Page 1
Japanese
American
I
IXGELES-Dr. Thomas T. Noguchi, ousted
| L0S * Coroner under charges of bizarre behavior,
^^‘Lfe^ioiial jealousy” over his role in the
Robert F. Kennedy might have led
dismissal.
who is figging the dismissal before the
H Service Commission, told a news conbounty
entlv that some physicians not selected to
rhe Kennedy autopsy team could, have criticized
Nogucnt
J:E'
v nnored - San Francisco coroner as telling
\n£UCm quuteu
.
, .
U Mrrh- after the Kennedy’" assassination:
Tom
You ve goinc to have problems . . .
'
Administrative Officer Lindon S. Hollinger,
Coroner
Charges
who filed a long list of ch
u in.
included “erratic behavior" nd use o.t
ress<
he was not questioning" Noguchi's competence in per
forming the autopsy on Kennedy.
Godfrey Isaac
attorney.
d he m
summon as many as 60 witnesses to the commissi
hearing into the coroner's discharge set for May 12.
Deputy County Counsel Martin Weekes, who will
present the county's case agains Noguchi, implied
that jobs were offered to prospective witnesses.
“Were any promises made to witnesses from the
coroner’s office,” Weekes asked Isaac before the commission’s meeting. "Were there any offers of promotion?”
Professional
Jealousy
Isaac called the questions "ridiculous” and denied
e implications.
and is
Tikes to bug
not serious./
offered, it
But Weekes again said, “If jobs
is a practice we intend to stop.”
and Dr.
He aid investigators for
not only were questioning employees in the coroners,
office in the daytime but also were “barging" into their
houses at night.”
Weekes said he advised Herbert McCroy, admin
istrative deputy in the coroner's office, to issue a
memo that employees do not have to participate in
(Continued on Page 5)
!ulllll)ililliiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiniiiiiiiiinH>i»*"||lllllllllllll,lllll,,l,lllllllllll,llillllllIlllIlilllIilllll,l!llllllllllllllIllllllllllllinI!,llllIIII,llllllllllllll,i,lll,lllll 'lillu
“SUKIYAKI”
Cookbook By
MISS STELLA ITO
Vol. XXXIII—No. 38
jiiinniiiiiHiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiEiiiiitiBi
he Item Canadian
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A storv of J.C.’s By
JESSIE L. BEATTIE
Toronto, O.nt
JIHfniinilllllllllllUHIIIiKIJlIlllIlllllllIiLHIHHlllIHjmiHBlIinillllllllHIHmilllllHlIlilllllHIIHIIIIinilllHUHIHIHHinilllllillUHItlHIlllllHIMHIIIIIin
Seiji’s Symphonic Sayonara | Toronto Nisei Music Teacher To
Chaperone Students On Europe Tour
guest conducting in Europe and
By JOHN KRAGLUND
N
orth America, including TorTORONTO. — Conductor Seiji
Ozawa was showered with praise, onto, before he takes over as
got a standing ovation, was giv music director of the San FranTORONTO.—A Nisei music teach grade 13, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
en a large Eskimo sculpture and cisco Symphony in the fall of
er, Mrs. Mayumi Kumagai of Tor Takue Nikaido and Margaret Imai,
auDointed honorary music direc 1970.
After
the
final
chords
of
Rich
tor of the Toronto Symphony at
onto has been selected as one oi grade 12, daughter of the Reverend
Massey Hall this week. And, at ard Strauss’ Der Rosenkavalier
and Mrs. Ken Imai of the Japanese
the end of an emotional concert, Suite, most of the audience three chaperones to take 29 Oakwood
Ozawa’s Toronto farewell to the doubtless felt like Ozawa, who Collegiate students on a three week Anglican Church. The students will
Series A, Tuesday night sub said, “I think I’m too emotional
leave for Europe on May 18th.
scribers, a large banner, inscrib tonight, I won’t talk . . . I just visit to France and Italy.
They will visit headquarters of the
ed Sayonara, was unroled above want to say thank you very
The students, about half of Italian
much.”
the orchestra.
United Nations Educational, Scienti
One regrets only that the origin, includes two Japanese Cana
The presentation to Ozawa and
his wife Vera was made by concert had not been program- dians. They
are: Phyllis Nikaido, fic and Cultural Organization in Paris
give
the
34-year-old
conRobert F. Chisholm, Toronto med to
and the Food and Agriculture
Symphony president, who said: ductor a chance to remind his
Organization in Rome.
“.Maestro Ozawa has given us listeners of some of his major
Money for the students’ trip
an enduring enrichment through achievements during the _ past
has
been raised by Friends of
his four years with us because four years— or even of his ini
Japan will pic” organizing committee.
NEW
YORK.
Oakwood,
a group of graduates
of his electrifying spirit, his en tial triumph, before his appoint
Fujimura said the 1969 cham
gaging personality and his musi ment, in Prokofiev’s Fifth Sym play host for the first time in pionships will be held on Novem and staff members, plus a grant
its history to a world dancing
cal scholarship.
phony, for example.
championships
in November in ber 22 and 23 at Budokan Hall from the Federal Department of
His recent bout with influenza
“We are proud that his rise
in the heart of Tokyo.
External Affairs.
to world wide fame has been an prompted him to turn over to Tokvo.
This
was
disclosed
recently
here
He
said
more
than
17
countries
endowement of this distinguish assistant conductor Kazuyoshi by Kosaku Fujimura, president
are expected to participate in the
ed orchestra.”
Akiyama the rehearsal and last
of the Japan Social Dance forthcoming dance championships
During the coming season, night’s .performance of Three
Association.
Ozawa—whose successor is Czech Places
in New England, by Teacher’s hsiting European and in Tokyo.
He is
participating
conductor Karel Ancerl—will do Charles Ives, a composer for
each
He said
countries to prepare
American
an
entry for
whom Ozawa has shown con
country
can
file
Tokyo chamfor
the
forthcoming
in
siderable affinity: Akiyama con
in his capacity as two couples to participate
ducted with vitality, but he has pionships of ‘‘the dance Olym- each category.
not learned how to expose fully chairman
GREENWOOD. — A Japanese
the familiar tunes the complex
Canadian teenager, Lenny Tate
Ives score.
yama of Greenwood brought
Nor was Ozawa given a chance
TOKYO.—Earners of incomes ' Co., a top electric home applian- home to Greenwood recently the
to reveal again to the audience
TOKYO. — Thousands of Ja- his growing affinity for Mozart
producer enjoying a big sales
of more than 100 million yen in
best Teen Town in British Co
panese lined up outside Isetan in a performance of that com Japan last year totaled 61, a big boost in color television sets last
wpv. Store recently awaiting poser’s Piano Concerto in A. K increase of 49 over the pieuous year, became the No. 1 corporate lumbia award. He is the pres
‘■he opening of an Abraham Lin 488, for he had apparently ac vear, reflecting the brisk econ firm in terms of annual income, ident of the B.C.T.A.
coln exhibition.
This award was given at a
cepted the approach of piano omic conditions in the country, surpassing the Bank of Japan.
The exhibit, designed to ac- soloist John Brooming.
income tabulations by major taxa
Among the 61 earning 100 mil three day conference held at Echo
JaPanese people, with
That approach called for me tion offices revealed recently.
lion or more were three Diet Center in Port Alberni. There
l e an^ philosophy” of the chanical speed and clarity in the.
Konosuke Matsushita, chair members — Shokichi
Uehaia,
teenagers
president of the United outside movements, a subjective man of the board of Matsushita Morinosuke Kashima and Tasa- were two hundred
rt65.'
opened by acting expressiveness and enervating Electric Industrial Co., recaptur buro Kumagai, all members of gathered at this conference.
x ^ni™ssador David Osborn.
lethargy in the Adagio. If to ed the top position on the Iim the Liberal-Democratic Party.
Among the items on display day’s younger pianists are seeking with an annual income of
Flower artist Sofu Teshigawa
original copy of the Get- a cool, modern approach to mu million yen (about $2 million).
psburg Address, a model
of sic—in keeping with pop trends He beat out Busaburo Otsuka, ra, thanks to the boom in flower
w.coln s log cabin at New Salem, —Browning could, show them how board chairman of Otsuka Phar arrangement among the Japanese
A historical illustrations, pho- to do it without long hair, fancy maceutical Co., who fell to sec and foreigners of late, rose to
16th place from 25th place that
^a?hs an<T personal belong- clothes and the sacrifice of vnond place.
. T
, he had gained the previous year.
tuosity. Ozawa and the orchestra
Matsushita Electric Industrial
gave him the support he deservLONDON. — Beatle John Lened.
non,
who complained a month
Because the overture to Johann
ago he was down to his last
Strauss’ The Gypsy Baron could
$120,000
cash, has bought a
MONTREAL Dr. Shinichi Suzuki of Japan has a philosopny.
be considered nothing more than
$360,000
pad
in the country.
a filler. Ozawa was given a T
a Trin-d instrument should be thaught as soon
chance for full expression only
It’s Tittenhurst Park, a seven
fact lessons should start before
in
the
Rosenkavalier
music.
bedroom,
18th century mansion
^^ FRANCISCO. — S. I.
And in this lilting waltz-fillsd
on 72 acres,
with four bath
^hich is gening Prominence throughout the rooms, two servants’ apartment,
^e grRty acting work with its nostalgic, bitter
11 " T ho demonstrated bv the master himself at a day-long four servant’ cottages, a gate
of San Francisco State sweet mood, the conductor foun
expression, as well as for the :Zk£’hoP to I- held June 10th at_ the Westmount High Schoo, lodge, a picture gallery, a Tudor"aS cheered by his ample opportunity for emotiona^
style tea pavilion, four green
seemly, when he ap- fraceful podium technique tna. Auditorium, 4350 St. Catherine St. W
houses, a tennis court, a cricket
demonstrations and massed playings field and a heated
V 5s DeFore them at a program has done much to win him a deThere will be lectures
pool.
voted
following.
,
gymnasium.
And in the music’s echo ot me by
in I"-" «“i™’ 10 “: Rd2 n”n
Lennon, 28, and his Japanese
Performed an imto her
farewell
1
‘
H
will
be
$-3.50
all
day
or
$2.2n
per
session.
3 ^c!'C? 'v;‘^ a co-ed to a Marschellin’s
Yoko Ono .34, plan
bride.
young lover, Ozawa made Rs
^ rnvablp* to “Suzuki Workshop” and mail with a’ to move in August. They have
to
.' J"Z2 ,Gne by Duke El- personal farewell
!^7^
envelope to 351 Kensington Ave., Montreal been living in Lennon’s $120,000
the p 9 ^^
Who
knows
whether
k A ?rouP of camformance was up to the occasion
S infomation call: 933-5731, 484-9457, 484-7773. -Mont. Bull. Currey County home.
had tried in vain It
was at least appropriately
“ ett the concert called off.
moving.
World Dance Championships In Tokyo
Abraham Lincoln
Display Brings
Out Japanese
Sansei Brings
Home Trophy
For Best Teener
Matsushita Top Earner In Japan
Beatle John And
Yoko Buy Home
For $360,000.
L Hayakawa
Cheered Frugging
With D. Ellington
Jaoan Violin Teacher Suzuki In Montreal Display
American
I
IXGELES-Dr. Thomas T. Noguchi, ousted
| L0S * Coroner under charges of bizarre behavior,
^^‘Lfe^ioiial jealousy” over his role in the
Robert F. Kennedy might have led
dismissal.
who is figging the dismissal before the
H Service Commission, told a news conbounty
entlv that some physicians not selected to
rhe Kennedy autopsy team could, have criticized
Nogucnt
J:E'
v nnored - San Francisco coroner as telling
\n£UCm quuteu
.
, .
U Mrrh- after the Kennedy’" assassination:
Tom
You ve goinc to have problems . . .
'
Administrative Officer Lindon S. Hollinger,
Coroner
Charges
who filed a long list of ch
u in.
included “erratic behavior" nd use o.t
ress<
he was not questioning" Noguchi's competence in per
forming the autopsy on Kennedy.
Godfrey Isaac
attorney.
d he m
summon as many as 60 witnesses to the commissi
hearing into the coroner's discharge set for May 12.
Deputy County Counsel Martin Weekes, who will
present the county's case agains Noguchi, implied
that jobs were offered to prospective witnesses.
“Were any promises made to witnesses from the
coroner’s office,” Weekes asked Isaac before the commission’s meeting. "Were there any offers of promotion?”
