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The New Canadian — September 9, 1967

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Page 1

967

.an
OT FIRINGS.—The occasional clink
only sound from the more than
e silently under the trees at this
mountain fastness far from madlike Monterey and San Luis
id Zen Buddhist priests underat Zenshinji — the Centre for

tones of Zen training
m and sitting meditation.
Centre involves some of the most
hysical training known to West-

The centre is comparable,
retreat — an opportunity fo.
tate and study the philosophy
"I don’t think many who are
and director of the centre
“We have about 200 applications f
month training period. Of those we at
people we knew or those who were
interviews to determine their sincerity
Then came Tangaryo. a three-dav ‘
ration m a sitting position from 4 a.m
breaks for meals only.
“It doesn't sound too hard, but so

oi

hand-picked

made it through

Simple Life

a Zen

\v ;>0 miles south
and priests alih
md fruit
aim

sine
quarters

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((omiuned on Pa

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8 ^-^

An Independent Organ far Canadians of
iHiinmniH

apanese Origin

. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9. 1967
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Toronto, Ont
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gg

Japan'. = most famous grower of bonsai, dwarfed tree—
BALTIMORE.
scientist. Key memKyuzo ^Utf'Y1' b ^le Principal figure in an article bv Noel j ^Gr °^ the National Aeronautics and Space AdBusch, pwished in September’s “Reader’s Digest.,’
"
1 ministration’s medical research team a< the Univ
la the Digest entry, <entitled
...............“—
The -Lilliputian World of ihe i*ersity of---Mari’h*nd, has been arrested for attempt­
Busch attempts to convey the meaning
‘ '
' '
'

L £

&

U.S. customs agents arrested H
about to board a jet for London.
Ihe three crates seized were l;i be! led IIouschold Etleets, but contained 38

of the art form ing- to leave the country with three cr:
scientific documents.
popularity of bonsai over recen
of other scientific documents, data tables a
autnor recalls a visit to an amazing- ’ forest, “where none
He is a 39-year-old Japanese scienti
Hidebumi computations and analysis of the information.
j of the trees was more than three Hazama, who was preparing to return to his home­
Dr. Hazama wa s
with
' feet tall.”
land with his wife and daughter after severing
statements on his export declaration” and re­
connections with NASA.
Busch continues:
leased in the custody of the first secretary of the
“Bonsai growing, the ancient
art of root pruning, twig snip­
under $15,000 bond.
ping and branch wiring which van
Fisherman Fine
produces the gracefully shaped
Customs agents began investi­
trees, was once pursued only by
ALERT BAY, b.C. A Japanese Canadian fisherman found gating the case last week after
the Japanese. Now it is a hobby 'uilty of fishin
with a net almost three times the loyal
Dr. Robert Grcnnell, head of
UXCOLYER. — Six Japa- for millions of plant lovers all
fined
$1,000
i-ecently.
the
NASA project at the univer­
left B.C. re- over the world.
He had to forfeit the $1,400 net and a salmon catch worth $825. sity, reported a “great volume”
er conquering three of
* Although young specimens
j of data was mising.
C;t mountains in the pro- can be bought for as little as
Magistrate W. C. Deadman imposed the penalties on Tsuneyu- । Grcnnell said he
was baffled
$25 . . . bonsai worth $1000 or
ki Amadatsu of Vancouver after fisheries protection officer Rm. ; by Hazama’s action,
more
are
fairly
common.
noting that
lour men and two
Bell said Amadatsu was caught fishing with the oversize gillnet j the material would
have littd
“After World War II, soldiers ' in Bates Pass, 50 miles north of here.
nun cd m Vancouver
I
market
value.
nd teamed up with two returning from Japan and Korea i
The project Hazama was wo rk Bell said Amadatsu’s net was 390 fathoms (2,340 feet) long
helped spread the cult to the ■
Akio Kimu- United States. where there a
and 90 meshes deep. The legal limit is 200 fathoms and 60 meshes? ing on before he left the team
now some 40 associations of i
Amadatsu’s net. catch and boat were seized by fisheries officers is a study of the effects of outer
bonsai fanciers, most of them in i
space on the function of the
x climbers returned to California and Hawaii. There are ; but Jie magistrate confiscated only the net and catch.
brain.
•coa\ er area recently also bonsai associations in Switzerland, France, England, Can- Si
Blounts Robson, ada, Australia and Brazil.”
ia
Columbia.
The remainder of Busch’s arwho was one tide goes on to attribute the sur
­
of the expedi- vival of
bonsai during World
TORONTO,
^T^” ^°\'St^
be Prwiu^<l in OMI’S Point
rhe 12.972-foM V'ar II to Murata, who “as a tor Industries has
announced
a
......

