Page 1
* ™. ..Excitement Awaits gening Of Osaka Expo 70 Gates
(Toronto Star)
[ OSAKA. — Only a dreamer, viewing the ravaged
I
hills from atop a tower, could see in this dirt
bustle the beauty and excitement that ^H be
fe when the Osaka Expo opens its gates on March
111 1970.
.
.
Lt bulldozer is tearing a gash perilously close to
Ij thick stand of young bamboo. A ravine which will
IjAsr a subway from the city today looks eroded
ri;;a crevice on the moon. A hilltop is being levelledMake bed is being excavated. All over the 800-acre
Me are trucks and tractors. On the edge of the site
a suburb of pretty homes, covered with a film
■ddust.
. .
.
. Western critics in Tokyo say the work is not pro
pping fast enough. But in the offices of Expo 70,
BiiiiiiiiiinnniiiiHniiiHiiiiiiiiiiim^
V OBUNSHA’S
Essential Japanese-Eng.
DICTIONARY
$5.40 Postage Included. ■
^..^ouHdence.
Once
f.hP SThe i.;n.
rhe epavilions
will rise
quickly
T
)reshaPed>
have water, the greenery S'n
artificial lakes will
"Ml be laid, hotels w ll
t -i ke
the subway
way to brino- motoristand le suPer-highbe completed0.
fl°m Tokyo in six hours will
-J?Pw^
70—who ever thinks them up?
Pietv apkmtv Bui
f°r Mankini It will hale
ar. ^Pi’^siwe. It will remain open
to attract 30 millioM
t
different visitors),
vspsiiess buildin0*^ will
another $80 million
k COs bl0° bullion and
for 183E^
(not
tions and maintenance. Vast sums will also be soent
(The’c
70 ”ati°nS ex’Pected to exhibit here.
ne Canadian government will invest $$11.2 million
snenH
1O”’
-Americans and Russians may
spend twice as much.)
J
This X big business’ and’ stably enough, the govT'tUwed t0
^usiness to run the Expo,
h
m 8“-year-old Taizo Ishizaka, foi- veays
°f Jhe Toshiba Electronics octopus. A sprightiv
th/fiLiltai*^
k”'vn as “prime
*
„ P der I11? W1P come five deputies representing the
S inciustnal giants. Ishizaka’s “foreign minibter is commissioner-general Toru Hagiwara, formei ambassador to France.
—.... ............................
(Continued on Page 8)
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiuiiiiiKiii
The Dem Canadian i
•*" “•’^.f^* ?T^ “
Origin
OBUNSHA’S
Essential Eng.-Japanese
DICTIONARY
$5.40 Postage Included.
Fol. XXXII—No. 83
ffiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiuhii
.................................... ,.................................................................................
Rejects Aged Issei’s Claim’
In J.C. Evacuation Land Snatch Suit
M Happened To Wise! Heroes? Court
I IOS ANGELES. — What ever I Their Nisei counterparts in the
Iteppened to “Baby Sergeant
European
theater, the famous
|W'J. “Guts” and Horizontal “Go -for Broke” 442nd Regiment IM”?
-a! .Combat Team with a lighting
I Ite were the nicknames giv- ’Strength of 4000 Nisei rspear"
[s in awe and respect by fellow I headed Tour major Allied offenWean GIs to Nisei :— Japa- I'sives .and-received -4500 in Purple fee claim of an 81-year-old Japanese Sheppard, deputy-judge of the court,
s Americans — who fought in I •Hearts ..alone. The 442nd became
said in a 24-page judgment that the
Canadian
who
sought
$1,500,000
from
i South Pacific and the China- the most . decorated1 unit in Amebasis of the claim was without foun
[Smna-India theater during W. I -rican military history for its the Canadian Government in condation and the release Iwasaki sign
1, II. wrote Bruce Lee in a past I size and length of service.
lection with lands confiscated from ed was valid.
sne of Saga magazine.
I
him during World War H was in erBut the Nisei in the Pacific,
Iwasaki, one of 20,000 Japanese
ror.
I Somewhere in southwest, Los also were decorated with Purple
■Mes, is Kenny Yasui. “Baby Hearts, Bronze and Silver- Stars,
The ruling against the claim of To- Canadians evacuated from the coastal area as a wartime security mea[Sergeant York” and the other
direct
battlefield . commissions
sure,
alleged
breach of trust
«nt MIS heroes are wanted • . . but almost everything was
against
the
Secretary
of State for
I® the Second Netiona! Reunion
maiked Secret”. Never in mili
Canada who, he said, acted un
the Veterans of Military Inteltary history did so many soldiers v i LONDON--—Beatle John Lennon and his Japanese girl friend lawfully in conveying the 640
Service on Nov. 9, 10 and
perform so creditably with so Yoko Ono, disclosed last week that they are expecting a baby next
il at the Ambassador Hotel in j
acies he owned on Sal tspri ng
little recognition, writes Bruce year.
Island to the
purchaser. Salt
® Angeles, urge George KaneLee.
“
We
have
h Jaj-AUS-Ret, general chairbeen told the baby is due in February,” Miss Ono Spring Lands Ltd. A sharehold
told
1
reporters.
er and director of the develop
Hand Gerald Kobayashi, con-|
Among- the 7000 anonymous
ment company, Gavin C. Mouat,
lotion chairman.
I heroes in the Pacific was bespec
Lennon, in an interview with the London Daily Mirror, said:
was
also agent of the Secretary
Kenji
Mans still don’t know, in- tacled T/3
Yasui, five
“When we are both free to marry, we will.”
of State, who -was custodian of
Lennon and Miss Ono currently are both on bail awaiting enemy property.
k f the SanseL that 7000 I feet two and 120 pounds.
Ja?anese descent fought
In Burma, when the American trial Nov 28 on charges of possessing the drug cannabis, or maThe Crown
contended that
F against Japan, the nation troops were stopped by wither rijuana.
Iwasaki had received $13,000 in
grandparents, with the ing fire from a forested island
Miss Ono, who achieved fame in Britain by making
compensation for the property
a film
P^and resourcefulness of a in the middle of the Irrawaddy
featuring
and
had signed a release.
365
bare
bottoms
—
one
for
t Wet °r an Astronaut and
every day of the year—is
Riy er, audacious Kenji persuaded quoted by the newspaper as saying:
The claimant contended that
U Uasive ability of Madison a
‘ Caucasian
captain and a PFC
“We are both very thrilled about the prospect of a baby and certain Orders-In-Council set up
to strip and wade into the river we both want a large family.”
a tiust under which the custo
K?"*' R ^ presid- with him.
dian was bound to manage the
Lennon, 28-year-old guitai- player and lyric writer for manv
property and return it to him.
,fc Su.Mr>or Court
“You over there!” he bellow- of the Beatle’s biggest hit songs, is being sued for divorce by h
This contention was in error,
ed, “I am Colonel Yamamoto of wife Cynthia. They have a 6-year-old son, Julian.
IT
l u?e bench Nisei
by G°vthe judge ruled.
the Imperial Japanese Army. A
Tlren! and Directo1'
am working now -with the Ameri
rainino of the war- cans because Japan has lost the
Yoko Ono Expecting Beatle's Baby
|i‘
K
r
K
states;
Ulcers Don't Lead To Cancer, Japan Report
war. See, there is an American
soldier with me to prove what I
TOKYO. — There is no rela- these prefectures the death rate
say.
I command you to cease fire
h ^re and the code of conyear until early this year, he
tionship
between cancer of the
ideX while we come to talk with you.” stomach and stomach ulcers, a from stomach ulcers was 20 per i°oooUCte^-a tracking survey of
cent higher than the national 1,928 patients treated for sto
When they hit shore, the in Japanese medical scientist report average.
W
“Bushi” (Jamach ulcers at nine hospitals in
ed at a medical conference re
The incidence was 20 percent
Boston area from 1945 Jo
^ ties of bi’' ■ dieeiplinod credible Nisei tech sergeant braz- cently.
lower than the average in Hok 1955.
4rt,J
as of s«- cnly
commanded the Japanese
Dr. Tomio
Hirohata of the kaidb, Aomori, Tokyo, Aichi anc
_He found that out of this total
into surrendering and stacking Graduate School of Medicine of
^**«w "he»
the four prefectures of Shikoku
355 had died within five years
their arms. A grenade meant for Kyushu University, disclosed his according to the surveys.
(hon°r>of
their treatment for ulcers,
findings
at
the
congress
of
the
Kenji, thrown suddenly by the
' "ere at stake.
On the other hand, the death
Japanese
Cancer
Association
but
only nine of these had died
Japanese
commanding officer,
^®te from stomach cancer was
of Nisei luckily blew the enemy officer now being held in Tokyo.
of cancer of the stomach. Furth
20 percent higher than the aver
Pacific Was as
Dr. Hirohata based his conclu
ermore, of the nine cases only
to his death instead.
age in the Hokuriku Region and
Aa „.
aginary secret
sion on the result of two surveys N ara
cne was diagnosed to have de
Prefecture and 20 percent
With a series of stacatto com- he had conducted on the geogra
b°mb> and todav,
veloped cancer from ulcers, Dr
lower
in
Kyushu,
Shikoku
and
mands,
la«r, their storv
Kenji
Yasui holdlv phical distribution of patients
Hirohata reported to the medical
Iwate and Shizuoka prefectures.
Yet
‘ !s marched the Japanese troops with stomach cancer and with
congress.
