Page 1
iMulti-Cdturalism Programme Of Federal Government Issues First Grants
. . and, employment
,
jk
information and gramme s of folk music, dancin
them with language and fnms anj speakers as part of the
citizen preparation. The Centre official opening programme
will also sponsor orientation se- ’
the University of Lethbridge.
minars and exchange sessions ।
i $7,500 to the Chinese Canadian
with other cultural groups.
Folk
. Citizens Association of Vancouver
$1,500 to the Lethbridge
"Canada
Arts Council, Lethbridge, Alta. ] to help finance
First
”
project
which
is
designed
to help finance the holding of
fX Association of B.C., Bur- an International Week Program to integrate newly arrived immi
grants into their respective com
l1",
to help finance the me of cultural activities during
through
orientation
which many ethnic groups of munities
programmes. and to develop
ge:
Information
Centre Southern Alberta will participate
Iepu^THnt ill provide new Japanese in displays of their arts and participation in community afwhich w
and
handicrafts, and present pro- fairs of Chinese-s
nigra nt with accommodation
||llllllIllllllllllllilllllllllIllll’|||,,,,|,,,,,™^
v-ic groups under
comment s Multiwere
Prv-gramme
ntly by Secretary
&snou!
J Pelletier.
■ -re a few of 'the
I The ollow
that have been given:
ec to t
s
U
I
m the Native Resource
means $5,000 to
Centre of the Cross-Cultural
’ Centre at the University of
Western Ontario. London for the
$5,000 to the Canadian
of
V ni- collection and development
Studies Resource Centre
and
versity of Western Ontario. Lon information on the history
don to enable them to carry out culture of native people in the
research in libraries in Canada London region for inclusion in
Cultural Centre of the
and the U.S., conduct interviews the Cro
. The. latter is a multi
programming
audiovisual
for
op eraand develop) a slid collection of media, computer-assisted
ell Black communities in Canada, tion. designed to acquaint
with, the cultures and pro
in their programme to
for
about blent of the Third World and to
disseminate
knowledge
I promote understanding".
various cultural groups.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinmHiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiinimniiiiiiiiiiiiiiHHii*1
ht I)® Canadian
“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.65
WITH POSTAGE
“X CHILD IN PRISON
CAMP”
Bv SHIZUYE
TAKASHIMA
$7.95 WITH POSTAGE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
TITP^DAY
oZ
Toronto. Ont.
1972
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiii’ii|iiiiiiii'iiii|i,',l,,,H,,i,uH^
I
Immigration To Canada
j OTTAWA. — In the Quarterly
ft Immigration Bulletin (December
11971) released here recently
S from the Department of Manp power and Immigration, compa| rative figures in immigration to
8 Canada were disclosed.
B The number of immigrants,
I from various countries all ovex
I file world, to arrive in Canada
| during the last quarter- of 1971
APRIL 95
and the total numbers of immi
grants for the calendar year 1971
were compared with 1970 im
migration statistics.
In the comprehensive, report,
a breakdown, as to the numbers
and origins of the immigrants,
by continent and country, was
given. The following are repre
sentative of the figures released
in the report.
Plans For “Bigger & Better Picnic
By Toronto JCCA Nisei And Isseibu
of the recently incomer:
incorporated
received its Annual Report which help
TJCCA
Isseibu
for
a
bigger and
stated that, for the first time
better
picnic
this
year.
The picnic
JCCA
was
since its inception, the
will
be
held
at
Stanley
Park on
hold
what
unable last year, to
July
2nd.
,
•
f
22
nd
Anwould have been its
Due
to
the
decreased
size
of
largely
atnual Picnic. This was
... .
tributed to the move, early last the Toronto 3 CCA Executive
year, of the. JCCA office from Committee, activities have be
its location on Spadina Road to come somewhat limited, but it is
the Japanese Canadian Cultural hoped that with the help of some
Centre, which caused a lack of of the voungcr groups in the
preparation time for the memb J.C. community, re-vitalized pro
grammes may be carried out in
Besides the discussion on the ers of the executive. Plans, ho
CALENDAR YEAR
4th QUARTER
the coming term.
COUNTRY
“Garden Project” the TJCCA wever, are underway with the
1971
1970
1971
883
797
156
« ^apan
47
119
10
China
5,009
4,509
1,119
Hong Kong
1,119
TOKYO. - The $300 million I The airport is designed for a courses will lead to four separate
918
315
South Korea
4,180
3,240
boarding’ satellites. Each will ac
843
Philippines
new Tokyo International Airport, ’projected 16 million passengers
761
749
^ Taiwan
commodate eight planes.
137 fast rising on an island plateau . by the year 1978. It is being
132
South Vietnam
31
728
Driving time between Tokyo
646
147
Rep. of S. Africa
some 37 miles east of Japan s built primarly to accommodate
32
||| Zimbabwe (Rhodesia)
capital/ is scheduled to^ begin intei'national fights, but a limit- and the new airport is estimated
serving international airline pas- ed number of domestic flights at an hour and twenty minutes.
from major cities are to
be By rail, the trip takes 60 minusengers in June.
allowed.
tes.
According to Japan Lines, one
Most domestic flights within
Tokyo City Terminal is being
of the prime users of the new Japan will continue to land at
constructed downtown for limou
facility, the airport when fully
Haneda Airport.
sine service to
the purport.
completed will be comparable in
The new four-level passenger Initially,
passengers will
be
size to London’s Heathrow or
By S. I. HAYAKAWA
terminal
will
be
shaped
in.
an
required to check in three hours
Los Angeles International air
| open “U” from which four con- prior to their plane departure,
President, S. F. State College
according to a JAL spokesman.
Mating, like courtship, is richer for human beings than for
Keisei Electric Railroad will
other animals, “hi baboons,” says Desmond Morris in his book, Japanese Are Biggest Spenders In AustraUa
operate a six-coach express to
“The Naked Ape,” “the time taken from mounting to ejaculation
'y
1971,
during
the airport from Ueno Station.
is no more than seven or eight secohxds.. . the female does not
CANBERRA — The Japanese overseas visitors
appear to experience any kind of climax.”
are Australia’s biggest tourist they spent A$500 a head while Departures every half hour are
planned during peak travel.
Fer human beings, Morris continues, sex is infinitely sexier spenders, according to the first in the country.
