Page 1
Je >5 ca>
biMr
^" “ $15-Million Japanese Cultural
® Edits;
If.
; SAX FRANCISCO.—This city’s first Japanese Cul
tural and Trade Center—a $15 million project be^un
n 1960—was dedicated recently by dignitaries "as
sembled from as far away as Tokyo and Osaka, Washngton D.C. and Honolulu., as well as those of the
Jay area who had a hand in the center’s creation.
test
nt.
ED
ited
tea. p
scenes b
'rthen re.
8 hetwees;
“taent lot
^medics
ited
snced
Sia'
g About 600 invited guests and hundreds of onlookers
gathered in the new spacious, beautifully landscaped
iPeace Plaza at the heart of the new center to witness
She dedication.
| Ceremonies opened with the Sixth U.S. Army Band
^Maying the National Anthems of Japan and the United
States, as the flags of the two nations were raised
In flagpoles which flank the Plaza’s entrance (on Post
St. at the intersection of Buchanan).
It Then a procession of four “pioneer” Japanese Ameri-
can families
Issei, Nisei,
Was Presented.
.
..
v ere represented
Folio win
Mineo
the ^ro^Sn \ b>-•
minister
Mineo lyoya.
lySan Francisco MavorUoseohT^- ?th reniarks bv
bassador to the U S
L n P d • -AHoto; Japan’s Amf^evelopment^
Shimoda; San Francis’s
Yasushi Oshima, DeputA^MaJS
He™ian; and
and
ciscos sister city. P 5 Major of Osaka, San Franspoke includ^l^ayi^
°f the center who
tetsu Enterprise Co. of America^’ president of Kin■ng of a^qae on w™'^."?1®1 ,'vi.th the unveil•* the Peace Plaza entr^ce ’
“ *
Pew Gste
and civic ^eadei^prfsenjed th’°S>-or°"’inent business
IIIIIIHUIHMIHIHnHHinHIIIIIiniHIIIUIIIIimilHIIIliiiiinH!,,,^
h—r_-u
“ the Bly ajei a'U^
.................. Illlllllllllll||||||i|||||ll||||||i|||i!|1|1|||
& Trade Centre Opens
“ a unibol oi international friendship.
*
*
*
Location
(firesemwS'’?8
“A of ^ square blocks
LASnlf 2d Mi™, ?““' bonded by Post, Geary,
ana riiiniore streets.
^Er®et spans the city from east to west, brin^-
fi.t»iM toi 'vithin 10 minutes’
(Continued on Page 8)
The Dm Canadian
Stella Ito’s
Sukiyaki Cookbook
$1.50
■ary co;
363-073
&
Jessie L. Beattie’s
STRENGTH for the
BRIDGE
$5.00
jVol. XXXII—No. 27
tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinnHiiniiiiiHiHiiiiiiiiiii
S
Ads
JFE
«17
*±^S^^
We Becomes First To Hold
—^INational And Toronto JCCA Presidencv
|. teftlihVi^ rSKt
but he said such a
[Chinese response.
“ W about
use of »«clear devices
°Uld tngger a similar Soviet or Red
By T. UMEZUKI
T
Rits Inouye and A. Shirakawa, Coressponding
TORONTO.—Air. Ed Ide last week became the
Secretary — Denise Nishimura, Recording SecThe Democrat from Hawaii fnM person to hold both the National and Toronto
letaiy
Eleanor Shirakawa, Treasurer __ Ge
speaking
before a Japanese Japanese Canadian Citizens’ Association presiden
orge
Takahashi.
Unamber of Commerce audience, tial seat at elections at the Toronto JCCA Annual
Some 17 members of the new Japanese Im
f
,
firmly believes that in General Meeting held at the Toronto Buddhist
today s world, there can be no
Church Hall. It was reported that he has fully re migrant Committee accepted positions in both the
such thing as a “small” thermo
executive and the working committee. They have
covered from his recent auto injury.
nuclear war.
pledged
their full support and proved their worthi
Other officers elected for the Toronto chapter
k
s/ici sucb a war w°uld pro
ShONG BEACH. — The 1968 bably destroy the social, political, are: Past President — Roy Sato, Vice President ness in the chapter’s work last year.
The_Executive Committee will consist of Tak
International Beauty Pao-eant cultural and economic institu
Kneeled last month bv its^Lon- tions of the major powers of the
-I Ichiki, George Imai, Miye Kiyoearth.
se, John Kunitomo, Kay Morita,
,. The world as we know it may
Mutsumi Nagai, Fukashi NakaOrganization which for the disappear,” Inouye warned.
I
TOKYO.
Miss
Shirley
Yama
i^k1' Presence at a reception tsumi, Akemi Oyama, Janet Sa
^i
the f™- , ^l6 senator said in recent times guchi, onetime queen of the Ja
ie has been rather “dismayed
celebrating the 10th anniversary kamoto, Fumi Sasaki, Hiroshi
panese screen, is now the talk of
Be Cih- r
Japan, asked
KS^tby ^tter to and disturbed” by the teno/ of film circles concerning her come ot the Foreign Motion Picture Sasaki, Mits Sumiya, Kunio Ta
som? ,°T the letters he has been
Importers and Distributors Asso
da, Alas Tsubota, Chiyo Tsuyuki,
ffokyo. " 6 0 he P^eant in recexvmg concerning America’s back as a hostess in a popular ciation,
held recently at Tosho
TV
program
shortly.
&’?len proved the pro- I involvement in Vietnam.
Hall, surprised those attending, T. Umezuki, Ko Yamamoto, Sam
Miss Yamaguchi, now the wife bum industry leaders are believ Yamamoto, June Yamamoto.
He said typical are those who
eitv m^™
and asked I would say, “If we have no inten- of a Japanese diplomat, enjoyed ed to have provided a chance for
This .year’s Working Commit
/aaaager
|«iC »z
c"!gand
’tiaticity
"iBattor«a I tion of winning this war we predominant popularity for her her comback” to the filmdom
tee
will consist of: Kyoji Hori
should ge^ out. . . The easiest way exotic charm and exquisite voice
Mrs. Kashiko Kawakita, viceto win this war is to drop five during wartime and postwar Ja president of Towa Film, one of koshi, Mayumi Kumagai, Ed Ku
Fm' b'S c president of well-placed thermonuclear bombs pan.
Miss Yamaguchi’s close friends, magai, Michi Nakashoji, Albert
I Tokvo S t Stress Inc., , on North Vietnam. . . If we have
She was the first Japanese ac said she was highly impressed Nishimura, Gloria Sumiya, Emi
|opes it also
°rS"anization no intention of using nuclear tress picked to play the heroine
by her youthful attractiveness, ko Sumi, Yasuharu Tai, Yoshiko
^ X
Siven con
bombs, why are we spending bil *n the early postwar international which has not changed after all
fer M 101 Paging the 1070 lions of dolars manufacturing I Plo<$ucti°n ‘The House of BamTai, Hideko Umeda, Grace WheePageant in Osaka • 1J 0
!e Xears and was convinced
Paction with
• a 111 con~ I. them
? ... Why don’t we use °°°” S;.?ce
.
appearance
in
the
™at s7 can still appear as a er, Rick Wheeler. At the meet
|ir.
"Uh that city’s world’s
I tactical nuclear weapons in Viet- I
film Holiday in Tokyo,”
ing chaired by Roy Sato, Fumi
star of international caliber.”
nam ? . . . There isn’t much dif- s . ^e^ the screen to become the
Airs. Kawakita is one of those Sasaki gave the Annual Report
I ference between them and lar°"e I P ^fe of a diplomat. She has been pinning much hope on Miss Ya
our artillery shells.”
° 1111 Geneva since 1963 with her maguchi s comeback to filmdom and George Takahashi presented
^J^ana expense.”
The veteran of World War II husband.
Moreover, an actress like Miss the Financial Report. Speeches
who lost his right arm in com- T M1SS Yamaguchi returned to Yamaguchi, who is well versed were made by M. Am emo ri of
bat said he was also concerned Japan when her husband was in many languages, is drastically the Isseibu, M. Nagai of the Imover the
popularity
of “Iron transferred to a home post in needed by the industry for suc
mig. Liaison Comm., and PresiMountain Report” which has been Januarycess in its international ventures.
(Continued on Page R)
on the best-seller list for several k'■■■^^■■■"“"■™■H™m■™■■■
weeks.
I
I This report, allegedly prepared
1
by a special study group conflOKYO__ t
I sisting of the nation’s top intelg“ence ^niA. apan Maritime I lectuals, .suggest that war is deL^en ks p]^ /™ndation | sirable because war gives econWASHINGTON. — Iwo Jima. cussion
that f/‘V"^
Stripes
^•ton Brit.?,10 buy the I omic stability by prodding jobs, I won at the cost of some 5000 and
object to the
I American lives 23 years ago. will
Elizabeth
lin«
economic surpluses, enana otnpes by Marines was re- I
f ?^^Port
fe request ' consumes
nances the Gross National Pro- I be peacefully transferred back corded in one of history’s most
The Tokvo newspaper A^hi
Kasone.
nisier Yasuhiro duct and advances the standard Ito Japanese rule soon.
g™us combat photographs. The Shimbun termed Amerkan
I yState Dept, officials said the o46-foot volcano will instead car- to keep the fIag above Suriba?
t1? « re«® >» of living.
^However.”
Inoouve
added. |I United States will sign an agree •' aiLrOJiZe Plaque commemorat-I chi as “very childish”
v^P because n?Tn°1' to buv
mg the flag-raising.
I
^S ^-on Mountain Report’ and
Lco,!^-e fo4-^ Japan’s need these. "V ietnam letters convenient ment by late March or earlv April - Under terms of the still-pend- Su^lch ^7^"^
turning
over
to
Janan
adminis
kp^i Sas,^. currency.
ly failed to consider the destmc- tration of the historic World War
?eement. the United States ed concrete platform which al”
,Nz location f' President tive effects of a thermonuclear II battle 'ite and 28 other de Wifi ag
retain rights to use military I ready
contained
two
bronze
I
wav
”
^b^bon reached^ thaf
solate Pacific islands of the Bo- facilities on Iwo and another is- I plaques.
cnonz„
Iasi- XTed agree- j “Thermonuclear war mav bring ninWolcano groups.
land
in
the
Bonin
chain
—
The
I
A
rt^’zabeth I f "Ttb the about economic stabiHtv because
Chichi Jima.
One notes this was the spot
such a war will diminish the ]ic<Some 22,000 Japanese died in
-Japan
has
been
pressing
for
and"^
1^^6 flag 'Xas raised
of the unemployed. Thev will all a vain effort in February and
be
killed.
It
may
provide
politi
return of the islands for a num- Adm Chester W. Nim^ q^
• "Xt October.
^ <T^a^to con- cal stability for all politicians, March of 1945 to hold the strateber of years. In agreeing to the that among the Americans who
^a
end nolitical leaders mav well get gically important, eight-.square’ Museum ;n ‘03tlng hotel killed.
United States turn- I sealed on Iwo Jima uncommon
’
mile island.
The over-all U.S.
