Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
An independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. 21—No. 75
SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 27, 1958
s
Japan Pressured
By Soviet Demand
TORONTO. ONT.
Centre Campaign Underway
As Early Pledge Made
TOKYO.—The Soviet Union
demanded last week that Japan
deny the United States use of
The first pledge of $1,000 to they can pursue various educamilitary bases on its territory
.the Japanese Canadian Centre donal.
and recreational
because of American “aggressive
was received by a Nisei business activities designed to foster cul
activity in the Formosa crisis.
man following the announcement tural development and under
of the campaign date.
A protest note delivered to th
standing, not only within their
Mr. Dick Tabuchi, owner and own groups but also in associa
Japanese Foreign Ministry ac
operator of Modern Appliances tion with Canadians of other
cused U.S. forces of openly using
and
Radio, located at 1068 Eglin- racial origins. The Centre will be
Japanese teritory foi' “provoca
ton
Avenue
West in Toronto, do a powerful influence in stren
tive, aggressive actions against
nated
the
sum
with a promise of gthening the bonds of brother
Communist China.” It also quoted
further
donations
of all profits hood and will promote that unity
news reports to the effect that
derived
from
JC
sales
at his place in our community which is so
American forces in Japan have
of
business
during
the
fund cam essential in achieving- our destiny
“completed their, battle prepara
paign
ending
December
31 of this as citizens of one of the great
tions.’’
year.
cities of the world.
Russia warned that even if. Ja
Mr. Tabuchi, aftex- making- his
“I hope the Toronto Japanese
pan did not wish to become in
announcement, stated that he was Canadian Centre will be a force
volved in any outbreak of hosti
very pleased in having this op for good in the community and
lities in the Formosa strait area,
portunity to participate in the that it will provide the essential
“it cannot be helped if Japan is
fund campaign, and that he never
considered a party to aggression”
felt a greater moral responsibi feature of all Community
should the United States continue
lity to do something than towards Centres: that of providing- a place
to use the base’s.
the proposed Centre. Announced where people of all walks of life
—Photo by. JACK HEMMY yesterday
news of an- and all ages may get together
In Tokyo, observers considered
pleasure and become better
other donation in the sum of $500 for
the note a skillful attempt to
Bishop and Mrs. Rani Kurose are seen admiring a from
acquainted.
”
Mr. Sam Kamo of Downspressure the Japanese govern
gift
of
a
silver
spoon
at
a
partygiven
in
their
honor
The question of why the sum
view, Ontario.
ment into drastic action to revise
of
$400,000 is necessary has
recently
by
the
Japanese
Canadian
Anglican
congrega
the 1951 security agreement with
With the inauguration of the
arisen
among many, and in order
the United States.
tion in Toronto. Bishop and Mrs. Kurose are visiting fund campaign yesterday, Mayor
to
answer
this question Mr. Bob
Talks to revise the agreement Canada and the U.S. on their return to Japan from the Nathan Philips stated:
Kadoguehi,
chairman
of the
“As Mayor of the City of Tor Centre committee, was approach
are scheduled to open in Tokyo Lambeth Conferences in England.
onto, and Honorary Patron to ed. He had this to say regarding
shortly.
*
$
$
the Toronto Japanese Canadian the sum:
The foreign office had no im
Centre, it gives me a great deal
“The goal established by the
mediate
comment.
Observers,
of pleasure to extend greetings
Centre
committee was not arriv
however, discounted the possibil
and best wishes for the success ed at lightly
but is the direct re
ity that the Soviet note would
After attending the Lambeth Church in Canada.
of the forthcoming financial sult of many meetings over the
cause the Japanese government Conference in England, the Rt.
The gift followed a strong- ap- campaign for a recreational . past decade in which a number
to deny the, United States use of Rev. Paul Kurose and..'Mrs. Ku peal from the Japanese bishop to centre.
of Issei and Nisei organizations
the bases.
rose are visiting Canada and the continued WA monetary and mis
“Toronto is fortunate in having took part.
The figure can be
The note was delivered by Ni United States before returning to sionary assistance to his. diocese, well-equipped recreational and broken down into $280,000 for the
colai B. Adyrkhaev, Counselor of Japan where Rev. Kurose is the which is divided into three dis cultural centres augmenting its building, estimated at the present
the Soviet Embassy here, to Ma consecrated bishop of mid-Japan. tricts, north, middle and southern. community centre prog-ram and figure of $14 per square foot for
in
Yamaguchi
city,
sahide Kanayama, Director of the .Born
“Assistance,” he said, “is need-'the proposed new Centre will be a building of 20,000 square feet.
European-African Affairs Bu Bishop Kurose was ordained in ed chiefly to build new churches a welcome addition. The Centre The land would cost $100,000 and
reau of the Foreign Ministry.
1931 in Tokyo and took part of and replace those damaged by is designed to provide Japanese miscellaneous expenses $20,000,
his training at Trinity College in years and the Second World War, Canadians with . a place where making the total of $400,000.”
Toronto, where, on September 15 when hundreds were destroyed or
At a meeting held last Wedhe received his Dr. of Divinity burned.’’ He explained that Ja
Scholarships
Offered
nesdav,
both Issei and Nisei ex
at which time Rev. P. K. Imai panese churches were wooden and
pressed
hope that the public
KAMLOOPS.—Tad Wakabaya also received his Dr. of Theology have a lifetime of about 30 years. to Canadian Students
would
give
their Centre the sup
degree. Miss Grace Yoshiko Ku- Funds are also necessary to pur
shi was installed as president of rose, daughter* of Bishop and chase new church land because
One Canadian research student port it deserves.
North Kamloops High School Mrs.
Kurose,
attended and much of it was sold during the will be invited by the Japanese
graduated
from
the Anglican war, the proceeds being used to Government to study at a Japa JACL Headquarters
Parent-Teacher Association last
Women
’
s
Training
College here help feed people who otherwise nese university beginning April
week.
1959. The student will study for
last spring, and has since return would have starved.
SAN FRANCISCO.—The mov
After a brief business session ed to Japan.
The $1,000 cheque, the bishop a period of two years.
ing of the national JACL head
when it was decided that small
This year, a two-year scholar quarters to a new location at
Attending the closing sessions said, would be used partly for the
group discussions would be held of the 73rd annual meeting at much-needed Anglican cathedral ship was given to William Donald 1634 Post St., from October- 1,
next month on the Slocan Com Christ Church last Saturday, for the diocese of mid-Japan and Burton, a graduate of University was announced recently by na
mission brief. The meeting which Bishop Kurose was presented partly toward St. Paul’s church of B.C., who is now doing post tional director Mas Satow.
it was
decided
that
small with a cheque for $1,000. by Mrs. at Nigata.
graduate work at Tokyo univer
The new address will also
with an enjoyable musical pro Britton Osler, president of the
Mrs. Kurose who accompanied sity.
house the Calif, regional office
gram and closed wife ‘a social Dominion Board of the Women’s her husband on the trip to En
Each year the Japanese Gov occupying the entire second floor
get-together.
Auxiliary, of
the
Anglican gland, and now visiting with him ernment offers scholarships to a of the recently-erected building.
in Canada and the United States, limited number of foreign stu Th space at the former head
presented Mrs. Osler with a Ja dents who wish to study in Ja quarters will be used as a work
panese WA pin and expressed pan. Since 1958, the number of ing office for the San Francisco
appreciation on behalf of the Ja scholarships has been increased JACL chapter which holds title
panese women to Mrs. Osler and to 70. Matriculation and tuition to the property.
t
WA members.
expenses are paid by the govern
Satow announced the addition
TOKYO.—An accident maroon ence, three kilometers from shore
ment in addition to a monthly of Tsutomi Uchida of Long Beach
ed fisherman Haruo Usui and his (1- kilometer—% mile).
to the headquarters staff for
Banquet to Pay Tribute allowance of $55.
sweetheart on an isolated islet in
They lived on fish, shellfish
Additional information con- training experience. The new
Tokyo bay last month.
and spring water until Usui built Canada’s M. J. Coldwell cerning the scholarship is avail staff member is a graduate of
Usui, 27, and Utako Hanaza a small raft from driftwood. But
Mr. M. J. Coldwell, CCF Na able from the Embassy of Japan Occidental College, and has been
wa, 22, liked the Robinson Crusoe now that they had a means of tional Leader, will be the guest at Ottawa or from any of the active in youth programs and
existence so much they decided returning to civilization they of honor at a banquet on Satur Consulates at Toronto, Winnipeg JACL national committee for the
and Vancouver.
work with youth projects.
to live there—until police found chose to stay on the island. They day, October 11, 7:30 p.m., at the
Royal York Hotel.
them and told them to move on.
used the raft for occasional trips
This banquet is being held to Chinese Enter U.S. Under New Provision
The adventure began when to the mainland to obtain food.
pay tribute to one of Canada’s
Usui and Utako left their homes
SAN FRANCISC.-—Eighty-one
They were discovered, however, outstanding statesman, "whose Chinese intellectuals, refugees visas. They will continue their
in Osawa, Chiba prefecture, to’
professions in America.
fight
for
a
Bill
of
Rights
and
get married. On their way to Yo when the raft overturned on one complete equality for ail, whe from Communist terror, were
Most of the group fled China
kohama, however, they dropped of these trips and were rescued ther they be newcomers or old- rady to start a new life in Ame when the Communists took over
in at the Futtsu seashore and de by local fishermen.
the nation, and have been living
timers, has made him one of the rica this week.
cided to have a holiday.
Last week, police heard of the most highly respected political
The engineers, teachers, scien in Hong Kong as displaced per
tists and businessmen, together sons.
They moved into an old air raid couple and their island home and leaders.
with
their families,
arrived
The program will include an
The refugees were chosen by a
shelter at the tip of Futtsu cape sent a policeman to the island
aboard
a
Pan
American
plane.
committee
of the Judd organiza
address
by
Mr.
Coldwell
and
en
and enjoyed themselves at the with orders to tell them to move
tertainment will be provided by Their trip was arranged by “Air tion on the basis of their educa
beach with other vacationers. But on or be arrested for “vagrancy.” Joe Glazer, well-known American Refugee Intellectuals, Inc..’’ a tion and ability, as well as the
high waves washed away the
Whether they were now mar singer of folksongs.
private organization headed by degree of hardship suffered.
Lng sand bank which linked the ried in Yokohama or back in their
S. P. Soong, local Chinese Con
Everyone is welcome, and Rep. Walter H. Judd (R-Minn.).
homes
at Osawa, police at Kisa tickets at $5 a plate may be
The
group
entered
the
country
sul,
and K. S. Wang, represent
cape to the mainland one day razu did not know. They do know,
obtained from: M. J. Coldwell under a new immigration provi ing the refugee aid group which
and they were stranded on an however, that the couple are no Banquet, 565 Jarvis Street? Tor sion which permits certain classes brought the group to America,
islet one kilometer in circumfer- longer living on the island.
onto 5.
of refugees to enter on resident headed the reception committee.
