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The New Canadian — March 16, 1957

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Page 1

THE NEV?

An .Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin

ooth year

SATURDAY, MARCH 16. 1957

^o. 21

TORONTO. ONT.
COLLEGE EDUCATION

: f ON THE NEWSFRONT

McGill Campus Club
Debates on Aesthetics
Versus Technology

Pert Dover to Receive Cherry Trees from Japan
POKT DOVER. Ont.—Port Dover is to receive ten flowering
ri’^n^ nee>, a gift to the town by Japanese Consul for Toron:?.
vXp Endo? on occasion of his visit to Port Dover to address the
iXc’i on April 16. The trees will be specially selected stock
X X‘ b* flown to Canada air-express from Japan.

MUN TRE AL.'P.Q.- Discussion,
a.c r than decision, was the
xmnme of the evening when the
WBi'i Nisei Campus club staged
. 6 base March 9 on the topic:
■uk-wlved that universities should
-ms. a liberal education rather
.b..ra a technical one”.

Negro Refused Haircut; Awarded $200 Damages
STOCKTON, Calif.—A Tracy restaurant and tavern owner who
refused a haircut last June 16 because he is a Negro was award^X’09 damages on Jan. 30. Archie Manley, who is a deacon of his
church testified .that after waiting his turn in the shop, he started
to o-et Xo a chair, and was refused service by owner Robert MutrhlX The iudge rejected a plea of Murrillos that he had not been
trained to cut the hair type of a Negro, that a barber who has been
licensed must learn to cut a Negro’s hair.

lowing as a point of departure
1 da k Twain's observation: ’They
: baiiT teach me nothing in school,
: but they did it very well.” an
alt npt was made to trace the
I source of the seeming decline in
Introduced 1st Japanese-English Newspaper
' tin’ quest for knowledge. On the
HONOLULU.—Yasutaro Soga, 84, editor-publisher emeritus of
f question of whether the students,
the bilingual Hawaii Times, died March 3 following a heart attack.
educators, or society was to
He came°to Hawaii in 1896. In 1919, he introduced the English sec­
blame for the horrid failure rates
tion to the Nippu Jiji (now known as the Hawaii Times), said to be
in most uni versit ies. it was found
the first of its kind in a Japanese newspaper anywhere in the world.
that most of the students and
His son Shigeo is now editor-publisher of the Hawaii Times.
recent graduates, in a fit of
fancy, place the blame squarely
on the educators and the society
controlling their activities.
('haired by Yosh Taguchi, the
debate was upheld on the affir­
mative side by two representa­
family for several hundred years.
By CECILIA SMITH
tives
of the Fellowship group—
Trimming and pruning have kept
In the Vancouver Sun
teacher,
Helen Tanaka and den­
small.
VANCOUVER.—The Japanese them
—Telegram photo
tistry
student,
Don Jinnouchi,
Periodically, Vancouver resi­
influence on architecture, interior dents
i
while
freshette
science student
are enabled to see how this i ROSIE OKANO (right) of Vancouver won the National
decoration and landscaping is be­
}
Hiroko
Watanabe
and senior,
coming increasingly important on is done when Japanese ships dock I Hair Styling Competition at the Canadiana Beauty Ca- j Dave Ohashi, comprised the nein our harbor.
this continent.
I gative team.

lit el Bonsai Seen on Japan Ships

The inter-relation of garden
and house, the exposed structural
features, sliding panels between
living areas and uncluttered sim­
plicity of rooms, all reflect it.
One of the most ancient Japa­
nese arts that is gaining popu­
larity on this continent, is bonsai,
growing miniature trees.
But
though dwarfed, the characteris­
tic shapes are not destroyed.
The last shipment of these
trees to Vancouver was snapped
up practically over night. ■
Japanese often have minia­
ture trees that have been in the

For instance aboard the M.S. j valcade held at the Royal York in Toronto last Tuesday
Hikawa Maru, at Pier B. last I night. She poses with the Lance Memorial trophy, while I Views for the affirmative reweek, chief officer R. Uchida has
■ vcaled a "Frankenstein Monster"
in his cabin a 10-year-old plum M. Carter models the winning hair style, “fantasy line”. i produced by man’s technical .ad­
tree which is only 18 inches high.
vances which hove not equipped
It has been regularly pruned to
him with the ability to control it.
keep it a dwarf.
i I mversit ies must, remind themAny one surprised at this feat
i -elves of the purpose for which
is taken to see another oddity
ST0 CK H O LM, S weden.—J a pan beat Berczik in three tough sets, ; ihev were first- founded. -knowaboard his ship. It is a Japanese captured both men’s and women’s 29-22. 21-19. 21-19. downing Hun­ । Tdge as an end in itself and not
fir tree which in 30 years of world team championship cups in gary 5-2 to reign as world cham­ i i> a menus to an end.
vigorous life has been trimmed table tennis.
pions for the fourth siraipn
i
A technical education does not.
so successfully to dwarf size
year.
Ichiro Ogimura, men’s singles
i endow man with the capacity to
■while continuously at sea that the champion of tile world, crushed
The girls upset Romania’s de- । cn mv .-ill that life has to offer,
tree now reaches only 12 inches Zoltan Berczik, holder of four j fending cup holders 3-t1. Japan i t he intrinsic limitations of a
in height.
European championships, 21-14. i defeated Canada m • the lir a total1/ technical education has

oi Retains Ping Pong Team Championship

(^Continued- on Page Eight'}

21-11.

while

Toshiaki

Tanaka ' round of the team mairiics.

