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The New Canadian — May 19, 1956

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Page 1

THE NEW CANADIAN
^Anlndependent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin

VOL. 19 — NO. 39

BELIEVES NEGROES
WINNING STRUGGLE
FOR EQUAL RIGHTS

SATURDAY, MAY 19. 1956__ __________________________

ON THE NEWSFRONT

TORONTO, ONT.

Family Assistance Offered
Newcomers by Government

OTTAWA.—The department of | child of an immigrant or of a
citizenship and immigration is I Canadian citizen returning to
A^^L FRANCISCO.—Iva Toguri d’Aquino, better known as now accepting applications for j live in Canada permanently,until
i 1 v °r °S?’ arrived nere last week from Chicago to fight efforts family assistance from eligible ! such child has reached 16 years
Ed’s Note: This is the con­
£ r“e -“Probation and Naturalization Service to deporLher. Much immigrants and returning Cana­ I of age or has lived in Canada foi­
cluding passage,of an address
l'd months. After 12 months, they
v test has been aroused in the case because of the legal tech­ dian citizens.
on “How to Be Sane Though
Subject
to
the
approval
of
Par
­
are
eligible for family allowances.
nicalities
involved:
to
wit,
Can
the
U.S.
government
deport
a
nativeNegro,” given at San Francisco
liament,
an
amount
of
five
dol
­
These
family assistance pay­
born
citizen.
It
may
take
three
or
four
years
to
exhaust
legal
means
State College April 24 by Van­
lars
per
month,
beginning
April
ments
are
intended to help
in
her
fight,
said
her
attorney,
Wayne
M.
Collins.
couver-born Dr. S. I. Hayaka­
1, will be paid on behalf of each
newcomers become established
wa, authority in language arts.
in Canada and to keep families
“Quiz Kids” Looking for Nisei Panelist
The extensional person is rela­
united.
returnees with
The CBS television show Quiz Kids is looking
tively courageous, then, not be­ , .
children under 16 will be able
01
.
j
1
1
^.
<an<l
interesting
children
as
possible
panelists,
and
is
es
­
cause he has more bravado, but
to take advantage, of this new
because he knows that the things pecially interested in finding a Japanese American child between
plan during the first year of
he has been afraid of have chang­ the ages of seven and 13. Interested persons should write Miss
residence,
in which time they
ed, that he himself'has changed, Daphne Elliot, c/o Quiz Kids, 575 Madison Ave., New York 22.
are not eligible for family also that the future is always in
lowances.
U.S. Buddhists Offer Scholarship for Ministry
some respects, for better or
To receive family assistance,
PALO ALTO, Calif.—If he can mothers
. S-'P'J FRANCISCO.—A $1400 scholarship for the first vear of
worse, different from the past.
are. requested to make
Therefore past fears inevitably study in Japan will be given to any aspirant for the Buddhist minis- enlist the help of enough youth- application at the immig-ration
have less meaning for the exten­ hy>. it was announced by the Buddhist Churches of America. In'. ful volunteers, a Stanford Uni­ office nearest to their home or by
sional person than curiosity about addition, a $900 annual scholarship will be given to the same aspi­ versity scientist hopes to deter­ writing to the director of immi­
the future. Adjusted to change rant for subsequent years of study until he has completed his work mine ' whether Nisei and Sansei gration, department of' citizen­
and difference, the extensional ■with full ordination. The purpose is to secure a greater number of children share the accelerated ship and immigration, Ottawa.
pei-son seems often to walk in English-speaking ministers who will be able to meet the ever-ex­ growth and development shown
Family assistance cheques will
by other American children.
where angels fear to tread, not panding interest of Buddhism among Nisei and Caucasians.
be
mailed to mothers directly
The investigator is Professor
because he is ~a' damn fool, but
from
Ottawa every three months.
William W. Greulich, head of the
MORE NISEI GRADUATES ...
because he has -been curious en­
For
convenience
each quarterly
Anatomy Dept, and a noted au­
ough to investigate what it was
Bachelor of Applied Science degrees will be awarded at Univer­ thority on child development. His cheque will be accompanied by an
the angels were afraid of—andhas sity of Toronto to the following' graduates:
'
research is sponsored by the U.S. application form to be submitted
discovered that whatever it was,
G. Kitagawa, civil engineering; I. D. Yonemitsu.mechanical en­ Public Health Service and in­ near the end of the following
it isn’t there any more. Without gineering; H. Watada, honors, R. T. Tanaka, J. M. Sunohara, chemic­ volves checking- the growth pat­ three-month period.
the habit of indexing and dating, al engineering; T. Onodera, applied geology.
tern of hundreds of young- Japa­
one would not have bothered to
Mihoko Shimizu, exchange student from Tokyo, has completed nese, from pre-schoolers to young
investigate; one would simply second year in the school of physical and health education.
adults, who live on the San Fran­
have taken the angel’s word for
LETHBRIDGE.—Lawrence Higa received the degree of bache­ cisco peninsula.
it. In other words, the person lor of -law in the 45th annual convocation of the University of Sas­
Dr. Greulich and his assistants
who indexes his judgments does katchewan at Saskatoon.
have already examined several

