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The New Canadian — July 10, 1957

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Page 1

THE NEW CANADIAN

pas

An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin



TORONTO. ONT.
__ NO. 54

WEDNESDAY,. JULY 10. 1957

fokyoTbade Caravan to be Exhibited from July 16
At Vancouver, Edmonton, Winnipeg and Toronto

NC Takes a Holiday
for the week of July 28.

Top Scientists of the World
Meet This Week in Nova Scotia

distant general scientific sccietary of the USSR Academy of
from 14 nations met in this quiet Sciences; A. M. Kuzin and A. ■
Nova Scotia village Monday to Topchiev of the Academy o. Sci­
ponder one of the world s hottest ences, and D. F. Skobelhyn of
questions: The dangers of atomic the Soviet National Academy.
radiation.
Chou Pei Yuan, Peiping Univer­
They came here to the famous sity’s vice rector represented
home of 73- year-old Cyrus Eaton, Red China.
Cleveland. *0., industrialist, for
This is the third summer Mr.
of thought and inforEaton
has been host to world sci­
mal discussion behind closed
entific and educational leaders.
doors.
When ho announced his plans
Thirty-eight have been
in
1955 he said he aimed to give
ed and close to thirty were expec_
blinking men an opportunity to
ted. Lord Bertrand Russell, Bri­ “relax together, exchange views,
tish philosopher and mnthcmati-, sharpen their own thinking and
cian. heads the.group. He drew
design formulas for us to live in
up the agenda and invitation listthis
brand new world. ’
Four Soviet scientists arrived
His
guests find this fishing and
Friday night. Twelve United lumbering village on Northum­
States scientists and .scholars berland Strait a good place to re­
the
fact
that
the
nation
is
slip
­
have been asked, and five from lax, he saws. Its citizens, who
TOKYO.—Emperor Hirohito is
ping
back
to
the
days
before
Gen
­
Britain, three from Germany and number less than 1,000 opened
the subject of a nationwide con­
troversy today because many Ja­ eral Douglas MacArthur lifted two each from Canada, India and their homes last weekend to help
panese Teel the humanizing of the the chrysanthemum curtain sur­ Japan, among other countries.
house the visitors.
former “national deity” has gone rounding the emperor.
The official topic is Nuclein
.
When
the
56-year-old
emperor
I
TOKYO.-—And now it s the Ja- too far.
Energy
Hazards in War and
goes
for
a
walk
or
makes
a
visit
The list includes four Nobel
j panese who intend to break into
A Japanese college professor to a hospital, he leaves a trail of
Peace?
The
men are expected to
made the front pages recently arguments behind. Many consci- Prize winners. Lord Russell won range over such aspects as con­
I America’s small-car market.
a Nobel Prize for literature,
J
The Toyota Motor Company is when he chastised students for vative persons feel the emperor s Prof. C. F. Powell of Bristol, trol and development of atomic
| developing a low-priced, high- not taking their hats off when humanization has gone as far. as Eng., for physics, Dr. Adolf bu- and hvdrogen weapons, an inter­
the emperor passed by.
it should go— probably too lai. tenandt of Munchen, Germany, national code for dealing with
| speed midget car that may be inradioactive materials and the di­
The. professor’s criticism im­
They would like to see a return
I troduced into the United . States mediately generated retorts froni to more austere, dignified life for chemistry and Dr. Hideki version of fuels for war puiposes.
Yukawa of Tokyo for physics.
I within a year or so. It will pro- readers, one of whom said the with less contact with the people
The old Eaton house has been
Canadians invited were Dr. G.
I bably be a modified version of emperor “welcomed this treat­ for the man who after the war Brock Chisholm, former director dubbed the “home for thinkers"
I Japan’s ‘‘people’s car” that was ment and preferred living with became merely a symbol of his general of the World Health Or­ since the first group of scholars
here in 1955.
country.
ganization, and Prof. John Stuai t vacationed
I shown to the public a year ago. the people.” . '
Two other groups will come
At the same time other Japa­ Foster, McGill University physics
Prof.
Sozo
Komachiya
said
the
I
The car was a four-seater,
later on—U.S. college presidents
