Page 1
M
^J
ess Assm-
Wisher !
-se Ediigi
3mg
i
ml I
Editor I
WEST J
Ont. I
05
J
ADS.
anted J
l™? is
anted!
To Complete Pavilion At Japan’s Expo 70
&5!!1P!^
^“'SSS ^^^"^ gently
Same
the first nation to finish the job. The problems
1^planning
and mounting Canada’s most ambitious
I^lion abroad
are mostly over.
Ohe stream of professional and amateur camerawho come to the pavilion to document their sur^idings, to make TV commercials or . just to photograps themselves in the mirrored surfaces of its intenor are daily proof that something unusual, even
spittle wonderful, has been achieved.
fee Canadian Pavilion has already qualified for
Ruction in the Japanese media — being acclaimed
he-most unique pavilion out of 76 national structures
likl being linked with the “big three” pavilions of
ISA, USSR, and Japan. The reasons for this preamnence are many.
of ^IaTM? 5“ ff}1™ «* the design
the 'be«t\f
Erickson of Vancouver) was
tioxr; aSrd V
V964
competiverv well Aiff
be llVlng UP to ks promise
4a of Exm? 4 masons can be traced to the nostal70
o ’ andthe fact that the powerful Exoo
eeVn® Committee which is composed of 17 natries is"chaired°b b4alp of tbe 76 participating counaies is chaned by the Commissioner General of Can
ada’s pavilion, Mr. Patrick Reid.
oX Can
da F11’-t 4 Precedence. For manv Japanese +he
E atelTS 1S 4at Canada was ready to respond imBecaS? Cnn4n Japan issued her invitation in 1966.
1970
? 4 the first nation to support the
on all
^Position, the Canadian flag flies first
'° °TS1011S’ and Canada ranks first in
inter national precedence.
Expo >70 - Jinny Opportunities f„r &niu(,. Ev„„
Opportunities for Canada. Expo
<0 mil play almost exclusively to a Japanese audi, aucbence, variously forecast at 60-70 million.
^ . be the largest Canaria has ever faced abroad at
a single event. Visitors to the site will be primarilv
yarns’ Japanese, -—-70% under the age of 25 — and
the Canadian Pavilion has been designed, inside and
t$ attract that audience. It is becoming known,
fittingly, as the “Young Pavilion”.
Fundamental Objectives for Canada — to persude
these future leaders, executives and artisans of Ja
pan that Canada is a Pacific-rim nation worthy’- of
l-JL collective esteem. A companion objective is to
highlight, the sophistication of Canada’s economy and
to clear up any’ Japanese misconception that Canada
is solely’ a supplier of raw materials.
[.................... ............................................................... —— ...... Hi,.,.......
u^™^,,^^^
uimm
lull Ci ^
isJl hr I
ad
------- —_
louses. Is
'ferry ?fa
“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.50
he Octo Canadian
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
By MISS J.L. BEATTIE
$5.00
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
raateo.
|1. XXXIV—No. 13
glish, fa
roon
Co
lillllllilllHililllllllllllllillllUtlllllliii;
Portrait of Canada’s
Buddhist Leader
to
ICY
Ltd.
nts
floor
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1970
i..nilnilil.lil„i„i„„„„„„....... ,III,IIIU|„„1,,„„„„„„„.„,,„„.......
~
t
. ’^a,,,
.
„„„„„„„„„,„„„„„„„„,„„,„„„„„„,„„„„... .h,,,^^,
1971 Boy Scouts World Jamboree
At Mt. Fuji Planning Underway
By DOUGLAS HALL
TOKYO. — Preparations for Japan to inspect the 13th world- | nouncement recently
priest. Instead of entering a
the
1971 Boy Scouts World Jam wide gathering site on the AsaDouglas Hall is a prominent I Euddhist university right away
Dr. Laszlo Na^y, secretarvboree
to be held at the foot of giri Highland in Shizuoka Pre- general of tire Boy’ Scouts World
yangelical layman and the au-11 enrolled in a Lutheran mis- Mt. Fuji
are going smoothly and
or of five books. — Toronto I sionary school for a couple of world Boy Scout leaders are con ^c^re^ncl to talk with officials Bureau in Geneva, -who was also
of the Boy’ Scouts of Japan.
at the press conference, added
years. My father didn’t object vinced of success in the coming
The
nine-day
’
jamboree
startthat he knew that “friendship”
too strongly, he was progressive event.
■ng August 2, 1971 will be par- among- the boy’s was not simply
This was made clear during
wev. Newton Ishiura, the newt for his time. Mother wasn’t too a press conference given at To ticipated in by’ some 20,000 boys a ’word but “reality.”
from about 120 countries 3,000
The officials said that tho
hop for Canada’s 5,000-mem- overjoyed about it.”
kyo Kaikan Hall by organizers 1rT Ja?an and 12’000 from the year 1971 would also be the year
r Buddhist Church, is probably
It w;as during his studies at of the jamboree, including Wil rest of the world, including Afri- in which some 15 million bovs of
liam D. Campbell, honorary vicethe world affiliated with the Boy
e most unorthodox bishop in the Lutheran school that he made chairman of the Boy Scout’World can countries.
The theme for the 13th world- Scouts would study’ and learn
e history’ of the religion which I up his mind to keep the line un- Committee.
wide event will be “For Under- about Japan.
ces its beginning back to the I broken and enter the priesthood'.
The Boy Scout leaders visited standing,” according to an anAlso scheduled at the same
century’ BC when Hindu sage I »t
n j
I site as tHe 13th World Jamboree
Wdha “the enlightened" began tt
f
Ryukyu
s teachings in India.
Untverstty m Kyoto and began
Jamboree and the First^Fa/East
to.
| three y’ears of intensive studies
z
"
Y°uth Conference.
TOKYO.—Ed Sullivan, Frank Sinatra and Harry Belafonte
Some 30,000 Japanese and
t0 the delight of which culminated in mv ordinan
T
Ca
w
e
thenplanned
visits
to
Japan
during
Expo
’
70
in
some
1,000 representatives from
i
in tion as a monk in 1938,” he said
B/ddh}s\Church on pl eyen sampled life in a monas- Osaka, March 15 through Sept. 13, Japanese organizers of the about 16 countries are expected
I to p3i*ticipate in the nation 1
%storatp 4
111 hls 12-yeai tery, but six months was enough
They said the Ed Sullivan Show had to be dropped due largely | jamboree starting August 6
orm
r°Ught an air of re~ to convince me that the monastic to contract disagreements between the noted television emcee and
About 64 representatives
the organizers.
irom
and Progress into what life was not for me ”
o
j i , , . .
,
i b Fai Eastern countries will be
X *”SideI a “
fat the political • u Sullivan and his group had insisted, they said, on exclusive Participating in the first fourTor- TV broadcasts of all Expo ’70 programs, including the day youth conference starting
HaWaitan.boJ“
March 15 opening ceremony, in the United States and Canada.
August 1.
*
*
Sullivan, Sinatra, Belafonte NIX EXPO
Frank Sinatra and his show had to be called off, the officials
'is
SUf y t0 exert States and arrived in California said, because Sinatra said he was unable to sign the contracts until
ickiiX 4 7 xn<?1Vldualit^ by hl July, 1941, just five months two months before his troupe’s opening performance in Japan.
It’s technically impossible to meet his requirements,” an
h° 44 \
Iclzed name at before Pearl Harbor. Once war
official
said.