not conclude, because the SnoConstance Hoshida of Picture Butte is one of 46 receiving nurs­ hundred children, teen-agers, and
white Corporation of Minneapolis ing diplomas from St. Michael’s School of Nursing in Lethbridge.
a smaller number of adults of
MONTREAL.—Hamilton, Tor­
refused him a job, that the SnoJapanese ancestry. But many onto and Montreal delegates will
VANCOUVER. —Jim Nishiyama of Chilliwack was among suc­ more are needed from the Penin­
white Corporation of Kansas City
assemble at the Jewish hall today
will necessarily do the same. The cessful graduates of a barbering examination held last week by the sula area, he said, and volunteers to open the three-day eighth an­
person who dates his opinions Barbers’ Association of B.C.
are invited to contact him at the nual conference of the Eastern
has no airtight conclusions about
Anatomy Dept, at Stanford.
Canada Young Buddhists’ Lea­
the present state of affail’s in the
His measurements consist of gue.
restaurant where he was refused
standing and sitting- height,
Here is an outline of the con­
service in 1951. For the exten­
weight, and an X-ray of the hand ference program:
EDMONTON. — George Soga, Another $22,900 was recovered in and'wrist. From the X-ray film,
sional person the world is never
Saturday: 10 a.m. to noon, re­
• dull—it is vivid with potentiali­ 25, was sentenced to seven years a shack in Vancouver’s west end. the child’s entire skeletal develop­ gistration, executive board meetties. If he hears that such-and- in penitentiary last week in police
Soga is a former Canadian Na­ ment can be determined.
’P?; 1 p.m., opening service, Rev.
such a firm does not hire Ne­ court, in connection with theft of tional Express employee. Gagne
He later will examine similar Karl Tada; 2 p.m., general assem­
groes, he will reply, “But they $44,300 from a Canadian National was a messenger aboard the truck Japanese groups in other parts bly,
5:30, . Toronto - Montreal
haven’t seen me yet;” After Express truck here April 9. Soga from which the money vanished.
of California, or a total of 1500- Sangha meeting; 7 p.m. bowlingthey’ve seen him, he may still be and Edward Gagne, 21, pleaded
2000 to complete the three-year tournament; 9:30, board meeting;
without a job. But the mere fact guilty to the theft earlier.
project. The measurements of 9:30-12:30, get-acquainted Mazeof his applying may have started
Gagne was remanded to May
the Californians will then be com­ kuri.
MONTREAL. — A Graduates’ pared with the same age groups
within the firm a discussion of 16 for sentence after telling the
Sunday: 9 a.m., registration;
whether or not they should hire court that two detectives who Tea for high school and univer­ in Japan.
9:30, panel discussion; 1:30, spe­
Negroes—a discussion which in questioned him advised him to sity graduates, sponsored by the
So far, his results indicate that cial Gotanye service, Rev. T.
many firms has not even begun, plead guilty and obtain a lighter McGill Nisei Campus Club, will the American-born youths are Tsuji;. 4 p.m., Sunday School
because no Negro has ever ap­ sentence. Gagne asked for per­ be held Saturday, June 2, at the ahead of their Japan-born cousins teachers’ meeting; 6:30, banquet;
plied.
mission to change his plea to not Japanese Community Centre, 175 in growth and development.
9-12:30, conference ball.
Sherbrooke St., at 8 p.m.
Mrs. Greulich is one of his as­
guilty.
Monday: 9 a.m., general busi­
I speak as sanguinely as I do
Rev. Clifford Noels, a member sistants on the project.- Others ness assembly; 11 a.m., sight­
Permission was refused.
because I believe that in the
Police arrested Soga near Van­ of the McGill Students’ Council, are Dr. Catherine Grismon, and seeing trip, board meeting; 1 p.m.
long struggle for equality of
couver
April 20,1 recovering will be guest speaker. Everyone Yoshio Okumoto of the Anatomv to 3:30 p.m., luncheon and Sayorights and opportunities, Ne—F.T. Dept.
$22,000
of
the missing money. is urged to attend.
nara Social.
groes simply cannot lose. The
moral sense of the nation (ex­
BAN DEROGATORY SONG LYRICS
cept in a few pockets of resis­
tance), economic conditions,
technological necessities, his­
torical social forces both here
and abroad and, most impor­
tantly, the practical necessities
“When many of these songs NBC feels it might be offensive
Three television networks have the lyrics are derogatory to Ne­
of living together in our ex­
banned some songs and changed groes, explained Bob Wood, man­ were written, the words involved to Negroes.
tremely closely-knit and inter­ words in others in an all-out ef­ ager of NBC-TV continpity de­ no racial connotation,” explains
/‘Massa’s in the Cold, Cold
dependent economy will compel
fort to avoid offending members partment on the Pacific Coast. Jane Wamboldt, CBS head of the Ground’ is banned at
the end of enforced segrega­
of minority groups—including However, it is not banned on the. Coast music clearance. Rhythm W ords “daddy” and “mammy”
and blues records are carefully
tion, both official and unoffi­
persons of Japanese ancestry— other networks, Variety noted.
been changed to “grandpa”
cial.
’While NBC and CBS have screened and all those with any have
who might take offense at lines
and

Granny” in “Waiting for
certain words in other reference considered offensive to
Sylvia Porter reported in her in some tunes, the Daily Variety changed
the
Robert
E. Lee” and the
Stephen Foster melodies, ABC Negroes are banned.
column, in the Chronicle the other learned last week.
phrase

light
and
dark folk meet”
hasn’t. Martie Hubie, head of
ABC has eliminated the words In “Basin Street Blues” replaced
industries planning to . The show world publication re­ ABC’s music clearance departguild new plants in Alabama and ported continuity and music s ment on the West Coast, explain- ‘darkies” and ‘niggers”, taking by “where friendly folk meet” at
out of “Old Alan NBC. Same song’s “mammy’s
Georgia were now changing-their clearance departments at NBC- I ed “the things Foster wrote were ‘darkies
®lnQs. much to the consternation TV, CBS-TV and ABC-TV are j of an era which factually existed. River” as well as “chipk” out of arms” is now “someone’s arms”
nt *ocal chambers of commerce, constantly on the alert for tunes ; We have been clearing his songs “Chinatown, My ChinAtown”. At and. “darkies a-singing” is now
NBC, “Aly Old Kentucky Home” “bld folks a-singing.”
ecause of the racial situation. which they feel might cause such j without change.”
In “Sleepytime Down South”
X° ?UU can exPect any day now offense, including persons suffer­ । CBS has banned “Sam, You is okay after the word “darky”
is
changed. In “Swanee River”, the phrase “darkies crooning” be­
trom -within Southern busi­ ing from physical delects.
s Made the Pants Too Long”, feel­ the word “darkies” has been
comes “people crooning” and the
ness circles, there will be presWhile there is some difference ing it offensive and derogatory changed to “children.”
line “when old mammy falls upon
suje on the,; segregationists to lay in various network policies, to the Jewish race. Word “chink”
her
knees” becomes “sweet mag­
because racial antagonism is Variety said all agree it is essen­ was removed from “Chinatown, _ “Shortnin’ Bread”, explains
aping to cost too much money. If tial they maintain a vigilance lest My Chinatown” and an entire NBC, can be only done instrumen­ nolias bloom in the trees.”
- egroes continue, as they* are there be any adverse reaction paragraph referring to “Chinks, tally as the word “mammy” has
NBC extends its frown on such
L^ a°®a: io meet hatred with from the public.
Japs and Laps” was erased from | been expunged from the tune. matters beyond tunes as it has
1 ve, as is the policy of the busNBC-TV for years has banned “Let’s Do It” so as not to offend । The word is associated with Ne­ banned blackface routines or
gro servants down South and
(CONTINUED PAGE 2)
“Old Black Joe” on the grounds the minorities involved.

