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The New Canadian — April 18, 1969

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Page 1

It

Code Of The Samurai - Was Duty Religion In Prewar Japan

By HISASHI UNO

- - .1- before the end of the -war, or at least
—outbreak quite recently of Zengakuren
?’" - had any group of Japanese youths risen in
"the" established order of society. People,
^‘.‘r -heir age, had up to then, either positively’
followed and accepted the old moral
Japan's religion of obedience.
Vurewar Javan. even those who actually7 rebeled
the government rulers had in most cases held
^‘religion aloft. The young Army officers, when they
panted and failed in armed coups on Mayr 15, 1932,
’Ton February’ 26, 1936, had also been prepared
o die for the sovereign.
: rhev shouted banzais to the emperor before facing
firing squad. This sort of obedience did actually7
Tv*no?only simple submission, but affectionate sub­

mission—not merelv the sense of ol
tion, but
sentiment of duty, too.
-A.n<i? such dutiful obedience, as H
‘‘is essentially religious” in its or
expected
in loyalty, it retains the religious
and becomes the constant manifestation of
igion of
self-sacrifice,’- he also viewed.
As long as. the system was a duty, the required
action of self-immolation was also a dutv. which often
was more. voluntary than obligatory. And. th
practice, as history’ shows, w.as highly popul
with
people of samurai rank in feudal Japan and w
like military men in wartime Japan.
When the Nobel Prize-winning poet-novelist '
(1861-1941) of India visited Japan earlier this century,
he said that the Indians and Japanese are the only
peoples of the world who could die smiling'. As if to
piove this, in old Japan, many samurai warriors fol­

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“SUKIYAKI”
Cookbook By
MISS STELLA ITO

lowed their lords in death voluntarily and with great
happiness.
To his “divinely descended-’ lord, the retainer owed
everything—household, liberty and life . . . and, duty
to the lord, “like duty to family ancestors,” did not
cease with death. Feudal Japan’s moralists also held
that honor and loyalty required tire samurai to be. ready
at any time to perform self-destruction by the sword.
This constituted the very core of old bushido, or
the way of the warrior’s life. And, as for the warrior,
anv
trust, failure to execute a difficult
mission, a clumsy mistake or even a look of displeasure
from his liege was regarded as sufficient reason for
harakiri, which could more formally be referred to
seppuku.
Webster’s Dictionary’
the definition of bushido
(Continued on Page 8)
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he Pm Canadian

STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A storv of J.C.’s Bv
JESSIE L. BEATTIE

An Independent O^Qn for Canadians of Japanese Origin
,ol. XXXIII No. oO

FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 1969

Toronto, Ont

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Judge Lucien Kurata May Run
For Alderman Seat On Council

Latest Kimono: 'Minimono'