4
°4lnation into was declared he, along with
Belafonte’s fee and schedule did not meet the Expo ’70 pro
c ais Priesthood.
thousands of Japanese Americans
gram, resulting in cancellation of his trip, the organizers said.
given name is Takashi, and Japanese nationals, was in- Originally, Belafonte was to lead in the Caribbean show.
-I since I was born in what is terned at the Santa Anita Race
The organizers said the Ed Sullivan Show would be replaced
°" an American state wanted Track in Los Angeles.
by the Sammy Davis Jr. Show March 15-19.
TOKYO. — Prof. Taro Kono
0 c looje a typically American I
at Tokushima University has
rame. Why I picked Newton 11
Pastorates in U.S.
found a personal account of a
p .^'d.J^Ily know,” he said, “I I Despite the war years and the
.shipwrecked Japanese s a i 1 o r,
“Aboku Shinwa” (New Tales
Ih.*e it.
niarks some
they’ peasant
left, Ishiura
-does
I
I';,
^^
are a ^ I have
—
J^^^
from
America and Mexico), writ
more—770 yen per mat. This
ten
by
Hatsujiro who had been
implies that even poor living
^
.
e ishiura family’. New- I one oX them is meeting Mary Ma- small apartments or structures facilities such as these must be shipwrecked, rescued by a Spa
j1' w rhe 15th in succession I tsuura in Arizona. Se became his unfit for habitation beca.use of tolerated
in
congested urban nish ship and landing in April,
1841, in Baja California.
has come d'own in an un- wife in 1952 and thev now have the housing shortage, the Con- areas.
Manjiro Nagahama, shipwreck
line from eldest son to ‘hree daughters and two sons.
P1™'1'™
h?s ‘■=”lei
The housing problem is seen
feldest son. When
% j
• x I
Of this number, about 80 per- most serious in southern Kanto ed1 the same year, was rescued by
lin n
q jnead priest I Following a number of pas-1 cent or 2,800,000 households re- (Tokyo, Kanagawa, Saitama and an American whaler and became
hh4
dles b/s accepted torates in the U.S., Ishiura was side in small private apartment Chiba prefectures) with a tota1 the first Japanese to live and
Iby 4.r\, acancy will be filled I appointed minister of the Tor- houses where a family of four of 1,300,000 households plagued study in the U.S. (1843-1846).
?e’ This haP- onto Buddhist Church in 1958, a or more is accommodated in a by lack of snace, followed by
maximum space of 12 mats, about part of the Kinki area (Osaka
Iskum wh ° " 611 b*e cLler I post he has held up to his elec- 20 square meters.
Hyogo .and Wakayama) with a
khurchm p
-as Pastoring a tion as bishop. He will continue
These facts were revealed re corresponding figure of 620,000
to the
.?ai1’ "as summoned | serving as minister.
cently by the ministry after ana- and the Tokai area (Shizuoka.
.
। lyzing statistics obtained in the Aichi, Mie. and Gifu) with 290," n • temPle in Kyushu,
000.
-44 t0 ass«me his TPnnn i Another break with tradition 1959 national census.
" ” I came when his father died and
<
n
I, K J x , As an over-all average, one
The number of overly congest
I e had to decide whether to re-1 person in those families occu- ed households has been follow
TOKYO. — The world’s most
Lutheran School
I turn to the family temple in Ky- pies 3.5 mats (approximately 5.6 ing a downward trent in manv populous city has taken its first
1
whole family went
ushu in accordance with church square meters) but, excluding orefeetures. By contrast, how- official steps against the longh Mher,” saij Ishi * X? teachings or make a definite I Pe°ple who live alone the aver- wer, it is increasing in Saitama. winded. Experimental new rules
age figure worsens to barely one Chiba and Kanagawa prefectures, on about 7509 public pay phones
nad Ju
mat per person.
in central Tokyo limiting conver
all neighbors of the metropolis.
rad”•Geiing college. While I I
wasn’t easy,” he recalled.
sations
to three minutes. There’s
Rents average 430 yen per
The Ministry of Construction
Yt too much thought, | -Despite the fact that my roots mat but, paradoxically. apart - is planning a new five year pro a warning chime at 30 seconds
" '^s foregone conclusion with I are Oriental I look upon myself ments of inferior qualities with gram to start next year for to go but no extension of the
call by droping another coin. A
out an independent kitchen or easing the situation, especially phoner
<-hat I’d become a
can
of course make
toilet for- the occupants cost in the quality of new apartments. another call.
(Cont. on Page 8)
Personal Account Of
First Japanese To
America Said Found
Japans Too Little Living Space Still Problem
Long Telephone
Calls In Tokyo
To Be Cut Short
^J
ess Assm-
Wisher !
-se Ediigi
3mg
i
ml I
Editor I
WEST J
Ont. I
05
J
ADS.
anted J
l™? is
anted!
To Complete Pavilion At Japan’s Expo 70
&5!!1P!^
^“'SSS ^^^"^ gently
Same
the first nation to finish the job. The problems
1^planning
and mounting Canada’s most ambitious
I^lion abroad
are mostly over.
Ohe stream of professional and amateur camerawho come to the pavilion to document their sur^idings, to make TV commercials or . just to photograps themselves in the mirrored surfaces of its intenor are daily proof that something unusual, even
spittle wonderful, has been achieved.
fee Canadian Pavilion has already qualified for
Ruction in the Japanese media — being acclaimed
he-most unique pavilion out of 76 national structures
likl being linked with the “big three” pavilions of
ISA, USSR, and Japan. The reasons for this preamnence are many.
of ^IaTM? 5“ ff}1™ «* the design
the 'be«t\f
Erickson of Vancouver) was
tioxr; aSrd V
V964
competiverv well Aiff
be llVlng UP to ks promise
4a of Exm? 4 masons can be traced to the nostal70
o ’ andthe fact that the powerful Exoo
eeVn® Committee which is composed of 17 natries is"chaired°b b4alp of tbe 76 participating counaies is chaned by the Commissioner General of Can
ada’s pavilion, Mr. Patrick Reid.
oX Can
da F11’-t 4 Precedence. For manv Japanese +he
E atelTS 1S 4at Canada was ready to respond imBecaS? Cnn4n Japan issued her invitation in 1966.
1970
? 4 the first nation to support the
on all
^Position, the Canadian flag flies first
'° °TS1011S’ and Canada ranks first in
inter national precedence.
Expo >70 - Jinny Opportunities f„r &niu(,. Ev„„
Opportunities for Canada. Expo
<0 mil play almost exclusively to a Japanese audi, aucbence, variously forecast at 60-70 million.
^ . be the largest Canaria has ever faced abroad at
a single event. Visitors to the site will be primarilv
yarns’ Japanese, -—-70% under the age of 25 — and
the Canadian Pavilion has been designed, inside and
t$ attract that audience. It is becoming known,
fittingly, as the “Young Pavilion”.
Fundamental Objectives for Canada — to persude
these future leaders, executives and artisans of Ja
pan that Canada is a Pacific-rim nation worthy’- of
l-JL collective esteem. A companion objective is to
highlight, the sophistication of Canada’s economy and
to clear up any’ Japanese misconception that Canada
is solely’ a supplier of raw materials.