YUKICHI FUKUZAWA:

100 Years Igo 1st Japan Ship Came to IL S

GIANTS, catcher Shigeru
Fujio (left) and pitcher
Sho Horiuchi, keep in shape
as they unload their bag­
gage from a JAL plane be­
fore joining the Brooklyn
^o^ers at Vero Beach,
Ea., for spring training.
They will spend a month
forking out and studying
’Mth the National League
champions.

been recognized by certain pro­
fessions (legal, medical, dental,
"l.c.) which demand years of ex­
posure to the liberal arts before
accepting candidates into the
professional study. There is an
increasing conviction in industry
that man’s soul must be soothed
and satisfied as evidenced by
libraries and music appreciation
clubs within the industrial plants.

!
He describes the lengths to I other, it took nip a long tmc‘
By RELMAN MORIN (AD)
i which the people in San Framdsim I before I con’d understand th ,-v
NEW YORK.—Just 100 years I went to provide them with food ; separate and mysterious facts.
The aim of universities must be
ago this time, an eager young j comparable to their own diet and
.And to show how little Hie
man in Japan was brimming- with —"knowing- our habits’—facili­ i
dynamic, not static, was the sug­
excitement about a long voyage. ties for a Japanese style bath. He 'world has changed in HH) years, gestion of the negative team, and
He was going to the United used a charming ' Japanese ex­ la Russian tried to persuade him should prepare man to face the
Ho be a spy for Moscow!
States.
pression—
I
The time came to go back to problems of today, not of yesterA little earlier, Commodore
"It was as if our host had pul i Japan, in San Francisco, m-mi- j day. In this highly mechanical
Perry had “opened” Japan some­ ...us in the palm of-his hand to st u : while, their ship had undergone I ago, an emphasis on technology
I at the university level is not at
what forcibly, ending its 250
exten.-ive repairs.
i nil misplaced. .Aesthetic values,
years of self-imposed isolation ! that we lacked nothing."
i
"When tin' ship was ready, and
Adventure meets him at eve: y I we were preparing to sail on the I the inevitable accompaniments of
from t,he rest of the world. Dur­ I
ing that time, no Japanese could i turn . . . Ice even in summer, and homeward voyage, we inquired a technical education, could be
legally leave the country. After i floating in champagne, at that. now much we should have to pay more- profitably imbued at the
Perry, a treaty was written and I . . . Ladies present at receptions. i for the repairs and other ex- high school level.
I . . . Having learned to smoke, he 1 pem-es. We were met with a
relations with America began.
Psychology, the cult of this
:
lights
a
cigar
but
cunt
find
an
modern
age, does not even reA century has passed now, 100
' kindly smile, and were obliged tv

ash
Cray
in
one
of
th
w
>
ironis!
I
cognize
the
existence of a soul,
years of give and take, including
i sail away with out obligations
| ami minds are soothed with trana fearful war, and today the two ’ “I put it in my poA t- .. d pre- ; impaid.”
m
I quilizers.
Individuals equipped
countries are linked again. Su­ I sentlv mv clothe.-- wuie
What was the result of ah j neither to face reality nor enjoy
perficially, no two people seem i flames."
j ‘his?
I all the happiness of the so-called
less alike. But underneath—weii,
In Washington, however, he
i full life are bred by universities
i
At
home,
Fukuzawa
became
here is the young man’s story.
• finds something that times in
। which fail to recognize their own
i
one
of
the
loaders

often
at
the
His name was Yukichi Fukuza­ ’vUmly with the deepest sensi- . risk of his life—m the struggle j cultural anti societal values—the
wa and he was a man of wicg- . i-M Ri'5The Japam —< vouma. - between those who feared and l “almighty buck” is the prime
ranging curiosities. Everything then’ groat men. and hv is imhated foreigners and the group I motivator in a materialistic counp
with the statm-s
f
interested him, the sciences, la
advocating closer relation.-' v s’.a try. A university that probes the
guages, government, marines, George Wa.mmgB n a M g'lo = the United States and other We.— omblems of antiquity is revertof
the
fmmdr.z
customs. He came to America m i ■>pur*’•foes
: mg to the "good old days” that
fathers.
Now.
L
fIcompNB
A torn nations. 1 hrnv is no way of
the first ship, built and navigated
: probably never were.
knowing
how
many
«>f
his
people
pt limne.
entirely by Japanese, to cross *h
he converted during his years >1
The final rebuttal for the af­
But the
< <«f mw.Trm- v
Pacific.
tcaciiii g : A ’’ r" mg.
firmative pointed out that we
O
ey
ba-fi
h.:
How would they be received?
There are slid rrw- iike him must be masters of the machines

7 that 4bic
The answer came quickly.
today on bulb .•■Me., of '.re I'arif.''. ; and not be enslaved by them.
“They, the Americans
did
people wim
e 'h ■ de-p suidar- Liberal education alone can and
everything for us,”' he wrote,
> tics, not tire curiace (Lfivi>.)ic^ t must save man from an impend“and" they could not have done ; e,-. ba «r>eii al the same table, between two races.
■ ing technological disaster.
‘ eating and drinking with eaun
more.”

