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The New Canadian — May 30, 1969

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Page 1

. Way of Telling You

iTf,e

A
_
,
s HIKONE; Japan.
Attention all ye harassed riders
J drivers) of city buses:
| A Japanese bi: company is having great success,
[ r claims, makins nicer persons and safer drivers of
| their employees by keeping tabs on their “emotional
srhvihms.'’
I tk works," said Senzaburo Oka, 33, chief of the

[wapany’s safety section. “We have reduced our overtall accident rate by 35 to 40 percent in one of the
I heaviest traveled sections of Japan.”
[ The Omi Tetsudo Company, which operates 385 buses
|and 330 taxis in the Lake Biwa resort area, is applying
[ro its drivers psychological theory developed in Europe^

Oka- said
~aid that what
,

theory was worked out m \h?
' "^ ^ bio’rh-vthm
from research performed bt^"^
European psychologists.

The theory claims that male.

fiend and other
i cn

all

Bm-rhvthm readies that a male’
fitness passes from 1OW . ]ia]
low in
cycles. The male also
the bus company’ official
aid.
Alien we hire
uew driver.
things we instruct him on dun'iw . one of the first
10 dav
tion trainin

to

“Slow Down”

“From the
mans date of birth, we can calculate
of hi physical, emotional and intellectual
ups and d'owns Our special calculator can produce
a man\
i
m
mental curves five minutes after
we know his birth date.
“On tho
5 s in which a man enters ra new period
either up or down, he must be
particularly cautious
about
and of course particularlv
about his drivin
The bus company claims
amazing results from the
bio-rhythm theory, which it
has applied to 500 drivers
since last
along with other company

liiiiiiniiiiiinHiiiniiiiHiiiiiiiiiim

(Continued on Page g)
‘’""‘BIBBIHniHllillllllMinUIIIHinniH!^^

The Ika Canadian

“SUKIYAKI”
Cookbook Bv
.MISS STELLA*ITO

Vol. XXXIII—No. 42
jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniHi

An Independent Organ for Canadians of Jo
«.,_•
sans of Japanese Origin

nunnm
STRENGTH FOR THE I
BRIDGE
|
A story of J.C.’s Bv I
JESSIE L. BEATTIE I

FRIDAY AI AY

«"™"^H>nnHimm.iHiI.iIIill^

1

Toronto, Qnt

One would think

mthm Bounds Of “Normality”
Ought To Be An Ideal Job
■Noguchi Psychiatrist Testifies

I
By A. B. HOTTA
I When I was a young kid, I whZYY mOTtth“ a year but
what about my .superiors”? For
I guess my idea of the perfect job a young.
By KATS KUN1TSUGU
r
ambitious securities
[was one in which I could just trainee,
disease.’’
The house of normal! tv
why
didn

t
I
show
more
I
a11 day and &et bright
nas many differed thP
interest
rooms. There are
Hacker, who was trained -it
I was. Things would be just so I paid in my work, why hadn’t to be abnormal.” more
to be normal thai the Uychiatric Institute in New York- r
A i
relaxed.. and
unhurried, and Dealer’s to take the Investment
«t
the
famed
Menninger
Clinic
in
Toneka
*
111
atriV
!
S
3
J^nna-trained
neuro-psvehiAssociation
Course,
why
I soove all, easy.
operates the Hacker§CliEc k BeX*^ "S
neuro-psychi
hadn

t
I
before
h^Si°V
nd
testified
recently
applied
for
a
job
chan
I Okay, 1 have these plans about
or whv
—.. hadn’t I even inquirec
■ gong to Japan for a vear (well
Ut
»a ra^se after three months?
|Y that half a year) and then
super,or court and federal
Of Los Angeles County “N t ’
coroner courts
u
n
conclusion he reached after
| aomg grad work. But that’ll take J?mm i j ^nd 1 have relatives in
q l' 5% D1\ Koguchi for some 20 hours
|wej, wont it? Right. So now the old country.
between
April 8 and 18 of this year.
'Something else sort of gave me
into that dream
nerfectlv HUStria? accent of a man who
Te’ and everything is reservation. Some of the Board
peiteeny typecast as psychiatrist. Dr may be
[peachy keen. Right? Wrong. members might work 12 to 14
Hacker
described Dr. Noguchi as an “un.Namely, with that little piece of hours a day, 6 or 7 days a week
usual” man in the sense “that
parchment, clutched confidently merely looking for new ways to
make money. Now money is all
1
would hope our leaders are
SWea?
summer)
unusual, ” and said that Dr.
j0 have but is it really
S
0Uland settIe fw the n
- oguchi showed unusual ambi­
worth devoting all your energies,
Yai
c°mes along.
tion dedication and enthusiasm
t° • Surely there’s someM to 1 ed KS IOng as possible JvU1
lor hard work which may dis­
beyond the government’s
io he about mv qualifica£
^ ^ ^ symbolic guarantee of wealth. So
tinguish
him from other men
TOKI O. — Student
but could not be defined as “ab­
here was an intractable problem. strations and violence demon­
U , j 1 > ^a
y asn t getting
normal” in the medical sense
meaningless across Japan recently to erupted
f a doughnut. Mv very first Boring, seemingly
Dr. Hacker was
the
third
compromise.

