Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
^YEAfc^--------------------------=---------------- WEDNESDAY^
No; 86'
^P Jung Plans a Trip to Red China
TORONTO^ONT.
NOVEMBER 6. 1957
_____________________ ____
Japan To Take Part in B.C, Centennial
Columbia Centennial celebrations
TOKYO.—The Japan Foreign
“Tve the _ Chinese, it was said, voted
01 a agauisu him. Ninety
. per
- . cent of Ministry is considering
Consul Muneo Tanabe of Yan. ,
.wwpTiiment sen
.
tion in the forthcoming Biit^n couver made the suggestion based
hoker
government
one sawmill urm-taT
worker wlm
who piniprated
emigrated his law clients were whites.
mi the fact that B.C. is Lpa^
Jung doesn't even look Chinese,
1900, Douglas Jung has seen half
nearest- neighbor across the la«' Tn ;s he suggested it.
of Europe but never visited Asia. except perhaps for his long, sen
cifie. with ties in trade and cul
J'f 1 ifke official delegation
sitive fingers and a certain qua
His
will
be
no
tourist
’
s
junket.
ture. and a second
™7he
^t U moving soon, Jung
Over three or four months, Jung lity about his clear, frank eyes.
Japanese Canadians bifiu
Trhom to it. The 33-year- hopes to visit most of Asia, talk At the United Nations, where ne
war. At present, there arc ^YCV
niay b^ - Vancouver-Centre
VANCOUVER .—In . connoctioii an estimated 1,QO? JC m b.G
is
Canadian
representative
on
the
ing
as
well
as
listening.
oid
X a (strictly unoffithe B-C. Centennial celebnAccording to R- Rujuki, . C
legal committee, he has been mis
“I want to show them,* he taken for a _ Spaniard, and a blois next year, the Vancouver Tokvo correspondent, the Japa
g) tZ ?o Peking himself, early
says, “that here in Canada we do
Civic Unity Association V <’
nese Foreign Ministry *s
in the nev . e ^
blessing of have a democracy—equal oppor French-Canadian.
the following tor the B.C. Cen
In the House of Commons, deavoring to launch a
He
i^ Prime Mini- tunity. This they cannot doubt where he occupies a fourth-row protect on the history of
tennial celobratioiis, .
^ °Diefenbaker has pointed out when they see me, a Member of Tory seat. Jung has already been groups hi B.C. Dr. K John Shm- o
a merchant marine.
Kwo- could expect noprotec- Parliament for a constituency identified'as a member who mis tani is an executive ofbeei o
training
ship,
the Nippon-Siam
non ses few debates and who applauds
T^ Wnm the Canadian Govern- which is
°Ta"^
JCCA plans to tn a goodwill visit t" Vaurouver
'^Aince Ottawa - and Peking Chinese.”
sparingly He doesn’t pound his
Before the war, a similar visit
write a history of Japanese tan- was made, by the training ship,
desk
in*
the
approved
“
tramedam not on speaking Terms.
Jung, who put himself through
seal” fashion even when his ov a adians in B.C, and ™W
ate. with National JCCA on
- Kaio-Maru, to Vancouver.
the first Canadian of Chi-; law school working at a dairj, side has scored.
e To participate in the bf-'
Mans to write a mstory of
b
Xtrv ever elected to par- swept the Vancouver-Centre seat
snonsored International
nuk
ncse
jiot worried. His will out from under former Defence
Accustomed to thinking- for in Canada. Miss Jkhha 3 uraU- Fair to be hold m May, Ldob, u
mi is the author toi i>.v. •> v jTT^faM-fiiiding mission, he Minister Ralph Campney in a himself, Juiio has
-— strong'
~ _ views
H S Saita, president of
1
out and he doesn't expem stunning upset last June 10.
about the position of the M eM m Vancouver-B.C. JCCA, -«S” ' €2 To hold a recital of famous J a- .
He
increased
the
Conservative
' ’“’““t in double by asking quesvote from four per cent ho 27 per Asia and what should be done the Centennial celebrations as .1 panose musicians and P^em.
lions.
i ,
various Japanese films m B.C.
opportunity to publicize tae
cent, won a majority of 4,000 di • about it.
Whv is he going i
® To telecast the Centennial
a riding where only 2,70T regis
contribution to B.C.
.■For one thing,” answers Jung, tered voters are Chinese. Most ot
“There’s a strong wave of na
Several other ethnic g o^ Celebrations in Jopmi with a tieJ“ known as Tien Wail m
tionalism
sweeping
through have made plans to write
up between CBUT-TV m VancouAsia,” he says, clenching his
tory of their own community*
in Japan.
. to emphasize the point. 11 vyil B.C.. and the Provincial Arch es ver ano x * nv 1 '
in the InternaBuffalo
be a long .process to win China in Victoria will publish a bwto- O To pariivipaU
back. But a start must be madv, graphy on ethnic group histm, Conal Film Fm •
any more racist films. , .
Reviving to a protest made by
phony concert.
“After viewing the Wm _Kcllei and the best way to start is
resources.
'
_____ ___ — © To send the tn nous Tak;u'!vzu>
the Toronto JCCA against an wrote in a letter to TJCCA, 1
_______
anti-Nisei film, “Little Tokyo, concur heartily - with your posi trade.”
bn Hrls to \;m<mvor.
Japan intend ; to realize these
IT SA.” which’ was shown on tion, and I wall see to it that, this
during the period of \ anWBEN -TV earlier this _ yea r, film, or others like it, will not
international Art rcstiWBEN-TV Program Directoi be televised, on our station in the
a five-cent increase oyr tael coaver/be held tor three weeks
Fred A. Keller said that his_ sta
TOKYO.—The season for Japa
vear, which moans a total of . n ~
Julv 19,
to be spon
tion will henceforth not release future.
,
Million Canadian dolMis,
nese oranges, is fast
sored
by
‘
the
Wmvmyer
I estiva
Although this year did wt > eld
000 more than? ^-ocivlv
H
these
plans
do not
a good harvest of md<anb Ca Shizuoka-kcn will ship to G
materialize.
Japan
will
concen
of ed without injuryjy to « da Placed' orders for 2,580,000 ada 1.450,000 boxes; Elnntoe :
trate on Hw 1mm national Tiadc
VERNON, BJ3.—The home
hich
destroyed
their
home
crates, some 220,000 crates more 350 000; Wakayama-ken,
,
fire w.
Sagawa-ken, 270,000; and oFukutaro Oishi and family - of C°Mi\e Oishi expressed his deep ^veXpdce
been
Vernon went up in flames ea^ ^-^—'^y and help
kushima and Hiroshima kei ,
,
at
80
cents
per
box
(FOB
Japan*,
Fridav morning, Oct. 25.,
°°Most of the mikans will be sold
six members of the family escap- shown.
.■west of Winnipeg, but tte W^ritv of the small Japanese HIGH SCHOOL AWARDS
oranges-is rising-in eastern Cana
Patty Hashimoto of Eastern
da. the f’1^ boat-load of mjkm J Hi-h School of Commerce was
will leave-Japan in the middle <
recipient of the George H. Hees
this -month for Vancouver B.C-, Award at that school’s commen
By KIMI TAKIMOTO
to bo followed by ten moic boat- cement, exercises last week.
difficult for Ute to deseri^eVe«
Dorothy Shimizu of I «rk(klc;
Tokyo, Oct. 26
loads.
now, but as I
Capri ' the beautiful
Collegiate was awarded the Ro^
GREETINGS from Tokyo] 1
Asiatic Rome ,the romantic Is e ^Xsert land of the
salie A. Dugit Prize m Latin.
of the Acropolis, the *
the Taj Mahal,
® the long silence. Nothing s^it f Western city
'
fluor yellow fever. ... Just a little bit or
_
..pyramids, tke w0^ef1 IL Holv Ganges, the BurREG INA, Sask.—J ack O’hashi
the incredible Bnd ,of tl e q^ 'Bangkok>s floating
was
presented with a 8o0 IO DE
laziness.
■ •■
F mese
P±^pS the shoppers paradise
After exactly, .three monthsof to^^
municipal
chapter scholarship at
markets and opium das, « shabby, struggling
NEW YORK.—New Y ork s the commencement exercises o
suitcases and mixing with all yP
reaChed my S« SeXZ oi never-to-be-forgotten smart set took off its shoes and
Central collegiate on Oct- <m- I he
people in all kinds of places, I Snails i®
sat down-in “ozashiki Oct. 18 a
meritorius prize was awarded on
destination. As one “er ^
the impressions and
tUo
settled and
Mrs Moto Saito opened the city a the basis of scholarship, athletics
Some day when I get a wuc^
(whm , most authentic Japanese restauoff the plane at Haneda,
T-mn+n to Tokyo
and extra-curricular_ activities.
World in SO Days’ but ‘From Ty* “ 1
toto stay put for a while), I’ll sort out my
in 90 Days’”. (And all at a very moderate
rak' was a success beyond hei Jack w.'is elected president of the
■’^.todpass them on to you. ,
student council last ycai.
•
too, I might add.) . x
■
nil the travel
Much against the advice o
,vjth only a
In lhe meantime, I would «eo=>^ ^“^ ^Consul General Mitsuo Tanaka
agencies I consulted, I began N^ ' j a partiallyamong the more than y.
venturesome SP111^,,, ?‘
toPbe your own porter Quests
who found the restaurant
booking for the ylan?
the long journey,
a/d try the same on West 55th Street similar to
planned schedule for the rest o
on-the- bring too
This vear, two scholarships of
Very fortunately for me,
able on more occasions than one ;
one they might have gone to in
_
,f _ ^ but
spot bookings worked out very v
d of my . stunt as I did.
$125 each will be awarded to two
. to go through 22. countries before
o
hat
TraveF through E^°^_? ^^^^
the Middle TTh«e was a -tempura’’ (deep first year students attending the
trip. A couple of times,-though I was oi
don’t miss the chance to _a^fi And don’t wait till feted sea food) bar and seven University, of Toronto.
1 might not get.to my destination.^. .