[.................... ............................................................... —— ...... Hi,.,.......
u^™^,,^^^
uimm
lull Ci ^
isJl hr I
ad
------- —_
louses. Is
'ferry ?fa
“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.50
he Octo Canadian
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
By MISS J.L. BEATTIE
$5.00
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
raateo.
|1. XXXIV—No. 13
glish, fa
roon
Co
lillllllilllHililllllllllllllillllUtlllllliii;
Portrait of Canada’s
Buddhist Leader
to
ICY
Ltd.
nts
floor
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1970
i..nilnilil.lil„i„i„„„„„„....... ,III,IIIU|„„1,,„„„„„„„.„,,„„.......
~
t
. ’^a,,,
.
„„„„„„„„„,„„„„„„„„,„„,„„„„„„,„„„„... .h,,,^^,
1971 Boy Scouts World Jamboree
At Mt. Fuji Planning Underway
By DOUGLAS HALL
TOKYO. — Preparations for Japan to inspect the 13th world- | nouncement recently
priest. Instead of entering a
the
1971 Boy Scouts World Jam wide gathering site on the AsaDouglas Hall is a prominent I Euddhist university right away
Dr. Laszlo Na^y, secretarvboree
to be held at the foot of giri Highland in Shizuoka Pre- general of tire Boy’ Scouts World
yangelical layman and the au-11 enrolled in a Lutheran mis- Mt. Fuji
are going smoothly and
or of five books. — Toronto I sionary school for a couple of world Boy Scout leaders are con ^c^re^ncl to talk with officials Bureau in Geneva, -who was also
of the Boy’ Scouts of Japan.
at the press conference, added
years. My father didn’t object vinced of success in the coming
The
nine-day
’
jamboree
startthat he knew that “friendship”
too strongly, he was progressive event.
■ng August 2, 1971 will be par- among- the boy’s was not simply
This was made clear during
wev. Newton Ishiura, the newt for his time. Mother wasn’t too a press conference given at To ticipated in by’ some 20,000 boys a ’word but “reality.”
from about 120 countries 3,000
The officials said that tho
hop for Canada’s 5,000-mem- overjoyed about it.”
kyo Kaikan Hall by organizers 1rT Ja?an and 12’000 from the year 1971 would also be the year
r Buddhist Church, is probably
It w;as during his studies at of the jamboree, including Wil rest of the world, including Afri- in which some 15 million bovs of
liam D. Campbell, honorary vicethe world affiliated with the Boy
e most unorthodox bishop in the Lutheran school that he made chairman of the Boy Scout’World can countries.
The theme for the 13th world- Scouts would study’ and learn
e history’ of the religion which I up his mind to keep the line un- Committee.
wide event will be “For Under- about Japan.
ces its beginning back to the I broken and enter the priesthood'.
The Boy Scout leaders visited standing,” according to an anAlso scheduled at the same
century’ BC when Hindu sage I »t
n j
I site as tHe 13th World Jamboree
Wdha “the enlightened" began tt
f
Ryukyu
s teachings in India.
Untverstty m Kyoto and began
Jamboree and the First^Fa/East
to.
| three y’ears of intensive studies
z
"
Y°uth Conference.
TOKYO.—Ed Sullivan, Frank Sinatra and Harry Belafonte
Some 30,000 Japanese and
t0 the delight of which culminated in mv ordinan
T
Ca
w
e
thenplanned
visits
to
Japan
during
Expo
’
70
in
some
1,000 representatives from
i
in tion as a monk in 1938,” he said
B/ddh}s\Church on pl eyen sampled life in a monas- Osaka, March 15 through Sept. 13, Japanese organizers of the about 16 countries are expected
I to p3i*ticipate in the nation 1
%storatp 4
111 hls 12-yeai tery, but six months was enough
They said the Ed Sullivan Show had to be dropped due largely | jamboree starting August 6
orm
r°Ught an air of re~ to convince me that the monastic to contract disagreements between the noted television emcee and
About 64 representatives
the organizers.
irom
and Progress into what life was not for me ”
o
j i , , . .
,
i b Fai Eastern countries will be
X *”SideI a “
fat the political • u Sullivan and his group had insisted, they said, on exclusive Participating in the first fourTor- TV broadcasts of all Expo ’70 programs, including the day youth conference starting
HaWaitan.boJ“
March 15 opening ceremony, in the United States and Canada.
August 1.
*
*
Sullivan, Sinatra, Belafonte NIX EXPO
Frank Sinatra and his show had to be called off, the officials
'is
SUf y t0 exert States and arrived in California said, because Sinatra said he was unable to sign the contracts until
ickiiX 4 7 xn<?1Vldualit^ by hl July, 1941, just five months two months before his troupe’s opening performance in Japan.
It’s technically impossible to meet his requirements,” an
h° 44 \
Iclzed name at before Pearl Harbor. Once war
official
said.
4
°4lnation into was declared he, along with
Belafonte’s fee and schedule did not meet the Expo ’70 pro
c ais Priesthood.
thousands of Japanese Americans
gram, resulting in cancellation of his trip, the organizers said.
given name is Takashi, and Japanese nationals, was in- Originally, Belafonte was to lead in the Caribbean show.
-I since I was born in what is terned at the Santa Anita Race
The organizers said the Ed Sullivan Show would be replaced
°" an American state wanted Track in Los Angeles.
by the Sammy Davis Jr. Show March 15-19.
TOKYO. — Prof. Taro Kono
0 c looje a typically American I
at Tokushima University has
rame. Why I picked Newton 11
Pastorates in U.S.
found a personal account of a
p .^'d.J^Ily know,” he said, “I I Despite the war years and the
.shipwrecked Japanese s a i 1 o r,
“Aboku Shinwa” (New Tales
Ih.*e it.
niarks some
they’ peasant
left, Ishiura
-does
I
I';,
^^
are a ^ I have
—
J^^^
from
America and Mexico), writ
more—770 yen per mat. This
ten
by
Hatsujiro who had been
implies that even poor living
^
.
e ishiura family’. New- I one oX them is meeting Mary Ma- small apartments or structures facilities such as these must be shipwrecked, rescued by a Spa
j1' w rhe 15th in succession I tsuura in Arizona. Se became his unfit for habitation beca.use of tolerated
in
congested urban nish ship and landing in April,
1841, in Baja California.
has come d'own in an un- wife in 1952 and thev now have the housing shortage, the Con- areas.
Manjiro Nagahama, shipwreck
line from eldest son to ‘hree daughters and two sons.
P1™'1'™
h?s ‘■=”lei
The housing problem is seen
feldest son. When
% j
• x I
Of this number, about 80 per- most serious in southern Kanto ed1 the same year, was rescued by
lin n
q jnead priest I Following a number of pas-1 cent or 2,800,000 households re- (Tokyo, Kanagawa, Saitama and an American whaler and became
hh4
dles b/s accepted torates in the U.S., Ishiura was side in small private apartment Chiba prefectures) with a tota1 the first Japanese to live and
Iby 4.r\, acancy will be filled I appointed minister of the Tor- houses where a family of four of 1,300,000 households plagued study in the U.S. (1843-1846).
?e’ This haP- onto Buddhist Church in 1958, a or more is accommodated in a by lack of snace, followed by
maximum space of 12 mats, about part of the Kinki area (Osaka
Iskum wh ° " 611 b*e cLler I post he has held up to his elec- 20 square meters.
Hyogo .and Wakayama) with a
khurchm p
-as Pastoring a tion as bishop. He will continue
These facts were revealed re corresponding figure of 620,000
to the
.?ai1’ "as summoned | serving as minister.
cently by the ministry after ana- and the Tokai area (Shizuoka.
