Page 1
lifl
if
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
TORONTO. ONT.
^glicanJVelfare-Groug
^T© Meet Bwstidf LmkTraosp@rt®ition
A>^:
a ■ -mder discussion
:eting of the newlyAiigTican Nisei woraei oi
yroup on Sunday.
0p.m.
March 17
are a great
It is f^! that there
naber of ague. L ?i without rein Camion who are susrhemsmvos on the small
tvA wised from their old age
Sons. The group would like
the realization
haiion of a rest
home for Japanese aged in th-
u be tn
Vlheit first project, a Spring
• • on May* 4
Festival will be, held
with net proceed; for the assis!3! ,,f We Wei- , Tlie group
shas to visit tne lonely Issei,
Japan Researcher at UBC
Studies Schizophrenia
with economic ant
necessary, and serving a int
prefers in rest homes whe
exists a language difficulty,
fund will be set up gradually fw
a rest home for the Japanes;
aged.
The general meeting to he ho!
on March T2 will take place a
St. Anne’s hall, 651 Dufferin A
A cordial invitation is extends,
to all older Anglican Nisei am
friends.
T
froi
IT
nts left
the Emi
u s sorer
umber is
ation
“But
1 the req
KELOWNA TO SPONSOR
"Wo
bor
to
JAPANESE REST HOME ;
KELOWNA,
na Welfare Department is spon
soring a rest home for the Japa
nese aged and has asked Une local
Japanese organizations for con
tributions. Further details on this
report are expected in the near
future.
1 American n
Office spoke
I
th
to
eount nes, '
o move; e the num30,000 is soon as
pos sib I
In an overall review-of Japan’s
emigration programs. Y oshioka
reported that for th
pan is hoping to send about 11SU of its citizens abroad wi
aid from the government.
VANCOUVER, B.C.—Dr. John
In LOOK M agazine:
Wada, working at UBC on a visit
from the Hokkaido University in
Javan, is trying to find out along
with a team of UBC researchers
a better u
of
al pin
In the March 19th it
whether
schizophrenia,
the
g
world's most common mental LOOK magazine is an article en
racists do not via
lore, t
Th
titled
Los
Angeles:
A
Race
Re
disease, is caused by poisons.
in
to
Schizophrenia, a disease that lations Success Story.
There are about 40,000 Japa
fills more than half the world’s
ea
nese (almost twice as much as
mental hospital beds, in charac the total Japanese Canadian
The aruea
terized by extreme instability, population) included in the five
hallucinations, dream states and and a half million population of
Los Angeles County, plus larger in
irrationality.
It has been found basal meta numbers of Mexicans and Ne- Japanese in a Japanese-langua
school was denounced by 1
says writer
bolism of schizophrenics was en groes.
teachers
as "un-American.”
tirely different from that of a Boynoff,-. this is the city that
Junior
high
school, when lie v
normal individual. In a progress probably7 leads the nation in en
elected
student
body preside
report submitted last week to the lightened race and community re
the
school
administration
simply
ilth ansual conference of the lations.
abolished
student
government.
B.C, Academy of Science, Dr.
The article quotes Japanese Today, Judge Also presides in an
Wada stated that he has been American leader1 Saburo krio, a American
courtroom, having been
able to induce schizophrenic
named to the bench by Gov. Ear:
lawyer
and
the
polisher
of
the
characteristics in monkeys and
his last ofiicml
cats by injections of minute daily, Shin Nichi Bei. Recalling Warren in one of appointment
to
before
amounts of lysergic acid and the rigid prejudice and oesenmthe
U.S.
Supreme
Court.
ether compounds.
ination against Japanese
Tim writer adds, however, that
The LEG team is attempting cans before the war, Kico says or I
discrimination
employment is
to isolate and identify the the city today: “It is practically i ■still extensivelyin practiced,
putiunbelievable
to
us
that
conditions
mystery compounds which they
have
changed
so
rapidly.
The
suspect lie behind the disorder.
Race Relations
uv-bnek in
o
emigrants
aoronu wnexe
i 1
ire wanted,” he said, "is
ok of strip transportation,
11
on
own.
mugh the transportation
ry nns submitted a budge*
“'However, the number that will
T^ q for building an emigrants
bo sent with government aid.”
a J a paa e s e sh i p p mg
Yoshioka said, "will depend on
i reported as plannbudget appropriations though the arm an
similar ship "nothrequest to take eare of 14,180 has
on
these have been
Ffiiriie
been submitted.”
io said.
"South ami Central Ameri
can countries remain the chief
recipient areas tor Japanese, ’
said the emigration expert.
"The Latin American countries
have spacious virgin areas
which, have high yields when
developed.”
Although Japan has been
searching other areas for emigration purposes, none of the
proved
otlur ;
fruitful ns yet.
Japan had hopes of sending
olhers to southeast Asian areas,
particularly Cambodia, "but in
vestigation has shown that the
countries there with ceuturieshmg civilize!ions that, have uninhabttoil or sparsely settled places
have these for very practical rea
sons,” Yoshioka said.
,
Japan had been conducting
talks with Cambodia officials to
send .10.000 people to that small
nation with 2,000 to go this year.
“It will take about three or
four years before full preparatiniv cam be made to send emi
grants there,” he said, though
.Japan has not given up the idea
of eventually carrying out earlier
.»’m” s.
"The area a nd possibiH i ios o f
development must be -studied
—Pro's bv joe Qu;:;i
ms ? without some know-how for
and furthering the
YVONNE TASAKA, 18,
11
0 p
Vancouver’s
Valentine
was chosen Vancouver’s
Miss Valentine of ’57 at
the Cupid’s Fancy dance
on Feb. 15. A first year
student at UBC, Yvonne
represented
the
Nisex
Varsity club in the west
coast contest.
Testimony during her' trial, Reubens reports. Drought out that
By BILL HOSOKAWA
d'Aqnim was a Nisei caught in Japan by the
, fmced o
In the Pacific Citizen
I'rjdnst her will, suspected as an American spy by the Japa^w\d police, refused' to give up her /American citizenship ana
DEW ER, Colo.—A favorite device among authors of 19ui <.enfimlk
took'a job as typist in the accounting department of Radio
‘tiry melodramas was the wayward girl who had brought, shame
'Aon her laanly. In these stories, it was forbidden to mention .im
name. It was reasoned that if no one acknowledged that she exism..
Further, Mr*. d’Aqnino did not become an announce!’ unlil^she
perhaps even the memory of her would go away. But inevitably, wo
roqueted to do so'by a captured Australian Maj. Charles Couc^graced sister would come back. And in an encouraging nunmei s j n who had bwii ordered bv the Japanese to produce a radio prooi instances, there were extenuating circumstances to clear hex ox
w iwtirkd at the trial that when Iva Toguri protested
udeasting
he told her: “This is a straight-out entertainmgrace ana restore her fair name.
a Bn
rm. T have written it and I know what I am doing. Al*
T ^^afsgi'aced sister of the Nisei family is a woman named r. a
a
tn do is i n k on voursolf as a soldier under my orders,
-Ofuri d Aquino, a native-born American convicted as “Tokyo Ro?
axe told to do. Don’t try to do anything for
q i"a;Oi1' Mrs. d’Aquino was tried before a federal jury in 1919 m Do <x
wT do nothing that you do not want to do. You
lf!ii crarge$ of treason and convicted on one count. Sentenced m
><•■• a^nin.-t your own people.”
N'eT? *!) Prison, she was released in January7 a year* ago. boon
-av- the government's case hinged on the “oral‘and
A^ her release, the department of immigration opened depona;'on proceedings against her. So far as we know, these proceeding.-: unco: u ' >” t d U'-i;’”onv of two native-born Americans, Kenneth
c« sgi under way.
ee Mat-xG.io, both of whom admittedly became JapaOki a ri G
f d.-‘
Thev were the only witnesses to the one act
a--? propa vanety of reasons which we need not go into here,
was
convicted.
”
of wh? s ic
gJ in _STne''a^ have chosen not to speak Mrs. dAqumo’s run
i.^.^
*he relatives of the soiled doves of melodrama, a
'S FF< TIME—Reubens makes a strong case on behalf
her m®mory would be erased. Recently, however, tn
Tw>. What’s more, in addition to pointing out the in‘iNr^J piercing arid eloquent voice raised on her benaif. 1
r cmwicticm, he argues that if Dm government wins
ice- ■
A^3^^” °* William A. Reubens, a thrice-wounded lieutenant
m
case, “an ominous precedent will have been, estab d- a-r
hC4’’ ^ ^ 01bd War II. He speaks through the pages of the
1 on a treason conviction resting entirely on a disputed
^1^'^ issue of Frontier, a small, liberal, monthly tl:n!7negation concerning 25 wo:
no
mN^N^bl’.shed in Los Angeles, in an article titled “The
<oy about their
•ie
for the Nisei to stop ben
I":hug - it i.: t
Tokyo Rose’.”
v
for an actb .oman
who
has
paid
hex
di g”
»t is tiw” 'o
not. have been a crime. I <-’
rn.^' ^^1^^ DATA—Reubens probes into the background at which rm
Mv that we are
? does indeed exist, and
NaF" Rose trial and comes up with some disturbing iniormaathat she gains justice.
ilfTe never was. he says, a Tokyo Rose. That was a :
- in zero -tcJ? '-.g Americans for English-speaking women announcers e:”* G-j-‘ No. G, <-5 which she was convicted,
that sho had
■ ^\.y Radio Tokyo during the war. And there were 18 of lU -o
whom Iva Toguri d’Aquino was singled out for pro- ; of fee pacific. Now, how do you thin* you will ever get home.
