Page 1
(Japan Beginning To Feel Need For “Big Nation” Status. Identity
'Bv CARL T. ROWAN
^^YO._ A returning visitor
.... ^.v ces many changes
15 years, the most
ne
Hking being the
nomy and the
erity of the people,
er P
rtant, is the evid■ nationalistic temee
; risen markedly.
The result is that the end
has about- m ,me for the postctor and vanquishwar era ot yi
the
ed in rektio ns between
United States and Japan.
was obvious to U.S.
cabinet and other officials who
came here recently to discuss
economic problems flowing from
Japan s billion-dollar advantage
in trade with the U.S, last year
and from Japanese curbs on
U.S. products and investments.
The Japanese were talking
back in ways the Americans had
not heard since before the war.
It was obvious that the Japa
nese knew they were talking
from a position of economic
strength, so they were conced
ing little and giving away noth
ing.
The bolder and bolder Japa
nese demands for the return of
Okinawa are further evidence
that this country now thinks
of itself as an equal and no:
as a ward of the United States.
Soviet A Menace
This ought not be confused
with anti-Americanism, although
Uncle Sam is no runaway pop
ularity hero here. In a recent
As for Russia, 2.9 percent
nationwide poll. Yomiuri news
were pro, 2,9 percent were anti,
papers asked Japanese to name
and 45 percent were undecided.
the country they considered a
And 6,2 percent were promenace to Japan’s security. The
Red China. 32.7 percent were
Soviet Union was named by
anti, and 4S.1 pexvent undecid
20.4 percent. Red China by 15.6
ed.
percent, and the U.S. by seven
“for Japan'’
percent
What seems to be happening
In the popularity check, 23.9
here is not a tendency for th?
percent of the Japanese were
Japanese to be against anyone
pro-United States, 10.8 percent
or anything especially: they are
were anti, and 57,6 percent
were undecided.
(Cont. on Page 8)
|]|||llllllllIIIII|n,l,l,ll,,l,,,,,ll,,llll,,ll,,,,lllll,ll,,,,,,,,,l,,l,l,,I,l,,,,l,,,,ll,l,l,l,| llllil,llI,H,lllll,,,ll,,l,,lll|ll,II,l,,,,lll!llllllll,ll,l)llllllll1lllllllMlllllUIII)l,|liillllllllli,llll,ll,l,,ll,lll,IlllI,I(Iim
“SUKIYAKI”
Cookbook By
MISS STELLA ITO
The Dew Canadian
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A storv of J.C.’s By
JESSIE L. BEATTIE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 5, 1969
Vol. XXXIII—No. 68
nnnniifiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiilllHii
Toronto, Ont
niiiniiniiiiiiHiiiiniHHinuiiiiiHHiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiLiiiniiiiiiiiiiiifniiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiniHuiHniiiiiiii
Japanese Youth
On Stopover From
World Cycling Trip
Todai Holds Exams
Despite Attempted
Entry By Protestors
Bv PATRICIA LOWE
MONTREAL. — Montreal’s
streets are confusing, but for
Motomitsu Ikemoto of Takasa
City. Japan, they were impos
sible. He had been bicycling for
over a year touring the world
TOKYO. — The long-delayed end-of-term examinations were
and hardly ever got lost.
held at the College of General Education of the University of
Montreal, unfortunately, was
an exception until “a very kind
Tokyo without majox- disruptions though about 100 protesting
policeman” helped him reach his
radicals combined their efforts to prevent the examinations.
Lions’ Club contact, Edward Mc
The examinations started from 9:30 a.m., 30 minutes behind
Lean, last week at the Notre
schedule, and ended at 10:40 a.m. at the faculty in Komaba, Tokyo.
Dame police station.
Police stood by outside the campus to cope with any emergency.
Left Last Year
Motomitsu left home, twentyShortly after 8 ami. the activists of the All-Campus Joint StrugThe Zama Maru, a modern Datsun car carrier with a six deck
five miles from Osaka, last Au configuration for a total capacity of 1200 cars and trucks.
gle Committee, armed with helm
gust to take a seven-year bicycle
The unique feature of the ship is that autos are driven or ets and wooden staves, stormed
trip from one end of the world and off at a rate of 150 cars an hour.
into the faculty compound. Then
to the other. He was on his own
The ship is then converted into a conventional carrier fo- they broke into the No. 1 main
until a Lions’ Club in Australia the return trip with Canadian exports.
hall and No. 1 hall and vandalized
decided to give a letter of re
The cranes remove the flooring from the storage levels. Seen the rooms, smashing window
commendation to help him from here is the unloading of the ship at. Pier 43, Toronto Harbour, panes and overturning chairs and
one city to the other. Now every last week.
desks.
club on his route does so.
New CP AhTORONTO.
loading
occurs
muck
like
parking
At least a few students were excursion fares between Toronto
TORONTO. — The first of a
‘T want to see all the world,
injured during the and Tokyo
freighters in a downtown pigeonhole park reportedly
of
versatile
and take pictures,” said the 22- fleet
will
reduce rates
confrontation
between the radi across the North Pacific from
ing
lot.
of
importyear-old photographer. When he made to trim the cost
The decks, once the cargo is cals
and moderate
pro-Japan eight to more than 30 percent if
returns to Japan five or six ing cars arrived in Toronto from
faction
discharged,
simply
drop
away
Communist
Party
(JCP)
Japan
last
week.
years from now he hopes to
North given government approval, II. B.
to
the
sides,
turning
the
ship
students
in
front
of
the
A flock of huge car-carrying
Renwick, Vice-President, Market
write a book on his world ex
into a sea-going bulk carrier. Dormitory.
periences and include the pic aircraft may not be fax* behind.
ing and Sales announced recentJapan’s first roll-on-roll-off Bulk cargo capacity is 10,800
The pro-JCP students turned ly.
tures he has taken.
Nissan car carrier was loaded tons.
back their radical
opponents
Plans call for CP Air to introHome In ’74, Maybe
Hiraki Miki, vice-president of who later tried to storm the No.
with a cargo of 1,200 cars and
excursion
“I was planning to be home trucks and a convertible system Nissan Automobile Co. Canada, 7 main hall where the examina duce a $862,
fare
to
Tokyo
on
October
1. That
in ’75.” he said, “but now I think enabling the vessel to return said the Zama Maru is one of tions were held.
will
be
8.1
percent
lower
than
it will be in ’74 ... I hope.
four special carriers delivering
with Canadian wheat.
the
present
all-year
return
rate
The
college
of
General
Educa
His family hopes so too. Moto
With six decks and an ele Datsun cars and trucks.
of
$937.
The
peak
season
charge
V the youngest in a family of vator system, the 16,000-ton Za
Nissan Motor Co. of Tokyo tion has a total enrollment of
six. Although he can write to ma Maru allows cars to be driven has been studying the feasibility 7,000 or roughly one-half of the for this fare will be $891. A
them, they cannot give him news on or off the ship at a rate of of producing Datsun cars in Can university’s entire student body. 21-day excursion fare to Hong
Kong will be $1,053, $100 less
of home because he is never 150 an hour. Loading and un ada, Mr. Miki said.
The new university administra than today’s cost.
sure where he will be.
tion headed by Ichiro Kato has
Fox- groups of 40 or more
“I miss them sometimes, but
been trying to advance the fresh
travelling
in tours of 14 to 28
I don't know if they miss me.”
men and the sophomores to high
days
duration,
the planned reduc
Sets
The
Stage
The trip is all that absorbs
er grades through the term ex
tions
are
more
remarkable 32.7
■ns attention at the moment, how
aminations because the univer
percent
when
compared
to pres
ever. He never stays in one place
sity’s next entrance examinations
ent
round-trip
fares.
CP
Air
will
too long. Ottawa was his longest
will have to be canceled if they
sell
40-seat
blocks
of
tickets
to
stop-over, five davs.
stay over.
travel agents who in turn will
. Of all the places he has visited
Aeronautical Science.
The administrators had a num sell them individually with
Japane
UCHINOURA.
Jie likes Honolulu best. “I would
ber
of instructors patrol the cam ground tour packages worth a
scientists
successfully
fired
Ja
It jettisoned its eight auxiliary
to ^ve there,” said Moto.
pus
during the previous night to minimum $108.
pan
’
s
biggest
rocket
recently,
booster
rockets
eight
seconds
Yhen ,he returns to Takada
keep
the campus clear of radicals.
paving
the
way
for
launching
of
after
the
launching
and
splashed
These new tariff schedules are
'.‘.'A hms bicycle
145,000
•VC viv will
»> ill have
14M t V AMUjVVU
a
scientific
observation
satellite
down
into
the
Pacific
112
miles
being
submitted to the Canadian
*>mes on the meter. Usuallv
he
Police
De
The
Metropolitan
Usually
Air
Transport
Committee and
averages 60 miles a day, but his into earth orbit next yeai\
southeast of the space center m partment
riot
police
posted
The four-stage 44-ton, 75-foot- western Japan seven minutes —
'word is 120 miles in one day.
the civil aviation boards of Ja
squads outside the campus in pan and the U.S. for approval.
stops every hour, so I long rocket reached its highest seconds Later, they said.
preparation for possible clashes
aon
altitude of 345,600 feet four min
that fast.”
The
scientists
hope
to
put
a
utes 12 seconds after the blast satellite into orbit around the between the rivaling students.
Warships To Be Built
v ; .Perfect Tourist
off, said scientists of Tokyo
The university authorities plan
has been to Auckland, Univ.’s Institute of Space and earth in 1970.__
TOKYO. — The Japanese de
to finish the end-of-term exam
l^IPA' Canberra, Austrafence agency announced recently
;a
inations
by
the
end
of
this
week.
” i ■ A1? Islands and Hawaii.
it plans to build 11 warships,
e ,"°rked his way across the
The successful ending of the 15,360 tons in total, next year
YlC10,0^ a freighter from New
naval
first-day tests at Komaba has to strengthen Japanese
i crates sponsoring pavilions at
and landed, bike and all,
forces.
TOKYO. — The Japanese
the
prospects
■■' ' ancouver.
summer. Japan has brightened
The defence budget totals
Foreign Ministry said recently
advancing
the
students
and for about $1.47
perfect tourist Moto has the government has invited Pope received no reply from the Vat
billion, up about
We
rpr ssed by everything he
holding entrance examinations $260 million over fiscal 1969,
Paul
VI
to
the
1970
World
’
s
er. “Canada is very big,
can.
which were cancelled this year, which ends March 31, 1970.