By GAY PAULEY
NEW YORK.—The miniskirt has come to the Japanese kimono. We immediately7 thought of a name for it: The Minimono,
Responsible for this and other revolutions in the centuries-old'
TORONTO.—Provincial Judge Lucien Kurata
The judicial inquiry was established by7 Attorney
dress of the Orient is a Japanese woman more famous as a fine said last week he may run as an aiderman in Tor­ General Arthur Wishart on the recommendation
srist than as a fashion designer.
onto’s new Ward 1 in the municipal election in of the Province’s Judicial Council, a body7 of se­
As a matter of fact, someone billed Miyoko Yanagita the December.
nior court and legal officials.
j “Grandma Moses of Japan.” She
The judge, who is now the subject of a judi­
It was set up -to investigate complaints that
is a grandmother all right—six cial inquiry7 into his conduct on the bench, said the judge had indecently7 assaulted a policewoman
small grandchildren, all told. But he feels he has been prejudged on the charges in his chambers at the old city7 hall.
in the artist’s approach, she is in against him and wants to run a “vindication”
Other complaints against him included attempt­
campaign
so
the
people
can
judge
him
for
them
­
ing
to interfere with the course of justice and
no
way
akin
to
'the
late
Mrs.
VANCOUVER. — Two men
attempted suicide.
selves.
■robbed a service station attendant Moses of Eagle Bridge, N.Y.
All the evidence has now been
Gandma
Moses
was
self-taught
of about §160 recently7 and' ripped
submitted
and a decision will
the telephone from a wall when and called a primitive artist.
probably7 be handed down soon
Mrs. Yanagita, wife of a pro­
he tried to phone for help.
by Justice Donald Keith, the oneOTTAWA.—Less Japanese immigrants are coming to Canada. man board of inquiry.
Attendant Vern Uyesugi, of minent Japanese businessman, is
Judge Kurata said last week
4570 Reid, said the two men en­ highly7 trained, having studied Statistics issued this week by the Department of Manpower and
he
felt all his troubles and the
tered the Mohawk station at with both Oriental and western Immigration in their Quarterly bulletin revealed that 930 Japanese inquiry7 had sprung from the fact
Tenth and Kings way7 about 9 teachers and specializes in ab­ came to this country in 1967 and only7 693 came here in 1968.
he’s Japanese.
stracts.
“It’s been a racial issue right
The
bulletin,
released
by
authority
of
the
Deputy
7
Minister,
p.m. and emptied his till.
from
the start,” he said.
She
devoted
her
latest
one
wo
­
also indicated that 136 Japanese immigrated to Canada during
Uyesugi told police that when
The
new Ward 1 is basically
the men left, he went to call po­ man show of art inspired by7 the the first 3 months of 1969.
the
same
as the old Ward 7 where
lice but one returned, wrapped “now” sound of electronic music.
Aidermen
Mary
Temple and
The petite Japanese artist has
the telephone cord
around a
Ben Grys now hold seats.
screwdriver and yanked it from had her works on exhibit repeat­
The new ward came about
the wall.
edly in her homeland and in Eu­
TORONTO.—Doctoral fellowships in the social sciences and when City Council voted to do
rope and has had two one-woman humanities have been awarded to 4 J.C. scholars in B.C., the Canada away with the Board of Control
The pair left on foot.
and increase the number of wards
shows in New York, the latest Council announced recently7 in Ottawa.
in the city7 from nine to 11.
one staged at the Park Avenue
The fellowships worth from §3,500 to .$5,500 each are for the
.,yard U t^Res in the former
branch of the Bank of Tokyo
final stage of training for a career in research and university7 village of Swansea where Judge
Trust Co.
Kurata served as reeve before
teaching.
it was amalgamated into the
While she talked about her
The Japanese Canadian winners are: E. P. Tsurumi of Na- city and he was appointed a
painting, which began in child­
noose; K. V. Ujimoto of Salmon Arm; Mitsuru Shimpo of Van­ magistrate by7 the Province.
nSv J Judge ruied tlxat hood, she also explained how she
Judge Kurata said his one big
couver; FI. H. Sugimoto of Victoria.
problem in trying to run for
T Teor^e Hans Bur­ got into modernization of the
council would be money.
as A ”deed stran?ers as long ancient kimono.
s-------------- ---------- -—--------------------He intimated that most of his
T Passenger in the
In addition to using traditional
a’- omobile he drove.
money7 had gone for expenses
materials,
like
oils,
for
her
paint
­
larded p°k’chi Haseba’s ruling
connected with the inquiry.
J Boger s Japanese wife ings, she also uses plastics and
_ _____________________ ( Tel egram)
:Ti?dl$ Payments from fabrics for an often three-dimen­
Taketori-Monogatari, Tale of a Bamboo Cutter, is the oldest
^ch
Insurance Co., sional effect. In fabric, she uses folk tale in Japan. Although the author is unknown it is believed
Tp k\might aPPeal the a sort of batik dying technique
to have been written in the 9th cenuuiy. The stoiy itself ,s mucn
At P® '"'I*' driver on cloth. This led, naturally, tn
older and references to it are made in Manyoshu.
P^' the medical textile design and it wasn’t long
The old man is cutting bamboo and in cutting one stalk he
tt'n A 1 7**™»«ers” in- until she figured the complicat­ finds within it a beautiful little girl only three inches high. He
7- car M accident involving ed construction of the kimono
takes her home and raises her as his own child. In three months
TOKYO. — The Giken Kagyo
simplified. She now =he becomes a woman and is so beautiful that she was nameo.
3.D6R ige?vas injured May could be
K.K.
of Tokyo has announced its
holds
patents
on
some
of
her
driving Ahe
her husband
Kaguva-hime (Brilliant Maiden).
development
of a new radiation­
^ankment TT ed dm an innovations, she said.
Her beauty’ attracts many young men but none win her
pany rei
durance comThe traditional kimono, for in­ favor. Finally, the field narrows to five young noblemen. She tells proof material named “ Paratom ^und< aT?0 paN her hills on
ic” which is said to shield off
hiT X "’as ^t a stranger stance, will have as much as 29 them that she will marry the one who carries out her wishes.
radiation
She asks the first for a stone basin of Buddha from India. He direct and reflected
feet of the obi, or sash, to be
beams.
wound and tied. It uses as many* produces only a temple badn.
At present, lead is effective
as seven sashes. Now she has the
The second is asked for a precious stone from Horai, or the
number7 down to two.
Island of Eternal Youth. His is discovered to be an imitation gold, for protection only from radio­
active penetration while other raSo that the kimono could fit silver and jeweled item.
chation-proof materials such as
The third is asked for a tire-proof fur coat.
TAvn
, ne Population of into the busy7 life of today’s wo­
The fourth is asked for a gem from the neck of a dragon. asbestos and tiles give protec­
^ dy.^ the world’s larg- man, Mrs. Yranagita also has
tion from radioactive reflection.
:i-35lpi ^^ T° an estl’niated made the garment sleeveless, if
The product may be used for
shell. Thinking
A? T TnnUr calendar 1968. the wearer wishes. Skirts can be
The nfth is asked for a jme
walls
of hospitals and research
Vi lhs end of ia?t v
the traditional ankle length, knee that such a shell can be found on the bird itself he climbs to a
institutes using radioactive mat­
T— s’, Md fe- length, or y’es, mini length. She s
erials.
(Cont. on Page 8)

