Page 1
* ?* Of The World" Westernized
TOKYO.—The door _ was hardly wider than mv
shoulders and the stairs steep as a ladder and the
u':: dub at the top no bigger than mv living room
ow-ceninged, dimly-lit with about 40 people jammed
b. t>ut this was no dive.
This was a place to have fun, drink Sapporo beer
at pretzels, clap hands to the beat, sing alon°- if
elt like it and watch Tokyo live it up.
'
There are thousands of these tiny clubs. YVho really
nows? They close quickly if they don’t make it but
lis one seemed to be popular.
’
About 30 of the patrons were young Japanese all
ten, between 2o and So years old, one American ’ o-iri
string alone, three sailors off a U.S. carrier and mv
^end and myself.
| The owners were also the entertainers, five girls and
wmiimiiinmiinnHiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim^
almost continuous. The
P-animent with an
• 1
„
eiectuc
lu't and their mu
S‘ st^t^^
e room with
would get
— not professional
J ’ ^hen music
stuff.
but good — and modern. 1
al! they had. all the infhw’ '“n7’
singers, the movements the f» /J
snnled as the room
4
LUl
und one
is good
parade
they gax
tOP AmCT
biank 'ag
i”,
About 10:M the „,„rd b
,
But Distinctly Japanese
Japanese leaving quietly. Savonara.
i'i<e
rat?ei’ eaHy 1 thought, and I was told
U
, °Pei1^d at 6 and closed at 11 p.m. There
i v2 ? ; buI, no' ,n 3 »•«««•>» vav. An™„v it
O;S£,"t* "
11
«li <’'<r.
were
jammed
with
people, a
moving- mass.
and a man darted at me out
ot the crowd , ,shook
mv- hand vigorously and muttered
.
a few words, looked at me and smiled, and said a few
more words ; nd was gone gone, back into the nick
“What wa< that tor?” I asked.
"Oh. thev often do that. Happens r
(Continued on Page 8)
Stella Ito’s
Sukiyaki Cookbook
§1.50
Mol. XXXII—No
The Dod Canadian
A„
^ ,n
^iiiiiiiiiiimiinniinimiiiiiii^
1
I
Jessie L. Beat tie’s
STRENGTH for th
BRIDGE
§5.00
..—..........
““*",,,“”BllnRa”a,,*,l,,,™«nra™«»«^BWW
Show Bizz Eyes Expo zo
I'lHiiHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllHIHilIilltlllllll,
Nssei Congressman Tells Washington
‘ A_
■ . _
VII
Remember Japanese Discovered U. S
OTTAW
«Xcrop
.‘o send
a bunwer a,™
of per
PaZ? artists~amateur and Professional— bumper
Osaka.
C .SeZlffl^
“”>y amateur
groups,
g y Capiat E“S Sfe
m travel money.
Amidst the clamor that Leif Her the
commission, now octu
setting
^PCana^» Participation at Expo 70 isn cano-hf
“8 Ericson discovered Am
erica first (or was it Chris- i tile discovery sn Hag, is generally credited wi(h
BP a position where it can neither nni S cau»ht for die time being
of America in 1492.
^pressing interest.
encourage nor discourage groups topher Columbus?), a prominent Japanese AmeriScandinavians
generally recognized Leif Ericson
can claims the Japanese actually
set foot on these i a Vikiiw
warrior,
as America’s discoverer. He
shores
first
and
he
thinks
that
f
NO IDEA
"eported ly Landed
in North America around
Until Expo 70’s first meeting ognized by a national holiday.
1000 A.D.
“Anthropologists found bones and' artifacts that i
„ .^’^H^ssioners-general at the
a nationwide celebration of the
nnd ‘
McV’ ,Canada "’LU have kno„v Rep. Spark M.’SttSS'lMwo’i^
,ap<mc^Jj*’1 “*u« chance of catehne/ea 'whether the Japanese
hosts can handle the community,
offer legislation
high school and ethnic bands,
gX®?^^
called'
“Discover
singers and dancers who mi<dit
America First Day
come.
*
as
their
&AtnIeie of the Y’ear”
an 18“Then the Italian would cele
$o?'old Sansei Youth’
Once assured', Canadian offi
Frank
brate
Columbus the Scandinavicials are likely to offer help in _
TORONTO.—A .Japanese built locomotive, specially designed
hmng up low-cost charter flights for the Toronto Transit
ans would celebrate Ericson and
and a work-and-play schedule for Maru in Toronto harbor Commission, was unlodcd from the Texas I would celebrate the Japanese ”
this week.
the performers at Osaka.
he said.
The locomotive, one of four built for
the
11C,
will
run
on
the
Matsunaga made the proposal
If people have the resourcesubway system’s contact rail or under its
and backing to get to Osaka”
own battery power, and before laughing members of the
we assume they will be good will be used’ to shunt car s, particularly in cases of power failure.
House Rules
Committee
who
enough to perform,” commission
1/ •■
l
~
’
"’ere hearing testimony on a bill
fear"0 0W11 diversity next director Patrick Reid said.
Last year almost 500 Canadian
amateur groups performed at Ex(]J=^y and Vetoes Day on
p° , • American groups numberea cjose to 300 and another 30 ttoT'Le^
’hJ W |? 'A " Ad. il™SM
of Hakan,
or 3o came from Europe. Mexico
and the Caribbean.
first Japanese American to kj »n/I™” 5"'^
th° m,!''s"re "ouM
ceive
the
endorsement
of
a
major
fund'
A
r
V
,nate
mutual
create
a
new
national holiday—
PA VI LI ON
political party in New York.
| J
dXn
and Columbus Day.
Kojima, successful l„wye,.ba si- „!,„;'. fem X“ ”
The mirror-sheathed Canadian
SliZ
Rep’ C^ude Pepper, a RepubW ° ObmmT j*5'0 Astro- “avihon at Osaka will surround
ness executive and investor, has em 'fiePN °
"
I bean from Florida, objected to
been endorsed
by the
New^n.b.Ltcrnario;,,,)
York
,
‘tred a reouPy +
~ recently a C0’J1^yai,fl providing continuous County
Committee
of
the
^^
leader in the bill on the grounds that
aa Astroph^cai '^Smithson- afternoon entertainment, and it
’’
““ a""’“n;'d re. serves as edited of the vv and Abraham Lincoln should likewise
- Abridge'Mo -. Observatory is here that performers would ™>V
niost exposure. But Canada
^firiiiatinn k» ?*‘ichusetts, for
t
v v
I
1 Law Association Bulletin. °e accordeJ national recognition,
1 to " ! « "-bat was believ- will also join in a major arts
In A. 1.. the enciosement of a most influential patent journal in | ^e Kai<l he would offer an amfestival off the Expo site, and
f»» Japane„ "2®yIisc^
tZLS'!;^^
beMal-d„Mnt
creating
Presidents
Piners.
"e amateur astro- I fay 1 on a Canada Day spectacular
' ' is inot usual,y de « ft. ZS/S' Z h^’ t”
-K,
* ^e Tokv
1 ate ^ay or eai'ly June.
which
*yarOry/(XjM^
Ob'
Montreal impresario Sam Ges- should aris m the primary elecKojima is active in the Jana-’h °r Honest Abe’
“hwersity Of
?^ the ser has been commissioned to tion. to be heid ihia \ear on nese American Citizens League
^graphic renon > ’
a scour the country for professional June 18.
‘be Japanese American Associa^go of Tsuvama rn^ViA^hLho 1 PeMormers and p e r f o r m i n g
_ The
r Nisei candidate is director tion and various Japanese busi
•lecture, on the -:oU-^a^ama Shoups. Comedy, folk-singing and er lar eastern patent operations ness groups.
’ '• cornet.
Jag of the I iazz will be some of the fare at
These positions of leadership
• ccording to rhe
m
I 'be Pav:bon, a symphony orchestm
the legal profession, business
^-ed a taTe^t *
or ballet is the likely choice
TOKYO.—Beer ration?
and civic matters,” a Countv
^whh.,,^
.arts festival, and the
the war helped ferment
Committee
spokesman
said,
“
eminew
yn aegrees
® of about RCMP band and musical ride are
nentlv
nej!^y . qualifies Mr. Kojima for trend — beer drinking among
tf ^yhula AndromXr^1011!1^ °f 5ure bets for the Canada Dav
Japanese women.
De sanP y\°^eda at 2:50 ceremonies
According to Hiroyoshi Ishi
Most importantly, it was pointi-»..-eP°y was Soon followed
-n”6 ^uarantee that Canada
out, h;s leadership i being kawa, assistant professor of psy
MIDWAY', B.C.—The first an
Lp-e spotting of the
. get S'ood’ mileage out of its
to the neonk at a crucia1 chology at Seijo University in
come
nual
Boundary
District
Car
Ral
1 astir.,-four other amatalent at Expo 70 is that
Pi?1' -J’1 American history, when Tokyo,, the battle today amon"
‘chi iire^l61'5 in Tochigi and -federal officials will be working ly held here recently was won L‘e 'i-fer-’iu rectal groups are breweries is to capture a bigger
"he unu;JCilHr7:?.
*
£j°sely with Quebec, Ontario and
rapidly polarizing in different share of the expanding female
3WO0^ai':\'?rge number of | ribisb Columbia, all installing
beer-drinking- population.
gashi and his partner David
Japanese drink an average of
'°D Hpn^igntin= including £a'Tlons°f their own 031 the
•'His leadership can and will
Jones.
?» staS* (^*»y» °sa-a site.
ng about reconciliation, and 30 bottles of beer a year, com
They wheeled their car with
1 ^vho ba<
0 Kurashiki I
The §11,200,000 federal budget
to people of pared with 2o0 in the Netherands and West Germany, and
ah
backgrounds
?fb5? to V;
coniet lor Expo 70 includes about S900.- 20 other top contestants through
? spokesman
00 in the United States.
said.
e‘iCe D the
}t; gave | 000 for entertainment of all Rocky Mountain curves and came
But the number is increasing
■,;w r-f a
port\ of the kinds, but Reid says it will be out on top with a total of 894
normal A- the 69th m Japan, thanks in part to a rise
Di
$?R?s arrs*-,
comeu
I some time before specific costs
overwhelmingly for in female beer drinkers, accord
points । it of a possible .990.
' $-en m^a,.Vr-,astronomers are allocated. There are prob
Dart”.
om ing to Prof. Ishikawa.
Other Japanese Canadian win
Dressed c
ate in sjy^w successful lemsthat
The professor says w
were Willie Kakuno, John- toe poor n would
break from a high “brand loyalty.’
t
^e feDous^Ikev^^
Sample: “How much does it. ners
.
The rea1. '.yanz pattern and son for this
ny
Tatevama. their pre
'-^cove,-^ ;^
. Seki I cost to ship 40-odd horses across n
-v Kakuno,
is not clear — beer
.t
ojima,
who
is
in
his
I the Pacific and back?”
and Shiro Oye.
early SOL
o office.
gSansei Student
|Wins Lorne Park
/Athlete Of Year
Japan Locomotiv© For Toronto Transit
Kojima Is First Nisei To Win N.Y. GOP Backing fe^^ Si: £
pniet Found
^ 4 Japanese
Astronomers
J.C. Lad Wins
Rocky Mountain
Automobile Rally
Japan Breweries
Eye The Ladies
(Continued on Page 8)
TOKYO.—The door _ was hardly wider than mv
shoulders and the stairs steep as a ladder and the
u':: dub at the top no bigger than mv living room
ow-ceninged, dimly-lit with about 40 people jammed
b. t>ut this was no dive.
This was a place to have fun, drink Sapporo beer
at pretzels, clap hands to the beat, sing alon°- if
elt like it and watch Tokyo live it up.
'
There are thousands of these tiny clubs. YVho really
nows? They close quickly if they don’t make it but
lis one seemed to be popular.