Nation
urea."
In addition to the above, about
1,000 Japanese have migrated to
the United States.
The chief aim of Japan's emi
gration programs is not to re
lieve the overpopulation problems
created by its almost 90 million
on four little islands,” Yoshioka
said. "To have any noticeable in
fluence on the population pres
sures, at least 100,000 would have
to migrate yearly.”
“Japanese emigration,” he
said “is much the same as cxfarming
porting
J apanese
t cc b n i q u c-s. ind us tri a 1 knowhow and skilled labor.”
‘•Particularly in Latin American countries,” ho said, “Japan,
with its small and medium sized
industries, in contrast to the
mass scale industries close at
hand of the United States, could
often furnish the not-too-highly
developed areas with what they
needed.”
(Continued on Page Eight')
TJCCA and Chinese Reps
To Meet Pickersgill
Representatives of the Toron
to-Ontario JCCA Immigration
Committee and the Toronto
Chinese Canadian Association
will meet, informally with .Minis
ter of Citizenship and Immigra
tion J. W. Pickersgill this after
noon m Toronto’s Royal lock
Hotel. A brief will be submitted
to the .Minister.
MAIL TO JAPAN: SS China
Mail leaves Vancouver for Japan
on March 14; SS Java Mail leaves
March 23.
if
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
TORONTO. ONT.
^glicanJVelfare-Groug
^T© Meet Bwstidf LmkTraosp@rt®ition
A>^:
a ■ -mder discussion
:eting of the newlyAiigTican Nisei woraei oi
yroup on Sunday.
0p.m.
March 17
are a great
It is f^! that there
naber of ague. L ?i without rein Camion who are susrhemsmvos on the small
tvA wised from their old age
Sons. The group would like
the realization
haiion of a rest
home for Japanese aged in th-
u be tn
Vlheit first project, a Spring
• • on May* 4
Festival will be, held
with net proceed; for the assis!3! ,,f We Wei- , Tlie group
shas to visit tne lonely Issei,
Japan Researcher at UBC
Studies Schizophrenia
with economic ant
necessary, and serving a int
prefers in rest homes whe
exists a language difficulty,
fund will be set up gradually fw
a rest home for the Japanes;
aged.
The general meeting to he ho!
on March T2 will take place a
St. Anne’s hall, 651 Dufferin A
A cordial invitation is extends,
to all older Anglican Nisei am
friends.
T
froi
IT
nts left
the Emi
u s sorer
umber is
ation
“But
1 the req
KELOWNA TO SPONSOR
"Wo
bor
to
JAPANESE REST HOME ;
KELOWNA,
na Welfare Department is spon
soring a rest home for the Japa
nese aged and has asked Une local
Japanese organizations for con
tributions. Further details on this
report are expected in the near
future.
1 American n
Office spoke
I
th
to
eount nes, '
o move; e the num30,000 is soon as
pos sib I
In an overall review-of Japan’s
emigration programs. Y oshioka
reported that for th
pan is hoping to send about 11SU of its citizens abroad wi
aid from the government.
VANCOUVER, B.C.—Dr. John
In LOOK M agazine:
Wada, working at UBC on a visit
from the Hokkaido University in
Javan, is trying to find out along
with a team of UBC researchers
a better u
of
al pin
In the March 19th it
whether
schizophrenia,
the
g
world's most common mental LOOK magazine is an article en
racists do not via
lore, t
Th
titled
Los
Angeles:
A
Race
Re
disease, is caused by poisons.
in
to
Schizophrenia, a disease that lations Success Story.
There are about 40,000 Japa
fills more than half the world’s
ea
nese (almost twice as much as
mental hospital beds, in charac the total Japanese Canadian
The aruea
terized by extreme instability, population) included in the five
hallucinations, dream states and and a half million population of
Los Angeles County, plus larger in
irrationality.
It has been found basal meta numbers of Mexicans and Ne- Japanese in a Japanese-langua
school was denounced by 1
says writer
bolism of schizophrenics was en groes.
teachers
as "un-American.”
tirely different from that of a Boynoff,-. this is the city that
Junior
high
school, when lie v
normal individual. In a progress probably7 leads the nation in en
elected
student
body preside
report submitted last week to the lightened race and community re
the
school
administration
simply
ilth ansual conference of the lations.
abolished
student
government.
B.C, Academy of Science, Dr.
The article quotes Japanese Today, Judge Also presides in an
Wada stated that he has been American leader1 Saburo krio, a American
courtroom, having been
able to induce schizophrenic
named to the bench by Gov. Ear:
lawyer
and
the
polisher
of
the
characteristics in monkeys and
his last ofiicml
cats by injections of minute daily, Shin Nichi Bei. Recalling Warren in one of appointment
to
before
amounts of lysergic acid and the rigid prejudice and oesenmthe
U.S.
Supreme
Court.
ether compounds.
ination against Japanese
Tim writer adds, however, that
The LEG team is attempting cans before the war, Kico says or I
discrimination
employment is
to isolate and identify the the city today: “It is practically i ■still extensivelyin practiced,
putiunbelievable
to
us
that
conditions
mystery compounds which they
have
changed
so
rapidly.
The
suspect lie behind the disorder.
Race Relations
uv-bnek in
o
emigrants
aoronu wnexe
i 1
ire wanted,” he said, "is
ok of strip transportation,
11
on
own.
mugh the transportation
ry nns submitted a budge*
“'However, the number that will
T^ q for building an emigrants
bo sent with government aid.”
a J a paa e s e sh i p p mg
Yoshioka said, "will depend on
i reported as plannbudget appropriations though the arm an
similar ship "nothrequest to take eare of 14,180 has
on
these have been
Ffiiriie
been submitted.”
io said.
"South ami Central Ameri
can countries remain the chief
recipient areas tor Japanese, ’
said the emigration expert.
"The Latin American countries
have spacious virgin areas
which, have high yields when
developed.”
Although Japan has been
searching other areas for emigration purposes, none of the
proved
otlur ;
fruitful ns yet.
Japan had hopes of sending
olhers to southeast Asian areas,
particularly Cambodia, "but in
vestigation has shown that the
countries there with ceuturieshmg civilize!ions that, have uninhabttoil or sparsely settled places
have these for very practical rea
sons,” Yoshioka said.
,
Japan had been conducting
talks with Cambodia officials to
send .10.000 people to that small
nation with 2,000 to go this year.
“It will take about three or
four years before full preparatiniv cam be made to send emi
grants there,” he said, though
.Japan has not given up the idea
of eventually carrying out earlier
.»’m” s.
"The area a nd possibiH i ios o f
development must be -studied
—Pro's bv joe Qu;:;i
ms ? without some know-how for
and furthering the
YVONNE TASAKA, 18,
11
0 p
Vancouver’s
Valentine
was chosen Vancouver’s
Miss Valentine of ’57 at
the Cupid’s Fancy dance
on Feb. 15. A first year
student at UBC, Yvonne
represented
the
Nisex
Varsity club in the west
coast contest.
Testimony during her' trial, Reubens reports. Drought out that
By BILL HOSOKAWA
d'Aqnim was a Nisei caught in Japan by the
, fmced o
In the Pacific Citizen
I'rjdnst her will, suspected as an American spy by the Japa^w\d police, refused' to give up her /American citizenship ana
DEW ER, Colo.—A favorite device among authors of 19ui <.enfimlk
took'a job as typist in the accounting department of Radio
‘tiry melodramas was the wayward girl who had brought, shame
'Aon her laanly. In these stories, it was forbidden to mention .im
name. It was reasoned that if no one acknowledged that she exism..
Further, Mr*. d’Aqnino did not become an announce!’ unlil^she
perhaps even the memory of her would go away. But inevitably, wo
roqueted to do so'by a captured Australian Maj. Charles Couc^graced sister would come back. And in an encouraging nunmei s j n who had bwii ordered bv the Japanese to produce a radio prooi instances, there were extenuating circumstances to clear hex ox
w iwtirkd at the trial that when Iva Toguri protested
udeasting
he told her: “This is a straight-out entertainmgrace ana restore her fair name.
a Bn
rm. T have written it and I know what I am doing. Al*
T ^^afsgi'aced sister of the Nisei family is a woman named r. a
a
tn do is i n k on voursolf as a soldier under my orders,
-Ofuri d Aquino, a native-born American convicted as “Tokyo Ro?
axe told to do. Don’t try to do anything for
q i"a;Oi1' Mrs. d’Aquino was tried before a federal jury in 1919 m Do <x
wT do nothing that you do not want to do. You
lf!ii crarge$ of treason and convicted on one count. Sentenced m
><•■• a^nin.-t your own people.”
N'eT? *!) Prison, she was released in January7 a year* ago. boon
-av- the government's case hinged on the “oral‘and
A^ her release, the department of immigration opened depona;'on proceedings against her. So far as we know, these proceeding.-: unco: u ' >” t d U'-i;’”onv of two native-born Americans, Kenneth
c« sgi under way.
ee Mat-xG.io, both of whom admittedly became JapaOki a ri G
f d.-‘
Thev were the only witnesses to the one act
a--? propa vanety of reasons which we need not go into here,
was
convicted.