Professional
Jealousy
Isaac called the questions "ridiculous” and denied
e implications.
and is
Tikes to bug
not serious./
offered, it
But Weekes again said, “If jobs
is a practice we intend to stop.”
and Dr.
He aid investigators for
not only were questioning employees in the coroners,
office in the daytime but also were “barging" into their
houses at night.”
Weekes said he advised Herbert McCroy, admin
istrative deputy in the coroner's office, to issue a
memo that employees do not have to participate in
(Continued on Page 5)
!ulllll)ililliiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiniiiiiiiiinH>i»*"||lllllllllllll,lllll,,l,lllllllllll,llillllllIlllIlilllIilllll,l!llllllllllllllIllllllllllllinI!,llllIIII,llllllllllllll,i,lll,lllll 'lillu
“SUKIYAKI”
Cookbook By
MISS STELLA ITO
Vol. XXXIII—No. 38
jiiinniiiiiHiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiEiiiiitiBi
he Item Canadian
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A storv of J.C.’s By
JESSIE L. BEATTIE
Toronto, O.nt
JIHfniinilllllllllllUHIIIiKIJlIlllIlllllllIiLHIHHlllIHjmiHBlIinillllllllHIHmilllllHlIlilllllHIIHIIIIinilllHUHIHIHHinilllllillUHItlHIlllllHIMHIIIIIin
Seiji’s Symphonic Sayonara | Toronto Nisei Music Teacher To
Chaperone Students On Europe Tour
guest conducting in Europe and
By JOHN KRAGLUND
N
orth America, including TorTORONTO. — Conductor Seiji
Ozawa was showered with praise, onto, before he takes over as
got a standing ovation, was giv music director of the San FranTORONTO.—A Nisei music teach grade 13, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
en a large Eskimo sculpture and cisco Symphony in the fall of
er, Mrs. Mayumi Kumagai of Tor Takue Nikaido and Margaret Imai,
auDointed honorary music direc 1970.
After
the
final
chords
of
Rich
tor of the Toronto Symphony at
onto has been selected as one oi grade 12, daughter of the Reverend
Massey Hall this week. And, at ard Strauss’ Der Rosenkavalier
and Mrs. Ken Imai of the Japanese
the end of an emotional concert, Suite, most of the audience three chaperones to take 29 Oakwood
Ozawa’s Toronto farewell to the doubtless felt like Ozawa, who Collegiate students on a three week Anglican Church. The students will
Series A, Tuesday night sub said, “I think I’m too emotional
leave for Europe on May 18th.
scribers, a large banner, inscrib tonight, I won’t talk . . . I just visit to France and Italy.
They will visit headquarters of the
ed Sayonara, was unroled above want to say thank you very
The students, about half of Italian
much.”
the orchestra.
United Nations Educational, Scienti
One regrets only that the origin, includes two Japanese Cana
The presentation to Ozawa and
his wife Vera was made by concert had not been program- dians. They
are: Phyllis Nikaido, fic and Cultural Organization in Paris
give
the
34-year-old
conRobert F. Chisholm, Toronto med to
and the Food and Agriculture
Symphony president, who said: ductor a chance to remind his
Organization in Rome.
“.Maestro Ozawa has given us listeners of some of his major
Money for the students’ trip
an enduring enrichment through achievements during the _ past
has
been raised by Friends of
his four years with us because four years— or even of his ini
Japan will pic” organizing committee.
NEW
YORK.
Oakwood,
a group of graduates
of his electrifying spirit, his en tial triumph, before his appoint
Fujimura said the 1969 cham
gaging personality and his musi ment, in Prokofiev’s Fifth Sym play host for the first time in pionships will be held on Novem and staff members, plus a grant
its history to a world dancing
cal scholarship.
phony, for example.
championships
in November in ber 22 and 23 at Budokan Hall from the Federal Department of
His recent bout with influenza
“We are proud that his rise
in the heart of Tokyo.
External Affairs.
to world wide fame has been an prompted him to turn over to Tokvo.
This
was
disclosed
recently
here
He
said
more
than
17
countries
endowement of this distinguish assistant conductor Kazuyoshi by Kosaku Fujimura, president
are expected to participate in the
ed orchestra.”
Akiyama the rehearsal and last
of the Japan Social Dance forthcoming dance championships
During the coming season, night’s .performance of Three
Association.
Ozawa—whose successor is Czech Places
in New England, by Teacher’s hsiting European and in Tokyo.
He is
participating
conductor Karel Ancerl—will do Charles Ives, a composer for
each
He said
countries to prepare
American
an
entry for
whom Ozawa has shown con
country
can
file
Tokyo chamfor
the
forthcoming
in
siderable affinity: Akiyama con
in his capacity as two couples to participate
ducted with vitality, but he has pionships of ‘‘the dance Olym- each category.
not learned how to expose fully chairman
GREENWOOD. — A Japanese
the familiar tunes the complex
Canadian teenager, Lenny Tate
Ives score.
yama of Greenwood brought
Nor was Ozawa given a chance
TOKYO.—Earners of incomes ' Co., a top electric home applian- home to Greenwood recently the
to reveal again to the audience
TOKYO. — Thousands of Ja- his growing affinity for Mozart
producer enjoying a big sales
of more than 100 million yen in
best Teen Town in British Co
panese lined up outside Isetan in a performance of that com Japan last year totaled 61, a big boost in color television sets last
wpv. Store recently awaiting poser’s Piano Concerto in A. K increase of 49 over the pieuous year, became the No. 1 corporate lumbia award. He is the pres
‘■he opening of an Abraham Lin 488, for he had apparently ac vear, reflecting the brisk econ firm in terms of annual income, ident of the B.C.T.A.
coln exhibition.
This award was given at a
cepted the approach of piano omic conditions in the country, surpassing the Bank of Japan.
The exhibit, designed to ac- soloist John Brooming.
income tabulations by major taxa
Among the 61 earning 100 mil three day conference held at Echo
JaPanese people, with
That approach called for me tion offices revealed recently.
lion or more were three Diet Center in Port Alberni. There
l e an^ philosophy” of the chanical speed and clarity in the.
Konosuke Matsushita, chair members — Shokichi
Uehaia,
teenagers
president of the United outside movements, a subjective man of the board of Matsushita Morinosuke Kashima and Tasa- were two hundred
rt65.'
opened by acting expressiveness and enervating Electric Industrial Co., recaptur buro Kumagai, all members of gathered at this conference.
x ^ni™ssador David Osborn.
lethargy in the Adagio. If to ed the top position on the Iim the Liberal-Democratic Party.
Among the items on display day’s younger pianists are seeking with an annual income of
Flower artist Sofu Teshigawa
original copy of the Get- a cool, modern approach to mu million yen (about $2 million).
psburg Address, a model
of sic—in keeping with pop trends He beat out Busaburo Otsuka, ra, thanks to the boom in flower
w.coln s log cabin at New Salem, —Browning could, show them how board chairman of Otsuka Phar arrangement among the Japanese
A historical illustrations, pho- to do it without long hair, fancy maceutical Co., who fell to sec and foreigners of late, rose to
16th place from 25th place that
^a?hs an<T personal belong- clothes and the sacrifice of vnond place.
. T
, he had gained the previous year.
tuosity. Ozawa and the orchestra
Matsushita Electric Industrial
gave him the support he deservLONDON. — Beatle John Lened.
non,
who complained a month
Because the overture to Johann
ago he was down to his last
Strauss’ The Gypsy Baron could
$120,000
cash, has bought a
MONTREAL Dr. Shinichi Suzuki of Japan has a philosopny.
be considered nothing more than
$360,000
pad
in the country.
a filler. Ozawa was given a T
a Trin-d instrument should be thaught as soon
chance for full expression only
It’s Tittenhurst Park, a seven
fact lessons should start before
in
the
Rosenkavalier
music.
bedroom,
18th century mansion
^^ FRANCISCO. — S. I.
And in this lilting waltz-fillsd
on 72 acres,
with four bath
^hich is gening Prominence throughout the rooms, two servants’ apartment,
^e grRty acting work with its nostalgic, bitter
11 " T ho demonstrated bv the master himself at a day-long four servant’ cottages, a gate
of San Francisco State sweet mood, the conductor foun
expression, as well as for the :Zk£’hoP to I- held June 10th at_ the Westmount High Schoo, lodge, a picture gallery, a Tudor"aS cheered by his ample opportunity for emotiona^
style tea pavilion, four green
seemly, when he ap- fraceful podium technique tna. Auditorium, 4350 St. Catherine St. W
houses, a tennis court, a cricket
demonstrations and massed playings field and a heated
V 5s DeFore them at a program has done much to win him a deThere will be lectures
pool.
voted
following.
,
gymnasium.
And in the music’s echo ot me by
in I"-" «“i™’ 10 “: Rd2 n”n
Lennon, 28, and his Japanese
Performed an imto her
farewell
1
‘
H
will
be
$-3.50
all
day
or
$2.2n
per
session.
3 ^c!'C? 'v;‘^ a co-ed to a Marschellin’s
Yoko Ono .34, plan
bride.
young lover, Ozawa made Rs
^ rnvablp* to “Suzuki Workshop” and mail with a’ to move in August. They have
to
.' J"Z2 ,Gne by Duke El- personal farewell
!^7^
envelope to 351 Kensington Ave., Montreal been living in Lennon’s $120,000
the p 9 ^^
Who
knows
whether
k A ?rouP of camformance was up to the occasion
S infomation call: 933-5731, 484-9457, 484-7773. -Mont. Bull. Currey County home.
had tried in vain It
was at least appropriately
“ ett the concert called off.
moving.
World Dance Championships In Tokyo
Abraham Lincoln
Display Brings
Out Japanese
Sansei Brings
Home Trophy
For Best Teener
Matsushita Top Earner In Japan
Beatle John And
Yoko Buy Home
For $360,000.
L Hayakawa
Cheered Frugging
With D. Ellington
Jaoan Violin Teacher Suzuki In Montreal Display
Page 2
PAGE 2
Friday
“liittle” Okano Drives Home With
Second OH Japan Judo Crown
By ANDY ADAMS
TOKYO.—Isao Okano, 25-vear
Championships 'for iha^11^
three Pyears.PS
the
.
i
j
weight d^am^on^r^^^
?965 “Hdle- human dynamo, keeping" v a„veritable
once again judo founder b^wfth^^^
s^ies, of lightning attack! Finah
'Yei^bing ^174 I try. w£’
/ 1'^
¥A® .
v
on tothe qunrter-finals, then wen’ i
Md b6a‘ °U‘ W”‘. 231-Pound|
jke- *^^'Japan Judo ,, ^ar.e than 13,000 enthusistJc iudn
‘-e in the Past I ^W°a^
oig man. Standing- nnlv 5 q
9*
Pound's, Okano defeated 6-f’oot
Ji
in
Japan Wins World Kendo 4,,*
.
5" XIS X".. . J
' P
e feilcing) Ch
s hips here recently.
Korea placed second and Nationalist
shared' third place in the team event.
C ‘^ and °^
In the senior individual division for 6th
.
grade holder Yukiyoshi Matsubara of Japan
k
Chinese 7th grade holder Chiu Chen°-h'-& ChanW^
leap (“kouchi-gari) to flatten hi^
by losing 0-2 to Matsubara. Yoshii
big opponent (“waza-ari”)
J
Pyung
II Yun, both 6th grade, shaded third place ^ ^ ^
ta?
°kano zlmost
K. Refusing to go on the
In the junior individual division for
a
defensive even though he was i _
Koreas
Chun
Kyung
Kim
placed
first
and
^
shimu Ruby NX^a^i®'”™!0. C“"ie Kondo, Checker Ni- ahead on points, he kept attackhUt Ma?da’ desperate now. Japan took second place. Japan’s Yukiko
^aiI0DU °h of
Cossy SsaiX
Hauth, Mitzi Burrell, Dawn Lenton, Oot his smaller rival onto th* naginata) and Korea’s Kyuno- Jai Leo d
(temsle
fnd tried using his hu^e them are 5th grade holders ~
^^ tWd ^’^
“lk; ‘ttu™ Okano over on his
yama Chiyoko Sakm’SCys,®0J;“.!|a’
Asada, Peter Sugi- back. It was touch and go fo>
Besides the three countries and Okinawa
.
’ ' ’ h Lmt^
a-AfT secoiMs as the partisan also took part in the annual meet.
