Page 1
Japan, Land Of
:
Rising Son And
By DOX SHANNON
Along with its other- rising statistics, Jail^ , record for divorces in 1968, with 86,921 mar-
ipoallv ended during the year.
^{bo’it 90 percent of the divorces were believed to be
! ■' v-id;uonal style. a simple declaration by the
y s. " rhat he wants to end the marriage, acknowli ^' bv the wife's signature. This is probably the
world’s cheapest and easiest dissolution of
.^^e. No lawyers necessary nor even a fee for
Nation of the document.
) ’T was even simpler before World War II, when
■
wife’s signature could be dispensed with. In those
■ ^w a woman could literally be put out on the street
Divorces
with a minimum cash settlement which
„
which. wa
strict requirement.
Custody of children was n problem: 1
Japanese law they were and till are th property o
their father.
There is growing campaign by women's
lawyers to have the old "Mikudari-han”
and
a half written lines) divorce abolished in favor o
court proceedings. Mrs. Aiko Noda, one of 14 judge
in the Tokyo family court, s:?.id formal
now occurring in nearly all cas es there is
ubstantial
amount of property involved.
Airs. Noda, one of three of
*o court
who also take jurisdiction over cases involving
Sets New
Record
am
the old “mutual
agreement" procedure amended to require at least that
both parties appear in court.
"Frequently
in which men come to
Tokyo from the country to find jobs and leave their
home
aid in an interview■. “They meet
woman here, forge their
signature and
nd in a divorce statement to be entered in the family
gister at their birthplace. The wife never finds out
that
been divorced unless she has occasion to
check the family register.”
If the signature is fraudulent, the victimized spouse
can ask the family court to .annul the ‘‘agreement’’ and
(Continued on Page 8)
j iiiniiiininHnniHniniiHHiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiniiiiinniiiijiiiHHiiiHHijiiiiiijiiiiii^ji^ijiiij^iiiii^^iiiiiHHjiijiiijii^iijiHiiHi^jij^^^HH^H^H^^
“SUKIYAKI”
Cookbook By
MISS STELLA ITO
lit Octo
anadian
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A storv of J.C.’s Bv
JESSIE L. BEATTIE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
FRIDAY, MAX 9. 1969
jllillllllllllliillinifmilHlIIIIIHIlIIHiii
Toronto, Ont
I!!IHIIT1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIlUJIIIIlIll!IIIlllLHIlllUH!||jlHlinflIIIUllllHI!lIIIiniHII!lllllinillHlinHllill!llllinillHIinilirilfiilH!!ll!tliillllHinil*ii!lllll!!l
East To Meet West
Kurata’s Lawyer Says Cabinet
Should Reconsider “Hasty” Decision
TORONTO. — Toronto lawver Arthur Maloney
"There are many appealable grounds in the
said the Ontario cabinet show
reconsider its report and 1 greatly- hope the cabinet will recon
“hasty” decision to remove Jud
Lucien Kurata sider and allow us to draw their attention to
«s®?'&
from the bench.
them.’’ Maloney- said.
The Toronto judge was disi
“I got a bad, deal, a bad deal.” said Kurata,
found who resigned .as reeve of Swansea shortly before
after a report tabled in the i
his appointment to the bench in 1966. He said
him unfit to serve “by reason of misbehavior.”
Maloney, one of two lawyers who represented he was “not greatly surprised” at Keith’s decision.
Mr. Justice Keith held eight days’ hearings in
Kurata at a public inquiry before air. Justi
-8^'
March to inquire into charges that Kurata, 46:
Donald Keith, said the haste in firing- Kurata w
» Tried to kill himself Sept. 1 last year;
as hard to accept as the report that condemned
• Mistook Policewoman Marlene Watson for a
him. He asked that Kurata be allowed to appeal
before the cabinet to argue the commission verdict. prostitute, invited her into his office and indeccntly- touched her; and,
• Propositioned thief-prostitute
Kathy- Lonsberry, promising he
could use his influene to help
her
in court in return for- sex.
TABER, Alta.—About 20 more Japanese immigrants will ar
Hostesses Await Your Pleasure At Expo 70
Keith
’s 221-page
report was
OSAKA.—Six Japanese hostesses recruited as travel counsel rive at Taber this spring to take a two-year training program presented by- Attorney-General
lors at the Canadian Government Pavilion of Expo ’70 were in with Alberta potato growers. Some 27 arrived last week.
Arthur Wishart to the Legis
troduced to the Kansai travel industry circles last week at the
lature.
It said Kurata was guiltyPotato
Growers
’
AsE. E. O’Donnell, president of the Alberta
Kyoto International Hotel. Introducing -them is W. R. AlacLean
on
everycount,
that he lied
lengthy negotiations
(center), manager, Canadian Government Travel Bureau, Tokyo. sociation, said the program is the result of
under oath to the inquiry- and
-1 exheme left is Sadao Endo, also of the Canadian Government with the Japanese Government.
that he was unfit to hold office.
(ravel Bureau.
The attornely- general present
Under the plan, trainees will work for potato growers and
ed, along with the report, an
’ take leave without pay each December to attend' intensified agri- order-in-council firing Kurata.
cultural training courses The immigrants are all high school
Maloney- said
Kurata should
taken
courses
in
agriculture.
At
present
have
been
given
an
opportuni t.v
graduates
and
some
have
TORONTO. An Alberta Nisei woman last Saturday- became.
to
comment
on
the
report
to the
all are taking a crash course in English.
>.ie dinner of the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre’s Annual
cabinet—which issues orders-inT° Japan Raffle draw. She is Amy Nakamura of Box
Said Mr. O’Donnell: “We are delighted, not only with the council—before the final decision
*w, Taber, Alberta. Seller of the winning ticket was K. Kano satisfactory- conclusion of these negotiations but also because was made.
“The decision to fire Judge
of Barnwell, Alberta.
the selection of Alberta for this experimental program is indicative Kurata without giving us an op
Miner Nakamura has a choice of the “Air Trip and Tour of the high reputation which Alberta potato growers enjoy as to portunity- to appeal to them,”
°i Japan for two plus 8250. expense money, or $2,000.00 in cash. their competence and progressiveness.”
said Alaloney, “was hasty and
"inner of the selling
highhanded.”
ticket K.
“Cabinet meetings, of course,
Kano receives 8200.
are secret but there is a proced
-econd prize winner of a Conure that allows interested groups
model color TV set was
to present briefs to them. Various
labor bodies do that soi-t of thing,
ancy Veilleux, 106 Roebuck Dr..
for
instance.
“
The
Longest
Day.
”
OriginallyTarboro
. Wait ’til I blow up the whole
By DIGBY DIEHL
budgeted
for
a
modest
15
million
UNPRECEDENTED STEP
Third prize winner of
ship!”
8300. in
PEARL HABOR. — Fire-fight
In
fact, he could have been dollars, the picture is now esti
cadi was
“
I’d like to see us allowed’ to
8 Hols- ing crews play hoses over the serious, for that spectacular scene mated to be completeled for 22.5 present a brief to the cabinet,
"‘der Rd., Scarboro.
raging flames and thick black
constitutes only .a few seconds in million dollars, and production to all of them, to part of the
smoke
on
the
deck
of
the
battle
staff realists are projecting a
oh.1^ To 1(’th prize
winners ship USS Nevada as a swarm the 45-minute sequence depicting likely- 25 million dollars, which cabinet or maybe to a committee
^5100.00 each in cash
of the cabinet.
were as of Japanese Zeroes, Kates, and the bombing of Pearl Harbor in makes “Tora!” the
1
second most
20th
Centurv-Fox
’
s
war
epic
“Unprecedented ?
so.
Aorm Lightfoot, Toron- Vais swoop down foi- another
“Tora! Tora! Tora!” Attempting expensive film in history- — But so is the procedure that re
A
' StreiF Willowdale: J. bombing pass. Two lethal tor to follow in documentary fashion trailing “Cleopatra” (39 million suited in Judge Kurata’s
dis
^esronl Kaz Tsuchida, pedoes the planes have dropped the events in both the United dollars) but beating “Dolly” (22 missal.”
million dollar).
come speeding toward the ship,
y
u $' Mark, Oshawa;
Kurata was thoroughly roasted
a while the gun crew maneuvers a States and Japan leading up to
So how can they spend 25 mil- in the report which said he “did
anaka, Port Credit; T Ael- 30 mm cannon in position and and including the attack, thi-,
may well be the most complex lion dollars without Elizabeth not frankly- testify- . . . created
11 ^nt, Scarboro.
rocks the deck with return fire.
Taylor ’s help? Easy says prod- a credibility- gap . . . his storv
movie ever made.
Elmo Wiliam:
“This set is childishly- preposterous.”
uccer
enuh to lorn place prize Seconds later, the torpedoes tear
IN ADDITION To the 3 specinto
the
side
of
the
ship,
sending
tanding
on
cost
1,500,000
you're
of pl*
ri
Justice Keith’s report'also took
followsup a 40-foot spout of water and tacular bombing sequences
’
Constructed on two
dollars
Pearl Harbor’s navy yard,
broad
swipes at Maloney- and
flying
steel
debries,
catapulting
A eve\McGeorge, Van
locations in Hawaii are huge barges with 400 tons of lawyer Bernard Cugelman
other
sailors
into
the
harbor,
and
race Veston, Scarboro;
u-ed. as well as eight steel, the full-scale 608-foot repli appeard as a witness for Kurata.
vividly- shocking spectators back being
•^.er Douglas
ca represents
the
battleships
Okada, Toronto; into that tragic day of Dec.
other: in Washington. D.C., and Arizona. West Virginia, Oklaho
At the inquiry, Kathy- Lons“ )«umatsu,
the 20th Centurv Fox studio ma. and Nevada during different berry- testified Kurata invited her
Toronto; Carol 1941.
Toronto.
sound str es. That's only the srages of the shooting. A 134- into his office Nov. 1 sometime
“Cut!” yelled director Richard American
half, of course.
In
*:Xwenth to
foot mast of the Tennessee was before court opened at 10 a.m.
■n place prize Fleischer. “Is anybody hurt?' Japan, a •milar large operation also constructed for background. She _ was sitting in a corridor
no
one was.
and is taking place on the glands o;
b in cash were Amazing,
Eighty World War II vintage outside a courtroom waiting for
iO^OW D. H
Fleischer viewed the smoldering Kvushu and Hokkaido, as w
aircraft have been purchased or trial on a theft charge, she said,
Neilson, Oak- scene of devastation
with ap- as in T
4 Die
constructed
to represent planes when Kurata approached her.