All senior matriculation honor
East. It’s an educat
saved up either. Do R separate rooms on which pic •
The first time was when the customs^of^i^^ vou have lots of « energy to walk or climo could sit on a “zabuton (eush students enrolled in a first year
on. a tatami floor.
undergraduate course a.t the U ot
at Beirut became a bit nasty <b (Actually it was while you still have the mg.y^ taxi at every
T are eligible. Recipients of these
Mrs.
Saito,
who
once
ran
a
a
few
steps
instead
the*
nerve
to
poke
into
my visas weren t quite m orae • I
yo.^ time
scholarships will be ^“^
famous
restaurant
m
Shanghai.
my own fault; I hadn’t K^gSder the turn, and while you
_rners and ask a few quesSid
in
recent
years
-^operated
bv the Senate of the U of P. One
£ answll sdme/and make friends with people
to prepare my moves and I was
_»
of these awards has been made
the
Nagoya
Restaurant,
w
,
more strict Middle ■ East restric io M
bookpossible by the gift of ?12o from
f questions in the course
The second time: was wnen m} . 4n . Calcutta, from all walks °f tf®Sa
“
It
has
been
my
aim
to
create
I’ve asked Q^. a ]o ^^ a great deal about
Saisei-Kai Incorporated.
,
ing was cancelled at the last. F •_
that was
an establishment on a. par ^th
Application
forms
and
any
.fur
of
my
trip,
f
a4
^
v6
_
*
customs
and
(I was mistakenly booked for P to°wasn’t until
ther
details
may
be
obtained
from
the
best
found
in
a
large
Japa, human nature in general. ■
strictly closed to non-Onentals ai
dav prior to people of d^er®
New Yorkers
the Registrar at Simcoe Hall,01
nope y
„
lud my sketchy notes on my nese city. Tr hone
they saw my Canadian passport the
If traditions, and_
I
In fact, as I conclude n y
had a wonderful will enjoy this taste ^ »„ from Gerry Masuda, LL. 6-0388.
the sailing that they, discovered ^
trip, I can quite franMy^yJ .^ many different
Mrs. Saito speaks only Japa Al! applications must be made oy
there had been vacancies in the o
, •
there
nese,
but a Nisei, .Mitzi Kinoshi November 30.
could have- easily made the ^ang ^b^_ a tree.)
holiday, seen an
■ tiful tan and now I’m fully
A i j
At Frosh Nite on Oct. 4, two
thi
"
SS
’
JT±
>
my
“
lf
to
whatever
the
native
ta,
interprets
for
her.
p{1
weren’t any open reservations, 1 , b. amounted
first vear representatives were
The prices would have n
However, neither of
setbacks to ^ ?TTS mv Parents has in store for me.
Japanese
eyebrows
back
home.
elected to act on the executive.
to much more than a momentary _
mv way land of my pa
_
now-the country’s Sk^aki is'.$5. So is "C"innabe'
This vear, they are Esther Sunoally managed to continue peacef ,
to a
One thing 1
in Tokyo’s rush- Tempura is ,?4.o0. _
■
hara (Dent. 'Hygiene) and Ron
by eliminating some stopovers and switching
overcrowded! One SVtys fact. I’m still looking
But sake comes free with every Shigeishi (I UC).
plane.
f’rteCto buttons that disappeared in the
meal.
. What with travelling the
^
had
by sea and land and the seconii
’ ^ ^00 struggle.
quite a varied and enjoyable time. It is mucn
^
,
the Diefell- Vancouver’s
Chinatown,
History of JCs in B.C.
To Be Written by JCCA
TV Station to Stop Ra
Japanese Oranges Coming This Month
Vernon JC Home Completely Destroyed By Fire
I The Scholars |
Lines from a Traveller’s Notebook
Authentic Japanese
Restaurant Opens in HYC
U of T Nisei Freshmen
Eligible for $250
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
^YEAfc^--------------------------=---------------- WEDNESDAY^
No; 86'
^P Jung Plans a Trip to Red China
TORONTO^ONT.
NOVEMBER 6. 1957
_____________________ ____
Japan To Take Part in B.C, Centennial
Columbia Centennial celebrations
TOKYO.—The Japan Foreign
“Tve the _ Chinese, it was said, voted
01 a agauisu him. Ninety
. per
- . cent of Ministry is considering
Consul Muneo Tanabe of Yan. ,
.wwpTiiment sen
.
tion in the forthcoming Biit^n couver made the suggestion based
hoker
government
one sawmill urm-taT
worker wlm
who piniprated
emigrated his law clients were whites.
mi the fact that B.C. is Lpa^
Jung doesn't even look Chinese,
1900, Douglas Jung has seen half
nearest- neighbor across the la«' Tn ;s he suggested it.
of Europe but never visited Asia. except perhaps for his long, sen
cifie. with ties in trade and cul
J'f 1 ifke official delegation
sitive fingers and a certain qua
His
will
be
no
tourist
’
s
junket.
ture. and a second
™7he
^t U moving soon, Jung
Over three or four months, Jung lity about his clear, frank eyes.
Japanese Canadians bifiu
Trhom to it. The 33-year- hopes to visit most of Asia, talk At the United Nations, where ne
war. At present, there arc ^YCV
niay b^ - Vancouver-Centre
VANCOUVER .—In . connoctioii an estimated 1,QO? JC m b.G
is
Canadian
representative
on
the
ing
as
well
as
listening.
oid
X a (strictly unoffithe B-C. Centennial celebnAccording to R- Rujuki, . C
legal committee, he has been mis
“I want to show them,* he taken for a _ Spaniard, and a blois next year, the Vancouver Tokvo correspondent, the Japa
g) tZ ?o Peking himself, early
says, “that here in Canada we do
Civic Unity Association V <’
nese Foreign Ministry *s
in the nev . e ^
blessing of have a democracy—equal oppor French-Canadian.
the following tor the B.C. Cen
In the House of Commons, deavoring to launch a
He
i^ Prime Mini- tunity. This they cannot doubt where he occupies a fourth-row protect on the history of
tennial celobratioiis, .
^ °Diefenbaker has pointed out when they see me, a Member of Tory seat. Jung has already been groups hi B.C. Dr. K John Shm- o
a merchant marine.
Kwo- could expect noprotec- Parliament for a constituency identified'as a member who mis tani is an executive ofbeei o
training
ship,
the Nippon-Siam
non ses few debates and who applauds
T^ Wnm the Canadian Govern- which is
°Ta"^
JCCA plans to tn a goodwill visit t" Vaurouver
'^Aince Ottawa - and Peking Chinese.”
sparingly He doesn’t pound his
Before the war, a similar visit
write a history of Japanese tan- was made, by the training ship,
desk
in*
the
approved
“
tramedam not on speaking Terms.
Jung, who put himself through
seal” fashion even when his ov a adians in B.C, and ™W
ate. with National JCCA on
- Kaio-Maru, to Vancouver.
the first Canadian of Chi-; law school working at a dairj, side has scored.
e To participate in the bf-'
Mans to write a mstory of
b
Xtrv ever elected to par- swept the Vancouver-Centre seat
snonsored International
nuk
ncse
jiot worried. His will out from under former Defence
Accustomed to thinking- for in Canada. Miss Jkhha 3 uraU- Fair to be hold m May, Ldob, u
mi is the author toi i>.v. •> v jTT^faM-fiiiding mission, he Minister Ralph Campney in a himself, Juiio has
-— strong'
~ _ views
H S Saita, president of
1
out and he doesn't expem stunning upset last June 10.
about the position of the M eM m Vancouver-B.C. JCCA, -«S” ' €2 To hold a recital of famous J a- .
He
increased
the
Conservative
' ’“’““t in double by asking quesvote from four per cent ho 27 per Asia and what should be done the Centennial celebrations as .1 panose musicians and P^em.
lions.
i ,
various Japanese films m B.C.
opportunity to publicize tae
cent, won a majority of 4,000 di • about it.
Whv is he going i
® To telecast the Centennial
a riding where only 2,70T regis
contribution to B.C.
.■For one thing,” answers Jung, tered voters are Chinese. Most ot
“There’s a strong wave of na
Several other ethnic g o^ Celebrations in Jopmi with a tieJ“ known as Tien Wail m
tionalism
sweeping
through have made plans to write
up between CBUT-TV m VancouAsia,” he says, clenching his
tory of their own community*
in Japan.
. to emphasize the point. 11 vyil B.C.. and the Provincial Arch es ver ano x * nv 1 '
in the InternaBuffalo
be a long .process to win China in Victoria will publish a bwto- O To pariivipaU
back. But a start must be madv, graphy on ethnic group histm, Conal Film Fm •
any more racist films. , .
Reviving to a protest made by
phony concert.
“After viewing the Wm _Kcllei and the best way to start is
resources.
'
_____ ___ — © To send the tn nous Tak;u'!vzu>
the Toronto JCCA against an wrote in a letter to TJCCA, 1
_______
anti-Nisei film, “Little Tokyo, concur heartily - with your posi trade.”
bn Hrls to \;m<mvor.
Japan intend ; to realize these
IT SA.” which’ was shown on tion, and I wall see to it that, this
during the period of \ anWBEN -TV earlier this _ yea r, film, or others like it, will not
international Art rcstiWBEN-TV Program Directoi be televised, on our station in the
a five-cent increase oyr tael coaver/be held tor three weeks
Fred A. Keller said that his_ sta
TOKYO.—The season for Japa
vear, which moans a total of . n ~
Julv 19,
to be spon
tion will henceforth not release future.
,
Million Canadian dolMis,
nese oranges, is fast
sored
by
‘
the
Wmvmyer
I estiva
Although this year did wt > eld
000 more than? ^-ocivlv
H
these
plans
do not
a good harvest of md<anb Ca Shizuoka-kcn will ship to G
materialize.
Japan
will
concen
of ed without injuryjy to « da Placed' orders for 2,580,000 ada 1.450,000 boxes; Elnntoe :
trate on Hw 1mm national Tiadc
VERNON, BJ3.—The home
hich
destroyed
their
home
crates, some 220,000 crates more 350 000; Wakayama-ken,
,
fire w.