250; 3ri Ad’^Hm^^
KaMe Shimizu 252; 2nd Hany Inouye ciowd gasped in dismay. But just
when it appeared that Maeda
3rd Amy Fukutaka 19^ ~ ^tzi Bun’eJ1 231; 2nd Joy Chow 201; was succeeding, Okano flipped
fe feet5 stoniach and regained
Men’s High Trippie Flat
1
TORONTO.—Toronto Mh»„ Q K 1 K J
1
t
—
Sam Furuya 926.
kJhen+tVit5 about 30 seconds
Nihon Shokokai
Men’s
TC®
Hi^ si' J, ''1' — Y°Sh Shinmoto 887
left in the bout, Maeda uncork nament which started on only May 4th ha. alrpa^ 5
Men’s J>h Single Flat — Adam Hauth 381.
ed a terrific “uchimata”
(hip second phase. The results were: JETr6
Men’s High Hdcp —
i °kan°
up> hung in 4th at Rouge Hills Golf and Country Club — T .
“v” ^
Ladies’ High Trinln
Sam Noda 358the
balance
an
instant,
then
'lust
Ladies’ Higli S
^a^d 822.
M y o,bi- iiK “«•
Tuli Sh
Sheppard
822.
suddenly ^itSeftX Sle^
’ -» i"iMd,‘,<lio' Y“' ^sults
LTXaS““ &-V^
5
B-'tog
Tor. Nihon Shokokai Starts Golf Sea
's°n
,
Ladies’ High Sink F
Ladies- 1IiEl, Sing)e H;
~ C°nnie Kondo 745.
_^^® 369.
A^ e\, tkat’ Okano kept up his
relentless .attack until the final 10th Ouchi, 15th Sakagami,’20th Umtuki N11"* “
gong and was declared the victor
Sumitomo Golf Tournament, May 11th
r k Men’s Most Improved Bonder - 4d T, at"'
by virtue of his half-point
Country
Club
Handicap
result
1st
Umedn
9
improved B.wIer_^c^a‘
the spectators shouted their riuchi, 4th Tanaka
p
16da' “nd
ol<ose, 3rd Ho-1
approval as the referee raised 15th Nihida.
Furutani,
7th
Ichikawa,
10th
X*,lmi
.
-Irie Annual Dinnpr
Ch\man 't0A^ -heir judo bero.
^apk Room, Union Station
Saturday, May 1th
Lniversity judoka serenadfor the 69-70 season are- Presidpnt ’
executive elected
^beir
illustrious alumnus, then
- Joe Iwata; Secretaries - Rnh
Ohashi; Vice-PresidT
the air with cries I
kura; Treasurer — Yosh Shimnotm ^agakawa’ aud Chiyoko Sa- of “b.anzai.”
. Fast year’s defending chamBy ROY SHIMODA
At this moment, we are sfl]
fr°n: -Takeshi Matsuzaka. was
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A. May 4, Olympia Edward
TORONTO. - The Japanese short of a few men, especial!,
k1'uliated 111 the second round
TE4MS 27 Entries, Prize
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
p°wer.ful Masatoshi Shino- Canadtan Baseball League has good players, to enjoy the sea
5251.00
60.00
offcially
formed among new
utum was beaten, been
--------------*
Haide„ShM>™ (Majors)
notary public
son which starts May 11th.
35.00 The lore
i
n
th
e
garter-finals
Canadian
immigrants
t
(Majors)
25.00 Ihe 1966 champion, Mitsuo Ma- Dan
k°"
Sde
PPard
(Majors)
wii ik
f
m Ja'
121 RICHMOND ST W
Also, I wish to mention that
20.00
5. tW1
Tateishi (Majors
tsunaga,
was
unable
to
competa
?
be
made
up
of
four
TORONTO 1
20.00
Joe Nakanishi (Majors)
the balls to be used are made si
20.00 taiQ%°f a le~ in'iury, while tea”,S’
Z O- Oyama (Dana)
363-5002 — 691-3388 (Res.)
rubber, imported from Japan
20.00
TUnner-up, Nobuyuki
Originally, we had planned to
200.00 Sato
individual prize winners
£<"S ”Sted m thC -Fiona, have each team represented their (Nankyu).
MeV Hlgh Triple — K. Shimizu
The parks mentioned by the
12.0C
MEN'snHIGH‘SINGLE ■
Okano won the middleweight
U1 Japan’ Kanto-Toho- Department of Parks .and Recrea
„
8.00
— Sam Noda 6.00
SAY IT WITH
Chubu-Kinki, Chugoku-ShikoLadies^^/gh PTMplJ’ ,
^.00 gold' medal in the 1964 Tokv< J
tion are Greenwood and River
at^hTR^w ™’ddk"’eight title ku and Kyushu. However, this
flowers
Runner UD - M-rtha
00
Ladies' High ‘Single^^ ^
' J to SV'ahd'r^^
=s some dis-' dale, but I believe that we will
Runner up - M. Edamura
°
be permitted to use Riverdale
SHARON'S FLORIST
3.0G judo crown in 1967. He was rur"
ylct“ c°ukl not come up with
51.00
Park.
We will be permitted n
was runMfNW T°,-TBILE 28 Eenries. Prize
CITY- WIDE DELIVERY
89.06 £TUL to.?Iat5uz3^ Mst yeaiJen°Ugh meiL Therefore, we got
o u
Tateishi and Maw Mori
r
,
r
last
year
from 1:30 to 6:00 p.m.
34.00
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
-n e bow iniury Prevented everybody together, except Wat Tnam'n-nouye and K Shimizu 20.00
Anyone interested in participat4' H
and DaleY Baba 15.00
comPeting in the 1968 kayama-ken (who has it’s own
Bus: HO. 6-2041
ing;
players or sponsors, should
10.00
^.Championships
at
Salt
5. Wayne Sonoda & Art Tanaka
Res: HO. 6-7962
boys), and divided them evenly
10.00 Lake City. Okano hopes to crown
942 PAPE AVE., ytoronto
contact:
Roy Shimoda 924-71?-!
^T'o °?BLES 19 EnWes. Pri« 89.00
to three teams.
^I
’
eer
by
capturin
60.00
g
the
openor 261-5856 (evenings).
k 5 . Oyakawa & Meiko Hauth
— sybolic of
22.00 weights , , division
.
3’
—°to $ Tomo Yoshida U.GO
14.00 the
world judo title — at the
'
' t1!0™1. a!vci J. Adachi
10 00
s' V S ,Sn’ cnd S- Wakisaka 7 00 Mexico Citv
-Ly
World Champion5. M. Edamura and Mrs. Matsuo 7.'00
shins in October.
The All-Japan Judo ChampionMS° o,lES Z1""- ’*• i”
JAMES KAMINO
I dan of Fanka (Long Beach) was
J
G®?° ^^^ Nishitoba
32.00 sups is the only major tournaYamashita
1 vMasayuki second and Isao Mura, nidan cf
f vh-U r
i° anJd h Hamura 24.00 | ^ent
anywhere in the
world finJlT^
York Nanka, (Gardena) was thid. .
] t v-FUrre! °"d x. _ Shimizu 18.00
’,
JPdoka
compete on an ^hio of the 1969 Senior AAUPNa’ Lt TidaS/^r HiraoKa, yodan or
■ I. Ais.anura S G. Nishimura 15 00
5. Norma ana Joe Iwata
12 00 equal bams with no weight cate7 rF°Wn L,en4.°" aJd Sravn Noda 10.0C
ZSeS- ThlS year th* touimamen’ tional judo championships held ?? (gorwalk). tooK honors
•Lon ana Tub Sheppard
10 00
svstem was revived so that all
ecentlv at the Naval
the lo4 lb. div sion from s
EM- 4-9913
*
12L00
31 Traimn-I ^Held
of 46 judois- Norio Ar:the bouts were fought in a single Base gvm
l he tournament committee thanks all
e
many
bowlers
who
rarticioated
oNoguchi,
yodan
of
\ovam
J
ma
’
S
?
ndan.of Gen:r ■ 1 Coast, was
day instead of over two davs i(TOHONTO)
etr
continued
support in’ matins
Gakuin
Daigaku,
decisioned?^
ruvama.
yo’n the past eight years. Thirtv.
ese annua! events possible.
ty°. Judoka competed in the mashita, another yodan, as New d
°f the Armed F-^ceo.
finals.
York walked off with the team | Masayuki Yamashita of Nr
competition.
I York took the title in the I•Judo Results
In the round robin leading to lb‘ group froni a f’eld of -V
First Round
_ Enshu
decision"
Tamura; Sonoda die finals, Yamashita, defeated I petK°rs. Second was Clyde Wo:
"taiotosk
shodan of WashfgY
Yamamoto "de- hhiro Oishi and Tadashi Hiraoka I ^ken’
HOhnV
.°--: ..j
*sada
-decision?' Shi- and Noguchi defeated Allen Co-1 F>-C., and third was Orvk I
COMPASS TRAVEL SERVICE LTD.
ada ’"decision"
7?°^. -"^i
’I., "decision"
decision" Seki;
Sela; ]Maeda
age and Toshio Ichinohe.
I hen, shodan of Chicago.
ei^ro^-0^^1^0^'- Shino.?^
i ”de^dKn^^ “!
tasi"css ” « sroup of Jap.mm.eU<>tioMa.suzaka
x’chimata"
The inspirational award was
Toshio
Ichinohe, yodar
Mu"i
"^Va „uc^«tc" Yamamoto;
Itomil^^rAhh™^^
^“^ * Mr. Alfred
Northwest
was
the winner i:
”^^n''S^ Kaf’rV T.?kahcShi ri 4
Yamashita,
205
lb.
class
in
a f ield of
vv
i2
Vorth
enyodan
from
>«"
Kun
shi
no
t
Kawatsuka
"uchima”t “i'^'^ "'e
“"I'Xa.eT^
\Tabat?
taiotoshi" Eto; Washington, D.C., won the best judoists. Kensuke Kob.
Okano "okuri°eO"™alC"ICOmi" Haseaawa;
-as sew
okwi-enume"
Chiba; Kawa- sportsmanship award and Allen dan of New York, v
-ata
o-uchigari" Kono.
Coage. sandan of New York re and Rod Has, nidan of ChA
third.
.. ,SeF°nB Round
ceived the Matsunaga Award.
Tor Detail Information. Contact
•■J2- .. decision" Enshu Yamaraot
Allen Coage, sandan oi
In
the
National
Kata
ccmpe4^-'^- ASada; Mo^
York,
won the 20-5 and ove:
Shinomaki " ’ vision" 'decision'
fSr7;omen’ ikk^ Jeanine
MotsuzaT:
Fa: Murai "decici
vision
from a field
r n aBd, lkkyu Sachiko Koizumi
isuka
okuri-ashibari Ba^ahara; Kawaji
Nakagawa,
yoda
_Tckahcshv
Ni?\Da^uken took first in Ju-no■y-imura
id ^iTabata;
Okanc
Aaw-bo<a
Kam. Miss Fox was tori and Mis- (Norwalk), was sec
d Es^Umi
uke' Betty Lee liam McCabley, shot
— TO "VERY INTERESTING
eda""
'ich’mata” Yamamoto; Maka,
third.
andc MaJtina Haussecker
decision
Shinomaki;
Mura
PLACES”—
Grand champion Tmzc
Or Senshin was third in
Kawatsuka; Okano "de.
•’k» .Maui Street. Vancouver 4. B C
cision" 1
chi,
yodan of New ’iortthe event as tori and uke.
... Senu-Final<
first
in the Open bracket 1
682-2241
Maeda , decision"
Scnoda.Ul l’
yodan of New a field of 22. Richard Vu!
Okano v^i“decision'
Murai.
iVj-"-as the winner in the 139 yodan of Washington- D-CFinals
io. division from a field of 36 second. Dale Lehman. san<ia;
Okano
decision" Mtreda.
competitors. Larry Fukuhara. ni- Texas, third.
New immig. Start Baseball Leag
ue
Japanese Prominent In US AAU Judo
T.V. Service
ANNOUNCEMENT
VJ.P. Travel Ltd
Friday
“liittle” Okano Drives Home With
Second OH Japan Judo Crown
By ANDY ADAMS
TOKYO.—Isao Okano, 25-vear
Championships 'for iha^11^
three Pyears.PS
the
.
i
j
weight d^am^on^r^^^
?965 “Hdle- human dynamo, keeping" v a„veritable
once again judo founder b^wfth^^^
s^ies, of lightning attack! Finah
'Yei^bing ^174 I try. w£’
/ 1'^
¥A® .
v
on tothe qunrter-finals, then wen’ i
Md b6a‘ °U‘ W”‘. 231-Pound|
jke- *^^'Japan Judo ,, ^ar.e than 13,000 enthusistJc iudn
‘-e in the Past I ^W°a^
oig man. Standing- nnlv 5 q
9*
Pound's, Okano defeated 6-f’oot
Ji
in
Japan Wins World Kendo 4,,*
.