Iva d’Aquino to Fight Deportation in S. F.

California Scientist
Comparing Nisei, Sansei
With Growth in Japan

Here's Program
For Bussei Conference
in Montreal Today

Seven Years in Pen for $44,300 Theft Attempt

Honor Nisei Graduates

TV Networks to Avoid Offending Minority Groups

Page 2

THE
NEW
CANADIAN
EM. 6-5005 479 Queen St. W„ Toronto 2-B, Ont. Red-Headed dudof^t
F>lbl‘*h°d m Wednesday and Saturday of each week
as a medium, of expression and neius outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada •

By BILL HOSOKAWA in the Pacific Citizen

Saturday, May 19

I Thos. T. Onizuka, B,a
barrister, solicitor
notary public

Office: Roon 40;
229 Yonge St..
EM. 3-5002 - OX? ^^

DENVER, Colo.—The little the premises of an American milifellow was barefooted and he tary
establishment. That Avas
wore a padded judo jacket, a
f’ UMEZUKI, Publisher
okav
too. Most of them were ?
SrKDGD----------- —.^>Lh Section Editor
white canvas belt holding it in
place. He strode purposefully to American citizens now.
IORL.----- ---------------- Japanese Section & Advertising
I
the center of the canvas-covered
i
The
incongruity
carried
over
tatami mats. Hands held stifflv
SUBSCRIPTION PAYABLE IN AB VANCE
i
— The
------ tour­
barrister — solicitor
at his sides, he bowed from the among the contestants.
$3.50 per six monthsLje.oo per year
nament
was
being
sponsored
bv
notary
*
waist in the traditional, courteous
Authorized second class mail, Post Office Dept., Ottawa’
v
gesture of respect and greeting ^e Denver Judo Dojo made up
Room 203A
of Nisei and Issei dads and their
between judo opponents.
2 College St., TOronto
Then-' suddenly they grappled. youngsters with a goodly mix­
The little fellow seized his op­ ture of their Caucasian friends.
ponent’s jacket, shuffled about in A somewhat similar group had
seemingly aimless manner foi- come over the mountains from
long moments. All at once he Salt Lake City to take part.
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
gave a sharp soprano cry that T T® there vvas the American
VANCOUVER __ I
J
notary public ob
Judo
Club
of
Denver,
almost
en
­
and I include both n it^
1S. sPeedin& up constant- sounded like
“Yeeeooh.” He
S&xS £A -Xa
tirely
Caucasian
and
headed
by
whirled swiftly, jerked mightily
Suite 502, Temple Building
and using his hip as a fulcrum, a Denver city policeman named
62 RICHMOND ST WEST
TORONTO
T
™5y.’°"‘ b’ S°'”e f0°'ish Uni'
He said thc sovereign fact of threw his opponent cleanly. .The Frank Goody. The other two en­
other boy crashed to the mat but tries were service groups—cadets
EM. .6-0959 - Res: RO. 7.3427
and officers of' the Air Force
b Itat ChW -Vas made Mliav process and the svstem^fS outside of the chagrin that show­ Academy,
and a crack team from
ed
on
his
face
the
lad
wasn