Fair in Osaka but has not invited
On Au”' 29. a political science
JAe country,” he said.
according
to university officials.
The agency said the warships,
C;
a i? big. especially when the pontiff to visit Hiroshima nrofessor from the University ox
are
five destroyer escorts, one
on the 25th anniversary of its Hiroshima handed the Pope an
The examinations were origin
y peddling- all the way and
submarine,
two
minesweepers,
he
anniveratomic
bombing.
invitation to attend
Y*t most of the time.
ally scheduled for October last two torpedo boats and one land
Hiroshima
A spokesman said the Pope
ceremome
-<nap=acks. strapped to was invited to the fair because
ing vessel.
vear.
invitations
went
to
heads
of
al(Continued on P. 8)
Reduced Air Fare
Possible With
Govt. Approval
Largest Launched
Foreign Ministry Affirms Pope Invited to Expo 70
'Bv CARL T. ROWAN
^^YO._ A returning visitor
.... ^.v ces many changes
15 years, the most
ne
Hking being the
nomy and the
erity of the people,
er P
rtant, is the evid■ nationalistic temee
; risen markedly.
The result is that the end
has about- m ,me for the postctor and vanquishwar era ot yi
the
ed in rektio ns between
United States and Japan.
was obvious to U.S.
cabinet and other officials who
came here recently to discuss
economic problems flowing from
Japan s billion-dollar advantage
in trade with the U.S, last year
and from Japanese curbs on
U.S. products and investments.
The Japanese were talking
back in ways the Americans had
not heard since before the war.
It was obvious that the Japa
nese knew they were talking
from a position of economic
strength, so they were conced
ing little and giving away noth
ing.
The bolder and bolder Japa
nese demands for the return of
Okinawa are further evidence
that this country now thinks
of itself as an equal and no:
as a ward of the United States.
Soviet A Menace
This ought not be confused
with anti-Americanism, although
Uncle Sam is no runaway pop
ularity hero here. In a recent
As for Russia, 2.9 percent
nationwide poll. Yomiuri news
were pro, 2,9 percent were anti,
papers asked Japanese to name
and 45 percent were undecided.
the country they considered a
And 6,2 percent were promenace to Japan’s security. The
Red China. 32.7 percent were
Soviet Union was named by
anti, and 4S.1 pexvent undecid
20.4 percent. Red China by 15.6
ed.
percent, and the U.S. by seven
“for Japan'’
percent
What seems to be happening
In the popularity check, 23.9
here is not a tendency for th?
percent of the Japanese were
Japanese to be against anyone
pro-United States, 10.8 percent
or anything especially: they are
were anti, and 57,6 percent
were undecided.
(Cont. on Page 8)
|]|||llllllllIIIII|n,l,l,ll,,l,,,,,ll,,llll,,ll,,,,lllll,ll,,,,,,,,,l,,l,l,,I,l,,,,l,,,,ll,l,l,l,| llllil,llI,H,lllll,,,ll,,l,,lll|ll,II,l,,,,lll!llllllll,ll,l)llllllll1lllllllMlllllUIII)l,|liillllllllli,llll,ll,l,,ll,lll,IlllI,I(Iim
“SUKIYAKI”
Cookbook By
MISS STELLA ITO
The Dew Canadian
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A storv of J.C.’s By
JESSIE L. BEATTIE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 5, 1969
Vol. XXXIII—No. 68
nnnniifiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiilllHii
Toronto, Ont
niiiniiniiiiiiHiiiiniHHinuiiiiiHHiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiLiiiniiiiiiiiiiiifniiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiniHuiHniiiiiiii
Japanese Youth
On Stopover From
World Cycling Trip
Todai Holds Exams
Despite Attempted
Entry By Protestors
Bv PATRICIA LOWE
MONTREAL. — Montreal’s
streets are confusing, but for
Motomitsu Ikemoto of Takasa
City. Japan, they were impos
sible. He had been bicycling for
over a year touring the world
TOKYO. — The long-delayed end-of-term examinations were
and hardly ever got lost.
held at the College of General Education of the University of
Montreal, unfortunately, was
an exception until “a very kind
Tokyo without majox- disruptions though about 100 protesting
policeman” helped him reach his
radicals combined their efforts to prevent the examinations.
Lions’ Club contact, Edward Mc
The examinations started from 9:30 a.m., 30 minutes behind
Lean, last week at the Notre
schedule, and ended at 10:40 a.m. at the faculty in Komaba, Tokyo.
Dame police station.
Police stood by outside the campus to cope with any emergency.
Left Last Year
Motomitsu left home, twentyShortly after 8 ami. the activists of the All-Campus Joint StrugThe Zama Maru, a modern Datsun car carrier with a six deck
five miles from Osaka, last Au configuration for a total capacity of 1200 cars and trucks.
gle Committee, armed with helm
gust to take a seven-year bicycle
The unique feature of the ship is that autos are driven or ets and wooden staves, stormed
trip from one end of the world and off at a rate of 150 cars an hour.
into the faculty compound. Then
to the other. He was on his own
The ship is then converted into a conventional carrier fo- they broke into the No. 1 main
until a Lions’ Club in Australia the return trip with Canadian exports.
hall and No. 1 hall and vandalized
decided to give a letter of re
The cranes remove the flooring from the storage levels. Seen the rooms, smashing window
commendation to help him from here is the unloading of the ship at. Pier 43, Toronto Harbour, panes and overturning chairs and
one city to the other. Now every last week.
desks.
club on his route does so.
New CP AhTORONTO.
loading
occurs
muck
like
parking
At least a few students were excursion fares between Toronto
TORONTO. — The first of a
‘T want to see all the world,
injured during the and Tokyo
freighters in a downtown pigeonhole park reportedly
of
versatile
and take pictures,” said the 22- fleet
will
reduce rates
confrontation
between the radi across the North Pacific from
ing
lot.
of
importyear-old photographer. When he made to trim the cost
The decks, once the cargo is cals
and moderate
pro-Japan eight to more than 30 percent if
returns to Japan five or six ing cars arrived in Toronto from
faction
discharged,
simply
drop
away
Communist
Party
(JCP)
Japan
last
week.
years from now he hopes to
North given government approval, II. B.
to
the
sides,
turning
the
ship
students
in
front
of
the
A flock of huge car-carrying
Renwick, Vice-President, Market
write a book on his world ex
into a sea-going bulk carrier. Dormitory.
periences and include the pic aircraft may not be fax* behind.
ing and Sales announced recentJapan’s first roll-on-roll-off Bulk cargo capacity is 10,800
The pro-JCP students turned ly.
tures he has taken.
Nissan car carrier was loaded tons.
back their radical
opponents
Plans call for CP Air to introHome In ’74, Maybe
Hiraki Miki, vice-president of who later tried to storm the No.
with a cargo of 1,200 cars and
excursion
“I was planning to be home trucks and a convertible system Nissan Automobile Co. Canada, 7 main hall where the examina duce a $862,
fare
to
Tokyo
on
October
1. That
in ’75.” he said, “but now I think enabling the vessel to return said the Zama Maru is one of tions were held.
will
be
8.1
percent
lower
than
it will be in ’74 ... I hope.
four special carriers delivering
with Canadian wheat.
the
present
all-year
return
rate
The
college
of
General
Educa
His family hopes so too. Moto
With six decks and an ele Datsun cars and trucks.
of
$937.
The
peak
season
charge
V the youngest in a family of vator system, the 16,000-ton Za
Nissan Motor Co. of Tokyo tion has a total enrollment of
six. Although he can write to ma Maru allows cars to be driven has been studying the feasibility 7,000 or roughly one-half of the for this fare will be $891. A
them, they cannot give him news on or off the ship at a rate of of producing Datsun cars in Can university’s entire student body. 21-day excursion fare to Hong
Kong will be $1,053, $100 less
of home because he is never 150 an hour. Loading and un ada, Mr. Miki said.
The new university administra than today’s cost.
sure where he will be.
tion headed by Ichiro Kato has
Fox- groups of 40 or more
“I miss them sometimes, but
been trying to advance the fresh
travelling
in tours of 14 to 28
I don't know if they miss me.”
men and the sophomores to high
days
duration,
the planned reduc
Sets
The
Stage
The trip is all that absorbs
er grades through the term ex
tions
are
more
remarkable 32.7
■ns attention at the moment, how
aminations because the univer
percent
when
compared
to pres
ever. He never stays in one place
sity’s next entrance examinations
ent
round-trip
fares.
CP
Air
will
too long. Ottawa was his longest
will have to be canceled if they
sell
40-seat
blocks
of
tickets
to
stop-over, five davs.
stay over.
travel agents who in turn will
. Of all the places he has visited
Aeronautical Science.
The administrators had a num sell them individually with
Japane
UCHINOURA.
Jie likes Honolulu best. “I would
ber
of instructors patrol the cam ground tour packages worth a
scientists
successfully
fired
Ja
It jettisoned its eight auxiliary
to ^ve there,” said Moto.
pus
during the previous night to minimum $108.
pan
’
s
biggest
rocket
recently,
booster
rockets
eight
seconds
Yhen ,he returns to Takada
keep
the campus clear of radicals.
paving
the
way
for
launching
of
after
the
launching
and
splashed
These new tariff schedules are
'.‘.'A hms bicycle
145,000
•VC viv will
»> ill have
14M t V AMUjVVU
a
scientific
observation
satellite
down
into
the
Pacific
112
miles
being
submitted to the Canadian
*>mes on the meter. Usuallv
he
Police
De
The
Metropolitan
Usually
Air
Transport
Committee and
averages 60 miles a day, but his into earth orbit next yeai\
southeast of the space center m partment
riot
police
posted
The four-stage 44-ton, 75-foot- western Japan seven minutes —
'word is 120 miles in one day.
the civil aviation boards of Ja
squads outside the campus in pan and the U.S. for approval.
stops every hour, so I long rocket reached its highest seconds Later, they said.
preparation for possible clashes
aon
altitude of 345,600 feet four min
that fast.”
The
scientists
hope
to
put
a
utes 12 seconds after the blast satellite into orbit around the between the rivaling students.
Warships To Be Built
v ; .Perfect Tourist
off, said scientists of Tokyo
The university authorities plan
has been to Auckland, Univ.’s Institute of Space and earth in 1970.__
TOKYO. — The Japanese de
to finish the end-of-term exam
l^IPA' Canberra, Austrafence agency announced recently
;a
inations
by
the
end
of
this
week.