^rke ;i ‘E °rder to proed down at least temporarilv anv I valor was a common virtue ”
T am convinced that if we and Japanese casualty toll made return of Okinawa, another World
Nc Merest"
5 ?nd arouse
a
,
Maiva s?A“,marine affairs, did" follow the advice of the im it one of the bloodiest battles of War II battle site — and >S “ pA. ’’S^,11 ^ Associated
major American bas« greatly co lb. ti.Ph - J°e Rosenthal of
a ? a* Jan
sorry to patient a^d the bloodthir=tv. the war.
veM
bv the Japanese.
5
I?A ^-^uSf on Surfbachi by
sA Z^^o'd t-1^ P® was these bloodthirsty ones may find
themselves
drinking
their
©yn
Recently
there
had
been
fc
ft
wf^.o^ the h'«ht °f
The transfer will haul down
^5^t of ^ ^ Jesire for
blood
instead
oUthe
blood
of
the
cussion
that
the
Japanese
might
I
most
™' ” mA^35 one °^ ^e
:he American flag from Mt. Suricountry.”
‘" ““ ™l »f
1 enemy!”
bachi, where raising of the Stars object to the AmeriJan flaK o?ed that w”?
Bnll Beauty
gageanf May
Bove To Tokyo
K®'Srr b'e hew
Shirley Yamaguchi On Comeback Trail
gaxx r«
Japanese Drop
?lans To Buy
PUe®n Elizabeth
Iwo Jima Coing Back To Japanese
biMr
^" “ $15-Million Japanese Cultural
® Edits;
If.
; SAX FRANCISCO.—This city’s first Japanese Cul
tural and Trade Center—a $15 million project be^un
n 1960—was dedicated recently by dignitaries "as
sembled from as far away as Tokyo and Osaka, Washngton D.C. and Honolulu., as well as those of the
Jay area who had a hand in the center’s creation.
test
nt.
ED
ited
tea. p
scenes b
'rthen re.
8 hetwees;
“taent lot
^medics
ited
snced
Sia'
g About 600 invited guests and hundreds of onlookers
gathered in the new spacious, beautifully landscaped
iPeace Plaza at the heart of the new center to witness
She dedication.
| Ceremonies opened with the Sixth U.S. Army Band
^Maying the National Anthems of Japan and the United
States, as the flags of the two nations were raised
In flagpoles which flank the Plaza’s entrance (on Post
St. at the intersection of Buchanan).
It Then a procession of four “pioneer” Japanese Ameri-
can families
Issei, Nisei,
Was Presented.
.
..
v ere represented
Folio win
Mineo
the ^ro^Sn \ b>-•
minister
Mineo lyoya.
lySan Francisco MavorUoseohT^- ?th reniarks bv
bassador to the U S
L n P d • -AHoto; Japan’s Amf^evelopment^
Shimoda; San Francis’s
Yasushi Oshima, DeputA^MaJS
He™ian; and
and
ciscos sister city. P 5 Major of Osaka, San Franspoke includ^l^ayi^
°f the center who
tetsu Enterprise Co. of America^’ president of Kin■ng of a^qae on w™'^."?1®1 ,'vi.th the unveil•* the Peace Plaza entr^ce ’
“ *
Pew Gste
and civic ^eadei^prfsenjed th’°S>-or°"’inent business
IIIIIIHUIHMIHIHnHHinHIIIIIiniHIIIUIIIIimilHIIIliiiiinH!,,,^
h—r_-u
“ the Bly ajei a'U^
.................. Illlllllllllll||||||i|||||ll||||||i|||i!|1|1|||
& Trade Centre Opens
“ a unibol oi international friendship.
*
*
*
Location
(firesemwS'’?8
“A of ^ square blocks
LASnlf 2d Mi™, ?““' bonded by Post, Geary,
ana riiiniore streets.
^Er®et spans the city from east to west, brin^-
fi.t»iM toi 'vithin 10 minutes’
(Continued on Page 8)
The Dm Canadian
Stella Ito’s
Sukiyaki Cookbook
$1.50
■ary co;
363-073
&
Jessie L. Beattie’s
STRENGTH for the
BRIDGE
$5.00
jVol. XXXII—No. 27
tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinnHiiniiiiiHiHiiiiiiiiiii
S
Ads
JFE
«17
*±^S^^
We Becomes First To Hold
—^INational And Toronto JCCA Presidencv
|. teftlihVi^ rSKt
but he said such a
[Chinese response.
“ W about
use of »«clear devices
°Uld tngger a similar Soviet or Red
By T. UMEZUKI
T
Rits Inouye and A. Shirakawa, Coressponding
TORONTO.—Air. Ed Ide last week became the
Secretary — Denise Nishimura, Recording SecThe Democrat from Hawaii fnM person to hold both the National and Toronto
letaiy
Eleanor Shirakawa, Treasurer __ Ge
speaking
before a Japanese Japanese Canadian Citizens’ Association presiden
orge
Takahashi.
Unamber of Commerce audience, tial seat at elections at the Toronto JCCA Annual
Some 17 members of the new Japanese Im
f
,
firmly believes that in General Meeting held at the Toronto Buddhist
today s world, there can be no
Church Hall. It was reported that he has fully re migrant Committee accepted positions in both the
such thing as a “small” thermo
executive and the working committee. They have
covered from his recent auto injury.
nuclear war.
pledged
their full support and proved their worthi
Other officers elected for the Toronto chapter
k
s/ici sucb a war w°uld pro
ShONG BEACH. — The 1968 bably destroy the social, political, are: Past President — Roy Sato, Vice President ness in the chapter’s work last year.
The_Executive Committee will consist of Tak
International Beauty Pao-eant cultural and economic institu
Kneeled last month bv its^Lon- tions of the major powers of the
-I Ichiki, George Imai, Miye Kiyoearth.
se, John Kunitomo, Kay Morita,
,. The world as we know it may
Mutsumi Nagai, Fukashi NakaOrganization which for the disappear,” Inouye warned.
I
TOKYO.
Miss
Shirley
Yama
i^k1' Presence at a reception tsumi, Akemi Oyama, Janet Sa
^i
the f™- , ^l6 senator said in recent times guchi, onetime queen of the Ja
ie has been rather “dismayed
celebrating the 10th anniversary kamoto, Fumi Sasaki, Hiroshi
panese screen, is now the talk of
Be Cih- r
Japan, asked
KS^tby ^tter to and disturbed” by the teno/ of film circles concerning her come ot the Foreign Motion Picture Sasaki, Mits Sumiya, Kunio Ta
som? ,°T the letters he has been
Importers and Distributors Asso
da, Alas Tsubota, Chiyo Tsuyuki,
ffokyo. " 6 0 he P^eant in recexvmg concerning America’s back as a hostess in a popular ciation,
held recently at Tosho
TV
program
shortly.
&’?len proved the pro- I involvement in Vietnam.
Hall, surprised those attending, T. Umezuki, Ko Yamamoto, Sam
Miss Yamaguchi, now the wife bum industry leaders are believ Yamamoto, June Yamamoto.
He said typical are those who
eitv m^™
and asked I would say, “If we have no inten- of a Japanese diplomat, enjoyed ed to have provided a chance for
This .year’s Working Commit
/aaaager
|«iC »z
c"!gand
’tiaticity
"iBattor«a I tion of winning this war we predominant popularity for her her comback” to the filmdom
tee
will consist of: Kyoji Hori
should ge^ out. . . The easiest way exotic charm and exquisite voice
Mrs. Kashiko Kawakita, viceto win this war is to drop five during wartime and postwar Ja president of Towa Film, one of koshi, Mayumi Kumagai, Ed Ku
Fm' b'S c president of well-placed thermonuclear bombs pan.
Miss Yamaguchi’s close friends, magai, Michi Nakashoji, Albert
I Tokvo S t Stress Inc., , on North Vietnam. . . If we have
She was the first Japanese ac said she was highly impressed Nishimura, Gloria Sumiya, Emi
|opes it also
°rS"anization no intention of using nuclear tress picked to play the heroine
by her youthful attractiveness, ko Sumi, Yasuharu Tai, Yoshiko
^ X
Siven con
bombs, why are we spending bil *n the early postwar international which has not changed after all
fer M 101 Paging the 1070 lions of dolars manufacturing I Plo<$ucti°n ‘The House of BamTai, Hideko Umeda, Grace WheePageant in Osaka • 1J 0
!e Xears and was convinced
Paction with
• a 111 con~ I. them
? ... Why don’t we use °°°” S;.?ce
.
appearance
in
the
™at s7 can still appear as a er, Rick Wheeler. At the meet
|ir.
"Uh that city’s world’s
I tactical nuclear weapons in Viet- I
film Holiday in Tokyo,”
ing chaired by Roy Sato, Fumi
star of international caliber.”
nam ? . . . There isn’t much dif- s . ^e^ the screen to become the
Airs. Kawakita is one of those Sasaki gave the Annual Report
I ference between them and lar°"e I P ^fe of a diplomat. She has been pinning much hope on Miss Ya
our artillery shells.”
° 1111 Geneva since 1963 with her maguchi s comeback to filmdom and George Takahashi presented
^J^ana expense.”
The veteran of World War II husband.
Moreover, an actress like Miss the Financial Report. Speeches
who lost his right arm in com- T M1SS Yamaguchi returned to Yamaguchi, who is well versed were made by M. Am emo ri of
bat said he was also concerned Japan when her husband was in many languages, is drastically the Isseibu, M. Nagai of the Imover the
popularity
of “Iron transferred to a home post in needed by the industry for suc
mig. Liaison Comm., and PresiMountain Report” which has been Januarycess in its international ventures.
(Continued on Page R)
on the best-seller list for several k'■■■^^■■■"“"■™■H™m■™■■■
weeks.
I
I This report, allegedly prepared
1
by a special study group conflOKYO__ t
I sisting of the nation’s top intelg“ence ^niA. apan Maritime I lectuals, .suggest that war is deL^en ks p]^ /™ndation | sirable because war gives econWASHINGTON. — Iwo Jima. cussion
that f/‘V"^
Stripes
^•ton Brit.?,10 buy the I omic stability by prodding jobs, I won at the cost of some 5000 and
object to the
I American lives 23 years ago. will
Elizabeth
lin«
economic surpluses, enana otnpes by Marines was re- I
f ?^^Port
fe request ' consumes
nances the Gross National Pro- I be peacefully transferred back corded in one of history’s most
The Tokvo newspaper A^hi
Kasone.
nisier Yasuhiro duct and advances the standard Ito Japanese rule soon.
g™us combat photographs. The Shimbun termed Amerkan
I yState Dept, officials said the o46-foot volcano will instead car- to keep the fIag above Suriba?
t1? « re«® >» of living.
^However.”
Inoouve
added. |I United States will sign an agree •' aiLrOJiZe Plaque commemorat-I chi as “very childish”
v^P because n?Tn°1' to buv
mg the flag-raising.