t
hurt.
Wetori^^
“«' on ‘rial for t£“
Then the two bowed to each other the i Strategic Air Commaiid
v Luu a uaiiy limes.
lives.’
headquarters in Omaha.
again and retired.
He told Canadian and Ameri- , Mr- Hutchinson said the probAll this is routine in any judo
The audience reaction shoAved
^'l^kgates to the Pacific Stu- mms °f future relations between I tournament but there was some­
i°T different this was from an
dent I residents’ Association-con- Canada and the United States thing incongruous about this hdtime judo tournament. Back
Barrister & Solicitor
vention at the Hotel Georgia wdl become more complex “be­ particular scene. The little fel­ then
the spectators watched y
that (great businesses are bein^ cause of man’s neAv power to des­ low, the one we’ve been talking mostly in 'silence, indulging oc­
run by men Avhose minds never proy himself and because of his about, was redheaded and his face casionally in a sharp grunt of J Cameron, Weldon
progressed
beyond
entrance increas>ng knowledge.”
a mass of freckles. Judo was satisfaction when someone made :
Brewin & McCallum
.
.
U.S. INVESTMENT
completely alien to his heritage, a spectacular throAv. - Now this
a e .SCIentists who knoAv
. He predicted American capital- but there
he was
like d
a baseball
game.
,
nao taking
Laaiuo and
emu giv- aa as more ime
oaseDaiii game
i^ou nA-C^
«t°nrs but -"vestment in Canada will be a mg the
Toronto
dumps as if his name were. 1 ou could hear them shoutin o- • :>
EM.
3-4391
k™
r ?'“E al>out that codec- major issue in Canada’s next Suzuki or Yamamoto. ’
•'Come on, Red, flip him.” “Give
^°-j °f atoms called society,” he federal election.
it
to him, Ted, give him the
As my eyes scanned the rows
I Americans, he said, should I
•>
of boys squatting on each side works.’
LAST MILE?
recognize that the Canadian “is of the mat, I couldn’t help but
J s.ai?pose a sociologist would
"Civilized man has been Miine- nitrilo ^ileAd Briton Oi* ^ under-, see the sprinkling of towheads,
call this scene a comingling- of
steadily behind his problems Th^
calIed :
redheads, brownheads among the cultures and find much of signi­
race between good s<X
kids with straight, bristly black ficance in what Avent on at
- ’
------------------- ----- Canada by Americans.
haii\ . In fact the whole scene Lory’s Gym ^' f last Sunday.
was incongruous.
.Snow is that it was fun and
It was not being enacted in a thrilling, satisfying experience.
i
some dingy basement quarters
where
most judo clubs seem to
to act upon it. The prophecA^ of
boycotters in Montgomery, if democracy states that if we~ in­ wind. up. This was the vast,
Phone Us at EM. 8-9934
they continue to meet illega deed treat each other as created cavernous Gymnasium No. 1. of
^Cotiti/iued from P^^e One')
action Avith legal, never descend­ equal and therefore act on the Lowry Air Force Base, converted
reservations made promptly
on any Airline at official rates
ing to or condoning illegal action principles of respect for all per­ into a gym from what must have stereotyped Negro characters. No
fares quoted to any point
N?VniVC5’ “ is the Policy of sons regardless of race, color, re- been an airplane hangar. There Italian gangsters have been de­
were close to a thousand specta­ picted on the network for three
TORONTO TO
Single Return
?r Previous condition of tors
i/F
>progress ls inevitable.
New York .........
S 24.00 S43.20
in the stands that climbed years because it felt that there
tactical errors are going to be ,se ■,vitl!de' we shall all of us—
Montreal ........................ 19.Q0 38.00
made out of anxiety and fear, let both the oppressors and the op­ up the walls, about half Japanese, were too many gangster charac­
...................... 31.00 55.80
half Caucasian.
ters shown as Italians.
Noav
Winnipeg .................... 62.00 124.00
make them, pressed—be healed on the pro­
Vancouver ..................... 128.00 256.00
There was a large sprinkling of there is more even racial distri­
as they did in their recent attack found emotional scars that Ave
ban Francisco .... ....... 107.00 207.80
bution
of
heavies,
Variety
said.
Issei
on
hand,
too,
men
and
wo
­
on Nat King Cole.
inherit from earlier and less just
Tokyo ;..... ...................... 587.00 1076.40
men alike. They were obviously ra^o%V
^BC Phhosophy hi
.
- human organization,
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER’
and attain a full human dignitv. enjoying themselves. Incongru­ ladio-TV broadcast iS that we
Passage arranged by steamer or aiwe come, finally, to the Like all self-fulfilling prophecies, ous ? You bet. A few years ago delete any material Avhich
we
greatest of social prophecies, the ? 1S. prophecy Avill not realize you couldn’t'get an Issei within consider
derogatory
to
any
self-fulfilling prophecy of politic- i f
at once on the sudden a mile of an air force base, or
Woods t01d
daAAn
of
a
Day of Jubilee.
It any military installation for that
K. Iwata. Travel Service
auety, —thats on a common
democracy. It as a prophecy
■fulfills itself slowly, not only be- .eahzes itself from day to day matter. -They didn’t Avant to sense and public relations basis.
113 McGauI St. TORONTO
make&trouble. They didn’t Avant ^ur outlook on society is sup­
one that i^es from moment to moment, as AA^e to be suspected of espionage, or posed to enlighten the rest of the
a lot of fulfrihng, but also be­ accept its assumptions, accept the
whatever, even if they didn’t E
^nts to Msent
cause all of us, white and Ne^ro Dren^516111^ il implies’ and know
the difference between a that intelligently. We don’t want
piepaie ourselves not to fWit
in between.
Cub and a B-o2 jet bomber. to say slavery- never existed—but i
have faltered in our belief in it over again the battles of yester­ .Piper
But
this
day they had passed we don't want to play- it up.”
day,
but
to
take
our
places
in
and have lacked the faith ahvavs
through the check gate in droves tbMABC’/K-K-K-Katy” one of 1
WE HAVE NO
the changed world of tomorrow.
and found their reaction Avithin
SERVICE . CHARGES
pop tunes of World
.?ai k ;13 banned on the grounds
YOUNG ADULTS FELLOWSHIP Of Tor^^
merOU!dr°ff%d those/who stam4 CKNOWLEDGEMENTS
pier'
Cross-Eyed Cowboy on a
The New* Canadian acknowl­ Cross-Eyed Horse” is also out beInvites One and All to the
j edges. w*ith thanks generous E
P°licy ^orbids anvdonations from the following:
L? T -hl?h seems to poke fdn
Mr. and Mrs. S. Yamamoto, Win­ at physical infirmities.
nipeg, on daughter’s engagement.
Jhe F3^?0 Citizen does not reMr. and Mrs. Tak Ohashi, Toron­ 7m any times in the past before
(HAYRIDE & SQUAREDANCE) J to, on marriage.
*}n}erican public with words
Jap in the lyrics though there
NEXT FRIDAY MAY 25th at 7:30 p.m.
'
Or Bringing Some­
Mr. and Mrs. S. Shinmoto. Kaslo,
one over?
B.C., in memory of late daughter.’ ‘‘Japaneses number of tunes with
We represent ail

KAZUO G.OIYE

ARROGANT ILLITERATES HOLD B.A. DEGREES
IN CANADA, U.S., CHARGES BRUCE HUTCHISON

F. A. BREWiN,Q.c

TRAVEL BY AIR
Anywhere—Anytime

Minorities Need Belief in Self-Fulfilling Prophecy

BAN SONG LYRICS

I. KAMEOKA

May Hoedown

“i^ree Gates Siable <St- Clair-Warden)

TICkEiS $1.50 FROM AUDREY SASAKI

I

(PL 5-4591) < S

Mr. and Mrs. Steve Sano, Toron­
to. on son’s birth.
Mr. and Mrs. T. Omotani, Toronto on son's marriage.
Mr. K. Furumoto. Toronto.

■h«he/AC^’ 011 the othe-r hand,
. carnPaigmed against the
'i0.""^ of oId movies on TV that
iidicule or reflect against the
°f an/
regardless
oriX
creeJ. color or national
oiigm through its National JACL
Committee Against DiscriminaE^erteinment and Allied
Fields, which w;’as chaired
' bj* Ina
Sugihara.

The Hamilton JCCA Presents •

'BALLYHOO
From 7:00 p.m.

lines including
American President
Northwest Airlines
Canadian Pacific
and Pan American
Write or call for
full information and
rates.