’
About 30 of the patrons were young Japanese all
ten, between 2o and So years old, one American ’ o-iri
string alone, three sailors off a U.S. carrier and mv
^end and myself.
| The owners were also the entertainers, five girls and
wmiimiiinmiinnHiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim^
almost continuous. The
P-animent with an
• 1
„
eiectuc
lu't and their mu
S‘ st^t^^
e room with
would get
— not professional
J ’ ^hen music
stuff.
but good — and modern. 1
al! they had. all the infhw’ '“n7’
singers, the movements the f» /J
snnled as the room
4
LUl
und one
is good
parade
they gax
tOP AmCT
biank 'ag
i”,
About 10:M the „,„rd b
,
But Distinctly Japanese
Japanese leaving quietly. Savonara.
i'i<e
rat?ei’ eaHy 1 thought, and I was told
U
, °Pei1^d at 6 and closed at 11 p.m. There
i v2 ? ; buI, no' ,n 3 »•«««•>» vav. An™„v it
O;S£,"t* "
11
«li <’'<r.
were
jammed
with
people, a
moving- mass.
and a man darted at me out
ot the crowd , ,shook
mv- hand vigorously and muttered
.
a few words, looked at me and smiled, and said a few
more words ; nd was gone gone, back into the nick
“What wa< that tor?” I asked.
"Oh. thev often do that. Happens r
(Continued on Page 8)
Stella Ito’s
Sukiyaki Cookbook
§1.50
Mol. XXXII—No
The Dod Canadian
A„
^ ,n
^iiiiiiiiiiimiinniinimiiiiiii^
1
I
Jessie L. Beat tie’s
STRENGTH for th
BRIDGE
§5.00
..—..........
““*",,,“”BllnRa”a,,*,l,,,™«nra™«»«^BWW
Show Bizz Eyes Expo zo
I'lHiiHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllHIHilIilltlllllll,
Nssei Congressman Tells Washington
‘ A_
■ . _
VII
Remember Japanese Discovered U. S
OTTAW
«Xcrop
.‘o send
a bunwer a,™
of per
PaZ? artists~amateur and Professional— bumper
Osaka.
C .SeZlffl^
“”>y amateur
groups,
g y Capiat E“S Sfe
m travel money.
Amidst the clamor that Leif Her the
commission, now octu
setting
^PCana^» Participation at Expo 70 isn cano-hf
“8 Ericson discovered Am
erica first (or was it Chris- i tile discovery sn Hag, is generally credited wi(h
BP a position where it can neither nni S cau»ht for die time being
of America in 1492.
^pressing interest.
encourage nor discourage groups topher Columbus?), a prominent Japanese AmeriScandinavians
generally recognized Leif Ericson
can claims the Japanese actually
set foot on these i a Vikiiw
warrior,
as America’s discoverer. He
shores
first
and
he
thinks
that
f
NO IDEA
"eported ly Landed
in North America around
Until Expo 70’s first meeting ognized by a national holiday.
1000 A.D.
“Anthropologists found bones and' artifacts that i
„ .^’^H^ssioners-general at the
a nationwide celebration of the
nnd ‘
McV’ ,Canada "’LU have kno„v Rep. Spark M.’SttSS'lMwo’i^
,ap<mc^Jj*’1 “*u« chance of catehne/ea 'whether the Japanese
hosts can handle the community,
offer legislation
high school and ethnic bands,
gX®?^^
called'
“Discover
singers and dancers who mi<dit
America First Day
come.
*
as
their
&AtnIeie of the Y’ear”
an 18“Then the Italian would cele
$o?'old Sansei Youth’
Once assured', Canadian offi
Frank
brate
Columbus the Scandinavicials are likely to offer help in _
TORONTO.—A .Japanese built locomotive, specially designed
hmng up low-cost charter flights for the Toronto Transit
ans would celebrate Ericson and
and a work-and-play schedule for Maru in Toronto harbor Commission, was unlodcd from the Texas I would celebrate the Japanese ”
this week.
the performers at Osaka.
he said.
The locomotive, one of four built for
the
11C,
will
run
on
the
Matsunaga made the proposal
If people have the resourcesubway system’s contact rail or under its
and backing to get to Osaka”
own battery power, and before laughing members of the
we assume they will be good will be used’ to shunt car s, particularly in cases of power failure.
House Rules
Committee
who
enough to perform,” commission
1/ •■
l
~
’
"’ere hearing testimony on a bill
fear"0 0W11 diversity next director Patrick Reid said.
Last year almost 500 Canadian
amateur groups performed at Ex(]J=^y and Vetoes Day on
p° , • American groups numberea cjose to 300 and another 30 ttoT'Le^
’hJ W |? 'A " Ad. il™SM
of Hakan,
or 3o came from Europe. Mexico
and the Caribbean.
first Japanese American to kj »n/I™” 5"'^
th° m,!''s"re "ouM
ceive
the
endorsement
of
a
major
fund'
A
r
V
,nate
mutual
create
a
new
national holiday—
PA VI LI ON
political party in New York.
| J
dXn
and Columbus Day.
Kojima, successful l„wye,.ba si- „!,„;'. fem X“ ”
The mirror-sheathed Canadian
SliZ
Rep’ C^ude Pepper, a RepubW ° ObmmT j*5'0 Astro- “avihon at Osaka will surround
ness executive and investor, has em 'fiePN °
"
I bean from Florida, objected to
been endorsed
by the
New^n.b.Ltcrnario;,,,)
York
,
‘tred a reouPy +
~ recently a C0’J1^yai,fl providing continuous County
Committee
of
the
^^
leader in the bill on the grounds that
aa Astroph^cai '^Smithson- afternoon entertainment, and it
’’
““ a""’“n;'d re. serves as edited of the vv and Abraham Lincoln should likewise
- Abridge'Mo -. Observatory is here that performers would ™>V
niost exposure. But Canada
^firiiiatinn k» ?*‘ichusetts, for
t
v v
I
1 Law Association Bulletin. °e accordeJ national recognition,
1 to " ! « "-bat was believ- will also join in a major arts
In A. 1.. the enciosement of a most influential patent journal in | ^e Kai<l he would offer an amfestival off the Expo site, and
f»» Japane„ "2®yIisc^
tZLS'!;^^
beMal-d„Mnt
creating
Presidents
Piners.
"e amateur astro- I fay 1 on a Canada Day spectacular
' ' is inot usual,y de « ft. ZS/S' Z h^’ t”
-K,
* ^e Tokv
1 ate ^ay or eai'ly June.
which
*yarOry/(XjM^
Ob'
Montreal impresario Sam Ges- should aris m the primary elecKojima is active in the Jana-’h °r Honest Abe’
“hwersity Of
?^ the ser has been commissioned to tion. to be heid ihia \ear on nese American Citizens League
^graphic renon > ’
a scour the country for professional June 18.
‘be Japanese American Associa^go of Tsuvama rn^ViA^hLho 1 PeMormers and p e r f o r m i n g
_ The
r Nisei candidate is director tion and various Japanese busi
•lecture, on the -:oU-^a^ama Shoups. Comedy, folk-singing and er lar eastern patent operations ness groups.
’ '• cornet.
Jag of the I iazz will be some of the fare at
These positions of leadership
• ccording to rhe
m
I 'be Pav:bon, a symphony orchestm
the legal profession, business
^-ed a taTe^t *
or ballet is the likely choice
TOKYO.—Beer ration?
and civic matters,” a Countv
^whh.,,^
.arts festival, and the
the war helped ferment
Committee
spokesman
said,
“
eminew
yn aegrees
® of about RCMP band and musical ride are
nentlv
nej!^y . qualifies Mr. Kojima for trend — beer drinking among
tf ^yhula AndromXr^1011!1^ °f 5ure bets for the Canada Dav
Japanese women.
De sanP y\°^eda at 2:50 ceremonies
According to Hiroyoshi Ishi
Most importantly, it was pointi-»..-eP°y was Soon followed
-n”6 ^uarantee that Canada
out, h;s leadership i being kawa, assistant professor of psy
MIDWAY', B.C.—The first an
Lp-e spotting of the
. get S'ood’ mileage out of its
to the neonk at a crucia1 chology at Seijo University in
come
nual
Boundary
District
Car
Ral
1 astir.,-four other amatalent at Expo 70 is that
Pi?1' -J’1 American history, when Tokyo,, the battle today amon"
‘chi iire^l61'5 in Tochigi and -federal officials will be working ly held here recently was won L‘e 'i-fer-’iu rectal groups are breweries is to capture a bigger
"he unu;JCilHr7:?.
*
£j°sely with Quebec, Ontario and
rapidly polarizing in different share of the expanding female
3WO0^ai':\'?rge number of | ribisb Columbia, all installing
beer-drinking- population.
gashi and his partner David
Japanese drink an average of
'°D Hpn^igntin= including £a'Tlons°f their own 031 the
•'His leadership can and will
Jones.
?» staS* (^*»y» °sa-a site.
ng about reconciliation, and 30 bottles of beer a year, com
They wheeled their car with
1 ^vho ba<
0 Kurashiki I
The §11,200,000 federal budget
to people of pared with 2o0 in the Netherands and West Germany, and
ah
backgrounds
?fb5? to V;
coniet lor Expo 70 includes about S900.- 20 other top contestants through
? spokesman
00 in the United States.
said.
e‘iCe D the
}t; gave | 000 for entertainment of all Rocky Mountain curves and came
But the number is increasing
■,;w r-f a
port\ of the kinds, but Reid says it will be out on top with a total of 894
normal A- the 69th m Japan, thanks in part to a rise
Di
$?R?s arrs*-,
comeu
I some time before specific costs
overwhelmingly for in female beer drinkers, accord
points । it of a possible .990.
' $-en m^a,.Vr-,astronomers are allocated. There are prob
Dart”.
om ing to Prof. Ishikawa.
Other Japanese Canadian win
Dressed c
ate in sjy^w successful lemsthat
The professor says w
were Willie Kakuno, John- toe poor n would
break from a high “brand loyalty.’
t
^e feDous^Ikev^^
Sample: “How much does it. ners
.
The rea1. '.yanz pattern and son for this
ny
Tatevama. their pre
'-^cove,-^ ;^
. Seki I cost to ship 40-odd horses across n
-v Kakuno,
is not clear — beer
.t
ojima,
who
is
in
his
I the Pacific and back?”
and Shiro Oye.
early SOL
o office.
gSansei Student
|Wins Lorne Park
/Athlete Of Year
Japan Locomotiv© For Toronto Transit
Kojima Is First Nisei To Win N.Y. GOP Backing fe^^ Si: £
pniet Found
^ 4 Japanese
Astronomers
J.C. Lad Wins
Rocky Mountain
Automobile Rally
Japan Breweries
Eye The Ladies
(Continued on Page 8)
Page 2
PAGE 2
N E W
Saturday. Max
Matsuzaka Cops Japan Judo Title
Upsetting The Great Isao Okano
J^V ANDY ADAMS
V?- — Takeshi Matsuzaka frustrated Isao
?ianOi ^opes of capturing his second straight
national judo title when he upset the Olvmpic
gold-medahst in the finals of the All-Jaoan Judo
• ^’^H^ps recently .at the Nippon *Budokan
in Tokyo.
,, ^e.c'oseh contested bout went right down to
the wire, with neither judoka to score even half
3 D01”1 against the other during the eight-minute
aw*rded the match—and the
k e i °r Matsuzawa on a “yusei-gachi” out-ofjxindsuchimata’’ throw he pulled off against
• BOWLING
Okano toward the end.
Okano, who. beat Nobuyuki Sato last year with
Winners of the 8th Annual Nisei
1S ."F^ed semoge ’ over-the-shoulder throw, was
(211); Roy
,
Tournament
A.uratac55'9 (223k“Son J
-inab.e to get his husky rival into position for
Shea's Cedarbrae
Akira Sogawa 551 h;;
a history-repeating performance. For one thin%
— April I2th and btu, 1968
Gert Smykowski ^34.
iiatsuzmca wore his judogi jacket so loosely Oka-’ 38 entries
Teams
Prize-S408.50 Alma Wilson 518 '
;.O could do little more than pull it over his'rival’s Sea Hi
$169.<JU rA^V2t!i: ^en hu
3033
$80.03 Couhghan 601 (W).
aead during his throwing attempts.
2767
(237); 7om
$J 0.00 19971.