5" XIS X".. . J
' P
e feilcing) Ch
s hips here recently.
Korea placed second and Nationalist
shared' third place in the team event.
C ‘^ and °^
In the senior individual division for 6th
.
grade holder Yukiyoshi Matsubara of Japan
k
Chinese 7th grade holder Chiu Chen°-h'-& ChanW^
leap (“kouchi-gari) to flatten hi^
by losing 0-2 to Matsubara. Yoshii
big opponent (“waza-ari”)
J
Pyung
II Yun, both 6th grade, shaded third place ^ ^ ^
ta?
°kano zlmost
K. Refusing to go on the
In the junior individual division for
a
defensive even though he was i _
Koreas
Chun
Kyung
Kim
placed
first
and
^
shimu Ruby NX^a^i®'”™!0. C“"ie Kondo, Checker Ni- ahead on points, he kept attackhUt Ma?da’ desperate now. Japan took second place. Japan’s Yukiko
^aiI0DU °h of
Cossy SsaiX
Hauth, Mitzi Burrell, Dawn Lenton, Oot his smaller rival onto th* naginata) and Korea’s Kyuno- Jai Leo d
(temsle
fnd tried using his hu^e them are 5th grade holders ~
^^ tWd ^’^
“lk; ‘ttu™ Okano over on his
yama Chiyoko Sakm’SCys,®0J;“.!|a’
Asada, Peter Sugi- back. It was touch and go fo>
Besides the three countries and Okinawa
.
’ ' ’ h Lmt^
a-AfT secoiMs as the partisan also took part in the annual meet.
250; 3ri Ad’^Hm^^
KaMe Shimizu 252; 2nd Hany Inouye ciowd gasped in dismay. But just
when it appeared that Maeda
3rd Amy Fukutaka 19^ ~ ^tzi Bun’eJ1 231; 2nd Joy Chow 201; was succeeding, Okano flipped
fe feet5 stoniach and regained
Men’s High Trippie Flat
1
TORONTO.—Toronto Mh»„ Q K 1 K J
1
t
—
Sam Furuya 926.
kJhen+tVit5 about 30 seconds
Nihon Shokokai
Men’s
TC®
Hi^ si' J, ''1' — Y°Sh Shinmoto 887
left in the bout, Maeda uncork nament which started on only May 4th ha. alrpa^ 5
Men’s J>h Single Flat — Adam Hauth 381.
ed a terrific “uchimata”
(hip second phase. The results were: JETr6
Men’s High Hdcp —
i °kan°
up> hung in 4th at Rouge Hills Golf and Country Club — T .
“v” ^
Ladies’ High Trinln
Sam Noda 358the
balance
an
instant,
then
'lust
Ladies’ Higli S
^a^d 822.
M y o,bi- iiK “«•
Tuli Sh
Sheppard
822.
suddenly ^itSeftX Sle^
’ -» i"iMd,‘,<lio' Y“' ^sults
LTXaS““ &-V^
5
B-'tog
Tor. Nihon Shokokai Starts Golf Sea
's°n
,
Ladies’ High Sink F
Ladies- 1IiEl, Sing)e H;
~ C°nnie Kondo 745.
_^^® 369.
A^ e\, tkat’ Okano kept up his
relentless .attack until the final 10th Ouchi, 15th Sakagami,’20th Umtuki N11"* “
gong and was declared the victor
Sumitomo Golf Tournament, May 11th
r k Men’s Most Improved Bonder - 4d T, at"'
by virtue of his half-point
Country
Club
Handicap
result
1st
Umedn
9
improved B.wIer_^c^a‘
the spectators shouted their riuchi, 4th Tanaka
p
16da' “nd
ol<ose, 3rd Ho-1
approval as the referee raised 15th Nihida.
Furutani,
7th
Ichikawa,
10th
X*,lmi
.
-Irie Annual Dinnpr
Ch\man 't0A^ -heir judo bero.
^apk Room, Union Station
Saturday, May 1th
Lniversity judoka serenadfor the 69-70 season are- Presidpnt ’
executive elected
^beir
illustrious alumnus, then
- Joe Iwata; Secretaries - Rnh
Ohashi; Vice-PresidT
the air with cries I
kura; Treasurer — Yosh Shimnotm ^agakawa’ aud Chiyoko Sa- of “b.anzai.”
. Fast year’s defending chamBy ROY SHIMODA
At this moment, we are sfl]
fr°n: -Takeshi Matsuzaka. was
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A. May 4, Olympia Edward
TORONTO. - The Japanese short of a few men, especial!,
k1'uliated 111 the second round
TE4MS 27 Entries, Prize
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
p°wer.ful Masatoshi Shino- Canadtan Baseball League has good players, to enjoy the sea
5251.00
60.00
offcially
formed among new
utum was beaten, been
--------------*
Haide„ShM>™ (Majors)
notary public
son which starts May 11th.
35.00 The lore
i
n
th
e
garter-finals
Canadian
immigrants
t
(Majors)
25.00 Ihe 1966 champion, Mitsuo Ma- Dan
k°"
Sde
PPard
(Majors)
wii ik
f
m Ja'
121 RICHMOND ST W
Also, I wish to mention that
20.00
5. tW1
Tateishi (Majors
tsunaga,
was
unable
to
competa
?
be
made
up
of
four
TORONTO 1
20.00
Joe Nakanishi (Majors)
the balls to be used are made si
20.00 taiQ%°f a le~ in'iury, while tea”,S’
Z O- Oyama (Dana)
363-5002 — 691-3388 (Res.)
rubber, imported from Japan
20.00
TUnner-up, Nobuyuki
Originally, we had planned to
200.00 Sato
individual prize winners
£<"S ”Sted m thC -Fiona, have each team represented their (Nankyu).
MeV Hlgh Triple — K. Shimizu
The parks mentioned by the
12.0C
MEN'snHIGH‘SINGLE ■
Okano won the middleweight
U1 Japan’ Kanto-Toho- Department of Parks .and Recrea
„
8.00
— Sam Noda 6.00
SAY IT WITH
Chubu-Kinki, Chugoku-ShikoLadies^^/gh PTMplJ’ ,
^.00 gold' medal in the 1964 Tokv< J
tion are Greenwood and River
at^hTR^w ™’ddk"’eight title ku and Kyushu. However, this
flowers
Runner UD - M-rtha
00
Ladies' High ‘Single^^ ^
' J to SV'ahd'r^^
=s some dis-' dale, but I believe that we will
Runner up - M. Edamura
°
be permitted to use Riverdale
SHARON'S FLORIST
3.0G judo crown in 1967. He was rur"
ylct“ c°ukl not come up with
51.00
Park.
We will be permitted n
was runMfNW T°,-TBILE 28 Eenries. Prize
CITY- WIDE DELIVERY
89.06 £TUL to.?Iat5uz3^ Mst yeaiJen°Ugh meiL Therefore, we got
o u
Tateishi and Maw Mori
r
,
r
last
year
from 1:30 to 6:00 p.m.
34.00
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
-n e bow iniury Prevented everybody together, except Wat Tnam'n-nouye and K Shimizu 20.00
Anyone interested in participat4' H
and DaleY Baba 15.00
comPeting in the 1968 kayama-ken (who has it’s own
Bus: HO. 6-2041
ing;
players or sponsors, should
10.00
^.Championships
at
Salt
5. Wayne Sonoda & Art Tanaka
Res: HO. 6-7962
boys), and divided them evenly
10.00 Lake City. Okano hopes to crown
942 PAPE AVE., ytoronto
contact:
Roy Shimoda 924-71?-!
^T'o °?BLES 19 EnWes. Pri« 89.00
to three teams.
^I
’
eer
by
capturin
60.00
g
the
openor 261-5856 (evenings).
k 5 . Oyakawa & Meiko Hauth
— sybolic of
22.00 weights , , division
.
3’
—°to $ Tomo Yoshida U.GO
14.00 the
world judo title — at the
'
' t1!0™1. a!vci J. Adachi
10 00
s' V S ,Sn’ cnd S- Wakisaka 7 00 Mexico Citv
-Ly
World Champion5. M. Edamura and Mrs. Matsuo 7.'00
shins in October.
The All-Japan Judo ChampionMS° o,lES Z1""- ’*• i”
JAMES KAMINO
I dan of Fanka (Long Beach) was
J
G®?° ^^^ Nishitoba
32.00 sups is the only major tournaYamashita
1 vMasayuki second and Isao Mura, nidan cf
f vh-U r
i° anJd h Hamura 24.00 | ^ent
anywhere in the
world finJlT^
York Nanka, (Gardena) was thid. .
] t v-FUrre! °"d x. _ Shimizu 18.00
’,
JPdoka
compete on an ^hio of the 1969 Senior AAUPNa’ Lt TidaS/^r HiraoKa, yodan or
■ I. Ais.anura S G. Nishimura 15 00
5. Norma ana Joe Iwata
12 00 equal bams with no weight cate7 rF°Wn L,en4.°" aJd Sravn Noda 10.0C
ZSeS- ThlS year th* touimamen’ tional judo championships held ?? (gorwalk). tooK honors
•Lon ana Tub Sheppard
10 00
svstem was revived so that all
ecentlv at the Naval
the lo4 lb. div sion from s
EM- 4-9913
*
12L00
31 Traimn-I ^Held
of 46 judois- Norio Ar:the bouts were fought in a single Base gvm
l he tournament committee thanks all
e
many
bowlers
who
rarticioated
oNoguchi,
yodan
of
\ovam
J
ma
’
S
?
ndan.of Gen:r ■ 1 Coast, was
day instead of over two davs i(TOHONTO)
etr
continued
support in’ matins
Gakuin
Daigaku,
decisioned?^
ruvama.
yo’n the past eight years. Thirtv.
ese annua! events possible.
ty°. Judoka competed in the mashita, another yodan, as New d
°f the Armed F-^ceo.
finals.
York walked off with the team | Masayuki Yamashita of Nr
competition.
I York took the title in the I•Judo Results
In the round robin leading to lb‘ group froni a f’eld of -V
First Round
_ Enshu
decision"
Tamura; Sonoda die finals, Yamashita, defeated I petK°rs. Second was Clyde Wo:
"taiotosk
shodan of WashfgY
Yamamoto "de- hhiro Oishi and Tadashi Hiraoka I ^ken’
HOhnV
.°--: ..j
*sada
-decision?' Shi- and Noguchi defeated Allen Co-1 F>-C., and third was Orvk I
COMPASS TRAVEL SERVICE LTD.
ada ’"decision"
7?°^. -"^i
’I., "decision"
decision" Seki;
Sela; ]Maeda
age and Toshio Ichinohe.
I hen, shodan of Chicago.
ei^ro^-0^^1^0^'- Shino.?^
i ”de^dKn^^ “!
tasi"css ” « sroup of Jap.mm.eU<>tioMa.suzaka
x’chimata"
The inspirational award was
Toshio
Ichinohe, yodar
Mu"i
"^Va „uc^«tc" Yamamoto;
Itomil^^rAhh™^^
^“^ * Mr. Alfred
Northwest
was
the winner i:
”^^n''S^ Kaf’rV T.?kahcShi ri 4
Yamashita,
205
lb.
class
in
a f ield of
vv
i2
Vorth
enyodan
from
>«"
Kun
shi
no
t
Kawatsuka
"uchima”t “i'^'^ "'e
“"I'Xa.eT^
\Tabat?
taiotoshi" Eto; Washington, D.C., won the best judoists. Kensuke Kob.
Okano "okuri°eO"™alC"ICOmi" Haseaawa;
-as sew
okwi-enume"
Chiba; Kawa- sportsmanship award and Allen dan of New York, v
-ata
o-uchigari" Kono.
Coage. sandan of New York re and Rod Has, nidan of ChA
third.
.. ,SeF°nB Round
ceived the Matsunaga Award.
