Page 1
he
Image
Changing
# TOKYO.—With the coming of age of Japanese civil
^viation, the image of the stewardess has changed.
1 Until not, long ago, airlines put, special emphasis
gm her intelligence and good style in their advertise®ents.
pin fact, the cream of,Japanese girls almost mobbed
Recruitment offices of, airlines. At that time to become
fen air hostess was quite a reputation.
H But today the one-time stewardess image which was
glamorized to the point of being a myth is crumblino-.
1 Passengers interviewed at Tokyo International AirJort one recent day pointed out this change.
S “I thought stewardesses were gaudy. But girls back
gn my town look much gaudier than'hostesses of mv
|)lane,” said a o2-year-old male passenger from Ka
goshima. He made the comment just after the first
Sight in his life from his hometown to Tokyo.
Of
Today's
Japanese
Gae me kindness rat1-—
rather than b
aged Housewife declared
W a middle"The other
v when I gor
sick during the flight, mv
stewards;
was very ate2,tlve' She was great.”
b bo^s as if Bis dav8 of
They work hard'^ pretty air hostes
they must be hardv, fir^ nousemaids, don’t thev?
oi ally offered another
male passenger.
*
shorter and in flight ^vU.
^pidly becoming
.
6
^eiMces more comvlicated
lo'add.
,r0,t,"S cartoonist Eizo Tomita has this
women'
IniiiiiiiiiimHiiHiHnJiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiinHiiiinniniiji!
Stewardesses
Pa sound more intelligent than <
And
iasmon models can make big monev
or?"?4es acknow’edge that the days of glamor
ous, stewardesses are gone.
the
recruitment officer at
- pAa A,r P’nes, explain what is happening.
scion *
applicants who are too conscmtis ot their g-ood looks. We tell them, 'Why don’t
xou become a fashion model?' ”
Murayama says. -'From last
.. vear we dropped the
once customary phrase 'fair of face and figure' from
our recruitment
----- j ad's.”
Why ?
"I-or one thing.” Murayama
nave become varied
W hen we flew only privileged people, we did not
(Continued on Page 8)
.......... .. ................ "I,ll,'ll'llll™'™'''™"»-^
.....................
he m Canadian
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Oriain
WEDNESDAY. MAY S I96S
Origin
yol. XXXII—No. 36
liiiiniiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiifiiiin
2221222222121^
... .
Jessie L. Beattie’s
STRENGTH for the
BRIDGE
$5.00
Toronto, Ont.
^■•^■HiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiuinnniHnnm]
New Canadian Exclusive . . .
S
Japanese Promoters Put $500 Million
“gsf“ ST? Heat 0" «i Frozen North
HIIIUH^l
JU 5
nono
fro
„-, oil.
.
j W
VW ’business
businessknows
knows
front eih. Without the slightest inhibition, Tokyo pro- oil, ouilding vast timber mills and fish canneries
Ir, j Ti.
the 12th ins,allne»t of “The Ministry
r
fmanciers have just begun a bold developing new plants and factories and setting
of
|
$o00
million
thrust
into the "frozen north.”
°£ trying offices. Ignoring all
Scythe
in aSY a1’! 20Urb?Si capital and technology into competition Tokyo firms are regular]v outbidding
their American rivals and now buy St) percent of
Alaska and Canadas Yukon and British Colum- Alaska's total exports.
timber wIn Ca^a, they are d°inS‘ the same. The Mitsui
Mining Co. has recently signed a huge eight-year
r. wSaered Theology in Union College of rc
“f Muapmt ready for the exportation of extern contract worth $250 million for zinc ore, and wi’l
VI ,”! ^ ?”"“' "■» « ^ - Japan 35 years ago .iU '
mW up the entire output from a mine in remote
vvnite Horse.
OIL HUNT
wHiTT* "V I"8 '"tC and dau^hter Far missionary work in LeBoth in Alaska and the Yukon, Japanese capital
In Alaska Japanese giant. like Sumitomo, Mihas already helped spark memories of the Klon
dy prospecting for dike rush.
i
: £« SN S ^h7d™“
.
ha.,
In the drowsy Alaskan seaport
of Ketchikan, in southern Alaska,
Japan s Kawasaki Kisen will
By THE REV. TADASHI MITSUI
BLENHEIM Ont.—Computerized hospital care, a revolutionary build a sprawling new harbor for
|llth?Xf^
followed these i
_
high-seas fishing fleets while, at
innovation that has hospital administrators buzzing owes a
men,
and
by
1915,
I
deal
to
a
former,
young
Blenheim
resident.
°
1
Kodiak, on one of the Aleutian
8Jd men. Althou^tSe^^
the-e J_aP«nese M'dain- ^ |gj 5SS&F2S Islands, Japanese companies will
in the
construct an enormous cannery
r Mot without 2
Cnnsnan churches ii
for Alaskan king crab and saf^difficulties adjusting5 tinsel311 S^nr/ to have
.ve more
more or
or less
less some
some | sweeping changes "the brain” can make i” hospiS
6 mon, as well as
reJapanese imm^ranR
t
j°- lfe- 111 Car^da and among the
The University of Western Ontario graduate, now regional search centre.
» Serkan o^^
^cult to follow- the paths
meaica coordinator with IBM of Canada, says that in a CalifornH
Other major projects include
®f knowledge of the
f
musters because of their lack hospital, a patient can pass through 20 hospital stations in a period
a §50 million pulp mill at Sitka,
ftroblem. Some diffimiH e country and because of the language of three hours with help of a computer.
P
southern
Alaska,
and’
office
Win from that of £ tWere caused by a difference in class
Under
present
conditions
the
same
operation
could
involve
buildings and sawmills.
We Christians belong J
immigrants. In Japan, most of
days of waiting for test results.
Tor industrial Japan, however,
KVhe Protestant ChrhHan
1111®116*^31 class in the early days
. be writes that the computer won’t replace doctors or their
»el°ng .to the povertv
most of the immigrants i relationship with patients, but will vastly speed and extend their the prospects of a major oil
strike are the most exciting. The
» most of other immi2n+ken flshemeii and farmers as seen diagnostic capabilities.
newly-formed
Alaska,
jointly
ministers leSS « T®56 »» A® reasons why ,
This, Mr. Yamada says, will increase the doctor’s effectiveness
owned
by
Mitsubishi,
Sumitomo
®to Japan or for further1^
aAsh?rt time, and had gone either
b'l" ° concentrate on tasks that require insight'
®enous situations \vhen
feW m”?isters ran into very skill and understanding.
and two other companies, has al
ready
put aside §41 million for
revolutionary
N
tried something very courageous
...
Tamada was. a systems engineer manager for 3U years
Thus, the Jan® X X
the case of Rev- Fumio Matsu- with. IBM, pioneers in medical computors, prior to his "present preliminary development and ex
ploration.
f* leadership until g ?
? in Canada had t0 rail for position.
gibe church.
“
Canadian-trained ministers appeared in
J® a Senate of Blenheim District High School and a
SIBERIAN PLAN
member
of
tne
provincial
engineering
profession.
fcese missions
111 various fields of the JaOn P?e Pacific’s other coast,
*
*
*
J.C. Suggests Computerized Hospitals
meanwhile, the Japanese govern
||yntt0 Vancouver
Xo5 °J\ S Xawa arrived from Japan and
ment
has already began negotia
came to NhS^wX keV'
Akagawa and Rev. Ma- Japanese To Double Space For Expe '70 Fair
tions with Russia to open up Si
TOKYO. — Available rooms in
their studies
' .Westminster and Victoria upon finishm,S’^and the International beria. On his recent visit M. K.
taVu''er, came S J t
College. Into the W.M.S? house in Osaka, Kyoto, and Kobe are ex- r?°
Hotel Osaka, with 150 double Baybakov, chairman of Russia’s
I Japari, to succeed
e ?°Wie’ after some years of service I pected to double to accommodate rooms.
all-powerful State Planning Com
Miss Howie i? 3hss, Boston. Miss Chuko Hibi, trained the record number of visitors
In the port city of Kobe, the mittee, openly invited the heln
fc^orated and remodel?6 X ^l11636 helper. The house was anticipated during Japan’s 1970 lakarazuka Hotel is adding 119 of Japanese big business in build
Etrs w'omen from Hip nS° ^at k became a sort of model home World Exhibition at Osaka.
rooms accommodating 218 guests' ing an oil pipeline between Tyu
The number of hotel rooms in And the new Rokko Oriental men and the port of Nakhodka.
