 1 1
The watei’front recently show country’s many forms of good tional story of the priest is that feet high
luck charms. Another name for : he sat in meditation for many
—
b
are also Dar-uma dolls
! with the ris- ed our dependency upon trade the doll, somewhat complicated ■ years on a rock on the side of
yju'
the language, with Japan. There were nine Ja for non-Japanese speaking for- : an isolated, uninhabited moun- that have no eyes painted on
f^se Mini
them. Japanese buy the eyeless
'*ry of Educa- panese ships in port, two of them eigners,
is
“Okiagarikoboshi,” , tain. As a result of this long Daruma dolls in the hope that
:^ a teach: ^o years has loading logs. Two ships of other ? which translated literally means ; period of inactivity, he lost the good fortune will befall them.
^? seminar in
. J a “doll that can never be upset.” ■ use of his legs for the rest of
ei? something does happen
Ae Japanese nations were loading full gram i rpjle Daruma doll has a round- his life. He has come to be rethat
is considered extremelv good
Educ
cargoes
for
Japan
and
a
third ed, weighted bottom so that it presented as a stubby, legless
Society.
luck,
the purchaser paints in one
‘ o (level on? n rr a cargo of lumber.
{ always returns to an uprigh- posi- statue, in a sitting posture.
eye
on
the doll as a token of his
V ;rv /‘‘^’Ja?e teachers,
Most Daruma dolls are painted appreciation for the Daruma’s
They made a significan econ- D°n no matter how it is placed. ;
year compiled
This feature of the Daruma ■ red, except for the face. The goodness. If another stroke of
omic backdrop for the float:
(Coat:
°
.
doll
that enable it to return im- i face is round with huge eyes. Its luck occurs, then he paints the
on page S)
fair.
i mediately to an upright position , shape and expression are gro- oJier eye on the doll.
Jopcin Longuctge
Marify Rising
The Daruma Doll Good Luck Charm
196?
Poll
nan
i 52 percent of Americans believe
ree in Asia, only 45 percent feel
[worthy ally, a recent poll in the
i
of Britons questioned in a similar
’< industrial products when they
m," but seven out of 10 have no
understand the political system
J
J
and
are
Reports
Americans
Distrust
A total of l,o03 American adults and 2.002 B’-'tLh
Japan
As
An
Ally
16
°’d Were rationed in
conducted oy investigators employed by George Gallon.
mere were anti-American demonstrations in Japan and that Japan is not helping the U.S. in Vietnam,
American Poll
Some of the results of the Gallup polls:
United Stares—The national average was 45 percent
tty-two percent felt that Japan was a stable force
16 percent said
Of those who
percent gave as them reason the fact
that
rong economically.
-ali% whiV
^"b Japan WaS a Uustworthv
cent
theSe W1° answered’ "No’’ tolled 32 per-
some results obtained from Gallup
the United States and Britain on
Public Information and Cultural
Japan's foreign ministry this past
Among those with little education and among fre
aged many replied that Japan could not be trusted'
Ao for the reasons for untrustworthiness, thev cred
urs Bure
pa*t events, particularly the case of the Pearl Harbor
surprise attack, that Japan is controlled by communists,
wnniiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii........... '"""iiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiniinuunnmnm
in
Products Rated
In
g Japanese products
percent of the
Americans polled said they
excellent, while 29
percent fen they were good and 36 percent said quali
ty was ordinary. They total 71 percent.
Twenty-one percent said Japanese products were
(Continued on Paco
............................................................... ........................ ................ ..... ........................................................................ .............................................
CENTENNIAL
YEAR
EXPO 67
1867—1967
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
pl. XXXI—Xo. 66
hiiiiiiiAHiiiiiii'iiiiiHiiiniiiniii;
SATURDAY, AUGUST 26
_
----------------------------------------------------------------------
1967
................................. '''"'"'''"'"'"""'"'"'HinHnmunnnmmH.J^
11 *11111 * ■ * ■ ■ 11111 i 1111111111 m f 1{111 j
—
haw Enjoys Floating Fair PaPanese
Nobel Prize Winner's Wife
Stresses Women's Role In Mont
ly CHARLES M. DEFIEUX
hibit in the Japanese Industrial
VANCOUVER. — Superlatives Floating Fair- in Vancouver re
rere inadequate to describe the cently.
AO widely varied items on exThat applies equally to Sakura
SHEILA ARNOPOULOS
buila-up they should feel free to campaign against
Maiu, the ship
which houses
AIOiN IREAL.—Women can play an important war :
them.
role in promoting ideas of world peace through which and for a more, powerful United Nations
Built in 1962 specifically for «or d law, said Mrs. Sumi Yukawa, now in Mon- world. could bring peace and order to a tangled
husband Professor Hideki Yukawa.
floating fair use, Sakura Maru,
T!hCrS’ women must teach their children
^°be Prize winner in physics who spoke
12,600 tons gross, is a beautv. at Expos. DuPont Auditorium recently.
p A A future war
could extinguish the race
live throu^h the war have
Hei’ white and blue hull sets off
Mis. Yukawa, president of tlie 5,000-member U71 dUn
A
about
the
horrors
and grief wrought bv
fine streamlining as she lies at Japan Women Council of World Federation So mu. Their mothers must educate
them,” she said.'
IODO.—All artificial pearls Centennial Pier. She cruises at cieties, explained in a recent interview that be- I
Yukawa,
who
have
been active in
cause most women throughout the world are not
F? produced in Japan will be 17.5 knots.
directly concerned
properly identified to wipe out
Mitsui-OSK Line operates the
growing complaints that imitaand for a strengthened central
3® pearls are becoming harder vessel which, between the fair
world- organization shortly after
io di Aguishi from genuine voyages, is in Japan-Brazil pasWorld War II.
senger service. Exhibit space
I Lie, decision was reached here then becomes quarters for 250
after the war,” said
OTTAWA.—The Quarterly Immigration Bulletin issued recently
Y.
s
Xukawa,
“we visited Albert
ht!!lb?n a cooperative meeting
by the Department of Manpower and Immigration reveals that 424
r.^cials of the government’s second class passengers. Luxury Japanese have immigrated to Canada during the first, half of Einstein at the Institute for Ad^ncGd Studies
at Princeton.
pg trade Commission and ^e- accommodation is provided for
196(.
Of
this
total
269
came
here
during
the
months
April,
May
It
was
felt
that
if
another Hiro150
in
first
class
R^ffives of three national
and you can
’
suma was to be avoided in the
Facial pearl organizations and emphasize luxury, in the public and June.
accessory manufacturers.
In comparison, during the first six months of 1966 only 197 luture there would have to be a
rooms especially.
^’'oh* global authority which
| Among the organizations was
Japanese immigrated to this country.
*
*
*
could
keep world order and preArtificial Pearl and
i
ent
extinction
of the race by
Sakura
Maru
left
Tokyo
May
Ha. Giass Articles Manufacturnuclear
war.
”
Association of Tokyo.
4 to visit San Francisco, Los An
Japanese Pearls
Fo Be Properly
Identified by Gavzt
424 Japanese Immigrated Here In 6 Months
Japan !s 1971 Site Of Scout Jamboree
formed sources said the IFC geles, Houston, New Orleans,
Mr. Yukawa, the mother of
SEATTLE. — Boy scout of Fujiyama national park will be two grown-up boys, attended the
N?en. In • contact with the New York, Montreal, Portland
Oslo conference of the World
S^A?aniZa;ions since last
and Seattle in that order, She ficials have selected Japan as available to the scouts, including Association of World Federal
G
l° A0^^ the increasthe site of the 1971 world jam- the use of five lakes, and the in ists earlier this month. She quot
^PJ^caLon of artificially gets home Aug. 30.
boree.
An
estimated
15,000 evitable climb of Japan’s highest ed a number of the resolutions
:5; Japanese
pearls.
Such
After such a voyage and
passed by the 100-member womscouts
will
camp
and
learn
in peak.
j’lsufficieiit mark- public visitation you’d think the
en s committee of which she has
the
foothills
of Mount Fuji.
The 1967 jamboree, an event been
r
or'®’!1 accordin
ship would show signs of wear
chairman for four years
‘-JWc complaint.
The jamboree site is about one held every four years, ended re
and
tear.
Not
Sakura
Maru.
meeting recently apAmong them was the resolu
^'afted by indus- Captain Toshio Kambayashi has hour’s drive from Tokyo in the cently at Farragut state park in tion to develop new children’s
i^A:”^ concerned, to clearly her looking sparkling fresh. This Asakiri highlands, August Naru Idaho.
programs which could give youn^
Japan was also awarded the: people the concept of one world&
Pearls and is applicable to every exhibit in mi, a Japanese delegate to the
ucis and have the comshe
in
1971 boy scout world conference I . - An J^Pan./’ —
- continued
'-''“v..iuvu ju
conference, said.
