Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
A° ,ndePendent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. XXIV.—No. 57
WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, I960
TORONTO, ONT.
Adoption of Orphans Enlarged to Orient
gov- Cecile: The provincial child wel
will do much to meet
fare authority concerned will ap
tie objectives which your council
prove the application and will
confirm that suitable Canadian had in mind in presenting' the
children are not available, ft will iecommendation concerning the
undertake to give
continuing acceptance of public responsibi
The arrangement was outlined supervision to the proposed adop lity in this matter.”
Concerning adoption of refu
last Friday in a letter written tion during the probationary per
gee
children Mr. Diefenbaker had
by Prime Minister Diefenbaker to iod required by provincial laws.
cautioned
that the problem was
Kenneth K. L. Carter of Toronto,
In its recommendations, the complicated, primarily because of
president of the Canadian Wel Canadian Welfare Council had not
the exclusive provincial jurisfare Council in answer to a brief
expected
the
number
of
prospec
diction
with respect to legal adoppresented last March.
tive adoptees to be large.: The tion.
Welcoming' the announcement, stipulations set by the " Prime
The Federal department con
Mr. Carter indicated that Cana Minister appear to put no limi cerned
had been in touch with
dian families who wish to adopt tation on numbers as far as the
I.
and Korean orphans -may Federal Government is concerned, provincial child welfare author
ities and has sought their reac
now do so.
v
^
r
'
Carter
also
welcomed
an
tion,
to the council’s proposal.
With the Prime Minister’s an
While
the Government had vet
indication
-in
Mr.
Diefenbaker
’
s
nouncement, however,
Ontario
to
hear
from
a number of pro
letter
tnat
the
Federal
Govern
—Photo courtesy Shin Nichi Boi. Los Angelos
Welfare Minister Louis Cecile
vincial
governments,
it
had
armentis
willing
to
undertake
with
said Sunday that charity begins
COS ANGELES.-—At the climax of the Tidal Wave
*5o K
ay' JA l°M K“ ,'™i
A.A eh^!
at-home, and expressed only cau the other provinces the same ar ,rn’™ M the conclusion that in
tious approval that Canada will rangement it has with Ontario individual cases, prospective adop
.
r
'
‘
--DO"
as.presented
to
•
Congressman
Daniel
Inouve
(D. Hawaii)
welcoine tor adoption tiny refugee for public health and welfare ser tive parents in Canada might
C t
Who
lhe restaurant, ami who
children from anywhere in the vices for privately sponsored pPPly for the admission of "an
p fow^ ami facilities, Imade the presentation, while (at left) Frank
individual
orphan
refugee
child
world.
President of the Japanese American CidX Leallie Canadian Welfare Coun lor legal adoption.
Mr. Cecile said he would •refuse
h
i
31
K
«»W
and (at extreme iright) Joe Kadowaki, 'National
There were too. Mr. Diefento support any policy which cil considers that the Federal
a
’
e
4
C
c
a
“
IUan
Two-hundrcd-fifty mainland friends of
said’ substantial numbers
> <i
o'
T aU<1Crs attended. Jhc benefit driv^ for fuiX
would be detrimental to the cur Government in effect is willing
rent- adoption policy of the pro to split welfare costs whenever of Canadian-born children who for the May 23 tidal wave disaster -at Hilo.’Hawaii which tool
vince or would jeopardize
the the province decides to relieve m^ht be considered for adoption
homeless, has reached $6,000 of a national
chances for placement of 8,000 the private sponsor of his re it standards comparable to those £>al of $11,000 Donations for the Hawaii Tidal Wave Fund Drive
for refugee children were to be
to 10,000 Ontario children now sponsibility and assume the applied.
UCahf"
keKional JACL Office. 258 E. First St., Los Angeles
under care of the Children’s Aid charges itself.
Societies.
Ontario has agreed to provide
On, the other hand, he said, he welfare assistance to privately
Mould not be the last to discou sponsored refugee families if
rage help for suffering refugee they should need it after they
OTTAWA.—Canadian
manu the Canadian tube manufac
chiid:en in countries like China have been in the country six
facturers of electronic tubes for turers must soon stop all pro- Canadian market.
or Korea.
months.
In 1958, Canadian imports from
He said the provincial child . “I am sure,” Mr. Diefenbaker radios and other home entertain- douction.”
Japan numbered 214,000 tubes.
ment
sets
have
asked
their
Japa
Legare authorities would rule on wrote to Mr. Carter, “you will
Employment has fallen to The figure rose in 1959 to 2,applications, judge whether Ca agree that the announcement nese counterparts to compete 19,000 Canadians from 25,000 last 205,000 and 'may climb to 5,nadian children were available made by the Ontario Govern with them in a different line of year and there has been a 23 per
500,000 this year on the basis of
anc supervise proposed adop- ment in this matter will do much business.
cent curtailment of production.
imports during the first quar
.Producers
want
Japanese
pons during probationarv per to facilitate’ the working out of
He said that 98 per cent of the
manufacturers to ship specialty Japanese imports come from one ter of I960, Mr. Dowdell said.
iods.
‘ r
arrangements for the ■ private
Canadian manufacturers pro
The new policy has these con- sponsorship of-refugee families, tubes to Canada, and to leave the firm—Hitachi,
Tokyo—and at duce about 200 types of tubes, out
market for the common type of least four other Japanese manu
aiuons:
and if otner provincial govern
of 1,200 used in all kinds of elec
That which was outlined by Mr. ment agree to similar arrange- radio tube to Canadian manu facturers may have an eye on the tronic devices.
facturers who produce the bulk
of the . commonly used types of
tubes for radio, television, record
player and tape recorder sets.
They have to import specialized
tubes.
In a brief presented to Erne
TOKYO,-—Koreans migrating
Yamasita, first secretary of the
..^^' Mellowed bv years was sharply underlined soon after Japanese Embassy here, the from Japan to Communist North 30,231 Koreans who have gone
spent ni the political wilderness, Mr. Ikeda spoke, when at a re Electronic Industries Association Korea no_ longer take automobi to North Korea.
.^e repatriation program was
w^° once told the poor ception honoring the new presi of Canada declared the electronic les, washing machines, and tran initiated
last December over the
NXt ^r‘ey If they couldn’t af- dent, Nobusuke Kisffi, who, on tube industry in this country is sistor radios with them.
bitter
objections
of South Korea.
S ^became president of Ja- July 15 stepped down as Premier, in danger of being wiped out by
They take clothing, bicycles, It permits those Koreans so de
nXS
conservative Liberal was stabbed by a man believed to Japanese competition.
sewing machines, soap, drugs, ra siring, among the 000,000 in JaIJe?locratic Partv July 14
be a rightist.
The brief asked the Japanese zor blades, food and other consu ^n’ t° H° to North Korea in
Hayato, Ikeda had to
Mr. Kishi’s injury was not se Government to inform manu mer goods.
ships furnished bv the Soviet
n er action “1 order to be- rious, but the attempted assas- facturers there that a valuable
They yearned from early repa Union.
~XPremier’ the Liberal De- sintion recalled last month’s at market for specialty tubes is triates that gasoline in North Ko
5AJ°7thll'ds„ ™ajority tack also by a rightist against available in Canada, and that rea is only for the privileged few,
(continued on page eight)
’ha ‘Xure(^ Hun of victory if moderate Socialist leader Jotaro sales in this field would not dam batteries for transistor radios are’
remained united.
Kawakami and gives the nation a age ' Canadian producers since non existent, and electric current
Lirst statement after chilling reminder of the spate of specialty tubes are not made here. so weak washing machines won’t
36->rj^ed Mitsujiro Ishii, by assassinations that ushered the
V. B. Dowdell of Canadian work.
19Aa^ a special party militarists into power less than General Electric Co., told a press
This is a part of the picture
IV Htbiya Hall showed 30 years ago.
conference here “it is quite clear ;pieced together here, from intel
Mi Vs-’ cHat the first need
sources and personal let
The attempt on Mr. Kishi was that if the present trend .persists ligence
"
VA N CO U VE R.
N ego t i a t i o n s
ters, of what has happened to the
na^,^ l?S par^ and f°r the believed to have been made by
are
reported
to
be
under
way be
"p'N ^P0, restore harmony.
a man connected with a faction
tween
Consolidated
Mining
and
Consul
Talks
Range
Over
.:or “-Patience and within the Liberal Democratic
nadjan cities also were studied. Smelting Company and Japanese
V *Pd asked for a Party which was disgruntled
Indicative of the importance interests for development of the
odp^ a' PoHcy with the over what it considered Mr. Ki Japan's Becoming
of
the meetings, a cable was re Coast Copper propertv on Van
,±5” socia!i^ -'o that the shi’s “treachery” in failing to
ceived
at the height of the meet- couver Island.
Gateway to Orient
coodXp? u'° major parties could swing votes to party vice-pres
'n?s. Tr°rn the Japanese foreign , Cominco is a majority share
to maintain parlimeu- ident Bamboku Ohno, after alVANCOUVER. — The discus minister Aiichiro Fujiyama.
nocracv.
holder in Coast Copper which
sions
here Monday and Tues
The results of the talks obvi owns 448 claims near Quatsino
The
(continued
on
page
eight)
d for harmonv
day of last week between Japa ously will be studied in Tokvo be
bound, northern Vancouver Is
nese embassy and consulate re fore any tangible result of* them land.
' '
presentatives ranged over a va becomes visible in Japanese-Ca
A. geologist from The Dowa
riety of subjects.
nadian relations, it appears.
Mining
Company Ltd., Tokyo,
■ While there will be no official
“They were very important recently inspected the propertv
announcements regarding the meetings,” says Mr. Tanabe.
and it is understood the Japa'}0 a^1® ^ew Canadian will close shop next week unique sessions, this much was in “Japan is looking to become the qese
dicated by Muneo Tanabe, Japa-, gateway to the Orient for Cana ment.firm is interested in develop
v«cafa S ^e S^ ^° take its annual one-week nese consul in Vanvouver.,
da.”
Cominco officials declined to
Discussed
were
■ways
and
cow ^Ti80, ^Sar readers, please don't expect a means of promoting greater The meeting of 13 Japanese comment on negotiations at this
representatives here—-to take a stage.
27th ° ~e ^ew Canadian next Wednesday, July trade, “economic cooperation” close
look at Japan’s business
Diamond drilling and developand
stronger
ties
of
friendship
position
in Canada—was preceded !”ent wk in recent years has
Press °? ? n^^^Y’ W 30th. But, we will start the
between Japan and Canada.
similar sessions in San Fran- been financed by Cominco
3rd is? iOlin9’ in time for the Wednesday, August Means of improving coordi by
ci&co, attended by Japanese em
^.“inors ,°f a pending deal has
nation between the foreign office bassy representatives from Wa pushed
Coast Copper stock up
in Tokyo, the embassy in Ottawa shington, consulates in U.S/ ci
past
the
$6 mark in recent trad
and the consulates in various Ca ties and Tokyo officials.
ing.
OTT AW A
The federal
approved an arna
err
rangement under which Canadian
parents will be able to adopt or
phaned refugee children regard
less of their racial origin. ■
Tube Farms Move to Source of Threat
Ikeda Takes Helm in. Japan.