A semifinalist for the past two vears. Ma^upiaaoKoro
Hayashi
2959
$40.00 Utsunomiya
(204); T
Nisnimura
°ir ka Po,licen^—made the finals this
294
$30.00 (256); Shig On: uka 58''
Geslak
2934
Murata
581
iij.Ub
S
sp!l lli°1Nobuyuki Sato in the semi-finals
; Chud- GssA
Cinicola
2927
$23.50 (202); Dick Isoshim
y it 11 the only thing resemblin
Men's Singles Prize -S18O.UO Goryo 5 9 (211); Ai 5?l «;
a successful in 30 entries
rounds throw. Even at that, h
1155
$60.00
technique looked Mike Sakura
Suehiro
1109
SJu Ik Kitaura-® R)M°V2F
more like • it came from pro Gord
7am Ohara
1101
$25.00
wrestling than from judo.
foe Doi
1088
$20.00 (257); Kim Onizuka
1074
$15.00 553 (203); Shir! Mivasw
pulled it off bv an Doi
'
k 5T; Sae /
George Masuda
1062
$12.00 vata 530.
grabbing Sal
by the left
By T. UMEZUKI
1060
$10.00
.$
...
Mary T^'
1058
TORONTO.—Spring has brought out the greenery in Toronto heaving him ofT his feet a^i
and Herb Miyasaki
$4.00
Tom Sumi
1058
men
s
.amming
him
onto
the
mat.
$4.00
5i.pin bowling's
and the greenery has brought out the Japanese and Japanese
entries Ladie' s Singles Prize -S64.50 wXani,
It wasn’t worth a half-point, but 30
Kathy Yamamoto
749
$20.00 was held on Sat., Aoril 27ft ~Y"
Canadian golfers.
it was obviously instrumental in Mary Ebata
699
$15.00 The following trophies were ~
Nora Ryan
Tw'o major golf groups in this area. the Japanese
the judges’ decision.
633
$12.00
Canadian
Donna Baba
A" DIVISION:
629
$10.00
Okai™ earned the right to face Shirley
Nisei Golf Club and the Toronto Nihon Shokokai Club (the latter
vfagUn Champs: Wayen D^Doi
624
$3.75
Matsuzaka in the finals bv de Irene Hayashi
624
$3.75 Ylay-off Champs: Dave Kobv's’
consisting of members of the Consulate General of Japan and Ja
Repairs
feating Mitsuo Matsunaga, 1966 21 entries Ladie's All Events Prize-S.21.00
panese business firms in Toronto) will hold or have already be national
Kathy Yamamoto 2485 — Bowling Ball Team Triple: Wayen Din"
champion
and
1965
leam Single: Nobby's Sun’ll'
and Silver Tray
gun to hold tournaments.
world open-weights titlist. Al- Mary Ebata
_
"B” DIVISION2465
$10.00
Broadway Florist
Alma Wilson
On Sunday, May 12th, the J.C. Nisei dub, with many young though, the latter vuuu
2394
87.00
outweighed fean
Berry's Trophies
Ward
2380
84.00
Okano oy at least 70 pounds and
Sansei
Eldorado
Ladie's All Events (Scratch)
r
W111 110,0 theh’ firSt tournament of the season tow-ered over him at 6-2, the huge
„Alma Wilson
2286 — Bowling Shoes Broadway Forist
‘! R° lnghll! Go,f and Country Cub. This year players have
This year we have the seedentries Mixed Doubles Prize-S258.00
been Matsunaga made almost no aa^
Class is only for iron's
divided into three groups: “A”, “B”. and “C”.
’ean & Clare Ward
gressive moves.
°
1319 $80 GO
fication of 240 and’ over av=7
T.
Yamamura
&
A.
Watanabe
1306
$40.00
Okano was full of soirit and1 Alma Wilson & H. Hayek
The Nihon Shokokai Club had their first tournament on Sun
1250 $30.00 Hi Average: Frank Nozaki
was
constantly
on
the
move
Mary
Ebata
&
W.
Kimura
day, May 5th at Rouge Hills Golf and Country Chib. This
1128 $25.00 Hi Triple: Greg Nishi
year nfa!nSt M^s^aga, trying one G. Smykowski & Y. Murata 1214 $20.00 Hi Single: Boe> Yamaoka
Due to only treohv pe- bow
the players were divided into two groups: “A” Handicap 6-20 and Lhiow aHer another—mostly “se- Martha Miike & Jack Ono 1212 $18.00
must mention' that Frank fee
P.
Nishimura
&
T.
Furukawa
1204
$15.00
“B” Handicap 21-30. The A gioup winner w,as Mr. R. Yonemoto killaiSe’/ ^atsunaga effectively Mary Ebata & Ben Mori
1194 $12.00 another perfect aame of 450 and G
blocked them all. and on one oc- Jean & George Furukawa
and the “B” group winnei
1193 $10.00 Nishi had rolled two 400 a'
400).
casion, forced Okano onto the K. Yamamoto & M. Sakura 1180 $8.00 season. (440, "A"
CLASS:
15 entries Ladie's Doubles Prize-S. 4.50
tatami, but was unable to pin T. Watanabe & K. Onizuka 1228 $30.00 Hi Average Geri Fujisawa
Average Nobby Yano
smaller opponent, who man G. Wakida & Jean Katai 1179 $15.00 Hi
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A
Hi Ttriple Joyce Kitagawa
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D. aged to squirm loose and crawd D. Baba & Marie Kawano 1173 $10.00 Hi
Triple' Yosh Taguchi
Jean Ward & Terrie Doi
1161 $9.50
out of bounds.
‘ Doctor of Chiropractic’’
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
tri
40 entries Men's Doubles Prize-S172.00 Hi Single Yosh Inouye
Hi Single Ka- MaHrn’r
Since no points were scored G. Masuda & B. Gately
1294 $70.00
728A S(. Clair Ave. West
NOTARY PUBLIC
' either . f the two godan ju- L. N’shimoto & S. Couligban 1291. $35 00 Josie Matsuba“B" CLASS:
Furukawa and Ben Mori 1258 $25.00
(H block West of Christie)
doka.
the judges were forced1 to Aki
221 VICTORIA ST., TORONTO
Ken Doi- and ____
Ken _____
Katai
„
1249 $20.00 Stan Koyanagi
TORONTO
c o m e u p with
EM. 3-5002
OX. 1-3388 (Re,.)
Ernie Jomori and Don Martin 1246 $12.00 Kim Kariya
decision.
AnHamade
651-8060
Res. 621-1989
narently favoring Okano’s of- M. Cinicola and Dick Kimura 1239 $10.00 Yutch
Irene Haraga
39
entries
Men's
All
Events
Prize-S39.00
Pensive tactics and frowning on Mike Sakura 2964
Tom Ogawa
I — Bowling Ball
"C" CLASS:
Matsunaga’s
lack of
and Silver Tray
fighting
Amy Haraga
Ken
Doi
spirit, t
-2953 $16.00 Ken
judges gave Okano
Takahashi
2905 $13.00
the nod.
Ken Katai
2903 $5.00 Joyce Mayede
1,ot11 the final bout lack Ono
2903 $5.00 Dennis Nishi
Nancy Nomura
M en's All Events (Scratch)
ami the two semifinal matches
Shoes Iohn Nishi
Tom Madokoro 27
Bowling
were rather dull, unexciting afLADIES'
Tournament Receipts
>8’
Most
with none of the four iu- 18 Teams $20.00
$760.00 Most Spares:
in
Men's
Doubles
$8
00
$320.00
^ scorR e''e^ half a io Men's Singles $5.00
MEN'S:
Reservations: EM. 6-2164 point. Okanos
$400.00 : Ken Takahashi
tendency to move 15 Ladie's Doubles $8.00
$120.00
CROWN LIFE
toward the edae caused nume 30 Ladie's Singles $4.00
$120.00 Koichi Kitagav
1 or best arrangements
rous delays in forcing the notion =0 Mixed Doubles $3.00
$480.00
!&Ul
$2,260.00
back to the center while MatsuReserve ahead of time.
Toronto Nisei Sunday Ten Pin W
Tournament Disbursments
zaka’s W’^ecnred jacket made it Lane Rental
1750 lines .45
$787 50 ing League, April 7th: Shirley Do: £
doublv difficult for his opponents jrize Fund
VA?I0US KINDS OF SUSHI
$1,208.00 Marjorie Izumi 465; Yosh Hurals
Ken Doi 613; George Masuda J
to o-et a firm grasn
AND OTHER JAPANESE
April 21st Shirley Doi 621 (?!2. '
Postage, Stationeries, Engravina
AGENCY
CUISINES AVAILABLE FOR
Four other JuHol
Mary Mils
Marjorie Izumie ;
v Forms, Telephone Calls,
lo^f out in
476; Marg:
the e’1arter-finals: '
Nakaga
FAMILY PARTIES
rs, Special Prizes, etc: S7R4 50 I M-argaret
naka 453; Frank Wakida ®7 ^.y
Office — 3101 Bathurst St.
S2,260.00
FREE DELIVERY
u-bu^Sokine. Hi^hi OknTournament Director I Coombes 584; Ken Doi 565:^ icsn --—
Phone: 783-4261
Mary Ebata rata 554; Paul Nakagawa 55;.
460 Dundas St. W.
April 28th: Marv Mitsuki 5'0: ^
■
■eted m the semifinals last year.
Home phone: 449-9293
Doi 568; Rhoda Masuda 469: tory^
hot it ’•arkefT th? fjrq time
Toronto Nisei Major Ten Pin Bowling bes 489; Ken Doi 636; Frank
Toronto
League
other
jmMlm have
Gene Shinya 588; Terry Dot J;
Le
r Hi. Terrv Dot
Izumi 572; Kayo Smgetcrni
it to the final eight.
SCORES
Nisei & Japanese Golf Tourneys Begin
NIKKO GARDEN
Gertrude Urate
*Veicoxne Japanese Canadian
Toe Doi, Terrie Nakagawa 560; Joe Doi 55Dot, Yukio Murata.
May 5th: Shirley
Play-off chamos Sea
bes
532; Mary M
Consotation champs Southam's Law;
hrs ?;
Quarterfinals
Mover Service Shig Onizuka. Kim On! Izumi 473; George
623: u
Ken
Doi
602;
Clare
(A Block)
zuka, Amv Su:^a M^s r.ndo. Mas S
L G’c:
rata 568; Brian Gal
Matsuzaka drew with Kato: Okano aamo-i, Tom Fujimoto.
drew with
Sekine;
Matsuzaka drew Ladle's^ Hiah Average Alma Wilson 178 suda 554.
League Champions
with Okano;' Kato drew with Sekine;
Men s Hiah A.veraae Ken Izumi
:ain)
186
Matsuzaka
Lucy Coombes
Ssk’np by
"sukui- Ladie's Hiah Trial? F'a* M Ebata 607
Gene Shinya
^ano beat Kato bv "awase- Men's High Triple Flat T. Fujimoto 661
Yosh Murata
a‘?\ Okano beat Matsuzaka bv "Voand Richard Sakauye 661
Margaret Tanc
.o-sh^ogatame, in a playoff. Racking:
Hiah
Triple
Handicap
Matsuzaka (1-0-2); Kato (0-1-2); Sekine
Jim Roberts
•
Hatanaka
685
(0-1-2).
Play-Off Champions
Marjorie Izumi
Richard Sakauve
724
(B Block)
Ken Doi
Lady's
High
Sinah
Flat
Keii Sato drew with Matsunaga; NoPaul Nakagav.
Bernice Dorrell
244
buyuki Sa’o
Terry Doi
.W —
^y 'koko-'-hiArchie Mats
_
Sato decisioned Oka"'’’aternabe <5 Terry Doi
256 Consolation Champions
1-a.sunrrga drew with N. Sato; N
L:
Han dicao
Shirley D.
Sato "ku3UFe-kamishiho2:
? , 7°..
Matcunnaa b-at Okada bv
trank
Single Handicap
Ranking: N. Sato (2-0-1);
Rodnev Ts
D
:wa
279
Ken Nakar
T'a7no/!’°-2>; K- Sato
(1-1-1);
'd Bowler Awgr
Okada (0-0-3).