I time of their adopted land^t Came ^° 'earn ^e customs and
the three cities will be increased Hotel, which is expected to open He also asked for aid in developfrom
4,839 to 8.040, providing ac in June, will accommodate 200
popper mines at Udokan and
E^ ^adon thereGa
Ozawa, arrived at the mission, he found
commodations for more than 14.- persons in 60 rooms, 12 of them
Many La u 7 discouraging one. The members were 000 people, according to the Ja the large Japanese style.
"'ere not mXh °Ut^f touch with the church so long pan Hotel Association.
But why Japan’s sudden in
•^^°??Lberr the three cities
terest
in remote Arctic regions ?
Lf' tVas revitalized
Through Ozawa’s strenuous efforts.
7,785 Western-stvle
In Kyoto, Japan's ancient capi will offer
-rou^t beck ml/ a 10nJ P^’iod of laxity. He successAs tensions increase in the FarlX°Tere of the niis^T and ^•mrents, so that the whole tal, six hotels are expanding to rooms accommodating 13,606 per East, Japan has learned that her
sons and
255
Jananese-stvle supply lines must be kept safelv
^ of Gaining in CanL^^n11 to cban&e- Because of his back- provide 752 new rooms before rooms housing about 750.
the fair opens in the spring of
open- and the Arctic is closest.
iZ^NTe of institution a ,na -. Ozawa succeded in organizing Kabu- 1970. A new facility, the Japan
Kjw prayer meeting "i°rk in tbe mission. Outside of Worship
Royal Hotel will be comnleted
idzpi127’ Bpworth
C aSS meeting-. Sabbath School, Women’s in time for the influx of visitors,
c?nducted
.arid, other ordinary pastoral -work, with 256 rooms accommodating
KAWAGUCHI, Saitama, — 4
Q1?social
1^12! er-]
evils a
drinking and gambling and 500 persons.
Fukushima Prefecture, with a
Nv-S^Tan custom- ° ^ Canadian Citizenship to teach English
lokyo
factory hand gave UmThe
recently
opened
Kyoto
Pain a f^ °f anger when
ervices.
cultuves, interpreting, counseling, emseL up at the local police sta
lace-Side Hotel
downtown
J
IS
,
7?
er
toM him he did not
^ion s;mce he wa^
tion
recentlv
after
fatally
S° D]ecam.e .the spokesman for the Japanese Kyoto has 64 rooms accommodat
reel
like
attending
his wedding
e only minister with an efficient command
strangling his
father during
ing 128 guests.
ceremony
scheduled
next dav.
a quarrel on the eve of his wed
Stevo^n
The father’s body was found
Four hotels are under con ding.
arise. Th
difficult place for the Christian Mis- struction in Osaka and three of
S???o Hemmi, a 29-vear-old Ja.ter on a bank of the Shiba
nat e custom- fishermen seemed to be more attached them will be opened bv 1970. Thev metal polisher of Adachi-ku To- River, about 300 meters from
^heculprit’s home in Adachi-ku
s and the mission there had always been are the Plaza Hotel Osaka, with
po!ice he choked to
600 double rooms: the Hotel Mai- feath his father Shoji Hemmi,
was said to have
(Continued on Page 8)
nichi Hoso, also with 600 double 61, a xarmer of Shirakawa Citv often been seen in a raving
drunk condition.
Strangles Father On Eve of Weddi
ng
Image
Changing
# TOKYO.—With the coming of age of Japanese civil
^viation, the image of the stewardess has changed.
1 Until not, long ago, airlines put, special emphasis
gm her intelligence and good style in their advertise®ents.
pin fact, the cream of,Japanese girls almost mobbed
Recruitment offices of, airlines. At that time to become
fen air hostess was quite a reputation.
H But today the one-time stewardess image which was
glamorized to the point of being a myth is crumblino-.
1 Passengers interviewed at Tokyo International AirJort one recent day pointed out this change.
S “I thought stewardesses were gaudy. But girls back
gn my town look much gaudier than'hostesses of mv
|)lane,” said a o2-year-old male passenger from Ka
goshima. He made the comment just after the first
Sight in his life from his hometown to Tokyo.
Of
Today's
Japanese
Gae me kindness rat1-—
rather than b
aged Housewife declared
W a middle"The other
v when I gor
sick during the flight, mv
stewards;
was very ate2,tlve' She was great.”
b bo^s as if Bis dav8 of
They work hard'^ pretty air hostes
they must be hardv, fir^ nousemaids, don’t thev?
oi ally offered another
male passenger.
*
shorter and in flight ^vU.
^pidly becoming
.
6
^eiMces more comvlicated
lo'add.
,r0,t,"S cartoonist Eizo Tomita has this
women'
IniiiiiiiiiimHiiHiHnJiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiinHiiiinniniiji!
Stewardesses
Pa sound more intelligent than <
And
iasmon models can make big monev
or?"?4es acknow’edge that the days of glamor
ous, stewardesses are gone.
the
recruitment officer at
- pAa A,r P’nes, explain what is happening.
scion *
applicants who are too conscmtis ot their g-ood looks. We tell them, 'Why don’t
xou become a fashion model?' ”
Murayama says. -'From last
.. vear we dropped the
once customary phrase 'fair of face and figure' from
our recruitment
----- j ad's.”
Why ?
"I-or one thing.” Murayama
nave become varied
W hen we flew only privileged people, we did not
(Continued on Page 8)
.......... .. ................ "I,ll,'ll'llll™'™'''™"»-^
.....................
he m Canadian
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Oriain
WEDNESDAY. MAY S I96S
Origin
yol. XXXII—No. 36
liiiiniiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiifiiiin
2221222222121^
... .
Jessie L. Beattie’s
STRENGTH for the
BRIDGE
$5.00
Toronto, Ont.
^■•^■HiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiuinnniHnnm]
New Canadian Exclusive . . .
S
Japanese Promoters Put $500 Million
“gsf“ ST? Heat 0" «i Frozen North
HIIIUH^l
JU 5
nono
fro
„-, oil.
.
j W
VW ’business
businessknows
knows
front eih. Without the slightest inhibition, Tokyo pro- oil, ouilding vast timber mills and fish canneries
Ir, j Ti.
the 12th ins,allne»t of “The Ministry
r
fmanciers have just begun a bold developing new plants and factories and setting
of
|
$o00
million
thrust
into the "frozen north.”
°£ trying offices. Ignoring all
Scythe
in aSY a1’! 20Urb?Si capital and technology into competition Tokyo firms are regular]v outbidding
their American rivals and now buy St) percent of
Alaska and Canadas Yukon and British Colum- Alaska's total exports.
timber wIn Ca^a, they are d°inS‘ the same. The Mitsui
Mining Co. has recently signed a huge eight-year
r. wSaered Theology in Union College of rc
“f Muapmt ready for the exportation of extern contract worth $250 million for zinc ore, and wi’l
VI ,”! ^ ?”"“' "■» « ^ - Japan 35 years ago .iU '
mW up the entire output from a mine in remote
vvnite Horse.
OIL HUNT
wHiTT* "V I"8 '"tC and dau^hter Far missionary work in LeBoth in Alaska and the Yukon, Japanese capital
In Alaska Japanese giant. like Sumitomo, Mihas already helped spark memories of the Klon
dy prospecting for dike rush.
i
: £« SN S ^h7d™“
.
ha.,
In the drowsy Alaskan seaport
of Ketchikan, in southern Alaska,
Japan s Kawasaki Kisen will
By THE REV. TADASHI MITSUI
BLENHEIM Ont.—Computerized hospital care, a revolutionary build a sprawling new harbor for
|llth?Xf^
followed these i
_
high-seas fishing fleets while, at
innovation that has hospital administrators buzzing owes a
men,
and
by
1915,
I
deal
to
a
former,
young
Blenheim
resident.