5 urso work and
equally meaningless a pleasure to give the protest
witness called by the defense
paycheques
(such
as
thev
were).
am. now firmly Outside school, is that all there ;ment more power to put down
and allowed to testify out of
hibabe^' L
wicked world is? Is that it?
student violence on the campuses.
turn, since he will be leaving for
The national police agency’
please oF
if you
Europe this week
xot tS-vT 11{;tle bond
said more than 32,600 students
|
A courteous and unflappable
(Cont. on Page 8)
held rallies and demonstrations
off
expected to
'Witness, Dr. Hacker refused to
trj d ■ a . chairman of the .
on 35 universitv campuses in 34
lend credence to the prosecution’s
of
the nation
46 prefectures.
KlenirH’ V1 noss Gxa™ination. to
Ji'lS' 11 was here I
Ss ‘ < led something else
?’°"
Dr’ Koguchi might
The most violent clashes took
have been ‘ simulating sanitv”
place in Tokyo, where 3,000 hel­
S ^Vy*^
during his tests with Dr. Hacker
meted students battled 1,500 riot
J ^ost Of the tfmlU1butn'4,S0'l
Japan. — A 16-year- police. The students hurled rocks
or might have been able to “beat
the tests,” because of his exte”
weyiose perspective on f-llo^en h d JaPanese factory worker has and broken concrete blocks at
of what thev dn ^L®611
a P^’s bver
sive reading and medical train­
the police and attacked with long
ing.
1
tg uiey’re doino- it
an<* I transplanted into
her stomach wooden staves.
so®ewhat I SInCeu^ 12>
was reported
•,
Pointed out that
Shinichi Suzuki
The police charged with tear
, m difficult for trained psychi­
Do I NEED THT^

recently. _

MONTREAL. — Among this atrists themselves to “beat the
;bt person who had
v n Tn Xom^ri newspaper said gas bombs and a bloody threehad done h 5
Pn Funil° Murakami and his 19 lour fight ensued before the year adjudicators at the second I i^
test, and added. “Dr’ Nogucki’
7r°n the other hand

Osaka University’s students were disnersed.
VioIin ComPeHWoo. '^»t ”
*°tal'y
backoromXi bad I medical school conducted the sur"X/.
10 June 17’ W1H be Mr.
Smile a Japanese cultural trait
^ hundredth time T
I ^ry f°ur mon^s ago to save
.Junichi
Suzuki.
This
competition
I
f
Replying to a direct question
:lXV°ni?thing I
patient suffering from a
was first held in Montreal in “"oni Godfrey Isaac, attornev for
A.jw or was told “T
seU-Ous case of liver hepatitis,
1966.
’ Dr Noguchi, Dr. Hacker'also
j’.;.^ Leo ahvavA
i
? was ^be world’s fourth—
An3
Iroade the point that a person’s
YYhe thought
and ?pan’s first .— successful
Mi. Suzuki gained prominence behavior is indeed influenced bv
t A - L° I need this
wled °RerabO11 of the kind, the paper
j or pioneering new techniques in I earb’ cultural factors.
1lor sheer
3 1
* Were said.
hSi^''6 ^J‘out
I -Dr’ Yoshitake Shinji. 37, who
“The smile of the Japanese,
violin teaching.
TOKYO.—A 969-ton Japanese
I for instance The Japanese people
After the war he started the
a-X YYin* new. I mean t in“ I X,as amoilg the 20 staffers, con- freighter, the Seiho Maru, sank
smile all the. time, in time of
X ‘^ to. I knew !
fbe report as correct.
recently after a collision
off Talent Educational Movement. In danger, and in time of sorrow
^nt
It will take some time before southern Japan with the 212,000
this experiment, young children al
.as happiness. This is
is released,” Shinji said. “We ton tanker
Energy Evolution.
were
taught violin playing utiliz­ °?en ™ interpreted by people,
S: I still have to observe her condi- Four members of rhe 13-m ember
Rften say thev feel like beats I mon so hepatitis will not occur freighter crew were killed and ing the technique of rapid learn­ •
J
n
*
™ UP for ’t ” Dr- Hacker
again.”
ing through hearing the music.
two others are missin
void the commissioners.
, The girl has recovered from
The drug Dexamil came in for
the operation so well that she
Our
sincere
thanks
go
to
the
readers
of