Nisei Station
Attendant Robbed

Less Japanese Coming As immigrants

B.C. Nisei Win Doctoral Fellowships

Wife Legally
Defined Stranger
By Japan Judge

|

Taketori Monogatari

Japan Firm Has
Radiation Proof
Material Sheets

^Population
sAGrowing

(Cent, od Page 8)

Page 2

PAGE 2

Friday

H. Wakabayashi Chosen All American
For 2nd Consecutive Year In Boston
n i 0ST0N-~Hei'b Wakabayashi of Chatham top­
ped off a great hockey career at Boston University
by being chosen for the all America team
for
the second consecutive year.
Wakabayashi was also named first
team
New England for the second time
Die 5-5 center scored 35 points this season

Wakabayashi also moved into second place in
BU s all-time scoring list — his 145 points place
him behind only the great Bob Marquis in that
TORONTO. — Canada’s “Jol- | in Ajax, outside
department.
°* Torons
ly
Green Giant of Judo, Nick April 12th.
Herb is one of the greatest
ever cached,” said BU coach W Wly'^
U^™’40 “P^
.Twenty judoka —
the Heavyweight Division of the
a magician with that puck, is a great skater.■- pas­
of
each of the 5 div:
third
%Te™rS t0 a i^-iO-O record and a
Ontario Judo Championships held
ser,
and
can
put
it
in
the
net.
I runner-ups — won bert^
thud place finish in the E.C.A.C. Championships.