Amidst Political Criticism
Repatriation to North Korea Slackens from Japan '
With Smuggled News of Disillusionment and Toil
Stocks rise with pending
Japanese mine deal
^ ON HOLIDAY ALL NEXT WEEK
A° ,ndePendent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. XXIV.—No. 57
WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, I960
TORONTO, ONT.
Adoption of Orphans Enlarged to Orient
gov- Cecile: The provincial child wel
will do much to meet
fare authority concerned will ap
tie objectives which your council
prove the application and will
confirm that suitable Canadian had in mind in presenting' the
children are not available, ft will iecommendation concerning the
undertake to give
continuing acceptance of public responsibi
The arrangement was outlined supervision to the proposed adop lity in this matter.”
Concerning adoption of refu
last Friday in a letter written tion during the probationary per
gee
children Mr. Diefenbaker had
by Prime Minister Diefenbaker to iod required by provincial laws.
cautioned
that the problem was
Kenneth K. L. Carter of Toronto,
In its recommendations, the complicated, primarily because of
president of the Canadian Wel Canadian Welfare Council had not
the exclusive provincial jurisfare Council in answer to a brief
expected
the
number
of
prospec
diction
with respect to legal adoppresented last March.
tive adoptees to be large.: The tion.
Welcoming' the announcement, stipulations set by the " Prime
The Federal department con
Mr. Carter indicated that Cana Minister appear to put no limi cerned
had been in touch with
dian families who wish to adopt tation on numbers as far as the
I.
and Korean orphans -may Federal Government is concerned, provincial child welfare author
ities and has sought their reac
now do so.
v
^
r
'
Carter
also
welcomed
an
tion,
to the council’s proposal.
With the Prime Minister’s an
While
the Government had vet
indication
-in
Mr.
Diefenbaker
’
s
nouncement, however,
Ontario
to
hear
from
a number of pro
letter
tnat
the
Federal
Govern
—Photo courtesy Shin Nichi Boi. Los Angelos
Welfare Minister Louis Cecile
vincial
governments,
it
had
armentis
willing
to
undertake
with
said Sunday that charity begins
COS ANGELES.-—At the climax of the Tidal Wave
*5o K
ay' JA l°M K“ ,'™i
A.A eh^!
at-home, and expressed only cau the other provinces the same ar ,rn’™ M the conclusion that in
tious approval that Canada will rangement it has with Ontario individual cases, prospective adop
.
r
'
‘
--DO"
as.presented
to
•
Congressman
Daniel
Inouve
(D. Hawaii)
welcoine tor adoption tiny refugee for public health and welfare ser tive parents in Canada might
C t
Who
lhe restaurant, ami who
children from anywhere in the vices for privately sponsored pPPly for the admission of "an
p fow^ ami facilities, Imade the presentation, while (at left) Frank
individual
orphan
refugee
child
world.
President of the Japanese American CidX Leallie Canadian Welfare Coun lor legal adoption.
Mr. Cecile said he would •refuse
h
i
31
K
«»W
and (at extreme iright) Joe Kadowaki, 'National
There were too. Mr. Diefento support any policy which cil considers that the Federal
a
’
e
4
C
c
a
“
IUan
Two-hundrcd-fifty mainland friends of
said’ substantial numbers
> <i
o'
T aU<1Crs attended. Jhc benefit driv^ for fuiX
would be detrimental to the cur Government in effect is willing
rent- adoption policy of the pro to split welfare costs whenever of Canadian-born children who for the May 23 tidal wave disaster -at Hilo.’Hawaii which tool
vince or would jeopardize
the the province decides to relieve m^ht be considered for adoption
homeless, has reached $6,000 of a national
chances for placement of 8,000 the private sponsor of his re it standards comparable to those £>al of $11,000 Donations for the Hawaii Tidal Wave Fund Drive
for refugee children were to be
to 10,000 Ontario children now sponsibility and assume the applied.
UCahf"
keKional JACL Office. 258 E. First St., Los Angeles
under care of the Children’s Aid charges itself.
Societies.
Ontario has agreed to provide
On, the other hand, he said, he welfare assistance to privately
Mould not be the last to discou sponsored refugee families if
rage help for suffering refugee they should need it after they
OTTAWA.—Canadian
manu the Canadian tube manufac
chiid:en in countries like China have been in the country six
facturers of electronic tubes for turers must soon stop all pro- Canadian market.
or Korea.
months.
In 1958, Canadian imports from
He said the provincial child . “I am sure,” Mr. Diefenbaker radios and other home entertain- douction.”
Japan numbered 214,000 tubes.
ment
sets
have
asked
their
Japa
Legare authorities would rule on wrote to Mr. Carter, “you will
Employment has fallen to The figure rose in 1959 to 2,applications, judge whether Ca agree that the announcement nese counterparts to compete 19,000 Canadians from 25,000 last 205,000 and 'may climb to 5,nadian children were available made by the Ontario Govern with them in a different line of year and there has been a 23 per
500,000 this year on the basis of
anc supervise proposed adop- ment in this matter will do much business.
cent curtailment of production.
imports during the first quar
.Producers
want
Japanese
pons during probationarv per to facilitate’ the working out of
He said that 98 per cent of the
manufacturers to ship specialty Japanese imports come from one ter of I960, Mr. Dowdell said.
iods.
‘ r
arrangements for the ■ private
Canadian manufacturers pro
The new policy has these con- sponsorship of-refugee families, tubes to Canada, and to leave the firm—Hitachi,
Tokyo—and at duce about 200 types of tubes, out
market for the common type of least four other Japanese manu
aiuons:
and if otner provincial govern
of 1,200 used in all kinds of elec
That which was outlined by Mr. ment agree to similar arrange- radio tube to Canadian manu facturers may have an eye on the tronic devices.
facturers who produce the bulk
of the . commonly used types of
tubes for radio, television, record
player and tape recorder sets.
They have to import specialized
tubes.
In a brief presented to Erne
TOKYO,-—Koreans migrating
Yamasita, first secretary of the
..^^' Mellowed bv years was sharply underlined soon after Japanese Embassy here, the from Japan to Communist North 30,231 Koreans who have gone
spent ni the political wilderness, Mr. Ikeda spoke, when at a re Electronic Industries Association Korea no_ longer take automobi to North Korea.
.^e repatriation program was
w^° once told the poor ception honoring the new presi of Canada declared the electronic les, washing machines, and tran initiated
last December over the
NXt ^r‘ey If they couldn’t af- dent, Nobusuke Kisffi, who, on tube industry in this country is sistor radios with them.
bitter
objections
of South Korea.
S ^became president of Ja- July 15 stepped down as Premier, in danger of being wiped out by
They take clothing, bicycles, It permits those Koreans so de
nXS
conservative Liberal was stabbed by a man believed to Japanese competition.
sewing machines, soap, drugs, ra siring, among the 000,000 in JaIJe?locratic Partv July 14
be a rightist.
The brief asked the Japanese zor blades, food and other consu ^n’ t° H° to North Korea in
Hayato, Ikeda had to
Mr. Kishi’s injury was not se Government to inform manu mer goods.
ships furnished bv the Soviet
n er action “1 order to be- rious, but the attempted assas- facturers there that a valuable
They yearned from early repa Union.
~XPremier’ the Liberal De- sintion recalled last month’s at market for specialty tubes is triates that gasoline in North Ko
5AJ°7thll'ds„ ™ajority tack also by a rightist against available in Canada, and that rea is only for the privileged few,
(continued on page eight)
’ha ‘Xure(^ Hun of victory if moderate Socialist leader Jotaro sales in this field would not dam batteries for transistor radios are’
remained united.
Kawakami and gives the nation a age ' Canadian producers since non existent, and electric current
Lirst statement after chilling reminder of the spate of specialty tubes are not made here. so weak washing machines won’t
36->rj^ed Mitsujiro Ishii, by assassinations that ushered the
V. B. Dowdell of Canadian work.
19Aa^ a special party militarists into power less than General Electric Co., told a press
This is a part of the picture
IV Htbiya Hall showed 30 years ago.
conference here “it is quite clear ;pieced together here, from intel
Mi Vs-’ cHat the first need
sources and personal let
The attempt on Mr. Kishi was that if the present trend .persists ligence
"
VA N CO U VE R.
N ego t i a t i o n s
ters, of what has happened to the
na^,^ l?S par^ and f°r the believed to have been made by
are
reported
to
be
under
way be
"p'N ^P0, restore harmony.
a man connected with a faction
tween
Consolidated
Mining
and
Consul
Talks
Range
Over
.:or “-Patience and within the Liberal Democratic
nadjan cities also were studied. Smelting Company and Japanese
V *Pd asked for a Party which was disgruntled
Indicative of the importance interests for development of the
odp^ a' PoHcy with the over what it considered Mr. Ki Japan's Becoming
of
the meetings, a cable was re Coast Copper propertv on Van
,±5” socia!i^ -'o that the shi’s “treachery” in failing to
ceived
at the height of the meet- couver Island.
Gateway to Orient
coodXp? u'° major parties could swing votes to party vice-pres
'n?s. Tr°rn the Japanese foreign , Cominco is a majority share
to maintain parlimeu- ident Bamboku Ohno, after alVANCOUVER. — The discus minister Aiichiro Fujiyama.
nocracv.
holder in Coast Copper which
sions
here Monday and Tues
The results of the talks obvi owns 448 claims near Quatsino
The
(continued
on
page
eight)
d for harmonv
day of last week between Japa ously will be studied in Tokvo be
bound, northern Vancouver Is
nese embassy and consulate re fore any tangible result of* them land.
' '
presentatives ranged over a va becomes visible in Japanese-Ca
A. geologist from The Dowa
riety of subjects.
nadian relations, it appears.
Mining
Company Ltd., Tokyo,
■ While there will be no official
“They were very important recently inspected the propertv
announcements regarding the meetings,” says Mr. Tanabe.
and it is understood the Japa'}0 a^1® ^ew Canadian will close shop next week unique sessions, this much was in “Japan is looking to become the qese
dicated by Muneo Tanabe, Japa-, gateway to the Orient for Cana ment.firm is interested in develop
v«cafa S ^e S^ ^° take its annual one-week nese consul in Vanvouver.,
da.”
Cominco officials declined to
Discussed
were
■ways
and
cow ^Ti80, ^Sar readers, please don't expect a means of promoting greater The meeting of 13 Japanese comment on negotiations at this
representatives here—-to take a stage.
27th ° ~e ^ew Canadian next Wednesday, July trade, “economic cooperation” close
look at Japan’s business
Diamond drilling and developand
stronger
ties
of
friendship
position
in Canada—was preceded !”ent wk in recent years has
Press °? ? n^^^Y’ W 30th. But, we will start the
between Japan and Canada.
similar sessions in San Fran- been financed by Cominco
3rd is? iOlin9’ in time for the Wednesday, August Means of improving coordi by
ci&co, attended by Japanese em
^.“inors ,°f a pending deal has
nation between the foreign office bassy representatives from Wa pushed
Coast Copper stock up
in Tokyo, the embassy in Ottawa shington, consulates in U.S/ ci
past
the
$6 mark in recent trad
and the consulates in various Ca ties and Tokyo officials.
ing.
OTT AW A
The federal
approved an arna
err
rangement under which Canadian
parents will be able to adopt or
phaned refugee children regard
less of their racial origin. ■
Tube Farms Move to Source of Threat
Ikeda Takes Helm in. Japan.