DOMINION
Travel Office

$8 Wellington Street West
" EM 6-6451
Toronto

4

J.C.C.A. FUNDance

At St. Stephen’s Hall

4
4

• entertainment ’

(Barton at Mary)

4
i
1
4
1
I

I
4
i

ADMISSION; Adults $1.25, Children 50c

UNf Hall, Toronto
I
4

ERIDAY, JUNE 1, 1956, 8:30—12:30

-*

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Page 7

Saturday, May 19, 1956

jE

dates and doings

NEW

C A N AD I AN

WAT ARE RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF CITIZEN7
i
ASKS NEWCOMER; CITIZENSHIP ACT NO HELP

by Margie

Page 7
I .WMVB^MBMm

CALENDAR

MONTREAL.—A
MAY
^
l^^^uslnp
was
blended
insenarthan asked this week what sped
This week the Gerry Mullio-an SpyIpT^”
------------- ~------ _
laKv wiih the idea of racial com- I 19—Toronto. Eastern Canada Bow|
ically
are
the
j
Colonial, so on opening night whirl-,
v "jS skedded for the
nng tourney at. Olympia-Edward?
and the re imunnv. But in a multiracial
dance nt Masaryk Hall. S:30—12’
up and hiedright down there, being that^mv vmked myself ponsibilities of a Canadian citi i c?)nP? such as Canada, the idea
| ot cm----1
favorite or ravontes when it comes tn
MuHigan is mv
en.
biisnip
must rise above 19-20—MontreaL Fellowship Group
tour of Quebec City,
Got there to find that it-was a Quintet
f°rni called Jazz,
jthat of he racial community.
ley left back in a New York hospital w£h 1 n™Petman Jon Eard19-21—Montell. ECYBL conference
Gerry on baritone sax, Zoot Simson tPnor BolPp^V h^ ^awing- i rmtriA?Zubk°W^ former Polish
hall; banquet and
Help
I S101’ now a Montreal lawver
‘'The idea of citizenship is tronwone, Dave Bailey on drums anH SPir n B
kmeyer M
y
at Berkeley hotel.
a -I—Loth brid j
™ v -r^ W
Bi" ms ®^'« lUiisi"™355 ” K1'rr ami assistant professor in the mortar
. x.- that )vi 11 cement in a con
Ho-1 \hrS p5' °f ^Iontreal- Address­ ^h'/ive way the various group
toria Day Dance at Henderson .
Pavilion, 9-1.
ed
Pub °r Montreal ot cozens ” he declared. Success
—Toronto. N’AF Wind-Up Ban­
that the
pointed out
rk VnS ?eing J°ue in thi.
d
Clanship Act of 1947 Sto) bj ^dera ’ Provmcial, rnuniPar^^&
quet and Election at China Gar­
t ^Pft 7 Canadian citizen
den, 6:30 p.m.
cJPa
ann civic
informal manner, even while plavinoa most pIeasant and
>—Toronto.
audience feel right at home, thereby “makii^hT™8 t0 make the ” stated that he had “rio-hts Citizenship class.Adults
Hoedown at
and
T
rivil
eges
.
.
.
subject
help,
'
lo me, the first number of the’eve alwav^
• n\°re recePtive. L?.
pre
obUsations and „i
7 :30 p.m.
SI
into a cold and empty atmosphere—As Vhe*v
break St'S’ bV‘ did not specify
26—-Hamilton,
Ballyhoo (concert)
newspapers in Canada.
alniost see the notes bouncing and tranoj s ai^ Pkij nig, I can
sponsored
by
whole room is filled with them. GenyriJd ^filledMtil the b& nghtS :",d '--’PonsiJCCA,
at
St.
of
Stephen’s hall.
number.
silled by the second
Canadians of different
—Hamilton. Bussei
at
! tions to exchange ideas.
I
To a new jazz aficionado like mvsai-F
j
Rights
Hard
to
Find
Gannon Hall, 1-6 p.m.
I
called a muted form of jazz chamber'music^Ts Sv to’"1'8? <often
|
)V e should give a
/It took peple with a rather
I
. . . You don't have to know oririnal
A 5 to understand,
knowledge and education Of thought to the rights and
v
thrilling sounds that come out of tL^orn^inV0 eru°?r
The
to find out what were the rights duties o.t Canadian citizens, and 1—Toronto. JCCA June Dance at
|
the subtle nuances or shadings the wav Q
1 h™mc interplay.
UNF hall.
they ?771S1 blscattered as through the schools, the pres*
fully underscored bv the other two hmm.
mel°dic line
and
m
other
ways
try
to
make
---Montreal.
Graduates’ Tea at
|
all backed by a moving (soS
bloAvmg softly together. of Hw- through a large number
r lh?; ““’“taiKl fully'what their
ox laws, and statutes, Dr Zub
'
Comm un it y Cent re. S p. m
|
beat, is enough to catch your ear and hold -breathtaking hesitation) kowski
Zub- rights and duties are so that the" 10—Vancouver. JCCA Picnic at Belsaid. •
group was the first that l ew X SP3 attention. This jazz
Di. Zubkowski said that
StM! m0re ^’S
■carra Park,
j
self (by a fluke) at my first real 1
1 found mv' umracial countries the idea S
j , y democratic country,” he
l7-T«ro“t‘’- Busscf annua.) Dienic
added.
'

j now a Mulligan fan, I come
last falb Being
at Huttonville.
i .turned 29 last April 6th, bom in
lbs“
| for 13 years, etc.
. ik, a professional musician
5
After sitting through thim^
1-1'on>u<<*- 7th JCCA* Community
| “Are you still here?” Also takingth7 gl’nil;ed at us and said,
I ionic at Lynbrook Park.
By.JACK NISHIZAKI
j critic Helen MacNamara Dick Mae Don
, were Tely jazz
*
trophies went to 1
? ed, and Phil MacKellar, popular CKFR
°f .la^los Jazz Unlimit- eiC5ATHAM’ Ont—Thus :far
Marion
Hoshizaki
and Ted Taka- I
OAKD OF T
J spective spouses (or spice?)
dlsc JOckey’ with their re- Chatham is fortunate as far as
as hashi, while singles awards were
I
5
-sh
to expre;
weather is concerned, comparing
my sincere
. Betty Nishiyama tha.nli to my friend
[ of 3Uri so'imSow TfekUe^another evening (2nd with other southern Ontario Se?rd
in
Vancouver
and Slug Aoki. On conclusion of and Kamloops for farewell
parties'
i his autograph he asked, “Mind i/1 sit do^m?”^0^
^Ve
warnings presentations, '
gilts, and encouragement on the oci coming big band which he hopes will
W about his
°f my
for japan.
[ keep on with his small g?oupsPbut
falL
H-ang arnved safely jn T/ ,
are thinking- of organizing- fhpir
°°t §nns and Bob Brookmever
Apt il o(), .1 am now taking this on
Hlv not b’e able to mX it f’r X Xf fU9" Eardl<^ "'ill pro- ments. This steady rainfall re- second year in raw feri.!01 «
”^
oxu.nd ;„y ^J^
PS
weather
1
^Periencwas
enjived
b