°
1
Kodiak, on one of the Aleutian
8Jd men. Althou^tSe^^
the-e J_aP«nese M'dain- ^ |gj 5SS&F2S Islands, Japanese companies will
in the
construct an enormous cannery
r Mot without 2
Cnnsnan churches ii
for Alaskan king crab and saf^difficulties adjusting5 tinsel311 S^nr/ to have
.ve more
more or
or less
less some
some | sweeping changes "the brain” can make i” hospiS
6 mon, as well as
reJapanese imm^ranR
t
j°- lfe- 111 Car^da and among the
The University of Western Ontario graduate, now regional search centre.
» Serkan o^^
^cult to follow- the paths
meaica coordinator with IBM of Canada, says that in a CalifornH
Other major projects include
®f knowledge of the
f
musters because of their lack hospital, a patient can pass through 20 hospital stations in a period
a §50 million pulp mill at Sitka,
ftroblem. Some diffimiH e country and because of the language of three hours with help of a computer.
P
southern
Alaska,
and’
office
Win from that of £ tWere caused by a difference in class
Under
present
conditions
the
same
operation
could
involve
buildings and sawmills.
We Christians belong J
immigrants. In Japan, most of
days of waiting for test results.
Tor industrial Japan, however,
KVhe Protestant ChrhHan
1111®116*^31 class in the early days
. be writes that the computer won’t replace doctors or their
»el°ng .to the povertv
most of the immigrants i relationship with patients, but will vastly speed and extend their the prospects of a major oil
strike are the most exciting. The
» most of other immi2n+ken flshemeii and farmers as seen diagnostic capabilities.
newly-formed
Alaska,
jointly
ministers leSS « T®56 »» A® reasons why ,
This, Mr. Yamada says, will increase the doctor’s effectiveness
owned
by
Mitsubishi,
Sumitomo
®to Japan or for further1^
aAsh?rt time, and had gone either
b'l" ° concentrate on tasks that require insight'
®enous situations \vhen
feW m”?isters ran into very skill and understanding.
and two other companies, has al
ready
put aside §41 million for
revolutionary
N
tried something very courageous
...
Tamada was. a systems engineer manager for 3U years
Thus, the Jan® X X
the case of Rev- Fumio Matsu- with. IBM, pioneers in medical computors, prior to his "present preliminary development and ex
ploration.
f* leadership until g ?
? in Canada had t0 rail for position.
gibe church.
“
Canadian-trained ministers appeared in
J® a Senate of Blenheim District High School and a
SIBERIAN PLAN
member
of
tne
provincial
engineering
profession.
fcese missions
111 various fields of the JaOn P?e Pacific’s other coast,
*
*
*
J.C. Suggests Computerized Hospitals
meanwhile, the Japanese govern
||yntt0 Vancouver
Xo5 °J\ S Xawa arrived from Japan and
ment
has already began negotia
came to NhS^wX keV'
Akagawa and Rev. Ma- Japanese To Double Space For Expe '70 Fair
tions with Russia to open up Si
TOKYO. — Available rooms in
their studies
' .Westminster and Victoria upon finishm,S’^and the International beria. On his recent visit M. K.
taVu''er, came S J t
College. Into the W.M.S? house in Osaka, Kyoto, and Kobe are ex- r?°
Hotel Osaka, with 150 double Baybakov, chairman of Russia’s
I Japari, to succeed
e ?°Wie’ after some years of service I pected to double to accommodate rooms.
all-powerful State Planning Com
Miss Howie i? 3hss, Boston. Miss Chuko Hibi, trained the record number of visitors
In the port city of Kobe, the mittee, openly invited the heln
fc^orated and remodel?6 X ^l11636 helper. The house was anticipated during Japan’s 1970 lakarazuka Hotel is adding 119 of Japanese big business in build
Etrs w'omen from Hip nS° ^at k became a sort of model home World Exhibition at Osaka.
rooms accommodating 218 guests' ing an oil pipeline between Tyu
The number of hotel rooms in And the new Rokko Oriental men and the port of Nakhodka.
I time of their adopted land^t Came ^° 'earn ^e customs and
the three cities will be increased Hotel, which is expected to open He also asked for aid in developfrom
4,839 to 8.040, providing ac in June, will accommodate 200
popper mines at Udokan and
E^ ^adon thereGa
Ozawa, arrived at the mission, he found
commodations for more than 14.- persons in 60 rooms, 12 of them
Many La u 7 discouraging one. The members were 000 people, according to the Ja the large Japanese style.
"'ere not mXh °Ut^f touch with the church so long pan Hotel Association.
But why Japan’s sudden in
•^^°??Lberr the three cities
terest
in remote Arctic regions ?
Lf' tVas revitalized
Through Ozawa’s strenuous efforts.
7,785 Western-stvle
In Kyoto, Japan's ancient capi will offer
-rou^t beck ml/ a 10nJ P^’iod of laxity. He successAs tensions increase in the FarlX°Tere of the niis^T and ^•mrents, so that the whole tal, six hotels are expanding to rooms accommodating 13,606 per East, Japan has learned that her
sons and
255
Jananese-stvle supply lines must be kept safelv
^ of Gaining in CanL^^n11 to cban&e- Because of his back- provide 752 new rooms before rooms housing about 750.
the fair opens in the spring of
open- and the Arctic is closest.
iZ^NTe of institution a ,na -. Ozawa succeded in organizing Kabu- 1970. A new facility, the Japan
Kjw prayer meeting "i°rk in tbe mission. Outside of Worship
Royal Hotel will be comnleted
idzpi127’ Bpworth
C aSS meeting-. Sabbath School, Women’s in time for the influx of visitors,
c?nducted
.arid, other ordinary pastoral -work, with 256 rooms accommodating
KAWAGUCHI, Saitama, — 4
Q1?social
1^12! er-]
evils a
drinking and gambling and 500 persons.
Fukushima Prefecture, with a
Nv-S^Tan custom- ° ^ Canadian Citizenship to teach English
lokyo
factory hand gave UmThe
recently
opened
Kyoto
Pain a f^ °f anger when
ervices.
cultuves, interpreting, counseling, emseL up at the local police sta
lace-Side Hotel
downtown
J
IS
,
7?
er
toM him he did not
^ion s;mce he wa^
tion
recentlv
after
fatally
S° D]ecam.e .the spokesman for the Japanese Kyoto has 64 rooms accommodat
reel
like
attending
his wedding
e only minister with an efficient command
strangling his
father during
ing 128 guests.
ceremony
scheduled
next dav.
a quarrel on the eve of his wed
Stevo^n
The father’s body was found
Four hotels are under con ding.
arise. Th
difficult place for the Christian Mis- struction in Osaka and three of
S???o Hemmi, a 29-vear-old Ja.ter on a bank of the Shiba
nat e custom- fishermen seemed to be more attached them will be opened bv 1970. Thev metal polisher of Adachi-ku To- River, about 300 meters from
^heculprit’s home in Adachi-ku
s and the mission there had always been are the Plaza Hotel Osaka, with
po!ice he choked to
600 double rooms: the Hotel Mai- feath his father Shoji Hemmi,
was said to have
(Continued on Page 8)
nichi Hoso, also with 600 double 61, a xarmer of Shirakawa Citv often been seen in a raving
drunk condition.
Strangles Father On Eve of Weddi
ng
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V
Page 7
Wednesday, _May_ 8, _1968
&5
PAGE 7
The Vigorous Bishop Of Kyoto
Rte a good policy to
LONG, long ago, there lived in Kyoto an old bishoj
^Kancho. He was the chief priest of the Ninnaji Temple. milieu
A man
i^of noWe origin, highly learned and virtuous. He wa
s also quit'
TORONTO 1
Registration On May 12 th
Tr vv gorous.
Z ; ^7
eJn' Trinity-Bellwoods.
'A. W
Once Kancho
had
h 1
wsome parts
K J of the temple structure repairLove fift
?
" at ^V-Belhvoods May 12
*
eh. -Many hands worked very hard every day on scaffoldings and
O'e tifteen, )„ve thirty, love forty. Game’ — Tennis
J J.dders. He sometimes went his rounds to inspect the work One KitkyZh™'" “
Registration ^ly jo
evening, after all the workers went home,, he came out alone t
at
: ' De site. He walked around the place for a while, and when he was a J«? !L W
>'w Tri"ity Te""is Ci“b *
Ingoing back to his quarterns, there suddenly stood in his way a
p.m.