Amidst Political Criticism
Repatriation to North Korea Slackens from Japan '
With Smuggled News of Disillusionment and Toil
Stocks rise with pending
Japanese mine deal
^ ON HOLIDAY ALL NEXT WEEK
Page 2
0
JM L III-1
^T
FI //rWI ft
P R
•{ft z|x
o ^
^r ^
Si ^
?
Li< ^
d ft
n t
« I
Fly in High Style on JAL’s Magnificient
DC SC Intercontinental Jef Courier [
from SAN FRANCISCO on August 12th;
"•from LOS ANGELES on September 5th;'
-••from SEATTLE
The calm beauty and matchless service of the new DC-SC Jet
Couriers. (The .DeLuxe Kikunoma Lounge)
60 East Monroe St.
Chicago ANdover 3-1384
Rockefeller Center,
620 Fifth AveNew York JUdson '6-7400
JZ3AQAI jQJW 1/AT^S
IMPERIAL BAHK
OF CANADA
ELIZABETH & DUNDAS STS.
(116 Elizabeth St.)
TORONTO
L. J. - Walker, Manager
oji
October 1st.
JM L III-1
^T
FI //rWI ft
P R
•{ft z|x
o ^
^r ^
Si ^
?
Li< ^
d ft
n t
« I
Fly in High Style on JAL’s Magnificient
DC SC Intercontinental Jef Courier [
from SAN FRANCISCO on August 12th;
"•from LOS ANGELES on September 5th;'
-••from SEATTLE
The calm beauty and matchless service of the new DC-SC Jet
Couriers. (The .DeLuxe Kikunoma Lounge)
60 East Monroe St.
Chicago ANdover 3-1384
Rockefeller Center,
620 Fifth AveNew York JUdson '6-7400
JZ3AQAI jQJW 1/AT^S
IMPERIAL BAHK
OF CANADA
ELIZABETH & DUNDAS STS.
(116 Elizabeth St.)
TORONTO
L. J. - Walker, Manager
oji
October 1st.
Page 3
THE NEW
3* G
T
£
&
It
©
6
IT
v
o
XP
<k
21
72
0
fol
r
Q
PAGE
(X
J
W
it
h
^
5
»>
0
#
IC
n
o
tux.
&
72
•5
I
5
^
^1
^ 3S
JT W
I'
It
I?
n
n z
0
IX
n
i
&
£
5
©
lc
L
0
4k
3
IX
72
L
IX
IX
CD
iD
^)
o
0 h
$
it
G
LA
o
nl
?n ^Ife
114
®
II
P
iir
nr:
O 7? 0
-LU
I®
LSI
n
; iSiw
Bl
1^ D
72 U & ®ii
Jjf
w
E
CD
I
o
it (7
ix
Every Sunday Morning- 8 to 8:
9 ? ^ ^ (1250 .Kilocycles)
P.O. Box 190, Toronto, Ont.
°t^«Ozfc
^©/bMIO
©
^1
©
st
I'US
to
ci i
4
Q*
5
#
n
S<
1$
5
^’
ft
i
4
0
XP
^'
V
£
©
4
3
^
i^
IX
&
9
fly
54a
Bl
*u
IX # I
U&
*>
po
2
X
5] pX?’
S«
i|j
}WXA^
IX
_1. {
?|M
■LI
~H->
Sic
Hit
fly
T&j
a
HEW CONFECTIONERY & GIFTS
Y. UCHIDA & CO.
630—13th St. NORTH,
LETHBRIDGE, ALBERTA
—S. SAKUMOTO—
615 West Pender Street
VANCOUVER 2, B.Q
HO. 6-2041
HO. 6-7962
i” 5$
k sh
e<rR w»
s?s *
^§N
Tn
a
nn
ffl
ora®
fill
a
b
•» 942 Pape Ave.
Continental Family Co-op
618 Dundas St. W., Toronto
Phone EM. 6-5589
ffflfHIiWM^ 7 y -v ^
^^^Oi»Ji^K i n
EBISU
YAMASA
MAGILL EXPORT IMPORT LTD.
P.O. Box 2003
(2909 Grandview Hwy.)
HE. 4-2522
wiiiniiuiiniiifiiniiniiuiiniii
I
3* G
T
£
&
It
©
6
IT
v
o
XP
<k
21
72
0
fol
r
Q
PAGE
(X
J
W
it
h
^
5
»>
0
#
IC
n
o
tux.
&
72
•5
I
5
^
^1
^ 3S
JT W
I'
It
I?
n
n z
0
IX
n
i
&
£
5
©
lc
L
0
4k
3
IX
72
L
IX
IX
CD
iD
^)
o
0 h
$
it
G
LA
o
nl
?n ^Ife
114
®
II
P
iir
nr:
O 7? 0
-LU
I®
LSI
n
; iSiw
Bl
1^ D
72 U & ®ii
Jjf
w
E
CD
I
o
it (7
ix
Every Sunday Morning- 8 to 8:
9 ? ^ ^ (1250 .Kilocycles)
P.O. Box 190, Toronto, Ont.
°t^«Ozfc
^©/bMIO
©
^1
©
st
I'US
to
ci i
4
Q*
5
#
n
S<
1$
5
^’
ft
i
4
0
XP
^'
V
£
©
4
3
^
i^
IX
&
9
fly
54a
Bl
*u
IX # I
U&
*>
po
2
X
5] pX?’
S«
i|j
}WXA^
IX
_1. {
?|M
■LI
~H->
Sic
Hit
fly
T&j
a
HEW CONFECTIONERY & GIFTS
Y. UCHIDA & CO.
630—13th St. NORTH,
LETHBRIDGE, ALBERTA
—S. SAKUMOTO—
615 West Pender Street
VANCOUVER 2, B.Q
HO. 6-2041
HO. 6-7962
i” 5$
k sh
e<rR w»
s?s *
^§N
Tn
a
nn
ffl
ora®
fill
a
b
•» 942 Pape Ave.
Continental Family Co-op
618 Dundas St. W., Toronto
Phone EM. 6-5589
ffflfHIiWM^ 7 y -v ^
^^^Oi»Ji^K i n
EBISU
YAMASA
MAGILL EXPORT IMPORT LTD.
P.O. Box 2003
(2909 Grandview Hwy.)
HE. 4-2522
wiiiniiuiiniiifiiniiniiuiiniii
I
Page 4
PAGE 4
THE NEW CANADIAN
2b
5
0
A
^k
Wednesday, July 20. iaM
•P
£
PR
a
2L
ix
A5
^
f^
79*
El
hit
£ #>
M
H.
it
IX
(X
fl
HJ 70
r^
ma
i
1
£
ft’
mt
i
£
fi
^i zb
<40
KO
if
5
G
n I-
D
fl
#
i
0
5
1*
o
b
IX
&
c’ 0 X
6
6
E*
.0
5
-ine
W
5
E
0
1st
fi
IX
TO
7 5
72
0
&
® fH
IX
IX
IX
d
to
c
5 It
IX
0
9
H
*b
zb
ML
<7
f
fl 5
i
77
8$
2b
i
rd (X
fi
7
fl
IX
IX
M
M
0
0
(O
M
2.
t
>J
b
IX
2b IT
'X
IX
b
1'5
b
3
Tt A
Un
ft]
T b
T
1
L
£1?
4=
?
7?
IX
E
nn
20
-7-
6
6
^ £1
M
72
MS ^
fe
0
0
0
^f
m
M
I
Ze
IX
n
i
t
5
6
b
fj
PR
BE
Sb§
3
ji
ft
aS
0)
22 11' bitit Xp
©
IX
ft
^
fl
L
B
uu
I
1
s
20
ft
1
n
M
Hi
fl
ft
6
1U.
#
IX
AL
JLLJUL*
ft
^
ft
ft
t
b
^
I
ft
"L
yl
AW = w
— A^
H w ^J # §' KM1
b
— 00
vsz
‘ W^XW.K 3 b ^ Lb«7 £1 £
* A Ml®iK 1 ^ 72 b
^^ A il
M 'MO 11
K Jn II ^ M ®? K W IX T
^ iff
T II ^ 0 E5 ® &
IJ^ T M »
^oit 0
® #|5] ^ 0
S -^ t >
$^^ 9 ^X^®^^
_b ^i: I ?l®^ ^t ^^
if & n » #p ^ i# 3 ± k t M
x «f^^^^^tzUTUA
W^^T^^U^AB
T ft < ^Ktli II 1 H0
t1E±^^t^«
^1
/> ■ b # ^
^
a^
°7
t 77
IX
^1
J
1^
^ AH
1 4 1
1 —
X
0
?A
-ff *MPO A
PE - △ “M -
7W $M3i> M^
O®^f 7
0 ° #J t & I
^ A ffl Lit K ^
^ ^1- 1
0 ^A K
H
^®# L
S
MM
B cX £1
co
FAj
31 8$
lb
2b
fill
o
THE NEW CANADIAN
2b
5
0
A
^k
Wednesday, July 20. iaM
•P
£
PR
a
2L
ix
A5
^
f^
79*
El
hit
£ #>
M
H.
it
IX
(X
fl
HJ 70
r^
ma
i
1
£
ft’
mt
i
£
fi
^i zb
<40
KO
if
5
G
n I-
D
fl
#
i
0
5
1*
o
b
IX
&
c’ 0 X
6
6
E*
.0
5
-ine
W
5
E
0
1st
fi
IX
TO
7 5
72
0
&
® fH
IX
IX
IX
d
to
c
5 It
IX
0
9
H
*b
zb
ML
<7
f
fl 5
i
77
8$
2b
i
rd (X
fi
7
fl
IX
IX
M
M
0
0
(O
M
2.
t
>J
b
IX
2b IT
'X
IX
b
1'5
b
3
Tt A
Un
ft]
T b
T
1
L
£1?
4=
?
7?
IX
E
nn
20
-7-
6
6
^ £1
M
72
MS ^
fe
0
0
0
^f
m
M
I
Ze
IX
n
i
t
5
6
b
fj
PR
BE
Sb§
3
ji
ft
aS
0)
22 11' bitit Xp
©
IX
ft
^
fl
L
B
uu
I
1
s
20
ft
1
n
M
Hi
fl
ft
6
1U.
#
IX
AL
JLLJUL*
ft
^
ft
ft
t
b
^
I
ft
"L
yl
AW = w
— A^
H w ^J # §' KM1
b
— 00
vsz
‘ W^XW.K 3 b ^ Lb«7 £1 £
* A Ml®iK 1 ^ 72 b
^^ A il
M 'MO 11
K Jn II ^ M ®? K W IX T
^ iff
T II ^ 0 E5 ® &
IJ^ T M »
^oit 0
® #|5] ^ 0
S -^ t >
$^^ 9 ^X^®^^
_b ^i: I ?l®^ ^t ^^
if & n » #p ^ i# 3 ± k t M
x «f^^^^^tzUTUA
W^^T^^U^AB
T ft < ^Ktli II 1 H0
t1E±^^t^«
^1
/> ■ b # ^
^
a^
°7
t 77
IX
^1
J
1^
^ AH
1 4 1
1 —
X
0
?A
-ff *MPO A
PE - △ “M -
7W $M3i> M^
O®^f 7
0 ° #J t & I
^ A ffl Lit K ^
^ ^1- 1
0 ^A K
H
^®# L
S
MM
B cX £1
co
FAj
31 8$
lb
2b
fill
o
Page 5
Us«
Z^lNl^ANADIAtf
K>
n
i#ffS
A ®
o
n
0
6 #
i^i © t
ft it B z
ft
0
V
o
6
9
ft
L
a
IX
PD
IX so
(X
SO
L
O
fib
r"
5
0
IX
Fr
5 B
ft
ft]
G
t
h
P
f.