?S

?
g
r
°°
m
fOr
rear
seat
i
E
^
’^ s. plant toward the
Robson said young man had developed a $100 price cut in the new Isuzu
j^encCIS.
lend Qf th]s ye?r would bc ,^_
-cred no diffi- severe stomach ulcer and on h^
doctor’s advice had gone to Omi- : Dedet sedan. which was intro - ' CMI’s President, Narufumi Ya-‘
units now Uoin"- imof the ascents. ya, where the water is reputed duced recently. The new four | no said that the 1968 Bdlett in-i
lroT
Canadian
■r-ry of ice ami to have health-giving properties door sedan will retail
;
corporates
Isuzu

s
latest
think-i
P^^^ctjon
will
feed
CMfor $1,998
Tnwh I; J s ’-astern and Central zones,
b- T°r™to'
and I ing
... on an economv
economy car for N
North
of Robson, but .SataT^ ’Ve“ aS ^
71 horsepower i S '
awl
j America. The new 7'
j Vancouver, compared with the < engine and
....---- 1 brakes ii ’ i .Ajni.es will continue to receive
improved
“Murata tried his hand at it 1 previous price of 2,098. Freight | should safely cope with Cana- I cars directly from Isuzu Victors
(bonsai) and presently found will add somewhat to
cost ! fban highway and traffic condi- I Ltd., in Japan.
j tions while the mechanical im- i
that he was blessed with a in other centre.
I y°";ments ."'in make the new; lowe'r’pri”° ^ thf ‘"' new
green thumb. His bonsai plot beresult of
■ -Major changes include a corn­ ! hr X YXiUTf
• ^W v,,ume an<r
’atiohlcame one of Omiya’s best.
I pletely new four cyiindier. five pOl .a.he fumiA car.
; ization of the Bellett line into
- . When World War II bearing crankshaft onetine and I He said that the Isuzu Belletts' one model for 1968.
broke out, the draft and the em four speed all-synchromesh trans?^an piano phasis on raising food stuffs re ' mission to give the car s moother
1 lor drunken duced the number of Omiya power delivery and iractabilh
■•rts of Tokyo growers from a peak of 23 in on highwavs and in busv citie
dependent
Ihe four
the late 1930’s to one, Murata.
YAMAGUCHI, Japan.—A Chi- has, one of the rare specimens.
also ^;"
been es
1. as Miss Hi“But when the war ended, Mu­ SUSpe“;:^
« note (photo) issued during
Yoshino went to China in 1939
ride '-^ithe
with
d ioi a
Ming Dynastv (1368-1644)
- Hino City, rata had no money to keep his
to
a relative manage a farm
even °^er
said to be the
' world’s oldest in help
vi a hot two- garden growing and no custom­
Tientsin.
While there an aclne. bictn.e.i
e --een ■ papcr monev, has long been in
1:~s Yamane, ers to buy his trees. He was on beefeu, up
quaintance gave him the note,
m
the
interests
ox
/
the
posscss
f
on
of a local farmand smelling the point of taking up some safety and tne instrument cluster .
it was an ancient
other occupation when . ..”
’ relic.
is
padded
and
recessed
in
accord
au nour.
The story of how fate allow­ ance with the recently approver
Yoshino h
kept the bill in a
^officers she ed Murata to keep his bonsai
A
a re<-f
glass frame. He said it i
;--cs of beer. florishing and an explanation of
about
O
worm-oaten as the one o
= -kat she is how “bonsai shows the import-no, when she ance _ of the unimportant, are been faceiilted van a new grn m
nelp driving contained within the Dige.
Yoshino intend to keep it as a
ar- trim and rear deck treatment arme
he local Ma
tide.
and inside there are roomier nichi branch office that he also ■ family treasure.

cine Sensei
o Drive

Japanese Owns World’s Oldest Paper Currency

1

Page 2

PAGE 2

Twenty-four Solid Hours Of Karate
Kt DOE’s Oorth Rmerican Tourney
TORONTO.—Black Belts from the Tsuruoka ' competitor, counter-puched club mate Hal “Blonde
Karate School made a big sweep at the big- Bomber” Henschel, 2nd-dan, in the finals to win
gest and best karate tournament ever held in this the heavily contested Black Belt division. Third
country the National Karate Association sane- place was given to Shigeto Yamashiro, 4tn-dan,
Bv B. D. COLEN
for 20 years, but this is r,
tioned Canadian
Exhibition’s North of Tsuruoka over Terry Nishikawa, lst-dan, of
WASHINGTON. — A 13-year
Tye seen judo arT
American Canadian Centennial Karate Champion­ Toronto’s Chito Karate Dojo in a close win that had veteran of the Los .Angeles Police (involving
self-control w,
ships on Sept. 2nd and 4th. The 6,000 capacity the crowd and referee at ends with each other.
Department
believes he has applied to specific po­
Nishikawa, one of the best black belt stylists found a way to virtually elimi­ tions.
h "
C.N.E. Coliseum was steadily packed for the over
nate
cries
of