students didn’t even bow to Em­ nese applaud the emperor’s fre­
.
e weighing 1,300 pounds. The Ja- peror Hirohito and some even quent public appearances as proof professor.
Soviet representatives are Vla­ beginning" July .1.5 and Univcisity
I panese hope to be able to under- ? climbed a fence to get a closer that Japan has become truly de­
dimir Pavlivich Pavlichpnko as- deans July,26.
I sell most of the small-car prices
mocratic.
I in this country. They are aiming look.
Before the war this “rudeness”
I at less than $1,000 which could
not
only would have been un­
E cause some revolutionary leacheard
of, but students or anybody
■ tions among American manufacelse rarely would have been given
| timers.
the opportunity to see the emper­
islands being so small, and non­
seem ahead due to the abundance contiguous from the mainland,
or with their own eyes.
By FRED TAOMAE
of higher education facilities naturally, it takes time for new
J DONATES TO CENTRE FUND . But in these post-war, demo­
In Shin Nichi-Bei
here. Whereas, the average mam- things to reach there.
cratic days in Japan when some
LOS ANGELES—On the.basis landers almost automastically go
I
Mrs. Harumi Inouye of Toronto students bow their heads or doit
One of the biggest thrills of a
i recently donated $10 to the their caps to his imperial high­ of my recent trip to Hawaii, I’ve up to the junior college level, Hawaiian sports-fan-visitor to
been trying to compare Hawaii most Hawaiians stop at the high LA was seeing a major boxing
I TJCCA Community Centre Fund ness, it also raises a storm.
and the Japanese there with Los school level. On the matter of
I on the occasion of her son’s marThe critics point with alarm to Angeles and the mainland Japa­ brains however, , the islanders match on TV the moment it was
i riage.
being held. Tn Hawaii, one secs
more than hold their own.
nese.
The mainlanders dress better attractions such as those, base­
And I feel that in many ways
simply because the weather is ball world series, or Kentucky
the first mentioned are backward more ideal here for dressing up. Derby a week or two latci, if
as far as shedding typical Japa­ With the tropical nature of the they’re lucky to get a sponsor.
The leading theatre in Honolu­
climate in Hawaii, the islanders
nese customs is concerned.
lu
proudly presented “Baby Doll,
It’s because the Japanese there tend to casual wear.
Even
when
Island
youngsters
when
I was home.
]
complish something worthwhile still cling to customs of Japan,
i
By TAMOTSU MURAYAMA
An
LA
dentist
friend
told
me
dress
up,
it
seems
incongrouous
for the benefit of this human which is due to the large Issei
that toothwise, Hawaiian dentists
to
see
them
in
well-pressed
pante,
E
In the Pacific Citizen, L.A.
world by introducing this spirit­ population and the pressure ex­
newly scrubbed faces, and slicked are at least 25 years behind the
H
TOKYO.—Japan has been in- ualism of Japan,” declares the erted by them.
hair in “hadashi.”
Some
I terpreted as a sacred land and Hokkaido miracle man. Japan
On the matter of marriage, down wear shoes until they7 get times.
Of course, Hawaiians do not
E many phenomena of a religious - can give a great deal' of her spi there are still Issei and even Ni­ never
live
in grass shacks anymore. I
E nature have been noted here in ritual strength to the world.”
sei who object to their daughters into high school.
think
the average tourist is
■ recent years. One of the most
Tsubaki is confident that any marrying other races m spite of v The Islanders are strong in the mighty surprised to see. the. mo­
■ striking is the presence of a sickness can be “cured”. ‘ Above the fact that Hawaii proudly calls habits of sending omiyages back
R “miracle man”, Reiju Tsubaki of all, this spiritual strength can be itself a land of many races living and forth on all sorts of occa­ dern city that Honolulu is. Eyciy
other person owns a car there
■ Hokkaido, who visits Tokyo once acquired by any person who de­ happily together.
sions. On our trip back, 33 of my resulting in exasperating traffic
■ or twice a month and intrigues sires to grasp the fundamental
wife’s alloted 44 pounds consisted
One broadminded
mainland of souvenirs for the folks back jams.
■ Japanese and foreigners alike.
strength of human energy7. Man Nisei matron told me she was
But life is slower than here.