Page 2

PAGE 2
_£gturday, March is

Double S Upsets Brass Rail in 1st Game of Semis

’DAVE'S

Double S Tile upset secondj^lace Brass Rail 5-3 in the first
’ game of the best of three semi­
finals in the East Toronto Hockey
League last Sunday before, a
crowd of 1.500 at East York

Sales and Service

DAVID AZUMA

The

734 St. C!ai

LE. 3-0386

W. S. TATEISHI
OPTOMETRIST

q( DOXSEE III
,^74 College St.

1 I.
Toronto w

4-58>';3(Ues.)

isei

on a. winnins

■ast eight games, and tieing one
and losing one. If they win this
Sunday’s game, 1 p.m. at East
York .Arena, they’ll go on to the
Unais against either Aireon TV
or Cross-Town Buick with a g’ood
.•hance for the championship.
Jim Molnar paced the team last
Sunday■' with one goal and three
, with a goal each marked
UD
Dave Sunohara, Roy Koi, Ian MacPherson and Jin:

’ DOCTOR O
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693 Yonge ,

WA. 1-854;

Toronto
bice)

BE. 3-3889 (

2 College St., Toronto

|

F. A. BREWIH, Q.C.
Barrister & Solicitor

.Cameron, Weldon
( Brewin & McCallum
'■372 Bay St.

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Toronto

-84.4 TONCI ITUIT, TORONTO,

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Or Bringing Some
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alj
American President
Northwest Airlines

ana Fan American
Write or call for
full information and
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Travel Office
68 Wellington Street West
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Toronto

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INVOICE

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DRYCLEANI1W--------------

CHATHAM NISEI SPARK
2nd Invitational Cage
LOCAL HOCKEY TEAMS
Tourney Slated March 30 CHATHAM, Ont.—Jim Abe’s

HAMILTON, Ont.—The big
uuy, March 30, will soon be here
when four teams will vie for the
4
tournament
championship
in
Hamilton. The action will take
place in the spacious gym of the
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
newly-erected Cathedral
Girl
NOTARY 1TRL1C
£ School at 46'7 Main East.
The four teams hoping to be
victorious are:
I MM. ?.O959
LONDON-CHATHAM — This
3427
combo will be sparked by the
University of Western Ontario
Colt player, Art Suzuki, and
diminutive
Chuck
Okubo
of
Thos. T. Onizuka, B.A
Chatham.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
TORONTO—Starring for TorNOTARY PUBLIC
onto will be Dick Tanaka, already
making his mark with the Ya­
i-9 Tonge St., Toronto
mada
Studio hoopsters, assisted
EM. 3-5002 — OX. 1-3388 (res.)
by Kayo Shigetomi.
H A MIL T 0 N CHIN E S E
AV A. 1-5005
ATHLETIC
CLUB—This team
2280 (Iles.) f
Has
been
added
to provide keen
KAZUO G. OIYE f competition as well as to promote
greater interest. This group of
BARRISTER — SOLICITOR
speedy sharpshooters will be led
notary
by
ace Jinx Chong- and Benny
IIoom 203A
L

JON ONODERA

time a Nisei team has an op­
portunity to try for a provincial title, and is particularly
unique in that the field of
basketball is characterized by
height.
are
to
come out and get behind their
team and give moral support.
Games start this Thursday,
8:30 at Parkdale Collegiate
(Close, south of Queen).



m^
gardeners

oiuet^

The Ontario Senior B basket ball crown
at stake
next week when Yamadas take
on Northern Ontario champs
Sudbury in a two out of three

CLUB FIDELIS

I Paul K.

Arrangements

NISEI URGED TO CHEER
YAMADAS TO VICTORY

HAMILTON CLUB FIDELIS
—Two six-footers, Shin Fukumo­
to, winner of the team’s M.V.P.
at last year’s Toronto Invita­
tional. and Tim Oikawa, will be
ably supported by Frank Shimo­
da and the rest of the team,
essentially the same as the one
entered in the ’56 Toronto Invitational.
Another feature which should
promote a great deal of interest
is the Club Ami
Club

Professional referees have been
nired to keep the games’ officiaing unbiased. Schedule has been
;et up as follows: 12.30 p.m., Tormto vs. Chinese Athletic Club;
;:45 pan., Hamilton vs. London.hatham; 3 p.m., Club Ami girls
-s. Club Fidelis girls; 4 'p.m.
Consolation; 5 pan., Finals.
Any interested spectators wor­
k'd about parking- problems have
hem solved because of the park­
ing area behind the school, so
ome out and seo some interest;1K games and spend an enjoyble afternoon.
The Community Dance to folw the tournament will be held
Michael's hall on James
opposite
Armorie
will commence at S:30
arid continue to midnight, with
he admission price only one dol­
or. And so, to everyone. Torononians. Londoners. Chathamites.
Hamiltonians ’.—^whoever you are,
Ring evening after
atternoou. Evervone
we scon
—M.M.

goal at 4:12 of overtime enabled
the Chatham Collegiate Greenshirts to capture their second
straight Western Ontario Secon­
dary School Association Senior
‘‘A” hockey title and defeat Lon­
don Beal Technical school 3-2 be­
fore nearly 1,000 wildly-cheering
high school students March 6 at
the Chatham arena. Abe’s over­
type marker gave Chatham the
Miller Memorial Trophy.
In the opening g-ame of a round
robin series for the championship
on March 2, Greenshirts’ Maruo­
ka scored the winning goal with
one minute and four seconds to
go to defeat Windsor Lowe Voca­
tional school Roughriders 7-5 in
Windsor. The defeat was the first
in 15 straight vans for Windsor
and the eighth straigthwin for
Chatham.