Yoko Shige
150
(Mrs.) Mori0”5
Semifinals
Ma-”
dwi'i^n^d Mckunnrrrr; Matsu
Secretary
158 ta 172
-ka decisioned Nobuyuki Sato.
Sinais
Toronto Nisei Maio Ten Pin Bov.^bcr
Matsunaga decisioned Okano.
. A^r;i <;♦},. r, -v noj *35 (274).
->- a—„^_ ego zw,:
Friends
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TMVESW
special Attention on Take Out Orders
CM
2-U029
For reservations
EM. 2-4322
!26 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
to budding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
PEST NEW SPRING
STYLE ARJUVED
Ladies'
CO <
Buy & Sell -
iroiTi
1 up to 11
Through
Men ’ Scott Mellales
up to 14
Mils Kuroda
ALBERTS SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
Representing
i
। I
1
I
(
Bob Owen
Real Estate Co.
| I
2625 Eglint on Ave. East.
| | Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-25S1
*84 1227’.
M-ma 5?1
(Wl.
^7 (9975. v„p T —
y^njn-y 577 r?p^.
5"
^C’b
MtVQSdkj
Use New Canadian A^
So?
SAY TT WITH
FLOWERS
SHARON'S FLORIST
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Peter Sasaki
K. Sasaki
Rus: Hn. 6-204]
Res: HO. 6-7962
942 PAPE
AVE.,
T.V. Service
TORONTO
EM. 4-9913
(TOHONTO)
N E W
Saturday. Max
Matsuzaka Cops Japan Judo Title
Upsetting The Great Isao Okano
J^V ANDY ADAMS
V?- — Takeshi Matsuzaka frustrated Isao
?ianOi ^opes of capturing his second straight
national judo title when he upset the Olvmpic
gold-medahst in the finals of the All-Jaoan Judo
• ^’^H^ps recently .at the Nippon *Budokan
in Tokyo.
,, ^e.c'oseh contested bout went right down to
the wire, with neither judoka to score even half
3 D01”1 against the other during the eight-minute
aw*rded the match—and the
k e i °r Matsuzawa on a “yusei-gachi” out-ofjxindsuchimata’’ throw he pulled off against
• BOWLING
Okano toward the end.
Okano, who. beat Nobuyuki Sato last year with
Winners of the 8th Annual Nisei
1S ."F^ed semoge ’ over-the-shoulder throw, was
(211); Roy
,
Tournament
A.uratac55'9 (223k“Son J
-inab.e to get his husky rival into position for
Shea's Cedarbrae
Akira Sogawa 551 h;;
a history-repeating performance. For one thin%
— April I2th and btu, 1968
Gert Smykowski ^34.
iiatsuzmca wore his judogi jacket so loosely Oka-’ 38 entries
Teams
Prize-S408.50 Alma Wilson 518 '
;.O could do little more than pull it over his'rival’s Sea Hi
$169.<JU rA^V2t!i: ^en hu
3033
$80.03 Couhghan 601 (W).
aead during his throwing attempts.
2767
(237); 7om
$J 0.00 19971.
A semifinalist for the past two vears. Ma^upiaaoKoro
Hayashi
2959
$40.00 Utsunomiya
(204); T
Nisnimura
°ir ka Po,licen^—made the finals this
294
$30.00 (256); Shig On: uka 58''
Geslak
2934
Murata
581
iij.Ub
S
sp!l lli°1Nobuyuki Sato in the semi-finals
; Chud- GssA
Cinicola
2927
$23.50 (202); Dick Isoshim
y it 11 the only thing resemblin
Men's Singles Prize -S18O.UO Goryo 5 9 (211); Ai 5?l «;
a successful in 30 entries
rounds throw. Even at that, h
1155
$60.00
technique looked Mike Sakura
Suehiro
1109
SJu Ik Kitaura-® R)M°V2F
more like • it came from pro Gord
7am Ohara
1101
$25.00
wrestling than from judo.
foe Doi
1088
$20.00 (257); Kim Onizuka
1074
$15.00 553 (203); Shir! Mivasw
pulled it off bv an Doi
'
k 5T; Sae /
George Masuda
1062
$12.00 vata 530.
grabbing Sal
by the left
By T. UMEZUKI
1060
$10.00
.$
...
Mary T^'
1058
TORONTO.—Spring has brought out the greenery in Toronto heaving him ofT his feet a^i
and Herb Miyasaki
$4.00
Tom Sumi
1058
men
s
.amming
him
onto
the
mat.
$4.00
5i.pin bowling's
and the greenery has brought out the Japanese and Japanese
entries Ladie' s Singles Prize -S64.50 wXani,
It wasn’t worth a half-point, but 30
Kathy Yamamoto
749
$20.00 was held on Sat., Aoril 27ft ~Y"
Canadian golfers.
it was obviously instrumental in Mary Ebata
699
$15.00 The following trophies were ~
Nora Ryan
Tw'o major golf groups in this area. the Japanese
the judges’ decision.
633
$12.00
Canadian
Donna Baba
A" DIVISION:
629
$10.00
Okai™ earned the right to face Shirley
Nisei Golf Club and the Toronto Nihon Shokokai Club (the latter
vfagUn Champs: Wayen D^Doi
624
$3.75
Matsuzaka in the finals bv de Irene Hayashi
624
$3.75 Ylay-off Champs: Dave Kobv's’
consisting of members of the Consulate General of Japan and Ja
Repairs
feating Mitsuo Matsunaga, 1966 21 entries Ladie's All Events Prize-S.21.00
panese business firms in Toronto) will hold or have already be national
Kathy Yamamoto 2485 — Bowling Ball Team Triple: Wayen Din"
champion
and
1965
leam Single: Nobby's Sun’ll'
and Silver Tray
gun to hold tournaments.
world open-weights titlist. Al- Mary Ebata
_
"B” DIVISION2465
$10.00
Broadway Florist
Alma Wilson
On Sunday, May 12th, the J.C. Nisei dub, with many young though, the latter vuuu
2394
87.00
outweighed fean
Berry's Trophies
Ward
2380
84.00
Okano oy at least 70 pounds and
Sansei
Eldorado
Ladie's All Events (Scratch)
r
W111 110,0 theh’ firSt tournament of the season tow-ered over him at 6-2, the huge
„Alma Wilson
2286 — Bowling Shoes Broadway Forist
‘! R° lnghll! Go,f and Country Cub. This year players have
This year we have the seedentries Mixed Doubles Prize-S258.00
been Matsunaga made almost no aa^
Class is only for iron's
divided into three groups: “A”, “B”. and “C”.
’ean & Clare Ward
gressive moves.
°
1319 $80 GO
fication of 240 and’ over av=7
T.
Yamamura
&
A.
Watanabe
1306
$40.00
Okano was full of soirit and1 Alma Wilson & H. Hayek
The Nihon Shokokai Club had their first tournament on Sun
1250 $30.00 Hi Average: Frank Nozaki
was
constantly
on
the
move
Mary
Ebata
&
W.
Kimura
day, May 5th at Rouge Hills Golf and Country Chib. This
1128 $25.00 Hi Triple: Greg Nishi
year nfa!nSt M^s^aga, trying one G. Smykowski & Y. Murata 1214 $20.00 Hi Single: Boe> Yamaoka
Due to only treohv pe- bow
the players were divided into two groups: “A” Handicap 6-20 and Lhiow aHer another—mostly “se- Martha Miike & Jack Ono 1212 $18.00
must mention' that Frank fee
P.
Nishimura
&
T.
Furukawa
1204
$15.00
“B” Handicap 21-30. The A gioup winner w,as Mr. R. Yonemoto killaiSe’/ ^atsunaga effectively Mary Ebata & Ben Mori
1194 $12.00 another perfect aame of 450 and G
blocked them all. and on one oc- Jean & George Furukawa
and the “B” group winnei
1193 $10.00 Nishi had rolled two 400 a'
400).
casion, forced Okano onto the K. Yamamoto & M. Sakura 1180 $8.00 season. (440, "A"
CLASS:
15 entries Ladie's Doubles Prize-S. 4.50
tatami, but was unable to pin T. Watanabe & K. Onizuka 1228 $30.00 Hi Average Geri Fujisawa
Average Nobby Yano
smaller opponent, who man G. Wakida & Jean Katai 1179 $15.00 Hi
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A
Hi Ttriple Joyce Kitagawa
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D. aged to squirm loose and crawd D. Baba & Marie Kawano 1173 $10.00 Hi
Triple' Yosh Taguchi
Jean Ward & Terrie Doi
1161 $9.50
out of bounds.
‘ Doctor of Chiropractic’’
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
tri
40 entries Men's Doubles Prize-S172.00 Hi Single Yosh Inouye
Hi Single Ka- MaHrn’r
Since no points were scored G. Masuda & B. Gately
1294 $70.00
728A S(. Clair Ave. West
NOTARY PUBLIC
' either . f the two godan ju- L. N’shimoto & S. Couligban 1291. $35 00 Josie Matsuba“B" CLASS:
Furukawa and Ben Mori 1258 $25.00
(H block West of Christie)
doka.
the judges were forced1 to Aki
221 VICTORIA ST., TORONTO
Ken Doi- and ____
Ken _____
Katai
„
1249 $20.00 Stan Koyanagi
TORONTO
c o m e u p with
EM. 3-5002
OX. 1-3388 (Re,.)
Ernie Jomori and Don Martin 1246 $12.00 Kim Kariya
decision.
AnHamade
651-8060
Res. 621-1989
narently favoring Okano’s of- M. Cinicola and Dick Kimura 1239 $10.00 Yutch
Irene Haraga
39
entries
Men's
All
Events
Prize-S39.00
Pensive tactics and frowning on Mike Sakura 2964
Tom Ogawa
I — Bowling Ball
"C" CLASS:
Matsunaga’s
lack of
and Silver Tray
fighting
Amy Haraga
Ken
Doi
spirit, t
-2953 $16.00 Ken
judges gave Okano
Takahashi
2905 $13.00
the nod.
Ken Katai
2903 $5.00 Joyce Mayede
1,ot11 the final bout lack Ono
2903 $5.00 Dennis Nishi
Nancy Nomura
M en's All Events (Scratch)
ami the two semifinal matches
Shoes Iohn Nishi
Tom Madokoro 27
Bowling
were rather dull, unexciting afLADIES'
Tournament Receipts
>8’
Most
with none of the four iu- 18 Teams $20.00
$760.00 Most Spares:
in
Men's
Doubles
$8
00
$320.00
^ scorR e''e^ half a io Men's Singles $5.00
MEN'S:
Reservations: EM. 6-2164 point. Okanos
$400.00 : Ken Takahashi
tendency to move 15 Ladie's Doubles $8.00
$120.00
CROWN LIFE
toward the edae caused nume 30 Ladie's Singles $4.00
$120.00 Koichi Kitagav
1 or best arrangements
rous delays in forcing the notion =0 Mixed Doubles $3.00
$480.00
!&Ul
$2,260.00
back to the center while MatsuReserve ahead of time.
Toronto Nisei Sunday Ten Pin W
Tournament Disbursments
zaka’s W’^ecnred jacket made it Lane Rental
1750 lines .45
$787 50 ing League, April 7th: Shirley Do: £
doublv difficult for his opponents jrize Fund
VA?I0US KINDS OF SUSHI
$1,208.00 Marjorie Izumi 465; Yosh Hurals
Ken Doi 613; George Masuda J
to o-et a firm grasn
AND OTHER JAPANESE
April 21st Shirley Doi 621 (?!2. '
Postage, Stationeries, Engravina
AGENCY
CUISINES AVAILABLE FOR
Four other JuHol
Mary Mils
Marjorie Izumie ;
v Forms, Telephone Calls,
lo^f out in
476; Marg:
the e’1arter-finals: '
Nakaga
FAMILY PARTIES
rs, Special Prizes, etc: S7R4 50 I M-argaret
naka 453; Frank Wakida ®7 ^.y
Office — 3101 Bathurst St.