Ha"' « 2 Wellesley W. on May 11 « S:30
•nan dressed in black with a black hood. As it was already dark
h ncho could not tell who this man was.
For further information, phone Jane 532-2131. - J.p.
-Who is this?” Kancho asked calmly. The strange man sit*
on his knee, replied threateningly:
’ ' '
tor
?” ’^rtal Love" May 12
■
"He! he! As you see, I am a pauper. I want vour fine ki
mmo, and so I am here before your very eyes.” He seemed to --r Sunday, May 12th at 3 ultmsl Ce",re Film Society
11 e bilm Society selection
;Behave a drawn sword behind his back. .Kancho, however was not for
and 8 p.m. will be “Immortal Love” __
no Hito.
B>rprised at all. He said calmly, “So you are a pauper? Poor
This film pm an Ac^emy Award nominee for rhe Best ForeBut don?t J'ou know how to beg for mercv? Such
ign
Language
^^impoliteness! I shall have to mend your ways.” No sooner had
J-m of 1961. Keisuke Kinoshita, noted for his inherent ability
We uttered the words than he kicked the man with crushing force
standing directors S Sw “'^^ > “”' °f JaPan’5
^
tO
hiS su^^se at kanchfs
action .he next moment he disappeared. Kancho, wonder
| ,|ng where the man had gone, went back to his quarters and
fclled together his acolytes. He told them the story. £ that
Dauact ot Aaravama).
sweep of Mount Aso (like
the clT r'? “d
Miss Effie Chow, noted Chinese cusine expert i
aCt° ‘ eJ t0°k him °ff the bar and angrily drao-o-ed
J|ghim down to the ground. When hauled before the bishop Se holding classes in Authentic Chinese Cusine
presently
’
adapted
to
western
ferobber was very humble.
entertaining”, on Wed., May Sth and Thursday
BL ?t bl,Ct 5CTtIemanaddressed
Kancho tenderly “re- ' to 9 p.m. and on Saturday, May 11th from 1 , May 9th from
to 3 p.m. at the
K LZk' p
atten,I,t t0 asMlt
made Consumer’s Gas Co., 19 Toronto Street.
-matt foi it. Be a gooa man from now on.”
Cost is $2. per lesson with all proceeds to
Project Concern,
Kancho <luickly took off his warm kimono and a non-profit medical relief organization.
Schedule and subjects are as follows:
Bitheir master did0?]61'
aco.lytes watched amazed at all that
Wednesday,
May 8, 1968 7:00 — 9:00 p.m.
®ullv received the
P°bber’ tlmdly extending his hands, grateM
•
d
kjm°no and dlsaPPeared into the darkness.
1. Crispy whole sweet and soui’ fish
2. Black bean steamed spare ribs
J v-St0^ °f Kancho’s mercy was handed
down to posterity
zS^1
3. Beans with fermented been cake
Temple- Those who later heard
it were surprised
4.
Shrimp chips
|jfL
T?’eat stren°th of having kicked a robber high up
Thursday,
May 9, 1968 7:00 — 9:00 p.m.
gave been caught V^V^r^
r°bbe:r, in falling, “mu2
1. Deep fried prawns
Llhe many via™
b 3 bar °f the scaffoldings. It is said that
2.
Almond chicken
Burelv ^u^
temple in later d'ays must
3. Shrimp stuffed mushrooms
p
.
.ucceo6or6 to Kancho. Hokubei Mainichi
4. White turnip with dried shrimps
Saturday, May 11, 1968 1:00 — 3:00 p.m.
1. Lobster black bean sauce
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
2. Cauliflower with dried scallops
SUNDAY, MAY 12, 1968
3.
Palace diced pork
m.A
Parents' Day
^eHgrious School
4. Agar agar dessert — almond delight.
918 Bathurst St.
.Morning Service
Japanese Service
Parents' Day Service
Telephone:
534-4302
When Buying Or Selling A Home
Call: KEN HORI
^■T3 JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
f
ll-
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
South of Bloor.
SUNDAY, MAY 12, 1968, 11:30 A.M.
7 Ena^ «d Church School - 11:30 A.M.
Jananoi
~ Rev- G444-5159
Japanese — Rev. M. Norisue 766-5632
A warm welcome to all.
.
—
$UY & Sell
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perivale Cres.
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough
Warehouse Clearance Sale
TOSH IWAI
mell real estate ltd.
Open to the public every Friday and Saturday’ from 10.00 a.m.
to 2.00 p.m. Come See — Come Save — Factory clearance of
Samples, Seconds, and Ends of Lines. Stools, Steel Utility
Floor and Wall Cabinets, Johnny Poles, Folding Tables, Bar
becues, Utility and Sewing Machine Tables, and much more.
i'^? O’Connor Dr., Toronto, Ont.
THE NORTEX WAREHOUSE
Phone 757-5184 — Res. 757-7578
11, Dohme Avenue,
(1 Block West of the O’Connor Bowling Alievs’)
PRESIDENT
Ws Private! No Time Limit!
Takara Jewellers
® most enjoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
^eiUy of delicious food!
Plenty of free parking!
CHINA
925 Eglint
on W. Toronto
house
RU. 1-9123
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
464
Toronto
Yonge Street,
Phone 921-3171
Bum
824-8153
922-1353
ERNEST JOMOR1
Chartered
Accountant
Suite
<03
130 BLOOR ST. W.
tORONTO
Custom Picture
F rarnwg
NISHIMURA
1278 Yonoe Str«.t, Toronto 7. Ont
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
toHo Nkhimi
923-6877
KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C.
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Fishing Ttickle and
Golf Equipment
Dew Worms
551 Danforth Ave,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
UNTIL 9
OPEN FRI.
P.M.
Formal
Rentals
Now hot
Wedding#
Dances Etc.
alna
Your Home
Through
$
Coatutt
!”^
W^e acolytes got excited and ran ou£ to catch ’
’
.Ipgiow, each armed with a club and a lantern. the shameless felThey searched for
robber aU over the place, but in vain.
suddenIy one of them cried, pointir
;' his finger LeLLLL,Chinese Co°king Given By Miss Chow
K^uP"'a™- They all looked up, and lo! High
,
.
.
- 1 up, on the top of the
,T]R0NT0-Are f°u
of the many who have always want|L- ^ft°ld^S’ was hanging ^u
1CLI1wg like
line a numan
something
human being. The
They
^li immediately ran up to the spot, and found the robber danglin- vou 0 "a™ SOme °f the Secrets Of Chinese cooking? Weil here's
^roni a bar there. He was insensible with some bruises on his body your chance.
’
rc b
1
Lott. th. RIGHT POLICY
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
I
J
I
Mon. — Fri. 9—6, Sat. 9—1 p.m.
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1103. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe —
Of Toronto
CUSTOM MADE SUIT
Sub Nagai
«? Danforth Ave.
PHONE:
443-8104
TRAVEL OFFICE
Specialists
In Group Travel
Travel with your
friends and associates
and Save!
For details — phone
Stanley M. Furuya
251-0170
Office 364-7331
OOMINIO|I. .
Travel Office
55 Wellington W. Toronto
Eat.
1923
&5
PAGE 7
The Vigorous Bishop Of Kyoto
Rte a good policy to
LONG, long ago, there lived in Kyoto an old bishoj
^Kancho. He was the chief priest of the Ninnaji Temple. milieu
A man
i^of noWe origin, highly learned and virtuous. He wa
s also quit'
TORONTO 1
Registration On May 12 th
Tr vv gorous.
Z ; ^7
eJn' Trinity-Bellwoods.
'A. W
Once Kancho
had
h 1
wsome parts
K J of the temple structure repairLove fift
?
" at ^V-Belhvoods May 12
*
eh. -Many hands worked very hard every day on scaffoldings and
O'e tifteen, )„ve thirty, love forty. Game’ — Tennis
J J.dders. He sometimes went his rounds to inspect the work One KitkyZh™'" “
Registration ^ly jo
evening, after all the workers went home,, he came out alone t
at
: ' De site. He walked around the place for a while, and when he was a J«? !L W
>'w Tri"ity Te""is Ci“b *
Ingoing back to his quarterns, there suddenly stood in his way a
p.m.