5
d
$ i
4>
3
o
ft
1'
tm
M
5
i
o
7?
*/
7
5
3
i
IX IC Zo
n
(X 1"
Is IX
Ze
o
ft
IX
7
~^J
ns
IX
X
h
BD
0
yt
HAI IX
IP
^Lj
ft
it
it
0
Ze
°n
^
t
3
.a
RO
o © -^ a
IX
OK® ' S i^B K1-gffi*
7 2®® AW® A fftt^U
|s^^»i;<twet * 4 G ix
HD
£
§I{
no
0
C
ft. ®
i:^l^i^
b g a fK 55
& ® 'w^
ft 1^ a &5 n zj ^ ^ # a 3 ^
9
I'
ip s
5
a
M
a o s'
i
3 ic
7 t
ft
an
fit
3
<
5
Ze op
0 ft’ IX
3
It
4$ i
b
Zj
B
A 0
0
0
i
0
^ Z
«
IC 0
IM
£
i
>
0
S
& IC R
®5
arc #5
Ai 3
0 Pn
A Ze
3 Ss
It
ft 0 ft
A <£>
5
Ze
1'
#F
ft
<1:
A
o
ft tt
’ ft
9 tc 0
3 L /e
IX #
0 3 *1? ®
#
u
11 /Er
^
t
ip 4 ft 5> eg
IL. H$. ft
IX
#
ft
«
m
a ft
0
It
w
0
a
41
XJc Ze
o
Zp
'Ms
APx/M^'IX
9 o
to
0 1± 1ft 3
v
ffl<'liWW0»^fflUTs. j t ftt----- JH ft P li 10 ^ « £
^OtOtt^LF^Hto
^to ^CTMl^’ ^^ k+h^^ n _^----- Hi#fHi%t’ 3 0 A® 0®
i ft A^ft ^ sfo ^{^ttix^^
“^ • i#^ . ^^^ . -^^ W^^^Kl.t 3 /^t#-c^ 5^^^
1 i^^t^ft^M^^ L^T© ?W ft — t*^ #> 4> £ ^ Zejggt L/e^0iWXiXF»0titiS&^
0
1
a ift
©
^
IC
1®
w IC
1
i&‘ 3 a a fa
Ze
ft’ 0 £ M ft 0 - —•
Ze ai
IX
4 77 0 0 ^
0
ic
ft ip* A JJ
Hl
1ft tft 1ft s M
Rd i
Ze i Ze ft
a
ft ft X
®
^
J IX 6 £ b IX ft
£ K M £
0 0 0
0 IX
L
£
4) ® 5 14
3
IX
ft
M
ft
IX 9
4?
3
6
IX
ti
IC
0
5
<
IX
il
'i
Ze
% i^
n
0
0
5
^J
4 0
ip
IX IX
IC
% f
IX 4)
&
p
ip
Iwft
p
S
S ^ ± 3
3
IX Ze ^J
0 ip
'M'
IX
RO
z> z?* IX
IX
ft’
$ X
0
SB
Zp
^ tr o
if Ze
Ot
Sftz^z^-A'
^7
ft
0 IX M
^h
M # 0
#
“K^5Wtio^-tBb “f*-b0^f>cl^^ft^ I)
(X
6 It IX
3 IX' iff
IX
« K----- ffl R R li WM't Il-Ei 5
0
n
0
•Ht
mm
^-c
£
to
(X
a
Ze
ft]
0
IC
ic
T
IC
IX
(P
it
5
(X
#
n R
rtf M 4)
IC ft
£ K ^
(6
ii
0
■SU ip*
9
It
) iffl^tt
IX
mi
0
it ft
IC
IC
It
ix
ti?
R
M
ft'
ft 4)
3 IX
ft*
M
V t
a
0 Ze
IC
IX
^ iS
T
0’
^i^^!OT0 6-c^tfo £©Ze#£n£.4O(O<:fc0<T3^
WS#«0x*ft#iifi5jii|ig«a io»«S ? ter i>^>y> T <t
It J0WM>ltigXliHglci®^!i4r.
3
52/0
nx.
IX 0
3
’ c
o
0
a
,B
_j_
^
I
ic
I
x a
'C 3
b «’’ A 8 tt L # © t]t S fi W ©
WAatlilft^ b ^ftf SfflgI:*?^
I
SU M V
®«0«0SO«5ac '$
0
0
9
3
; # a
9
p?
0
Jt
JR
>
0
O')
5
n
0
o
J
p
0
7j
nn
IX
Ml
IX ^
It
§ 4)
H
1
3^
3
z. FT
SK
Ri
©
9
LX
° & ^ A ic
(D
i
f7
§
F?
H »
an
” 13
i- a
it
0
a
lt^® AK 0 t> ^
’ — Hal'
>
' Ai
1?
1^
It
71
1S
10
a
a
3
6
0
i
lit
i
45
&
®J fa
IC
0
1
?
$ ^ 5
can be obtained from your local
Medical Health Officer.
Jr
9
3
%
£
3
6 8
Hem. HaUkctr B. Dymond. M.D., G.M
V
A O
tt tt W® £
5
SO
H 5
6
X
IX
IX
IC
jc
WARIO DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH.PARLMMEHTBtilLDINGS,TORONTO, ONTARIO
G
Ze
Details on any of the above services
ONTARIO,
M G
a
IX
o
IC
F»
IX
5
$
3
6
10 F
Z^lNl^ANADIAtf
K>
n
i#ffS
A ®
o
n
0
6 #
i^i © t
ft it B z
ft
0
V
o
6
9
ft
L
a
IX
PD
IX so
(X
SO
L
O
fib
r"
5
0
IX
Fr
5 B
ft
ft]
G
t
h
P
f.
5
d
$ i
4>
3
o
ft
1'
tm
M
5
i
o
7?
*/
7
5
3
i
IX IC Zo
n
(X 1"
Is IX
Ze
o
ft
IX
7
~^J
ns
IX
X
h
BD
0
yt
HAI IX
IP
^Lj
ft
it
it
0
Ze
°n
^
t
3
.a
RO
o © -^ a
IX
OK® ' S i^B K1-gffi*
7 2®® AW® A fftt^U
|s^^»i;<twet * 4 G ix
HD
£
§I{
no
0
C
ft. ®
i:^l^i^
b g a fK 55
& ® 'w^
ft 1^ a &5 n zj ^ ^ # a 3 ^
9
I'
ip s
5
a
M
a o s'
i
3 ic
7 t
ft
an
fit
3
<
5
Ze op
0 ft’ IX
3
It
4$ i
b
Zj
B
A 0
0
0
i
0
^ Z
«
IC 0
IM
£
i
>
0
S
& IC R
®5
arc #5
Ai 3
0 Pn
A Ze
3 Ss
It
ft 0 ft
A <£>
5
Ze
1'
#F
ft
<1:
A
o
ft tt
’ ft
9 tc 0
3 L /e
IX #
0 3 *1? ®
#
u
11 /Er
^
t
ip 4 ft 5> eg
IL. H$. ft
IX
#
ft
«
m
a ft
0
It
w
0
a
41
XJc Ze
o
Zp
'Ms
APx/M^'IX
9 o
to
0 1± 1ft 3
v
ffl<'liWW0»^fflUTs. j t ftt----- JH ft P li 10 ^ « £
^OtOtt^LF^Hto
^to ^CTMl^’ ^^ k+h^^ n _^----- Hi#fHi%t’ 3 0 A® 0®
i ft A^ft ^ sfo ^{^ttix^^
“^ • i#^ . ^^^ . -^^ W^^^Kl.t 3 /^t#-c^ 5^^^
1 i^^t^ft^M^^ L^T© ?W ft — t*^ #> 4> £ ^ Zejggt L/e^0iWXiXF»0titiS&^
0
1
a ift
©
^
IC
1®
w IC
1
i&‘ 3 a a fa
Ze
ft’ 0 £ M ft 0 - —•
Ze ai
IX
4 77 0 0 ^
0
ic
ft ip* A JJ
Hl
1ft tft 1ft s M
Rd i
Ze i Ze ft
a
ft ft X
®
^
J IX 6 £ b IX ft
£ K M £
0 0 0
0 IX
L
£
4) ® 5 14
3
IX
ft
M
ft
IX 9
4?
3
6
IX
ti
IC
0
5
<
IX
il
'i
Ze
% i^
n
0
0
5
^J
4 0
ip
IX IX
IC
% f
IX 4)
&
p
ip
Iwft
p
S
S ^ ± 3
3
IX Ze ^J
0 ip
'M'
IX
RO
z> z?* IX
IX
ft’
$ X
0
SB
Zp
^ tr o
if Ze
Ot
Sftz^z^-A'
^7
ft
0 IX M
^h
M # 0
#
“K^5Wtio^-tBb “f*-b0^f>cl^^ft^ I)
(X
6 It IX
3 IX' iff
IX
« K----- ffl R R li WM't Il-Ei 5
0
n
0
•Ht
mm
^-c
£
to
(X
a
Ze
ft]
0
IC
ic
T
IC
IX
(P
it
5
(X
#
n R
rtf M 4)
IC ft
£ K ^
(6
ii
0
■SU ip*
9
It
) iffl^tt
IX
mi
0
it ft
IC
IC
It
ix
ti?
R
M
ft'
ft 4)
3 IX
ft*
M
V t
a
0 Ze
IC
IX
^ iS
T
0’
^i^^!OT0 6-c^tfo £©Ze#£n£.4O(O<:fc0<T3^
WS#«0x*ft#iifi5jii|ig«a io»«S ? ter i>^>y> T <t
It J0WM>ltigXliHglci®^!i4r.
3
52/0
nx.
IX 0
3
’ c
o
0
a
,B
_j_
^
I
ic
I
x a
'C 3
b «’’ A 8 tt L # © t]t S fi W ©
WAatlilft^ b ^ftf SfflgI:*?^
I
SU M V
®«0«0SO«5ac '$
0
0
9
3
; # a
9
p?
0
Jt
JR
>
0
O')
5
n
0
o
J
p
0
7j
nn
IX
Ml
IX ^
It
§ 4)
H
1
3^
3
z. FT
SK
Ri
©
9
LX
° & ^ A ic
(D
i
f7
§
F?
H »
an
” 13
i- a
it
0
a
lt^® AK 0 t> ^
’ — Hal'
>
' Ai
1?
1^
It
71
1S
10
a
a
3
6
0
i
lit
i
45
&
®J fa
IC
0
1
?
$ ^ 5
can be obtained from your local
Medical Health Officer.
Jr
9
3
%
£
3
6 8
Hem. HaUkctr B. Dymond. M.D., G.M
V
A O
tt tt W® £
5
SO
H 5
6
X
IX
IX
IC
jc
WARIO DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH.PARLMMEHTBtilLDINGS,TORONTO, ONTARIO
G
Ze
Details on any of the above services
ONTARIO,
M G
a
IX
o
IC
F»
IX
5
$
3
6
10 F
Page 6
’CHE NEW CANADIAN
0
6
Wednesday; July 20, ig80
II
i
fi
li
Mt
/hb
IC
It
11
6
IX
IX 3
IX
ft
0
0
II
m
0
I'
72
3
It
R
M e
3
?