” i ■ A1? Islands and Hawaii.
it plans to build 11 warships,
e ,"°rked his way across the
The successful ending of the 15,360 tons in total, next year
YlC10,0^ a freighter from New
naval
first-day tests at Komaba has to strengthen Japanese
i crates sponsoring pavilions at
and landed, bike and all,
forces.
TOKYO. — The Japanese
the
prospects
■■' ' ancouver.
summer. Japan has brightened
The defence budget totals
Foreign Ministry said recently
advancing
the
students
and for about $1.47
perfect tourist Moto has the government has invited Pope received no reply from the Vat
billion, up about
We
rpr ssed by everything he
holding entrance examinations $260 million over fiscal 1969,
Paul
VI
to
the
1970
World
’
s
er. “Canada is very big,
can.
which were cancelled this year, which ends March 31, 1970.
Fair in Osaka but has not invited
On Au”' 29. a political science
JAe country,” he said.
according
to university officials.
The agency said the warships,
C;
a i? big. especially when the pontiff to visit Hiroshima nrofessor from the University ox
are
five destroyer escorts, one
on the 25th anniversary of its Hiroshima handed the Pope an
The examinations were origin
y peddling- all the way and
submarine,
two
minesweepers,
he
anniveratomic
bombing.
invitation to attend
Y*t most of the time.
ally scheduled for October last two torpedo boats and one land
Hiroshima
A spokesman said the Pope
ceremome
-<nap=acks. strapped to was invited to the fair because
ing vessel.
vear.
invitations
went
to
heads
of
al(Continued on P. 8)
Reduced Air Fare
Possible With
Govt. Approval
Largest Launched
Foreign Ministry Affirms Pope Invited to Expo 70
Page 2
PAGE 2
Sansei Kendoka, Takagaki Wins
Bt International Kendo Toorneu
TORONTO—A standing room only crowd was - Canadian Cultural Centre
team before winZ
Z tO/?neSS the eXciting “First Toronto
ning
the
Consul
General
of
Japan
Cup. The tro
ternational Kendo Tournament,” held August
phy was presented by Vice-Consul, Mr. T. Furuta.
OSAKA.—The first International Kendo
'
•1st in the mam auditorium of the Japanese
Canadian Cultural Centre. Most of the enthusiast As runner-up, the Centre team received the Con Championships will be held in Tokvo and n J panese W
tinental Times Trophy. Two other prominent local year, the International Kendo Federation of
m April J
ic spectators stayed on for the entire programme
The team championsMp will be Idd
^’^Pon B ~
X
111 FPt aVentiOn* They
rewarded teams were also in the competition; the Toka Hall in Tokyo on April 5 and the individual
th hvely action which saw the more experienc Kendo Association and the Japan Camera School. Osaka Municipal Central Gymnasium on April i?P:onshiP
For the Gin-sho (best technique), the Japan
ed American Buddhist Academy of New York I
About 130 fencers from 19 country
Camera Trophy went to Gordon Godfrey of "the
■
team extended to the wire by the Japanes
Australia, Belgium, France and Britain /ip
udlnR
'63
1 Steveston Kendo School of British Columbia.
championships, according to the federation
‘ participate in
Thirteen year old Mark Grivas,
The participants are also expected
the youngest competitor in the Sdwi11
k?ndo n^eet April 9 at th? site of Expo Part in the
w
tournament was the recipient of w ill open in March next year.
■0 in Osaka
rLtlTl^ V For'ner
[Tokyo, soon after the New Year
ihe Kanto-sho (fighting spirit)
' s award. Disadvantaged in height
The All-Japan Kendo Federation is ako
1 .
grand champion Kashiwado said s^mo
sumo cnanipionship
championship
opening1 in
a
six-member
team
to
Europe
in
September
®
etl 10
here recently that he would es Jan. 11, at Kuramae Kokugikan compaied to the older contest
and instructions in Japanese fencing. The tear/
tablish a new sumo stable in Jan- arena in Tokyo.
ants, he nevertheless put on a bv Kozo Takizawa, a director of the federation. ‘
be head;
Tihe TGrrner grand champion game display.
uary next year for training
The federation will also send
made the announcement when he
young wrestlers.
a 22-member te
In the L.S. — Canada all-star and Taiwan in October.
visited patrons in his native preKashiwado, now called Kaga- tecture of Tsuruoka.
competition, the second voungest
his
^-emfnt
Meanwhile,
Kashiwado’s sta- competitor, Toronto Sansei, Bob
bis “Kagamiyama°Stab^
chief Isenoumi told the press lakagaki put on an excellent
open in Koiwa, Edogawa Ward Iater 1,1 the daV that he had al- performance downing three con’ ways been in favor of Kashisecutix e opponents for first place
wado
’
s
establishing
a
stable
of
V
his own.
Bob will be entering the Univer
Healthy Body & Mind t be cou^ make a great con- sity
of Toronto this fall.
Authorized Dealer For
tnbution to the sport of sumo
Through the Martial Arts US
Other, seldom seen exhibitions
RCA. Victor — Color TV. — Stereo-etc.
T® his knowledge as .a n^w
and young master, Isenoumi
a fu Very fay°urably receiv
said.
ed by the attentive audience. A
2893 Lawrence Ave. East At
demonstration of Kenbu (sword
Phone 759-1583
q311™?) ?Yas Performed by Mr.
Brim ley Rd. Scarboroug h
1 ’ S V0,23^ of Montreal accom
Tom Iwamoto
panied by Mr. Sato who did Ka- I
FIKE — THEFT — AUTO
Tosh Muraki
vxanakajima, shigin (ceremonial
Consult
s. Kan 5th dan ‘
S
BCk 0Wen 4th dai‘
Of the Buddhist Academy
of New York} put on a precise
display of lai-do Eishin Ryu.
I
1 st International Kendo Ghshpst For Janan In
Ex-Champ’s Sumo Stable
TOM'S TELEVISION & RADIO
Sales - Service
OSCAR'S
Sport Shop
RITZ KINOSHITA
NEW
LOCATION
Specializing In Chinese Food
For All GLassea of
1201 Bloor Street West
The planners were much en
couraged by the response to thD ।
tournament, designed to promote I
Japanese culture as well as ken
'
00, and are optimistic about mak
ing it an annual event.
To recap the results of th’
tournament, they are as follows:
insurance
Phonax PL. 9.2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
LE. 2-4267
ASK FOR
Stan Nishimura
Travel Arrangements
Air—Ship—Bus—Rail
1682 St. Clair Ave. W.
Toronto
Bus. 766-6191
BEST TECHNIQUE - Gordon
sX? ~ Steveston Kendo
Anywhere — Anytime
Real Estate
Res. LE. 1-1089
TEAM CHAMPIONSHIP 1 \m.
Budddhist Academy of
Kev ^ork "A” team, 2. Japanese
I Canadian Cultural
Centre “A.”
team.
trcvellers Choques
Obtainable
Trarel, Accident
and Bagqatrs Insuranc
™HT®G «H - Mark Gri-
Businessmen Luncheon
We Cater To Parties And Banquets
TAKE OUT SERVICE
Phone: EM. 3-7646 — EM. 8-0035
123A Dundas St. West
—
Toronto 2, Ont.
Parking At Bay & Dundas
Escorted Autumn Tours to Japan
Departure — November 2nd, Sunday
F01 further information and reservations contact
nf'f}XADA
ALL-STAR __
Bob Takagaki — Japanese Cana
dian Cultural Centre “A” team.
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
Furuya Travel Service
Passage arranged by Steamer or Air
SAY IT WITH
FLOWERS
TEN PIN BOWLERS
WANTED
Information — EM. 8-9934
SHARON'S FLORIST
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
T. KAMEOKA
8us: HO. 6-2041
^es: H0- 6-7962
K. Iwato Travel Service
CITY-WIDE DE1.IVERY
M2
PAPE
AVE..
365 Spadina Ave.
Toronto 2-B, Ont
Tel. 366-1075
Call for Reservations or
TORONTO
;
S89 Dundas St. W., Toronto 140 j
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD,
Scarboro Nisei
VESTROUGHING
Call 222-3613
SHEET METAL WORK .
ALCAN SIDING DEALER
LEARN CHICK SEXING
TORONTO
<
421-3374 NISEI OWNED
TOSH ^SffijatA
"COVERING ONTARIO'
Calls: PL. 9-5095 Hl. 7-1100
LAST OPPORTUNITY
OPTICAL
TO ENROLL IN THE 1969 CLASS SESSION
* Only chick $
chool in the U.S.
operating continuously since 1937.
Complete Care
Write or phone for free brochure-
„ kwongchow
CHOP SUET TAVERN
AMERICAN CHICK SEXING SCHOOL
214 Prospect Avenue
Lansdale. Pennsylvania 19446
Phone: 215/855-5157
Night Tel.:
Tsuvuki 535-9935
Uyeda LE. 6-1403
Attention on Take Out Orders
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
(
i
i
4
I
VANCOUVER, S.C.
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
I
I
I
Sansei Kendoka, Takagaki Wins
Bt International Kendo Toorneu
TORONTO—A standing room only crowd was - Canadian Cultural Centre
team before winZ
Z tO/?neSS the eXciting “First Toronto
ning
the
Consul
General
of
Japan
Cup. The tro
ternational Kendo Tournament,” held August
phy was presented by Vice-Consul, Mr. T. Furuta.
OSAKA.—The first International Kendo
'
•1st in the mam auditorium of the Japanese
Canadian Cultural Centre. Most of the enthusiast As runner-up, the Centre team received the Con Championships will be held in Tokvo and n J panese W
tinental Times Trophy. Two other prominent local year, the International Kendo Federation of
m April J
ic spectators stayed on for the entire programme
The team championsMp will be Idd
^’^Pon B ~
X
111 FPt aVentiOn* They
rewarded teams were also in the competition; the Toka Hall in Tokyo on April 5 and the individual
th hvely action which saw the more experienc Kendo Association and the Japan Camera School. Osaka Municipal Central Gymnasium on April i?P:onshiP
For the Gin-sho (best technique), the Japan
ed American Buddhist Academy of New York I
About 130 fencers from 19 country
Camera Trophy went to Gordon Godfrey of "the
■
team extended to the wire by the Japanes
Australia, Belgium, France and Britain /ip
udlnR
'63
1 Steveston Kendo School of British Columbia.
championships, according to the federation
‘ participate in
Thirteen year old Mark Grivas,
The participants are also expected
the youngest competitor in the Sdwi11
k?ndo n^eet April 9 at th? site of Expo Part in the
w
tournament was the recipient of w ill open in March next year.