S2,260.00
FREE DELIVERY
u-bu^Sokine. Hi^hi OknTournament Director I Coombes 584; Ken Doi 565:^ icsn --—
Phone: 783-4261
Mary Ebata rata 554; Paul Nakagawa 55;.
460 Dundas St. W.
April 28th: Marv Mitsuki 5'0: ^
■
■eted m the semifinals last year.
Home phone: 449-9293
Doi 568; Rhoda Masuda 469: tory^
hot it ’•arkefT th? fjrq time
Toronto Nisei Major Ten Pin Bowling bes 489; Ken Doi 636; Frank
Toronto
League
other
jmMlm have
Gene Shinya 588; Terry Dot J;
Le
r Hi. Terrv Dot
Izumi 572; Kayo Smgetcrni
it to the final eight.
SCORES
Nisei & Japanese Golf Tourneys Begin
NIKKO GARDEN
Gertrude Urate
*Veicoxne Japanese Canadian
Toe Doi, Terrie Nakagawa 560; Joe Doi 55Dot, Yukio Murata.
May 5th: Shirley
Play-off chamos Sea
bes
532; Mary M
Consotation champs Southam's Law;
hrs ?;
Quarterfinals
Mover Service Shig Onizuka. Kim On! Izumi 473; George
623: u
Ken
Doi
602;
Clare
(A Block)
zuka, Amv Su:^a M^s r.ndo. Mas S
L G’c:
rata 568; Brian Gal
Matsuzaka drew with Kato: Okano aamo-i, Tom Fujimoto.
drew with
Sekine;
Matsuzaka drew Ladle's^ Hiah Average Alma Wilson 178 suda 554.
League Champions
with Okano;' Kato drew with Sekine;
Men s Hiah A.veraae Ken Izumi
:ain)
186
Matsuzaka
Lucy Coombes
Ssk’np by
"sukui- Ladie's Hiah Trial? F'a* M Ebata 607
Gene Shinya
^ano beat Kato bv "awase- Men's High Triple Flat T. Fujimoto 661
Yosh Murata
a‘?\ Okano beat Matsuzaka bv "Voand Richard Sakauye 661
Margaret Tanc
.o-sh^ogatame, in a playoff. Racking:
Hiah
Triple
Handicap
Matsuzaka (1-0-2); Kato (0-1-2); Sekine
Jim Roberts
•
Hatanaka
685
(0-1-2).
Play-Off Champions
Marjorie Izumi
Richard Sakauve
724
(B Block)
Ken Doi
Lady's
High
Sinah
Flat
Keii Sato drew with Matsunaga; NoPaul Nakagav.
Bernice Dorrell
244
buyuki Sa’o
Terry Doi
.W —
^y 'koko-'-hiArchie Mats
_
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256 Consolation Champions
1-a.sunrrga drew with N. Sato; N
L:
Han dicao
Shirley D.
Sato "ku3UFe-kamishiho2:
? , 7°..
Matcunnaa b-at Okada bv
trank
Single Handicap
Ranking: N. Sato (2-0-1);
Rodnev Ts
D
:wa
279
Ken Nakar
T'a7no/!’°-2>; K- Sato
(1-1-1);
'd Bowler Awgr
Okada (0-0-3).
Yoko Shige
150
(Mrs.) Mori0”5
Semifinals
Ma-”
dwi'i^n^d Mckunnrrrr; Matsu
Secretary
158 ta 172
-ka decisioned Nobuyuki Sato.
Sinais
Toronto Nisei Maio Ten Pin Bov.^bcr
Matsunaga decisioned Okano.
. A^r;i <;♦},. r, -v noj *35 (274).
->- a—„^_ ego zw,:
Friends
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TMVESW
special Attention on Take Out Orders
CM
2-U029
For reservations
EM. 2-4322
!26 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
to budding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
PEST NEW SPRING
STYLE ARJUVED
Ladies'
CO <
Buy & Sell -
iroiTi
1 up to 11
Through
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up to 14
Mils Kuroda
ALBERTS SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
Representing
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Bob Owen
Real Estate Co.
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2625 Eglint on Ave. East.
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CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Peter Sasaki
K. Sasaki
Rus: Hn. 6-204]
Res: HO. 6-7962
942 PAPE
AVE.,
T.V. Service
TORONTO
EM. 4-9913
(TOHONTO)
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Dates And Doings
®1
,
rah
Si^»«^-=»-s-—^h»®»**«™^-------------- -----
■ Trinity Tennis Club Registration This Sunday
J|
TORONTO.—Yes! The Trinity Tennis Club will have Re-iMra
Gallup Survey
Shows Yanks Still
Distrust Japanese
Persona! Notes Across Canada
Obituaries
Births
TOKYO. — a
a
J^bcn Day on May 12th at the Trinity—Bellwoods Park
° "
number of AmericanThMd-MAKINO
S
To bring in the 1968 season the Trinity Tennis Club N havin- >ng the opinion that “Japan U
Mr. and Mrs.
-eslie Kunio
HAMILTON
trustworthy
’
was
noted
k
an
After
a
^i-n opening dance at the War Amps Hall, 62 Wellesley, on Satnav
askatchewan are happy to anMototaro Makino pa
^May 11 at 8:30 p.m.
*
‘ ‘
' opinion survey conducted bv Gal line.
nonnce the birth of their first
lup. according to the survey
away at his residence.
jhter, Tamara Jodi"1
See ail of you tennis fans on both occasions —
*u t& i eleased by the Jauane^e St. N. on Friday, May
ne.
ob February
12th, 1968 at
L 1968.
Foreign Office.
W
*
*
*
Beloved husband of
U£
Al^-icaM opin- Akazi. dear father of Thomas
f ^J.C. United Church Satsuki Matsuri Concert May 11 ion f
Mr. and Mrs.
-on. according to the Foreign Of Kazuo. Hamilton.
Allen Michio,
gggfg
TORONTO.—The Toronto Japanese United Church — Nisei fice, were the anti-American deEtobicoke, and Mr Harry Taka- nia) are happy to announce the
^Congregation is holding their Sth Annua] Satsuki Matsuri Concert thprT'T in- January
^beu
suri Concert
birth of their second child’, a son
the
L.S.
Aircraft
Carrier
Enter
f^oif Saturday, May 11th from 7:30 p.m. This year
David
•
promises
to
be
n Ward,
.
on April
1st at the
prise visited Sasebo.
E ^bigger and better with many new talents.
fet.
Boniface
Hospital.
funeral services were held
*
The Gallup opinion survev fm
The boys and girls of the church school will be
p.articipat
-Tay nth at 7 p.m. at Dodsworth
Sue and Roy
■nVev "ais taken be,tween Feb.
well as many newcomers from Japan.
Mizuno are
h-’ppy to anand
Brown.
-4 to March 3 in which 1.504
;
Tickers :
elling for
$1.00 per adult and 25 cents for children. people were interviewed through
nounce the birth of their first
....
, , „
child, a son, Gary Philip, on April
‘.Refreshment will oe sold. Come one, come all, to this old fashioned out the United States.
2nd. i1968 at the Women’s PaKOTERA
- Sconce
leal ihe talent from our own Japanese community. __ G.I.
vilion.
sur
Mvs
bare
been
taker
I#
by Gallup since I960 under com
|fXp
ST. A GATH IMr.
mission of the Japanese govern- Kotera, after a h
. ki- ’
— Judy and Jack
'^Toronlo JCCA Annual Gala Picnic Slated June 30 ment.
ln Mizuno are pleased to announce
semi-retirement, passed away in the birth of their second chili?, a
3
TORONTO.—Summer is a glorious time for picnics and when
During the period mentioned his 83rd year on March 28th nt I daughter, Darlene Sumiko, on
Uggyour thoughts turn to swimming, treasure hunt, races for ell a-es' above 40 percent of the inter
the Koval Edward Hospital, St. April 3rd, .at the Misericordia
M’ingo. demonstrations dancing and hot dogs, ice cream, pop and viewees aid they
’
“trusted”
Agathe.
Mr. Kotera, born .March Hospital.
^naturally obento — these are all part and parcel of one of the pan, and 34 percent
aid not.
15, 1SS5. came to Canada from New Phone
^^Japanese Canadian community’s largest social events of the ve-ir
Hiroshima in 1902 at 17 years
^he TORONTO J.C.C.A. ANNUAL PICNIC to be held on SUNDAY
Results howed (porcenta
TORONTO. — Mr. T. Sada,
M
then spe
most of his
parenthesis is for 1967):
gg^JUXL 30th.
gardener,
wishes to announce a
time in Ocean Fall
Stsengaged in
Trust Japan as
40 perdate open! Please watch for further particulars!
the production of paper. During I caange in his phone number to
cent (45 percent).
Toronto J.C.C.A.
Do Not Trust Japan as Allie: his stay there, he taught shuji 53J~2784 (Toronto).
B
34 percent^(32 percent).
the art of Japanese calliDon t Know: 26 percent (23
>hy at the Ocean Falls Japa4l?nd Eastern Can. Sangha-Dana Confab May 18-19 percent).
Healthy Body & Mind
acted
Do You Think Japan as Deinn nese School, and
'JUS . MONTREAL.—Montreal Buddhist Church
a
H^Wi’^L^VD?.”1 chapters responsible for the° 2nd Eastern' a Stabilizing Force in Asia? Yes', lay minister to the Buddhists ad
AAfaylS?19th
Conference.
scheduled to be held here 45 percent (52 percent); No. 19 herents in Ocean Falls. He con- Through the Martial Arts
percent
(16
percent); Don’t tinned with
this same activitv
JL
■UW M,?™!!,* b 5u™dly engaged in drawing up Know, 36 percent (32 percent).
during
his
evacuation
in
What
Do
You
Think
of
Japa
1 °
conference to welcome Toronto and HaniiFon
<?T ! “IT Ua8?£ who
b« participating ,7 discu™
nese Goods? Excellent, 6 percent Angler. Arriving in Montreal in
g Sf Or V” zSTi ^W ^ “ Canadian Buddhism”
(6 percent); Good, 33 percent (29 1946, he spent his remaining
Ordinary, 38 percent years in St. Agathe.
-V- °L y„Zolt z“S'., Professor of History from the McGill percent);
ASK FOR
uy
1 conclude the Banquet and Social, being planned. (36 percent); Above Ordinary.
He leaves to mourn his passNMm) w Eri" tt'roraTTh yl0^^
°f S**"™**"" and the 77 percent (71 percent); Bad
r'lSe Grur^
* be held at 17 percent (21 percent); Don’t big, Mr. Benso Kanna, younger
Know. 6 percent (8 percent).
Highly rated Japanese g’oods brother living in Yokohama, Mrs.
^pnridhL
recent Winnipeg conference, held in March of Huof Canada, Rev. N.’ishiura was selected were: cameras, optical products,
Luciano Cianciusi
chinaware, radios, television sets S. Miyake, sister-in-law .and her
ch?n-e —^hpHXT61’ °f
Caiiadian Buddhist churches. tape recorders, motorbikes.
Real Estate
married' children, 6 grand netWlS.A.
keenin°f the umbBical cord' of Japan and
Lowly
rated
Japanese
goods
pfenglish-speal^
nn\era of N'.A' Buddhism, where
5 grand neices in Canada
were: tovs, textile products, can 1
Toronto
F<to an indenendonV m P
Sin a P^ion to give guidance ned goods.
and 3 nephews and 3 neices in
pFineiital influences or
.BucdllslA ,in keeping with environBus. 766-6191 Res. LE. 1-1089
Medium: automobiles, watches Japan.
L ^Hawaii. Unerku
and cowries such as
'ewing
machines.
.#1 Buddhj^
tCa- f ei’e 1S-a great challenge before
f>Al possible
from , a pioneer stock, new changes
I-A^
”
1 ^o^d be faced with vigor and stamina. —M.B.C.
r.y
*
*
#
I
Stan Nishimura
'■*J?.Bad<ttist School Teachers Hold Session
1/ f CLIO.