KEG

v

256 COLLEGE
WA. 2-0991

COATS
SUITS
DRESSES

556 YONGE’
WA. 2-3270
TORONTO

10 Richmond St. East
TORONTO
Open Friday Till 9 a.m.

Ladies' Shoes, 1 & Up
Men's Scott McHales, 4-14

ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West

®

I

T. Seki 751
uda 737, H. Hatanaka
, M. Nakamoto 704. M. Nishimura 562,
Towata 610 ( ;92). Weekly doubles
chamos: M. Nakamoto,. N.
1418. *
(Mar.
s had
USS)
"ikea Ken's 7-0 to
lead to J3 points,
onlv
gaining they look
ch. for
■' doubles
:s Tets Sek
1445.

Toronto

C.O.D. ORDERS

FROM COAST TO COAST

SUKIYAKI
NABEYAKI
Various Kinds of Donburi

C

Ginza Cafe

| EM. 8-9368

two

577 BAY (at Dundas)', TORONTO

WELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS

GOLDEN DRAGON
CHOP SUEY HOUSE

NISEI MAJORS (Mar
ji act back in form b

Open Noon to 2 a.m.

777 "(SIIL S
Isoshima 766

’oda 758
15, G. N
A.

Shoes

IN NEW SPRING STYLES

(Mar. 3); Caotam Paul
"WSJOps wiih a Respectable
S2z. (29q). M. Nagata 763 (277),. F. Ina­
moto 733 (261), J. Shigetomi 724 (26°)
J1- 5tsu ^ C8S), K. Izumi 716 (283),
L08 (282). Alice Matsui 691
(205), M. Hamade 653 (280), R. Shiomi
630 (217), M. Sakura 628 (246).'G Ni­
shimura 609 (229), T. Baba 606 (266).'
(Mar. 10): Sats Nakawatase was "on"
with
vvun 831
ooi (344),
uwi, k
loyonaaa 788 (330),
A
P. Toyonaga
(330)
M. Otsu /4/ (281), S. Mitsuki 711 (315), $
M. Nagata 709 (247). For ladies, Torchv
an impressive 710 (266), M’.
Tbe
660 (2-tz), G. Nakauchi 657
H-„,Waklaa 655 (229), M. Hamazaki c

ow

CANADA'S FiRst ^A'^

SmalL Size

RECSOCRATIC

DANFORTH (Mar. 4):
lashed for the 2nd tirr

FORMAL RENTAL SERVICE

Men s rentals at both Toronto 4
Ladies at Yonge Street only

NEWS

EM. 8-2475

Orders to Take Ou*

131A Dundas St. W„ Toronto

725

no
MIXED MAJORS

8’7

1ST

1G)

v

4
CIO
3

BIRD NEWS
. yeda is entered in the
n w, m t i on al Tournev at
one or me last major
tmenis of rhe season, to
dace March 23-24.
Nations Ayes play their
ome game of the season
t Metro in the Interchurch
this Tuesday.

USE OUR COMPLETE

Melvin Wa-kabayashi scored
four g-oals, the last with only 14
seconds left in the game, as" the
Chatham Branch 28 Canadian
Legion Bantams took a one-goal
lead over Stratford recently.
Final score was 5-1 for Chatham
in the second round of the On­
tario Minor Hockey Association
pl ay downs.

J

1 osn

MARRIED?

S'"

O1

613.
WEDNESDAY 10-PIN

y

5

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DUNDAS FISH & GBOCEBY
GEN TATEYAMA' and TOSH RYOJI

c.

82)

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ne:

171 Dundas Street West. Toronto
EM. 4-7692

4

Page 3

•h 16, 19-57
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70-78 Roy St
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Montreal, P.Q.

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620 5th Avenue Rockefeller Center Promenade
New York JUdson6-7400
37 South Wabash Avenue Chicago,
ANdover 3-1384

SAN FRANCISCO, HAWAII to JAPAN, OKINAWA,
HONG KONG, BANGKOK

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. Marc.1116^1957
1
i
i
4

Hlllllllllllllillllllllllltllllllllllllllllllll

dates and doings
A

Personal Notes Across Canada CALENDAR

' IIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

REC SOCRATIC'S MONTE CARLO NITE which takes plat
Engagements
.Uthe UNF hall will feature a skit, "Annie Hold That Gun
Rov Kusano, Reg Mori, Mary Uchiyama, George Imai,
Mr. and Mrs. Takajiro Baba of
arrm
nnohara
and Tuck Fujino. Location of this hilarious Wes- Chatham, Ont., announced the
?arme
ana is the Monte Carlo Casino, and Roy will be singing engagement of their first daugh-You Berre Kot Do That”. Also on hand for entertainment wifi be ter, Pat Hatsue. to Yul e son or
the popular Suices instrumental trio, and a number of door prizes, Mr. and Mrs. Tokue Kf
Tr.afs tom: hr. S-9 for the Latin American Hour, and 9-12 for the Toronto. A party was held
March 9, 1957, at the
of
A note to members. Rec So will be held as usual tommorrow Mr. and Mrs. Baba.
^

ij:



FUJI WAR A
'hi Un i; v, ar::

K
6. I!