■0 in Osaka
rLtlTl^ V For'ner
[Tokyo, soon after the New Year
ihe Kanto-sho (fighting spirit)
' s award. Disadvantaged in height
The All-Japan Kendo Federation is ako
1 .
grand champion Kashiwado said s^mo
sumo cnanipionship
championship
opening1 in
a
six-member
team
to
Europe
in
September
®
etl 10
here recently that he would es Jan. 11, at Kuramae Kokugikan compaied to the older contest
and instructions in Japanese fencing. The tear/
tablish a new sumo stable in Jan- arena in Tokyo.
ants, he nevertheless put on a bv Kozo Takizawa, a director of the federation. ‘
be head;
Tihe TGrrner grand champion game display.
uary next year for training
The federation will also send
made the announcement when he
young wrestlers.
a 22-member te
In the L.S. — Canada all-star and Taiwan in October.
visited patrons in his native preKashiwado, now called Kaga- tecture of Tsuruoka.
competition, the second voungest
his
^-emfnt
Meanwhile,
Kashiwado’s sta- competitor, Toronto Sansei, Bob
bis “Kagamiyama°Stab^
chief Isenoumi told the press lakagaki put on an excellent
open in Koiwa, Edogawa Ward Iater 1,1 the daV that he had al- performance downing three con’ ways been in favor of Kashisecutix e opponents for first place
wado
’
s
establishing
a
stable
of
V
his own.
Bob will be entering the Univer
Healthy Body & Mind t be cou^ make a great con- sity
of Toronto this fall.
Authorized Dealer For
tnbution to the sport of sumo
Through the Martial Arts US
Other, seldom seen exhibitions
RCA. Victor — Color TV. — Stereo-etc.
T® his knowledge as .a n^w
and young master, Isenoumi
a fu Very fay°urably receiv
said.
ed by the attentive audience. A
2893 Lawrence Ave. East At
demonstration of Kenbu (sword
Phone 759-1583
q311™?) ?Yas Performed by Mr.
Brim ley Rd. Scarboroug h
1 ’ S V0,23^ of Montreal accom
Tom Iwamoto
panied by Mr. Sato who did Ka- I
FIKE — THEFT — AUTO
Tosh Muraki
vxanakajima, shigin (ceremonial
Consult
s. Kan 5th dan ‘
S
BCk 0Wen 4th dai‘
Of the Buddhist Academy
of New York} put on a precise
display of lai-do Eishin Ryu.
I
1 st International Kendo Ghshpst For Janan In
Ex-Champ’s Sumo Stable
TOM'S TELEVISION & RADIO
Sales - Service
OSCAR'S
Sport Shop
RITZ KINOSHITA
NEW
LOCATION
Specializing In Chinese Food
For All GLassea of
1201 Bloor Street West
The planners were much en
couraged by the response to thD ।
tournament, designed to promote I
Japanese culture as well as ken
'
00, and are optimistic about mak
ing it an annual event.
To recap the results of th’
tournament, they are as follows:
insurance
Phonax PL. 9.2632
OR
PL. 5-7317
LE. 2-4267
ASK FOR
Stan Nishimura
Travel Arrangements
Air—Ship—Bus—Rail
1682 St. Clair Ave. W.
Toronto
Bus. 766-6191
BEST TECHNIQUE - Gordon
sX? ~ Steveston Kendo
Anywhere — Anytime
Real Estate
Res. LE. 1-1089
TEAM CHAMPIONSHIP 1 \m.
Budddhist Academy of
Kev ^ork "A” team, 2. Japanese
I Canadian Cultural
Centre “A.”
team.
trcvellers Choques
Obtainable
Trarel, Accident
and Bagqatrs Insuranc
™HT®G «H - Mark Gri-
Businessmen Luncheon
We Cater To Parties And Banquets
TAKE OUT SERVICE
Phone: EM. 3-7646 — EM. 8-0035
123A Dundas St. West
—
Toronto 2, Ont.
Parking At Bay & Dundas
Escorted Autumn Tours to Japan
Departure — November 2nd, Sunday
F01 further information and reservations contact
nf'f}XADA
ALL-STAR __
Bob Takagaki — Japanese Cana
dian Cultural Centre “A” team.
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
Furuya Travel Service
Passage arranged by Steamer or Air
SAY IT WITH
FLOWERS
TEN PIN BOWLERS
WANTED
Information — EM. 8-9934
SHARON'S FLORIST
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
T. KAMEOKA
8us: HO. 6-2041
^es: H0- 6-7962
K. Iwato Travel Service
CITY-WIDE DE1.IVERY
M2
PAPE
AVE..
365 Spadina Ave.
Toronto 2-B, Ont
Tel. 366-1075
Call for Reservations or
TORONTO
;
S89 Dundas St. W., Toronto 140 j
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD,
Scarboro Nisei
VESTROUGHING
Call 222-3613
SHEET METAL WORK .
ALCAN SIDING DEALER
LEARN CHICK SEXING
TORONTO
<
421-3374 NISEI OWNED
TOSH ^SffijatA
"COVERING ONTARIO'
Calls: PL. 9-5095 Hl. 7-1100
LAST OPPORTUNITY
OPTICAL
TO ENROLL IN THE 1969 CLASS SESSION
* Only chick $
chool in the U.S.
operating continuously since 1937.
Complete Care
Write or phone for free brochure-
„ kwongchow
CHOP SUET TAVERN
AMERICAN CHICK SEXING SCHOOL
214 Prospect Avenue
Lansdale. Pennsylvania 19446
Phone: 215/855-5157
Night Tel.:
Tsuvuki 535-9935
Uyeda LE. 6-1403
Attention on Take Out Orders
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
(
i
i
4
I
VANCOUVER, S.C.
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
I
I
I
Page 3
5, 1969
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Phone MU. 1-6642—0451
1550 Wert Georgia. St
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Page 7
SeDteniber 5,_1969
_________ PAGE 7
Dates And Doings
MEMORIES OF A NISEI IMMIGRANT
It b « good policy to
hav. Ui. KIGHT POLICY
Con.lilt
(The writer of the following article is a British Columbiaborn Nisei who first, wrote to tl ' New Canadian when it was
relish Language Courses For Asians To Open founded, in 1939. Now. a medical researcher in the United State.
Mr. Sitarr (pen name)
writing a series of whimsical account
i;r.\RBORB.—scarboro will have its first English Language of
recollections over the
.„.L’seared to immigrants from Asia—including Indonesia and
‘/’’ ..h/’opruieni of India this September by the opening of the
f.i^ Vian Institute. The institute will offer English courses
Ju
smily 1 acquired a couple of antique radio sets. One
':^'and recognized by the Dept, of Citizenship (Ont. Govtewart-Warner and the 0 her is a 1928 Radiola.
m'm) and will include courses in writing as well as English These were
expensive
radios back in th ■se days and we didn't
i^^fe^ionals upon demand. Special emphasis will be given own any until 1934. Until
tequainted
101 mkeii^ contemporary English—including idioms, slangs and " ith were those bdoncin then the radios that I w
,
,
,
to
Hakujin
friends
of
our
In fact
pronunciation— rather than grammar- and syntax, so that "a new one was ownea by my father's very good friend. Mr.
Tisdale.
I
immigrant may enter into the business stream of Canadian life
^V0 °^ r-}? later series of the Radiolas anyway
i^naie who first explained to me how radios worked
5; quickly as possible. Courses will be taught on a continuous
” ' ’
Mkal system in order that those who may have to drop out although 1 am sun
I was
r^ week or two c.an pick up their studies without lagging be- 8 years old then. If w as Mr. Tisdale who took me to s<
enrolled me the first day of school because I couldn't
1 their classes.
word
., , , of English,
-— : and
............ .- parents couldn't do much better. Hr.
There will also be opportunity to attend Group and Voca- T
iisdaie was a friend and source of information to me and to the
al Counselling’ sessions. The aim of these counselling services
ai?! A J
n 4 years when I was barely ten my father died
d help new immigrants to adjust their lives to the problem ana Mr. lisdale died within 1(10 days after
my father's death.
’inding suitable employment, of making new friends in Canada
My interest in radios was aroused and when the mobile
started to bring’ books to the one-room country
end of assimilating generally into the social milieu of a complex library
school
one
of the lirst books I took out was on radios li told flow
a cosmopolitan city like Toronto.
to make crystal sets by winding wire on an oat meal carton etc.
Registration and classes will begin on Monday, Sept. 22nd. 1 begged my mother to let me have some money to buy
parts
they will be held every Monday and Wednesday‘evenings from'
to ~make a crystal set, and I sent away for a kit from : mail
■•SiMioO. Location of the Scarboro Asian Institute is
oraer radio store in Edmonton Alberta. 'which 1
in
Warden Ave. (S. of Ellesmere). No tuition fees are charged ex- a farm magazine. 1 bought a pair of secondhand ear advertised
phones from
cept the annual registration cost of $10.00. Inquiries and
a junk shop for a couple of dollars, (Brandes which survive today
plication should be made to the Institute at 757-7844 soon.
jit up collection of old time radio gear). With an antenna over
100 feet long up in the air about 70 feet that crystal set pulled
*
in stations all over the USA, New York. Atlanta. Los Angeles,
and
Denver. I remember call letters like KnX. WABC, WSB KSL.
Reminder For Buddhist Church Charter Flight
KOA, etc.
I was ready for bigger
things and finally in 1934 1 talked
KAMLOOPS.—To: Buddhist Church members
Your
my mother into buying a second hand console broadcast radio set:
po Charter Flight leaving Vancouver on the first Friday of I think it was a Philco. I stayed up all night the first day weAugust 1970 notices may have been overlooked.
had it. Anyway after that I stayed up many nights logging
We are just reminding you that this 3-week charter flight different stations, and sort of slept on the kitchen floor since
it was located in the kitchen. I really don’t know what 1 used
($305.00) return was designed just for you.
as a sales talk to get mother to buy that set.
We had all information in our original brochures to you
of
I think I said something like she could
but if you have misplaced or not received them, we have a few eggs over the radio and she wouldn’t sell them too cheap because
newspapers came only late in the afternoon. The truth of the
left.
matter was it was just an excuse.
If you are contemplating an Expo ’70 trip, and decide to
It appears that we had an unusual crop of strawberry^
join the charter, contact your “Charter Flight Headquarters” im- that summer and so mother indulged. The crowning glory for
mediately.
me was that I talked mother into trading that radio within a
month for a table model which had the shortwave broadcast band.