police
brutality

tounnwhole
in North America, was easily the
24 hours of solid karate spread over 2 days.
Says Koga: “Nobody;,
and to establish better police- tempting t0 train the kg
Tsuruoka stable’s Fred Boyko, lst-dan, a veteran ment’s crowd favorite displaying fiawiess tech- community relations.
policeman to control g
niques.
Robert K. Koga, author of to control a suspect
“The Koga Method: Police Weap­ weapons. All the acce^
BLACK BELT CATEGORY
onless Control and Defense Tech­
1. Fred Boyko, Tsuruoka Ka- niques,” and an instructor in brute force.”
Koga said he believed A
rate School, Toronto.
self-defense at the Police AcadeBy KEN MOKI
gun
and the “bilk club”
2. Hal Henschel, Tsuruoka Ka- HIV. feels that police are rely-:
°^ iOr ^!Ce *
ing far too much on firearms. ' but
(N.C. Angling Editor)
rate School, Toronto.
out that they were be^c c

Control

is
the
key
to
the
Koga
3. Shigeto Yamashiro, Tsuru- Method.
used.. He even would limit k
They’re off and running at Nottawasaga! And that’s good
oka Karate School, Guelph.
“If you have a gun on some- offtrearms in riot control
news for all Nisei anglers who enjoy the late summer and early7
,only time an £
4. Terry Nishikawa, Cliito Ka- body, you don’t have him under i
should
shoot/
Koga sa’d.
autumn weather chasing Rainbows coming into the rivers to spawn.
control. He may be able to take his life, is in ’danger,
rate Dojo, Toronto.
if $og
your gun from you. He can still else s life is in danger o- ?
One of karate’s greatest ma
Nisei anglers reporting to the N.C. sport desk, say trout from
move,” Koga said.
I suspect has killed oratfe
2 to 6 pounds have been caught by J.C. anglers last weekend at ters, Dr. Tsuyoshi Chitose
“You put yourself in a posi­ to
kill someone.”
the Nottawasaga River. This weekend promises to be even better. ’ retired medical doctor and hold- tion where you are either bluff- I He. said it made little a
er of a lOth-dan Gold Belt ing or not. If your prisoner to give a policeman a sH
This is no ordinary fish story — it’s “’the” fish story, at least — presided over the tournament moves you either have to shoot and then expect him to cd
him, or lose your gun,” he add- and search suspects.
|
for Toronto Nisei fisherman, Ed Nishimura. Last weekend while with two of his most famous ed.
In
such
a
situation,
a
m
fishing at Cape Cod he finally got a bite after some 412 hours pupils, the long-haired “Apache
Tense Situation
man does not have propad
Yamamoto,
Koga said the idea of being trol over his gun or the ad
of fishing’. It turned out to be quite a bite — a 60< pound tuna! warrior" Mamoru
Ed and a business partner caught and landed the monster' while 6th-dan, and the “'Father of Can­ able to shoot to wound is non- he said.
While Koga does not m
cruising some four- miles from the shoreline of this famous resort adian Karate Mas Tsuruoka, 6th- sense. “' 'You’re lucky if you hit
him in a tense situation. You his methods could always I
dan.
town. That, is fishing.
have to shoot to kill.”
used to stop a riot, he dm
*
*
Outstanding demonstrations of
Koga, an American of Japa­ that a police force employing!
are requested to send or telephone any karate kata (patterns) were de­ nese descent and holder of a methods could help prevent is
I
angling
(no fishy stories please!) that can be documented monstrated by Jimmy Sagawa, Black Belt in both judo and ka­ ble before it started.
rate, has developed a method of
The
police
also
could
im
to this office for publication.
2nd-dan, a student of U.S.A.’s weaponless control that employs
their relations with the peJ
leading Shotokan sensei Tsuto­ bits and pieces of amongst all of the ghetto he added. I
Until next wook, we’ll see you around the next bend in the mu Ohshima. He performed katas Oriental methods of attack and
policeman using self-control I
river. And easy with the gumboots — we don’t want to scare all Teike Shodan and Bussai. Other defense.
subdue an angry drunk k®
those 16 pound Rainbows, do we boys?
The
individual
officer,
Koga
excellent katas were shown by said, must have confidence in less likely to touch off a id
ance than two officers d
Masayuki Hisataka, 7th-dan, who his own ability. If he is in con­ night sticks.
I
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiu displayed an advanced form of trol of his thought processes, he
Koga feels that the mail
his Shorinjiryu Kendokan karate can handle almost any problem the beat often is impnd
Buy & Sell
Your Home
style; Mamoru Yamamoto, 6th- he may face. This, he said, is a trained. His instruction is d
premise of much Oriental philo­ ly much too brief, Koga sal
Through
dan, performed a powerful Pus- sophy.
Koga has spent the last |
sai: and Shane Higashi, 4th-dan,
Interest in Koga’s training weeks touring the country ail
of Toronto demonstrated a beau­ methods has increased greatly in own. expense, talking to pi
tiful kata with the use of the bo California since the Watts riot. instructors about his theories.!
Officers from all over the state is trying to gain supp®l
(stick).
Representing
have enrolled at their own ex­ Federal funds to set up
In the Intermediate Division pense in a course Koga teaches police training centres.
In Washington, he
(3rd, 2nd and 1st kyu) Peter at California State College.
his plans to the stafi oiJ
System Lauded
Ross of Montreal out-kicked
1527 O’Connor Dr., Toronto, Ont.
Sgt. William Carver of the ’ Robert F. Kennedy
Ronnie Boyer of Ottawa to cap­ Nassau County, Long Island, * Lew Kaden, Kennedy’s M
Phone 757-5184 — Res. AM. Ji-2581
ture this crown. Lanky Ken­ Police Department said of Koga’s ; assistant, said he though I
~< 11 h 11 n 1111111! ih111iih111h11111111111111 m n 111111j u111n1111111111111n11(11111123v tuckian, Martin King eked out a method: “I think his ideas are ; program was worthwhile
a close win over’ Dick Salaga, a good. I’ve practiced judo myself i merited study.
tough counter-puncher of the Tor; onto Chito Karate Dojo, to take
SAY IT WITH
/
third
place.
ou;er4
FLOWERS
TAMES KAMINO