Tor Detail Information. Contact
•■J2- .. decision" Enshu Yamaraot
Allen Coage, sandan oi
In
the
National
Kata
ccmpe4^-'^- ASada; Mo^
York,
won the 20-5 and ove:
Shinomaki " ’ vision" 'decision'
fSr7;omen’ ikk^ Jeanine
MotsuzaT:
Fa: Murai "decici
vision
from a field
r n aBd, lkkyu Sachiko Koizumi
isuka
okuri-ashibari Ba^ahara; Kawaji
Nakagawa,
yoda
_Tckahcshv
Ni?\Da^uken took first in Ju-no■y-imura
id ^iTabata;
Okanc
Aaw-bo<a
Kam. Miss Fox was tori and Mis- (Norwalk), was sec
d Es^Umi
uke' Betty Lee liam McCabley, shot
— TO "VERY INTERESTING
eda""
'ich’mata” Yamamoto; Maka,
third.
andc MaJtina Haussecker
decision
Shinomaki;
Mura
PLACES”—
Grand champion Tmzc
Or Senshin was third in
Kawatsuka; Okano "de.
•’k» .Maui Street. Vancouver 4. B C
cision" 1
chi,
yodan of New ’iortthe event as tori and uke.
... Senu-Final<
first
in the Open bracket 1
682-2241
Maeda , decision"
Scnoda.Ul l’
yodan of New a field of 22. Richard Vu!
Okano v^i“decision'
Murai.
iVj-"-as the winner in the 139 yodan of Washington- D-CFinals
io. division from a field of 36 second. Dale Lehman. san<ia;
Okano
decision" Mtreda.
competitors. Larry Fukuhara. ni- Texas, third.
New immig. Start Baseball Leag
ue
Japanese Prominent In US AAU Judo
T.V. Service
ANNOUNCEMENT
VJ.P. Travel Ltd
Page 3
kwA2^
N E W
Pl
b Un] ^ S I △
Is
6
£
^ $
It
&
V'
?
&
a
-v
5
n
ft
&
ft
b
?
£
T
^^T
CD
£
©^
%
x 4
id
M a
B
a
iX
O’
b
b
X
CD
SB
4
^
17
11
CD
2 * # S ft
©
cD
7
t
X
ft'
ft
d*
6
V"1
V'
6
t H
3
6 £4
0 4.
ft
o
Id
d>
T
0
n
Lt
5
o
17
b
&t
i
£
h F ^ 0J 5
01
4
b
I'
*
6
f
0
o
3 InJ ££ ®
V
K
5
to
fi
09
ft
11
Oj
b
^ H <^ i ®
5
4
a
t ^ ^^+^
IX
7?
o
?
IX
>
£
(X
7
ft
i
° it
tx
X
BE
mJ
5
5
5
Q
7
SI
ft
#
B
6
$
IX
4b
© ® IX X
M& * OI&&®
rz
©
9
41
IX
(1
fU
K
ft
£
a°
14
b'
b
0
0
I'
ft
^'%' ^ £
* ft M ®t '#<*#&• fi^
^ ^ l§ ^ $ W O ft ^ « ^ v
0 13
CD
d’
5
?
3
X
L’
^ 31T3
5
CD
5
b
CD
OS
5
I'
ft
b^^is
o
^ift^^Mi^Jrit^
± W ft X ft ' ’0§^®
^ Ib ^ W 1 W ^ ^ b ft L
on
03
$
o
w
<x
ft
ft
a
nn
I'
s
5 M
6
o
3
CD
7
i;
7?
11
V'
5
*
d*
ft
re
LM
5
Gn
2
(1
©® g
5
85^^
$ ft
X
7
ft
*
t’
— b
8
P
aM
M 5
3 O
ft
CD
» ® ^
to
w
IX II
IS #
^tAA^m
^#11
TK
u
3
5
ft
W. K. GARDENS
Frank G. Yada
a. £ 5 $ ° @ @ *•'*«! ft IB
^L^^aseafftRLtt
D ?®?®y«»MW+B*th
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. i-6642—045S
Crown Life insurance Co
1550 Wert Georgi* St
Vancouver, B.C.
I
X ft
H
S ^
ST^S
#©«
§^^>i
5
CATERING TO
Wedding, dub Banquet*
Private Dinner Roost*
?&&* 11B
NO5
iJSfl
Hte
Sit
N E W
Pl
b Un] ^ S I △
Is
6
£
^ $
It
&
V'
?
&
a
-v
5
n
ft
&
ft
b
?
£
T
^^T
CD
£
©^
%
x 4
id
M a
B
a
iX
O’
b
b
X
CD
SB
4
^
17
11
CD
2 * # S ft
©
cD
7
t
X
ft'
ft
d*
6
V"1
V'
6
t H
3
6 £4
0 4.
ft
o
Id
d>
T
0
n
Lt
5
o
17
b
&t
i
£
h F ^ 0J 5
01
4
b
I'
*
6
f
0
o
3 InJ ££ ®
V
K
5
to
fi
09
ft
11
Oj
b
^ H <^ i ®
5
4
a
t ^ ^^+^
IX
7?
o
?
IX
>
£
(X
7
ft
i
° it
tx
X
BE
mJ
5
5
5
Q
7
SI
ft
#
B
6
$
IX
4b
© ® IX X
M& * OI&&®
rz
©
9
41
IX
(1
fU
K
ft
£
a°
14
b'
b
0
0
I'
ft
^'%' ^ £
* ft M ®t '#<*#&• fi^
^ ^ l§ ^ $ W O ft ^ « ^ v
0 13
CD
d’
5
?
3
X
L’
^ 31T3
5
CD
5
b
CD
OS
5
I'
ft
b^^is
o
^ift^^Mi^Jrit^
± W ft X ft ' ’0§^®
^ Ib ^ W 1 W ^ ^ b ft L
on
03
$
o
w
<x
ft
ft
a
nn
I'
s
5 M
6
o
3
CD
7
i;
7?
11
V'
5
*
d*
ft
re
LM
5
Gn
2
(1
©® g
5
85^^
$ ft
X
7
ft
*
t’
— b
8
P
aM
M 5
3 O
ft
CD
» ® ^
to
w
IX II
IS #
^tAA^m
^#11
TK
u
3
5
ft
W. K. GARDENS
Frank G. Yada
a. £ 5 $ ° @ @ *•'*«! ft IB
^L^^aseafftRLtt
D ?®?®y«»MW+B*th
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. i-6642—045S
Crown Life insurance Co
1550 Wert Georgi* St
Vancouver, B.C.
I
X ft
H
S ^
ST^S
#©«
§^^>i
5
CATERING TO
Wedding, dub Banquet*
Private Dinner Roost*
?&&* 11B
NO5
iJSfl
Hte
Sit
Page 4
PAGE 4
^ %yiS. i.
It
IX
IX
T'l
f
5
It
IX
s ± is A £F ^ © ix ± -ci
© IC
IC Hi ^ ^ ^ ^ # £> IX {ll| - -
G
IX
5 ^M^n^
©
I'
3
0iixa
3
©
3
72
IX
M
Uf
3
if
It
It
0 J$ (Ui — ^ 3 ^ 0t si ^ +
I' i
IX
It
d*
V'
't'EfPO^f ]
3
s ^ © O 0 IX * , , _ i
IK«#5Blf ^ ■ 72
IX
7
i>
09
3
d*
H
^>
»>
i»
IX
H
IX
3
3 IX' -
It
f&
£15
IX
i>
7?
i
b B $
i'
SO
5
#1
i>
d» >'
IX
F
d»
B^T
t Bn
5
© X&
3
IX
It
IX
It
9
A*
<- IX Jg
+i
7c
it
5
1® & V' £
8
*
3
iw
£ ifi x®«
MM fr T ft if it
*
3
F
T
F
(X it
IX
CH
H
It
12
CH
7?
7
IX
@
IX
□
0
7
6 «
- - 5 0 *5 © X
A A W A ff gij ^
^fti
$ i K
A«»’
-^*2
> 4 V
ASIXJd |$ ir
I ^M£
®!K^b’
2
og
^ IX
<&fr©
T^^C^
§ *
r
re
re
^ 9 3
& *
^ %yiS. i.
It
IX
IX
T'l
f
5
It
IX
s ± is A £F ^ © ix ± -ci
© IC
IC Hi ^ ^ ^ ^ # £> IX {ll| - -
G
IX
5 ^M^n^
©
I'
3
0iixa
3
©
3
72
IX
M
Uf
3
if
It
It
0 J$ (Ui — ^ 3 ^ 0t si ^ +
I' i
IX
It
d*
V'
't'EfPO^f ]
3
s ^ © O 0 IX * , , _ i
IK«#5Blf ^ ■ 72
IX
7
i>
09
3
d*
H
^>
»>
i»
IX
H
IX
3
3 IX' -
It
f&
£15
IX
i>
7?
i
b B $
i'
SO
5
#1
i>
d» >'
IX
F
d»
B^T
t Bn
5
© X&
3
IX
It
IX
It
9
A*
<- IX Jg
+i
7c
it
5
1® & V' £
8
*
3
iw
£ ifi x®«
MM fr T ft if it
*
3
F
T
F
(X it
IX
CH
H
It
12
CH
7?
7
IX
@
IX
□
0
7
6 «
- - 5 0 *5 © X
A A W A ff gij ^
^fti
$ i K
A«»’
-^*2
> 4 V
ASIXJd |$ ir
I ^M£
®!K^b’
2
og
^ IX
<&fr©
T^^C^
§ *
r
re
re
^ 9 3
& *
Page 5
SifeJI^Li^ 1969
PAGE 5
A|t
a
i^lgj Zt
to
©
*
© Its
is
Ze
©
iz
?IJ
&
^
IS
s
©
iz
w
%
o
ZP
-B'
6
W
We
M
©
iz
©
© M
'1 'b
n
k
Zt
©
LU
4
W
ffl S
B
7j\
o
Zp
?t
ft
o
© k
d>
Zt
it
o
d*
&
O
5
TP
fl ft
TP
JO.
b
it
I' 3
it
5
fp
l'
6
in
71
5
b
0
3
f?
9
It
tf
it
Zp
& I#
5
th
t
»L'
it
it
it £
©
I'
5
it
BU
»'
d»
I® JH
it &
©
ft
ffi ®I
ill
?
It
2
^IJ ^ 1 fl S
6
^ 2
W^'t^lZg^r®^-^^®)©^ 7 +
a
a
$
7
® Sa
it tz
flfl it
6 ^ & $ it SO
b
IZ
©
B^
Zf^ftf
i^is^^ca
t0r;g
P fi A M
0 ii O O *
B
z # is a a ft
flfl it t>
L ©^i^M
o
HI ft 6 © ^ Z?
Wii^-pijXg 2>i’^ii
^ » *s Mas^tfts?^!^
H^Z>.
^^^ i z sr^tfr^lr^^t
£ Lt^attt MT. h¥l:i
The Bank of Nova Scotia
till
©
^»
©
d*
© K It #P < L
7’
fl6
b
|Z
it
&)
it
ft it
IZH
3
©
©
f^
It
5
zb
to
6
it
V'
i^
w
6
b
f?
t I it
6
Zp
5
it ii:i
Ze ft
it
I' it
BE
©
t
d*
IS
5
tz
4
it ft
d»
It
M K
© it
©
It It
2. t
©
it
d>
b
Zt
9
<L>
z gut ^
3 V' S ®J
i*
5U
i’ t* t ^ PP
t
3
©
M
b
5
5
it
If
it
o
0
o
to
d»
Zp
9
"jr
ft
7^
©
7^
it
it
t
5
6
%
9
©
b it
Zt
a
>
it
it
L ©
it
I'
6 fl
ft
PAGE 5
A|t
a
i^lgj Zt
to
©
*
© Its
is
Ze
©
iz
?IJ
&
^
IS
s
©
iz
w
%
o
ZP
-B'
6
W
We
M
©
iz
©
© M
'1 'b
n
k
Zt
©
LU
4
W
ffl S
B
7j\
o
Zp
?t
ft
o
© k
d>
Zt
it
o
d*
&
O
5
TP
fl ft
TP
JO.
b
it
I' 3
it
5
fp
l'
6
in
71
5
b
0
3
f?
9
It
tf
it
Zp
& I#
5
th
t
»L'
it
it
it £
©
I'
5
it
BU
»'
d»
I® JH
it &
©
ft
ffi ®I
ill
?
It
2
^IJ ^ 1 fl S
6
^ 2
W^'t^lZg^r®^-^^®)©^ 7 +
a
a
$
7
® Sa
it tz
flfl it
6 ^ & $ it SO
b
IZ
©
B^
Zf^ftf
i^is^^ca
t0r;g
P fi A M
0 ii O O *
B
z # is a a ft
flfl it t>
L ©^i^M
o
HI ft 6 © ^ Z?