Japanese Bishop and Wife Tours Canada and U.S.
Hew PTA President
His Giri Friday
An independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. 21—No. 75
SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 27, 1958
s
Japan Pressured
By Soviet Demand
TORONTO. ONT.
Centre Campaign Underway
As Early Pledge Made
TOKYO.—The Soviet Union
demanded last week that Japan
deny the United States use of
The first pledge of $1,000 to they can pursue various educamilitary bases on its territory
.the Japanese Canadian Centre donal.
and recreational
because of American “aggressive
was received by a Nisei business activities designed to foster cul
activity in the Formosa crisis.
man following the announcement tural development and under
of the campaign date.
A protest note delivered to th
standing, not only within their
Mr. Dick Tabuchi, owner and own groups but also in associa
Japanese Foreign Ministry ac
operator of Modern Appliances tion with Canadians of other
cused U.S. forces of openly using
and
Radio, located at 1068 Eglin- racial origins. The Centre will be
Japanese teritory foi' “provoca
ton
Avenue
West in Toronto, do a powerful influence in stren
tive, aggressive actions against
nated
the
sum
with a promise of gthening the bonds of brother
Communist China.” It also quoted
further
donations
of all profits hood and will promote that unity
news reports to the effect that
derived
from
JC
sales
at his place in our community which is so
American forces in Japan have
of
business
during
the
fund cam essential in achieving- our destiny
“completed their, battle prepara
paign
ending
December
31 of this as citizens of one of the great
tions.’’
year.
cities of the world.
Russia warned that even if. Ja
Mr. Tabuchi, aftex- making- his
“I hope the Toronto Japanese
pan did not wish to become in
announcement, stated that he was Canadian Centre will be a force
volved in any outbreak of hosti
very pleased in having this op for good in the community and
lities in the Formosa strait area,
portunity to participate in the that it will provide the essential
“it cannot be helped if Japan is
fund campaign, and that he never
considered a party to aggression”
felt a greater moral responsibi feature of all Community
should the United States continue
lity to do something than towards Centres: that of providing- a place
to use the base’s.
the proposed Centre. Announced where people of all walks of life
—Photo by. JACK HEMMY yesterday
news of an- and all ages may get together
In Tokyo, observers considered
pleasure and become better
other donation in the sum of $500 for
the note a skillful attempt to
Bishop and Mrs. Rani Kurose are seen admiring a from
acquainted.
”
Mr. Sam Kamo of Downspressure the Japanese govern
gift
of
a
silver
spoon
at
a
partygiven
in
their
honor
The question of why the sum
view, Ontario.
ment into drastic action to revise
of
$400,000 is necessary has
recently
by
the
Japanese
Canadian
Anglican
congrega
the 1951 security agreement with
With the inauguration of the
arisen
among many, and in order
the United States.
tion in Toronto. Bishop and Mrs. Kurose are visiting fund campaign yesterday, Mayor
to
answer
this question Mr. Bob
Talks to revise the agreement Canada and the U.S. on their return to Japan from the Nathan Philips stated:
Kadoguehi,
chairman
of the
“As Mayor of the City of Tor Centre committee, was approach
are scheduled to open in Tokyo Lambeth Conferences in England.
onto, and Honorary Patron to ed. He had this to say regarding
shortly.
*
$
$
the Toronto Japanese Canadian the sum:
The foreign office had no im
Centre, it gives me a great deal
“The goal established by the
mediate
comment.
Observers,
of pleasure to extend greetings
Centre
committee was not arriv
however, discounted the possibil
and best wishes for the success ed at lightly
but is the direct re
ity that the Soviet note would
After attending the Lambeth Church in Canada.
of the forthcoming financial sult of many meetings over the
cause the Japanese government Conference in England, the Rt.
The gift followed a strong- ap- campaign for a recreational . past decade in which a number
to deny the, United States use of Rev. Paul Kurose and..'Mrs. Ku peal from the Japanese bishop to centre.
of Issei and Nisei organizations
the bases.
rose are visiting Canada and the continued WA monetary and mis
“Toronto is fortunate in having took part.
The figure can be
The note was delivered by Ni United States before returning to sionary assistance to his. diocese, well-equipped recreational and broken down into $280,000 for the
colai B. Adyrkhaev, Counselor of Japan where Rev. Kurose is the which is divided into three dis cultural centres augmenting its building, estimated at the present
the Soviet Embassy here, to Ma consecrated bishop of mid-Japan. tricts, north, middle and southern. community centre prog-ram and figure of $14 per square foot for
in
Yamaguchi
city,
sahide Kanayama, Director of the .Born
“Assistance,” he said, “is need-'the proposed new Centre will be a building of 20,000 square feet.
European-African Affairs Bu Bishop Kurose was ordained in ed chiefly to build new churches a welcome addition. The Centre The land would cost $100,000 and
reau of the Foreign Ministry.
1931 in Tokyo and took part of and replace those damaged by is designed to provide Japanese miscellaneous expenses $20,000,
his training at Trinity College in years and the Second World War, Canadians with . a place where making the total of $400,000.”
Toronto, where, on September 15 when hundreds were destroyed or
At a meeting held last Wedhe received his Dr. of Divinity burned.’’ He explained that Ja
Scholarships
Offered
nesdav,
both Issei and Nisei ex
at which time Rev. P. K. Imai panese churches were wooden and
pressed
hope that the public
KAMLOOPS.—Tad Wakabaya also received his Dr. of Theology have a lifetime of about 30 years. to Canadian Students
would
give
their Centre the sup
degree. Miss Grace Yoshiko Ku- Funds are also necessary to pur
shi was installed as president of rose, daughter* of Bishop and chase new church land because
One Canadian research student port it deserves.
North Kamloops High School Mrs.
Kurose,
attended and much of it was sold during the will be invited by the Japanese
graduated
from
the Anglican war, the proceeds being used to Government to study at a Japa JACL Headquarters
Parent-Teacher Association last
Women
’
s
Training
College here help feed people who otherwise nese university beginning April
week.
1959. The student will study for
last spring, and has since return would have starved.
SAN FRANCISCO.—The mov
After a brief business session ed to Japan.
The $1,000 cheque, the bishop a period of two years.
ing of the national JACL head
when it was decided that small
This year, a two-year scholar quarters to a new location at
Attending the closing sessions said, would be used partly for the
group discussions would be held of the 73rd annual meeting at much-needed Anglican cathedral ship was given to William Donald 1634 Post St., from October- 1,
next month on the Slocan Com Christ Church last Saturday, for the diocese of mid-Japan and Burton, a graduate of University was announced recently by na
mission brief. The meeting which Bishop Kurose was presented partly toward St. Paul’s church of B.C., who is now doing post tional director Mas Satow.
it was
decided
that
small with a cheque for $1,000. by Mrs. at Nigata.
graduate work at Tokyo univer
The new address will also
with an enjoyable musical pro Britton Osler, president of the
Mrs. Kurose who accompanied sity.
house the Calif, regional office
gram and closed wife ‘a social Dominion Board of the Women’s her husband on the trip to En
Each year the Japanese Gov occupying the entire second floor
get-together.
Auxiliary, of
the
Anglican gland, and now visiting with him ernment offers scholarships to a of the recently-erected building.
in Canada and the United States, limited number of foreign stu Th space at the former head
presented Mrs. Osler with a Ja dents who wish to study in Ja quarters will be used as a work
panese WA pin and expressed pan. Since 1958, the number of ing office for the San Francisco
appreciation on behalf of the Ja scholarships has been increased JACL chapter which holds title
panese women to Mrs. Osler and to 70. Matriculation and tuition to the property.
t
WA members.
expenses are paid by the govern
Satow announced the addition
TOKYO.—An accident maroon ence, three kilometers from shore
ment in addition to a monthly of Tsutomi Uchida of Long Beach
ed fisherman Haruo Usui and his (1- kilometer—% mile).
to the headquarters staff for
Banquet to Pay Tribute allowance of $55.
sweetheart on an isolated islet in
They lived on fish, shellfish
Additional information con- training experience. The new
Tokyo bay last month.
and spring water until Usui built Canada’s M. J. Coldwell cerning the scholarship is avail staff member is a graduate of
Usui, 27, and Utako Hanaza a small raft from driftwood. But
Mr. M. J. Coldwell, CCF Na able from the Embassy of Japan Occidental College, and has been
wa, 22, liked the Robinson Crusoe now that they had a means of tional Leader, will be the guest at Ottawa or from any of the active in youth programs and
existence so much they decided returning to civilization they of honor at a banquet on Satur Consulates at Toronto, Winnipeg JACL national committee for the
and Vancouver.
work with youth projects.
to live there—until police found chose to stay on the island. They day, October 11, 7:30 p.m., at the
Royal York Hotel.
them and told them to move on.
used the raft for occasional trips
This banquet is being held to Chinese Enter U.S. Under New Provision
The adventure began when to the mainland to obtain food.
pay tribute to one of Canada’s
Usui and Utako left their homes
SAN FRANCISC.-—Eighty-one
They were discovered, however, outstanding statesman, "whose Chinese intellectuals, refugees visas. They will continue their
in Osawa, Chiba prefecture, to’
professions in America.
fight
for
a
Bill
of
Rights
and
get married. On their way to Yo when the raft overturned on one complete equality for ail, whe from Communist terror, were
Most of the group fled China
kohama, however, they dropped of these trips and were rescued ther they be newcomers or old- rady to start a new life in Ame when the Communists took over
in at the Futtsu seashore and de by local fishermen.
the nation, and have been living
timers, has made him one of the rica this week.
cided to have a holiday.
Last week, police heard of the most highly respected political
The engineers, teachers, scien in Hong Kong as displaced per
tists and businessmen, together sons.
They moved into an old air raid couple and their island home and leaders.
with
their families,
arrived
The program will include an
The refugees were chosen by a
shelter at the tip of Futtsu cape sent a policeman to the island
aboard
a
Pan
American
plane.
committee
of the Judd organiza
address
by
Mr.
Coldwell
and
en
and enjoyed themselves at the with orders to tell them to move
tertainment will be provided by Their trip was arranged by “Air tion on the basis of their educa
beach with other vacationers. But on or be arrested for “vagrancy.” Joe Glazer, well-known American Refugee Intellectuals, Inc..’’ a tion and ability, as well as the
high waves washed away the
Whether they were now mar singer of folksongs.
private organization headed by degree of hardship suffered.
Lng sand bank which linked the ried in Yokohama or back in their
S. P. Soong, local Chinese Con
Everyone is welcome, and Rep. Walter H. Judd (R-Minn.).
homes
at Osawa, police at Kisa tickets at $5 a plate may be
The
group
entered
the
country
sul,
and K. S. Wang, represent
cape to the mainland one day razu did not know. They do know,
obtained from: M. J. Coldwell under a new immigration provi ing the refugee aid group which
and they were stranded on an however, that the couple are no Banquet, 565 Jarvis Street? Tor sion which permits certain classes brought the group to America,
islet one kilometer in circumfer- longer living on the island.
onto 5.
of refugees to enter on resident headed the reception committee.