I

m
sorry
to
see
him
go.
He
gave
BU
the Ontario Black Belt jud^
His MJ assists boosted his three-year total to 90
some
of
its
finest
hockey
moments.
Herb
is
which
will travel to the en­
^llMme high in Boston Universitv history’
just a fine
person and tremendous athlete.”
dian Championships ar u
bridge, Alberta on May 17th 1
Wakabayashi still holds the
E.C.A.C. season assist record. Ho
More than 70 top blacky
TOKYO. — Hiroshi Kobayashi,
garnered ol assists as a sophojudoka
competed at this fe
will b?S"r0'7 P A“ml N‘se;
Handicap Tournament
more — a record that may hold the World Boxing Assn’s junior) ment sponsored by the Oaias
».11 be held on Sunday, May 4th at the Olympia Edward.
lightweight
champion, recently
up for a lon& long time.
Judo Black Belt Association.
bv t^M ■ ia''tS, V 12:30 "'ith the M^ed Teams event followed
w on a 15-round split decision I
Winners and team me^
Some of
the
other honors from Panamanian challenger An-I
interested / ^ L
Doub!es" md Mixed Doubles. Everyone
awarded to Herb during■ his BU tonio Amaya to retain his title in each division were:
interested is welcome to enter. It’s the bioroll-off
of
the
year
career
include: New
HEAVYWEIGHT: Xkk
featuring many of the top Nisei bowlers in
England for the third time.
the Toronto area. A Sophomore of the Year; All New
A
I
T
endaal,
Toronto; Wayne Doi
There
were
no
knockdowns,
special welcome to out-of-town entries.
England First team (66-67) and crowd of 4,000 saw the fight.'
Toronto; Phil Harvey, Oak^
For further information, call
or write Kaide Shimizu, 70 second team (67-68); MVP in
Referee Ko Toyama scored at Ed Dzieduszycki, Toronto.
Lappin Ave., Toronto 4, 535-6492,
or Min Sasaki, 757-4016.
the Beanpot Tourney (66-67); 72-71 and Japanese judge Hiro­
LIGHT-HEAVYWEIGHT Gil­
Division I All East second team yuki Tezaki 72-69, both for Ko­
les Champagne, Ottawa; Au^
Player (67-68). He was selected bayashi. But judge Takeo Ugo
Liauba, Whitby: Alex Rogatin]
as the Boston University Athlete had it 74.72 for Amaya.
sky, Ajax; Bill Coakley, OakvillJ
uni JORO^TO-~UT5 honor student Ray Kinoshita won top individKobayashi, 24, fighting in his
of the Year for the 1967-68 year.
fourth world title match, fought
MIDDLEWEIGHT: Dennis JW
taS^I
“T a4 ™AA
^^P at Sirfc
He led the Terriers to a near I a cool battle and Apparently con- |
Can,
Brampton; Gord Buttle, To:]
'iiir nmH
Ie ^^
P*ace in the horizontal bars upset win over top-ranked Co:
centi-ate<l on trying to wear out onto; Rainer Fischer, Waterloo]
horizontal
Foukls of Cedarbrae tied Kinoshita in the nell in the Semi-final round of j his opponent’s stamina in everv
Steen Melander, Oakville.
noiizontai with 8.0 points and Gord McCue of R. H. Kin
round.
tied for the E.C.A.C. Tourney at the
fust place in the parallel bars with 7.3.
The champion blocked the chai- | LIGHTWEIGHT: Mike NailoJ
Boston Garden this year. Trail- I
lenger s punches and concentrat­
A crowd of more than 300 witnessed
a fast-moving display ing 2-0 after two periods, BU ed on scoring with short left Toronto; Bill McGregor, Toronie:
of gymnastic skill.
roared back to tie it up in the and right uppercuts to the face Dave Hunt, Stratford; Tom Ccand body.
nieetS 111 the past tenc!ed to be ^.awn-out
niello, Toronto.
affairs, third. Wakabayashi set up line­
Mowed down by warmups and slow judging,” said Paul Jacobson
mates Surge Boily and Eddie . Neither boxer did any damage
FLYWEIGHT: Mitchell Ka’d
COad1' N°W’ however’ the stl’ess is on making it a V light for both g’oals to send m the early rounds. Amava had
saki,
Hamilton; Bill Czarina
tried to force the fight with his
another”6
sport Wlth one even immediately flowing from the g’ame
into
sudden death left but Kobayashi showed an Toronto; Steve Alstedter, Tor]
overtime.
airtight defense.
onto; Mickey Mori, Windsor,
Ke' in Petit of Cornell won the
game
early in the
overtime
?
period, but not before Wakabaya­
Thos. T. Onizuka,
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C.
shi and company had given the
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
Consult
BARRISTER, SOLICITOB
Big Red the scare of their lives.
NOTARY PUBLIC
NOTARY PUBLIC
The name Herb Wakabayashi
2 Carlton St., Toronto
121 RICHMOND ST W.
will go
down
in BU record
Room 1805
I
TORONTO 1
books as one of the greatest
293-4281 [Ejs,!
363-5 002 — 691-3388 (Res.)
366-6388
T
Specialists
players ever to wear a Terrier
For All Classes of
uniform. “And well it should”
ALSIP
INSURANGE
said Kelley. “There won’t be too
LOCATION
Buy & Sell - Your Home
many
more like him.”
Phone: PL. 9-2632
ASK FOR
1201 Bloor Street West
OR
Through
LE. 2-4267

20 Ont. Judoka Chosen For Alt-Canada to

Japanese Boxer
Retains Crown

Annual Nisei 5-pin Handicap Tourney

UTS Ray Kinoshita Wins Gymnastics

OSCAR'S
Sport Shop

RITZ KINOSHITA

PL. 5-7317

f

Mits Kuroda
oivera
Fully Licenced

TORIC
OPTICAL

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Reservations: EM. 6-2164
For best arrangements
Reserve ahead of time.
VARIOUS KINDS OF SUSHI
AND OTHER JAPANESE
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460 Dundas St. W.

Toronto

JON ONODERA

Bob Owen
Real Estate Co.

HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-880-5

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Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-2581 l

proprietor

(Bustnesa)

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540 Eglinton Ave. W,
Toronto

Travel Arrangements
Anywhere — Anytime

SMALL

SHOE SIZES
NEW
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Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14

ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
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Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto

^rcfY611er8 Cheques
Obtainable
^gvoL Accident
and

Luciano Cianciusi
Real Estate
1682 St. Clair Ave. W.

Toronto
Bus. 766-6191

Res. LE. l-l®

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KM^Mi:®^
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.