Wii^-pijXg 2>i’^ii
^ » *s Mas^tfts?^!^
H^Z>.
^^^ i z sr^tfr^lr^^t
£ Lt^attt MT. h¥l:i
The Bank of Nova Scotia
till
©
^»
©
d*
© K It #P < L
7’
fl6
b
|Z
it
&)
it
ft it
IZH
3
©
©
f^
It
5
zb
to
6
it
V'
i^
w
6
b
f?
t I it
6
Zp
5
it ii:i
Ze ft
it
I' it
BE
©
t
d*
IS
5
tz
4
it ft
d»
It
M K
© it
©
It It
2. t
©
it
d>
b
Zt
9
<L>
z gut ^
3 V' S ®J
i*
5U
i’ t* t ^ PP
t
3
©
M
b
5
5
it
If
it
o
0
o
to
d»
Zp
9
"jr
ft
7^
©
7^
it
it
t
5
6
%
9
©
b it
Zt
a
>
it
it
L ©
it
I'
6 fl
ft
Page 6
PAGE 6
Page 7
1 Friday,
PAGE 7
Japanese Farmers
Personal Notes Across Canada
Want Brides
st. Andrews Japanese Anglican Union Serv. Sun. For Their Sons
Marriages
। Anniversary
Dates And Doings
TORONTO.—St. Andrew’s Japanese Anglican Congregation
Reverend Ken Imai, Rector, will be holding its monthly "Union
^e-v’ce on 31ay iSth at 11:30 a.m. Holy Communion will be
Stated in English and the theme for the sermon will be —
is the Truth
AVh
The choir will raise its voice in song. Everyone is cordially
A 10 attend.
J.A.C.
TOKYO.—The greatest headache of modern farmer
longer the natural clement: plav ■
TORONTO. — 3!r. and 31rs
ing havoc with their crops, but
uaiui P. t'hintani are happy
is something more human —
announce
the
mar
shortage of brides for their on
Nowadays in many rural
Hori,
munities electric computer ousi- to Roy Yosh
ly
chatter
and
31r.
and
31rs.
; 'Rokotsuzome' Display On May 16 At Craft Found,
parents offer
prizes'- just to find young ladies
The wodd in
f
TORONTO.—A display of the unique Japanese traditional
united
with
their
Lune
s L nited Church on 3la\
leather batik — will be held at the sons engaged in
oi “Rokotsuzome”
agricultural
Hhh. 1969
and
the reception
J Ontario Craft Foundation, 663 Yonge Street, Toronto from 3Iay work.
i Gate Restaurant.
An anecdote
I 16th to June 14th.
last
spring
in
agricultural
Mrs. Sadako Yoshitome, wife of a prominent painter from
iiigh school in Tottori prefecture.
San Paulo, Brazil, and her brother, Mr. Shinjiro Ono have been
Japan, tells all about it.
working day and' night for- the past months readying this show. When the principal, in the en
TORONTO.
31
This is the first “Roketsuzome” show for the Canadian public. trance ceremony of Kuravo<hi Diana Yoshiki, daughter of 3Ir.
— 50 —
1 Tneir products have been selling well in many Toronto department Agricultural High School.' wa, Robert Yoshik a ml late ShinwVANCOUVER, B.C,
and
“bput to make an address titled
i stores.
the Future of the Agricultural ko Toshiki of Cooksville and 31r. Mi
business, " there was a crisp voice Toshio Norris 31izuno. son of Vancouver celebrated their Goldfrom among the attending p.a- 31 r. and 31 rs. George Mizuno of on
j Tor. JCCA Sponsors Nipponia Home Raffle Again lents, saA
“No hnr.Qno-ninn- Nashville, Ont.
•ere married on at a party held by their children
i
TORONTO.—Your Toronto JCCA is once again sponsoring chief. Just find brides for our
31
arch
1969
at Toronto JaBamboo
Terrace here,
j a Raffle to aid the Nipponia Home. Your generous support last boys while they are in school."
panese
United
Church
with
th
Many
Since a 32-year-old youth com
atives gathered, includ1 year netted $110.60 to the “Home”. This year we hope to better
mitted suicide several year ago Rev. Gordon Imai officiating.
ing
their
eldest son and his wife
f :his amount.
in Nishi-Yoshino Village in Na Reception at China House. Th? from .Alberta.
The Nipponia Home, the home of the aged of Japanese ancestry ra prefecture, near Osaka, leav
couple honeymooned on the Pa
ha ve
sons
1 annually requires monetary help to supplement the deficiency in ing a note reading “No one
cific
coast.
They
reside
at
Nash
and
2
daughters,
13
grandchil
J its operational fund. The government subsidizes up to 80% of the would marry me,” they have es ville. Ont.
tablished a “marriage consultant
dren and 2 great grandchildren...
I deficiencies but the rest plus costs of major repairs to the home committee.”
j must come from various donations throughout the year. As you
The committee members travel,
.at village expense, all around
; can see, this is a very worthwhile project for your JCCA.
J
The prize once again will be in cash with 1st prize of 8300.00; the prefecture, neighboring pre
J the 2nd prize of $100.00; the 3rd $50.00; the 4th $25.00. The tickets fectures, and sometimes even to
Kyushu, in their search for bet
; will be available from all executives of the JCCA, both Issei and ter-halves of their young men.
i Nisei divisions, the members of the Nisansei Kai, and the Kameoka "Otherwise, our village may pe
; Book Store. The cost of the ticket will be 50d each or 3 for $1.00. rish,” a committee member was
i ihe draw will be made at our annual community picnic at Fan- quoted as saying recently.
CROWN LIFE
In Iwate Prefecture, northern
Complete Care
; tasyland Park on Sunday, June 29, 1969. This year, the seller of Japan,
the Agricultural Council
: the 1st prize ticket will receive $25.00, so anyone wishing to sell took the initiative in setting up
For Your Eyes
; some tickets for us please call George Takahashi at 461-2259. "marriage consultation offices”
in major towns and citie in adj lour help will be greatly appreciated. —JCCA
ti^±
di tion to rural village
across
AGENCY
I
*
*
*
the prefecture.
Yamanashi
prefecture,
Office, 43 Eglinton Ave. East
J ToVCCA Annual Picnic Fantasy Park lune 29th
1T8 West Hastings St.
.
- 0R0NT0.—At the Toronto JCCA meeting on May 7th, known for its abundant
Phone 485-5087
harvests, has employed more
VANCOUVER, B.C.
i icmc Chairman Roy Sato announced that Fantasyland Park has
Home
phone: 449-9293
scientific measures. They feed an
। been reserved for the Annual Picnic on June 29th. To eliminate the electric
computer
“marriage
with the character, hob
i 4 \0,r Deckel's to pay two separate fees, it has been decided card
| ~
1 e total cost of tickets will include the park fee bies and other data of young
|
/he P11Ce ^'^ ^°r those 12 years and over, and .50 cents men and women in the prefeeture punched on it. Only after
*
t° H Nears °f a^e’ “Youngsters” over 75 and under the machine has sorted out a
e Emitted free. The park personnel will merely collect a proper couple will the marriage
MEMBER OF C-R.C.A.
FLAT ROOFS
J
10m each ticket, and these stubs will be used to calculate counsellor consult them and bring
SHINGLING
about the marriage.
1
aj0Un/ that JCCA wil1 reimburse, .50 and .25 per person
EA
VESTROUGHING
SHEET METAL WORK
A unique bank recently opened
1 >’ifii)Ct'' 11 ^'^ basis, Adult tickets this year will be sold at in Tokushima prefecture in ShiALCAN SIDING DEALER
I otaU ad'^ee-sale basis. The public is urged to make use koku Island. This ‘Bride Ban
to match a
;
iate and av°M the necessity of tie-ups at the gate, whose “business”
TORONTO
NISEI OWNED
according
to
man
with
a
woman
i
6 k°°ks are now ready for distribution, and net protheir record books. on which all
t 6 ^"a" W'h ke donated to Nipponia Home.
TOSH NISHIJIMA
''COHERING ONTARIO'
data of the youths in the pre
t sorshi 6
^oncerL 1° be Presented in October under the spon- fecture is registered.
Night Calls-. PT 9-5095 HI. 7-1100
In Hikimi Village in Shimane
i Lia^ r tne. ’°Ca^ ebapter, Issei-bu and the Japanese Immigrant
^ke Hi 01nmitLee’ 'v*ll take place at the Cultural Centre and will prefecture, they offer ;
The prize
will be doubled if
■ ksei-bu6
°^ a JaD-anese Folk Festival. Mr. T. Hiramatsu. someone brings a “bride” from
TVel come Japanese Canadian Friends
; £to!s i cm.inian °f ^e committee, gave a brief resume of pro- outside their village.
i
iogiam directors are H. Katayama and E. Ide. Date
’
3b p
A - — o p.m.
1 Sunday B
representin& J.I.L.C., reported that a four team
I Japan‘ t?^ 3 I ^Mue has been formed by the newcomers from
;
^ 01®anizah°n also plans to join in the Bon Odori
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
i
The j ° 6 ^^ 'n J^M a^ Civic Square.
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
i s% by thePa^ete ^^en’*’ trees in High Park, donated 10 years
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
GOLF, FISHING
I JCCA,'reJ.?/ °^ Tokyo under the sponsorship of the Toronto
as to the ^^ ^ ^e 'n ^u^ bloom, but the question was raised
Specialists
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and P»rn«
■^letter of /Le 01 H^P^’H^tely 1,500 of the 2,000 trees planted.
Seating Capacity 240
ATIF
On Mav^11'11^-"^ ^ ^hen to the Parks Board on this matter.
LOCATION
£
Mitsuko Inouye will represent the chapter at
1201 Bloor Street V est
» a Carriers to Equalitv” to be held bv the Labor
LE. 2-4267
Human Rights.
- v the
^^
mon
thly
meeting
of
the
Toronto
JCCA
Issei4' Mr. T
CC 0 rh/ an?atSU’ ^e lst 'dee-president filled in with the
,
, ^^'^ent and Mr. H. Hayashi, 2nd vice-presideA
Wd
NEW
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
Mr. Edward TH
President.
SPRING STYLES
nd;r4 ;, ^t’ TJCCA president reported to the meeting
Consult
Ladies’ shoes from
on the t JCCA 6 case °? Lucien Kurata .and explained what
'
"
as
taking.
Since
there
are
legal
technicalii"oived
1 up to 11
rganization will be enlisting the aid of lawyers.
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
I
OPTICAL
Gertrude Urabe
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD
421-33/4
OSCAR'S
Sport Shop
KWONGC^OW
CHOP SUEY TAVERN
SMALL SHOE SIZES
RITZ KINOSHITA
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
!1S Sp°L’CITOH
PUBLIC
' Cel
St- Toronto
^3
aoc; i
1805
293-4281
(Res.)
“Doctor of Chiropractic’’
728A St. Clair Ave. West
O/z block West of Christie)
TORONTO
651-8060
Res. 621-1989 |
INSURANCE
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
Phone: PL. 9-2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
PAGE 7
Japanese Farmers
Personal Notes Across Canada
Want Brides
st. Andrews Japanese Anglican Union Serv. Sun. For Their Sons
Marriages
। Anniversary
Dates And Doings
TORONTO.—St. Andrew’s Japanese Anglican Congregation
Reverend Ken Imai, Rector, will be holding its monthly "Union
^e-v’ce on 31ay iSth at 11:30 a.m. Holy Communion will be
Stated in English and the theme for the sermon will be —
is the Truth
AVh
The choir will raise its voice in song. Everyone is cordially
A 10 attend.
J.A.C.
TOKYO.—The greatest headache of modern farmer
longer the natural clement: plav ■
TORONTO. — 3!r. and 31rs
ing havoc with their crops, but
uaiui P. t'hintani are happy
is something more human —
announce
the
mar
shortage of brides for their on
Nowadays in many rural
Hori,
munities electric computer ousi- to Roy Yosh
ly
chatter
and
31r.
and
31rs.
; 'Rokotsuzome' Display On May 16 At Craft Found,
parents offer
prizes'- just to find young ladies
The wodd in
f
TORONTO.—A display of the unique Japanese traditional
united
with
their
Lune
s L nited Church on 3la\
leather batik — will be held at the sons engaged in
oi “Rokotsuzome”
agricultural
Hhh. 1969
and
the reception
J Ontario Craft Foundation, 663 Yonge Street, Toronto from 3Iay work.
i Gate Restaurant.