Ha"' « 2 Wellesley W. on May 11 « S:30
•nan dressed in black with a black hood. As it was already dark
h ncho could not tell who this man was.
For further information, phone Jane 532-2131. - J.p.
-Who is this?” Kancho asked calmly. The strange man sit*
on his knee, replied threateningly:
’ ' '
tor
?” ’^rtal Love" May 12
■
"He! he! As you see, I am a pauper. I want vour fine ki
mmo, and so I am here before your very eyes.” He seemed to --r Sunday, May 12th at 3 ultmsl Ce",re Film Society
11 e bilm Society selection
;Behave a drawn sword behind his back. .Kancho, however was not for
and 8 p.m. will be “Immortal Love” __
no Hito.
B>rprised at all. He said calmly, “So you are a pauper? Poor
This film pm an Ac^emy Award nominee for rhe Best ForeBut don?t J'ou know how to beg for mercv? Such
ign
Language
^^impoliteness! I shall have to mend your ways.” No sooner had
J-m of 1961. Keisuke Kinoshita, noted for his inherent ability
We uttered the words than he kicked the man with crushing force
standing directors S Sw “'^^ > “”' °f JaPan’5
^
tO
hiS su^^se at kanchfs
action .he next moment he disappeared. Kancho, wonder
| ,|ng where the man had gone, went back to his quarters and
fclled together his acolytes. He told them the story. £ that
Dauact ot Aaravama).
sweep of Mount Aso (like
the clT r'? “d
Miss Effie Chow, noted Chinese cusine expert i
aCt° ‘ eJ t0°k him °ff the bar and angrily drao-o-ed
J|ghim down to the ground. When hauled before the bishop Se holding classes in Authentic Chinese Cusine
presently
’
adapted
to
western
ferobber was very humble.
entertaining”, on Wed., May Sth and Thursday
BL ?t bl,Ct 5CTtIemanaddressed
Kancho tenderly “re- ' to 9 p.m. and on Saturday, May 11th from 1 , May 9th from
to 3 p.m. at the
K LZk' p
atten,I,t t0 asMlt
made Consumer’s Gas Co., 19 Toronto Street.
-matt foi it. Be a gooa man from now on.”
Cost is $2. per lesson with all proceeds to
Project Concern,
Kancho <luickly took off his warm kimono and a non-profit medical relief organization.
Schedule and subjects are as follows:
Bitheir master did0?]61'
aco.lytes watched amazed at all that
Wednesday,
May 8, 1968 7:00 — 9:00 p.m.
®ullv received the
P°bber’ tlmdly extending his hands, grateM
•
d
kjm°no and dlsaPPeared into the darkness.
1. Crispy whole sweet and soui’ fish
2. Black bean steamed spare ribs
J v-St0^ °f Kancho’s mercy was handed
down to posterity
zS^1
3. Beans with fermented been cake
Temple- Those who later heard
it were surprised
4.
Shrimp chips
|jfL
T?’eat stren°th of having kicked a robber high up
Thursday,
May 9, 1968 7:00 — 9:00 p.m.
gave been caught V^V^r^
r°bbe:r, in falling, “mu2
1. Deep fried prawns
Llhe many via™
b 3 bar °f the scaffoldings. It is said that
2.
Almond chicken
Burelv ^u^
temple in later d'ays must
3. Shrimp stuffed mushrooms
p
.
.ucceo6or6 to Kancho. Hokubei Mainichi
4. White turnip with dried shrimps
Saturday, May 11, 1968 1:00 — 3:00 p.m.
1. Lobster black bean sauce
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
2. Cauliflower with dried scallops
SUNDAY, MAY 12, 1968
3.
Palace diced pork
m.A
Parents' Day
^eHgrious School
4. Agar agar dessert — almond delight.
918 Bathurst St.
.Morning Service
Japanese Service
Parents' Day Service
Telephone:
534-4302
When Buying Or Selling A Home
Call: KEN HORI
^■T3 JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
f
ll-
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
South of Bloor.
SUNDAY, MAY 12, 1968, 11:30 A.M.
7 Ena^ «d Church School - 11:30 A.M.
Jananoi
~ Rev- G444-5159
Japanese — Rev. M. Norisue 766-5632
A warm welcome to all.
.
—
$UY & Sell
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perivale Cres.
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough
Warehouse Clearance Sale
TOSH IWAI
mell real estate ltd.
Open to the public every Friday and Saturday’ from 10.00 a.m.
to 2.00 p.m. Come See — Come Save — Factory clearance of
Samples, Seconds, and Ends of Lines. Stools, Steel Utility
Floor and Wall Cabinets, Johnny Poles, Folding Tables, Bar
becues, Utility and Sewing Machine Tables, and much more.
i'^? O’Connor Dr., Toronto, Ont.
THE NORTEX WAREHOUSE
Phone 757-5184 — Res. 757-7578
11, Dohme Avenue,
(1 Block West of the O’Connor Bowling Alievs’)
PRESIDENT
Ws Private! No Time Limit!
Takara Jewellers
® most enjoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
^eiUy of delicious food!
Plenty of free parking!
CHINA
925 Eglint
on W. Toronto
house
RU. 1-9123
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
464
Toronto
Yonge Street,
Phone 921-3171
Bum
824-8153
922-1353
ERNEST JOMOR1
Chartered
Accountant
Suite
<03
130 BLOOR ST. W.
tORONTO
Custom Picture
F rarnwg
NISHIMURA
1278 Yonoe Str«.t, Toronto 7. Ont
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
toHo Nkhimi
923-6877
KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C.
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Fishing Ttickle and
Golf Equipment
Dew Worms
551 Danforth Ave,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
UNTIL 9
OPEN FRI.
P.M.
Formal
Rentals
Now hot
Wedding#
Dances Etc.
alna
Your Home
Through
$
Coatutt
!”^
W^e acolytes got excited and ran ou£ to catch ’
’
.Ipgiow, each armed with a club and a lantern. the shameless felThey searched for
robber aU over the place, but in vain.
suddenIy one of them cried, pointir
;' his finger LeLLLL,Chinese Co°king Given By Miss Chow
K^uP"'a™- They all looked up, and lo! High
,
.
.
- 1 up, on the top of the
,T]R0NT0-Are f°u
of the many who have always want|L- ^ft°ld^S’ was hanging ^u
1CLI1wg like
line a numan
something
human being. The
They
^li immediately ran up to the spot, and found the robber danglin- vou 0 "a™ SOme °f the Secrets Of Chinese cooking? Weil here's
^roni a bar there. He was insensible with some bruises on his body your chance.
’
rc b
1
Lott. th. RIGHT POLICY
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
I
J
I
Mon. — Fri. 9—6, Sat. 9—1 p.m.
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1103. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe —
Of Toronto
CUSTOM MADE SUIT
Sub Nagai
«? Danforth Ave.
PHONE:
443-8104
TRAVEL OFFICE
Specialists
In Group Travel
Travel with your
friends and associates
and Save!
For details — phone
Stanley M. Furuya
251-0170
Office 364-7331
OOMINIO|I. .
Travel Office
55 Wellington W. Toronto
Eat.
1923
Page 8
PAGE 8
History of J.C. United Church
^“StLS^that the
of 1915-191'7 originated
not
b
Cont. from Page One
the consemtive nationalists
°f CT‘e MeiaI pra8T“' “ P^fes did
‘ h
any dlfferences. Thev both agreed unon the
XT r aSS'm'lat-’ by means of’ economif eLansion of
anTof XP
°f vanadian CU!tU1’e and laW' and of obs’erv?
mm^ t'1
P°rt^, the JiherMs were abused by the Volunteers The ^rPn<rik
the liberals weakened a little to some neor>u4
strength of
because of their fear of violence. But within several niofith?^111
e.'rsSSSJf*.
to retain
. They also agreed that it was important
retain the good qualities of Japanese culture and language.
ficting organizations in the community an^ gave^aS’ UWte
fives desired the ^ove CmentS^
tW° k?r°UPK
?