;~Sion
an amazing show.
ume responsibility in
Id 1
by
approximately
400
delegates
halting
English
while
she
fanntrie
Captain Kambayashi, veteran
Japan’s own national jamboree
enforced as
ed heiself with a pink and gold
y Possible.
mariner, is making his first call scouts will test the site accommo meeting here.
fan “more than 250 cities—in
hei*e. The
Mitsui-OSK skipper dations in 1970.
Japanese delegates said Kyoto cluding Tokyo—have ‘mundializhas been at sea 27 years, the last
has been selected as a tentative ^ ’” -nhis means that more than
“About 30,000 scouts are ex “but not definite” location for 50 million Japanese have endors
12 as master. He is a graduate
pected to come to help iron out the meetings, to be held some ed the idea of world citizenship
of Japan’s highly efficient mer
supported by a strong UN. The
chant service schools and univ all the bumps,” Narumi said.
time after the jamboree winds ‘mundialized’ cities fly the' UN
Four thousand acres of the up in August.
ersities.
(Continued on Paso 8)
as
Ship lovers who dote on models
JOKYO.
Canada has ten are not overlooked in the ex
■‘Yuag^
-J^s
or
schools hibits. The huge Japanese shipbuilding industry has seen to
J States has
11 New Zealand, that. There must be a dozen or
^^.lu breat
_ One of the oldest simple toys . is considered to be a good omen j tesque. There are Daruma dolk
^n six. Alto- more of all types.
m Japan the Daruma coll ,s al- ; ay the Japanese hence its value I less than half an in™ hri*
rits there are
so considered to be one of this as a good luck charm. The tradi- | and there are others up to S
*
*
The language
P 1 1
The watei’front recently show country’s many forms of good tional story of the priest is that feet high
luck charms. Another name for : he sat in meditation for many
—
b
are also Dar-uma dolls
! with the ris- ed our dependency upon trade the doll, somewhat complicated ■ years on a rock on the side of
yju'
the language, with Japan. There were nine Ja for non-Japanese speaking for- : an isolated, uninhabited moun- that have no eyes painted on
f^se Mini
them. Japanese buy the eyeless
'*ry of Educa- panese ships in port, two of them eigners,
is
“Okiagarikoboshi,” , tain. As a result of this long Daruma dolls in the hope that
:^ a teach: ^o years has loading logs. Two ships of other ? which translated literally means ; period of inactivity, he lost the good fortune will befall them.
^? seminar in
. J a “doll that can never be upset.” ■ use of his legs for the rest of
ei? something does happen
Ae Japanese nations were loading full gram i rpjle Daruma doll has a round- his life. He has come to be rethat
is considered extremelv good
Educ
cargoes
for
Japan
and
a
third ed, weighted bottom so that it presented as a stubby, legless
Society.
luck,
the purchaser paints in one
‘ o (level on? n rr a cargo of lumber.
{ always returns to an uprigh- posi- statue, in a sitting posture.
eye
on
the doll as a token of his
V ;rv /‘‘^’Ja?e teachers,
Most Daruma dolls are painted appreciation for the Daruma’s
They made a significan econ- D°n no matter how it is placed. ;
year compiled
This feature of the Daruma ■ red, except for the face. The goodness. If another stroke of
omic backdrop for the float:
(Coat:
°
.
doll
that enable it to return im- i face is round with huge eyes. Its luck occurs, then he paints the
on page S)
fair.
i mediately to an upright position , shape and expression are gro- oJier eye on the doll.
Jopcin Longuctge
Marify Rising
The Daruma Doll Good Luck Charm
Page 2
^£da^Augusta u
Rational Risei Bowling Champion 1
-4
^^^^^^Paul Yoshimasu of
more concerned at what he considerWinnipeg, one of four Canadian ed insufficient interest shown by
bowlers at the recent world cham Canadian officials at the government
man from Os“
Sfe
pionships at Malmoe, Sweden, was level in Canadas representatives.
at the Univ, of Utah Field House t.^.*?****
genuinely embarrassed and keenly
"Other countries, many of them
isappointed ' with Canada's repres much smaller than us, brought con six championships decided at the fifth WorldL ”? fiTe of ^
There was no clear throw and the referee
entation in the tournament.
tingents of 12 to 15 bowlers with them to Matsunaga's
opponent, Klauss Claim of WP- r ^ ***
Yoshimasu, formerly of Vancouver,
to the championships/' said Yoshima- wmner until shouts from the crowd and a word ,
'S "&
finished a creditable ninth and
corrected the error.
d from Mej^
was} su during a stopover here.
I Matsunaga Wins Opentveighf Judo [»,
*
*
*
,
h,® alI-Japanese finale in the lightweWd 1' ■ ■
“Imagine our humiliation when funii Shigeoka defeated Hirofumi Matsuda for • ^"' '*'
Others from Japan who won titles"™^ T?
these countries exchanged gifts
,
Hy ken MORI
J
j with each other and we were heavyweight and Hiroshi Minatova, lM>t uttft.**1*
.JO,!OX™--'t should be called '■Kato’s Hole” That', were'
Third places in the events went to Pe" t"5 1
provided with nothing to give.
Ptalmibail /
puds in his limit of good bating I
•'■We didn’t even have a team Germany and Masatoshi Shinomaki of Japan in ‘L
“Y®
and to Byuns Sik Kim of Korea in the li*i^ ^
Ms fish mine
™
Ml
Ij manager/’
!
Yoshimasu was recently
Newly cronmed world heavyweight i„j„ i
■ 4?M
HO;VCVCr’
Canadian’s special fish investigator* have ) ed Manitoba’s athlete of namthe of the Netherlands withdrew- from Ye open Ztab/1'?,
tip riom one of its paid informers. ‘Kato" Hole.”
: year. With him on Canada’s
-v loealed, !S m the Honey Harbor area”
team were Jim Kramer of
A couple of Nisei anglers - probably top henchmen in Kato’s
; Sault Ste. Marie, Frank Boehm
heavyweight t0D(eg,
of Regina and Cathy Townsend ™ifour
of Montreal, who finished 15th
So, anglers, its refreshing to know that some Nbei fFher
"PPfhi"S
Wc'"
»
.again this w^i in the ladies division.
'Kato's Hole' Believed in Honey Harbor
*
is. And g.»dU|.Sr
l’C arOUml
OPTICAL
o^em
OPTOMETRISTS
proprietor
Complete Care
JON ONODERA
For Your Eyes
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-^05
^tj^±
(Dudacxs)
118 West Hastings St.
Although Canada had only four
bowlers, they were proud of the moru Yamamoto, and Canadian'karate'leata Ala- 'r "T'
fact that all reached the semi
finals. The ultimate winner in
the men’s division was a Japa
nese, followed by a Briton and an
American.
of hSh ?YLeld a
“Paining to the eager stade*
*
life ktate Th
Y ’°“ltS °f ” art h
«
Mhis is one sport where Can
lie, Kai ate The exciting workout was followed bv a buffet dh™
ada does have an excellent op
d hTTY’s" P™1'
“' students
portunity of winning a gold
Club a/”’ S °’ PreSid“‘ °f th° JCC CaiW
«
medal,” said Yoshimasu. “In fact,
?irter' °n
01 tlw cIub MrI d say the chances could have ed Dr mV8
ed Di. Chitose and Mr. Yamamoto with gifts. - JCC Centre
been better than at the world
| hockey championships. But we |
were vastly outnumbered by the
other countries and our chances I
were thus diminished.
“Even small countries, like
Minimum Land Arrangements: $216.00
Puerto Rico and Peru, sent more
1O-Day Tour of Japan or
bowlers to Sweden than we did.”
Any Day To Japan For $850.00*
540 Eglinton Ave. W^
Toronto
VANCOUVER, B.C.
small
(Residence)
Dr. Chitose Honored At J-CcTCentr/
*
1^ P^ ^our Ind‘ Calif., Hawaii and Japan
( Slightly Higher During Jul. Aug. Sept. Oct.)
shoe sizes
For Further Information Contact
FURUYA TRAVEL SERVICE
365 Spadma Ave.
SALES
Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Mens Scott McHales
4 up to 14
366-1075
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
MOTS SHOE STORE
Gertrude Grate
1328 Queen St. West
agency
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
Office — 3101 Bathurst St.