THE
NEW
CANA
­
n?n
d’T^n in testimony as
?°i>v wa^s around in the hospi­
Dr.
Donald
Stuart, a prosecution
DIAN” for their continuing kind support in light of the increased
tal s lobby,” the story said.
Was asked to tell about
The unidentified girl became subscription rates from $7.00 to $9.00 per year and from $4.00 to
Lconducted in which Her­
unconscious four day’s before the $5.00 per six months. This increase was due to a drastic change k
bert McRoy and Nancy Palmer,
In er of a 3-month-old, 55- pound
in mail rates by the federal government.
two other prosecution witness
Pig was transplanted, according
were
asked to identify the green-’
to the report.
Not only that, but many of the readers who have already paid
The newspaper said the woman their subscription fees in advance, have been sending an additional and-white capsule which thev
regained
consciousness
three $2.00 or $3.00 to cover the increased postal rates. With this thev 'ai^ they saw Dr. Noguchi take.
Identify drug capsules
hours after the operation ami
" ‘?wrt testified that Mrmsked for water eight hours afte*' have included the most heartening words of encouragement.
Ro and MiSS Palmer picked the
the surgery.
We are more than thankful to these readers and will endeavour
capsule from among 40
“Two days later, she was able to repay all the kindness shown to us by the people.
A. B,
capsules, each tinged with gk^n
co. speak to her doctors.” YomiTHE NEW CANADIAN
un reported.
(Cont. on Page 8)

Campus Violence
Over Increased
Govt. Control

Girl1 76
IO' ReceivA?
K^CeiVGS
Anim«,'s. Liver

Freighter, Tanker
Collide with
Loss of Four

Page 2

PAGE 2

Ford Kawano Ulins Black Belt Title! ^
Rt Ont. Open Judo Champinnship ^

3

(

00611 Jl

°’!!S' ??■J* “**

HAmH13?^0®.., , L°“ Windsor, London, Fort Erie, t£
IudkFLT°N' ~ F highest sPirited
onto, Hamilton and other Ontario
atd^Upn^ffluntL°r.the year was heM cities.
.
TORONTO.—The Juuo Educational Centre of m Avenue, Toronto 2o8, is presenting the Toronto Open Jur’
ert Scott Park High School gym in HaThe Tournament was sanctioned pionships, the Junior Team Judo Chamm™-^ P ? Cn£
°n Saturday. May 24, 1969.
by tne Ontario Judo Federation, the Team Judo Championship, under the sanctionVthTo
any participants from Montreal host judo club Hamilton Kodokan Federation. This competition is open to all member club"
and northern New York State added
Ontano Judo Federation, the Quebec Judo Federa-i,. ’ w
with
great
effort
won
the
Ontario
holders
of A.A.U. cards.
06 a 0,! and i
tYhkerabl? interest t° to the event
ogether with the Ontario contestants Open Team Championship with the
Date: Saturday, June 7, 1969.
Martial Art Judo Club of Montreal
_ Location: Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre

'r

Nihon Shokokoi Golf Club Results

Drive, Don Mills (Toronto) (one block north of e^.-T
Lehkon .ve.T
chan’Pion in the Black and east of Don Mill Ro,act).
Sa
DlV1Slon
was
Ford
Kawano,
CtablmjS u^e V t0Urnament «f the Nihon Shokokai Goll
Time: Registration — Individual — 11-30
1
Shodan age 17, of Judo Educa­
try Ab »e of d P
Knt
at 0,6 Mt“ G°te and Conn- tional Centre in Toronto with a Team - 2:00 p.m - 3:00 p.m. Elimination - ludhaj
7lncdn the filials over p.m. Team — 3:30 p.m.. Semi-finals and Finals, Indirid:
The results were: Winner o?the “tTn " Me‘” Tm™to. Lail Slade,
Shodan of Hamilton Team — 7:00 p.m.
competitors were 2nd to 7th and 10th SoT""0’ k j01'0"'1"’ Kodokan Judo Club. Many excelINDIVIDUAL CATEGORIES:
Okabe, Sakagami, Yonemoto, ivXa LezY
H?and sPee<iy action
9, 10, 11 and 12 years old — Lightweight, Middlewekh
the entire competi­
and Kawamura.