479 QUEEN ST.
the • conserva-
the cause of the Japanese Fmn’r1 ^ S
^ •t ^ey rnigHt serve
liberals were convince! that thei Xum a P°Tgn land) whiIe the
of Canada and to S harm^
contribute to the Dominion
by demonstrating a unitvh 1 e^aU°nship of different races
East” which ^sS/T^ °"
WeSt “d th6
- snB THccinih
^
I
L>
prophets of the Old Testament4X ’ 6 ’’“j ’ and tra=dc as the
liberal standpoint. When he
adherent of the
give all rights of scrutiny
1S pC consul at that time
immigrants to the Tmpnoe
a edl^cadon of guarantees to bring
g
compFetelv the fade S 'T?” A ''“"'''■ goring
naga co-operated with Kabnram'4???”e“s Association, Matsuconsul’s prejudiced favor
and bl-S ,associates to oppose the
among fishermen who had^e^prouTT^U^ firSt ”• Steveston
were convinced that theirs haShS d of their organization and WM did not Ute the ^.^JX^ ^5*S§§
recognition of the consul
integrity for such a
into two. One naHnnaUc'r He fishermen s Association was split
Association and another grouu^vhn
^e Japanese taau™ tVXe'Tde^
^ Pas&bS‘sT T s“r'a XTr-?
converts were baptised. This was
influence seventy-six
upheaval as a result of Mr Tsurin Kani ° the
sPiritual
group had the majority in Ste^sto™ Japanese ta>2™' ^
paign which was conducted bv thl
S- evan?ellstic camthodist Church. Matsunaga branched P^36 mi.SS1.ons of the MeBaseball Playeis
the UbeSToupTntf b,jT5SW^ ?f NeW Westminster, headed of Vancouver during Ms nastoS? n
° missions in the city
14 to 16 years old.
’J Lansdm™ <®
fight for tK c'Ue rfXTbeVT,^'^
‘« Avenue) where sifday SeXe a^
Phone 425-3169 or
fervent when evidence showed
Tn
PL-TPT b,ecame more "V Se WP “f Miss Jessie Howie "n IS 4 IS” "'ere sVd
V
699-3776
given favors to those loval
b ^e nationalists’ group had ville Street at Mr. Heiii Yamazakis v-L-a ^^^hDei* was on Grancrease of those Xse rStivJ
tned to P^vent the in- points, K. Shimizu, who then was the ™ j^”0?' Pn these preaching
School
\V
socialists. (Trade Unionists were TeTsTXt’sT^ “d “* m Vancouver attending CB.C m^
Rev. Matsunaga. SinceMatsuno
J if ?’ helping out busy
panese Mission should be or£Pd 1 felt strongly that the Jafessor in Literature1 at ? ColieS™! orator "ho had been a pro- way, he divided the X e ZXp/the Methodist
were attracted to the chur<*S thJouS3?’- a”d many yon”s People ~ eiass meetings e^“eS S^XlX
were.attracted by his^nteUiXn^
of ideals.
1916
„
personality.
alsoand
a man
chief
of theIncitv
police
o( He
?e was
Mayor
the panese should make^thei/minds tr® ?r^ments that the JaWiring, Installation, Repairs,
etc.
in Japanese community In ?hk he iV?™1 to ^holish brothels so it was no wonder that he felt ft ™ 1Ve 111 Canada permamently,
on the conservative Ttiona^
1°'
His attack
Kenji Tsuruda
ter. Always his tongue and nen were tX? Md sometimes bit- with Canadian culture and customs In ?^ssary to start a school
tsunaga,
an
Anglo-Japanese
School
’
’
°
U
V
11
^^
6
of
MaPhone
489-3341
paigns. In return, attacks on him wer ? S ?eaPons ln these cam- and Rev. and Mrs. Kaburagi ^p1 PXVrga^ in the church,
because of slander, manv tre<rin £aJ^.?? ^
vicious, wives domestic science, hygiene and S r h°n t0 t.each girls and
left him for tS ba’chX^consuTw^
him' His
naga divorce his wife. He wasVe^t
Ma^u- ":ho andved from Japan recentlv^if gfShi especially for those
the Night School building was denml^^0? wa® continued until
Inimigration Authority for some Un 2 Si
of Amarican gymnasium.
But a course^f thisHnd ? d ° ^ake room for the
AUTO — FIRE
LIFE
because of some false* information from-opponents.
Vancoaver
workers.
e 01 tnis bind was carried on by W. M. S.
AU POEMS
WANTED
KENJI ELECTS
Canadian
were sometimes vioIeiV^I^Vebrua^ 1916he Japanese community News beinf cmnpfeely^^
Politically committed, MaVolunteer Corps attacked the ri
a ^“P of .Japanese tsunaga and Akagawa\nd ~ 4
^t the necessity
which had been printing Hip
.J^anese paper Canadian News of publishing a strict!^
destroyed the pr?n
0 the liberal camp. They literature. In 1915, four m n XtP Pt /or ^ngelism through
be published fo? two months. The 1
the ;paPer couId not
Publish a paper called Hokko hvt- fOt toSether and started to
It lasted about ten “ars lending L™^
"Northern Light”)?
of the attempt of Japanese Vohmi-o
camP bad been cynical
British Army against thP fp,-n° n -eerft.Corp3 to Uoht with the rural areas.
^ ^leat influence particularly in
this attemptthe World Wai'
because
knew that the conservatives\veiVXTa^
TL
J
. I
militant character of the Jananet
eagrex- to show off the ihallcloiTlIflA
Dominion. The temperaXt
t0 be Photic .to the
^"W^miOe
found that thev had no chanl
v
worsened when t,
B.C because of resentment of the white? fcxCanadian -Army
yhS BQkies In Japan
Pose Problems
Stewardesses . .
— With the approach
(Cont. from Page One)
f the new school year in April
hMi dle girl from next door to
'n P/S.leni of schooling forsoi cruit -10 new stewardesses. JAL
«/heir hostess.
Thalld°rnide babies born in
recruitment
officials
were
dis
.-But today even farmers are
Japan
is pus
posing a headache to the
9
Qnn
h
it
flying with us. Accordingly, we mayed to learn that only AoOO | parentsio and
girls
applied.
1 authorities concernneed girls who can serve and be
iivecruitment officers were
Pheasant to all kinds of people ”
Lhe recruitment officer also sent across the country to man 'IhSX, t0 the Education
says exceptionally prettv <nrk age to boost the number of ap- ' suor TeT^*
CfU?ie .^rouble in group training phcants to 5,300.
-A JAL official explain’s “To
of Ue^mg stewardesses.
get
satisfactory stewardesses, we
lou know how girls react
when they are put together,” he need at least 20, hopefully 30 ap
plicants, tor every vacancy.”
°f ^a11” he Rinnes,
All Nippon Airways, another rtite 11’ ,’, "W °ther chiMre"
pietty stewardesses draw most though airHne’
Wa sil* schools 1 a‘e StUd!™ff at fecial
OF
INSMCE
consult
KIYO TAMURA
TORONTO
Bn«. 366-5812
Res. Pl. 9-8S17
J Lichee Garden
no
(Dining Lounge)
118 Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
^3e
“Oc
^e;
Phone 364-3481
<4 Dines To Serve You)
CATERING SERVICE — “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
Banquet Facilities
For Business Or Private Parties
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
____ DINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY
[A:
san
r c
|°k
J.C.C. Centre Raffle Results
complaints.”
S
as7 great difficulty:
i thpi/u^V?/0 aP organizations and volunteer workers for
You don’t understand? Yukio <onie _,000 girls applied for 60'
estimates that
1 urdav Vn.^1 SU?port of the Annual Bazaar held on Satmoie Thalidomide babies will
taSwhJ™” ,rainer at JAL- vacancies there last year.
•eainSch°o1 age this year 61
1
t -ailm congratulations
to the winners of i^
■ Annual Air Trip To Japan’ draw.