Sagawa-ken, 270,000; and oFukutaro Oishi and family - of C°Mi\e Oishi expressed his deep ^veXpdce
been
Vernon went up in flames ea^ ^-^—'^y and help
kushima and Hiroshima kei ,
,
at
80
cents
per
box
(FOB
Japan*,
Fridav morning, Oct. 25.,
°°Most of the mikans will be sold
six members of the family escap- shown.
.■west of Winnipeg, but tte W^ritv of the small Japanese HIGH SCHOOL AWARDS
oranges-is rising-in eastern Cana
Patty Hashimoto of Eastern
da. the f’1^ boat-load of mjkm J Hi-h School of Commerce was
will leave-Japan in the middle <
recipient of the George H. Hees
this -month for Vancouver B.C-, Award at that school’s commen
By KIMI TAKIMOTO
to bo followed by ten moic boat- cement, exercises last week.
difficult for Ute to deseri^eVe«
Dorothy Shimizu of I «rk(klc;
Tokyo, Oct. 26
loads.
now, but as I
Capri ' the beautiful
Collegiate was awarded the Ro^
GREETINGS from Tokyo] 1
Asiatic Rome ,the romantic Is e ^Xsert land of the
salie A. Dugit Prize m Latin.
of the Acropolis, the *
the Taj Mahal,
® the long silence. Nothing s^it f Western city
'
fluor yellow fever. ... Just a little bit or
_
..pyramids, tke w0^ef1 IL Holv Ganges, the BurREG INA, Sask.—J ack O’hashi
the incredible Bnd ,of tl e q^ 'Bangkok>s floating
was
presented with a 8o0 IO DE
laziness.
■ •■
F mese
P±^pS the shoppers paradise
After exactly, .three monthsof to^^
municipal
chapter scholarship at
markets and opium das, « shabby, struggling
NEW YORK.—New Y ork s the commencement exercises o
suitcases and mixing with all yP
reaChed my S« SeXZ oi never-to-be-forgotten smart set took off its shoes and
Central collegiate on Oct- <m- I he
people in all kinds of places, I Snails i®
sat down-in “ozashiki Oct. 18 a
meritorius prize was awarded on
destination. As one “er ^
the impressions and
tUo
settled and
Mrs Moto Saito opened the city a the basis of scholarship, athletics
Some day when I get a wuc^
(whm , most authentic Japanese restauoff the plane at Haneda,
T-mn+n to Tokyo
and extra-curricular_ activities.
World in SO Days’ but ‘From Ty* “ 1
toto stay put for a while), I’ll sort out my
in 90 Days’”. (And all at a very moderate
rak' was a success beyond hei Jack w.'is elected president of the
■’^.todpass them on to you. ,
student council last ycai.
•
too, I might add.) . x
■
nil the travel
Much against the advice o
,vjth only a
In lhe meantime, I would «eo=>^ ^“^ ^Consul General Mitsuo Tanaka
agencies I consulted, I began N^ ' j a partiallyamong the more than y.
venturesome SP111^,,, ?‘
toPbe your own porter Quests
who found the restaurant
booking for the ylan?
the long journey,
a/d try the same on West 55th Street similar to
planned schedule for the rest o
on-the- bring too
This vear, two scholarships of
Very fortunately for me,
able on more occasions than one ;
one they might have gone to in
_
,f _ ^ but
spot bookings worked out very v
d of my . stunt as I did.
$125 each will be awarded to two
. to go through 22. countries before
o
hat
TraveF through E^°^_? ^^^^
the Middle TTh«e was a -tempura’’ (deep first year students attending the
trip. A couple of times,-though I was oi
don’t miss the chance to _a^fi And don’t wait till feted sea food) bar and seven University, of Toronto.
1 might not get.to my destination.^. .
All senior matriculation honor
East. It’s an educat
saved up either. Do R separate rooms on which pic •
The first time was when the customs^of^i^^ vou have lots of « energy to walk or climo could sit on a “zabuton (eush students enrolled in a first year
on. a tatami floor.
undergraduate course a.t the U ot
at Beirut became a bit nasty <b (Actually it was while you still have the mg.y^ taxi at every
T are eligible. Recipients of these
Mrs.
Saito,
who
once
ran
a
a
few
steps
instead
the*
nerve
to
poke
into
my visas weren t quite m orae • I
yo.^ time
scholarships will be ^“^
famous
restaurant
m
Shanghai.
my own fault; I hadn’t K^gSder the turn, and while you
_rners and ask a few quesSid
in
recent
years
-^operated
bv the Senate of the U of P. One
£ answll sdme/and make friends with people
to prepare my moves and I was
_»
of these awards has been made
the
Nagoya
Restaurant,
w
,
more strict Middle ■ East restric io M
bookpossible by the gift of ?12o from
f questions in the course
The second time: was wnen m} . 4n . Calcutta, from all walks °f tf®Sa
“
It
has
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my
aim
to
create
I’ve asked Q^. a ]o ^^ a great deal about
Saisei-Kai Incorporated.
,
ing was cancelled at the last. F •_
that was
an establishment on a. par ^th
Application
forms
and
any
.fur
of
my
trip,
f
a4
^
v6
_
*
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and
(I was mistakenly booked for P to°wasn’t until
ther
details
may
be
obtained
from
the
best
found
in
a
large
Japa, human nature in general. ■
strictly closed to non-Onentals ai
dav prior to people of d^er®
New Yorkers
the Registrar at Simcoe Hall,01
nope y
„
lud my sketchy notes on my nese city. Tr hone
they saw my Canadian passport the
If traditions, and_
I
In fact, as I conclude n y
had a wonderful will enjoy this taste ^ »„ from Gerry Masuda, LL. 6-0388.
the sailing that they, discovered ^
trip, I can quite franMy^yJ .^ many different
Mrs. Saito speaks only Japa Al! applications must be made oy
there had been vacancies in the o
, •
there
nese,
but a Nisei, .Mitzi Kinoshi November 30.
could have- easily made the ^ang ^b^_ a tree.)
holiday, seen an
■ tiful tan and now I’m fully
A i j
At Frosh Nite on Oct. 4, two
thi
"
SS
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my
“
lf
to
whatever
the
native
ta,
interprets
for
her.
p{1
weren’t any open reservations, 1 , b. amounted
first vear representatives were
The prices would have n
However, neither of
setbacks to ^ ?TTS mv Parents has in store for me.
Japanese
eyebrows
back
home.
elected to act on the executive.
to much more than a momentary _
mv way land of my pa
_
now-the country’s Sk^aki is'.$5. So is "C"innabe'
This vear, they are Esther Sunoally managed to continue peacef ,
to a
One thing 1
in Tokyo’s rush- Tempura is ,?4.o0. _
■
hara (Dent. 'Hygiene) and Ron
by eliminating some stopovers and switching
overcrowded! One SVtys fact. I’m still looking
But sake comes free with every Shigeishi (I UC).
plane.
f’rteCto buttons that disappeared in the
meal.
. What with travelling the
^
had
by sea and land and the seconii
’ ^ ^00 struggle.
quite a varied and enjoyable time. It is mucn
^
,
the Diefell- Vancouver’s
Chinatown,
History of JCs in B.C.
To Be Written by JCCA
TV Station to Stop Ra
Japanese Oranges Coming This Month
Vernon JC Home Completely Destroyed By Fire
I The Scholars |
Lines from a Traveller’s Notebook
Authentic Japanese
Restaurant Opens in HYC
U of T Nisei Freshmen
Eligible for $250
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Page 6
Wednesday, November 6, J957
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Page 7
PAGE 7
Wednesday
OliiiOWOii
Fidelis Cagers
IP ORTS
HAMILTON, Ont.—Club Fide
lis started another season of
basketball ar First United Church
Huge Display of Mums Seen at TJGC Flower Show
t nA Sunday. Double S Tile Ni- Banks (Jim Molnar, Bill Veyars), to continue every Friday night
hockey team downed Merritt
from 7-.10 p.m. Anyone, boys or
Some
120
chrysanthemum
A- - 8 hi its third game of the and Sunohara (Jim Molnar). The
girls,
wishing
to
play
are
wel
plants
were
on
display ar the Meet the HJCCA Exec
'‘Toronto Hockey League seventh goal was scored with one
Toronto
Japanese
Garden club's
come.
—K.N.
- - -on The Nisei lost their open- second to go.
HAMILTON, Out.—-The Ham
annual
Chrysanthemum
and
17^ 4-3 to Aireon TV. and
Flower Show- held last weekend ill on JCCA will hold its “Meet
.Vpn"their.second 3-1 from Lyndtlie Executive" banquet
and
at
the Royal Ontario Museum.
Motors.
dance
on
Friday.
Nov.
22.
at
MarAccording to an expert, ‘‘There
Newcomer Fete Sawney and
is
a notable improvement, and auee Restaurant, ‘76 Main St,
n-ve Sunohara shone in the DouNisei bowling leagues across Canada should be written briefly, including
yet there is much room for fur West. Supper will commence at
are invited to send in their reports for name and playing date.
i‘Z S triumph, getting two goals
6:30 p.m.'.'to be followed by a
the
NEWS .column.
Reports
ther study.”
while Lou Luchetta. Jimmy
dance.
Admission to both banquet
Over 50 displays of Japanese
Voinar and Johnny Banks conand
dance
is $2.50 per person.
VANCOUVER NISEI: "A" Div.: Tad flower arrangements were on
NISEI MAJORS (Nov. 1): High scores
^ibuted singles.
'
this week were Shoji Nakashima .783, Knacawa SC? (30'), Dave Matsuba <’58 exhibit, as well as Japanese dolls Everyone -is cordially welcomeFirst period: Lou Luchetta, Tak Nishino .7768, 7. Kats . Isoshima: 768, ■ (340), ]im Nishimura 750 '.(274), Silo
and
the
beautifully-executed Tickets may be obtained from
'•listed by Dave Sunohara and Scotty Takeuchi 7.62, Sam Furuya 722. Tabata 744 (OSO Pm Akune 716 (258);
-—K.N.
Connie. Hozaki ■ 648 (282) . Sumire. Saka-, brush paintings of Miss Marjorie executive members.