Japanese Bishop and Wife Tours Canada and U.S.
Hew PTA President
His Giri Friday
Page 2
1
PAGE 2
Saturday, September 27
_
SPORTS
1oThe ^ doubles matcHy
were unable to get undm way' £
•Accurettes won the second centre and a stolen base.
last Sunday owing to X
Jean
San?,e °f fhe playoffs against McNaughton hit to right
which dominated «t7‘J?
field
Cecil Morris 16-4 last Monday scoring Gay, tying the score.
Hamilton. Sept. 20: Tak Tono folks); Kay Shimoji 591.
ern Ontario Weather permitting
^’^t at Coxwell Stadium. Pat
Accurettes
shut
out
Cecil Mor gai opened the ’58 season with a
tomorrow
should see the coni
Rodgers had ten strikeouts and ris in the top of the ninth inning.
The second night’s honors went
863-319
taon
of
the
Msei Tennis Open at
helped Cecil Morris to four runs. Sandra England bunted down, the' while
to veteran Roy Honda who rolled
the
next
closest
scores
Trinity
Tennis
Courts.
1
Erin Martenack came through third base line to get her first
like a pro . toppling a 788-300
were:
Tosh
Hashimoto
.691;
Aen
with a homer and Gay Mongraw hit of the game. Sharon walked,
Suzuki 661; Bob Kenno 647. while Kay Shimoji led the ladies
collected two safeties.
with 695-271 (the men will please
Awaiting the outcome of
Carol Fowler dropped a well Eadies:
Jean
Kanemoto
618 remove their hats again). Other
semi-finals with Sue Nagano
placed bunt at the plate. With (which beat, most of the mentop scores were: Soc Shintani Toiu Idenouye against Sue
Accuiettes squeezed a run the bases loaded .and none away
679; George Yanagawa 677; Tak saki and Ken Koyanagi are rk
through in the bottom of the Gay hit a Texas leaguer to left
Tonogai
66’4; Nancy Abe 593.
Rec
Socratic
Results
current champs Aggie and Edzv
Muth last Tuesday evening at field. The left fielder dropped the
Hank
Kondo
’s and Tak; Tono- Su,jl“oto-. .In the bottom half
Coxwell to win the East Toronto ball allowing Sandra to score.
Rec Socratic. Sept. 20: Rec So , gai’s have taken
the lead with 6
Ladies Softball League junior Final score 5-4.
matic bowling opened for another points each. Slim Takeda and Mich Isozaki and Mush Fukumo
to are still awaiting- th
playoff championship series 3-0.
A two-out-of-three series will s^oson. This year the league is
miners
George
Yanagawa
’
s'
teams
have
°L the early rounds
Chris Sutherland pitched a steady be Played against the winners of headed by president^Fudge'lnaF
claimed the second slot with 5
game and was in trouble only
ownship League, Indus- motoandtreasurerTadMorishi- points.
once when Cecil Morris scored MXinrX^p0 f e^ at Fairbanks ta- 0P®ning day scores indicated
The B mixed doubles will
two runs off four hits and one memorial Lark.
—Lizz a long summer layoff as no sen
match
.
Louise Baniel and Kiv0
error in the top of the seventh
sational scores were posted. Tops
Fujiwara against Frances KoX.
inning. _ Accurettes killed the in
for the men was Nobby Kimura
naf^
Bruno Kuhlmann: Miits
ning with a terrific double play
Sunday 10-Pin. Sept. 21: Jim
with 696 (249); Gord Mori 695
Kame°ka against Kav
nabbing the base runner at the
Morita 511; Terry Doi 510; Tad Takasaki and
(288); Sab Morita 656 (271).
Stan Nishimura.
plate and catching the other run
Wakabayashi
506
(199)
For.
the
ladies
’
:
Torchy
Abe
By OSCAR HATASHITA
ner on a run-down play between
Jean Nitta (438); Shirley Ha
was high with 622 (275); Grace
In the top bracket Agnes Shi
second and third. Accurettes tied
Omoto 618 and a fine single yakawa 411; Anne Okada 408;
Fishing News
the score 4-4 in the bottom of
mono
and Jim Morito plav Evia
Marg
Nakagawa
405.
(291); Jean Fujita 5D7 (232).
the eighth on Gay’s single to it Lucky Nobby Wakabayashi did
Team
results:
Geo.
Ohori,
Jim
‘'ara in
—G. K.
again. He landed a 12 pound,
Morita,. Ken Doi,... Paul Omoto the semi-finals.
ounce rainbow, plus a 6%
blanked Terrie Yamanaka, Mas
pound fish at the.Ox
'
Bow last
Best-Bestway
Results
Kawabata,
Mike Doi and Yoko
week.
Noda
by
4-0. Tosh Fujioka,
Bestway. Sept. 22: George An*
Frank Omoto, Terry Doi and
it is a good policy io
zai^SO (331); Gord Smith 704
John
Nishimura
over
Tad
Waka
have
the RIGHT POLICY
Yon
ion Shimizu another big fish (317); Jack Watanabe 696 (315).
bayashi,
Herby
Hamade,
Anne
Inducer, caught two fish both
Consult
EHen Hughes 638
weighing 9% pounds each. Both (288); Millie Earle 588; Tosh So Okada.and Barney 3-1;
WALES and DUNCAN
fisn were caught with a mepps gawa 583 (270).
—B. Ozawa
OPTOMETRISTS
spinner in the same pond.
insurance agents
OPTICAL
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER. B.C.
Season Closes
Danforth Results
T^e seas°n for bass, ' muskie,
Danforth. Sept. 22: Many good
pike and pickerel closes on Octo
scores
were posted: Roy Ushiji
ber 15.
ma
led
with a fine 751, Tak To. It should be noted that there
wata
711
and Don Takaoka 702.
is no closed season for pike and
For
the
ladies: Pat Ono hit a
pickerel in the Great Lakes. The
770
(328); Speed Towata
season for pike and pickerel is
(?
14
)
’
Trudy
Eto 705 (353);
also open till November 1 in the
Mie
Hamaguchi
632
and Toshiye
Nottawasaga.
Katsuyama 609.
Team results: Aki, Nak and
Don blanked Yo, Ken and Roy
Tak over Harley 5-2.
Vancouverites!
Anywhere— Anytime
IN NEGOTIATING
REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT,
MORTGAGES,
Air-Ship-Bus-Rail
Tours-Hotel-Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
and Baggage Insurance
Boultbee Sweet & Co. Ltd.
1000 W. King Edward, VANCOUVER
CE. 4184
CH. 3231
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
Vancouver Nisei Results
^aneouver Nisei. Sept. 20:
Hobby Fujisawa 724 (273); Ko
705’ Thos- Nomura’ 687
Miwa Tada 648 (261)Fujisawa 590; Joan Okahon 547.
Special note: October 11-12
Thankskiving Weekend Tourney
at Kamloops. Please contact Kaz
Hakamoto at HA. 3571-M, those
who are interested.
__ Raz
Sunday 5-Pin Results
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
5-Fin: Mas Ohata 774;
Stubby Wakabayashi 742; Tsugiyo Yano 735 (330); Shig Nishi^^a 6891 Harry Inouye 662.
mxdies: Mary Ebata 765; Terrv
Watanabe 663; Marg Nagano
648 (330); Kay Akada“6E g
Miyazaki 617.
__ Mits
Lucien C. Kurata
B.4EBISTER and SOLICITOR
NOT ABY PUBLIC
Suite 502, Temple Building
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
TORONTO
EM. 6-0959
Res.: RO. 7-3427
Thos. T. Onizoka, B.A.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
Office: Room 403
. 229 Yonge St., Toronto
EM. 3-5002 — OX. 1-3333 (res.)
(F. A. BREWIN, Q.C.
। WA. 1-5605 -
OX. 8-2280 (Res.) I
KAZUO G. OIYE
barrister — solicitor
notary
Room 103
2 College St., Toronto
I
Barrister & Solicitor
I Cameron, Weldon
|
Brewin & McCallum
► 372' Bay St.
—
EM. 3-4391
Toronto
Passage arranged by Steamer or Air
Call for Reservations or
Information—EM. 8-9934
d
ifer
K. Iwata Travel Service
113 McCaul St. TORONTO
WE HAVE NO
SERVICE CHARGES
S?!?ZX5?jyrfe^^
• ^^ • db
TRAVELLING
TO JAPAN
0$w
Or Bringing Some
one over?
We represent all
lines including
American President
Northwest Airlines
Canadian Pacific
and Pan American
Write or call for
full information and
rates.
DOMIWIO^
Travel Office
55 Wellington Street West
EM 6-6451
^L®
^ Br
/i\JJW1
$20, 5th Ave., Rockefeller Center
N.Y. JUdson 6-7400
37, South Wabcsh Ave.,
Chicago ANdover 3-1334
»
77Ain
“iji «
Toronto
s
PAGE 2
Saturday, September 27
_
SPORTS
1oThe ^ doubles matcHy
were unable to get undm way' £
•Accurettes won the second centre and a stolen base.
last Sunday owing to X
Jean
San?,e °f fhe playoffs against McNaughton hit to right
which dominated «t7‘J?
field
Cecil Morris 16-4 last Monday scoring Gay, tying the score.
Hamilton. Sept. 20: Tak Tono folks); Kay Shimoji 591.
ern Ontario Weather permitting
^’^t at Coxwell Stadium. Pat
Accurettes
shut
out
Cecil Mor gai opened the ’58 season with a
tomorrow
should see the coni
Rodgers had ten strikeouts and ris in the top of the ninth inning.
The second night’s honors went
863-319
taon
of
the
Msei Tennis Open at
helped Cecil Morris to four runs. Sandra England bunted down, the' while
to veteran Roy Honda who rolled
the
next
closest
scores
Trinity
Tennis
Courts.
1
Erin Martenack came through third base line to get her first
like a pro . toppling a 788-300
were:
Tosh
Hashimoto
.691;
Aen
with a homer and Gay Mongraw hit of the game. Sharon walked,
Suzuki 661; Bob Kenno 647. while Kay Shimoji led the ladies
collected two safeties.
with 695-271 (the men will please
Awaiting the outcome of
Carol Fowler dropped a well Eadies:
Jean
Kanemoto
618 remove their hats again). Other
semi-finals with Sue Nagano
placed bunt at the plate. With (which beat, most of the mentop scores were: Soc Shintani Toiu Idenouye against Sue
Accuiettes squeezed a run the bases loaded .and none away
679; George Yanagawa 677; Tak saki and Ken Koyanagi are rk
through in the bottom of the Gay hit a Texas leaguer to left
Tonogai
66’4; Nancy Abe 593.