Frank S. Yoshioka,
Shortwave broadcast, beamed from Japan came in loud and clear
Charter Chairman
about 9 or 10 o’clock in the evening. Since we were the first Ja
panese family to have a. shortwave set, in the evenings we used
160 Seymour Street,
to have visitors who came to listen to the Japanese broadcasts.
Kamloops, B.C.
In a short while most of the families had much fancier sets
than our six tube Westinghouse table model.
Of course when the war came the government called in all
radio sets. I was not about to give up so easily, so one of my
"Japan Folk Festival" Scheduled Oct. 5 at Centre Hakujin friends kept the radio for me. And after I was safe!
TORONTO.
On Sunday, October 5th, 1969 from 2:00 p.m. back East he sent it to me and I still have it. You know it was
a funny thing- I never did turn that crystal set in and after the
until 5:30 p.m. there will be a “Japan Folk Festival” sponsored radio was gone I dug it up from my junk box and heard all kinds
bj the Toronto JCCA, Issei-bu and New Immigrant Liaison Group of things on it. Somehow over the years I don’t know what hap
at the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre, 123 Wynford Drive, Don pened to it, but I think it was left behind when I got my BC
Security Commission permit to travel to Montreal. I feel a strong
Mills.
attachment to radio and still don’t have TV. I have my amateur
he sincerely hope the Issei’s, Nisei’s and Sansei’s will come radio call letters on my car licence plates although I haven't
<cid enjoy the fall afternoon of fi'iendship and relaxing entertain turned on a transmitter for at least 5 years.
ment.
However my day to day activities involves mostly bio-medi
The Sansei Choir and Parents’ group will sell drinks and re cal electronics. The days of saving up pennies, nickles and dimes
freshments during the afternoon in the basement. Proceeds will for resistors, capacitors are over but now I save up memories of
the past. My collection among other things old 1935 Allied Radio
be for the Sansei Choir..
Catalog, Hugo Gernsback’s magazines, etc. Mr. Tisdale’s influence
The ticket to cover cost of operating will be $1.00 for adults is very strong yet; my son is named after him.
and 50 cents for children under 12 years. (Donations will not be
necessan). lou may obtain tickets at the New Canadian, Conti
nental Times, Kameoka Book Store and any executive of the
loionto JCCA, Issei-bu or New Immigrant Liaison Group.
Please purchase your
tickets
early
as the numbers are
lilted.
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone 368-4681
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
RICHMOND ST. W.
TORONTO 1
363-5002 — 691-3388 (Res.)
121
| Paul K. Asada. D.C., N.D.
“Doctor of Chiropractic’’
728A St. Clair Ave. West
Q4 block West of Christie)
TORONTO
Res. 621-1989
651-8060
KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C.
BARRISTER. SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Carlton St., Toronto
Room 1805
293-4281 (Ros.)
366-6388
Buy & Sell — Your Home
Through
Mils Kuroda
Representing
Robt. Owen,
Realtor
2685 Eglinton Ave. East
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-2581
proprietor
JON ONODERA
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805
( Busi n ess)
( R esidence)
540 Eglinton Ave. W,
Toronto
Personal Notes Across Canada
Marriages
—Japan Folk Festival Programme Committee
RAMEN
or
T.V. Service
UDON
ONCE A DAY
EM 4-9913
535-5402
445-1338
Toronto
(TORONTO)
YOSHIKI-HORIKAWA
TORONTO. — Miss Faye Ho
rikawa, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
C. Horikawa of Toronto and Mr.
Robert Yoshiki Jr., son of Mr.
Robert Yoshiki Sr., and the late
S. Yoshiki, of Mississauga
Miwere married at St. Albans The
Martyr Anglican Church by Rev.
K. Imai.
Reception was at China House,
Following, the couple honey
mooned in Quebec, The Gaspe
area and Prince Edward Island.
NISHIMURA-IWANAKA
mutual funds salesman
V ^ePen(^en^ sales agents for over 30 of the best
utual Funds we offer a fine opportunity to an
aggressive salesman. Prior experience is not
necessary and adequate training and sales help
are provided.
p
Ask for Jack McMurray
MUTUAL INVESTMENTS LTD.
Bayview Avenue
Pronto 352, Ontario
Phone 481-3387
GREENFIELD PARK, P.Q.—
On Saturday, August 23rd, 1969,
Rev. H. Iwai officiated at the
wedding of Miss Judy Mayumi
Iwanaka, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenji Iwanaka of Green
field Park, to Mr. Archie Akira
Nishimura, son of Mr. Kiheiji
Ste. Catharines,
of
Ont.
at the Greenfield Park
United Church.
The reception followed at the
Greenfield Park Town Hall. The
couple honeymooned at Cape Cod
and are residing in Toronto.
Births
STE. CATHARINES. — Emil
and Yukiko Tognon (nee Miyaga
wa) are happy to announce the
birth of a daughter,
Cristina
Esao, 7 lbs. 6I2 oz. on Aug. 18,
1969 at Hotel Dieu Hospital in
Ste. Catharines. Both doing fine.
card OF THANKS
We wish to extend our sin
cere thanks to our many rela
tives and friends, for their
many acts of kindness, floral
tributes and
expressions of
sympathy
shown us during
our recent bereavement of our
dear Mother, Airs, Hide Ebisuzaki.
Ken & Kinuko Eb'suzaki
Koji & Yaeko Ebisuzah;
Gertrude Urabe
AGENCY
Office, 43 Eglinton Ave. East
Phone 485-5087
Home phone: 449-9293
Fully Licenced
NIKKO GARDEN
Reservations: EM. 6-2164
For best arrangements
Reserve ahead of time.
VARIOUS KINDS OF SUSHI
AND OTHER JAPANESE
CUISINES AVAILABLE FOR
FAMILY PARTIES
Choice This Sunday
460 Dundas St. W.
Toronto
_________ PAGE 7
Dates And Doings
MEMORIES OF A NISEI IMMIGRANT
It b « good policy to
hav. Ui. KIGHT POLICY
Con.lilt
(The writer of the following article is a British Columbiaborn Nisei who first, wrote to tl ' New Canadian when it was
relish Language Courses For Asians To Open founded, in 1939. Now. a medical researcher in the United State.
Mr. Sitarr (pen name)
writing a series of whimsical account
i;r.\RBORB.—scarboro will have its first English Language of
recollections over the
.„.L’seared to immigrants from Asia—including Indonesia and
‘/’’ ..h/’opruieni of India this September by the opening of the
f.i^ Vian Institute. The institute will offer English courses
Ju
smily 1 acquired a couple of antique radio sets. One
':^'and recognized by the Dept, of Citizenship (Ont. Govtewart-Warner and the 0 her is a 1928 Radiola.
m'm) and will include courses in writing as well as English These were
expensive
radios back in th ■se days and we didn't
i^^fe^ionals upon demand. Special emphasis will be given own any until 1934. Until
tequainted
101 mkeii^ contemporary English—including idioms, slangs and " ith were those bdoncin then the radios that I w
,
,
,
to
Hakujin
friends
of
our
In fact
pronunciation— rather than grammar- and syntax, so that "a new one was ownea by my father's very good friend. Mr.
Tisdale.
I
immigrant may enter into the business stream of Canadian life
^V0 °^ r-}? later series of the Radiolas anyway
i^naie who first explained to me how radios worked
5; quickly as possible. Courses will be taught on a continuous
” ' ’
Mkal system in order that those who may have to drop out although 1 am sun
I was
r^ week or two c.an pick up their studies without lagging be- 8 years old then. If w as Mr. Tisdale who took me to s<
enrolled me the first day of school because I couldn't
1 their classes.
word
., , , of English,
-— : and
............ .- parents couldn't do much better. Hr.
There will also be opportunity to attend Group and Voca- T
iisdaie was a friend and source of information to me and to the
al Counselling’ sessions. The aim of these counselling services
ai?! A J
n 4 years when I was barely ten my father died
d help new immigrants to adjust their lives to the problem ana Mr. lisdale died within 1(10 days after
my father's death.
’inding suitable employment, of making new friends in Canada
My interest in radios was aroused and when the mobile
started to bring’ books to the one-room country
end of assimilating generally into the social milieu of a complex library
school
one
of the lirst books I took out was on radios li told flow
a cosmopolitan city like Toronto.
to make crystal sets by winding wire on an oat meal carton etc.
Registration and classes will begin on Monday, Sept. 22nd. 1 begged my mother to let me have some money to buy
parts
they will be held every Monday and Wednesday‘evenings from'
to ~make a crystal set, and I sent away for a kit from : mail
■•SiMioO. Location of the Scarboro Asian Institute is
oraer radio store in Edmonton Alberta. 'which 1
in
Warden Ave. (S. of Ellesmere). No tuition fees are charged ex- a farm magazine. 1 bought a pair of secondhand ear advertised
phones from
cept the annual registration cost of $10.00. Inquiries and
a junk shop for a couple of dollars, (Brandes which survive today
plication should be made to the Institute at 757-7844 soon.
jit up collection of old time radio gear). With an antenna over
100 feet long up in the air about 70 feet that crystal set pulled
*
in stations all over the USA, New York. Atlanta. Los Angeles,
and
Denver. I remember call letters like KnX. WABC, WSB KSL.
Reminder For Buddhist Church Charter Flight
KOA, etc.
I was ready for bigger
things and finally in 1934 1 talked
KAMLOOPS.—To: Buddhist Church members
Your
my mother into buying a second hand console broadcast radio set:
po Charter Flight leaving Vancouver on the first Friday of I think it was a Philco. I stayed up all night the first day weAugust 1970 notices may have been overlooked.
had it. Anyway after that I stayed up many nights logging
We are just reminding you that this 3-week charter flight different stations, and sort of slept on the kitchen floor since
it was located in the kitchen. I really don’t know what 1 used
($305.00) return was designed just for you.
as a sales talk to get mother to buy that set.
We had all information in our original brochures to you
of
I think I said something like she could
but if you have misplaced or not received them, we have a few eggs over the radio and she wouldn’t sell them too cheap because
newspapers came only late in the afternoon. The truth of the
left.
matter was it was just an excuse.
If you are contemplating an Expo ’70 trip, and decide to
It appears that we had an unusual crop of strawberry^
join the charter, contact your “Charter Flight Headquarters” im- that summer and so mother indulged. The crowning glory for
mediately.
me was that I talked mother into trading that radio within a
month for a table model which had the shortwave broadcast band.
Frank S. Yoshioka,
Shortwave broadcast, beamed from Japan came in loud and clear
Charter Chairman
about 9 or 10 o’clock in the evening. Since we were the first Ja
panese family to have a. shortwave set, in the evenings we used
160 Seymour Street,
to have visitors who came to listen to the Japanese broadcasts.
