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The New Canadian — March 27, 1948

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Page 1

•w Meeii

‘Japanese Urigin

THE NEW CANADIAN

reeling of v^X
d&y. March {^
3blems faced hS

10c per copy

WINNIPEG, MANITOBA

$5 per 1 year

CAL NE^^HH^

B.C. Opposes Discrimination

uto of Coaldak
This editorial (and others to follow in
ioa at Mayo
| primarily to thte representatives of the people o^BriLh Sr?4
ras financed asj %ho preside over the affairs of the province from Vkta
3
y the local c®
Our purpose in these editorials is to ur~ .them t
ready to be g
completely
the discriminatory measures in the statute bo^fe and
nonth treaty
particularly the provision in the B C. Elections Act wh^ ’
°
<1 condition. T
Japanese Canadians the right to vote
vhnh aenies
I to take a
Our foremost argument is that the people of British Columbia
are required?
are overwhelmingly against racial discrimination and are Xfrino^ to the ^
tired of seeing the Japanese pushed- around.
° 1 °
Nation back, v
A little more than a year ago, a special committee of the
?ann Store is a
lature was given the task of studying the Elections Act and of
>r the
suitable recommendations. Its members were Mr R h CaX X
accepting aU
™s <*a*man, Mr. W. T. Straith, Mr. Thomas King,’Mr Don B“ovm
|Mr. Tom Love, Mr. Harold Winch, and Mr, Herbert Gargl e
’ * ( J5^^3 a ,ClSar indlcatlon at the public hearings that the people
°use busha^ ox British Columoia : favored the extension of franchise to all
: “Mayhome 3
Ori^taI^, t*^ committee recommended the extending ©^franchise
'ted in Liy^
only to Chinese and East Indians who qualified as Canadian citizenLsari .
firm not. to tne Japanese.
u
Vernon in ^
The recommendation was the result
,
the members of the committee. Mr. Straith, Mr. WhcVV”0132
Gargrave voted to enfranchise the Japanese, while M? Kin- Mr.
ura, who
Lov3 were oPPOsed. The chairman, Mr Carson Mr.
the' Gibb’s
the deciding vote in the negative.
parson, cast
•ire Butte,
think it has become apparent from reaction at th- time
ore . , . Her
•horn mere recent developments (m the reaction to the batnin and
become miJ
of
Japanese from Crown timber lands), that British Columbians areig no
■Ita.) United
e is now is
>ernational
This change in
x publi
Lc °Pinion. if it can be called a change is
sxhibition of
we believe, reflected in the .editorials of a popular Vancouver
be given
newspaper.
House on'
Linds for ifeg
I Canada if the“““
’ ^.“^ right tn the rote in
. . . Rt. R
of Calgary, I J the country £
v. G. G. N
the policy „f thc wemn,ei|l ^ ^ « - a matter ready of
ition of
which was
iian volun^
service or
gate Canadian Cltto>2r‘““' “

Saturday,. March 27, 191S

6 Provinces Represented
At National Conference
To Make Changes
In Election Act?
VICTORIA, B.C.-The pro­
vincial government proposes to
re-open the Provincial Elections
Act during the current session,
and a legislative committee has
been set up to consider amend­
ments, reported the Canadian
Press on March 18.
The Act was amended to give
the vote to Chinese and Hindus,
but not to Japanese-Canadian
citizens.

Ban Disappoints
Moose Jaw Holdouts

Lengthy Debates Expected
On Constitution and Budget
focussed ^dm-hS^^
°f ^P^^ese Canadians will be
representative?
^here
across Canada are holding 4 doorganizations
borough Hotel.
g 4-da3 conference at the Marl-

discriminatory legislations
W1H ,uniteto combat
ca?ipaign for tolerance and bitter S-Ty
an educational
Following delegates and Nal^
Citizenship.

JCCA officials are expected’”to
hX “ 7innipe= to Participate
The Netv Canadian
By GENICHI OHASHI
i the conference which will con­
Welcomes
tinue from March 26 to March 29:
MOOSE JAW, Sask.—The fortyDelegates
and Observers
Kay Oikawa, Montreal.
six holdouts at the former air
Rosie Okuda, Montreal.
to the JCCA’s
force station are disappointed at
T- Kameoka, Toronto.
NATIONAL
CONFERENCE
the federal government’s decision
Eddie
Ide,
London.
to extend the ban on the move­
George Tanaka, Toronto.
ment of Japanese.
Roger Obata, Toronto.
Fred Nogami, Chatham.
It is believed some of them had
hoped that the ban would be re­
Kar Kobayashi, Kamloops.
Tony Kobayashi, O.K. Centre.
moved and thej' would be allowed
to go back to their former homes
Seiji Homma, Greenwood.
in B.C.
Koyanagi, Southern Alberta.
S. Sakumoto, Southern Alberta.
Sunada, Southern Alberta.
Takada, Southern Alberta
LETHBRIDGE, Alta.—The Jap­
In
addition
to
the
above,*
one
anese
property claims commission
tile Sun.in. the early part of 1947;
delegate is expected from Sas­
began its hearing.- here on March
Cameramar'
extending frfncIii^V Oriental11- ^^ (O'Cr 916 5uestion of
katchewan. Manitoba representa­
22 under Mr. Justice H. I. Bird at
a at won IT
on award I
the court house.
tives are Bill Sasaki, Elmer Oike
suttee is forced to forego the wrif>B?S f and ^t if the com"
TOKYO—Japan’s minister of
. e ^tinf of a draft biU it will at
and T. Umezuki, all of Winnipeg./
oronto Ct \’ least stick to the
agriculture got caught in one of
The hearings will continue until =
all qualified CanadiaJ citize^n-^ v reconunendi«S votes for
•ing Pnis - 1
A special guest speaker and
April
6, and about 50 of the 372
Tokyo

s
popular

man
in
the
traction, if if ;_
* ,, ,’ inciuJin» those of Oriental exmercial l®
resource leader has been invited
claims filed in Lethbridge area will
street’’ broadcasts recently and
Coalition Government is
to attend the conference. He is
ssociation, * reluctant to consider the
be heard at these sessions. The
was asked by a bystander how
3 rS”cbise’ ^ is time f°r the
mto. (Eh ' government to take stock
Dr.
Randolph
M.
Sakada,
of
Chi
­
remainder
will be heard later this
he
managed
to
live,
the
food
For reasons uSd h
Sltuation in Canada today. . . .
n The Nsf s
cago, who is expected to arrive
year by two Calgary district court
situation being what it is...........
Columbians in the past
^ majGrity of British
judges.
in Winnipeg on the 2Gth by
issue)...F 4
condition. So Ion®
?r Orientals on any
“On black market rice,” re­
ing wkS>
plane. Also travelling by plane
plied
the minister,
Kazuo
in a state of confusion® th?8 Wn ,of Canadian nationality were
The Lethbridge Herald report­
3 in the'
is
the Montreal delegate, Rosie
Nagae, who directs the rice-col­
ed
the following w’ere present at
Justification
for
this
J™^
have
been
some
legal
Okuda.
•ecently,
lection program and has much
injustice stands out
T°day i€ is anomalous and its
the bearings: Mr. Justice II. I.
as of Mr.
A heated discussion is expected
aIone amour Sa “ .BntlS.h Columbia no longer can stand
to do with rationing.
Bhd, commissioner; J. w. G.
to take place on the degree of cen­
lira
Hunter,
counsel for the Dominion
of persons who
“ d^°riminating‘ against any class
The crowd roared approval as
tral authority to be given the
ide by
government;
A. Watson, secre°f the King.
y
1 as citizens of Canada and subjects
someone shouted: “Good. At
National headquarter^ of the Ja­
tar
I

{

Korrob
’n, reporter; Miss
least you’re honest.”
panese Canadian Citizens’ Associ­
Christine Sainas, typist, and Mr.
ation. The size of the national
G. N. R. Upton and D. Handford,
budget
is also expected to take up
interpreters.
of R<
considerable time.
!, and
The claimants are represented by
; was *
Expect Amendments
TOSUKE YAMASAKI
W.
E. Huckvale and L. S. Turcotte,
lanship
The provincial delegates have
■ Sadao S. Munemori.
U BROOKLYN ARMY BASE, N.Y.
Army Officials Present
who
are acting for the Lethbridge
been invited to suggest amendonsor

The
renaming
of
the
Wilson
Vic
­
Consultative
Committee and A. G.
The dedication ceremony con­
Plarch'lfi16 ^emony here on
ments to the draft constitution
rial ft
tory
was
the
ninth
such
ceremony
Virtue,
K.C.,
and
W. S. Russel rep­
sisted
of
the
reading
of
the
Army
&
^^ niarKed an act withamitte
prepared by the National JCCA.
to be held here.
resenting the Southern Alberta
^ Si: ;n the his^ o*
redesignation
order
and the pre­
Perhaps the most drastic pro­
mi
Central Committee.
sentation of a plaque bearing the
Present at the ceremony which
&f a F <? a States—the naming
la, Di
posals will come from Manitoba
citation and a photograph of the
took place at noon on the bridge
WINNIPEG. — The property
delegates, who are reported to
mota
®f a J"
y vessel in memory
• 21-year-old Nisei soldier to the
of the ship were Robert Munemori,
claims commission is expected to
‘ come armed with a completely re­
soldier.
ship’s master, and the trim 7.000the medal winner’s brother, a
commence hearings hear on April
d decided ^o ^ 1S47’ ^^ Army
vised and simplified draft consti­
ton
former
troopship
Wilson
Vic
­
t SUEt
10 and continue for about a
dozen
ranking
Army
officials
in
­
gfe in hlj° ^le 29 Of its
tution, which, however, is based
tory officially became the U.S.
week. About 40 claims will be
cluding two generals, representa­
jasinS
gno had been *
' ^ose soldiers
closely on the original draft.
Army transport “Private Sadao S.
heard during this time, most of
tives of the Japanese. American
I the
posthumously awardtoga
The chief proposals from Mani­
Munemori."
This
is
the
first
and
them being on farm lands in the
Citizens
League,
a
number
of
news
­
S°nor.
^rcssional Medal of
gue
toba, it is believed, will be for a
Fraser
Valley area.
only
occasion
that
a
U.S.
ship
of
papermen
and
photographers
from
0 03 8r the honor% th6 heroes chosen
greater degree of emphasis on the
any
size
had
been
named
after
both
the
American
and
Japanese
Remainder of the 159 claims filed
or was a Nisei, Private
•ei^ »
a Nisei.
activities by provincial organizapress, and the assembled ship's
at Winnipeg will be heard by a
ntAE
officers.
local district court judge in Sep­
(Continucd on Page 12)
The Wilson Victory was the
tember or October.
ton
ship that brought back the men '
and colors of the 442nd Japanese
>e
American Regimental Combat
Team, of which Private Munemori was a member, on its tri­
(Ph
umphant homecoming from
'aS S^h\OfficiaI citati°n
and
knocked
out
two
machine
guns
Italy.
a
^ Mun-mori, killwith grenades.
TORONTO. — Educating the
The 442nd, which lost more than
Apra 5. 1945, and
Association, the Joint Labor
public
on the need for improving
600
men
in
combat,
was
repre
­

Withdrawing
under
murderous
u
w
P
^T
r<3ed
the
Con
Committee
4o CcmbatPRacial In­
a
race relations, and taking inter­
sented in the person of Colonel
- le^al of Honor on
fire and showers of grenades from
tolerance, and the Fellowship of
1946.)
racial action to combat discrimi­
James M. Hanley, formerly an ex­
other enemy emplacements, he had
Reconciliation.
nation
are among the projects in­
ecutive officer of the combat team.
nearly reached a shell crater occu­
class Sadao S.
A representative of the JCCA
cluded in the race relations in­
“\an assistant squad
Colonel Hanley presented a wreath
pied by two of his men when an
wiITbe
chairman at an open pub­
stitute to be held in Toronto
c- Comm
to the chip s officers and men on
unexploded grenade bounced on his
A,'’ 100th Inlic
meeting
on April 16 at the
April 16, 17 and 18.
behalf of the 442nd.
helmet, and rolled toward his help^, 442nd Regimental
Central Technical School.
ies comrades. He arose into the
Special speakers at the institute
Nation’s Tribute
^- ^tc w“b great withering
The Toronto chapter of tkt
the
fire, dived for the missile
<*re
Villard S. Townsend, inter­
tepidity on April
* L 31 JCCA
will hold a meeting on Sun­
and
smothered
its
blast
with

his
tended,
national president of the United
*eravezza, Italv.
ce: ■mony
day, April 18, a « p.m., at which
body.
Transport Service Employees Union
symbolized more than the nation’s
•ii^. ^ Pin^ed down
Mr. Townsend
11 be the special
, C1O)LEabbi Abraham L. Feintribute to an outstanding hero; it
speaker.
■.J5 Itom ^e enemy's
By nis swixt, supremely heroic
berg.
Holy
Blossom
WHo an. <*CKiiowl3d?ni5nt
Temple, Tor• -m. dexense and comThe institute will end on 7 p.m.
action Private Munemori saved two
onto; and Bayard Rustin, field
rs^ard ths Japanese Anisrj^squad devolved on
Sun
da-,- with a forum at
of his men at the cost of his own
worker for the UH. Fellowship of
can servicemen of World War II
* cundmg of its reguum^
Street United Church, wh^n
life and did much to clear the
Reconciliation.
J won in the eyes of their
i^^ &O3taI. one-^.Fo-nsend
aRd a representative
Path for his company's victorious
^ a he institute is sponsored by
Americans.
•-^ough direct fire
advance.”
J
^
ISh
c<>mi
nunity will lead
ine Canadian Jewish Congress,
(Continued on Page 12)
v
if
:
t
^e
discu5s;
°
n
by talks on the
the Japanese Canadian Citizens
Fair employment Practices Act.

Property Loss
Hearings Begin
In Lethbridge

Food Minister
Depends on
Black Market Rice

| U.S. Army Names Ship After Nisei

Munemori Wins

f

Top U.S. Award

Race Relations Institute to Study
Methods of Fighting Intolerance

Page 2

f

“-.-"L^wnaoian
,, , ,

Kasey oyami_“

Ph’n' 5°’ 306

as a medium of
P e °£ *Me ”™ “ Canada

ant
hei
m<
on*

i

f?i

Free Press Editorial

Racial Discrimination"
(From The Winnipeg Free Press)

ABOUT THAfoS

COUNTRY STUFF I

dX°x :^ ^
Claon Oj the House of
can be applied to one minority it
Commons to continue official disor a dream. Beaut’ x
can
be applied to another and no
anyone who appreci^ ^
™aiiO11
against
Jananese
^IXXIPEG, MAX.,
minority will be safe in its HveCanaaians xor another year must
Some people have
*
1948
hnood
or even in its place of resi­
•?^uragin? to all believers in
ferent national
dence.
civil liberty. That this decision
to keep alive theb SnL “°
was sponsored by a Liberal gov­
£aftS or music?
J ’vi
id.
ernment must bring a feeling of
ins issues at stake here go far
Why not forget abour
shame to ah Canadian liberals
deeper than most members of Par­
Country stuff?’-- thev N-"2'
New CaX&&“
“ Winnipeg, The
for
whatever political partv thev may
liament
seem
to
realize.
all
Canadians now.”
^ ele
is Toronto, and thf~&^
next deftiSatlon
at^st H°^.ver’ the government
presently engaged in a
I. on« «^ ^ ex?
more permanent. If our S.
, le W1" ^ a ™e
end T 13 ^t^’ committed to
worldwide struggle to maintain a
nonton, which
le
JananX^h^A4’ regulations against
hope to make the move aho.p-??S 1?°?^ °nt smoothly, we
f®8 -a£ ^ Ufe a= ainst the most
Leer. He’s a full-bL?^’?' me: o
Japanese by April 1, 1943. It
We had a very nlea± rthe fanning of May. ~
formiaable threat in all history.
hawk Indian ana a ? ^V pViv.a
t? S ParIiament “d the public
I’D rnic
_
J
sorry to leave our manv fr,^ ? W1™« and we are
-u
^ struggle we can lose our
back once in a 3X4 $
" W® hope to
singer. Two musicians a^
W "3 Sure that this promise is
reeaom by attack from without
him when he was a ^'^l' thr he
a We ^n ^ow R avvay ourselves.
po-’C-^
to PlacVl*TnX£I^
We find it desirable
^ding in the
C'?’ de£Srves fuU credit
if we do not maintain
to a
for its attempt to reueal th®
to^to £ ^ak: ^ *? 2^;
freedom within our own society
the increased publication costed ec.onoF12c basis to meet
^rs-m-councn by which Japa­
er Tt &h SChOGl ia ^e J Cann
we shall be unabL
we can count on more advert':^' ^ to a mte where
nese are still prevented from enrer. The musicians heard mF sue outward challenge, for the only
job printing work. The second ™»s™ ™i Poss21^ some
smgmg Indian songs hS
COaStaI
of British
s^e Power we possess against
bJa‘ 111 its struggle to secure
the centres where so much „r
n 13 to ^‘ closer to
Communism, our secret weapon
to go ahead mTh^
ST JaP.a^e-includmg the
Toronto and Ottawa.
'
of °ur ne"s c°mes from_
It’s Bee
than atom bombs, is
education. L i
the will of men to be free. As we
COP h
^umbia-the
^You
sb
hls specialty U
L.C.P. hasbeen enlightened, courtribal songs, hut he knows k
JinS
n
^
freedom
ev
en
at
the
away from the western provinces ^nri® of,movinS farther
'get one of
ani
i^doXt
E He
fringes among a few helnless
every means possible to SvereSthis ^2^ ?0UgM of
have to i
in B#sh
ib ^^ Votes
people, we weaken th« whole
teat OM Com^ ^ "l firs! wroi
We hope to have a renrespnS ■ disadvantage,
Columbia, both in
spiritual Structure on which the
centres, who will be askS/^^ h Jn each of the larger
S
i -^d Provincial elections
free world is built. We sabotage
Oskeuonton at J oy;. mar.
XT
that Pr°Vincs its a®Hees, etc., and fomarf thm toW ?WS itemsourselves.
0
5
StlVal
thsy
1134 ^ J^- ’ ?to pay a c
^Tt
i ”ide ^eolation,
western provinces a more comnbf» ? e hope to give the
th. art gaHery in Toronto. He J i’a^<ea k
as it deserves to do. There can be
dub news and give them « * P- ie c?ver*ge of local and
a sort of unofficial ures-dj’
what the Ra­
of deadline.
g
them a sPeciaI Priority in the matter
dian Parliament does when it dehttle doubt, indeed, that the great
JOver six
genius at the festival, a week-W -end of Pe
th^T^w f Canadians are behind
10 °ne group in our
mUSt harS made *: graphed
ST
started to Sribute°ahS^
Send Us news> we have
th C.C.F. m its attitude and
Population, merely because their
f
►r
full
de
i^nT^ ^^ theb Rarliament
for
a? nOt ^ 30(1 ^ause
your organization no matter ?slness rePly envelopes. If ’
f
singing, brought s’ "tit.:zen so 1
they lack power to resist. Thus we*
s perpetuating a piece of racial
eetved these envelopes “i
^ T”' has
^t rl
Canaaa from many lands. BeU
/application
^ Russians and weaken
■jrannj without a shadow of leg’it
was over, I was so muddled^
timate excuse.
°^
We introduce into the
I couldn’t tell a Chinese muscj
national bloodstream a poison
selection
from a Finnish dance m Applicant
—the subscribers’thFadSrt--10 its many wellinch can spread, touching the
W
ckar
e
n'ough
in
sowing
and
reaping; but I nona? aiid wome
and friends. We hope their sunmr^-in the reP°rters,
oSr 11 Japanese today, some
^ Cerent pariiameiit.ary debate,
denied by
Chief Oskenonton seemed io
We wish to remind
? J be continued
group tomorrow and fin­
^ce either
a
benevolent
delight
in
all
of
it,
I
The New CanadSn
ally injecting the whole state.
r e g u I a 11 o n s the government
Why not let the national. charge cerii
tnrough Mi-. Mitchell, offered no
And this while we are obligated
views, to look after their
to CW their
their conn
TPtd° aU they ^a^ ^ heepf L
complaints.
mteiests, and to receive their
excuse. It could only argue that
ChaXOUC a^Sptance of the United
letter
alive their heritage? so long as J
t rem°vaI of ^ Japanese from
and nL
UniVerSal ^I>eot for
they
treat
that
heritage
as
someJ
So early :
coact was necessarv, for
and observance of, human rights
Pg
to
make
life
more
inter-;
^

‘11 a lettt
S r PUrPOS£S’ dur“g wartime,
a^ fundam«ntal freedoms for° all
cini opera was quietly dropped
estmg
rather
than
as
a
claim?
of
my st ah
Without
distinction
as
toTare
sex
with °L°Urse’ has nothing to do
from the San Carlo repertoires
What Others Say...
superiority over other groupsf. I also wi-c
*itn the present issue. Whm
language or religion.” in Canada
programs of’the
From Jean Hinds “It Takes C^cl>ot in i
our Parliament has chosen to
of
a large part
The X?* “ Hnd OtlKr ““Panics.
All
Kinds” column in The Win- Siconfirmatioi
f the Pacific basin and its ultimake one exception to this rule—
StX S PV10* was M tte for a
nipeg Citizen.
re the armv x
St
l
reach
of
P
0
^
was
unknown
Jau^ n°fc aPPly to Canadians of
797,423”
aoout a romance, however
"I '^‘1I’»e ccrti
Canadian government was ob*Z w®n- The OTer-&ai
sten £ to ; ^ every ne^
ab°Ut a Japanese girl and
heront in it for all Canadians J ^c-I prob;
we^S? 15 ™Ked llK «»«
American
Navy
officer.
Mme
S ^^^ the Pacific coast.
or the freedom and security f'L^^k for nr
An old vaudeville gag told of a
we shall remove the danger inmeat
int° virtual retirek for other
this country.
Like the United States governconceited counuterfeiter who came
jnent, it could not afford to leave
. /rie{ because he could not re*0n April 21
h^Xn
W operatic stare
S S^OUP °f »eoN« ^ore
ih^Wo^Whis “ra Wcta “
plus
later, th.
loyalty it felt it could not trust in
nas
greeted by critical hosanoN.'.
.
r8e Washington's,
.tiheate
of pre
na^ from coast to coast. She re. e event of attack. But that
'
zenship

arriv
WJWd encore after encore li
danger ended with the fall of
^anji Ikeda and his wife Yoshino
Quite
a
set
of
week at the War Memorial opet
were not vain, but they did arrange
The reasons ofsecurity,
Jiad to be swor
sketeh
U
°f
^
a
brief
bi
°Sraphical
valid during the war, are not valid
bnTcT™1 nUmbers on their fake
served
in many
.
. - organizations
—Since
of
' Adolph M. Sakada
M Esher, the San Francesco
to read as messages to the
b}’ mentioning them Mr.
various capacities, such as ck^i a lawyer
ofttln

5630114
vi
^-President
Mitchell
only
showed
that
he
had
°aiIed
son whose death in the war had
president, president of the Jai
of the Japanese American- Citizens
no real argument.
turned their life to misery and
ons ,of toe most thrilling
League who will attend the S
nese Students Club. Resuming h
it off, tog;
SirnH52611- ln OUr Opera house.”
despair. One of the Arabic numnJne/aCt’ °f com-se, is that the i ^f6011^05 in Winning
■college
career
after
a
leave
of
ab
­
50m
London i
bM J.423-.md aioud to JaX
a^Iar PiaUditB ^ followed her
present regulations have been
yj
ce
sence,
he
again
became
active
:
^^ and resource
appearances
in
LoS Angers
? S“t: "Don’t ®r. honor,
maintained until now—long after leader
the field of sports by earning 4 < Ji Months pass:
&5 Sacramento- Portland and’
able elder son.”
u6^arall€l regulations in the
Circle “C” sweater in basketball
Randolph Mas Sakada was bom
apparent! Jllt^.,States were repealed—and
.In Japan, where the largest note
coaching the UC students “fNovember S, 1912. Bls fe“ ^
T^s
had sot
^nd2d for mother
in circulation is 100 yen (worth
and “B” teams in basketball. 1 ^Ts west bio
a
Pioneer
nurseryman
In
the
San
•_ , f°r only one purpose. That
Born To Be Spinsters
approximately 50 cents), counter­
Francisco Bay region Ox
e ban
Dr. Sakada married the toy' ^ if.
^ Britis*i Columbia
feiting is a poor business at best
(Peterborough Examiner)
jears.
He
attended
the
Highland
Shizu
Bando, a campus co-ed.
members of Parliament- who can­
,|Then on s3p
ana the Ikedas were not even good
The debit balance is now at
many
Nisei
in
Calfornia
he
^,,
^5istered letter
not
even
demonstrate
that
they
counterfieiters.
least 75,000 marriageable Cana­
atod as president of his class and
evacuated to the
Tale Lake ?4
» Ta' In it was

,
;
SUPP
?
rt
°
f
the
Briti

Rh?^1S^ a ^-^ ^^^ iron
dian girls who are unlikely to ob­
“iXcteta- Bcs“
location Centre. With his wife, X >^nadian Citize
Columbia people. This is a case
tain husbands even if they want
n° blankets and little
and^?°°a f^^ Hi^h ^hool
left for Chicago under the Bre^v ^‘Jia! sealed
11
P^
^«ial prejudice and of
food, the pair laboriously painted
^eX° X^’
ren Hostel Plan. Passing tit'-^at j Wa^s a ..^
—. a. PuLtics. A small group of
They can do little to help them­
copies of 100-yen and 10-yen notes
Illinois -Board examination ^ie" eight mont
Columbia politicians * has
by hand. Kanji, a onetime me­
selves. They can marry older men
XT T
opened
his practice at the Se^'4 w?^ing.
successfully
blackmailed
the
gov­
chanical draftsman, sold them
°r y<M^er men <in a stronglv
smn. Frcnn Fremont High he
ernment
and Parliament
S-‘^ at a 10 % d*«>unt.
competinve market). Girls from
E Sd Xth honors “ ^cemCanada.
Building, where he is still cond®'-^ ^ngely, i
eas.-ern Canada can go west where
that 1116 ink had bene
theTT?
-A mn5ediately entered
ing business.
F-k Bo fe«I pa.
When
th<
CC R. member ar-blurred in a faulty printing press
the percentage of males to females
^rveisiny of California, which
gued
in
When
the
newly
organized
Ci;
'“hullabaloo L?
has always been two to eight per
In ten months, the total take was'
House of Commons
for
the
repeal
of
the
regulations
less than $50.
cago chapter of the JACL ^ |f Ottawa a» 7 t
cent higher than the average for
1931
1U1M leave of ^sence in
formed
he served as rhe first ^p«n at New Tea
met
first
^itt
Mr.
Canaaa,
or
north
where
the
odds
But if crime did not pay for the
i inched s irrelevant replv that- th®
president
and after the Na^Q-Mew Citi-p...,,-. . r
xedas, at least courage and per
Randolph joined th- Oakland
Convention in Denver in 1^ ^^luagmire or PJ^
• Japanese were dangerous durine
Epworth
League
and
was
a
re^ar
sistence did. Last. Veek their
They can choose foreign hus­
the war (though no single act of
was appointed national s^f -iad effect-- ,
bands. either by emigrating or bv
counterfeiting came to an abrupt
ba^ketoSl^1113 Methodist Church
sabotage occurred among them.)
vice-president.
J !*mpatorv joy 'G
marrying an immizrant. Thos°
^rne S
am’ ^hiCh Iater b*ena as police closed in on their
.
xney
were
met
next,
with
aciron hovel, Citizens
reaiedies for Four changed
He was recently appointed to -r
aw-aJ to u
of Osaka,
h?
h mamps in the Bav ReT^l °f JaPanese atrocities in
hearing ths
situation, girls and women be­
pathetic stcry of
staff
of
the
Northern
Illinois
^k#^his
is
a u
dolnhLT"
^^
sion
in
1933.
RanbUS rnat' had the Canadian
Kanji p>t Yoshino.
tween the ages of 21 and 35—
varfo'us “4X— aCtiVe ”
lege
of
Optometry
as
a
5
^pted
to by
Japanese
t
o
do
with
these
acts
0
raised and sent, to die jail a sym
unless you begin an immediateiv
instructor. He was also elec "J ^P/te you’ve
How
were
they
responsible
7^
thj- Fund of IS,000 yen—almc
thS °akIand ^s
succtssxul campaign for polygamy.
active membership of me ^4 ? necessary for
1
Team
which
also
became
wood
Lions Club.
J ^^of danad.
th- wor 1q any move than a Cana‘he caampions of the
themselv
Acknowledgment
cuan of German descent was re­
Dr. Sakada was arrive n
^ttinLo-Sf 1 r
L?10 to th5 Bay R^i°* ^ 1931
The NOW CnunrUn
sponsible for the crimes of Hitler’
ackn
and national policies in noc-^Wpv .’
^-tete
the jTLnS ?aJIand chanter of
J The C.CK. was finally met bv
California before the evscw^Bfn’
y-nship s
tions rem the following:
1^35
WaS
orsanized in
uie rerealing admission of Mr.
where he received a co
I93o, he was elected the
nd Mrs. Seitaro Nishimura.
and the following vrer
that
', on the occasion of their
on Jie Pacific coast by Hizi Kovke
^mn to me
xor his leadership a mo:
CO3«S'
ma
‘r s engagement.
this season as Cho-Cho-San in the
hsh themToday,
he is active in
e-c.ea to ^a^ post t
n Judobu Koenkai, Vernon.
s^
in
state
and natior
ban C?no Opera company’s pro­
succession.

b a
-a). In other words, the govern­
duction of -Madame Butterfly” is
Since becoming the
he became associated
ment is asked to decide which
and Mrs. n. Yamazaki, on
indicative of the changed attitude
tional
vice-president o:
witn
rhe
office
o?
nJi
a
Canaaians shall work in that invne occasion of their daushter’s
of the general public toward per­ engagement.
he has devoted much '
vVeaara
and
in
the
GUSCr-v- U necessary by keeping
follow!
sons of Japanese ancestrv.
problems relating to
rs turned to the
*ome
Canadians
awav
from
the
University pf
Ruddhist Association,
■Americans in the Uni
California,
graduating
sja—one of the first principles of
from
aid
and
is considered one of si^
School
of
Optometry
;
the police state. If that principle
mg Nisei professio:
campus life he
Onk
America.

The New Canadian is Movina

1

ft

Winnipeg Man.

Takaichi Umezukf ............. 7........... —....... ........... Editor

prow7

bcibul'uay

Page 3

3

iturday. March 27. 1948

TRY STUFF j

COKING UP . , .

Physics Prize Pfopos^

Pagre 3

All Jazz Is Not

by F.A.M.

®««I belong I
appreciate if ’
I
^ave cribn,,L 4
J groups who ^
^ recently
up in memory of thW^no -S^SUZu^
non around to
—sir special h3
mer brought a keen sei4 of
3
By HUGO YAMAMOTO
ii a "Canadian
I os s to all of us.
Jsic, or literal id
'
Oi!e
tiugic
drowning
last
sumH7. -pu a?; Eastern jazz
ui.her the su°-°'e~rin'v
ow.
been that wav
ret about
deplore- the
J’
famny, the savin® of the late D
noise or
time now
W ask, J fol
mw
and ask^
were used as the nu
univei
low.”
| de 3’ :i or S?pi ember 1947, to be
« broader attitude, to
of this Fund which is beina bac,.
Advancement of
rica's noth
W original Caa3 - .exc-c-.
ed by a Commit of ^ ^
Lar.- vf people seem to thin’,

»e
appointed
hfm
Beta
Kappa and Si
because
Met—Chief ^t
t na t
we believed him to be" a
among whom are many of*^
his
music js alwavs loud
means Knni*
man of
and outstanding
? secretary of state in
,
or
integrity
and outstanding ability.
ca
s
rop
physicists,
including
Pro
­
and
b.a.\>y
Going along with thL
njuuy differentiated him from
full-blooded m3 Oi a
ed a certificate saying
He proved that we were'
fessor Albert Einstein of the lnv<
onv
other
.
,’ many laymen think that th.
young America it
5”$ a concen
Canadian citizen and
in our belief. Our sorrow athk
tute for Advanced Studv at Princelouoer and !as:rr a
scientist.
Claris discos ~ th?
entitled to all rights,
untimely death is profound and
ion. Currently contributions to
the better the jazz.
35 a young nuj po e- and privileges and subject
‘•Although Kusaka
Ke
should like to express our
this
Fund
are
being
asked
bv
:b
e
.
- hat* Mja% is not oni-v ^ud and
e Woods in tj,,| to a’, obligations, duties and
respect for fits accomplishment
e. y macle significant contribu­
sponsors.
fast: jazz is music that expresses
te enough mo®? l^oih res to which a natural-born
tions to theoretical physics, it was
through a permanent memorial.
emoaon, freedom of movemcn’
*«>ol in the mt Caa’dnn citizen is entitled • or
obvious that he was just on the
This fund is to be used “to
and tonesians heard hiar sue 'Cl Doesn’t that sound fine?
Details of Dr.
threshold of a distinguished
s career
establish the Kusaka prize in
are ai o given inKusaka
songs by the8
^m,’1C: Johnn>’ Inages
scientific
career, m his- short
th
pamphlet,
Physics, to be awarded annual
encouraged hj/
f the Ellingtou outfit, expresses
which especially
t
une
as
a
member
of
the
Univer
­
the late
a th his musical; It’s Been a Long, Long- Time
io the most promising student of
S ’ in-“'Vann VaIIev” BilI'>
P jsicist as “a successful teacher,
se y faculty, he had shown him­
Holhday Sj„gs .*rn Be ^.^
his specialty^ ^ou should be warned that to
Physics of Princeton University
master of theoretical phvsics
self a successful teacher, a mas­
: he knows the! rget one of these hunks of paper, you
lou With sentimental feeling.
ter of theoretical physics, and an
ana an inspired and inspiring re­
color or national origin.”
songs of nm’ La.e to nave a lot of patience. I
Coleman
Hawkins plays his ini'search worker in the field of cos­
inspired and inspiring research
’t brushed oji ^ol wrote to Ottawa on January
mic ravs.”
“The award would be made to a
worker in the field of cosmic
and S°Ul 'rith aH
7 stuff.
* 10 1947 light after the news came
h’s body and soul. The same
member of the senior class, or to
rays. His premature death has
Hawkins gets in a gay mood on
Kusaka was born in
skenonton ard0?' r iat veterans wouldn’t have
Jr fraduate student at Princeton'
cut short a career of «reat
Osaka,
Japan,
in
1915,
and
came
had last yea-J 1° pav a csnt for th®r certificates.
University or to any other suitable
promise.

”-‘ru'nc^ 011 Get Happy.
to Vancouver, British Columbia at
Toronto. Her; x^a^ea ior an application form.
st! h S 1S jHZZ’ MO nia“cr the
student. The judges -will be the
iXage J fiVe- After lending
Dr. Kusaka was unmarried, but
fieial wAjover six weeks later, at the tail
speed in m.p.h., as is Lionel
Pi esident of the University, the
public
schools
in
Vancouver,
he
is
survived
by
his
parents
and
one
Hampton
’s Flyini
.al, a week-fcs ^d
end °i
of February,
February, Ii got
?nh a
a mimeoDean of the Graduate School, and
U H,
^ H°niC °r «°W
went
to
the
University
of
British
sister
living
in
Japan,
and
by
an
­
Lave made
th
anthe Chairman of the Department
h ’r ’C M°On aS pla-vca
-u
^!ie® form letter (F) asking
° ^bl\where he was graduated
other sister living in British Cothe Jazz at thc Philharmonic
-ollapse with it ;for full details of my status as a
of Physics.”
group.
n
193,
wuh
the
highest
honors
in
unibia,
it
is
their
wish
that
Dr.
=, brought e Mt.zen so that the proper form of
mathematics and physics. He then
Kusaka’s savings be turned over
’ lands. Befon - application form could be sent to
Why is it, then, that the AverSays
the
pamphlet
issued
by
the
to
Princeton University as the
enrolled
at
Massachusetts
Insti
­
so muddled s' .we
M1ai\COnSidCrS jazz as sou­
Committee of Sponsors for The
tute of Technology, from which he
nucleus of a memorial fund,
Chinese musty ^
thing
loud and brassy? To me
Sauichi Kusaka Memorial Fund:
received a Master of Science de­
nnish dancer ^-^Ppi’cacions from ex-serviceme’1
seems
that many jazz bands them­
Subscriptions in any amount to
gree in 1933. Returning to the
1 but i nenes® tod women should be accomselves
cause this line of thought
“To
thoughtful
Americans,
the Shuichi Kusaka
Memorial
coast, he was granted a Ph.D. decemed to tai* pamed by evidence of their ser­
among
the public. The trouble
some of the brightest pages in
Fund are invited from all friends
: in all of it [ vice either in the form of disgvee in theoretical physics by the
the
history
of
this
country
re
­
.
„Ot wholly He in the type of
and admirers of Shuichi Kusaka
charge certificates or a letter from
University of California in 1942.
the _ nationals their
cord
the
contributions
to
its
cul
­
and
from
all
those
who
wish
to
Pla}'’ bue the Publicity
commanding officer, the
want to keep; four, letter
tural and political life made iy
help young students of science, the
“He first came to the town of
s
tO Ue pe°P]e- T^
added.
- so lone as I
Stan Kenton for an example
citizens of foreign birth. Though
Fund Committee says. Checks’and
Princeton in 1942 as a member of
age as some- j _- So early in March
we stray too often from the
the Institute for Advanced Studv
STAN KENTON
money orders should be made pay­
I answered
more inter-j; Bith a letter giving fuller details
paths of justice, tolerance and
able to Princeton University am.
on
a
special
travelling
fellowsnip
There is no doubt that the in­
as a claim ff ’ 1117 Si3tuS and service record,
freedom, on the whole we have
from tile University of California.
mailed to Henry Dewolf Smyth
dividual
instrumentalists in the
ther groupsj. J also . wrote io the military
offered newcomers opportuni­
Department of Physics, Princeton
After a year he went to Smith
Stan
Kenton
band are great jazz■ L Takes U^pot m London, Ontario, for
ties for development and for
University, New Jersey, U.S.A.
College as an instructor of physics,
Ye
^'
under
the leadership
n The Win ™rmatwn of my service b
participation in our activities
leaving there after two years when
and
arrangements
of
Kenton, they
The Committee of Sponsors of
, e army. No sendmg.of my dishis efforts to enlist in the army
which’they have seized eagerly
persist
in
playing
loud
and brassv:
Jhaige cCrtii'icatc b ottawa for
the Shuichi Kusaka -Memorial
to the great benefit of all. In
of the United States were finally
often
using
an
echo
chamber
hi
TJ1)C
Fund are the following: Henry
inadians ar •back fprobabJy wouldn’t get it
science, traditionally interna­
successful. His tour of duty at the
their
recording
to
further
enhance
. security s h ft ou^011^5 aUd 1 needed
Dewolf Smyth, Chairman Dept,
Research Laboratory at Aberdeen
tional or non-national in out^ 8nd disco^ant con­
of
Physics, Princeton University;’
• other purposes just then.
Proving Ground was of such great
look, this has been particularly
trast. The result is a loud, res’Rev. K- Shimizu-, the United
value that intervention bj' the
true, go that today many of our
less type of music.
' 3 mOnfck 3nd a half
Church of Canada, representing
highest authority was required be­
best known men of science are
The Kenton band, through
the Japanese - Canadian group;
foreign-born.
fore he could be released to join
good
press agentry and adverzenshin” » pt0Ox of Canadian citiFrank Aydelotte, Emeritus Direc­
the Princeton faculty in July 194b'
t^uig,
has achieved the position
tor of the Institute for Advanced
“Our universities should take the
as
an
instructor.
Shortly
before
of
America
’s No. 1 band through
k
b
ks’ the petition
Study; Albert Einstein, Emeritus
lead in carrying on this tradition;
his tragic accident in August 1947,
>bhc. IZ'1’™0 W°rf a Notary
various jazz magazine polls.
Professor of Theoretical Physicsat
they particularly should judge
aizations
he was promoted to an assistant
o 1
-Id gone this far I men in terms of ability and char­
Thus, the ordinary listener will
the
institute
lor
Advanced
study;
professorship.
naturally tend to tab jazz as
notarize the
J. Robert Oppenheimer, Director
acter as individuals regardless or
the Japa
loud
and brassy because the
W
and
011
Ma
y
12
I
of the Institute for Advanced
“Throughout the; inevitable diforigin. Princeton—aspiring as it
2sumin£ is
Kenton
outfit, being a “greal
'£om London
the lette
Acuities of the war' Period, Kusaka
Study, formerly professor
of'
eave of ai- '&*
^Hd^ about my army ser- ’ does to be a great national univer­
jazz
band,
” plays this way.
bore himself with <dignity and reTheoretical Physics at the Univer­
e active 5
sity and thereby a great inter­
The
same
applies to Illinois
strain t. Those who knew him
sity of California; Gladys Anslow,
earning
*1 i appa-fn^H Suinmer set in,
national university — is proud of
baskets
Jacquet
and
his stratosphere
Chairman Dept, of Physics, Smitlr
never questioned his loyalty and
the cosmopol tan character of its
euoi. His high screeching tenor
College; Eugene Paul Wigner,
dents “A ^ma w
summer dol­
shared his satisfaction when his
faculty and is proud that Shuichi
sax
as in the high register squeaks
Thomas
D.
Jones,
Professor
of
tball. ( taka’s
lleavilY hi Otarmy
service
enabled
him
to
be
­
Kusaka became a member of it
How
High the Moon or The
Theoretical
Physics;
John
Archi
­
come
a
citizen
of
the
United
States.
,
almost forand was happy here during his
he

Blues w-ith the Jazz at the Phil­
bald
Wheeler,
Professorof
all—to—brief association with the
A. member of the American
o-ea. Lylpien on September 17
harmonic groups has become his
Physics,
Princeton
University;
Physical Society, the American
a he Fi-Roistered letter
j j’ 1947- a
trademark,
so that Jacquet featRobert Ray Bush, representing the
Lake ?/ ^a In
n
arrW.d from OtAssociation of Physics Teachers,
uxes this ability of his and the pub­
graduate students in physics at
^nad, ,
^ Certificate of
the American Association for the
lic thinks he always plays this way.
X A»=u ^
» « an
Princeton University,
Yet, as on Blue Mood and Don’t
Dja ever smell snow? Recently
Blame
Me, he can and does play
a
man
called
on
the
Washington
dta |Ml ^d^n^^a Citizen."
LEAP YEAR FORMIH.A
soulfully with feeling.
Weather
Bureau
and
told
them
he S4, W Kuun. '
'“ a>a se ven days
he was going to make it snow
WOODY HERMAN
Comps^^
'
perfume.
Woody Herman, “The Man Who
condiK «o not” f2j 1 dld aot’ and still
Flays
the Blues,” started his
His system was to mix vials
J?r Proud,' After th ^^ haPPT
campaign for top spot with his
" of perfume when dry ice ’and
zed Ci; ^Habaloo that
loud
Caldonia, Apple
Honey,
—His Stomach and His Ankles
dump the concoction in the sky
1CL "V ^ Ottawa and
^^
Northwest Passage, and Your
? at
Provinces put
By “dorthie” dixie
over the capital. He said this
Father
’s, Mustache,
.,
--------- > which he
si^Qiew CitizeLtW' about ^he
would result in fragrant snow.
‘nd^LXU“,“^^^
look" sult
at the pubUc steadily and
^Wuajmirg .
the s’^ffish
This was to advertise a type of
with such force that most forgot
are only about 40 weeks left to 8i ln 1948? '^^““^
perfume.
he was “The Man Who Plays Tlie
f ^"Patorv joy
“y anBlues” and linked his name with
J . fn'en awar 7 ^aWicaiioh had
The Washington Weather Bureau
fc thetas our privileges bv
loud jazz.
^Ti‘ U "difference.
tive union. C«“X”5 ?J
"1° ^^e’ors- Mutual Protek
was much relieved when the pro­
But, loud jazz is not the only
is a
.
ject was called off. a similar
proposal warrants a Uttle feminine intri^UST’^ ■“” *“ 3
jazz. Just as much, if not more,
h case you
attempt was tried at Bridgeport,
fore, therefore, why not disr^n^ nni v I .b g the 155,16 ^ the
t? the Kenton and Herman
=i? SgMrse, vnu’va u ^ ^ ?et one- Of
just doesn’t go with these tiSs '
h Vlctorian coquettishness? it
Conn., but failed. Chicago is the
neeessartold they are
m^rai"C’S’ SOft moody lhingslike
next target for sweet-smelling
| ^’ients of
Canadhn-born
leddy Wilson’s Memories of You
snow, the promoters say.
to defeat its chief p^.
^ tO mvade the B-M-P-U.
Bat you will
and Don Byas' September Son«
Song
iM ?mrn? cS VeLshed the idea
are jazz,
forever for her “choice” to take her to the alto
g°in° *° Wait
are jazz.
not bring himself to pop the question Now S‘ JUS h^.1136 he could
ally we put a question mark there
Wd on {o
P st’atU5- I Hke to
bit of manoeuvring—but with a subtle
course> this calls for a
and sent it in.
your strategy with scrjpX^ ‘S ^’SS! ^ “'! ^
»mba
5V dimming ;ideals
I am not saying that loud
and
” J0's ox Canadian. citi■When the certificate arrived I
“suitors" and make him strongly aware ir w i£“ ”“ Str“s o£
fast jazz is ^ot good jazz or not
turned to the back where parto listen
the
ticulars of Description” are
fira ;°
prtodSef pro^Xty
b? ‘reatmg
privilege of the jazz bands to
enumerated. Jn the blank after
Play what they want to, and it
“Colour.'’
is
neatly
typed
is our privilege to like jazz. load
“YELLOW.”
^ When we
or soft. But to think that all
painstakiSU: MtM^hS^Mfei- S
Petition for the
jazz is fast and loud just be­
Still there's no
away
—*me to the blank
cause many name bands phr
n awful pretty cer’^er friend looked
that
sort of jazz is wrong.
tificate.
*aid, '"What
been a sucker for
To
limit your listening to onbcert ifie;
^h, i don't
I predict that before th
one
type
of jazz music isn’t good
those
one-armed driv.
onk ■want o put
..... .u. will have lost
out completely, what with th
either.
You
may prefer one tvpc
ss in the penny arcades.
A sound reminder to
said. “Well,
to
another-but
to stick to one
be.ore
you
begin
your
I'm a “Canadian Citizen.’
do not
in—the boys actual!"
type
solely
will
tend
to prejudice
pursued
by
the
right
Gee. isn't it wonderful?
_
face, they lo
you against other types of jazz,
vn. Good luck’—Montreal Bulletin,
or any Dther type of music.

Smelly Snow

The Way to a Man's Heart

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HAROLD A. HIROSE

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5

Page 10

Page 10
k

Page 10
t

^^J^OJONJ^AGfcHAMMAGAlN I
Mossy Mitsui Sinks Free' Throw
r
Lost 3 Seconds For 39r3g Finish
kettaFuS

-By T. F.
"^

^«> as Toronto Ba,

uproar? BoS^

jo a

• Here was a game above all
games. Utter hysteria, wjJd joyand heart-rending grief ema­
nated from the dramatic play.
BOJd&V3’’ Stangs 3S
So deafening was the din in the
AshikaWa s/M^ffxn^
S^
fading moments of the game that
Yama 2 idy Idenouye 2
wSeye
s s
even the referee's frantic whistle
could not be heard. So startled
were the Bombers at the game's
end that they walked out in a
stunned, daze for a few minutes,
—"as .Mori,
F ' u
not quite believing that they had
really won the title.- Then they
Rick Harvey whistled
d
^’o free
whooped out in exuberant joy.
shots for Mitsui. Only
w
three
secPathetically tough was the state
onds remained.
b
of the Mustangs who had all but
Mossy Mitsui was in probably
it
stowed away the symbolic cup
the most momentous point in
th
before it was stolen away from
his basketball career. He coafi
their grasp.
de„tiy ^ his first shot to put
8® th:
It was a case of deadly accurate
the Bombers ahead by one point.
shooting versus strategical flankCaptain Joe Akiyama then elect
plays. Time and time again,
ed io have the second free shot
;
His
, embers pierced through with
waived for a throw in from the
inti
oeauuful plays only to miss their ‘
side and froze the ball to give
yea
set-up shots, while Mustangs sunk
the Bombers the championship.
V
pot shots fi-om almost all positions
I '. dale
and angles with alarming accur­
^^ THE CUFF: This game will bs [•
accc
All araa *^sd-°f subJect for months.
acy. The tide changed when Mus­
< visit
All three final games were thrill-packed
tangs failed to protect their lead
Said Mterav-bUt this °ne topped ‘he rest,
JO
htart^ ^1?ama ‘‘This is bad for the
in tne last quarter and continued
and j
heart.
Referees Harvey and Moors ' i Biilt
their offensive attempt to increase
commented: “Some game!”
shot
It was a real tough game for ths
the margin, with Captain Joe
AKJ
Mustangs to lose. Seemingly a winin’
fame
Akiyama recovering most of the
Snitz for.the“ aH the way, no one can
■quad
^te understand how the Thin JIea J
rebounds from their taller oppo­
food s
for oh
WM also a Sreat gams
teame
nents, Bombers came back ’and
for the Bombers. Behind their victory
Ready
eAreWd strategy of J09 Miook the game through sheer fight.
JIM

GAME RESULTS

Jeep Inamoto, idy idenouye, Sockeye Tsukamoto, Mossy Mitsui,
George Hirano. Kneeling, 3. to r.’
Koach Ken Mitsui, Joe Akiyama
(capt.), Shige Ashikawa, Baron
Wakabayahi (coach).
; The blinking is caused partly by
modesty and partly by the flash­
bulbs of three photogs.

Obokata, Nunoda
Tops Again in
NO Cage Win

Vrhich took advantage of evety
^^tS® error. It can be summed up
$
^Pwience and Moxie triumphs
r ^°aJl and ^ower.” This should
be an example to all individualists that
teamwork really pays off. Mustangs will
hf^j^ from this game and will
be hard to beat-next time.
The Mitsui brothers were the most
underrated players. They were nothing
snort of sensational in this game and
tU th?, ?eries' Both E® Miyasaki and
7>oe, "Hiyama played with a bad cold,
probably the happiest man was Coaca
xTar2a Wakabayashi, who can Mima
Him?
Although they lost, Mustangs and
coach Frank Hiyasaki still deserve top
respect. They axe still the most feared
team m Eastern Canada. Wa would
Jlk^>,t0: see tIle3n' ^ neit time . . .
. . reI photogs were on hand taking
snots of tha action. All experts, they
were Jack. Hammy, Jon Onodera ana
j'rar vet Kitty Kitagawa. Action shoU
by Onodera and Hemmy will be on disst Keiyo Inouye’s barber shop.
This rings down the curtain on To­
ronto Nisei Basketball for 1917-48. Wo ,
salute the Bombers, again ch amnions, 1
and great ones.


+
berS PracticaI1y toyed with
the Thin Men in rhe first quarter
but failed to capitalize on'their
advantage and led only 7-3, Tn
LONDON; Ont. — Art Obothe next quarter, Mustangs got
kata and Bob Nunoda led the
the feel of the large floor and
London 'Nisei Organization
Mukawa (facing Ken) not making ^7-' N°te Bc‘maer centre Bhi^
Up their lead t0 be abead
eagers to an exciting 45-37 vic­
Mustang captain, others in picture°ar-id^
^ 6'foot-P^s
20-14 at the half and 31-20 in the
tory over Grace United in the
third quarter.
..J^^1 indden by Idenouve. Toki
London Church league game
foom Masaki, and rX
^^ ^^ to
Then began the great Bomber
on March 5 at the King St.
gosh, we DID IT' ’TnhHnt
k Harvey.
rally in the final quarter which
gym. Obokata picked up 13
victory. Fi-om left. Socket
a^^S- the Bombers after the
will
Probably remain perma­
points and Nunoda 10 to lead
Wakabayashi, Joe Akiyama and■ i^0’ Sh*Se Ashikawa (4), Baron
nently in Nisei basketball his­
the L.N.O. scoring.
Jon 'Onodera and Jack Hemmy./
namoto- ‘GUI photos thanks to
tory and will be told to their
Giaces lanky Jack Greene was
grandsons by the happy Bomb­
responsible for 17 points. Grace
ers.
enter KING CLANCY LEAGUE
kept the- lead until the end of the
Koach Mitsui played as he never
fluid Quarter when the score stood
Played before, weaving dribbling,
at 30-29.’ The Niseis hit their full
passing and shooting, to lead both
stride in the final stanza, to draw
teams
with 18 points. Shige Ashi­
away from the lasers.
kawa- and Joe Akiyama fought as
Tak Ozaki's capable checking of
they never fought before. Idy
the 6 ft. 6 in. Greene, Grace pivot,
Ogasawaraz Yakura
Idenouye and George
Hirano
was a highlight of tht game. Wes
struggled as they never struggled
Hjodo came all the way from
entered two All-s2rT(2^ f^%
Hockey League has before. And Mossy NIitsui emerg­ Winners in Vernon
Hamilton to help the LN.O. five
ed finally as the. hero of the game
Sections of the Kmg Ctacv
in tins important victory, which
Judo Tournament
by
the winning point on a
first time that Nisei
league. This is the fieesinking
partly compensated for the disap­
shot with, just three seconds
hockey in Toronto
taken part in organized left in the game.
pointing show against Toronto’s
VERNON, B.C.—Hiroshi Ogas­
Rebels.—!’. FUSHIMI.
awara and Ko Yakura won out
Countering
the
thunderous
LONDON NISEIS — F. Sahara. 2,
as champions of the senior and

^
Junior
entry
is
named
.
'
decent
Saturday
night.
Bomber
rally,
Mucka
Makimoto,
A. Auswij, A. Obokah 13. B. Nunoda. 10
S1;TNn ™e the

junior
sections respectively in
,
«. Tak O»»ki 4, J. Ka-I
who is at his best when the chips
^he
Vernon
Judo Club red-andoSl.
' ^-^^^ S. E. Yoshioka, Tam
ti
Wy

except
that
there
diate team is sponsored by Saul
are down, shone as the outstands
white
tournament
held at the No
Thf
On3Sa
Dsnforth
Cleaners.
72 teams- taking part in this
«
rNITEO—Sp^.xke I. Warwick
ing Mustang player. Captain Ken
Kai. Hall on February 28.
Milker4- ^’^Gp^*n’ r-‘rk"’
The junior section of the Kin’ .eague play, it is expected that the
Miyasaki,. too, stood out with his
Feature of the tournament was
^^^ h^ 28 tea^, which
I’yc^r-sts will gain experience
great play-making and offensive
the
ceremony in which the mem­
^ded Ult° Various groups.
JL?1?^ .^Iue in organized hockey
Play.
£hioh
win
profit
the
Nisei
Hock4
bers
of the Judo Club were pro­
teamS Of 03011 ^‘P
With two minutes and 45
league itself.

moted, after the results of tes^
y K the end of the schedule for
seconds
the championship trophy. The In­

^ ’ to
to go,
ffOj Bombers were
conducted by Shigeru Sasaki, yo*
*
»
behind
11
noinfas

e
tel mediate section is composed in
dan,
head of Canadian Judo, who
At a Minute
On Monday. Marcia 15, Danforth
and a half, g points behind. At
visited Vernon on February 5.
Cleaners defeated Crockers. 6-3 at
WINNIPEG—Trophies or some
4b seconds more-5 points more.
the Wexford Arena (20 miles
Promoted to Ni-dan were
other token of support will be
Then with less than a half minnoitheast
of
Toronto.)
Rai
Adachi.
Yoshitaka
Mori and Katsushi
donated, to the various sports
a
shoJ
0

Shi
e
AsWka

took
,^
orth
goalie
was
the
standout
Oikawa,
who
are in charge of the
leagues in the city, the Manitoba
^
One
of
the
Vernon
gym.
Holders
of Sho-dan.
Ox
,
e
game.
Given
good
supoort"
J.C.C.A. decided Sunday, March 21.
Mitsn! boys in a wHd under-thefirst
degree
black
belt,
are Hiro­
oy
his
defensemen,
Adachi
put
on
at the special general meeting in
basket turmoil and ^ ^
TORONTO—Nisei university stu­
a
sterling
show
against
the
shortshi,
Ogasawara,
Shoki
Ouchi.
To­
the North Winnipeg C.C.F. hall.
dents across Canada are requested
yuig
goal.
Coach
Baron
Waka
­
handed
Crockers.
shimitsu
Isobe
and
Seiji
Tabara.
It is proposed to.assist the
to send in their names and courses
bayashi, who had been practiSho-dan kokoroe holders are I*'
Art Watanabe, centreman and
existing Nisei sports organiza­
xrt5 ^ ^ ^
being taken by them to:
sutaka Tahara, Toshiro YakurJ.
probably the smallest player on the
tions like the basketball, base­
ff f A the ^H^ and dying a
Richard Takimoto
K. Mori and Masamichi Ikeda.
ice. played a good stickhandling
ball and bowling leagues in
thousand deaths, then went into
267
Woburn
Ave.
The Vernon gym was started and checking game.
this way. A committee was set
^ unrestrained exhibition of
Toronto, Ont
October, 1944, with 30 mem^
Line-up of the Intermediate
up t-o handle this matter, be­
S£^e^ ^ ^ ^’^
under the charge of four sho-c^
Niseis:
ing Harold Hirose, Tom Mit­
Additional information as to iu
Hideo Tokairin, Mitsugu Teraci
Goalie:,
K.
Adachi
ani, Mickey Hayashi and Jack
(TNT) ;
sub
ture plans is welcomed.
Morj and Oikawa. Tokairin relo­
goalie: Bob Ohashi
IS score, and either overtime or
(Rovers) ; Mits
A. Okimura.
, Those who have already sent
Takahashi (DC); r
cu
I
Ken Kuwshara (DC) ;
cated
to Montreal and Terada i^
a game-clinching point was the
J«p Inamoto (Rovers);
' ; T. Sakura (St.
details either individually or as 3
Canada,
leaving Mori and Oixa*-’
^'-..^ Watanabe: Tad Miura, joe
teamS ^ere Mantle.
group need not reply.
v i G i O RI A. B.C.—A British
ns
mentors
of the ev
flU of Danforths); Kiro
Jie s^PPed in on the BombGe°rge Nakamura. Mosa
Coiumb.i Bill of Rights was one of
club.
The information will be used as ^°®.oto- E3
' Kuroda. H. Morita (all
^ MOS3y ^tsvii sped
the major projects that should be
01 Spauna); and s. Sora (Sockets).
® ba;,is for a second and more com­
aown the centre and tried an un­
tieroj- Aiorita (2). George Naka­
undertaken this year, said the CCF plete record of Nisei students in
derhand shot near the keyhole,
mura. Tad Miura, Masa’ Matsu­
opposition leader Harold E. Winch.
Mustang
Canadian universities. The res
. Toki -«■ oyama threw his
moto and Sumi Sora got- the goals.
MarchTS'during his attacks on the
of -the -first- survey will appear
haua down on Mitsuis arm in a
Sora and Kaz Kuroda were creditthe National JCCA publication.
to check the

First Nisei Teams in Toronto
Organized Hockey Noted on Air

Manitoba JCCA
Donate Sport
Trophies

University
^
Students ^
Please Note!

at;
T1

ug

lie ■-? f

lX -.- ) ?

shot

Subscribe to
The New Canadian

.

of tear
0'shirt

^strong
■i Checks
)tp pendab.
I '
geoi
est on
men, j
*
Shct; f;
v Amend
ROY
of Coal,
• fastest ]
b soak
and plat
i.-:: former

Winn
-■alley f
( average
Ians ar<
‘^ the m<
* Jonny •
mate of
1 nig the
^ n^av pre
. Mani Job;

5 Winnij
| K ho are

3

. JOX YA
Msketbalh
lhe» Tam,
T'th Kcnn
“nd comp
«oadymadc
j^'r Inte>
5Uh Yama

4
)I 'en?e

“p 11

Tron

j 021 breakaw
4 , -’^AC ors
basketbaii •
r? Hi- Ph
^ak Hiroe/..

J SPM^, i^
7 l^b tnd ? Ita«t <eori
1 iff. ’^
i ^
"or
’ ^ aecond hi,^
? . ^AXX y.
, a^lbertan.'

~ "ls ^ hock
. -h^T St
7 l£d. 13«-

1 fa^ty cal. *

j
Ops ^te
^ shot'-’ J^fensi-

<«Si™!-

nir

01

g

Page 11

HANK SUGIYAMA BIG FACTOR

MN
^ow in
Finish

big Hank kigitTima^l^^

1 Jo a mad
cnaiiipion.
one singly
e finals^r
of Friday,

By “LONGSHOT”

ULTS
■ngs 33
^b 18. Shiga
li f, Joe Ak>^eorge Hirara
Baron Wak».

^’o free
three sec-

i probably
point in
He confl­
ict to put
one point.
:hen elect
free shot
from the
I io give
lionsliip,
me will bs
for months,
hrill-packed
ed the rest.
>ad for the
and Moors

NEWS OF
of

Basketball championship this week bv
*mW^ Nisei
two straight, defeating Central
S-e®?ln^ ^e finals
and 31-27 in the second game.
“ the fh»t ^me,

ronto B

■saki 12. Roy
aki 6. Mucka
i 3_. Tokj Tois Mori,

SOCIAL CALENDAR

J17® ^' i™ Mt Sanies
For Winnipeg Hoop Championship

fI

WINNIPEG
Next Monday and Tuesday
March 29 and 30, five of Alberta’s
~ best Nisei eagers will face the
s Winnipeg Nisei Basketball Leasue
All-Stars in the much - talked about inter - provincial “Dream
,( Gi.me that is finally coming true
s this year.

The first final game on March
13 revealed 517ers at top f^
® ?ed by smooth passing and
well-executed plavc
n“tMuSh Saito rac^d np totals
of 13 and 11 points respectively,
Hiro Furuya,
and Hank Sugiyama were
responsible for 7
apiece. *
Tak Hirose■ had a good night
151POlnts’
the team was
hopelessly outclassed,, by the penlpTtWfnner'S’ ^^ Tahiro total­
ed 9 for the losers while
guard
S^sh Miyata piled up -a
fat 7
points.
1

_

EaSe^S Sd £isei ®ia> •
LakeThes^L^r^ ^^^
(rear

£a^“PTempuat^

Coherence



2S^U^g°S P^ W°CkS

^MCA°t’^^ Suarise

Service,

Basketball. Albrets vs.
"^?^ Fun Ba^^s United

8:15

Church,

31—?SnCe
S:3° pja-’
^rDMcr'af'st CJnb Easter Holid~l Hall, Bond* Vat^hX^

APRIL



8-12.

*”

George’s

tatile—deadly shot
H,-f»ve; vershot as specialty__ ton
>?ei”'>and auniP
AKI O’SHffioL^ 5^ba
handier.
> fame in Alta • cantain n/n ^f5^ learnt
►quad; aniazinz cn i ^ Coaldale Hifh
and
food Shot; playmaker a
aHd dribbling;
drihI”f—
(earned with Toyamaas Coaldale guard;
Readymade previously. as forward in
JIM KANASHIRO__ v -n.
•f team learnt ram®
b 7rs-J baby
OsMro and Tovmml saM33?”134' from
,strong on two’-hanL^ 7 f°r Coalda‘e,
t-thecks in high school 1’ one of best
Pendable guard.
1 ^^^ solid, de-

Kamloops Nisei Athletic Club^ ''^ SpOns0red bV «ie
on Mar-h
w
’—' newlY formed
13
an “qualified success
and over 85 dancers jammed
the
—~ 1*^11311 Hall

bang up the SK.O. sign.
, makmg it necessary* to
Smooth music was implied
by
automatic
recording

^ H* oo,,^ ™s

hino.
At the dance was
of
bowlers from Vernon andgroup
several
St
®

Change of Address
Mr and Mrs. Yukie Takai (nee
Xeneko Kakutani), formerly or
toV/fT^ S^^ve moved
to the following address:
- c/o W. A. Clarke,
^ox 26, Penticton, B.C.

Hall,

a~»wa%;^
“'IS' “
-&? sSF"hr

(
Pre-game doping is always a
n
sscond and deciding game
gam
’, dangerous thing, and especially so
i2 ^ a disaPP°inting
-. when most of the guessing has to
finale to a league season that saw
- < be done on hearsay evidence, but
some top basketball thrills. 5i7ers
it seems safe enough to say that' were off form and could not land
dance.
sketball, followed by
afte? ^"
< the games should be mighty close.
• ^AlbT’a has a big advantage in
S fc
°h the Gentral defence
, that all of the players have played
Central was even more' laggard
. together, three of them having
st. Michael’s
Club Dance at
not capitalize on the
” J.™ed a nucleus of the Coaldale
-^f^^n^hu^^^^^^rellow517 lapses. Mush Saito and Henry
- , g\?ve that made ^^ way
ugiyama potted 8 points each for
year ^ Alberta ^-finals this
12 n? ? € ^^ Yahiro ^etted
Tak HIrose moored
11 for Central.
Veteran Roy O’Shiro, of GoalMarch 22 game:
dale, is heading the Albertans and
iita’K ^.’T1 X„ Salto
wssO£X>~t,“Ia Hashimoto
. accoiaing to available info, the
y-?!rL^7 &>“? -’'®°
’ Vitors shape up like this:
d P^dent of st. Fran^ $ X7ler Club’ Toronto, at a well
Jimmy Sugivama v o G °rge Tamura,
JOE TOYAMA—5’
on
.
CEN® T^k w<y Susiyma’
H epve<! ™eptin° °n March 1“
4 and forward of RcarivJ-j iTs-’ caPLin

Officers Elected
For St. F.X. Club

Kamloops Athletic Club Dance
Is Success; Vernon BowlSTS Win

Credit for the access of
dance goes to the executive
ho were kept busy right up into '
£7hz;otthe“'””?ank -TOu” goes to
who loaned records.
The Vernon five-pin bowlers, in
Eastern Representative
’1 dS ^ ^SVRANCS CO.
“ateh’ dcfeate<i both
I -1 ^’k^ 0076-7 I»"“
local teams before the dance. Due
Montr^v/q Catharin<’ s^. „
only one game
comd be played.
I^^MMI^MAv^ FL^SM
I
Proceeds from the dance will be
used to buy baseball equipment.
£t is hoped to delude
soft, ball, bowling and basketball
in rhe club’s activities before the
OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS
year’s end.
There are several judo enthusiasts in and around Kamloops, but
Consult HARRY S. KONDO
!?==—__________ ___
_ ' ^Tl^^f!!
7 St- Toronto, AD5081

FRED URABE

PRINTING

*

Yahiro 12 qno?L-Hlrose ^^ Frank
hire. Hippo
2‘ yas Toinihiro.
PP ’ S^i^oda 2, Doug Tomi-

CHOP SUEY RESTAURANT
s executive officers are:
GOOD HOMES at* low
i
PRICES
Vice - president, Ed.
Tsuiifor sale
*
*
I frra2nf’eSta?lished business now of-;
CONSULT
Kioto; recording secretary, Mary
I Itai fn^ ST^C t0 dissoIve partnership.
facwX ta°a^NTS-DeSpite «>e
E. Nakamachi; corresponding

William Bendena
2fi into We Party t0 ^side;
season was a hL?16 3 ^down, the
I Snr^ business operating this
:
Real Estate & Business Broker
secretary*, Hope Hanada; treas­
With each
Higlily- successful one.
s
pee «“i.XS““f- i ««■
urer, Anthony Fujimoto; conX
* nvvX"CS<! 1 “tronage Appreciated
i | people serving owi
Ita
1555 DUNDAS W *
the experience nf ik H
^ener and
| LA <570
TORONTO, ONT ’ |
SaLIre«t “^ F-^eiS
Sakura,
Steve
Sano,
Roy
FujiPerformance outside
Top -easue
Power of the qi?;
f the consistent
mote and Paul Miki.
J
of Jonny YamAn t- ^ the ^^ng
i KtGeorge
saito__ v 4».
& t /“^ous ’o^Mac Ots?
I range; everything kep/ship-sha ’pe!
WedEesday> March 31, at St
on team, but one^f h” ^^ shor*PETER Y. KARATSU
t»C^S ’S Hal1' Bond St afc Shu"
the most
AGENT
» t ere is to be an Easter Holie no thing
X‘ Si;"
‘ manner . . 7 “
MONARCH LIFE ASSURANCE CO
penses necessary. Worker
m
t-know-how-he-does-it’ ’
I
remain
on
request.
k
®
tff
wW
I
fame and
24^
°n April 10 and April
~ 80 King St. W., Toronto
isaki and
of Coaldale Gophers
yrs.; coach
t Hippo Shimoda of Central
..
wm
t?
rday
bi
we
^Y
dance
Phone
25
487
bad co.d.
lave
much
tn
do
,-,,
veni
rai,
who
didn

t
• fastest players in w ’ -US^ *° ^e One of
' 2 Moutray Street
into a X m ^A /?17 season, turned
l-v soaked £
th’r.oughas Coaca
or see
be held at the same hall An
hone‘ ~ ~ LLoydbrook 4869
drive
Nevt
atcH in the last stretch
; and pla;.s> forward M?r
fundamentals
u Nun
active discussion group and a full
Mr. Wong Schuck
former years.
r Coaldale Niseis in
. fast ■ athletic program are planned by
ngs and
ALeXander Ave- Wpg.
aU ^emi^iro needs is expe;erve top
»S17'S X®^ TO a “»
rience and confidence . . .
the new executive.
Daily 8 p.m. to 11 p.m.
st feared
a would
aww w?nhWe oWer on 016
seL^.
the final
J
final
ran,
™ ^?e ™st ^ the Alberm
+

ls
week
they
met
the Flv1 takin’
«
tans
are
hi^
,
----^^
J ^ mosSv » °°Iers’ th€ IocaIs
is, they
Agent
berta Srs* prep f« ?he tough Alera ana
,
mostly uiiiversitv
'
Mail Your Films For
MANUFACTURERS life
Jonm*
^vdents.
>u shots
»*Si ? goraer teamon disInsurance Co.
LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — Having
shop.
Quality
Work
ing
the
w
"
^
b
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Home:
198 Albany Are
on Tosponsored a successful Leap Yeai
hav prove^T^^^1"3*3,1,8’ which
48. Wt
Toronto,
Ont.
Fast
Service
Danpe, the Tuesday Niters have
S5'L teis,™« «• “XS
.inpions.
Any
6-8
Exposure
Roil
qa
Manitobans.
advantage for the
Phone
LA
9332
decided to held an International
the season
?e imProvement through
most of ae Dl2^n ^markable amo^g
I-...
Dance to which various Youn**
Developed and Printed
or secondMTVh0 are “
; "feo^^ S Damed eight men
People’s Groups in Lethbridge will
E—
»uu year of the game.__ F.
as follows:
be mvited.
CRYSTAL PHOTO
f’asketbainn^^^ S”f 21 J”-; started
Variety numbers, good music and
SERVICE
E
lhe“ Tammys and^i Ver with Trojans
a
hilarious evening is promised at
86 GAMBLE AVE.
1
Ken nX MivWak?0 ^!aj^. f°r Vegas’
f
1500
Dundas
W.,
Toronto,
Ont.
LOCAL
NEWS
C0InPanv; ’ in A’,^7osha Miakawa
dance on ApriI 3- Trom 8 to 12,
Toronto, Ont.
Phone LA-6378
1 IarV'n2dc. Taber Rit^ Ph}ed for
at the Y.M.C.A- gym.
Automobile, Fire
bX Ci^ as ^Ni^’^' ^® '
The admission will be 75 cents
g«.™"'J ”“' »— ® w
up ^a^ue sennit
This year
per couple, 50. cents for stags. Stu­
In Greenwood, Tasaka's Pool
to sniro
? 186 points
out
4 lem-’
Trophci re tlle Hirose ChaJdents get a special rate of 35 cents
Hall and barber shop is bein- enand
on
, ccar basket?-^ ,with oneper couple and 25 cents sin-le
^Ft^LMr^AsSUEANCE-cb
breakaways,
Can ^ ^e stopped
arged and construction has start­
in
.3' Mac ojstt
Refreshments will be served free.
Agent
ed on the adjacent lot. . . . joe
ndCROWN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
conLn
ProW«««.
All Niseis are cordially invited to
Homma, mechaic at Central Ga­
Xo
our B.C. Representative,
attend.
OffiBk 21 Dunda« Square
«?^^ a - ~ «
rage, attended a four-day Chrysler
Rhone AD-0076-7
Mr. Joe T. Oikawa
corporation
school in Nelson.
'< J«£e End Ac« in
ca '^
Captained..
Bes.: 526 Manning Avenue
was
■?
^ne
scoring
oca|
,OO
P.
Third
in
Dr.
George
AShiwara
left
Gre

e
n_
_______
T
oronto
,
ont
.
iem^^^SXJSZ—kameoops. - B.C
IriROSE—V
ood to start practice in Grand
pro< finj'r caPtained Daniel’ w yrs-i stylish
r
Forks. “What is Greenwood's loss
i eve ^" of schoob rt 1 Mac seniors in
5 hbi« Ionp5ots; worksTelFw^h ^Cadyois Grand Forks’ gain,” reported the
’ 5FRA>^
finaJ^ CenK
H.C.—Over 35 mem­
Smart Lounge Suits
(flu
Grand Forks Gazette.
bers of the English Y.PH and
Manufacturers Life
Tailored
to Your Measure
j ajtrK^5"-. baii^}^ 8’w4 yrs-; burly
Japanese YP.C.A. were guests a.
Insurance Co.
j cek on'Vh fi’hter: top’’tea^^V6 Bnl<c:
■re
-*-• S^ooofo was among a party*
Naramata, a small town on the
English Wool Gabardines
:
7«.?RrhX shot f-« :^
KP.O. Box 519
hi
of Grand Forks ranchers who
outskirts of Penticton, on Sundav
; *la*ed riH^iTAbU-S- r>.
All Shades __
GREENWOOD, B.C.
lie
made a tour of potato growing
* ^vUr^^ r^ed^V^
March 14. A special bus took the
n.
areas in Washington and Idaho. ’
Party to the Christian Leadership
HARRY
Training School at Naramata.
*
*
| v Artsir S;1IT
2 of Manitoba.
’ ^r,^!"°Ps inter /p]’; 2.3 yfs-l another
The students of the school, who
WYASAKI
Restrictions on pulpwood exports
'^G’a 5ensive Plaver Lrebound “an.
Agent
were
in
charge
of
entertaining
the
to U.S. has resulted in the cl osure
। of
inl=--facJt T°US Pivot
guests,
showed
them.
around°
the
3-'*oba.
aacnlty ball at rr
WA
5342
of a number of lumber camps
I
Iff
assurance ;
178 Beverley St.,:
fcjh.
hosml, crafts shop, Sunday school,
; of pi
X COMPANY OF CANADA
■sealsaround
Fort
William.
About
20
Toronto?
“-S! and de,^'" ^°angster
Lnited Church, and the scenic
g°-’cr for ehl y °nder the
Japanese families at Neys 72 camp
——Boz 149
Kamloops, B.C.!
surroundings.
n,Pe? product Pi°n ”I7ers’’
in
are employed at two sawmills, but
of Manitns ’ ,starrcd this
Manitoba inter-faculty
Some colorful pictures were
unless the lumber camps are re^L?KA-5’ 9o.
shown,
and an interesting talk
opened, they ma; face unemploy­
Oriental Food p,** ^ ^^
^best^heck” ^ith '°^ first
given
by
the principal, Rev. R. Mc­
ment until th e river drive begins.
Xi sei
Laren, on the future expansion of
hard
the school, a banquet was held in
The Lillooet PTA’s* Klondike
the evening after which all attend­
Cabarec was a great success. Art
ed the church service.
149 Victoria Street
b on ■30 p-ffl-> on Monexhibit was in charge of Oscar
4 ? f30 M- »n
Kamloops, B.C.
A Nisei girl, Myra Fujimura, of
• HANA KATSUO
Yamanaka, Akira Horii and Tad
Greenwood,
was
a
student
here,
A dance will
• AWO ITA KONBU
Tsuyuki, who did a good job. A
but unfortunately she had already
• KIRIFU
net profit of around S250 is ex­
'Say gam- th ^G^^ng
text.
« NURIBASHI
'^ attend
PUblic 15
pected. . . . Fred Kozuki’s baby

SHAMOJT,
and
many
other
items
The guests had a very enjovable
^
« both games and
son passed away at Williams Lake,
time and left at 8.30 p.m. to ^atch
B.C.
.

me Kelowna bus.—N.H.
mail order service
ie for ths
a winning
io one can
Thin Men
treat gams
eir victory
Joa Akiof evety
immed uu
triumphs
lis shonld
alists that
tangs will
and will

’ j

b.!..,

to th(. gI„,}"’n“llt"Ui

A?

..“a.1" s'sa «•

“”: S\X‘ a ,—&*•»»?

J?

i«S. SHINOBU

Niseis Invited to
Lethbridge Donee

its,

f |

s'4

S * H ‘it

BILL TAKEDA

MICKEY S. SATO

Kelowna Groups
Visit Naramata

SEIJI HOMMA

+ T. KOBAYASHI

INLAND IMPORTING CO

*

'

£ ' 5

Page 12

Saturday, March 27,^

■i

Personal Notes Across Canada
Marriages '

KOBAYASHI—ARIZONO
DIMOND, Alta.—Miss Temiko
Arizono, second daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Zentaro Arizono of Coal­
hurst, was united in marriage to
Mr.
Kihei Kobayashi, second
son of Mr. Kiyomatsu Kobayasm
of Raymond, at - the Raymond
Buddhist Church, on March 17.
The Rev. S. Ikuta officiated.
The baishakunins were Rev. and
Mrs. Y. KaKwamura,

SEKO—MORIMOTO
TORONTO, Ont.—The mtrriage
of Miss Teruke (Jennie) Morimoto,
second daughter of Mrs. Ritsu
Morimoto of Arrowhead, B C to
Mr. Tetsuichi Seko of Toronto, took
place at Buddhist Church in To­
ronto on March 6. The Rev T
Tsuji officiated.
After a reception at Chung King
Chop Suey, the bride and groom
left on a honeymon trip to Niagara
Falls.,
SUGIMOTO—YANO
HAYMOND, Alta. — The marri­
age of Miss Takako Yano to Mr.
Kanao Sugimoto, eldest son of Mr.
Kisabur Sugimoto of Raymond,
was slemnized on March 15 at the
Raymond Buddhist Church. The
Kev, S. Ikuta officiated and the
Rev. K. Kawamura assisted.
Baishakunins were Mr. and Mrs.
S. Oishi and Mr. and Mrs. E. Hi­
raga.

TABER, Alta.—Born to Mr. and
Mrs. Kiyoshi Murakami, at the
Taber Hospital, a son, Seiji Henry.

Help IV anted
YOUNG MAN wanted:
For
jewellery: polishing. . Experience
preferred. Harold Mfg. Jewellers,
138 Dundas St. W., Toronto.
EL-7646.

New Tax



OUT-OF-TOWN CUSTOMERS

B.C.’s provincial sales tax of
three percent is expected to cost
an average family $30 a year; most
cigarettes will go up to 36 cents
. . . The old Vancouver hotel win
be .torn down to make place for
Eaton’s new and fully modern de­
partment store.

Engagement
GREENWOOD, B.The en­
gagement has been announced of
Miss Tamiko Oye, fourth daughter
of Mr. Yazaemon Oye, to Mikio
Haraga, second on of Mr. Masatsuga Haraga, on Feb. 21, at the
home of Mr. Oye.

CONFERENCE

No Increase
Facing an uncertain export marhet, with U.K. out of the picture,
Vernon-Coldstream members of
P.O. Fruit Growers’ Association
rejected the packinghouse work­
ers bid for a 25 to 33^2 percent
wage, increase. . . . Surfacing will
begin on Hope-Princeton highway
this summer and traffic, may be
allowed by autumn.

MAIL ORDER SERVICE
We always carry a full line of FABRICS
„ •
Dresses, Blouses, Skirts, Suits and CoaS Th? J? “5 Your
list of FABRICS usually carried lu stock: *
following ls a

A complete line of CELANESE fab
rics. COTTON GOODS, Plain and
Printed PLASTIC FILM (for table
cloths, shower and window cur­
tains), Plain and Printed RAYONS
and CREPES, WOOLLENS for
Coats and Suits, VELVETS TAF
FETAS, etc. Practically everythinrequired for home sewing carried
in stock.

Please write in to one of our stores
nearest you, and we will be very
glad to forward samples and prices
As merchandise is still verv scarce'
•please give second choice when
ordering.

IN OUR CALGARY STORE ...

SERVICE

MA. 1186 - 7

THRIFT

3 Sherwood Ave.
Toronto, Ont.
HANDLED BY

ROY KAMINO

In the Navy
The U.S. f mate confirmed
appointment of Grace Yos
Tanigawa, fo:
Roseville Caiifornia high school studen to be
an ensign in t
e corps of
now a nurse in Minneapolis.

line of: SADIES’-

and CHILDREN^ READY^^

hosiery, gloves, c» SSS K^
silk-o-una

stores

119-8th Ave. W.
Elhj Jasper Ave. 1768-1172 Scarth Street

Calgary, Alta.
Edmonton, Alta.
Regina, Sask.

?DR. RAJ
P«| guest s
today afte

The National JCCA’s

Second National Conference

Mv
Ida

rJ^€ZZan*ne £>"“”& Hall of
IhE MARLBOROUGH HOTEL
March 26 to



• Public Meeting, Sunday, March 28 ’ n
c
Randolph M. Sakada.
28’ ° P*m* Speaker: Dr.
• Sessions (Open to public)_ _
Friday: 1:30 pan.
Saturday: 9 a.m. and 1:30 p.m,
p Done
Sunday 1:30 p.m,
Monday: 9 a.m. and 1:30 pan.
LwWlP]
• Conference Dance, Saturday, March
R
. «
HaI1’ 360 Your? St *
8 p.m., at Royal ' Oght to se
^“^^rta ^ Manitoba.
I
and e*
, Wld bear
Sav warCJ ? mA ^ at 9:3<>
; !^V’ dec]
Tuesday, March 30, YWCA gym, at 8:30 p.m.
p.m.
S AI. Sa
Followed by Farewell Dance.

^fed vi«
Japanese
League,
»ver loo ■
S6? tte pj
® ^Iar]b°D
®ch 28.

in Montreal Visit the Orient
Tell your friends that you’ll meet them

— at —

NAMES SHIP

QUALITY

rol

We have established a

By-election
Ralph o. Campney, Vancouver
lawyer and former secretary to
Prime Minister King, is best bet
to be Liberal candidate in Vancou­
ver Centre by-election. He also
has good chance of winning, ana
of becoming a cabinet minister.

(Continued from Page 1
Help Wanted
tions and a lesser control by the
Victim •
WANTED: ■ Reliable person or
National headquarters.
The body of a snowslide victim,
family to take charge of fully
*-ETie size of the National budget
Tetsuo Otsu, was discovered by a
equipped greenhouse at Niagara
is another question expected to
search party at Iago, near Hope.
Falls. For furthter details, apply . provoke a great deal of discussion.
Otsu, a railway sectionman, was
A. K. Nishimura, P.O. Box 27
While the budget to be recom­
buried in a slide on Feb. 17.
Queenston, Ont., or A. a. Holman’
mended by the National JCCA
Bans Noise
1084 Portage. Rd.,’ Niagara Falls’
headquarters has. not yet been dis­
Angered by the blasts from a
Ont.

closed, some delegates are prepared
sound truck used by an enterpris­
to insist an attempt to impose
ing evangelist, the Penticton city
WANTED: A family of at least
oversized,
appropriations, it is retwo workers, male or female, to
council passed an anti-noise measproted locally. =
ure to prohibit use of sound trucks
work on chicken farm. One must
An important new project which
take night shift. Large 6-room
other than for permitted an­
is to receive the attention of the
nouncements.
concrete house located on the bank
delegates is a nation—wide reset­
of Niagara River. Apply h. Klas­
Secession
tlement
survey proposed for this
sen or A. K. Nishimura, P.O. Box
year?
.More than 200 farmers and spe­
27, Queenston, Ont.
cial
speakers, including Phil Baker
The entertainment side of the
F" U L L TIME office secretary reof
the
Alberta Sugar Beet Grow­
conference has not been neglected
NatiOnal JC-C.A. Salary,
ers’ Association, attended a meet­
by the Manitoba conference com?35.00 a week maximum. Apply
ing of the Alberta Farmers’ Union
mittee, which has arranged to take
National Office, 84 Gerrard St
at Magrath assembly hall and
up all the spare moments of the
Toronto.

passed
a resolution favoring seced­
. delegates with parties, banquets,
WANTED: Waiter or waitress
ing
from
eastern Canada. Reason:
basketball games and a conference
to work on Fridays and Saturdays
eastern
discrimination
against wes­
dance complete with the crowning
^■ ^PPh’Chungking Chop Suey,
tern
growers
and
cattlemen.
of a Miss Nisei Winnipeg. .
11 Ey^beth St., Toronto. TR 0851,
BUI of Rights
Agenda
“No one has the right to appeal
Friday, March 26
Room and Board
to the Supreme Court of Canada
• 9.-30 a.m. to 12—Registration and
ROOM AND BOARD in nice
steering committee meeting..
unless the amount involved ex­
1:30 p.m. to 6' p.m—Welcome adVancouver home to girl willing to
ceeds $2,000, and even then it is
* adB rep°rts from the National
give in return light sendees in her
Ax“d provincial organizations.
confined almost exclusively to
Saturday, March 27
spare time. Mrs. a. Fouks, 6637
financial cases and does riot In­
9:°° 3“‘ to 12—National constitu­
^artier st., Vancouver, B.C.
tion education, naturalization, race
clude issues of civil liberty,” said
relations, labor unions, citizenship
John G.-Diefenbaker in a speech
and national publication.
tp‘m‘—National budget, so­
to Toronto’s Canadian Club. He
cial welfare, family allowance, med­
believed
individuals .should be
ical benefits, old age pensions, sin(Continued From Page 1)
ployment. evacuation claims.
given
that
right through the enPrivate Munemori’s body is
Sunday, March 2S
actment
of
a bill of rights. ~
1:o0,pdn' to 6 F-m.—Address by Mr.
now interred at the U.S. Mili.
Sakada, National constitution, evactary Centre at Castclfiorentino,
Conscience
a^°?
claims*
B.C. restrictions,
Italy. His widowed mother hopes
r trestrictions, bUl of rights,
Armand Lafleur, Montreal truck
Employment Practices Act,
*? bave ^nn re-interred in the
■“ai)sitl®nal Measures Act. Stranddriver,
told the court he was offer­
National Cemetery at Arlington.
.ees 111 Japan. National budget.
ed $700- by an unsuccessful lover
Monday, March 20
Yn World War II there were ”87
1-30
^
I
2
"^nished
business.
.
to
run over and kill his rivaa.
Congressional Medal of Honor win­
contu ° J P-®—Election of new
Lafleur
refused. His reason; he
ners. Approximately’ one-fourth of
executive committee.
conferen tatl°n °f eVacuation. next
would lose his drivers’ license.
this number were ’ awarded the
conierence.
resettlement
survey
medal' posthumously,' and one of
Re-education
^IOM‘ employment service,
msl'131123^011 of insurance rates.
them was a young Japanese Ameri­
Japanese school children will get
I -e conference dance will take
can whose liame will be carried
millions
of new revised textbooks
place on Saturday. 27th, at the
proudly by the Army -transport.
in
April,
according ,to General
Templar Hail.
MacArthur’s, headquarters. ... A
Los Angeles Nisei, Naoshi Shima­
nouchi, has been appointed official
s
secretary of Japan’s • new prime
minister Hitoshi Ashida.
COMBINED WITH OUR USUAL GIUR4XTFF
Exports
77x^TISFIED customer or awl
AO CHARGE ’ MAKES OURS INDEED A
An estimated SO,000 tons of coal
from Alberta mines have been sold
“UNIQUE SERVICE^
to Japan, because Nanaimo is
strikebound -. . . At
4 to 6 Day Pick-up and Deli
eral member, A. T. Proctor. called
Service
Premier
Douglas
a
‘‘stinking
skunk,” refused to
»* as expelled
o:
the day.

*

I

REGINA, Sask. — Mr. Tomejiro
Escapes Deportation
Kitagawa passed away on March
Fong Goey Jow, 45, of Vancou­
18. The funeral service was held
on March 20.
ver, held for deportation for vio­
*
*
*
lating Narcotics Drug Act, wa»
SHIGEYOSHI TABE
saved from deportation when ha
FT. WILLIAM, Ont.—Mr. Shige­
lawyer proved that the authorities
yoshi, son of Mr. Shigeo Tate,
took too long before attesting Jow
passed away at the Ft. William
for deportation. The fight haa
General Hospital on March 18.
been carried unsuccessfully to the
The funeral service was held- on
Supreme- Court before the new
March 20, the Rev. Stevens offici­
legal angle was discovered bj^ the
ating.
defence.

Accommodation Wanted
WOULD LIKE two or three
room suite in Toronto from be­
ginning of May, by young couple
and reasonably well-behaved chik.
Please write Kasey Oyama, 751
McCalman Ave., 'Winnipeg.'

Births

News Briefs

J^. OhienL

The onIr ««^ in Canada
TABLE D’HOTE,

958

SUKTV4VT

COCKTAIL
LOUNGE
^’ex?heart of Metropolitan Montreal
Loews Theatre - Abhve Haroon Club

luncheon



p’

DINNER

less. Mrs. F. Tanaka

— _-

' '

Manager: Mr. Jack Adachi

'

'____ d

Toronto Nisei Hockey League
announces

»’ ^sada ti
>W JaPanese <
Seach one si
’#aP]ng the p
' against d
eanh one s]
iaI obligati
e must ai
ations b;
rver they *
. ha perS(
.? anywhe
h°n and t<
curate ^
!^t prejudic,
’ he stated.

CUP PRESENTATION DANCE 1
'

^S^MAISW’S TROPHY)

Toronto Labour Lyceum
9 P.m., to 1 a.m

Admission 750

|S

Education

Ms ^ferested
ad rhe
nO3i: ci

^d^. ^k’ He
c^;onai cai

*^e Wish to Announce—
• Everything in Furniture
• Refrigerator
• Electrical* Kanga
• Wood and Coal stoves

• Radio
• Piano

the appointment of
Mr. Thomas Mitani
577 Stelia Avenue
Winnipeg
as our Japanese represersiato-

CENSER & SONS LTD.

291 Portage Avenue

Winnipeg ^;r’

Air. Mtoni.or special introductory disco
Japanese Canadian customers.

^■oup” fh
Jtself repi

(C

■“J ^ponsoi
-d b7 Dr. !
n^y of «
■^’^d on