I
^S ^-on Mountain Report’ and
Lco,!^-e fo4-^ Japan’s need these. "V ietnam letters convenient ment by late March or earlv April - Under terms of the still-pend- Su^lch ^7^"^
turning
over
to
Janan
adminis
kp^i Sas,^. currency.
ly failed to consider the destmc- tration of the historic World War
?eement. the United States ed concrete platform which al”
,Nz location f' President tive effects of a thermonuclear II battle 'ite and 28 other de Wifi ag
retain rights to use military I ready
contained
two
bronze
I
wav
”
^b^bon reached^ thaf
solate Pacific islands of the Bo- facilities on Iwo and another is- I plaques.
cnonz„
Iasi- XTed agree- j “Thermonuclear war mav bring ninWolcano groups.
land
in
the
Bonin
chain
—
The
I
A
rt^’zabeth I f "Ttb the about economic stabiHtv because
Chichi Jima.
One notes this was the spot
such a war will diminish the ]ic<Some 22,000 Japanese died in
-Japan
has
been
pressing
for
and"^
1^^6 flag 'Xas raised
of the unemployed. Thev will all a vain effort in February and
be
killed.
It
may
provide
politi
return of the islands for a num- Adm Chester W. Nim^ q^
• "Xt October.
^ <T^a^to con- cal stability for all politicians, March of 1945 to hold the strateber of years. In agreeing to the that among the Americans who
^a
end nolitical leaders mav well get gically important, eight-.square’ Museum ;n ‘03tlng hotel killed.
United States turn- I sealed on Iwo Jima uncommon
’
mile island.
The over-all U.S.
^rke ;i ‘E °rder to proed down at least temporarilv anv I valor was a common virtue ”
T am convinced that if we and Japanese casualty toll made return of Okinawa, another World
Nc Merest"
5 ?nd arouse
a
,
Maiva s?A“,marine affairs, did" follow the advice of the im it one of the bloodiest battles of War II battle site — and >S “ pA. ’’S^,11 ^ Associated
major American bas« greatly co lb. ti.Ph - J°e Rosenthal of
a ? a* Jan
sorry to patient a^d the bloodthir=tv. the war.
veM
bv the Japanese.
5
I?A ^-^uSf on Surfbachi by
sA Z^^o'd t-1^ P® was these bloodthirsty ones may find
themselves
drinking
their
©yn
Recently
there
had
been
fc
ft
wf^.o^ the h'«ht °f
The transfer will haul down
^5^t of ^ ^ Jesire for
blood
instead
oUthe
blood
of
the
cussion
that
the
Japanese
might
I
most
™' ” mA^35 one °^ ^e
:he American flag from Mt. Suricountry.”
‘" ““ ™l »f
1 enemy!”
bachi, where raising of the Stars object to the AmeriJan flaK o?ed that w”?
Bnll Beauty
gageanf May
Bove To Tokyo
K®'Srr b'e hew
Shirley Yamaguchi On Comeback Trail
gaxx r«
Japanese Drop
?lans To Buy
PUe®n Elizabeth
Iwo Jima Coing Back To Japanese
Page 2
page 2
Saturday Am-n n ..
----------- ^h^Ly^
Japan Cameramen Defeat Urabe 4-2 F
To Become CJHL1967-68 Champions
TORONTO. -V°LSra
Japan
from
W seS 316 the CJHL ^"^“"S ^ t^
I
s^^jURk^^^^
P^' Oshiba’s Aikido: Law Of Nature
oameramen, who were also the league’s re- Fa tand
Baba were Particularly steady. . /
’ 3 self-defense art, involves several thousand de
L roSiaS^n nalers’ came fr°m behind to shade
blocking
shots,
breaking
up
rushes
and
handing
meLhoab
or
movements for defending against almost ^ ^
h“e 9ertrude Urabe insurancemen 4-2 in the mo^t
exSing game of the year.
1 strntp™
checkF This, then, was Urabe’s abIe form of attack such as a knife sword
" any Coscs*
The action was fast and furious as the Urabe to slow
dhe speedy Japan Camera forwards can be used against a group of people
’ &pear’ or blow
forwaras showed amazing speed and hustle in co slow them down, score a coudIp of o-naic
p
Pe°Pie simultaneous
a series of hl&hIy scientific movements
the opening period. Thus, the insurancemen were then hang on. It almost worked^ for Urabe was
P^ centrifugal or centripetal power.
* h make®
S ^^.S'h .the taHo.S’«S' leading 2-1 well into the third period.
u2
apan
Ca
mera
only
knows
one
wav
to
plav
Most
of
us
have
heard
of
people
in
an
emer-Pm
men, both teams trading in end-to-end rushesTnd hockeT CSn°n)y tknTi °ne way
^laV
------------------------------ ------------------ -1 ockey - ^hke heck> stick to your wings and
Japan Pitcher Rough Time In Makors
P?.T®BURG, Florida
’ ifch
'" " ”l‘
Tsuneo Horiuchi, who’ had a ^S- pitch against other big league
flying m this game. Even when «s and increase our effectiveness For
^aIpo"er^h
3 record for the Tokyo Yomiuri team before he leaves
Toshiharu
Usami
of
the
Yomi
Ci ants over the past two seasons,
the going got heavy, the spunky orio-inator Profe^™i
“ s understanding, tb
cameramen just did' not let up °
T
Ueshiba, has said that Aikido mu A
luck gainst the New uri Giants “B” team pitched two They
skated and shot for the
h “Law of Nature.”
1 1 °
lork Met’s “B” squad recently scoreless innings and gave up
only one hit. The game was plavana?^s coughed up a bit in a ed at the -Mets practice field at
wind-blown game.
& » 14 “ desparate I in both physid and Mnbl
, (Reactions were in his favor Huggm-Stengel Stadium.
Horiuchi
has
a
good,
strong
however.
. Horiuchi, pitching for the Los a™' ^ia' maiWer Gil Hodges h AnqUiCT ^ft3 Up the ^rds r h he mo^ment of the attacker. It means that mind^^
Angeles Dodgers “B” team with of the Mets. “It was tough pitch- by Dave Takashima to Paul Su- aie inseparable, without one there cannot be the other R
’’
other. Both as
whom he has been training, work ing °ut there in that high wind.” nohara, sent Paul on his way for equally important, howev.- ’ - ’
e1’ both must be Erected to the sa^’
u e Japanese boys who pitch- a clear* break. Paul made no mis
ed four inning and gave up five
S
'
h
i
mina
eaUlg
’
the
body following. Often our mind i
k
four -nnings threw take on his opportunity to give
hits and all the runs in a 3-3 tie
tne
ball
hard,
”
said
coach
Joe
in opposite directions, the end result being they cancel
Urabe Insurance an early 1-0 _y
game called after the seventh
Pignatano of the Mets.
lead.
each other, or we become less effective in whatever we endear
inning by agreement.
Jim Campanis, the Dodger who
Tim 20-year-old right hander
The period was ms
also marked to do- No matter how much you trai
i■ , ,
“-ain, there is a limb to what
Horiuchi, was impressed by some heavy checking. Late in
walked two, struck out two and
tO d0- The ™'id, on the other hasi
He has a good fast ball,” said l F1'10^ George Shimono was baX i 7 “ F
hit one batsman.
as no form or color and has an unlimited capacity for learnt
Horiuchi,
who
shutout the Campanis, “as fast as any Dodg checked heavily into the boards
Drysdale, Bill by Dave Mitobe.
This was
a —
mis- n y°y
Dodgers when they toured Japan er except Don
P
— “
it- we do not utilize physical strength, we stre^
take, Jf J George who
after the 1966 season, passed uu Singer and Alan Foster. He m
up until Nation of the entire bod'y so that
a
f 7
a task nr
•
S° ; at
Hen oui mind is focused os
ms own club’s spring training to throws harder then anybody I then had not been plavin^ up to
^ We lramediately, without inhibition go inti
see how he would perform have seen for his size.‘He has pa^ sudd'enly took over the game,physical action
He u^-umedefiniteThe whole tempo of the game
‘
/
against major league hitters. Heuoutstanding
u ;° control.
------will return to Japan bv opening- ' F cou , be a starter in the big quickened in the third stanza. LProfessor Ueshiba studied
and practiced
ancient stvle
(layApri! 6 and probably wifi j leagues”
Roger Inamoto used himself ad^u and several different Samurai
F 7 i x
t
a decoy to pull the defencemen most proficient man hT
i ,
Y be“ &
°\er to bim before setting up arte
*
111 niodein Japan. In his words, ‘‘The mams!
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A
Willy Naka in the clear. Willy
- r ,,
concerned with defeating others, but with the practice
KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C. w
Sh0t int° the
S IOVeuWlbbln ourselves.” He hoped its deeper philosophical
BARRISTER.
SOLICITOR
I
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
The
ta“~Z
b
j
™
r Y ’ ® fca’CeM' t0 Peop]e after he witnessed ^
NOTARY PUBLIC
2Carlton St., Toronto
NOTARY PUBLIC
221 VICTORIA
EM. 3-5002
ST.. TORONTO
OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
Room
366-6388
right back to recapture the™ad I -wairXA F ^ t ^'^ War
Soon after Aikido was Hai
Rick
Matsumoto
stopped
a
Japan
®
T
°
T
the
pubIlc
111
Japan.
Professor
Koichi Tohei introduce!
1805
I
^
“
L/fTF'
1
the
beeline
„
,
“
l0
Ha
"--aii
i"
1953.
At
the
same
time,
others went to f«
293-4281 (Res.) I
^o
the worid and since its ini*
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
ASK FOR
Consult
Stan Nishimura
SITZ KINOSHITA
For Alb Classes of
Real Estate
insurance
Toronto
Bus. 766-6191
Res. LE. 1-1089
Phon*: PL. 9.2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
Fully Licenced
NIKKO GARDEN
Reservations: EM. 6-2161
For best arrangements
Reserve ahead of time.
VARIOUS KINDS OF SUSHI
AND OTHER JAPANESE
CUISINES AVAILABLE FOR
FAMILY PARTIES
FREE DELIVERY
460 Dundas St. W.
I
I
ed the puck to score.
|
steadily gained in popularity.
It was at this point that Ge
orge Shimono turned the game
upside down. He made an "icelength rush to set un Willy Na
ka for a clear shot. Willy’s shot
was stopped, but George was
ae^ t0 rap in the rebound and inq-Sun/1 ‘t® Vm- Nisei 5-Pir- bow’- play-off in the 1st half.
e game.
,
~ uivision; Woven Diner
“A**" CLASS: Paul Kite
A few moment Mm-. Gem-o-P
Meiers 51/105- Sv'
Sam 796; Kaye Inouye 773.
"A" CLASS: Fred Tsuji SSI (313,®
came charging up the Irft
Nobby Yano 788 (337); Nobay b?
et™ ’fl ^ \ard
sawa 741; Gordon Shimizu 731; b
cau^hj
b ast which just h“o^
37/77- Goldin Nakamoto 721; Tad Ikeda 72G; fe
i t w J c.'
e of ■the
MW 8 «7/ S®*? 5r Yada 705; Yosh Inouye 796 (35®;_fe
Fujisawa 731; Etsuko Ogawa /IS;??’
I George again who sending Goods* ’31)93
2/78; Tad s Kitagawa 693.
"B" CLASS: Masao Tanaka 772 l&
wRh th*™010 011 a breakaway,
DIVISION: Broadway Flonsf
for ih? msurancemen pressing Lift
Vphies S0/W3; National Ken Haraga 709; Stan Kayanes -?