£ n
uZ
n IX a
3
|fj
IX 0
^
n
ex
0
5
0
T
5
5
b
b
5
n
H
IX
0
3
IX
0
®C
31
E
It
3
IX
0
#
0
R
Phone: EM. 6-5005
5 31$
5
n
i
n
o
7
5
IX
to
n
t
0
Ht ^
i
KU
IX
0
3
A
IX
^W AS
IX
x
' 0
IX
1 nil
I1
ill
479 Queen St. W„
Toronto 2-B Ont.
R
0
3
0
li A
Thfl New Ccmodian
i
IX
i ®
0 It 0
n
T
II
3
1$
9
11
Jj
i-
*
o
R
i
3
R
y
b
By
Mt
0
5
IX
IX
IX
Jig
B «
5
t
IX
9
IX
3 n 9
n IX
IX' ~c
f
"F MV
IX
&$
IX
^■r
bf T g^ lZ H ^O
IX
3
9
IX
IX
9
^ #
IX
IX IX
t
6
IX
m
ax
w
IX
IX n
n IX
9
$
9
9
9
^
b"
IX
T?
n
IX
IS
R
7
IX
w
IX
R
R IX
#
R
00
1
0
I'
R
R
IB
9
12
IX
R
L
R
tn is
5
y
IX 3 V’
$ ^
R
IX
7
'9
IS
Ab
3
3
4
^
£
IX
IX
£
IX
4
IX
0
b
IX
E
IX
3
x*
IX
5
I"
t
IX 0
72
IX
6
6
B
0
R
A’
4
IX
/n
fr*
i
rtf
IX
3
lx*
w
IX
72
5
i’
6
#>
L
U
IX
IX
n
R
IX
i^
6$ 5
t © i ^ ft ?x + & ^
7
R
^5
3W
HO
WT IIO
R
Jfil 0 i Mt Il f ©
10 I IS
9 #
IX ^ X
Jt ^ ft
o ^
IX
j
6
IX
IX
0
L
7
IX
n
R
®
IX
fi
0
6
Wednesday; July 20, ig80
II
i
fi
li
Mt
/hb
IC
It
11
6
IX
IX 3
IX
ft
0
0
II
m
0
I'
72
3
It
R
M e
3
?
£ n
uZ
n IX a
3
|fj
IX 0
^
n
ex
0
5
0
T
5
5
b
b
5
n
H
IX
0
3
IX
0
®C
31
E
It
3
IX
0
#
0
R
Phone: EM. 6-5005
5 31$
5
n
i
n
o
7
5
IX
to
n
t
0
Ht ^
i
KU
IX
0
3
A
IX
^W AS
IX
x
' 0
IX
1 nil
I1
ill
479 Queen St. W„
Toronto 2-B Ont.
R
0
3
0
li A
Thfl New Ccmodian
i
IX
i ®
0 It 0
n
T
II
3
1$
9
11
Jj
i-
*
o
R
i
3
R
y
b
By
Mt
0
5
IX
IX
IX
Jig
B «
5
t
IX
9
IX
3 n 9
n IX
IX' ~c
f
"F MV
IX
&$
IX
^■r
bf T g^ lZ H ^O
IX
3
9
IX
IX
9
^ #
IX
IX IX
t
6
IX
m
ax
w
IX
IX n
n IX
9
$
9
9
9
^
b"
IX
T?
n
IX
IS
R
7
IX
w
IX
R
R IX
#
R
00
1
0
I'
R
R
IB
9
12
IX
R
L
R
tn is
5
y
IX 3 V’
$ ^
R
IX
7
'9
IS
Ab
3
3
4
^
£
IX
IX
£
IX
4
IX
0
b
IX
E
IX
3
x*
IX
5
I"
t
IX 0
72
IX
6
6
B
0
R
A’
4
IX
/n
fr*
i
rtf
IX
3
lx*
w
IX
72
5
i’
6
#>
L
U
IX
IX
n
R
IX
i^
6$ 5
t © i ^ ft ?x + & ^
7
R
^5
3W
HO
WT IIO
R
Jfil 0 i Mt Il f ©
10 I IS
9 #
IX ^ X
Jt ^ ft
o ^
IX
j
6
IX
IX
0
L
7
IX
n
R
®
IX
fi
Page 7
Consulate Here Will
spoors
Mixed Crowd Enjoys Buddhist Church Bon Odori
Present Award Movie
Sue Iwasaki Caphires Earlscourt Singles A Title,
A special presentation of Japr
nese educational films is bein
planned by the. Consulate of Ju
pan in Toronto to be shown at
the Imernation
Institute of
By FUZ FUJIWARA
title by outlasting June Nobuoka Metronol in Toronto
on Wednesc^
Lirtie Sue Iwasaki annexed her jn/?ay okaz^lci in the ladle’s
doubles
final
ably
assisted
bv
her
second single’s title last Sunday partner Amy Iwasaki/
by defeating Chic Yanagizawa in
Fleet-footed Eri Matoba over
the Earlscourt club finals, and
powered
featherduster Hedv Ihe btory of Little Tartian (Oneilarer in the evening won her third Sakai to little
win the ladie’s B crown, । ban to Issho) Black & White 52
and, if Eri practices hard with A min. (Vinner of Grand Prize,
players, she definitely has the Children's Film Category, Venice
best possibility of turning into International Film Festival, 1957)
another : superstar like "
-This film quietly tells the story
Ebata, as she has the photon
of a little boy and what happens
ability and natural strokes of a to him every day, how he fights
born athlete. She, however, lacks with his brother and sister, how
the desire to improve as Kay attached he is to his grandmother*
Takasaki or Sue Iwasaki have.
who comes for a -visit, how he
In the men s A. and B single’s gets lost, and how he is found
PEMBROOKE, Ont.—Dropping finals next Sunday, are Ed Tsu again.
yearling speckled trout 200 feet jimoto vs Aki Koyanagi, and Hel Schools in Japan—Color 20 mins.
into the water from Ontario mut Schmid vs Arne Mortensen
A day in the life of Japanese
Lands and Forests Dept. Beaver And in the B flight men and school children. both in their
ladies
’
doubles
finals
are
Pete formal study in class and their
aircraft, travelling at 90 mph in
Nakatsu-Lefty
Sasaki
vs
±Veu
test drops here has indicated: 1.
recreational play outside. Ex
Kanda-Frank
Walden,
and
Ruth
that aerial planting of fish does
pression
given to the children’s
GarrierrAgnes
Shimono
v
Marv hopes foris their
not result in high mortality, 2.
careers. Includes
Ann
Murakami-May
Edamura.
that the technique is obviously
institutions
of
higher learning
expedient and accurate and 3. that The men s A doubles are still in and specialized training which
the rate of descent and. the sur the semi-final stage with George these children may eventually
face impact are not the hazards Shitami-Vic Lum winning a three attend.
once feared.
■ setter over Arne Mortensen-Bru
no Kuhlmann, and Stan Nishimu
Tests of what is a normal ra-Joe Leibet in two sets over Maki Sisters—color, 27 mins.
This film depicts the daily life
’‘drop ■ as carried out in many Soc Shintani-Kiyo Fujiwara.
of two working girls in Japan.
parts of the province by the De
partment were made at Wylie
(Loon) Lake in Wylie Twp. in
southeastern Ontario as" a co- operative project arranged by the
Department with the Upper Ot
Fun galore and prizes too
tawa Valley Conservation Club
Will be the treat in store for you,
and the Deep River Skin Divers
Locals, visitors young and old
mixed crowd of curious Oc- pa pens.—Tosh AI inamide photo.
Club which provided ten skin
Will love the sounds plus rock and roll,
cidentals
and Japanese Canadians
divers.
You, too, will love the sweet success
numbering approximately 2,000
An accurate drop of 100 fish
Of meeting, greeting friends and guests,
watched over 100 performers in
From eight until the witching hour
^vo lows of boats en
Toronto Buddhist Church’s annual
abled divers, some of them under
The Settlement House is the Eiffel Tower,
Obon Odori at Christie Pits
vater at the time, to work over
The doors before nine is fifty cents
Saturday night. Pictured is dance
the drop area immediately from Thereafter one dollar for ladies and gents,
instructress Suzuyo Yoshikawa on
the bottom up and make brief
- Club 7-11 is our name
stage with Dobie Suyama and
reports for about half an hour. A
Locally we have considerable fame,
July
Ami Yonekura. The event receiv
second drop, similarly successful,
So do come down and please enjoy
ed wide pictorial coverage in local
was made 200 yards away so as
20—Toronto. Puppet show lor aduiia and
The season’s last dance we do employ.
children at lnt'1 Insliluio. 8 p.m. 50c
to check previous findings.
adults, 25 kiddies.
—U. S. H.
In an interesting report on the
22—^-Toronto. Club 7-11’s final danco of
the season, fiard-times dance. Every
District Forester
one welcome. .. .
Richard C. Passmore states:
23*24—Kolowna. Bunsei Sunday School
.
- Check with Officials
Although the behaviour or tv
Teachers' Training Session.
evident that the maKELOWNA, B.C.—The Kelow- 27—
Toronto. Toronto Japanese Consulate
,.ri n°f
^lsh recover prompt- these fish is obviously abnormal, t ISulllg’ With All 11110 WS
na Young Buddhist Association
presents
award-winning
Japanese
. after hitting the water, and they . tried to swim away when
. Before you take minnows to will hold its annual Regatta
movie and two shorts, lnt'1 Institute,
swim away at random depths A approached by the divers. At the your favorite fishing spot this Dance on Saturday, August 13th
8 p.m. Frac admission.
29-Aug. 1—Toronto. (Cleveland): Tennis
Jonty of the fish seemed to end of the first period of obser summer, check with the Ontario beginning 10:00 P.M. until
1:0()
players to Cleveland for annual tour
sutler a more severe shock and vations,, it was decided to collect Department of Lands and A.M.
nament.
Kiam erratically above five feet all of these fish, but at this stage Forests, In many lakes and
below the surface or lav on their none could be found. This same streams, fishing with live min
Music will be live during the
fact was verified after the second nows dr having live minnows in earlier part of the evening folKelowna. K.Y.B.A. Regatta Dance.
drop when all the fish recovered possession for taking or attempt lowed by records. Everyone is cor- 13—
10-1 a.m., entertainment live and
dially
invited
to
attend.
after 15 or 20 minutes.
records.
ing to take fish has been pro
“Since the depth of water in hibited this year.
the. drop areas only varied from
The move has been brought
eight to 15 feet, there was no about in an effort to stop the
thermocline factor to be consider planting—either by intent or ac
CLUB REC SOCRATIC
ed. Deeper water was close to the cident—of minnows which would
Male Help Wanted
drop area, however, with a slight be detrimental to the fish in the
ly lower temperature at the bot lakes or streams.
JSe
D Presser for dry cleaner's
tom. The water temperature in
(^rontoi dy VOrk‘ Phone LE. 6-6141
the drop area was 70° F. at all
depths. This rather warm water
no
doubt constituted somewhat
SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1960
Female Help Wanted
of a shock to the fish which had
sS?1^??. sergers’ for m"erro^'~a"nd just. left the 48 degree water at
Shadow Lake near Musselman's Lake
?V*q nf-a?-lne‘ Good wages. Phone the hatchery.”