Rec
Socratic
Results
current champs Aggie and Edzv
Muth last Tuesday evening at field. The left fielder dropped the
Hank
Kondo
’s and Tak; Tono- Su,jl“oto-. .In the bottom half
Coxwell to win the East Toronto ball allowing Sandra to score.
Rec Socratic. Sept. 20: Rec So , gai’s have taken
the lead with 6
Ladies Softball League junior Final score 5-4.
matic bowling opened for another points each. Slim Takeda and Mich Isozaki and Mush Fukumo
to are still awaiting- th
playoff championship series 3-0.
A two-out-of-three series will s^oson. This year the league is
miners
George
Yanagawa
’
s'
teams
have
°L the early rounds
Chris Sutherland pitched a steady be Played against the winners of headed by president^Fudge'lnaF
claimed the second slot with 5
game and was in trouble only
ownship League, Indus- motoandtreasurerTadMorishi- points.
once when Cecil Morris scored MXinrX^p0 f e^ at Fairbanks ta- 0P®ning day scores indicated
The B mixed doubles will
two runs off four hits and one memorial Lark.
—Lizz a long summer layoff as no sen
match
.
Louise Baniel and Kiv0
error in the top of the seventh
sational scores were posted. Tops
Fujiwara against Frances KoX.
inning. _ Accurettes killed the in
for the men was Nobby Kimura
naf^
Bruno Kuhlmann: Miits
ning with a terrific double play
Sunday 10-Pin. Sept. 21: Jim
with 696 (249); Gord Mori 695
Kame°ka against Kav
nabbing the base runner at the
Morita 511; Terry Doi 510; Tad Takasaki and
(288); Sab Morita 656 (271).
Stan Nishimura.
plate and catching the other run
Wakabayashi
506
(199)
For.
the
ladies
’
:
Torchy
Abe
By OSCAR HATASHITA
ner on a run-down play between
Jean Nitta (438); Shirley Ha
was high with 622 (275); Grace
In the top bracket Agnes Shi
second and third. Accurettes tied
Omoto 618 and a fine single yakawa 411; Anne Okada 408;
Fishing News
the score 4-4 in the bottom of
mono
and Jim Morito plav Evia
Marg
Nakagawa
405.
(291); Jean Fujita 5D7 (232).
the eighth on Gay’s single to it Lucky Nobby Wakabayashi did
Team
results:
Geo.
Ohori,
Jim
‘'ara in
—G. K.
again. He landed a 12 pound,
Morita,. Ken Doi,... Paul Omoto the semi-finals.
ounce rainbow, plus a 6%
blanked Terrie Yamanaka, Mas
pound fish at the.Ox
'
Bow last
Best-Bestway
Results
Kawabata,
Mike Doi and Yoko
week.
Noda
by
4-0. Tosh Fujioka,
Bestway. Sept. 22: George An*
Frank Omoto, Terry Doi and
it is a good policy io
zai^SO (331); Gord Smith 704
John
Nishimura
over
Tad
Waka
have
the RIGHT POLICY
Yon
ion Shimizu another big fish (317); Jack Watanabe 696 (315).
bayashi,
Herby
Hamade,
Anne
Inducer, caught two fish both
Consult
EHen Hughes 638
weighing 9% pounds each. Both (288); Millie Earle 588; Tosh So Okada.and Barney 3-1;
WALES and DUNCAN
fisn were caught with a mepps gawa 583 (270).
—B. Ozawa
OPTOMETRISTS
spinner in the same pond.
insurance agents
OPTICAL
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER. B.C.
Season Closes
Danforth Results
T^e seas°n for bass, ' muskie,
Danforth. Sept. 22: Many good
pike and pickerel closes on Octo
scores
were posted: Roy Ushiji
ber 15.
ma
led
with a fine 751, Tak To. It should be noted that there
wata
711
and Don Takaoka 702.
is no closed season for pike and
For
the
ladies: Pat Ono hit a
pickerel in the Great Lakes. The
770
(328); Speed Towata
season for pike and pickerel is
(?
14
)
’
Trudy
Eto 705 (353);
also open till November 1 in the
Mie
Hamaguchi
632
and Toshiye
Nottawasaga.
Katsuyama 609.
Team results: Aki, Nak and
Don blanked Yo, Ken and Roy
Tak over Harley 5-2.
Vancouverites!
Anywhere— Anytime
IN NEGOTIATING
REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT,
MORTGAGES,
Air-Ship-Bus-Rail
Tours-Hotel-Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
and Baggage Insurance
Boultbee Sweet & Co. Ltd.
1000 W. King Edward, VANCOUVER
CE. 4184
CH. 3231
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
Vancouver Nisei Results
^aneouver Nisei. Sept. 20:
Hobby Fujisawa 724 (273); Ko
705’ Thos- Nomura’ 687
Miwa Tada 648 (261)Fujisawa 590; Joan Okahon 547.
Special note: October 11-12
Thankskiving Weekend Tourney
at Kamloops. Please contact Kaz
Hakamoto at HA. 3571-M, those
who are interested.
__ Raz
Sunday 5-Pin Results
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Phone WA. 1-3171
5-Fin: Mas Ohata 774;
Stubby Wakabayashi 742; Tsugiyo Yano 735 (330); Shig Nishi^^a 6891 Harry Inouye 662.
mxdies: Mary Ebata 765; Terrv
Watanabe 663; Marg Nagano
648 (330); Kay Akada“6E g
Miyazaki 617.
__ Mits
Lucien C. Kurata
B.4EBISTER and SOLICITOR
NOT ABY PUBLIC
Suite 502, Temple Building
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
TORONTO
EM. 6-0959
Res.: RO. 7-3427
Thos. T. Onizoka, B.A.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
Office: Room 403
. 229 Yonge St., Toronto
EM. 3-5002 — OX. 1-3333 (res.)
(F. A. BREWIN, Q.C.
। WA. 1-5605 -
OX. 8-2280 (Res.) I
KAZUO G. OIYE
barrister — solicitor
notary
Room 103
2 College St., Toronto
I
Barrister & Solicitor
I Cameron, Weldon
|
Brewin & McCallum
► 372' Bay St.
—
EM. 3-4391
Toronto
Passage arranged by Steamer or Air
Call for Reservations or
Information—EM. 8-9934
d
ifer
K. Iwata Travel Service
113 McCaul St. TORONTO
WE HAVE NO
SERVICE CHARGES
S?!?ZX5?jyrfe^^
• ^^ • db
TRAVELLING
TO JAPAN
0$w
Or Bringing Some
one over?
We represent all
lines including
American President
Northwest Airlines
Canadian Pacific
and Pan American
Write or call for
full information and
rates.
DOMIWIO^
Travel Office
55 Wellington Street West
EM 6-6451
^L®
^ Br
/i\JJW1
$20, 5th Ave., Rockefeller Center
N.Y. JUdson 6-7400
37, South Wabcsh Ave.,
Chicago ANdover 3-1334
»
77Ain
“iji «
Toronto
s
Page 3
aturday, September 27, 1958
PAGE 3
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i ■ 3
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Page 4
PAGE 4
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ENSIGN MOTORS LTD.
A. MASUHARA
QUEEN ST. WEST AT WINDERMERE
TELEPHONE RO. 2-8231
BLOCK BROS. REALTY LTD.
4155 Fraser St., Vancouver 10, B.C.
Tel. EMerald 2111 Res. EXpress 1700
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fill
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A. MASUHARA
QUEEN ST. WEST AT WINDERMERE
TELEPHONE RO. 2-8231
BLOCK BROS. REALTY LTD.
4155 Fraser St., Vancouver 10, B.C.
Tel. EMerald 2111 Res. EXpress 1700
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PAGE 6
Saturday, September 27, 1958
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479 Queen St. W„
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479 Queen St. W„
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
Phone EM. 6-5005
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Page 7
? Saturday, September 27, 1958
NEW
Personal Notes Across Canada
Marriages
CLASSIFIED
Female Help Wanted
HOME SEWER wnh electric machine,
experienced on dolls clothes. Apply sec
ond tloor 350 Sorauren Ave. (Toronto).
Engagements
Telephone numbers in Montreal
made a change over this week. goods, games and food.
Betty
Setsuko
Edamura, Please note: the Plateau exThe next W. A. meeting is
Male Help Wanted
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Masao change has changed to Victor 2; Wednesday, October 15 at S p.m.
Edamura of Japan, and Tosh Ta Belair to Victor 4; Dexter to The ladies are asked to bring
GARDEN helpers wanted. Phone BA.
naka, son of Mrs. Yoshio Tanaka Hunter 4; Elwood to Hunter 6.
their handiwork for appraisal. 1-21-15. Kinoshita (Toronto).
°f Greenwood, B.C., announced
Join the chatter and curse the
their engagement at the home
auctioneer who is to price your
Rooms to Let
of Mr. and Mrs. Kanichiro Eda
The Japanese Catholic Kinder goods for the Bazaar.
mura on September 20, 1958.
garten classes are .given free to
^
?
*
ONE bedroom end kitchen. Child wel
all school children and pre
optional.
Bloor and
The Fifth Anniversary Concert come.
Births
schoolers. Cost of transportation
and nursery services are $1.00 will be held October 4 at St. Ed Dovercourt district. Phone LE. 3-9866
Rev. and Mrs. Kyojo Ikuta of per week. Teachers in charge of ward Hall at Beaubien and St. (Toronto).
Vancouver, B.C., are happy to the children are Miss Lydia Her- Denis beginning 7 p.m. A varied ONE room and kitchen near Parliament
announce the arrival of their ric, graduate of University of prog-ram will entertain attend and Carlton. Phone WA. 1-2314 (Tor
daughter, Mary Ann, on August London, Education Dept., and ants given by the Montreal and onto) .
30, 1958 at the Vancouver Gen holder of Foekel Method Diplo Toronto
talents.
Entertainers
eral Hospital. Mother and daugh ma, and Miss G. Vedos, a grad from Toronto are Messrs. Vernon ONE unfurnished ^ room and kitchen
London, Ontario ter are doing fine.
Sam
Furuya
and with siik, stove, refrigerator. $10 wook.
li
uate of Canadian Kindergarten Hakkaku,
Misses
Terry
Yamashita
and Coady and Queen district. Phone
Joanne
Setsuko
Sunahara,
Institute.
HO. 1-9866 (Toronto).
Caroline
Iwasaki.
I daughter of Mr. and Mrs. TamotMr. and Mrs. Sadao Minato
fsu Sunahara of London, and
TWO rooms, private washroom. Business
The United Church kindergar
(nee
Shirley Toshiko Banno) of
I'David Takaki Suzuki, son of Mr.
An enthusiastic response was couple preferred. Victoria Park and
| and Mrs. Kaoru Suzuki of Lon- 100 Mile House, B.C., are happy ten classes have resumed with received to the newly formed Ja Kingston Rd., district. Phone OX. 4-3760
| don, were united iip marriage on to announce the arrival of their the services of Miss Jean Low, panese Language School. The (Toronto).