INTERMEDIATE
SHARON'S FLORIS'
J
1. Peter Ross, Montreal.
CITY-WIDE DEUVE5Y
proprietor
]
2. Ronnie Boyer, Ottawa.
OPTOMETRISTS
Peter
Sasaki — k
3. Martin King, Kentucky.
JON ONODERA
Bus: HO. 6-2041
EM 4-9913
Complete Care
4. Dick Salaga, Chito Karate
Res: HO. 6-7962 i
Dojo, Toronto.
For Your Eyes
942 PAPE AVE., TOaCM
(TORONTO)
In the Novice Division (4thHU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805
; kyu and under) Toronto Tsuru( Business )
(Kesidence) ; oka Karate School’s Hendrik Verhoek defeated fellow club-mate
540 Eglint on Ave. W.
118 West Hastings St.
‘ Ted Jungblut in the finals to
i capture the Novice class. Roger
Toronto
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Holmes of the Higashi School of
J Karate came third.
1
In the children’s kata contest,
tlie gold medal first prize was
FOR
given to 12-year-old Kenny7 Paige,
18 weeks skilled training
j Ki-kyu, of the Tsuruoka Karate
tthat can earn you an income
i School of Toronto. Kennv, the
of S12,000 to S20,000 a year
। son of National Karate Associa­
SALES
tion Secretary Dr. Ned Paige,
Ladies’ shoes from
performed
the kata “Sai sun”.
1 up to 11
Second place was won by mus­
Write or Call for Information
Men's Scott McHales
cular
14-year-old,
John
Elbe.
3rdI
4 up to 14
i
kyu, of the Rochester Tsuruoka
Karate Club. Jolin demonstrated
a powerful “Heian Yodan” kata,
CHICK SEXING SCHOOL
1328 Queen St West 1I third place was awarded to Al­
lan
Little,
a
spectacular
S-vearPhone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
I
I old, of the Hamilton Eastern Ka­
214 Prospect Avenue, Lansdale. P^ LI
I
C.O.D. orders from coast to coast
I rate Club performing Nisei shi
Phone: 855-5156 (Area Code 215) ^

U.S. Nisei Develops Police Defence Technip

Rainbows Running In Nottawasaga

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§

Page 3

September 9, 1967
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FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS

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It IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
Authorized Agent for All Airlines
authorized AGENT FOR

UNES

W. K. GARDENS

Frank G. Yada

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VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455

Crown Life insurance Co.

CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquets
Private Dining Rooms

1550 Wert Georgi* St.
Vancouver, B.C.

Page 4

PAGE 4

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NEW JOB?
To keep insured fol­
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on the Hospital In­
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of Payment—Form
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present employer is
required to give you
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Services Commission,
Toronto 7. Ontario,

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must now be paid to
cover husband and
wire. Notify your
group without de­
lay or ir you both pay
premiums direct, no-

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Page 7

September 9, 1967
PAGE 7

Henry (!?$!) Miller
Personal Notes Across Canada
75, To Marry Japan
1st Regular Nisei Service Sun, At United Church Pianist Aged 32
Obituaries
Marriages