MARCH '

3

8-12.

w .1
id hl

Funeral w

ow

a.

■T wren to.

KAMACHI
p

$

-He rail! an

Hospital

ancy Naomi Yamashit
ec
ond daughter of Mr. and M

fl
PIANIST KAY FUJINO of Hamilton will give a recital this
APRIL
Thursday- March 21, at the Royal Conservatory Concert hall, UniWin
JCCA
A
verAv and College St., starting at 5 p.m. Kay has been studying Alta., and Jimmy Toshio Adachi,
--’Me at the University of Toronto Royal Conservatory, and has won son of hl r Yoshiko Adachi of
V number of scholarships in the past. The concert is open to the Lethbridge.
Alta
announced
N rsilIZA KI MEMORIAL
their e ngagcment on hlarch 10.
public.
*
$
*
1957, at the S
were hd
THE NISEI WOMEN’S CLUB of Toronto will hold its general. Taber, Alta. Sew
Mr.
u the T
eting on Tuesday, March 19 at the Japanese United Church, 765 and Mrs. George
Buddhist. Church with mot
OaeenSt. West, at S p.m. The North group under the leadership
cf ilrs. Aiko Murakami will be in charge: and an interesting talk Obituaries
IN NEGOTIATING
o’i ceramics will be given by Miss Chiz Shimano, who will also show
REAL ESTATE. INSURANCE
mura
siinwks of the raw "material up to the finished product.
AMEMORI
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT.
Rev.
T. Tsuji
The club's annual Children’s Easter Party for the members'
MORTGAGES.
Mrs. Asa Amemori, 75, died on
mo
children will be held from-11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. on April 24, at the March 2, 1957 in Raymond, Alta. made bv Mr. T.
Consult
above church.
Funeral services, held March G
The annual Spring Tea will be held at the same place on Satur- at the Raymond Buddhist Church,
dav. March 11, 8-10 p.m. Tickets may be obtained from the members were conducted by Rev. H. NeCARD OF THANKS
at 50 cents each which includes Tea and program. There will also koda and Rev. Y. Kawamura.
Boultbee Sweet & Co. Ltd.
be a sale of goods and home baking at this affair.
1000 W. King Edward. VANCOUVER
DIKE
CE. 4184
MA. 7452
TORONTO J CCA SPRING FROLIC is slated for Saturday
Kyusuke Oike of Vancouver
night, April 20, on Easter Weekend at the UNF hall. The Ontario died March 7, 1957 at the age of
The Kosaka Family
4
The S. Matsushitas
JCCA Conference is also set for the same weekend, with Toronto 8; vear Funeral was held March
I
The J. Fujimotos
4
i
hosting.
9.
F 4

Vancouverites!

Ira G. Oikawa

MAMBO AT EL CHOCLO tomorrow night. There’ll also be a
brushup on rumba, and beginners’ jive starting 7:30 sharp as usual.

TYBS DANCE CLASS starts tomorrow night at 7:30 for mem­
bers and friends. Basic steps of all dances will be taught by Tomo
Goto and Edith Tatebe.

CLUB AMI will hold a benefit dance for the Double S Tile
hockev team on March 23, 8 p.m. at the Buddhist Church.
*
*
*
ALBERTA HANA-MATSURI services will be held in thejocal
Buddhist Churches on the following- dates: April 7, Raymond and
Taber; 14, Picture Butte; 21, Coaldale; 22 Rosemary; 28, Lethbridge.

Chatham Slants

4

Hasn't Lost Touch

MOVING TO B.C.?

A Japanese Canadian farmer,
who used to specialize in bar­
rel-making long ago in Japan,
recently built himself a house
in the backwoods of B.C.
Friends, in praising his work,
remarked, "This one hasn’t any
leaks.”

For Homes, Business or
Acreage, Consult

INSURANCE

i^m

PATRONIZE
OUR ADVERTISERS

Established over y5 Years
MArine 6421, Day or Night
530 Burrard St., VANCOUVER. \ B.

By JACK NISHIZAKI
CHATHAM, Qnt.—Last week­ summer by volunteers harvesting
end was most profitable, having tomatoes.
been spent in Toronto, primarily
The Chatham Bantams doubled
to attend a memorial seiw'ice for their 5-4 score to win the second
my late brother Fred, sponsored round 10-8 over Stratford, this
by his close friends Mr. Hideo time away from home at Strat­
Yoshida and company.- We are ford. Again Melvin Wakabayashi
more than grateful to them and was the game’s outstandingthe congregation which gathered player, scoring two goals and
at the Toronto Buddhist Church. assisting on. three others. The
After
the
gathering
our team now advances to the semi­
memory lingered back to the ol’ final round of the OMHA playA ancouver days, meeting many offs, with the opposition likely
friends and families from Kitsila- to be Kitchener.
There is every indication that
no whom we hadn’t seen since
the
local basketball players will
the evacuation. It certainly gives
accept
the invitation of Club
a wonderful feeling- to meet them
Fidelis
of
Hamilton for the com­
once again to reminisce.
ing tourney on March 30. They
The Kent 1-2-3 Club, through can combine with the London
president Jim Yako, presented' a boys to make up a worthwhile
cheque for S250 to the YMCA team, or even better than aver­
building- project at a dinner meet­ age . . . regardless, it will be
ing. This money was raised last good relations. (

PAINTERS
EXPERIENCED

:
A

for first-class decora­
in
tor,
high-class residential
districts; good pay.
Apply KAZ KATO,
LE. 5-4697 (Toronto).