4
’ lke tbe atom through close-order drill, had
Dr. Hiiohata said there was
stomach ulcers. He conducted
He maintained on the basis of
7 w®e directly „,. them build a raft and ordered
the surveys from 1949 to 1951 no geographical corelationship these findings that a stomach
t _ ^«ng two years them to push him back across.
between the incidences of cancer ulcer
and from 1959 to 1961.
patient who is completely
and ulcers.
cured
tO p"®11
and
has no relapse for five
T/c Kenji Yasui was awarded
The surveys revealed that the
years
has
no greater cancer in
^t " ' ^ °f the Silver Star for gallantry — incidence of stomach ulcers was
rnedical research corrobo
rated
his
conclusion
with
data
cidence
than
the average. Thus
iur General and the nickname “The Baby Ser- the highest regardless of the
he obtained in the U.S. During he doubted the validity of the
sexes in Ibaraki, Chiba, Yamagu his research at Harvard Univer
[geant York”.
chi and Shimane prefectures. In sity where he stayed from last j theory that stomach ulcers often
turn into cancer.
ae
JaPaaese ancestry
fenced by their ances
(Toronto Star)
[ OSAKA. — Only a dreamer, viewing the ravaged
I
hills from atop a tower, could see in this dirt
bustle the beauty and excitement that ^H be
fe when the Osaka Expo opens its gates on March
111 1970.
.
.
Lt bulldozer is tearing a gash perilously close to
Ij thick stand of young bamboo. A ravine which will
IjAsr a subway from the city today looks eroded
ri;;a crevice on the moon. A hilltop is being levelledMake bed is being excavated. All over the 800-acre
Me are trucks and tractors. On the edge of the site
a suburb of pretty homes, covered with a film
■ddust.
. .
.
. Western critics in Tokyo say the work is not pro
pping fast enough. But in the offices of Expo 70,
BiiiiiiiiiinnniiiiHniiiHiiiiiiiiiiim^
V OBUNSHA’S
Essential Japanese-Eng.
DICTIONARY
$5.40 Postage Included. ■
^..^ouHdence.
Once
f.hP SThe i.;n.
rhe epavilions
will rise
quickly
T
)reshaPed>
have water, the greenery S'n
artificial lakes will
"Ml be laid, hotels w ll
t -i ke
the subway
way to brino- motoristand le suPer-highbe completed0.
fl°m Tokyo in six hours will
-J?Pw^
70—who ever thinks them up?
Pietv apkmtv Bui
f°r Mankini It will hale
ar. ^Pi’^siwe. It will remain open
to attract 30 millioM
t
different visitors),
vspsiiess buildin0*^ will
another $80 million
k COs bl0° bullion and
for 183E^
(not
tions and maintenance. Vast sums will also be soent
(The’c
70 ”ati°nS ex’Pected to exhibit here.
ne Canadian government will invest $$11.2 million
snenH
1O”’
-Americans and Russians may
spend twice as much.)
J
This X big business’ and’ stably enough, the govT'tUwed t0
^usiness to run the Expo,
h
m 8“-year-old Taizo Ishizaka, foi- veays
°f Jhe Toshiba Electronics octopus. A sprightiv
th/fiLiltai*^
k”'vn as “prime
*
„ P der I11? W1P come five deputies representing the
S inciustnal giants. Ishizaka’s “foreign minibter is commissioner-general Toru Hagiwara, formei ambassador to France.
—.... ............................
(Continued on Page 8)
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiuiiiiiKiii
The Dem Canadian i
•*" “•’^.f^* ?T^ “
Origin
OBUNSHA’S
Essential Eng.-Japanese
DICTIONARY
$5.40 Postage Included.
Fol. XXXII—No. 83
ffiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiuhii
.................................... ,.................................................................................
Rejects Aged Issei’s Claim’
In J.C. Evacuation Land Snatch Suit
M Happened To Wise! Heroes? Court
I IOS ANGELES. — What ever I Their Nisei counterparts in the
Iteppened to “Baby Sergeant
European
theater, the famous
|W'J. “Guts” and Horizontal “Go -for Broke” 442nd Regiment IM”?
-a! .Combat Team with a lighting
I Ite were the nicknames giv- ’Strength of 4000 Nisei rspear"
[s in awe and respect by fellow I headed Tour major Allied offenWean GIs to Nisei :— Japa- I'sives .and-received -4500 in Purple fee claim of an 81-year-old Japanese Sheppard, deputy-judge of the court,
s Americans — who fought in I •Hearts ..alone. The 442nd became
said in a 24-page judgment that the
Canadian
who
sought
$1,500,000
from
i South Pacific and the China- the most . decorated1 unit in Amebasis of the claim was without foun
[Smna-India theater during W. I -rican military history for its the Canadian Government in condation and the release Iwasaki sign
1, II. wrote Bruce Lee in a past I size and length of service.
lection with lands confiscated from ed was valid.
sne of Saga magazine.
I
him during World War H was in erBut the Nisei in the Pacific,
Iwasaki, one of 20,000 Japanese
ror.
I Somewhere in southwest, Los also were decorated with Purple
■Mes, is Kenny Yasui. “Baby Hearts, Bronze and Silver- Stars,
The ruling against the claim of To- Canadians evacuated from the coastal area as a wartime security mea[Sergeant York” and the other
direct
battlefield . commissions
sure,
alleged
breach of trust
«nt MIS heroes are wanted • . . but almost everything was
against
the
Secretary
of State for
I® the Second Netiona! Reunion
maiked Secret”. Never in mili
Canada who, he said, acted un
the Veterans of Military Inteltary history did so many soldiers v i LONDON--—Beatle John Lennon and his Japanese girl friend lawfully in conveying the 640
Service on Nov. 9, 10 and
perform so creditably with so Yoko Ono, disclosed last week that they are expecting a baby next
il at the Ambassador Hotel in j
acies he owned on Sal tspri ng
little recognition, writes Bruce year.
Island to the
purchaser. Salt
® Angeles, urge George KaneLee.
“
We
have
h Jaj-AUS-Ret, general chairbeen told the baby is due in February,” Miss Ono Spring Lands Ltd. A sharehold
told
1
reporters.
er and director of the develop
Hand Gerald Kobayashi, con-|
Among- the 7000 anonymous
ment company, Gavin C. Mouat,
lotion chairman.
I heroes in the Pacific was bespec
Lennon, in an interview with the London Daily Mirror, said:
was
also agent of the Secretary
Kenji
Mans still don’t know, in- tacled T/3
Yasui, five
“When we are both free to marry, we will.”
of State, who -was custodian of
Lennon and Miss Ono currently are both on bail awaiting enemy property.
k f the SanseL that 7000 I feet two and 120 pounds.
Ja?anese descent fought
In Burma, when the American trial Nov 28 on charges of possessing the drug cannabis, or maThe Crown
contended that
F against Japan, the nation troops were stopped by wither rijuana.
Iwasaki had received $13,000 in
grandparents, with the ing fire from a forested island
Miss Ono, who achieved fame in Britain by making
compensation for the property
a film
P^and resourcefulness of a in the middle of the Irrawaddy
featuring
and
had signed a release.
365
bare
bottoms
—
one
for
t Wet °r an Astronaut and
every day of the year—is
Riy er, audacious Kenji persuaded quoted by the newspaper as saying:
The claimant contended that
U Uasive ability of Madison a
‘ Caucasian
captain and a PFC
“We are both very thrilled about the prospect of a baby and certain Orders-In-Council set up
to strip and wade into the river we both want a large family.”
a tiust under which the custo
K?"*' R ^ presid- with him.
dian was bound to manage the
Lennon, 28-year-old guitai- player and lyric writer for manv
property and return it to him.
,fc Su.Mr>or Court
“You over there!” he bellow- of the Beatle’s biggest hit songs, is being sued for divorce by h
This contention was in error,
ed, “I am Colonel Yamamoto of wife Cynthia. They have a 6-year-old son, Julian.
IT
l u?e bench Nisei
by G°vthe judge ruled.
the Imperial Japanese Army. A
Tlren! and Directo1'
am working now -with the Ameri
rainino of the war- cans because Japan has lost the
Yoko Ono Expecting Beatle's Baby
|i‘
K
r
K
states;
Ulcers Don't Lead To Cancer, Japan Report
war. See, there is an American
soldier with me to prove what I
TOKYO. — There is no rela- these prefectures the death rate
say.
I command you to cease fire
h ^re and the code of conyear until early this year, he
tionship
between cancer of the
ideX while we come to talk with you.” stomach and stomach ulcers, a from stomach ulcers was 20 per i°oooUCte^-a tracking survey of
cent higher than the national 1,928 patients treated for sto
When they hit shore, the in Japanese medical scientist report average.
W
“Bushi” (Jamach ulcers at nine hospitals in
ed at a medical conference re
The incidence was 20 percent
Boston area from 1945 Jo
^ ties of bi’' ■ dieeiplinod credible Nisei tech sergeant braz- cently.
lower than the average in Hok 1955.
4rt,J
as of s«- cnly
commanded the Japanese
Dr. Tomio
Hirohata of the kaidb, Aomori, Tokyo, Aichi anc
_He found that out of this total
into surrendering and stacking Graduate School of Medicine of
^**«w "he»
the four prefectures of Shikoku
355 had died within five years
their arms. A grenade meant for Kyushu University, disclosed his according to the surveys.
(hon°r>of
their treatment for ulcers,
findings
at
the
congress
of
the
Kenji, thrown suddenly by the
' "ere at stake.
On the other hand, the death
Japanese
Cancer
Association
but
only nine of these had died
Japanese
commanding officer,
^®te from stomach cancer was
of Nisei luckily blew the enemy officer now being held in Tokyo.
of cancer of the stomach. Furth
20 percent higher than the aver
Pacific Was as
Dr. Hirohata based his conclu
ermore, of the nine cases only
to his death instead.
age in the Hokuriku Region and
Aa „.
aginary secret
sion on the result of two surveys N ara
cne was diagnosed to have de
Prefecture and 20 percent
With a series of stacatto com- he had conducted on the geogra
b°mb> and todav,
veloped cancer from ulcers, Dr
lower
in
Kyushu,
Shikoku
and
mands,
la«r, their storv
Kenji
Yasui holdlv phical distribution of patients
Hirohata reported to the medical
Iwate and Shizuoka prefectures.