.
। lyzing statistics obtained in the Aichi, Mie. and Gifu) with 290," n • temPle in Kyushu,
000.
-44 t0 ass«me his TPnnn i Another break with tradition 1959 national census.
" ” I came when his father died and
<
n
I, K J x , As an over-all average, one
The number of overly congest
I e had to decide whether to re-1 person in those families occu- ed households has been follow
TOKYO. — The world’s most
Lutheran School
I turn to the family temple in Ky- pies 3.5 mats (approximately 5.6 ing a downward trent in manv populous city has taken its first
1
whole family went
ushu in accordance with church square meters) but, excluding orefeetures. By contrast, how- official steps against the longh Mher,” saij Ishi * X? teachings or make a definite I Pe°ple who live alone the aver- wer, it is increasing in Saitama. winded. Experimental new rules
age figure worsens to barely one Chiba and Kanagawa prefectures, on about 7509 public pay phones
nad Ju
mat per person.
in central Tokyo limiting conver
all neighbors of the metropolis.
rad”•Geiing college. While I I
wasn’t easy,” he recalled.
sations
to three minutes. There’s
Rents average 430 yen per
The Ministry of Construction
Yt too much thought, | -Despite the fact that my roots mat but, paradoxically. apart - is planning a new five year pro a warning chime at 30 seconds
" '^s foregone conclusion with I are Oriental I look upon myself ments of inferior qualities with gram to start next year for to go but no extension of the
call by droping another coin. A
out an independent kitchen or easing the situation, especially phoner
<-hat I’d become a
can
of course make
toilet for- the occupants cost in the quality of new apartments. another call.
(Cont. on Page 8)
Personal Account Of
First Japanese To
America Said Found
Japans Too Little Living Space Still Problem
Long Telephone
Calls In Tokyo
To Be Cut Short
Page 2
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Page 7
PAGE 7
memories of a nisei immigrant]
D b « good poLk-f to
Coamli
By M. SITARR
rt Fund Needs Your Aid To Continue The Fiaht I
,
Hldden Under Jap Farm"
0R0NT0.—If your child has a bad sore throat — call wr
I
r
1
especially if there is difficulty in swallowing, swollen neck which Tbrn^
whatever happened to a box of dynamite
5. high fever, or nausea. Prompt treatment of “strep” throat evacuation n J1 a^i
°£ °Ur chicke" fa™ <^ng the
revent rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease. Knowl- arms, short xX ’^
reCa11’ items Iike fire
^'of rheumatic fever prevention is one of the many life-savi
ts of Heart research supported by your Heart P^iid <L^llT^
^ tke hands of Japanese and" an wder"wln^t to
elp your Heart Fund' continue its fight against all forms of us to dZr\h
: and circulatory diseases by giving to the Canadian Heart Lan
\
, 247 Davenport Road, Toronto 5, Ontario.
a asportation.
*
? P,
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-4681
statio^- I don’t see how they expected
^ police station about 10 miles awav without
MEN'S SUITS
to grow strawberries was a necea-
Made To Measure
And Alterations
f°r cleari'^
Canadian Heart Fund
WiHiam Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
Chris Nomura
Shikat«ni Hected President Mont. Sangha
132 Baldwin St^ Toronto
Phone 368-9225
366-5065
Opening Service conducted by Rev. Okada.
a^ then run like hell for cover
a
Quickly light them
classy
he following members were elected to the Executive Board "’hen one failed
• 4
aan^er would come mostly
* miie 1970 term: President — John Shikatani; Vice-president"
often o-0 off iust win f at !\e
time' U’^odv’iatelv it would
AUTO — FIRE — LIFE
Ebata; General Secretary - Yo Hayashi; RecS^
aspect it. Several* widows
ALL FORMS
rotary — Butch Hayashi; Treasurer — Kaz Kadohama- Member I - “
inexperienced Issei
OF
back
too
soon
to
look
their handiwork..
Shikatant
Hayashi; Social Convenors
^sWS1nIa S
ya’ T°t
Welfare Convenor — Aki Yamafuji;
C“0^- Tak Omoto, Shig Kojima;
- Meo Tamada; Auditors — Tom Satta, Sam Ishihara;
consult
-Jltemoshlko Chairmen: John Shikatani, Butch Hayashi."
FIFO TAMURA
this year marks the 15th anniversary of the Sangha’s forhai of d rt \
S ?
50 thr°UK’' and
^ s™«
TORONTO
i
by
a
the organization is planning a varied program to comhan of dirt, stones .and roots. Fortunately no one was ever
366-5812
Res.
PI.
9-8317
j
6 the year. —Y. Hayashi
hurt,
tte b™t tool 1 '“Tv °f the d°^ that ra" °ut barking
when
an
‘ A blfT Stunw landed 0,1 hbn- Father was
' P
W °^en "eut out to dynamite for Isseis who
^i®nto IaPanese Garden Club Holds Shinbokukai I quite
CTiFlY"^ t0 *” “ to ^ow strawberries,
Bum 824-8153
B.m
By T. UMEZUKI
■elsariiw
lt
H
/
Y
1
cmtmMli
to
use
dynamite
to
do
sow
-TORONTO.—’ThLToronto JaPauese Garden Club held its anfe?
aino. At the time the order to turn in explosives came I had!
t. |m| get-together (Shinbokukai) on Sunday, Feb. Sth at China about a case of dynamite, cans and fuses on hand Wei
3ut th
ERNEST JOMORI
T |J|ggse and fully enjoyed by all.
ciynamite sticks in a wheel barrow and took thL h
P I
{-'bartered Accountant
fter the luncheon a few reports were heard and ballots were woods and buried them. I threw the cans into n
n a
j
or the photo contest at the last Mum Show.
Suit# 403
hot veryone received a “Fukubiki” and door prize. Mrs. L.
130
BLOOR
ST.
W.
TORONTO
were found buried in the
^‘^^^* whose travels last year covered, the South Pacific,' showed and woods! Perhaps ugly headlines like
®ted beautiful, slides covering: Hawaii, New Zealand, Australia, JAP FARM’’.
“DYNAMITE HIDDEN ON
, Philippines, Hong Kong, Singapore, Bankok, and' Japan.
Today headlines about, right .and
Omoto aIso showed slides of last year’s Mum show. These
left wing, militants making
explosives
and
the
public
crv
about
Custom Picture
aPPi’eciated in these winter days recalling sumfirearms are still with us.
Even
though
I
used
to
handle
dangerous
explosives
before
I
waand mature in full bloom.
Framing
H
'^.™
SE
‘
’
ff
firecrackers
in
m
y
adult
life.
(iS
*
*
*
ln/hlS State aS WeI1 as in many otbers). And I am glad
NISHIMURA
^®' Okita Is Gues‘ For Trade Council Lunch
-nd will refuse to let my son play with firecrackers. The thought
tt^W0R0NT0' Dr- Saburo Okita, internationally-known Japanese m
? fUSeS attached t0 100 Sticks of dynamite makes
1278 T°ng* Street. Toronto 7, Ont
me
feel
weak.