Yuji Asai 692; Ted Hirose 6/4; st
101 the equalizer. Roger made a Granrrp FrP’ Kami Insurance 44/95- Asai
Yutch Hamade 671; Aixc *-?
good fake, to shift bv Mat Naka
>& <S ris ^’i'
A"'°- guchi 71:
667; Jean Minamimaye
”C" CLASS: Joe Kamiya
and pop in the ™|
Mayede 699; Geo. Minami
assured Japan the victory It was __2^a‘r9c«iy qualified for the Joyce
Mayede 710.
a great finish to a great game
,~
—
• BOWLING
SAY IT WITH
FLOWERS
SHARON'S FLORIST
Gertrude Urabe
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 8-7MG2
TAKE OUT SERVICE
942
Summer Tour To Japan
For Further Information & Reservations
PAPE
AVE.
TORONTO
OPTOMETRISTS
•U
for your wedding candids
borne portraits
and special events
461
^/7M^±
365 Spadina Ave, Toronto 2-R. Ont
Nio-hf _
i
Tsuyuki 535-9935
Night — T. Uyeda 536-1403
a Ph°ne: EM- 3'7646 — EM- 8-0035
123A Dundas St. West
—
Toronto 2, Ont.
Parking At Bay & Dundas
PTICAL
contact
Day 366-1075
Businessmen Luncheon
We Cater To Parties And Banquets
Phone: 783-426]
Home phone: 449-9293
Toronto
Specializing In Chinese Food
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
AGENCY
Office — 3101 Bathurst St
SCORES
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
26
22 Peterlee Crescent
Islington, Ontario
BElmont 3-3095
Saturday Am-n n ..
----------- ^h^Ly^
Japan Cameramen Defeat Urabe 4-2 F
To Become CJHL1967-68 Champions
TORONTO. -V°LSra
Japan
from
W seS 316 the CJHL ^"^“"S ^ t^
I
s^^jURk^^^^
P^' Oshiba’s Aikido: Law Of Nature
oameramen, who were also the league’s re- Fa tand
Baba were Particularly steady. . /
’ 3 self-defense art, involves several thousand de
L roSiaS^n nalers’ came fr°m behind to shade
blocking
shots,
breaking
up
rushes
and
handing
meLhoab
or
movements for defending against almost ^ ^
h“e 9ertrude Urabe insurancemen 4-2 in the mo^t
exSing game of the year.
1 strntp™
checkF This, then, was Urabe’s abIe form of attack such as a knife sword
" any Coscs*
The action was fast and furious as the Urabe to slow
dhe speedy Japan Camera forwards can be used against a group of people
’ &pear’ or blow
forwaras showed amazing speed and hustle in co slow them down, score a coudIp of o-naic
p
Pe°Pie simultaneous
a series of hl&hIy scientific movements
the opening period. Thus, the insurancemen were then hang on. It almost worked^ for Urabe was
P^ centrifugal or centripetal power.
* h make®
S ^^.S'h .the taHo.S’«S' leading 2-1 well into the third period.
u2
apan
Ca
mera
only
knows
one
wav
to
plav
Most
of
us
have
heard
of
people
in
an
emer-Pm
men, both teams trading in end-to-end rushesTnd hockeT CSn°n)y tknTi °ne way
^laV
------------------------------ ------------------ -1 ockey - ^hke heck> stick to your wings and
Japan Pitcher Rough Time In Makors
P?.T®BURG, Florida
’ ifch
'" " ”l‘
Tsuneo Horiuchi, who’ had a ^S- pitch against other big league
flying m this game. Even when «s and increase our effectiveness For
^aIpo"er^h
3 record for the Tokyo Yomiuri team before he leaves
Toshiharu
Usami
of
the
Yomi
Ci ants over the past two seasons,
the going got heavy, the spunky orio-inator Profe^™i
“ s understanding, tb
cameramen just did' not let up °
T
Ueshiba, has said that Aikido mu A
luck gainst the New uri Giants “B” team pitched two They
skated and shot for the
h “Law of Nature.”
1 1 °
lork Met’s “B” squad recently scoreless innings and gave up
only one hit. The game was plavana?^s coughed up a bit in a ed at the -Mets practice field at
wind-blown game.
& » 14 “ desparate I in both physid and Mnbl
, (Reactions were in his favor Huggm-Stengel Stadium.
Horiuchi
has
a
good,
strong
however.
. Horiuchi, pitching for the Los a™' ^ia' maiWer Gil Hodges h AnqUiCT ^ft3 Up the ^rds r h he mo^ment of the attacker. It means that mind^^
Angeles Dodgers “B” team with of the Mets. “It was tough pitch- by Dave Takashima to Paul Su- aie inseparable, without one there cannot be the other R
’’
other. Both as
whom he has been training, work ing °ut there in that high wind.” nohara, sent Paul on his way for equally important, howev.- ’ - ’
e1’ both must be Erected to the sa^’
u e Japanese boys who pitch- a clear* break. Paul made no mis
ed four inning and gave up five
S
'
h
i
mina
eaUlg
’
the
body following. Often our mind i
k
four -nnings threw take on his opportunity to give
hits and all the runs in a 3-3 tie
tne
ball
hard,
”
said
coach
Joe
in opposite directions, the end result being they cancel
Urabe Insurance an early 1-0 _y
game called after the seventh
Pignatano of the Mets.
lead.
each other, or we become less effective in whatever we endear
inning by agreement.
Jim Campanis, the Dodger who
Tim 20-year-old right hander
The period was ms
also marked to do- No matter how much you trai
i■ , ,
“-ain, there is a limb to what
Horiuchi, was impressed by some heavy checking. Late in
walked two, struck out two and
tO d0- The ™'id, on the other hasi
He has a good fast ball,” said l F1'10^ George Shimono was baX i 7 “ F
hit one batsman.
as no form or color and has an unlimited capacity for learnt
Horiuchi,
who
shutout the Campanis, “as fast as any Dodg checked heavily into the boards
Drysdale, Bill by Dave Mitobe.
This was
a —
mis- n y°y
Dodgers when they toured Japan er except Don
P
— “
it- we do not utilize physical strength, we stre^
take, Jf J George who
after the 1966 season, passed uu Singer and Alan Foster. He m
up until Nation of the entire bod'y so that
a
f 7
a task nr
•
S° ; at
Hen oui mind is focused os
ms own club’s spring training to throws harder then anybody I then had not been plavin^ up to
^ We lramediately, without inhibition go inti
see how he would perform have seen for his size.‘He has pa^ sudd'enly took over the game,physical action
He u^-umedefiniteThe whole tempo of the game
‘
/
against major league hitters. Heuoutstanding
u ;° control.
------will return to Japan bv opening- ' F cou , be a starter in the big quickened in the third stanza. LProfessor Ueshiba studied
and practiced
ancient stvle
(layApri! 6 and probably wifi j leagues”
Roger Inamoto used himself ad^u and several different Samurai
F 7 i x
t
a decoy to pull the defencemen most proficient man hT
i ,
Y be“ &
°\er to bim before setting up arte
*
111 niodein Japan. In his words, ‘‘The mams!
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A
Willy Naka in the clear. Willy
- r ,,
concerned with defeating others, but with the practice
KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C. w
Sh0t int° the
S IOVeuWlbbln ourselves.” He hoped its deeper philosophical
BARRISTER.
SOLICITOR
I
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
The
ta“~Z
b
j
™
r Y ’ ® fca’CeM' t0 Peop]e after he witnessed ^
NOTARY PUBLIC
2Carlton St., Toronto
NOTARY PUBLIC
221 VICTORIA
EM. 3-5002
ST.. TORONTO
OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
Room
366-6388
right back to recapture the™ad I -wairXA F ^ t ^'^ War
Soon after Aikido was Hai
Rick
Matsumoto
stopped
a
Japan
®
T
°
T
the
pubIlc
111
Japan.
Professor
Koichi Tohei introduce!
1805
I
^
“
L/fTF'
1
the
beeline
„
,
“
l0
Ha
"--aii
i"
1953.
At
the
same
time,
others went to f«
293-4281 (Res.) I
^o
the worid and since its ini*
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
ASK FOR
Consult
Stan Nishimura
SITZ KINOSHITA
For Alb Classes of
Real Estate
insurance
Toronto
Bus. 766-6191
Res. LE. 1-1089
Phon*: PL. 9.2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
Fully Licenced
NIKKO GARDEN
Reservations: EM. 6-2161
For best arrangements
Reserve ahead of time.
VARIOUS KINDS OF SUSHI
AND OTHER JAPANESE
CUISINES AVAILABLE FOR
FAMILY PARTIES
FREE DELIVERY
460 Dundas St. W.
I
I
ed the puck to score.
|
steadily gained in popularity.
It was at this point that Ge
orge Shimono turned the game
upside down. He made an "icelength rush to set un Willy Na
ka for a clear shot. Willy’s shot
was stopped, but George was
ae^ t0 rap in the rebound and inq-Sun/1 ‘t® Vm- Nisei 5-Pir- bow’- play-off in the 1st half.
e game.
,
~ uivision; Woven Diner
“A**" CLASS: Paul Kite
A few moment Mm-. Gem-o-P
Meiers 51/105- Sv'
Sam 796; Kaye Inouye 773.
"A" CLASS: Fred Tsuji SSI (313,®
came charging up the Irft
Nobby Yano 788 (337); Nobay b?
et™ ’fl ^ \ard
sawa 741; Gordon Shimizu 731; b
cau^hj
b ast which just h“o^
37/77- Goldin Nakamoto 721; Tad Ikeda 72G; fe
i t w J c.'
e of ■the
MW 8 «7/ S®*? 5r Yada 705; Yosh Inouye 796 (35®;_fe
Fujisawa 731; Etsuko Ogawa /IS;??’
I George again who sending Goods* ’31)93
2/78; Tad s Kitagawa 693.
"B" CLASS: Masao Tanaka 772 l&
wRh th*™010 011 a breakaway,
DIVISION: Broadway Flonsf
for ih? msurancemen pressing Lift
Vphies S0/W3; National Ken Haraga 709; Stan Kayanes -?
Yuji Asai 692; Ted Hirose 6/4; st
101 the equalizer. Roger made a Granrrp FrP’ Kami Insurance 44/95- Asai
Yutch Hamade 671; Aixc *-?
good fake, to shift bv Mat Naka
>& <S ris ^’i'
A"'°- guchi 71:
667; Jean Minamimaye
”C" CLASS: Joe Kamiya
and pop in the ™|
Mayede 699; Geo. Minami
assured Japan the victory It was __2^a‘r9c«iy qualified for the Joyce
Mayede 710.
a great finish to a great game
,~
—
• BOWLING
SAY IT WITH
FLOWERS
SHARON'S FLORIST
Gertrude Urabe
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 8-7MG2
TAKE OUT SERVICE
942
Summer Tour To Japan
For Further Information & Reservations
PAPE
AVE.
TORONTO
OPTOMETRISTS
•U
for your wedding candids
borne portraits
and special events
461
^/7M^±
365 Spadina Ave, Toronto 2-R. Ont
Nio-hf _
i
Tsuyuki 535-9935
Night — T. Uyeda 536-1403
a Ph°ne: EM- 3'7646 — EM- 8-0035
123A Dundas St. West
—
Toronto 2, Ont.