Yet
‘ !s marched the Japanese troops with stomach cancer and with
congress.
4
’ lke tbe atom through close-order drill, had
Dr. Hiiohata said there was
stomach ulcers. He conducted
He maintained on the basis of
7 w®e directly „,. them build a raft and ordered
the surveys from 1949 to 1951 no geographical corelationship these findings that a stomach
t _ ^«ng two years them to push him back across.
between the incidences of cancer ulcer
and from 1959 to 1961.
patient who is completely
and ulcers.
cured
tO p"®11
and
has no relapse for five
T/c Kenji Yasui was awarded
The surveys revealed that the
years
has
no greater cancer in
^t " ' ^ °f the Silver Star for gallantry — incidence of stomach ulcers was
rnedical research corrobo
rated
his
conclusion
with
data
cidence
than
the average. Thus
iur General and the nickname “The Baby Ser- the highest regardless of the
he obtained in the U.S. During he doubted the validity of the
sexes in Ibaraki, Chiba, Yamagu his research at Harvard Univer
[geant York”.
chi and Shimane prefectures. In sity where he stayed from last j theory that stomach ulcers often
turn into cancer.
ae
JaPaaese ancestry
fenced by their ances
Page 2
PAGE 2
NEW
THE
C A N A D I A N
Beamsville Nisei Claims 7th-dan
Karate Rank From Japan Association
BEAMSVILLE, Ontario. — A sociation is Mr. Shintani.
Beamsville Nisei, Basil Shintani
The Wado-Kai, the organizais reported to have been awarded Hon behind the Wado-ryu
a 7th-d.an karate degree by the of karate, is headed' by 76-yearWado-Kai, one of the major ka old Hitonori Otsuka, a renown
rate styles in the All Japan Ka- lOth-dan, master
ability, fineness of character, and
the contribution made to the or
ganization tor ranking purposes.
Mi. Shintani
presently
instiucta at a number of clubs in
his area: Grimsby, Hamilton,
An advisory board of elderly Winona, St. Catharines, Beamsrate-doh Federation. This was
announced recently by the Nippon men at Nipponia Home — a ha ville and within the next year
Karate Kai (International) with ven for aged Issei citizens — in expec>_s to be travelling through
world headquarters in Beamsvil Beamsville, assists
Shintani in out the country to many of the
le, Ontario. President of the as- judging the quality of lighting unofficial clubs to judge their
calibre and possibly expand his
own group, the Nippon Karate
Kai (International).
He feels he must be very care
MEXICO CITY. — The first proposed by the Japan Amateur ful in his selection in order to
Pacific conference games will be Athletic Federation, and two pre maintain the calibre of the club,
held in Tokyo on Sept. 27 and paratory
committee
meetings and has instructed all his black
28 next year with five countries were held in Tokyo in August belteis not to abuse their status,
his association reports.
participating,
the
permanent and November Last year.
committee for the games decided
The five Pacific nations are
here recently.
Japan, Australia, Canada. New.
The tracx and field meet was Zealand and United States.
St Louis Gards Star Pitcher Off To Japa
1st Pacific Conference Games Sept. 27
JCCA Curling Now
Continuing Hot
In Second Week
TORONTO. - With the curling season barely 2 weeks gone,
many new .and' old members are
begmning to show their skill.
Herb Sugie allowed Hide Hirowatari two on the first end and
"hen blanked him the rest of the
game. He took 3 on the second
end and stole 1 on each of the
next 6 ends to win 9-2. Herb had
Bob Gibson
Ray Matsunaga,
Lily Kishita
and newcomer Keiko Oyakawa
LOS ANGELES, — St. Louis pitcher Bob Gibson, awaiting;
curling with him. Hide had
two
newcomer, Ken Tsumura and parture of chartered JAL jetliner at L.A. .Airport, caught up|
Kaj Takahashi and veteran Juanswering fanmail which filled flight bag. Gibson and Cardiiia
dy Nishimura.
Two other- games ended the left here Oct. 22 for a month long trip of exhibition games again
same way with Tosh Omoto and Japanese prof essional all-star teams. The Yomiuri-sponsored m
Michi Ashikawa both gaining 2
concludes for the Cardinal players and their wives on Nov. 24.J
j>n the last end to tie their games
i-7. Tosh came on to tie Archie
— (Japan Air Lines
Kamiya and Michi tied against
Rod Matsuo. Rod had Dick Ki
mura as vice-skip, Julie Yama
saki as second and Nancy Isozaki
as lead.
Other scores were: Yas ShindcMEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
|
FLAT ROOFS
SHINGLIN'^
l-o over Leri Matsukubo. Bob Takashiba_ edged Fudge Inamoto’s
BA VESTROUGHING
SHEET METAL WORK*
ALCAN SIDING DEALER
I
team 6-5 and Vic Suzuki defeat
ed Gord Kai 8-2.
The curling is spirited and
TORONTO
NISEI OWNED
lull of fun and we are still look
I'O.SH NISHIJIMA
ing for new curlers. Come down
"COHERING ONTARIO
to the Terrace next Friday to
Nig& Calls: PL. 9-5095 Hi. 7-1100
trj your hand at it or contact
one of your curling friend's or
president, Gord Kai.
Shop The Rest — Buy The Best
JCCA Curling League
.
DUNDAS UNION STORE
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
SUKIYAKI MEAT — VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
EM. 4-7S92
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVERN
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD,
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
Fally Licenced
NIKKO GARDEN
421-3374
Reservations: EM. 6-2164
For best arrangements
Reserve ahead of time.
Complete Care
VARIOUS KINDS OF SUSHI
AND OTHER JAPANESE
CUISINES AVAILABLE FOR
FAMILY PARTIES
460 Dundas St. W.
Toronto
SMALL
AT
Travel Arrangements
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
SHOE
SIZES
Tours Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtain able
Travel, Accident
G.E
COLOR — $299
PORTA.
19” ADMIRAL
— $459
21” PHILCO-FORD
•’
__ $490
v
_ $545
22” PHILCO-FORD
25” PHILCO-FORD
”
— $625
25” ADMIRAL
”
__ $599
__ $599
25” EMERSON25” PHILIPS
”
— $725
Baggage
Insurance
ucssace
1 up.to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
1328 Queen St. West
COLOR TV
. BRINGING SOMEONE OVE:
Ladies’ shoes from
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
Anywhere — Anytime
and
NEW FALL
STYLE ARRIVED
OT All
Coll for Reservations or
Information — EM. 8-9934
I
(
i
i
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
I
i
A
T. KAMEOKA
।
ELECTRO-SUN APPLIANCE
K. Iwata Travel Service
1113 McCaul St., TORONTO ^
NO DOWN PAYMENT
1166 Eglinton Ave West
3 BLKS. WEST. OF BATHURST
783-1255
.4Aso — Rargains on Black and White Set,
John M. Foulis — Tak. W. Hatanaka
I
NEW
THE
C A N A D I A N
Beamsville Nisei Claims 7th-dan
Karate Rank From Japan Association
BEAMSVILLE, Ontario. — A sociation is Mr. Shintani.
Beamsville Nisei, Basil Shintani
The Wado-Kai, the organizais reported to have been awarded Hon behind the Wado-ryu
a 7th-d.an karate degree by the of karate, is headed' by 76-yearWado-Kai, one of the major ka old Hitonori Otsuka, a renown
rate styles in the All Japan Ka- lOth-dan, master
ability, fineness of character, and
the contribution made to the or
ganization tor ranking purposes.
Mi. Shintani
presently
instiucta at a number of clubs in
his area: Grimsby, Hamilton,
An advisory board of elderly Winona, St. Catharines, Beamsrate-doh Federation. This was
announced recently by the Nippon men at Nipponia Home — a ha ville and within the next year
Karate Kai (International) with ven for aged Issei citizens — in expec>_s to be travelling through
world headquarters in Beamsvil Beamsville, assists
Shintani in out the country to many of the
le, Ontario. President of the as- judging the quality of lighting unofficial clubs to judge their
calibre and possibly expand his
own group, the Nippon Karate
Kai (International).
He feels he must be very care
MEXICO CITY. — The first proposed by the Japan Amateur ful in his selection in order to
Pacific conference games will be Athletic Federation, and two pre maintain the calibre of the club,
held in Tokyo on Sept. 27 and paratory
committee
meetings and has instructed all his black
28 next year with five countries were held in Tokyo in August belteis not to abuse their status,
his association reports.
participating,
the
permanent and November Last year.
committee for the games decided
The five Pacific nations are
here recently.
Japan, Australia, Canada. New.
The tracx and field meet was Zealand and United States.
St Louis Gards Star Pitcher Off To Japa
1st Pacific Conference Games Sept. 27
JCCA Curling Now
Continuing Hot
In Second Week
TORONTO. - With the curling season barely 2 weeks gone,
many new .and' old members are
begmning to show their skill.
Herb Sugie allowed Hide Hirowatari two on the first end and
"hen blanked him the rest of the
game. He took 3 on the second
end and stole 1 on each of the
next 6 ends to win 9-2. Herb had
Bob Gibson
Ray Matsunaga,
Lily Kishita
and newcomer Keiko Oyakawa
LOS ANGELES, — St. Louis pitcher Bob Gibson, awaiting;
curling with him. Hide had
two
newcomer, Ken Tsumura and parture of chartered JAL jetliner at L.A. .Airport, caught up|
Kaj Takahashi and veteran Juanswering fanmail which filled flight bag. Gibson and Cardiiia
dy Nishimura.
Two other- games ended the left here Oct. 22 for a month long trip of exhibition games again
same way with Tosh Omoto and Japanese prof essional all-star teams. The Yomiuri-sponsored m
Michi Ashikawa both gaining 2
concludes for the Cardinal players and their wives on Nov. 24.J
j>n the last end to tie their games
i-7. Tosh came on to tie Archie
— (Japan Air Lines
Kamiya and Michi tied against
Rod Matsuo. Rod had Dick Ki
mura as vice-skip, Julie Yama
saki as second and Nancy Isozaki
as lead.