I guess times have changed; we were poor then
15.®ln,st’ W,H be &uest speaker at a Canada-Japan Trade Council
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
^^^°\at t51e R°yal ^01k Hote1, Toronto, on February 24.
and my father needed all the help he could get in order to provide
Tokio NiaMmura
923-6877
&
i w pio-uae
’
a’ tlesident of Japan Economic Research Centre since the necessities of life.
a^° a member of several policy advisory councils and
of his government, and is a special adviser to the Min'«°f Economic Planning. The author of articles and books on
nucs matters, in both English and Japanese, Dr. Okita has
involved in several international projects, including the
H i ations Development Planning Committee.
ps most recent international task was as a member of the j
ission on International Development, headed by former Cana- I
rime Minister, Lester B. Pearson. At the request of World
piemdent,
Robert McNamara, the multi-nation commission I
) 9
Slocan City, B.C.
J completed a study on international co-operation for econ- I
Phone 355-2211
development.
I
n J ^Ioh- — Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
i V
Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1402. Phone 363-0952
*
T°10nt° address, Dr. Okita will survey the economic I
Eve. By Appointment
?. 0 aP'an, both at home and on the international scene.
11
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
15 , xceMency Shinichi Kondo, Ambassador of Japan to Can- IJ
act tie Honorable John Robarts, Premier of Ontario, will |
® on& the head table guests.
I
SPORTING GOODS
;n<jcawa Prefecture and "Yokohama City will stage a five
T^a °f *he area,s machinery and metal products at the IB Buy and Sell
SKATES
Your Home
a " e . ^entre’ T°ronto, beginning May 25. It will be the I
Hockey Equipment
Through
fail held in Canada by the Prefecture and Yokohama. Ie
INSURANCE
Bkm.
KINO'S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
DANFORTH
Skate Sharpening
MAS (Ron) MENDE
551 Danforth Ave.,
JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
OEs?^°
VICES- ' °' S ^tes^^er'on'
t
1
Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SundaY School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
p.-jeS^a^' Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
pt
Y°Ung Pe°Ples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
- e ontact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
j^TObontO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
i
iI
s
^ove.'oourt
Rd.
lat^^' FEBRUARY 22, 1970. 11:30 A.M.
J
~ n67, C- Y- Horikoshi, 766-5632
— Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
kurch School for the children
A warm welcome to all-
South of Bloor
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
MELL REAL ESTATE LTD.
Phone: HO. 3-7400
(Tosh Iwai)
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
1527 O'Connor Dr.
757-5184
Lichee Garden J
(Dining Lounge)
118 Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
Phone 364-3481
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1970
ScHooI
gig Bathurst S{.
Morning
Service
Japanese Service
Telephone:
FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Suits
& Trousers
(4 Lines To Serve You)
CATERING SERVICE — “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
Religious
OFTORONTO
534-4302
Banquet Facilities
For Business Or Private Parties
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
DINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
memories of a nisei immigrant]
D b « good poLk-f to
Coamli
By M. SITARR
rt Fund Needs Your Aid To Continue The Fiaht I
,
Hldden Under Jap Farm"
0R0NT0.—If your child has a bad sore throat — call wr
I
r
1
especially if there is difficulty in swallowing, swollen neck which Tbrn^
whatever happened to a box of dynamite
5. high fever, or nausea. Prompt treatment of “strep” throat evacuation n J1 a^i
°£ °Ur chicke" fa™ <^ng the
revent rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease. Knowl- arms, short xX ’^
reCa11’ items Iike fire
^'of rheumatic fever prevention is one of the many life-savi
ts of Heart research supported by your Heart P^iid <L^llT^
^ tke hands of Japanese and" an wder"wln^t to
elp your Heart Fund' continue its fight against all forms of us to dZr\h
: and circulatory diseases by giving to the Canadian Heart Lan
\
, 247 Davenport Road, Toronto 5, Ontario.
a asportation.
*
? P,
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-4681
statio^- I don’t see how they expected
^ police station about 10 miles awav without
MEN'S SUITS
to grow strawberries was a necea-
Made To Measure
And Alterations
f°r cleari'^
Canadian Heart Fund
WiHiam Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
Chris Nomura
Shikat«ni Hected President Mont. Sangha
132 Baldwin St^ Toronto
Phone 368-9225
366-5065
Opening Service conducted by Rev. Okada.
a^ then run like hell for cover
a
Quickly light them
classy
he following members were elected to the Executive Board "’hen one failed
• 4
aan^er would come mostly
* miie 1970 term: President — John Shikatani; Vice-president"
often o-0 off iust win f at !\e
time' U’^odv’iatelv it would
AUTO — FIRE — LIFE
Ebata; General Secretary - Yo Hayashi; RecS^
aspect it. Several* widows
ALL FORMS
rotary — Butch Hayashi; Treasurer — Kaz Kadohama- Member I - “
inexperienced Issei
OF
back
too
soon
to
look
their handiwork..
Shikatant
Hayashi; Social Convenors
^sWS1nIa S
ya’ T°t
Welfare Convenor — Aki Yamafuji;
C“0^- Tak Omoto, Shig Kojima;
- Meo Tamada; Auditors — Tom Satta, Sam Ishihara;
consult
-Jltemoshlko Chairmen: John Shikatani, Butch Hayashi."
FIFO TAMURA
this year marks the 15th anniversary of the Sangha’s forhai of d rt \
S ?
50 thr°UK’' and
^ s™«
TORONTO
i
by
a
the organization is planning a varied program to comhan of dirt, stones .and roots. Fortunately no one was ever
366-5812
Res.
PI.
9-8317
j
6 the year. —Y. Hayashi
hurt,
tte b™t tool 1 '“Tv °f the d°^ that ra" °ut barking
when
an
‘ A blfT Stunw landed 0,1 hbn- Father was
' P
W °^en "eut out to dynamite for Isseis who
^i®nto IaPanese Garden Club Holds Shinbokukai I quite
CTiFlY"^ t0 *” “ to ^ow strawberries,
Bum 824-8153
B.m
By T. UMEZUKI
■elsariiw
lt
H
/
Y
1
cmtmMli
to
use
dynamite
to
do
sow
-TORONTO.—’ThLToronto JaPauese Garden Club held its anfe?
aino. At the time the order to turn in explosives came I had!
t. |m| get-together (Shinbokukai) on Sunday, Feb. Sth at China about a case of dynamite, cans and fuses on hand Wei
3ut th
ERNEST JOMORI
T |J|ggse and fully enjoyed by all.
ciynamite sticks in a wheel barrow and took thL h
P I
{-'bartered Accountant
fter the luncheon a few reports were heard and ballots were woods and buried them. I threw the cans into n
n a
j
or the photo contest at the last Mum Show.
Suit# 403
hot veryone received a “Fukubiki” and door prize. Mrs. L.
130
BLOOR
ST.
W.
TORONTO
were found buried in the
^‘^^^* whose travels last year covered, the South Pacific,' showed and woods! Perhaps ugly headlines like
®ted beautiful, slides covering: Hawaii, New Zealand, Australia, JAP FARM’’.
“DYNAMITE HIDDEN ON
, Philippines, Hong Kong, Singapore, Bankok, and' Japan.
Today headlines about, right .and
Omoto aIso showed slides of last year’s Mum show. These
left wing, militants making
explosives
and
the
public
crv
about
Custom Picture
aPPi’eciated in these winter days recalling sumfirearms are still with us.
Even
though
I
used
to
handle
dangerous
explosives
before
I
waand mature in full bloom.
Framing
H
'^.™
SE
‘
’
ff
firecrackers
in
m
y
adult
life.