OPTICAL
Session was held on
Buddhist Chl'rclK Over 130 Sunday School
^Xheyib
OPTOMETRISTS
4 Gup^iJ16' 9 1StGn t0 IectUres and take Part il! workshops,
^sadena
as Dr- P- Harrison of Clarmont College, PaBjoy/' ---^uia, who spoke on “The Aims of Religious Educa-
Science has now found a
solution to one of man’s
most serious problems.
JON ONODERA
(Busihwicj
For Your Eyes
rn
oroDHet/n
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-880.
Complete Care
and ^Biss Sally Sakai, who are teachers ot
^^iarv Divk; \C
* 111 ^^moncL handled the workshop in the Primake Simp!e objects as teaching aids.
Teacher.;:
S^llino^ ^ Bitermediate Division were g! ... r
given practice in
KWhonm^n ■ tone
'°lie' eifecBvely, by Mak Ikuta, who teaches
S> R
becoadar.v School iin Vancouver.
kMoo
°f Richmond High School conducted
nother wor
ior Division;
l^for Les«on-^U'ebI01
^'Bsion; “How to Use Newspapers as Source
Th ° \
Buddhist Sunday School Teachers discussed
,<pc meat
31&
facing them and tried to find solutions durina
two d
The
e Trainin& Session.
churches that belong to the NWBSST are
^lgl’°'eh Hope, Kamloops, Kelowna, Steveston,
■ 0 le&on, Portland, Seattle. Spokane, Tacoma. Wa- '
'hite River. — M. Ikuta
ouwrt
Now Available in Canada
Only 84. At Your Druggist
( W/^trionce r
540 Eglinton Ave. W
I oron to
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER,
B.C.
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
FLAT ROOFS
Trave! Arrangements
SHINGLING
EA VESTROUGHING
SHEET HET Al WORK
ALCAN SIDING DEALER
Anywhere — Anytime
^ir—Ship—Bus—Rai)
Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
and
Baggage
18EJ OWNED
TOSH NISHIJIMA
’’COHERING ONTARIO
Ni^ Calls- PL o-v>9' Hl hi)<>
insurance
8
Leaves June 28.
information & Reservations
contact
t
Bar 366
--' SPadina Ave” Toronfo 2'R> Ont.
‘ °'d
Night — K. Tsuyuki 535-9935
Night — T. Uyeda 536-1403
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
Passage arranged by Steamer or Air
DUNDAS UNION STORE
Call for Reservations or
T. KAMEOKA
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
SUKIYAKI MEAT - VINEGAR _ MANJU - SUGAR
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
K. Iwata Travel Service
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
Information — EM. 8-9934
H3 McCaui st.,
Toronto!
Dates And Doings
®1
,
rah
Si^»«^-=»-s-—^h»®»**«™^-------------- -----
■ Trinity Tennis Club Registration This Sunday
J|
TORONTO.—Yes! The Trinity Tennis Club will have Re-iMra
Gallup Survey
Shows Yanks Still
Distrust Japanese
Persona! Notes Across Canada
Obituaries
Births
TOKYO. — a
a
J^bcn Day on May 12th at the Trinity—Bellwoods Park
° "
number of AmericanThMd-MAKINO
S
To bring in the 1968 season the Trinity Tennis Club N havin- >ng the opinion that “Japan U
Mr. and Mrs.
-eslie Kunio
HAMILTON
trustworthy
’
was
noted
k
an
After
a
^i-n opening dance at the War Amps Hall, 62 Wellesley, on Satnav
askatchewan are happy to anMototaro Makino pa
^May 11 at 8:30 p.m.
*
‘ ‘
' opinion survey conducted bv Gal line.
nonnce the birth of their first
lup. according to the survey
away at his residence.
jhter, Tamara Jodi"1
See ail of you tennis fans on both occasions —
*u t& i eleased by the Jauane^e St. N. on Friday, May
ne.
ob February
12th, 1968 at
L 1968.
Foreign Office.
W
*
*
*
Beloved husband of
U£
Al^-icaM opin- Akazi. dear father of Thomas
f ^J.C. United Church Satsuki Matsuri Concert May 11 ion f
Mr. and Mrs.
-on. according to the Foreign Of Kazuo. Hamilton.
Allen Michio,
gggfg
TORONTO.—The Toronto Japanese United Church — Nisei fice, were the anti-American deEtobicoke, and Mr Harry Taka- nia) are happy to announce the
^Congregation is holding their Sth Annua] Satsuki Matsuri Concert thprT'T in- January
^beu
suri Concert
birth of their second child’, a son
the
L.S.
Aircraft
Carrier
Enter
f^oif Saturday, May 11th from 7:30 p.m. This year
David
•
promises
to
be
n Ward,
.
on April
1st at the
prise visited Sasebo.
E ^bigger and better with many new talents.
fet.
Boniface
Hospital.
funeral services were held
*
The Gallup opinion survev fm
The boys and girls of the church school will be
p.articipat
-Tay nth at 7 p.m. at Dodsworth
Sue and Roy
■nVev "ais taken be,tween Feb.
well as many newcomers from Japan.
Mizuno are
h-’ppy to anand
Brown.
-4 to March 3 in which 1.504
;
Tickers :
elling for
$1.00 per adult and 25 cents for children. people were interviewed through
nounce the birth of their first
....
, , „
child, a son, Gary Philip, on April
‘.Refreshment will oe sold. Come one, come all, to this old fashioned out the United States.
2nd. i1968 at the Women’s PaKOTERA
- Sconce
leal ihe talent from our own Japanese community. __ G.I.
vilion.
sur
Mvs
bare
been
taker
I#
by Gallup since I960 under com
|fXp
ST. A GATH IMr.
mission of the Japanese govern- Kotera, after a h
. ki- ’
— Judy and Jack
'^Toronlo JCCA Annual Gala Picnic Slated June 30 ment.
ln Mizuno are pleased to announce
semi-retirement, passed away in the birth of their second chili?, a
3
TORONTO.—Summer is a glorious time for picnics and when
During the period mentioned his 83rd year on March 28th nt I daughter, Darlene Sumiko, on
Uggyour thoughts turn to swimming, treasure hunt, races for ell a-es' above 40 percent of the inter
the Koval Edward Hospital, St. April 3rd, .at the Misericordia
M’ingo. demonstrations dancing and hot dogs, ice cream, pop and viewees aid they
’
“trusted”
Agathe.
Mr. Kotera, born .March Hospital.
^naturally obento — these are all part and parcel of one of the pan, and 34 percent
aid not.
15, 1SS5. came to Canada from New Phone
^^Japanese Canadian community’s largest social events of the ve-ir
Hiroshima in 1902 at 17 years
^he TORONTO J.C.C.A. ANNUAL PICNIC to be held on SUNDAY
Results howed (porcenta
TORONTO. — Mr. T. Sada,
M
then spe
most of his
parenthesis is for 1967):
gg^JUXL 30th.
gardener,
wishes to announce a
time in Ocean Fall
Stsengaged in
Trust Japan as
40 perdate open! Please watch for further particulars!
the production of paper. During I caange in his phone number to
cent (45 percent).
Toronto J.C.C.A.
Do Not Trust Japan as Allie: his stay there, he taught shuji 53J~2784 (Toronto).
B
34 percent^(32 percent).
the art of Japanese calliDon t Know: 26 percent (23
>hy at the Ocean Falls Japa4l?nd Eastern Can. Sangha-Dana Confab May 18-19 percent).
Healthy Body & Mind
acted
Do You Think Japan as Deinn nese School, and
'JUS . MONTREAL.—Montreal Buddhist Church
a
H^Wi’^L^VD?.”1 chapters responsible for the° 2nd Eastern' a Stabilizing Force in Asia? Yes', lay minister to the Buddhists ad
AAfaylS?19th
Conference.
scheduled to be held here 45 percent (52 percent); No. 19 herents in Ocean Falls. He con- Through the Martial Arts
percent
(16
percent); Don’t tinned with
this same activitv
JL
■UW M,?™!!,* b 5u™dly engaged in drawing up Know, 36 percent (32 percent).
during
his
evacuation
in
What
Do
You
Think
of
Japa
1 °
conference to welcome Toronto and HaniiFon
<?T ! “IT Ua8?£ who
b« participating ,7 discu™
nese Goods? Excellent, 6 percent Angler. Arriving in Montreal in
g Sf Or V” zSTi ^W ^ “ Canadian Buddhism”
(6 percent); Good, 33 percent (29 1946, he spent his remaining
Ordinary, 38 percent years in St. Agathe.
-V- °L y„Zolt z“S'., Professor of History from the McGill percent);
ASK FOR
uy
1 conclude the Banquet and Social, being planned. (36 percent); Above Ordinary.
He leaves to mourn his passNMm) w Eri" tt'roraTTh yl0^^
°f S**"™**"" and the 77 percent (71 percent); Bad
r'lSe Grur^
* be held at 17 percent (21 percent); Don’t big, Mr. Benso Kanna, younger
Know. 6 percent (8 percent).
Highly rated Japanese g’oods brother living in Yokohama, Mrs.
^pnridhL
recent Winnipeg conference, held in March of Huof Canada, Rev. N.’ishiura was selected were: cameras, optical products,
Luciano Cianciusi
chinaware, radios, television sets S. Miyake, sister-in-law .and her
ch?n-e —^hpHXT61’ °f
Caiiadian Buddhist churches. tape recorders, motorbikes.
Real Estate
married' children, 6 grand netWlS.A.
keenin°f the umbBical cord' of Japan and
Lowly
rated
Japanese
goods
pfenglish-speal^
nn\era of N'.A' Buddhism, where
5 grand neices in Canada
were: tovs, textile products, can 1
Toronto
F<to an indenendonV m P
Sin a P^ion to give guidance ned goods.
and 3 nephews and 3 neices in
pFineiital influences or
.BucdllslA ,in keeping with environBus. 766-6191 Res. LE. 1-1089
Medium: automobiles, watches Japan.
L ^Hawaii. Unerku
and cowries such as
'ewing
machines.
.#1 Buddhj^
tCa- f ei’e 1S-a great challenge before
f>Al possible
from , a pioneer stock, new changes
I-A^
”
1 ^o^d be faced with vigor and stamina. —M.B.C.
r.y
*
*
#
I
Stan Nishimura
'■*J?.Bad<ttist School Teachers Hold Session
1/ f CLIO.
OPTICAL
Session was held on
Buddhist Chl'rclK Over 130 Sunday School
^Xheyib
OPTOMETRISTS
4 Gup^iJ16' 9 1StGn t0 IectUres and take Part il! workshops,
^sadena
as Dr- P- Harrison of Clarmont College, PaBjoy/' ---^uia, who spoke on “The Aims of Religious Educa-
Science has now found a
solution to one of man’s
most serious problems.
JON ONODERA
(Busihwicj
For Your Eyes
rn
oroDHet/n
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-880.
Complete Care
and ^Biss Sally Sakai, who are teachers ot
^^iarv Divk; \C
* 111 ^^moncL handled the workshop in the Primake Simp!e objects as teaching aids.
Teacher.;:
S^llino^ ^ Bitermediate Division were g! ... r
given practice in
KWhonm^n ■ tone
'°lie' eifecBvely, by Mak Ikuta, who teaches
S> R
becoadar.v School iin Vancouver.
kMoo
°f Richmond High School conducted
nother wor
ior Division;
l^for Les«on-^U'ebI01
^'Bsion; “How to Use Newspapers as Source
Th ° \
Buddhist Sunday School Teachers discussed
,<pc meat
31&
facing them and tried to find solutions durina
two d
The
e Trainin& Session.
churches that belong to the NWBSST are
^lgl’°'eh Hope, Kamloops, Kelowna, Steveston,
■ 0 le&on, Portland, Seattle. Spokane, Tacoma. Wa- '
'hite River. — M. Ikuta
ouwrt
Now Available in Canada
Only 84. At Your Druggist
( W/^trionce r
540 Eglinton Ave. W
I oron to
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER,
B.C.