Other scores were: Yas ShindcMEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
|
FLAT ROOFS
SHINGLIN'^
l-o over Leri Matsukubo. Bob Takashiba_ edged Fudge Inamoto’s
BA VESTROUGHING
SHEET METAL WORK*
ALCAN SIDING DEALER
I
team 6-5 and Vic Suzuki defeat
ed Gord Kai 8-2.
The curling is spirited and
TORONTO
NISEI OWNED
lull of fun and we are still look
I'O.SH NISHIJIMA
ing for new curlers. Come down
"COHERING ONTARIO
to the Terrace next Friday to
Nig& Calls: PL. 9-5095 Hi. 7-1100
trj your hand at it or contact
one of your curling friend's or
president, Gord Kai.
Shop The Rest — Buy The Best
JCCA Curling League
.
DUNDAS UNION STORE
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
SUKIYAKI MEAT — VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
EM. 4-7S92
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY TAVERN
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD,
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
Fally Licenced
NIKKO GARDEN
421-3374
Reservations: EM. 6-2164
For best arrangements
Reserve ahead of time.
Complete Care
VARIOUS KINDS OF SUSHI
AND OTHER JAPANESE
CUISINES AVAILABLE FOR
FAMILY PARTIES
460 Dundas St. W.
Toronto
SMALL
AT
Travel Arrangements
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
SHOE
SIZES
Tours Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtain able
Travel, Accident
G.E
COLOR — $299
PORTA.
19” ADMIRAL
— $459
21” PHILCO-FORD
•’
__ $490
v
_ $545
22” PHILCO-FORD
25” PHILCO-FORD
”
— $625
25” ADMIRAL
”
__ $599
__ $599
25” EMERSON25” PHILIPS
”
— $725
Baggage
Insurance
ucssace
1 up.to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
1328 Queen St. West
COLOR TV
. BRINGING SOMEONE OVE:
Ladies’ shoes from
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
Anywhere — Anytime
and
NEW FALL
STYLE ARRIVED
OT All
Coll for Reservations or
Information — EM. 8-9934
I
(
i
i
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
I
i
A
T. KAMEOKA
।
ELECTRO-SUN APPLIANCE
K. Iwata Travel Service
1113 McCaul St., TORONTO ^
NO DOWN PAYMENT
1166 Eglinton Ave West
3 BLKS. WEST. OF BATHURST
783-1255
.4Aso — Rargains on Black and White Set,
John M. Foulis — Tak. W. Hatanaka
I
Page 3
2 1968
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1550 Wot Georgia St.
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Frank G. Yada
Crown Life insuraice Co
I ,^«
1550 Wot Georgia St.
Vancouver, B.C.
I iT^s
:
I
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
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Page 7
Saturday. November 2, 1968
THE
NEW
Simple Answers
To Questions
f Food-a-rama By Mont. Dana At Church On Nov. 9 On The US Scene
JIONTREAL.—Food-a-rama “Aki no Matsuri’
"Fete D’
utomne” will be held by the Montreal Dana on November 9th
- the Buddhist Church from noon to 7:00 p.m.
members have planned a Japanese cuisine restaurant
ta-clad girls waiting at the tables taking orders on
Menues 1, II- HL IV of various bargain rates.
Pastry. Christmas gifts, take home counters, Coffe
eater to the public taste.
There will be door prizes, and a raffle on an 18 inch Japane
doll and tea set.
' The objective is to start a Dana Scholarship Fund.
We cordially welcome all friends to help us start the fund;
an enjoyable atmosphere, “au japon,” with pre-Osaka hints
Japanese cuisine clelectables — exciting, Oriental and interesting
Caucasian friends —Mrs. A.
PAGE 7
CANADIAN
Personal Notes Across Canada
Obituaries
SAKAMOTO
MONTREAL. — Mr. and Mrs.
M. Sakamoto ;and the Sakamo
to family are in mourning for
the late
Mrs.
H. Sakamoto,
whose wake service, the first
Nichiren
service in
Montreal
was conducted by Toronto Rev.
Z. Ezaki, at the Thoms. Wray
Funeral Parlours on Oct. 6.
Mrs. H. Sakamoto, an earlv
___ _
pioneer of 83 years of age, pass
ed away on October 4th at the
home of Mr. M. Sakamoto.
She arrived in Vancouver in
1907
— as
— .. young Kanto bride,
from Enoshima, Kanagawa. She
came from a well-known jewelry
craft
"--.L
family
“Uragawa’s” of
several generations fame up to
the present day, Her husband,
one of the very early pioneers
who obtained his naturalization
in the late 1880’s spent his life
time actively engaged in the
fishing
industry in Steveston,
followed later by movements to
Prince Rupert and Seymour Creek
N. Vancouver. Mrs.
Sakamoto
actively assisted her husband.
boarding and
caring
for the
young Issei fishermen who came
to Pr. Rupert in the early 1900’s.
Left behind to mourn her pass
ing are 5 sons, 1 daughter and
10 grandchildren, all of this ci
ty.
M r. N. A sa z n m a
By WILLIAM MARUTANI
Lawyer)
PHILADELPHIA .—The other
day while doing’ ome banking,
I noted that the sweet-voun gthing behind the counter
wearing some kind of a “mes
sage button” on her blouse. I
figured it must be part of some
bank promotional gimmick. That
is, until I got up closer to the
counter to conduct my modest
monetary transaction. The words
on the button read: "I Fi^Tit
Poverty. 1 Work”.
Simple isn’t it? Who can ar
gue against “work” and all that
it simply implies: Initiative, diliThe Art As
From Nov. 6th To Dec. 11th gence,
responsibility ?
Implicit
(to me’ at least) in
TORONTO.The Art and The Artist”
two Wedhesd
that
“
message
” was the clear
| evening series of exposures to .and explanations of contemporary
—50th—
suggestion that those who comI painting and poetry — will commence November 6th under the
plain about being unemployed,
TORONTO.
Mr. Toshiaki
( sponsorship of the Forest Hill Learning Resources Centre, Toronto about substandard living, about
and his wife Oiso, 69,
i Public Libraries, and the New Writers’ Workshop. Both series poverty—that these people ought recently celebrated their 50th
1 continue weekly through December 11th and will provide an to simply get off their haunches wedding
anniversary at Nikko
Garden with a party
held by
I opportunity to meet and talk with a number of prominent Canadian . . . and work.
their
children
CLICHES
Some
100
people
■ painters and poets who are active in the Toronto scene.
But like
manv “simple an- attended the. gathering and ex|
The painting series will include visits to art galleries and swers”, like many cliches
this tended congratulations.
| talks by artists or gallery owners. The painters involved are: glaringly ignores the guts o:
<
They received special congraI John MacGregor, Tony Urquhart, Michael Snow (at the Isaacs the problem, the material facto
tulations
from:
Governor and
that
most
of
us
do
not
wish
to
| Gallery); Ken Danby, a selection of XXth Century Masters, PicasMrs. Mitchener, Prime Minister
recognize.
I so, etc (at the Gallery Moos), plus a lecture by internationally
Trudeau
Secretary of
These cliches appeal to our Pierre
known artist William Ronald at the Forest Hill Learning Resources
Pelletier
for simple answers that
I' Centre, 666 Eglinton Avenue West, on November
This group we can “understand’"’, that OU!SHIMADA
They have 2 sons and 2 daughtlazy minds can encompass. tha r
| will be under the guidance of Toronto painter Aiko Suzuki.
s. and 8 grandchildren.
provide a ready unction to pla
HAMILTON, Ont. — Mr. No|
The Poetry series will include Canadian poets John Robert cate the stirrings of our vaguely
buji Shimada, 80, passed away
J Colombo, George Jonas, Dennis, Lee, bp Nichol, Ted Plantes and troubled souls.
—50th—
on October 19th, 1969 at Hamil
And to those of us who are
i scan o huigin. all reading from their own works. The series will
TORONTO.
Mr. and Mrs. ton General
Hospital
from a
i be held in the studio-auditorium at the Learning Resources Centre so predisposed (and that about
includes all of us) we find our Kakichi Fujiwara celebrated their heart attack.
; at 9 p.m.
“answers” in simple cliches. And 50 th wedding anniversary on OctFuneral service, conducted by
For further information as to fees and registration, phone that’s that.
ober 13th at the China House
the
Rev. C. N. Furuya, was held
i 787-1816 or 787-1817. — T.P.L.
“LAW AND ORDER”
with a party held by their sons
at bhe Dodsworth ;and Brown
The cliche that enjoys repeti*
*
*
tious currency to a nauseating and daughters. Mr. Fujiwara is Funeral Home.
Ed Ide At Cross Canada Conference This Weekend frazzle in this campaign yeai’ a hearty 80 years og age and his
TORONTO.—The International Institute of Metropolitan Tor is “law and order”. Any man wife Matsuyo, 73.
onto is sponsoring .a Cross Canada Conference for voluntary who opposes “law and order ” let
CARD OF THANKS
For the occasion, the Canadian
agencies and government officials working in the field of im him dare to stand uo and indentify
himself.
(
“
We
’
ll
kill
him
”
).
Government sent a wire of conmigration held in Toronto from October 30 to November 2, 1968.
We wish to express our sin
And among the candidates who
cere appreciation to our fri
gratulations
and
the
Ontario
proclaim so vehemently this reThe Conference will tackle the following- three questions:
ends for the kindness and
sent a plaque in
frain
of “law and order’, we Government
•^!'e Present services for immigrants adequate?
many sympathies extended to
have the tragic spectacle of one honoring the anniversary.
Anat kind of agencies can best serve the immigrant?
us during the illness and pass
who himself personally demon
Do we need more of them across Canada?
ing of a dear husband and
strated by blocking the doorway
Mr. Fujiwara came to Canada
father.