Representing

Stan Nishimura

Escorted Tours to Japan
* Departure — June 29th, Sunday
Departure — November 2nd, Sunday
Foi further information and reservations contact

Furuya Travel Service
365 Spadina Ave.
°nt
Tel. 366-10/0

Night TeL:
Tsuyuki 535-9935
Uyeda LE. 6-1403

Baggage Insurance

BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
Passage arranged by Steamer or Al

Call for Reservations or

Information — EM. 8-9934

T. KAMEOKA
K. Iwata Travel Service

113 McCaul St., TORONTO

DUNDAS UNION STORE
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
ctt^-URA
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SLKIYAKI MEAT — VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
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Page 3

April IS. 1969

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I IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE

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Frank G. Yada
Crown Life insurance Co

127 EAST PENDER STREET
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Phone MU. 1-M42—0456

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W8sJ4(
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451 K Ha-r
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’ Vanco“ver 4, B.C. Tel. 254-5101
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Wedding, Qnb Banquet*
Private Dining Rooaa

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NEW CANADIAN
•179 Queen St. W
Toronto 2-B, On?
Phone EM. 6-5005

life ^



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Page 7

| Frfday. April 18, 1969

PAGE 7

Dates And Doings

Visiting The
Fcimous Mori
Bingo At Toronto Buddhist Church On April 19th Tokyo Boutique

Personal Notes Across Canada

s
TORONTO.—Ever try the fascinating and enjoyable
game
ADAMS
ailed Bingo?
NAKAMACHI
TOKYO
Yts
a
minimum
If not. give us one evening and you’ll be goino- homp
TORONTO. —
satis- of “Ah so' j aud a maximum of
.11
bowing, Hanae Mori, favorite Hw) at St. Micha
ed customer.
| Come to Toi onto Sangha Bingo Nite, held at Toronto Buddhist designer of Japan's Imperial kino Nakamachi.
wife of
whoever else car. Gunji
| Church. 918 Bathurst Street, on April 19, from 8 p.m. — T.B.C
Nakamae!
afford
her.
, .
paraded
her new
Dorothy, Ben, Mr f. Mary Saito,
»pung collection.
The place was her two-stor-w Joseph, Paul, pas
:ed away. Re­
and saion in the Ginza.
’ St. Andrews Japanese Anglican Union Serv Sun boutique
quiem mass was held on MonI
TORONTO.—St. Andrew’s Japanese Anglican Church ’will be Ute time was one dav after «hreturned from lauMl,i„? 1“ pg lay, April 14 at St
| holding their monthly Union Service this Sunday, April ooth a^ fume m New York.
Interment Holv Ci
Cemetery.
J 11:30 a.m. The message of the Rector will be “Is The Resurrection was organized
'
confusion as mod­
els, dre. ers (a couple of them
| of Christ A Superstition For The Public?”
male), a few wardrobe mist res­
The Holy Communion will be celebrated in English. Tim choir ses the commentator, Mrs. Mod
will sing the anthem. Everyone is cordially invited. —The Rev and .a few liaison personnel sharin MEMORIAM
Ken Imai.
r
u reSS11i8 ^oin the ^ize of
a walk-m closet while 20 tou”KIMURA —
in q; me*
ing Americans outside the folded
mory of a wife, mother and
sipped green tea. tried to
Haruno.
who passed
1 Centenarian Honored at TBC Hanamatsuri Service screen
-ontrol their spines on the back­
away
April
18th.
1967.
TORONTO.—Mrs. Yuki Nishidera, who will be 100 years of us Japanese stools, fingered a
Led, white,
and blue organza
age in a few months, was honored at the Toronto Buddhist Church Ch
"A I ways rem embered”
s
featured
in the
s last Sunday when special “Hanamatsuri”, Buddhas birthday, serv- h
? V°ffUe and a Hink num­
By her husband and
ber . that
graces a pa-e in
i ices were held.
t ,
, f
All
Lilis
month
s
Harper's
Bazaar.
Th^v
Mrs. Nishidera was left to raise 3 sons and a daughter when
family, and Mrs. M. Ma­
tried to guess the price of an in. her husband died many years .ago. Now she has IS grandchildren lara pearl table standing in a
kino.
i and 16 great grandchildren.
corner and told themselves what
,
I JoHu’jes they’d save because Haj
A scroll was presented to her by Mr. p
Koyotaro Nakamura, use Mori’s Tokyo prices are one; President of the Toronto Buddhist Church.
third what thev are in Bergdorf’s.
Mrs. Nishidera came to Canada from Kumamoto-Ken in Ju- gSg™hJ
Magnin, or
Duskin.
Entitled, “the Moon Collec­
*
*
tion
*
many ensembles featured

,Roy Yoshimoto, Malloney's Chef, Specialty Dish ecl ,or in biackC1an^^

express our smcere t1 hanks to our manv
friends and relatives for their
many acts of kindness. floral
t ri bates and expressions of
sympathy shown us during our
recent bereavement of our
de.
husband and father.
Mr.
Mrs. Aiko Tashiro
3Irs. Tsuyako Takao
And Family

It k a good policy to
hart the RIGHT POLIO
Consult

William Wales Ltd
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone 368-4681