”
of wh? s ic
gJ in _STne''a^ have chosen not to speak Mrs. dAqumo’s run
i.^.^
*he relatives of the soiled doves of melodrama, a
'S FF< TIME—Reubens makes a strong case on behalf
her m®mory would be erased. Recently, however, tn
Tw>. What’s more, in addition to pointing out the in‘iNr^J piercing arid eloquent voice raised on her benaif. 1
r cmwicticm, he argues that if Dm government wins
ice- ■
A^3^^” °* William A. Reubens, a thrice-wounded lieutenant
m
case, “an ominous precedent will have been, estab d- a-r
hC4’’ ^ ^ 01bd War II. He speaks through the pages of the
1 on a treason conviction resting entirely on a disputed
^1^'^ issue of Frontier, a small, liberal, monthly tl:n!7negation concerning 25 wo:
no
mN^N^bl’.shed in Los Angeles, in an article titled “The
<oy about their
•ie
for the Nisei to stop ben
I":hug - it i.: t
Tokyo Rose’.”
v
for an actb .oman
who
has
paid
hex
di g”
»t is tiw” 'o
not. have been a crime. I <-’
rn.^' ^^1^^ DATA—Reubens probes into the background at which rm
Mv that we are
? does indeed exist, and
NaF" Rose trial and comes up with some disturbing iniormaathat she gains justice.
ilfTe never was. he says, a Tokyo Rose. That was a :
- in zero -tcJ? '-.g Americans for English-speaking women announcers e:”* G-j-‘ No. G, <-5 which she was convicted,
that sho had
■ ^\.y Radio Tokyo during the war. And there were 18 of lU -o
whom Iva Toguri d’Aquino was singled out for pro- ; of fee pacific. Now, how do you thin* you will ever get home.
Nation
urea."
In addition to the above, about
1,000 Japanese have migrated to
the United States.
The chief aim of Japan's emi
gration programs is not to re
lieve the overpopulation problems
created by its almost 90 million
on four little islands,” Yoshioka
said. "To have any noticeable in
fluence on the population pres
sures, at least 100,000 would have
to migrate yearly.”
“Japanese emigration,” he
said “is much the same as cxfarming
porting
J apanese
t cc b n i q u c-s. ind us tri a 1 knowhow and skilled labor.”
‘•Particularly in Latin American countries,” ho said, “Japan,
with its small and medium sized
industries, in contrast to the
mass scale industries close at
hand of the United States, could
often furnish the not-too-highly
developed areas with what they
needed.”
(Continued on Page Eight')
TJCCA and Chinese Reps
To Meet Pickersgill
Representatives of the Toron
to-Ontario JCCA Immigration
Committee and the Toronto
Chinese Canadian Association
will meet, informally with .Minis
ter of Citizenship and Immigra
tion J. W. Pickersgill this after
noon m Toronto’s Royal lock
Hotel. A brief will be submitted
to the .Minister.
MAIL TO JAPAN: SS China
Mail leaves Vancouver for Japan
on March 14; SS Java Mail leaves
March 23.
Page 2
PAGE 2
Saturday, Mai-oh 9
HiiiHHiHiiiiiiiiiniiiiimiiiinnnHiiHiiiHimiHiniiiiiiiiHinniniiniiiiiiHiii
J
The Sportspace ♦
HiiHmiHiuHinniiHiinmniiHiHnnHmiiHminHiiiHHiiHminmHiHiHHLi
DAVE'S
TV and Appliances
Distinctive
al Arrangements
P Wanted
TRUCK
Sales and Service
By GENNY OHASHI
DAVID AZUMA
Morio Koga, high-flying
Kegier in this Orchard Ci'
claimed title to the first ’
ve-pin bow
at Kelowna
this 1956—57
734 St. Clair West
i LE. 3-C386
TORONTO,
Morio
honor 1
Morio rut tne magic numoer
while rolling with four of his
friends on Feb. 21. As the mark
I
/
W. S. TATEISHI
f
OPTOMETRIST
?DOXSEE HEALTH CENTRE 1
j <4 College St.
—
Toronto^
I WA. 4-8966,
EM. 4-53«3<Res.> )
s the
der of
th sin*:
gtl U"
i bow
triple
PRESSER
(3i8),
and
.one
JON ONODERA
Proprietor
league
to the
___female Help Wanted
c ounteiTTDTPt^
—
VOUrs
(Business)
HAMILTON BASKETBALL
I Ongg and -Laiir^o-n
(Residence)
HU. 1-40S8 (
COUNTER c
St. Ciair-Vc
only. Phone
EXPERIENCED
blouses. Pleas
□as college to
(Toronto).
EXPERIENCED
manufacturing
district. S: gie
e
Phone RI. 6325 f
onto).
SHIRT PRESSER,
sary. AddIv 23It
RO. 6-1’007' (Ton
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
। Antlers in the
competition, he is not-eligible
Hoop&Twine
for the prize money. However.
MOOSET-
Toronto
the achievement is officially recogrized in tile Ogopogoiand.
Third person in Kelowna Keg
history
to hit the jackpot, Morio
their tnird loss bill
A
became the first reported in Ni failed to down the Dukes who
sei circles across Canada this managed to eke Gut
season. Last season, Willie Ta ha rd- f ou gh t vic t ory.
teishi of Toronto amazingly roll
Paul K. Asada, D.C
ed two 450s.
DOCTOR OF CH1ROFRACTI
Neither team si
much
Ot th., two previous perfect action in a dull, low
693 Yongo St.
Toronto
WA. 1-6549 (office)
gamp holders in Kelowna, one is
nided in a 14-14 tie
If no answer, call
a N isei as well—Coke Koyanagi
The
win-hungry
.Angels star
BE. 3-3869 (residence)
who crashed the barrier a few ed to come to life in the second
half and met little resistance as
a Comet veteran played very
badly
and wasted many coring
Lucien C. Kurata
chance
The Angels came ou
First practice for the girls’ with their regular performances
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
softball team, will be this Sunday, in this half and it proved too
NOTARY PUBLIC
Marcii 10, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. much to the handicapped Comets,
Suite 502, Temple Building
at
the Accurate Distributing Co.. as they were outscored 22-10 and
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
30S Coxwell Ave., who are to bo
TORONTO
this year’s sponsors for the form
EM. 6-0959
three Comets. T. Oikav
Res: KO. 7-342
er Burke-Pastor team. Any girls 10, D. Kuwabar
under 19 years interested in soft- 5 left their ma
on
ball are invited to come and try sheet. High-sc oners for Angels
were F. Shimoda and B. Matsui
Thos. T. Onizuka, B-A. | out for the Accurettes.
with 13 each.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and I
NOTARY PUBLIC
The Angels launched a man-toOffice: Room 403
|
Raffle tickets for the draw man attack against the unwary
229 Yonge St., Toronto
I
sponsored by the Toronto Nisei Dukes but found it rather costly
EM. 3-5002 — OX. 1-3388 (res.)
| Badminton club juniors are now
being distributed among club fouls early in the game. The
members to be sold at the low, Angels led 13;10 at the quarter
WA. .1.-5605
low price of three for a quarter’ out fell behind 27-26 at the half
The lucky winners will be drawn as the Dukes capitalized on free
KAZUO G. OIYE
at the TNBC Easter dance on throws.
BARRISTER
SOLICITOR f April 18, the Thursday night be
In the second half, the ^Angels,
fore Good Friday. First prize is playing safe, reverted to their
notary
a 'mans or lady’s suit: second usual zone defence but were disRoom 203A
prize, a Darker pen and pencil org’amzed for a short time. The
2 College St., Toronto
t
set; third, a Ronson table lighter; Dukes took advantage of this de
fensive lapse and spurted ahead
but the spirited Angels re-formed
and managed to whittle the lead
but the whittles weren’t enough.
Tsdo or die’ for the THL Final score favored the Dukes
^
Barrister & Solicitor
| Nisei Flyers tonight against 55-50.
Pigotr Motors in the second of
S. Fukumoto and H. Morino
o Cameron, Weldon
| their two-out-of-three playoffs. with
22 and 14 were best for
Uf'V l°st the first game 3-1. Duke
; Brewin & McCallum j ^TLIc ground is Leaside Arena and B. Sherwood with 15,Aumagai
9, and
at 10:15 p.m.
S were best for Angels.
L
—
Toronto
Domestic Help Wanted
GIRL or woman for general r'GW
to live in a modern
vv'P
family, good wages. PhoK TH’ st
(Toronto).
”
'
Help Wanted
INVOICE clerk,
perience not nec
Apply Miss Sun
Ave., Toronto.
BLOOR-JANE, two or
rooms, kitchen with
6-3840 (Toronto).
COATS
SUITS
DRESSES
vo
AAllflEirTa wioK'ro. ont.
FRIDAY 10-PIN
KELOWNA
Apartments to Let
APARTMENT, self-contained, Fulton A
Phone HO. 3-8698 (Toronto).
TORONTO
Open Friday Till 9 a.m.
PATRONIZE
OUR ADVERTISERS
Small Size Shoes
Ladies' Shoes, 1 & Up
Men's Scott McHales, 4-14
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
®
Toronto
m
C'^7
C.O.D. ORDERS
FROM COAST TO COAST
r
MAJORS
0
8
Ginza Cafe
577 BAY (at Dundas), TORONTO
WELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS
Ma:
GOLDEN DRAGON
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
Open Noon "to 2 a.m.
EM. 8-2475
G
TO JAPAN
SUKIYAKI
NABEYAKI
Various Kinds of Donburi
$ EM. 8-9368
is (Wasn't it the first time thi
led with S71 (365), N. I
■9L
M.
Tomasi' 803
e
Uva). 1. lamagi 717. (VancouNisei League keglers—take note,
and ire prepared for the Easter tourney.
Ogopogoites are s-?! for the invasion).