The Japan National Railroad
than for the baboon: “The hunting life that gave us naked skins major national survey of over
only
with
This
compared
and more sensitive hands has given us much greater scope fox seas visitors announced by the
is scheduled to open a new line
spend by the
in October. An official of JNR
sexually stimulating boby-to-body contacts... stroking, rubbing, Australian Tourist Commission. A&390.20 a head
who came to
83,500
Americans
pressing and caressing occur in abundance and far exceed anything
While Japanese tourist made
said one of the company’s famous
Australia.
bullet trains will be linked to the
up
only
4
per
cent
of
Australia
’
s
^ound in other primate species. Also, specialized organs such as
airport but not.within five years.
lips, ear-lobes, nipples, breasts and genitals are richly endow e
^ith nerve-endings and have become highly sensitized to erotic
tactile stimulation.”
But just as important as the tacile signals are the visual sig
TOKYO. — Tokyoites visiting playground for the frogs.
a nals- — the responsive facial expression of the partner — and
e
Shinobazu Pond in Ueno Park
The Humor Club, headed by
auditory signals — the voice soft with affection or husky with
this summer to savor cool breezes late comedian Musei Tokugawa,
^tual excitement.
. ’
unique
asked Tokyo Governor Ryokichi .
Sexual union then is a profound person-to-pei'son communica- will be treated to
chorus
—
frog
singing.
Minobe to build a pond and an 1
hon, the culmination of all the communications antecedent to it.
The
calling
of
frogs,
which
&.
TOKYO. — Japanese work an
island exclusively for frogs with
- s sexually attractive and sexually sensitive areas of the body are
average of 44 hours a week and
largely in front. It is therefore by no means accidental that a vast was often heard in prewar days, the fiscal 1971 budget.
will
return
to
Shinobazu
Pond
ought to work less, a group of
Eidoriiy of tlie human race unite sexually' in face-to-face position.
The
club
dropped
10,000
tad
The irontal approach means that the incoming sexual signaL when a special enclosure is built poles into Shinobazu Pond then government advisers, said.
near Benten Island on the pond.
The National Economic Council
“M levarcs are kept tightly7 linked with the identity signals from
but very few matured into frogs.
The
Tokyo
Metropolitan
Gov
recommended
Japanese industry
partner, writes Morris. “Face-to-face sex is personalized sex.
Most of them died, unable to live
s
^ or’ier '7ords we are so constructed as to derive additional ernment plans to release thou through their, hibernation period. shift to a five-day, 40-hour work
615- Others were reportedly devoured week within the next three
"7^ $leasures from knowing with whom we are copulating.
e sands of frogs into the
Al
so
enclosure.
years.
by snakehead fish.
am derives richness fi’om all the pi'ior communicative, emo square-meter
under
construction
is
a
“
frog
is
X—! ^ :aCile imprintings of the valued partner. And ^sexual
It noted that the average work
The
rectangular-shaped
en
land
”
which
will
stand
on
the
^-•^ure is cumulative, each imprinting x’einforcing the effect o
week is 38 hours in the United
fringe of the enclosure. The is closure is expected to provide States and 39 in West Germany.
’^printinvs.as a frogs with comfort and security.
land is expected to serve
(Continued on Page 8)
“The Toronto
TORONTO.
Japanese Canadian Citizens’ As
sociation has supported1 and will
continue to support the Japanese
Canadian Cultural Centre’s Gar
den Project’'. Such w as the
general reflection of the execu
tive members about the contro
versial issue at the. JCCA’s (To
ronto Chapter) Annual General
Meeting held here on April 12th.
$300 Million Tokyo International Airport Opens In June
Natural History
Of Monogamy
Singing Frogs To Croon A Few Tunes
Suggests Cut In
i Working Hours
For Japanese
. . and, employment
,
jk
information and gramme s of folk music, dancin
them with language and fnms anj speakers as part of the
citizen preparation. The Centre official opening programme
will also sponsor orientation se- ’
the University of Lethbridge.
minars and exchange sessions ।
i $7,500 to the Chinese Canadian
with other cultural groups.
Folk
. Citizens Association of Vancouver
$1,500 to the Lethbridge
"Canada
Arts Council, Lethbridge, Alta. ] to help finance
First
”
project
which
is
designed
to help finance the holding of
fX Association of B.C., Bur- an International Week Program to integrate newly arrived immi
grants into their respective com
l1",
to help finance the me of cultural activities during
through
orientation
which many ethnic groups of munities
programmes. and to develop
ge:
Information
Centre Southern Alberta will participate
Iepu^THnt ill provide new Japanese in displays of their arts and participation in community afwhich w
and
handicrafts, and present pro- fairs of Chinese-s
nigra nt with accommodation
||llllllIllllllllllllilllllllllIllll’|||,,,,|,,,,,™^
v-ic groups under
comment s Multiwere
Prv-gramme
ntly by Secretary
&snou!
J Pelletier.
■ -re a few of 'the
I The ollow
that have been given:
ec to t
s
U
I
m the Native Resource
means $5,000 to
Centre of the Cross-Cultural
’ Centre at the University of
Western Ontario. London for the
$5,000 to the Canadian
of
V ni- collection and development
Studies Resource Centre
and
versity of Western Ontario. Lon information on the history
don to enable them to carry out culture of native people in the
research in libraries in Canada London region for inclusion in
Cultural Centre of the
and the U.S., conduct interviews the Cro
. The. latter is a multi
programming
audiovisual
for
op eraand develop) a slid collection of media, computer-assisted
ell Black communities in Canada, tion. designed to acquaint
with, the cultures and pro
in their programme to
for
about blent of the Third World and to
disseminate
knowledge
I promote understanding".
various cultural groups.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinmHiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiinimniiiiiiiiiiiiiiHHii*1
ht I)® Canadian
“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.65
WITH POSTAGE
“X CHILD IN PRISON
CAMP”
Bv SHIZUYE
TAKASHIMA
$7.95 WITH POSTAGE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
TITP^DAY
oZ
Toronto. Ont.
1972
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiii’ii|iiiiiiii'iiii|i,',l,,,H,,i,uH^
I
Immigration To Canada
j OTTAWA. — In the Quarterly
ft Immigration Bulletin (December
11971) released here recently
S from the Department of Manp power and Immigration, compa| rative figures in immigration to
8 Canada were disclosed.
B The number of immigrants,
I from various countries all ovex
I file world, to arrive in Canada
| during the last quarter- of 1971
APRIL 95
and the total numbers of immi
grants for the calendar year 1971
were compared with 1970 im
migration statistics.