SAY IT WITH
FLOWERS

SHARON'S FLORIST
CITY-WIDE

Sasaki

Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
942

' ana/or beaded. Those vivid reds
CHEF’S SPECIALTY
blues, greens, hot
pinks, and
T0ROXTO. — Roy Yoshimoto, executive chef at Mallonev’s ? indlng oranges for which she’s
| Studio in Toronto, was born in Vancouver of Tannnoo
‘'
famous were included.
Japanese parents.
|
Peach blossoms and cherry
He went to Japan when of school age, .and there gained Jr's
blossoms floated in airy chiffon
i AmS 7”":eTnd '" Of oookin» from Ms grandmother,
. over Chirimen pink “pantaloons.”
i "no owned and operated a cafe.
I Long flowing sleeves swayed
Since
he
US nearly .implidtv of Hue a

DELIVERY

Peter Sasaki —

PAPE

AVE

TORONTO

:

‘ Club y wn
HMSe at L*e S1,ncoe> then at the Carlton
of Mori, was seen in the
s mo, au Milford Manor in Muskoka and the Island Yacht Club Hhlte
kimono-silk Mini with
: oeiore joining Malloney’s.
’ I r’lng" collar, wide black silk belt,
L
I and allover calligraphy which
; (
MIX^D SEAFOODS IN WINE SAUCE
I said *T love vou.”
i

skin and bone, break inti 6 portions)



I

Sowns _ concentrate on

the

softne
and prettiness of organza. dlk, and chiffon and her
famou. butterflies twitter everywhere. Tiny butterflies in shades
I of blues and pinks flitted across
one scoop-neck fitted bodice in
chartreuse silk while double tiers
of printed chiffon overlaid an
identical silk print skirt.
Jeweled belt
buckles winked
and blinked from half the designs
shown. Another signature was
VliquV”U
flour and blend. Add fish stock the matched item. For instance,
tiny buttons trimming a shoulder
'“Until smoothly thickered °alIy’ StW”S constanUy' S“' "d matched tiny dots on the tinv
wings of the butterfly on the
**S^‘tX"d
heating sWy. Do hem.
Airs. Mori's hand is seen in the
emphasis on the softly feminine.
pw on sau^'anTt sa/m?n and scallops in top of double boiler. Tailored suits are feminized with
'E Patty shells Ga,.„- eat. ^"NOShly. Serve on buttered toast or scarves and fringe. Jackets were
long-line and double-breasted but,
wtth parsley. Makes 6 servings. -Telegram once removed, showed crushable,
double silk blouses. Others had
I
llllll,l,llllllllllllllllllll,llllllll|llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli pussy-willow soft ruffles hang­
ing from neck and wrists. In
Jessie L. Beattie's
some cases the ruffles came off
with the jacket revealing some­
thing sleeveless underneath.
Throughout the collection Ja­
A Japanese Canadian story
pan was never far awav. The’e
was the black and white coat
Available at The Nt
whose pattern duplicated woven
ew Canadian For $5.50
bamboo, the heavily embroider­
4/9 Queen Street TV
^est
ed
golden obi cloth suits with
Toronto 2-B, Ontario
!?*jiiiii^
kimono neck, the scenes of Mount
iiiiiiiiiiniiniiiiiiniiiiiiiitHiiumnjfiiniiimiiiHp Fuji plus colorful dragons in
sparkling beading and the bouquets of camelia, in
primrose
peony, and plum bio om prints
She doesn’t borrow foreigners
allbut, instead, from the colors and
cultures of her own land creates
ROOFS
member of C.R.C.A.
fashion distinctive to her country
^Woughnc
SHINGLING
although in no way limited by it.



Pound fresh or frozen scallops, sauteed in
tap fspoo„ butted
sW hM(
1 tablespoons butted or margarine
5 tablespoons flour
1L wds fish stock
L teaspoon salt
pirrU""0^" sMtamate
Mil of white papper
■i cup dry white wine

Gertrude Urabe

JAMES KAMINO

AGENCY

T.V. Service

Office, 43 Eglinton Ave. East

J

v

KWOWCHOW
CHOP SUET TAVERN
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto"
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240

ear

The
Bouquet
Invitation
Line

Good taste needn't be expensive. Our beoutifu! Bouquet
Invitation Line proves this with the
most exquisite papers.
faces and workmanship you could wish for* It
features Thermo-Engraving—rich raised lettering—elegant
as the finest craftsmanship — yet costing so little? Come
see our unusual selection.
~

SHEET METAL WORK

ALCAN SIDING DEALER

’a^0

(TORONTO)

Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends

STRENGTH for the bridge

WAY ROOFING LTD.