Yokoyama, Ouchi L^hlig-hted
tion. Also the entries in this di- Heavyweight
included the high calibre
13, 14, 15 and 16 years old — Lightweight, Middleweight
Quebec champions from Mon­ Heavyweight
treal.
KAZUO g OIYE Q.c.
ELIGIBILITY:
In the individual
RfinDTCTrn
W>*M
mudansha
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
Individual
"16 years old and under
categories, the following are the
NOTARY PUBLIC
Junior Team
champions

16 years old and under
who
emerged
after
2 Carlton St., Toronto
very hare? fought matches with ,
Senior Team — 17 years old and up — Best fire naJ
Room 1805
SEATTLE. — A karate expert many excellent techniques in evi.rom each club with two black belt holders permissible
' 1
366-6388
293-4281 (Res.)
was pierced with a samurai sword oence.
divistrat,on °f each ciub - ^ °tea,,,s <6
»
recently as he tried1 to show Boy 1 and 2 KYU (BROWN BELT)
Scouts how to block the thrust
®ntly Pee: 1969 O.J.F. card holders $1.00, 1969 QJF J
n L1sMweight: Champion — Reg a
of the weapon.
’ ’ |
- B
iE-C’; Ranner up A.A.U. card holders $1.00, without above cards $2.50.
ASK FOR
Akio Minakami, 21, was treat­
B, Clarke, Hamilton Kodokan. ,
eanL fntT Fee: Juni0r Team —?2-50 per team (payment
ed at a hospital after the mis­ .T^avy'ye>^'t: Champion — D
n °J'0-shu) Senior Team — 85.00 per team (musthaj
hap.
MacCormick, Hamilton Kodokan- 1969 O.J.F., Q.J.F. or A.A.U. cards)
I
Runner up — L. Martin, Mon­
Police said his partner in the
Awards
Winner and runner-up in each individual caiegj
the
demonstration, Julius Thiry, 30 treal Martial Art.
Luciano Cianciusi
Winner and runner-up — team trophy
I
reported Minakami slipped at the
3 and 4 KYU (BLUE BELT)
Waning
team
individual
plaques.
I
Real Estate
FTmen£ he was to block the at­
Lightweight: Champion — M
tack. Both men .are instructors vra,ne’ Niagara Falls N.Y YSpectator's Admission Fee: $1.00 per person.
I
tor the Washington Karate As­ M.C.A.; Runner up — T. Miskoi
oie:
First
round
in
individual
eliminations
will
be
conduct?!
1682 St. Clair Ave. W.
sociation.
Izc, Fort Erie Y.M.C.A.
J11 61 lounc^ iobin system to insure a minimum of two match™
Toronto
Thiry s?id he and Minakami
Heavyweight: Champion — T
to each contestant.
1
will slow down the action hence­ bimser, Hamilton Kodokan: Run­
Bus. 766-6191 Res. LE. 1-1089
Semi final contestants will select their own opponents
forth.
ner up — J. Riviera, Rochester
drawing lots. — J.E.C.
I
•Japan American Judo Club.
6, 6 and 7 KYU (ORANGE AND
YELLOW)
I
TOKI 0 — Maegashira TakaLightweight: Champion — E
Escorted Tours to Japan
? miyama (Jesse Kuhaulua. of Ha- Edmunds, Toronto J.E.C.; RunneJ
Departure — June 29th, Sunday
t
suffared his fourth defeat up — W. Prince, Rochester Japan
• I on the sixth day of the grand su- American Judo Club.
Departure — November 2nd, Sunday
Heavyweight: Champion — E.
i mo summer tournament recently,
? । ?.
Sekiwake Kiyokuni scored Ra"a’ RanMton Nirryu Judo
For further information and reservations contact
J his sixth win to remain the only Club; Runner up — R. Richmond.
Specialists
wrestler to
maintain a clean Hamilton Nirryu Judo Club.
? slate.
wprf’c81 vatT- the Toumament
NEW
F
G. N Kawano,
4th-dam
Top
results
follow:
365 Spadina Ave.
LOCATION
Night Tel.:
lournament
Chairman
and
RefeTaiho 5-1 def. Toda 3-3.
Toronto
2-B,
Ont
Tsuyuki
535-9935
1201 Bloor Street. West
J Uemura, 5thKashiwada 4-2 def. TochiazuTel.
366-1075
Assistant
Referee-in-Chief.
Uyeda LE. 6-1403
in a 2-4.
LE. 2-4267
3rd;dan? Tournament
Kitanofuji 2-4 def. Wakanise
Co-oidmator. M. Kayahara, 2nd2-4.
Assistant Tournament Co­
Kotozakura 4-2 def. Ryuko 3-3.
Kiyokuni 6-0 def. Takamiva- ordinator and guest referee from
Montreal, Mr. B. Gauthier. The
FIRE — THEFT — AUTO
ma 4-2.
Wasv prepared and
Tamanoshima 3-3 def. FujinoConsult
r k -nthe capable hand of Mr
kawa 1-5.
Hasegawa 5-1 def. Kirinji 3-3. I ta'*^’ -Vting Chief InstrucMutsuarashi 1 ” def. Maenoya- Acting thief teti^'S
ma 4-2.