T^5 Conference is being held with the corporation of the Citi- to an Alabama university to pre
60 years ago and Mrs. Fujiwara
Mrs. Maki Ogaki
Branch, Department of the Secretary of State, and the vent the carrying out of the law
Mr.
Mrs. Hajime Og’aki
joined
him
50
years
ago.
They
,,!“zens“;P Branch, Department of the Provincial Secretary and proclaimed by the highest court
Mr. & Mrs. Takashi Ogaki
have
3
sons,
4
daughters,
and
11
'-JDzenship, Province of Ontario.
of our Land.
Mr. & Mrs. Hiroshi Ogaki
j
°Hf knowledge, this is the first Cross Canada Conference
Others preach law and order grandchildren.
Mr.
Mrs. George Ogaki
ealing with immigration to involve voluntarv agencies from Van that is to apply only to part of
Mr. & Mrs. Sueyoshi Ogaki
couver to Halifax.
our citizenry; and this, in and
Mr. & Mrs. Tame Ogaki
j ; A.,103111 °F Hye impartial conference observers will attend the of itself, is not law and order.
Mr. & Mrs. Tsuyoshi Ogaki
T^a
n^ei ence ana’ provide a summation on Saturday morning, They exhort “law and order” at
SAY IT WITH
Mr. & Mrs. Katsumi Ogaki
c e , 3!ra*an of the Observer Panel will be Dr. Joseph Kage, Na- ] all costs, even if it bespeaks of
Mr. & Mrs. Masanori Ogaki
FLOWERS
Executive Vice-President, Jewish Immigrant Aid Services contempt for our hallowed Con
V _^npr‘a’ aad the other four members will be: Dean McCormack stitutional safeguards, the very
SHARON'S FLORIST
Joseph E. Atkinson College, York University; Mrs. Mar- backbone of the greatness of our
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
-aiep i Wuay, Member of the Faculty of Social Sciences. Ryer- American system of government.
They speak (not' always open
131 ^clinical Institute; Mr. Ernest Wengler, Canadian CorPeter Sasaki
K. Sasaki
^eue Zurcher Zeitung; and Mr. Ed Ide, National and ly, but clearly always impliedly)
Bus: HO. 6-2041
of “law and order” in the streets,
a
resident. Japanese Canadian Citizens Association.
Res: HO. 6-7962
942 PAPE AVE., TORONTO
»/7^Fno^e speaker whose subject is the title of the con- to attain a semblance of law and
A ^ ^ ^ »
A ^ .t.
,
^ Community and Immigration”, is Mrs. S.aul Hayes, order, even at the price of having
justice taking a back seat or be” executive Vice President, Canadian Jewish Congress.
g ignored altogether.
^oei'ee1’’ Q-C., Deputy Provincial Secretary and' DeThese haranguers of law and
. U?te1' °^ Citizenship, Province of Ontario, was the order are strangely silent on the
aL the dinner on Thursday night, sponsored bv the Ontario
JAMES KAMINO
matter of obedience to the law
of
the
land
of
Brown
vs.
Board
-i. Kiibert Stanbury, M.P., Parliamentary Secretary to the
secretary >>f State of Canada was the speaker at the dinner on of Education (which became the
Friday «
AGENCY
enmg, sponsored by the Citizenship Branch, Department law. of the land 14 long years
ago), which required desegrega
cretary
of
State
in
the
Gold
Room
of
the
Park
Plaza
Hotei
tion of schools and thereby equal
Office, 43 Eglinton Ave. East
EM. 4-9913
A
opportunities
for education for
ripating Agency in the United Community Fund.
Phone 485-5087
all citizens.
(TORONTO)
Home
phone: 449-9293
These
very
same
people
con
'>III,IiIIf l!III!niIHIIIIUIIIIIl!!II!EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiriIIIIII!IIIl!!IIIIIIiniIIIinj£
demn those who would select and
“KARATE FOR THE FAMILY” = decide which laws are to be
A, One of Toronto's Officially Recognized Clubs cf The
“
violated, while they themselves
NATIONAL KARATE ASSOCIATION
= choose to ignore and disobey laws
HAST
Tsuruoka Karate School, 782 Yonge St., 924-4385
= which hapnen to displease them.
DON kottq
Higashi School of Karate, 832 Eglinton E., 425-6003
=
JUSTICE. TOO
'•«f
— Nisei Karate Club, (J.C.C. Centre) 123 Wynford Dr. 429-0676 z
All
of
us. including this writor information and reservation contact
IlllllUinil
U“tO Karcte D°i°- 5415 Dundas St. West Phone 233-3478 =
but
er,
are
for
“law and order
——LLLLLLLLLLLLII,,,,i,ii!HiIHiiiHiiiiiiinii iiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiii!!! iiiiiiiniHi—
with justice. Yes, clear the
but at the same time, let
street
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A.! those who would clear the streets
also observe the law. Let those
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
365 Spadina Ave.
solicitor
who preach
“law and order'’
NOTARY public
Night Tel.:
preach it, and enforce it, for
NOTARY PUBLIC
Canton St., Toronto
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
all.
Tsuyuki 535-9935
121 RICHMOND ST. W.
Hoom 1805
Otherwise, it will simply be
TORONTO
1
Tel.
366-1075
£S
293-4281 (Res.)
“law and order” — as Hitler had
Uyeda LE. 6-1403
363-5002
691-3388 (Res.)
—devoid of justice.
i
I
|
I
|
|
I
T.V. Service
Gertrude Urabe
tm iim iu iim im i?
For Worry Free Travel
THE
NEW
Simple Answers
To Questions
f Food-a-rama By Mont. Dana At Church On Nov. 9 On The US Scene
JIONTREAL.—Food-a-rama “Aki no Matsuri’
"Fete D’
utomne” will be held by the Montreal Dana on November 9th
- the Buddhist Church from noon to 7:00 p.m.
members have planned a Japanese cuisine restaurant
ta-clad girls waiting at the tables taking orders on
Menues 1, II- HL IV of various bargain rates.
Pastry. Christmas gifts, take home counters, Coffe
eater to the public taste.
There will be door prizes, and a raffle on an 18 inch Japane
doll and tea set.
' The objective is to start a Dana Scholarship Fund.
We cordially welcome all friends to help us start the fund;
an enjoyable atmosphere, “au japon,” with pre-Osaka hints
Japanese cuisine clelectables — exciting, Oriental and interesting
Caucasian friends —Mrs. A.
PAGE 7
CANADIAN
Personal Notes Across Canada
Obituaries
SAKAMOTO
MONTREAL. — Mr. and Mrs.
M. Sakamoto ;and the Sakamo
to family are in mourning for
the late
Mrs.
H. Sakamoto,
whose wake service, the first
Nichiren
service in
Montreal
was conducted by Toronto Rev.
Z. Ezaki, at the Thoms. Wray
Funeral Parlours on Oct. 6.
Mrs. H. Sakamoto, an earlv
___ _
pioneer of 83 years of age, pass
ed away on October 4th at the
home of Mr. M. Sakamoto.
She arrived in Vancouver in
1907
— as
— .. young Kanto bride,
from Enoshima, Kanagawa. She
came from a well-known jewelry
craft
"--.L
family
“Uragawa’s” of
several generations fame up to
the present day, Her husband,
one of the very early pioneers
who obtained his naturalization
in the late 1880’s spent his life
time actively engaged in the
fishing
industry in Steveston,
followed later by movements to
Prince Rupert and Seymour Creek
N. Vancouver. Mrs.
Sakamoto
actively assisted her husband.
boarding and
caring
for the
young Issei fishermen who came
to Pr. Rupert in the early 1900’s.
Left behind to mourn her pass
ing are 5 sons, 1 daughter and
10 grandchildren, all of this ci
ty.
M r. N. A sa z n m a
By WILLIAM MARUTANI
Lawyer)
PHILADELPHIA .—The other
day while doing’ ome banking,
I noted that the sweet-voun gthing behind the counter
wearing some kind of a “mes
sage button” on her blouse. I
figured it must be part of some
bank promotional gimmick. That
is, until I got up closer to the
counter to conduct my modest
monetary transaction. The words
on the button read: "I Fi^Tit
Poverty. 1 Work”.
Simple isn’t it? Who can ar
gue against “work” and all that
it simply implies: Initiative, diliThe Art As
From Nov. 6th To Dec. 11th gence,
responsibility ?
Implicit
(to me’ at least) in
TORONTO.The Art and The Artist”
two Wedhesd
that
“
message
” was the clear
| evening series of exposures to .and explanations of contemporary
—50th—
suggestion that those who comI painting and poetry — will commence November 6th under the
plain about being unemployed,
TORONTO.
Mr. Toshiaki
( sponsorship of the Forest Hill Learning Resources Centre, Toronto about substandard living, about
and his wife Oiso, 69,
i Public Libraries, and the New Writers’ Workshop. Both series poverty—that these people ought recently celebrated their 50th
1 continue weekly through December 11th and will provide an to simply get off their haunches wedding
anniversary at Nikko
Garden with a party
held by
I opportunity to meet and talk with a number of prominent Canadian . . . and work.
their
children
CLICHES
Some
100
people
■ painters and poets who are active in the Toronto scene.
But like
manv “simple an- attended the. gathering and ex|
The painting series will include visits to art galleries and swers”, like many cliches
this tended congratulations.
| talks by artists or gallery owners. The painters involved are: glaringly ignores the guts o:
<
They received special congraI John MacGregor, Tony Urquhart, Michael Snow (at the Isaacs the problem, the material facto
tulations
from:
Governor and
that
most
of
us
do
not
wish
to
| Gallery); Ken Danby, a selection of XXth Century Masters, PicasMrs. Mitchener, Prime Minister
recognize.