In the comprehensive, report,
a breakdown, as to the numbers
and origins of the immigrants,
by continent and country, was
given. The following are repre
sentative of the figures released
in the report.
Plans For “Bigger & Better Picnic
By Toronto JCCA Nisei And Isseibu
of the recently incomer:
incorporated
received its Annual Report which help
TJCCA
Isseibu
for
a
bigger and
stated that, for the first time
better
picnic
this
year.
The picnic
JCCA
was
since its inception, the
will
be
held
at
Stanley
Park on
hold
what
unable last year, to
July
2nd.
,
•
f
22
nd
Anwould have been its
Due
to
the
decreased
size
of
largely
atnual Picnic. This was
... .
tributed to the move, early last the Toronto 3 CCA Executive
year, of the. JCCA office from Committee, activities have be
its location on Spadina Road to come somewhat limited, but it is
the Japanese Canadian Cultural hoped that with the help of some
Centre, which caused a lack of of the voungcr groups in the
preparation time for the memb J.C. community, re-vitalized pro
grammes may be carried out in
Besides the discussion on the ers of the executive. Plans, ho
CALENDAR YEAR
4th QUARTER
the coming term.
COUNTRY
“Garden Project” the TJCCA wever, are underway with the
1971
1970
1971
883
797
156
« ^apan
47
119
10
China
5,009
4,509
1,119
Hong Kong
1,119
TOKYO. - The $300 million I The airport is designed for a courses will lead to four separate
918
315
South Korea
4,180
3,240
boarding’ satellites. Each will ac
843
Philippines
new Tokyo International Airport, ’projected 16 million passengers
761
749
^ Taiwan
commodate eight planes.
137 fast rising on an island plateau . by the year 1978. It is being
132
South Vietnam
31
728
Driving time between Tokyo
646
147
Rep. of S. Africa
some 37 miles east of Japan s built primarly to accommodate
32
||| Zimbabwe (Rhodesia)
capital/ is scheduled to^ begin intei'national fights, but a limit- and the new airport is estimated
serving international airline pas- ed number of domestic flights at an hour and twenty minutes.
from major cities are to
be By rail, the trip takes 60 minusengers in June.
allowed.
tes.
According to Japan Lines, one
Most domestic flights within
Tokyo City Terminal is being
of the prime users of the new Japan will continue to land at
constructed downtown for limou
facility, the airport when fully
Haneda Airport.
sine service to
the purport.
completed will be comparable in
The new four-level passenger Initially,
passengers will
be
size to London’s Heathrow or
By S. I. HAYAKAWA
terminal
will
be
shaped
in.
an
required to check in three hours
Los Angeles International air
| open “U” from which four con- prior to their plane departure,
President, S. F. State College
according to a JAL spokesman.
Mating, like courtship, is richer for human beings than for
Keisei Electric Railroad will
other animals, “hi baboons,” says Desmond Morris in his book, Japanese Are Biggest Spenders In AustraUa
operate a six-coach express to
“The Naked Ape,” “the time taken from mounting to ejaculation
'y
1971,
during
the airport from Ueno Station.
is no more than seven or eight secohxds.. . the female does not
CANBERRA — The Japanese overseas visitors
appear to experience any kind of climax.”
are Australia’s biggest tourist they spent A$500 a head while Departures every half hour are
planned during peak travel.
Fer human beings, Morris continues, sex is infinitely sexier spenders, according to the first in the country.
The Japan National Railroad
than for the baboon: “The hunting life that gave us naked skins major national survey of over
only
with
This
compared
and more sensitive hands has given us much greater scope fox seas visitors announced by the
is scheduled to open a new line
spend by the
in October. An official of JNR
sexually stimulating boby-to-body contacts... stroking, rubbing, Australian Tourist Commission. A&390.20 a head
who came to
83,500
Americans
pressing and caressing occur in abundance and far exceed anything
While Japanese tourist made
said one of the company’s famous
Australia.
bullet trains will be linked to the
up
only
4
per
cent
of
Australia
’
s
^ound in other primate species. Also, specialized organs such as
airport but not.within five years.
lips, ear-lobes, nipples, breasts and genitals are richly endow e
^ith nerve-endings and have become highly sensitized to erotic
tactile stimulation.”
But just as important as the tacile signals are the visual sig
TOKYO. — Tokyoites visiting playground for the frogs.
a nals- — the responsive facial expression of the partner — and
e
Shinobazu Pond in Ueno Park
The Humor Club, headed by
auditory signals — the voice soft with affection or husky with
this summer to savor cool breezes late comedian Musei Tokugawa,
^tual excitement.
. ’
unique
asked Tokyo Governor Ryokichi .
Sexual union then is a profound person-to-pei'son communica- will be treated to
chorus
—
frog
singing.
Minobe to build a pond and an 1
hon, the culmination of all the communications antecedent to it.
The
calling
of
frogs,
which
&.
TOKYO. — Japanese work an
island exclusively for frogs with
- s sexually attractive and sexually sensitive areas of the body are
average of 44 hours a week and
largely in front. It is therefore by no means accidental that a vast was often heard in prewar days, the fiscal 1971 budget.
will
return
to
Shinobazu
Pond
ought to work less, a group of
Eidoriiy of tlie human race unite sexually' in face-to-face position.
The
club
dropped
10,000
tad
The irontal approach means that the incoming sexual signaL when a special enclosure is built poles into Shinobazu Pond then government advisers, said.
near Benten Island on the pond.
The National Economic Council
“M levarcs are kept tightly7 linked with the identity signals from
but very few matured into frogs.
The
Tokyo
Metropolitan
Gov
recommended
Japanese industry
partner, writes Morris. “Face-to-face sex is personalized sex.
Most of them died, unable to live
s
^ or’ier '7ords we are so constructed as to derive additional ernment plans to release thou through their, hibernation period. shift to a five-day, 40-hour work
615- Others were reportedly devoured week within the next three
"7^ $leasures from knowing with whom we are copulating.
e sands of frogs into the
Al
so
enclosure.
years.
by snakehead fish.
am derives richness fi’om all the pi'ior communicative, emo square-meter
under
construction
is
a
“
frog
is
X—! ^ :aCile imprintings of the valued partner. And ^sexual
It noted that the average work
The
rectangular-shaped
en
land
”
which
will
stand
on
the
^-•^ure is cumulative, each imprinting x’einforcing the effect o
week is 38 hours in the United
fringe of the enclosure. The is closure is expected to provide States and 39 in West Germany.