.

Karateka Pierced

By Samurai Sword

Stan Nishimura

JTaiho wins again

OSCAR'S
Sport Shop

Furuya Travel Service

RITZ KINOSHITA
For AU Classes of

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Phone: PL. 9-2632
OR
PL. 5-7317

Healthy Body & Mind
Through the Martial Arts

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t

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Call for Reservations or

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ADDRESS

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CITY

I

PROVINCE

Baggage Inourance

Passage arranged by Steamer or Air

J

NAME (MR. MRS. MISS)-

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and

BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?

° Enter my new subscription for_____ year/months
$5.00 for six months

Tours Hotel—Sightseeing
Trave Ilers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident

Information — EM. 8-9934

T. KAMEOKA

I

^* Iwoto Trovsl Service*

I

S89 Dundas St. XV.. Toronto 140

Good taste needn’t be expensive. Our beautiful Bouqu^
Invitation Line proves this with
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THE NEW CANADIAN
479 Queen St West

Toronto 2-B, Ont

Page 3

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1969

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9

w. K. GARDENS

Frank G. Yada
Crown Life insurance Co
?I.?lyttteB RtM*Xfi

127 EAST PENDER STREET

1550 Wert Georgia St
Vancouver, B.C.

Phone MU. i-6642—U45»

3
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125

2Tt3
z^$T^
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CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquet*

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Page 4

PAGE 4

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May SO.

•53

1969

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Page 7

Friday. _May

1969

PAGE 7

Dates And Doings

Personal Notes Across Canada

Let's speak Japanese" starts June 17th at Centre Marriages

I
J
1
i

;
S

i
f
I
J
[

Nurses' 14th Quadrennial Congress from June 22
MONTREAL.—The 14th Quadrennial Congress of the Interna­
tional Council of Nurses will be held here from June 22 to 28.
At this conference almost every phase of nursing will come
under the scrutiny of world health leaders. Aside from this there
will be a big round of social events.
Some 750 student nurses are expected with the majority
Canada, Japan, Ghana, Thailand and
from the United States,
Uruguay.

J.C. Anglers' Annual Picnic at High Park June 8th
TORONTO.—The Hamilton-Toronto Japanese Canadian Anglers
Club will be holding its annual picnic at Toronto’s High Park.
The date for this event will be Sunday, June 8th, starting at 10 a.m.
The location of the picnic ground is immediately behind the
Grenadier Restaurant. Parking is available nearby, but you must
enter from the Bloor- Street entrance.
A large turnout from members and their families is expected.
with games, bingo, prizes and a draw promising to
this a whole day for enjoyment. — J.C.A.C.
*
*
*

Batik on leather exhibition opened May 16th
TORONTO.—An interesting exhibition of batik on leather bv
two Japanese artists — Sadako Yoshitome and her brother Shin­
jiro Ono opened Friday, May 16 at the Ontario Craft Foundation
Gallery, 663 Yonge Street, Toronto.
Exhibited are several handmade batik items including- hand­
bags, belts, wallets, neckties, dress, hat and bag combination,
abstract baric work framed for wallhanging, and other miscel­
laneous pieces.
This is not an introduction for the first time in Ontario of
their ancient Japanese craftwork, known as roketsu-dome. For
>ome rime, their product has been sold in several Toronto, Ottawa
and Montreal craft shops. At Simpsons, the Colonnade, the Cana­
dian Guild of Handicraft in Toronto — the Four Corner Crafts
in Ottawa
and in the gift shops of Place Bonaventure, Place
Hile Marie, Chateau Champlain and Atwater Plaza in Montreal,
‘ten batik pieces are on sale.
Shinjiro has been two years in Canada. In July 1968, he won
the CNE prize for his batik.
Sadako and her painter husband Yo, has been in Toronto foi
a jeai. In July 1968, she had a show at the Nikko Garden which
!DC1^ *onre of her student’s works. Her previous shows were
LM at San Paulo, and in 1966 at Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
J. Koyanagi

Toronto Japanese Language School

HAMILTON. — The forthcommg marriage is am
of
Diane Yoko, daughter
Mrs. Harry K. Izumi, to Dennis
Masakazu, son of Mr and Mrs.

rubhc Welcome T.J.L.S. Iji-Kaji and P.T.A.