I September 20, 19^* at the King daughter, Satomi Connie Jeanne, a qualified teacher in kindergar classes are held at the Japanese
| Street United Chitrch.
Rev. C. on September 10, 1958 at the ten work as well as in childrens’ Community Centre and will con TWO rooms with kitchen. East-end.
Phone OX. 9-4668 (Toronto).
Vancouver
General
Hospital. dramatics. This year’s enrolment
f Jardine officiated.
tinue
till
further
notice.
has
18,
this
is
a
maximum.
| Reception was held at the Mother and daughter are doing
THREE large unfurnished rooms witk
It was suggested at a Quebec sink and IV outlet. Garage optional.
fine.
1 Hong Kong Chop Suey^
World Wide Communion serv
ices will be held on October 5 at JCCA meeting held recently, the Christie and Davenport district. Phone*
*
Obituaries
11:00 a.m. (not Sept. 21 as an possibility of having a second LE. 3-1581 (Toronto).
TONOGAI-FUJITA
nounced). Invitation is extended night for students who cannot
HARAFUJI
to all members who wish to par attend the Tuesday night classes.
Winnipeg', Manitoba
Domestic Help Wanted
ticipate in the celebration of the The JCCA agreed to support the
Shizuo
Harafuji
of
Toronto,
i
United in marriage on SeptemLord’s Supper which is observed use of -the rooms at the Centre A CANADIAN family desires a Japanese
} ber 6, 1958 were Etsuko Fujita, Ontario, passed away on Septem- by
all
Protestant
Churches for a second class. Those who male or female for housework. Live in.
daughter of Mrs. Sano Fujita of ber 18, 1958 at the St. Michael throughout the world.
wish to attend these classes are Phone LE. 5-2683 (Toronto).
J Winnipeg, and Larry S. Tonogai, Hospital.
asked to call: Y. Ono; H. Kawai;
The Annual Church Bazaar is P. Nakamachi; Dr. J. Hasegawa; MALE-COOK CHAUFFEUR required for
son of Mr. and Mrs. Seiichiro
Tsuya was held *on September
slated for Saturday, October. 18 Mrs. F. Ishii. The fee is $1 per gentleman's apartment. Live in. Must
' Tonogai of Winnipeg.
19 at the Elliot Funeral Home. beginning
12 noon till 10 p.m. An
be fully experienced with references.
The newlyweds will reside at Funeral services were held on the invitation is extended to the lesson paid monthly in advance.
Chas. Foster, EM. 8-2645 between 9-5
same day conducted by Rev. K. community to make this a suc(Toronto).
Imai at St. Clement Anglican
Church.
Flower Display
FOOD MARKET FOR SALE
VANCOUVER
MONTREAL.—The Fifth Annual Exhibition
of Japanese East-end, excellent volume in meats,
ITO
Buddhist Church
flower
arrangements
by the Ta- groceries, fresh fruits and vegetables.
Rec Socratic will open its Fall
Ito
Tome
,
of
Steveston,
keya
School,
under
the
direction Price will include one truck, fixtures
season
on
Sunday,
October
5
with
NISEI ENGLISH SERVICE
B.C., passed away at the Vancou an Open House Night at Hager of Mrs. Seisho Kuwabara, is to and equipment. Established 35 years.
Every Sunday at
ver General Hospital on Septem man’s Hall beginning 7 p.m. till be held on Saturday, October 4 Phone HO. 5-0838 (Toronto).
7 p.m.
ber 7, 1958.
11 p.m.
in the Channing Hall, Church of
Funeral services were held on
Rev. K. Ikuta
The ever-popular Jay-Cats will the Messiah, 1497 Sherbrooke St.
September'
13
at
the
Steveston
be there to supply the dance
Visiting hours will be from 2
WELCOME TO ALL I!
Buddhist Church officiated by music. Price is 50 cents for mem p.m. till 10 p.m. with demonstra
Distinctive
220 Jackson. Ave. — Vancouver
i Rev. S. Ikuta and Mr. Yamamura. bers and $1 for non-members. tions of flower arranging' given
There will be no dance lessons, by Mrs. Horisaki and Mrs. Kuwa
Floral Arrangements
so come on out and enjoy your bara at 3 p.m., 5 p.m., and 8:30
self on Sunday, Oct. 5.
—Ace p.m. Japanese tea will be served.
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH*^ Bathurst st
I
Toronto, Ont.
| St. Anne’s Anglican Church
|was the setting for the marriage
I of Joan Yaeko Nishimura, daugh. ter of Mr. and Mrs. Kinsaburo
Nishimura of Toronto, to Herby
I Yukio Hamada, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Matsunosuke Hamada of
/Toronto, on September 13, 1958.
Rev. K. Imai officiated.
After the reception at the
■Muirhead Restaurant, the couple
Heft, for the U.S. on their honey
moon trip.
*
*
*
SUZUKI-SUNAHARA
te
f^&te^ ^nd doings
6 Rusholme Drive in Toronto.
Ontario.
HAMADA-NISHIMURA
I
j
PAGE 7
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1958
10:30 a.m., Toronto Buddhist Religious School
11:30 a.m., English Service in memory of Bishop Shigefuji
. "TRUE HUMANITY"
EVERYONE
Rev. T. Tsuji
CORD IA L L Y
o cue rd
V/ELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS
Proprietor
INVITED
OO1BEW DRAGON
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1958
Buy Your House Through
The Most Successful Realtor in Toronto
Open Noon to 2 a.m.
FOR THE LARGEST SELECTION OF
IMPORTED CARS INCLUDING. . .
representing
KEN WILES LIMITED REAL ESTATE
2578 Yonge Street
HU. 5-0411
TORONTO, Ont.
Res.: LE. 4-1427 or CR. 8-1683
131A Dundas St. W., Toronto
i
AA. YANAGISAWA
j
The Famous MORRIS "1000"
MORRIS Station Wagon .......
MORRIS "Oxfords" ..... ............
AUSTIN A-35
MGA and AUSTIN sports cars
and AUSTIN trucks and buses
$1,546
$1,827
$1,998
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
(Residence)
Eglinton Ave.
Toronto
W.
F. M. MORITSUGU
DAVE’S
TV and Appliances
Soles and Service
Shina and Giftware
DAVID AZUMA
734 St. Clair West
(1 block west of Christie)
LE. 3-0386
TORONTO
59 VOLKSWAGEN
For friendly service, call
DUNDAS UNION STOKE
(Business)
Orders to Take Ou*
EM. 8-2475
A Big Majority of Japanese Canadian Customers
Purchase Their Homes Through
HU. 9-4654 - BA. 1-4374
540
We are open to the public this Sunday
11:30 a.m., Sunday Church School
11:30 a.m. Enalish Service
"HOW TO BE MESSIAH?"
Rev. Bruce Cunningham, B.S., B.D.
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
701 Dovercourt Rd., Toronto
@ SAKURA
RICE
3' MARUKIN SHOYU
S' VINEGAR
@ SUGAR
JON ONODERA
ROger 2-4408
ONTARIO DISTRIBUTOR FOR MORRIS, WOLSELEY and MG
- DEALER FOR AUSTIN and AUSTIN-HEALEY
Ask for
KLAUS
SANDER
RU. 7-4241
•
RO. 6-6261
Eglinton Caledonia Motors Ltd.
Q EGGS
& SUKIYAKI MEAT
©> MANJU
g, MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
PHONE EM. 4-7692
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
MOTORS LTD^
Queen St. W. at Winaerrnere
ro 2-8231
•♦JJONOIJTIHIUOICNT0, ONT.
NEW
Personal Notes Across Canada
Marriages
CLASSIFIED
Female Help Wanted
HOME SEWER wnh electric machine,
experienced on dolls clothes. Apply sec
ond tloor 350 Sorauren Ave. (Toronto).
Engagements
Telephone numbers in Montreal
made a change over this week. goods, games and food.
Betty
Setsuko
Edamura, Please note: the Plateau exThe next W. A. meeting is
Male Help Wanted
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Masao change has changed to Victor 2; Wednesday, October 15 at S p.m.
Edamura of Japan, and Tosh Ta Belair to Victor 4; Dexter to The ladies are asked to bring
GARDEN helpers wanted. Phone BA.
naka, son of Mrs. Yoshio Tanaka Hunter 4; Elwood to Hunter 6.
their handiwork for appraisal. 1-21-15. Kinoshita (Toronto).
°f Greenwood, B.C., announced
Join the chatter and curse the
their engagement at the home
auctioneer who is to price your
Rooms to Let
of Mr. and Mrs. Kanichiro Eda
The Japanese Catholic Kinder goods for the Bazaar.
mura on September 20, 1958.
garten classes are .given free to
^
?
*
ONE bedroom end kitchen. Child wel
all school children and pre
optional.
Bloor and
The Fifth Anniversary Concert come.
Births
schoolers. Cost of transportation
and nursery services are $1.00 will be held October 4 at St. Ed Dovercourt district. Phone LE. 3-9866
Rev. and Mrs. Kyojo Ikuta of per week. Teachers in charge of ward Hall at Beaubien and St. (Toronto).
Vancouver, B.C., are happy to the children are Miss Lydia Her- Denis beginning 7 p.m. A varied ONE room and kitchen near Parliament
announce the arrival of their ric, graduate of University of prog-ram will entertain attend and Carlton. Phone WA. 1-2314 (Tor
daughter, Mary Ann, on August London, Education Dept., and ants given by the Montreal and onto) .
30, 1958 at the Vancouver Gen holder of Foekel Method Diplo Toronto
talents.
Entertainers
eral Hospital. Mother and daugh ma, and Miss G. Vedos, a grad from Toronto are Messrs. Vernon ONE unfurnished ^ room and kitchen
London, Ontario ter are doing fine.
Sam
Furuya
and with siik, stove, refrigerator. $10 wook.
li
uate of Canadian Kindergarten Hakkaku,
Misses
Terry
Yamashita
and Coady and Queen district. Phone
Joanne
Setsuko
Sunahara,
Institute.
HO. 1-9866 (Toronto).
Caroline
Iwasaki.
I daughter of Mr. and Mrs. TamotMr. and Mrs. Sadao Minato
fsu Sunahara of London, and
TWO rooms, private washroom. Business
The United Church kindergar
(nee
Shirley Toshiko Banno) of
I'David Takaki Suzuki, son of Mr.
An enthusiastic response was couple preferred. Victoria Park and
| and Mrs. Kaoru Suzuki of Lon- 100 Mile House, B.C., are happy ten classes have resumed with received to the newly formed Ja Kingston Rd., district. Phone OX. 4-3760
| don, were united iip marriage on to announce the arrival of their the services of Miss Jean Low, panese Language School. The (Toronto).