5f
— Nakayama
(^ .C.TetoL 5 45 (248). Keen up
Ab
C
©
0
a
0
Mas
form
■s:ng cause as
le of their ra:
amazing 792
NISEI MAJORS
HA\
NISEI
Pho:
10 Richmond St. East
EM. 3-4391
HAMILTON (Met
iaa xenao
?d the men with
Hash:
teem: surged back into first
ace
Vs point ahead of J.
; witn ne help of Y. Kiiagatriple; . Kinoshita 730 (297',
.-3
Suzuki 703 (307). Chisa
finally
ladies' high
a ter
oji hit 62:
wa 610, A. Mitsui
19.
Qi
Rooms to Let
F. A. BREWIN, Q.C. |
WEDNESDAY 10-PIN
rmura
- ?■
S-n
Orders to Take Ou1
131A Dundas St. W., Toronto
KELOWNA COMMERCIAL MEN
ono
repre
lines
t
all
r
DUNDAS FISH a GROCERY
Northwest Airlines
Canadian Pacuic
and Pan American
Write or call for
full information cares
%
0@MM@I ;
Traud @1^ ^ S ^? ;
68 Wellington Street West i I
Toronto
EM. 6-6451
C;
1
’any
v
GEN TATEYAMA and TOSH RYOJI
4
S
171 Dundas Street West, Toronto
EM. 4-7692
5
Saturday, Mai-oh 9
HiiiHHiHiiiiiiiiiniiiiimiiiinnnHiiHiiiHimiHiniiiiiiiiHinniniiniiiiiiHiii
J
The Sportspace ♦
HiiHmiHiuHinniiHiinmniiHiHnnHmiiHminHiiiHHiiHminmHiHiHHLi
DAVE'S
TV and Appliances
Distinctive
al Arrangements
P Wanted
TRUCK
Sales and Service
By GENNY OHASHI
DAVID AZUMA
Morio Koga, high-flying
Kegier in this Orchard Ci'
claimed title to the first ’
ve-pin bow
at Kelowna
this 1956—57
734 St. Clair West
i LE. 3-C386
TORONTO,
Morio
honor 1
Morio rut tne magic numoer
while rolling with four of his
friends on Feb. 21. As the mark
I
/
W. S. TATEISHI
f
OPTOMETRIST
?DOXSEE HEALTH CENTRE 1
j <4 College St.
—
Toronto^
I WA. 4-8966,
EM. 4-53«3<Res.> )
s the
der of
th sin*:
gtl U"
i bow
triple
PRESSER
(3i8),
and
.one
JON ONODERA
Proprietor
league
to the
___female Help Wanted
c ounteiTTDTPt^
—
VOUrs
(Business)
HAMILTON BASKETBALL
I Ongg and -Laiir^o-n
(Residence)
HU. 1-40S8 (
COUNTER c
St. Ciair-Vc
only. Phone
EXPERIENCED
blouses. Pleas
□as college to
(Toronto).
EXPERIENCED
manufacturing
district. S: gie
e
Phone RI. 6325 f
onto).
SHIRT PRESSER,
sary. AddIv 23It
RO. 6-1’007' (Ton
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
। Antlers in the
competition, he is not-eligible
Hoop&Twine
for the prize money. However.
MOOSET-
Toronto
the achievement is officially recogrized in tile Ogopogoiand.
Third person in Kelowna Keg
history
to hit the jackpot, Morio
their tnird loss bill
A
became the first reported in Ni failed to down the Dukes who
sei circles across Canada this managed to eke Gut
season. Last season, Willie Ta ha rd- f ou gh t vic t ory.
teishi of Toronto amazingly roll
Paul K. Asada, D.C
ed two 450s.
DOCTOR OF CH1ROFRACTI
Neither team si
much
Ot th., two previous perfect action in a dull, low
693 Yongo St.
Toronto
WA. 1-6549 (office)
gamp holders in Kelowna, one is
nided in a 14-14 tie
If no answer, call
a N isei as well—Coke Koyanagi
The
win-hungry
.Angels star
BE. 3-3869 (residence)
who crashed the barrier a few ed to come to life in the second
half and met little resistance as
a Comet veteran played very
badly
and wasted many coring
Lucien C. Kurata
chance
The Angels came ou
First practice for the girls’ with their regular performances
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
softball team, will be this Sunday, in this half and it proved too
NOTARY PUBLIC
Marcii 10, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. much to the handicapped Comets,
Suite 502, Temple Building
at
the Accurate Distributing Co.. as they were outscored 22-10 and
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
30S Coxwell Ave., who are to bo
TORONTO
this year’s sponsors for the form
EM. 6-0959
three Comets. T. Oikav
Res: KO. 7-342
er Burke-Pastor team. Any girls 10, D. Kuwabar
under 19 years interested in soft- 5 left their ma
on
ball are invited to come and try sheet. High-sc oners for Angels
were F. Shimoda and B. Matsui
Thos. T. Onizuka, B-A. | out for the Accurettes.
with 13 each.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and I
NOTARY PUBLIC
The Angels launched a man-toOffice: Room 403
|
Raffle tickets for the draw man attack against the unwary
229 Yonge St., Toronto
I
sponsored by the Toronto Nisei Dukes but found it rather costly
EM. 3-5002 — OX. 1-3388 (res.)
| Badminton club juniors are now
being distributed among club fouls early in the game. The
members to be sold at the low, Angels led 13;10 at the quarter
WA. .1.-5605
low price of three for a quarter’ out fell behind 27-26 at the half
The lucky winners will be drawn as the Dukes capitalized on free
KAZUO G. OIYE
at the TNBC Easter dance on throws.
BARRISTER
SOLICITOR f April 18, the Thursday night be
In the second half, the ^Angels,
fore Good Friday. First prize is playing safe, reverted to their
notary
a 'mans or lady’s suit: second usual zone defence but were disRoom 203A
prize, a Darker pen and pencil org’amzed for a short time. The
2 College St., Toronto
t
set; third, a Ronson table lighter; Dukes took advantage of this de
fensive lapse and spurted ahead
but the spirited Angels re-formed
and managed to whittle the lead
but the whittles weren’t enough.
Tsdo or die’ for the THL Final score favored the Dukes
^
Barrister & Solicitor
| Nisei Flyers tonight against 55-50.
Pigotr Motors in the second of
S. Fukumoto and H. Morino
o Cameron, Weldon
| their two-out-of-three playoffs. with
22 and 14 were best for
Uf'V l°st the first game 3-1. Duke
; Brewin & McCallum j ^TLIc ground is Leaside Arena and B. Sherwood with 15,Aumagai
9, and
at 10:15 p.m.
S were best for Angels.
L
—
Toronto
Domestic Help Wanted
GIRL or woman for general r'GW
to live in a modern
vv'P
family, good wages. PhoK TH’ st
(Toronto).
”
'
Help Wanted
INVOICE clerk,
perience not nec
Apply Miss Sun
Ave., Toronto.
BLOOR-JANE, two or
rooms, kitchen with
6-3840 (Toronto).
COATS
SUITS
DRESSES
vo
AAllflEirTa wioK'ro. ont.
FRIDAY 10-PIN
KELOWNA
Apartments to Let
APARTMENT, self-contained, Fulton A
Phone HO. 3-8698 (Toronto).
TORONTO
Open Friday Till 9 a.m.
PATRONIZE
OUR ADVERTISERS
Small Size Shoes
Ladies' Shoes, 1 & Up
Men's Scott McHales, 4-14
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
®
Toronto
m
C'^7
C.O.D. ORDERS
FROM COAST TO COAST
r
MAJORS
0
8
Ginza Cafe
577 BAY (at Dundas), TORONTO
WELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS
Ma:
GOLDEN DRAGON
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
Open Noon "to 2 a.m.
EM. 8-2475
G
TO JAPAN
SUKIYAKI
NABEYAKI
Various Kinds of Donburi
$ EM. 8-9368
is (Wasn't it the first time thi
led with S71 (365), N. I
■9L
M.
Tomasi' 803
e
Uva). 1. lamagi 717. (VancouNisei League keglers—take note,
and ire prepared for the Easter tourney.
Ogopogoites are s-?! for the invasion).
5f
— Nakayama
(^ .C.TetoL 5 45 (248). Keen up
Ab
C
©
0
a
0
Mas
form
■s:ng cause as
le of their ra:
amazing 792
NISEI MAJORS
HA\
NISEI
Pho:
10 Richmond St. East
EM. 3-4391
HAMILTON (Met
iaa xenao
?d the men with
Hash:
teem: surged back into first
ace
Vs point ahead of J.
; witn ne help of Y. Kiiagatriple; . Kinoshita 730 (297',
.-3
Suzuki 703 (307). Chisa
finally
ladies' high
a ter
oji hit 62:
wa 610, A. Mitsui
19.
Qi
Rooms to Let
F. A. BREWIN, Q.C. |
WEDNESDAY 10-PIN
rmura
- ?■
S-n
Orders to Take Ou1
131A Dundas St. W., Toronto
KELOWNA COMMERCIAL MEN
ono
repre
lines
t
all
r
DUNDAS FISH a GROCERY
Northwest Airlines
Canadian Pacuic
and Pan American
Write or call for
full information cares
%
0@MM@I ;
Traud @1^ ^ S ^? ;
68 Wellington Street West i I
Toronto
EM. 6-6451
C;
1
’any
v
GEN TATEYAMA and TOSH RYOJI
4
S
171 Dundas Street West, Toronto
EM. 4-7692
5
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Page 7
March 9. 1957
i
iiiHiiiiiniiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiii
^ates and doings
Personal Notes Across Canada ' CALENDAR
I
ix T^E NEWS: Flight Cadet W. Shimbashi of Barnwell, Alta.,
vr No. 2 Air Observer School in a wings ceremony at
^r^Av-'lVinnipeg- His parents are Mr. and Mrs.-J. Shimbashi.