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
division of extension

Wiese language summer school
July 7 to August 15, 1969
ai^ aPPh'cation forms write to:
S' n °F extension, university of Toronto,
QLEEN’S PARK, TORONTO 181, ONTARIO.

2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone 36S-46S1

Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
"Doctor

of

Chiropractic'’

Hamilton, Ontario.
The weddi
3:30 p
1969.
Mount,
ton. Ontario.

June

block West of Christie)
TORONTO

651-S060

Res. 621-19S9 |

Buy & Sell — Your Home
Through

TORONTO.
and Mr
Yoshio Norris Mizuno who were
recently married at the Toronto
Japanese United Church. The
bride is the former Hisako Dean­
na Yoshiki.

FLOWERS

Mits Kuroda

SHARON'S FLORIST

Representing

CITY-WIDE DELIVERY

Peter Sasaki

K.

Sasaki

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

AVE.,

TORONTO

Bob Owen
Real Estate Co
2625 Eglinton Ave. East.
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-2581

Obituaries
OAKVILLE.
On Monday.
May 26, 1969 Mr. Kunimatsu Ya­
gi at Oakville Trafalgar Memo­
rial Hospital, beloved husband of
Toshi and dear father of Hach
of Toronto and Andrew of Clark­
son. Resting at funeral home of
S. S. Russell and Son, Dunn
Street (at the Lake). Oakville.
Funeral service at the Chuwli
of St. Alban the Martyr, 100
Howland Ave. Toronto, on Thurs.,
evening May 29 at 8:00 p.m.
Interment,
Trafalgar
Lawn
Cemetery, O.akville.

otvem

OPTICAL
proprietor

TON ONODERA
Complete Core

HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805

For Your Eyes

(Business)

(Reatdence)

540 Eglinton Ave. W
Toronto
1’8 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.

CARD OF THANKS

Fully Licenced

We wish to extend our
heartfelt thanks to our many
friends and relatives for their
many acts of kindness, floral
tributes and expressions of
sympathy shown us during our
recent bereavement of outdear father, Suekichi Honkawa.
Mr. & Mrs. Ken Honkawa
and family,
28761 Fraser Hwy.,
R.R. 2, Aldergrove, B.C.
Mr. & -Mrs. Hiroshi Honkawa and family.
R.R. 2, Aldergrove, B.C.
28761 Fraser Hwy.,
Mr. Takeo Honkawa,
28761 Fraser Hwy.,
R.R. 2, Aldergrove, B.C.
Mr. & .Mrs. Kunio Yoshiza
wa (Masaye) and family
14144-92nd Ave.,
North Surrey, B.C.

NIKKO GARDEN

mura (Fusae) and family,
12937-lOlth Ave.,
North Surrey, B.C.

CARD OF THANKS
v°' 1 ^ide Public School (Central)
v° o Rexford Collegiate (Scarboro)
pi * °' . ^ estway Public School (Etobicoke)
« ,ce'
Park (Area No. 3) near Bloor St. ent.
: Sunday, June 8, 1969, 10 a.m.
Adnussion: $1.00 per family
Games, Races, Bingo and Refreshments

Corusult

William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents

Engagements

ummer program for the Sansei Youths, a
TORONTO.—A
nrse in ••Let’s Speak Japanese” will be offered at the Japanese
Canadian Cultural Centre. The course will run for six consecutive
^-eeks, on Tuesday and Thursday evenings beginning June 17th.
It is primarily designed for the busy secondary and early
university .age students who do not have the time for Japanese
ions during the school year.
* ~ Last summer, thirty students, boys and girls of the Centre’s
club learned to speak the simple and essential Japane
You
words and phrases. It is hoped that they will all return. New
indents however, are of course, welcome to attend.
'
The fee will be $12.00 for 12 lessons and is payable in Hrance. Application forms are available at the Centre office.
Students have the choice of attending either the 7:00 to 8:30
p.m. class or the S:30 to 10:00 p.m. session. — J.C.C. Centre
*
*
*

It b a good poli^j to
bar. th. RIGHT POUCT

We wish to express our sin­
cere thanks to our many
friends and relatives for their
many acts of kindness, floral
tributes and expressions of
sympathy shown us during our
recent bereavement of a dear
husband and father. Senji Sa­
no.
Mrs. Yuwa Sano.
242 Calvington Dr..
Downsview, Ont.
Mr. & .Mrs. Jim Sano
and family
Vineland. Ont.
Tada

and family
Hawaii. U.S.A.
Mr. & Mrs. George Tsubone
and family
Painswick. Ont.
Mr. & Mrs. Jack Ohara
and family
Weston. Ont
.Mr. & Mrs. Bob Ogata
and family
Downsview, Ont.