Van- parent satisfaction before turning
a
mu
he
movie
in
the
actual
strike, and 48 ..f
She said Kurata, once in his
There
to yours truly who was cowering
L-^’ , - -ia’’<iener
Japanese
tor
them
are
used
in
the
air.
office
with her, made indecent
ho
i
Y'chxi, Hamilton: T. Alio in awe. Affecting his most flip is bein'
h :he American
intercutting
pant tone of gleeful nonchalance,
H. L te„
(Cont. on Page 8)
(Cent, on Page 8)
Toronto. he quipped: “A mere bagatelle iootage English sub led a
Group of 20 Immigrants Come to Alta.
Taber, Alta. Woman Wins Japan Trip
Remember
Pearl
Harbor?
:
Rising Son And
By DOX SHANNON
Along with its other- rising statistics, Jail^ , record for divorces in 1968, with 86,921 mar-
ipoallv ended during the year.
^{bo’it 90 percent of the divorces were believed to be
! ■' v-id;uonal style. a simple declaration by the
y s. " rhat he wants to end the marriage, acknowli ^' bv the wife's signature. This is probably the
world’s cheapest and easiest dissolution of
.^^e. No lawyers necessary nor even a fee for
Nation of the document.
) ’T was even simpler before World War II, when
■
wife’s signature could be dispensed with. In those
■ ^w a woman could literally be put out on the street
Divorces
with a minimum cash settlement which
„
which. wa
strict requirement.
Custody of children was n problem: 1
Japanese law they were and till are th property o
their father.
There is growing campaign by women's
lawyers to have the old "Mikudari-han”
and
a half written lines) divorce abolished in favor o
court proceedings. Mrs. Aiko Noda, one of 14 judge
in the Tokyo family court, s:?.id formal
now occurring in nearly all cas es there is
ubstantial
amount of property involved.
Airs. Noda, one of three of
*o court
who also take jurisdiction over cases involving
Sets New
Record
am
the old “mutual
agreement" procedure amended to require at least that
both parties appear in court.
"Frequently
in which men come to
Tokyo from the country to find jobs and leave their
home
aid in an interview■. “They meet
woman here, forge their
signature and
nd in a divorce statement to be entered in the family
gister at their birthplace. The wife never finds out
that
been divorced unless she has occasion to
check the family register.”
If the signature is fraudulent, the victimized spouse
can ask the family court to .annul the ‘‘agreement’’ and
(Continued on Page 8)
j iiiniiiininHnniHniniiHHiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiniiiiinniiiijiiiHHiiiHHijiiiiiijiiiiii^ji^ijiiij^iiiii^^iiiiiHHjiijiiijii^iijiHiiHi^jij^^^HH^H^H^^
“SUKIYAKI”
Cookbook By
MISS STELLA ITO
lit Octo
anadian
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A storv of J.C.’s Bv
JESSIE L. BEATTIE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
FRIDAY, MAX 9. 1969
jllillllllllllliillinifmilHlIIIIIHIlIIHiii
Toronto, Ont
I!!IHIIT1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIlUJIIIIlIll!IIIlllLHIlllUH!||jlHlinflIIIUllllHI!lIIIiniHII!lllllinillHlinHllill!llllinillHIinilirilfiilH!!ll!tliillllHinil*ii!lllll!!l
East To Meet West
Kurata’s Lawyer Says Cabinet
Should Reconsider “Hasty” Decision
TORONTO. — Toronto lawver Arthur Maloney
"There are many appealable grounds in the
said the Ontario cabinet show
reconsider its report and 1 greatly- hope the cabinet will recon
“hasty” decision to remove Jud
Lucien Kurata sider and allow us to draw their attention to
«s®?'&
from the bench.
them.’’ Maloney- said.
The Toronto judge was disi
“I got a bad, deal, a bad deal.” said Kurata,
found who resigned .as reeve of Swansea shortly before
after a report tabled in the i
his appointment to the bench in 1966. He said
him unfit to serve “by reason of misbehavior.”
Maloney, one of two lawyers who represented he was “not greatly surprised” at Keith’s decision.
Mr. Justice Keith held eight days’ hearings in
Kurata at a public inquiry before air. Justi
-8^'
March to inquire into charges that Kurata, 46:
Donald Keith, said the haste in firing- Kurata w
» Tried to kill himself Sept. 1 last year;
as hard to accept as the report that condemned
• Mistook Policewoman Marlene Watson for a
him. He asked that Kurata be allowed to appeal
before the cabinet to argue the commission verdict. prostitute, invited her into his office and indeccntly- touched her; and,
• Propositioned thief-prostitute
Kathy- Lonsberry, promising he
could use his influene to help
her
in court in return for- sex.
TABER, Alta.—About 20 more Japanese immigrants will ar
Hostesses Await Your Pleasure At Expo 70
Keith
’s 221-page
report was
OSAKA.—Six Japanese hostesses recruited as travel counsel rive at Taber this spring to take a two-year training program presented by- Attorney-General
lors at the Canadian Government Pavilion of Expo ’70 were in with Alberta potato growers. Some 27 arrived last week.
Arthur Wishart to the Legis
troduced to the Kansai travel industry circles last week at the
lature.
It said Kurata was guiltyPotato
Growers
’
AsE. E. O’Donnell, president of the Alberta
Kyoto International Hotel. Introducing -them is W. R. AlacLean
on
everycount,
that he lied
lengthy negotiations
(center), manager, Canadian Government Travel Bureau, Tokyo. sociation, said the program is the result of
under oath to the inquiry- and
-1 exheme left is Sadao Endo, also of the Canadian Government with the Japanese Government.
that he was unfit to hold office.
(ravel Bureau.
The attornely- general present
Under the plan, trainees will work for potato growers and
ed, along with the report, an
’ take leave without pay each December to attend' intensified agri- order-in-council firing Kurata.
cultural training courses The immigrants are all high school
Maloney- said
Kurata should
taken
courses
in
agriculture.
At
present
have
been
given
an
opportuni t.v
graduates
and
some
have
TORONTO. An Alberta Nisei woman last Saturday- became.
to
comment
on
the
report
to the
all are taking a crash course in English.
>.ie dinner of the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre’s Annual
cabinet—which issues orders-inT° Japan Raffle draw. She is Amy Nakamura of Box
Said Mr. O’Donnell: “We are delighted, not only with the council—before the final decision
*w, Taber, Alberta. Seller of the winning ticket was K. Kano satisfactory- conclusion of these negotiations but also because was made.
“The decision to fire Judge
of Barnwell, Alberta.
the selection of Alberta for this experimental program is indicative Kurata without giving us an op
Miner Nakamura has a choice of the “Air Trip and Tour of the high reputation which Alberta potato growers enjoy as to portunity- to appeal to them,”
°i Japan for two plus 8250. expense money, or $2,000.00 in cash. their competence and progressiveness.”
said Alaloney, “was hasty and
"inner of the selling
highhanded.”
ticket K.
“Cabinet meetings, of course,
Kano receives 8200.
are secret but there is a proced
-econd prize winner of a Conure that allows interested groups
model color TV set was
to present briefs to them. Various
labor bodies do that soi-t of thing,
ancy Veilleux, 106 Roebuck Dr..
for
instance.
“
The
Longest
Day.
”
OriginallyTarboro
. Wait ’til I blow up the whole
By DIGBY DIEHL
budgeted
for
a
modest
15
million
UNPRECEDENTED STEP
Third prize winner of
ship!”
8300. in
PEARL HABOR. — Fire-fight
In
fact, he could have been dollars, the picture is now esti
cadi was
“
I’d like to see us allowed’ to
8 Hols- ing crews play hoses over the serious, for that spectacular scene mated to be completeled for 22.5 present a brief to the cabinet,
"‘der Rd., Scarboro.
raging flames and thick black
constitutes only .a few seconds in million dollars, and production to all of them, to part of the
smoke
on
the
deck
of
the
battle
staff realists are projecting a
oh.1^ To 1(’th prize
winners ship USS Nevada as a swarm the 45-minute sequence depicting likely- 25 million dollars, which cabinet or maybe to a committee
^5100.00 each in cash
of the cabinet.
were as of Japanese Zeroes, Kates, and the bombing of Pearl Harbor in makes “Tora!” the
1
second most
20th
Centurv-Fox
’
s
war
epic
“Unprecedented ?
so.
Aorm Lightfoot, Toron- Vais swoop down foi- another
“Tora! Tora! Tora!” Attempting expensive film in history- — But so is the procedure that re
A
' StreiF Willowdale: J. bombing pass. Two lethal tor to follow in documentary fashion trailing “Cleopatra” (39 million suited in Judge Kurata’s
dis
^esronl Kaz Tsuchida, pedoes the planes have dropped the events in both the United dollars) but beating “Dolly” (22 missal.”
million dollar).
come speeding toward the ship,
y
u $' Mark, Oshawa;
Kurata was thoroughly roasted
a while the gun crew maneuvers a States and Japan leading up to
So how can they spend 25 mil- in the report which said he “did
anaka, Port Credit; T Ael- 30 mm cannon in position and and including the attack, thi-,
may well be the most complex lion dollars without Elizabeth not frankly- testify- . . . created
11 ^nt, Scarboro.
rocks the deck with return fire.
Taylor ’s help? Easy says prod- a credibility- gap . . . his storv
movie ever made.
Elmo Wiliam:
“This set is childishly- preposterous.”
uccer
enuh to lorn place prize Seconds later, the torpedoes tear
IN ADDITION To the 3 specinto
the
side
of
the
ship,
sending
tanding
on
cost
1,500,000
you're
of pl*
ri
Justice Keith’s report'also took
followsup a 40-foot spout of water and tacular bombing sequences
’
Constructed on two
dollars
Pearl Harbor’s navy yard,
broad
swipes at Maloney- and
flying
steel
debries,
catapulting
A eve\McGeorge, Van
locations in Hawaii are huge barges with 400 tons of lawyer Bernard Cugelman
other
sailors
into
the
harbor,
and
race Veston, Scarboro;
u-ed. as well as eight steel, the full-scale 608-foot repli appeard as a witness for Kurata.
vividly- shocking spectators back being
•^.er Douglas
ca represents
the
battleships
Okada, Toronto; into that tragic day of Dec.
other: in Washington. D.C., and Arizona. West Virginia, Oklaho
At the inquiry, Kathy- Lons“ )«umatsu,
the 20th Centurv Fox studio ma. and Nevada during different berry- testified Kurata invited her
Toronto; Carol 1941.