I so, etc (at the Gallery Moos), plus a lecture by internationally
Trudeau
Secretary of
These cliches appeal to our Pierre
known artist William Ronald at the Forest Hill Learning Resources
Pelletier
for simple answers that
I' Centre, 666 Eglinton Avenue West, on November
This group we can “understand’"’, that OU!SHIMADA
They have 2 sons and 2 daughtlazy minds can encompass. tha r
| will be under the guidance of Toronto painter Aiko Suzuki.
s. and 8 grandchildren.
provide a ready unction to pla
HAMILTON, Ont. — Mr. No|
The Poetry series will include Canadian poets John Robert cate the stirrings of our vaguely
buji Shimada, 80, passed away
J Colombo, George Jonas, Dennis, Lee, bp Nichol, Ted Plantes and troubled souls.
—50th—
on October 19th, 1969 at Hamil
And to those of us who are
i scan o huigin. all reading from their own works. The series will
TORONTO.
Mr. and Mrs. ton General
Hospital
from a
i be held in the studio-auditorium at the Learning Resources Centre so predisposed (and that about
includes all of us) we find our Kakichi Fujiwara celebrated their heart attack.
; at 9 p.m.
“answers” in simple cliches. And 50 th wedding anniversary on OctFuneral service, conducted by
For further information as to fees and registration, phone that’s that.
ober 13th at the China House
the
Rev. C. N. Furuya, was held
i 787-1816 or 787-1817. — T.P.L.
“LAW AND ORDER”
with a party held by their sons
at bhe Dodsworth ;and Brown
The cliche that enjoys repeti*
*
*
tious currency to a nauseating and daughters. Mr. Fujiwara is Funeral Home.
Ed Ide At Cross Canada Conference This Weekend frazzle in this campaign yeai’ a hearty 80 years og age and his
TORONTO.—The International Institute of Metropolitan Tor is “law and order”. Any man wife Matsuyo, 73.
onto is sponsoring .a Cross Canada Conference for voluntary who opposes “law and order ” let
CARD OF THANKS
For the occasion, the Canadian
agencies and government officials working in the field of im him dare to stand uo and indentify
himself.
(
“
We
’
ll
kill
him
”
).
Government sent a wire of conmigration held in Toronto from October 30 to November 2, 1968.
We wish to express our sin
And among the candidates who
cere appreciation to our fri
gratulations
and
the
Ontario
proclaim so vehemently this reThe Conference will tackle the following- three questions:
ends for the kindness and
sent a plaque in
frain
of “law and order’, we Government
•^!'e Present services for immigrants adequate?
many sympathies extended to
have the tragic spectacle of one honoring the anniversary.
Anat kind of agencies can best serve the immigrant?
us during the illness and pass
who himself personally demon
Do we need more of them across Canada?
ing of a dear husband and
strated by blocking the doorway
Mr. Fujiwara came to Canada
father.
T^5 Conference is being held with the corporation of the Citi- to an Alabama university to pre
60 years ago and Mrs. Fujiwara
Mrs. Maki Ogaki
Branch, Department of the Secretary of State, and the vent the carrying out of the law
Mr.
Mrs. Hajime Og’aki
joined
him
50
years
ago.
They
,,!“zens“;P Branch, Department of the Provincial Secretary and proclaimed by the highest court
Mr. & Mrs. Takashi Ogaki
have
3
sons,
4
daughters,
and
11
'-JDzenship, Province of Ontario.
of our Land.
Mr. & Mrs. Hiroshi Ogaki
j
°Hf knowledge, this is the first Cross Canada Conference
Others preach law and order grandchildren.
Mr.
Mrs. George Ogaki
ealing with immigration to involve voluntarv agencies from Van that is to apply only to part of
Mr. & Mrs. Sueyoshi Ogaki
couver to Halifax.
our citizenry; and this, in and
Mr. & Mrs. Tame Ogaki
j ; A.,103111 °F Hye impartial conference observers will attend the of itself, is not law and order.
Mr. & Mrs. Tsuyoshi Ogaki
T^a
n^ei ence ana’ provide a summation on Saturday morning, They exhort “law and order” at
SAY IT WITH
Mr. & Mrs. Katsumi Ogaki
c e , 3!ra*an of the Observer Panel will be Dr. Joseph Kage, Na- ] all costs, even if it bespeaks of
Mr. & Mrs. Masanori Ogaki
FLOWERS
Executive Vice-President, Jewish Immigrant Aid Services contempt for our hallowed Con
V _^npr‘a’ aad the other four members will be: Dean McCormack stitutional safeguards, the very
SHARON'S FLORIST
Joseph E. Atkinson College, York University; Mrs. Mar- backbone of the greatness of our
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
-aiep i Wuay, Member of the Faculty of Social Sciences. Ryer- American system of government.
They speak (not' always open
131 ^clinical Institute; Mr. Ernest Wengler, Canadian CorPeter Sasaki
K. Sasaki
^eue Zurcher Zeitung; and Mr. Ed Ide, National and ly, but clearly always impliedly)
Bus: HO. 6-2041
of “law and order” in the streets,
a
resident. Japanese Canadian Citizens Association.
Res: HO. 6-7962
942 PAPE AVE., TORONTO
»/7^Fno^e speaker whose subject is the title of the con- to attain a semblance of law and
A ^ ^ ^ »
A ^ .t.
,
^ Community and Immigration”, is Mrs. S.aul Hayes, order, even at the price of having
justice taking a back seat or be” executive Vice President, Canadian Jewish Congress.
g ignored altogether.
^oei'ee1’’ Q-C., Deputy Provincial Secretary and' DeThese haranguers of law and
. U?te1' °^ Citizenship, Province of Ontario, was the order are strangely silent on the
aL the dinner on Thursday night, sponsored bv the Ontario
JAMES KAMINO
matter of obedience to the law
of
the
land
of
Brown
vs.
Board
-i. Kiibert Stanbury, M.P., Parliamentary Secretary to the
secretary >>f State of Canada was the speaker at the dinner on of Education (which became the
Friday «
AGENCY
enmg, sponsored by the Citizenship Branch, Department law. of the land 14 long years
ago), which required desegrega
cretary
of
State
in
the
Gold
Room
of
the
Park
Plaza
Hotei
tion of schools and thereby equal
Office, 43 Eglinton Ave. East
EM. 4-9913
A
opportunities
for education for
ripating Agency in the United Community Fund.
Phone 485-5087
all citizens.
(TORONTO)
Home
phone: 449-9293
These
very
same
people
con
'>III,IiIIf l!III!niIHIIIIUIIIIIl!!II!EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiriIIIIII!IIIl!!IIIIIIiniIIIinj£
demn those who would select and
“KARATE FOR THE FAMILY” = decide which laws are to be
A, One of Toronto's Officially Recognized Clubs cf The
“
violated, while they themselves
NATIONAL KARATE ASSOCIATION
= choose to ignore and disobey laws
HAST
Tsuruoka Karate School, 782 Yonge St., 924-4385
= which hapnen to displease them.
DON kottq
Higashi School of Karate, 832 Eglinton E., 425-6003
=
JUSTICE. TOO
'•«f
— Nisei Karate Club, (J.C.C. Centre) 123 Wynford Dr. 429-0676 z
All
of
us. including this writor information and reservation contact
IlllllUinil
U“tO Karcte D°i°- 5415 Dundas St. West Phone 233-3478 =
but
er,
are
for
“law and order
——LLLLLLLLLLLLII,,,,i,ii!HiIHiiiHiiiiiiinii iiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiii!!! iiiiiiiniHi—
with justice. Yes, clear the
but at the same time, let
street
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A.! those who would clear the streets
also observe the law. Let those
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
365 Spadina Ave.
solicitor
who preach
“law and order'’
NOTARY public
Night Tel.:
preach it, and enforce it, for
NOTARY PUBLIC
Canton St., Toronto
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
all.
Tsuyuki 535-9935
121 RICHMOND ST. W.
Hoom 1805
Otherwise, it will simply be
TORONTO
1
Tel.
366-1075
£S
293-4281 (Res.)
“law and order” — as Hitler had
Uyeda LE. 6-1403
363-5002
691-3388 (Res.)
—devoid of justice.
i
I
|
I
|
|
I
T.V. Service
Gertrude Urabe
tm iim iu iim im i?
For Worry Free Travel
Page 8
PAGE 8
Saturday, November 2
Quebec Unveils
Japan Expo Pavilion
Expo 70 . . .
I
(Cont. From Page 1)
The planning began back in
But the belle of Expo 70 will
Authorized as second
i
3 965. The experts had spent a be neither one of these giants,
Post Office DopS^4® 0=2
and for payment of poshg^^
good deal of time looking, with a but Canada. For reasons of trade
very hard eye, at Montreal. No or sentiment, Canada has become
body will say a harsh word about a favorite here, and she is res
MONTREAL. — Expo 70 ar as the new.
Expo 67, but it is clear that the ponding in kind. Ottawa’s paviJapanese found much there that
Osaka, Japan,
was highlighted
:^
At the press conference in the was wrong, and they are deter lion will be called “Discovery”
and will depict jthe growth and
at Place Ville
Marie recently
I
Quebec office at Place Ville Ma- mined to avoid it here.
future of the country. Covei'ing
where
Premier
Jean-Jacques
i
lie, the Japanese consul-general,
The planners here seem to 103,000 square feet it will be
Bertrand unveiled the maquette
Katsuma Urabe, was asked If think Montreal botched its job pyramidal in shape, lined with
and details of Quebec’s pavilion
Hrl
1SUMURA
EnglishEditor
Tri itor
of
chiefs-of-state of accommodating visitors, feed mirrors. The design was prepar
KEN
MORI Japanese
at the first world exhibition in a program
ing them, and providing parking ed by Erickson-Massey of Van
visits, one of the highlights of space. They also feel that a vis couver.
the Far East.