Why
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Christian
Science
Monitor
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Home phone: 449-9293

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Page 8

PAGE 8

Ideal job . . .

(Cont. from Page One)
I * .
END OF DREAM
The New Canadi;
The preceding has merely been
a long preface to saying that in I And Ill tell you quite honestlyV/K/l VII Vf
Second class aaa r
the absence of the English sec­ nothing The writer has never L
^0S ANGELES.—Although witnesses now
l
a unin er 0355’ '^
tion editor, Kei Tsumura, I’ll be had a burning ambition to beCounty Civil Service CommisiLn \e4rd^
before
acting as editor for the next six corrle a Journalist. Consequently, Koguchi’s dismissal last March have hPP^iJnc a D
??nias T'
’?f?ths'i,But’ he of ?oocl cheer, if the editions for a little while coroner, a Chicago pathologist
months ’ 11 iS "”'y (S“lp) SiX I hence
don t seem particularly half recently.
°
b Peinutted
testify in his beoutstanding please bear in mind
Dr. William Q. Stumer
c
,
When the job was first men- that Im
learning type sizes, the Univ, of Chicago said that hn k-n^
of pathology at
1 ’J fn:ed,^edIcai examiner
LOneu
mer’ 1 thought—“Where layout, news gathering, a little as a “warm, articulate^ humanity
the hell is K. C. going to find) reporting and interviewing and
Dr
e
.

eader 111 bis communitv.”
PUBLISHED ON EVERY _ __ .
ANU fS TdES°AY
he flrst met the Fukuoka-born No<*u
someone sucker enough to take even headlining siting. In other chi in
words, this is the sink or
Scknee of
°f the American Academy of Forensic
+
l" for Slx months?” But
RR f^.UBSCRIP^I0N
^ere
and biology section the Chicagoan ^
by re-examining the twi- I
light zone position I had at the usuaiij ,a bit of a rush. End, mv I
per year
m,
v
111 advance
brokerage, the editor’s desk be­ aream
job.
'

,
.
Noguchi
witness,
who
was
scheduled
1
ARTICLES, WE NEED
hrl^MarcTTnP^ d"SOr at the academy's convention Feb
gan to take on a sort of morbid
UMEZUKI Publisher
appeal.
1
If youre still with me so far, “phenomenal now??? 5fear‘ He ^id he w.as impressed by Noguchi’s
KEN
MORI Japanese Editor
. But then again, after 9 days
?cniber to keep any news or of thought ” P
S °f concentration ” and “absolute continuity
And Advertisin'*.
in the office, a phrase keeps re­ articles coming in. Being a Sansei 1
A.
B.
HOTTA Acting Editor
verberating in the back of my niyself, articles for, about, and in hfcoSr? »“’■£?“
““““le duress
b*;aT F “What have 1 d°ne, oh by Sanseis will be
much ap­ Of composure” He
the6SS showed a “high level
vhat have I done!”
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
preciated. We can always
Pill Ws„!e
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
original material (boy can
use
new
material).
Not
to
EMpire 6-5005
I
we
can
utilize
everything
in'time
t
11

asked

Dr^'fe^jJ

NoJ?A
natUlaI
a^
cifi
'
Nature's way . . .
(Continued from Page 1‘)
The company's vehicles cam-v
commuters, tourists
and si°-ht- I bei that if you can interest one
Accordinof c
seeres around Japan’s largest person with what you say, m
Dr Noguchi is now engaged in a
Jake, Biwa (Mandolin), and* in ? ln‘T^1 a FTat
Every- Scie ce
project of research for the Academy of Forensic
Articles For Sale
the nearby cities of Kyoto, Osaka thing still cool ? Great.
ana Nagoya.
J