Toronto.
sound str es. That's only the srages of the shooting. A 134- into his office Nov. 1 sometime
“Cut!” yelled director Richard American
half, of course.
In
*:Xwenth to
foot mast of the Tennessee was before court opened at 10 a.m.
■n place prize Fleischer. “Is anybody hurt?' Japan, a •milar large operation also constructed for background. She _ was sitting in a corridor
no
one was.
and is taking place on the glands o;
b in cash were Amazing,
Eighty World War II vintage outside a courtroom waiting for
iO^OW D. H
Fleischer viewed the smoldering Kvushu and Hokkaido, as w
aircraft have been purchased or trial on a theft charge, she said,
Neilson, Oak- scene of devastation
with ap- as in T
4 Die
constructed
to represent planes when Kurata approached her.
Van- parent satisfaction before turning
a
mu
he
movie
in
the
actual
strike, and 48 ..f
She said Kurata, once in his
There
to yours truly who was cowering
L-^’ , - -ia’’<iener
Japanese
tor
them
are
used
in
the
air.
office
with her, made indecent
ho
i
Y'chxi, Hamilton: T. Alio in awe. Affecting his most flip is bein'
h :he American
intercutting
pant tone of gleeful nonchalance,
H. L te„
(Cont. on Page 8)
(Cent, on Page 8)
Toronto. he quipped: “A mere bagatelle iootage English sub led a
Group of 20 Immigrants Come to Alta.
Taber, Alta. Woman Wins Japan Trip
Remember
Pearl
Harbor?
Page 2
PAGE 2
Friel ay
JCCfl Curling Banquet Hnnors
lien matsukubo Team Rs Champs
was the "setting for tV 6th Annual' J CC f° c^fM ?YYT b"f f1S0 “ the pIa-voffs- Don Eto, Tad
Inouye .and June Eto made up the winning- combination.
Hide Hirowatari dropped a close decision for
^T-shootmg Len Matsukubo and his rink
of Hans Anderson, Seishe Shinde and Marge Ura the league championship to Len Matsukubo with
F«
separating the two top teams but finally
_ point
,
trophy
the mUCh C°Veted lea^e championship one
>#H
settled for 3rd place. Rod Matsuo, Paul Roslin
Vic Suzuki, a household name in the curling and Junie Yamasaki were mainly responsible for
the gradual climb to 3rd place.
circuit, not only took 2nd place honors in lea-me
Sit
Herb Sugie, our talented artist, won
won 4th
4th place
honors in the league curling and
3rd in the playoff championships.
Fudge Inamoto, Lloyd Ito and
LOS
ANGELES. — Japan’s
I
pan
and
France,
and
was
most
Lily
Kishita gave Herb good
hope tor the 1969 World Fencing
recently
a
student
of
the
late
Championship, Heizaburo Okawa,
support throughout the season.
^aye up his
amateur fencing lor.ao Mori, Lendo great.
Fourth runner-up in the play
He was ranked ninth in the
status to become fancing mastei
world
off
championship was Yas Shin
a result 0±‘ the 1964
■ nthe ,Mori Fencing Academy t i
Iokvo Olympics and is ranked de and his rink of Janet Matsu
in Beverly Hills.
among
14 as a result of kubo, Jack Nishiyama and Ken
9kawa> who captured the Un the Mexico City
Olympics last
Len Matsukubo New JCCA Curling Champ
ited States
Foil Championship
Ito.
year
(exact
ranking
has not been
two years in a row, is currently
TORONTO. - J.C.C.A. Curling champions receive L
Playoff
Championship
was
announced yet).
the defending
----- „ champion. He is
Besides France, Japan is the won by Michi Ashikawa, George Camei a Trophy from new pres. Paul Kilburn L. f0 R _ 4in f
also 1the
’
Japanese National Foil
■
non-Iron
Curtain country) Ogino, Dan Washimoto and newand Sabre Champion.
a”d S^she Shinde (absent Hans Anderson and
with ranking among the top 14. comer Kazuko
He has studied fencing in Ja- Ihe sport in the past decade has
Akagi, after
been dominated by the commu- see-saw battle
against Michi’s
nists.
nephew,
Richard Kimura. InJapan, although new to the cidentally
, some of the credit
sport, placed fourth at the Tokyo must go
to George Ogino for
?tTTAd A‘ The following statement was made recently k
ympics and fourth again in
skippingMichi's
rink in the the Hon. Rene Brunelle, Minister of lands and forests. with
niternational competition in 1967
Okawa, a member of the Japa playoffs.
nope of clarifying some of the questions which have arhen cr'
nese team, was the only “West
Lucky recipients
of
raffle
cerning
the new Forest Fires Prevention Act:
‘ "
ern” fencer besides the French
MUNICH, Germany — Mitsu to be ranked among the top 14 prizes at the banquet were Janet •
F°ieSt K1’eS Prevention Act which was
ru Kono,
regaining his touch fencers in Maxico City last year. Matsukubo and our hard work- m 1968 and came into effect April 1st has several new proXOkawa’s decision to give up his ing Herb Sugie who assisted in to protect our forests from the threat of fire yet give the max^
when it mattered most, scored
ama
eur status was accelerated choosing the prizes. (Fixed?)
three victories recently in lead
freedom possible to the public.
i
by
the
sudden death of his fenc
ing defending champions JaThe new
executive for th
M ith respect to smoking, the Act state
ing master. Torao Mori, earlier
'No person shd
pan to j 5-3 victory over West this year.
1969-70 curling season was an- smoke while walking Or working in a forest or woodland during
In addition to his U.S. and Ja nounced by outgoing- president the fire season.”
Germany in the Swaythling Cup
final at the World Table Tennis panese championships in the Gord Kai. President: Paul Kil
Now this is a common sense rule that has been followed by
Championships.
I sport, Okawa has won a number burn; Vice-president — Paul Ros bushmen and woods workers for
of championships in meets con
years. About 500 to 600 fore?:
It was the seventh title win ■ ducted m France and Germany lin; Treasurer — Yas Shinde; files result from careless smokers
each year and we must reduce
for Japan since she first won , n™n° the past few years.
Secretary — Julie Yamasaki.
these numbers. Careless smokers, on the average, burn about 50000
-ills. Okawa is the late fencing
in 1954.
A special thanks to Treasurer. acres of forest annually in Ontario.
master s eldest daughter.
If .a person sits down to smoke and safely disposes of hi
Rod Matsuo; Secretary, Lily Ki
smra;
shita; ar
and Herb Sugie for their butt, there is no problem. If a fisherman is standing by a strer
?
fire — THEFT — AUTO
js ung and haying a smoke, we would not consider this as 'Ivak
help this year. —Gord Kai
ino oi
woiking’ (fishing isn’t considered to be work — jus
Consult
p ain pleasuie). This will be a matter of education — to gah
the full support of people using the woods to prevent fires cause
by
smoking materials.
GOLF, FISHING
*^*‘.WhiCh
^'^
A™
I
Kendo Great's Son-in-law Takes Over
"No Smoking” Fishing Rule Clarified
Japanese Capture
World Table
Tennis Champion
OSCAR’S
Sport Shop
RITZ KINOSHITA
Specialists
i
NEW
LOCATION
insurance
1201 Bloor Street West
LE. 2-4267
For All Classes of
M
_
Phone: PL. 9-2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
Miyasaki 559; Richard Sa-
MEMBER OF C.R.CA.
SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK
ALCAN SIDING DEALER
TORONTO
421-3374 NISEI OWNED
"COVERING ONTARIO
Nigbf Calls; PL. 9-5095 HI. 7-1100
SMALL
SHOE SIZES
NEW
SPRING STYLES
Ladies’ shoes from
I up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
ALBERTS SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 7-1931, Toronto
9 BOWLING
SCORES
.J0?0:,— A Japanese ski
ofiicial said recently he felt tbj Toronto Nisei Major Ten Pin Bowling
Ladies High T-i
president of the
TInternational
'
“I
M5”1 Bth: Sam Lee 632 (248y
709;
Olympic Committee Was obliged fins''(7?^aira 81^ ,^21); Blas Sugamori Yamamoto
Ladies High Sin;
(237); Don1 and Berniece Dorr:
Doi 'sOtP'^fs?
to ask some Olympice champions Martin 601 (215); Terry 604
sLadies Hi<
to return medals in order to p"uc* GesiaK 5/6 (215); Yosh Murata Hayashi
270
protect the Olympic’s amateur j;\UoZ); Herb Morino 567 (202)- Tom
Ladies Most I:
h?TOS «° i?6L(212){ Shig Onizuk’a 562 Toki;
nature.
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
FLAT ROOFS
BA VESTROUGHING
Nippon Olympic
Official Favors
Brundage Action
<
I
Mens Most
Irr
C.ye-5t-Z c^l'Cl?® Tsujimoto 556; Ken Idenouye.
Azllma- president of Nakanis.a
555; ia.< Sonoda 554 (201);
the bki Association of Japan. wa= $!ar® J’®a 553 (200); Rick Toki 552;
commenting on the report from
Er‘~-;562 1203); Bernice Dorrell
SUNDAY NISEI CLASSIC
(213); Amy Toki 545 (204)Montreal
that IOC
President
April 13th: Err.:-? Y~cz ®
Onj^uka 515 (223); Shirl Miyasaki 504
Berniece Dorrell
I22L t'in a letter to
I the federal International du Ski
567 ( 211); Mike
v:ye 5H
- Ap1-’1 18th: Ed Utsunomiya 630 (237) Tosh Iwai 554 (202
re Tsryz:
| asked for the return of the Olym
1237}; Frank Wakida (205).
SL
(22c);
Sam
Hayashi
5S6
(215);
lim
pic medals won by skiers Nancv
April 20th: Ken I: ■
:" J.-”
Greene of Canada and France’^ Xuamura 535 (214); Joe- Ito 585 (237); Tsujimoto 611 (218’ : ey rrr
581 (207); Tom Made- (220); Sho Mori 566; KwA V=fy
Jean-Claude Killey.
xmo 5r8 (205); Lin Huddart 565- R^-b
Miyasasi 555 (214) Ken Katai 563'(22rAzuma, also a member of the 1“ ^l?ot° 56Z, G01); Miki Cinicola
Mike Idenoi
International
Committee,
said'.