SUNDAY, AUGUST 27, 1967
10 A.M. Nisei Service — Rev. Wm. Morris
10 A.M. Program for the children
11:30 A.M. Issei Service — Rev. M. Norisue
Phone: 783-4261
C.O.D. orders from coast to coast
Home phone: HI. 7-8905
^OOOH>$ieoo
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
^WOKGCTOW
CHOP SOTT TAWW
ngemenfs
C^x^t^i/
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
Air—Ship— Sus—Raj]
Tours-Hot^I-Sightseemg
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
®d Baggage Insurance
PLUS TRAVEL
CaL^ring to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
^iiniinnniinnnininnninjHjjHjHHiiHiijjj^ijiij^ijijiiiijifinniniinii:
become a
professional
chick sexor
RINGING someone over?
Passage arranged bv St=c-=-
;
Call for Reservations or
Income of $12,000 to $20,000
L KAMEOKA
AMERICAN CHICK SEXING school
Buy J Sell
__
your Home j
Through
MITS KURODA
Information — EM. 8-9934
Mrite for information
214 Prospect Avenue
Lansdale, Pennsylvania 19445
Toronto 2-B,
;
■
Representing
MELL REAL ESTATE LTD.
I
M3 McCool St., TORONTO j
:
1527 O’Connor Dr., Toronto, Ont.
;
:
Phone 757-5184 — Res. AM. 1-2581
j
'LiiniHnHni{njnniijj|jin|||IlnnnniHjinjJ{nniJII||iHJiIj|f{nin^^
Rational Risei Bowling Champion 1
-4
^^^^^^Paul Yoshimasu of
more concerned at what he considerWinnipeg, one of four Canadian ed insufficient interest shown by
bowlers at the recent world cham Canadian officials at the government
man from Os“
Sfe
pionships at Malmoe, Sweden, was level in Canadas representatives.
at the Univ, of Utah Field House t.^.*?****
genuinely embarrassed and keenly
"Other countries, many of them
isappointed ' with Canada's repres much smaller than us, brought con six championships decided at the fifth WorldL ”? fiTe of ^
There was no clear throw and the referee
entation in the tournament.
tingents of 12 to 15 bowlers with them to Matsunaga's
opponent, Klauss Claim of WP- r ^ ***
Yoshimasu, formerly of Vancouver,
to the championships/' said Yoshima- wmner until shouts from the crowd and a word ,
'S "&
finished a creditable ninth and
corrected the error.
d from Mej^
was} su during a stopover here.
I Matsunaga Wins Opentveighf Judo [»,
*
*
*
,
h,® alI-Japanese finale in the lightweWd 1' ■ ■
“Imagine our humiliation when funii Shigeoka defeated Hirofumi Matsuda for • ^"' '*'
Others from Japan who won titles"™^ T?
these countries exchanged gifts
,
Hy ken MORI
J
j with each other and we were heavyweight and Hiroshi Minatova, lM>t uttft.**1*
.JO,!OX™--'t should be called '■Kato’s Hole” That', were'
Third places in the events went to Pe" t"5 1
provided with nothing to give.
Ptalmibail /
puds in his limit of good bating I
•'■We didn’t even have a team Germany and Masatoshi Shinomaki of Japan in ‘L
“Y®
and to Byuns Sik Kim of Korea in the li*i^ ^
Ms fish mine
™
Ml
Ij manager/’
!
Yoshimasu was recently
Newly cronmed world heavyweight i„j„ i
■ 4?M
HO;VCVCr’
Canadian’s special fish investigator* have ) ed Manitoba’s athlete of namthe of the Netherlands withdrew- from Ye open Ztab/1'?,
tip riom one of its paid informers. ‘Kato" Hole.”
: year. With him on Canada’s
-v loealed, !S m the Honey Harbor area”
team were Jim Kramer of
A couple of Nisei anglers - probably top henchmen in Kato’s
; Sault Ste. Marie, Frank Boehm
heavyweight t0D(eg,
of Regina and Cathy Townsend ™ifour
of Montreal, who finished 15th
So, anglers, its refreshing to know that some Nbei fFher
"PPfhi"S
Wc'"
»
.again this w^i in the ladies division.
'Kato's Hole' Believed in Honey Harbor
*
is. And g.»dU|.Sr
l’C arOUml
OPTICAL
o^em
OPTOMETRISTS
proprietor
Complete Care
JON ONODERA
For Your Eyes
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-^05
^tj^±
(Dudacxs)
118 West Hastings St.
Although Canada had only four
bowlers, they were proud of the moru Yamamoto, and Canadian'karate'leata Ala- 'r "T'
fact that all reached the semi
finals. The ultimate winner in
the men’s division was a Japa
nese, followed by a Briton and an
American.
of hSh ?YLeld a
“Paining to the eager stade*
*
life ktate Th
Y ’°“ltS °f ” art h
«
Mhis is one sport where Can
lie, Kai ate The exciting workout was followed bv a buffet dh™
ada does have an excellent op
d hTTY’s" P™1'
“' students
portunity of winning a gold
Club a/”’ S °’ PreSid“‘ °f th° JCC CaiW
«
medal,” said Yoshimasu. “In fact,
?irter' °n
01 tlw cIub MrI d say the chances could have ed Dr mV8
ed Di. Chitose and Mr. Yamamoto with gifts. - JCC Centre
been better than at the world
| hockey championships. But we |
were vastly outnumbered by the
other countries and our chances I
were thus diminished.
“Even small countries, like
Minimum Land Arrangements: $216.00
Puerto Rico and Peru, sent more
1O-Day Tour of Japan or
bowlers to Sweden than we did.”
Any Day To Japan For $850.00*
540 Eglinton Ave. W^
Toronto
VANCOUVER, B.C.
small
(Residence)
Dr. Chitose Honored At J-CcTCentr/
*
1^ P^ ^our Ind‘ Calif., Hawaii and Japan
( Slightly Higher During Jul. Aug. Sept. Oct.)
shoe sizes
For Further Information Contact
FURUYA TRAVEL SERVICE
365 Spadma Ave.
SALES
Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Mens Scott McHales
4 up to 14
366-1075
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
MOTS SHOE STORE
Gertrude Grate
1328 Queen St. West
agency
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
Office — 3101 Bathurst St.
SUNDAY, AUGUST 27, 1967
10 A.M. Nisei Service — Rev. Wm. Morris
10 A.M. Program for the children
11:30 A.M. Issei Service — Rev. M. Norisue
Phone: 783-4261
C.O.D. orders from coast to coast
Home phone: HI. 7-8905
^OOOH>$ieoo
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
^WOKGCTOW
CHOP SOTT TAWW
ngemenfs
C^x^t^i/
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
Air—Ship— Sus—Raj]
Tours-Hot^I-Sightseemg
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
®d Baggage Insurance
PLUS TRAVEL
CaL^ring to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
^iiniinnniinnnininnninjHjjHjHHiiHiijjj^ijiij^ijijiiiijifinniniinii:
become a
professional
chick sexor
RINGING someone over?
Passage arranged bv St=c-=-
;
Call for Reservations or
Income of $12,000 to $20,000
L KAMEOKA
AMERICAN CHICK SEXING school
Buy J Sell
__
your Home j
Through
MITS KURODA
Information — EM. 8-9934
Mrite for information
214 Prospect Avenue
Lansdale, Pennsylvania 19445
Toronto 2-B,
;
■
Representing
MELL REAL ESTATE LTD.
I
M3 McCool St., TORONTO j
:
1527 O’Connor Dr., Toronto, Ont.
;
:
Phone 757-5184 — Res. AM. 1-2581
j
'LiiniHnHni{njnniijj|jin|||IlnnnniHjinjJ{nniJII||iHJiIj|f{nin^^
Page 3
1967
PAGE 3
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127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
CATERING TO
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127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
CATERING TO
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479 Queen St ^
Toronto 2-B, On.
Phone 356^X5
12th.
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Page 7
^VO;
siurday. August 26, 1967
Dates And Doings
-----
—
PAGE 7
f Designer Mori's
New Styles Are
Personal Notes Across Canada
r^i Open Tennis Tournament Slated Sept. 9th
Obituaries
TORONTO.—Attention tennis players. The Nisei Open Tennis
Marriages
will be ^revived this year. The tournament will comMORI-KIMURA
;y. bepi.. 9ri, but in order to participate vou must
TORONTO. — Mr
your entry fees at Trinity Bellwoods Park (Queen
;ps:«
°f Toronto Nissed awav
TORONTO.—Miss Elaine Ake
- bun. Aug. 27 or on Sun. Sept 3.
4ddenly on August 21 <t upr mi Mori, daughter of Mr. and
p.avers are urged to come out.