Parking At Bay & Dundas
PTICAL
contact
Day 366-1075
Businessmen Luncheon
We Cater To Parties And Banquets
Phone: 783-426]
Home phone: 449-9293
Toronto
Specializing In Chinese Food
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
AGENCY
Office — 3101 Bathurst St
SCORES
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
26
22 Peterlee Crescent
Islington, Ontario
BElmont 3-3095
Page 3
N E W
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K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
Frank G. Yada
Crown Life insurance Co
1550 We^t Georgi* St
Vancouver, B.C,
^giis’^r
^^ *
W. K. GARDENS
I ^^
®* »M
y ^# t A
a aaag t; & L i t
V np ®
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER. B.C
Phone MU. 1-6642—045'
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquet
Private Dining Koo>».
ffi)gt * ^
45 |1 ^
7 Jr«
9 ft *
ini'
® 1 h ^ ft tt
61 R- Hastings
^tf)
St-, Vancouver 4, B.C. Tel. 254-5101
SU Toronto 2-B, Ont. Tel. 368-9934
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Sansei: On Being
Comfortable
■ yor. Jcponsss United Church Communion Service With "Hakuiin"
PAGE 7
Personal Notes
TORONTO—The Toronto Japanese United Church Palm Sun
Obituaries
Tne IHERYL yoSHIMURA
dar on April /th, 11.30 will have a special Anniversary Sunday
problemwith
and Communion Service. Communion cards will be delivered bv the mainS^
?& ™
? the board members. It is our 14th anniversary — the start of our
| TORONTO. - Mr. Yoichi Su
can life. They had
' 15th year since the Nisei church was first organized April 4, 1954
the completely
adjust to
ar customs of
unfamili- nn,. 68, died suddenly with a heart
« society, attack while working as gardener
After the service we are having a Chow Mein Luncheon and Their 3^
^^e^ had on April 1st. Funeral was held
movies on Japan. Tickets are available from board members, §1 00 the problem nf
Prejudice
erCOmin
S racial
for adults and 50c for children under 16.
equal citizen? Tb * accePted as at the Japanese United' Church
S~- a p^
°f | on April 5th. Officiated by the
May we invite you to join in this celebration ? __ T.J.U C
Rex erends Gordon Imai and
® Sansei dilemma is the anx*
*
*
Norisue.
Science has now found a
solution to one of man’s
most serious problems.
Nou- Available in Canada
Only S4. At Your Druggist
J Japan-Can- Society's “Welcome To Can." April 17
thb Oilemma ? It is
b
MONTREAL.—-On Wednesday, April 17th the Japan-Canada whether to idei tX ? ^nowing
•• - aentlt
w ^k
Society will have a “Welcome-to-Canada” dinner at L’Auberge Le net
lUm
" "’y
» fully
the Jak?
| Vieux St. Gabriel in Old Montreal. This will be our “Canadian” Sta,.,S n°‘ a l’tall!’ "“i«=
: event. Our guest of honor will be Mr. Katsuma Urabe, the newly
tinTe°r fb^eQ“leater part of the
Anywhere — Anytime
f arrived Consul-General of Japan. Please fill in the card telling
'
’ the Sansei thinks of him. us if you will or will not attend the dinner and if you .are planning h i Ta
' N°rth Serkan
| to attend, how many guests you intend to bring.
° natural h Japanese. This is only
Tours Hotel—Sightseeing
|
We would appreciate a quick reply in order to help our plan So m 603"36 the Sa^sei has
Travellers Cheques
Uown up ni a completely North
I ning.
Obtainable
ttvTcTfM"'™^
this ™"Travel,
Accident
Date: is Wednesday, April 17, 1968. Time: is 7 p.m. Place:
Dart S ?
a1d ‘editions are
and
Baggage
insurance
m is L’Auberge Le Vieux St. Gabriel,
Meet Your New and
pait of his make-up. The only
442 St. Gabriel (just below «M
V
lctor
,!
h
?' mk“ 2
Used
Car Representative
Notre Dame West), Montreal, Quebec. Price is (for members) —
?^i?
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
ct-stinct
from
all
his
“
hakujin
”
■j^i)) So.00 per person, (for guests) — §6.00 per person.
e^ol’v1'6 simpiy his almond
Passage arranged by Steamer or Air
*
*
*
E ’
i e >kln and bIack hair
vun iui Rcservanons or
hlS' Ph-Vsical stature,
Nipponia Home Looks To Public For Financial Aid
Bus. 485-0353
a
as American
TORONTO.-The Nipponia Home is indeed grateful to ’,
Information
—
EM.
8-9934
q lde’ bIue-eyed friends.
Res. PL. 9-2014
Ihe Sansei is made to feel a
man; loyal members and supporters for their generous contribu.E
hls, Caucasian group,
nous to this wonderful Home for the Aged.
n
?llleS he is the most im'
®
»f "’’er $4,000.00 in the Portant member of his clich;
: audit of 196/, the maintenance account of our non-profit institu
the Sansei is the
K. Iwato Travel Service
:*Xito a imi
- ^X|
plays and studies
On Bayview,
।
with his “hakujin” friends; he
113
McCaul
St.,
TORONTO
shares many good
Toronto, Ontario
.tsX'lu! aHeviate this critics! financial situation, it them. But, once in times with
____
a while a
the At X^
genera,! meeting to again appeal to iTew( alienation will strike
Japanese. Canadian-public for their liberal - imA ^at 1S this strange feel* j^ le Sansei becomes per
plexed. He has never felt this
riS Urgent appealfor the continuity of com- before.
sunport — Toshi^H ^
Cltlzens will merit your undeniable I Suddenly from the homogenegloup’ the Saiisei will step
PPoit.
Tosa1o Uyeda, Acting Chairman of Board.
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
and see that he really is
I
ei ent- True, he mav think
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
’ww^V Aprfl 19‘h At The R°Ya! York the same as his friends, ’but this
SUKIYAKI MEAT — VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
t ooT^0t ^rase the fact that he
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
ringing skirt?
'^ 6611 ^^ ^ ^e eye ^’ a Mexican dancer’s LOOKS different.
I What to do ? Many thoughts
I
of the future pop into his head,
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
Nwe™SWen"1Sh EySn "’‘th 3
M1 of hot 'hiIi!
I thoughts that take on a great
Never! Well
Tort Hotel when theV^T v • comin8' A*> 19 at the Roy
fal magnitude; thoughts that will
EM. 4-7S92
fcn.. “„“"“ the T°f°nto Men's Press Club stages its
help to govern the rest of his
By-Line Ball.
annual life. .Since he looks different, he
I realizes he should look for a mate
heels and sk» X
,
P atact city Peopie to stamp within his own Nisei-Sansei com
viMon celebrities the
Wlth neWSpaper’ radio and tele- munity. He realizes that he
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friend*
a» expense paid
tW° bi^ dow’ p™- - an should try to make friends in the
tnP Thr fi ° t0 S°Uth Car^ina. °
eX1C°’ and ^ aU expense paid community, too.
To discover whether or not he
can solve his alienation problem.
"'th two top bands J ^S°Jeatuies a full night of entertainment the Sansei may begin to frequent
a«e fun of cha^
the M«s • By-Line contest, his local community activities,
He tries to discover whether or
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
llckets to the ball are
111 the fabuIous Games Room. not being around1 just Nisei-SanThe ball \
each. '
। sei friends will make .a differEM. 2-0029 For Heservations EM. 2-4322
days dhrhg^Xa^
^S® °f activities that lasts for ence. He tries to identify with
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas. Toronto"
the “nihonjin” life.
This b
national Press Week, April 15/^1
outstand * le Wee^ "’hen newsmen
~ 1
„
But does this solve his problem
Catering to Wedding Banqaeta, Showers and Parties
ndln§' achievement in
a Canada .are honored for of feeling uneasy around entirely
- "ards Dinner CanaHin
craft. At the National Newspaper I “Hakujin” people. No.
Seating Capacity 240
Photography anr]
n newsmen receive top awards for writing.
The Sansei finds that he cancaiioomng.
I not hide his uneasiness
by embedding and hiding himself in the
Nisei-Sansei community. He must
I learn to get along with both
Your Home
Japanese Hockey League Presents
I sides. He discovers that he can
Through
not live just within this com
JC c,
munity: manv times he must get
Cultura] Centra
"
। out and mingle with the Caucas
ar Utilities
__ Sat., April 13th at 8:30 p.m.
ians. He must to live in today’s
contemporary North American
a
.
$1.25 Admission
the Asia Minors
society.
Representing
The Sansei finds that he must
be able to transgress the line
that separates the two. He must
be able ^ feel at ease in both
2625 Eglinton Ave. East.
communities.
Phone 266-4501 — Res. 261-2581
I Travel Arrangements
TOM HOITA
T. KAMEOKA
At Rumble
Pontiac Buick
BUNDAS UNION STORE
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVERN
AWARD dance
Mils Kuroda
Bob Owen Real Estate Co.
SMALL
£§?§^^^^^
1»‘
shoe
sizes
,
latest new spring
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
STYLE ARRIVED
Ladies’ shoes from
1 ap to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
ALBERTS SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
proprietor
JON ONODERA
EAVESTROUGHING
ALCAN SKIING DEALER
HU. 94654 — HU. 1-8805
IBdsImm)
(Residence)
540 Eglinton Ave. W„
Toronto
SHEET METAL WORK
TORONTO
421'3374 NISEI OWNED
TOSH NISHIJIMA
, ''COVERING ONTARIO"
Ntgl* Calif: PL. 9-5095 HL 7-1100
at.
JOS
J
3
1
A N
Sansei: On Being
Comfortable
■ yor. Jcponsss United Church Communion Service With "Hakuiin"
PAGE 7
Personal Notes
TORONTO—The Toronto Japanese United Church Palm Sun
Obituaries
Tne IHERYL yoSHIMURA
dar on April /th, 11.30 will have a special Anniversary Sunday
problemwith
and Communion Service. Communion cards will be delivered bv the mainS^
?& ™
? the board members. It is our 14th anniversary — the start of our
| TORONTO. - Mr. Yoichi Su
can life. They had
' 15th year since the Nisei church was first organized April 4, 1954
the completely
adjust to
ar customs of
unfamili- nn,. 68, died suddenly with a heart
« society, attack while working as gardener
After the service we are having a Chow Mein Luncheon and Their 3^
^^e^ had on April 1st. Funeral was held
movies on Japan. Tickets are available from board members, §1 00 the problem nf
Prejudice
erCOmin
S racial
for adults and 50c for children under 16.
equal citizen? Tb * accePted as at the Japanese United' Church
S~- a p^
°f | on April 5th. Officiated by the
May we invite you to join in this celebration ? __ T.J.U C
Rex erends Gordon Imai and
® Sansei dilemma is the anx*
*
*
Norisue.
Science has now found a
solution to one of man’s
most serious problems.