’^printinvs.as a frogs with comfort and security.
land is expected to serve
(Continued on Page 8)
“The Toronto
TORONTO.
Japanese Canadian Citizens’ As
sociation has supported1 and will
continue to support the Japanese
Canadian Cultural Centre’s Gar
den Project’'. Such w as the
general reflection of the execu
tive members about the contro
versial issue at the. JCCA’s (To
ronto Chapter) Annual General
Meeting held here on April 12th.
$300 Million Tokyo International Airport Opens In June
Natural History
Of Monogamy
Singing Frogs To Croon A Few Tunes
Suggests Cut In
i Working Hours
For Japanese
Page 2
Tuesday. April 25 19
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479 Queen St. W
Toronto 133, Ont.
Phone 366-5005
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number 0356
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Page 7
J
1972
Personal Notes
Cocoon To Butterfly
^ih Annual "Satsuki Matsuri" — Sun. May 7th
T vu 'XTO. _ The ^-th Annual Spring Concert, SATSUKI
will be held Sunday, May 7th 1972 at 2:00 p.m. at the
j
p'->^ese United Church, 701 Dovercourt Rd.
' ' ■^b. , \v\’ert is held for everyone’s enjoyment, but particularly
l<<e^ who look forward to an evening of entertainment.
Y -' -m il luncheon will ibe served before the concert begins,
welcome to attend. — Toronto Japanese United Church
vt<iRL
— May 7
HAMILTON. Ont. — Hamilton Buddhist Church will hold its
mar. on May 7th, from 1 P.M. There will be manv inon display for sale in addition to the very popular
no- goods. Everyone is welcome to help us to make this
cune success of former years.
Use. ladies who are interested in participating in the vearlv
Obon dance
Practice is already in 'progress on Sundays bet-ween
— Hamilton Buddhist Church
nd 9 Wf1
- Your Home
O.K. CAFE
Chinese Foods
Through
Mils Kuroda
Representing
469 Queen St. W.
Toronto. Ont.
Robt. Owen
Realtor
Take Out Service
2685 Eglinton Ave. East
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-2581
Specializing In Japanese
Foods & Giftware
Sandown
Market
221 Kennedy Rd. (between
Danforth & Kingston Rd.)
Scarborough, Ontario
Nancy Ariza 261-7040
OHAGI & OSHUSHI
Dn Thurs.. Fri. & Saturdays
Open Sundays 10 A.M.-6 P.M.
Free Delivery
in Central only
Tel. 367-0444
Japan's
Specialty Shop
463 Eglinton Ave. W.
Phone 489-8611
Mon. — Wed. & Sat.
10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Thur. & Fri. until 8:00 p.m.
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
Si. John's Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
.
Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
SUNDAY. APRIL 30. 1972
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 782-5267
Sunday Service and Sunday School 11:30 A.M. ..
English Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
A warm welcome to all.
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
. By DIANA LOER CH ER
Obituaries
reproach to
NEW YORK. — The Japanese kimono is
mercurial cour
The kimono ha
Morishita
female population of Japan from the
all in the
eighth century to the present with only minimal ehan
TORONTO. — A funeral ser
direction of sinwlification.
vice was held recently for Umezo
Its longevity is a tribute to the impeccable leganee of its Morishita, a leader in the Toron
opportunity to
styling, which Americans were recently
the All Japan to Japanese community. /Morishi
appreciate during a tour of ti
ta. who was interned as a Ja
purpose
Kimono Consultant Association
count rie panese national during World
ion was to further cultural exchange
and perhaps serve as something of an antidote to the wave of War ll. died Friday, April 14,
chinoiserie that is sweeping the American fashion scene.
1972 at 81.
CURVES DE-EMPHASIZED
Canada in
came.
i of
The kimono is an important s;ymbol of the Japanese
1907
and
ran
a
store
on
Vaneousilk
ultimate beauty. Contrasting with sumptuously
ind until his internment.
and recall
r
fabrics, the line of the kimono is mpremely a
f a "sens
the classical simplicity of Grecian
; put to work on road
of shame
in the Britisl i Columbia
tht straight-line cutting method and by wrapping the bodv tightly
interior.
so that he kimono glides in a barely percepibl arc from
In 1946. Morishita came to
silhouette,
a
smooth
to the floor. The resi
beautv
that
and
an
impression
of
dainty, mincing walk
Toronto and worked
makes the wearer seei a living work of art.
:ind on a
The American women who gathered at the New York Hilton mushroom farm.
lived
on
to view the kimono show looked like gangling colts next to then
11 •ears then
diminutive, exquisitely graceful Japanese counterparts. Before, the
in Scarshow started visitors were treated to an informal demonstration moved to Whyne
of how to wear a kimono, with Japanese women putting them on borough.
themselves, one another, and Americans.
the
The kimono fits .a woman of any girth (only height can some
to the Japanese
times be a problem), for its design is based on a flexible process
Japanese
of wrapping', tying', and binding that eliminates unyielding Western
Japanese
Garden
Club
and
gadgets such as buttons, zippers, pins. etc.
re when
Canadian Cultural
organized.
these
groups
were
If there had been any doubt in anyone s mind as jo why
wife.
four
kimono consultants were necessary, they were quickly dispelled.
The skill and precision required to put on a. kimono would stagger laughters and a son.
.a spider weaving- its web. The function of the consultant is to teac.li
the woman how to put it on herself “to bring out the personality
and charm of its wearer” and to teach "the spiritual side ot. dress
ing’ and character building.”
We wish to express our sin
Two nimble, non-English-speaking Japanese women launched
cere thanks to our friends and
me. ito my first kimowo in the following' manner: first a thick
for
kindness.
Turkish towel is wrapped tightly around the midriff; then a thin
many expressions of sympathy
white silk robe with short kimono sleeves is wrapped loosely oyer
and beautiful floral tributes
it; a thick band' of velcro tape snuggles again over the midriff;
during our recent bereavement
another robe, this one a bit fancier, ties in inscrutable locations
of our beloved father and
above, under, and over the shoulders.
husband. Mr. Richard Uchida.