His feats have marvelled the can be stronger than what he is. dumbfounded when a Hawaii Ni­ home. And when we came hack, When a baby whale washed upon
the folks loaded us with stuff
K public. He has made a hopelessly The only thing that he has to do
sei doctor disowned his daughter
Waikiki beach was put in' the out­
■ crippled man walk again imme- is to realize the spiritual strength for marrying out, of her race. As again making for a lot of trouble door pool at the aquarium there,
figuring what to ,,buy, buying
H
diately. In front of American within him,” he explains.
H
eyes, he has cured a polio yictim. ' He teaches any person is able a doc, he should have been more them, wrapping them up, and it created big excitement.
Business perked up at the
'then lugging them back and
I A former German ambassador to to cure his own. ills. And this tolerant, she claimed.
aquarium
and 50,000 persons
Only the merchants get
Still, there have been and are forth

Japan and his wife were also in- “miracle strength ’ is beino
went
to
see
“Daisy” before she
rich
as
we
just
trade
things
with
today, many Nisei marrying other

stantly cured of their physical
taught to scores in Tokyoall
the
attendant
humbug.
died.
races, with the Issei gradually
More recently7 he has cured vic­ becoming resigned to the ^act
I
understand
that
the
kosai
The best way I can compare
S
As he explains it, man has tims of Fukuryu Maru— the ship
thing
got
so
widespread
that
the
Hawaii
with Los Angeles, I guess
that
it

s
better
that
way.
If
their

failed to appreciate the world in Lucky Dragon which was subject­
community leaders got together is to point out the fact that once
daughters
are
going
to
marry
the

which he lives. He points to the
and set some kind of a standard
S
spiritual elements in man as the ed to A-bomb fallout in the cen - haoles (whites), they are going back home. Many families had to a Hawaiian comes to Los Angeles
ral
Pacific.
Whether
this
he never goes back there again,
■ source of this miraculous pheno- man can create a.sP1^1.^0,. to, that’s all, they reason.
borrow
money
just
to
go
through
except to visit.
9
mena.
Yet I know one family7 where
in this atomic age is questioiwb e, two of the three girls ^ave ^mar- the age old routine of sending
Take a look and talk to the
I
.. It appears to be difficult to be- but he is confident that he cai
something for an occasion.
ried
haoles
with
the
third
neadold
timers here. They’ve disown­

Heve his performances, but many help radiation victims.
ing
for
old
ma

denhood.
She
could
ed
the
island paradise long ago.
Hawaiian
residents
upon
re9
have been spiritually upTsubaki appears to be a com­ have married a C^uc^a"’ fc d sidin*7 on the mainland quickly And if they go back for a visit,
H
u ?or lack °f a better word,
backed out because as she stated, drop the old-time Japanese cus­ thev never recognize the place.
»
subakis “spiritualism” has been mon man, looking like a sc io
three Xis of the family marry­ toms very7 happily.
teacher,
but
his
eyes
are
extiemeBut they don’t care a hoot.
a
me object of serious .study by
“Hawaii?” they snort, “Don t
ing
foreigners
would
have
been
ly
penetrating.
Hawaii as a whole is behind
I
Jann c°ILge professors and stuIn every respect JaPan L an the last straw for the otoosan.
the times in many ways also. Ine; bother me I”
“Of course, it is difficult to ex- interesting country full of strange
Educationwise, the mainlanders
PI?rn in words, but we can ac-._ .phenomena and incidents.

The New Canadian will
Members of the seven-man misnot be published for July
sion include H. Takagi (Japan
31 and August 3, as the NC
Chamber of Commerce and Instaff will close up shop
dustry), H. K a m a gat a (Tokyo
and take off on its annual
Metropolitan Government), T.
(once-a-yegr) one week
Yasumoto (Tokyo Chamber of
(seven days only); holiday
Commerce and Industry), K. Ha­
from July 28-August 4. But
rada (Mitsubishi Shoji Kaisha,
the presses will start rolling
Ltd.), T. Ugawa (Daiichi Bussan
' Saw aw- ” at
Eoy
again in time for the
I iexandriaHotel^nd in Toronto Kaisha, Ltd.), H. Tabata (Mikimoto Pearl Co., Ltd.) and T. Ta- | August 7th issue.
; .t the Canadian National Exhibi nabe (Kokusai Boeki Co., Ltd.). J
I “ from
8‘ Te
f Tokro Metropolitan Trade Mis|
,vjii also make market sur[ veys in Regina, London, Ont.,
I Montreal, and Quebec City..
Tnkvo Trade
qAedule wr the
_
which leaves Toxyo this
Friday to tour Canada has been
Ynred as follows:
■ 8' 3 Shows will be held at
' LU ver on M' » at the VanJ '
Hotel- in Edmonton July
i?”i»»- Hotel; in
h a

' Emperor.'Hirohito Leaves
Trails of Irgaments

I Japan to Invade
| u. S. Car Market

Hawaiians Cling to their Japanese Customs.

Miracle Man in Tokyo Astounds
Japanese and Americans Alike

-?'A

Page 2

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Tel. PL. 4483

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Insure Today
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Page 7

July 10. 195~

iimiiiiiiHiiiniiinniiiHiHiiiHiunniH

Ij CALENDAR

liiiiiiiniiniinniniHnHBiininiiiiin

»er Hisel Break Loose to Swamp
Firefighters 13-4 After Alberta Victory

OBON SERVICES IN B-C.
TORONTO OBON SERVICE
7—Hamilton. Hamilton Ny
Binbrook Shady A
The Toronto Buddhist Church
rch
will
conduct
Obon
7—Montreal
invites everyone to join in, the
(July 14
in the following B.C.
I Obon Midsummer Festival, taking
a commanding 9-1 lead. In
fourth. Nisei added three more place Saturday night. July 13, and Buddhist congregation Buddhis
:-—Toronto, It
Club
-> ___ Vancouver's runs on four singletons and two Sunday, July 14.
J uly 14—-Kelowna
B^n^Ht Dane
26