Kte Yawney assisted by Johnny and Tom Madokoro 703.
mo
to
639
:
(310),
Yosh
I
npuy
$
S1
0,
A
nh
. The end of the . first , round finds 3
■Pigott of the Nanga schools:i/B7j7^7//7^77U/S://t
Bonks opened tip the scoring for . teams- in a tight race for first place, Matsub<
\3"
Terese. Murao 240
The
exhibit
of
the
first
rice
-bo ‘ Nisei.
Merrittmen
Jack with Ken - Izumi : still in. front with 35, Div.: Itsuo Tabata 672 (254). Yuki Ya grown in Canada attracted the NAF Square-Dancing
641 (301); ]oy Nozaki 636 (247).
Mnwkshaw and Joey Lyons even- ; points,. and Yamada ,Studios and; Lewis manaka
Stry Majors: Shia Hiwatsuk’.no 838 attention of many. It was grown
The Toronto Nisei Anglican
Men's Wear right behind with 34 points
up the count. Roy Kobayashi each, java Shoppe, has 28, Zaduk & (341), Dave Matsuba 836 (332); Commo by Teizo Nakashima of Comber, Fellowship will hold a squarev- q struck on the head with a Williams . 20, Min: Sasaki ,17, Main Auto dore: Tom Nomura 770 (314), Dave Mat (int., located in the rich farm- dancing' session on Nov. 8. S p.m.,
suba 750 (300); City Senior Men's: Tad
ruck/but returned to the game in Body :16,7and Spadiha Bowlingtll.
'
’
and
Kitagawa 779 (301), Mammy Yabe 730;
; Tak Nishino. upped, his average to C.Y.O. League: Kals Shimizu came up belt between Le
•ho third period
Helen Bienosz will be the instruc
Chatham.
245, passing Tad Tanabe, who dropped with a good 'score of 761 to lead.
Second period: Jim Malnar, un- to 243; -Mas' Isoshima 238, Harry Inouye
larger nt the tor. Everyone, is welcome.
Attendance
was
^dsled. chalked up number three 234, Fred Saito,228, S.: Wakabayashi 226,
Sunday showing, including' many
for the Nisei,. followed by Hawk- 7 Scotty, Takeuchi 224, Roy Ushijima .223.
MIXED MAJORS (Noy. 3k Kaide Shi Occidentals.
Tuck Kataoka, absent -for 4 weeks, still
A'iw scoring the third and last ' claims the season's high average of mizu 776, Shig. Nishikawa-'771, Tosh Sa
goal for Merritt. Sunohara made .A577'7;Wl7-/:: /
—M.S. kura.738, Maize - Nishimura 720, Mickey
Nobuta 71.9, .Mas Isoshima 701; Dot Ha Oriental Study
it 4-3 in a lovely unassisted goal
aluminum storms
yashi 713, Amy Kondo 604.
The Toronto' Oriental Study
FRIDAY 10-PIN (Nov. 1): Sab Seki 504
for the Nisei.
Group will meet on Nov. 10< 8:30
(245),.Ken Iwai 598 (232), Sant Baba.
& SCREENS
Third period: The last three 570
(211-210), Sid Kondo 553 (207), Jack BOTTLE DRIVE
p.m..
at
International Institute,
counts were credited to Johnny Watanabe 551 (200), Sho Mori 547, Ken
GRAND FORKS, B.C.—Pictur 415 Jarvis Street. Speaker will
Ito 539 (213), Jim Burns 537 (200), Roy:
DIRECT FROM FACTORY
Nagamatsu 536 (202), ; Mori . Higa d3-l. ed in the Grand Forks Gazette re be Mrs. K. Hayashi on the topic,
@ FULL GUARANTEE
Chuck Shimizu: 528y Lefty Nakamura 516, cently was Bob Fujimoto, one of •‘Late Heian .Period*''.
Kidokan Tourney
f HIGHEST QUALITY AT
Mgs Kawabata 504 (220), Kaide Shimi
The Kidokan Judo Club of Tor zu 503, Jofe Tsujimoto- 500, Mike Idenouye the Grand Forks high school stuLOWEST PRICES
dents who" collected empty bottles El Choclo
onto will hold its annual autumn 2C2.
Kay Okada 455, Eri Tanaka 447, Marie to raise funds for basketball trips
El Ghoclo’s next club session
indo tournament on Nov. 30, 7 Kobayashi
441, Mary Ebata 435, Joyce
this
winter
by
the
GFHS
Wolves
is
scheduIed fomSunday, Nov.10,
p.m„ at YMHA, corner of Spa- Nakamichi .423, Joyce Taniishi. 408, Toy
8
p.m..
at Armadale Hall, 133.1 A
and
Wolverines.
Hashizume
401.
/
dina and Bloor Streets.
BA. 5-5917
Dundas West. Light refreshments
W1LLOW DALE, ONT A RIO
will be served.
Instructor Eddie Hashimoto
will continue with instructions in
waltz and samba. All members
lowing
the
tourney
in
-Montreal.
anj friends arc requested to be
event
of
the
golf
year.
By JIM HUNT
• The man chiefly responsible for he took part in the Labatt Open on. hand early.
BAHtCiSTEK and 8OLICITOB
In the Toronto Star
Response to our membership
the victory of Japan over golfers at Scarboro.
NOTARY ITBLlO
A few holes of watching from 29 other countries of the
On the first..day, Nakamura, a7| drive has been very gratifying.
Samuel Jackson Snead put club to free world was 41-year-old Tora- small ilia'll who would seem more which shows that there are many
Suite 502, Temple Building
ball were enough; for one Japa . kichi Pete Nakamura. He won at home in a market garden than, who are really interested in social
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
nese golf professional.
He. ain, the individual competition with a a golf course, fired a 64 to lead dancing. However, there are st.il .
TORONTO
nounced ,in the best parlor Nip 274 score for the 72 holes over a. a field of top U.S., Canadian and a few openings and those stid
ties: BO. 1-Skl
KM. MW5
ponese that he was quitting for most demanding' type of golf British golfers.
\vishing to join are most cordially
ever the game: of golf.
This reporter decided to inter- welcomed.
;
—L.N.
course. And the little man they
Other sons of Japap may have have dubbed a carbon copy, of view the Japanese star. There
*
felt the same way. They,gazed in Gene Sarazen teamed with Koichi was one difficulty. He didn’t Young Adults
awe at the booming drives of the Ono to. win the. Canada Cup by ■speak English and our Japanese
Nisei Young Adult Fellowship
■ mighty Slammer.
But perhaps an 11-stroke margin over the U.S. is non-existent. The gap. was invites you to join them in a tour
Watch Repair Shop
thev recalled that putting the ball entry of Snead arid Jimmie De- bridged with the aid of a trans- shop of the United Church of
in the hole is still the main point maret.
labor who then was employed in of Berkley. Studio, Central workHO. 5-3652 — Res: LE. 2-7445
in this the most exacting of all
the
Japanese
consulate
in
ToronCanada,
for
an
Audio-Visual
Pro
328 Broadview Ave., Toronto
Somehow you just don’t asso
games man has invented, to try
to (Shig Oue).
gram. Miss Dickie .Bada wilLconciate
Japan
and
golf.
Most
North.
his patience.
In the course of the interview, duct the tour at Queerest 1ws .
In any event, the Japanese en Americans probably didn’t even we asked the little man if he had on Friday, Nov 8, / .oO P-nK
RESIDENCE
try decided to; stick around for realize before last weekend that, ever shot a 64 before on a course sharp. Make it a date.
OFFICE
2 Vosta Drive
EM. 4-1394
’ the Canada Cup matches on the the Japanese played golf. They
MAyfair 1365
EM. 4-1395
home Tokyo course. The rest is a certainly didn’t appreciate that
the
little
men
with
the
slant
eyes
matter for the record. Japan
well or even better on Japanese
olf world
stood atop the gi/*x,
V v— last
—t were so proficient at the game.
'BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
week, by once again proving that
; Actually it shouldn’t be too sur
Hill
II
11
HllllIIIIH
1111
Hl
III
11
*1*
1
*
,I!
1,111
NOTARY PUBLIC
We asked (he translator to re
‘‘while you may drive for show, prising. The Japanese proved in
NOVEMBER
____
peat
the
question.
Surely
he
you putt for dough.”
<
World" War II they are a most
201 Northern Ontario Building
couldn’t have understood us ? Na.- 8—Toronto. Nisei Young Adult Fellow
enterprising
people.
Anything
330 Bay; Street (at Adelaide)
The victory of Japan in both
ship, tour of Berkley Studio, genual
kamura just grinned and nodded
thev
take
rd, they do well.
TORONTO
the t.eam and individual events in
Workshop of United. Church of Canahis
head
to
indicate
he
knew
what
Nakamura-played
golf
in
Cana
da,
Audio-Visual/
.Program
,a
this competition has been select
meant.
,
* Queen St, East, 7:30 sharp.
n _
ed as the Feat of the Week. . It da as a member of the Japanese weThe
8—Toronto. Nisei Anglican Young Peo
next day he soared into the
team
,in
the
1954
matches.
Folcertainly is the most surprising
ple will hold Square-dancing at St.
70’s and was forgotten as the
Anne's Parish Hall, bom 8 p.m.
usual grouip of U.S. players 9—Toronto. Buddhist Bazaar at 9 IB
scrambled for the $27,000.
. . Bathurst St.
. ■
'
, n r
9-11—Kamloops, B.C. Third annual B.C
'"studio—
YBL Convention; Convention ban itu
But now we are sure of one
during Miss Bussei. contest; bowling
l-«ii«:*»?!£,
thing'. Mr. Nakamura wasn t pull
Flat Roofing © Shingling ® Eavestroughs ® Sheet Metal Work
tourney.
ing our leg. They really do play 17—Toronto. Club Phenix Fall Social
,
BONDE D ROOFER
_
"•olf in Japan in a manner that
Night, .8-11 ‘-30, admission SL door
prizes, refreshments.
must
have
amazed
Messrs.
Snead
Phone RO. 2-4311
—
T’ NishiPma
Buddhist
I3841/o Queen W.
17—Vancouver.
Vancouver
and Demaret that past weekend.