Mrs. R. H. Uchida, 52
COMES THE STRUGGLE
Then comes the luscious kimono robe itself, arranged and
Ala win
wrapped with meticulous care so that the length is precisely even
Robin
and the collar projects slightly away f72m the body.
Rick
Added to my midriff -was another, more decorative band of
UnokicIri
Uchida
Mr.
tape and over it the wide obi (sash) that can be tied in a variety
fa m i 1 v
of shapes. While the two women tugged and yanked to fasten the
Shusaku Naka
Air*
apparatus tightly, I discreetly tried to keep my balance and stifle
mura & Family
I emerged with the famous Japanese ‘willow line and the
sensation of wearing a very heavy, misplaced girdle or being
wrapped in a cocoon.
।
I found my posture improved, since it is about as easy to
slouch in a kimono as a suit of armor, and my walk felt decidedly
more feminine. Eating' struck me as a potential problem as 1 en
visioned sleeves dangling in the dinner.
A PARADOX ON POPULARITY
In the show. 140 Japanese women displayed kimonos that
ranged from highly formal ancient and modern silk costumes (of
.vhich the bridal kimono is the most unwearably elaborate and
beautiful, requiring a half day to put on) to simplifier!, everyday
kimonos. Regardless of period or function, rarely in the history
of dress has such an impression of simplicity been achieved through
such complication of craft.
This paradox is responsible for both the endurance and the
decline of the labyrinthine kimono. About a century ago Western
influences reached Japan and many younger Japanese women,
-speciallv those who had to catch the equivalent of the 8:1d,
rejected 'it in favor of more convenient forms of Western dress.
Also kimonos, even in cotton and linen, tend to be* prohibitively
expensive excessively warm.
, • , ,
, ,
Still Japanese women have shown an admirable reluctance
to abandon their splendid sartorial heritage entirely. They still
appear in kimonos on social occasions.
KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Fishing Tackle
Deio Worms
SUNDAY, APRIL 30, 1972
10:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service
551 Danforth Ave.,
918 Bathurst St.
Custom Picture
Framing
Telephone: 534-4302
WORSHIP WHERE EAST MEETS V^ST
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
Test-drive TOYOTA!
Corolla - Sprinter - Corona
Mark II Crown
At your SCARBORO Test-a-Toyota
Centre. Metro's Fastest-Growing
Dealership.
BRIMELL Toyota Ltd.
TOM HOITA
NICK bozian
1302 Ellesmere Rd. at Brimley
293-3643
1278 Yonge Street. Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
923-6877
Tokio Nishimura
(neai Car law)
Res: 922-1353
Bus: 924-8153
George Fukusaka
463-7400
ERNEST JOMORI
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
Chartered Accountant
Suite
403
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
OF TORONTO
DANFORTH GARDENS
♦ FORMAL RENTALS
Cullom Made Suits
Famous Chinese Foods
& Troutert
3212 Danforth Ave. (at Pharmacy)
___
One free order of fried Wun Tun and One, pair
of chopsticks with orders over $5.00
Free local delivery over $3.00
10% off on pick-up orders over $2.00
Call now 699-1171 or 699-1172
?
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
1972
Personal Notes
Cocoon To Butterfly
^ih Annual "Satsuki Matsuri" — Sun. May 7th
T vu 'XTO. _ The ^-th Annual Spring Concert, SATSUKI
will be held Sunday, May 7th 1972 at 2:00 p.m. at the
j
p'->^ese United Church, 701 Dovercourt Rd.
' ' ■^b. , \v\’ert is held for everyone’s enjoyment, but particularly
l<<e^ who look forward to an evening of entertainment.
Y -' -m il luncheon will ibe served before the concert begins,
welcome to attend. — Toronto Japanese United Church
vt<iRL
— May 7
HAMILTON. Ont. — Hamilton Buddhist Church will hold its
mar. on May 7th, from 1 P.M. There will be manv inon display for sale in addition to the very popular
no- goods. Everyone is welcome to help us to make this
cune success of former years.
Use. ladies who are interested in participating in the vearlv
Obon dance
Practice is already in 'progress on Sundays bet-ween
— Hamilton Buddhist Church
nd 9 Wf1
- Your Home
O.K. CAFE
Chinese Foods
Through
Mils Kuroda
Representing
469 Queen St. W.
Toronto. Ont.
Robt. Owen
Realtor
Take Out Service
2685 Eglinton Ave. East
Phone 266-4501 - Res. 261-2581
Specializing In Japanese
Foods & Giftware
Sandown
Market
221 Kennedy Rd. (between
Danforth & Kingston Rd.)
Scarborough, Ontario
Nancy Ariza 261-7040
OHAGI & OSHUSHI
Dn Thurs.. Fri. & Saturdays
Open Sundays 10 A.M.-6 P.M.
Free Delivery
in Central only
Tel. 367-0444
Japan's
Specialty Shop
463 Eglinton Ave. W.
Phone 489-8611
Mon. — Wed. & Sat.
10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Thur. & Fri. until 8:00 p.m.
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
Si. John's Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
.
Sunday: Sunday School and Worship Services 2:00 P.M.
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
SUNDAY. APRIL 30. 1972
Japanese — Rev. C. Y. Horikoshi, 782-5267
Sunday Service and Sunday School 11:30 A.M. ..
English Rev. Ken Matsugu, 444-5159
A warm welcome to all.
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
. By DIANA LOER CH ER
Obituaries
reproach to
NEW YORK. — The Japanese kimono is
mercurial cour
The kimono ha
Morishita
female population of Japan from the
all in the
eighth century to the present with only minimal ehan
TORONTO. — A funeral ser
direction of sinwlification.
vice was held recently for Umezo
Its longevity is a tribute to the impeccable leganee of its Morishita, a leader in the Toron
opportunity to
styling, which Americans were recently
the All Japan to Japanese community. /Morishi
appreciate during a tour of ti
ta. who was interned as a Ja
purpose
Kimono Consultant Association
count rie panese national during World
ion was to further cultural exchange
and perhaps serve as something of an antidote to the wave of War ll. died Friday, April 14,
chinoiserie that is sweeping the American fashion scene.
1972 at 81.