And Advertising
Expo 67, would be undertaken at itor to Expo 67 found it difficult
But
this
will
not
be
the
only
SUBSCRIPTION
Premier Bertrand, obviously Osaka, and whether the Quebec to grasp the theme, for even
$4.00 per 6 mentis
patch of Canada in Osaka. Three
enjoying the opportunity to show
S7.00 per year
how Quebec’s story of her cul premiei would qualify as a chief- the sturdiest pair of legs requir provinces, Quebec, British Colum
ed
days
to
walk
the
rounds
of
bia and Ontario, will also have
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
ture and achievement would be of-state.
the widely scattered buildings.
sizable pavilions. The first two
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
shown at Expo 70, described the
Before Mr. Urabe could quite
The planners think they can (along with that of Canada) will
overall design of the pavilion as
EMpire 6-5005
around to answering, Pre do better. Geography favors be in choice _ spots near Symbol
“very much in the French Cana get
mier Bertrand smiled and said: them. The Senri hills are hugged Lane. Ontario’s site may not
dian
tradition” — its overall
by the great Kansai district, prove as attractive. The pavilion
‘'We’ll be there.”
shape recalling the Norman-type
with its cities of Osaka (3.2 mil
houses along the highways and
The Quebec pavilion architect lion people). The breathtakingly will be on the edge of Expo,
where millions may well miss it.
byways of the province.
was Jacques de Blois, with Ma- beautiful Kyoto (1.3 million), as
Like any self-respecting Expo,
In fact, however, the pavilion sami Tokunaga acting as co well as the smaller Nara, Taka
Male Help Wanted
this
one will have a huge amuse
conceived by Julien Hebert, one architect.
razuka and Otsu. This area of
LICENSED
bodyman or
fers 6,000 Western-style hotel ment area. Its biggest attraction estimating collision damage'"Exi^of Quebec’s most prominent deThe exhibits in the pavilion
will be a 3.3 mile long five-lane. preferred. Prefer single, willing'
signers
he was responsible will cover a multitude of sub rooms, with another 4,200 to be $24 million Daidarasaurus. (To a
m 6 to 12 months Ad^
added before the fair opens.
Accident Services 4S7-23RS Tosh
for the Expo 67 symbol — is jects includinng climate, natural
the uninitiated, this is a roller Auto
~
I
In
Montreal,
there
were coaster.) The thing will truly be uyeda.
decidedly futuristic in concept, resources and folklore.
queues for restaurants. Here, the
die maker
and as can be expected, will at
fhe total expenditure budget fair will itself operate 190 eating a monster, meanndering over 41 EXPERIENCED
extrusion plant.
Contact Ken Oda
acres
and
offering
speeds
of
up
phone 625-3333 (Toronto).
'
tempt to reflect the old as well ed for Quebec’s participation in places, with another 40 expected to 50 miles an hour.
the neighborhood of to be put up by foreign exhibi
man for general duties for
$3,300,000.
Those who crave even more YOUNG
skin merchant. No excerienc® n=c®s
tors. The fair is also negotiating
with “world-famous” restaurants excitement will have a choice of sary. Permanent position. Aoolv i2cj.
n' Victor- Goodman, 254 S^dina Ave
delights as
Astrojet,” “
Tak Television Service
to have a fling here. (“Very sor such
(Toronto).
“
Shooting
the
rapids
and HurPaul K. Asada, D.C., N.D. ry, I can’t tell you the names ’ I ricane,” which balances
movie
SERVING WEST METRO
but
you
’
d
know
them.
”
)
Female Help Wanted
* Doctor of Chiropractic’’
rp,
,.
,. , ....
screens showing stormy seas.
PHONE 621-2228
LADY for invoicing, tyoina and good 3
Ine thematic buildings at the
u ,
728A St. Clair Ave. West
Osaka Expo will he in “Symbol
r theTlovers of nature, there with figures. Part time ' Centra o’ c
(!4 block West of Christie)
TOSH TAKAHASHI
Lane”—a miracle belt half a mile
« a Japanese garden cover- Apply Mr. Davis, 921-7740 (Toronto).
TORONTO
long and 360 feet wide. In this W 64 acres‘
COOK-HOUSEKEEPER for iamilv of two.
651-8060
Res. 621-1989 stretch, in the heart of the fair, I There will be beauty of another Convenient
to bus, subway, and shonui
Comfortable room, bath, and TV.
a v’s^or "’Hl find the immense sort' Japan’s 50 prefectures will mg.
cleaning woman twice weekly. Box KI
It ia a good policy to
theme hall, under Hie largest select 233 of their loveliest girls The New Canadian.
hare th« HIGHT POLICY
plastic roof ever made; the festi-I to serve as hostesses. (They will
Consult
yal plaza, where he may be able be required to know a foreign
OFFSET ANO LETTERPRESS
to watch half a dozen wonderous language). There will be another
William Wales Ltd.
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHEADS
events at once; and an art gal- 150 roving hostesses-interpreters
Insurance Agents
^ fcy Jj«^ &Zw ”*™^ I
erj;
I and 1,500 stationed in the paThe idea of theme hall came I aliens.
,
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
from
an
abstract
painter,
Taro
Only
two
private
exhibitor
HARRY S. KONDO ^®!^^^O
Science has now found a
Phone 921-3171
^h°1°’ vho YaAput m cha^
abroad will venture info
627 BAY ST., TORONTO Phone 368-9768
of all theme exhibitions.
this Expo. One will be Easting solution to one of man’s
PRINTING
JACK
Ever mindful of visitor fatigue. I । oc^a^’ making a sortie into a
the planners have provided for I ^nd of at least 50 million came- I
a monorail line that will circle Ira f^ns, each seemingly equipped
Expo site in 15 minuttes. |'P^.a superb Japanese camera.
(The . Japanese .are no novices I Another firm will represent 20
at this. A monorail line already or. so American companies. (Pe- I
links Tokyo with its airport at psi Cola is listed here as .a JaHaneda.) More important, Expo PaneBe concern).
^^
-ill J
jor your wedding candids
home portraits
and special events
most serious problems.
3#
Now Available in Canada
Only S4. At Your Druggist
air-conditioned and enclosed withj the w«
|HEMMY'
Buy & SeJI — Your Home
in a transparent tube, these will
converge on
“Symbol Lane ” adult. But, at that, the Daidara- I
They will be free.
Through
^^^AJ-15 and the jellyfish floating I
Predictably, Expo 70 will be in the sky should alone be worth
dominated by those perennial Hie price. Not to mention the I
fair rivals, Russia and the United Toronto Symphony and the Ed
States. Each will have 215,000 Sullivan show, the ancient Noh
Representing
square feet for its pavilion, and £ , P f111^! Harry Belafonte, the I
the planners have thoughtfully Bolshoi ballet and the Hagen- I
Bob Owen
placed them on opposite sides beck Circus.
Real Estate Co.
of the Expo site.
Now
the
officials
here
are
The
Russians
sent a high- praying for good' weather and
2625 Eglinton Ave. East.
powered mission
which circled toi peace, both .abroad and at
Phone
266-4501 - Res. 261-2581
over the hills until it picked the
h,on,ie- 51e 'honeyed Zengakuren
spot it wanted. With an eye on
here.
unfortunately,
•japan’s hunger for raw mater- students
make
the
youths
of Paris and
’ the Russians will feature Mexico City look like
amateurrs
the riches of Siberia.
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
1 in the art of rioting.
Consult
17 Golf Valley Lane,
Etobicoke, Ont.
Phone 621-6067
Mits Kuroda
S pecializing In Chinese Food
Businessmen Luncheon
We Cater To Parties And Banquets
Read Jessie L. Beattie’s
Phone: EM. 3-7646 — EM. 8-0035
123A Dundas St. West
—
Toronto 2, Ont.
Parking At Bay & Dundas
Get Tout Friend To Subscribe To.
i
I
The New Canadian
1
I
479 QUEEN STREET WEST
TORONTO 2-B. ONT.
I
I
I
I
I
J
I
For AU Classes of
A Japanese Canadian story
INSURANCE
Available at The New Canadian For S5 00
479 Queen Street West
_
Toronto ^ Ontario
!nnn!in....llll.ll.,l.l„„„„„„„l„,„„„„„„„„„„„„
J
<mr. mrs. miss)
otuerd
proprietor
JON ONODERA
I
I
ADDRESS
I
CITY .....
I
I
PROVINCE
Phone: PL. 9-2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
.......................
I
I
Please find enclosed $ ___________
for which
c Renew my subscription.
I
° ^nn”7 " ■"’ subscription for... _.._ year/months I
$4.00 ror six months • $7.00 per year
_i
name
STRENGTH FOR THE BRIDGE
HU. 9-1654 — HU. 1-8805
ask for
Stan Nishimura
i
i
i
Euciano Cianciusi
Real Estate
Specialists
1682 St. Clair Ave. W.
ZONE NO.
1
I
J
540 Eglinton Ave. W
Toronto
Toronto
Bus. 766-6191
Res. LE. 1-1089
OSCAR'S
Sport Shop
*
NEW
LOCATION
1201 Bloor Street V e
LE. 2-4267
j
Saturday, November 2
Quebec Unveils
Japan Expo Pavilion
Expo 70 . . .
I
(Cont. From Page 1)
The planning began back in
But the belle of Expo 70 will
Authorized as second
i
3 965. The experts had spent a be neither one of these giants,
Post Office DopS^4® 0=2
and for payment of poshg^^
good deal of time looking, with a but Canada. For reasons of trade
very hard eye, at Montreal. No or sentiment, Canada has become
body will say a harsh word about a favorite here, and she is res
MONTREAL. — Expo 70 ar as the new.