TORONTO.—September 10th will be the first regular service
— Tlle Parents of a
NONAKA
OKAMURA-ASO
die Nisei at the Japanese United Church after the summer Japanese jaa pianist said recently
their
daughter
will
marry
TORONTO.
—Saint Mark Pres'".^ The church school will resume its classes for the children.
TORONTO. — Tsunezo Nona­
author Henry Miller.
^y;ei members and friends are urged to attend and begin the
Roukuro Tokuda, father of the ka, SI, an Issei World War I byterian Church in Don Mills on
September 2nd, 1967 was the
^< Fall term with a good turnout. Regular dates for activities of
Hoki Tokuda veteran, passed away on August
Jie marriage is to be in Los 31 at the Toronto General Hospi­ setting- for the mariage of AFiss
^ United Church women and children will also be resumed.
Ange.es, Calif. Miller is 75.
Esther
Yuriko Aso, second
tal.
The parents said their daughtHaving no known relatives or daughter of the Pastor, and Mrs.
*
*
*
er met Miller in Los Angeles
family, the Toronto Japanese George S. Aso, Pastor of Seventh
last year,
University Settlement Presents Dance Instructions
Los AnS’eles, Miller said: Welfare Committee handled his Day Adventist Church, and Mr.
TORONTO—The University Settlement House at 23 Grange 1 have nothing to say about funeral on September 5th at the David Ikuo Okamura, second son
Kd ri Toronto will present dance instructor, Madelynne Greene on that report. I’ll talk next week” Waslungton and Johnson Funeral of Mr. and Mrs. Hideo Okamura
No application for a marriage
Saturday. September 16th from 8 to 11:30 p.m. and Sunday. Seutof Toronto.
certificate
could be found at the Home. The Rev. F. Watanabe
ember 1" from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m.
The ceremony was officiated
Nakagawa ofLos Angeles County Courthouse. and the Rev.
by the Pastor Timothy Iwahashi
She will teach some exciting and exotic dances from Spain, However, the couple could have ficiated.
Armenia. Mexico, Poland and Nigeria.
lecerved a certificate elsewhere
Tribute was paid by tlie re- of the West Los Angeles Seventh
Madelynne Greene is a professional folk, ballet and Spanish in the countv.
Day Adventist Church. A recep­
Miller, who lives in a spacious presentatives of the Toronto tion followed at the Japanese
dance teacher from San Francisco. She does her own research
anil comes up with the most interesting dances from far away home in Pacific Palisades, near JCCA, the Toronto Buddhist
places. Don’t miss her! — U.S.H.
Los Angeles, grew first noto- Church, Kotobuki Kai, Koto Kai, Canadian Cultural Centre.
The happy, young couple will
•T-Tons, then famous, from his use and his comrades who fought
*
*
*
of four-letter words in such with him during World War I.
reside in downtown Toronto. Ti e
Phil MacKellar At JCC Centre "Swing Era" Dance cooks as Tropic of Cancer and
groom
wall continue his studies
*
*
*
Tropic of Capricorn.
as
a
Dental
student at the Univ­
TORONTO.— Phil MacKellar, Toronto’s most outstanding jazz
In 1963 the U.S. Suprerne
BURKHOLDER
ersity of Toronto. The bride is
disk jockey, will be playing some of his favorite pieces at the Ja­ Court refused to upset a ruling
employed
in the Personal Depart­
that
Ti'opic
of
Cancer
is
not
hard
­
panese Canadian Cultural Centre’s “Swing Era” dance slated for
TORONTO.—The Rev. Horace
core
pornogi-aphy.
| Burkholder passed away • at his ment of the Canadian Broadcast­
Saturday, September 9th.
Lately Miller has been devot­
home in Willowdale on Sept. 2nd, ing Corps.
Music will be supplied by the likes of Glenn Miller, Tommy ing .more time to painting than 1967. An old church friend of
*
*