CURVES DE-EMPHASIZED
Canada in
came.
i of
The kimono is an important s;ymbol of the Japanese
1907
and
ran
a
store
on
Vaneousilk
ultimate beauty. Contrasting with sumptuously
ind until his internment.
and recall
r
fabrics, the line of the kimono is mpremely a
f a "sens
the classical simplicity of Grecian
; put to work on road
of shame
in the Britisl i Columbia
tht straight-line cutting method and by wrapping the bodv tightly
interior.
so that he kimono glides in a barely percepibl arc from
In 1946. Morishita came to
silhouette,
a
smooth
to the floor. The resi
beautv
that
and
an
impression
of
dainty, mincing walk
Toronto and worked
makes the wearer seei a living work of art.
:ind on a
The American women who gathered at the New York Hilton mushroom farm.
lived
on
to view the kimono show looked like gangling colts next to then
11 •ears then
diminutive, exquisitely graceful Japanese counterparts. Before, the
in Scarshow started visitors were treated to an informal demonstration moved to Whyne
of how to wear a kimono, with Japanese women putting them on borough.
themselves, one another, and Americans.
the
The kimono fits .a woman of any girth (only height can some
to the Japanese
times be a problem), for its design is based on a flexible process
Japanese
of wrapping', tying', and binding that eliminates unyielding Western
Japanese
Garden
Club
and
gadgets such as buttons, zippers, pins. etc.
re when
Canadian Cultural
organized.
these
groups
were
If there had been any doubt in anyone s mind as jo why
wife.
four
kimono consultants were necessary, they were quickly dispelled.
The skill and precision required to put on a. kimono would stagger laughters and a son.
.a spider weaving- its web. The function of the consultant is to teac.li
the woman how to put it on herself “to bring out the personality
and charm of its wearer” and to teach "the spiritual side ot. dress
ing’ and character building.”
We wish to express our sin
Two nimble, non-English-speaking Japanese women launched
cere thanks to our friends and
me. ito my first kimowo in the following' manner: first a thick
for
kindness.
Turkish towel is wrapped tightly around the midriff; then a thin
many expressions of sympathy
white silk robe with short kimono sleeves is wrapped loosely oyer
and beautiful floral tributes
it; a thick band' of velcro tape snuggles again over the midriff;
during our recent bereavement
another robe, this one a bit fancier, ties in inscrutable locations
of our beloved father and
above, under, and over the shoulders.
husband. Mr. Richard Uchida.
Mrs. R. H. Uchida, 52
COMES THE STRUGGLE
Then comes the luscious kimono robe itself, arranged and
Ala win
wrapped with meticulous care so that the length is precisely even
Robin
and the collar projects slightly away f72m the body.
Rick
Added to my midriff -was another, more decorative band of
UnokicIri
Uchida
Mr.
tape and over it the wide obi (sash) that can be tied in a variety
fa m i 1 v
of shapes. While the two women tugged and yanked to fasten the
Shusaku Naka
Air*
apparatus tightly, I discreetly tried to keep my balance and stifle
mura & Family
I emerged with the famous Japanese ‘willow line and the
sensation of wearing a very heavy, misplaced girdle or being
wrapped in a cocoon.
।
I found my posture improved, since it is about as easy to
slouch in a kimono as a suit of armor, and my walk felt decidedly
more feminine. Eating' struck me as a potential problem as 1 en
visioned sleeves dangling in the dinner.
A PARADOX ON POPULARITY
In the show. 140 Japanese women displayed kimonos that
ranged from highly formal ancient and modern silk costumes (of
.vhich the bridal kimono is the most unwearably elaborate and
beautiful, requiring a half day to put on) to simplifier!, everyday
kimonos. Regardless of period or function, rarely in the history
of dress has such an impression of simplicity been achieved through
such complication of craft.
This paradox is responsible for both the endurance and the
decline of the labyrinthine kimono. About a century ago Western
influences reached Japan and many younger Japanese women,
-speciallv those who had to catch the equivalent of the 8:1d,
rejected 'it in favor of more convenient forms of Western dress.
Also kimonos, even in cotton and linen, tend to be* prohibitively
expensive excessively warm.
, • , ,
, ,
Still Japanese women have shown an admirable reluctance
to abandon their splendid sartorial heritage entirely. They still
appear in kimonos on social occasions.
KINO’S MARKET
Red & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C
Phone 355-2211
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
Fishing Tackle
Deio Worms
SUNDAY, APRIL 30, 1972
10:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service
551 Danforth Ave.,
918 Bathurst St.
Custom Picture
Framing
Telephone: 534-4302
WORSHIP WHERE EAST MEETS V^ST
NISHIMURA
PICTURE FRAMES
Test-drive TOYOTA!
Corolla - Sprinter - Corona
Mark II Crown
At your SCARBORO Test-a-Toyota
Centre. Metro's Fastest-Growing
Dealership.
BRIMELL Toyota Ltd.
TOM HOITA
NICK bozian
1302 Ellesmere Rd. at Brimley
293-3643
1278 Yonge Street. Toronto 7, Ont.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
923-6877
Tokio Nishimura
(neai Car law)
Res: 922-1353
Bus: 924-8153
George Fukusaka
463-7400
ERNEST JOMORI
OPEN FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
Chartered Accountant
Suite
403
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
OF TORONTO
DANFORTH GARDENS
♦ FORMAL RENTALS
Cullom Made Suits
Famous Chinese Foods
& Troutert
3212 Danforth Ave. (at Pharmacy)
___
One free order of fried Wun Tun and One, pair
of chopsticks with orders over $5.00
Free local delivery over $3.00
10% off on pick-up orders over $2.00
Call now 699-1171 or 699-1172
?
437 Danforth Ave. Toronto
Tel. 463-8104
Page 8
Til
PAGE 8
History Of Monogamy
SAN A DIAN
Tuesday, April 25 1979
Cont. from Page One
The New Canadian
N S W
Sexual anarchists and advocates of sexual freedom proclaim communicate Ly communicating.
Second class moi registration
Children throughout their childhood should ha^e ample op.number 0388
that the moral and institutional attitudes and legislation in favor
portunity
to
interact
with
other
children
and
.adults
of
botn.
sexe^
A
member
of
Ethnic Press Ajsoaatics
of monogamy are. merely cultural prejudices, and the monogamy is
of Ontario.
and, if 'possible, of many different ages. However our present
contrary to human nature. Although Desmond Morris uses the
PUBLISHED ON EVERT TUESDAY
AND FRIDAY
term “pair-bond” in place of “monogamy” and “imprinting” in culture segregates the old into retirement communities, the young
marrieds
with
their
small
children
into
tract
homes,
and
the
more
place of “love,” those who read his book will find new grounds for
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
questioning the easy dogmatism of sexual freedom advocates about prosperous middle-aged into fashionable suburbs. I think we are
K. C. TSUMURA
all deprived by this segregation — and small children most of all.
the nature of 'human nature.