AH
natiS C011eCti0n is more inter
MtTriai Hospital Fum w-s. George Kanichi Mori of
O.P.T.
national m approach.” she
<'
sale We f
Ch^ei and the 1 ownsnew, Ontario, became the
1
1 X
I
m
I
^er
at
Plaza
Church on Au- 'U® of ^Dr. Donald Kimura,
Ue Girls & Hockey Players Get Cut For Dance ±eZ"s *w ta di
ra, son
son
Interment at Park ct Mr. and Mr Ronald Kimura
J TORONTO.—There-s only one more week to go until the
°
&
^ ™ter‘
Lawn.
te&n Japanese Hockey League Labor Day Dance. So make L ? takes ^ote of the fact tha*
Ollto^°, on August
survived by husband I—?
at ^
tin Kew Dead!
has ro attend - This dance is once again being held at the JCC tracts?
bf t”10^ aiM «Shotaro
I amasaki;
daughters timed Church. The Rev. Hodder
tire, Don Mills and Eglinton, and it starts at 8:00 pm £
“
6
of liv- Mrs. M.
K. Kumagai (Mayumi), olficiatod the vows.
rill I1- ‘
r and also door prizes to be given away. Admission is
Mrs. T. F. Imada (Sachi),-and
Following
Mrs. who”' a slender
51.-50 ri
a"d a11 C-J HL. play. woXi
young Juli; son Dun; and four grand- China Housi a reception at the
5 o^onal. Everyone is invited to attend!
‘
self-deri^ most often wears
the happy couple
K. Dre;
left for a honeymoon
Western clothes, children.
to Mon
So come out and support tlie C.J.H.LJ Remernh^a
n^VeS
ri cal and Quebec.
.e . era
of pas^
‘‘cute
ember 2nd. - B.M.
^member Saturday, J^anese lady clothes
” has
SHIMIZU
VANCOUVER.
— Mr. Ichiro
*
♦
IKUTA-ORITA
“It is time now to fly
Sunnzu,
61,
passed
away sudinto
pemese Librarians Attend Tor. Intem'l Confab
from tradition/ ienlj on August Sth, 1967 np
The
:eSna^
Sty °Ubi^^
should^ be^d^
^^ Vancouver General Hospital. Ho daughter of a Buddhist minister
survived by his wife Koto became the bride of one on Au
EL) w
in an elegant
daughter Reiko of Toronto, son’ gust Sth, 1967 when Miss Kvoko
nosh Of Winnipeg, tfcee bro J Ikuto,^ daughter of the Rev. and
'ederarion of Library Associations (IFLA).
„ &/fori’s/.'elegant jet” has
tueis
lorn of Hope, B.C., Nobo, ! Mrrs. S. Ikuta of Steveston, B C
Hemy C Campbell, Chief Librarian of the Toronto Public a lull cargo this season, divided
tk?
;
“
d boutique sec- ™ of Toronto, Sadao of Winni- exchanged vows of marriage with
^’ h^
appointed honorary secretary-treasurer of the
P01'- There are more than 100
the Rev. Nobuo Orita, son of
nation winch is to ue a section of IFLA. Dr
dresses, pantdresses, pantsuits, i g:eg, and a sister Mrs. Asave Sothe Liverpool Public Library has been appointed president of
the
Rev. and Mrs. H. Orita of
and eveni-m- “ awa of Cambell River.
provisional steering committee of the association.
of at-home pajamas
Hawaii at the Steveston Buddhist
Funeral service was
dresses and coats.
°
held at
LjOwr
^e Ts.teering committee include: Gertrud
Church.
the Japanese Buddhist
Almost all are in exclusive faChurch
br^’r11' Hamburg Public Libraries; Emerson Greenaway Phila I
After the ceremony and recep
on August 10th with th Rev. S.
2i
CS
\
at
5116
Jlas
designed
her
Lpha Free Library; Philip J. McNiff, Boston Public Library
Ikuta
officiating.
tion, the happy couple left for
self and were made especially
ton
Tokyo Charief
Metropolitan
U-a Hasegawa,
Public Library;
F. J. Library
7^) Ma^nn
QimS’s BoroSh’’ tor her.
New York where the Rev. Orita
Engagements
Hah? IM’m^
Bibhotheque Municipale Centrale du
is the minister of the New York
There are silk prints splashed
|u^ Gothenburg Mlk'gbr^
lAbrary; and Siguard with landscapes,
Buddhist Church.
chrysanthet™1™^^
velveteens ment of Jeai^Micliko, ^d'S
SB
DUS
LW,
03.
5X5
•s
13
"'
r»^^
M
«
9
,n M
bor
LSnyg^/'lSt “y165 in metropolitan areas khat concentrate on designs
xiiGLernw
rowed from
space;
flittering । daug'hter of Mr. Tomegoro EdafKoh SZ
ie<s> man
400,000 populations with the obi'pc-flate ^Hs- Setsu
mZL”^01111 eo-op^ Qf “: lame jerseys; printed Japanese- ™U’a and ^
made silk velvets and more tra- Edamu^L to George Masao OtsuK denari
information particularly in connection
and
» ;f Mr. mdZ
co lectlolls °f international and foreign litera- and c) participation in IFLA and .its Public Librari2°SecSom
The rinzu fabric, once made ^ ^
tSUji ^a11 of Vancouver)
*
I
*
t
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
*
Consult
RITZ KINOSHITA
m narrow kimono widths, has "aS amiounced on Sunday, Aunow been widened to make it |sust G> 1967 at an engayeraen1
I »^1Y Kble Camp Su<=cess .With Full House
For All Classes of
f°r Western-style Party .held at the home of Mr"
I the JamiS^
Family Bible Camp sponsored
Mrs.'Mori’s skirt lengths ta TVZ ^ °W The
INSURANCE
S-wZ M1
Co”? from Au=- 5—13th this year
d latU n ”■ b»tt ~ Conference came to a most rewarding daytime outfits
Phone: PL. 9-2632
be.
c“mPers and counsellors alike. Total attend- to shorter. For evenings at home I er‘
^a^ ilLWe^ registrations, went over the 100 or out, she introduces a new
OR
Baishakunins were Air
™rl
,
h were ’still some ^^H fte C1V1C Holiday week-end was over lei£th ?at. barely. skims the Mrs. S. Taguchi
PL. 5-7317
need.
e S° b™1^ People for our dedicated cooks ai?^es> But it is an introduction
without too much conviction.
Most
of the long designs in this
I
can]P’ i{; included campers in every ag
campers in every age brack- collection almost touch the floor.
■Wi of G?Plnh Lttle,.Wesley
to Mr.
Mr.
- Yoshida
------------ (14 months) to
Mrs. Mori’s couture clothes are
kwh . • ^^Ph (111
his
s
-----x
■
?\h A seveilties). But none was left out PKICed from $150 to $800 with
-j camp. From
Shine’ short dresses up to $250, paja^’^ the
^e “Rise and
aiid SW
^^th’SXbi
0 P-m...evejy
hour of
typical mas 1° ?600, and gowns with
at 10
p.m. every hour
of a
a typical
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
to do—gratis, Vacation Bible School, ; Patching coats from $450 to
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN ^nnvir
"sh?
’ tucktime, organized■> sports,
, . 1s-wimming, skits, $800..
SUKIYAKI MEAT - VINEGAR _ MAKJU L ^“li
beside fePowshm
t le -day finished off with1 an inspirational I Prices for clothes in her boutiwas just one glorious week of fun and fel- , que bine range from $70 to $175.
MANY VARJETIES OF ARARE
Hers who accented
c.amP was over there were several
accepted Jesus Christ as their personal Saviour.
dunbas simon store
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
Parable om
activities which made this camp a
Kn-boat aloiwE r
Jad
°PP01'rimity to ride on a
^hole camp evacuate?^ C^- ' 01i Wednesday, August 9th,
near GamebrWo-P a
an(I picnic at the Centennial
^? takiS± ^ ^turday August 12th, saw the en^, our camp^ur^ ^ Censure Hunt arranged by Mrs. L.
r "-e'theY^*^
Scripture memorization this
P ^re: Joan° YoWp^T^
blg Gre? Vey. Others on this
GIen YamSX J^
Diane Idenouye, Susan
K Joan Morito DptS’
Susan Omura, Grant
Fy5.. Cabin made
c s Chafe and Rev. Johnston. The Primary
hi Johnston.
Puer Denyshenko, Michael Yamashita,
p Wr. H, Urbach
Dloyd Tanaka and their counTien the S7 p H^f ^th the Prize for the Kleenest
rifle the
pest Gui Camper Award went to Linda ।
^ ,
‘
b B°y Camper Award was captured by John
foroX Sa11s conclusion, the Japanese Gospel
precess of ^
s.t° thank all those who donated toward
*33 the 13th .Wnai^ki11 Doth funds and service. Plan now to
^S^^Ude/^JGC 11 ^ at Fah’havens’ ^ere
iAJ IT WITH
flowers
DiUVEBY
. S S' 6-2041
* ?«E >5: 6-7962
u” ftV£- Toronto
EM. 4-7692
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Cccrlton St., Toronto
Boom 1805
366-6388
233-4281
(Be*.)