Eri Matoba Takes B Crown; Men's Finals Sunday
Effects Hi! to Fish
When Dropped at 90 mph
For Re-stocking Lakes
Hard-times Dance, Friday, July 22nd '
CALENDAR
Kelowna YBA 'Regatta'
CLASSIFIED
SUMMER SOCIAL
Map to. Follow
s-ljiz (ioronto).
YWatch
onemitsu PRINTING
Repair Shop
Swimming — Dancing— Games — Prizes
OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS
^^ietinctuj& ('Wedding dJnvitationi
’S P363L" Res: LE- 2-7445:
Broadview Ave., Toronto
1384^ Queen W.
Toronto
LE. 2-6378 ;
it is a good policy to
, have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult
Himnowo dwitiuL^
€27- BAY STREET. TORONTO
•
EM. 8-’97«8
Rc^ 2O1K BEVERLEY-STREET • EM. 3 - 5081
.
464 Yongs Street, Toronto
Phons WA. 1-3171
In Metro Toronto
TOSH IWAI
1779-A DANFORTH AVE., TORONTO
5
PHONE
HO1 9.055i
Lucien C. Kurata
BAKEI5TKR and SOLICITOR
NOTABY PUBLIC
Suite 513 Temple Building
€2 RICHMOND ST. WEST
TORONTO
EM. 6-3323
Res.: RO. 7-3427
OFFICE
EM. 4-1334
EM. 4-1395
Registered Real Estate Broker '
(two blocks East of Coxwell)
;
vr/idux.j and
ana DUNCAN
vunL,APl :,
; WALES
INSURANCE AGENTS:
For Complete Real Estate Service
ESIDENCE
50 cents Per Person
RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
HUdson 5-1365
A. E. McKaque, Q.C
See SUS NAGAI
Phone WA. 4-8427
432 Parliament Street
TORONTO
H. S. TSURUDA
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBUC
(Japanese Canadian. Agent)
35 Rowntree Ave., TORONTO
RO. B-M78
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO
spoors
Mixed Crowd Enjoys Buddhist Church Bon Odori
Present Award Movie
Sue Iwasaki Caphires Earlscourt Singles A Title,
A special presentation of Japr
nese educational films is bein
planned by the. Consulate of Ju
pan in Toronto to be shown at
the Imernation
Institute of
By FUZ FUJIWARA
title by outlasting June Nobuoka Metronol in Toronto
on Wednesc^
Lirtie Sue Iwasaki annexed her jn/?ay okaz^lci in the ladle’s
doubles
final
ably
assisted
bv
her
second single’s title last Sunday partner Amy Iwasaki/
by defeating Chic Yanagizawa in
Fleet-footed Eri Matoba over
the Earlscourt club finals, and
powered
featherduster Hedv Ihe btory of Little Tartian (Oneilarer in the evening won her third Sakai to little
win the ladie’s B crown, । ban to Issho) Black & White 52
and, if Eri practices hard with A min. (Vinner of Grand Prize,
players, she definitely has the Children's Film Category, Venice
best possibility of turning into International Film Festival, 1957)
another : superstar like "
-This film quietly tells the story
Ebata, as she has the photon
of a little boy and what happens
ability and natural strokes of a to him every day, how he fights
born athlete. She, however, lacks with his brother and sister, how
the desire to improve as Kay attached he is to his grandmother*
Takasaki or Sue Iwasaki have.
who comes for a -visit, how he
In the men s A. and B single’s gets lost, and how he is found
PEMBROOKE, Ont.—Dropping finals next Sunday, are Ed Tsu again.
yearling speckled trout 200 feet jimoto vs Aki Koyanagi, and Hel Schools in Japan—Color 20 mins.
into the water from Ontario mut Schmid vs Arne Mortensen
A day in the life of Japanese
Lands and Forests Dept. Beaver And in the B flight men and school children. both in their
ladies
’
doubles
finals
are
Pete formal study in class and their
aircraft, travelling at 90 mph in
Nakatsu-Lefty
Sasaki
vs
±Veu
test drops here has indicated: 1.
recreational play outside. Ex
Kanda-Frank
Walden,
and
Ruth
that aerial planting of fish does
pression
given to the children’s
GarrierrAgnes
Shimono
v
Marv hopes foris their
not result in high mortality, 2.
careers. Includes
Ann
Murakami-May
Edamura.
that the technique is obviously
institutions
of
higher learning
expedient and accurate and 3. that The men s A doubles are still in and specialized training which
the rate of descent and. the sur the semi-final stage with George these children may eventually
face impact are not the hazards Shitami-Vic Lum winning a three attend.
once feared.
■ setter over Arne Mortensen-Bru
no Kuhlmann, and Stan Nishimu
Tests of what is a normal ra-Joe Leibet in two sets over Maki Sisters—color, 27 mins.
This film depicts the daily life
’‘drop ■ as carried out in many Soc Shintani-Kiyo Fujiwara.
of two working girls in Japan.
parts of the province by the De
partment were made at Wylie
(Loon) Lake in Wylie Twp. in
southeastern Ontario as" a co- operative project arranged by the
Department with the Upper Ot
Fun galore and prizes too
tawa Valley Conservation Club
Will be the treat in store for you,
and the Deep River Skin Divers
Locals, visitors young and old
mixed crowd of curious Oc- pa pens.—Tosh AI inamide photo.
Club which provided ten skin
Will love the sounds plus rock and roll,
cidentals
and Japanese Canadians
divers.
You, too, will love the sweet success
numbering approximately 2,000
An accurate drop of 100 fish
Of meeting, greeting friends and guests,
watched over 100 performers in
From eight until the witching hour
^vo lows of boats en
Toronto Buddhist Church’s annual
abled divers, some of them under
The Settlement House is the Eiffel Tower,
Obon Odori at Christie Pits
vater at the time, to work over
The doors before nine is fifty cents
Saturday night. Pictured is dance
the drop area immediately from Thereafter one dollar for ladies and gents,
instructress Suzuyo Yoshikawa on
the bottom up and make brief
- Club 7-11 is our name
stage with Dobie Suyama and
reports for about half an hour. A
Locally we have considerable fame,
July
Ami Yonekura. The event receiv
second drop, similarly successful,
So do come down and please enjoy
ed wide pictorial coverage in local
was made 200 yards away so as
20—Toronto. Puppet show lor aduiia and
The season’s last dance we do employ.
children at lnt'1 Insliluio. 8 p.m. 50c
to check previous findings.
adults, 25 kiddies.
—U. S. H.
In an interesting report on the
22—^-Toronto. Club 7-11’s final danco of
the season, fiard-times dance. Every
District Forester
one welcome. .. .
Richard C. Passmore states:
23*24—Kolowna. Bunsei Sunday School
.
- Check with Officials
Although the behaviour or tv
Teachers' Training Session.
evident that the maKELOWNA, B.C.—The Kelow- 27—
Toronto. Toronto Japanese Consulate
,.ri n°f
^lsh recover prompt- these fish is obviously abnormal, t ISulllg’ With All 11110 WS
na Young Buddhist Association
presents
award-winning
Japanese
. after hitting the water, and they . tried to swim away when
. Before you take minnows to will hold its annual Regatta
movie and two shorts, lnt'1 Institute,
swim away at random depths A approached by the divers. At the your favorite fishing spot this Dance on Saturday, August 13th
8 p.m. Frac admission.
29-Aug. 1—Toronto. (Cleveland): Tennis
Jonty of the fish seemed to end of the first period of obser summer, check with the Ontario beginning 10:00 P.M. until
1:0()
players to Cleveland for annual tour
sutler a more severe shock and vations,, it was decided to collect Department of Lands and A.M.
nament.
Kiam erratically above five feet all of these fish, but at this stage Forests, In many lakes and
below the surface or lav on their none could be found. This same streams, fishing with live min
Music will be live during the
fact was verified after the second nows dr having live minnows in earlier part of the evening folKelowna. K.Y.B.A. Regatta Dance.
drop when all the fish recovered possession for taking or attempt lowed by records. Everyone is cor- 13—
10-1 a.m., entertainment live and
dially
invited
to
attend.
after 15 or 20 minutes.
records.
ing to take fish has been pro
“Since the depth of water in hibited this year.
the. drop areas only varied from
The move has been brought
eight to 15 feet, there was no about in an effort to stop the
thermocline factor to be consider planting—either by intent or ac
CLUB REC SOCRATIC
ed. Deeper water was close to the cident—of minnows which would
Male Help Wanted
drop area, however, with a slight be detrimental to the fish in the
ly lower temperature at the bot lakes or streams.
JSe
D Presser for dry cleaner's
tom. The water temperature in
(^rontoi dy VOrk‘ Phone LE. 6-6141
the drop area was 70° F. at all
depths. This rather warm water
no
doubt constituted somewhat
SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1960
Female Help Wanted
of a shock to the fish which had
sS?1^??. sergers’ for m"erro^'~a"nd just. left the 48 degree water at
Shadow Lake near Musselman's Lake
?V*q nf-a?-lne‘ Good wages. Phone the hatchery.”
Eri Matoba Takes B Crown; Men's Finals Sunday
Effects Hi! to Fish
When Dropped at 90 mph
For Re-stocking Lakes
Hard-times Dance, Friday, July 22nd '
CALENDAR
Kelowna YBA 'Regatta'
CLASSIFIED
SUMMER SOCIAL
Map to. Follow
s-ljiz (ioronto).
YWatch
onemitsu PRINTING
Repair Shop
Swimming — Dancing— Games — Prizes
OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS
^^ietinctuj& ('Wedding dJnvitationi
’S P363L" Res: LE- 2-7445:
Broadview Ave., Toronto
1384^ Queen W.
Toronto
LE. 2-6378 ;
it is a good policy to
, have the RIGHT POLICY
Consult
Himnowo dwitiuL^
€27- BAY STREET. TORONTO
•
EM. 8-’97«8
Rc^ 2O1K BEVERLEY-STREET • EM. 3 - 5081
.
464 Yongs Street, Toronto
Phons WA. 1-3171
In Metro Toronto
TOSH IWAI
1779-A DANFORTH AVE., TORONTO
5
PHONE
HO1 9.055i
Lucien C. Kurata
BAKEI5TKR and SOLICITOR
NOTABY PUBLIC
Suite 513 Temple Building
€2 RICHMOND ST. WEST
TORONTO
EM. 6-3323
Res.: RO. 7-3427
OFFICE
EM. 4-1334
EM. 4-1395
Registered Real Estate Broker '
(two blocks East of Coxwell)
;
vr/idux.j and
ana DUNCAN
vunL,APl :,
; WALES
INSURANCE AGENTS:
For Complete Real Estate Service
ESIDENCE
50 cents Per Person
RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
HUdson 5-1365
A. E. McKaque, Q.C
See SUS NAGAI
Phone WA. 4-8427
432 Parliament Street
TORONTO
H. S. TSURUDA
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBUC
(Japanese Canadian. Agent)
35 Rowntree Ave., TORONTO
RO. B-M78
1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO
Page 8
PAGE 8
THE NEW CANADIAN
Wednesday, July 20.