English Section Editor
To sum up, a long-lasting pairbond is never solely the result ■
Acting English Editor
For human beings sexual imprintings necessarily involve com of conditioning to mutually pleasurable erotic sensations. There ।
C. R. CHIBA
municative imprintings. Reinforcing the sensual pair-bond of a is a lot more to sex than sex. In the human pair-bond the erotic
KEN MORI
couple who have lived together many years are all the communica
Japanese Section Editor
is inextricably bound up with the semantic.
tions they have exchanged, the understandings they established,
Nature has so distributed our nerve-endings and constructed
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
the feelings they have shared. They have worked together and
our bodies and brains that the profoundost joy we can experience
traveled together. They have quarreled .and made up. They have
Toronto 183, Ont.
comes from an eroticsemantic attachment reinforced by repeated
talked to each other about themselves, their friends, the adventures
EMpire 6-5005
they have had, their home, their debts and financial problems, imprintings over a long period of time.
A durable pair-bond is not instinctually given. Like a work of
their children and how they should be brought up, their political
art it is an achievement, .and like all other human achievements,
decisions, their religious and philosophical beliefs.
it is the product of patience, thought and self-disciplines.
Good communication is therefore at the heart of good sexua
lity. How can it be nurtured
Male Help Wanted
"Mission
Guam
”
Certainly training in communication and responsiveness
DRIVER with car for Part-time.
begins in infancy. Babies need to be cuddled and held and patted
Apply 1607 Queen St. E. (Toronand talked to — all through their babyhood. To deprive babies of
to)
_________ __
this kind of stimulation is to leave them without a necessary
Female Help Wanted
TOKYO.
—
A
three-man living 28 years in the jungles
ingredient of their education. In writing about tactile communi
EXPERIENCED operators on
cation, the psychologist Lawrence K. Frank has said that even the government mission returned to of Guam.
children
’s
outerwear.
Apply
Tokyo
by
a
JAL
plane
recently
The three-man team was dis
understanding- of language in later life may be impaired for those
Coronet
Children
’
s
Wear
Co.,
148
who have been so deprived by lack of contact with the experiences after a futile one-month search patched as there had been re Augusta Ave. or phone 366-5439
for Japanese war stragglers on ports that, other stragglers be (Toronto).
Language stands for.
Guam island.
lieved to be former Japanese
Almost everything that happens in the bringing up of a child
soldiers were still alive in Guam.
Paul K. Asada, D.C., NJ).
bears upon the development of the child’s communicative abilities.
The mission, led by
Takeo
“Doctor of Chiropractic'’
In thinking about child-rearing, therefore, it is well to remember Ishida, 60, a section chief of the
that just as one learns to swim by swimming, so does one learn to Health and Welfare Ministry’s
728A St. Clair Ave. West
Yamaha
Music
Course
(
’/z block West of Christie)
repatriation bureau and former
TORONTO
For Children
lieutenant colonel, w,as
! army
651-8060
Res. 621-1989
4 to 8 years
sent to Guam
to ascertain
Buy and Sell
Your Home
OKS 231-0883
BUS. 783-4261
World Famous — over 1
Through | whether other stragglers like
11 Ivy Lea Cree
3101 Bathurst St
million graduates.
Shoichi Yokoi were still living
Free Film demonstration or.
It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
on the island1.
See a class in
operation
MRS. SATOKO SATO
any day.
Conran
XII types of insurance
• !
Yokoi, a former sergeant, was
MELL REAL ESTATE Ltd. 5
LLoyd Edwards
William Wales Ltd.
discovered early this year after
Yamaha
2006
Lawrence
Ave.
East
Insurance Agents
CROWN LIFE
!
Scar boro, Ont.
Music
Academy
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
INSURANCE CO.
757-5184
231 Danforth Ave.
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-4681
461-2468
Enrol today
CLASSIFIED
Reports, No More Japanese Hold-Outs
TOSH IWAI
When Buying Oi Selling A Home
vail: KE^ nORl
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perivale Cres
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough
;
YOUR
BLOOD
PHOTOGRAPHY
the greatest
gift of all
WEDDING SPECIALISTS
EXCLUSIVE COVERAGE
T.B. MATSUDA
TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO
TORONTO
425-5211
PHONE FOR SAMPLES
RCA — ZENITH
SALES & SERVICE
1055 MIDLAND AVE. (ORIOLE PLAZA)
SCARBORO
Phone 759-1583
Between Eglinton & Lawrence Ave. Zast,
Repairs To All Makes
Takara Jewellers
733 Danforth Ave.,
Toronto
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
Phone Store 463-3426
Home 469-0293
Japanese Food
Deliver Evenings
and Saturdays
COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED
MONEY
MANAGEMENT
Income Tax Reduction
Retirement Income
Family Protection
Disability Pay Cheques
Mortgage Redemption
College Tuition Fund
MITS TANOUYE
NATIONAL LIFE
OF CANADA
10 St. Marv St„ Toronto
923-0916
447-S9S6
4
Mon. — Friday 9—-6, Sat. 9—1.
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1291. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
With The Generous Support
Of Japanese Canadian Organizations
The Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre
Presents
The Annual Spring Bazaar
Saturday, May 6th, 1972-1 To6 P.M.
123 Wynford Drive, Don Mills, Ont.
Merchandise, Demonstrations, Displays
Why Not Join Us
For A Light Snack Or Supper?
Oriental And Occidental Foods
Will Be Served
Hot Dogs, Udon, Tempera, Chow Mein, Etc .
Also: Trip To Japan Draw
(Ticket Sellers, Please Submit Stubs By May 5th)
PAGE 8
History Of Monogamy
SAN A DIAN
Tuesday, April 25 1979
Cont. from Page One
The New Canadian
N S W
Sexual anarchists and advocates of sexual freedom proclaim communicate Ly communicating.