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
Nov^i &°ML,Orde Street Public School
'
Phone 921-3171
pl
tauI A Orde St. every Saturday 9 to 12 a.m.
N°;2 Soh°o1 — Redford Collegiate
harmacy North of Lawrence, Scarboro, Saturday^ to 12
a.m.
No. 3 School — Islington Public School
Welcome To Expo ’67
^JAPANESE RESTAURANT
Advice on all troubles of life.
* Special Family Dinner
* Reasonable Price
220 Jean Talon St. East
MONTREAL
,2
(from 8 years of age1)
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Reads cards and palm
Phone 535-7708
1967-68 terms on Sept. 9, 1967 at 9 p.m.
Consult
madam marusha
(above Sunset Restaurant)
Announces the opening of its schools for the
It is a good policy to
have the HIGHT POLICY
MADAME
BUTTERFLY
808-A College, near Ossington
Japanese Language School Board
TEL. 271—4803
Cordou Avenue, Etobicoke, Saturday 9 to 12 a.m.
l
I
J
i
I 11
S
Tuition fees — $3.50 per pupil per month
— 81.00 less per extra pupil from a family
vn ^pedal Sch°o1 F“ Adult Beginners
N Ako Garden, 4S0 Dundas St. Every Tuesday 7;30 to 9:30 p.m.
-M“lt r«s S5.00 per month
^or fur*,her “formaliim contact the school princinal
° b°ard Cha™an’ K- Saito HO. 1-5318 (Toronto)
siurday. August 26, 1967
Dates And Doings
-----
—
PAGE 7
f Designer Mori's
New Styles Are
Personal Notes Across Canada
r^i Open Tennis Tournament Slated Sept. 9th
Obituaries
TORONTO.—Attention tennis players. The Nisei Open Tennis
Marriages
will be ^revived this year. The tournament will comMORI-KIMURA
;y. bepi.. 9ri, but in order to participate vou must
TORONTO. — Mr
your entry fees at Trinity Bellwoods Park (Queen
;ps:«
°f Toronto Nissed awav
TORONTO.—Miss Elaine Ake
- bun. Aug. 27 or on Sun. Sept 3.
4ddenly on August 21 <t upr mi Mori, daughter of Mr. and
p.avers are urged to come out.
AH
natiS C011eCti0n is more inter
MtTriai Hospital Fum w-s. George Kanichi Mori of
O.P.T.
national m approach.” she
<'
sale We f
Ch^ei and the 1 ownsnew, Ontario, became the
1
1 X
I
m
I
^er
at
Plaza
Church on Au- 'U® of ^Dr. Donald Kimura,
Ue Girls & Hockey Players Get Cut For Dance ±eZ"s *w ta di
ra, son
son
Interment at Park ct Mr. and Mr Ronald Kimura
J TORONTO.—There-s only one more week to go until the
°
&
^ ™ter‘
Lawn.
te&n Japanese Hockey League Labor Day Dance. So make L ? takes ^ote of the fact tha*
Ollto^°, on August
survived by husband I—?
at ^
tin Kew Dead!
has ro attend - This dance is once again being held at the JCC tracts?
bf t”10^ aiM «Shotaro
I amasaki;
daughters timed Church. The Rev. Hodder
tire, Don Mills and Eglinton, and it starts at 8:00 pm £
“
6
of liv- Mrs. M.
K. Kumagai (Mayumi), olficiatod the vows.
rill I1- ‘
r and also door prizes to be given away. Admission is
Mrs. T. F. Imada (Sachi),-and
Following
Mrs. who”' a slender
51.-50 ri
a"d a11 C-J HL. play. woXi
young Juli; son Dun; and four grand- China Housi a reception at the
5 o^onal. Everyone is invited to attend!
‘
self-deri^ most often wears
the happy couple
K. Dre;
left for a honeymoon
Western clothes, children.
to Mon
So come out and support tlie C.J.H.LJ Remernh^a
n^VeS
ri cal and Quebec.
.e . era
of pas^
‘‘cute
ember 2nd. - B.M.
^member Saturday, J^anese lady clothes
” has
SHIMIZU
VANCOUVER.
— Mr. Ichiro
*
♦
IKUTA-ORITA
“It is time now to fly
Sunnzu,
61,
passed
away sudinto
pemese Librarians Attend Tor. Intem'l Confab
from tradition/ ienlj on August Sth, 1967 np
The
:eSna^
Sty °Ubi^^
should^ be^d^
^^ Vancouver General Hospital. Ho daughter of a Buddhist minister
survived by his wife Koto became the bride of one on Au
EL) w
in an elegant
daughter Reiko of Toronto, son’ gust Sth, 1967 when Miss Kvoko
nosh Of Winnipeg, tfcee bro J Ikuto,^ daughter of the Rev. and
'ederarion of Library Associations (IFLA).
„ &/fori’s/.'elegant jet” has
tueis
lorn of Hope, B.C., Nobo, ! Mrrs. S. Ikuta of Steveston, B C
Hemy C Campbell, Chief Librarian of the Toronto Public a lull cargo this season, divided
tk?
;
“
d boutique sec- ™ of Toronto, Sadao of Winni- exchanged vows of marriage with
^’ h^
appointed honorary secretary-treasurer of the
P01'- There are more than 100
the Rev. Nobuo Orita, son of
nation winch is to ue a section of IFLA. Dr
dresses, pantdresses, pantsuits, i g:eg, and a sister Mrs. Asave Sothe Liverpool Public Library has been appointed president of
the
Rev. and Mrs. H. Orita of
and eveni-m- “ awa of Cambell River.
provisional steering committee of the association.
of at-home pajamas
Hawaii at the Steveston Buddhist
Funeral service was
dresses and coats.
°
held at
LjOwr
^e Ts.teering committee include: Gertrud
Church.
the Japanese Buddhist
Almost all are in exclusive faChurch
br^’r11' Hamburg Public Libraries; Emerson Greenaway Phila I
After the ceremony and recep
on August 10th with th Rev. S.
2i
CS
\
at
5116
Jlas
designed
her
Lpha Free Library; Philip J. McNiff, Boston Public Library
Ikuta
officiating.
tion, the happy couple left for
self and were made especially
ton
Tokyo Charief
Metropolitan
U-a Hasegawa,
Public Library;
F. J. Library
7^) Ma^nn
QimS’s BoroSh’’ tor her.
New York where the Rev. Orita
Engagements
Hah? IM’m^
Bibhotheque Municipale Centrale du
is the minister of the New York
There are silk prints splashed
|u^ Gothenburg Mlk'gbr^
lAbrary; and Siguard with landscapes,
Buddhist Church.
chrysanthet™1™^^
velveteens ment of Jeai^Micliko, ^d'S
SB
DUS
LW,
03.
5X5
•s
13
"'
r»^^
M
«
9
,n M
bor
LSnyg^/'lSt “y165 in metropolitan areas khat concentrate on designs
xiiGLernw
rowed from
space;
flittering । daug'hter of Mr. Tomegoro EdafKoh SZ
ie<s> man
400,000 populations with the obi'pc-flate ^Hs- Setsu
mZL”^01111 eo-op^ Qf “: lame jerseys; printed Japanese- ™U’a and ^
made silk velvets and more tra- Edamu^L to George Masao OtsuK denari
information particularly in connection
and
» ;f Mr. mdZ
co lectlolls °f international and foreign litera- and c) participation in IFLA and .its Public Librari2°SecSom
The rinzu fabric, once made ^ ^
tSUji ^a11 of Vancouver)
*
I
*
t
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
*
Consult
RITZ KINOSHITA
m narrow kimono widths, has "aS amiounced on Sunday, Aunow been widened to make it |sust G> 1967 at an engayeraen1
I »^1Y Kble Camp Su<=cess .With Full House
For All Classes of
f°r Western-style Party .held at the home of Mr"
I the JamiS^
Family Bible Camp sponsored
Mrs.'Mori’s skirt lengths ta TVZ ^ °W The
INSURANCE
S-wZ M1
Co”? from Au=- 5—13th this year
d latU n ”■ b»tt ~ Conference came to a most rewarding daytime outfits
Phone: PL. 9-2632
be.
c“mPers and counsellors alike. Total attend- to shorter. For evenings at home I er‘
^a^ ilLWe^ registrations, went over the 100 or out, she introduces a new
OR
Baishakunins were Air
™rl
,
h were ’still some ^^H fte C1V1C Holiday week-end was over lei£th ?at. barely. skims the Mrs. S. Taguchi
PL. 5-7317
need.
e S° b™1^ People for our dedicated cooks ai?^es> But it is an introduction
without too much conviction.