Nou- Available in Canada
Only S4. At Your Druggist
J Japan-Can- Society's “Welcome To Can." April 17
thb Oilemma ? It is
b
MONTREAL.—-On Wednesday, April 17th the Japan-Canada whether to idei tX ? ^nowing
•• - aentlt
w ^k
Society will have a “Welcome-to-Canada” dinner at L’Auberge Le net
lUm
" "’y
» fully
the Jak?
| Vieux St. Gabriel in Old Montreal. This will be our “Canadian” Sta,.,S n°‘ a l’tall!’ "“i«=
: event. Our guest of honor will be Mr. Katsuma Urabe, the newly
tinTe°r fb^eQ“leater part of the
Anywhere — Anytime
f arrived Consul-General of Japan. Please fill in the card telling
'
’ the Sansei thinks of him. us if you will or will not attend the dinner and if you .are planning h i Ta
' N°rth Serkan
| to attend, how many guests you intend to bring.
° natural h Japanese. This is only
Tours Hotel—Sightseeing
|
We would appreciate a quick reply in order to help our plan So m 603"36 the Sa^sei has
Travellers Cheques
Uown up ni a completely North
I ning.
Obtainable
ttvTcTfM"'™^
this ™"Travel,
Accident
Date: is Wednesday, April 17, 1968. Time: is 7 p.m. Place:
Dart S ?
a1d ‘editions are
and
Baggage
insurance
m is L’Auberge Le Vieux St. Gabriel,
Meet Your New and
pait of his make-up. The only
442 St. Gabriel (just below «M
V
lctor
,!
h
?' mk“ 2
Used
Car Representative
Notre Dame West), Montreal, Quebec. Price is (for members) —
?^i?
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
ct-stinct
from
all
his
“
hakujin
”
■j^i)) So.00 per person, (for guests) — §6.00 per person.
e^ol’v1'6 simpiy his almond
Passage arranged by Steamer or Air
*
*
*
E ’
i e >kln and bIack hair
vun iui Rcservanons or
hlS' Ph-Vsical stature,
Nipponia Home Looks To Public For Financial Aid
Bus. 485-0353
a
as American
TORONTO.-The Nipponia Home is indeed grateful to ’,
Information
—
EM.
8-9934
q lde’ bIue-eyed friends.
Res. PL. 9-2014
Ihe Sansei is made to feel a
man; loyal members and supporters for their generous contribu.E
hls, Caucasian group,
nous to this wonderful Home for the Aged.
n
?llleS he is the most im'
®
»f "’’er $4,000.00 in the Portant member of his clich;
: audit of 196/, the maintenance account of our non-profit institu
the Sansei is the
K. Iwato Travel Service
:*Xito a imi
- ^X|
plays and studies
On Bayview,
।
with his “hakujin” friends; he
113
McCaul
St.,
TORONTO
shares many good
Toronto, Ontario
.tsX'lu! aHeviate this critics! financial situation, it them. But, once in times with
____
a while a
the At X^
genera,! meeting to again appeal to iTew( alienation will strike
Japanese. Canadian-public for their liberal - imA ^at 1S this strange feel* j^ le Sansei becomes per
plexed. He has never felt this
riS Urgent appealfor the continuity of com- before.
sunport — Toshi^H ^
Cltlzens will merit your undeniable I Suddenly from the homogenegloup’ the Saiisei will step
PPoit.
Tosa1o Uyeda, Acting Chairman of Board.
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
and see that he really is
I
ei ent- True, he mav think
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
’ww^V Aprfl 19‘h At The R°Ya! York the same as his friends, ’but this
SUKIYAKI MEAT — VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
t ooT^0t ^rase the fact that he
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
ringing skirt?
'^ 6611 ^^ ^ ^e eye ^’ a Mexican dancer’s LOOKS different.
I What to do ? Many thoughts
I
of the future pop into his head,
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
Nwe™SWen"1Sh EySn "’‘th 3
M1 of hot 'hiIi!
I thoughts that take on a great
Never! Well
Tort Hotel when theV^T v • comin8' A*> 19 at the Roy
fal magnitude; thoughts that will
EM. 4-7S92
fcn.. “„“"“ the T°f°nto Men's Press Club stages its
help to govern the rest of his
By-Line Ball.
annual life. .Since he looks different, he
I realizes he should look for a mate
heels and sk» X
,
P atact city Peopie to stamp within his own Nisei-Sansei com
viMon celebrities the
Wlth neWSpaper’ radio and tele- munity. He realizes that he
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friend*
a» expense paid
tW° bi^ dow’ p™- - an should try to make friends in the
tnP Thr fi ° t0 S°Uth Car^ina. °
eX1C°’ and ^ aU expense paid community, too.
To discover whether or not he
can solve his alienation problem.
"'th two top bands J ^S°Jeatuies a full night of entertainment the Sansei may begin to frequent
a«e fun of cha^
the M«s • By-Line contest, his local community activities,
He tries to discover whether or
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
llckets to the ball are
111 the fabuIous Games Room. not being around1 just Nisei-SanThe ball \
each. '
। sei friends will make .a differEM. 2-0029 For Heservations EM. 2-4322
days dhrhg^Xa^
^S® °f activities that lasts for ence. He tries to identify with
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas. Toronto"
the “nihonjin” life.
This b
national Press Week, April 15/^1
outstand * le Wee^ "’hen newsmen
~ 1
„
But does this solve his problem
Catering to Wedding Banqaeta, Showers and Parties
ndln§' achievement in
a Canada .are honored for of feeling uneasy around entirely
- "ards Dinner CanaHin
craft. At the National Newspaper I “Hakujin” people. No.
Seating Capacity 240
Photography anr]
n newsmen receive top awards for writing.
The Sansei finds that he cancaiioomng.
I not hide his uneasiness
by embedding and hiding himself in the
Nisei-Sansei community. He must
I learn to get along with both
Your Home
Japanese Hockey League Presents
I sides. He discovers that he can
Through
not live just within this com
JC c,
munity: manv times he must get
Cultura] Centra
"
। out and mingle with the Caucas
ar Utilities
__ Sat., April 13th at 8:30 p.m.
ians. He must to live in today’s
contemporary North American
a
.
$1.25 Admission
the Asia Minors
society.
Representing
The Sansei finds that he must
be able to transgress the line
that separates the two. He must
be able ^ feel at ease in both
2625 Eglinton Ave. East.
communities.
Phone 266-4501 — Res. 261-2581
I Travel Arrangements
TOM HOITA
T. KAMEOKA
At Rumble
Pontiac Buick
BUNDAS UNION STORE
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVERN
AWARD dance
Mils Kuroda
Bob Owen Real Estate Co.
SMALL
£§?§^^^^^
1»‘
shoe
sizes
,
latest new spring
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
STYLE ARRIVED
Ladies’ shoes from
1 ap to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
ALBERTS SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
proprietor
JON ONODERA
EAVESTROUGHING
ALCAN SKIING DEALER
HU. 94654 — HU. 1-8805
IBdsImm)
(Residence)
540 Eglinton Ave. W„
Toronto
SHEET METAL WORK
TORONTO
421'3374 NISEI OWNED
TOSH NISHIJIMA
, ''COVERING ONTARIO"
Ntgl* Calif: PL. 9-5095 HL 7-1100
Page 8
PAGE 8
$15-Million Centre . •
^?F^t°^ the Center is Nihon- of America.
(Cont. From Page 1)
Streptomycin Co-
^e. New Canadian
S~o^^
Western Interna
Peace Plaza
machi (Japanese Town), where
tional
Hotels.
Inc., whose head
the Bay Area’s 20,000 JapaneseThe 30,000 square foot plaza i DlSCOV^I'AI' LlVAC
American residents frequently quarters are in Seattle, Washing at the center of the development
and for payment of postage
ton, operates the hotel.
is paved with slate. Its perimeter J
congregate,
Nihonmachi
itself
hotel’s manager is Charles is landscaped with. Japanese ;gar- " ■*
will be reconstructed and reha
110511111 IM
K’ken Suf En^lish M
McCaffree, a graduate of Michi dens and two pools.
bilitated.
■
■ '
S A? PaneSe
gan
State
Hotel
School.
He
has
m
i
,
HIROSHIMA.
—
Dr.
-Walton
Eventually the Western Addigraceful covered entrance
„
, , .
.
. . ,
And Advertising.
been affiliated with Western In to The
the plaza has a copper roof Geioer, noted -American bioche^10o w^l. also be the setting for
SUBSCRIPTION
a Catholic cathedral complex, of ternational Hotels in Seattle and which, like those of the Paogda, mist and co-discoverer of strepW‘nnn9r 6 ““^tli*
fice buildings, commercial struc- at the Sir Francis Drake Hotel. will weather to a green patina, tomycin, is on his way here to
57.00 per year
His most recent post with the
tuies, and 100 new appartments.
flanked'h “kyel’’“ ^HuVV'X at°”-bomW *
479
QUEEN
st. west
organization was as executive as
Toronto
2-B,
Ont.
sistant manager of the St. FranFacilities
1
with his family.
EMpire 6-5005
Gara
The Japanese Cultural and sis Hotel in San Francisco.
A subterranean, self-parkiug t^
-trade Center includes three com
A staff of over 100 Japanese
mercial buildings: the San Fran- speaking employees serves under fare «^ tX^XX^ V 800 ^ ^ ^ Pennsylvania State
Building, the International McCaffree.
Sundtog NihonmSh^ea
“e”‘al Hl?lth I"s,ilnti“ ^ take
Building and the Kintetsu Build
Prices at the Miyako Hotel
Elevators throno-hnnf th?
Papt in the {peace movement in
ing. The latter two are linked range from §15 per night (for a
Elevators throughout the Cen- japaili He
be acc t ,
by a Bridge of Shops, which standard single room to $75 per the Sarai65 ta
Female Hefr WanteF
lecturer of English .at Hiroshima
spans Webster Street. The east night (foi* the deluxe Japanese- buildings? central mlte mFto Jo^“»> "’omen’s college here.;
Pj?®^TORS must be exoeri°nc°d
ernmost building in the Center style suites).
■ladies sportswear. AddIv Mis- c.
is the Japanese Consulate Gene
the hotel and offices.
He is being accompanied by his ley, 8th floor, 96 Soadina ATheatre-Restaurant
(To:
‘ '
ral Building.
Cultural Dianlav
daughters, Andrea, 14, and onto).
The
Theatre-Restaurant,
still
West of this is the Miyako
.
Vanessa, 13, on his sea trip to
^^S good at figures and f»«h.
As a permanent display, Japa- Japan.
Hotel, which also provides, on under construction at the western
public. Permanent position. Sa’ar/c^
end
of
the
Center,
will
boast
the
nese
craftsmen
demonstrate
traM
r
•
mensurate with ability Coll
one full floor of the adjoining
• •
.lgeI 1S already here, Mi^orada^
Consulate General Building, lux finest technical facilities in Ame ditional arts and crafts in various
ury guest accommodations and rica fox- the presentation of thea public areas of the Center. They arriving m October last year, WOMEN lor repairs and alier^
trical spectacles. Specially de work, in their native costumes, £, •
??w staying at the World ?tenWSy Cleaners,. 249 Donlands anauthentic Japanese-style suites.
signed machinery will make pos on tatami mats specially providCenter and actively 1518 Bayview Ave. (Toronto).
The Theatre-Restaurant at the sible the onstage simulation of ed for this purpose.
taking part in the “promoting
westernmost end of the Center floods, waterfalls and fires.