Second class moi registration
Children throughout their childhood should ha^e ample op.number 0388
that the moral and institutional attitudes and legislation in favor
portunity
to
interact
with
other
children
and
.adults
of
botn.
sexe^
A
member
of
Ethnic Press Ajsoaatics
of monogamy are. merely cultural prejudices, and the monogamy is
of Ontario.
and, if 'possible, of many different ages. However our present
contrary to human nature. Although Desmond Morris uses the
PUBLISHED ON EVERT TUESDAY
AND FRIDAY
term “pair-bond” in place of “monogamy” and “imprinting” in culture segregates the old into retirement communities, the young
marrieds
with
their
small
children
into
tract
homes,
and
the
more
place of “love,” those who read his book will find new grounds for
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
questioning the easy dogmatism of sexual freedom advocates about prosperous middle-aged into fashionable suburbs. I think we are
K. C. TSUMURA
all deprived by this segregation — and small children most of all.
the nature of 'human nature.
English Section Editor
To sum up, a long-lasting pairbond is never solely the result ■
Acting English Editor
For human beings sexual imprintings necessarily involve com of conditioning to mutually pleasurable erotic sensations. There ।
C. R. CHIBA
municative imprintings. Reinforcing the sensual pair-bond of a is a lot more to sex than sex. In the human pair-bond the erotic
KEN MORI
couple who have lived together many years are all the communica
Japanese Section Editor
is inextricably bound up with the semantic.
tions they have exchanged, the understandings they established,
Nature has so distributed our nerve-endings and constructed
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
the feelings they have shared. They have worked together and
our bodies and brains that the profoundost joy we can experience
traveled together. They have quarreled .and made up. They have
Toronto 183, Ont.
comes from an eroticsemantic attachment reinforced by repeated
talked to each other about themselves, their friends, the adventures
EMpire 6-5005
they have had, their home, their debts and financial problems, imprintings over a long period of time.
A durable pair-bond is not instinctually given. Like a work of
their children and how they should be brought up, their political
art it is an achievement, .and like all other human achievements,
decisions, their religious and philosophical beliefs.
it is the product of patience, thought and self-disciplines.
Good communication is therefore at the heart of good sexua
lity. How can it be nurtured
Male Help Wanted
"Mission
Guam
”
Certainly training in communication and responsiveness
DRIVER with car for Part-time.
begins in infancy. Babies need to be cuddled and held and patted
Apply 1607 Queen St. E. (Toronand talked to — all through their babyhood. To deprive babies of
to)
_________ __
this kind of stimulation is to leave them without a necessary
Female Help Wanted
TOKYO.
—
A
three-man living 28 years in the jungles
ingredient of their education. In writing about tactile communi
EXPERIENCED operators on
cation, the psychologist Lawrence K. Frank has said that even the government mission returned to of Guam.
children
’s
outerwear.
Apply
Tokyo
by
a
JAL
plane
recently
The three-man team was dis
understanding- of language in later life may be impaired for those
Coronet
Children
’
s
Wear
Co.,
148
who have been so deprived by lack of contact with the experiences after a futile one-month search patched as there had been re Augusta Ave. or phone 366-5439
for Japanese war stragglers on ports that, other stragglers be (Toronto).
Language stands for.
Guam island.
lieved to be former Japanese
Almost everything that happens in the bringing up of a child
soldiers were still alive in Guam.
Paul K. Asada, D.C., NJ).
bears upon the development of the child’s communicative abilities.
The mission, led by
Takeo
“Doctor of Chiropractic'’
In thinking about child-rearing, therefore, it is well to remember Ishida, 60, a section chief of the
that just as one learns to swim by swimming, so does one learn to Health and Welfare Ministry’s
728A St. Clair Ave. West
Yamaha
Music
Course
(
’/z block West of Christie)
repatriation bureau and former
TORONTO
For Children
lieutenant colonel, w,as
! army
651-8060
Res. 621-1989
4 to 8 years
sent to Guam
to ascertain
Buy and Sell
Your Home
OKS 231-0883
BUS. 783-4261
World Famous — over 1
Through | whether other stragglers like
11 Ivy Lea Cree
3101 Bathurst St
million graduates.
Shoichi Yokoi were still living
Free Film demonstration or.
It is a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY
on the island1.
See a class in
operation
MRS. SATOKO SATO
any day.
Conran
XII types of insurance
• !
Yokoi, a former sergeant, was
MELL REAL ESTATE Ltd. 5
LLoyd Edwards
William Wales Ltd.
discovered early this year after
Yamaha
2006
Lawrence
Ave.
East
Insurance Agents
CROWN LIFE
!
Scar boro, Ont.
Music
Academy
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
INSURANCE CO.
757-5184
231 Danforth Ave.
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-4681
461-2468
Enrol today
CLASSIFIED
Reports, No More Japanese Hold-Outs
TOSH IWAI
When Buying Oi Selling A Home
vail: KE^ nORl
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perivale Cres
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough
;
YOUR
BLOOD
PHOTOGRAPHY
the greatest
gift of all
WEDDING SPECIALISTS
EXCLUSIVE COVERAGE
T.B. MATSUDA
TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO
TORONTO
425-5211
PHONE FOR SAMPLES
RCA — ZENITH
SALES & SERVICE
1055 MIDLAND AVE. (ORIOLE PLAZA)
SCARBORO
Phone 759-1583
Between Eglinton & Lawrence Ave. Zast,
Repairs To All Makes
Takara Jewellers
733 Danforth Ave.,
Toronto
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
Phone Store 463-3426
Home 469-0293
Japanese Food
Deliver Evenings
and Saturdays
COUNTER
INFLATION
BY PLANNED
MONEY
MANAGEMENT
Income Tax Reduction
Retirement Income
Family Protection
Disability Pay Cheques
Mortgage Redemption
College Tuition Fund
MITS TANOUYE
NATIONAL LIFE
OF CANADA
10 St. Marv St„ Toronto
923-0916
447-S9S6
4
Mon. — Friday 9—-6, Sat. 9—1.
21 Dundas Sq. Toronto, Suite 1291. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
With The Generous Support
Of Japanese Canadian Organizations
The Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre
Presents
The Annual Spring Bazaar
Saturday, May 6th, 1972-1 To6 P.M.
123 Wynford Drive, Don Mills, Ont.
Merchandise, Demonstrations, Displays
Why Not Join Us
For A Light Snack Or Supper?
Oriental And Occidental Foods
Will Be Served
Hot Dogs, Udon, Tempera, Chow Mein, Etc .
Also: Trip To Japan Draw
(Ticket Sellers, Please Submit Stubs By May 5th)