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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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1932 An El Paso saddler named Sam Myres produces the first commercial<br />

quick-draw holsters, with a design following the ideas<br />

of an Oklahoma lawman named Tom Threepersons. Custom<br />

quick-draw rigs had been available for several years. See, for<br />

instance, William D. Frazier’s 1929 book, American Pistol<br />

Shooting, and J. Henry Fitzgerald’s 1930 book, Shooting.<br />

1934 Ôtsuka Hironori of the All-Japan Collegiate Karate Association<br />

publishes rules for yakusoku kumite (noncontact free sparring).<br />

1934 Twenty-seven-year-old Charles Kenn of Honolulu organizes a<br />

theatrical event featuring ancient Hawaiian games and sports,<br />

with the goal of replicating a mahahiki festival, including replicating<br />

Lua and other combative sports virtually extinct since<br />

the arrival of missionaries and smallpox during the 1840s.<br />

1935 Kawaishi Mikonosuke introduces Butokukai Jûdô to Paris. (Although<br />

a separate licensing body, the Butokukai’s jûdô differed<br />

from Kôdôkan Jûdô mostly because the former put more emphasis<br />

on groundwork than the latter.) At the front of<br />

Kawaishi’s school was a blackboard. On this board, Kawaishi<br />

wrote the names of his techniques. In front of each name was a<br />

number:<br />

Ashi-waza (Leg technique)<br />

1. Osoto-gari (“Major Outer Reaping Throw”)<br />

2. De-ashi-barai (“Advanced Foot Sweep”)<br />

3. Hiza-guruma (“Knee Wheel”)<br />

Kawaishi would then say, “I will teach you the first movement,”<br />

and the students would follow along. As the numbers<br />

were in French, the students thus “learned by the numbers”<br />

(personal communication with Henry Plee, October 8, 1995).<br />

Kawaishi’s inspiration was probably American self-defense instruction,<br />

as by 1935, New York wrestling instructor Will Bingham<br />

had been teaching women “to dispose of a masher with<br />

neatness and dispatch [using] grip No. 7 followed by hold No.<br />

9” for at least twenty years (New York <strong>World</strong>, January 30,<br />

1916, Sunday Magazine, 3).<br />

1940 <strong>The</strong> Hon Hsing Athletic Club is established in Vancouver,<br />

British Columbia, and its quanfa (fist law) classes are (probably)<br />

the first organized Chinese martial art classes in Canada.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re were, however, no non-Chinese students allowed until<br />

the 1960s. “It used to be that the Chinese instructors wouldn’t<br />

teach Westerners,” Raymond Leung told Ramona Mar in 1986.<br />

“But it’s wrong to think that if we teach them, they’ll use it to<br />

beat us. With every new student, I think we make one new<br />

friend” (Yee 1988, 148).<br />

1940 In Montreal, 19-year-old Joe Weider publishes the first issue of<br />

Your Physique, the first magazine to seriously tout bodybuilding.<br />

In 1947 Weider started the International Federation of<br />

Body Builders. <strong>The</strong> chief difference between bodybuilding and<br />

weight lifting is that the former is semierotic muscular theater<br />

while the latter is nationalistic athletic competition.<br />

1941 Bob Hoffman of York Barbell introduces the idea of women’s<br />

weight lifting and bodybuilding to the United States.<br />

1942 <strong>The</strong> Japanese replace the Dutch colonial government of Indone-<br />

826 Chronological History of the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>

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