Lee 551 _ (213); Amy Ebata
Sogawa 514; Marjorie trnie Jomor
Brundage was obliged to tak-^ Izumi
Yanagisawa
f^H Zl st™ng measures to main
Miki Cinicoh
WINNERS
OF
THE
68/69
SEASON
tain the Olympic regulations.”
Tsujimoto
e
Mossy Mitsu
■s Me
| “A case of returning- the OlvmKen Izumi
?^n!??s,.is very rare'” Azuma
Tosh Iwai, 7
kida, Mike
p
-'am. 1 believe Brundage had se
Champs:
tbsti
cured decisive evidence that The
am Lee. Georgs
rd by
two skiers failed to abide bv
Me ucscaae nccr^.
man Airlines.
Olympic regulations? in the 1968
EXECUTIVE FOR THE SEASON Consolation Cr
berniece
DorGames at Grenoblea France.”
T Sam Havash
Isoshima, Stan
President: Frank Miyasaki
Vice-president Joe Doi
A spokesman for the Sapporo
Secretary: Marjori Iru—:
Winter
Olympic
Treasurer: Shirl Miyasaki
Preparatory
Committee said. "I believe Brun- IS:
15790- 3rd
dage became_ angrv
_...,... about bre;
of the Olympic regul; iion
Asked whether authorities at
S;
the 19 < 2 Olympic Games at Sap
poro northern Javan, will take
special measures to protect the
Olympics’
amateur
principles.
the spokesman said “We have
nothing in mind. Wc just'follow
the Olympic regularions as inSi
SiniCicd by tne IOC, ' he said.
YOUR
BLOOD
gift of all
Friel ay
JCCfl Curling Banquet Hnnors
lien matsukubo Team Rs Champs
was the "setting for tV 6th Annual' J CC f° c^fM ?YYT b"f f1S0 “ the pIa-voffs- Don Eto, Tad
Inouye .and June Eto made up the winning- combination.
Hide Hirowatari dropped a close decision for
^T-shootmg Len Matsukubo and his rink
of Hans Anderson, Seishe Shinde and Marge Ura the league championship to Len Matsukubo with
F«
separating the two top teams but finally
_ point
,
trophy
the mUCh C°Veted lea^e championship one
>#H
settled for 3rd place. Rod Matsuo, Paul Roslin
Vic Suzuki, a household name in the curling and Junie Yamasaki were mainly responsible for
the gradual climb to 3rd place.
circuit, not only took 2nd place honors in lea-me
Sit
Herb Sugie, our talented artist, won
won 4th
4th place
honors in the league curling and
3rd in the playoff championships.
Fudge Inamoto, Lloyd Ito and
LOS
ANGELES. — Japan’s
I
pan
and
France,
and
was
most
Lily
Kishita gave Herb good
hope tor the 1969 World Fencing
recently
a
student
of
the
late
Championship, Heizaburo Okawa,
support throughout the season.
^aye up his
amateur fencing lor.ao Mori, Lendo great.
Fourth runner-up in the play
He was ranked ninth in the
status to become fancing mastei
world
off
championship was Yas Shin
a result 0±‘ the 1964
■ nthe ,Mori Fencing Academy t i
Iokvo Olympics and is ranked de and his rink of Janet Matsu
in Beverly Hills.
among
14 as a result of kubo, Jack Nishiyama and Ken
9kawa> who captured the Un the Mexico City
Olympics last
Len Matsukubo New JCCA Curling Champ
ited States
Foil Championship
Ito.
year
(exact
ranking
has not been
two years in a row, is currently
TORONTO. - J.C.C.A. Curling champions receive L
Playoff
Championship
was
announced yet).
the defending
----- „ champion. He is
Besides France, Japan is the won by Michi Ashikawa, George Camei a Trophy from new pres. Paul Kilburn L. f0 R _ 4in f
also 1the
’
Japanese National Foil
■
non-Iron
Curtain country) Ogino, Dan Washimoto and newand Sabre Champion.
a”d S^she Shinde (absent Hans Anderson and
with ranking among the top 14. comer Kazuko
He has studied fencing in Ja- Ihe sport in the past decade has
Akagi, after
been dominated by the commu- see-saw battle
against Michi’s
nists.
nephew,
Richard Kimura. InJapan, although new to the cidentally
, some of the credit
sport, placed fourth at the Tokyo must go
to George Ogino for
?tTTAd A‘ The following statement was made recently k
ympics and fourth again in
skippingMichi's
rink in the the Hon. Rene Brunelle, Minister of lands and forests. with
niternational competition in 1967
Okawa, a member of the Japa playoffs.
nope of clarifying some of the questions which have arhen cr'
nese team, was the only “West
Lucky recipients
of
raffle
cerning
the new Forest Fires Prevention Act:
‘ "
ern” fencer besides the French
MUNICH, Germany — Mitsu to be ranked among the top 14 prizes at the banquet were Janet •
F°ieSt K1’eS Prevention Act which was
ru Kono,
regaining his touch fencers in Maxico City last year. Matsukubo and our hard work- m 1968 and came into effect April 1st has several new proXOkawa’s decision to give up his ing Herb Sugie who assisted in to protect our forests from the threat of fire yet give the max^
when it mattered most, scored
ama
eur status was accelerated choosing the prizes. (Fixed?)
three victories recently in lead
freedom possible to the public.
i
by
the
sudden death of his fenc
ing defending champions JaThe new
executive for th
M ith respect to smoking, the Act state
ing master. Torao Mori, earlier
'No person shd
pan to j 5-3 victory over West this year.
1969-70 curling season was an- smoke while walking Or working in a forest or woodland during
In addition to his U.S. and Ja nounced by outgoing- president the fire season.”
Germany in the Swaythling Cup
final at the World Table Tennis panese championships in the Gord Kai. President: Paul Kil
Now this is a common sense rule that has been followed by
Championships.
I sport, Okawa has won a number burn; Vice-president — Paul Ros bushmen and woods workers for
of championships in meets con
years. About 500 to 600 fore?:
It was the seventh title win ■ ducted m France and Germany lin; Treasurer — Yas Shinde; files result from careless smokers
each year and we must reduce
for Japan since she first won , n™n° the past few years.
Secretary — Julie Yamasaki.
these numbers. Careless smokers, on the average, burn about 50000
-ills. Okawa is the late fencing
in 1954.
A special thanks to Treasurer. acres of forest annually in Ontario.
master s eldest daughter.
If .a person sits down to smoke and safely disposes of hi
Rod Matsuo; Secretary, Lily Ki
smra;
shita; ar
and Herb Sugie for their butt, there is no problem. If a fisherman is standing by a strer
?
fire — THEFT — AUTO
js ung and haying a smoke, we would not consider this as 'Ivak
help this year. —Gord Kai
ino oi
woiking’ (fishing isn’t considered to be work — jus
Consult
p ain pleasuie). This will be a matter of education — to gah
the full support of people using the woods to prevent fires cause
by
smoking materials.
GOLF, FISHING
*^*‘.WhiCh
^'^
A™
I
Kendo Great's Son-in-law Takes Over
"No Smoking” Fishing Rule Clarified
Japanese Capture
World Table
Tennis Champion
OSCAR’S
Sport Shop
RITZ KINOSHITA
Specialists
i
NEW
LOCATION
insurance
1201 Bloor Street West
LE. 2-4267
For All Classes of
M
_
Phone: PL. 9-2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
Miyasaki 559; Richard Sa-
MEMBER OF C.R.CA.
SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK
ALCAN SIDING DEALER
TORONTO
421-3374 NISEI OWNED
"COVERING ONTARIO
Nigbf Calls; PL. 9-5095 HI. 7-1100
SMALL
SHOE SIZES
NEW
SPRING STYLES
Ladies’ shoes from
I up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
ALBERTS SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 7-1931, Toronto
9 BOWLING
SCORES
.J0?0:,— A Japanese ski
ofiicial said recently he felt tbj Toronto Nisei Major Ten Pin Bowling
Ladies High T-i
president of the
TInternational
'
“I
M5”1 Bth: Sam Lee 632 (248y
709;
Olympic Committee Was obliged fins''(7?^aira 81^ ,^21); Blas Sugamori Yamamoto
Ladies High Sin;
(237); Don1 and Berniece Dorr:
Doi 'sOtP'^fs?
to ask some Olympice champions Martin 601 (215); Terry 604
sLadies Hi<
to return medals in order to p"uc* GesiaK 5/6 (215); Yosh Murata Hayashi
270
protect the Olympic’s amateur j;\UoZ); Herb Morino 567 (202)- Tom
Ladies Most I:
h?TOS «° i?6L(212){ Shig Onizuk’a 562 Toki;
nature.
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
FLAT ROOFS
BA VESTROUGHING
Nippon Olympic
Official Favors
Brundage Action
<
I
Mens Most
Irr
C.ye-5t-Z c^l'Cl?® Tsujimoto 556; Ken Idenouye.
Azllma- president of Nakanis.a
555; ia.< Sonoda 554 (201);
the bki Association of Japan. wa= $!ar® J’®a 553 (200); Rick Toki 552;
commenting on the report from
Er‘~-;562 1203); Bernice Dorrell
SUNDAY NISEI CLASSIC
(213); Amy Toki 545 (204)Montreal
that IOC
President
April 13th: Err.:-? Y~cz ®
Onj^uka 515 (223); Shirl Miyasaki 504
Berniece Dorrell
I22L t'in a letter to
I the federal International du Ski
567 ( 211); Mike
v:ye 5H
- Ap1-’1 18th: Ed Utsunomiya 630 (237) Tosh Iwai 554 (202
re Tsryz:
| asked for the return of the Olym
1237}; Frank Wakida (205).
SL
(22c);
Sam
Hayashi
5S6
(215);
lim
pic medals won by skiers Nancv
April 20th: Ken I: ■
:" J.-”
Greene of Canada and France’^ Xuamura 535 (214); Joe- Ito 585 (237); Tsujimoto 611 (218’ : ey rrr
581 (207); Tom Made- (220); Sho Mori 566; KwA V=fy
Jean-Claude Killey.
xmo 5r8 (205); Lin Huddart 565- R^-b
Miyasasi 555 (214) Ken Katai 563'(22rAzuma, also a member of the 1“ ^l?ot° 56Z, G01); Miki Cinicola
Mike Idenoi
International
Committee,
said'.