local
bow
m

will break up-in a couple
' °f
Present tour which
Oliver Beemar was called in from NY
TS-year-old IwS OTOe”d S,ngapore
^congratulations to the winAiko Hori
favorite, Duke Ellington, Gerry
Of his
to jazz than anv other sinX
P l
^S contributed more
Kent Nisei bowling league com.
band around.” *
0
nan, and has the hardest-swinging Dieted its 1955-56 season with a
ina- 1^
subject of bowl­
MADE-TO-MEASURE CLOTHES
banquet last. Saturday at Kingsc
^ad each team partid q
• le- Bowl-o-Fun
^j-- » Toronto for wav hotel, emceed by yours tndv
BING TAKAHA
snowed that mofniiD) They Ld
Stan^ the cold (It had Bowladrome trophy for league
hn r8 SPecmI, in which high
SS degrees and dittbri^te «”t
“ « champion and playoff champion
Mftvmu
George’s
BE. 1-8882. evenings
were presented to captain Shio. J
(which was over the
37 Norseman St., TORONTO
then oXec^^^^^^^^
Set a chance to hear Aoki. Men’s high average honors
ma'k rlth handicap). j
W I h L C A L L
couldn’t plav H
\
^ad brought a record plaver here but went as usual to one of the ton
^ teep Y°ur fingers crossed
1
^stedly%lL th^
“I'^ps ta4 He said dis- local Nisei and city bowleg
6 neVer kn°^'

modern furnishing's and evervlbm,^-1! he
^t’sS staying-,
staldng, “'has
has ultraH’s next to summertime now
ultra- George Nishizaki (226). And it
flicker!”
8 and everything, and then the lights always was no surprise to anybody that "’Inch means onlv outdoor acti-l <
Unfortum I
®tt““tarJai1^ chatted with us about everything and the ladies’ high was won by Emy vity from here on.
Rent
Nisei
are
unable to
For Homes, Business or
Asked hoPherie^
It
taking
like oM
talking like
old Trends
friends.

~ Deld a softball team in the local j
Acreage, Consult
one of three thingsr d f°r lum
—1 11
^ has to be at least
league
due
to
lack
of
players.
I
in the vrOOvp
S
Groovy> or Soulful. When thev’re
UM KAKUTANI
Its certainly disappointing to the
You can tell ’if thevh-P V?derstand, what they’re trying to sav. .
REAL
ESTATE
.
lssei> who have been staunch sup- ,
insurance
f»r the reX proSs^^^
“ oth™' ?‘ « “S
A Blossom Tour to the Niagara P^^iets, and to the hakujin, with
"‘avout’ Butn^ nT k
' ‘ V7011 can^ understand.it—thev’re Peninsula, sponsored by the Ja- '”■ Nisei teams have been
ton’s Monotonv1 “fp
that he did understand was Stan Ken- panese Men’s Club of Queen very popular. Best of luck to
Toshiko Akireki sat in ^T^
5s •‘f ™cntioned that Street United church will leave those Nisei who
are trying out
B«t°n ■ . . thinks Se’s Jot sonShi^
the church at 10 a.m. this morn- for various other teams.
Established over 35 Years
falatewElf aEE‘ S'™" on 6re re.Puted to be quite inar- | Nig.
President Jim Yako, Murray
MArine 6421, Day or Night
Rev. Horace Burkholder of the
Kayahara, and Issei advisor
one of the annrpHn?™6 r
Gusss lt s because I’ve been
530 Burrard St., VANCOUVER 1. B.C
to b TdTgrit"1 20 years; I didn’t have an LS Department of Religious Educa­
.--------of •the
locaI
Mr. t Takahashi
JCCA chapter were m Toronto
"’ound up I can
a
d s°mething, so I talked. Once I get tion of the United church will be
Years a^ X £
started drumming onlv five guest speaker at a supper meet­
for the Ontario JCCA confer­
^sic. mis Wh^
ha wanted to get into ing of the Married Couples’ fel­
ence last weekend.
lowship this evening at 6:30 p.m.
engineering) He’s
/ one year away from a degree in in the junior room.
Sometimes it doesn’t pav to be
Save told
.Geri,Y for 11 months.
generous.
Just ask Aki* Kudo,
_ The women’s missionary asso­
and always looks forward^n PU^S highly of Toronto jazz audiences
c.nd
he
11
tell
you his experience
?P of a very succXfiPP^r^
here Tonight will be thewind- ciation will hold, a spring display last weekend on his trip back
lo°k fonvard to
~oinS to settle down to of flower arrangements by the D°m London. He was stopped
students of Mrs. Kin Izumi next
OPTOMETRISTS
TONITE
f
m the falL Tt shouId be interesting.
by a provincial on highway No. 2
orchestra OWrP u?PN0BT Dance with Ken Miyasaki and his Saturday, May 26, 3-8 p.m. in the and asked if he would take an injunior room.
Complete Care
juied person to the nearest town
^reic?^
fun-packed hayride and
The Young Adults fellowship for a doctor. Aki obliged, and
For Your Eyes
-,ak and Wardpn
^ Gick Aiai at Three Gates Stable, at St. will hold a May' Hoedown next started off with the injured chap
Hie ad Wednesday.) PharmaCy and AVarden don’fc meet: an error in Friday at Three Gates Stable, for town. Coming upon another
St. Clair and Warden, from 7:30 accident, he stopped and volun­
^naGarden^^ the NAF Wbd'UP Banquet and Election at p.m.
Tickets may be obtained teered his assistance. While he
by contacting Audrey Sasaki was inquiring, BANG! came an­
KK-Wffifti:«t
(PL.
5-4591)
or
at
the
dcor.
other
car
from
behind,
causing
the famous Bally-Hoo concert.
118 West Hastings St.
-S500 damage to Aki’s bus. O mv
such is fate.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
So long for now. ...
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Shizuko
Oishi, grade 10, was pictured in
The Sentinel as one of the win­
ners in a poster contest'held at
Kamloops high school.
11 a.m.. Junior Congregation
Judy Nakano of the No. -5

11 a-m-- Nisei English Service
Bir.haay O1 tne Christian Church”_Rev. K. Shimizu, MA., D.D.
Brownie pack in north Kamloops
was shown in the same paper,
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
publicizing the annual cookie sale
of the girl guides and brownies.