An anecdote
I 16th to June 14th.
last
spring
in
agricultural
Mrs. Sadako Yoshitome, wife of a prominent painter from
iiigh school in Tottori prefecture.
San Paulo, Brazil, and her brother, Mr. Shinjiro Ono have been
Japan, tells all about it.
working day and' night for- the past months readying this show. When the principal, in the en
TORONTO.
31
This is the first “Roketsuzome” show for the Canadian public. trance ceremony of Kuravo<hi Diana Yoshiki, daughter of 3Ir.
— 50 —
1 Tneir products have been selling well in many Toronto department Agricultural High School.' wa, Robert Yoshik a ml late ShinwVANCOUVER, B.C,
and
“bput to make an address titled
i stores.
the Future of the Agricultural ko Toshiki of Cooksville and 31r. Mi
business, " there was a crisp voice Toshio Norris 31izuno. son of Vancouver celebrated their Goldfrom among the attending p.a- 31 r. and 31 rs. George Mizuno of on
j Tor. JCCA Sponsors Nipponia Home Raffle Again lents, saA
“No hnr.Qno-ninn- Nashville, Ont.
•ere married on at a party held by their children
i
TORONTO.—Your Toronto JCCA is once again sponsoring chief. Just find brides for our
31
arch
1969
at Toronto JaBamboo
Terrace here,
j a Raffle to aid the Nipponia Home. Your generous support last boys while they are in school."
panese
United
Church
with
th
Many
Since a 32-year-old youth com
atives gathered, includ1 year netted $110.60 to the “Home”. This year we hope to better
mitted suicide several year ago Rev. Gordon Imai officiating.
ing
their
eldest son and his wife
f :his amount.
in Nishi-Yoshino Village in Na Reception at China House. Th? from .Alberta.
The Nipponia Home, the home of the aged of Japanese ancestry ra prefecture, near Osaka, leav
couple honeymooned on the Pa
ha ve
sons
1 annually requires monetary help to supplement the deficiency in ing a note reading “No one
cific
coast.
They
reside
at
Nash
and
2
daughters,
13
grandchil
J its operational fund. The government subsidizes up to 80% of the would marry me,” they have es ville. Ont.
tablished a “marriage consultant
dren and 2 great grandchildren...
I deficiencies but the rest plus costs of major repairs to the home committee.”
j must come from various donations throughout the year. As you
The committee members travel,
.at village expense, all around
; can see, this is a very worthwhile project for your JCCA.
J
The prize once again will be in cash with 1st prize of 8300.00; the prefecture, neighboring pre
J the 2nd prize of $100.00; the 3rd $50.00; the 4th $25.00. The tickets fectures, and sometimes even to
Kyushu, in their search for bet
; will be available from all executives of the JCCA, both Issei and ter-halves of their young men.
i Nisei divisions, the members of the Nisansei Kai, and the Kameoka "Otherwise, our village may pe
; Book Store. The cost of the ticket will be 50d each or 3 for $1.00. rish,” a committee member was
i ihe draw will be made at our annual community picnic at Fan- quoted as saying recently.
CROWN LIFE
In Iwate Prefecture, northern
Complete Care
; tasyland Park on Sunday, June 29, 1969. This year, the seller of Japan,
the Agricultural Council
: the 1st prize ticket will receive $25.00, so anyone wishing to sell took the initiative in setting up
For Your Eyes
; some tickets for us please call George Takahashi at 461-2259. "marriage consultation offices”
in major towns and citie in adj lour help will be greatly appreciated. —JCCA
ti^±
di tion to rural village
across
AGENCY
I
*
*
*
the prefecture.
Yamanashi
prefecture,
Office, 43 Eglinton Ave. East
J ToVCCA Annual Picnic Fantasy Park lune 29th
1T8 West Hastings St.
.
- 0R0NT0.—At the Toronto JCCA meeting on May 7th, known for its abundant
Phone 485-5087
harvests, has employed more
VANCOUVER, B.C.
i icmc Chairman Roy Sato announced that Fantasyland Park has
Home
phone: 449-9293
scientific measures. They feed an
। been reserved for the Annual Picnic on June 29th. To eliminate the electric
computer
“marriage
with the character, hob
i 4 \0,r Deckel's to pay two separate fees, it has been decided card
| ~
1 e total cost of tickets will include the park fee bies and other data of young
|
/he P11Ce ^'^ ^°r those 12 years and over, and .50 cents men and women in the prefeeture punched on it. Only after
*
t° H Nears °f a^e’ “Youngsters” over 75 and under the machine has sorted out a
e Emitted free. The park personnel will merely collect a proper couple will the marriage
MEMBER OF C-R.C.A.
FLAT ROOFS
J
10m each ticket, and these stubs will be used to calculate counsellor consult them and bring
SHINGLING
about the marriage.
1
aj0Un/ that JCCA wil1 reimburse, .50 and .25 per person
EA
VESTROUGHING
SHEET METAL WORK
A unique bank recently opened
1 >’ifii)Ct'' 11 ^'^ basis, Adult tickets this year will be sold at in Tokushima prefecture in ShiALCAN SIDING DEALER
I otaU ad'^ee-sale basis. The public is urged to make use koku Island. This ‘Bride Ban
to match a
;
iate and av°M the necessity of tie-ups at the gate, whose “business”
TORONTO
NISEI OWNED
according
to
man
with
a
woman
i
6 k°°ks are now ready for distribution, and net protheir record books. on which all
t 6 ^"a" W'h ke donated to Nipponia Home.
TOSH NISHIJIMA
''COHERING ONTARIO'
data of the youths in the pre
t sorshi 6
^oncerL 1° be Presented in October under the spon- fecture is registered.
Night Calls-. PT 9-5095 HI. 7-1100
In Hikimi Village in Shimane
i Lia^ r tne. ’°Ca^ ebapter, Issei-bu and the Japanese Immigrant
^ke Hi 01nmitLee’ 'v*ll take place at the Cultural Centre and will prefecture, they offer ;
The prize
will be doubled if
■ ksei-bu6
°^ a JaD-anese Folk Festival. Mr. T. Hiramatsu. someone brings a “bride” from
TVel come Japanese Canadian Friends
; £to!s i cm.inian °f ^e committee, gave a brief resume of pro- outside their village.
i
iogiam directors are H. Katayama and E. Ide. Date
’
3b p
A - — o p.m.
1 Sunday B
representin& J.I.L.C., reported that a four team
I Japan‘ t?^ 3 I ^Mue has been formed by the newcomers from
;
^ 01®anizah°n also plans to join in the Bon Odori
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
i
The j ° 6 ^^ 'n J^M a^ Civic Square.
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
i s% by thePa^ete ^^en’*’ trees in High Park, donated 10 years
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
GOLF, FISHING
I JCCA,'reJ.?/ °^ Tokyo under the sponsorship of the Toronto
as to the ^^ ^ ^e 'n ^u^ bloom, but the question was raised
Specialists
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and P»rn«
■^letter of /Le 01 H^P^’H^tely 1,500 of the 2,000 trees planted.
Seating Capacity 240
ATIF
On Mav^11'11^-"^ ^ ^hen to the Parks Board on this matter.
LOCATION
£
Mitsuko Inouye will represent the chapter at
1201 Bloor Street V est
» a Carriers to Equalitv” to be held bv the Labor
LE. 2-4267
Human Rights.
- v the
^^
mon
thly
meeting
of
the
Toronto
JCCA
Issei4' Mr. T
CC 0 rh/ an?atSU’ ^e lst 'dee-president filled in with the
,
, ^^'^ent and Mr. H. Hayashi, 2nd vice-presideA
Wd
NEW
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
Mr. Edward TH
President.
SPRING STYLES
nd;r4 ;, ^t’ TJCCA president reported to the meeting
Consult
Ladies’ shoes from
on the t JCCA 6 case °? Lucien Kurata .and explained what
'
"
as
taking.
Since
there
are
legal
technicalii"oived
1 up to 11
rganization will be enlisting the aid of lawyers.
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
I
OPTICAL
Gertrude Urabe
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD
421-33/4
OSCAR'S
Sport Shop
KWONGC^OW
CHOP SUEY TAVERN
SMALL SHOE SIZES
RITZ KINOSHITA
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
!1S Sp°L’CITOH
PUBLIC
' Cel
St- Toronto
^3
aoc; i
1805
293-4281
(Res.)
“Doctor of Chiropractic’’
728A St. Clair Ave. West
O/z block West of Christie)
TORONTO
651-8060
Res. 621-1989 |
INSURANCE
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
Phone: PL. 9-2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
Page 8
PAGE 8
THE
NEW
John Gould, whose drawings of Indians in Mexico, Canad'a
and Peru, have provided the material for several films, art exhi
bitions and a book, has been awarded a Canada Council grant to
make a sketching trip in Japan.
Goul-d will leave in late August with as much Japanese vocab
ulary as he can cram into the intervening weeks. He will sketch
in small towns and villages. When he returns to Toronto about
three months later, he will make a documentary film from his
sketch portfolios.
Gould’s first film in 1966 was a 15-minute documentary, Little
Monday, based on his drawings of Mexican scenes and faces.
The National Film Board commissioned Gould to do a sketching
record of Ojibway Indians at Kikangikum near Red Lake in northern
Ontario.
Last year, a Canada Council grant permitted Gould to travel
to Cuzco, a mountain village over the Andes in Peru. On the basis
of these drawings, a nine-minute film was made. It was shown
recently on CBC television.
Coroner . . .
interviews after' working hours.
However, they are not to par
ticipate in any interview request
ed during regular hours. The
county will provide the time and
space.
Isaac charged that the county
had ordered none of its employ
ees to talk unless a deputy coun
ty counsel is present.
Weekes replied that such a
lawyer will be provided only if
the employee requests one. He
denied any smothering of inter
views.
Isaac’s
list of 60
potential
witnesses includes Dr. William
Q. Stumer, visiting assistant
professor at the University of
Chicago and chairman of the
American Academy of Forensic
Sciences’ pathology and biology
section.
Others being
considered in
clude Dr. William G. Eckert of
Wichita, Kan., and Dr. Cyril
Wecht
of
Pittsburgh, former
chairman of this section: Police
Chief Richard Conroy of Palos
Verdes and Chief Pep. County
It ia a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-4681
(Cont. From Page 11
Atty. Lars Pederson of Tucson,
Ariz.
Weekes’ witness list includes
14 employees of the coroner’s of
fice, two former employees and
L. S. Hollinger, county chief ad
ministrative officer.
O. Richard Capen, Civil Serv
ice
Commission president, annouced the three-member group
voted unanimously to forbid live
radio or television coverage of
the discharge hearing.
Isaac pleaded for TV freedom
but the commission was advised
by County Counsel John D. Maharg it is a quasi-judical body
with power under legislation and
court rulings to prohibit it.
In another final stand, the com
mission agreed that Weekes, its
former legal adviser, may handle
the evidence against Dr. Nogu
chi. The commission now has a
different deputy counsel as an
adviser. Isaac sought a replace
ment for Weekes for the dis
charge hearing.
CLASSIFIED
proprietor
1 The New Canadian
।
J
r
|
1
Buy & Sell — Your Home
i
Stan Nishimura
Through
1
Real Estate
1682 St. Clair Ave. W.
Toronto
Bus. 766-6191
Res. LE. 1-1089
. Representing
479 QUEEN STREET WEST,
TORONTO 2-B, ONT.
,
S5.00 for six months
•
NAME (MR. MRS. MISS)......-....... -................
ADDRESS_____________________________________________________
। CITY..... ......................................
' PROVINCE
Bouquet
Invitation
Line
Furuya Travel Service
Night Tel.:
Tsuyuki 535-9935
Uyeda LE. 6-1403
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
SUKIYAKI MEAT — VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
EM. 4-7692
(Residence)
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
Toronto
i
Fully Licenced
NIKKO GARDEN
Reservations: EM. 6-2164
For best arrangements
Reserve ahead of time.
VARIOUS KINDS OF SUSBl
AND OTHER JAPANESE
CUISINES AVAILABLE FOR
FAMILY PARTIES
For further information and reservations contact
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
i
1
2625 Eglinton Ave. East.
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-2581
DUNDAS UNION STORE
(BU8iBfl»)
J
ZONE NO. .................. i
______________ ___ 1
Bob Owen
Real Estate Co.
Escorted Tours to Japan
* Departure — June 29th, Sunday
* Departure — November 2nd, Sunday
365 Spadina Ave.
Toronto 2-B. Ont.