Lee 551 _ (213); Amy Ebata
Sogawa 514; Marjorie trnie Jomor
Brundage was obliged to tak-^ Izumi
Yanagisawa
f^H Zl st™ng measures to main
Miki Cinicoh
WINNERS
OF
THE
68/69
SEASON
tain the Olympic regulations.”
Tsujimoto
e
Mossy Mitsu
■s Me
| “A case of returning- the OlvmKen Izumi
?^n!??s,.is very rare'” Azuma
Tosh Iwai, 7
kida, Mike
p
-'am. 1 believe Brundage had se
Champs:
tbsti
cured decisive evidence that The
am Lee. Georgs
rd by
two skiers failed to abide bv
Me ucscaae nccr^.
man Airlines.
Olympic regulations? in the 1968
EXECUTIVE FOR THE SEASON Consolation Cr
berniece
DorGames at Grenoblea France.”
T Sam Havash
Isoshima, Stan
President: Frank Miyasaki
Vice-president Joe Doi
A spokesman for the Sapporo
Secretary: Marjori Iru—:
Winter
Olympic
Treasurer: Shirl Miyasaki
Preparatory
Committee said. "I believe Brun- IS:
15790- 3rd
dage became_ angrv
_...,... about bre;
of the Olympic regul; iion
Asked whether authorities at
S;
the 19 < 2 Olympic Games at Sap
poro northern Javan, will take
special measures to protect the
Olympics’
amateur
principles.
the spokesman said “We have
nothing in mind. Wc just'follow
the Olympic regularions as inSi
SiniCicd by tne IOC, ' he said.
YOUR
BLOOD
gift of all
Page 3
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1550
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Bi
W. L GARDENS
127 EAST PENDEP STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C
Phone MU. i-6 6 42—0454
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquet*
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Leader of Geisha
Assoc. Seeking
I Japan Will Be Major Exhibitor At Production '69 Export Possibilities
Dates And Doings
By SELIG S. HAR
TORONTO.—Japan will be one of the major exhibitors in the
1
Production
and
Machine
Tool
Show
at
Toronto's
TORY O. — With g- shas losoral Industr
£ Exhibition Park. June 2-6. The Japan Trade Centre will use 1,560 mg- out increasingly ir Japan to
to display a variety of machinery and equip- the hostesses staffing- W esternstyle cabarets and bars Miss KiIncluded Li the display will be a vertical milling’ machine, fork- kuya, a leader of Tokyo's Aka
• up Truck, band sawing machine, pipe cutting and threading machine. saka Geisha Association, is look* electric pipe and bolt threading machine, stainless steel gate and ing into export po ssibilities.
! Jow valves, power sprayer, solid state metering relay, multimeter
Since Japanese lik
to copv
/ Jircujt tester and jewel bearings. —J.E.T.C.
what is popular abroad, she told
a rapt dinner audience at th?
*
Foreign Correspondents Club of
& Founding Members Urged To Attend Centre Meet Japan the way to make geishas
fashionable in Japan again is
TORONTO.—All founding members of the Japanese Canadian make them
"foreign” by start
Cultural Centre are urged to attend the Annual Meeting of the
J.C. Cultural Centre on Monday, May 12th, 1969 at 8:00 p.m.
i
Agenda will be as follows: (1) Message from the President.
(2) Report of the Executive Director. (3) Report of the Treasurer.
bhe would like to open up
(4) Report of the Landscape Committee. (5) Election of Members
io the Board of Directors. (6) Appoint auditor for the ensuing year. branches in Europe and the
(7) Transact other business as may properly come before the United States, she said, if she is
able to find a sponsor or two.
meeting — Hide Shimizu, Sect.
Miss Kikuya is a trim, forty*
ish senior geisha currently pro
moting an autobiographical book
j 10th E. Young Buddhist League Seminar May 17-18 dedicated to proving that a geisha
■
TORONTO.—The 10th Eastern Young Buddhist League Sunday is “'a purely professional Japanese
: School Seminar will be held in Toronto during the long week- lady who is advancing and main
taining Japanese tradition, mani end. May 17-18, 1969, with the Toronto Buddhist Church as host.
ners and customs”
;
The Religious School of the Toronto Buddhist Church is an
mastery of ancient dance
1 associate member of the EYBL Sunday School League. When
music forms.
: the Eastern Young Buddhist League was formed in 1944, the
“It would prove a rather scanty
Rev. Newton Ishiura, who lived in New Haven, Conn., became
understanding of Japan,” she
the first Executive Secretary of the League. The league member
said in the foreword to her bool
chapters then were, Midwst Buddhist Church, Chicago Buddhist
I a Geisha “If vou should mi
Church, New Tork Buddhist Church, Seabrook Buddhist Church
take a g
for
fallen
and Philadelphia YBA.
woman.
Sunday School teachers from the Midwest and Eastern States
But answering questions before
are expected to register at the seminar. Montreal, Hamilton and
a mixed audience of reporters
as far west as Winnipeg will be sending teachers to attend.
and their wives, Miss Kikuya,
The seminar theme will be “The Eye of Wisdom”, so will the clad in a black and gold Kimono
mure topic by Rev. Fumimaro Watanabe, who will also lecture dotted with plum blossoms, adon the “Pali and Sanskrit Terms in Sunday School.” Also lectur ded that this did not apply tc
ing at the 2-day seminar will be Rev. Ensei Nekoda, Sunday “low* class geishas who are not
School director, Buddhist Churches of America (hdqs. San Fracisco). really geishas.”
^'^a vvill introduce his “A Guide to Creative Teaching
In addition to their income
the bunday School,” stretching the teacher' program guidebook from nightly work as entertainnuo three separate sessions.
ers in geisha restaurants, she ex
The following staff members .are coordinating the seminar: plained, geishas often establish
;® 0'0, ^ak’man; Miss Amy Mui’abayashi, correspondence; Miss a liaison with a wealthy patron
---an ELsuzaki and Miss Ann Yasui, registration and dinner ar- while still in their teens in ex
°^10®ram> Jack
Shimizu;
transportation, Toronto change for apartments and dow
-angha; mealSj Toronto Dana; worship, Kaz Tatebe; printing, ries totalling at least 2,000,00(j
kk Yoshida. — T.B.C.
yen (86,000).
“It is not a shame for us to
become a second or third wife
in our society, or for a man to
have a second or third wife."
OPTICAL
CROWN LIFE
KCE A COM
For Your Eyes
O££±
Gertrude Urabe
®i^MI;^^
AGENCY
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Office, 43 Eglinton Ave. East
Phone 485-5087
Home phone: 449-9293
woiwv Canadian
'4'o 2.^ west.
।
i
■'ease find enclosed $ __________
□
Months
MRS
•
_ for which
S9.00 per year.
MISS)
i
owens
J
”^_ A_ .
NIKKO GARDEN
Reservations: EM. 6-2164
TORONTO. —
For best arrangements
proudly
announce
Reserve ahead of time.
10
on
Joseph Ho
VARIOUS KINDS OF SUSHI
AND OTHER JAPANESE
CUISINES AVAILABLE FOR
FAMILY PARTIES
460 Dundas St. Wk
Toronto
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
r
1
Chiropractic”
“Doctor of
(z2 block West of Christie)
TORONTO
Trave! Arrangements
Air—Ship—Bus—Rail
Res. 621-19S9 |
651-8060
Anywhere — Anytime
Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C.
BARRISTER. SOLICITOR
NOTARY’ PUBLIC
and
Baggage
Insurance
2 Carlton St.. Toronto
Room
1805
356-6388
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
293-4281
(Res.)
Passage arranged by Steamer or An
Call for Reservations or
It is a good policy to
hear* the HIGHT POLICY
Information
— EM. 8-9934
Consult
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
T. KAMEOKA
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone 368-4681
889 Dundas St. W., Toronto 140
ASK FOR
Buy & Sell — Your Home
Stan Nishimura
Through
Iwato Travel Service
K
Mils Kuroda
Luciano Cianciusi
Real Estate
Representing
1682 St. Clair Ave. W.
Bob Owen
Real Estate Co.
Toronto
Bus. 766-6191
Res. LE. 1-1089
2625 Eglinton Ave. East.
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-2581
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friend#
KWONGSHOW
CROP SUET TAVERN
EM. 2-4322
EM. 2-0029 For Heservations
126 Elizabeth Street art Dundas, Toronto
Catering to Wedding Banqaeta, Showers snd Parties
Seating Capacity 240
Escorted Tours to Japan
Departure — June 29th, Sunday
Departure — November 2nd, Sunday
For further information and reservations contact
Furuya Travel Service
365 Spadina Ave.
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
Tel. 366-1075
Night Tel.:
Tsuyuki 535-9935
Uyeda LE. 6-1403
ZONE NO.
DUNDAS UNION STORE
proprietor
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
JON ONODERA
SAKURA RICE
EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
SUKIYAKI MEAT — VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
MANY VARIETIES OF A RARE
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805
(Residence)
adDRESS
Provin*ce
Fully Licenced
i
my subscription.
r ®t new subscription for........... year/months
S5.oo
Effective April 1. 1969
r
Advice offered
For the Western wives present.
Miss Kikuya offered the advice
that “if you want to have healthy
husbands, you should expect men
to play. After all. women car:
restrain their desire.-s. but men
cannot.”
A genuinely successful wife.
-mav become a
she observed.
geisha to her husband and should
play many role =. At times, she
must be like a rose to him. A'
some times, like an elderly sister.
and at others, like a youngci
sister. At some times she musr.
be like a mother to him, and
quite often, like a prostitute
Personal Notes
540 Eglinton Ave. W
Toronto
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
EM. 4-7692
Assoc. Seeking
I Japan Will Be Major Exhibitor At Production '69 Export Possibilities
Dates And Doings
By SELIG S. HAR
TORONTO.—Japan will be one of the major exhibitors in the
1
Production
and
Machine
Tool
Show
at
Toronto's
TORY O. — With g- shas losoral Industr
£ Exhibition Park. June 2-6. The Japan Trade Centre will use 1,560 mg- out increasingly ir Japan to
to display a variety of machinery and equip- the hostesses staffing- W esternstyle cabarets and bars Miss KiIncluded Li the display will be a vertical milling’ machine, fork- kuya, a leader of Tokyo's Aka
• up Truck, band sawing machine, pipe cutting and threading machine. saka Geisha Association, is look* electric pipe and bolt threading machine, stainless steel gate and ing into export po ssibilities.