EM 4-9913

Phone 485-5087
Home phone: 449-9293

$21-3374 NISEI OWNED

NlSHlJau

Mf& Colli- or „
"COVERING ONTARIO’
--__^_J_«« <-*to: PL. 9.5095 Hl. 7-1100

Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
“Doctor of Chiropractic*’
728A St. Clair Ave. West
(^ block West of Christie)
TORONTO

651-8060

Res. 621-1989 |

ne to

two

tv cry /

THE NEW CANADIAN

479 Queen St West

Toronto 2-B, Ont

Page 8

PAGE 8

Friday
(Cont. from Page One)
The New Canadi
his body forward, throwing the
head back so . as to render the
Second class ~cU regi^neck a. fair object for the sword.
number 0366

An official assistant, standing
beside him with a drawn sword I
poised in the .air from the mo-1 *
ment the operation commenced, I ।
sprang up and delivered a blow
TOKYO. — Scientists at the uranium by 1972 and build an
with the sound of thunder.
Physical and Chemical Research enriched
uranium manufacturing
i
j j
I Institute have succeeded hi nro^r d$15’ Physical anc
d
tO the Unction of enriched uranium —
Chemical Research Institute has
matted floor, with his body lurch- the substance used as material been testing the gaseous diffu­
iug forward. The blood from thepor,^ue^ -for- nuclear power gen­
sion method, while the centrifug­ keikoturTeS
At one time, it was the re- arteries pouring out and forming er^10n’
n
,
al difusion method is being stu­
rnn^e^ duty of a samurai to a pool, it was 11 over now
'
^Su j of tbe tests, con- died by the Nuclear Reactor and
kill himself at the word' of com­
ei no"‘
aucted by the Institute’s Radio- Fuel Development Corporation.
And Advertising
mand.
Sir Algernon B. F. Mitford ^s°b°Pe Research Laboratories in
479 QUEEN ST. WIST
Hidetake Kakihana, professor
with
the Nuclear
Toronto 2-B. Ont."
Witnessing the performance of who also witnessed the scene with cooperation
at
the Tokyo Institute of Tech­
Sir
Ernest,
later
published'
a
bi°I
T?
6
^
Division
of
the
Sumitomo
■EMpire 6-5005 '
harakiri as an invited guest in
3 T5udal court,
in 1864, the masterpiece on the subject. The b eddc Industries, Ltd., was an- nology, hailed the tests as highly
Butish diplomat Sir Ernest Sa- author of “Tales of Old Japan’I nounced by researcher Shohei Iso- significant in the limited sense
tow said in his memoirs that it is also known for his transla-] mm a lecently at an annual meec- that they had proved Japan could
was “disgusting exhibition, but tion of the true story of the | Ln® . °f ^}e Japan Atomic Energy produce enriched uranium if pro­
I Society in Hiratsuka, southwest duction cost and safety were not
a most
decent and decorous "Forty-Seven Ronin.”
Japan
’s | of Tokyo. _
taken into account.
This
is
the
story
of
ceremony.” He also said that it
__Male Help Wan^
most
loyal
samurai
who
had
pa-1
.
e
basic
tests
were
carried
was “far more respectable than
In
the
Diet,
meanwhile,
direc
­
what
our countrymen were in tiently waited one. full vear to | ou^ 111 ^me with a long-term pro- tor-general Shiro Kiuchi of the SHIPPER-packer,
.,
motive parts. Acres sUTNE Fl.
the habit of producing for the avenge the killing of their lord Sra.m f°r development and utili- science and technology agency^ ™if' steady good wage? JJ r^
in
dishonor
and
disgrace. The I zad°n °f atomic energy approv—
entertainment of the public in the
also chairman of the (Toronto).
oldest chronicles of Japan teem | e^
m December, 1961, by the who is
front of Newgate prison.
atomic energy commission, de­ MANAGERIAL assisi
Zenzaburo Taki, a samurai re­ with instances of such obligatory Atomic Energy Agency.
clared
that Japan had no inten­ financial firm. YowUnder this program, Japan is tion at all of demonstrating its background. Exceed
tainer condemned for ordering vengeancy.
his soldiers to fire on foreigners,
m ■
,to dete™ne which method will potential capability of producing ■Write Box 10, fhe y
Co:
The Confucian
was led to a red sheet of felt­ forbade a man to
atomic bombs.
FemaIe Help Wanted
cloth laid on the dais before the same heaven” with the slaver of ... .
DICTA-typisi required Vor.ce and
altar. On this he squatted and
ms Jord, parents or brothers. It Minimono . . .
Clair. -Good typist, «
(Cont. From Page 1)
then performed two bows, one I stated in part
ior small
insurance
noJi I adaPted jt to° as a two or threeat a distance and the other close I live under the\same°
..... .. heaven, J1V
the Western world influenced her 927-1674 (Toronto).
a ^^‘
I Heat the same earth with the i P^c® outfit and is making it in
turn to the avant garde. It is a
Domestic Help Wanted
Placed in fornt of him were a I enemy of thy father oi' lord.”
I reversible fabrics.
radical departure from classic CLEAN reliable babysitter for i-dirk
wrapped
in paper and
It is well remembered that OiHer fashion designs now are Japanese art—usually landscapes. 5. ^ys o ' V’eek. Lakeshore-New
vicinity. Phone 252-3957 (To-o^-T
unpainted wooden stand. |
.Yoshio and his 46 fellow making their way into select
The condemned man took his seat ret.ainersLi-had at
one
stage
di
i
Japanese stores, she said She f
■themselves as vandals,
i l
,
on the red felt “with the „calmest .I fi^h mongers,
carpenters, other
d lltted their appeal has been
deliberation” (in
Ernest’s artisans, and so forth, seeking to the younger women; the older
CLOSING OUT SALES
words),
choosing the
position tae chance to kill their enemy woman has -given the changes
which would
afford
him the lopd. While
Oishi lived under "‘tremendous opposition.” But tlm
greatest convenience lor falling P?™' "^‘"'^“‘K the designer figured the new kimono’
forward.
city s tamous led light district, pvpntmii,.
K
t
one middle aged samurai even