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
FLAT ROOFS
Trave! Arrangements
SHINGLING
EA VESTROUGHING
SHEET HET Al WORK
ALCAN SIDING DEALER
Anywhere — Anytime
^ir—Ship—Bus—Rai)
Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
and
Baggage
18EJ OWNED
TOSH NISHIJIMA
’’COHERING ONTARIO
Ni^ Calls- PL o-v>9' Hl hi)<>
insurance
8
Leaves June 28.
information & Reservations
contact
t
Bar 366
--' SPadina Ave” Toronfo 2'R> Ont.
‘ °'d
Night — K. Tsuyuki 535-9935
Night — T. Uyeda 536-1403
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
Passage arranged by Steamer or Air
DUNDAS UNION STORE
Call for Reservations or
T. KAMEOKA
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
SUKIYAKI MEAT - VINEGAR _ MANJU - SUGAR
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
K. Iwata Travel Service
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
Information — EM. 8-9934
H3 McCaui st.,
Toronto!
Page 8
PAGE 8
A Matter Of Race
The
(Continued From Page 1)
New p.
probably a little high and just sight. They never are, not even
wanted to show that he spoke in oui zoos. A few birds, ducks.
MATTER OF RACE. In a United
post Office D‘*?d des
some English. They like to prac geese and the like, looking unStates
high
school
md ior P^ent
^
SV?' ^''U a£to the assassination’of
untise on you. They mean no harm,” happy. That was it.
Tin
*^
Dr.
Martin
Luther
said my friend.
King, Jr., a white girl approached
Around the grounds, off the K- C.TSWmPp^
a Negro schoolmate and asked
Good for them, I thought.
UnCe,^1Iy: “G8raldi”e, are we still friends?”
paths,
groUpS of young Japanese
KEN MORI
In the street, half a dozen men
*at and swigged bottles of beer
And A^P eseE(^
in * were swinging picks lifting pav or whisky. By their posture and
^
ing stones and a mechanical dig
fk1101?’ .the aPPeared loaded alsubscription
ger stood bv.
“there was
though it was only mid-after^’e0^81 6 month,
t P?3 was another facet about
57,00 pei J8®
ng, and all 1 okx o. Street work cannot be noon. Nobody bothered them and
the Negroes were blaming all the whites and .
■
they bothered no one, although
479 QUEEN w
or during the a few gave me a wave and a grin
T
ST< ^
should,A
I*- W done by day,
evening , so the repair work must a?lshouted something. I doubt
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
house or loot your father’s store
"° E°'nS *° ^ ‘° h” y°"r be done when the city stills, or if they wanted company; they
EVnir# s -nnslows its heartbeat. About 11 were just being friendly.
? ® 6’3005
the «i*X^ :' ^“f^ tafiat abom p.m., a whole army of workers
One should not consider this
oegin their tasks, and they must
park
as being unique, in that it
like it before. On Dee. 8,‘ 1!M!, mavbe’LvZt am T^T have the streets ready for'traffic
again
by
dawn.
was
hammered
by humanity and
X-X7 appreh*ive ab“
that
no
grass
grew, for ‘ what
Tokyo traffic is unbelievable,
schoolmates busmess associates because you happened to U m n VaS told_ there are now more chance did it have with scores
For Sale
'Tm wr^fort™.?6 Japanese had attacked Pearl Harbor? than a million vehicles on the ot thousands of visitors evei y J^^bjjizeF^^
?
streets, and the town is not gear dav
the inescapable fact about suggest^? rS *Ss fc’O
that Geraldine did- “WhrlU fi-'enrfs replied the same way ed for them. The traffic jams
]
is its people. It is the 1 (Toronto).
fT—
' no—
we’re friends. Why shouldn’t we be-’’" “
are unbelievable, and it will only Tokyo
worlds
largest
city.
From
the
Volse’ ^le status symbol of
°P i
new Tokyo Tower
the Japanese family is an auto
•?r<! by the Tokyo Prince Hotel,
KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C.
And why not?
the
J
hc “™y last because vou were
it
stretches
away
to
everv
hori
both
And the driving! It’s everv man
same wior and so they took out their anger 'and X and
BA^?A™ER' s°HCITOB
zon. Not houses, you don’t see
notary public
tor himself, and the 38,000" taxis houses,
frustration on
although they are there,
you, even though you were just as angry as thev. ln,^e city, the little vellow and
2 Carlton St., Toronto
and perhaps even
red zippers, make it all the more out office buildings as far as
And so you had t™X pf
J"
Pei“J °f *h'
Room 1805
you can see? Tokyo has 11 mil
lectic. But few accidents.
366-S388
and
condemnation
on
a
strictlv
iiaTte*"
1
"
1
"
Wit
'
Ce
°
f
lion people. Count ’em, 11 mil
293-4281 (Res.)
and condemnation on
The philosophy of every driver lion. And I was told that the
the ^^ ^.jr X ’
point out this aspect ot seems to . be that every other population swells to nearly 15
driver is in the wrong, and that million during each and everv
to be both obvious mod omi^
they se“ ie will shortly see the error of day.
offfflwn®
But the overwhelming fact is
the person of Martin Luther Kin'l it"’ ’™'.tlle “"“ °n his ways and sweiwe off his col
lision
course.
This
makes
drivthat
; within a 25-mile radius of
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHEADS
lions of so many Negroes manv° J“i h^ USh f1”’ th® aspiH’
In^ 111 Tokyo a game of compro- | the icity centre, 25 million people
^^"^ 'Y/cMhiy ^ntii/aticns ^enbt JS
every other driver! live. That
xuac js_
is one-quarter the
k cei*tainly adds population of all Japan But
— j more
depth and vigor to life, and they pertinent,
’
P
1
that is five million
HARRY S. KONDO
have an aplomb that is admore people than in all Canada.
627 BAY ST., TORONTO Phone 368-57:
mirable.
Taxis are cheap. They bun, I sidZlokA!™ Sl,”W
Canadian
a
classified
§
PRINTING
We Nisei know from
experience the wrongness of blanke4
indictments as well as the anger
and frustration that fester und'er
discrimination. And so perhaps rt is time that some of as pointed
out the parallel; that
we spoke out to warn against hysteria
whatever the source;
to urge thoughtful rather tttXd^ I*”' the ™tta:
about one third the”eost of’'asp5 rtrh C'f n c°“'p“?ei1 “f wards, I
line and in a citv where everyone '\?ch
^uaHy ai’e cities in themseems to travel'bv cab, the'cost
P?ople, can live and die
is amazinglv low.'No lower than H a
anTd never visit downelsewhere° 'in the (£t
of
™Tokyo- R haPPens.
It to a good policy to
hare the HIGHT POLICY
Consult
William Wales Ltd.
course, but low compared to our
ward’ Shibuya, has 4.5
Insurance Agents
costs.
million people. Think of it that
□Z7 ""derstanding because we U^Xl £
I went out to Ueno Park —
you wiIL
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
lokvos
equivalent to Stanley
Fe°ple, people, people, people.
Phone 921-3171
Park — to see the cherry bios'- peopIe- ’ • •
Racism
Negro
Or N^el, ZZZZoZ^T t^
soms and the ride seemed to
^nd remember, Tokyo was 70
cd this lesson from our experience and can .
f ^ '^ ’earn‘ cover miles and the cost was Percent destroved by American
less than a dollar.
fire
tire raids
raids during
during the war. One
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
this lesson to our fellow citizens, lien
« ”fte7rimi“!e
The cherry blossoms were
in
laid,
so I am told, killed more
were
m dignity, treasure and even life itself will W nA
n
We
bloom — although everyone said i n
- . in. one night than ^
cu ni
people
died
in
Consult
for naught. Unlike 1941, when our voice was wld
entirely it was a slow spring and thev Cle atomic raid on Hiroshima. Or
men few, we have many to speak eloquently f
T SP°ke-’ k e3eV^ °ut in full blaze yet — maybe it was Hiroshima and Nabut they seemed to lack the rich- ^asakl- Figures like that tend
is no better or more urgent occasion for
°! Ub.today- There ness and color of blossom of to become meaningless.
themselves heard
"
"
them to rise and make
the cou»rty they said
hAnd yet, what is the Japanese
For All Classes of
---------------------------- 1_______________________ By BILL HOSOKAWA
dMnT °cSOmS WeT6 better, but it ^trtute
towards
the
United
dn t seem so. It appears Van- Abates? Resentment? Hate9
INSURANCE
Beerettes . . .
SKX*^ °” ,a|,“' L “ "’°UW be
»f me to,
(Cont. from Page One)
'
°^SOmS। even suggest. There
must be
remains a “socio-psychological”
Phone: PL. 9-2632
S^'r, P1?fAikawa save
Vikted-the park on a Mon- some resentment. I leave that
commodity.
OR
"bile Japanese rice-wine
‘‘•w
*t was
overwhelmed to others naturally.
To win new customers, an ad whiskey
and other beverage* are nth solid masses of humanity
PL. 5-7317
But the fact remains that Ja
vertisement will claim, with snide
their “alcoh^ in! In an hour’s stroll, I saw only
lefeience to another brand, to
pan is westernized, or in a more
have “purged” the bitterness in uuences, beer serves to oil the one other non-Japanese. a woman minister sense, Americanized.
"ho seemed to jump out of the
beer, while, a rival brewery will wheels of social life.”
In the rest of the Orient. Ja
The
professor
believes
this
is
I
aLn^J
1^ a Wh4-e Patch 011 a
g.oau triumphantly in a fuli-pa™
pan
is considered .as neither’ fish
of brown. We looked sur
newspaper ad of a “landslide one reason why women aie in- / quilt
nor
fowl.
Other Oriental nations
prised to see each other.
conversion" of female drinkers to creasingly taking to beer
kok
.
u
P°n
it with envy, as a
drink- 1
their brand. .
"aS
days before the
foieign
nation,
as a western
’
ng
’
—
if
not
the
bottle
Japanese children went back to nation.
On the social benefits of beer
JAL
r^0? aft!r1 M-days, and fami
S»WW
a^' ^ieir accomplishment.
nes "ere taking the last chance
Third
highest
in
the
world
in
^ TnJCLY themselves. They seemgross national product. Fifteenth
I u to, but m a strange silence,
in personal income. And vet the
average Japanese makes a small,
k
candy floss and
f c,el’°P^”e ba^rs of the even ridiculous salarv compared
ff r !takie honie- They drank to us in North America, or West
Coca Cola by the hundreds of Germany, France, Britain. Aus
ca.lons and munched on a kind tralia.
r
and visited a temole
Net, they are so far ahead
Meet Your New and
ami threw monev into an iron re- ot the rest of the Orient that
Investment firms perform many function,
Used Car Representa&i
-epcacle and pulled on a rope-like each Japanese could be consider
a"d
cI^PPed P their ed an Oriental capitalist.
ticular interest to
7
x Of Par"
choosing investmeni wS'S l“ assistance in
hands, twice so they would bemc™V1Ch' At least’ that is "’hat
his particular aims pX« 7‘ =«°™Plish
mj Japanese friend told me. I
cesstul experience and impartial jud^en^eXe
Bus. 485-0353
In a
yen Piece- pulled
characteristics to be looked for.
°
are the
w gapped my hands
Res. PL. 9-2014
bnce, but Tm as Door as ever.
Sia bought rubbery snakes
nc^r °Ur Se™CeS- An
implies
?rh Xai’t L°i°d Iuck’ and tooled
turtles, and took gold
and snaPPed millions
Call or write to William T. Ayukawa.
ot pictures.
On Bayview,
iJL,1 ^’"ei"ber anything about
Toronto, Ontario
vew W-S lhe ca:He^ around
expensive cameras.
and they us ■ them constantly. J
wonder whatt they do with the
Members: The Toronto Stock
pictures
•
^eaters ^ssedstion cf
United Investment Services Ltd.