First Roots of Japan’s Ancient Crilttire and Tradition
THE NEW CANADIAN
Japan’s own mythological tra- racsiic sources are not hard to
work of this sort too i
dition long ago assigned a spec imagine. . .
now just begin
tacular origin to the Japanese
With race comes culture, but
In
prewar
Japanese
Published on 'Wednesday and Saturday of each week
nation and to its culture: the gods though it would be most satisfac archaeologists devoted the major
descend from heaven long enough tory- to be able to go through part of their energy and skill to
as a medium of expression and news outlet
to create the islands and the po specimens of Japan’s prehistoric thei
nown
on
among those of Japanese origin, in Canada
pulation inhabiting them and earthenware, and neatly identify Asiatic continent and in Korea.
equip these fortunates with the the origins of each feature, the This was partly .because these
T. UMEZUKI, Publisher
elementary tools of civilization. specialized study of such early great, largely untouched treasureKEN MORI------- - --- Japanese Section Editor & Advertising
Such legends of divine origin tell wares is not nearly advanced houses of archaeology were then
JERRY KUTSUKAKE-------------------- E^slish section Editor
little or nothing about the origin enough to permit this sort of as now irresistible to any scholar
of any particular phase of the Ja comparative discussion.
EM. 6-5005
479 QUEEN ST. W., TORONTO 2-B, ONTARIO
fortunate enough to be in a posi
panese culture, such as for exam _ Probably most to blame for this tion to dig there, but also because
Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa
ple ceramic art, but modern scien situation is recent Japanese his- in th days of supernationalism
tific study of early culture has torv
th sense that prew
only problems in th prehistory
thus far advanced so little that in supernationalism with its insis of foreign countries
could be
most cases what the archeologist fence upon a literal interpreta studied with anything like
scho ■Flower Drum Song’ to Have Movie Version
and anthropologist can tell
tion of mythology made it vir- larly detachment from .political
can hardly be considered much of tually impossible for modern considerations. For the prehistory
By LARRY TAJIRI
an improvement.
archaelogical and anthr
of her neighbors, even militaristic
The little that is clear can be scientists to operate. . .
other performers of Oriental descent, can thark
Japan set down no ideological
summed up briefly. The islands
extent the nature flats. so that in these areas at Richard Hoagers and Oscar Hammerstein for their main ch®
were settled relatively late in the of the materi als themselves is
the scholar was free to on Broadway. Other productions, notably "Teahouse of the
scale of Far Eastern history, and also to blame, The dating and
on his investigations.— ivloon.- have used large .numbers of Orientals, but Rodger &
probably in several successive typology of
From "Japanese Ceramics,” b.v merstein were the first to entrust the leads in one of^roadwwaves, of invasion and immigra can be carried out successfully
top musicals to ^performers of Japanese and other Asian descent
tion. The resulting racial stock only when carefully controlled Roy’ Andrew Miller. Copvright in J^? succ®ss of Pat Suzuki, Miyoshi Umeki and later, Jack Soo in
1960, b.v Toto Shuppan
betrays its heterogeneous’origins excavations are possible, and Japan,
Flower Drum Song” proved to Broadway that Japanese
Company,
Limited. Charles E.
encans
to this day, and the almost in only when precise strata evidence
could
carry a big show.
-Means
Tuttle
Company,
Rutland,
Vt.,
and
finite variety of facial and body can be brought into consideration. Tokyo, Japan.
Drum-Song’’ was sold to Universal-International the
types to be observed in any car
m
v.er210a t0 ke made by Producer Ross Hunter
of a crowded Tokyo subway train
I 1* Portrait.in Black”). After enjoying “Flower Drum
is more ■ than sufficient evidence
(Continued from ?age One) * Song - at_the Philharmonic in Los Angeles, where, the show is nhv.
that the chief ethnic ingredients
ing °h tour. Hunter announced he. would make the picture for Christ
in the Japanese race derive from
mas,
.£961 release with an all-Oriental cast.
Chosen Soren, the North Ko live. The initial repariation fervor
continental ethnic structure, so
If
Hunter goes ahead with his present plans (U-T paid
mil
^i^ !" this case to. say "continen rean residents association, claims is wearing off. North Korean pro bon for screen rights to "Flower Drum Song”) his project
d
paganda has slackened. Some let- involve the largest group of Oriental American play?ers in Holl tal’ is to imply very much, but eventually 120,000 wilt go.
But a slight trend away from ters of disillusionment and disto say rather little.
wood history.
1 u •
Other important, if numeric the journey into Communism satisfaction have been received o .Tharks to the Oriental .trend on Broadwav (“The World
ally less striking, infusions of seems to be developing. The Ja by friends in Japan.
“A Majori^
°*e”> as -ell as ill
The reports say the repatriates
race must also have come from pan Red Cross reports that 1800
,
there
are
now
more
professionally
qualified performers of Ja
have
now
changed
their
minds.
were first- put into fine apart panese and Chinese descent than ever before.
the islands to the south and from
C^
1
?
1
'
sources
report
a
certain
ments in Pyongyang, the North
elsewhere in the nearby Pacific
William Goetz Is producing George Campbell’s novel. “Crv for
areas. The seafaring abilities of ‘'hesitation*'' forming among Ko Korean capital, and other cities.
reans
still
in
Japan.
Happy,
' at Columbia studios in Hollywood. This comedv of occupa
Gradually rhey were. moved to in
the earlier Pacific island popula
tion
Japan
concerns U.S. navy men who take over a geisha hX
South
Korea
now
has
a
more
ferior housing in rural areas,
tions are now well recognized, and
many different immigrations to democratic goverment, and life where they went to ’ work on ln,T°k?° aiid stars Glenn Ford and Donald O’Connor. All the Usha
io es have been cast by Goetz with actresses of Japanese ancestry.
the Japanese islands from diverse there may become more attrac- farms and mines.
Salaries’ average 60 Avon or $25 Only one (Miyoshi Umeki) was born in. Japan but all have worn
monthly for nonskilled laborers-. i^*0110^011 s^Fe and screen. Miiko Taka, of course, plaved the
High wages are SO won and ex dancer, Hana-Ogi, opposite Marlon Brando in' "Savonara.” Tsuruko
(continued from page one)
fl’°m her B1’oadway role in "A Major
tremely high wages up to 150 it^cf
ity
of
One.
Miss
^Kobayashi,
to writer Marvin Fineber^
legedly twice promising to do so. soon as Washington accepts his won, or $62. Work is divided into has never been, in Japan. She ismarried
a
native
of Hawaii.
The attack and the sympathy bona Tides as basically loyal to three eight-hour shifts, but reUchi
Kobi
js
one
of
the
latest
additions
to the “Crv for Happv”
it may engender for Mr. Kishi the American alliance,' he 'is ex patriates have had to attend in
natl
7
e
°
f
San
Brancisco,
made her New York
may help to assuage bitter feel pected to press this viewpoint doctrination classes, in their spare
drama
’
“
Wedding
in
Japan,
” and has been
ings left among members of this with far more energy than did time and "volunteer” additional
t
le
flll
?
S
’
S
e
1
1
'
“
^
recent
movie
roles
were
the femme
working
hours.
faction, who are mostly party his predecessor.
X J “io J R°UiTS Xy° ^ter Dark” and Columbia’s current
A
North
Korean
pamphlet
on
hacks angered by the choice
Meanwhile, in early newspaper
+ 4ut0 the Moon., She also appears in Allied Artists’ drama,
posts which former career bu comments on Mr. Ikeda’s victory, the repatriates just received in
in which Miss Taka portrays the role of a Nisei
Japan
still
depicts
a
life
of
smil
reaucrats have been given, des Mainiehi said that Mr. Ikeda ha'd
°
drama of Guy Gabaldon, the Marine hero.
ing
workers,
recreation,
compite their late entry into political shown forbearance during attacks
-e male -ads in “Cry for Happy” is being plaved bv
fort and happiness.
on him by party politicians in the
king eta as a Nisei navy man whose difficultv, when he is
South. Korea, moves to better
But Air. Ikeda now faces the preconvention
period and that the livelihood of Korean residents n
aiS an, ^rPreter, is that he cannot speak Japanese.
difficult process of allocating this may indicate evolution away’
■ ®. chaiactei Pla>ed by Shigeta is named: George Washington SuCabinet and party jobs in a way’ from the high-handed bureaucrat, |n.Jqpan and persuade them from ZUK1,
v
"
pleasing to all factions, yet en of the 1 oshida Cabinet days when joining the mass migrations to
Communist North Korea were an
abling him to carry out his own
*
$
n?i
erVed
as
^
‘
nister
of
Finance.
nounced
July 9 by Ea Chai-hang,
fairly detailed policies.
1 hough he is certain to come Korean minister in Tokyo.
°f Buzie Wong” was a cliche-ridden drama of an
envisage
under' renewed criticism by traatiaT when'we saw it on Broadway nearly two
pan firmly committed'’ to the ditionallyT antigovernment news Ue said the goverment of care
American alliance and
^v»s never much of a favorite with the
do- papers in the days ahead, he is taker South Korean premier Huh
n
hOU
S
the
pub
.
hc
seemed
to like it wherever it played. It
Chung"
has
decided
in
principle
to
mestic
program
. . _ .
aimed at in respected for being a man of in1 loadvay, a triumph of an exotic -production over a bad
a
five-million-dollar
creasing social welfare benefits. S^Djsnclont views who does not establish
Mr.. Ikeda’s attachment to Ja hesitate to voice them even when Ioan.fund in Japan.and to pour a
of particular interest in the stage’s "Suzie Wong” is
pans Western alignment is a mat it’s politically unwise. There is considerable sum into a projected
ter of record, and for this rea reputedly a strong streak of stub welfare fund for destitute Kore n J™e/ead ^^e h?s been played since last fall, on Broadway and
son his Victory will nrobablv be bornness and nonconformism in ans in Japan..
5 a !
^ir narnedUeri Aliyazaki who was born in a war
L
\e
On
cen
^e
on
the Pacific coast ,thus making her not more
welcomed in Washington.
his makeup unusual in i career
n?
rs
°f
age
'
;
41thou"h "Suzie Wong” has been -panned. Miss
But he is also known to hold bureaucrat.
As one man
charmed the critics, including-those in San Francisco
that eventually Japan must come street said of him "Well, on the man with quite a bit of self-con
fidence to make a statement like which is Suzie’s most recent port of call.
to some kind of accommodation he told the poor to eat
that. He may make a good
„
barlev.
The movie will be beckoning next to Miss Miyazaki.
with Communist China and as But after ;•
Ml you’ve, got to be 'a premier.”
—Pacific Citizen
Korean Migrants
Ikeda
Until SATURDAY, JULY 30th
Mid-Summer Sale
TABLEWARES: Dinner
take) — Fancy*
HOUSEHOLD ORNAMENTS: Japanese Scrolls and
Framed Pictures—-Folding Screens (Byobu)—Table
^^p?2 Flower Vases——Statuettes—Wall Plagues
Qi All Materials, and Designs—Iron or Stone Orna-
Glasses—Complete Li:
nese Cuisine (Nihonst
SUNDRIES: Jew
viewer
s and Accessories
Paramount Gift Shop
H^ASf ojt^^^j;
TELEPHONE HO. 3-7831
733 Danforth Avenue, Toronto
STORE OPEN 9 A.M. TO 9 PM
THE NEW CANADIAN
Wednesday, July 20.