! Jow valves, power sprayer, solid state metering relay, multimeter
Since Japanese lik
to copv
/ Jircujt tester and jewel bearings. —J.E.T.C.
what is popular abroad, she told
a rapt dinner audience at th?
*
Foreign Correspondents Club of
& Founding Members Urged To Attend Centre Meet Japan the way to make geishas
fashionable in Japan again is
TORONTO.—All founding members of the Japanese Canadian make them
"foreign” by start
Cultural Centre are urged to attend the Annual Meeting of the
J.C. Cultural Centre on Monday, May 12th, 1969 at 8:00 p.m.
i
Agenda will be as follows: (1) Message from the President.
(2) Report of the Executive Director. (3) Report of the Treasurer.
bhe would like to open up
(4) Report of the Landscape Committee. (5) Election of Members
io the Board of Directors. (6) Appoint auditor for the ensuing year. branches in Europe and the
(7) Transact other business as may properly come before the United States, she said, if she is
able to find a sponsor or two.
meeting — Hide Shimizu, Sect.
Miss Kikuya is a trim, forty*
ish senior geisha currently pro
moting an autobiographical book
j 10th E. Young Buddhist League Seminar May 17-18 dedicated to proving that a geisha
■
TORONTO.—The 10th Eastern Young Buddhist League Sunday is “'a purely professional Japanese
: School Seminar will be held in Toronto during the long week- lady who is advancing and main
taining Japanese tradition, mani end. May 17-18, 1969, with the Toronto Buddhist Church as host.
ners and customs”
;
The Religious School of the Toronto Buddhist Church is an
mastery of ancient dance
1 associate member of the EYBL Sunday School League. When
music forms.
: the Eastern Young Buddhist League was formed in 1944, the
“It would prove a rather scanty
Rev. Newton Ishiura, who lived in New Haven, Conn., became
understanding of Japan,” she
the first Executive Secretary of the League. The league member
said in the foreword to her bool
chapters then were, Midwst Buddhist Church, Chicago Buddhist
I a Geisha “If vou should mi
Church, New Tork Buddhist Church, Seabrook Buddhist Church
take a g
for
fallen
and Philadelphia YBA.
woman.
Sunday School teachers from the Midwest and Eastern States
But answering questions before
are expected to register at the seminar. Montreal, Hamilton and
a mixed audience of reporters
as far west as Winnipeg will be sending teachers to attend.
and their wives, Miss Kikuya,
The seminar theme will be “The Eye of Wisdom”, so will the clad in a black and gold Kimono
mure topic by Rev. Fumimaro Watanabe, who will also lecture dotted with plum blossoms, adon the “Pali and Sanskrit Terms in Sunday School.” Also lectur ded that this did not apply tc
ing at the 2-day seminar will be Rev. Ensei Nekoda, Sunday “low* class geishas who are not
School director, Buddhist Churches of America (hdqs. San Fracisco). really geishas.”
^'^a vvill introduce his “A Guide to Creative Teaching
In addition to their income
the bunday School,” stretching the teacher' program guidebook from nightly work as entertainnuo three separate sessions.
ers in geisha restaurants, she ex
The following staff members .are coordinating the seminar: plained, geishas often establish
;® 0'0, ^ak’man; Miss Amy Mui’abayashi, correspondence; Miss a liaison with a wealthy patron
---an ELsuzaki and Miss Ann Yasui, registration and dinner ar- while still in their teens in ex
°^10®ram> Jack
Shimizu;
transportation, Toronto change for apartments and dow
-angha; mealSj Toronto Dana; worship, Kaz Tatebe; printing, ries totalling at least 2,000,00(j
kk Yoshida. — T.B.C.
yen (86,000).
“It is not a shame for us to
become a second or third wife
in our society, or for a man to
have a second or third wife."
OPTICAL
CROWN LIFE
KCE A COM
For Your Eyes
O££±
Gertrude Urabe
®i^MI;^^
AGENCY
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Office, 43 Eglinton Ave. East
Phone 485-5087
Home phone: 449-9293
woiwv Canadian
'4'o 2.^ west.
।
i
■'ease find enclosed $ __________
□
Months
MRS
•
_ for which
S9.00 per year.
MISS)
i
owens
J
”^_ A_ .
NIKKO GARDEN
Reservations: EM. 6-2164
TORONTO. —
For best arrangements
proudly
announce
Reserve ahead of time.
10
on
Joseph Ho
VARIOUS KINDS OF SUSHI
AND OTHER JAPANESE
CUISINES AVAILABLE FOR
FAMILY PARTIES
460 Dundas St. Wk
Toronto
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
r
1
Chiropractic”
“Doctor of
(z2 block West of Christie)
TORONTO
Trave! Arrangements
Air—Ship—Bus—Rail
Res. 621-19S9 |
651-8060
Anywhere — Anytime
Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C.
BARRISTER. SOLICITOR
NOTARY’ PUBLIC
and
Baggage
Insurance
2 Carlton St.. Toronto
Room
1805
356-6388
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
293-4281
(Res.)
Passage arranged by Steamer or An
Call for Reservations or
It is a good policy to
hear* the HIGHT POLICY
Information
— EM. 8-9934
Consult
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
T. KAMEOKA
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone 368-4681
889 Dundas St. W., Toronto 140
ASK FOR
Buy & Sell — Your Home
Stan Nishimura
Through
Iwato Travel Service
K
Mils Kuroda
Luciano Cianciusi
Real Estate
Representing
1682 St. Clair Ave. W.
Bob Owen
Real Estate Co.
Toronto
Bus. 766-6191
Res. LE. 1-1089
2625 Eglinton Ave. East.
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-2581
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friend#
KWONGSHOW
CROP SUET TAVERN
EM. 2-4322
EM. 2-0029 For Heservations
126 Elizabeth Street art Dundas, Toronto
Catering to Wedding Banqaeta, Showers snd Parties
Seating Capacity 240
Escorted Tours to Japan
Departure — June 29th, Sunday
Departure — November 2nd, Sunday
For further information and reservations contact
Furuya Travel Service
365 Spadina Ave.
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
Tel. 366-1075
Night Tel.:
Tsuyuki 535-9935
Uyeda LE. 6-1403
ZONE NO.
DUNDAS UNION STORE
proprietor
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
JON ONODERA
SAKURA RICE
EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
SUKIYAKI MEAT — VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
MANY VARIETIES OF A RARE
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805
(Residence)
adDRESS
Provin*ce
Fully Licenced
i
my subscription.
r ®t new subscription for........... year/months
S5.oo
Effective April 1. 1969
r
Advice offered
For the Western wives present.
Miss Kikuya offered the advice
that “if you want to have healthy
husbands, you should expect men
to play. After all. women car:
restrain their desire.-s. but men
cannot.”
A genuinely successful wife.
-mav become a
she observed.
geisha to her husband and should
play many role =. At times, she
must be like a rose to him. A'
some times, like an elderly sister.
and at others, like a youngci
sister. At some times she musr.
be like a mother to him, and
quite often, like a prostitute
Personal Notes
540 Eglinton Ave. W
Toronto
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
EM. 4-7692
Page 8
PAGE 8
Kurata . .
(Continued from Page I1)
Pearl . . .
(Cont. from Page One)
advances and
she fled, badly’a lawyer (Osgoode Hall ’48).
shaken by the experience.
^ ^Sav^
1 ®uess it’s not> the end jorical real tMng,ethe°20thhJa^^ I hMf-ti™th^
Cugelman, a young lawyer two of the world,
” he said. I don” AT-fe‘ andFBT-l^ composed of balanced view of the? blunder!
Second class aoa r
years out of Law school, testified know what I’m going to
-umber 03S6
^
well
ne was defending a man who was we ll just wait and" see
cosmetic touches addd,” (casting Tttemj^^
charged along with Mrs. Lons
berry and he met her about that . .yr- Justice Keith said: •His
time. They talked quietlv and ,^^ra^as) story with respect
normally, he said, and she cer to the reason Policewoman Wat S,ra- a* » s«J s- .=;,,■
tainly didn’t seem like a woman son was in the room is childishlv
who had just been through a preposterous and not to be beleaie fiom the air force and I
!ie\ ed for one moment.’’
frightening experience.
PUBLISHED on 2VERY
navy who simulate the forma- , „ ^OP6 people do get arrous"® FRIDAY
1
^
1
’Justice
Keith
’
s
report
is
Mi. Justice
Keith described
tions, dogfights, and dives - T
saVS Fleischer. “They can
an
inch
thick
and
goes
into
the
fugleman’s testimony- as “hav
F?,UBSCRIpTlON
dipping as low as five feet from
a lot from this film. Thev
ing no value whatsoever. His de testimony of each witness in de the ground — that the 353 at- mi?h^ And out that Gen. Smort
^9.00 per year
meanor and deportment in the tail seldom found in even the
aircraft performed in u K^unel, who took the
in advance
witness box did nothing to en most searching Supreme Court .Un^ ,Tra=ically, one pilot was brunt .of thls in the navy reports,
hance my opinion of his veraci- case.
'illed before shooting began and I " ei^.iUSt scape-goats for an in- KEI M&tJ^L
It concludes with a half-page another died in a crash during cre®We .number of mistakes bv
SsF
titled simply: “Finding-”
practice
exercises
for
the
film
”
m
?
ny
military
personnel.
Thev
WOULD DO IT AGAIN
This was:
°
“Tora! Tora! Tora!” Hu titbi ^“^ fmd out that Yamamoto,
Mr Justice Keith reffered to
taken
from the Japanese" code
alwa£s
villain in our
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
,/'F°r th® reasons set out in
Cugelman as “the ineffable Mr
signal
“
Tiger!
Tiger'
Ti°-er
'
”
I
•
j
ldn
^
wan
t
to
carrv
loronto 2-B, Ont
the foregoing report and the
Cugelman. . .”