writing. He has been married
Dorsey, Charlie Spivak, Duke Ellington, Benny Goodman, Artie four times.
the Nisei from Vancouver days,
KVTAYAMA-NAKASHIMA
Shaw, Gene Krupa, Teddy* Wilson, Jimmy Dorseys, The Andrew
.Miller was born in New York he was formerly the Secretary
City the day after Christmas
Sisters, Helen O’Connell, Frank Sinatra, and more.
TORONTO. — On September
1891, according to his own auto- of Education for the United 1, 1967, Miss Eiko Nakashima,
There will be door prizes and bar facilities will be available. biograpliical note. His grand­ Church in B.C. and Alberta. He
eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
The admission price is only $2.50 per person, which includes free parents had come to the United leaves to mourn his loss his wife Fusato Nakashima of Kingsville,
States as immigrants and Ger- Helen and son Ro lien, daughter
sandwiches and coffee.
man still was spoken in his
Jeannie (Mrs. Donald Mackay Ont., became the bride of Mr.
home.
Mas Katayama, son of Mr. and
Tickets-may be obtained by forwarding a cheque made payable
According to his account, he of Saskatoon). A family service Mrs. Gorosuke Katayama of Ste­
to The. Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre and tables will be re- took off on his own at the ago was held on Sept. 3rd at the
served upon request for parties of ten to twelve persons.
when most boys go to college, Kane Funeral Home. A memorial veston, B.C. in a double-ring
See ’you all at “Swing Era” at the Centre this Saturday worked at various jobs and de­ service will be held on Sunday, ceremony at the Toronto Japa­
cided to become a writer. Nothnese Gospel Church (Broadview
— J.C.C. Centre
ing was published, however, un­ Sept. 10th at 3 p.m. at the New- at Simpson Ave.). The Rev. E.
53
til 1931 when Obelisk Press in tonbrook United Church
*
*
Paris brought out Tropic of Cummer Ave. In lieu of flowers, S. Yoshida united the lovely
Cancer.
Can. National Exhibition Thanks New Canadian
gifts may be sent to the Burk­ couple while Mr. and Mrs. Ram­
In 1942 he moved to Beverly holder
Memorial
Scholarship say Macdonald acted as Best Man
The big birthday party is over. The terrifically successful 1967 Hills and in 1944 to the Big
C.N.E. is closed.
United and Matron of Honour respectiv­
Sur corm try along the coast 150 Fund — Newtonbrook
ely. After- their honeymoon the
We hope you enjoyed it as much as we did. It was fun to plan miles south of San Francisco. Church.
the exhibits and watch them grow to completion. It was great to There he lived until three years
couple will take up residence in
find media people enthusiastic about our displays of fashions, fur­ ago when he purchased a man­
Moose Jaw, Sask., where Mas is
nishings and products aimed at the women’s market. And it was sion at pacific Palisades.
CARD OF THANKS
stationed with the Canadian
very rewarding to find the building crowded and the general public
In the Big Sur country he
We
wish
to
express
our
Aimed
1 Forces.
excited about our presentation.
made a point of having no tele­
heartfelt
thanks
and
apprecia
­
He have already started making plans for next year, and as phone, frequently refused to
tion to our many relatives,
soon as we have news, we’ll start sending you releases about the answer letters, and rarely met
IKUTA-ODA
friends
and neighbors for the
anyone else he
the press or
many acts of kindness, mes­
In the meantime, thank you for your interest and enthusiasm didn’t want to. He spent much
STEVESTON, B. C.
The
sages
of sympathy and all the
,D™» Inis Centennial Year when there were so very many ac- time travelling on unannounced
daughter
of
a
Buddhist
minister
beautiful floral offering re­
iivitiK. Au revoir until next year.
trips, collecting material for the
ceived in the loss of our be­
Hope to see you at the 1968 C.N.E.
became the bride of one on Au­
books he wrote in his rustic seloved
husband, and father.
gust
8th, 1967 when Miss Kyoko
Yours very truly,
elusion.
Mrs, Kin Izumi
Canadian National Exhibition Association.
Miller’s second wife appeared
Ikuta, daughter of the Rev. and
and Eiko
Elsa Jenkins,
as an off-stage character in Tro­
Mrs.
S. Ikuta of Steveston, B.C.,
Masakazu and family
Manager, Women’s Activities.
pic of Cancer as Mona. In 1944 I
Kiyoshi
and
family
exchanged vows of marriage with
*
^:
^
he married Martha Lepska. Ten
the Rev. Nobuo Oda, son of the
years later he divorced her and
Mont. Odori Groups Thank The New Canadian nine
Rev. and Mrs. H. Oda of Hawaii
days after the divorce mar­
Dear Editor
CARD OF THANKS
ried a Berkeley girl named Evie
at the Steveston Buddhist
McClure.
On behalf of the E.C.B.L. the Expo Bon Odori and the CentenChurch.
The family of the late Kiri
(H^ ^^ Festival Committee, I with to express our deepest
After the ceremony and recep­
Yamasaki wish to extend
tion,
the happy couple left for
T J for the fine co-operation you extended to us by the interest
their heartfelt thanks and ap­
|
'Welcome
To
Expo

67
§
New York where the Rev. Oda
• °u splayed in publishing the many articles submitted by the
preciation for acts of kind­
committee.
is the minister of the New York
ness, messages of sympathy,
Buddhist
Church.
T
6 j°Pe ^at J°ur helpful publicity efforts pointed out to
and beautiful floral offerings
tonnH ^ ^a^ aS ^ana^an Japanese we tried to express our
from relatives, friends, and
thi/ 3 U a^°n w^h a full-hearted joy and gratitude that we had
neighbors during our recent
It la a good policy to
hav. the BIGHT POLICY
®
t° par^c'Pate with other Canadians to wish Canada, >JAPANESE RESTAURANT
bereavement.
Consult
^j M 3 rewar^in» manner, “Happy Centennial Birthday Can♦ Special Family Dinner
Mr.
Shotaro
Yamasaki
ay our second Centennial Celebrations be even better!”
.William Wales Ltd.
* Reasonable Price
Mr. & Mrs. hl. E. Kumagai
Publicity-Expo Bon Odori Co.
Insurance Agents
Mr. & Mrs. T. F. Imada
220 Jean Talon St. East
Mrs. -M. Asuzuma
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
bliss Juli Yamasaki
MONTREAL
Mr. Dan Yamasaki
Phone 921-3171
TEL. 271—4803