Kamloops, B.C.
In a short while most of the families had much fancier sets
than our six tube Westinghouse table model.
Of course when the war came the government called in all
radio sets. I was not about to give up so easily, so one of my
"Japan Folk Festival" Scheduled Oct. 5 at Centre Hakujin friends kept the radio for me. And after I was safe!
TORONTO.
On Sunday, October 5th, 1969 from 2:00 p.m. back East he sent it to me and I still have it. You know it was
a funny thing- I never did turn that crystal set in and after the
until 5:30 p.m. there will be a “Japan Folk Festival” sponsored radio was gone I dug it up from my junk box and heard all kinds
bj the Toronto JCCA, Issei-bu and New Immigrant Liaison Group of things on it. Somehow over the years I don’t know what hap
at the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre, 123 Wynford Drive, Don pened to it, but I think it was left behind when I got my BC
Security Commission permit to travel to Montreal. I feel a strong
Mills.
attachment to radio and still don’t have TV. I have my amateur
he sincerely hope the Issei’s, Nisei’s and Sansei’s will come radio call letters on my car licence plates although I haven't
<cid enjoy the fall afternoon of fi'iendship and relaxing entertain turned on a transmitter for at least 5 years.
ment.
However my day to day activities involves mostly bio-medi
The Sansei Choir and Parents’ group will sell drinks and re cal electronics. The days of saving up pennies, nickles and dimes
freshments during the afternoon in the basement. Proceeds will for resistors, capacitors are over but now I save up memories of
the past. My collection among other things old 1935 Allied Radio
be for the Sansei Choir..
Catalog, Hugo Gernsback’s magazines, etc. Mr. Tisdale’s influence
The ticket to cover cost of operating will be $1.00 for adults is very strong yet; my son is named after him.
and 50 cents for children under 12 years. (Donations will not be
necessan). lou may obtain tickets at the New Canadian, Conti
nental Times, Kameoka Book Store and any executive of the
loionto JCCA, Issei-bu or New Immigrant Liaison Group.
Please purchase your
tickets
early
as the numbers are
lilted.
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A. Ont.
Phone 368-4681
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
RICHMOND ST. W.
TORONTO 1
363-5002 — 691-3388 (Res.)
121
| Paul K. Asada. D.C., N.D.
“Doctor of Chiropractic’’
728A St. Clair Ave. West
Q4 block West of Christie)
TORONTO
Res. 621-1989
651-8060
KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C.
BARRISTER. SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
2 Carlton St., Toronto
Room 1805
293-4281 (Ros.)
366-6388
Buy & Sell — Your Home
Through
Mils Kuroda
Representing
Robt. Owen,
Realtor
2685 Eglinton Ave. East
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-2581
proprietor
JON ONODERA
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805
( Busi n ess)
( R esidence)
540 Eglinton Ave. W,
Toronto
Personal Notes Across Canada
Marriages
—Japan Folk Festival Programme Committee
RAMEN
or
T.V. Service
UDON
ONCE A DAY
EM 4-9913
535-5402
445-1338
Toronto
(TORONTO)
YOSHIKI-HORIKAWA
TORONTO. — Miss Faye Ho
rikawa, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
C. Horikawa of Toronto and Mr.
Robert Yoshiki Jr., son of Mr.
Robert Yoshiki Sr., and the late
S. Yoshiki, of Mississauga
Miwere married at St. Albans The
Martyr Anglican Church by Rev.
K. Imai.
Reception was at China House,
Following, the couple honey
mooned in Quebec, The Gaspe
area and Prince Edward Island.
NISHIMURA-IWANAKA
mutual funds salesman
V ^ePen(^en^ sales agents for over 30 of the best
utual Funds we offer a fine opportunity to an
aggressive salesman. Prior experience is not
necessary and adequate training and sales help
are provided.
p
Ask for Jack McMurray
MUTUAL INVESTMENTS LTD.
Bayview Avenue
Pronto 352, Ontario
Phone 481-3387
GREENFIELD PARK, P.Q.—
On Saturday, August 23rd, 1969,
Rev. H. Iwai officiated at the
wedding of Miss Judy Mayumi
Iwanaka, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenji Iwanaka of Green
field Park, to Mr. Archie Akira
Nishimura, son of Mr. Kiheiji
Ste. Catharines,
of
Ont.
at the Greenfield Park
United Church.
The reception followed at the
Greenfield Park Town Hall. The
couple honeymooned at Cape Cod
and are residing in Toronto.
Births
STE. CATHARINES. — Emil
and Yukiko Tognon (nee Miyaga
wa) are happy to announce the
birth of a daughter,
Cristina
Esao, 7 lbs. 6I2 oz. on Aug. 18,
1969 at Hotel Dieu Hospital in
Ste. Catharines. Both doing fine.
card OF THANKS
We wish to extend our sin
cere thanks to our many rela
tives and friends, for their
many acts of kindness, floral
tributes and
expressions of
sympathy
shown us during
our recent bereavement of our
dear Mother, Airs, Hide Ebisuzaki.
Ken & Kinuko Eb'suzaki
Koji & Yaeko Ebisuzah;
Gertrude Urabe
AGENCY
Office, 43 Eglinton Ave. East
Phone 485-5087
Home phone: 449-9293
Fully Licenced
NIKKO GARDEN
Reservations: EM. 6-2164
For best arrangements
Reserve ahead of time.
VARIOUS KINDS OF SUSHI
AND OTHER JAPANESE
CUISINES AVAILABLE FOR
FAMILY PARTIES
Choice This Sunday
460 Dundas St. W.
Toronto
Page 8
PAGE 8
a, 19
CflMl£
Psychedelic School Bus Makes Up Part of Exhibit The nw canadi
OTTAWA.—Canada's participation in Expo 70 at Osaka Jac
,
Second class
pan, is being heralded in many ways, but a new method has crop
nuater 0366
ped up — a bus painted in psychedelic colors is going to tell the
A
member
of
Ethmc
,
Japanese what Canada has to offer at the big fair.
of Ontario.Ss
An old Ottawa school bus, which in recent weeks has been I
touring Canada, will be heading to Tokyo via train to Vancouver
PUBLISHED ON EVErv
and Friday WAt
from Montreal.
THE CAB-DRIVER’S TALE
Harry Klaus, container manager for the freight forwarding
old gentleman wU'asked” to W
by a Mckly-looking
« SUBSC*UP“ION
company
. of Kuehne and Nagel
passenger remained silent a k k k° > certarir address. The
00Per 6 C0aih5
63.00 per year
Ltd., said the bus and two large
in an old part of the citv " U
Leaded for- its destination "Big Nation" . , .
a advance
containers, which will go by ship,
narrow street, the old man’
dme‘ d°W£Particularly
represent one-third of the total
tination.” The drivei
i
d’
fJease stop. This is my des(Cont. from Page One)
UMEZUKI Publisher
no houses to be seen onlv a aiound tot protest, for there were simply becoming more “for Ja Canadian pavilion at Osaka.
LEN MORI Japanese Editor
The Canadian government, he
passenger’s seat was emptv ST cemeteiT beside the road. The pan.”
And Advertising
explained,
has an enormous scale
sight on the street. LookmV
+ a so.btary person was in
Many Japanese have become
A.
BHOTTA ic6n:'w
model
project
of
the
pavilion
in
a pile of paper monev Ivino- a ? ab bhe back seat, he noticed fascinated by a “big nation,”
Ottawa
and
as
each
shipment
more quickly put it down' hB:
krked
Up’ anci evea "big power” dilemma. The young
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
money of the livino- but
h'^bBng. This was not the writers and intellectuals to whom moves out, a corresponding secmade especially I talked are certain, that thev Lion of the project moves away
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
relatives of the want Japan to be a “’bio- nation"'” as welL This ^ives planners a I
EMpire 5-5005
the soul of the meaning a country with
’___ enough Pr°.Jected -view of how the Cana°
dian pavilion is being set up, and
wealth, technological savvy, and
alterations
if necessary are made I
THR A^iryA-SAN’S STORY
political sophistication to put it
in
the
overall
plan.
Long since, in the citv of Matsue thorp
in the circle of nations most reswas a small sweet- pected,
The
planners
also are- makin
listened to, and sought
—
night a pale after.
i use of the comparatively new
a small dish
But these Japanese are divided container concept — shipping a I
_^a^e Help Wan ted
kiMy "shopkemr S '£' n,°thers ““"f nursea thin sweet and full of contradictions when variety of goods in one big box I SEVERAL garden ke'
them. The
instead of many little ones.
Phone 533-6196, Mr. Mae
appearance, but she would not0” the ",oman’s pallid and frail they consider whether they want
Japan to be .a “great power.”
The two containers carry base
he secretly f l ow
e
1anSWer hls, Questions, One night They sense immediately that in
GARDENER'S HELPERS and true
ball bats,
racer
sets, hockev I l't?
nP^ immediatelv. P
enter a gravevard
immensely shocked to see her the current world context there games,
roller skates furniture, I 221-2145 Kinoshita ' (Tc -.one 783.
night the woman came"
’cPpear ?ver a certain tomb. Next
cd to the sho-Pieper t^ foll^T
nothing. She beckon- are no great powers other than a six-foot bar and an assortment I
Female Help Wanted
several friends. As Hie woman
He "-"k' accompanied bv nations possessing nuclear wea- °f Canadian goods which will be
Ponsseen
by
millions
of
Japanese
and
COUNTER-CLERK
IO.
they shoveh
heard awS
chik\
va™shed
grave
ai--condi?c:
and
trou^tc
fr°more
m beneath
theinto
soiLher
LaJhTX
Go the Japanese intellectual — other visitors to Osaka, which dry-cleanina plant
or bureaucrat — begins to talk opens its gates next Starch.
| Cleaners, 3319 Bath .irs Street 787-3
corpse, clad in its white ’death rofes8 so™ Eclosed the woman’s about Japan's “nuclear energy”
(Toronto).
A reception was held at the
baby who laughed as he behek X
h i
Was a healthy
about this country’s deep-rooted
A YC^^® attractive, -~b^u c •,
fortunate mother had suffered u
diggers. The un aversion to atomic weapons which Cercle Universitaire at Cite du ^ SdM° work in do"^n cHavre attended by representa store. Phone 363-0738 for ~n
born in the grave! Bes
2
1 5 bunal’ a]lc! her child "'as
resulted from Japan’s being the
L‘”"'
for the strength of a mother’s
b?|S an ^PL’ mku-ame dish, only nation ever victimized by tives of the Japanese consulate, I ment. (Toronto).
s
x a mornei s love had overcome Death itself.
the _ Canadian government, the J
atomic bombs.