TOOUE ’ FtOWEB SHOP
CORSAGES, WEDDINGS, FUNERAL DESIGNS

CE. 6322, CE. 3021, or residence: CE. 3784
VANCOUVER, B.C

2677 West Broadway

NISEI UNITED CHURCH 7(15 Queen St. W., Toronto
SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1957

11 a.m.. Junior Congregation
Rev. Bruce Cunniigham. B.Sc., B.D.

This man can give you
dependable
delivery of

THE
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
.MONITOR
an
International
daily
newspaper

CONSULT

Housewives, businessmen,

teachers, and students all over
the m arid

read and

BERNARDI-MATHEWS REAL ESTATE

international

OX. 8-1121

famous

for

enjoy this

newspaper,

lished daily in

Res: AM. 1-5194

118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER. B.C.

A
;i

A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL

When Buying, Selling or Exchanging Your Home

KEN HORI

Complete Care
For Your Eyes

JIM KAKUTANI
REAL ESTATE

Boston.

constructive

pub­

Worldnews

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH^ Bathurst st.

TORONTO ONT.
Residence: 14 Perivale Crescent, Scarboro

A

Rev. T. Tsuji

EVERYONE CORDIAEI,Y

Special

features

for the

whole

of
THE CANADIAN JAPANESE MISSION
To know Him and to make Him known
VANCOUVER NISEI GOSPEL CHURCH
742 East Hastings Street
Pastor: Rev. Ed Yoshida

MU. 3-3082; MA. 0906
SUNDAY SERVICES:

.

_

7:30 p.m.. Nisei Christian rellowsnr

RUTLAND NISEI GOSPEL CHURCH

family.

UNF HALL |

money order.

1 year Si6 □

6 months SS □

3 months $4 □

„ ,

.

7:30 p.m,, Even
WEDNESDAY: 8 p.m. Prayer ’
ALTERNATE FRIDAYS: Nisei <

PtrOj:

LETHBRIDGE NISEI GOSPEL CHURCH
3rd Avenue and 12th Avenue B North
Pastor: Rev. Thomas T. Tazumi
SUNDAY SERVICES:
C-O:

ii:3u a.m., Morning woran.p
7:30 phn., GosnA Service

I

maturing THE SPICES, and slat: "ANNIE HOLD THAT GUN"

?

?

Sponsored by Club Rec Socratic

=

8-9 p.m.: LATIN AMERICAN HOUR
9-12 p.m.: GENERAL DANCE

I
t
?

S1.00 per-person

The Christian Science Monitor
One Norway St., Boston 15, Moss.
Send your newspaper for the time
chicked. Enclosed find my check or

I Monte Carlo
Nite
iL^f^?HIZES

INVITED

NISEI GOSPEL CHURCHES

SUNDAY SERVICES:

j Saturday, March 16, 1957

1957

SUNDAY, MARCH 17

stories and penetrating editorials.

2670 DANFORTH AVE.

|

WEEKDAY SERVICES — 2113-IOth Avenue A South

Address

Oy

O’.

Poo.

Wbosoever Will May Come

Zone

pe-15

S

OPTOMETRISTS

:
X

A
t
A

Page 8

PAGE 8

TOE NEW CANADIAN il q^ readers write ii
Published cm Wednesday and Saturday of each week
as a medium of expression and news outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada

j LAUDS ‘WARTIME’
JC TEACHERS

®£i

If

By BILL HOSOKAWA
Editor: Three cheers for you?In the Pacific Citizen
being^^c^^ n°Ur’ and J’
OFFICE HOURS
recent editorial on “wartime JC
SUBSCRIPTION
the mistah
^
8:30—5:30 Monday-Friday
DENVE
<Ad rates on request)
teachers”—a tribute certainly
Colo.—The dinn
9 to 1 p.m. Saturday
tune. It was an
UP ot
S3.50 for 6 months, $6 per year
long overdue, and one, I'm sure,
Copy and ad deadline.■s are Mondays and Thursdays each week.
conduct. mMers^V1^11 c'^
that expresses the sentiments of
P'm' I g°t held up at the of
one, that a half ^
^
hundreds of former “ghost-town” art ice, arrived home behind scheT. UMEZUKI, Publisher
ame- ,h e started five minutes J good taste as
students as myself.
.Lit
• MARJORIE UMEZUKI
The admirable job they did, later than we should have to almost mandatory.
—.......— English Section Editor
mal
KEN MORI....................
: dinner on time. Traffic considered almost ini '. w^
with the meagre
Japanese Section & Advertising
' ‘° K
-ter than usual. By the prompt because
able and with virt ally no form
barrassed
others
T
'
ptnes
s emparked the car and enEM. 6-5005 479 Queen St. W., Toronto 2-B, Ont j teacher training*
ties
lived
bv