Most
of the long designs in this
I
can]P’ i{; included campers in every ag
campers in every age brack- collection almost touch the floor.
■Wi of G?Plnh Lttle,.Wesley
to Mr.
Mr.
- Yoshida
------------ (14 months) to
Mrs. Mori’s couture clothes are
kwh . • ^^Ph (111
his
s
-----x
■
?\h A seveilties). But none was left out PKICed from $150 to $800 with
-j camp. From
Shine’ short dresses up to $250, paja^’^ the
^e “Rise and
aiid SW
^^th’SXbi
0 P-m...evejy
hour of
typical mas 1° ?600, and gowns with
at 10
p.m. every hour
of a
a typical
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
to do—gratis, Vacation Bible School, ; Patching coats from $450 to
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN ^nnvir
"sh?
’ tucktime, organized■> sports,
, . 1s-wimming, skits, $800..
SUKIYAKI MEAT - VINEGAR _ MAKJU L ^“li
beside fePowshm
t le -day finished off with1 an inspirational I Prices for clothes in her boutiwas just one glorious week of fun and fel- , que bine range from $70 to $175.
MANY VARJETIES OF ARARE
Hers who accented
c.amP was over there were several
accepted Jesus Christ as their personal Saviour.
dunbas simon store
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
Parable om
activities which made this camp a
Kn-boat aloiwE r
Jad
°PP01'rimity to ride on a
^hole camp evacuate?^ C^- ' 01i Wednesday, August 9th,
near GamebrWo-P a
an(I picnic at the Centennial
^? takiS± ^ ^turday August 12th, saw the en^, our camp^ur^ ^ Censure Hunt arranged by Mrs. L.
r "-e'theY^*^
Scripture memorization this
P ^re: Joan° YoWp^T^
blg Gre? Vey. Others on this
GIen YamSX J^
Diane Idenouye, Susan
K Joan Morito DptS’
Susan Omura, Grant
Fy5.. Cabin made
c s Chafe and Rev. Johnston. The Primary
hi Johnston.
Puer Denyshenko, Michael Yamashita,
p Wr. H, Urbach
Dloyd Tanaka and their counTien the S7 p H^f ^th the Prize for the Kleenest
rifle the
pest Gui Camper Award went to Linda ।
^ ,
‘
b B°y Camper Award was captured by John
foroX Sa11s conclusion, the Japanese Gospel
precess of ^
s.t° thank all those who donated toward
*33 the 13th .Wnai^ki11 Doth funds and service. Plan now to
^S^^Ude/^JGC 11 ^ at Fah’havens’ ^ere
iAJ IT WITH
flowers
DiUVEBY
. S S' 6-2041
* ?«E >5: 6-7962
u” ftV£- Toronto
EM. 4-7692
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Cccrlton St., Toronto
Boom 1805
366-6388
233-4281
(Be*.)
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
Nov^i &°ML,Orde Street Public School
'
Phone 921-3171
pl
tauI A Orde St. every Saturday 9 to 12 a.m.
N°;2 Soh°o1 — Redford Collegiate
harmacy North of Lawrence, Scarboro, Saturday^ to 12
a.m.
No. 3 School — Islington Public School
Welcome To Expo ’67
^JAPANESE RESTAURANT
Advice on all troubles of life.
* Special Family Dinner
* Reasonable Price
220 Jean Talon St. East
MONTREAL
,2
(from 8 years of age1)
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Reads cards and palm
Phone 535-7708
1967-68 terms on Sept. 9, 1967 at 9 p.m.
Consult
madam marusha
(above Sunset Restaurant)
Announces the opening of its schools for the
It is a good policy to
have the HIGHT POLICY
MADAME
BUTTERFLY
808-A College, near Ossington
Japanese Language School Board
TEL. 271—4803
Cordou Avenue, Etobicoke, Saturday 9 to 12 a.m.
l
I
J
i
I 11
S
Tuition fees — $3.50 per pupil per month
— 81.00 less per extra pupil from a family
vn ^pedal Sch°o1 F“ Adult Beginners
N Ako Garden, 4S0 Dundas St. Every Tuesday 7;30 to 9:30 p.m.
-M“lt r«s S5.00 per month
^or fur*,her “formaliim contact the school princinal
° b°ard Cha™an’ K- Saito HO. 1-5318 (Toronto)
Page 8
KAGE 8
CANADIAN
I Gallup Poll
The
Changing
Of
Movie
Saturday
(Cont. From Page 1)
Role
The New Canadian
I poor in quality. They included ’ •anese
(63 percent), Japan’s
i women, middle
ind old age
cenery (42 percent) and Japan’s
: people, those wiLn little educa- culture, art and sports (36 perF« on;, Di&fci
I tion, laborers. farmers a n d cent.)
I
As for Japan’s political sys- I K
Good commen
were made on : tem, only 31 percent said that
optical prod-J-pan was a democratic counBy BILL HOSOKAWA
uets,
cmnaware
Seventeen percent thought
and
motorcycles
: Lnited States, it must be a UIT
CLASSIFIED ADS
i
was a despotic
state.
(Pacific Citizen)
i ed that Cagney
succeeded in but ihe reputa tion of watches
product s.
automobiles ; while nine percent believe Japan
Turning back the clock __ For ^,rin&in& the secret document to textile
.^al^IIelp W
was not I A a Communist country There
want of something better to (in tbe attention of the proper toys and sports
anted
;
were
very
good.
percent who did nor experienced
the other evening, we turned on <luthorities who then proceeded
S'
i know.
the television set and caught a to ^ something about it.
British Survey
,
781-2310 (Tor
1945 movie titled, I think, ‘“Blood J
Britain — When the Britons L lhlS mea?S’ in effect> that
on the
Sun.” James Cagney, ]
bed were asked, "what con- /e'en °7 of every 10 Britons LARGE steel
mainte
Changing
villains
minus the bags under his eyes?
ro mind when f’ne
no knowledge^ of or do not class
salary, ful) fc
some
wartime
movies
"‘Blood on Bar
and as fast with a quip as with '
mentioned?” 59 ne’- '1^ understand uapan’s politi- onto).
1
cal system.
his fists, was the hero. He plav- j the Sun’’ cast no aspersions on
said China while
percent
MAN wanted (q
The villains were coned the part of a fearless Ameri- j
As for Japanese products, 30 room duties. Fv~
c:
niving
Japanese
militar
its
and
can
newspaperman in Tokyo
H
;
percent
said
that
thev
were
ex'
nen
ed
fascist-minded
civilian
trying to smuggle out a copy of their
mentioned Cellent’ /hile 40 thought they pay annuallv. A
-^15 (To:
the infamous Tanaka Memorial counterparts who, I suppose, are mind when Janan
A YOUNG~//
68
percent
said
the
industrial
?
pe
^
cent
^
fair
game
today
even
for
Japa
which purported to blueprint
products of Japan.
! 1 ?b
the excellent products, cedure or bock:
Japan’s
plans for
ident preferred,
conquering nese film-makers. (Let it be said,
w
n
•
,
t
;
radios
registered
the
hi Mie A onto).
however, that it would be unfair
the world.
hollowing were the life of Ja-i percentage of 51 percent. °
The heroine, sort of, was Syl- to suggest that the Japanese film
Female Help Want^
v*a Sydney whose sad-eyed mien industry is capable of making
Nobel
Wife
.
.
.
as
unartistic
a
picture
as
COUNTER girnr^/^
qualified her for a number of
(Cont. from Page One)
c day week. Will
oWr 3 si
Eurasian roles in prewar „vt "Blood,” which, no doubt, was flag on a permanent basis.
French
Academy
of
Science W^Phane 532-6714 (H^.
boilers. Under the evil influence ground out over a couple of long
As the president of the Japa warning against radioactive fall
of Prime Minister Tanaka, she weekends on a very limited bud
-2?^cJk!p Wanted
nese
branch of World Federal- out.
get.)
tries to trap Cagney, but when
i^ts,
which
includes
the
women
’
s
he catches on, she proves that
Today they are continuing GOOD home lookir
Someone might make a studv section, Mrs. Yukawa finds her
a y0’
person to wo
her heart is pure after all.
their
campaign. “There is rauid- liable
sometime of the changing char time almost completely occupied
room
and
hot}
cleaning ladv
There were a number of more acter of movie villains. From
iy growing interest in world Good salary _
school ace c^
with
her
work
in
promoting'
the
Oi less Oriental types in support- I time to time thev have changed
peace through world law,” she — speak little Palish. Cal! er
cause.