-National Harbors Board, Mon -JOwnesticHelp Wanted
r
. ™K DANCING MAIDEN
let these Japanese go on to treal Shipping Company Ltd. and
BUSINESS GIRL or ^F^l~
person under the fcmndaStion^of^
practice to bury a living talk about how bitter defeat in Osaka-bound hostesses.
I nelp. Private room and bath
the
Second
World
War
smashed
in the belief that the dead one’s soid
other lar^e structure,
wages, references. Ru. 7-3347 (foronk
mg support for the edifice The
d epSU5e a firm and las> the Japanese ego, about how it
of high, if somewhat H i „
k
positl°n of the victim
created a “loss of national idenaccordingly
*
dublou- honour, and his family was was one Lty,
about Pearl Harbor and
Calgary Fund Awarded
awarded
how the ill-fated attempt to over
(Continued from Page 1‘)
^ALGARI'.—The Calgary Jacastle a^op^Osth-ovi^
bord Horio
run Southeast. Asia left Japan
hotel don- ’tu ex- Puuese-C a n a d i a n Centennial
built his with “a sense of national guilt.”
,. two-wheeled
. - - ------A young girl was b Sd
2 111 the cltM of Matsue,
actly contain all the luxuries of ^holarship fund office was inname has long since been ‘
V!ldei
castle foundations. Her
Reason of Ego
honie.
foi med recently, that the award.
And they tell you that Japan
all else she had loved to dance’0 °n’ bU ^ ^S known that above
worth $150 was assigned to Miss
Lions’ Club Aid
has not yet recovered from these
Myrna.
Louise Snow of 21st St.
cntually it became
i
,
From Vancouver he went to
all this to explain why
in Calgary.
youngr girls from dancing in tlrekMlr i“ “"’ Prohibiting nil things
Seattle, Wash., and then followthis occurred, the hill would shnM ’’“’M ’’■ CItV. for each time Japan cannot replace the U.S. m S AT^skan highway to Alaswould tremble from k
" ?nd the !tar* Matsue Castle in the Far East for at least a
Ka. 1 he Lions’ Club in Edmonton
generation.
e- eurtai! tWs fSl^X^^Xc^ ™
But as these Japanese continue ^KVe- ^m ^r' McLean’s name Sato Hints At Election
Councillor
OSAKA, Japan. — Prime Minto reflect, you hear them observe (he is International
ro
Montreal
Central
Lions’ istei' Eisaku Sato strongly hinted j
Hiat France and
Charles de
Gaulle wanted a nuclear force Club), and without it Moto would he would call a general election I
almost entirely for reasons of be camping again instead of liv
after he returns from talks with ]
ego, that Great Britain wanted ing in the Queen’s Hotel.
Nixon in |
Leaving Montreal for Toronto, President Richard
a nuclear capacity as a matter
1
°r ^Lonal pride .and as evidence his plans were vaque, “I don’t Washington in November
ber sPp'dal relationship with know what I’ll be doing, sight
L.S., that Red China developed seeing I guess.” He thought he
a nuclear capacity because of would visit Man and His World,
tear of Russia and the United before he left as he won’t be
OFfWO LETTERPRESS
kyo thi
States
and out of pride at prov- home for Expo 70.
Tae newspaper Mainichi Shim
OFFICE
FORMS,
BROCHURES,
IETTERHEADS
anniversary of the great earth
!n? ^at p colored nation could
After a short stay in Toronto,
quake ot 1923. in which 92.000 bun noted that Tokyo and Yoko- join the “nuclear club.”
nama would have far o-reater
people were
killed
One is compelled to ask whe tie cyclist thinks he will tour
,
----- amid warn
ings that another major tremor casualties than in 1923 because ther and when the Japanese Niagara Falls, Boston, New York
the western United States, Texas:
niay be gilding up in the area ot taeir increased population.
night get over their nuclear al Mexico and South America.
.vi.WM
V
Tok
>o
residents
lergy.
" °d(l ^ most populous city
627 BAY ST., TORONTO
Phone 355-976I he warnings are based on un- Ln T’M ln.the 1923 quake ™-e
Some Japanese want to believe
killed
by
the
great
fire-storms
ibual rises in the level of land
‘.hat Japan s ego needs are well
aieas south of Tokyo in the past) that swept across the city after enough satisfied by her prodigi
tew years. Land on the Boso and the shock, feeding on wood and ous economic achievements. Yet
Mmra peninsulas has risen bv I paper buildings.
I have hea^d harsh critics of Janc , > t wo inches during the I Many ot Tokyo’s office build "i”^ '‘mditary-industrial comdu f?Ur yCars' SUrveys Lave in ing’s now are built of concrete ^
, Pre<jLt that bv 1974 Japan
dicated.
| and ai^ considered earthquake- will be rushing headlong toward
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
proof. But hundreds of thousands
becoming
a
nuclear
power.
Land Levels Change
SAKURA
RICE
ot flimsy wooden homes still re
— EGGS — MARUKIN SHOW
I he Geographical Survey Insti- I tain and a big quake might a^aip
Xntional Identity
SUKIYAKI MEAT
—
VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
. "
^’e .Government's Con- produce uncontrollable "fires?
' hi ? For the same ego reaMANY
VARIETIES
OF ARARE
WUCVi°n ^‘nistry has pointed to
'0!1p
motivated France and
ie
Gaulle.
's sugposting that earthquake ean be
What nm-e dramatic way to
173 DUNDAS
predicted by the rise
ri-- or fall of
I uie a curbed ego or rediscover
land near th coming epicentre nr^TR0IT- — SeiJi Ozawa i sense of national identitv? A
EM. 4-7692
of the quake.
piojed once again Sunday that more compiling reason may be
The institute noted that land ,e? a symphony conductor who Khat by 10,4 the Japanese wil
in the Kanto Plain area around swings. This time, however, hi’ have perceived a security threat
=5
1 ok\ o rose by as much as 4 feet g^me was softball—not jazz o>- p^ery bit p’ worrisome as thov
go-go
dancing.
har sent Red China down the
prior to the 1923 earthquake.
Former conductor of the Tor I nuclear road.
Last year the director of Japan’s
The Japanese are alreadv chafMeteorological onto Symphony and now cond
Agency’s earthquake section. Koji uctor ot the San Francisco PhM- n<r at the nothm that the United
Kimura, declared that enough /aIIu?n’c and guest conductor of Ti v 1?- their ^M protector.
NEW
seismic energy had gathered un c ie New Wrk Philharmonic. Oho lonv-’ri nnn showed 24.1
der the Japanese islands to set lik"vlb aso third basemen for percent of the Japanese wantin?
SUMMER STYLE
, a niaj°r earthquake with a '
T ork Penguins.
security treatv
Ladies’ shoes from
. The Penguins, in their spare
hicnter scale magnitude of S °
n?- ^-s- next '-ear. with
The great Kanto Plain earth- nine, form the New York Phi1- . \
1 up to 11
percent against ternimanon.
quaxe of 1923 registered a shock narmonic.
Men
’
s
Scott McHales
Tli
Part oi the uneasiness here
of 8.3 on the Richter scale.
Ozawa’s Penguins
4 up to 14
ihe Detroit Power Brakes arise« from . widespread, and anWarnings Issued
&
naren^b1-14 to end a 23-srnmp
erowing. doubts thatMunicipal officials and new
the U.S
would really defend
papers in Tokyo have been iss
J?DUD n
2
showdown. Vomiuri
'etroit Symphony
mg warnings about what the.
1328 Queen St. West i
k was not known, bv
predict will be catastrophe con- h
lf Oza"'a can make it Ieally would defend Japan 28 S
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
sequences of another major quake
’ iir>t uase as a softball player. percent did not think so. and 34.2
percent were uncertain.
CLASSIFIED
zaSSO)
T°^° Remembers as New Quake Seen
PRINTING
du^bas union store
Seiji The Swinger
SMALL SHOE SIZES
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
a, 19
CflMl£
Psychedelic School Bus Makes Up Part of Exhibit The nw canadi
OTTAWA.—Canada's participation in Expo 70 at Osaka Jac
,
Second class
pan, is being heralded in many ways, but a new method has crop
nuater 0366
ped up — a bus painted in psychedelic colors is going to tell the
A
member
of
Ethmc
,
Japanese what Canada has to offer at the big fair.
of Ontario.Ss
An old Ottawa school bus, which in recent weeks has been I
touring Canada, will be heading to Tokyo via train to Vancouver
PUBLISHED ON EVErv
and Friday WAt
from Montreal.
THE CAB-DRIVER’S TALE
Harry Klaus, container manager for the freight forwarding
old gentleman wU'asked” to W
by a Mckly-looking
« SUBSC*UP“ION
company
. of Kuehne and Nagel
passenger remained silent a k k k° > certarir address. The
00Per 6 C0aih5
63.00 per year
Ltd., said the bus and two large
in an old part of the citv " U
Leaded for- its destination "Big Nation" . , .
a advance
containers, which will go by ship,
narrow street, the old man’
dme‘ d°W£Particularly
represent one-third of the total
tination.” The drivei
i
d’
fJease stop. This is my des(Cont. from Page One)
UMEZUKI Publisher
no houses to be seen onlv a aiound tot protest, for there were simply becoming more “for Ja Canadian pavilion at Osaka.
LEN MORI Japanese Editor
The Canadian government, he
passenger’s seat was emptv ST cemeteiT beside the road. The pan.”
And Advertising
explained,
has an enormous scale
sight on the street. LookmV
+ a so.btary person was in
Many Japanese have become
A.
BHOTTA ic6n:'w
model
project
of
the
pavilion
in
a pile of paper monev Ivino- a ? ab bhe back seat, he noticed fascinated by a “big nation,”
Ottawa
and
as
each
shipment
more quickly put it down' hB:
krked
Up’ anci evea "big power” dilemma. The young
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
money of the livino- but
h'^bBng. This was not the writers and intellectuals to whom moves out, a corresponding secmade especially I talked are certain, that thev Lion of the project moves away
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
relatives of the want Japan to be a “’bio- nation"'” as welL This ^ives planners a I
EMpire 5-5005
the soul of the meaning a country with
’___ enough Pr°.Jected -view of how the Cana°
dian pavilion is being set up, and
wealth, technological savvy, and
alterations
if necessary are made I
THR A^iryA-SAN’S STORY
political sophistication to put it
in
the
overall
plan.