Church's autumn bazaar, l-lU p.m.
.
TORONTO
'-
Double S Downs Merritt 7-3 for Second Win
KEG NEWS ACROSS CANADA
FRED TSUCHIYA
Golfer Nakamura Lives up to 1954 Claim
Lucien C Kurata
YONEMITSU
CALENDAR
Andrew E. McKague
ACCURATE ROOFING CO. LTD,
SHEPER, NAKASHIMA & CO
BUY THE BEST
CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS
Be Sure to Order
KIMIAKI NAKASHIMA, C.A.
WALTER I. SHEPER, C.A
J. DOUGLAS LEHBERG, C.A.
WALTER FISCHER, C.A.
RE. 1-1186
5590 VICTORIA AVE., MONTREAL 26, QUE,
SAKURA RICE
100 LBS. FOR $16.25
Buy Your House Through
The Most Successful Realtor in Toronto
0
At
Dundas Union
Store Ltd.
A Big Majority of Japanese Canadian Customers
Purchase Their Homes Through
M. YANAGISAWA
representing
S 153 St. Clair Ave. W.
1) TORONTO. Ont.
'_—.-,
WA. 1-1191
or LE. 4-1427 (Res.)
4
I
TORONTO
Phone EM. 4-7692
EM. 6-3663
22—Toronto. Nisei Students Club Autumn
Nocturne at Polish Alliance Ha.l.
22-Kolowna, B.C. KYBA Sixth Annual
General Election.
• _
22—Hamilton. Hamilton JCCA s Meet Lie
Executive Banquet and Dance, at
Marquee Restaurant, 76 Main. St, West.,
Supper will commence 6m0 p.m., aa30^To£nto? TYBS Musical Talent Revue,
30—Toronto. Nisei Women.s Club am
ner and dance ~at Little Jacks, La , rence Plaza. 5'2^.
. .
30—Kelowna, B.C. Bukkyo-Mi . 25hi an
niversary Concert and Sh.bai at
Buddhist HalL ___ ____________ ______ _
Toronto
LE. 2-6378
ijm^f^:^
2B4.A TONOI >TKIIT, TOtONTO, ONT.
CLASSIFIED
Male Help Wanted
YOUNG man lor delivery and machine
shop work Ask for Tosh a
^ V7est
Highvzay Auto Motors, 289s Bloor west
Toronto_
~
MACHINE CO.
H. S. TSURUDA
Domestic Help Wanted
(Japanese Canadian Agent)
SXtSSeSi
35 Rowntree Ave., TORONTO
RO. 9-0673
Wednesday
OliiiOWOii
Fidelis Cagers
IP ORTS
HAMILTON, Ont.—Club Fide
lis started another season of
basketball ar First United Church
Huge Display of Mums Seen at TJGC Flower Show
t nA Sunday. Double S Tile Ni- Banks (Jim Molnar, Bill Veyars), to continue every Friday night
hockey team downed Merritt
from 7-.10 p.m. Anyone, boys or
Some
120
chrysanthemum
A- - 8 hi its third game of the and Sunohara (Jim Molnar). The
girls,
wishing
to
play
are
wel
plants
were
on
display ar the Meet the HJCCA Exec
'‘Toronto Hockey League seventh goal was scored with one
Toronto
Japanese
Garden club's
come.
—K.N.
- - -on The Nisei lost their open- second to go.
HAMILTON, Out.—-The Ham
annual
Chrysanthemum
and
17^ 4-3 to Aireon TV. and
Flower Show- held last weekend ill on JCCA will hold its “Meet
.Vpn"their.second 3-1 from Lyndtlie Executive" banquet
and
at
the Royal Ontario Museum.
Motors.
dance
on
Friday.
Nov.
22.
at
MarAccording to an expert, ‘‘There
Newcomer Fete Sawney and
is
a notable improvement, and auee Restaurant, ‘76 Main St,
n-ve Sunohara shone in the DouNisei bowling leagues across Canada should be written briefly, including
yet there is much room for fur West. Supper will commence at
are invited to send in their reports for name and playing date.
i‘Z S triumph, getting two goals
6:30 p.m.'.'to be followed by a
the
NEWS .column.
Reports
ther study.”
while Lou Luchetta. Jimmy
dance.
Admission to both banquet
Over 50 displays of Japanese
Voinar and Johnny Banks conand
dance
is $2.50 per person.
VANCOUVER NISEI: "A" Div.: Tad flower arrangements were on
NISEI MAJORS (Nov. 1): High scores
^ibuted singles.
'
this week were Shoji Nakashima .783, Knacawa SC? (30'), Dave Matsuba <’58 exhibit, as well as Japanese dolls Everyone -is cordially welcomeFirst period: Lou Luchetta, Tak Nishino .7768, 7. Kats . Isoshima: 768, ■ (340), ]im Nishimura 750 '.(274), Silo
and
the
beautifully-executed Tickets may be obtained from
'•listed by Dave Sunohara and Scotty Takeuchi 7.62, Sam Furuya 722. Tabata 744 (OSO Pm Akune 716 (258);
-—K.N.
Connie. Hozaki ■ 648 (282) . Sumire. Saka-, brush paintings of Miss Marjorie executive members.
Kte Yawney assisted by Johnny and Tom Madokoro 703.
mo
to
639
:
(310),
Yosh
I
npuy
$
S1
0,
A
nh
. The end of the . first , round finds 3
■Pigott of the Nanga schools:i/B7j7^7//7^77U/S://t
Bonks opened tip the scoring for . teams- in a tight race for first place, Matsub<
\3"
Terese. Murao 240
The
exhibit
of
the
first
rice
-bo ‘ Nisei.
Merrittmen
Jack with Ken - Izumi : still in. front with 35, Div.: Itsuo Tabata 672 (254). Yuki Ya grown in Canada attracted the NAF Square-Dancing
641 (301); ]oy Nozaki 636 (247).
Mnwkshaw and Joey Lyons even- ; points,. and Yamada ,Studios and; Lewis manaka
Stry Majors: Shia Hiwatsuk’.no 838 attention of many. It was grown
The Toronto Nisei Anglican
Men's Wear right behind with 34 points
up the count. Roy Kobayashi each, java Shoppe, has 28, Zaduk & (341), Dave Matsuba 836 (332); Commo by Teizo Nakashima of Comber, Fellowship will hold a squarev- q struck on the head with a Williams . 20, Min: Sasaki ,17, Main Auto dore: Tom Nomura 770 (314), Dave Mat (int., located in the rich farm- dancing' session on Nov. 8. S p.m.,
suba 750 (300); City Senior Men's: Tad
ruck/but returned to the game in Body :16,7and Spadiha Bowlingtll.
'
’
and
Kitagawa 779 (301), Mammy Yabe 730;
; Tak Nishino. upped, his average to C.Y.O. League: Kals Shimizu came up belt between Le
•ho third period
Helen Bienosz will be the instruc
Chatham.
245, passing Tad Tanabe, who dropped with a good 'score of 761 to lead.
Second period: Jim Malnar, un- to 243; -Mas' Isoshima 238, Harry Inouye
larger nt the tor. Everyone, is welcome.
Attendance
was
^dsled. chalked up number three 234, Fred Saito,228, S.: Wakabayashi 226,
Sunday showing, including' many
for the Nisei,. followed by Hawk- 7 Scotty, Takeuchi 224, Roy Ushijima .223.
MIXED MAJORS (Noy. 3k Kaide Shi Occidentals.
Tuck Kataoka, absent -for 4 weeks, still
A'iw scoring the third and last ' claims the season's high average of mizu 776, Shig. Nishikawa-'771, Tosh Sa
goal for Merritt. Sunohara made .A577'7;Wl7-/:: /
—M.S. kura.738, Maize - Nishimura 720, Mickey
Nobuta 71.9, .Mas Isoshima 701; Dot Ha Oriental Study
it 4-3 in a lovely unassisted goal
aluminum storms
yashi 713, Amy Kondo 604.
The Toronto' Oriental Study
FRIDAY 10-PIN (Nov. 1): Sab Seki 504
for the Nisei.
Group will meet on Nov. 10< 8:30
(245),.Ken Iwai 598 (232), Sant Baba.
& SCREENS
Third period: The last three 570
(211-210), Sid Kondo 553 (207), Jack BOTTLE DRIVE
p.m..
at
International Institute,
counts were credited to Johnny Watanabe 551 (200), Sho Mori 547, Ken
GRAND FORKS, B.C.—Pictur 415 Jarvis Street. Speaker will
Ito 539 (213), Jim Burns 537 (200), Roy:
DIRECT FROM FACTORY
Nagamatsu 536 (202), ; Mori . Higa d3-l. ed in the Grand Forks Gazette re be Mrs. K. Hayashi on the topic,
@ FULL GUARANTEE
Chuck Shimizu: 528y Lefty Nakamura 516, cently was Bob Fujimoto, one of •‘Late Heian .Period*''.
Kidokan Tourney
f HIGHEST QUALITY AT
Mgs Kawabata 504 (220), Kaide Shimi
The Kidokan Judo Club of Tor zu 503, Jofe Tsujimoto- 500, Mike Idenouye the Grand Forks high school stuLOWEST PRICES
dents who" collected empty bottles El Choclo
onto will hold its annual autumn 2C2.
Kay Okada 455, Eri Tanaka 447, Marie to raise funds for basketball trips
El Ghoclo’s next club session
indo tournament on Nov. 30, 7 Kobayashi
441, Mary Ebata 435, Joyce
this
winter
by
the
GFHS
Wolves
is
scheduIed fomSunday, Nov.10,
p.m„ at YMHA, corner of Spa- Nakamichi .423, Joyce Taniishi. 408, Toy
8
p.m..
at Armadale Hall, 133.1 A
and
Wolverines.
Hashizume
401.
/
dina and Bloor Streets.
BA. 5-5917
Dundas West. Light refreshments
W1LLOW DALE, ONT A RIO
will be served.
Instructor Eddie Hashimoto
will continue with instructions in
waltz and samba. All members
lowing
the
tourney
in
-Montreal.
anj friends arc requested to be
event
of
the
golf
year.