Ted* Itani. 18, of Westbank, B.C.. was pictured in tha
.(ace^ j.standing smartH during the annual regimental inKe^ff
Kelowna branch of the 903 Cadet Squadron recently,
nial meeting of the Westbank,. B.C., United Church,
- At me
Sun 1 sueda as elected superintendent of the Westbank Sunday
*
*
*
JUDO AND JAPANESE HINA DOLLS will be discussed on
6 this Sunday, March 10 on Junior Magazine beCBC-TV C mt ei
2:30 p.m.
s VARIETY NIGHT ATTENDED BY 650: About
tended last Saturday’s Toronto Japanese Anglican
$50 persons,
Veins Associateon’s fund-raising Variety Night at St. Anne’s Parish
hail. The crowd1 heartily enjoyed the smoothly-run program which
ainers Kenny Hayashi, Yoshiko Inouye, K. Morita,
inriuciec e
Katsuyama
sisters, Chiyeko Hiraishi, Mrs. Ura NaIshida W
Jitsushio,
Marion
Hiramatsu, Tomiko Hiraishi. Teruye
kamoro. M
avid Nishioka, Mr. Cho, the Nisei Band, the Nisei
choir, and a orted actors in the three, plays: ‘‘Oh Cadillac”, "St.
Fool”, and “Nihon Kankodan” which erstwhile playFrancis and
tor
Rev. Ken Imai himself wrote and acted.
wright and :
YOUNG ADULTS TO HEAR TALK ON YOUTH OF JAPAN:
Mr Jim Thurlow, at present studying at Emmanuel College, and
teacher of English at Kansei Gakuin University near Kobe, Japan,
Mil give an illustrated talk on young people in Japan at the Queen
cLL Young Adults next Tuesday. Mr. Thurlow’s wife, Setsuko,
urvivor of the Hiroshima bombing Everyone is welcome to
w
and a special invitation .has been sent out to the Nisei AnVllowship to the meeting on March 12, 7.45 p.m. sharp at
Queeii Street United. There’ll be table tennis for the early birds.
NOTE TO NAF MEMBERS: The United'Church Young Adults
have invited the NAF to their meeting next Tuesday at 765 Queen
St West. See details above.
LADIES' NITE AT REC SOCRATIC tomorrow night—the first
25 ladies will bo admitted free, and door prizes for ladies only will
be awarded. Rec So continues rumba lessons from last week. A
reminder—Monte Carlo Nite is next Saturday.
VANCOUVER NANIWA-BUSH! CONCERT: The Vancouver
JapaiiesUGw^^
a ‘Naniwa-bushi’ (melodic chant
ing of stories) concei't on Sunday, March 1'7, 7 p.m. Performers in
clude Suzukime Yonewaka and hex- party.
ALBERTA BUDDHIST SUNDAY SCHOOL CHILDREN from
six Sunday schools will gather for a concert next Saturday, March
16, 7 pan. at the Lethbridge Buddhist Church. The six schools will
participate in the entertainment, sponsored by the Alberta Buddhist
Sunday School Teachers’ association.
*
*
A KEIRO-KAI WAS HELD BY THE YBS in Picture Butte,
Alta., on March 3 on the occasion of Sekku (doll festival). Twentythree aged Issei attended as guests of honor, and memorial gifts
were given to the two oldest, Mrs. Ine Furukawa, 83. and Zentaro
Marriages
iiiiimiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
MARCH
16
Births
KUMAGAI-IRIE
Toronto
The narriage of Doreen Ma
io. daughter of Mr. and
Sirs. Tataro Irie
of Hamilton, Ont., took
n Feb. 23. 1957, at Deer
r
Following a reception held
lina Garden, the couple left
Mr.
^
s
s
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Hito
Kasubuehi (nee Akemi Jobu)
girl, Donna Nobuko, ou Jan.
1957. at Kelowna General IL
APRIL
■Win nr
IS—Toronto
ISQ-J—Vane
PRINTING
wa
Mr
of all omsimoiis
7.
on
KITAMURA-0 YE
Hamilton. Out.
The
Ove.
vounge
and M
Asaji Oye. to Minoru
eldest son of Mr. and
irs. Sentaro • Kitamura, wa
olemnized on Feb. 16, 1957, a
at
re happy to announce thi
of a daughter, Dobra Mi
i Feb. 14. 1957, at the Jeni
Mr
iroji Ta
Toronto
?i:
HAW S. moo ^^^^fats
«27 BAY STREET- TORONTO • CM. S-»7«»
Sts JOVi BEVERLEY STREET • EM.3>5^>
The New Canadian acknowledges
with thanks generous donations from
the following:
Vancouver-ites!
IN NEGOTIATING
REAL ESTATE. INSURANCE
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT,
MORTGAGES,
M
Consult
ab
which wa
held
Izu CL Oikawa
moon,.
Boultbee Sweet & Co. Ltd.
Engagements
1000 W. King Edward. VANCOUVER
MA. 7452
CE. 4184
on
Fumiko Shigei, first daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Reizo Shigei of
Japan, and Robert Mutsuo Hoita,
first son of Mrs. Misao Hoita and
the late Mr. R. Hoita, announced
their engagement on Feb. 17.
1957, at the Hoita residence in
Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. R. Uyeno
of Toronto are acting guardians
of Fumiko.
Mr. and Mrs. Y. Kochi of Kam
loops, B.C., announced the en
gagement of their daughter Mary
Misao, to Yoshio, son of My. and
Mrs. Y. Hamakawa of Vancouver.
16,
1957, at the home of Mr and
Mrs. Kochi in Kamloops.
V
O;
Mr.
Omu
A CM
MOVING TO B.C.?
For Homes, Business or
Acreage, Consult
TIM KAKUTANI
INSURANCE
REAL ESTATE
f
Established over 35 Years
MArine 6421, Day or Night
TORIC
OPTICAL
OPTOMETRISTS
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
^W±
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
530 Burrard St.. VANCOUVER \ B.C.
•r
WSOE FB0WE1 SHOP
CORSAGES, WEDDINGS, FUNERAL DESIGNS
CE. 6322, CE. 3021, or residence: CE. 3784
2677 West Broadway
USE OUR-COMPLETE
FORMAL RENTAL SERVICE
Men’s rentals at botn Toronto stores
Ladies' at Yonge Street only
556 YONGE
WA. 2-3270
TORONTO,
caSaW'stRS^iSM'
• • . is a substantial symbol of personal achievement
and secure living. But can von be sure of its permanency if you should meet an untimely death? What
resources will be available to clear the mortgage?
i-ct me tell vou about Sun Life’s Mortgage Protec!ion Police — a life insurance plan tailored to vour
needs which will safeguard your home ... at
small cost.
For Further Information
Consult
KIYO TAMURA
NO OBLIGATION
Bus. EM. 4-5141
Res. OX. S-0333
TORONTO
i
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCHES Bathurst st.
SUNDAY, MARCH 10, 1957
10-30 a.m., Sunday School; II a.m. Enab si
"SEMANTICS AND BUD!
ri
of California's Buddhist Churcnes wui
Rev. T. Tsuji
EVERYONE CORDIALLY INVITED
256 COLLEGE
WA. 2-0991
Tour Home
VANCOUVER, B.C
TRAVEL BY AIR
Anywhere—Anytime
NISEI UNITED CHURCH® *“" s* " ■
SUNDAY, MARCH 10, 1957
11 a.m.. Junior Congregation
11 a.m.. Family BOngwl
"THE SUBCONSCIOUS POAmR OF
Rev. K. Shimizu, M.A., D.D.
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
BOOKKEEPER-STENOGRAPHER
EXPERIENCED. TO TAKE CHARGE OF SMALL GCn: ^U/Y COMMtNat
in writing to: SUPREME PRECISION CASTINGS LTD.,
‘780 LANTHIER ST., ST. LAURENT, MONTREAL 9
j
Phone Us at EM. 8-9934
RESERVATIONS MADE PROMPTLY
on any Airline at official rates
FARES QUOTED TO ANY POINT
Single Return.
TORONTO TO
..S 24.00 S 45.60
New York ......
38.00
19.00
Montreal .........
58.90
31.00
Chicago
......
. 62.00 124.00
Winnipeg .....
>128.00 256.00
Vancouver .....
107.00 210.90
San Francisco
587.00 1076.40
Tokyo .............
BRINGihG SOMlOL<l O/tR?
Passage arranaed by steamer or air
T. KAMEOKA
K. Ivrata Travel Service
113McCaulSt. TORONTO
When Buying, Selling or Exchanging Your Home
KEN HORI
BERNARDI-MATHEWS REAL ESTATE
OX. 8-1121
Res: AM. 1-5194
2670 DANFORTH AVE.
TORONTO ONT.
Residence: 14 Perivale Crescent, Scarboro
?
A
i
iiiHiiiiiniiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiii
^ates and doings
Personal Notes Across Canada ' CALENDAR
I
ix T^E NEWS: Flight Cadet W. Shimbashi of Barnwell, Alta.,
vr No. 2 Air Observer School in a wings ceremony at
^r^Av-'lVinnipeg- His parents are Mr. and Mrs.-J. Shimbashi.