’
Such difficulty, in 1969 and 31 in 1970. *
jSuppos.e y*ou go to a cabaret
in
cash*
A
’
r
^
Ip
and
Tour
of
Ja
P
“
n
for
Two
or
§2000^
and call its No. 1 giri. jf ,h n^k^ aIreadV decided to dis-'
Some of the Thalidomide ba°fficers this
of
'r , H^er
8ani Haba of Toronto. He was also the seller
leaves you often to serve othm vear
y ear too, to various Darts of the
ot
the
heket
which
gave him an extra S200
othei*s hay e no arms.
m1,.^’111 surely think. ccuutry to gather at least 90 an- iI
<>ii:ii a girl.'bv
of a Console Model Color TV set was won
Some schools are reluctant to
plications for each of 250 vacan
8 self $100 Re J Eam °f Toronto- Seller Flo Keriya won her“If she is not nretty," he says, cies.
1
SUC k CfWren- Thev claim .
“you don’t mind and keep en
a
J
hey
are
to
s
P
r
ead
such
words
SUch children are permit
joying you” drinks at least for
Prize of S3o°- was won by Mrs. T. Yatabe of
auuri,
m
b"'"'
!chML th
some time.”
OU d have tn accompany them
SurnfT^i-0
winn«r of S100. each are as follows:
can make you a good lt"
Int short.
e fw them ” "’P
..
he says, everybody
lf V°u have oniv basic
land
nkwf Islington, Mr. William J. Rutledge of
warns No. 1 to be near him. The knnwjedge of
English.”
Islington
^utSOn Of Cooksville, Mr. Mike Catania, Jr- «
simple result is that evervbodv
”Ve can correct your dialect.” K k. Kumamoto, a controversy I
onto0 Ahi 3r HnVey Bokser of Toronto. M. Obuchi of Tor
is disappointed and- complains
“This is no longer a special
of CnrLT Lue Tonkawa of Tendon. Mr. Fred Kirstem. Jr.
he savs.
J a Thalidomide girl who i>
lob
"
Markham
6"' ^ ^ ^' Spencer of Scarboro, J. V. Duke o
,, <£The sanie reaction happens in
This recruitment situation nue -o emer nHmary school
ihe air. too. - he explains.
month. The na^ents of the
_
gloomier to JAL. Japan’s "Y‘ A'r /hi''' ” ^I a ”!
Peter °?!een^ to 23rd winners of S50. each are as
And as any stewardess is rea looks
limes
^n f ^ ’Dowdale. Matsu Sada of Toronto, A-^
dy to testify, serving in Hie air national flag carrier, than to All
/^.Anvnvs
whwh
SDeciak
Of
sirbn
? uO,-rMr?- L P10^ of Oakville, W. M. Da^
demands heavy- labor. This is be i
_mho-.ies m Knman1otn .n^{n_
ze- ”i domestic flights
Nellv
°f New Toronto, L. T. Ong of Tor?
coming common knowlege.
should attend a
SM-seat Boeing
«Pin? °f Toronto, N. Reeve of Scarboro. Hr- D |.
The kb has los* much of the ..^r: wd’
3 < ew v$3p?
°‘ bcarboro.
j
glamor it used to enjoy. The *
“Wo n-d 6no
evp„v
K
Dukn?
ty
;
f
m
Ur
^
*
°
28
th
d
inners
of
§25.
are
as
;
number of applicants is fast de vear vn s,x vears Tt^ ^.^
^’V n can'o,;;- rj
Toronto Vf
J1 K Hu»hes of Toronto. A. Saic^®
clining.
be a big headache,” a JAL of ^rniky. S^e. hnwpvpr,
Toronto’ M* Vanderkaa of Don Mills, and -Mr- Roy Taw
Last year JAL planned to re- ficial
Iv can write and draw
savs.
her mouth and feet.
X
is®,
;'‘O
$4 t
r31'
I
^erv;
hir
fee?
feefe
I A«
'Ke:
’>en
■Hi
& r.
v
^^ £
History of J.C. United Church
^“StLS^that the
of 1915-191'7 originated
not
b
Cont. from Page One
the consemtive nationalists
°f CT‘e MeiaI pra8T“' “ P^fes did
‘ h
any dlfferences. Thev both agreed unon the
XT r aSS'm'lat-’ by means of’ economif eLansion of
anTof XP
°f vanadian CU!tU1’e and laW' and of obs’erv?
mm^ t'1
P°rt^, the JiherMs were abused by the Volunteers The ^rPn<rik
the liberals weakened a little to some neor>u4
strength of
because of their fear of violence. But within several niofith?^111
e.'rsSSSJf*.
to retain
. They also agreed that it was important
retain the good qualities of Japanese culture and language.
ficting organizations in the community an^ gave^aS’ UWte
fives desired the ^ove CmentS^
tW° k?r°UPK
?
479 QUEEN ST.
the • conserva-
the cause of the Japanese Fmn’r1 ^ S
^ •t ^ey rnigHt serve
liberals were convince! that thei Xum a P°Tgn land) whiIe the
of Canada and to S harm^
contribute to the Dominion
by demonstrating a unitvh 1 e^aU°nship of different races
East” which ^sS/T^ °"
WeSt “d th6
- snB THccinih
^
I
L>
prophets of the Old Testament4X ’ 6 ’’“j ’ and tra=dc as the
liberal standpoint. When he
adherent of the
give all rights of scrutiny
1S pC consul at that time
immigrants to the Tmpnoe
a edl^cadon of guarantees to bring
g
compFetelv the fade S 'T?” A ''“"'''■ goring
naga co-operated with Kabnram'4???”e“s Association, Matsuconsul’s prejudiced favor
and bl-S ,associates to oppose the
among fishermen who had^e^prouTT^U^ firSt ”• Steveston
were convinced that theirs haShS d of their organization and WM did not Ute the ^.^JX^ ^5*S§§
recognition of the consul
integrity for such a
into two. One naHnnaUc'r He fishermen s Association was split
Association and another grouu^vhn
^e Japanese taau™ tVXe'Tde^
^ Pas&bS‘sT T s“r'a XTr-?
converts were baptised. This was
influence seventy-six
upheaval as a result of Mr Tsurin Kani ° the
sPiritual
group had the majority in Ste^sto™ Japanese ta>2™' ^
paign which was conducted bv thl
S- evan?ellstic camthodist Church. Matsunaga branched P^36 mi.SS1.ons of the MeBaseball Playeis
the UbeSToupTntf b,jT5SW^ ?f NeW Westminster, headed of Vancouver during Ms nastoS? n
° missions in the city
14 to 16 years old.
’J Lansdm™ <®
fight for tK c'Ue rfXTbeVT,^'^
‘« Avenue) where sifday SeXe a^
Phone 425-3169 or
fervent when evidence showed
Tn
PL-TPT b,ecame more "V Se WP “f Miss Jessie Howie "n IS 4 IS” "'ere sVd
V
699-3776
given favors to those loval
b ^e nationalists’ group had ville Street at Mr. Heiii Yamazakis v-L-a ^^^hDei* was on Grancrease of those Xse rStivJ
tned to P^vent the in- points, K. Shimizu, who then was the ™ j^”0?' Pn these preaching
School
\V
socialists. (Trade Unionists were TeTsTXt’sT^ “d “* m Vancouver attending CB.C m^
Rev. Matsunaga. SinceMatsuno
J if ?’ helping out busy
panese Mission should be or£Pd 1 felt strongly that the Jafessor in Literature1 at ? ColieS™! orator "ho had been a pro- way, he divided the X e ZXp/the Methodist
were attracted to the chur<*S thJouS3?’- a”d many yon”s People ~ eiass meetings e^“eS S^XlX
were.attracted by his^nteUiXn^
of ideals.
1916
„
personality.
alsoand
a man
chief
of theIncitv
police
o( He
?e was
Mayor
the panese should make^thei/minds tr® ?r^ments that the JaWiring, Installation, Repairs,
etc.
in Japanese community In ?hk he iV?™1 to ^holish brothels so it was no wonder that he felt ft ™ 1Ve 111 Canada permamently,
on the conservative Ttiona^
1°'
His attack
Kenji Tsuruda
ter. Always his tongue and nen were tX? Md sometimes bit- with Canadian culture and customs In ?^ssary to start a school
tsunaga,
an
Anglo-Japanese
School
’
’
°
U
V
11
^^
6
of
MaPhone
489-3341
paigns. In return, attacks on him wer ? S ?eaPons ln these cam- and Rev. and Mrs. Kaburagi ^p1 PXVrga^ in the church,
because of slander, manv tre<rin £aJ^.?? ^
vicious, wives domestic science, hygiene and S r h°n t0 t.each girls and
left him for tS ba’chX^consuTw^
him' His
naga divorce his wife. He wasVe^t
Ma^u- ":ho andved from Japan recentlv^if gfShi especially for those
the Night School building was denml^^0? wa® continued until
Inimigration Authority for some Un 2 Si
of Amarican gymnasium.