A
9

J
he
P^gt


°>b
the
ousted
coroner
distinguish,
I
This type of work is sort
I
W!t
mN9ER,S Special Sa’e on
In the Nagahama city area, stimulating. I mean vou actually-^
y
demos, iypeWterW-W
“slidesmse
of ^unusua?
cfses” ?vhh^ Presenting a seminar featuring Machines,
Th C°?lpany operates 52 buses. get to see the results of your ef­ to see.
SeS Whch maily doct°rs never get a chance onto). Mrs' TwW-a -’621'.0aT
* w
They have travelled 1.56 million forts. Not that it involves such
miles without a single accident I a great deal of artistry, but it’s
his beI^” Dr- Stonier I Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A,
since
starting the bio-ryhthm interesting work and I hope you’ll said he often\ad ^e \^^
in New York and Chicago.
1
Was a medical examiner
program.
*
J .bear with me for awhile.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
Bus operation in two other
Now this article seems to hav°
branches, including Osaka (Ja- wandered along quite a bit (se* can
NOTARY PUBLIC
it
r^0-^- most populous Citv h.°"r desperate we are for mate­ Dr. Stumer declared.
P
1
of a coi’oneiy
121 RICHMOND ST W
with o million residents), have rial?) so I’d like to end it any­
^saae is expected to present defense
travelled 620,000 miles without time now.
TORONTO 1
witnesses as the liearin.
is continued in the new Hall of Records.
an accident.
363-5002 — 691-3388 (Res.)
I first heard
of the biojhythm theory five years ago Noguchi Psychiatrist . . . Cont. from Page One
niOm ^..Japanese scholars,”
Oka said “At first I refused to “ent°hefl?Va-T ^? capsule was I guchi take.
objection was sustained,
believe it had any validity. Some fTb^oIv fo^

L°‘ X , r“’*d '*« Kerr
oi our
top
company officials and found ”beD™il
dismissed the theory as bein- of
obtectioTtTl^
vehen?ent lhat
fXS'The q^esti^nYOUR SHOPPING LIST
no more value than the horoscope
columns in newspapers.
SAKURA RICE — EGGS — MARUKIN SHOYU
“Now our employees have be­
SUKIYAKI MEAT — VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
liam Ken, pointing out that I aiey saw.
come quite enthusiastic. Some of
MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
them have even asked us to one Zfc X£ SS £ d±"”?TrS showed consicompute the bio-rhythms of their guchi but one that hostile
a pe,sk^ticit>m about the way
wives and children.”
.Calmed 4
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO

^ ouches For Coronpr

.CLASSIFIED

DUNDAS UNION STORE

1969 TOURS to japan



May llfh (Sun)
November 21st (Sun)
' .
21st (Sun)
September
7



. , ,

T

9'' (S“">
n
t
fl <T,'UrSday)
December 14th (Sun)

1970 EXPO TOUR

Special Low Cost Tours
Special Group Tours
Monthly Departures During Expo. (Ma
Make Your Plan With Us N-o-w

Sept. 13)

For Detail Information. Contact

VJ.P. Travel Ltd
To “Very Interesting Places” —
•rl5 Mam Street, Vancouver 4, B C

682-2241

Closing Out Sale
Last Day — June 21st

I V eekes, the other deputy counI ty counsel, to bring in the 40
capsules with which the test was
conducted as well as the expei-t
in the sheriff’s laboratory" who
conducted the chemical analysis.
Isaac also pointedly questioned
Auart and elicited the informa­
tion that the test was conducted
after charges that Dr. Noguchi
used Dexamil
were
officially’
made on March 14 this year. In
xact Dr. Stuart admitted that
the chemical analysis results
were obtained only five davs ago.
after the hearing was started?
Questioned about Dexamil, Dr.
Hacker observed that the dru^
contained “upper and downers”
stimulants and depressants in the
same capsule and for that rea­
son. addicts do not favor it

782-7571

OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 8:30

ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD,
VESTROUGHING

SHEET METAL WORK

ALCAN SIDING DEALER

TORONTO

421 "3374 nisei

OWNED

tosh Nishijima
"covering Ontario”
wgbe Calls: PL. 9-5095 Hl. 7-1100
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends

Burial space is short
1
— Shortage in burial
land has brought about a 10w01'y’ ferro-concrete building in
West Japan’s city of the temples,
purely to house the dead.
The Nishi Hongwanji Temple
constructed the building, whic’a
s complete with
a 'hall for
worship.
The Japanese practice is [,,
to
cremate their dead and have the
ashes either enshrined at the
h°\n5kOr buried in a family plot.
^Abhes of the dead are containeo in specially made urns placed
m cabinet-size repositories.
Prices of a repository r;
from 300.000 yen (about
io one million yen (about 8
in American money.

KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUET TAVBRN
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM 2-0029 For Keservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seeing Capacity 240
3

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NEW
SPRING STYLES
Ladies’ shoes from

THE EGLINWOOD SHOP
1558 Eglinton Ave. West

EM. 4-7692

T.V. Service
EM. 4-9913
(TOHONTO)

1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14

ALBERTS SHOE STORE i
1328 Queen St. West

i

Phone LE. 7-1931, Toronto

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i