(iS
*
*
*
ln/hlS State aS WeI1 as in many otbers). And I am glad
NISHIMURA
^®' Okita Is Gues‘ For Trade Council Lunch
-nd will refuse to let my son play with firecrackers. The thought
tt^W0R0NT0' Dr- Saburo Okita, internationally-known Japanese m
? fUSeS attached t0 100 Sticks of dynamite makes
1278 T°ng* Street. Toronto 7, Ont
me
feel
weak.
I guess times have changed; we were poor then
15.®ln,st’ W,H be &uest speaker at a Canada-Japan Trade Council
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
^^^°\at t51e R°yal ^01k Hote1, Toronto, on February 24.
and my father needed all the help he could get in order to provide
Tokio NiaMmura
923-6877
&
i w pio-uae
’
a’ tlesident of Japan Economic Research Centre since the necessities of life.
a^° a member of several policy advisory councils and
of his government, and is a special adviser to the Min'«°f Economic Planning. The author of articles and books on
nucs matters, in both English and Japanese, Dr. Okita has
involved in several international projects, including the
H i ations Development Planning Committee.
ps most recent international task was as a member of the j
ission on International Development, headed by former Cana- I
rime Minister, Lester B. Pearson. At the request of World
piemdent,
Robert McNamara, the multi-nation commission I
) 9
Slocan City, B.C.
J completed a study on international co-operation for econ- I
Phone 355-2211
development.
I
n J ^Ioh- — Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
i V
Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1402. Phone 363-0952
*
T°10nt° address, Dr. Okita will survey the economic I
Eve. By Appointment
?. 0 aP'an, both at home and on the international scene.
11
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
15 , xceMency Shinichi Kondo, Ambassador of Japan to Can- IJ
act tie Honorable John Robarts, Premier of Ontario, will |
® on& the head table guests.
I
SPORTING GOODS
;n<jcawa Prefecture and "Yokohama City will stage a five
T^a °f *he area,s machinery and metal products at the IB Buy and Sell
SKATES
Your Home
a " e . ^entre’ T°ronto, beginning May 25. It will be the I
Hockey Equipment
Through
fail held in Canada by the Prefecture and Yokohama. Ie
INSURANCE
Bkm.
KINO'S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
DANFORTH
Skate Sharpening
MAS (Ron) MENDE
551 Danforth Ave.,
JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
OEs?^°
VICES- ' °' S ^tes^^er'on'
t
1
Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SundaY School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
p.-jeS^a^' Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
pt
Y°Ung Pe°Ples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
- e ontact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
j^TObontO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
i
iI
s
^ove.'oourt
Rd.
lat^^' FEBRUARY 22, 1970. 11:30 A.M.
J
~ n67, C- Y- Horikoshi, 766-5632
— Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
kurch School for the children
A warm welcome to all-
South of Bloor
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
MELL REAL ESTATE LTD.
Phone: HO. 3-7400
(Tosh Iwai)
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
1527 O'Connor Dr.
757-5184
Lichee Garden J
(Dining Lounge)
118 Elizabeth St.
Toronto, Canada
Phone 364-3481
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1970
ScHooI
gig Bathurst S{.
Morning
Service
Japanese Service
Telephone:
FORMAL RENTALS
Custom Made Suits
& Trousers
(4 Lines To Serve You)
CATERING SERVICE — “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
Religious
OFTORONTO
534-4302
Banquet Facilities
For Business Or Private Parties
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Small)
DINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
Page 8
PAGE 8
1
Tuesday
Greetings From The Mitsui’s Bishop
(Continued from Page 15
The New Cana,
as being completely American. I
i«i?’
decided against going back and vestiture rites and presented the
P-apers
in
Chicago.
It
marked
th«
Second class maiI ._ W
£"1
Lesotho, 4 Sra]la„ | gave the church to my younger first time that a bishop had
number
brother who is also .a priest. He’s
been
certified
outside
the
temple
southern Africa
doing a splendid job and I feel
in Koyto.
i
POHTroAT c February 2nd, 19970
Un making my contribution here.
In
Ishiura
’
s
opinion
his
big
I m sure I was right.”
KEN M0RIfa.S?M
gest job, besides pastoring his
! During a special meeting of
church and governing the 18 es
the National Assembly in 1963
tablished
churches in Canada,
^kAA-1
in Winnipeg, Ishiura was elech
from Quebec to British Colum
SOTSCMPnos
9^
ed bishop of Canada. The asbia,
will be to try and correct,
I
Basotho Nationalist
^Ui e confident that
’ &p” 9t6 «* mi
|sembly is made up of the two
the last on" ia^ 'Sd be ^en an
^conceptions
about
American bishops and 11 Bud
in advance
the Buddhist religion which cen
dhist ministers. It was nearly
tres its teachings around the I
miwU"S»>»<^
two years later that his election
four noble truths” of Buddha. I
Confess X? the Stale of C1«S« Sf"1, “’t C‘",S“"' was officially confirmed.
These are: The cause of pain I
479 QUEEN ST. ^^^
Whenever a bishop is elected,
I is desire; cessation of pain is I
I it is customary for him to make
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
possible through suppression oil
a -special trip to Kyoto, Japan,
EMpire 5-5005
denied the
government Party* mJ
uId .say “yes, for an investiture service and to desire; and the way to this is the |
(knowledge and observance of the '
Receive his papers from the ab good laws.” The goal is NiwaJ
bot, the head of the church.
1
!ia’ yltiniate
detachment from |
Once again Ishiura exerted his
•-vorldly 'cravings and ego cen
independence and desire to bring tredness.
I’
tradition into the 20th centur
I
‘We don’t worship idols,” ho
I couldn’t see the sense of stated. “We revere the teach-'
the Congress
Afnca and Mr. MokhehU
do» of wasting the time and money 0" pngs of Buddha much the same
sucn a trip when I was so busy
Christians revere
Female H^ W^i^^
with my church and new duties ” Chi ist s. We don’t bow down to .
ne said. “I knew if I waited long fns image at the altar. In fact we I Smach™ operators
eX
operators exts
Co
ATA-DPh BefeA
enough it would resolve
itself Z
aT have his
^keness ^_4o/Richmond St. W.. (Toss
satisfactorily.”
theie All we have are his words CHECK room attendant, M n-i
Se366SearftJ-C- Coltura! cil
’u calligraphic lettering. These in I (&)
Unprecedented Trip
aiter 7 o cW ^xl
it often works
1 3111 not saving
,n the
cur opinion are the most importIt was a year-and-half
later •
Mr. Jonathan 'chose a Xn^Xe* ^d1'0”®- Bu‘ 1 itt?' tbv
I
that everything was finally re anu
It is also unfortunate
and a wrong method
5
. Help Wanted
“Change Is Constant
.“7 “J ‘1“ 'taX’S Nntio’XA3'™ »" the de- solved. In November, 1969 4b
Ott Kosho Ohtani, the diM,f
We also don’t believe in re- asMVo^oT “ *’-»
mj^w^^s «a»a„t of the fomfc Qf ftf
J* Shinshu Buddhist denomina- wcarnation. We teach that change
£ constant and we stress the'
find it most unfortunate
” " "™' '"'“"As a cSaT? ion (just as in the Protestant Eternal now. It’s the now that’*
A Japanese Canadian
church,•there are many denomiDespite the ten^p
n
J
important. Instead of dwelling
nations and splinter
Best Seller!
Unprecediented Hu^to upon death we accept the do'1- I
.Children.