But a course^f thisHnd ? d ° ^ake room for the
AUTO — FIRE
LIFE
because of some false* information from-opponents.
Vancoaver
workers.
e 01 tnis bind was carried on by W. M. S.
AU POEMS
WANTED
KENJI ELECTS
Canadian
were sometimes vioIeiV^I^Vebrua^ 1916he Japanese community News beinf cmnpfeely^^
Politically committed, MaVolunteer Corps attacked the ri
a ^“P of .Japanese tsunaga and Akagawa\nd ~ 4
^t the necessity
which had been printing Hip
.J^anese paper Canadian News of publishing a strict!^
destroyed the pr?n
0 the liberal camp. They literature. In 1915, four m n XtP Pt /or ^ngelism through
be published fo? two months. The 1
the ;paPer couId not
Publish a paper called Hokko hvt- fOt toSether and started to
It lasted about ten “ars lending L™^
"Northern Light”)?
of the attempt of Japanese Vohmi-o
camP bad been cynical
British Army against thP fp,-n° n -eerft.Corp3 to Uoht with the rural areas.
^ ^leat influence particularly in
this attemptthe World Wai'
because
knew that the conservatives\veiVXTa^
TL
J
. I
militant character of the Jananet
eagrex- to show off the ihallcloiTlIflA
Dominion. The temperaXt
t0 be Photic .to the
^"W^miOe
found that thev had no chanl
v
worsened when t,
B.C because of resentment of the white? fcxCanadian -Army
yhS BQkies In Japan
Pose Problems
Stewardesses . .
— With the approach
(Cont. from Page One)
f the new school year in April
hMi dle girl from next door to
'n P/S.leni of schooling forsoi cruit -10 new stewardesses. JAL
«/heir hostess.
Thalld°rnide babies born in
recruitment
officials
were
dis
.-But today even farmers are
Japan
is pus
posing a headache to the
9
Qnn
h
it
flying with us. Accordingly, we mayed to learn that only AoOO | parentsio and
girls
applied.
1 authorities concernneed girls who can serve and be
iivecruitment officers were
Pheasant to all kinds of people ”
Lhe recruitment officer also sent across the country to man 'IhSX, t0 the Education
says exceptionally prettv <nrk age to boost the number of ap- ' suor TeT^*
CfU?ie .^rouble in group training phcants to 5,300.
-A JAL official explain’s “To
of Ue^mg stewardesses.
get
satisfactory stewardesses, we
lou know how girls react
when they are put together,” he need at least 20, hopefully 30 ap
plicants, tor every vacancy.”
°f ^a11” he Rinnes,
All Nippon Airways, another rtite 11’ ,’, "W °ther chiMre"
pietty stewardesses draw most though airHne’
Wa sil* schools 1 a‘e StUd!™ff at fecial
OF
INSMCE
consult
KIYO TAMURA
TORONTO
Bn«. 366-5812
Res. Pl. 9-8S17
J Lichee Garden
no
(Dining Lounge)
118 Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
^3e
“Oc
^e;
Phone 364-3481
<4 Dines To Serve You)
CATERING SERVICE — “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
Banquet Facilities
For Business Or Private Parties
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
____ DINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY
[A:
san
r c
|°k
J.C.C. Centre Raffle Results
complaints.”
S
as7 great difficulty:
i thpi/u^V?/0 aP organizations and volunteer workers for
You don’t understand? Yukio <onie _,000 girls applied for 60'
estimates that
1 urdav Vn.^1 SU?port of the Annual Bazaar held on Satmoie Thalidomide babies will
taSwhJ™” ,rainer at JAL- vacancies there last year.
•eainSch°o1 age this year 61
1
t -ailm congratulations
to the winners of i^
■ Annual Air Trip To Japan’ draw.
’
Such difficulty, in 1969 and 31 in 1970. *
jSuppos.e y*ou go to a cabaret
in
cash*
A
’
r
^
Ip
and
Tour
of
Ja
P
“
n
for
Two
or
§2000^
and call its No. 1 giri. jf ,h n^k^ aIreadV decided to dis-'
Some of the Thalidomide ba°fficers this
of
'r , H^er
8ani Haba of Toronto. He was also the seller
leaves you often to serve othm vear
y ear too, to various Darts of the
ot
the
heket
which
gave him an extra S200
othei*s hay e no arms.
m1,.^’111 surely think. ccuutry to gather at least 90 an- iI
<>ii:ii a girl.'bv
of a Console Model Color TV set was won
Some schools are reluctant to
plications for each of 250 vacan
8 self $100 Re J Eam °f Toronto- Seller Flo Keriya won her“If she is not nretty," he says, cies.
1
SUC k CfWren- Thev claim .
“you don’t mind and keep en
a
J
hey
are
to
s
P
r
ead
such
words
SUch children are permit
joying you” drinks at least for
Prize of S3o°- was won by Mrs. T. Yatabe of
auuri,
m
b"'"'
!chML th
some time.”
OU d have tn accompany them
SurnfT^i-0
winn«r of S100. each are as follows:
can make you a good lt"
Int short.
e fw them ” "’P
..
he says, everybody
lf V°u have oniv basic
land
nkwf Islington, Mr. William J. Rutledge of
warns No. 1 to be near him. The knnwjedge of
English.”
Islington
^utSOn Of Cooksville, Mr. Mike Catania, Jr- «
simple result is that evervbodv
”Ve can correct your dialect.” K k. Kumamoto, a controversy I
onto0 Ahi 3r HnVey Bokser of Toronto. M. Obuchi of Tor
is disappointed and- complains
“This is no longer a special
of CnrLT Lue Tonkawa of Tendon. Mr. Fred Kirstem. Jr.
he savs.
J a Thalidomide girl who i>
lob
"
Markham
6"' ^ ^ ^' Spencer of Scarboro, J. V. Duke o
,, <£The sanie reaction happens in
This recruitment situation nue -o emer nHmary school
ihe air. too. - he explains.
month. The na^ents of the
_
gloomier to JAL. Japan’s "Y‘ A'r /hi''' ” ^I a ”!
Peter °?!een^ to 23rd winners of S50. each are as
And as any stewardess is rea looks
limes
^n f ^ ’Dowdale. Matsu Sada of Toronto, A-^
dy to testify, serving in Hie air national flag carrier, than to All
/^.Anvnvs
whwh
SDeciak
Of
sirbn
? uO,-rMr?- L P10^ of Oakville, W. M. Da^
demands heavy- labor. This is be i
_mho-.ies m Knman1otn .n^{n_
ze- ”i domestic flights
Nellv
°f New Toronto, L. T. Ong of Tor?
coming common knowlege.
should attend a
SM-seat Boeing
«Pin? °f Toronto, N. Reeve of Scarboro. Hr- D |.
The kb has los* much of the ..^r: wd’
3 < ew v$3p?
°‘ bcarboro.
j
glamor it used to enjoy. The *
“Wo n-d 6no
evp„v
K
Dukn?
ty
;
f
m
Ur
^
*
°
28
th
d
inners
of
§25.
are
as
;
number of applicants is fast de vear vn s,x vears Tt^ ^.^
^’V n can'o,;;- rj
Toronto Vf
J1 K Hu»hes of Toronto. A. Saic^®
clining.
be a big headache,” a JAL of ^rniky. S^e. hnwpvpr,
Toronto’ M* Vanderkaa of Don Mills, and -Mr- Roy Taw
Last year JAL planned to re- ficial
Iv can write and draw
savs.
her mouth and feet.
X
is®,
;'‘O
$4 t
r31'
I
^erv;
hir
fee?
feefe
I A«
'Ke:
’>en
■Hi
& r.
v
^^ £