Ted* Itani. 18, of Westbank, B.C.. was pictured in tha
.(ace^ j.standing smartH during the annual regimental inKe^ff
Kelowna branch of the 903 Cadet Squadron recently,
nial meeting of the Westbank,. B.C., United Church,
- At me
Sun 1 sueda as elected superintendent of the Westbank Sunday
*
*
*
JUDO AND JAPANESE HINA DOLLS will be discussed on
6 this Sunday, March 10 on Junior Magazine beCBC-TV C mt ei
2:30 p.m.
s VARIETY NIGHT ATTENDED BY 650: About
tended last Saturday’s Toronto Japanese Anglican
$50 persons,
Veins Associateon’s fund-raising Variety Night at St. Anne’s Parish
hail. The crowd1 heartily enjoyed the smoothly-run program which
ainers Kenny Hayashi, Yoshiko Inouye, K. Morita,
inriuciec e
Katsuyama
sisters, Chiyeko Hiraishi, Mrs. Ura NaIshida W
Jitsushio,
Marion
Hiramatsu, Tomiko Hiraishi. Teruye
kamoro. M
avid Nishioka, Mr. Cho, the Nisei Band, the Nisei
choir, and a orted actors in the three, plays: ‘‘Oh Cadillac”, "St.
Fool”, and “Nihon Kankodan” which erstwhile playFrancis and
tor
Rev. Ken Imai himself wrote and acted.
wright and :
YOUNG ADULTS TO HEAR TALK ON YOUTH OF JAPAN:
Mr Jim Thurlow, at present studying at Emmanuel College, and
teacher of English at Kansei Gakuin University near Kobe, Japan,
Mil give an illustrated talk on young people in Japan at the Queen
cLL Young Adults next Tuesday. Mr. Thurlow’s wife, Setsuko,
urvivor of the Hiroshima bombing Everyone is welcome to
w
and a special invitation .has been sent out to the Nisei AnVllowship to the meeting on March 12, 7.45 p.m. sharp at
Queeii Street United. There’ll be table tennis for the early birds.
NOTE TO NAF MEMBERS: The United'Church Young Adults
have invited the NAF to their meeting next Tuesday at 765 Queen
St West. See details above.
LADIES' NITE AT REC SOCRATIC tomorrow night—the first
25 ladies will bo admitted free, and door prizes for ladies only will
be awarded. Rec So continues rumba lessons from last week. A
reminder—Monte Carlo Nite is next Saturday.
VANCOUVER NANIWA-BUSH! CONCERT: The Vancouver
JapaiiesUGw^^
a ‘Naniwa-bushi’ (melodic chant
ing of stories) concei't on Sunday, March 1'7, 7 p.m. Performers in
clude Suzukime Yonewaka and hex- party.
ALBERTA BUDDHIST SUNDAY SCHOOL CHILDREN from
six Sunday schools will gather for a concert next Saturday, March
16, 7 pan. at the Lethbridge Buddhist Church. The six schools will
participate in the entertainment, sponsored by the Alberta Buddhist
Sunday School Teachers’ association.
*
*
A KEIRO-KAI WAS HELD BY THE YBS in Picture Butte,
Alta., on March 3 on the occasion of Sekku (doll festival). Twentythree aged Issei attended as guests of honor, and memorial gifts
were given to the two oldest, Mrs. Ine Furukawa, 83. and Zentaro
Marriages
iiiiimiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
MARCH
16
Births
KUMAGAI-IRIE
Toronto
The narriage of Doreen Ma
io. daughter of Mr. and
Sirs. Tataro Irie
of Hamilton, Ont., took
n Feb. 23. 1957, at Deer
r
Following a reception held
lina Garden, the couple left
Mr.
^
s
s
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Hito
Kasubuehi (nee Akemi Jobu)
girl, Donna Nobuko, ou Jan.
1957. at Kelowna General IL
APRIL
■Win nr
IS—Toronto
ISQ-J—Vane
PRINTING
wa
Mr
of all omsimoiis
7.
on
KITAMURA-0 YE
Hamilton. Out.
The
Ove.
vounge
and M
Asaji Oye. to Minoru
eldest son of Mr. and
irs. Sentaro • Kitamura, wa
olemnized on Feb. 16, 1957, a
at
re happy to announce thi
of a daughter, Dobra Mi
i Feb. 14. 1957, at the Jeni
Mr
iroji Ta
Toronto
?i:
HAW S. moo ^^^^fats
«27 BAY STREET- TORONTO • CM. S-»7«»
Sts JOVi BEVERLEY STREET • EM.3>5^>
The New Canadian acknowledges
with thanks generous donations from
the following:
Vancouver-ites!
IN NEGOTIATING
REAL ESTATE. INSURANCE
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT,
MORTGAGES,
M
Consult
ab
which wa
held
Izu CL Oikawa
moon,.
Boultbee Sweet & Co. Ltd.
Engagements
1000 W. King Edward. VANCOUVER
MA. 7452
CE. 4184
on
Fumiko Shigei, first daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Reizo Shigei of
Japan, and Robert Mutsuo Hoita,
first son of Mrs. Misao Hoita and
the late Mr. R. Hoita, announced
their engagement on Feb. 17.
1957, at the Hoita residence in
Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. R. Uyeno
of Toronto are acting guardians
of Fumiko.
Mr. and Mrs. Y. Kochi of Kam
loops, B.C., announced the en
gagement of their daughter Mary
Misao, to Yoshio, son of My. and
Mrs. Y. Hamakawa of Vancouver.
16,
1957, at the home of Mr and
Mrs. Kochi in Kamloops.
V
O;
Mr.
Omu
A CM
MOVING TO B.C.?
For Homes, Business or
Acreage, Consult
TIM KAKUTANI
INSURANCE
REAL ESTATE
f
Established over 35 Years
MArine 6421, Day or Night
TORIC
OPTICAL
OPTOMETRISTS
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
^W±
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
530 Burrard St.. VANCOUVER \ B.C.
•r
WSOE FB0WE1 SHOP
CORSAGES, WEDDINGS, FUNERAL DESIGNS
CE. 6322, CE. 3021, or residence: CE. 3784
2677 West Broadway
USE OUR-COMPLETE
FORMAL RENTAL SERVICE
Men’s rentals at botn Toronto stores
Ladies' at Yonge Street only
556 YONGE
WA. 2-3270
TORONTO,
caSaW'stRS^iSM'
• • . is a substantial symbol of personal achievement
and secure living. But can von be sure of its permanency if you should meet an untimely death? What
resources will be available to clear the mortgage?
i-ct me tell vou about Sun Life’s Mortgage Protec!ion Police — a life insurance plan tailored to vour
needs which will safeguard your home ... at
small cost.
For Further Information
Consult
KIYO TAMURA
NO OBLIGATION
Bus. EM. 4-5141
Res. OX. S-0333
TORONTO
i
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCHES Bathurst st.
SUNDAY, MARCH 10, 1957
10-30 a.m., Sunday School; II a.m. Enab si
"SEMANTICS AND BUD!
ri
of California's Buddhist Churcnes wui
Rev. T. Tsuji
EVERYONE CORDIALLY INVITED
256 COLLEGE
WA. 2-0991
Tour Home
VANCOUVER, B.C
TRAVEL BY AIR
Anywhere—Anytime
NISEI UNITED CHURCH® *“" s* " ■
SUNDAY, MARCH 10, 1957
11 a.m.. Junior Congregation
11 a.m.. Family BOngwl
"THE SUBCONSCIOUS POAmR OF
Rev. K. Shimizu, M.A., D.D.
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
BOOKKEEPER-STENOGRAPHER
EXPERIENCED. TO TAKE CHARGE OF SMALL GCn: ^U/Y COMMtNat
in writing to: SUPREME PRECISION CASTINGS LTD.,
‘780 LANTHIER ST., ST. LAURENT, MONTREAL 9
j
Phone Us at EM. 8-9934
RESERVATIONS MADE PROMPTLY
on any Airline at official rates
FARES QUOTED TO ANY POINT
Single Return.
TORONTO TO
..S 24.00 S 45.60
New York ......
38.00
19.00
Montreal .........
58.90
31.00
Chicago
......
. 62.00 124.00
Winnipeg .....
>128.00 256.00
Vancouver .....
107.00 210.90
San Francisco
587.00 1076.40
Tokyo .............
BRINGihG SOMlOL<l O/tR?
Passage arranaed by steamer or air
T. KAMEOKA
K. Ivrata Travel Service
113McCaulSt. TORONTO
When Buying, Selling or Exchanging Your Home
KEN HORI
BERNARDI-MATHEWS REAL ESTATE
OX. 8-1121
Res: AM. 1-5194
2670 DANFORTH AVE.
TORONTO ONT.
Residence: 14 Perivale Crescent, Scarboro
?
A
Page 8
PAGE 8
THE HW CANADIAN Without Education...
Without education, you could
never hope to really under-
Published on Vr ednesday and- Saturday of each week
as a 'medium of expression and news outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada
g
what goes on in n: you could
not handle yourself graciously
and with ease in an environ
ment that is not aAavs so well
OFFICE HOURS
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(Ad rates on request)
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Copy and ad deadlines are Mondays and Thursdays each week.
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MAhJORIE UMtZLKI -- -------------- English Section Editor
KEN MORI....... ..............
Japanese Section & Advertising
EM. 6-5005
s
479 Queen St. W., Toronto 2-B, Ont.
Authorized as second class mail. Post Office Department, Ottawa
fr
' home and school; you could
never relate yourself properly
to the problems of others nor
achieve the peace of mind and
understanding that come to try
all of us.
—James Muir,
Royal Bank of Canada.