First Roots of Japan’s Ancient Crilttire and Tradition
THE NEW CANADIAN
Japan’s own mythological tra- racsiic sources are not hard to
work of this sort too i
dition long ago assigned a spec imagine. . .
now just begin
tacular origin to the Japanese
With race comes culture, but
In
prewar
Japanese
Published on 'Wednesday and Saturday of each week
nation and to its culture: the gods though it would be most satisfac archaeologists devoted the major
descend from heaven long enough tory- to be able to go through part of their energy and skill to
as a medium of expression and news outlet
to create the islands and the po specimens of Japan’s prehistoric thei
nown
on
among those of Japanese origin, in Canada
pulation inhabiting them and earthenware, and neatly identify Asiatic continent and in Korea.
equip these fortunates with the the origins of each feature, the This was partly .because these
T. UMEZUKI, Publisher
elementary tools of civilization. specialized study of such early great, largely untouched treasureKEN MORI------- - --- Japanese Section Editor & Advertising
Such legends of divine origin tell wares is not nearly advanced houses of archaeology were then
JERRY KUTSUKAKE-------------------- E^slish section Editor
little or nothing about the origin enough to permit this sort of as now irresistible to any scholar
of any particular phase of the Ja comparative discussion.
EM. 6-5005
479 QUEEN ST. W., TORONTO 2-B, ONTARIO
fortunate enough to be in a posi
panese culture, such as for exam _ Probably most to blame for this tion to dig there, but also because
Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa
ple ceramic art, but modern scien situation is recent Japanese his- in th days of supernationalism
tific study of early culture has torv
th sense that prew
only problems in th prehistory
thus far advanced so little that in supernationalism with its insis of foreign countries
could be
most cases what the archeologist fence upon a literal interpreta studied with anything like
scho ■Flower Drum Song’ to Have Movie Version
and anthropologist can tell
tion of mythology made it vir- larly detachment from .political
can hardly be considered much of tually impossible for modern considerations. For the prehistory
By LARRY TAJIRI
an improvement.
archaelogical and anthr
of her neighbors, even militaristic
The little that is clear can be scientists to operate. . .
other performers of Oriental descent, can thark
Japan set down no ideological
summed up briefly. The islands
extent the nature flats. so that in these areas at Richard Hoagers and Oscar Hammerstein for their main ch®
were settled relatively late in the of the materi als themselves is
the scholar was free to on Broadway. Other productions, notably "Teahouse of the
scale of Far Eastern history, and also to blame, The dating and
on his investigations.— ivloon.- have used large .numbers of Orientals, but Rodger &
probably in several successive typology of
From "Japanese Ceramics,” b.v merstein were the first to entrust the leads in one of^roadwwaves, of invasion and immigra can be carried out successfully
top musicals to ^performers of Japanese and other Asian descent
tion. The resulting racial stock only when carefully controlled Roy’ Andrew Miller. Copvright in J^? succ®ss of Pat Suzuki, Miyoshi Umeki and later, Jack Soo in
1960, b.v Toto Shuppan
betrays its heterogeneous’origins excavations are possible, and Japan,
Flower Drum Song” proved to Broadway that Japanese
Company,
Limited. Charles E.
encans
to this day, and the almost in only when precise strata evidence
could
carry a big show.
-Means
Tuttle
Company,
Rutland,
Vt.,
and
finite variety of facial and body can be brought into consideration. Tokyo, Japan.
Drum-Song’’ was sold to Universal-International the
types to be observed in any car
m
v.er210a t0 ke made by Producer Ross Hunter
of a crowded Tokyo subway train
I 1* Portrait.in Black”). After enjoying “Flower Drum
is more ■ than sufficient evidence
(Continued from ?age One) * Song - at_the Philharmonic in Los Angeles, where, the show is nhv.
that the chief ethnic ingredients
ing °h tour. Hunter announced he. would make the picture for Christ
in the Japanese race derive from
mas,
.£961 release with an all-Oriental cast.
Chosen Soren, the North Ko live. The initial repariation fervor
continental ethnic structure, so
If
Hunter goes ahead with his present plans (U-T paid
mil
^i^ !" this case to. say "continen rean residents association, claims is wearing off. North Korean pro bon for screen rights to "Flower Drum Song”) his project
d
paganda has slackened. Some let- involve the largest group of Oriental American play?ers in Holl tal’ is to imply very much, but eventually 120,000 wilt go.
But a slight trend away from ters of disillusionment and disto say rather little.
wood history.
1 u •
Other important, if numeric the journey into Communism satisfaction have been received o .Tharks to the Oriental .trend on Broadwav (“The World
ally less striking, infusions of seems to be developing. The Ja by friends in Japan.
“A Majori^
°*e”> as -ell as ill
The reports say the repatriates
race must also have come from pan Red Cross reports that 1800
,
there
are
now
more
professionally
qualified performers of Ja
have
now
changed
their
minds.
were first- put into fine apart panese and Chinese descent than ever before.
the islands to the south and from
C^
1
?
1
'
sources
report
a
certain
ments in Pyongyang, the North
elsewhere in the nearby Pacific
William Goetz Is producing George Campbell’s novel. “Crv for
areas. The seafaring abilities of ‘'hesitation*'' forming among Ko Korean capital, and other cities.
reans
still
in
Japan.
Happy,
' at Columbia studios in Hollywood. This comedv of occupa
Gradually rhey were. moved to in
the earlier Pacific island popula
tion
Japan
concerns U.S. navy men who take over a geisha hX
South
Korea
now
has
a
more
ferior housing in rural areas,
tions are now well recognized, and
many different immigrations to democratic goverment, and life where they went to ’ work on ln,T°k?° aiid stars Glenn Ford and Donald O’Connor. All the Usha
io es have been cast by Goetz with actresses of Japanese ancestry.
the Japanese islands from diverse there may become more attrac- farms and mines.
Salaries’ average 60 Avon or $25 Only one (Miyoshi Umeki) was born in. Japan but all have worn
monthly for nonskilled laborers-. i^*0110^011 s^Fe and screen. Miiko Taka, of course, plaved the
High wages are SO won and ex dancer, Hana-Ogi, opposite Marlon Brando in' "Savonara.” Tsuruko
(continued from page one)
fl’°m her B1’oadway role in "A Major
tremely high wages up to 150 it^cf
ity
of
One.
Miss
^Kobayashi,
to writer Marvin Fineber^
legedly twice promising to do so. soon as Washington accepts his won, or $62. Work is divided into has never been, in Japan. She ismarried
a
native
of Hawaii.
The attack and the sympathy bona Tides as basically loyal to three eight-hour shifts, but reUchi
Kobi
js
one
of
the
latest
additions
to the “Crv for Happv”
it may engender for Mr. Kishi the American alliance,' he 'is ex patriates have had to attend in
natl
7
e
°
f
San
Brancisco,
made her New York
may help to assuage bitter feel pected to press this viewpoint doctrination classes, in their spare
drama
’
“
Wedding
in
Japan,
” and has been
ings left among members of this with far more energy than did time and "volunteer” additional
t
le
flll
?
S
’
S
e
1
1
'
“
^
recent
movie
roles
were
the femme
working
hours.
faction, who are mostly party his predecessor.
X J “io J R°UiTS Xy° ^ter Dark” and Columbia’s current
A
North
Korean
pamphlet
on
hacks angered by the choice
Meanwhile, in early newspaper
+ 4ut0 the Moon., She also appears in Allied Artists’ drama,
posts which former career bu comments on Mr. Ikeda’s victory, the repatriates just received in
in which Miss Taka portrays the role of a Nisei
Japan
still
depicts
a
life
of
smil
reaucrats have been given, des Mainiehi said that Mr. Ikeda ha'd
°
drama of Guy Gabaldon, the Marine hero.
ing
workers,
recreation,
compite their late entry into political shown forbearance during attacks
-e male -ads in “Cry for Happy” is being plaved bv
fort and happiness.
on him by party politicians in the
king eta as a Nisei navy man whose difficultv, when he is
South. Korea, moves to better
But Air. Ikeda now faces the preconvention
period and that the livelihood of Korean residents n
aiS an, ^rPreter, is that he cannot speak Japanese.
difficult process of allocating this may indicate evolution away’
■ ®. chaiactei Pla>ed by Shigeta is named: George Washington SuCabinet and party jobs in a way’ from the high-handed bureaucrat, |n.Jqpan and persuade them from ZUK1,
v
"
pleasing to all factions, yet en of the 1 oshida Cabinet days when joining the mass migrations to
Communist North Korea were an
abling him to carry out his own
*
$
n?i
erVed
as
^
‘
nister
of
Finance.
nounced
July 9 by Ea Chai-hang,
fairly detailed policies.
1 hough he is certain to come Korean minister in Tokyo.
°f Buzie Wong” was a cliche-ridden drama of an
envisage
under' renewed criticism by traatiaT when'we saw it on Broadway nearly two
pan firmly committed'’ to the ditionallyT antigovernment news Ue said the goverment of care
American alliance and
^v»s never much of a favorite with the
do- papers in the days ahead, he is taker South Korean premier Huh
n
hOU
S
the
pub
.
hc
seemed
to like it wherever it played. It
Chung"
has
decided
in
principle
to
mestic
program
. . _ .
aimed at in respected for being a man of in1 loadvay, a triumph of an exotic -production over a bad
a
five-million-dollar
creasing social welfare benefits. S^Djsnclont views who does not establish
Mr.. Ikeda’s attachment to Ja hesitate to voice them even when Ioan.fund in Japan.and to pour a
of particular interest in the stage’s "Suzie Wong” is
pans Western alignment is a mat it’s politically unwise. There is considerable sum into a projected
ter of record, and for this rea reputedly a strong streak of stub welfare fund for destitute Kore n J™e/ead ^^e h?s been played since last fall, on Broadway and
son his Victory will nrobablv be bornness and nonconformism in ans in Japan..
5 a !
^ir narnedUeri Aliyazaki who was born in a war
L
\e
On
cen
^e
on
the Pacific coast ,thus making her not more
welcomed in Washington.
his makeup unusual in i career
n?
rs
°f
age
'
;
41thou"h "Suzie Wong” has been -panned. Miss
But he is also known to hold bureaucrat.
As one man
charmed the critics, including-those in San Francisco
that eventually Japan must come street said of him "Well, on the man with quite a bit of self-con
fidence to make a statement like which is Suzie’s most recent port of call.
to some kind of accommodation he told the poor to eat
that. He may make a good
„
barlev.
The movie will be beckoning next to Miss Miyazaki.
with Communist China and as But after ;•
Ml you’ve, got to be 'a premier.”
—Pacific Citizen
Korean Migrants
Ikeda
Until SATURDAY, JULY 30th
Mid-Summer Sale
TABLEWARES: Dinner
take) — Fancy*
HOUSEHOLD ORNAMENTS: Japanese Scrolls and
Framed Pictures—-Folding Screens (Byobu)—Table
^^p?2 Flower Vases——Statuettes—Wall Plagues
Qi All Materials, and Designs—Iron or Stone Orna-
Glasses—Complete Li:
nese Cuisine (Nihonst
SUNDRIES: Jew
viewer
s and Accessories
Paramount Gift Shop
H^ASf ojt^^^j;
TELEPHONE HO. 3-7831
733 Danforth Avenue, Toronto
STORE OPEN 9 A.M. TO 9 PM