I September 20, 19^* at the King daughter, Satomi Connie Jeanne, a qualified teacher in kindergar classes are held at the Japanese
| Street United Chitrch.
Rev. C. on September 10, 1958 at the ten work as well as in childrens’ Community Centre and will con TWO rooms with kitchen. East-end.
Phone OX. 9-4668 (Toronto).
Vancouver
General
Hospital. dramatics. This year’s enrolment
f Jardine officiated.
tinue
till
further
notice.
has
18,
this
is
a
maximum.
| Reception was held at the Mother and daughter are doing
THREE large unfurnished rooms witk
It was suggested at a Quebec sink and IV outlet. Garage optional.
fine.
1 Hong Kong Chop Suey^
World Wide Communion serv
ices will be held on October 5 at JCCA meeting held recently, the Christie and Davenport district. Phone*
*
Obituaries
11:00 a.m. (not Sept. 21 as an possibility of having a second LE. 3-1581 (Toronto).
TONOGAI-FUJITA
nounced). Invitation is extended night for students who cannot
HARAFUJI
to all members who wish to par attend the Tuesday night classes.
Winnipeg', Manitoba
Domestic Help Wanted
ticipate in the celebration of the The JCCA agreed to support the
Shizuo
Harafuji
of
Toronto,
i
United in marriage on SeptemLord’s Supper which is observed use of -the rooms at the Centre A CANADIAN family desires a Japanese
} ber 6, 1958 were Etsuko Fujita, Ontario, passed away on Septem- by
all
Protestant
Churches for a second class. Those who male or female for housework. Live in.
daughter of Mrs. Sano Fujita of ber 18, 1958 at the St. Michael throughout the world.
wish to attend these classes are Phone LE. 5-2683 (Toronto).
J Winnipeg, and Larry S. Tonogai, Hospital.
asked to call: Y. Ono; H. Kawai;
The Annual Church Bazaar is P. Nakamachi; Dr. J. Hasegawa; MALE-COOK CHAUFFEUR required for
son of Mr. and Mrs. Seiichiro
Tsuya was held *on September
slated for Saturday, October. 18 Mrs. F. Ishii. The fee is $1 per gentleman's apartment. Live in. Must
' Tonogai of Winnipeg.
19 at the Elliot Funeral Home. beginning
12 noon till 10 p.m. An
be fully experienced with references.
The newlyweds will reside at Funeral services were held on the invitation is extended to the lesson paid monthly in advance.
Chas. Foster, EM. 8-2645 between 9-5
same day conducted by Rev. K. community to make this a suc(Toronto).
Imai at St. Clement Anglican
Church.
Flower Display
FOOD MARKET FOR SALE
VANCOUVER
MONTREAL.—The Fifth Annual Exhibition
of Japanese East-end, excellent volume in meats,
ITO
Buddhist Church
flower
arrangements
by the Ta- groceries, fresh fruits and vegetables.
Rec Socratic will open its Fall
Ito
Tome
,
of
Steveston,
keya
School,
under
the
direction Price will include one truck, fixtures
season
on
Sunday,
October
5
with
NISEI ENGLISH SERVICE
B.C., passed away at the Vancou an Open House Night at Hager of Mrs. Seisho Kuwabara, is to and equipment. Established 35 years.
Every Sunday at
ver General Hospital on Septem man’s Hall beginning 7 p.m. till be held on Saturday, October 4 Phone HO. 5-0838 (Toronto).
7 p.m.
ber 7, 1958.
11 p.m.
in the Channing Hall, Church of
Funeral services were held on
Rev. K. Ikuta
The ever-popular Jay-Cats will the Messiah, 1497 Sherbrooke St.
September'
13
at
the
Steveston
be there to supply the dance
Visiting hours will be from 2
WELCOME TO ALL I!
Buddhist Church officiated by music. Price is 50 cents for mem p.m. till 10 p.m. with demonstra
Distinctive
220 Jackson. Ave. — Vancouver
i Rev. S. Ikuta and Mr. Yamamura. bers and $1 for non-members. tions of flower arranging' given
There will be no dance lessons, by Mrs. Horisaki and Mrs. Kuwa
Floral Arrangements
so come on out and enjoy your bara at 3 p.m., 5 p.m., and 8:30
self on Sunday, Oct. 5.
—Ace p.m. Japanese tea will be served.
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH*^ Bathurst st
I
Toronto, Ont.
| St. Anne’s Anglican Church
|was the setting for the marriage
I of Joan Yaeko Nishimura, daugh. ter of Mr. and Mrs. Kinsaburo
Nishimura of Toronto, to Herby
I Yukio Hamada, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Matsunosuke Hamada of
/Toronto, on September 13, 1958.
Rev. K. Imai officiated.
After the reception at the
■Muirhead Restaurant, the couple
Heft, for the U.S. on their honey
moon trip.
*
*
*
SUZUKI-SUNAHARA
te
f^&te^ ^nd doings
6 Rusholme Drive in Toronto.
Ontario.
HAMADA-NISHIMURA
I
j
PAGE 7
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1958
10:30 a.m., Toronto Buddhist Religious School
11:30 a.m., English Service in memory of Bishop Shigefuji
. "TRUE HUMANITY"
EVERYONE
Rev. T. Tsuji
CORD IA L L Y
o cue rd
V/ELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS
Proprietor
INVITED
OO1BEW DRAGON
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1958
Buy Your House Through
The Most Successful Realtor in Toronto
Open Noon to 2 a.m.
FOR THE LARGEST SELECTION OF
IMPORTED CARS INCLUDING. . .
representing
KEN WILES LIMITED REAL ESTATE
2578 Yonge Street
HU. 5-0411
TORONTO, Ont.
Res.: LE. 4-1427 or CR. 8-1683
131A Dundas St. W., Toronto
i
AA. YANAGISAWA
j
The Famous MORRIS "1000"
MORRIS Station Wagon .......
MORRIS "Oxfords" ..... ............
AUSTIN A-35
MGA and AUSTIN sports cars
and AUSTIN trucks and buses
$1,546
$1,827
$1,998
YOUR SHOPPING LIST
(Residence)
Eglinton Ave.
Toronto
W.
F. M. MORITSUGU
DAVE’S
TV and Appliances
Soles and Service
Shina and Giftware
DAVID AZUMA
734 St. Clair West
(1 block west of Christie)
LE. 3-0386
TORONTO
59 VOLKSWAGEN
For friendly service, call
DUNDAS UNION STOKE
(Business)
Orders to Take Ou*
EM. 8-2475
A Big Majority of Japanese Canadian Customers
Purchase Their Homes Through
HU. 9-4654 - BA. 1-4374
540
We are open to the public this Sunday
11:30 a.m., Sunday Church School
11:30 a.m. Enalish Service
"HOW TO BE MESSIAH?"
Rev. Bruce Cunningham, B.S., B.D.
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
701 Dovercourt Rd., Toronto
@ SAKURA
RICE
3' MARUKIN SHOYU
S' VINEGAR
@ SUGAR
JON ONODERA
ROger 2-4408
ONTARIO DISTRIBUTOR FOR MORRIS, WOLSELEY and MG
- DEALER FOR AUSTIN and AUSTIN-HEALEY
Ask for
KLAUS
SANDER
RU. 7-4241
•
RO. 6-6261
Eglinton Caledonia Motors Ltd.
Q EGGS
& SUKIYAKI MEAT
©> MANJU
g, MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
PHONE EM. 4-7692
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
MOTORS LTD^
Queen St. W. at Winaerrnere
ro 2-8231
•♦JJONOIJTIHIUOICNT0, ONT.
Page 8
py
PAGE 8
Saturday, September 27. 1953
OUR READERS WRITE
By Cinderella
PU
3
On Nisei Social Clubs
THE NEW CANADIAN
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
as a medium of expression and news outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada
Over a period of time I have
T. UMEZUKI, Publisher
“Woman In A Dressing Gown”—A memorable Film heard much said of Nisei social
KEN MORI... . ............ Japanese Section Editor & Advertising
clubs, especially as regards to
JERRY KUTSUKAKE........................... ..English Section Editor
Woman in a Dressing Gown*’ is like a small oasis in a desert their being a help or hinderance
of countless realistic films. Go and see it. You will never be quite
to the integration of a small Ja EM. 6-5005
479 Queen St. W., Toronto 2-B
the same again.
Authorized
aa
second
class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa ’
panese
Canadian
group
into
the
The film is a study of married drabness, but one treated with
such uncompromising* honesty that it becomes a terrifying com- overall national picture. Unfor
mentary on marriage, on human relationships, and on the fallibility tunately, my experience is limit
°f generalized thinking. It is, in essence, the tragedy of people who
mean well but who never quite make the grade, of people who un ed to two of the clubs in the Tor
wittingly make life a kind of hell for those whom they love most onto area, and I am basing my
dearly.
opinions on the assumption that
By FRANK HATASHITA
these Japanese boys had such
Amy Preston, the “Woman in a Dressing Gown”, is of such a other clubs across the country
strong
and pliable bodies. The
To a tourist visiting Japan for
breed. She means well. Married twenty years to Jim Preston, a are much the same.
m°st important part
the first time the sight of sacred
decent, hard-working shipping clerk, with* an adolescent son, she
of the body when it comes to Ju
All
factors
considered,
I
don
’
t
has lived for twenty years in a flurry of disorder, her hair unkept,
Mount Fuji, the great statue of do. It is used as the pivot point
flitting through each day in a grease-stained dressing gown, good think these clubs are anti-inte- Buddha, or the colorful Ginza is for most throws. Why were their
naturedly Jailing over stacks of unwashed dishes, tripping over grational. I haven’t the impres
hlPs so much stronger than
baskets of half-finished ironing, always late with her/husband’s sion- that all the members of a thrilling experience, but to a mine? I was born of Japanese
dinner, but cheerfully taking her family’s suggestions that she be these clubs attend the functions one-track mind of a Judoka like parents in Vancouver, but mv
more organized with a kind of childlike philosophy that “tomorrow with the idea that they absolu myself a visit to the Kodokan, hips were not as their’s. Why'9
tely must be among their own Mecca of the Judo • world, is the
. things will be better, just you wait and see.”
All evening I walked the honey
kind
to enjoy themselves, or that,
But instead of that wonderful tomorrow comes tragedy into
combed
streets of Tokyo paying
most
thrilling
of
all.