Goods made by the craftsmen clHzens’ dialogues for peace”
will feature both Japanese and
Paul K. Asada, D.C., NJ).
are
available for sale.
campaign which is being spread
The stage will incorporate a
international productions on a
These displays serve a double |mOng intellectuals here.
“Doctor of Chiropractic”
stage specially constructed for turntable, 43 feet in diameter, in
the
middle
of
which
will
be
an
purpose, giving tourists a chance
According to Mrs. Geiger, hei
the presentation
of
elaborate
• 728A St. Clair Ave. West
S-foot by 32-foot rectangular lift. to see the production of Japanese I husband is worried very much
(/z block West of Christie)
dramatic spectacles.
When locked in position — at
TORONTO
■At the heart of the Center will whatever height is desired — the handicrafts firsthand, and also about the growing war in Viet651-8060
Res. 621-1989
stand the Peace Pagoda, a sym lift wilhrotate with the turntable. attracting potential customers to | na™ arid wants to devote himbol of peace and friendship'be This device will make possible the many shops and restaurants self to the cause of peace in Asia.
tween Japan
and
the United an enormous range of stage ef of the Center.
Now 54, Dr. Geiger graduated
Demonstrations will eventually from Yale University in 1936 and
States.
fects
and
spectaculaiscene
H li a good policy to
include brush-painting, anima taught biochemistry at several
Beneath the Center is an 800- changes.
have
the BIGHT. POLICY
carvings (done by .an Ainu from American universities. He dis
car self-parking garage.
The Theatre-Restaurant will Hokkaido),
Consult
paper-design done covered streptomycin with Dr. S.
present some Kabuki, as well as with a fine-edged knife, potteryCommercial Buildings
William Wales Ltd.
The San Francisco, Internati Japanese stage revues, spectacles m a k i n g, lacquerware-making, A. Waxman in 1942.
and
international
musicals.
onal and Kintetsu Buildings are
Insurance Agents
toymaking (including handcarv
■It will accommodate 800 din ing of Kokeshi dolls, Fukushima
all designed around the central
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
malls landscaped in Japanese ner guests, and 200 more in the wooden horses and lion masks
“e
garden style. Skylights illumin balcony, where beverages will be from Yamagata and Toyama),
Phone 921-3171
Brit
ate the malls and open stairwells served.
papier-mache toymaking, kimono
'urii
provide a view from the upper ’ The owners of the Theatre- painting, woodcuts, and hand
hesi
Restaurant
are
Dream
Entertain
stories of the garden areas and
looming of vegetable-dyed tex
ments, Inc., whose president is tiles.
business activity below.
acri
San Francisco Building: The Kunizo Matsuo.
Developers
TOKYO.—The Japanese Trans
JAMES KAMINO
L-shaped San Francisco Building
Peace Pagoda
le k
National-Braemar, Inc., a sin port Ministry recently tightener
is owned by the Center develop
The Peace Pagoda, soon to be gle-purpose corporation, formed auto safety standards.
k>tho
ers, National-Braemar, Inc. Ad erected, will stand in a landscap to develop the Center. The presi
iese
Car
makers
will
be
requirec
jacent to it. on the ..east is the ed plaza near the main entrance dent of National-Braemar, Inc.
to
equip
automobiles
with
safety
Japanese
Consulate
General to the Center. Symbolic of mu is Masayuki Tokioka, who makes
Building, and, on the west, the tual goodwill between Japan and his headquarters in Honolulu. belts and head rests, strengthen
EM. 4-9913
Peace Pagoda.
the United States, the Pagoda Hawaii. He also heads National safety glass for windshields,; two
International Building: The In wFl be the hub of the Japanese Securities and Investment, Inc.. front and two rear lights for.
(TOHONTO)
ternational Building", also owned Cultural and Trade Center.
International Savings and Loan automobiles to signal emergency
I F
by
National-Braemar, Inc., is
Association, National Mortgage stops, additional mirrors on large
Design:
The
Peace
Pagoda
will
pet b
next to the Theatre-Restaurant.
trucks and buses and device to
be round in shape, composed of and Finance Co., and the Island signal occurrence of accidents at
Kied
Bru'ge of Shops: The bridge, 12 circular pillars which together Insurance Co.
Mini
night.
winch spans Webster Street, is will support its five roofs. Its
The vice president is Paul Bro
If the
135 feet long. It too, is owned shape was inspired by that of man, who serves as principal re
- appt
The ministry also called for
by
National-Braemar, Inc. On the round pagodas dedicated to presentative for the developers
•’•. her side of its 40-foot wide eternal peace by Empress Koken He was largely responsible for establishment of new standards
Pe t
center passageway are shops. In- 1200 years ago in Nara, ancient planning and coordination. Othm- for brake efficiency and improve
| disc
ment
of
fire
extinguishers
on
smred by the Ponte Vecchio of -anital of Japan.
officers are
Franklin Tokioka, trucks carrying flammable car
Mnce
Florence, Italy, it is believed to
K K
The main body of the Pagoda secretary, and Neil Kosasa. trea goes.
the
greatest
be the first shop-lined bridge in h of white precast concrete? Its surer.
;
fethod
America. By crossing it, one may five-tiered roof is composed of
No date was set for the en
Thi
Architects
gift of all
walk through the entire Center 1evels which decrease in diameter
forcement.
kemb
The
overall
plan
for
the
Center
without leaving its air-condition- (from 46 to 34 feet) as they in
hpane
done bv Minoru Yamasaki of
•^l cover.
crease in height. They are cover ras
M®8
roy, Michigan, in association
’ Kintetsu Building: The Kinte ed with copper platine- which will
ten pai
with Van Bourg. Nakamura and ■
tsu Building is owned by Kinte weather to a eTeen patina.
^ oth(
Associates
of
Berkeley,
Calif.
tsu Enterprises Company of Ame
Atop, the highest roof level is
enese 1
rica, a subsidiary of Kinki-Nip a “kurin,” a nine-ringed spire,
® En
pon Railway Co., Ltd., of Japan. symbolic of the .highest virtue.
Ed
Ide
.
.
It is located to the west of the
pd i
The highest point of the Pa
Peace Plaza.
(Continued from Page 1')
Isolate
goda is a “hoshu,” and ornamen
| Ibus
Consulate General Building
tal gold ball with flaming head.
dent Edward Ide.
L^e ii
Situated at the eastern end of
Architect: Professor
Yoshiro
It was reported that last year
■bad be
the Center, this building is the Taniguchi of Tokyo, an authori
a Sc
new home of the Japanese Con ty on ancient Japanese structur tome 950 paid-up members were
■J look)
sulate General at San Francisco. es. designed the Peace Pagoda iecorded. Other reports includ
eraied
On the third floor are spectai and the plaza in which it "will ed the review of the group’s par
deluxe accommodations of the stand.
ticipation in last year’s Centenr fefjj
Miyako Hotel, to which the Japa
(The Pagoda and plaza are the nial project
work with immigranese Consulate General Buildine only portions of the Center not
L1' Wa
is connected by a covered walk designed by the overall archi tion groups participation in the
way.
ni
tects. Minoru Yamasaki, and Van Human Rights conference, the
p of :
Bourg. Nakamura).
k
Miyako Hotel
annual visit to Nipponia Home
The 14-storev Mival
and
other- welfare work.
Hotel
national of San
Francisco en
provides 172 guest-rooms
;
p in
The Toronto JCCA looks forgineered the Pagoda, developing
L^ttrage
with modified unken bathtubs
ward to a busy year of participa
color television
FW ,
s. air-condi- new techniques in the precasting
tion. They will keep in mind that
tioning, shoji-panels. and picture- of concrete.
Builders: Martinelli Construe— 1968 has been designated by the
. J2 JurIt
window views of Sai
Included in the hotel’s facilities
United Nations as Human Righ
Sst t
Landscaping: The Pagoda will Year.
are restaurant, cocktail lounge
stand
m
the
middle
of
a
granite
with nightly entertainment, con
A Ko
ference rooms, tour and private Ol?‘^ned reflecting pool which
will be circular at the back and
dining facilities.
Among the 16 luxurious rooms ^iangnlar at the front, rather
OFFSET ANO LtTTFRPEESS
in the adjacent Japanese Consul 1Ke a keyhole. This shape is takthat
of
burial
mounds
ate General Building are two
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES. LETTERHEADS
an'^ ^th century Japanese
suits done in authentic Japanese
a
stvle. with tatami mats, sunken nob.es: some of these mounds
were larger than the Egyptian
i?i ?5cei
bathtubs, and futon beds.
pyramids.
^4tjM r»L
..The Miyako Hotel is owned by
l
The Pagoda will be illuminat-1 MH s. KOMO
iin.
479 Queen St West
Toronto 2-B/ Ont
Kintetsu Enterprises Company ' ed at night.
- | ’27 SAY ST^ TORONTO Fhone 36S-976S
CLASSIFIED
IV
Japanese Hit
Hard For Auto
Safety Standards
T.V. Service
YOUR
Bouquet
Invitation
Line
PRINTING
^®^O
THE NEW CANADIAN
$15-Million Centre . •
^?F^t°^ the Center is Nihon- of America.
(Cont. From Page 1)
Streptomycin Co-
^e. New Canadian
S~o^^
Western Interna
Peace Plaza
machi (Japanese Town), where
tional
Hotels.
Inc., whose head
the Bay Area’s 20,000 JapaneseThe 30,000 square foot plaza i DlSCOV^I'AI' LlVAC
American residents frequently quarters are in Seattle, Washing at the center of the development
and for payment of postage
ton, operates the hotel.
is paved with slate. Its perimeter J
congregate,
Nihonmachi
itself
hotel’s manager is Charles is landscaped with. Japanese ;gar- " ■*
will be reconstructed and reha
110511111 IM
K’ken Suf En^lish M
McCaffree, a graduate of Michi dens and two pools.
bilitated.
■
■ '
S A? PaneSe
gan
State
Hotel
School.
He
has
m
i
,
HIROSHIMA.
—
Dr.
-Walton
Eventually the Western Addigraceful covered entrance
„
, , .
.
. . ,
And Advertising.
been affiliated with Western In to The
the plaza has a copper roof Geioer, noted -American bioche^10o w^l. also be the setting for
SUBSCRIPTION
a Catholic cathedral complex, of ternational Hotels in Seattle and which, like those of the Paogda, mist and co-discoverer of strepW‘nnn9r 6 ““^tli*
fice buildings, commercial struc- at the Sir Francis Drake Hotel. will weather to a green patina, tomycin, is on his way here to
57.00 per year
His most recent post with the
tuies, and 100 new appartments.
flanked'h “kyel’’“ ^HuVV'X at°”-bomW *
479
QUEEN
st. west
organization was as executive as
Toronto
2-B,
Ont.
sistant manager of the St. FranFacilities
1
with his family.
EMpire 6-5005
Gara
The Japanese Cultural and sis Hotel in San Francisco.
A subterranean, self-parkiug t^
-trade Center includes three com
A staff of over 100 Japanese
mercial buildings: the San Fran- speaking employees serves under fare «^ tX^XX^ V 800 ^ ^ ^ Pennsylvania State
Building, the International McCaffree.