I
|

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Gold Seal Upholstery

SjS-?^IST£R, SOLICITOR

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 10,. 1967 11:30 A.M.
Nisei Family Service — Rev. Gordon Imai

Issei Service — Rev. Maldo Norisue
Church School for the children

ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
MEMBER OF C.B.CJL

Don Mitsubata

Toronto Japanese united church
_

|
8
J

Bus. Phone 633-3244

2 Ccritoa st.. Toronto

293-4281

MADAME
BUTTERFLY

For All Classes of

ALCAN SIDING DEALER

TORONTO
Phone: PL. 9-2632
OR

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421-3374 NISEI OWNED

COVERING ONTARIO
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Night Calls-. PL. 9-5095 HL 7-1100

Page 8

Saturday

$1.5 Million Case

Canada’s Day Of Infamy On Salt Spring Is
^.rA Vrr\T’VT?n

m

,

_



Authorized

cs

sscoad



Post Office Deccm-^
and for Dcvra^
~

^

VANCOUVER. — Torazo Iwa- came to

Canada in 1901 and tawa.
T.
the office of the Secretary of |
saM is 8< now, and the personal worked industriously as a fisher- i But in 1950 he reluctantly acState. The suit has since been
catastrophe that befell him and man. Soon after World War I ' cepted an additional $8,032 — referred to the Department of
KEN MORI JSPM^
his tiny 81-year-old wife is 26 he bought 640 acres of poten the government’s “final offe
Justice.
MacLeod
hopes
to
argue
tially valuable land on Salt
And Advertise '
and signed a release. Subse- the case before the Exchequer
j ears old. But this ancient nat- Spring Island in the Strait
of i quent investigation pointed up Court of Canada, and he thinks
uiadzed Canadian, in bringing to Georgia and by 1940 had paid the curious fact that, on the
subscription
it could lead to a flood of
54,00 per R
li&R a mysterious land transac- off the 83,950 purchase price same day in 1945, the land had that
<7 nn V 6 Hontas
Two years later he and his been conveyed to the Secretary appeals for realistic compensapej year
tion, has raised a
|
tion
to
Japanese
Canadians.
~ j family found themselves in a of State in Ottawa, and convey­
in British Columbia — and a ; detention
479 QUEEN st. WE
camp, having been ed back to Salt Spring Lands Co.,
We hold that the takeover
skeleton in Canada’s closet.
j given two hours to pack their a large real estate firm on the was invalid,” says MacLeod.
Toronto 2-B. Qnu
' belonging;
into the prescribed island whose president was Ga- “There was no urgency to sell
Torazo and T uku Iwa
EMpire 6-5005
two of the nearlv 20,00)0 Ja’"i- i ."° suitcases. The property fell vin C. Mouat. (Mouat died in this land—except that the war
nese who were livin on BC’s I tnto the hands of a government 1961.)
was nearly over. So the property
1, Bead ? custodian, Gavin C. Mouat, who
coast when,
in
Over the years, Torazo whote was transferred twice in a single
Harbor wrecked their peaceful ! happened to be a prominent several protest letters to Ottawa day, and the owners didn’t even
'up of life. These law-abiding i businessman on Salt Spring Is­ officials and received no satis- know it had been sold until two
people were hustled from their land.
factory answers. Then, last Jan­ months later.” With waterfront
homes and shipped off to lanVancouver land at a premium all along the
In May, 1945,, still living in uary, two young
gui.>h lor years in camps because
Male Help Wanted
lawyers
took
on
the
case, be­ lower B.C. coast—prices of $30
the federal government declared Cabin 134 at the
w«= Greenwood
yxcenHuuu De­ cause, says one of them, “It had a foot are common and $60 a A YOUNG
!o iWWy
that thev posed a secuHU !
m n C^^^^
or bo
a hell of a strong moral issue foot not unknown — MacLeod dure
menace. Their homes, land ho d< i
/ etter from . . . It became our Centennial figures that Torazo Iwasaki ident prefer
onto).
ings and fishing boats wer« । ? t
S
^ P^P?"
should
be
compensated
to
the
project.