Green
21

Vernon:
Ayi?ei. fresh;from BBs to sew up the game. Wild­
Morning services will be hdit Church
ion series . victory ness by three Snjpkie. hurlers at the following cemeteries this wood; : —Midway: A
0*'
14
yj;ei, looked and were their downfall as Nisei were I Saturdav: 10 a.m. Resthaven, can: 4- -New Denver: 11—Vai
.S' all
17

Aldergrove
>r
Am
it
the
part
of
chamove
in all.
’s St. James and Prospect: 11a.n
given
13
walks
On A.uStreet Grounds
act*ed eve
! Pine Hill, Mt. Pleasant., and veston 25—Kamloops.
E
H
KBI
R
AB
Firefight­
.g Adults
20—Toronto. Nise
i Park Lawn.
u bv bu
1 0
Gordie
Nishi,
3b
Japanese
g
e
win
snappea
a
on *n
On Saturday night, 8 p.m., the
1 0
a 2 1
Tad Koyanagi, c
20—Winnipeg
Q
ers 1
; streak for Frank
1
service will be followed by Obon Island.
0
'rd moved them \mH
Odori. MC Kunio Suyama pro- <
Pla
:S—Montreal
0
3 1
e and a half of the
I
mises
a
wonderful
evening,
and

0
1
1
Homma, ss ...
on*?
borth in the Inaust- Kenny
I yukatas will be supplied.
, i
1 2 0
Bo Miyagishima, ab
CARD OF THANKS
0
Baseball League.
0
Ron Montgomery, p
On Sunday at. 10:30 a.m., the ,
to extend our heartfelt
0 0 0 0
—-Vancouver, cbv bcr*
morning service will be conduc-.; thanks wish
itv” Montgomery and
and appreciation for the acts of iI 5.-9
;?V
conducted by UBC
oathy
and
Ron M
ted
in
English
by
Charles
Shimii
Tom and Gordie,
kindness, messages ot
International and Asian
beautiful
floral
offerings
...
i
zu.
Those"
who
are
planning
to
^nent ‘roKs in the
relatives and many “Itn ?^ Extension Dopar‘meat.
Budd tv. st
bring Buddhist Name Caids neighbours,
> :hc 1957 campaign
Nisei ........... 108 301 0
especially thanking Rev. Shimizu o. m W—Kelowna. Regatta D
100 1
....
101
Firelighters
(Homyos)
are
advised
to
be
at
consolina
words
and
.help
in
our
sad
hr Nisei perform with
Montreal. Nisei )euow^«P UiOvp
Montgome:ry
. and Oikawa; Don Smit
I the reception desk before 10:15 bereavement of a loving husband and 10—
for the first three Stan
Weiner Roast at urysta. cocko.
Brooks (3), J
father.
a.m. Any cards brought23-25—Toronto. Young Aduds M’notswir
Mrs. L. Odamura, Sharon, Ann,
weekend a*. South Camp Lake Scugog
this
time cannot be placed on the
nerv held the Smokies
Myra and Neil, Toronto, Ont.
LINE DRIVES: With two- stand until after the chanting ot
Moiii?0
.
scattered hits, struck om, thirds of the schedule gone,
the sutras.
to
A"
1 walked
four infour
gaming
*
»SM ’ l
’±Linst
de- standings show CYO atop with
This Friday. July 12. Club Ami
31 pts., Boilermakers 27, follow­ NISEI FAMILY BIBLE CAMP
CHANGE OF ADDRESS
sponsors a Toronto J CCA Com­
ed-bv Longshoremen, Firefight­
The Canadian Japanese Mis­
munity Centre Benefit Dance at
^W brothers were the night’s ers, Western Bridge and Nisen . .
Mr. and Mrs. Tosh Moriyama
, Scarboro,
sion

s
second
annual
Nisei
Family
moved
to
12
Panama
Court
the Toronto Buddhist Church.