By JIM HUNT
• The man chiefly responsible for he took part in the Labatt Open on. hand early.
BAHtCiSTEK and 8OLICITOB
In the Toronto Star
Response to our membership
the victory of Japan over golfers at Scarboro.
NOTARY ITBLlO
A few holes of watching from 29 other countries of the
On the first..day, Nakamura, a7| drive has been very gratifying.
Samuel Jackson Snead put club to free world was 41-year-old Tora- small ilia'll who would seem more which shows that there are many
Suite 502, Temple Building
ball were enough; for one Japa . kichi Pete Nakamura. He won at home in a market garden than, who are really interested in social
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
nese golf professional.
He. ain, the individual competition with a a golf course, fired a 64 to lead dancing. However, there are st.il .
TORONTO
nounced ,in the best parlor Nip 274 score for the 72 holes over a. a field of top U.S., Canadian and a few openings and those stid
ties: BO. 1-Skl
KM. MW5
ponese that he was quitting for most demanding' type of golf British golfers.
\vishing to join are most cordially
ever the game: of golf.
This reporter decided to inter- welcomed.
;
—L.N.
course. And the little man they
Other sons of Japap may have have dubbed a carbon copy, of view the Japanese star. There
*
felt the same way. They,gazed in Gene Sarazen teamed with Koichi was one difficulty. He didn’t Young Adults
awe at the booming drives of the Ono to. win the. Canada Cup by ■speak English and our Japanese
Nisei Young Adult Fellowship
■ mighty Slammer.
But perhaps an 11-stroke margin over the U.S. is non-existent. The gap. was invites you to join them in a tour
Watch Repair Shop
thev recalled that putting the ball entry of Snead arid Jimmie De- bridged with the aid of a trans- shop of the United Church of
in the hole is still the main point maret.
labor who then was employed in of Berkley. Studio, Central workHO. 5-3652 — Res: LE. 2-7445
in this the most exacting of all
the
Japanese
consulate
in
ToronCanada,
for
an
Audio-Visual
Pro
328 Broadview Ave., Toronto
Somehow you just don’t asso
games man has invented, to try
to (Shig Oue).
gram. Miss Dickie .Bada wilLconciate
Japan
and
golf.
Most
North.
his patience.
In the course of the interview, duct the tour at Queerest 1ws .
In any event, the Japanese en Americans probably didn’t even we asked the little man if he had on Friday, Nov 8, / .oO P-nK
RESIDENCE
try decided to; stick around for realize before last weekend that, ever shot a 64 before on a course sharp. Make it a date.
OFFICE
2 Vosta Drive
EM. 4-1394
’ the Canada Cup matches on the the Japanese played golf. They
MAyfair 1365
EM. 4-1395
home Tokyo course. The rest is a certainly didn’t appreciate that
the
little
men
with
the
slant
eyes
matter for the record. Japan
well or even better on Japanese
olf world
stood atop the gi/*x,
V v— last
—t were so proficient at the game.
'BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
week, by once again proving that
; Actually it shouldn’t be too sur
Hill
II
11
HllllIIIIH
1111
Hl
III
11
*1*
1
*
,I!
1,111
NOTARY PUBLIC
We asked (he translator to re
‘‘while you may drive for show, prising. The Japanese proved in
NOVEMBER
____
peat
the
question.
Surely
he
you putt for dough.”
<
World" War II they are a most
201 Northern Ontario Building
couldn’t have understood us ? Na.- 8—Toronto. Nisei Young Adult Fellow
enterprising
people.
Anything
330 Bay; Street (at Adelaide)
The victory of Japan in both
ship, tour of Berkley Studio, genual
kamura just grinned and nodded
thev
take
rd, they do well.
TORONTO
the t.eam and individual events in
Workshop of United. Church of Canahis
head
to
indicate
he
knew
what
Nakamura-played
golf
in
Cana
da,
Audio-Visual/
.Program
,a
this competition has been select
meant.
,
* Queen St, East, 7:30 sharp.
n _
ed as the Feat of the Week. . It da as a member of the Japanese weThe
8—Toronto. Nisei Anglican Young Peo
next day he soared into the
team
,in
the
1954
matches.
Folcertainly is the most surprising
ple will hold Square-dancing at St.
70’s and was forgotten as the
Anne's Parish Hall, bom 8 p.m.
usual grouip of U.S. players 9—Toronto. Buddhist Bazaar at 9 IB
scrambled for the $27,000.
. . Bathurst St.
. ■
'
, n r
9-11—Kamloops, B.C. Third annual B.C
'"studio—
YBL Convention; Convention ban itu
But now we are sure of one
during Miss Bussei. contest; bowling
l-«ii«:*»?!£,
thing'. Mr. Nakamura wasn t pull
Flat Roofing © Shingling ® Eavestroughs ® Sheet Metal Work
tourney.
ing our leg. They really do play 17—Toronto. Club Phenix Fall Social
,
BONDE D ROOFER
_
"•olf in Japan in a manner that
Night, .8-11 ‘-30, admission SL door
prizes, refreshments.
must
have
amazed
Messrs.
Snead
Phone RO. 2-4311
—
T’ NishiPma
Buddhist
I3841/o Queen W.
17—Vancouver.
Vancouver
and Demaret that past weekend.
Church's autumn bazaar, l-lU p.m.
.
TORONTO
'-
Double S Downs Merritt 7-3 for Second Win
KEG NEWS ACROSS CANADA
FRED TSUCHIYA
Golfer Nakamura Lives up to 1954 Claim
Lucien C Kurata
YONEMITSU
CALENDAR
Andrew E. McKague
ACCURATE ROOFING CO. LTD,
SHEPER, NAKASHIMA & CO
BUY THE BEST
CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS
Be Sure to Order
KIMIAKI NAKASHIMA, C.A.
WALTER I. SHEPER, C.A
J. DOUGLAS LEHBERG, C.A.
WALTER FISCHER, C.A.
RE. 1-1186
5590 VICTORIA AVE., MONTREAL 26, QUE,
SAKURA RICE
100 LBS. FOR $16.25
Buy Your House Through
The Most Successful Realtor in Toronto
0
At
Dundas Union
Store Ltd.
A Big Majority of Japanese Canadian Customers
Purchase Their Homes Through
M. YANAGISAWA
representing
S 153 St. Clair Ave. W.
1) TORONTO. Ont.
'_—.-,
WA. 1-1191
or LE. 4-1427 (Res.)
4
I
TORONTO
Phone EM. 4-7692
EM. 6-3663
22—Toronto. Nisei Students Club Autumn
Nocturne at Polish Alliance Ha.l.
22-Kolowna, B.C. KYBA Sixth Annual
General Election.
• _
22—Hamilton. Hamilton JCCA s Meet Lie
Executive Banquet and Dance, at
Marquee Restaurant, 76 Main. St, West.,
Supper will commence 6m0 p.m., aa30^To£nto? TYBS Musical Talent Revue,
30—Toronto. Nisei Women.s Club am
ner and dance ~at Little Jacks, La , rence Plaza. 5'2^.
. .
30—Kelowna, B.C. Bukkyo-Mi . 25hi an
niversary Concert and Sh.bai at
Buddhist HalL ___ ____________ ______ _
Toronto
LE. 2-6378
ijm^f^:^
2B4.A TONOI >TKIIT, TOtONTO, ONT.
CLASSIFIED
Male Help Wanted
YOUNG man lor delivery and machine
shop work Ask for Tosh a
^ V7est
Highvzay Auto Motors, 289s Bloor west
Toronto_
~
MACHINE CO.
H. S. TSURUDA
Domestic Help Wanted
(Japanese Canadian Agent)
SXtSSeSi
35 Rowntree Ave., TORONTO
RO. 9-0673
Page 8
E
NEW
C A N~A DIAN______________ :________ Wednesday, November 6, 1957
AiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiniHiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiHHi iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiniininiiiiniiiiiininniiiiiiniiHw^
THE HEW CANADIAN |
the M-space
j
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
as a medium of expression and news outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada
Jazz For Modems is the name of a package deal which makes wonderfully fluid on flight oi
the concert rounds just about this time every year. It was in Buf expression, developing his olo$
T. UMEZUKI, Publisher
falo Sunday and in Toronto on Monday. So was I.
carefully and surely, with Ge
MARJORIE UMEZUKI..........
.... ___ _ English Section Editor
It continually amazes me that these concert bookers jam-pack baritone harmonizing in the.
.Japanese Section
& Advertising
KEN MORI......................
.......
so many top names into a two or three hour program, enabling he background; But I regret the
loss
OFFICE hours
musicians to just get warmed up before' time.runs out.
SUBSCRIPTION
of Bobby’s - trombone which can
8:30—5:30 Monday-Friday
Jazz For Moderns could have been a good stream-lined concert
(Ad rates bn request)
9
to
1
p.m.
Saturday
had
they
dispensed with the Australians, who swing only sometimes, hold its own with a baritone
$3.50 for 6 months, $6 per year
rime
Helen Merrill; who sings only sometimes, and George Shearing, who whereas the alto
sounds
weak
when
the
two
blow
resorted to what he thought was humor. . .
together. . . . Lee and Gerry see??
Authorized as second class mail, Bost Office Department, Ottawa
'
It was the first
~ time I he^ird Miss
to - have similar ideas, however,
Merrill, and I hope
and the: easy-swinging, humorous
it will be the last.
notes will always have a place in
Her
singing
is
my jazz appreciation. Still with
’ -colorless, although
EXCERPTS FROM HANSARD,
. ’
the group . is drummer Dave
she tries to swing
OFFICIAL REPORT OF HOUSE OF COMMONS ■ DEBATES '
a bit.
I couldn’t
■Bailey, wvho is acquiring a verv
Mr. Stuart: The hon. member help thinking that
•Mr. Pickersgill: ! should, like to
tasteful style, and new bassist is
ask a further supplementary had asked me a question, Mr. she was a very far
one Henry Grimes, an up-andquestion. I wonder whether the Speaker.
cry from someone
coming star.
Some hon. members: Sit down. like Lena Horne..
minister could explain why this
Mr.