« e
in the medical journa
mv friends, reducing
who go about with an
which con si sts only or monotonou mono
broad daylight
driven out of
of their brains t won’t mat
lectual activity is "Did you see So-and
Lack of Irasportota
A TRIBUTE
JC Wartime’ Teachers
There is something very insidious
TV set is a deep scheme to rm sb
m
does not h
Emigration Program
Before Education Week across Canada ends today,
(ConPm/ed from Page One')
we would like to call your attention to the present Nisei
generation’s early schooling.
show that of the 14.ISO slated
Their teachers were young Nisei, the majority of
whom had just graduated from high school themselves, next year, 10,000 will be farmers
with no experience in teaching.
or of farming families. The re
mainder
will be skilled industrial
On Oct. 17, 1942, the B.C. Security Commission.
workers, machinists, technicians
Appointed former tencher Miss Hide Hyodo (now the and other plant or factory workw tie of Rev. k. Shimizu) us supervisor of the interior
pioject schools. Gradually, a school for the evacuated
Of those today wl
Japanese Canadian children began to shape up. The ally emigrating, Yoshioka said
young would-be teachers took a four-week special sum- that “the most conspicuous dif
___
ference between pre-war and
mer course in teaching at New Denver.
post-war Japanese emigration is
Looking_back on The New Canadian files, on Sep that those in pre-war days all
tember 4, 19b3, schools in the various Interior B.C. cent- looked sad while those today at
res were listed as follows: Under principal Takashi seem happy and gay.”
“In the earlier days,” he said,
Tsuji, the school for Bay Farm and Slocan had enrolled “there
was a lot of dock-side
460 pupils with 22 teachers; in Pop off, with principal tear-dripping, while . the emi
Yoshiko Tanabe, 180 students and 12 teachers; Lemon grants today seem to show little
Creek, principal Irene Uchida, 530 students, 26 teachers; ■sentimental attachment for the
New Denver, principal Mary Nagai, 275 students, 14 land they are leaving.”
One -reason for this, he felt.
teachers; Rosebery, principal Terry Sugiura, 175 stu was
that
world ‘‘was much
dents, ten teachers; Kaslo, principal Molly Fujita, 185 smaller,” and i
emigrants
students, ten teachers; Tashme, principal Myea Oka- were succe ful abroad thev could
mura, 6 0 0 students and 3 0 teachers; total, 2805 pupils
with 129 teachers. (In Greenwood, the school was car Japan if they wanted to.
tie
emphasized,
ried on under Catholic and United church sposorship).
however
that tnose leaving today all
r
Lack of facilities and chaotic circumstances did not
Lit with the idea of residing
deter these young inexperienced, teachers from success
abroad
permanently.
Since
1932 when
fully filling their responsibilities. Their enthusiasm and
emigration program, of the
high spirits carried them over the many obstacles facing
13,234 who left with govern
them.
ment aid, in addition the large
The success of their noble effort in teaching the
numbers who left on their own
to settle abroad, “almost none
children of the evacuation era is evident. Those child
have
returned for permanent
ren are now winning scholarships and going on to take
residence
here,” he said.
active part in the community at large.
He said that today’s emigrants
—T.U.
also differed with pre-war emi-
g-rants in that those waiting to
start new home's overseas were
quite often doing well in Japan.
“Those going today ar J not
those at the bottom of the social
strata,” he said.
Not everything about education, and the mental habits of childBrazil has taken the most peo
ru’ o
Professional educators. Now and then people out ple in past years because of the
side the Druid Circle show a surprising flair for getting their mes demands from coffee plantations
sage across.
&
there for Japanese workers. Yo
. A
y^.-ena scheme of British Railways. Thousand* shioka said.
of cmldien m die British Isle go to school by train, travelling short
He said that emigrants today,
instances, and they all have season tickets. Getting these "tickets however, do not choose their new
lenyweu each year is no small problem. But this vear there was not homes because of preference for
e railway companies posted their one country over another, but
notice asking the children to
rather on “the basis of what conaitions
and terms are offered in
bomeoody m the railway offices knew that children who will
the
areas
they are to settle.”
re a large and piamly worded notice in English will go to great
One
of
the most encouraging°Ut somethllW which appears to be intended for
recent developments, according
^® ^ oshioka, was the emigration
It is r
conversations at the stationagreement signed with Bolivia in
‘Wozzit sav
something about
what ar
August
last year for migration
billet:
•Tickets, you fathead. Hero, let me look’
to
that
country
of 1,000 farming
g dirty, .d’you suppo
’ ‘Where s Doreen: she's good at
Hi. Dorreii’; And so t
The Spur ©f Curiosity
of education here. Per
uke elaborate pains to
conceal knowlougo from them. Perhaps
teacher's. instead of
pleading with the torpid monsters to lei
hould tell them that
mathematics, languages and seiema'
for them and full of secrets which ™b adZ Z kiww bS
-em ^curr^^ through their books, while the teachers
Cmnow ^n th™ to cry ‘Put awav that
^^kespeave you ve got hidden under your desk?
hiw ot.en do I nave to tell you to keep away from all that dang
erous, suaversive, lascivious stuff!”
°
—Peterborough Examiner
Isstaested?
Cat! EM. G-5SG5 or write to
THE NEW CANADIAN
47S Queen St. West, Toronto
PAHT-ti
secrete:
cnci /or
Tie
e wers
opport nity to
:<? learn ail pl
w<$r business:
^posing, etc.
cgs: rec
families with about ISO individuals, will leave Japan next
starch under this agreement.
;
e " ould like to conclude
similar agreements with more
countries,” Yoshioka
adaea that no definite agreeniciiis on tnc mutter hnd bccH
leached with any other countrv
’
'
-
, _ At ten o’clock, all’s well and good. He’s seen one
ybieh he has selected out of the seven on the sched
deciaes to serve coffee. He has his coffee, and bN '
hiy dtyet-te. Then his wife begins to clear awav
While, she’s in the kitchen he thinks, “Well, IT bis
news.” And so he listens to Larry Henderson and th?)'
news
over the pretty grim picture in
tyich, and
gty dishes,
mi on the
,
Meanwhile, his wife is still puttering in the k
ne stares at the television screen, there comes an ;
uncemeut of
a late, movie. No sir, our hero isn’t going- to be foo
mto another
-ate night in front of a television set. He’s going t.
n°w the moviej is on. And he shouts to hi:
r what do
you think . . . it’s that old movie we missed,
nd decides to just
watch the beginning. The beginning extends
x
• . • And
finally at one-thirty in the morning he turns into bed,
Fuzing too
late how grim the world is going to look through red-ri
eyes some six hours hence.
_ Even if one may not be an. addict, one’s friends will eventuaHv
drive, you into that inky world of half-shadows. The oti
i ueciued to visit a couple who had long bemoaned the b
last visit had been as far back as the summer of 1953.
rushing around for months, and this particular evening, I suddenly
felt the need of coming to a store to unwind
a ku who could
Lis for me ihmi my dear friends? They were mt
i;;
ent, aniusin
and could bervl.counted
on to provide me with fr
■Pn/>/4
1.
and food for thought.
She greeted me with “O
love, do come m Haven’t seen
you for ages
I was ushered .into the living room. I roped for the
From out of the inky darkr
line voice
grunted “Hi, you ought to watch this. It’s pretty got
I was
pleasantly ignored for the next half hour, having
silted the
mortal sin of daring to announce myself at their door m lie middle
their favorite program! During tire station break 1 did
get in a few pleasantries. “How are you doing- these day?
genuinely interested in learning what my friend., had
a &oing
in
as I had
much. I
• home ar
Then they turned to me. “And you. What have wu be1
Just as I was about to account for my activities, I was u
lv told
to shut up with “This is Climax. It’s a wonderful progiv
• Halfway through the program, with the suspected murderer st
a°yn.^arK alleys, I decided to leave. I wasn’t used to bed
hushed” like a two-year old. Television may keep the family
out it certainly does not add to friendliness.
I wonder if we’ll all end un a race with n
boxes which will em
a story about the a
rial tailbone
Maren
*
I
i
•
?
i
se ;g
aaaicti
begins innocently. An intelligent individual i-e-’H-^i
master of one’s television set. After several wYtyty
kul .UlOUs Vl^xy,
mg, he will suddenly exert his intelligence and
Tm going to bed early.”
‘ nee, "Tonigh
We all suffer from televisionitis. And the frustiw
about it is that we are all conscious, deep down in our ht
while we are sittir
g, time i
myself becoming decidedly unsocial when the tel
midst of my favorite program. And I don’t dare
in the midst of their favorite ones or I’ll be sm
an abrupt “Call you back in fifteen minutes
forgiveable to make a wise selection, but how
we sit and watch trash that we wouldn’t g
the neighborhood theatre ?
Televisionitis will not shorten our phys
wondering about is the terrible thing it is doh
intellectual powers. We participate so placidly
on our part. We live vicariously in the shade
pass before our eyes.
signed by Japan,” Yoshioka said,
Under the agreement, made on a
most-favored-nation ’ basis,
Japanese government helps its
emigrants^ .with transportation
ising and food
expenses, while the Bolivian
free land and
additional
lana surveys, building roads,
setting up irrigation projects and
educational facilities.
yet.
^aerella
iatu?
Skits, Doo:
f, find
in the
st or
cure
vf at
THE HW CANADIAN Without Education...
Without education, you could
never hope to really under-
Published on Vr ednesday and- Saturday of each week
as a 'medium of expression and news outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada
g
what goes on in n: you could
not handle yourself graciously
and with ease in an environ
ment that is not aAavs so well
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479 Queen St. W., Toronto 2-B, Ont.