V t \IS!ted tke nearbv zoo. and
8 King Street East, Toronto, 364-4461
7' ° "'bite rhinocerous
->nd a lonely giraffe and two miu*
i
4 r 1 cv-cr-so-bored IkneMii
Sales Representative
I
* Canadian beaver
“
Proven
Growth
”
924-2-*
although Mr. Beaver wasn't in
RITZ KINOSW
How an Investment House
can help you
TOM HOITA
YOUR
BLOOD
At Rumble
Pontiac Buick
i
7
u
gfee
Mt
61
pi
&
^7
gif
Efe
IF'
Iparp
fiea
^ot,
|fo:
re
Fie
FOi
h
Ro
B®oi
SlOj;
^ii
the greatest
McConnell & company limited
gift of all
5Ce<
?svf
1
J
TAK HAMASAKI
-J<
A
A Matter Of Race
The
(Continued From Page 1)
New p.
probably a little high and just sight. They never are, not even
wanted to show that he spoke in oui zoos. A few birds, ducks.
MATTER OF RACE. In a United
post Office D‘*?d des
some English. They like to prac geese and the like, looking unStates
high
school
md ior P^ent
^
SV?' ^''U a£to the assassination’of
untise on you. They mean no harm,” happy. That was it.
Tin
*^
Dr.
Martin
Luther
said my friend.
King, Jr., a white girl approached
Around the grounds, off the K- C.TSWmPp^
a Negro schoolmate and asked
Good for them, I thought.
UnCe,^1Iy: “G8raldi”e, are we still friends?”
paths,
groUpS of young Japanese
KEN MORI
In the street, half a dozen men
*at and swigged bottles of beer
And A^P eseE(^
in * were swinging picks lifting pav or whisky. By their posture and
^
ing stones and a mechanical dig
fk1101?’ .the aPPeared loaded alsubscription
ger stood bv.
“there was
though it was only mid-after^’e0^81 6 month,
t P?3 was another facet about
57,00 pei J8®
ng, and all 1 okx o. Street work cannot be noon. Nobody bothered them and
the Negroes were blaming all the whites and .
■
they bothered no one, although
479 QUEEN w
or during the a few gave me a wave and a grin
T
ST< ^
should,A
I*- W done by day,
evening , so the repair work must a?lshouted something. I doubt
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
house or loot your father’s store
"° E°'nS *° ^ ‘° h” y°"r be done when the city stills, or if they wanted company; they
EVnir# s -nnslows its heartbeat. About 11 were just being friendly.
? ® 6’3005
the «i*X^ :' ^“f^ tafiat abom p.m., a whole army of workers
One should not consider this
oegin their tasks, and they must
park
as being unique, in that it
like it before. On Dee. 8,‘ 1!M!, mavbe’LvZt am T^T have the streets ready for'traffic
again
by
dawn.
was
hammered
by humanity and
X-X7 appreh*ive ab“
that
no
grass
grew, for ‘ what
Tokyo traffic is unbelievable,
schoolmates busmess associates because you happened to U m n VaS told_ there are now more chance did it have with scores
For Sale
'Tm wr^fort™.?6 Japanese had attacked Pearl Harbor? than a million vehicles on the ot thousands of visitors evei y J^^bjjizeF^^
?
streets, and the town is not gear dav
the inescapable fact about suggest^? rS *Ss fc’O
that Geraldine did- “WhrlU fi-'enrfs replied the same way ed for them. The traffic jams
]
is its people. It is the 1 (Toronto).
fT—
' no—
we’re friends. Why shouldn’t we be-’’" “
are unbelievable, and it will only Tokyo
worlds
largest
city.
From
the
Volse’ ^le status symbol of
°P i
new Tokyo Tower
the Japanese family is an auto
•?r<! by the Tokyo Prince Hotel,
KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C.
And why not?
the
J
hc “™y last because vou were
it
stretches
away
to
everv
hori
both
And the driving! It’s everv man
same wior and so they took out their anger 'and X and
BA^?A™ER' s°HCITOB
zon. Not houses, you don’t see
notary public
tor himself, and the 38,000" taxis houses,
frustration on
although they are there,
you, even though you were just as angry as thev. ln,^e city, the little vellow and
2 Carlton St., Toronto
and perhaps even
red zippers, make it all the more out office buildings as far as
And so you had t™X pf
J"
Pei“J °f *h'
Room 1805
you can see? Tokyo has 11 mil
lectic. But few accidents.
366-S388
and
condemnation
on
a
strictlv
iiaTte*"
1
"
1
"
Wit
'
Ce
°
f
lion people. Count ’em, 11 mil
293-4281 (Res.)
and condemnation on
The philosophy of every driver lion. And I was told that the
the ^^ ^.jr X ’
point out this aspect ot seems to . be that every other population swells to nearly 15
driver is in the wrong, and that million during each and everv
to be both obvious mod omi^
they se“ ie will shortly see the error of day.
offfflwn®
But the overwhelming fact is
the person of Martin Luther Kin'l it"’ ’™'.tlle “"“ °n his ways and sweiwe off his col
lision
course.
This
makes
drivthat
; within a 25-mile radius of
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHEADS
lions of so many Negroes manv° J“i h^ USh f1”’ th® aspiH’
In^ 111 Tokyo a game of compro- | the icity centre, 25 million people
^^"^ 'Y/cMhiy ^ntii/aticns ^enbt JS
every other driver! live. That
xuac js_
is one-quarter the
k cei*tainly adds population of all Japan But
— j more
depth and vigor to life, and they pertinent,
’
P
1
that is five million
HARRY S. KONDO
have an aplomb that is admore people than in all Canada.
627 BAY ST., TORONTO Phone 368-57:
mirable.
Taxis are cheap. They bun, I sidZlokA!™ Sl,”W
Canadian
a
classified
§
PRINTING
We Nisei know from
experience the wrongness of blanke4
indictments as well as the anger
and frustration that fester und'er
discrimination. And so perhaps rt is time that some of as pointed
out the parallel; that
we spoke out to warn against hysteria
whatever the source;
to urge thoughtful rather tttXd^ I*”' the ™tta:
about one third the”eost of’'asp5 rtrh C'f n c°“'p“?ei1 “f wards, I
line and in a citv where everyone '\?ch
^uaHy ai’e cities in themseems to travel'bv cab, the'cost
P?ople, can live and die
is amazinglv low.'No lower than H a
anTd never visit downelsewhere° 'in the (£t
of
™Tokyo- R haPPens.
It to a good policy to
hare the HIGHT POLICY
Consult
William Wales Ltd.
course, but low compared to our
ward’ Shibuya, has 4.5
Insurance Agents
costs.
million people. Think of it that
□Z7 ""derstanding because we U^Xl £
I went out to Ueno Park —
you wiIL
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
lokvos
equivalent to Stanley
Fe°ple, people, people, people.
Phone 921-3171
Park — to see the cherry bios'- peopIe- ’ • •
Racism
Negro
Or N^el, ZZZZoZ^T t^
soms and the ride seemed to
^nd remember, Tokyo was 70
cd this lesson from our experience and can .
f ^ '^ ’earn‘ cover miles and the cost was Percent destroved by American
less than a dollar.
fire
tire raids
raids during
during the war. One
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
this lesson to our fellow citizens, lien
« ”fte7rimi“!e
The cherry blossoms were
in
laid,
so I am told, killed more
were
m dignity, treasure and even life itself will W nA
n
We
bloom — although everyone said i n
- . in. one night than ^
cu ni
people
died
in
Consult
for naught. Unlike 1941, when our voice was wld
entirely it was a slow spring and thev Cle atomic raid on Hiroshima. Or
men few, we have many to speak eloquently f
T SP°ke-’ k e3eV^ °ut in full blaze yet — maybe it was Hiroshima and Nabut they seemed to lack the rich- ^asakl- Figures like that tend
is no better or more urgent occasion for
°! Ub.today- There ness and color of blossom of to become meaningless.
themselves heard
"
"
them to rise and make
the cou»rty they said
hAnd yet, what is the Japanese
For All Classes of
---------------------------- 1_______________________ By BILL HOSOKAWA
dMnT °cSOmS WeT6 better, but it ^trtute
towards
the
United
dn t seem so. It appears Van- Abates? Resentment? Hate9
INSURANCE
Beerettes . . .
SKX*^ °” ,a|,“' L “ "’°UW be
»f me to,
(Cont. from Page One)
'
°^SOmS। even suggest. There
must be
remains a “socio-psychological”
Phone: PL. 9-2632
S^'r, P1?fAikawa save
Vikted-the park on a Mon- some resentment. I leave that
commodity.
OR
"bile Japanese rice-wine
‘‘•w
*t was
overwhelmed to others naturally.
To win new customers, an ad whiskey
and other beverage* are nth solid masses of humanity
PL. 5-7317
But the fact remains that Ja
vertisement will claim, with snide
their “alcoh^ in! In an hour’s stroll, I saw only
lefeience to another brand, to
pan is westernized, or in a more
have “purged” the bitterness in uuences, beer serves to oil the one other non-Japanese. a woman minister sense, Americanized.
"ho seemed to jump out of the
beer, while, a rival brewery will wheels of social life.”
In the rest of the Orient. Ja
The
professor
believes
this
is
I
aLn^J
1^ a Wh4-e Patch 011 a
g.oau triumphantly in a fuli-pa™
pan
is considered .as neither’ fish
of brown. We looked sur
newspaper ad of a “landslide one reason why women aie in- / quilt
nor
fowl.
Other Oriental nations
prised to see each other.
conversion" of female drinkers to creasingly taking to beer
kok
.
u
P°n
it with envy, as a
drink- 1
their brand. .
"aS
days before the
foieign
nation,
as a western
’
ng
’
—
if
not
the
bottle
Japanese children went back to nation.
On the social benefits of beer
JAL
r^0? aft!r1 M-days, and fami
S»WW
a^' ^ieir accomplishment.
nes "ere taking the last chance
Third
highest
in
the
world
in
^ TnJCLY themselves. They seemgross national product. Fifteenth
I u to, but m a strange silence,
in personal income. And vet the
average Japanese makes a small,
k
candy floss and
f c,el’°P^”e ba^rs of the even ridiculous salarv compared
ff r !takie honie- They drank to us in North America, or West
Coca Cola by the hundreds of Germany, France, Britain. Aus
ca.lons and munched on a kind tralia.
r
and visited a temole
Net, they are so far ahead
Meet Your New and
ami threw monev into an iron re- ot the rest of the Orient that
Investment firms perform many function,
Used Car Representa&i
-epcacle and pulled on a rope-like each Japanese could be consider
a"d
cI^PPed P their ed an Oriental capitalist.
ticular interest to
7
x Of Par"
choosing investmeni wS'S l“ assistance in
hands, twice so they would bemc™V1Ch' At least’ that is "’hat
his particular aims pX« 7‘ =«°™Plish
mj Japanese friend told me. I
cesstul experience and impartial jud^en^eXe
Bus. 485-0353
In a
yen Piece- pulled
characteristics to be looked for.
°
are the
w gapped my hands
Res. PL. 9-2014
bnce, but Tm as Door as ever.
Sia bought rubbery snakes
nc^r °Ur Se™CeS- An
implies
?rh Xai’t L°i°d Iuck’ and tooled
turtles, and took gold
and snaPPed millions
Call or write to William T. Ayukawa.
ot pictures.
On Bayview,
iJL,1 ^’"ei"ber anything about
Toronto, Ontario
vew W-S lhe ca:He^ around
expensive cameras.
and they us ■ them constantly. J
wonder whatt they do with the
Members: The Toronto Stock
pictures
•
^eaters ^ssedstion cf
United Investment Services Ltd.
V t \IS!ted tke nearbv zoo. and
8 King Street East, Toronto, 364-4461
7' ° "'bite rhinocerous
->nd a lonely giraffe and two miu*
i
4 r 1 cv-cr-so-bored IkneMii
Sales Representative
I
* Canadian beaver
“
Proven
Growth
”
924-2-*
although Mr. Beaver wasn't in
RITZ KINOSW
How an Investment House
can help you
TOM HOITA
YOUR
BLOOD
At Rumble
Pontiac Buick
i
7
u
gfee
Mt
61
pi
&
^7
gif
Efe
IF'
Iparp
fiea
^ot,
|fo:
re
Fie
FOi
h
Ro
B®oi
SlOj;
^ii
the greatest
McConnell & company limited
gift of all
5Ce<
?svf
1
J
TAK HAMASAKI
-J<
A