-Stuart:
The
Hon.
member
man. who-claims to be a stateless
Taking the rest,
person should have been treated has asked me a question. Does he the concert line-up
warm, loose-swinging jazz, Chico
want it answered ?
differently from
would be Gerry.
Hamilton’s Quintet is a cool, yet
■ Mr.-Speaker: The hon. member Mulligan Quartet
Christian Hanna.
for Victoria-Carleton has the featuring- Lee Ko
humorous, chamber group, play
Mr. Fulton: The main reason floor.
ing the type .of music which ‘
nitz;
Chico
Hamil
of course, is that there is a dif-.
Mr. Stuart: He asked me a ton Quintet, and
would appeal to high-brow clas
ferent .g-overnment in office- at question. I want to know whether
Miles
Davis
Quin
sicists. Chico’s drumming was
the moment.
he wants an answer. The hon. tet.
especially
fascinating in a number
member asked, me why the gov
• Miles’ group is
ernment I supported—
dedicated to fellow-drummer -To
a trifle too loud
Mr. Winch: In the closing ses
Mr. Montgomery: Y ou can with everyone blow
Jones. The melodic cello singin?
sion of the last parliament the speak later.
ing as hard as pos
along with the melancholy flute
previous minister of finance gave
Mr. Stuart: Do you want my sible,
especially
had a beautiful harmonic sound.
a eommitmeht that there would answer ?
drummer
Philly
be the minting, of a silver dollar
Some hon. members: Sit down. Joe J ones. Paul
Consisting'of three string instru
in honor of the cenLmary of Bri
Mr. Speaker: Order.
ments ■ (cello, guitar and bass)
Chambers, one of •
tish Columbia. Gould the Minister
Mr. 'Stuart: It is all right if the top bassists,
along with flute and drums, this
of Finance tell us whether that you do not want an answer. I can can
hardly
be
classical-sounding jazz group
commitment made previously is answer'/ ■
heard at all, except
and
if
there
now being honored,
stole the show.
onhis one solo, r
will bo a minting of commemora(Translated from French)
Miles’
trumpet
five silver dollar ?
Mr. Hector Dupuis: . . .1 be competes -with Ju
Mr. Fleming; Mr: Speaker, the ware the Greeks even when they lian
Cannonball
dollar has been minted. I think are bearing gifts. I am not sure Adderley’s alto for
—photo by Wm. Umezu.<i
when my hon. friend sees it he how to translate this in Latin the melodRssounds,
. . Gerry Mulligan at Stratford
will recognize it as entirely but —
but the loudness of
worthy not only of the centennial
An hon. member: Timeo Da- the whole group
Gesu no chie wa ato kara
in the life of British Columbia naos et dona ferentes.
made it sound confused and too frantic. Maybe I was too close.
deru,
but also of the high standards of
Mr. Dupuis: Mr. Chairman, this
Gerry’s easy informal air always relaxes the audience, while
the Royal Canadian Mint.
(Wise after the event is the
is the first time I have been the group whips into some swinging - tune. This photo, taken at an
wit
of a low-rank official.) Com
Mr. Mclvor: I : should like to speaking in Latin in this House afternoon rehearsal at Stratford Festival last summer, illustrates
part:
After 'counsel is a fool’s
Iris informalitv—draped on a lean, flexible figure, a red. shirt, black
ask the Minister of Finance this and — ■
counsel.
'Hindsight is better than
question. If we wish to purchase
An hon. member: It is not Lat tie, blue jeans, white sneakers, topped, by sandy red hair and sunforesight.
these dollars what will they cost ? in, it is Greek.
*
*
*
The quartet has changed since its last visit. Instead of Boo
Mr.. Dupuis ^Forgive me; Latin
Mr. Fleming* Mr. Speaker,
Brookmeyer on trombone, there-ris Lee Konitz on alto sax. Lee is
Hito zoo noro-eba ana futais Greek to me. ;
thev will cost 100 cents.
EM. 6-5005
479 Queen gt W., Toronto 2-B, Ont
CastiMs MPs Working
Japanese Sayings
tsu. /
"^S^A ■"•■ 'T*^S§^ t^^O^;*li^^^li^j^^^
Nisei ©eianqwensy obi the' Bise
TORONTO BUDDHIST
CHURCH BAZAAR
.
(A curser must dig two graves,
one
for * himself.)
Compare:
Curses, like chickens, come home
to roost.
•
^
^
&
Nov. 9, 1957, • from noon to
sources of our findings, there are spring can breed future delinRy HENRY MORI
Hara mo mi no' uchi.
8 p.m.
_ ■
countless reports, made by social quents.
In the Pacific Citizen
(Your'
stomach, too, is part of
Because the vernaculars fail
workers and juvenile authorities
Recently - arrived / kimono, you.) Compare: Eats till sick,
LOS AN G ELES.—There was which, if printed, would make to report but few incidents of
an interesting Letter' to the Edi- frightening copy. In one case re juvenile delinquency among the
nin^yo, flower ■ vases, cho- must fast till well.
tor in the Los Angeles Times last cently; a Nisei social-worker in- Nisei and Sansei, there certainly
chinHpaper lanterns), and
week regarding the strict obe-.■ dicated from a hospital report is no assurance that the up-com many other modern Japa
dience,. courtesy and respect of that one Sansei youth was “so ing generation rates a gold star
children of Japanese and Chinese badly beaten up” that even his in deportment.
nese goods on sale.
. TOKYO.—Are today’s girls
descent for their parents in this mother could not identify him for
®
Food
and
games
.
.
.
also
one
consolation
in
prettier than their mothers and
But there is
country.
a moment.
-. this somewhat dismal picture of
raffle
draw
grandmothers?
The letter, written by a grand
Gang fights and party crashing- devil-may-care attitude_ of some ' Come on out and enjoy a
Takashi Suzuki, professor of
mother in Hollywood, points out
adolescent Sansei, forever getting
are
-not
too
uncommontoday
al
<
Saturday
afternoon!
■ that “one never hears of a Chi
anthropology at Tokyo Univer
in trouble mixing with, the bad
nese or Japanese boy or -girl though the older generation had crowd, but not necessarily -in an
sity says yes. Definitely. For ingetting- into any. trouble with the them too back in the hey days of all-Japanese group. That is the
• stance, he said, girls in the Edo
law.” - the roaring 1920s. But none of Nisei parents are very conscious
period (which began in 1610)
“I know them parents don’t
of bringing up their ~ children
us
can
recall
the
.
participants
had buck teeth—-the difference
beat them. I’ve heard the children
CHANGE. OF ADDRESS
right, although the instinct is
used
zip-guns
‘
and
knives
to
settle
spoken to ii4 a very soft voice and
' in the slant of the teeth was
universal.
Mr; and Mrs. Kunikazu Shinohara .and
they mind instantly.” She points their differences.
as much as 20 percent—, hooked
family
have
moved
:
to
7
Braemore.
Gar
It may be that the good home
out that, her son is a teacher' and
The pattern of juvenile delin training given us by the Issei dens,- Toronto 10. New phone number
noses, small, fat faces and vide
“he says they are the best,be quency among persons of Japa
is LE. 3-1581.
parents
has
made
a
dent
in
us,
haved children in his school.”
nese ancestry doesn’t differ in despite the many new handicaps
But the truth of the matter is any way from the general public. we ourselves face today in the.
juvenile delinquency among the A * broken home, both parents world of making' a daily living
younger Nisei and Sansei is de working
keeping away .the financial
ren alone at home, oversnow enng
w
finitely on the rise.
wolves
from
the
door.
While, we cannot reveal the of material things to the off We dare say that 4(he Los An
IN CON JUNCTION WITH THE NEW CANADIAN
geles Times item could be almost
HOLIDAY ISSUE
subversive in that most Sansei
get around quite well in the main
THE NEW CANADIAN
stream
of the American life and
479 QUEEN STREET WEST,
Contest is open to. all readers^of The New Canadian.
their encounter with daily pro
TORONTO 2-B, ONTARIO
Contestants may send in as many entries as ^?e^
blems is .not one of a somewhat
sheltered
existence
led
by
second
poems,
essays, articles, and short stories, n
for
which
Please find enclosed $ ------- —•—
generation
Japanese
whose
u Renew my subscription
2,500 words.
<
.
, it.
parents brought with them a
year/mon ths
U Enter my new subscription for ..
© Entries' should be type-written, double-spaced, and
serene and rather quiet, .backted with name; age, address, and Ph2?!,^P^he New Can$6.00 per year;
$3.50 for six months
woods tempo of'living from the
onto vicinity) of author to Literary Contest The New v
old country.
adian, 479 Queen St. West, Toronto 2-B, Ont.
This
may
be
the
basic
reason
ADDRESS
why the adult Nisei can speak
with pride of their fewer brushes PROV.
ZONE.
i CITY
with the' law before the war,
today's girls prettier?
NC Literacy Contest
Fifty Dollars in Prizes
Deadline far Entries: Nov. 20th
NEW
C A N~A DIAN______________ :________ Wednesday, November 6, 1957
AiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiniHiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiHHi iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiniininiiiiniiiiiininniiiiiiniiHw^
THE HEW CANADIAN |
the M-space
j
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
as a medium of expression and news outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada
Jazz For Modems is the name of a package deal which makes wonderfully fluid on flight oi
the concert rounds just about this time every year. It was in Buf expression, developing his olo$
T. UMEZUKI, Publisher
falo Sunday and in Toronto on Monday. So was I.
carefully and surely, with Ge
MARJORIE UMEZUKI..........
.... ___ _ English Section Editor
It continually amazes me that these concert bookers jam-pack baritone harmonizing in the.
.Japanese Section
& Advertising
KEN MORI......................
.......
so many top names into a two or three hour program, enabling he background; But I regret the
loss
OFFICE hours
musicians to just get warmed up before' time.runs out.
SUBSCRIPTION
of Bobby’s - trombone which can
8:30—5:30 Monday-Friday
Jazz For Moderns could have been a good stream-lined concert
(Ad rates bn request)
9
to
1
p.m.