EMpire 6-5005 '
conclusions which I have arrived conveying news of the successful S ?1S -’aid aT u11 and he was
attack) was a best-seller in Ja
I have him speak
Cugelman commented that it at, 1 fmd that Provincial Judge pan
in 1966 and was condensedlS6^ i ineS
9e fiIm’ which
was
“the
commissioner’s pre Kurata is by reason of his mism the Reader’s Digest
The P actually said: T fear that all
rogative to accept the evidence .jVWr unfit to serve as a
American edition will be publish u6 • e d°ne isto awaken the
oi a common prostitute and judge, and hence is liable to ‘be ed
by McGraw-Hill this summer
^
fiU hi^ with
diug addict against that of mv- i emoved from office before at
“THE JAPANESE h“^ te—ble resolve/ ”
self and Judge Kurata.
taining retirement age,’ pursuant
Male Heip Wanted
to
the Provincial Courts Act 6S s^mficant interest in Pearl , Some controversy has already JAPANESE trading
If I found myself in the same
of °”tai-io 1968, Chapter FksXraS«T|We
<Jo” explain developed over the appointment active salesman. 'WUl^ £ i/"
position again I would still come
103,
Section
4.
”
bril
£
n
regard
as 3 ? Gen- Minoru Genda, who work in Montreal
forward
with my evidence in
Iida Co. Ltd., Phone^ljjg1
£
€
^htai'y
coup,
which
it Planned the real attack on Pearl
spite of the roasting I received
NO HESITATION
inf^A,and
re^ard it as an Harbor> as adviser to the JanaFemale Help Wanted
from the commissioner both in
sneak attack, which it Pese unit on “Tora!” Protests FINISHERS, exapA/rTrT-----Mr. Justice Keith said he had S
the court and in his report.”
ao. hesitation in accepting the i eally wasnt. Both sides have Ihave Leon voiced by the Surviv- I ing operators reared on
Mr. Justice Keith was critical evidence of Policewoman Watson,
ors of Pearl Hrbor Assn, and wear for large clothina ‘ m^A^
of Maloney for not asking Mrs. who he described as ‘“of unbie-1 Divorce
foreign Wars. But in Honolulu, I feU ^nd dLa\£enc^^
Chapters
of the Veterans of |
Lonsberry if she recalled speak- ■ mished character, married, youn°, (Toronto).
'
the. navy and the natives of all I female
r--tS^Dl™61?61’ °f the iletr°- I
{Cont- From P8M 1)
niff to Cugelman.
politan Police Force, engag-ed in 1u
.
1i
, were simply de- TyX
the
protection
of
women
and
S
expun
A
ed
b
’
om
the
reL'
0b
^
d
.
with
the
10 million dol- dutiss- Full time.' Good'MaW. ^
DISTURBED
children from assault, indecent
Japan follows the French I ais being injected into Hawaiian I
Insurance, S52A. Eis
‘Tm particularly
disturbed,” and otherwise.
whose evidence PJ S;em of maintaining a perma- Prosperity, not to mention the
said Maloney, “that the commis
with respect to matters whihd
for each
generous spending of the HollyArticlPc7nr
---sioner failed to understand that she has observed in the course '-’^any at the husband’s family,
ancest- 'Yood C1’ew which has been there--------------- ticlesbor_bal^__
Mrs. Lorisberry was on the wit of carrying out her duties T I ral home,
I since JHnuary. The only local I
$ special sale on
CH zia-z^
ness stand, told her story, was regularly accepted in courts such I A woman’s family record is MTPlahT
find was ^e XS ^h£ feSuJ-fe
cross-examined by me, then left as those over which Judge Ku-I ; anally transferred to her hus-I r?Se schoolteacher who didn’t I (Toronto), Singer Conrray oi fe;the hearing . . . all this happen rata presides.”
panel s at marriage and it is nnlv . e J^-Panese planes buzzing -™—— ---------—-----ed before Mr. Cugelman came to
Lonsberrv’s I h’eCent
.that the government |110Usdl a^ her lessons.
I
Domestic Help Wanted
He accepted Mrs.
me to tell me about his conver
- much more careyoung couples to I
Shooting- in Hawaii
EXE.lUTIVE requires houseboy
evidence after
sation with her . . .”
M scrubny Mr. Justice Keithp*^
and o„ .fi^ltU^
Maloney, usually affable, clash
I the husband’s family honw
problems .appeared from nighls 921-1550 (Toronto).
ed with the commissioner several
One
’
s
veracity
is
not
establish^reds
of
miles
a
wav
’
Akira Kurosawa, |
times during the hearings. At
one point Mr. Justice Keith ac " £?S’S ST" ta^S’ “P^ can’t -^’ p#Zi.,S
SAY IT WITH
cused. Maloney ol “studied inso
CONSTANTLY SPARRING
~/^
Stg"? fi2”ta‘S
lence” .and said he would deal
FLOWERS
with him later.
At one point, in assessing uJ~\C^^
be *fter 22 days of ijti^ f"'J
SHARON'S FLORIST
Maloney claimed in his sumof Kurata, the commis^ bounds thev
hing-up that Kurata was being eydence
stoner noted, “It is hard to quotJ» their home country
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
persecuted by a senior police of
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
ficial—he didn’t name him—who
Sus: HO. 6-2041
resented
Kurata’s not-tough- arguing- with commission counsel pan ara.it two L )
5 0Ja“
Res: HO. 6-7962
enough attitude toward some and had to be stopped by myself py^cii X^^
942 PAPE AVE.. TORONTO
criminals.
on more than one occasion.’’
The first aim of Se courts Je
The commissioner found the
Dk W’ R Kyne' a Psychiatrist ^'d’.,f to save the marriage and
police acted properly.
on the staff at St. Joseph’s
thls Purpose each judje has
When he received the report r!°55-'1' testified at the inquiry h11?® Probation officers and an
Use New Canadian Ads
EM. 4-9913
Kurata was a combination of the that .Kurata was admitted to the assistant trained in psvcholow
glum and the fatalistic. Since hospital Sept. 1 with what ap- Iv?, assist in counseling all caseR
(TOHONTO)
For Best Results
the end of the hearings in March peared to be an overdose cfu? so assisting are conciliation
sleeping pills washed down with
commissioners.” older, usuallv
he’s been at home, doing- nothing'. liquor.
I learea men or housewives who
He’s
both a mining- engineer
Dr. Kyne said when he inter-L°Jk for exPenses only.
j
(University of Toronto ’45) and viewed Kurata the judge had-^M one,°f 40 women
Judges in Japan, thinks .the long
told him he had tried to take I conciliation
his own life because he was de-I whether it siceedt’in restoring
The New Canady
classified
T.V. Service
Thos. T. Onizuka,
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
121 RICHMOND ST W.
TORONTO 1
363-5002
691-3388 (Ros.)
Business For Sale
pressed over financial and dom- I a marriage or ends in agreed I
S» S’e
thi”ks th/otW
estic worries.
i Lu q
Japanese
contribution
“Judge Kurata lost lus cred I he use of senior citizens a J
ibility
seriously when
_
he denied counselors, is possibly worthv of
having told Dr. Kyne that he export
I
attempted suicide. ■ said the com- I
’
—I
— TORONTO —
radio-tv
Sales and Service. Furniture and
Appliances Service Depot for Nationally advertis
ed Stereo. Principal Only. Apply Box 15. The New
=^ Toronto's High
THANK YOU! BAZAAR A SUCCESS!
we e >ress our appreciation to all
organization
busines. firms volunteers and friends for
their
splendid
support of the
held on Saturday,
WINNERS OF JAPAN TRIP DRAW
..Ff.110™* is *he official list of the winners of the
‘Annual Air Trip to Japan’ Draw. Mav we offer
our congratulalions ro the winners and our appreciation to the sellers and
i.
— Air Trip to Japan or S2000.00
Nakaraura A 8372. Taber. Alta. Seller: K. Kano
— Barnwell. Alta.
2. Second Pnze — Colour T.V. Console
Y^leux^B 5399. Scarboro. Seller: C. Kondo.
3.
~ A1 Tapper D 1607. Scarboro. Ont
Fourth to Tenth Pure - S100.00. Norm Lightfoot C8695. Toronto 6.
T
Streib csss^'wni^.^^^^
*' rtlnosm
■ A^?s^ Ock
88541, V/eston;
7. Kaz
Tsuchida D74S0, Toronto 10; 8. R D Mark
a
—
Eleventh to Fifteenth Prie — S50.00: Pete MeGeo-co R rrgc v
Sc
U^’v C 2195’ S~*oro 13. Mas£ Dougfas Oka^^
Scarboro; 14. S. Yasumatsu CS952. Toronto 6- IS
cLi m ir. sk^’
wU, H. L. Baker C S575.
loronto IS.
Blossoms Bloom
I
TORONTO. — Toronto
Issei
nature-lovers predict that this
City’s High Park chem- blot
son, trees will be in full' bloom
this weekend.
“It should be an ideal weekend
for viewing the pink blooms.”
>.d^
^ ubhsher T. Umezuki I
rovidmg the .weather hohU
out.”
"I
These trees, planted 10 year*
ago were a gift of Metro Tokyo
to the City of Toronto. Over 2.000
trees were presented.
Healthy Body J Mind
ANNOUNCEMENT
COMPASS TRAVEL SERVICE LTD.
CamuBn^h ^^ S3'e °^ ^eir business to a group of Japane^c?nd Professional men, headed by Mr. Alfred
main imrhin3' Although the address and phone number re
name of — ^eJ’ Oie Company will operate under the ne’
TO -VERY INTERESTING
PLACES” —
a in St reel, Vancouver t ^’
682-2241
Kurata . .
(Continued from Page I1)
Pearl . . .
(Cont. from Page One)
advances and
she fled, badly’a lawyer (Osgoode Hall ’48).
shaken by the experience.
^ ^Sav^
1 ®uess it’s not> the end jorical real tMng,ethe°20thhJa^^ I hMf-ti™th^
Cugelman, a young lawyer two of the world,
” he said. I don” AT-fe‘ andFBT-l^ composed of balanced view of the? blunder!
Second class aoa r
years out of Law school, testified know what I’m going to
-umber 03S6
^
well
ne was defending a man who was we ll just wait and" see
cosmetic touches addd,” (casting Tttemj^^
charged along with Mrs. Lons
berry and he met her about that . .yr- Justice Keith said: •His
time. They talked quietlv and ,^^ra^as) story with respect
normally, he said, and she cer to the reason Policewoman Wat S,ra- a* » s«J s- .=;,,■
tainly didn’t seem like a woman son was in the room is childishlv
who had just been through a preposterous and not to be beleaie fiom the air force and I
!ie\ ed for one moment.’’
frightening experience.