Sundtog NihonmSh^ea
“e”‘al Hl?lth I"s,ilnti“ ^ take
Building and the Kintetsu Build
Prices at the Miyako Hotel
Elevators throno-hnnf th?
Papt in the {peace movement in
ing. The latter two are linked range from §15 per night (for a
Elevators throughout the Cen- japaili He
be acc t ,
by a Bridge of Shops, which standard single room to $75 per the Sarai65 ta
Female Hefr WanteF
lecturer of English .at Hiroshima
spans Webster Street. The east night (foi* the deluxe Japanese- buildings? central mlte mFto Jo^“»> "’omen’s college here.;
Pj?®^TORS must be exoeri°nc°d
ernmost building in the Center style suites).
■ladies sportswear. AddIv Mis- c.
is the Japanese Consulate Gene
the hotel and offices.
He is being accompanied by his ley, 8th floor, 96 Soadina ATheatre-Restaurant
(To:
‘ '
ral Building.
Cultural Dianlav
daughters, Andrea, 14, and onto).
The
Theatre-Restaurant,
still
West of this is the Miyako
.
Vanessa, 13, on his sea trip to
^^S good at figures and f»«h.
As a permanent display, Japa- Japan.
Hotel, which also provides, on under construction at the western
public. Permanent position. Sa’ar/c^
end
of
the
Center,
will
boast
the
nese
craftsmen
demonstrate
traM
r
•
mensurate with ability Coll
one full floor of the adjoining
• •
.lgeI 1S already here, Mi^orada^
Consulate General Building, lux finest technical facilities in Ame ditional arts and crafts in various
ury guest accommodations and rica fox- the presentation of thea public areas of the Center. They arriving m October last year, WOMEN lor repairs and alier^
trical spectacles. Specially de work, in their native costumes, £, •
??w staying at the World ?tenWSy Cleaners,. 249 Donlands anauthentic Japanese-style suites.
signed machinery will make pos on tatami mats specially providCenter and actively 1518 Bayview Ave. (Toronto).
The Theatre-Restaurant at the sible the onstage simulation of ed for this purpose.
taking part in the “promoting
westernmost end of the Center floods, waterfalls and fires.
Goods made by the craftsmen clHzens’ dialogues for peace”
will feature both Japanese and
Paul K. Asada, D.C., NJ).
are
available for sale.
campaign which is being spread
The stage will incorporate a
international productions on a
These displays serve a double |mOng intellectuals here.
“Doctor of Chiropractic”
stage specially constructed for turntable, 43 feet in diameter, in
the
middle
of
which
will
be
an
purpose, giving tourists a chance
According to Mrs. Geiger, hei
the presentation
of
elaborate
• 728A St. Clair Ave. West
S-foot by 32-foot rectangular lift. to see the production of Japanese I husband is worried very much
(/z block West of Christie)
dramatic spectacles.
When locked in position — at
TORONTO
■At the heart of the Center will whatever height is desired — the handicrafts firsthand, and also about the growing war in Viet651-8060
Res. 621-1989
stand the Peace Pagoda, a sym lift wilhrotate with the turntable. attracting potential customers to | na™ arid wants to devote himbol of peace and friendship'be This device will make possible the many shops and restaurants self to the cause of peace in Asia.
tween Japan
and
the United an enormous range of stage ef of the Center.
Now 54, Dr. Geiger graduated
Demonstrations will eventually from Yale University in 1936 and
States.
fects
and
spectaculaiscene
H li a good policy to
include brush-painting, anima taught biochemistry at several
Beneath the Center is an 800- changes.
have
the BIGHT. POLICY
carvings (done by .an Ainu from American universities. He dis
car self-parking garage.
The Theatre-Restaurant will Hokkaido),
Consult
paper-design done covered streptomycin with Dr. S.
present some Kabuki, as well as with a fine-edged knife, potteryCommercial Buildings
William Wales Ltd.
The San Francisco, Internati Japanese stage revues, spectacles m a k i n g, lacquerware-making, A. Waxman in 1942.
and
international
musicals.
onal and Kintetsu Buildings are
Insurance Agents
toymaking (including handcarv
■It will accommodate 800 din ing of Kokeshi dolls, Fukushima
all designed around the central
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
malls landscaped in Japanese ner guests, and 200 more in the wooden horses and lion masks
“e
garden style. Skylights illumin balcony, where beverages will be from Yamagata and Toyama),
Phone 921-3171
Brit
ate the malls and open stairwells served.
papier-mache toymaking, kimono
'urii
provide a view from the upper ’ The owners of the Theatre- painting, woodcuts, and hand
hesi
Restaurant
are
Dream
Entertain
stories of the garden areas and
looming of vegetable-dyed tex
ments, Inc., whose president is tiles.
business activity below.
acri
San Francisco Building: The Kunizo Matsuo.
Developers
TOKYO.—The Japanese Trans
JAMES KAMINO
L-shaped San Francisco Building
Peace Pagoda
le k
National-Braemar, Inc., a sin port Ministry recently tightener
is owned by the Center develop
The Peace Pagoda, soon to be gle-purpose corporation, formed auto safety standards.
k>tho
ers, National-Braemar, Inc. Ad erected, will stand in a landscap to develop the Center. The presi
iese
Car
makers
will
be
requirec
jacent to it. on the ..east is the ed plaza near the main entrance dent of National-Braemar, Inc.
to
equip
automobiles
with
safety
Japanese
Consulate
General to the Center. Symbolic of mu is Masayuki Tokioka, who makes
Building, and, on the west, the tual goodwill between Japan and his headquarters in Honolulu. belts and head rests, strengthen
EM. 4-9913
Peace Pagoda.
the United States, the Pagoda Hawaii. He also heads National safety glass for windshields,; two
International Building: The In wFl be the hub of the Japanese Securities and Investment, Inc.. front and two rear lights for.
(TOHONTO)
ternational Building", also owned Cultural and Trade Center.
International Savings and Loan automobiles to signal emergency
I F
by
National-Braemar, Inc., is
Association, National Mortgage stops, additional mirrors on large
Design:
The
Peace
Pagoda
will
pet b
next to the Theatre-Restaurant.
trucks and buses and device to
be round in shape, composed of and Finance Co., and the Island signal occurrence of accidents at
Kied
Bru'ge of Shops: The bridge, 12 circular pillars which together Insurance Co.
Mini
night.
winch spans Webster Street, is will support its five roofs. Its
The vice president is Paul Bro
If the
135 feet long. It too, is owned shape was inspired by that of man, who serves as principal re
- appt
The ministry also called for
by
National-Braemar, Inc. On the round pagodas dedicated to presentative for the developers
•’•. her side of its 40-foot wide eternal peace by Empress Koken He was largely responsible for establishment of new standards
Pe t
center passageway are shops. In- 1200 years ago in Nara, ancient planning and coordination. Othm- for brake efficiency and improve
| disc
ment
of
fire
extinguishers
on
smred by the Ponte Vecchio of -anital of Japan.
officers are
Franklin Tokioka, trucks carrying flammable car
Mnce
Florence, Italy, it is believed to
K K
The main body of the Pagoda secretary, and Neil Kosasa. trea goes.
the
greatest
be the first shop-lined bridge in h of white precast concrete? Its surer.
;
fethod
America. By crossing it, one may five-tiered roof is composed of
No date was set for the en
Thi
Architects
gift of all
walk through the entire Center 1evels which decrease in diameter
forcement.
kemb
The
overall
plan
for
the
Center
without leaving its air-condition- (from 46 to 34 feet) as they in
hpane
done bv Minoru Yamasaki of
•^l cover.
crease in height. They are cover ras
M®8
roy, Michigan, in association
’ Kintetsu Building: The Kinte ed with copper platine- which will
ten pai
with Van Bourg. Nakamura and ■
tsu Building is owned by Kinte weather to a eTeen patina.
^ oth(
Associates
of
Berkeley,
Calif.
tsu Enterprises Company of Ame
Atop, the highest roof level is
enese 1
rica, a subsidiary of Kinki-Nip a “kurin,” a nine-ringed spire,
® En
pon Railway Co., Ltd., of Japan. symbolic of the .highest virtue.
Ed
Ide
.
.
It is located to the west of the
pd i
The highest point of the Pa
Peace Plaza.
(Continued from Page 1')
Isolate
goda is a “hoshu,” and ornamen
| Ibus
Consulate General Building
tal gold ball with flaming head.
dent Edward Ide.
L^e ii
Situated at the eastern end of
Architect: Professor
Yoshiro
It was reported that last year
■bad be
the Center, this building is the Taniguchi of Tokyo, an authori
a Sc
new home of the Japanese Con ty on ancient Japanese structur tome 950 paid-up members were
■J look)
sulate General at San Francisco. es. designed the Peace Pagoda iecorded. Other reports includ
eraied
On the third floor are spectai and the plaza in which it "will ed the review of the group’s par
deluxe accommodations of the stand.
ticipation in last year’s Centenr fefjj
Miyako Hotel, to which the Japa
(The Pagoda and plaza are the nial project
work with immigranese Consulate General Buildine only portions of the Center not
L1' Wa
is connected by a covered walk designed by the overall archi tion groups participation in the
way.
ni
tects. Minoru Yamasaki, and Van Human Rights conference, the
p of :
Bourg. Nakamura).
k
Miyako Hotel
annual visit to Nipponia Home
The 14-storev Mival
and
other- welfare work.
Hotel
national of San
Francisco en
provides 172 guest-rooms
;
p in
The Toronto JCCA looks forgineered the Pagoda, developing
L^ttrage
with modified unken bathtubs
ward to a busy year of participa
color television
FW ,
s. air-condi- new techniques in the precasting
tion. They will keep in mind that
tioning, shoji-panels. and picture- of concrete.
Builders: Martinelli Construe— 1968 has been designated by the
. J2 JurIt
window views of Sai
Included in the hotel’s facilities
United Nations as Human Righ
Sst t
Landscaping: The Pagoda will Year.
are restaurant, cocktail lounge
stand
m
the
middle
of
a
granite
with nightly entertainment, con
A Ko
ference rooms, tour and private Ol?‘^ned reflecting pool which
will be circular at the back and
dining facilities.
Among the 16 luxurious rooms ^iangnlar at the front, rather
OFFSET ANO LtTTFRPEESS
in the adjacent Japanese Consul 1Ke a keyhole. This shape is takthat
of
burial
mounds
ate General Building are two
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES. LETTERHEADS
an'^ ^th century Japanese
suits done in authentic Japanese
a
stvle. with tatami mats, sunken nob.es: some of these mounds
were larger than the Egyptian
i?i ?5cei
bathtubs, and futon beds.
pyramids.
^4tjM r»L
..The Miyako Hotel is owned by
l
The Pagoda will be illuminat-1 MH s. KOMO
iin.
479 Queen St West
Toronto 2-B/ Ont
Kintetsu Enterprises Company ' ed at night.
- | ’27 SAY ST^ TORONTO Fhone 36S-976S
CLASSIFIED
IV
Japanese Hit
Hard For Auto
Safety Standards
T.V. Service
YOUR
Bouquet
Invitation
Line
PRINTING
^®^O
THE NEW CANADIAN