Tanat

^
tereu tile restaurant, we were 15
reflected today bv
Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department. Ottawa
^hwasanywhS^^
broadening accomplishments and minutes late. Feeling terribly
behind PaS ^
pursuits of the Nisei and Sansei self-conscious about being so SO
taruy,
we
slipped
into
the
dinine*
of that “crop.” They can be justly
Thig custom caused
room. We needn’t have.

proud. . .
culty when the S
The room was nearly empty. A to «ite Caucasian l*,^
George Nishimura,
Flying Officer, RCAF
small group’, no more than three
their functions. But a
or four couples, sat disconsolately was
quickly found. If the^S
j Ui one corner. There were rows
nig
invitation
said 3:30 P%1
। oi unoccupied seats. Then we rewould
tell
the ciai
It is encouraging- to note that Canadians have gradcalled that this was a Nisei gathTOOO.—A Tokyo columnist ;: ering.
Panter had made a
Nisei dinners, programs or
fhwiVU/3^ the11’ v0,ces 011 tlle JaPanese immigration said recently priva Japanese
take.

Mt

s really supposed^'
whatever never start- on time.
radio and TV interests con
o

clock,
” they’d say
4
At 7 p.m., only a third of the
sidering
inviting
Elvis
Presley*
i Last week, D1’ Mapy McCrimmon, who has recently
seats were occupied. At 7:30 p.m., gue m cheek. That wav. both?
to Japan were hesitating for
ret urn eel from a teaching post in Japan, speaking to the
there was still a sprinkling of tin Sd ^^^ Would shU
two reasons. One is the fact
empty places. Finally, at 7:40 up at approximately the
f1Sl y
°TR,S Club of Toi'onto said there was a
that he may ask too much
p.m.,
an hour and ten minutes time and nobody lost face.
need tor a broader program of adjustment for Japanese
money, and the second is that
after the appointment time, there “1Y archaic custom—I SQpps,
they are afraid some excited
immigrants. She said Japan is faced with the problem of
were enough persons on hand to
Japanese time-’ is an old coun­
?™!!f t™T0UPCeS "'ith iU gl'owillg Population prob- fan might "throw some acid get the dinner under way?- By try
custom born in the days when
on Presley.”
1C111 UI vapdll.
then, the early comers had eaten one walked wherever he went
up all the crackers in a futile ef­
„ • W? have heard similar arguments time and again
. Punctuality was an impracfort to stave off hunger pangs.
^.lcal viaue. ’ And I suppose the
^L^^^ p1 Parliament as well as in the churches. Back in
n
ounger ones—This practice had a certain appeal in
9oa, Mr. Angus Maclnnis, MP, urged that Canada ease
(Coni hi tied from Page One}'
the leisurely, low-pressure sociew
\ u™niFiatlon restrictions aginst Orientals, and more
Dwarfing is accomplished by deplorable Nisei habit of chronic of the prewar “Li’l Tokyos.” '
bore^
n956?- E1 *obe^ Liberal menu . transplanting a young 'tree into a tardiness is not confined to the
But today, tardiness would
panose tamS ’
ed “ Wte basis for Ja* small container after the roots older members. Not long ago I seem to be a luxury that we can
have been trimmed.
happened to. be a judge for a Ni­
Excess foliage and branch sei student queen contest. The ill afford. One can do so mu^h
thi11^ the Canadian public at large would now buds are carefully pruned and time was set for 7:30 p.m. At more todays with minutes that
the h S°m^ adjustment foi- Japanese immigrants Since copper wire is wound around the that hour, the only persons pre­ they have become infinitely more
^ &"^ Second World War, Japanese S trunk and branches to shape the sent were two judges and three precious
than they used to be. It
and restrict the growth.
committee members still string­ is presumptuous to waste them
™ Tcbir «d las been ,brou?ht to a standstill. Ja- tree
Achieving an aesthetic effect ing up decorations.
for others by making them wait
pan recently became a member of the United NatimK is important in growing these
The contestants began to drift
to fe MmS fa68 .an .influential part subscribing trees. Wiring* the trunk bends it in about 8 p.m. At 8:15, the con­ for you. This, then, is one man’s
and holds it in the desired posi­ test chairman, obviously embar­ protest against the perpetuation
to its high ideals and. principles of equality We do
JTJi^
negotiations between Canada and Japan tion.
rassed, _ suggested that it was of “Nisei time/''
Ancient
stoneware
containers
about
time the judging got under
icgaid to new immigrants is under way or not - U or copies of old pieces are used
way.
The
last of the contestants
IS a well-established fact that Japanese CmcZ™
and
often
a
garden
setting*
.
is
arrived
at
8:20, 40 minutes after
become good Canadian citizens; Ld a few pZef "
suggested by using an irregular the scheduled time, looking quite
PASADENA, Calif.—“Some
emploj eis hve shown their eagerness to secure Japanese rock, or another smaller free.
serene, unruffled and unapologe­
have
said J ACL should be done
3l^!'e'P- We hope tbe two countries ^
Today -expert gardeners are tic.
away
with, now that our major
finding* that training* these trees
suitable agreement in the near future.
issues
have been won,” declar­
Nobody lost face-—Back before
is big business. One'” of the welled
National
JACL president
UN'. as Canadian citizens of Japanese ancestry our known bonsai artists is Kyuza evacuation, the west coast Japa­ Dr.
Roy
Nishikawa,
“But, I
™paWri^
for the JCs, and the Murata Jr. in Omiva Citv who nese-American communities ran
sav.
.,
do
we
do
away
with
the
tional lUWjU U’ Unlts’ 111 this respect, the Na- learned^ the art from his ‘father on a sort of daylight saving time fire department as soon as the
who h-Tturn, learned it from hN in reverse. No event ever started
1951 h«Cm’Jl
1 ? JPPeads to the government in father.
fire is out?”