Each connected for NisePs win-loss record is 6 wins,
; S and a double. Play- 12 losses and two ties . . . Mana­ Bible Camp takes place from Ontario. New telephone number is Dancing will Mart at 8:30 and
3-11 at Fair Havens, AX. 3-3181.
two
a: Seichi Tahara, team’s ger Frank Kika made his first August
end at .1. a.m.
Gambridge,
on Lake Simcoe, Ont.
.346, collected hrs playing appearance of the seaSpecial speaker will be Sain
& hit“of' the season and drove son . . . Seichi Tahara is among I Hoshizaki of Kelowna, L-Gy
the top ten IUBL batsmen (see
teacher will be ^ey. H. y) •
“‘With the score deadlocked wt batting averages below) . . - Bible
Peeler, principal of MMbI; the
M after two innings of piay, Whereabouts ofKen Kochi, form­ MMBI Male Quartet will sing;
CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS
\Lei broke, loose for eight big er North Kamloops Mohawks ace and missionary speaker will be
KIMIAKI NAKASHIMA, C.A.
i on Three hits, including a pitcherj is being sought by Van­ Miss D. Thorp of the Central JaWALTER I- SHEPER. C.A.
J. DOUGLAS LEHBLRG. C.A.
WALTER FISCHER,^ C.A.
X-nm double by shortstop couver Nisei
RE. 1-1186
Roh Montgome­ I pan Pioneer Mission.
5590
VICTORIA AVE., MONTREAL 26, QUE.
v Homma, and seven tree ry with' an earned run avg. ot
Applications are now being
Ze, hi the third frame to take 3*32 is in the top. five Mirier taken by Hiko Kinoshita, 393
^bracket. He has whiffed 60 bat- Manning. Ave., Toronto 4. Theme
ters in a 40-and-a-third-innings of the nine-day camp . is
r
Hie
stint . . . George Fukuyama has a Voice of Many Waters.”
t
1-2 record . . • Only a handful o
Lucien C. Kurata t Japanese
Canadian supporters
J
:
BARRISTER, and SOLICITOR
were
in
attendance . . . Vancou­
6
notary PUBLIC
ver Nisei are very eager to have
t
an exhibition series with the inte­
Male Help Wanted^
E
Suite 502, Temple Building
Baseball League, leaders, EXPERIENCED ’presseTfordry-cleaners; I
t rior
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
t North Kamloops Mohawks, on one
apply .2318 Bloor St. West, • Toronto. I
TORONTO
1
1620 BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA BLDG.,
1
of the weekends in Kamloops Phone RO- 6-1007.
...
I
EM. 6-0959 — Rea: BO. 7-8427
t
own
backyard.
How
about
it,
5
TORONTO, ONTARIO
Female Help Wanted
Stan?

SHEPER, NAKASHIMA & CO

CLASSIFIED

General Insurance

YONEMITSU
Watch Repair Shop
HO. 5-3652 — Res: LE. 2-7445
328 Broadview Ave., Toronto


7

MACHINE CO.
H. S. TSURUDA
(Japanese Canadian Agent)
35 Rowntree Ave., TORONTO

RO. 9-0673

BATTING AVERAGES (inch July 4 )
AB H Avg.
52 18 .346
Seichi Tahard ....
71 22 .310
Tad. Koyanagi ....
16 .308
....
52
Elmer Mori ........
9 .290
.....
31
Danny Okano ....
... 51 14 .275
Azu Oikawa ....
... 68 18 .265
Gordie Nishi
.. 48 12 .250
Kenny Homma
. 44 10 .227
Toru Nishi ........
8 .195
...... 41
Bo Miyagishima

OPERATORS and tuckers, ^P611®^'
for ladies' blouses and skirts. Steady
employment. Apply Front Page Fashion,
130 Spadina Ave., Toronto. ____---- —_
i TYPIST, general office routine, mo ern
office. Apply Uniforms Registered Ba>
and College district; phone EM. 4-UU5
I

Telephone: Office EM. 3-1349 - Res. AM. 1-2746

u

&

ACCURATE ROOFING CO. LTD,

Domestic Help Wanted

Flat Roofing » “>Wtag» »^£ ® SheOt

sinn__ Girl for general housework, pri­
vate room and bath, .liberal time oft,
Forest Hill Village,Tays. Ph°ne EMpne
6-8811; evenings, MA. 3110, Mrs.
Toronto.
_ __

Remaining 1957 schedule: July 11-Western- Bridge; 15-CYO; 19-Firehghiers,
22—Longshoremen;
24 Boilerma -ers,
Rooms to Let
and 26—Western Bridge.
TWO
unfurnished
rooms, kitchen _and
TdDanes© Canadian Community suprequested in the Niset's home­ bedroom; Ossington and Bloor district.
Apply at 941 Bloor St. West, Toronto.
stretch for a playofi berth
Vancouver Nisei Baseball extends its TWO unfurnished rooms, kitchen wit
heoSS thanks to the Southern A n.rta sink and bedroom; business cample P community for their warm welcome ferred, West end; Phone RO. 9-9889 atte.
during the recent Alberta-Vancouver 6:30 p'.m., Toronto.
. .Nisei ball series in Lethbridge^______ _

Phone RO. 2-4911

Business Parties and Take-Out Orders

China Garden
FAMOUS CHINESE FOODS

OFFICE

EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395

(1

TORONTO

We cater to Banquets. Weddings. Showers.