She
has
been
aided
by
Mrs. p. Cooper
mg roles, but none could be re- i from Indians to Mexicans ° to
said.
85-5719.
SFgH’zed as Nisei
performers. I Germans to Japanese to Rus- her husband, a one-time pres
The world
federalism move- _ _____ personal
ident of the "World Association ।
understandable in view j sians to North Koreans. I haven’t who
taught
;
physics
for
four
J
™
ent
’
:
-.r
which
has
a branch in COMING TO EXPO.’ 4 s-c;;.::
of the fact that in 1945 Nisei j| seen any recent movies, but it ■ years
Montreal,
is
not,
however,
Mrs. clean rooms, 3 miles to ExM ')
were still larglely absent from ji! /oul(lbr reasonable
w «J W * * CL kJ k v
L to
V
JJpresume
.L CO V* Ill'
] New'York and is now at &Kvoto Fukawa’s sole concern. She takes ° cTugle- sPfgai rates by week.T
Hollywood film lots.
?.F ^,ndo' 363 Churchill Blvd., C। that Red Chinese and j/]/m
Vietnam j University in Japan.
time out to paint and delighted held
By 1967 dramatic standards, ese
Pk., Montreal. 671-3923
ese are fair game these days. Of ]
m
exhibiting
a
midnight
blue
“Blood on the Sun” was such a course there’s a certain permaAt
every
opportunity
dle .। kimono with
..
_____
_
„
iiiuv
ux
_
-Ci a delicate white or- EXPO — three bedroom with al cstinkeroo that we turned off the nence in making creatures from couple .speaks out against the < chid design
spread over it. “Falso comodation, living room and T.V. ii^
TV and wandered off to read outer space the whipping boys arms racev and
prinutes to subway. $5. each q—’h- ^
1 vi
chq li
UL UcO 1 L \
the
necessitv
a book. However, in view of the of celluloid drama, but even they eventual world federation. In X ' ^?Tes’” she smiIed and nod- for children. Contact Martin &:/
E
’OKI
, ded. But they aren’t for sale. I Eveline St. Fabreville, Laval, P. Q. ~
fact that the Japanese failed to may not be a safe targ-et for late 50’s Dr.. I ukawa madetle
a i just give them to my friends.”
conquer the world, much less the !
plea for Jest bans at a Pugwash
YOUNG lady requires fiat io rent. Ckm o
trally located. Before the 1st of 0*
(Nova Scotia) conference and I — Mont. Star
ber. Call at HU. l-9097 ~(Toror/o). '
Ih0,‘orsr
tiled a
memorandum
to the
hal
Gold Seal Upholstery
Bus. Phone 633-3244
-All Phases New And Used Furniture
and Antiques Custom Upholstered
Quality Guaranteed Workmanship
Metro-wide Service — Free Home
Estimates
Don Mitsubata
Res. — RO. v-6078
Villains
|
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
221 VICTORIA
EM. 3-5002
ST.. TORONTO
OX. 1-3388 (He*.
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
FLAT ROOFS
MEMBER OF QR.CA
SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK
ALCAN SIDING DEALER
ha vestroughing
TORONTO
421-3374 nisei OWNED
TOSH NISHIJIMA
''COVERING ONTARIO”
Night Calls: PL. 9-5095
Hl. 7-1100
tcart. . .
Bouquet
Invitation
a
iA
(Continued From Page 1)
w
Ta
,. 2,300-word
..
— Japanese Kanji
dictionary for foreigners. It is w
Language . . .
tee rf
bI
1
The
The Japanese language School
Dramatic evidence of the in- M
ci eased interest in the language : S
.1^ pioxided bx a radio broadcast ■
"Let’s Speak Japanese”, beamed $
abroad by Radio Jauan. Initiated X
weekly in 1959 in English and ]
i Indonesian, this program is now
■ broadcast in 12 foreign langu- '
■ ages, including Vietnamese. Bu
' mese and Hindi
Ml S. Aoki
829, West 33rd Ave., Vancouver 13, B.C.
Phone 739-7038.
BOWLERS!
The Montreal Japanese Gar
den I roject wishes to make
a correction on their last list
of donations. The correction
is as follows: Paul Murakami
$l.->0. and Fabreville Glass Co.
S60. The original sent to The
New Canadian had the dona
tions at both $100.
Papers,
Kmm r
”'ip you
wish for! ft
?*«-^"»"9-<lch
raisedcould
tana-
LET'S LEARN JAPANESE
yet costing so little! Come
k co
day r
pc 11
Elementary Class 4:00 p.m. — 5.30 p.m.
considering publication of ele- ; w
!
mentary, intermediate and adn
The Jr. and Sr. High School Class
vanced text books as well
I
a
'a
supplementary readers on
7:00 p.m. ■— 8:30 p.m.
sciences, literature
and social
studies.
ii w
The Special Class 7:00 p.m. — 8:30 p.m. IIt
I3
Interest in learning the lan- ■ u
® Note: 1.
1
guage has followed the remark- ;
The Special Class is for adults in eluding liS .
able growth of the Japanese
»1
a
University Students.
!
economy in recent years and in- I
2. The new term will be started on September *1
creasing sales of Japanese pro w
ducts jn international markets. n
5th Tuesday.
These items range from ships to ®
a
3.
For
transistor radios.
further information, please inquire at
W
Language training is availabl u
or phone:
i
to foreign students in Japan at ; a
a
public and private colleges as i B
Ia
well as universitie
Two special ^
schools are en gaged exclusively
475 Alexander St. Vancouver 4, B.C.
3
in teachin g Japanese to foreign- I «
Phone 254-2551, or
ers.
So Sorry, Pleasel
expensive, Our beautiful
Bouquet
s with the most exquisite
31
’’i
is an i
ible
larth
[WASH]
iciei
[Siry 1
[Ke for,
lite wa
K exact
k’s and
f« a cu
feies ‘
pt of
lairanci
p hope'
the
I its repi
f;T. Hai
^ Prof. 1
*
I.
Ji
^ncan
®«3cenie
Ah mei
sith hi
■tiosl a*'
^®2)iS
s 100.00
- ot
Join a Ten-Pin League on Sunday Afternoons
for Fun and Recreation
Toronto Nisei Ten-Pin
Sunday Mixed Bowling League
Of J]
...•-— si
i ^ TA
lQpan
^oduc
:f1gine
Contact: Marjorie
THE
NEW
CANADIAN
479 Queen St West
3
(TORONTO)
.1
5:
Izumi — 463-6879
or Frank Wakida — 757-3054
Tear
fc? ba?
I^®tim
CANADIAN
I Gallup Poll
The
Changing
Of
Movie
Saturday
(Cont. From Page 1)
Role
The New Canadian
I poor in quality. They included ’ •anese
(63 percent), Japan’s
i women, middle
ind old age
cenery (42 percent) and Japan’s
: people, those wiLn little educa- culture, art and sports (36 perF« on;, Di&fci
I tion, laborers. farmers a n d cent.)
I
As for Japan’s political sys- I K
Good commen
were made on : tem, only 31 percent said that
optical prod-J-pan was a democratic counBy BILL HOSOKAWA
uets,
cmnaware
Seventeen percent thought
and
motorcycles
: Lnited States, it must be a UIT
CLASSIFIED ADS
i
was a despotic
state.
(Pacific Citizen)
i ed that Cagney
succeeded in but ihe reputa tion of watches
product s.
automobiles ; while nine percent believe Japan
Turning back the clock __ For ^,rin&in& the secret document to textile
.^al^IIelp W
was not I A a Communist country There
want of something better to (in tbe attention of the proper toys and sports
anted
;
were
very
good.
percent who did nor experienced
the other evening, we turned on <luthorities who then proceeded
S'
i know.
the television set and caught a to ^ something about it.
British Survey
,
781-2310 (Tor
1945 movie titled, I think, ‘“Blood J
Britain — When the Britons L lhlS mea?S’ in effect> that
on the
Sun.” James Cagney, ]
bed were asked, "what con- /e'en °7 of every 10 Britons LARGE steel
mainte
Changing
villains
minus the bags under his eyes?
ro mind when f’ne
no knowledge^ of or do not class
salary, ful) fc
some
wartime
movies
"‘Blood on Bar
and as fast with a quip as with '
mentioned?” 59 ne’- '1^ understand uapan’s politi- onto).