Amy Preston’s little world—tragedy in the form of a young* girl, they must seek out a marital
particular
attention to the people
. My recent pilgrimage to the
a co-worker of Jim’s, a complete antithesis of Amy. Georgie, and .partner of their own racial group. birthplace of Judo was the most and their ■ habits. It was a hot
her husband fall in love. Jim suddenly sees himself in his true en Of course, it is quite natural for unforgettable experience of my summer, evening and the shutters
vironment for the first time—sees himself hemmed in by disorder, one to enjoy himself or marry life and-taught me a lesson in of homes were flung wide open.
routine, caught in a way of life which is a ceaseless round of blar another of the same group. The philosophy that many Canadians 1 C.OUM . see families seated in
ing radios, untidy rooms, tied to a life against which his orderly important thing as regards inte of Japanese origin might bear in -their living rooms, squatting bemind rebels. He carries on an affair—illicit in the eyes of society gration is that he does not con mind. I entered the arena with f01 e a small low table eating
which only sees that Jim is a married man. Encouraged by Georgie, sider it wrong to do otherwise. vigor and enthusiasm after I their evening meal, or seated
he asks for a divorce.
0 ’ Most club members I have met chose an opponent about my own about on the floor with young
But Jim cannot cope with his new freedom. There are too many are quite broad-minded on this size. Ever been hit by a truck? children doing “their homework
matter.
years between Amy and himself,, too many years which could not
I haven’t yet, but I now have a and the older folks reading* or
Why then do these clubs pretty good idea of what it would listening to the radio. They were
be wiped out by a mere packing* of his bag and a walking out
through a door. He goes to his routine life of drabness. 'Amy hap exist? For one thing, though be like. In a flash I was sailing all seated in the same manner.
pily promises to buy a new dress. “A woman,” she says, “shouldn’t JCs are becoming fairly well ac through the air.
I tried every Indian fashion, cross-legged on
cepted on the employment level, technique I knew, but against the matted floors of their homes.
run about all day in a dressing gown.”
k.ut as the film comes to its close, one is aware that no one they are hot yet accepted to the him it was as the old Japanese
Using the rapid transit system,
W1 “ change,-least of all Amy. And it comes home to the audience same extent on the social. .This saying suggests, like sprinkling I headed for a room which I had
gently perhaps, that maybe Jim too is not so different from Amy’ is a situation that will be recti■ water on a frog’s face—it didn’t rented for my stay in Japan. The
trolley was crowded with people
111
S P
to Georgie, “When you saw this happening to him fied but its roots lie in the 'em disturb him in the least.
couldn t you have been strong* enough to have stopped him. You’re ployment and academic realms1
My techniques fizzled out once all standing and swaying trying
y^S^d beautiful, lou can have other men. Jimbo’s not for you. and they take time to develop. again on a second opponent. I to keep their balance. I should
Seso lke ?\e‘ J A ^ -^“th becomes apparent. Jim too, belongs to It is a characteristic of people in couldn’t even dent him. A third have taken a taxi but my brain
he same breed, to that vast army of incompetents who make up a general, that only a small per partner was only a shell of a was tired and I didn’t realize it
centage are equipped to disre man, and in desperation I used would be this bad.
large portion of this world of ours.
P
gard
the fact that .they are the my strength to hug and squeeze.
Laying in bed that night, I
The acting of the entire cast is superb. Yvonne Mitchell’s Amv
focal
point for a host of stares He saw through my unethical thought of my boyhood days in
is not a mean, spiteful, sloppy harpy but a loveable, generous wo
man, v lose tiagic flaw, if one can call it a flaw, is her incompetence,* (even ... if the latter doesn’t tactics and countered with a Vancouver’s Powell Street' dis^r ^f ’ljty to cope with reality, living in a dream world of chiM- amount to a row of beans). A lightening movement that sent trict when the older generation
that tomorrow^ things will be different. If her art does Nisei, today, for example, would more than 200 pounds of good bragged of the superior body of
not do things to you, nothing will touch you. Anthony Quayle’s Jim be the victim of a great number Canadian beef sailing through the Japanese.
“Nihonjin No Koshi Ga Tsud'f?U * r°le’ W1? 110 °PP°rturiities for “big scenes” is of stares if he should attend a the air once again. Never before
suai0htioiward, sincere and completely believable. Sylvia Syms function of a majority group did I feel so helpless and lonely. yoi,” they would say (The Japa
le Ot ?er w°Tan’ interprets thb part with simple honest^ social club or should, he enter into For comfort, I made my way over nese hip is stronger).
mixed mai*riage. Nevertheless, to a group of Occidentals who
I argued with the Issei that
beb o
n° °"S?’
convontional “other woman” but a human most
members
of
minority also appeared to be licking their they were narrow-minded and
01 4v
SWcere’ just ^ full of ideals as Jim
wounds.
stubborn in their thinking. Be
member’ T
t
S adolescent son is an interpretation to re- groups come to recognize sooner
than others the basic equality of
sides, I would say, the Japanese
“
Incredible,
isn
’
t
it?
’
’
an
En
of a
da'™ing disillusionment human beings of all races and" for glishman was muttering to his people can’t be that strong when
beihg
b US futner not a god, but. an ordinary human
that reason are not really oppos Australian and American friends, all they eat is rice and fish.
...
camera work heightens the theme. Its approach is analv- ed to integration on either the “and to think they do it all on Everybody knows the Japanese
just a bowl of rice a day!”
nation has one of the world’s
and them-0
ad^'n? an
dimension to characterization social or marital level.
highest TB rates.
“A bowl of rice,” I thought.
A significant point which in
!
J he theme is brought home constantly by use of photoBack home in Canada the
.Now, suddenly, the answer hit
tt e
untidy walk-up flat of the Prestons against dicates that Nisei social clubs are
average man’s diet of meat, vege me. The native Japanese is born
not
anti-integrational
by
design
of
Leorgie’s; the blaring, raucous, crude
for
pf
L
°n pub against the wann intimacy of a dinner is that the membership is not re tables, _ and fresh fruit provide on the tatami, the same mats on
Srtnh^u^
use of light and shadow, by emphasis on stricted to JCs only. Close friends him with all the vitamins*' and which Judo is practiced. He lives
minerals his body needs to be
facetC
and. time again’ reveals hidden of Niseis are often seen at come healthy and strong, yet, on that same mat the rest of his
life playing, falling and sitting.
GeoiHe t
Personalities.
Amy Preston’s accusation of dances. I know of cases where
Ueoi^ic^ as a cold fish * is accompanied by a camera diet of male members of the majority these Japanese on their bowl of The Japanese sits on his hips all
wither Ui fefi“d Mtl coId ™d
as alabaster. Equipped group attend the dances because rice had bodies that were strong his life with no comfortable back
ic
f'Xih se"se’ the
at tiies’seta
they are never* refused a dance and pliable which had overcome rest such as we have on our
us. Why, then, were these fellows
ub J
• S
"Ch ?MpaB « mood or an emotion or throws (which is far from the case in" so tough, especially in their hips ? chairs, even the toilets in Japan
have no seats. And that is why
» “"''Ta trut!’ of l“e- T1’<= camera focuses on two X public dance halls about town).
In
Toronto,
Canada,
where
I
run
the hips become so strong.
of feet, walking the late night over cobble stones—Geordie’s steadv In fact, I have never* been aware
my
own
Judo
club,
I
am
looked
I was happy then that I had
1 en’ confident and Jim’s hesitant, slow, undecided—hintino- at the of the members of other racial upon as a big dragon by my stu
found
the answer, but more than
t\o peoples variant attitudes. It focuses on Amv Preston0 -s she groups having been revised entry
dents,
but
here
in
the'middle
of
that,
I
had learned that the Issei
Of™ hurt brohS
tlle bathroom sink—this very aetioTthat to the functions of Nisei social Tokyo I felt like a lowly worm.
■were
right.
It would do well for
clubs.
k
’S' Seeklng a Private hole in which to curl in
It was disheartening ^to think the younger* generation to listen
That integration both socially
I ^ ould have to take a and adhere to the wisdom and
and maritally is a definite trend,
u et of this pounding for teachings of our forefathers.
corned whether man fe^’1
WWW 8068 ’"' ’"^ UnCOn* has been confirmed by the course th? -Jy t three months, the length
In Judo, they have set prin
of events of the past decade. Due of time I was to stay and "work ciples of health and philosophy
. All in all, “'Woman in a Dressing Gown” is a wonderful motion to the unpreparedness of many out at the Kodok^g. Instead of
P10^1^ lt s guaranteed to do things to you. It will make you think of the majority group for com drowning my sorrows in beer or of living that have been developed through enerations of study.
th-?18/11 eVen Piak^ you smarten up if you’re of the breed that spend pete acceptance of Orientals in whiskey, I concentrated my at and are as good today as they
their days m dressing gown or shorts. And vou’ll never be too Se , P^aSes °1 life, the Nisei social tention to finding out just why
were centuries ago.
e°uventional definition of infidelity. The film will make clubs have become a temporary
you take a good, long look at life and yourself.
necessity to provide a social out°-r their members rather than
definite stumbling blocks in the
GEORGE J. YAMAZAKI
way of integration.
J. WILLIAM RIDPATH
Jud®
o
R
I?
Ir
v
Si
associate architects
85 northfield rd.
Scarborough, ont.
atlantic 2-3348
atlantic 2-5SSI
Bus. HO. 5-0771
Res. PL. 5-6173
YONEMITSU j
X-RAY DIAGNOSIS
Watch Repair Shop
HO. 5-3652 — Res: LE. 2-7445
32S Broadview Ave., Toronto
SMALL SIZE SHOES
wisco aluminum storm
screen and doors
MAS NAKAO
H
DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC
823
. Toronto
।
WA. I-6a49 (office)
I}S S 9 (r oil d o nc a )
LADIES NEW STYLED POINTED TOES
MEN'S SCOTT McHALES 4-14
Toronto
f Chrome & Wrought
j(
!g
DIRECT from FACTORY
TO YOU
11 BILL OKADA—RO. 6-2244
$ MAM NISHI—LE. 1-2238
j ^'
TORONTO
I
4
^
e
45
1328 Queen St. ,W., Toronto
Phone LE. 1-1931
L
I
I
l
»
I
2
PAGE 8
Saturday, September 27. 1953
OUR READERS WRITE
By Cinderella
PU
3
On Nisei Social Clubs
THE NEW CANADIAN
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each week
as a medium of expression and news outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada
Over a period of time I have
T. UMEZUKI, Publisher
“Woman In A Dressing Gown”—A memorable Film heard much said of Nisei social
KEN MORI... . ............ Japanese Section Editor & Advertising
clubs, especially as regards to
JERRY KUTSUKAKE........................... ..English Section Editor
Woman in a Dressing Gown*’ is like a small oasis in a desert their being a help or hinderance
of countless realistic films. Go and see it. You will never be quite
to the integration of a small Ja EM. 6-5005
479 Queen St. W., Toronto 2-B
the same again.