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fr
' home and school; you could
never relate yourself properly
to the problems of others nor
achieve the peace of mind and
understanding that come to try
all of us.
—James Muir,
Royal Bank of Canada.
« e
in the medical journa
mv friends, reducing
who go about with an
which con si sts only or monotonou mono
broad daylight
driven out of
of their brains t won’t mat
lectual activity is "Did you see So-and
Lack of Irasportota
A TRIBUTE
JC Wartime’ Teachers
There is something very insidious
TV set is a deep scheme to rm sb
m
does not h
Emigration Program
Before Education Week across Canada ends today,
(ConPm/ed from Page One')
we would like to call your attention to the present Nisei
generation’s early schooling.
show that of the 14.ISO slated
Their teachers were young Nisei, the majority of
whom had just graduated from high school themselves, next year, 10,000 will be farmers
with no experience in teaching.
or of farming families. The re
mainder
will be skilled industrial
On Oct. 17, 1942, the B.C. Security Commission.
workers, machinists, technicians
Appointed former tencher Miss Hide Hyodo (now the and other plant or factory workw tie of Rev. k. Shimizu) us supervisor of the interior
pioject schools. Gradually, a school for the evacuated
Of those today wl
Japanese Canadian children began to shape up. The ally emigrating, Yoshioka said
young would-be teachers took a four-week special sum- that “the most conspicuous dif
___
ference between pre-war and
mer course in teaching at New Denver.
post-war Japanese emigration is
Looking_back on The New Canadian files, on Sep that those in pre-war days all
tember 4, 19b3, schools in the various Interior B.C. cent- looked sad while those today at
res were listed as follows: Under principal Takashi seem happy and gay.”
“In the earlier days,” he said,
Tsuji, the school for Bay Farm and Slocan had enrolled “there
was a lot of dock-side
460 pupils with 22 teachers; in Pop off, with principal tear-dripping, while . the emi
Yoshiko Tanabe, 180 students and 12 teachers; Lemon grants today seem to show little
Creek, principal Irene Uchida, 530 students, 26 teachers; ■sentimental attachment for the
New Denver, principal Mary Nagai, 275 students, 14 land they are leaving.”
One -reason for this, he felt.
teachers; Rosebery, principal Terry Sugiura, 175 stu was
that
world ‘‘was much
dents, ten teachers; Kaslo, principal Molly Fujita, 185 smaller,” and i
emigrants
students, ten teachers; Tashme, principal Myea Oka- were succe ful abroad thev could
mura, 6 0 0 students and 3 0 teachers; total, 2805 pupils
with 129 teachers. (In Greenwood, the school was car Japan if they wanted to.
tie
emphasized,
ried on under Catholic and United church sposorship).
however
that tnose leaving today all
r
Lack of facilities and chaotic circumstances did not
Lit with the idea of residing
deter these young inexperienced, teachers from success
abroad
permanently.
Since
1932 when
fully filling their responsibilities. Their enthusiasm and
emigration program, of the
high spirits carried them over the many obstacles facing
13,234 who left with govern
them.
ment aid, in addition the large
The success of their noble effort in teaching the
numbers who left on their own
to settle abroad, “almost none
children of the evacuation era is evident. Those child
have
returned for permanent
ren are now winning scholarships and going on to take
residence
here,” he said.
active part in the community at large.
He said that today’s emigrants
—T.U.
also differed with pre-war emi-
g-rants in that those waiting to
start new home's overseas were
quite often doing well in Japan.
“Those going today ar J not
those at the bottom of the social
strata,” he said.
Not everything about education, and the mental habits of childBrazil has taken the most peo
ru’ o
Professional educators. Now and then people out ple in past years because of the
side the Druid Circle show a surprising flair for getting their mes demands from coffee plantations
sage across.
&
there for Japanese workers. Yo
. A
y^.-ena scheme of British Railways. Thousand* shioka said.
of cmldien m die British Isle go to school by train, travelling short
He said that emigrants today,
instances, and they all have season tickets. Getting these "tickets however, do not choose their new
lenyweu each year is no small problem. But this vear there was not homes because of preference for
e railway companies posted their one country over another, but
notice asking the children to
rather on “the basis of what conaitions
and terms are offered in
bomeoody m the railway offices knew that children who will
the
areas
they are to settle.”
re a large and piamly worded notice in English will go to great
One
of
the most encouraging°Ut somethllW which appears to be intended for
recent developments, according
^® ^ oshioka, was the emigration
It is r
conversations at the stationagreement signed with Bolivia in
‘Wozzit sav
something about
what ar
August
last year for migration
billet:
•Tickets, you fathead. Hero, let me look’
to
that
country
of 1,000 farming
g dirty, .d’you suppo
’ ‘Where s Doreen: she's good at
Hi. Dorreii’; And so t
The Spur ©f Curiosity
of education here. Per
uke elaborate pains to
conceal knowlougo from them. Perhaps
teacher's. instead of
pleading with the torpid monsters to lei
hould tell them that
mathematics, languages and seiema'
for them and full of secrets which ™b adZ Z kiww bS
-em ^curr^^ through their books, while the teachers
Cmnow ^n th™ to cry ‘Put awav that
^^kespeave you ve got hidden under your desk?
hiw ot.en do I nave to tell you to keep away from all that dang
erous, suaversive, lascivious stuff!”
°
—Peterborough Examiner
Isstaested?
Cat! EM. G-5SG5 or write to
THE NEW CANADIAN
47S Queen St. West, Toronto
PAHT-ti
secrete:
cnci /or
Tie
e wers
opport nity to
:<? learn ail pl
w<$r business:
^posing, etc.
cgs: rec
families with about ISO individuals, will leave Japan next
starch under this agreement.
;
e " ould like to conclude
similar agreements with more
countries,” Yoshioka
adaea that no definite agreeniciiis on tnc mutter hnd bccH
leached with any other countrv
’
'
-
, _ At ten o’clock, all’s well and good. He’s seen one
ybieh he has selected out of the seven on the sched
deciaes to serve coffee. He has his coffee, and bN '
hiy dtyet-te. Then his wife begins to clear awav
While, she’s in the kitchen he thinks, “Well, IT bis
news.” And so he listens to Larry Henderson and th?)'
news
over the pretty grim picture in
tyich, and
gty dishes,
mi on the
,
Meanwhile, his wife is still puttering in the k
ne stares at the television screen, there comes an ;
uncemeut of
a late, movie. No sir, our hero isn’t going- to be foo
mto another
-ate night in front of a television set. He’s going t.
n°w the moviej is on. And he shouts to hi:
r what do
you think . . . it’s that old movie we missed,
nd decides to just
watch the beginning. The beginning extends
x
• . • And
finally at one-thirty in the morning he turns into bed,
Fuzing too
late how grim the world is going to look through red-ri
eyes some six hours hence.
_ Even if one may not be an. addict, one’s friends will eventuaHv
drive, you into that inky world of half-shadows. The oti
i ueciued to visit a couple who had long bemoaned the b
last visit had been as far back as the summer of 1953.
rushing around for months, and this particular evening, I suddenly
felt the need of coming to a store to unwind
a ku who could
Lis for me ihmi my dear friends? They were mt
i;;
ent, aniusin
and could bervl.counted
on to provide me with fr
■Pn/>/4
1.
and food for thought.
She greeted me with “O
love, do come m Haven’t seen
you for ages
I was ushered .into the living room. I roped for the
From out of the inky darkr
line voice
grunted “Hi, you ought to watch this. It’s pretty got
I was
pleasantly ignored for the next half hour, having
silted the
mortal sin of daring to announce myself at their door m lie middle
their favorite program! During tire station break 1 did
get in a few pleasantries. “How are you doing- these day?
genuinely interested in learning what my friend., had
a &oing
in
as I had
much. I
• home ar
Then they turned to me. “And you. What have wu be1
Just as I was about to account for my activities, I was u
lv told
to shut up with “This is Climax. It’s a wonderful progiv
• Halfway through the program, with the suspected murderer st
a°yn.^arK alleys, I decided to leave. I wasn’t used to bed
hushed” like a two-year old. Television may keep the family
out it certainly does not add to friendliness.
I wonder if we’ll all end un a race with n
boxes which will em
a story about the a
rial tailbone
Maren
*
I
i
•
?
i
se ;g
aaaicti
begins innocently. An intelligent individual i-e-’H-^i
master of one’s television set. After several wYtyty
kul .UlOUs Vl^xy,
mg, he will suddenly exert his intelligence and
Tm going to bed early.”
‘ nee, "Tonigh
We all suffer from televisionitis. And the frustiw
about it is that we are all conscious, deep down in our ht
while we are sittir
g, time i
myself becoming decidedly unsocial when the tel
midst of my favorite program. And I don’t dare
in the midst of their favorite ones or I’ll be sm
an abrupt “Call you back in fifteen minutes
forgiveable to make a wise selection, but how
we sit and watch trash that we wouldn’t g
the neighborhood theatre ?
Televisionitis will not shorten our phys
wondering about is the terrible thing it is doh
intellectual powers. We participate so placidly
on our part. We live vicariously in the shade
pass before our eyes.
signed by Japan,” Yoshioka said,
Under the agreement, made on a
most-favored-nation ’ basis,
Japanese government helps its
emigrants^ .with transportation
ising and food
expenses, while the Bolivian
free land and
additional
lana surveys, building roads,
setting up irrigation projects and
educational facilities.
yet.
^aerella
iatu?
Skits, Doo:
f, find
in the
st or
cure
vf at