1
cal system.
his fists, was the hero. He plav- j the Sun’’ cast no aspersions on
said China while
percent
MAN wanted (q
The villains were coned the part of a fearless Ameri- j
As for Japanese products, 30 room duties. Fv~
c:
niving
Japanese
militar
its
and
can
newspaperman in Tokyo
H
;
percent
said
that
thev
were
ex'
nen
ed
fascist-minded
civilian
trying to smuggle out a copy of their
mentioned Cellent’ /hile 40 thought they pay annuallv. A
-^15 (To:
the infamous Tanaka Memorial counterparts who, I suppose, are mind when Janan
A YOUNG~//
68
percent
said
the
industrial
?
pe
^
cent
^
fair
game
today
even
for
Japa
which purported to blueprint
products of Japan.
! 1 ?b
the excellent products, cedure or bock:
Japan’s
plans for
ident preferred,
conquering nese film-makers. (Let it be said,
w
n
•
,
t
;
radios
registered
the
hi Mie A onto).
however, that it would be unfair
the world.
hollowing were the life of Ja-i percentage of 51 percent. °
The heroine, sort of, was Syl- to suggest that the Japanese film
Female Help Want^
v*a Sydney whose sad-eyed mien industry is capable of making
Nobel
Wife
.
.
.
as
unartistic
a
picture
as
COUNTER girnr^/^
qualified her for a number of
(Cont. from Page One)
c day week. Will
oWr 3 si
Eurasian roles in prewar „vt "Blood,” which, no doubt, was flag on a permanent basis.
French
Academy
of
Science W^Phane 532-6714 (H^.
boilers. Under the evil influence ground out over a couple of long
As the president of the Japa warning against radioactive fall
of Prime Minister Tanaka, she weekends on a very limited bud
-2?^cJk!p Wanted
nese
branch of World Federal- out.
get.)
tries to trap Cagney, but when
i^ts,
which
includes
the
women
’
s
he catches on, she proves that
Today they are continuing GOOD home lookir
Someone might make a studv section, Mrs. Yukawa finds her
a y0’
person to wo
her heart is pure after all.
their
campaign. “There is rauid- liable
sometime of the changing char time almost completely occupied
room
and
hot}
cleaning ladv
There were a number of more acter of movie villains. From
iy growing interest in world Good salary _
school ace c^
with
her
work
in
promoting'
the
Oi less Oriental types in support- I time to time thev have changed
peace through world law,” she — speak little Palish. Cal! er
cause.
She
has
been
aided
by
Mrs. p. Cooper
mg roles, but none could be re- i from Indians to Mexicans ° to
said.
85-5719.
SFgH’zed as Nisei
performers. I Germans to Japanese to Rus- her husband, a one-time pres
The world
federalism move- _ _____ personal
ident of the "World Association ।
understandable in view j sians to North Koreans. I haven’t who
taught
;
physics
for
four
J
™
ent
’
:
-.r
which
has
a branch in COMING TO EXPO.’ 4 s-c;;.::
of the fact that in 1945 Nisei j| seen any recent movies, but it ■ years
Montreal,
is
not,
however,
Mrs. clean rooms, 3 miles to ExM ')
were still larglely absent from ji! /oul(lbr reasonable
w «J W * * CL kJ k v
L to
V
JJpresume
.L CO V* Ill'
] New'York and is now at &Kvoto Fukawa’s sole concern. She takes ° cTugle- sPfgai rates by week.T
Hollywood film lots.
?.F ^,ndo' 363 Churchill Blvd., C। that Red Chinese and j/]/m
Vietnam j University in Japan.
time out to paint and delighted held
By 1967 dramatic standards, ese
Pk., Montreal. 671-3923
ese are fair game these days. Of ]
m
exhibiting
a
midnight
blue
“Blood on the Sun” was such a course there’s a certain permaAt
every
opportunity
dle .। kimono with
..
_____
_
„
iiiuv
ux
_
-Ci a delicate white or- EXPO — three bedroom with al cstinkeroo that we turned off the nence in making creatures from couple .speaks out against the < chid design
spread over it. “Falso comodation, living room and T.V. ii^
TV and wandered off to read outer space the whipping boys arms racev and
prinutes to subway. $5. each q—’h- ^
1 vi
chq li
UL UcO 1 L \
the
necessitv
a book. However, in view of the of celluloid drama, but even they eventual world federation. In X ' ^?Tes’” she smiIed and nod- for children. Contact Martin &:/
E
’OKI
, ded. But they aren’t for sale. I Eveline St. Fabreville, Laval, P. Q. ~
fact that the Japanese failed to may not be a safe targ-et for late 50’s Dr.. I ukawa madetle
a i just give them to my friends.”
conquer the world, much less the !
plea for Jest bans at a Pugwash
YOUNG lady requires fiat io rent. Ckm o
trally located. Before the 1st of 0*
(Nova Scotia) conference and I — Mont. Star
ber. Call at HU. l-9097 ~(Toror/o). '
Ih0,‘orsr
tiled a
memorandum
to the
hal
Gold Seal Upholstery
Bus. Phone 633-3244
-All Phases New And Used Furniture
and Antiques Custom Upholstered
Quality Guaranteed Workmanship
Metro-wide Service — Free Home
Estimates
Don Mitsubata
Res. — RO. v-6078
Villains
|
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
221 VICTORIA
EM. 3-5002
ST.. TORONTO
OX. 1-3388 (He*.
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
FLAT ROOFS
MEMBER OF QR.CA
SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK
ALCAN SIDING DEALER
ha vestroughing
TORONTO
421-3374 nisei OWNED
TOSH NISHIJIMA
''COVERING ONTARIO”
Night Calls: PL. 9-5095
Hl. 7-1100
tcart. . .
Bouquet
Invitation
a
iA
(Continued From Page 1)
w
Ta
,. 2,300-word
..
— Japanese Kanji
dictionary for foreigners. It is w
Language . . .
tee rf
bI
1
The
The Japanese language School
Dramatic evidence of the in- M
ci eased interest in the language : S
.1^ pioxided bx a radio broadcast ■
"Let’s Speak Japanese”, beamed $
abroad by Radio Jauan. Initiated X
weekly in 1959 in English and ]
i Indonesian, this program is now
■ broadcast in 12 foreign langu- '
■ ages, including Vietnamese. Bu
' mese and Hindi
Ml S. Aoki
829, West 33rd Ave., Vancouver 13, B.C.
Phone 739-7038.
BOWLERS!
The Montreal Japanese Gar
den I roject wishes to make
a correction on their last list
of donations. The correction
is as follows: Paul Murakami
$l.->0. and Fabreville Glass Co.
S60. The original sent to The
New Canadian had the dona
tions at both $100.
Papers,
Kmm r
”'ip you
wish for! ft
?*«-^"»"9-<lch
raisedcould
tana-
LET'S LEARN JAPANESE
yet costing so little! Come
k co
day r
pc 11
Elementary Class 4:00 p.m. — 5.30 p.m.
considering publication of ele- ; w
!
mentary, intermediate and adn
The Jr. and Sr. High School Class
vanced text books as well
I
a
'a
supplementary readers on
7:00 p.m. ■— 8:30 p.m.
sciences, literature
and social
studies.
ii w
The Special Class 7:00 p.m. — 8:30 p.m. IIt
I3
Interest in learning the lan- ■ u
® Note: 1.
1
guage has followed the remark- ;
The Special Class is for adults in eluding liS .
able growth of the Japanese
»1
a
University Students.
!
economy in recent years and in- I
2. The new term will be started on September *1
creasing sales of Japanese pro w
ducts jn international markets. n
5th Tuesday.
These items range from ships to ®
a
3.
For
transistor radios.
further information, please inquire at
W
Language training is availabl u
or phone:
i
to foreign students in Japan at ; a
a
public and private colleges as i B
Ia
well as universitie
Two special ^
schools are en gaged exclusively
475 Alexander St. Vancouver 4, B.C.
3
in teachin g Japanese to foreign- I «
Phone 254-2551, or
ers.
So Sorry, Pleasel
expensive, Our beautiful
Bouquet
s with the most exquisite
31
’’i
is an i
ible
larth
[WASH]
iciei
[Siry 1
[Ke for,
lite wa
K exact
k’s and
f« a cu
feies ‘
pt of
lairanci
p hope'
the
I its repi
f;T. Hai
^ Prof. 1
*
I.
Ji
^ncan
®«3cenie
Ah mei
sith hi
■tiosl a*'
^®2)iS
s 100.00
- ot
Join a Ten-Pin League on Sunday Afternoons
for Fun and Recreation
Toronto Nisei Ten-Pin
Sunday Mixed Bowling League
Of J]
...•-— si
i ^ TA
lQpan
^oduc
:f1gine
Contact: Marjorie
THE
NEW
CANADIAN
479 Queen St West
3
(TORONTO)
.1
5:
Izumi — 463-6879
or Frank Wakida — 757-3054
Tear
fc? ba?
I^®tim