TO

%

T. Nishijima

. RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
MAyfair 1365

126 Elizabeth St.. Toronto

EM. 4-5935

Andrew E. McKape,

SPECIALIZING IM CHINESE FOOD

BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC

We cater to wedding parties, private dinners an

201 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO

banquets Also take-out service.

SAI WOO TEAHOUSE
: 9-7646

123A Dundas St. West

Toronto

LEARN chick sexing

Buy Your House Through
The Most Successful Realtor in Toronto

real shortage of expert sexors
earn UP to $800 A WEEK

*2 Queen Vv.
Toronto —
LE. 2-6378

SERVING HATCHERIES IN 42 STATES
G J

A Ria Majority of Japanese Canadian Customers
A Big Mqortty^ ^ Homes ^gh

BILL FOR VETERANS

WRITE TODAY FOR FREE CATALOG
HOME
OFFICE:
214

Prospect Ave.

LANSDALE, PENNA.

d#acM>
“BEG. U.S. PAT- OFF.”

CHICK SEXING SCHOOL
«A-A YONG! »7RMT, TORONTO, ONT.

O
|

M. YANAGISAWA
representing

153 St. Clair Ave. W.
TORONTO. Ont

a TV

WA. 1-1191
or LE. 4-1427 (Res.)

n

Page 8

THE HEW CANADIAN
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each zueek
as a medium of expression and news outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada

T.

UMEZUKI,
Publisher;
MARJORIE
UMEZUKI, English Section Editor;
KEN MORI, Japanese Section Editor
and Advertising Manager.

Subscription Rates: §350 for 6 months;
So per year (Ad rates on request).

—----------- - ---- —1Q
Nisei Baha’i Writes onUS
Of Humans: Raps Biased Mi

(Letter to the .Editor, Pacific too, are guiltv of
Citizen, Los Angeles)
UI
crime We must, first cka
Editor: I notice by your last own hearts of all
-A
Authorized as second class mail.
two issues where Kango Kunitsu- gardless of business 5^ "
EM. 6-5005 479 Queen St. W., Toronto 2-B, Ont.
Post Office Department, Ottawa
gu, Southwest Los Angeles J ACL ved, or we shall cha? ?
president, and Bob Horiuchi, Mtn.
Plains District Council chairman,
participated as speakers on Ba­ al leaders, artists, musidam^ ‘
YUZO YAMAMOTO
ha’i Race Amity Day. Being one statesmen of the world An?5 ^
of the few Nisei Baha’i myself, it ly, it is contrarv to
was of particular interest-to me Of God and th^ ™ A*S
d
k
to note the JACL leadership par­ men.
ticipating on our program "all
Salt Lake City,^
By TAKASHI OKA
which is to lecture on Japanese lors, upper house of Japan’s Diet over the country. Here in Salt
Lake City, our past president
In the Christian Science Monitor literature at Michigan Univer­ (Parliament). He was a founder Rupert Hachiya also gave an ex­
sity.”
of the conservative "Green Wind”
BOSTON, Mass.—It was with
But presently Mr. Yamamoto Party—in fact, it was because of cellent resume of Japanese Ame­
some trepidation that I entered relented and was confiding that him that the party adopted so rican history, our problems and
the lobby of the New England he did not find the United States poetic a name.
Progress. (Local) NAACP presi­
Hotel where-Yuzo Yamamoto was as surprising as lie had expected.
"And today?” Mr. Yamamoto dent Albert Fritz spoke on the
staying. For I knew that, in Ja­ “The skyscrapers of New York laughed when I asked him this program with a Baha’i speaker.
Mil™kee Journai
pan, Mr. Yamamoto was a Great were tall enough,” he said. "But question. "I am a completely re­
Last February Robert G i
Like Brotherhood Week, Race
Literary Figure.
?geles went Wind a?
I knew they were going to be tall. tired man today,’’ he said. "No ob­ Amity Day aims to promote un­ °f
While I had had some exper­ The people'were busy, and the ligations to anybody. But I am in­ derstanding of true brotherhood, result of a blood clot folg
ience with stray political and pace was much faster than in Ja­ terested in everything.”
but we have found Brotherhood
-cldent< Nail is yo®»
industrial figures, including a pan. But I knew that, too before
Week
is somewhat limited to the and i Texas born, which he
Particularly in- world peace, it
premier’ or two and a brace of I came.’’ •
appeared. Time and time again Christians and Jews. Here for the combined to give him “a 2 ;
bank presidents, I had but one
"I think it was the people -I during our conversation Mr. Ya- first time, Baha’i embraces the deal of racial prejudice.” 6
awe-inspiring memory of a Great met that impressed me most,” . mamoto kep.t returning- to the Bo­ oneness of all religions including
The bulletin of the Anti-Defa
Literary Figure.
mation
league quotes him as sav­
Buddhists,
Moslems,
Hindus,
Zo
­
Mr. Yamamoto continued. "Such ston taxi driver he had met.
This Great Literary Figure li­ as the taxi driver that brought
ing
this
:
"’■
Evidently the American’s forth­ roastrians, Christians, Jews, etc;
ved in suburban Tokyo, in a ram­ me here a few days ago. When I right sincerity had impressed his