Authorized
aa
second
class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa ’
panese
Canadian
group
into
the
The film is a study of married drabness, but one treated with
such uncompromising* honesty that it becomes a terrifying com- overall national picture. Unfor
mentary on marriage, on human relationships, and on the fallibility tunately, my experience is limit
°f generalized thinking. It is, in essence, the tragedy of people who
mean well but who never quite make the grade, of people who un ed to two of the clubs in the Tor
wittingly make life a kind of hell for those whom they love most onto area, and I am basing my
dearly.
opinions on the assumption that
By FRANK HATASHITA
these Japanese boys had such
Amy Preston, the “Woman in a Dressing Gown”, is of such a other clubs across the country
strong
and pliable bodies. The
To a tourist visiting Japan for
breed. She means well. Married twenty years to Jim Preston, a are much the same.
m°st important part
the first time the sight of sacred
decent, hard-working shipping clerk, with* an adolescent son, she
of the body when it comes to Ju
All
factors
considered,
I
don
’
t
has lived for twenty years in a flurry of disorder, her hair unkept,
Mount Fuji, the great statue of do. It is used as the pivot point
flitting through each day in a grease-stained dressing gown, good think these clubs are anti-inte- Buddha, or the colorful Ginza is for most throws. Why were their
naturedly Jailing over stacks of unwashed dishes, tripping over grational. I haven’t the impres
hlPs so much stronger than
baskets of half-finished ironing, always late with her/husband’s sion- that all the members of a thrilling experience, but to a mine? I was born of Japanese
dinner, but cheerfully taking her family’s suggestions that she be these clubs attend the functions one-track mind of a Judoka like parents in Vancouver, but mv
more organized with a kind of childlike philosophy that “tomorrow with the idea that they absolu myself a visit to the Kodokan, hips were not as their’s. Why'9
tely must be among their own Mecca of the Judo • world, is the
. things will be better, just you wait and see.”
All evening I walked the honey
kind
to enjoy themselves, or that,
But instead of that wonderful tomorrow comes tragedy into
combed
streets of Tokyo paying
most
thrilling
of
all.
Amy Preston’s little world—tragedy in the form of a young* girl, they must seek out a marital
particular
attention to the people
. My recent pilgrimage to the
a co-worker of Jim’s, a complete antithesis of Amy. Georgie, and .partner of their own racial group. birthplace of Judo was the most and their ■ habits. It was a hot
her husband fall in love. Jim suddenly sees himself in his true en Of course, it is quite natural for unforgettable experience of my summer, evening and the shutters
vironment for the first time—sees himself hemmed in by disorder, one to enjoy himself or marry life and-taught me a lesson in of homes were flung wide open.
routine, caught in a way of life which is a ceaseless round of blar another of the same group. The philosophy that many Canadians 1 C.OUM . see families seated in
ing radios, untidy rooms, tied to a life against which his orderly important thing as regards inte of Japanese origin might bear in -their living rooms, squatting bemind rebels. He carries on an affair—illicit in the eyes of society gration is that he does not con mind. I entered the arena with f01 e a small low table eating
which only sees that Jim is a married man. Encouraged by Georgie, sider it wrong to do otherwise. vigor and enthusiasm after I their evening meal, or seated
he asks for a divorce.
0 ’ Most club members I have met chose an opponent about my own about on the floor with young
But Jim cannot cope with his new freedom. There are too many are quite broad-minded on this size. Ever been hit by a truck? children doing “their homework
matter.
years between Amy and himself,, too many years which could not
I haven’t yet, but I now have a and the older folks reading* or
Why then do these clubs pretty good idea of what it would listening to the radio. They were
be wiped out by a mere packing* of his bag and a walking out
through a door. He goes to his routine life of drabness. 'Amy hap exist? For one thing, though be like. In a flash I was sailing all seated in the same manner.
pily promises to buy a new dress. “A woman,” she says, “shouldn’t JCs are becoming fairly well ac through the air.
I tried every Indian fashion, cross-legged on
cepted on the employment level, technique I knew, but against the matted floors of their homes.
run about all day in a dressing gown.”
k.ut as the film comes to its close, one is aware that no one they are hot yet accepted to the him it was as the old Japanese
Using the rapid transit system,
W1 “ change,-least of all Amy. And it comes home to the audience same extent on the social. .This saying suggests, like sprinkling I headed for a room which I had
gently perhaps, that maybe Jim too is not so different from Amy’ is a situation that will be recti■ water on a frog’s face—it didn’t rented for my stay in Japan. The
trolley was crowded with people
111
S P
to Georgie, “When you saw this happening to him fied but its roots lie in the 'em disturb him in the least.
couldn t you have been strong* enough to have stopped him. You’re ployment and academic realms1
My techniques fizzled out once all standing and swaying trying
y^S^d beautiful, lou can have other men. Jimbo’s not for you. and they take time to develop. again on a second opponent. I to keep their balance. I should
Seso lke ?\e‘ J A ^ -^“th becomes apparent. Jim too, belongs to It is a characteristic of people in couldn’t even dent him. A third have taken a taxi but my brain
he same breed, to that vast army of incompetents who make up a general, that only a small per partner was only a shell of a was tired and I didn’t realize it
centage are equipped to disre man, and in desperation I used would be this bad.
large portion of this world of ours.
P
gard
the fact that .they are the my strength to hug and squeeze.
Laying in bed that night, I
The acting of the entire cast is superb. Yvonne Mitchell’s Amv
focal
point for a host of stares He saw through my unethical thought of my boyhood days in
is not a mean, spiteful, sloppy harpy but a loveable, generous wo
man, v lose tiagic flaw, if one can call it a flaw, is her incompetence,* (even ... if the latter doesn’t tactics and countered with a Vancouver’s Powell Street' dis^r ^f ’ljty to cope with reality, living in a dream world of chiM- amount to a row of beans). A lightening movement that sent trict when the older generation
that tomorrow^ things will be different. If her art does Nisei, today, for example, would more than 200 pounds of good bragged of the superior body of
not do things to you, nothing will touch you. Anthony Quayle’s Jim be the victim of a great number Canadian beef sailing through the Japanese.
“Nihonjin No Koshi Ga Tsud'f?U * r°le’ W1? 110 °PP°rturiities for “big scenes” is of stares if he should attend a the air once again. Never before
suai0htioiward, sincere and completely believable. Sylvia Syms function of a majority group did I feel so helpless and lonely. yoi,” they would say (The Japa
le Ot ?er w°Tan’ interprets thb part with simple honest^ social club or should, he enter into For comfort, I made my way over nese hip is stronger).
mixed mai*riage. Nevertheless, to a group of Occidentals who
I argued with the Issei that
beb o
n° °"S?’
convontional “other woman” but a human most
members
of
minority also appeared to be licking their they were narrow-minded and
01 4v
SWcere’ just ^ full of ideals as Jim
wounds.
stubborn in their thinking. Be
member’ T
t
S adolescent son is an interpretation to re- groups come to recognize sooner
than others the basic equality of
sides, I would say, the Japanese
“
Incredible,
isn
’
t
it?
’
’
an
En
of a
da'™ing disillusionment human beings of all races and" for glishman was muttering to his people can’t be that strong when
beihg
b US futner not a god, but. an ordinary human
that reason are not really oppos Australian and American friends, all they eat is rice and fish.
...
camera work heightens the theme. Its approach is analv- ed to integration on either the “and to think they do it all on Everybody knows the Japanese
just a bowl of rice a day!”
nation has one of the world’s
and them-0
ad^'n? an
dimension to characterization social or marital level.
highest TB rates.
“A bowl of rice,” I thought.
A significant point which in
!
J he theme is brought home constantly by use of photoBack home in Canada the
.Now, suddenly, the answer hit
tt e
untidy walk-up flat of the Prestons against dicates that Nisei social clubs are
average man’s diet of meat, vege me. The native Japanese is born
not
anti-integrational
by
design
of
Leorgie’s; the blaring, raucous, crude
for
pf
L
°n pub against the wann intimacy of a dinner is that the membership is not re tables, _ and fresh fruit provide on the tatami, the same mats on
Srtnh^u^
use of light and shadow, by emphasis on stricted to JCs only. Close friends him with all the vitamins*' and which Judo is practiced. He lives
minerals his body needs to be
facetC
and. time again’ reveals hidden of Niseis are often seen at come healthy and strong, yet, on that same mat the rest of his
life playing, falling and sitting.
GeoiHe t
Personalities.
Amy Preston’s accusation of dances. I know of cases where
Ueoi^ic^ as a cold fish * is accompanied by a camera diet of male members of the majority these Japanese on their bowl of The Japanese sits on his hips all
wither Ui fefi“d Mtl coId ™d
as alabaster. Equipped group attend the dances because rice had bodies that were strong his life with no comfortable back
ic
f'Xih se"se’ the
at tiies’seta
they are never* refused a dance and pliable which had overcome rest such as we have on our
us. Why, then, were these fellows
ub J
• S
"Ch ?MpaB « mood or an emotion or throws (which is far from the case in" so tough, especially in their hips ? chairs, even the toilets in Japan
have no seats. And that is why
» “"''Ta trut!’ of l“e- T1’<= camera focuses on two X public dance halls about town).
In
Toronto,
Canada,
where
I
run
the hips become so strong.
of feet, walking the late night over cobble stones—Geordie’s steadv In fact, I have never* been aware
my
own
Judo
club,
I
am
looked
I was happy then that I had
1 en’ confident and Jim’s hesitant, slow, undecided—hintino- at the of the members of other racial upon as a big dragon by my stu
found
the answer, but more than
t\o peoples variant attitudes. It focuses on Amv Preston0 -s she groups having been revised entry
dents,
but
here
in
the'middle
of
that,
I
had learned that the Issei
Of™ hurt brohS
tlle bathroom sink—this very aetioTthat to the functions of Nisei social Tokyo I felt like a lowly worm.
■were
right.
It would do well for
clubs.
k
’S' Seeklng a Private hole in which to curl in
It was disheartening ^to think the younger* generation to listen
That integration both socially
I ^ ould have to take a and adhere to the wisdom and
and maritally is a definite trend,
u et of this pounding for teachings of our forefathers.
corned whether man fe^’1
WWW 8068 ’"' ’"^ UnCOn* has been confirmed by the course th? -Jy t three months, the length
In Judo, they have set prin
of events of the past decade. Due of time I was to stay and "work ciples of health and philosophy
. All in all, “'Woman in a Dressing Gown” is a wonderful motion to the unpreparedness of many out at the Kodok^g. Instead of
P10^1^ lt s guaranteed to do things to you. It will make you think of the majority group for com drowning my sorrows in beer or of living that have been developed through enerations of study.
th-?18/11 eVen Piak^ you smarten up if you’re of the breed that spend pete acceptance of Orientals in whiskey, I concentrated my at and are as good today as they
their days m dressing gown or shorts. And vou’ll never be too Se , P^aSes °1 life, the Nisei social tention to finding out just why
were centuries ago.
e°uventional definition of infidelity. The film will make clubs have become a temporary
you take a good, long look at life and yourself.
necessity to provide a social out°-r their members rather than
definite stumbling blocks in the
GEORGE J. YAMAZAKI
way of integration.
J. WILLIAM RIDPATH
Jud®
o
R
I?
Ir
v
Si
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