Voices Raised For
Japan immigration

Japanese Dwarf I B t> ’L S

Reserve Force

has made gradual forward steps. Six rears ao-o
These trees are trained to fol­
NheYh^wU^
y^ers-in council, even"Canadian' low the forms of dwarf trees that
are a part of the Japanese land­
in japan could not return to Canada.
BOOKKEEPER-STENOGRAPHER
scape. Their interesting shanes
EXPERIENCED,
TO TAKE CHARGE OF SMALL OFFICE. SALARY COMMEN­
still remain many inequalities in the immi- are the result of a rugged terrain
SURATE
WITH
QUALIFICATIONS WITH OPPORTUNITY FOR ADVANCE­
■eJation legulations, such as Section 20 of the Cairdimi and violent wind storms.
MENT.
*
migration Act (mentioned in last WednesdlL ssue)
Many years ag*o, gardeners I
Please apply in writina io: SUPREME PRECISION CASTINGS LTD..
wherein Canadian citizens of Asiatic ancestiv do ft' collected awarf trees and placed g
780 LANTHIER ST., ST. LAURENT, MONTREAL 9
them
in
small
containers
to
c
he mX-o^^
Ot-?er ethnic Cai,adiai> citizens ill
corate the interior of houses. r.
V
1
lllg tamily members and relatives
fad became so popular, the tr
^HiHimiRnnnnHniiHHnHnnniiiiHiisiHiiiiiniiiHiiiiiiiniininiiiiiiiiHL
W hen the delegates of the Toronto-Ontario
dwarfed by nature became sea


and it was necessary to innt re
nature.
ciauon met with the Munster of Citizenshin and
Miniature trees was one of the
srahon last weekend in Toronto and presented a
S attractions
the Japan Merch­
bi let, it was reported that although the brief wasJ re andise Showatstaged
at the Hotel
difficulty slmpat¥ic u“dersta»«Jing, it would be very Vancouver, March 13-15.
The
merchandise
displaced
diuicu.t to change the existing* regulations
tl>e wmultre s!M!ilt| rOTlmali, p„sh for
,V' ranged from the artistic to buPdmg supplies. Sharing the sp<Whght with such things as hhli..speed cameras and hardware wew
porcelain, lacquer-ware, silks
to vs.
'

derationi to the JCCA's brief and maue an
J endeavmf
" ork out an appropriate adjustment.

Interested?

not a routine job

call EM. 8-5005 or write to

PART-time
or
cml-arae
position;
etarial and Jenera! office work
/or it des ea opportunity to
e and to
‘orn al! phases of
sr il newspap,
business: e'ditina.
--up, come;

THE NEW CANADIAN
•179 Queen St. West, Toronto

PRINTING ... Expertly Done
O Wed din g

© Du sine

~
Invitations

THE
EM. 6-5005

~
9 Dance Tickets, Handbills
9 Letterheads, Envelopes

NEW

CANADIAN

479 Queen St. W„ TORONTO

Japanese Athletes
Fooled By China

1

CAREER in RETAILING

I

= MODISTE LIMITED, RETAILERS IN LADES' READY TO =
= WEAR HAS AN OPENING FOR A YOUNG MAN IN- =
: TERESTED IN RETAILING AS A CAREER.
E
:
The applicant must have and recognize the following: :
:
:
:
:
:
:
:
:


kA minimum of high school matriculation, but univer- :
sity degree preferred.
E
2. An even temperament with pleasant personality; be =
able to meet the public and handle personnel (mostly |
women). '
=
3. Imagination, initiative, and ability to cope with multi- :
tude of circumstances, quickly and efficiently, since re- |
tail ladies' wear is a very competitive and demanding :
business.
:
4. Be bondable.
2
5. Be between the ages of 18-24.
, =
6. Realize that the period of apprenticeship is long ana :
difficult, but to qualify for an executive position, re- =
wards are worth the effort.
=

. Afroup of Japanese athletes
. . le recent Olympic games
visited a shop in .Melbourne
looking for some reasonably
priced Olympic souvenirs to
send home.
Send hand-written application on your personal his- ^
They quickly- found just
what they were
tory together with picture of yourself to:
looking* for__
seme attractive ‘china plates
Mr. J. SUZUKI,
=
decorated with Olympic
MODISTE LTD.,
=
and a view of Melbourne,
They
450
GRANVILLE
ST.,
=
i ,- *
, ^ tHe shop congratu­
lating themselves that their reVANCOUVER, B.C.
|
at home would be pleacYour application should, include together with y°u‘ .5
JHh an oriShial reminder
personal history, why you wish a 'career in retailing, s
or Lie great occasion.
also your educational backaround, hobbies, ana spo^s s
But they weren’t so hmmr
7
■ater when they examined Cm
Plates more closelv. EacL
: a reputable person together with a letter i.^i- w :
back
.mVibed Qn the
• doctor stating that you are in good health.
...s
Made in Japan."
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