Blinded,
I
learned
to
jud^e
This year initiated the first
bling house with a beautiful gar­ got on at Park Street, in Boston, passenger, for in the course of
people
not
by
how
they
looked
den and a lotus pond. He had any I thought he was a rather un­ our conversation Mr. Yamamoto Race Amity Day observance as or- what they wore but on their
number of disciples who polished couth sort of fellow. But we got kept ejaculating, "What do you inaugurated by the Baha’is of the merits as human beings. In the
his corridors and rubbed ink­ to talking, and there he was lec­ think of that ? He stopped the United States, and will be obser­ realm of the blind, you learn to stones in his study to make the turing to me about world peace meter, and kept right on talking ved each year on the second Sun­ know people by their voices, the
day of June. Men of good "will
heavy black Chinese ink which he and saying that there must be no about world peace.”
everywhere are not only invited warmth of their handshake, the
preferred. They stayed with him, more wars.”
In Japan, Mr. Yamamoto has but urged to participate. What is sound of their footsteps. You get
sometimes for years, but he hard­
to know them better than you
“ He told me all about himself
ly ever spoke to them. Once in a —how he was new in Boston, the reputation of being a man of of vital concern for the well­ ever did by sight.”
childlike straight-forward­ being of one segment of the hu­
while his son, with whom I trad­ having just arrived from Califor­ almost
Nail suddenly recovered his
ness
and
sincerity, and it may be man race is now of vital concern
ed postage stamps, pointed him nia, and how he hoped to find a
sight
a few weeks ago. He saw
out to me— a stern, lonely figure, better job. But he kept coming- that he felt if only for the length for all. There is no solution of again, and without any feeling
meditating on the pine-needle- back again and again to the of a taxi ride in a strange city our own nation’s problem, or even of racial prejudice. Maybe it
for the establishment of world would be a good thing for lots of
strewn path beside the lotus pond. theme of world peace, and even the touch of a kindred spirit.
Be that as it may, on his re­ peace until there is recognition people with prejudice if they shut
The memory of this Great Lit­ after we reached the hotel he turn some weeks later to Japan of the unity of the human race,
erary Figure disappeared, how­ stopped the meter and kept right Mr. Yamamoto sent nie clippings and spiritually motivated action their eyes for a while and judged
their fellow humans without re­
ever, as soon as I caught sight on talking.”
of an article he had written, on growing out of this recognition. ference to facial characteristics
of the plump, balding, alert-eyed
From taxi rides the conversa­ his visit, in which he saw the
I am sorry to note many Nisei, or color.
gentleman who bustled cheerfully tion shifted to language, to art, to United States as a land of
toward me from across the lobby. Mr. Yamamoto’s own varied, ver­ "straight lines.”
Mr. Yamamoto, conservatively satile .career as dramatist, nove­
It was the straight lines of the
clad in a dark suit and tie, was list, language reformer, and man buildings, as .well as the straight
accompanied by his wife; who, of politics.
lines in men’s minds, that im­
.Expertly Done
though in sober-hued kimono,
Yuzo Yamamoto started life as pressed him most, Mr. Yamamoto
O Wedding Invitations
was as cheerful- eyed as he.
@ Dance Tickets, Handbills
the son of an impoverished samu­ wrote. And, while he felt there
"Don’t ask me my impressions rai who turned to selling clothes were obvious limitations in see­
©Business Cards
® Letterheads, Envelopes^
of the United States —yet,” Mr. after the abolition of samurai ing everything in straight lines
Yamamoto said, almost as soon privileges. Mr. Yamamoto was (and admitted, too,that^tUis was
as the introductions were over. apprenticed in his teens to a but one facet of the United Sta­
EM. 6-5005
479 Queen St. W., TORONTO
"I have only been in Washington, clothes merchant, but was able to tes) he commended, on the whole,
New York, and now Boston— and work liis way through school and the honesty and the cleanness of
I still haven’t got to my main job, eventually graduated from Tokyo these lines.
Imperial University.
Office Hours:

8:30-5:30 Monday-Friday;