CHATHAM SLANTS

MOVING TO B.C.?

lOrOHlO OsC. Notes

OPTICAL

Names in Hie News

SMALL SIZE SHOES

NISEI UNITED CHURCH ,««„.„ Sl. w, Imnl.

New Spring Styles and Colors
Ladies' Shoes, size 1 & Up
Scott McHales for Men, 4 to 14

ALBERTS SHOE STORE
1328 Queen Street West
LE. 1-1931

TORONTO
C.O.D. ORDERS FROM COAST TO COAST

A

GRAND FORKS, B.C.—Mrs.
Colin Smith and Miss M. Imayo­
shi were sponsors of a junior
high school operetta.
Students
taking part included Yoshiko Ta­
keuchi, Jane Yamada and Yoko
Kondo.

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH^ b.^. st.
MAI' 20, 1956
10:30 a m., Sunday School

11 a.m., English Service
— Mr. Howard White
EVERYONE CORDIALLY INVITED

Buddhism and Pessimism

Page 8

Page 8

Saturday, May 19, 1955

NEW

BPs Encouraged
The future of Nisei participa­ ed out soon. A joint Chinese-Ja­ By Opening Victory
tion in the Toronto interchurch panese entry is a possibility.
Over Clapps, 11-3
Nisei officials expect to field

Nisei-Chinese Entry In Interchurch Possible

tennis league looked brighter this
week as the Chinese club indicat­
ed they are quite willing to share
their courts at Dovercourt for
home games.
Roy Shin has been talking with
Henry Lowe of the Dovercourt
group, and details will be work -

at least one team in the A division. The lack of lady players
may prevent organizing a B
team. The Interchurch league
will hold-its first meeting of the
year this Tuesday at St. George
courts. League schedule is to
open early next month.

CLASSIFIED SECTION
Help Wanted

Male Help Wanted

BOY or girl for fruit store, full
time,
good working conditions.
RO. 7-8971 (Toronto).
WAITERS and waitresses, full or
part time, urgently needed. Apply
House of Fuji-Matsu, EM. 4-8527
(Toronto).
YOUNG girl or boy wanted in den­
tal manufacturing firm. OakwoodSt. Clair. After 5 p.m., OR. 1269
(Toronto).
YOUNG man or girl with high
school education to start in shipping department, interested
a
.position ^with a future. Standard
Dress Co., 230 Spadina Ave., Tor.

Female Help Wanted
YOUNG girl, fresh out of school,
knowledge of shorthand and typ­
ing. Apply Tanaka Btrssan Co. Ltd..
229 Yonge St., 4th floor, oi' contact
Mr. Nish, The House of Fuji-Mat­
su, EM. 4-8527 (Toronto).
COUNTER girl for dry cleaners,
west end. RO. 6-1007 (Toronto).
WHOLESALE firm requires young
lady for general office work. Must
have knowledge of shorthand and
typing. EM. 4-2271 (Toronto).
for Saturday
HIGH school
only dry cleaning" store. Ascot
Cleaners, 2013 Eglinton XV., Toronto
RE. 8959.
FULL time ami part time store
clerk. If suitable, steady work.
Service Fruit Market, 46S Bloor W.,
Toronto. LE. 6-7733.
DRESS operators, experienced. Nat

GARDEN workers wanted. Mr. Ya­
tabe, RO. 9-5565 (Toronto).

EXPERIENCED -presser,
job. RO. 2-6-173 (Toronto).

steady

SHIPPER'S assistant, and janitor
(2 ’ men wanted), no experience
necessary, west end manufacturing
co. 420 Keele St., Toronto.

Ten - walks helped Burke-Pas­
tor to an 11-3- win over Clapps
in the East Toronto Ladies’
junior softball opener last Mon­
day. Coach Ed Hisaki feels much
encouraged, as Clapps are figur­
ed to be the team to beat in the
four-team
loop.
Wednesday’s
weather was too frigid, and
games were called off.
BP hitters Monday were Betty
Fenton (2), Carol Coghill, Gail
Fisher, and winning pitcher Judy
Smith. Amy Tani and Arlene Ha­
rada showed well in the infield.
First base candidate Barb Brough
is the latest to sign.
More players are wanted, and
asked to turn out to a practice
this Sunday at 1 p.m. at Christie
Pits.
BPs are slated Tuesday
vs. Orphans and Thursday vs.
Clapps, at Coxwell stadium, 7
p.m.

TWO men for wood-working. Snow
Window Frame, 3139 Bathurst St.,
Toronto.

Kutsukake New Coach;
Ed's Opener Sunday
SHORT order cook good wages.

Forum Restaurant,
235 Kingston
Rd., Toronto. AM. 1-2773
j
A FEW young helpers for gardener
wanted
immediately.
Bay view
Landscape Co., 119 Madison Ave..
Toronto,. WA. 1-0-162.

Domestic Help Wanted
GENERAL
housework,
modern
applainces, fond of children, private
room with bath. HU. 1-0121 (Tor.).

CAVABLE girl to live in, doctor’s
small, modern home, general house­
work, no cooking, good wages,
liberal time off. Call between 7-10
p.m., MA. 3434 (Toronto).

Rooms to Let'
TWO unfurnished rooms on third
floor, will furnish to suit tenants,
electric range, east end. GL. 0575
(Toronto).
THREE rooms downstairs, furnish­
ed-optional, continuous .hot water.
39 Grange Ave., Toronto. WA. 2-6212

I VANCOUVER NISEI ARE ’’HITLESS WONDERS,"
I MANAGE 3 SINGLES IN 2 GAMES, LOSE TWICE
By GENNY OHASHI
VANCOUVER. —’Twas an en­
joyable day for graduates on the
UBC campus but it was dull at
Powell Grounds, where Nisei
dropped their second straight
game May 14.
NealTv 2.000 saw Western
Bridge take revenge for the
humiliating opening day defeat
in trouncing John Inouye’s squad
6-1.
Nisei, who managed only
two singles against Longshoremen, were limited to only one
single by the cellar-dwelling
Westerns.
.
_
With the exception of- Seichi
Tahara, the league’s top third
sacker, Nisei were lifeless. Ta­
hara’s single scored Kenny Hom­
ma, who walked to open the
game. Western hurler Don Wilson
fanned 11 Nisei, increasing the
total Nisei whiffs to 51 in six

On the hill for Nisei was rookie
Gary McCullough, ex-junior A
pitcher and a long-time team­
mate of Tommy Tasaka, who was
with Nisei last year. McCullough
gave up only four hits, and whif­
fed six, but his wildness in walk­
ing 10 batters was his downfall.
McCullough and Homma were
charged with errors. . . . Hustling
Mush Uyesugi and Azu Oikawa,
Vancouver
Mounties’
bullpen
catcher, were missing from the
line-up.