Expo 67, but it is clear that the ponding in kind. Ottawa’s paviJapanese found much there that
Osaka, Japan,
was highlighted
:^
At the press conference in the was wrong, and they are deter lion will be called “Discovery”
and will depict jthe growth and
at Place Ville
Marie recently
I
Quebec office at Place Ville Ma- mined to avoid it here.
future of the country. Covei'ing
where
Premier
Jean-Jacques
i
lie, the Japanese consul-general,
The planners here seem to 103,000 square feet it will be
Bertrand unveiled the maquette
Katsuma Urabe, was asked If think Montreal botched its job pyramidal in shape, lined with
and details of Quebec’s pavilion
Hrl
1SUMURA
EnglishEditor
Tri itor
of
chiefs-of-state of accommodating visitors, feed mirrors. The design was prepar
KEN
MORI Japanese
at the first world exhibition in a program
ing them, and providing parking ed by Erickson-Massey of Van
visits, one of the highlights of space. They also feel that a vis couver.
the Far East.
And Advertising
Expo 67, would be undertaken at itor to Expo 67 found it difficult
But
this
will
not
be
the
only
SUBSCRIPTION
Premier Bertrand, obviously Osaka, and whether the Quebec to grasp the theme, for even
$4.00 per 6 mentis
patch of Canada in Osaka. Three
enjoying the opportunity to show
S7.00 per year
how Quebec’s story of her cul premiei would qualify as a chief- the sturdiest pair of legs requir provinces, Quebec, British Colum
ed
days
to
walk
the
rounds
of
bia and Ontario, will also have
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
ture and achievement would be of-state.
the widely scattered buildings.
sizable pavilions. The first two
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
shown at Expo 70, described the
Before Mr. Urabe could quite
The planners think they can (along with that of Canada) will
overall design of the pavilion as
EMpire 6-5005
around to answering, Pre do better. Geography favors be in choice _ spots near Symbol
“very much in the French Cana get
mier Bertrand smiled and said: them. The Senri hills are hugged Lane. Ontario’s site may not
dian
tradition” — its overall
by the great Kansai district, prove as attractive. The pavilion
‘'We’ll be there.”
shape recalling the Norman-type
with its cities of Osaka (3.2 mil
houses along the highways and
The Quebec pavilion architect lion people). The breathtakingly will be on the edge of Expo,
where millions may well miss it.
byways of the province.
was Jacques de Blois, with Ma- beautiful Kyoto (1.3 million), as
Like any self-respecting Expo,
In fact, however, the pavilion sami Tokunaga acting as co well as the smaller Nara, Taka
Male Help Wanted
this
one will have a huge amuse
conceived by Julien Hebert, one architect.
razuka and Otsu. This area of
LICENSED
bodyman or
fers 6,000 Western-style hotel ment area. Its biggest attraction estimating collision damage'"Exi^of Quebec’s most prominent deThe exhibits in the pavilion
will be a 3.3 mile long five-lane. preferred. Prefer single, willing'
signers
he was responsible will cover a multitude of sub rooms, with another 4,200 to be $24 million Daidarasaurus. (To a
m 6 to 12 months Ad^
added before the fair opens.
Accident Services 4S7-23RS Tosh
for the Expo 67 symbol — is jects includinng climate, natural
the uninitiated, this is a roller Auto
~
I
In
Montreal,
there
were coaster.) The thing will truly be uyeda.
decidedly futuristic in concept, resources and folklore.
queues for restaurants. Here, the
die maker
and as can be expected, will at
fhe total expenditure budget fair will itself operate 190 eating a monster, meanndering over 41 EXPERIENCED
extrusion plant.
Contact Ken Oda
acres
and
offering
speeds
of
up
phone 625-3333 (Toronto).
'
tempt to reflect the old as well ed for Quebec’s participation in places, with another 40 expected to 50 miles an hour.
the neighborhood of to be put up by foreign exhibi
man for general duties for
$3,300,000.
Those who crave even more YOUNG
skin merchant. No excerienc® n=c®s
tors. The fair is also negotiating
with “world-famous” restaurants excitement will have a choice of sary. Permanent position. Aoolv i2cj.
n' Victor- Goodman, 254 S^dina Ave
delights as
Astrojet,” “
Tak Television Service
to have a fling here. (“Very sor such
(Toronto).
“
Shooting
the
rapids
and HurPaul K. Asada, D.C., N.D. ry, I can’t tell you the names ’ I ricane,” which balances
movie
SERVING WEST METRO
but
you
’
d
know
them.
”
)
Female Help Wanted
* Doctor of Chiropractic’’
rp,
,.
,. , ....
screens showing stormy seas.
PHONE 621-2228
LADY for invoicing, tyoina and good 3
Ine thematic buildings at the
u ,
728A St. Clair Ave. West
Osaka Expo will he in “Symbol
r theTlovers of nature, there with figures. Part time ' Centra o’ c
(!4 block West of Christie)
TOSH TAKAHASHI
Lane”—a miracle belt half a mile
« a Japanese garden cover- Apply Mr. Davis, 921-7740 (Toronto).
TORONTO
long and 360 feet wide. In this W 64 acres‘
COOK-HOUSEKEEPER for iamilv of two.
651-8060
Res. 621-1989 stretch, in the heart of the fair, I There will be beauty of another Convenient
to bus, subway, and shonui
Comfortable room, bath, and TV.
a v’s^or "’Hl find the immense sort' Japan’s 50 prefectures will mg.
cleaning woman twice weekly. Box KI
It ia a good policy to
theme hall, under Hie largest select 233 of their loveliest girls The New Canadian.
hare th« HIGHT POLICY
plastic roof ever made; the festi-I to serve as hostesses. (They will
Consult
yal plaza, where he may be able be required to know a foreign
OFFSET ANO LETTERPRESS
to watch half a dozen wonderous language). There will be another
William Wales Ltd.
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHEADS
events at once; and an art gal- 150 roving hostesses-interpreters
Insurance Agents
^ fcy Jj«^ &Zw ”*™^ I
erj;
I and 1,500 stationed in the paThe idea of theme hall came I aliens.
,
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
from
an
abstract
painter,
Taro
Only
two
private
exhibitor
HARRY S. KONDO ^®!^^^O
Science has now found a
Phone 921-3171
^h°1°’ vho YaAput m cha^
abroad will venture info
627 BAY ST., TORONTO Phone 368-9768
of all theme exhibitions.
this Expo. One will be Easting solution to one of man’s
PRINTING
JACK
Ever mindful of visitor fatigue. I । oc^a^’ making a sortie into a
the planners have provided for I ^nd of at least 50 million came- I
a monorail line that will circle Ira f^ns, each seemingly equipped
Expo site in 15 minuttes. |'P^.a superb Japanese camera.
(The . Japanese .are no novices I Another firm will represent 20
at this. A monorail line already or. so American companies. (Pe- I
links Tokyo with its airport at psi Cola is listed here as .a JaHaneda.) More important, Expo PaneBe concern).
^^
-ill J
jor your wedding candids
home portraits
and special events
most serious problems.
3#
Now Available in Canada
Only S4. At Your Druggist
air-conditioned and enclosed withj the w«
|HEMMY'
Buy & SeJI — Your Home
in a transparent tube, these will
converge on
“Symbol Lane ” adult. But, at that, the Daidara- I
They will be free.
Through
^^^AJ-15 and the jellyfish floating I
Predictably, Expo 70 will be in the sky should alone be worth
dominated by those perennial Hie price. Not to mention the I
fair rivals, Russia and the United Toronto Symphony and the Ed
States. Each will have 215,000 Sullivan show, the ancient Noh
Representing
square feet for its pavilion, and £ , P f111^! Harry Belafonte, the I
the planners have thoughtfully Bolshoi ballet and the Hagen- I
Bob Owen
placed them on opposite sides beck Circus.
Real Estate Co.
of the Expo site.
Now
the
officials
here
are
The
Russians
sent a high- praying for good' weather and
2625 Eglinton Ave. East.
powered mission
which circled toi peace, both .abroad and at
Phone
266-4501 - Res. 261-2581
over the hills until it picked the
h,on,ie- 51e 'honeyed Zengakuren
spot it wanted. With an eye on
here.
unfortunately,
•japan’s hunger for raw mater- students
make
the
youths
of Paris and
’ the Russians will feature Mexico City look like
amateurrs
the riches of Siberia.
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
1 in the art of rioting.
Consult
17 Golf Valley Lane,
Etobicoke, Ont.
Phone 621-6067
Mits Kuroda
S pecializing In Chinese Food
Businessmen Luncheon
We Cater To Parties And Banquets
Read Jessie L. Beattie’s
Phone: EM. 3-7646 — EM. 8-0035
123A Dundas St. West
—
Toronto 2, Ont.
Parking At Bay & Dundas
Get Tout Friend To Subscribe To.
i
I
The New Canadian
1
I
479 QUEEN STREET WEST
TORONTO 2-B. ONT.
I
I
I
I
I
J
I
For AU Classes of
A Japanese Canadian story
INSURANCE
Available at The New Canadian For S5 00
479 Queen Street West
_
Toronto ^ Ontario
!nnn!in....llll.ll.,l.l„„„„„„„l„,„„„„„„„„„„„„
J
<mr. mrs. miss)
otuerd
proprietor
JON ONODERA
I
I
ADDRESS
I
CITY .....
I
I
PROVINCE
Phone: PL. 9-2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
.......................
I
I
Please find enclosed $ ___________
for which
c Renew my subscription.
I
° ^nn”7 " ■"’ subscription for... _.._ year/months I
$4.00 ror six months • $7.00 per year
_i
name
STRENGTH FOR THE BRIDGE
HU. 9-1654 — HU. 1-8805
ask for
Stan Nishimura
i
i
i
Euciano Cianciusi
Real Estate
Specialists
1682 St. Clair Ave. W.
ZONE NO.
1
I
J
540 Eglinton Ave. W
Toronto
Toronto
Bus. 766-6191
Res. LE. 1-1089
OSCAR'S
Sport Shop
*
NEW
LOCATION
1201 Bloor Street V e
LE. 2-4267
j