Meeting @ Great Literary. Figure

Blindness Freed Hi®
Of Race Preiurfirg

PRINTING

THE NEW CANADIAN

*

Taro Yashima to Publish His first success as a dramatist
was achieved with the play
of Life,’’ which was hail­
Another Children's Book "Crown
ed by critics in 1920 as the “dawn

LOS ANGELES.—Artist Taro
Yashima will have his sixth book
"Umbrella”,
published
next
spring-, it was reported. It has already been chosen as a Junior
Literary Guild, selection, which
means .an advance sale of 20,000
copies.
"Umbrella” will be his fourth
children’s book, and like its pre­
decessors, “Village Tree”, "Plenty
to Watch”, and "Crow Boy”, will
be illustrated through use of a
color separation process develop­
ed by the artist. “Umbrella” re­
cords a tiny incident in the life
of the Yashimas’ daughter, Momo
and its beautiful illustrations and
charming text may well win addi­
tional honors for the Japan-born
artist who fled the military Ja­
panese regime in 1940. His last
published book. "Crow Boy”, was
given two national awards, one
by the American Child Study As­
sociation, and was a runner-up
in the Caldicott awards.

*

*

of an era of modern plays” in Ja­
pan. The play traced the strug­
gles of a crab cannery operator
in the northern island of Karafuto. The operator, a man of rigid
honesty, eventually goes bank­
rupt and is forced to leave his
home; but the implication is that,
by remaining true to his own
principles, he has gained “the
crown of life.”
The same concern with individ­
ual morality even in the . face of
overwhelming social pressures
characterized Mr. Yamamoto’s
later plays, as well as his novels,
the first of which was written in
his fortieth year. His most fa­
mous novel, “Nami,” has been
translated into several European
languages, as have some of his
plays.
During World War II Mr. Ya­
mamoto was a member of the
Peace Party, and after the war
entered politics actively as a
member of the House of Council-

THE NEW CANADIAN
479 QUEEN STREET WEST
TORONTO 2-B, ONTARIO
Please find enclosed S ....... . ................
for which
u Renew my subscription
r
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Travel Writer Plans
’All the Best in Japan'
TOKYO.—Sydney Clark, cele­
brated U.S. travelog author of
the "All the Best” series which
already number 18, arrived in
Tokyo in April as special guest
of the Japan Tourist Association
to collect material for his intend­
ed 19th travelog to be entitled
“All the Best in Japan.”
A travel guidebook, writer by
profession, Mr. Clark made a
five-week complete tour of Japan
from Hokkaido to Kyushu Island
to gather all the interesting facts
about Japan. His intended Japan
g‘uidebook will place particular
emphasis on major tourist cen­
tres, hotel accomodations, restau­
rants and bars and touch on
Tokyo’s night life, department
stores and other shopping cen­
tres, amusement centres, sports,
Kabuki and other traditional
stage art presentations.
In his past voluminous travel­
ogs Mr. Clark has already cover­
ed America, Cuba, France, Eng­
land, Scandinavia, Mexico, Ha­
waii, Switzerland, Ifaly, Spain,
Portugal and some other Euro­
pean and African countries. He
records with unusual freshness
not only facts about money, tran­
sportation, hotels, etc., but tra­
ditions and background that
make cities real and people come
alive.. His volumes are tapestries
of history, personal experience
and present-day descriptions, in­
valuable for then* comprehensive­
ness, delightful as literary expe­
riences. And he is first in the
postwar field; his books are upto-the-minute.

Dr. Ayako M. Wani
announces the opening of her offices
in the general practice of dentistry

at

2 BLOOR STREET EAST (at Yonge)
Suite 34, Royal Bank Building
WAlnut 1-2912

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TORONTO

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$

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH918 Bathurst St
MORNING SERVICES AT CEMETERIES, JULY 13
11 a.m.
10 a.m.
Resthaven
St. James
Prospect

Pine Hill
Mt. Pleasant
Park Lawn
;e*

______________
. At Mount Pleasant
and _____
Park Lawn where most of the families w4
gathered, a portable shrine will be set up. The Reading of the Stu.as m
English will be given by the Bussei and Sangha representatives, ue-.
Tsuji is visiting Resthaven and Pine Hill this year.

SATURDAY NIGHT, JULY 13
8 p.m.z Service; Reading in English by Kunio Suyama
and Sermon by the Rev. T. Tsuji
After the service,-we would like all of you to join us
Odori. Master of Ceremonies Kunio Suyama promises a wonae.
Yukatas will be supplied, so just come down to the circle of
a. da:

SUNDAY, 10:30 a.m., JULY 14
All Nisei are cordially invited to the morning service ananese. N
conducted in English. The afternoon service will be in Shimoda w
Charles Shimizu will chair the service, and Miss Nancy
by
dedicate .a reading from the sutras. Incense offering will be aoa
representatives.