Predictably
enough,
snapped up for a song — often 10 f had J36?’1 sold mr $5,250.
A.M. F.M. ira
Ray MacLeod and Dan Small got tune of $1.5 million.
]
Eventually he received
ment engineor 20 percent of their, value-bv
received a
a cheque
cheque
>mZ^5 U «^m.. representing the the Ottawa runaround until June
Jon Ruddy and Barry Broadfoot Good opporto:
Columbian
when they presented a claim to
637 College S
MacLeans Magazine Manager.
the compensation they eventually >aie pnce minus commission.
*
received for their property was Demonstrating the g umption and
| business acumen that he’d shown
shamefully inadequate.
F emap Help Wanted
(Cont. From Page I)
। in buying the land, which includ- Zen Retreat
The Iwasaki story is similar j ed 13,000 feet of shoreline, Tora­
RELIABLE v.-a
The day starts at 4 a.m; with
Zen, according to Baker, is
large apartmo:
mam. Born in Japan, Torazo zo fired the cheque back to Otthe sound of the dawn bell, aa attempt to cleanse the mind an
onto).
of
specially cast bell presented to all conceptual attitudes.
j COUNTER girl for div ckadthe centre by a Zen monastery
I 5 day week. Wil i;$n 'Tk
Visualize
the
mind
as
an
abin Japan.
W. Phone 532-6714 (Tc-cC).
The days are spent in sitting I solutely clear pool of water,
and walking meditation, inter Nothing disturbes it, nothing disPERSONAL
spersed
with
meals
and
work
tracts
it.
COMING TO EXPO. 4 s:
Minimum Land Arrangements: $216.00
rooms, 3 miles to E'.XpO.
■ pem,0<ls', , ,
“Drop a leaf into the pool. Ob- aclean
couple, specia! rates br
nts ,are rePailW and serve what happens. Then cleanse to T. Endo, 363 Churchi'i B
1 O-Day Tour of Japan or

lehabihtatmg
the facilities for- the mind again. Perhaps the field Pk., Montreal. 571-392
1 O-Day Tour inci. Calif., Hawaii and Japan
Z y?1Sediibi7 the pu?ic when wind riffles the pool. Observe
(^Slightly Higher During Jul. Aug. Sept. Oct.)
rnej travelled over the moun- again what happens.”
ssssssssss
tain roads to steam in the hot
c
For Further Information Contact
mineral baths.
sometimes an “illuminating
For Best Results
Less
than
an
hour
a
dav
i<?
experience
” as the gradual, 01'
FURUYA TRAVEL SERVICE
spent in formal instruction, sudden realization occurs.
365 Spadina Ave.
Toronto 2-B,
366-1075
^^Hf a lecture by Shunryu SuRules are flexible. Baker a Use New Canadian Ads
zuki Koshi, the Zen master.
vegetarian because of the Bud<5
i
. RosIli,
dhist prohibitions against kill- ^^SSSSS
Hoshi — the Rosin mg, will eat meat if it is served
stands for piaster — gave up a at a friend’s home.
temple of his own in Japan eight
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A.
are guides,” Suzuki
years ago to come to the United i p Rules
i •
States to teach Zen. Only about ^!hl said. “They must give way
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
they conflict with realia score of Zen masters in the
NOTARY PUBLIC
world have attained his peak of
understanding of the philosophy. I
Hot Baths
221
VICTORIA ST.. TORONTO
Roshi
sees
a
great
opportunitv
The
EM. 3-5002

OX. 1-338S (tie?.)
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
hot
mineral
baths
have
no
S? “"^ ^ | Pax-tieulax- place in ’S »^

Any Day To Japan For $850.00*

KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUET TAVERN
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto

5 not1fllled YvitR age- training, although thev are freused by both students
ne said, xou have no prejudices and priests,
or traditions about one school
t .
or anotner as we have in the .
,
want to keep them open
Orient.”
e to the public,” Baker said. “We ;
Most of the students
n^-li11^ ^el ^ would be proper to?
casian Most of them will return beeni using to people who have j
them for years in
co
life —
after the two
or'Z
, outside ---mu or
the
past.

three months of training in the
mountains. A few may go on to
Operation of the baths, howtrain for the priesthood/
ever, is not expected to bring in
There is an Oriental flavor any profits.
about the centre, but, according
“We’ll be quite happy if we
to Baker, there is no attempt to break
even,” he said.
turn it into a transplanted Japan.

Catering to Wedding Banqaeta, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240

DUNDAS UNION STOKE
your shopping list
, ^^hRA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SI1OYIT
bUklYAKl MEAT — VINEGAR - MANJU — SUGAI

mani

Varieties of arare

173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO

MARKETING DIRECTOR -to SI 7,000

“I wear robes because I spend
a lot of my time sitting and it’s
much, easier to sit in robes than
it is in western garb.”
Shaven Heads
, ¥anf of the students shave
। their heads and long hair on
J men is forbidden in aH but a few
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