One-time Asahi catcher Ken
Kutsukake is - new manager of
Honest Ed Nisei of . the Toronto
Western City Senior baseball
league, succeeding Sub Miike,
who will continue as coach, along
with playing-coach Maw Mori.
Miike relinquished the managing
chore as he feels he cannot devote
as much time to* baseball this
season.
100 000 0—1 1 2
Honest Ed’s will open its sche­
210
’201 x—6 4 0
Westerns
dule at 2 p.m. Sunday against
McCullough
and
Okano.
Don Wil­
Columbus Grads.
son and Bill Taylor.
Sunday ball: Kidokan vs. Bus­
*
*
sei at Christie;
Giants vs.
Sooners, Yamada vs. Flyers, at
VANCOUVER. —Nisei suffered
Stanley.
their, first shutout, falling victim
to Longshoremen 4-0 May 11.
Ken Digby limited the JCCA
X-RAY DIAGNOSIS
nine to two singles, a leadoff

PATRONIZE
OUR ADVERTISERS

DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC
699 Yonge St.
Toronto

WA. 1-6549 (office) ■

blow by .Homma in the first ?nn
a safety by Miyagishima in t^
sixth. Digby whiffed six Nisei
and walked four.
Rookie hurler Eddie Yamamura
showed strong form in the fijy
two innings, failing six? then
weakened, giving up three runs
and six hits before Merv Franks
came on in the sixth. Franks
gave up two doubles for one run.
-before settling down.
SHORT SHOTS: Nisei missed
stickmen Elmer Mori and Azu
Oikawa . . . Mush Uyesugi Per­
formed capably in his strange
centre field position . . . Danny
Okano is-likely to be the regular
backstop this season as Oikawa
is busy with the Vancouver Moun­
ties’ games . . . Nisei introduced
two more rookies, Eddie Hayashi
and Gary McCullough . . . Manv.
youngsters are being tested by
coach Tad Ikeda and manager
John Inouye before the league
player deadline . . . After assist­
ing league scorer Bruce Johnson
in the past season, this writer
has been named official co-scorer
for the Industrial league, which
is the lone senior loop in the city
for 1956;
Kenny Homma, ss ..
Danny Okano, c ....
Mush Uyesugi, cf . ..
Seichi Tahara, 3b ...
Bo Miyagishima, 2b .
Ron. Montgomery, lb
Frank Kika, lb ........
Toru Nishi, If .............
Eddie Hayashi, rf ...
Hubbo Matsuzaki, rf
Eddie Yamamura, p.
xGary McCullough ..
Merv Franks, p ........

3

3
1

1
2
0
0
0

h
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

e
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

.375’
.222
.166
• 1SS
.429
.300
.100
.000
.000
■111
.000
.000
.000

22 2 1
Totals
x—Ran for Yamamura in 5th
Longshoremen .... 001 021 0—1
000 000 0—0 2 1

If no answer, call
BE. 3-3869 (residence)

When Buying, Selling or Exchanging Your Home

onto.

W.S. TATEISHI
OPTOMETRIST

DOXSEE HEALTH CENTRE
71 College St.
Toronto

1-5863 (Res.)

WA. 1-8966,

CLEANING BUSINESS
and TWO-STOREY BUILDING
'—TREMENDOUS INCOME—

KEN HORI

GERRARD-GREENWOOD, 2—storey bldg, and extremely
profitable cleaning business with a steady cash-andcarry clientele. This well-established business enterprise
is truly a bargain and includes over $5,000 worth of
equipment. For further information, Ken Hori, GL. 8914.

BERNARDI-MATHEWS REAL ESTATE
OX. 4-1127 or GL. 8914 (Residence)
TORONTO ONT.
2670 DANFORTH AVE,

Bernardi-Mathews, 2670 Danforth, Toronto

Distinctive

Floral Arrangements -

Complete Signs & Display Service

Hyland Flowers

WELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS

FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE

Don Yokota — LE. 5-2478

JON ONODERA

GOLDEN DRAGON

1345 Davenport Rd., Toronto

Proprietor

CHOP SUEY HOUSE

HU. 9-4654 - BA. 1-4374
(Business)

*

(Residence)

540 Eglinton Ave. W.,
Toronto

Phone Us for Nihonshokuryo for Supper Menus
We Prepare Osushi every Friday and Saturday
Maguro (tuna), Tai (sea bfeen), Ika (squid)
Rakka (rock cod), B.C. spring salmon
Try our Momiguki (pickles), our specialty

Open Noon to 2 a.m.
EM. 8-2475

GEN TATEYAMA and TOSH RYOJI

84.A YONOI ITI1CT, TORONTO, ONT.

171 DUNDAS ST. WEST

EM. 4-7692 '

131A Dundas St. W„ Toronto

GENUINE JAPANESE CUISINE

DUNDAS FISH & GROCERY

<j!r«TMd^|:Kt

Orders to Take Ou*

SUKIYAKI IN AN EXOTIC ATMOSPHERE

f
J

The House of FujiTTatsu
EM.'4-8527

J

17 Elm St., TORONTO ^___l||

9

lOth Eastern Canada Nisei Open Bowling Tournament
SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1956 at the Olympia-Edward Alleys, Toronto
Sponsored by TORONTO NISEI MAJOR BOWLING LEAGUE

DA NG ESaturday Night at Masaryk Hall (Cowan Ave. at Queen St West)
KEN MIYASAKI AND HIS ORCHESTRA ® $1.25 PER PERSON • DANCING EROM 8:30 TILL MIDNIGHT

I