Saturday
had
they
dispensed with the Australians, who swing only sometimes, hold its own with a baritone
$3.50 for 6 months, $6 per year
rime
Helen Merrill; who sings only sometimes, and George Shearing, who whereas the alto
sounds
weak
when
the
two
blow
resorted to what he thought was humor. . .
together. . . . Lee and Gerry see??
Authorized as second class mail, Bost Office Department, Ottawa
'
It was the first
~ time I he^ird Miss
to - have similar ideas, however,
Merrill, and I hope
and the: easy-swinging, humorous
it will be the last.
notes will always have a place in
Her
singing
is
my jazz appreciation. Still with
’ -colorless, although
EXCERPTS FROM HANSARD,
. ’
the group . is drummer Dave
she tries to swing
OFFICIAL REPORT OF HOUSE OF COMMONS ■ DEBATES '
a bit.
I couldn’t
■Bailey, wvho is acquiring a verv
Mr. Stuart: The hon. member help thinking that
•Mr. Pickersgill: ! should, like to
tasteful style, and new bassist is
ask a further supplementary had asked me a question, Mr. she was a very far
one Henry Grimes, an up-andquestion. I wonder whether the Speaker.
cry from someone
coming star.
Some hon. members: Sit down. like Lena Horne..
minister could explain why this
Mr.
-Stuart:
The
Hon.
member
man. who-claims to be a stateless
Taking the rest,
person should have been treated has asked me a question. Does he the concert line-up
warm, loose-swinging jazz, Chico
want it answered ?
differently from
would be Gerry.
Hamilton’s Quintet is a cool, yet
■ Mr.-Speaker: The hon. member Mulligan Quartet
Christian Hanna.
for Victoria-Carleton has the featuring- Lee Ko
humorous, chamber group, play
Mr. Fulton: The main reason floor.
ing the type .of music which ‘
nitz;
Chico
Hamil
of course, is that there is a dif-.
Mr. Stuart: He asked me a ton Quintet, and
would appeal to high-brow clas
ferent .g-overnment in office- at question. I want to know whether
Miles
Davis
Quin
sicists. Chico’s drumming was
the moment.
he wants an answer. The hon. tet.
especially
fascinating in a number
member asked, me why the gov
• Miles’ group is
ernment I supported—
dedicated to fellow-drummer -To
a trifle too loud
Mr. Winch: In the closing ses
Mr. Montgomery: Y ou can with everyone blow
Jones. The melodic cello singin?
sion of the last parliament the speak later.
ing as hard as pos
along with the melancholy flute
previous minister of finance gave
Mr. Stuart: Do you want my sible,
especially
had a beautiful harmonic sound.
a eommitmeht that there would answer ?
drummer
Philly
be the minting, of a silver dollar
Some hon. members: Sit down. Joe J ones. Paul
Consisting'of three string instru
in honor of the cenLmary of Bri
Mr. Speaker: Order.
ments ■ (cello, guitar and bass)
Chambers, one of •
tish Columbia. Gould the Minister
Mr. 'Stuart: It is all right if the top bassists,
along with flute and drums, this
of Finance tell us whether that you do not want an answer. I can can
hardly
be
classical-sounding jazz group
commitment made previously is answer'/ ■
heard at all, except
and
if
there
now being honored,
stole the show.
onhis one solo, r
will bo a minting of commemora(Translated from French)
Miles’
trumpet
five silver dollar ?
Mr. Hector Dupuis: . . .1 be competes -with Ju
Mr. Fleming; Mr: Speaker, the ware the Greeks even when they lian
Cannonball
dollar has been minted. I think are bearing gifts. I am not sure Adderley’s alto for
—photo by Wm. Umezu.<i
when my hon. friend sees it he how to translate this in Latin the melodRssounds,
. . Gerry Mulligan at Stratford
will recognize it as entirely but —
but the loudness of
worthy not only of the centennial
An hon. member: Timeo Da- the whole group
Gesu no chie wa ato kara
in the life of British Columbia naos et dona ferentes.
made it sound confused and too frantic. Maybe I was too close.
deru,
but also of the high standards of
Mr. Dupuis: Mr. Chairman, this
Gerry’s easy informal air always relaxes the audience, while
the Royal Canadian Mint.
(Wise after the event is the
is the first time I have been the group whips into some swinging - tune. This photo, taken at an
wit
of a low-rank official.) Com
Mr. Mclvor: I : should like to speaking in Latin in this House afternoon rehearsal at Stratford Festival last summer, illustrates
part:
After 'counsel is a fool’s
Iris informalitv—draped on a lean, flexible figure, a red. shirt, black
ask the Minister of Finance this and — ■
counsel.
'Hindsight is better than
question. If we wish to purchase
An hon. member: It is not Lat tie, blue jeans, white sneakers, topped, by sandy red hair and sunforesight.
these dollars what will they cost ? in, it is Greek.
*
*
*
The quartet has changed since its last visit. Instead of Boo
Mr.. Dupuis ^Forgive me; Latin
Mr. Fleming* Mr. Speaker,
Brookmeyer on trombone, there-ris Lee Konitz on alto sax. Lee is
Hito zoo noro-eba ana futais Greek to me. ;
thev will cost 100 cents.
EM. 6-5005
479 Queen gt W., Toronto 2-B, Ont
CastiMs MPs Working
Japanese Sayings
tsu. /
"^S^A ■"•■ 'T*^S§^ t^^O^;*li^^^li^j^^^
Nisei ©eianqwensy obi the' Bise
TORONTO BUDDHIST
CHURCH BAZAAR
.
(A curser must dig two graves,
one
for * himself.)
Compare:
Curses, like chickens, come home
to roost.
•
^
^
&
Nov. 9, 1957, • from noon to
sources of our findings, there are spring can breed future delinRy HENRY MORI
Hara mo mi no' uchi.
8 p.m.
_ ■
countless reports, made by social quents.
In the Pacific Citizen
(Your'
stomach, too, is part of
Because the vernaculars fail
workers and juvenile authorities
Recently - arrived / kimono, you.) Compare: Eats till sick,
LOS AN G ELES.—There was which, if printed, would make to report but few incidents of
an interesting Letter' to the Edi- frightening copy. In one case re juvenile delinquency among the
nin^yo, flower ■ vases, cho- must fast till well.
tor in the Los Angeles Times last cently; a Nisei social-worker in- Nisei and Sansei, there certainly
chinHpaper lanterns), and
week regarding the strict obe-.■ dicated from a hospital report is no assurance that the up-com many other modern Japa
dience,. courtesy and respect of that one Sansei youth was “so ing generation rates a gold star
children of Japanese and Chinese badly beaten up” that even his in deportment.
nese goods on sale.
. TOKYO.—Are today’s girls
descent for their parents in this mother could not identify him for
®
Food
and
games
.
.
.
also
one
consolation
in
prettier than their mothers and
But there is
country.
a moment.
-. this somewhat dismal picture of
raffle
draw
grandmothers?
The letter, written by a grand
Gang fights and party crashing- devil-may-care attitude_ of some ' Come on out and enjoy a
Takashi Suzuki, professor of
mother in Hollywood, points out
adolescent Sansei, forever getting
are
-not
too
uncommontoday
al
<
Saturday
afternoon!
■ that “one never hears of a Chi
anthropology at Tokyo Univer
in trouble mixing with, the bad
nese or Japanese boy or -girl though the older generation had crowd, but not necessarily -in an
sity says yes. Definitely. For ingetting- into any. trouble with the them too back in the hey days of all-Japanese group. That is the
• stance, he said, girls in the Edo
law.” - the roaring 1920s. But none of Nisei parents are very conscious
period (which began in 1610)
“I know them parents don’t
of bringing up their ~ children
us
can
recall
the
.
participants
had buck teeth—-the difference
beat them. I’ve heard the children
CHANGE. OF ADDRESS
right, although the instinct is
used
zip-guns
‘
and
knives
to
settle
spoken to ii4 a very soft voice and
' in the slant of the teeth was
universal.
Mr; and Mrs. Kunikazu Shinohara .and
they mind instantly.” She points their differences.
as much as 20 percent—, hooked
family
have
moved
:
to
7
Braemore.
Gar
It may be that the good home
out that, her son is a teacher' and
The pattern of juvenile delin training given us by the Issei dens,- Toronto 10. New phone number
noses, small, fat faces and vide
“he says they are the best,be quency among persons of Japa
is LE. 3-1581.
parents
has
made
a
dent
in
us,
haved children in his school.”
nese ancestry doesn’t differ in despite the many new handicaps
But the truth of the matter is any way from the general public. we ourselves face today in the.
juvenile delinquency among the A * broken home, both parents world of making' a daily living
younger Nisei and Sansei is de working
keeping away .the financial
ren alone at home, oversnow enng
w
finitely on the rise.
wolves
from
the
door.
While, we cannot reveal the of material things to the off We dare say that 4(he Los An
IN CON JUNCTION WITH THE NEW CANADIAN
geles Times item could be almost
HOLIDAY ISSUE
subversive in that most Sansei
get around quite well in the main
THE NEW CANADIAN
stream
of the American life and
479 QUEEN STREET WEST,
Contest is open to. all readers^of The New Canadian.
their encounter with daily pro
TORONTO 2-B, ONTARIO
Contestants may send in as many entries as ^?e^
blems is .not one of a somewhat
sheltered
existence
led
by
second
poems,
essays, articles, and short stories, n
for
which
Please find enclosed $ ------- —•—
generation
Japanese
whose
u Renew my subscription
2,500 words.
<
.
, it.
parents brought with them a
year/mon ths
U Enter my new subscription for ..
© Entries' should be type-written, double-spaced, and
serene and rather quiet, .backted with name; age, address, and Ph2?!,^P^he New Can$6.00 per year;
$3.50 for six months
woods tempo of'living from the
onto vicinity) of author to Literary Contest The New v
old country.
adian, 479 Queen St. West, Toronto 2-B, Ont.
This
may
be
the
basic
reason
ADDRESS
why the adult Nisei can speak
with pride of their fewer brushes PROV.
ZONE.
i CITY
with the' law before the war,
today's girls prettier?
NC Literacy Contest
Fifty Dollars in Prizes
Deadline far Entries: Nov. 20th