11 be accepted.”
Then “in .a distinct voice, very
to curse him and spat at
The artist is the wife of Seiiiro
as a traditional, feudal-militarv
Jfpanese code of behavior em­
phasizing loyalty, benevolence,
bravery self-control and the va­
luing of honor above life.” As
to harakiri, its definition is given as. suicide by d'isembowelment formerly practised by the
samurai or decreed to one of its
members by the feudal court in
consideration of his social status
111
the ordinary death
penalty.-’

Japan Scientists Produce
Enriched Uranium

'O'

by

°’'l

EGLINWOOD GIFT SHOP

'

Yanagita, a former banker and
tance to acknowiafeVan' act UQi 10 ^'’ wPn he learned of the P first president of Japan Air

which he was ashamed” Taki hi, ®rouP’s successful vendet- Lines. He now is with the Japad<'clared ihc alone was t1^ man t?eme°vT^^
felt ex- nese government’s Economic Co­
fire0 to bl o°pelK
on
himself. ^^^^
F™d- The couple has
For having conmiittecl

th^

Sr1 1,11

be "H

‘“

the tombs of the thiee U°«'n sons.

The net of the 47 ronin in 1703 k(

d

Japan with the late

ne^es.
I was one typical case, in which
Ishu and in London at
. Sir Ernest’s eyewitness story | death"6*5 follo^ed their Iord m Rhe Academy of Fine Arts with
follows:
The latest such death of hono- Amedee Ozenfaut. The study in

“He next divested himself of perhaps was that of Gen. of the
his upper garments
by with- Army Count Maresuke Nogi and I B
drawing his arms from the sleev- his wife, who committed suicide B
Mutsuhito. who B
es the long ends of which he after Emperor
tucked under his legs to prevent reigned _ over the eventful 45 B
his body from falling backward, years of the Meiji era, on the oc- B
the body was thus quite naked casion of the first anniversarv of B
B
to below the navel. He then took his death on June 30, 1913. ‘
the dirk in his right hand, grasuIn case of Japanese women, tra­
^F't TUS^ close to the point, and
after stroking'
’ U ^o^m the front of ditionally, it was not harakiri but
and belly inserted the jigai, that is to say, piercing- the
point as far down as possible. throat with a dagger so as to
and drew it across k,
to the righ
side, the position of his clothes sever the arteries by a single
movement.
“A
still fastened by the girth pre- thrust-and-cut
\x oman has no lord, but must re­
' enting our seeing the wound.”
vere and obey her husband,
g done .all this, he bent
one moralist once put it.

Tale . . .

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They hunted each other as enemies...
they tormented each other as savages...
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MIFUNE '

■plis

srmur pictures and .
TOY ESAPERSTElN-present

(Continued from Page 19

high roof and falls to his death.
„f,,S““y ‘n Em’aW °f ,apan asls
marriage, however
1 el used even though he is the Emueror.
.
One day she confesses that she must return to the world
of
the moon. Her adopted father and friends
but the would-be Moon Maid is adamant.
Her mind is made up.
On August 15 she starts to the moon.
Eu route ; he stops briefly to give the
Emperor some medicine
she has prepared to make him immortal.
Heart-broken,, the Emperor follows the lovely moon maiden to the highest point in Japan. the top of Mt.
A >he ascends to the moon he sets
fire to the medicine on top of the mountain. Mt. Fuji, thus duly
agitated, erupted for the first time, and smoke and fire poured W
from its mouth for hundreds of years after. Thus Fuji-san became
an “immortal" mountain.

IN THE
MOfK

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