- XAouVX^^
tnne of Karma which is, in effect
Ts
hX^"XT “ ri™5 "S^
® he U.S. He performed the in- Perpetual change for the betted
n
In keeping with'his pWes.
ap
Japanese Cookbook
JU
e
attitudes,
Ishiura
is
an
active
I
to be XS A 1<,-Mrty politics. A vhow E
ideas of
for
•
ember
of
a
number
of
religious
ibut
verv
tTiere ^ Peace, and busXUXT P "» reason
(Cent, from Page One?
Cosmopolitan Gourmets
.
the sfati^p?
and community organizations in- '
e b
To accomplish this the Federal Judmg the Canadian Libei
utho
has been appointed as a Protest-have ni°ved a^ain
I Government Participation if .
By STELLA ITO
I - ssociation; Ferment-69 (a
Jing 1
re60 Favorite Recipes
e '
cently
disbanded
inter-faith
But I must sav XX' er><o>- the work here* Xv’T "’ " ’’ee 'Brit sb CoiP1'°t’!nces of
or'io Xl tC "'"h'? M<t Ontaand the Bloor Ba
■Mvll ion
Topher c, “d °"'n thurst Community Association.
prams: Tt T V™ ' ?S and ofte" »™tin“L£ “?e Catholics.
haS broken with tradition
TOA .^XX^ SiXi’X1-^ W?Bx
■they; ret
phen
necessary, but has never
’
■nd
overall
impact
suburb^ l am X 18 "ot "'"'j different from that "J® 8^
d bv any
eilCe nnmatchthe tenets of ^ i
ail5 other country at Expo
comfort or not
SU1 e mhether we should
m 3jV Canadian i?,
X’
With the teachdS "1 effort, should0
thei:
Church he concen’fter Expo -70 ele'eTSt'”« X X
ng
hlS seemingly unboundless
many
of
energy
2"-rgy on the now, letting the
arents.
future take care of
,
,
----—
itself.
This
Told w
our next newsletter \t th^ y°U niore ab°W the work 7
be n XX ,“'St'"' of 'vil1 ‘here
iXXnX1 ^JS'X^"~ S X '?X “' X
dion? as \
lb. R Jit ge"'ralion Miwi> ®
’
reflects, i
the Buddhist priesthood.
tt*”^'* ^^e -S "XSS,
It could end with me or it
fend tee "rtf T^Xf XSt^^^
xcx£ natm-X
the ^er-fical in the. so°n ”
thr°Ugh ^ eldest |
A and M&^^l son, ^ said. “In 'any case it’s
IX~.^
with 33.mite a.
EVELYN ST.* and multi^cia)
make the decision.”
I
sun,
the
[once ir hexperience for Evelvn
^UHOOL HERE. It i^
f
noon and the stars.
tegrated school I nfl
d parenD=- It is an Fn<rl 6 an e^eftine boS
and the focal
ȣe!^
r clai V performances bv
:®r at
SINGER SEWING
RES. 231-0863
BUS. 783-4#!
1
f surr°unded stage w ona
MACHINES
Uli
thi
11 Ivy Lea Cres.
3101 BathurstS
.
aoanese
style
courtyard
warm
Straight
&
Zig-Zag
ctfu»^^^
® a f°
UmiSuaL Rising out
^l
h
°
m
n
demonstration
™
mirrored cot
MRS. SATOKO SATO ^ted te
call - 621-0684 (res.)
|ge scho<
Irs. R. Tsujimura
-AU types of insurance
®gral
'her
> ' oaiteL and gifts You h ' eUeis. newspapers ?er
Performance stX and
Spmunitj
SINGER COMPANY
he activity areas.
°
A
Mow of encouragement/A r
to cnU’h up with
• newsgter °f
OF CANADA
neath the outer w^X^
Is only
insurance
co
^nr
mav I
arranged in
gtheir li
We have had a
^’ Kh°tso'
i back<i
ye^ne layouts to tell the
a
of ram this
,
Sincerely
' thank yP„.
|ger SC€
omhfulness.
the
;
r Just heard that tlJXmX cX X Tad A!i;e>H
achievement*
~ - Penffes and I
|wed as
It’s Private! No Time Limit!
leader
- fc! f ^^ '■^XXU<^
rent
f’ of the
Pri n
the
fe by thr
md
i, “omuh.-m expressmo^ricf Catholic!
G«l the most enjoyment from your wedding
£X dis
fo the I’.)!. '
a “■’■■|™t "Trnd,.:.-": T e etmenfe . illegal
reception or anniversary
'k"”' raml
the ।
;U‘ kind of notWvnrld
Due to rhe
__
*
of
delicious
food! PIenty of free parktaf!
k
m the number of_________________ r"n :n
■a da.
^ Jauanp
c
restricted
eut those who h-ve
S° whuiylv, we w
| “Wit IS
'e to leave very"
” ln Jhe word “DismPoX°nXXed
p*
•
<'H
H]\]i3tion
fn
f-k
Q
(A beaut
- probably in Au^^ ^?efo’‘e the "my
next in the »ese people to discover Cam i
Bdf
H,NA
2oo
a da.
925 photon W. Toronto
_
RD_ ^
1 an enr
Can. Expo ’70
lUablj 2(
By THE rev. tad MITSUI
Irei?®1”
SUKIYAKI"
SX
^n 1
GIVE
so more will hfe1; ‘
bEF
CANADIAN g2
HEART FUND
.
t
house
1
Tuesday
Greetings From The Mitsui’s Bishop
(Continued from Page 15
The New Cana,
as being completely American. I
i«i?’
decided against going back and vestiture rites and presented the
P-apers
in
Chicago.
It
marked
th«
Second class maiI ._ W
£"1
Lesotho, 4 Sra]la„ | gave the church to my younger first time that a bishop had
number
brother who is also .a priest. He’s
been
certified
outside
the
temple
southern Africa
doing a splendid job and I feel
in Koyto.
i
POHTroAT c February 2nd, 19970
Un making my contribution here.
In
Ishiura
’
s
opinion
his
big
I m sure I was right.”
KEN M0RIfa.S?M
gest job, besides pastoring his
! During a special meeting of
church and governing the 18 es
the National Assembly in 1963
tablished
churches in Canada,
^kAA-1
in Winnipeg, Ishiura was elech
from Quebec to British Colum
SOTSCMPnos
9^
ed bishop of Canada. The asbia,
will be to try and correct,
I
Basotho Nationalist
^Ui e confident that
’ &p” 9t6 «* mi
|sembly is made up of the two
the last on" ia^ 'Sd be ^en an
^conceptions
about
American bishops and 11 Bud
in advance
the Buddhist religion which cen
dhist ministers. It was nearly
tres its teachings around the I
miwU"S»>»<^
two years later that his election
four noble truths” of Buddha. I
Confess X? the Stale of C1«S« Sf"1, “’t C‘",S“"' was officially confirmed.
These are: The cause of pain I
479 QUEEN ST. ^^^
Whenever a bishop is elected,
I is desire; cessation of pain is I
I it is customary for him to make
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
possible through suppression oil
a -special trip to Kyoto, Japan,
EMpire 5-5005
denied the
government Party* mJ
uId .say “yes, for an investiture service and to desire; and the way to this is the |
(knowledge and observance of the '
Receive his papers from the ab good laws.” The goal is NiwaJ
bot, the head of the church.