Tel. 366-1075
S9.00 per year.
JON ONODERA
HU. 84654 — HU. 1«
! Please find enclosed $ ________________ for which ।
f ° Renew my subscription.
,
. □ Enter my new subscription for......... year/months
।
Effective April 1, 1969
ASK FOR
Mits Kuroda
s'"”d 'i^r*=
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY
By ANNE MOON
AND FRIDAY
Y
WINDSOR.—This city’s smallest and oldest high school will
SUBSCRIPTION
become the first in Ontario to offer a course in black history and
S5.00 per 6 months
Asian studies — with its 100 Negro, Japanese and Chinese students
S9.00 per year
in mind.
in advance
Patterson Collegiate Institute, built in 1888, has 850 students.
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
It has the highest percentage enrolment of non-whites of any
KEI
TSUMURA English
Windsor school.
KEN
MORI Japanese E&
About 25 students have signed up for the course, which begins
And Advertising.
in September' in grade 12. At least three other Ontario schools
also expect to offer courses in history of the American Negro
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
or Asian studies next September.
Toronto 2-B. Ont.
Patterson Collegiate is just a short distance from Mercer
EMpire 6-5005
St. which has a heavy Negro population mainly made up of des
cendants of escaped slaves who found freedom on the Uunderground
Railway route. Windsor’s 200,000 population includes about 2,000
blacks.
Half the 25 students who have signed up for the course are
black or Oriental, and say it will give them a understanding of
Male Help Wanted
their culture and traditions.
trading company
Officials, however, are urging white students to take the JAPANESE
active salesman. A
course, giving them an insight into the tensions that whipped work in Montreal area. Al :o
Iida Co. Ltd., Phone 368-1
neigboring Detroit into a race riot in 1967.
•o:
“All we get now is the white man’s history,” said Peggy
Female Help Wanted
Brooks, a 17-year-old Negro. “All through school we hear what
FINISHERS, examiners, and but
the white man did. We never get a mention of the black man.
operators requi:
“In Grade 8 we had American history — and the book made ing
wear for. large cla ng manumetme
out like the black man never existed. A black man was the first Year round work,
■conditioned. EM
one up San Juan Hill (in the Spanish-American War) but the ferin and Lawren
Apply 22 OriRd., (Toronto).
books don’t tell you that.”
Milica Yaksich, 16, said the history of the Negro and Oriental
Domestic Help Wanted
races should be woven through all history lessons. “We shouldn’t
get it in one big lump. That’s a form of segregation,” she objected EXECUTIVE requires houseboy
penthouse apartment. Private -coin c
The course was the idea of John Tomlinson, 28, a political TV. Ask for Conway. Days 921-S;
science graduate, who found the world politics course he was teach nights 927-1650 (Toronto).
ing only touched briefly on racial and the Asian situation. He won
the support of Principal A. C. Liddell, the department of education
and the school board.
Use New Canadian Ads;
Besides classes, the course will include field trips to all-Negro
For Best Results
communities and a possible visit to “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” in the
southern U.S.
Doug- Williamson, 42-year-old head of the history department,
stresses that black studies is a legitimate area of academic con
cern and isn’t being introduced to appease any protesters, or stall
any demonstrations.
“The case for black studies has been presented many times,”
oweri
he said1, “I don’t think we have to defend it.”
.
Luciano Cianciusi
The New Canadian
Windsor Offers AsianBlack
History Course
YOUR
BLOOD
the greatest
gift of all
------ ^i^ay, May 16. 1959 l
First In Ontario .
Artist Wins Canada Council Grant For Japan
By KAY KRITZWISER
CANADIAN
460 Dundas St. H.
Toronto
Travel Arrangements
Air—Ship—Bus—Rail
Anywhere — Anytime
Tours—Hotei—Sightseers
Travellers Cheque#
Obtcrinable
Travel, Accident
Good taste needn't be expensive. Our beautiful Bouquet
Invitation Line proves this with the most exquisite papers,
type 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.
One fo
and
Baggage Issurfflc*
BRINGING SOMEONE OV
or At
Call for Reservations or
Information — EM. 8-9934
two weeLs delivery I
T. KAMEOKA
THE NEW CANADIAN
479 Queen St West
Toronto 2-B, Ont
K. Iwata Travel S&vice j
889 Dundas St. W., Toronto U j
i
THE
NEW
John Gould, whose drawings of Indians in Mexico, Canad'a
and Peru, have provided the material for several films, art exhi
bitions and a book, has been awarded a Canada Council grant to
make a sketching trip in Japan.
Goul-d will leave in late August with as much Japanese vocab
ulary as he can cram into the intervening weeks. He will sketch
in small towns and villages. When he returns to Toronto about
three months later, he will make a documentary film from his
sketch portfolios.
Gould’s first film in 1966 was a 15-minute documentary, Little
Monday, based on his drawings of Mexican scenes and faces.
The National Film Board commissioned Gould to do a sketching
record of Ojibway Indians at Kikangikum near Red Lake in northern
Ontario.
Last year, a Canada Council grant permitted Gould to travel
to Cuzco, a mountain village over the Andes in Peru. On the basis
of these drawings, a nine-minute film was made. It was shown
recently on CBC television.
Coroner . . .
interviews after' working hours.
However, they are not to par
ticipate in any interview request
ed during regular hours. The
county will provide the time and
space.
Isaac charged that the county
had ordered none of its employ
ees to talk unless a deputy coun
ty counsel is present.
Weekes replied that such a
lawyer will be provided only if
the employee requests one. He
denied any smothering of inter
views.
Isaac’s
list of 60
potential
witnesses includes Dr. William
Q. Stumer, visiting assistant
professor at the University of
Chicago and chairman of the
American Academy of Forensic
Sciences’ pathology and biology
section.
Others being
considered in
clude Dr. William G. Eckert of
Wichita, Kan., and Dr. Cyril
Wecht
of
Pittsburgh, former
chairman of this section: Police
Chief Richard Conroy of Palos
Verdes and Chief Pep. County
It ia a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-4681
(Cont. From Page 11
Atty. Lars Pederson of Tucson,
Ariz.
Weekes’ witness list includes
14 employees of the coroner’s of
fice, two former employees and
L. S. Hollinger, county chief ad
ministrative officer.
O. Richard Capen, Civil Serv
ice
Commission president, annouced the three-member group
voted unanimously to forbid live
radio or television coverage of
the discharge hearing.
Isaac pleaded for TV freedom
but the commission was advised
by County Counsel John D. Maharg it is a quasi-judical body
with power under legislation and
court rulings to prohibit it.
In another final stand, the com
mission agreed that Weekes, its
former legal adviser, may handle
the evidence against Dr. Nogu
chi. The commission now has a
different deputy counsel as an
adviser. Isaac sought a replace
ment for Weekes for the dis
charge hearing.
CLASSIFIED
proprietor
1 The New Canadian
।
J
r
|
1
Buy & Sell — Your Home
i
Stan Nishimura
Through
1
Real Estate
1682 St. Clair Ave. W.
Toronto
Bus. 766-6191
Res. LE. 1-1089
. Representing
479 QUEEN STREET WEST,
TORONTO 2-B, ONT.
,
S5.00 for six months
•
NAME (MR. MRS. MISS)......-....... -................
ADDRESS_____________________________________________________
। CITY..... ......................................
' PROVINCE
Bouquet
Invitation
Line
Furuya Travel Service
Night Tel.:
Tsuyuki 535-9935
Uyeda LE. 6-1403
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
SUKIYAKI MEAT — VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
EM. 4-7692
(Residence)
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
Toronto
i
Fully Licenced
NIKKO GARDEN
Reservations: EM. 6-2164
For best arrangements
Reserve ahead of time.
VARIOUS KINDS OF SUSBl
AND OTHER JAPANESE
CUISINES AVAILABLE FOR
FAMILY PARTIES
For further information and reservations contact
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
i
1
2625 Eglinton Ave. East.
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-2581
DUNDAS UNION STORE
(BU8iBfl»)
J
ZONE NO. .................. i
______________ ___ 1
Bob Owen
Real Estate Co.
Escorted Tours to Japan
* Departure — June 29th, Sunday
* Departure — November 2nd, Sunday
365 Spadina Ave.
Toronto 2-B. Ont.
Tel. 366-1075
S9.00 per year.
JON ONODERA
HU. 84654 — HU. 1«
! Please find enclosed $ ________________ for which ।
f ° Renew my subscription.
,
. □ Enter my new subscription for......... year/months
।
Effective April 1, 1969
ASK FOR
Mits Kuroda
s'"”d 'i^r*=
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY
By ANNE MOON
AND FRIDAY
Y
WINDSOR.—This city’s smallest and oldest high school will
SUBSCRIPTION
become the first in Ontario to offer a course in black history and
S5.00 per 6 months
Asian studies — with its 100 Negro, Japanese and Chinese students
S9.00 per year
in mind.
in advance
Patterson Collegiate Institute, built in 1888, has 850 students.
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
It has the highest percentage enrolment of non-whites of any
KEI
TSUMURA English
Windsor school.
KEN
MORI Japanese E&
About 25 students have signed up for the course, which begins
And Advertising.
in September' in grade 12. At least three other Ontario schools
also expect to offer courses in history of the American Negro
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
or Asian studies next September.
Toronto 2-B. Ont.
Patterson Collegiate is just a short distance from Mercer
EMpire 6-5005
St. which has a heavy Negro population mainly made up of des
cendants of escaped slaves who found freedom on the Uunderground
Railway route. Windsor’s 200,000 population includes about 2,000
blacks.
Half the 25 students who have signed up for the course are
black or Oriental, and say it will give them a understanding of
Male Help Wanted
their culture and traditions.
trading company
Officials, however, are urging white students to take the JAPANESE
active salesman. A
course, giving them an insight into the tensions that whipped work in Montreal area. Al :o
Iida Co. Ltd., Phone 368-1
neigboring Detroit into a race riot in 1967.
•o:
“All we get now is the white man’s history,” said Peggy
Female Help Wanted
Brooks, a 17-year-old Negro. “All through school we hear what
FINISHERS, examiners, and but
the white man did. We never get a mention of the black man.
operators requi:
“In Grade 8 we had American history — and the book made ing
wear for. large cla ng manumetme
out like the black man never existed. A black man was the first Year round work,
■conditioned. EM
one up San Juan Hill (in the Spanish-American War) but the ferin and Lawren
Apply 22 OriRd., (Toronto).
books don’t tell you that.”
Milica Yaksich, 16, said the history of the Negro and Oriental
Domestic Help Wanted
races should be woven through all history lessons. “We shouldn’t
get it in one big lump. That’s a form of segregation,” she objected EXECUTIVE requires houseboy
penthouse apartment. Private -coin c
The course was the idea of John Tomlinson, 28, a political TV. Ask for Conway. Days 921-S;
science graduate, who found the world politics course he was teach nights 927-1650 (Toronto).
ing only touched briefly on racial and the Asian situation. He won
the support of Principal A. C. Liddell, the department of education
and the school board.
Use New Canadian Ads;
Besides classes, the course will include field trips to all-Negro
For Best Results
communities and a possible visit to “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” in the
southern U.S.
Doug- Williamson, 42-year-old head of the history department,
stresses that black studies is a legitimate area of academic con
cern and isn’t being introduced to appease any protesters, or stall
any demonstrations.
“The case for black studies has been presented many times,”
oweri
he said1, “I don’t think we have to defend it.”
.
Luciano Cianciusi
The New Canadian
Windsor Offers AsianBlack
History Course
YOUR
BLOOD
the greatest
gift of all
------ ^i^ay, May 16. 1959 l
First In Ontario .
Artist Wins Canada Council Grant For Japan
By KAY KRITZWISER
CANADIAN
460 Dundas St. H.
Toronto
Travel Arrangements
Air—Ship—Bus—Rail
Anywhere — Anytime
Tours—Hotei—Sightseers
Travellers Cheque#
Obtcrinable
Travel, Accident
Good taste needn't be expensive. Our beautiful Bouquet
Invitation Line proves this with the most exquisite papers,
type 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.
One fo
and
Baggage Issurfflc*
BRINGING SOMEONE OV
or At
Call for Reservations or
Information — EM. 8-9934
two weeLs delivery I
T. KAMEOKA
THE NEW CANADIAN
479 Queen St West
Toronto 2-B, Ont
K. Iwata Travel S&vice j
889 Dundas St. W., Toronto U j
i