PUBLISHED on 2VERY
navy who simulate the forma- , „ ^OP6 people do get arrous"® FRIDAY
1
^
1
’Justice
Keith
’
s
report
is
Mi. Justice
Keith described
tions, dogfights, and dives - T
saVS Fleischer. “They can
an
inch
thick
and
goes
into
the
fugleman’s testimony- as “hav
F?,UBSCRIpTlON
dipping as low as five feet from
a lot from this film. Thev
ing no value whatsoever. His de testimony of each witness in de the ground — that the 353 at- mi?h^ And out that Gen. Smort
^9.00 per year
meanor and deportment in the tail seldom found in even the
aircraft performed in u K^unel, who took the
in advance
witness box did nothing to en most searching Supreme Court .Un^ ,Tra=ically, one pilot was brunt .of thls in the navy reports,
hance my opinion of his veraci- case.
'illed before shooting began and I " ei^.iUSt scape-goats for an in- KEI M&tJ^L
It concludes with a half-page another died in a crash during cre®We .number of mistakes bv
SsF
titled simply: “Finding-”
practice
exercises
for
the
film
”
m
?
ny
military
personnel.
Thev
WOULD DO IT AGAIN
This was:
°
“Tora! Tora! Tora!” Hu titbi ^“^ fmd out that Yamamoto,
Mr Justice Keith reffered to
taken
from the Japanese" code
alwa£s
villain in our
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
,/'F°r th® reasons set out in
Cugelman as “the ineffable Mr
signal
“
Tiger!
Tiger'
Ti°-er
'
”
I
•
j
ldn
^
wan
t
to
carrv
loronto 2-B, Ont
the foregoing report and the
Cugelman. . .”
EMpire 6-5005 '
conclusions which I have arrived conveying news of the successful S ?1S -’aid aT u11 and he was
attack) was a best-seller in Ja
I have him speak
Cugelman commented that it at, 1 fmd that Provincial Judge pan
in 1966 and was condensedlS6^ i ineS
9e fiIm’ which
was
“the
commissioner’s pre Kurata is by reason of his mism the Reader’s Digest
The P actually said: T fear that all
rogative to accept the evidence .jVWr unfit to serve as a
American edition will be publish u6 • e d°ne isto awaken the
oi a common prostitute and judge, and hence is liable to ‘be ed
by McGraw-Hill this summer
^
fiU hi^ with
diug addict against that of mv- i emoved from office before at
“THE JAPANESE h“^ te—ble resolve/ ”
self and Judge Kurata.
taining retirement age,’ pursuant
Male Heip Wanted
to
the Provincial Courts Act 6S s^mficant interest in Pearl , Some controversy has already JAPANESE trading
If I found myself in the same
of °”tai-io 1968, Chapter FksXraS«T|We
<Jo” explain developed over the appointment active salesman. 'WUl^ £ i/"
position again I would still come
103,
Section
4.
”
bril
£
n
regard
as 3 ? Gen- Minoru Genda, who work in Montreal
forward
with my evidence in
Iida Co. Ltd., Phone^ljjg1
£
€
^htai'y
coup,
which
it Planned the real attack on Pearl
spite of the roasting I received
NO HESITATION
inf^A,and
re^ard it as an Harbor> as adviser to the JanaFemale Help Wanted
from the commissioner both in
sneak attack, which it Pese unit on “Tora!” Protests FINISHERS, exapA/rTrT-----Mr. Justice Keith said he had S
the court and in his report.”
ao. hesitation in accepting the i eally wasnt. Both sides have Ihave Leon voiced by the Surviv- I ing operators reared on
Mr. Justice Keith was critical evidence of Policewoman Watson,
ors of Pearl Hrbor Assn, and wear for large clothina ‘ m^A^
of Maloney for not asking Mrs. who he described as ‘“of unbie-1 Divorce
foreign Wars. But in Honolulu, I feU ^nd dLa\£enc^^
Chapters
of the Veterans of |
Lonsberry if she recalled speak- ■ mished character, married, youn°, (Toronto).
'
the. navy and the natives of all I female
r--tS^Dl™61?61’ °f the iletr°- I
{Cont- From P8M 1)
niff to Cugelman.
politan Police Force, engag-ed in 1u
.
1i
, were simply de- TyX
the
protection
of
women
and
S
expun
A
ed
b
’
om
the
reL'
0b
^
d
.
with
the
10 million dol- dutiss- Full time.' Good'MaW. ^
DISTURBED
children from assault, indecent
Japan follows the French I ais being injected into Hawaiian I
Insurance, S52A. Eis
‘Tm particularly
disturbed,” and otherwise.
whose evidence PJ S;em of maintaining a perma- Prosperity, not to mention the
said Maloney, “that the commis
with respect to matters whihd
for each
generous spending of the HollyArticlPc7nr
---sioner failed to understand that she has observed in the course '-’^any at the husband’s family,
ancest- 'Yood C1’ew which has been there--------------- ticlesbor_bal^__
Mrs. Lorisberry was on the wit of carrying out her duties T I ral home,
I since JHnuary. The only local I
$ special sale on
CH zia-z^
ness stand, told her story, was regularly accepted in courts such I A woman’s family record is MTPlahT
find was ^e XS ^h£ feSuJ-fe
cross-examined by me, then left as those over which Judge Ku-I ; anally transferred to her hus-I r?Se schoolteacher who didn’t I (Toronto), Singer Conrray oi fe;the hearing . . . all this happen rata presides.”
panel s at marriage and it is nnlv . e J^-Panese planes buzzing -™—— ---------—-----ed before Mr. Cugelman came to
Lonsberrv’s I h’eCent
.that the government |110Usdl a^ her lessons.
I
Domestic Help Wanted
He accepted Mrs.
me to tell me about his conver
- much more careyoung couples to I
Shooting- in Hawaii
EXE.lUTIVE requires houseboy
evidence after
sation with her . . .”
M scrubny Mr. Justice Keithp*^
and o„ .fi^ltU^
Maloney, usually affable, clash
I the husband’s family honw
problems .appeared from nighls 921-1550 (Toronto).
ed with the commissioner several
One
’
s
veracity
is
not
establish^reds
of
miles
a
wav
’
Akira Kurosawa, |
times during the hearings. At
one point Mr. Justice Keith ac " £?S’S ST" ta^S’ “P^ can’t -^’ p#Zi.,S
SAY IT WITH
cused. Maloney ol “studied inso
CONSTANTLY SPARRING
~/^
Stg"? fi2”ta‘S
lence” .and said he would deal
FLOWERS
with him later.
At one point, in assessing uJ~\C^^
be *fter 22 days of ijti^ f"'J
SHARON'S FLORIST
Maloney claimed in his sumof Kurata, the commis^ bounds thev
hing-up that Kurata was being eydence
stoner noted, “It is hard to quotJ» their home country
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
persecuted by a senior police of
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
ficial—he didn’t name him—who
Sus: HO. 6-2041
resented
Kurata’s not-tough- arguing- with commission counsel pan ara.it two L )
5 0Ja“
Res: HO. 6-7962
enough attitude toward some and had to be stopped by myself py^cii X^^
942 PAPE AVE.. TORONTO
criminals.
on more than one occasion.’’
The first aim of Se courts Je
The commissioner found the
Dk W’ R Kyne' a Psychiatrist ^'d’.,f to save the marriage and
police acted properly.
on the staff at St. Joseph’s
thls Purpose each judje has
When he received the report r!°55-'1' testified at the inquiry h11?® Probation officers and an
Use New Canadian Ads
EM. 4-9913
Kurata was a combination of the that .Kurata was admitted to the assistant trained in psvcholow
glum and the fatalistic. Since hospital Sept. 1 with what ap- Iv?, assist in counseling all caseR
(TOHONTO)
For Best Results
the end of the hearings in March peared to be an overdose cfu? so assisting are conciliation
sleeping pills washed down with
commissioners.” older, usuallv
he’s been at home, doing- nothing'. liquor.
I learea men or housewives who
He’s
both a mining- engineer
Dr. Kyne said when he inter-L°Jk for exPenses only.
j
(University of Toronto ’45) and viewed Kurata the judge had-^M one,°f 40 women
Judges in Japan, thinks .the long
told him he had tried to take I conciliation
his own life because he was de-I whether it siceedt’in restoring
The New Canady
classified
T.V. Service
Thos. T. Onizuka,
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
121 RICHMOND ST W.
TORONTO 1
363-5002
691-3388 (Ros.)
Business For Sale
pressed over financial and dom- I a marriage or ends in agreed I
S» S’e
thi”ks th/otW
estic worries.
i Lu q
Japanese
contribution
“Judge Kurata lost lus cred I he use of senior citizens a J
ibility
seriously when
_
he denied counselors, is possibly worthv of
having told Dr. Kyne that he export
I
attempted suicide. ■ said the com- I
’
—I
— TORONTO —
radio-tv
Sales and Service. Furniture and
Appliances Service Depot for Nationally advertis
ed Stereo. Principal Only. Apply Box 15. The New
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THANK YOU! BAZAAR A SUCCESS!
we e >ress our appreciation to all
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busines. firms volunteers and friends for
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splendid
support of the
held on Saturday,
WINNERS OF JAPAN TRIP DRAW
..Ff.110™* is *he official list of the winners of the
‘Annual Air Trip to Japan’ Draw. Mav we offer
our congratulalions ro the winners and our appreciation to the sellers and
i.
— Air Trip to Japan or S2000.00
Nakaraura A 8372. Taber. Alta. Seller: K. Kano
— Barnwell. Alta.
2. Second Pnze — Colour T.V. Console
Y^leux^B 5399. Scarboro. Seller: C. Kondo.
3.
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loronto IS.
Blossoms Bloom
I
TORONTO. — Toronto
Issei
nature-lovers predict that this
City’s High Park chem- blot
son, trees will be in full' bloom
this weekend.
“It should be an ideal weekend
for viewing the pink blooms.”
>.d^
^ ubhsher T. Umezuki I
rovidmg the .weather hohU
out.”
"I
These trees, planted 10 year*
ago were a gift of Metro Tokyo
to the City of Toronto. Over 2.000
trees were presented.
Healthy Body J Mind
ANNOUNCEMENT
COMPASS TRAVEL SERVICE LTD.
CamuBn^h ^^ S3'e °^ ^eir business to a group of Japane^c?nd Professional men, headed by Mr. Alfred
main imrhin3' Although the address and phone number re
name of — ^eJ’ Oie Company will operate under the ne’
TO -VERY INTERESTING
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a in St reel, Vancouver t ^’
682-2241