1
!ia’ yltiniate
detachment from |
Once again Ishiura exerted his
•-vorldly 'cravings and ego cen
independence and desire to bring tredness.
I’
tradition into the 20th centur
I
‘We don’t worship idols,” ho
I couldn’t see the sense of stated. “We revere the teach-'
the Congress
Afnca and Mr. MokhehU
do» of wasting the time and money 0" pngs of Buddha much the same
sucn a trip when I was so busy
Christians revere
Female H^ W^i^^
with my church and new duties ” Chi ist s. We don’t bow down to .
ne said. “I knew if I waited long fns image at the altar. In fact we I Smach™ operators
eX
operators exts
Co
ATA-DPh BefeA
enough it would resolve
itself Z
aT have his
^keness ^_4o/Richmond St. W.. (Toss
satisfactorily.”
theie All we have are his words CHECK room attendant, M n-i
Se366SearftJ-C- Coltura! cil
’u calligraphic lettering. These in I (&)
Unprecedented Trip
aiter 7 o cW ^xl
it often works
1 3111 not saving
,n the
cur opinion are the most importIt was a year-and-half
later •
Mr. Jonathan 'chose a Xn^Xe* ^d1'0”®- Bu‘ 1 itt?' tbv
I
that everything was finally re anu
It is also unfortunate
and a wrong method
5
. Help Wanted
“Change Is Constant
.“7 “J ‘1“ 'taX’S Nntio’XA3'™ »" the de- solved. In November, 1969 4b
Ott Kosho Ohtani, the diM,f
We also don’t believe in re- asMVo^oT “ *’-»
mj^w^^s «a»a„t of the fomfc Qf ftf
J* Shinshu Buddhist denomina- wcarnation. We teach that change
£ constant and we stress the'
find it most unfortunate
” " "™' '"'“"As a cSaT? ion (just as in the Protestant Eternal now. It’s the now that’*
A Japanese Canadian
church,•there are many denomiDespite the ten^p
n
J
important. Instead of dwelling
nations and splinter
Best Seller!
Unprecediented Hu^to upon death we accept the do'1- I
.Children.
- XAouVX^^
tnne of Karma which is, in effect
Ts
hX^"XT “ ri™5 "S^
® he U.S. He performed the in- Perpetual change for the betted
n
In keeping with'his pWes.
ap
Japanese Cookbook
JU
e
attitudes,
Ishiura
is
an
active
I
to be XS A 1<,-Mrty politics. A vhow E
ideas of
for
•
ember
of
a
number
of
religious
ibut
verv
tTiere ^ Peace, and busXUXT P "» reason
(Cent, from Page One?
Cosmopolitan Gourmets
.
the sfati^p?
and community organizations in- '
e b
To accomplish this the Federal Judmg the Canadian Libei
utho
has been appointed as a Protest-have ni°ved a^ain
I Government Participation if .
By STELLA ITO
I - ssociation; Ferment-69 (a
Jing 1
re60 Favorite Recipes
e '
cently
disbanded
inter-faith
But I must sav XX' er><o>- the work here* Xv’T "’ " ’’ee 'Brit sb CoiP1'°t’!nces of
or'io Xl tC "'"h'? M<t Ontaand the Bloor Ba
■Mvll ion
Topher c, “d °"'n thurst Community Association.
prams: Tt T V™ ' ?S and ofte" »™tin“L£ “?e Catholics.
haS broken with tradition
TOA .^XX^ SiXi’X1-^ W?Bx
■they; ret
phen
necessary, but has never
’
■nd
overall
impact
suburb^ l am X 18 "ot "'"'j different from that "J® 8^
d bv any
eilCe nnmatchthe tenets of ^ i
ail5 other country at Expo
comfort or not
SU1 e mhether we should
m 3jV Canadian i?,
X’
With the teachdS "1 effort, should0
thei:
Church he concen’fter Expo -70 ele'eTSt'”« X X
ng
hlS seemingly unboundless
many
of
energy
2"-rgy on the now, letting the
arents.
future take care of
,
,
----—
itself.
This
Told w
our next newsletter \t th^ y°U niore ab°W the work 7
be n XX ,“'St'"' of 'vil1 ‘here
iXXnX1 ^JS'X^"~ S X '?X “' X
dion? as \
lb. R Jit ge"'ralion Miwi> ®
’
reflects, i
the Buddhist priesthood.
tt*”^'* ^^e -S "XSS,
It could end with me or it
fend tee "rtf T^Xf XSt^^^
xcx£ natm-X
the ^er-fical in the. so°n ”
thr°Ugh ^ eldest |
A and M&^^l son, ^ said. “In 'any case it’s
IX~.^
with 33.mite a.
EVELYN ST.* and multi^cia)
make the decision.”
I
sun,
the
[once ir hexperience for Evelvn
^UHOOL HERE. It i^
f
noon and the stars.
tegrated school I nfl
d parenD=- It is an Fn<rl 6 an e^eftine boS
and the focal
ȣe!^
r clai V performances bv
:®r at
SINGER SEWING
RES. 231-0863
BUS. 783-4#!
1
f surr°unded stage w ona
MACHINES
Uli
thi
11 Ivy Lea Cres.
3101 BathurstS
.
aoanese
style
courtyard
warm
Straight
&
Zig-Zag
ctfu»^^^
® a f°
UmiSuaL Rising out
^l
h
°
m
n
demonstration
™
mirrored cot
MRS. SATOKO SATO ^ted te
call - 621-0684 (res.)
|ge scho<
Irs. R. Tsujimura
-AU types of insurance
®gral
'her
> ' oaiteL and gifts You h ' eUeis. newspapers ?er
Performance stX and
Spmunitj
SINGER COMPANY
he activity areas.
°
A
Mow of encouragement/A r
to cnU’h up with
• newsgter °f
OF CANADA
neath the outer w^X^
Is only
insurance
co
^nr
mav I
arranged in
gtheir li
We have had a
^’ Kh°tso'
i back<i
ye^ne layouts to tell the
a
of ram this
,
Sincerely
' thank yP„.
|ger SC€
omhfulness.
the
;
r Just heard that tlJXmX cX X Tad A!i;e>H
achievement*
~ - Penffes and I
|wed as
It’s Private! No Time Limit!
leader
- fc! f ^^ '■^XXU<^
rent
f’ of the
Pri n
the
fe by thr
md
i, “omuh.-m expressmo^ricf Catholic!
G«l the most enjoyment from your wedding
£X dis
fo the I’.)!. '
a “■’■■|™t "Trnd,.:.-": T e etmenfe . illegal
reception or anniversary
'k"”' raml
the ।
;U‘ kind of notWvnrld
Due to rhe
__
*
of
delicious
food! PIenty of free parktaf!
k
m the number of_________________ r"n :n
■a da.
^ Jauanp
c
restricted
eut those who h-ve
S° whuiylv, we w
| “Wit IS
'e to leave very"
” ln Jhe word “DismPoX°nXXed
p*
•
<'H
H]\]i3tion
fn
f-k
Q
(A beaut
- probably in Au^^ ^?efo’‘e the "my
next in the »ese people to discover Cam i
Bdf
H,NA
2oo
a da.
925 photon W. Toronto
_
RD_ ^
1 an enr
Can. Expo ’70
lUablj 2(
By THE rev. tad MITSUI
Irei?®1”
SUKIYAKI"
SX
^n 1
GIVE
so more will hfe1; ‘
bEF
CANADIAN g2
HEART FUND
.
t
house