Long since, in the citv of Matsue thorp
in the circle of nations most reswas a small sweet- pected,
The
planners
also are- makin
listened to, and sought
—
night a pale after.
i use of the comparatively new
a small dish
But these Japanese are divided container concept — shipping a I
_^a^e Help Wan ted
kiMy "shopkemr S '£' n,°thers ““"f nursea thin sweet and full of contradictions when variety of goods in one big box I SEVERAL garden ke'
them. The
instead of many little ones.
Phone 533-6196, Mr. Mae
appearance, but she would not0” the ",oman’s pallid and frail they consider whether they want
Japan to be .a “great power.”
The two containers carry base
he secretly f l ow
e
1anSWer hls, Questions, One night They sense immediately that in
GARDENER'S HELPERS and true
ball bats,
racer
sets, hockev I l't?
nP^ immediatelv. P
enter a gravevard
immensely shocked to see her the current world context there games,
roller skates furniture, I 221-2145 Kinoshita ' (Tc -.one 783.
night the woman came"
’cPpear ?ver a certain tomb. Next
cd to the sho-Pieper t^ foll^T
nothing. She beckon- are no great powers other than a six-foot bar and an assortment I
Female Help Wanted
several friends. As Hie woman
He "-"k' accompanied bv nations possessing nuclear wea- °f Canadian goods which will be
Ponsseen
by
millions
of
Japanese
and
COUNTER-CLERK
IO.
they shoveh
heard awS
chik\
va™shed
grave
ai--condi?c:
and
trou^tc
fr°more
m beneath
theinto
soiLher
LaJhTX
Go the Japanese intellectual — other visitors to Osaka, which dry-cleanina plant
or bureaucrat — begins to talk opens its gates next Starch.
| Cleaners, 3319 Bath .irs Street 787-3
corpse, clad in its white ’death rofes8 so™ Eclosed the woman’s about Japan's “nuclear energy”
(Toronto).
A reception was held at the
baby who laughed as he behek X
h i
Was a healthy
about this country’s deep-rooted
A YC^^® attractive, -~b^u c •,
fortunate mother had suffered u
diggers. The un aversion to atomic weapons which Cercle Universitaire at Cite du ^ SdM° work in do"^n cHavre attended by representa store. Phone 363-0738 for ~n
born in the grave! Bes
2
1 5 bunal’ a]lc! her child "'as
resulted from Japan’s being the
L‘”"'
for the strength of a mother’s
b?|S an ^PL’ mku-ame dish, only nation ever victimized by tives of the Japanese consulate, I ment. (Toronto).
s
x a mornei s love had overcome Death itself.
the _ Canadian government, the J
atomic bombs.
-National Harbors Board, Mon -JOwnesticHelp Wanted
r
. ™K DANCING MAIDEN
let these Japanese go on to treal Shipping Company Ltd. and
BUSINESS GIRL or ^F^l~
person under the fcmndaStion^of^
practice to bury a living talk about how bitter defeat in Osaka-bound hostesses.
I nelp. Private room and bath
the
Second
World
War
smashed
in the belief that the dead one’s soid
other lar^e structure,
wages, references. Ru. 7-3347 (foronk
mg support for the edifice The
d epSU5e a firm and las> the Japanese ego, about how it
of high, if somewhat H i „
k
positl°n of the victim
created a “loss of national idenaccordingly
*
dublou- honour, and his family was was one Lty,
about Pearl Harbor and
Calgary Fund Awarded
awarded
how the ill-fated attempt to over
(Continued from Page 1‘)
^ALGARI'.—The Calgary Jacastle a^op^Osth-ovi^
bord Horio
run Southeast. Asia left Japan
hotel don- ’tu ex- Puuese-C a n a d i a n Centennial
built his with “a sense of national guilt.”
,. two-wheeled
. - - ------A young girl was b Sd
2 111 the cltM of Matsue,
actly contain all the luxuries of ^holarship fund office was inname has long since been ‘
V!ldei
castle foundations. Her
Reason of Ego
honie.
foi med recently, that the award.
And they tell you that Japan
all else she had loved to dance’0 °n’ bU ^ ^S known that above
worth $150 was assigned to Miss
Lions’ Club Aid
has not yet recovered from these
Myrna.
Louise Snow of 21st St.
cntually it became
i
,
From Vancouver he went to
all this to explain why
in Calgary.
youngr girls from dancing in tlrekMlr i“ “"’ Prohibiting nil things
Seattle, Wash., and then followthis occurred, the hill would shnM ’’“’M ’’■ CItV. for each time Japan cannot replace the U.S. m S AT^skan highway to Alaswould tremble from k
" ?nd the !tar* Matsue Castle in the Far East for at least a
Ka. 1 he Lions’ Club in Edmonton
generation.
e- eurtai! tWs fSl^X^^Xc^ ™
But as these Japanese continue ^KVe- ^m ^r' McLean’s name Sato Hints At Election
Councillor
OSAKA, Japan. — Prime Minto reflect, you hear them observe (he is International
ro
Montreal
Central
Lions’ istei' Eisaku Sato strongly hinted j
Hiat France and
Charles de
Gaulle wanted a nuclear force Club), and without it Moto would he would call a general election I
almost entirely for reasons of be camping again instead of liv
after he returns from talks with ]
ego, that Great Britain wanted ing in the Queen’s Hotel.
Nixon in |
Leaving Montreal for Toronto, President Richard
a nuclear capacity as a matter
1
°r ^Lonal pride .and as evidence his plans were vaque, “I don’t Washington in November
ber sPp'dal relationship with know what I’ll be doing, sight
L.S., that Red China developed seeing I guess.” He thought he
a nuclear capacity because of would visit Man and His World,
tear of Russia and the United before he left as he won’t be
OFfWO LETTERPRESS
kyo thi
States
and out of pride at prov- home for Expo 70.
Tae newspaper Mainichi Shim
OFFICE
FORMS,
BROCHURES,
IETTERHEADS
anniversary of the great earth
!n? ^at p colored nation could
After a short stay in Toronto,
quake ot 1923. in which 92.000 bun noted that Tokyo and Yoko- join the “nuclear club.”
nama would have far o-reater
people were
killed
One is compelled to ask whe tie cyclist thinks he will tour
,
----- amid warn
ings that another major tremor casualties than in 1923 because ther and when the Japanese Niagara Falls, Boston, New York
the western United States, Texas:
niay be gilding up in the area ot taeir increased population.
night get over their nuclear al Mexico and South America.
.vi.WM
V
Tok
>o
residents
lergy.
" °d(l ^ most populous city
627 BAY ST., TORONTO
Phone 355-976I he warnings are based on un- Ln T’M ln.the 1923 quake ™-e
Some Japanese want to believe
killed
by
the
great
fire-storms
ibual rises in the level of land
‘.hat Japan s ego needs are well
aieas south of Tokyo in the past) that swept across the city after enough satisfied by her prodigi
tew years. Land on the Boso and the shock, feeding on wood and ous economic achievements. Yet
Mmra peninsulas has risen bv I paper buildings.
I have hea^d harsh critics of Janc , > t wo inches during the I Many ot Tokyo’s office build "i”^ '‘mditary-industrial comdu f?Ur yCars' SUrveys Lave in ing’s now are built of concrete ^
, Pre<jLt that bv 1974 Japan
dicated.
| and ai^ considered earthquake- will be rushing headlong toward
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
proof. But hundreds of thousands
becoming
a
nuclear
power.
Land Levels Change
SAKURA
RICE
ot flimsy wooden homes still re
— EGGS — MARUKIN SHOW
I he Geographical Survey Insti- I tain and a big quake might a^aip
Xntional Identity
SUKIYAKI MEAT
—
VINEGAR — MANJU — SUGAR
. "
^’e .Government's Con- produce uncontrollable "fires?
' hi ? For the same ego reaMANY
VARIETIES
OF ARARE
WUCVi°n ^‘nistry has pointed to
'0!1p
motivated France and
ie
Gaulle.
's sugposting that earthquake ean be
What nm-e dramatic way to
173 DUNDAS
predicted by the rise
ri-- or fall of
I uie a curbed ego or rediscover
land near th coming epicentre nr^TR0IT- — SeiJi Ozawa i sense of national identitv? A
EM. 4-7692
of the quake.
piojed once again Sunday that more compiling reason may be
The institute noted that land ,e? a symphony conductor who Khat by 10,4 the Japanese wil
in the Kanto Plain area around swings. This time, however, hi’ have perceived a security threat
=5
1 ok\ o rose by as much as 4 feet g^me was softball—not jazz o>- p^ery bit p’ worrisome as thov
go-go
dancing.
har sent Red China down the
prior to the 1923 earthquake.
Former conductor of the Tor I nuclear road.
Last year the director of Japan’s
The Japanese are alreadv chafMeteorological onto Symphony and now cond
Agency’s earthquake section. Koji uctor ot the San Francisco PhM- n<r at the nothm that the United
Kimura, declared that enough /aIIu?n’c and guest conductor of Ti v 1?- their ^M protector.
NEW
seismic energy had gathered un c ie New Wrk Philharmonic. Oho lonv-’ri nnn showed 24.1
der the Japanese islands to set lik"vlb aso third basemen for percent of the Japanese wantin?
SUMMER STYLE
, a niaj°r earthquake with a '
T ork Penguins.
security treatv
Ladies’ shoes from
. The Penguins, in their spare
hicnter scale magnitude of S °
n?- ^-s- next '-ear. with
The great Kanto Plain earth- nine, form the New York Phi1- . \
1 up to 11
percent against ternimanon.
quaxe of 1923 registered a shock narmonic.
Men
’
s
Scott McHales
Tli
Part oi the uneasiness here
of 8.3 on the Richter scale.
Ozawa’s Penguins
4 up to 14
ihe Detroit Power Brakes arise« from . widespread, and anWarnings Issued
&
naren^b1-14 to end a 23-srnmp
erowing. doubts thatMunicipal officials and new
the U.S
would really defend
papers in Tokyo have been iss
J?DUD n
2
showdown. Vomiuri
'etroit Symphony
mg warnings about what the.
1328 Queen St. West i
k was not known, bv
predict will be catastrophe con- h
lf Oza"'a can make it Ieally would defend Japan 28 S
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
sequences of another major quake
’ iir>t uase as a softball player. percent did not think so. and 34.2
percent were uncertain.
CLASSIFIED
zaSSO)
T°^° Remembers as New Quake Seen
PRINTING
du^bas union store
Seiji The Swinger
SMALL SHOE SIZES
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE