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The New Canadian — April 30, 1952

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Page 1

THE NEW CANADIAN

____________ ^Independent Organ For Canadians Of Japanese Origin
VOL. 15 NO. 34
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 1952

intern’t’l Flavour Added
To Canada Ballet Festival

passing thru

S6 Per Year — 10 c Per Copy

; Hampton Auditions
Young Nisei Singer
On Casino Stage

Bill Extending; Citizenship
A small figure with a big voice. To U.S. Issei Passes House,
. TORONTO — A wide interna­ Cary Mizuno was given an audi­
tional flavour will be added to tion by famous jazz instrumental­ Needs Senate Approval
the nation-wide Canadian Ballet

ist and leader Lionel Hampton
WASHINGTON, D. C. — Extension of citizenship
at the Casino Theatre in Toronto
By KEN ADACHI
on April 25 at a late afternoon to some 80,000 Issei residing' in continental United
show.
States and the Hawaiian Islands is closer to reality with
Song At Midnight
V ibraharpist-drummer Hamp­ the passage in the House of Representatives on April
It’s funny what songs do to
ton whose band and stage revue is 25, of the Walter bill on naturalization and immigra­
someone, bringing back a flood
currently appearing at the the­ tion.
of memories. Take our hero, Wil­
atre for a one-week run was im­
The measure, which was passed by a standing vote of 206 to 68,
lie Motonoaji, who one night was
pressed by Mizuno’s voice and would rewrite all U.S. immigration laws and drop all race bars to
listening to an 'all-night disc
commented upon it as being “ter­ immigration and naturalization, making all Asians eligible for U.S.
jockey playing the most senti­
rific.

Among some 24G dancers who
citizenship. At present Japanese, Indonesians, Burmese, Siamese and
mental songs imaginable.
Hampton is known to have
will
converge
in
Toronto
will
be
persons from some Pacific islands cannot become citizeens.
Willie lay on the bed, his sleep­
auditioned several American Ni­
many
of
different
racial
extrac
­
The bill must now go to the®
------ ——---------- less eyes burning into the dark­
sei singers during the past sev­
Senate
for
action,
and
will
be
­
ness bounded by the four walls. tions. Representative of Japanese eral years. One of the features of
Still Discriminatory,
The songs came pouring out of Canadians will be Vancouver-born his band is San Francisco Nisei come finalized into law when pas­
sed by that body and signed by Places Us in Japan's
the mantle radio and in between, David Toguri who is dancing Paul Higaki on trombone.
the President.
the announcer was ladling out the
Immigration Quota
Mizuno who also sings occa­
with
the
Janet
Baldwin
Ballet
of
sex-appeal in a silken voice un­
The Senate, meanwhile, is
sionally at the Club Mercury in
Under the Walter bill, which
doubtedly very bored by it Toronto.
working
on a similar measure, was passed by the U.S. House of
downtown Toronto, has a large,
The Nisei who has been taking swooping voice patterned on Billy the McCarran bill, which has al­
all. It was maddening stuff, nev­
Representatives last week, Cana­
ertheless.
ballet lessons for the past two Eckstine, one of the top vocalists ready been approved by the Sendian Niseis, if they wish to per­
ate judiciary committee. If the manently reside in the U.S. would
Sarah Vaughan was, singing, years, will be appearing in Co­ of the day.
“Body and Soul”. She wrung out relli’s “Suite” on May 6 and May
McCarran bill is given similar come under the Japanese quota.
the words, “My heart and I are 7. “Suite” is a semi-classical pro­ Winnipeg JC's Will
treatment in the Senate as its
In the case of persons of Asia­
lonely, for you I cry for you. duction which was performed by Appear In McLeans
counterpart in the House, enact­
tic ancestry, the bifl assigns them
dear, only.”
the Janet Baldwin Ballet last
WINNIPEG — Five Japanese ment is practically assured.
to the quota of the land of their
Canadians will
be included in
Willie’s mind suddenly went week at the Royal York Hotel.
In addition to the elimination
Examples of other dancers of ! photographs illustrating an art­ of racial discrimination in the ancestry instead of their birth­
back to the time when he end led
in Their Song and they had sung different racial orgins who will icle on ethnic groups of Winni­ naturalization feature, the bill place. Thus a Canadian Nisei
it al] night long. He remember­ contribute towards the raising of peg which is expected to appear would extend immigration quotas could only emigrate to the U.S.
ed the magical night when the Canadian cultural standards are in a fall issue of McLeans Ma­ to all countries heretofore ex- if the 185 quota for Japan is not
used up for the year.
gazine.
eluded.
stars shone soft and bright and the following:
The Japanese Canadians were
George Anderson who also
the gentle breeze played tricks
Thus it discriminates against
The quota system is based
with her hair, tranforming it dances with the Janet Baldwin one of the group visited by fa­ mainly on the national origin of Japanese Canadians as Canada
from a thing of. unimaginative Ballet, is an Englishman born in mous photographer Yousuf Karsh the U.S. population in 1920 by does not come under the quota
black into dark velvet. There was Chungking, China. Exotic Willy of Ottawa who described them as which immigration quotas are al­ system and non-Asiatic Cana­
a breathless once- in-a-lifetime Blok Hanson, heading her own “beautiful dolls.”
loted to 85 countries, each calcu­ dians may enter the U.S. if they
The girls in kimonos were Mrs. lated on the number of its na­ are approved by their own and
glow of happiness about the troupe, hails from Bandung, JaTosh
Hashimoto, Mrs. Joanne Su­ tionals in the U.S. at that time. U.S. governments.
va, and comes of Dutch-French
whole affair.
Willie sighed when Sarah parentage. Only in Canada a few giyama, Mrs. Thelma Kojima, Under this, 185 Japanese would be
caressed the lyrics, “. . . I’m all months, she has also brought Miss Midori Matsuo, and Mrs. Ni­ permitted to enter the U.S., an- would mean the end of the Oriendancer Charlotte de Neve from shimura, the latter with Ikeba nually. The lowest quota is 100 tai Exclusion act of 1924 under
for you, body and soul.”
arrangement.
per year.
He remembered that brief won- Java.
which U.S. was absolutely closed
Elizabeth Leese who brings
derful fling. He remembered that
Passage
of
the
Walter
bill to Japanese immigration.
Urges Anti-Bias Program
night he had struck that respon­ her own ballet from Montreal,
sive chord in her after he felt was born in Pomerania, of Dan­ Before B.C. PTA Confab
KELOWNA, B.C. — Speaking
that he would never succeed. He ish-Alsatian parents and made
before the B.C. Parent-Teachers
had called for her early at her her professional debut at the age
Association convention recently, a
house and they had sat in the liv­ of 12 years in Berlin in Max
Nisei from nearby Winfield urged
ing room looking blankly at each Reinhart’s production of “Mid­
a long-range educational program
summer Night’s Dream.”
other.
NEW YORK — Fresh from a Royal Opera last fall. She also
to help eliminate racial discrim­
In
the
Mildred
Wickson
Ballet
successful
tour of the Scandina­ appeared in a series of concerts
The comic books were piled
ination and prejudices.
vian countries, Tomi Kanazawa,
neatly in one corner and scatter­ of Toronto are Joan Twose from
Anthony T. Kobayashi, past
in Sweden and Norway and tour­
California-born soprano, will
ed around the table were some Montserrat, British West Indies,
president of the B.C. JCCA, said
ed Alaska in November.
movie magazines. The lights were and John Mose of Nottingham, that such a program could be in­ make her first appearance with
Her husband, Leo Mueller, was
turned down real low, of course, England. Russia is represented in stituted on a local level through the Metropolitan Opera Company
the
conductor for the Metro­
as by a pre-arranged scheme, and the Montreal Ballet by Sylvia such organizations as the PTA of New York when she sings the
lead role in Puccini’s “Madame politan Opera’s “Die Fledermaus”
there was the This Is It atmos- Matuzewiski.
and then extended to a national
Butterfly” on May 18 in Minnea­ company which toured the nation
The Ottawa Classical Ballet in­
phere all over the place. The only
scale.
last year.
polis.
things missing were candlelight cludes Bernice Thornton of Lon­
The speaker also added that
don, England, and Erna Pilupe,
The Nisei soprano who lived in
and wine.
Miss Kanazawa will take over
Canada should adopt a Bill of
Willie’s was a terribly roman­ born in Russia and late of the Rights that would assist greatly the role which has been sung at Los Angeles before World War
tic nature. He was absolutely Latvian National Ballet. Halifax toward promoting racial and re­ the Metropolitan by Licia Alba­ II is the first singer to take the
role of “Madame Butterfly” in
nese and Dorothy Kirsten.
starved for love. Many were the Ballet has as its featured dancers ligious tolerance.
n’ghts he had spent at the Ii the renowned Jury and Irene GotIt is reported Miss Kanazawa’s a television production of the
New
Denver
San
Closes
’novies, watching all the love i shalka, also from the Latvian Co.
success in the Minneapolis per­ opera, appearing with the NBC
Eva Von Genesy of the Win­ After Nine Years
scenes twice over. And now, now,
formance may determine whether Opera Theatre in 1950. She also
NEW DENVER, B.C. — The she will receive a contract with appeared recently on TV and
he had The Girl, and an interest- nipeg Ballet comes from Buda­
New
Denver Tuberculosis Sana­ the company next year.
radio in the Metropolitan Opera
!^ noosphere to go along with pest, Arnold Spohr from Rhein,
Auditions over the ABC network.
111 He knew with a kind of de- Germany and Jean Stoneham | torium which opened on March
She is the first singer of Ja­
of 1943 and housed 250 Japanese
aPerateness, that he had to make i from Edinburgh.
panese ancestry to appear with
BICYCLE THIEF
11 this time; he was over the hill
Said Joseph A. Whitmore, pre­ Canadian patients, finally closed
the
Metropolitan
Opera.
its
doors
on
April
29.
NAGOYA, Japan — A bicycle
and girls were rather tough to sident of the Can. Ballet Fes­
There
were
sixteen
patients
During
1951
she
sang
the
role
thief
of note is Jiro Saito who
tival
Association,
recently,

Tn
the
get when a man neared middle­
who
remained
in
the
Sanatorium
of
Cho-Cho-San
with
the
Pacific
age.
has stolen 98 bicycles in the past
last five years Canadians have
Opera
Company
of
San
Francisco
until
its
closing.
Half
of
the
pa
­
twelve months. Recently released
These thoughts ran through his suddenly stopped apologizing for
tients
were
released
and
the
re
­
in
appearances
in
Seattle,
Port
­
from
prison, the 35-year-old Ja­
ead as Sarah continued, “It’s being alive, both in the field of
mainder
sent
to
Vancouver
for
land
and
the
San
Francisco
area
panese was back at his trade
ard to conceive, that you took international relations and in cul­
and
appeared
with
the
Stockholm
further
treatment.
again
on the same day.
tural activity.”
(Coni'd on Page 8)

Festival which starts May 5-10
at the Royal Alexandra in To­
ronto when thirteen ballet com­
panies from across Canada will
perform in 22 different produc­
tions. Dancers include many who
have come to the Dominion from
points as widely separated as
Nottingham and Java.

First of Japanese Origin
To Sing With Metropolitan

Page 2

F ’

PAGE 2

THE NEW CANADIAN

THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Japanese-English Organ.
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
as a medium of expression and news outlet

KEN .WACHlT<,f JaP”eSe

Wednesday, April 30, 1952

The Streaming- Tears
Namida wo poro-poro nagashita
. A man was shedding real tears
—tears that glistened in broad daylight. And she wondered why

“ ^^

By HISAYE YAMAMOTO

holding his threatening stance
“What did he look like, papa?-’
I
for
a
few
moments
and
then
Papa said there were tears
'Oh, he wasn’t very young, or
streaming down the man’s face. walking away, probably let down very tall. He was getting "sort
Well, how else would you trans­ at encountering neither resistance of fat and he was beginning to
Post Office Dept.. Ottawa
late: "namida wo poro-poro na- nor co-operation.
lose his hair. And he was wearThen there was the time papa iing casual clothes like everybody
A WAR FINALLY ENDS
gashite . . .?” There's no getSonF™ the
P^e Treaty which was signed in ing around it.
This man was got off the P car here at First else — no uniform, no hat.”
. X
d
.r1' !indly CQme “‘° e,,ed °” APril 28, shedding real tears, and he and Cummings, to be stopped by
“And he was weeping, really
H formally endea the state of war between Japan and Can- wasn’t intoxicated or anything, an obviously inebriated Mexican weeping ?”
as far as papa could see. I asked gentleman who made fists and
“He was really weeping. He
about the intoxication because it wanted to have it out with papa kept saying
he had killed a great
the X th®any°ter Single racial group in Canada were
seemed to me at the time that then and there because so many many people. And he also said
Xsh aZ b Z
°f
Canadians altered
intoxication would have made a Mexican boys had died in the war. he was being sent to Korea next.”
yd by the war clouds that suddenly broke ou* in difference in the meaning of the Pupa got out of that one by in­
“And what did you say to him,
ury at Pearl Harbour in 1M1. The immediJe re It
man’s tears.
But thinking it forming the man that he himself
papa?” I asked, although I knew
ned by mass hysteria, yellow journalism, and
•se'uZ over now, I don’t see that it had lost a son in the war, and the answer.
makes much difference whether by reminding him that Japanese
diXXV™”"0" ” 1942 °'
Cana- the man was cold sober or dead and Mexicans had been friends
“Nothing. It’s best not to say
H
h°meS °" the West Coast, and the sub- drunk. If a man cries, it must for a good many years. This was much to people like that.”
be something pretty serious; if all news to the gentleman evid­
sLre “at‘°n °f th® maiori‘y t° points eastward
The story fascinated me. Es­
he s drunk and cries, it must be ently, because he asked xvondersomething pretty serious again. ingly, “Yeah?”, and had to be pecially those tears fascinated
precedent in
T
rSme raC1St attitude without Because men just don’t
go i eassured before h e nodded me. I examined those tears from
P
m,Canad;an history, proved to be a boon when
around weeping like that, not in thoughtfully and continued on his every angle I could think of. Per­
haps, I thought, he was weeping
—th
I m e™S ° the economic and the social The result broad daylight, not on a public dazed way.
for
reasons other than the blood
widened
thr°^hout the country-has street — do they ?
And a few weeks ago, on
he felt on his hands. Perhaps
aX
econoomm security and has resulted in the
Now, as nearly I can recon­ papa’s latest visit here, he was
struct the incident, this is what | in a Japanese ten-cent store on he had lost all his money at the
Wb aOTP
“ °'
Canadians socially
gaming tables. Or he had fam­
happened: papa was walking East First, when a huge Negro
ily
troubles. Or he was lonely. Or
down this street in Las Vegas, man came up to him and asked
he politely thought papa, being
Nevada (xvhich is xvhere he bluntly and loudly, ‘‘How come
Japanese,
would appreciate a few
edlhem itt !'’“ industrV and ability and have trans™
xvorks and xvhere there are verv you so short?” Papa did not antears over Hiroshima. Or he
iX
th r
iObS- better
And sureX
few resident Japanese), when [' swer. “How come you so short?”
the gentleman insisted. A -white wanted recognition for his unique

H ens On X
™ - this man stopped him and began
lady employed at the store, em­ position and had been draniatizZ rf 7
r hand' ‘here OTe the d^
can talking- to him. Nothing unusua
ing it before someone who ought
in that, at least for papa. He’s barrassed for papa, ushered the
m™
j be, “^ completely from the bitter cup of
to be more impressed than most.
a small, inobstrusive man, but curious giant out, admonishing
the evacuation but the scars may
Then there was the possibility
he’s always getting stopped by him heatedly, “1 ou shouldn’t go
slowly fade with time.
that
he was not a pilot at all.
There is still much to be done
sti angers. For instance, once around asking questions like
centanro

---- ln “^‘erirg complete acOr . . . Oh, but he must have
eptance and wrier mtegration but the Japanese Cana
when he’d just come back to Los that!”
been drunk!
“Was he drunk, papa ? we ask­
tans now stand on firmer ground and this also should only Angeles after the war, he was
Then I remembered reading
backed up against the Taul ed later, when he told us about it. I
end
7
Of
Thusly, the news of the Wal
“No, he wasn't drunk ”
I ^omewhere about someone like
building by a belligerent, redZ whXT V1 be viewed wilh mised emotions h^e. haiied gentleman who proceeded
“And
hlm‘ OnIy this particular fellow
y
°
U
PaPa?

had
been the one ^^o P^hed the
nefited from L
X Canadians haTO ironically be- to open his pocketknife and point
Nothing.
It

s
best
not
to
say
button
which released the bomb,
W
eVaCUa"On' the hcwvest which Ja- it suggestively at papa’s abdomen much to people like that.”
Over either Hiroshima or NagaZtZ
r ^
hOTe rMped from th® ^ds of war- while he queried, “Are you Jap
To get back to Las Vegas, this* sakL I forget which. And this
or Chinese? If you’re Chinese,
fruitful. ThesVZole o™Z
°g°’ iS nOi as
stranger
there turned out to have fellow bad been in the papers, in
that’s all right, but of you’re a
Jap . .
Respect fX
And the knifepoint been one of the pilots on the B- a frugal, expendable squib nestl29 xvhich carried the atom bomb | ed way back there among the
almos t touched papa’s abdomen.
to
the skies over Hiroshima. Or lesser advertisements, because he
the Pea” T fd na“°n
mUS‘ aWe by the fof
"Was he drunk?” we asked so he told papa.
had entered a monastery (in Can­
X w T treaty Wh'Ch
''-agpapa, when he recounted the ad“I’ve killed a great many peo­ ada), I think it was (Toronto per­
h“o H bt r paneled in history", an attitude \entuie to the family at the sup­
ple,” he added. “But I couldn’t haps)), explaining that he was
thinking
be tenWed W“h
sob- »d realistic per table.
help it; if I hadn’t killed them, doing so because he had “lost his
No, said papa, the man had they would have killed me.” Or peace of mind.”
been quite sober.
Outwardly, the laMnpw
perhaps he said, “It was either
If this man and papa’s man
the war
" Q1S a ^^^rent people since
me
or them.”
And what had papa said, we
were one and the same, the tears
And the man continued to "ere simple. They became tragic
wanted to know.
"Nothing-,” said papa . “I was speak in this vein, with tears I and beautiful, akin to the tears of
so scared I couldn’t ay any- streaming down his face. Namida Judas- But in this age of specithing. Besides, it’s best not to wo poro-poro nagashite, that’s aHsts, it was probable that a pilot
eve,
the way papa told it to us.
| mould concentrate on his piloting,
say much to people like that.”
Streets but by quiet' p "at tX” t"”9 A”
That was when I asked, “Was "hile a button-pusher would come
Amway, this Taul Building
he drunk, papa?”
ably struck the trim
1 h^s probalong just for the button-pushing-.
episode ended with the man
r
wasn

t
drunk.
heavy chastisement
(Con’t on P. 8)

---------------------- --- Editor
Japanese Section Editor
---- Advertising
479 Queen St. W. __ EMpire 6-5005
Toronto, Ont.
Authorized as second class mail.

Takaichi umezuki
ken .mori________

Xeffec,ed in

means levied bv tire
gnawing problem of

m
overpoot:

cent of Japan’s terri

te Pacific ht

> her ISt

Furthe.

mt err


e

ci
‘he 1

^liii uaes. Hov
dictable and n

e

the

ACROSS MY MIND

s

Crazing skyward the other day, I watched with
uw idi delight the sleek F-S6 jet plane swish by
living behind black smoke trails. Then it climb­
ed up and*up, streaming behind snow white vapour
trails and then suddenly it went into rolls.
Oh. it was an awe-inspiring sight!
It brought to my mind Sabre jets tangling
oxer Korea with the Russian MIG-15 s which are
considered superior to our own F-S6’s. But thanks
to our highly-skilled pilots the outcome of air
battles is on our side. It is reported that Sabres
never go into battle with their wing tanks on and
?me tHe P1Iot fHps a switch to ditch them.
g earthwards.
yO bensuixe to roils is the Sabre jet that the
pilot had only to move the stick Ho
inches which
fh sUu-xicieni lo roll the plane richt over. Otherwise the pilot uses the little trim tab on the ton
ox the stick to trim the plane.

a

By Jack Nakamoto

wring World War II a British scientist by the
°^ Pran^ Whittle introduced jet propulsion
o. aircraft. Jet propulsion is a method of produc­
ing a propelling force on an aircraft through the
eaciion of a high-velocity jet of heated gases,
JC?
t°v. aid the rear. The simple principle
o jet propulsion can be seen when a balloon is
.°''n.Up ^md then suddenly released of air. The
aii~ singlet out produces reaction or a propelling
oice bx xxhich the balloon is thrust awax- from
its opening.
Axved at the terrific speed of a Sabre jet, I
vas awed also by the fast flight of time. It seems
•^LeidaJ vhen I was at the Vancoux-er
a er iont marvelling at ships churning in the
lar X °r Ioading ^^o at the docks. Today I
mar^eling with the same boyish heart,
in nexx circumstances at a new machine of
tne nexv age.

Page 3

Wednesday, April 30, 1952
THE NEW CANADIAN
PAGE 3

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(116 Elizabeth St.)

TORONTO
Manager

L. J. WALKER,

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page 4

THE NEW CANADIAN

Wednesday, April 30, 1952

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CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY
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or your travel agent

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Page 5

Wednesday, April 30, 1952

Page 6

PAGE 6

THE NEW CANADIAN

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Page 7

Wednesday, April 30, 1952

THE NEW CANADIAN
PAGE 7

^' r >^.?
= ot* - queen st w
r Pick-up and Defivo

Phorte

WA. 6953
tacror of traffic, or officially tournev manager rt^ JT 4'“ ^ Ma!’ becaiBf ** i4d ’ «
Johnny Mtura and singles director Rot Shin ^'^Y? I bo"1season in th. To I 7 Ono
24 Delhi Ave. Pho
, juggled up an admirMajors to ring
M ilson Heights
-UU900 for tl
Ont.
He put togeth- 1 romoto
A
u
t
o
m
obi
1
e
,
Fi
re
^°S^ °f
he3Vy f™g °CCUrred in the Ladies
er ce, 32, and 259 for a tora’ 1
u f
oi 930 which was good for sec- ! S. Takeuchi
even, was brought right up to the finals sta-e
ond highest triple, only urpassed!
Top-seeded Kay Ogaki rode in­
Bowling 1:
by
Muis Baba with 97 0. The third
to the finals in an impressive Jrs. Nick Kaji and veteran Matt
JOHNNY NAKASHIMA (
Oil Burners, Koofin
* *
nnura who shows > ‘vague cnampionship no matter i
style with the only tough com­ Matsui were the villains who upat 910.
Hock Wt)o| Insula
petition provided by Mary Ebata . set the seeding of the draw coinJ now what second-place Moonlight I *
With
Maw
1
Mori hitting 792 does. I he latter also won 7-0
H
11 rnaees.
who took one game while Toki I Iuittee. Young Kaji play in t an
Alton Avo„
Tojonto.
I
(329)
and
Mas
1 Isoshima failing
Yonemitsu went down 11-3, H-6 inspired game, took out second
to
PHONE
ha. 5550
ter, rhe individual
in the semis.
Takeda Insu ance. in third place.
seeded Mas Toyota .of Kitchener
i
was furth or tightened up as for ■
A
'
lo-ll,
17-14,
and
in
an
equally
5-2 and are practicKatie Yoshida of London who
all intent and purpose th two i ally
assurea.
stunning
upset,
Matsui
cut
down
only the night before had been
are deadlocked at around
Meanwhile, anything can hap­
J
crowned with her partner as the third-seeded Roy Shin who was M ith two weeks remaining
the
pen further down the line Yiladies doubles champ of London, touted as a leading contender for
race will be closely watched'
i mada who could pick up oi
Ont., just failed to make her sec­ | the singles crown.
Other individually good tallie ! pts. from El Mocambo has
ond successive finals in two days I Laji, tne giant-killer, started
1.07
COMPANY OF CANADA
were:
Joe
Izumi
856
(310),
Bin
pts.
Lowe
Bros,
who
wt
by an eye-lash. Katie met a tar­ ! off innocuously b y subduing
Box 149 Kamloops, B. C.
ed by Spadina 701. is 5th
tar in young Mary Shintani in Geoige Takaoka in three hard
104, Samtny’s 6th with
the second round but her vast fought games, 7-15, 15-6, 15-7, Final Week Decides
Uhl
El
Mocambo
7th
with
Last
Playoff
Spots
10.1
expel ience in tournament play *md fiom chat point on was never
Lucien C. Kurata
HAMILTON — Four of the six Breeze who scored 5-2 ov<
stood her in good stead as she headed as he made the semi-finbarrister and Solicitor
came through in a 3-game match ah He will tangle with Matsui playoff spots have been clinched mily Co-op to make it 9
1 Adelaide St. E.. Toronto
and Spadina 94.
m the Hamilton Nisei Bowling Busseis r
Her opponent in the semis, third ^or the finals berth.
League as just one more week can't be counted out.
seeded Toshi Takasaki, had to
Johnny Miura had a great
Office EM-4 5259 Res. LY.3427
put on a rally after losing the chance to down Matsui in the L remains in the schedule. Solly's
need
only
one
point
to
clinch
a
first game to Shirley Shimizu first round when he had
Tokyo Giants to Spring
spot
while
next
week
should
11-1, to win out 11-2, 11-0.
most insurmountable lead of 10Train in Calif. in '53,
The Yoshida-Takasaki match 0 but rapidly cooled off to lose make or break the other five con­
tending teams.
HONOLULU — Tokyo Yomiuri
was a treat supreme for shuttle at 17-14 and 15-5. The Shin-Mat­
Last week’s results: Lucy’s 3 Giants, champions of the Japa­
game gourmets. ■ Katie showed sui match was one of the best of
Yaguchi
’s 1; Pin-Cushions 3, Ta-| nese professional baseball, will
her stuff by taking the first the night with Shin exhibiting
game at 11-6 but equally deter­ superb form in the first game to maka’s 1; Sonoda’s 4, Kumagai’s! tiain for the 1953 season at Santa
JEHSXO^^
Maria, Calif., and play exhibition
mined Toshi pounded away in the win 15-2. Matsui suddenly came 9; Jack Kondo's 2, Ti
da’s 2, Tad Kondo’s
234-a YONGE STREET, TORONTO, ONT.
Solly’s 4. games against Pacific Coast Lea­
second to neutralize the match to life in the second and traded
Kosugi’s 0.
gue
clubs
during
the
training
pe11-8. In the crucial third game,! shot for shot when it had looked
Ken Hashimoto topped the riod.
Katie s previous exertions began I ^^e curtains for the veteran and
This will be tin
1
to tell as fresher Toshi put on a | von out 15-13. Vastly heartened scores with 758-294. closely fol-!
lowed by Tats Tanaka 743. Zen I baseball team to
YONEMITSU
A meric
spurt to emerge the winner, 11-8, by the turn for the better, Mat­
Tanaka 732, Herby Izumi
since the end of World War II. o Watch Repair Shop |
after some of the most brilliant sui put on a much better defense
Keii Abe 716, Kaye Inouye 715- I Prior to Pearl Harbour, the To- I
rallies of the tourney.
328 BROADVIEW AVE. j
against Shin’s smashing* shots to
kyo Giants made exhibition trips
325, Jim Kinoshita
In Men’s Singles play, JCCA take the deciding game at 15-10. George Mitsui rolled
Toront o.
330 sin- to the U.S. and Canada.
3652
Defending singles
c h a m p gle.
^iiiniiiHiiiHiniiiiHnftiniiiiifiiiir-f
Giants at the present time have
Frank Matsui will battle out the
Playoff
start
.May
:
two
Niseis in their line-up. Wally
10. In the
f
ACCEPT NEW
i other finals berth with fast and
of a tie for seventh place, tonamine is their centre-fielder
Residence:
EM 4-0508
= DANCE STUDENTS = tricky Tad Miura. The “B” Ladies event
the teams will play a sudden- and this year they signed Jun Hi­
2 Vesta Driv*
MAfair 1365,
5© For Fridays, 7 p.m.
= Singles have also reached the death game immediately after the rota of Hawaii and he has been
finals
stage
with Terry Fujioka
z © Couples Accepted
E
ls.st scheduled game.
—“Doc.” I doing bulk of their catching.
Andrew E. McKague,
and Mary Ebata meeting for the
H either Thurs., Fri., 7 p.m.E title.
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary
Public.
~ ® Private, couples, small
=(
In other events, a few matches
201 Northern Ontario Bids.
=
groups, Mon. to Fri., 6 p.m.E
330 Bay St.
were run off, George Takaoka(Corner
=
.Archie Miyashita
= Ike Matsuo advanced into the
dn & Bay Sts.)
______ HELP WANTED
TORONTO
__
FEMALE
HELP
W
AN
TEI)
men

s
doubles
third
round
by
E GORDON burke STUDIOf
ROUGH SPOTTER, experienc­
FOUR STORE girls wanteO~for
; 880 Queen West (rear) ~ downing Nobby Tonogai-Ken Su- es, apply 673 College St., To­ dry-cleaning,
good wages, allronto. ’
mimi innninniiinnn । ini inii: nnr? gamori.
year around work. Phone HA.
TRUCK DRIV ER for gardener 6550, Toronto.
phone RA. 2926. Toronto.
G1RL for dry-cleaning store, I
1OU1H, to work in shipping experience not necessary. Phone
department of millinery mfg. Co. LQ- 6141. Toronto.
Agent
Apply American Hat Co.. 71 York
GIRLS, for sewing machine,
St., Toronto.
MONARCH LIFE
good wages to start. Apply Acme i
BOFFMAN presser, experienc­ Hat Co., 209 McCaul St., Toronto i
ASSURANCE CO.
ed; mghest wages. Apply Dandee
COUNTER GIRL, for dry- i
e LIFE
Cleaners, 559 Dundas St. West cleaning store, experienced pre- I 66 King St. E., — Tel. 2-2594
Toronto.
ferred but not necessary. Phone !
Hamilton
T
OL.
2652,
between
8
a.m.
to
9
DELIVERS BOY with triving
AUTOMOBILE
Residence:
licence. Phone LT. 8971. Toronto p.m., Toronto.
•59
Oxford St., — Tel. 7-1960
EXPERIENCED male or fe­
PART-TIME store girls want­
CC?
male, for hand and spray painter ed. Call HA. 6559, Toronto.
® FLOATER
‘ for plaster products. Phone HO
I 1449, Toronto.
TRUCK-DRIVER for dry-cleanHEALTH
ing plant. HA. 6550, Toronto.

0

OTHER TYPES

Office: 21 Dundas Square
Residence: 526 Mannino- Ave.
Phone: ME. 5072

TORONTO

______ for rent
I
L^T ROOMS, unfurnished.
’ phone after 6 p.m. GE. 2425. To-'
I ronto.
TWO ROOMS and sun room,
i v.ich sink, suitable for couple
: phone LO. 2186, after 6 p.m.
j (Toronto).
i
^l'^ -ROOMS, with sink, part!
*u;?nsne<L private entrance
! ;LF, Park district. Phone KE. i
t 7776, Toronto.
' I

HR

TOP QUALITY
PAINT, VARNISH, ENAMELS

537 Queen St W. (Corner Augusta)
Phone WA. 5375 — Toronto, Ont.

Page 8

PAGE 8

THE NEW CANADIAN

Wednesday, April 30, 1952

CLUB AMI PLANS
TRIP TO NIAGARA

“STREAMING TEARS’

SOCIAL CALENDAR

(Cont’d from Page 2)
Springtime is blossom time
’^J^J^AY>,^,^
So I was left where I had be­
and to take advantage of it, Club
Ami is planning a bus trip to gun, with the streaming tears.
3—Toronto. Nisei Open Badmin­
—------------------- , By CINDERELLA
Niagara Falls on Sunday, May I still think about them every
ton Tournament Presentation
day, wondering. Sometimes I
18.
“NIHON NO KATSUDO SHASHIN"
Dance at Metropolitan gym.
The bus will go along No. 8 see them in a sort of close-up
8-12 p.m.
-xi-KM0St NfeiS’ at S°me time or another> have been subjected to
Highway, passing through such face, glistening and reflecting the 3—Montreal. Quebec Japanese
Nihon no Katsudo Shashin.” Before the talkies invaded Japanese
points as St. Catharines, Grims­ glister of a Las Vegas street as
Golf Club Social Nite, at St.
movie making, no Hollywood film could quite match those films
by, Stoney Creek, Vineland, and they go rolling down those ano­
Raphael House, 8:30 p.m.
shown in the average Japanese community. For sheer sentimentality,
Beamsville. It will stop at nymous plumpish cheeks.
3

Toronto.
Metropolitan Nisei
or shameless playing with human emotions, for intentionally wringRecently, I happened to see in
Queeston Heights, the location of
Mission Circle Annual Cherry
mg the heart dry of tears, there was no equal to the Japanese silent
the papers where they had in­
the
famous
Brock
Monument.
Tea, at Metropolitan Church
flicker.
The bus will leave 134 Huron vented a special pilotless plane
House, 2:30-5 p.m.
for dropping atom bombs. Now
at
9
a.m.
and
return
for
Toronto
a very young child I recall vividly being bundled off to a
10—Toronto. Western Baseball
“Nihon no Katsudo Shashin” — an event which occurred several at 8:30 p.m.
This will leave I think this is just wonderful: it
Club benefit dance. St Mich­
times a year, and a gala day for the Japanese community, hungry plenty of time to be spent at Nia­ will do away with the necessity
ael
Hall, Bond and Shuter.
for streaming tears and Cana­
for the sights and sounds of a beloved country which for them was gara Falls, in enjoying lunch at
17—Hamilton. Hamilton Nisei
the beautiful park, or in crossing dian monasteries and such. Un­
an oasis in a desert of foreign and strange customs.
Bowling League Annual
less, that is, the people assigned
No American-made or English-made film can wring those tears the border to Buffalo or Niagara
Wind-up
Dance, at Century
to sending these planes on their
Falls,
N.Y.
as could the Japanese movies. And wring them they did! Japanese
Room, Bud Fisher’s Hotel
Tickets for this trip must be missions start moping.
films were strong on situations which touch every conceivable emo­
9-12.
Well, papa, no doubt, will meet
bought
before
May
11.
They
can
tion. Emotional intensity was heightened by power of suggestion
23—Toronto.
Toronto
JCCA
be obtained by calling Nancy Mo­ up with one of those.
lather than by direct statement. And there was the projectionist _
Spring Fiesta, at UNF Hall.
—From Rafu Shimpo.
always with a double role to play — that of projecting the film and ri LL. 0077; Don Tsuji ME. 5486;
of enacting all the characters as well. And the success of the film or Aki Ikebata HA. 1787. The
Hamilton Keg Loop
PASSING THRU
depended, to a great extent, on his vocal gymnastics. And what a prices are 32.50 for members who
Sets Wind-up Dance
range he had ... if he was good! He would bellow in round terms to have paid their fees before May
(Confd from Page 1)
HAMILTON — The Hamilton
defend the hero’s manhood, simper coyly and toothily as the heroine, 4, and $3.00 for non-members.
Nisej Bowling League is present­
away romance. . .”
chirp with birdlike clarity as a child of six or eight, tremble with Tor. Baseball Meeting
The silence had been horribly ing its Annual Wind-up Dance,
omniscience as prophetic seer, throb, murmur or tremolo in moments, • The Toronto Nisei Sunday
drawn out, he remembered. Wil­ on Sat., May 17, with music pro­
of passion as lover, father, villain.
Baseball League is holding a
dded by Floyd Roberts’ Orches­
And if one were the least bit sensitive to suggestions thrown meeting on Thursday, May 1, at lie kept trying to think up some
bright, witty remark that would tra, at the Century Room of Bud
upon the screen, to sounds hammering at one’s ears, to sounds of 8 p.m., at 296 Pape Ave. All last
set the tone of the evening. Neith­ Fisher’s Hotel.
women weeping openly in the audience, in time the “Nihon no Kat­ year’s managers and new pros­
All non-bowlers and out-ofer of them were much at conver­
sudo Shashin” became an event for a really good cry.
pective entries or representatives sation. They had soon exhausted towners are invited to attend the
Films quivered with emotions. Plots, counter-plots, situations __ are requested to be present.
the commonplaces, the weather, dance which continues from 9 to
all plucking the heartstrings — were piled on top of one another
and he .stared gloomily at the 12 p.m. Tickets can. be obtained
with no let up.
Tor. AYPA Slates
floor, while she studied the knit­ from any of the bowlers. Admis­
Drama
Nite,
Supper
Ihere were numerous favourite themes — all very tragic __ but
ting that had leaped suddenly in­ sion is 75 cents for men and 50
The
next
Toronto
AYPA
meetthe prized ones were those which centred around the hackneyed “A
-M.H,
to her hands. The atmosphere cents for ladies.
big
will
be
held
this
Friday,
May
little child shall lead them” angle. There was always “Bo-ya” whose
was pretty dull now. Willie thum­
f/nthei\a drunkard’ leaves his wife and family in very dire straits. 2, from 8 p.m. sharp, with a bed through a magazine that
drama nite being planned which
was lying on the chesterfield and
Bo-ya ’ becomes the master of the house at the age of eight, pre­
Baggage And Parcel
cociously tells his mother not to worry, and proceeds to send him­ should be hilarious and entertain­ looked at the cover.
ing. All members are requested to
Then a thought struck him.
self, his three brothers and sister through school. And in comes the
REX MATSUYAMA
turn out and are urged to bring “Would you care”, Willie mum­
power of suggestion — scenes are shown with “Bo-ya” chasing after that shy friend along.
PHONE LL. 4575
bled, like a drowning man clutchthe rice peddlar’s wagon, scraping up a few grains of rice for his
Sat., May 3, is the date on
52 Hickson St. — Toronto
sick mother; “Bo-ya” being told to beat it by mean and wealthy which the Issei have invited the ing at straws, “to go to the
movies ? There’s a new Tony
schoolboys; “Bo-ya” watching another boy flying a kite, his eyes
Nisei to a supper party starting Curtis show playing
downtown.”
full of longing — and the tears being to flow!
from 6 p.m. All members should
She smiled brilliantly. Desire,
And, as if that weren’t enough, Lid pa comes home. And then,
make a big effort to show up Ecstacy danced in her eyes. He
I Ladies & Gents
g
there is the heart-rending moment when the old man, completely
■with hearty appetites and social knew that somehow he had reach­
Tailored Suits & Coats f
changed, asks for forgiveness. True to life? Questionable, I would spirit.
__ p e
ed into her inner soul.
MICHI ASHIKAWA |
say, but then, everyone has a wonderful time weeping.

emme

cere

■>

237 Seaton St. — Toronto |

Then, there were the themes on love, tender and passionate
Telephone RA. 2618
|
versus duty, stem and demanding. Many a movie did I sit through
where the heroine, torn between personal happiness and a greater
duty, threw herself after a long-drawn out sequence, into a river. She
Ty Cobb’s article in Life Ma­
never died, however, without coming up once above the ebbing tide, to
Negroes to play. And that’s a
TILE WORK
gazine
recently that baseball
give.a farewell speech expressing the hope that “Kamisama” would
great improvement, especially
Walls and Floors
oigive her. And of course, the man in question does several minutes ain t what it used to be stirred when we compare their type of
Of Every Description
o soliloquy, full of self-less self-condemnation, and then walks up quite a commotion in diamond playing alongside Cobb and
his
EDWARD SORA
through a quiet sunset, a Sa,Mfr and a wiser man, to his patient circles, He claims that the pla
ers of today couldn’t stack up rough-house tactics which he em-7
(RA. 0305)
wife and children.
ployed.
GEORGE SATO
?f7
","c,1 "as
favourite during the impros- against those of his time.
And we also note that in his
(JU. 4434)
P”
' teens. I wept buckets. Title of film, actress, director have
We can't argue with such an article, when he took stock of to­
TORONTO, ONTARIO
memory, but the film did leave i ne with a lasting authority as the Georgia Peach. day s better players, he made no
impression that love, and patience will cure tuberculosis. A beautifu1 Moreover, we weren’t around oi little mention of Robinson,
nurse falls in love with a T.B. patient with only a few months to when the Wagners, the Lajoies, Campanella, Irvin etc. who are
live. He does the only honorabl thing — and reacts her. She con- and the Speakers were in their good enough to make all-star
vinces him that it does not matt r
teams, win Most Valuable Play­
that they w-P have two wonder- hey-days.
fill months to live By sheer devotion on the nurses’s part, he b
But Cobb forgot to mention one er award and capture various tit­
cured, and all look
j
y. Put the nurse suddenly is stricken . . and thing which can be said in favor les.
dies — not in his arms' —but as near to that as a Japanese film
Chop Suey House
Could it be that his argument
of the game as it’s played proof the time would allow.
92-A Elizabeth St, Toronto i
tessionally today. When he used that old players were better won’t
banquets and family
Love took other forms
to cavort in the outfield for the hold v ater, if he were t-o bring in
and sometimes the plot was
the
Negro
players
for
compariDINNERS
Detroit Tigers, they didn’t allow
strained —but it did brin ? about much weeping
1 son ?
A quite modern one
Hours: 12 Noon to 4 &jn.
I remember was a film <
Meets Girl” — they fall in ]Ovo.
Reservations: EM4-9035
And the love scenes wer
Md
by the wind wimmwinv through ^z zx s:“ xme that a race
fields of wheat, a moon 1
through clouds. The audience was a “Nihon „0 Katsudo ShaZ^f
7 so unrestrainedly at
lense, moved — and then come the terrible
they
me
f k
'
deed’ Jt L°ok quite some time for
were blood brother and sister. separated in. babyhood by

The Limit is 200

i

c

e<
A

£ Open 12 noon to 2 a.m.

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unshed tears
life and forg
There is

snds on the railroad platform, eyes
the train moves on. carrying the b
s. That really brought on the ween

reserved and unaemor

families I knew, this was tr
by a rigid code were there, bu

And in mo

’ certainly, demonstrativeness w

i

conclusions

- t^VZ:^

The Japanese -re
able of exprZingTt. And r
ducers. sir o’d foxes knew
naturally pent-X^
tions” in entertainment form.

h Japanese race is a fallacy,
“ “’’’ °ther race and
as capPre”5 sure that: Japanese movie pro—
'’ ' “

3

pursln^ of en“-

Hoe Sai Gay

01

famous Chinese foods
X

69 Albert St. —Toronto
(at Elizabeth)
Telephone WA. 9817
Special attention given
to take out orders.

o