Page 1
Iass mail .
- Ottawa
s^r. Kei
Section
Japanese
■avertisina
THE NEW CANADIAN
^»”d« Own !» C™d|.n!
s
hi. XXIV.—No. 81
1ST,
005
OtWn
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, i960
TORONTO, ONT..
Radians Fear Japanese Monopoly
Extreme Leftists Vs
bin "Volunteers” Cut In Export “»«
e one)
Y in the
'■By ■
YUKIE TANEMURA
In Japan Turmoil
xt^
“>= ports'
exports
year.
produced in this country, may
T ' summer, "'Japan further- next vt
””
Last
Though-the Indian summer may
In regard to the suggestion
[don disappear from the Cana- agreed to impose additional ex
TOKYO. — Japanese leftists
.return
the bright leaves of the
■ian market..
n U?S!ed ^at textile exports gathered their forces for a new
port controls. This time hardwood
o Canada have been under rigid wave • of demonstrations follcw- mellowing Maple is already the
■ The Canadian Government has plywood was affected.
■nested Japan to curtail sharpon I'M"? Iarse sacrifi5eJ mg the assassination pf their •instant captive of winter.
As the football and hockey sea
Tokyo
Meeting
on behalf of industry. This principal leader, Socialist Chair
■y.'its export of these vacuum
son
return, the exciting / World
lobes and has. won a tentative
Last week the Trade and Com «S J^n’S *ex«le industry man Inejiro Asanuma, by a 17Series
is in the background again,
was
forced
to
a
ten
days
’
work
taise that this will be done.
year-old rightist student.
merce and Tokyo Foreign Minisr
ootball
is becoming very popular
ttoPPage.
Therefore,
it
is
believtry met with the visiting Cana
1 lemier Hayato Ikeda’s cabinet
I
‘Voluntary” Step
around
the
B.C. interior as many
dian Textile Industry Mission re j
m,ore restrictions are level- met in extraordinary session to local high school
JC’s are drilling
^d lL tbe textile industry, it is
resignation of Public out in the powerful moving
One report here, not confirm garding the Japanese textile doubtful jf they will offer any
Safety Minister Iwao Yamazaki, game.
ed by the Government, is that goods export to Canada.
more
co-operation.
Canada
pointed
out
that
be
who
took responsibility for failJapan has “voluntarily” agreed
n
dle add H the professional
Japan
pointed
out
that
even
cause
of
a
“
slowdown
”
of
p^^mu
out
that
even
n
^
s
,t°
Prevent the assassination B.C.
music
io? discontinue all shipments of
Bions
an interior high school
dian economy and increase of un-' CMadfS
kSS eSporis to of the Socialist leader.
pupu- : hetronic tubes to Canada.
junior
football
league has been
employment.
Japan
should
be
as
£?
oth
^
exports,
such
.Red
banners
billowed
in
the
il mu•Japanese tubes have been floodformed
This
is
good news to
t0 ^ttte Canadian Sa b 2°ng ?°ng etc” in' wind and the police braced themlosely
ij the Canadian market. Some
many
JC
football
fans
and grid
plays
manufacturers have warned they Industry by an influx of exports adX Jn • ■ bonders what Can- Sve? for trouble on Tokyo’s iron performers.
be then- Ja' Capitol Hill,” the main stagefor
’ama)
would be forcedout of produc- And therefore Canada suggested n™
that
Japan
should
substantially
should
^
ntiK
^s
6 points the
pO.»re^er heights the annual
being
anti-U.S.-Japan
security
unless Some protection was
urted.
treaty demonstrations last spring-. p.G. .Nisei 5-pin bowling conclave
liven them by the Government,
Fearful of more violence the Tub-!? Thanksgiving weekend
illent
f Exports of Japanese tubes in
dancPut 3,500 men on riot duty. a* Mendan Lanes in Kelowna. We
Ilie first six months of this year
Of
these 1,800 were posted d°ff our chapeaux chumly (?) to
tee double that of a year ago.
s’ of
around the Diet building com Kamloops and Vancouver bowlers
kliital of 1,895,000 lubes' were
TORONTO, Oct. 17.—The Ja
wsic
pound. More than 30 police trucks who shared honors and trophies
imported, valued at $571,000. In
“
a
2
t
gl
c
nt
clrcle
and
san
?
difthe first half of 1959 a total of panese Youth Goodwill Mission Auld Lang Syne,” and a most were strategically posted in the etc. - Kamloops, lead by Coke Ko
nust ’
same area, their backs boarded yanagi, captured the all-star
MO items were brought in met and .discussed mutual pro
mteiesting evening came to a up against assault by- leftist men s trophy with a three-game
1 go
korth 8288,000.
'
blems with members of the JCCA close.
total of 3562. Koyanagi was also
groups.
Sast
Sales of Japanese tubes in all and others last night at the Tor
ling
- t Tr t
Zengakuren, the big extremist successfully biding his time lead
pf 1959 were valued at $678,000 onto Buddhist Church.
Following a Japanese dinner, Daniel
lor 2,205,000 units.
Inouye Wins ■ student federation which sparked ing the pack in capturing the 6.
the anti-trusty - vio l once and th€ game singles crown totaling 1509
SSJtors individually introduc
i.
Held Conference
Democratic
Nomination
]e
tt"Wing labor unions ’promised , Lets call it a day, Coke—in
ed themselves, and broke into
a
turnout of 100,000 to protest the teresting to note, Mr. Koyanagi
groups
for
discussions
with
the
I finance Minister Fleming conHill
crowd.
Incumbent fatal
stabbin of Asanuma.
a graduate of Kelowna Bowla™* ^vcv^Mnig
P
^ek with Japanese
\ 7 Inouye Saturday night
drome.
But
the
police
discounted
that
,The
Japanese
visitors,
compris
Ambassador Toru Hagiwara and
won the Democratic congressional Lgu_
U1C crowds fell far off
'ure and the
T Vancouver led by the keggling
I e matter of tubes was reported ed of 8 women and 19 men, came election1011
Hawai?s primary the massive protests against the Kozaki girls captured the ladies’
f
101
?
1
all
walks
of
life.
There
were
loliave been discussed. Mr. Hahsecurity pact.
team trophy with a 2973. Followstudents,
profes
flew afterward to Japln Agricultural
opponent Phil Bird, an
More.than 20 policemen were ®“ UJP TJy Miss Kumi Miyama and
sional
lecturers,
teachers,
travel
W an announcement of the cutDklahoma-born
Honolulu
ap'bureau workers, woman’s dress PiianceT salesman, conceded defeat injured in a skirmish with stu- 1 at A ozaki sweeping the ladies
7 is expected shortly.
event with a fine 1362.
.Canada has been putting pres- Fes^nors etc. The group was led after Inouye piled up an early aents hastily mobilized after news
of
Asanuma
’
s
death
spread.
'
Miss
Miyama
illustrated brilliant
„iCtheua^anese
to
impose
Professor
Kisuke
Nagasugi
of
Japanese to i----Asanuma’s
slayer,
slight
Mr curbs on the export n?
ages of and overwhelming lead.
registering
a fleeting
Popular Japanese-American
Ml ’products whichP haw ^
V1Slt
°rS -ra11^ from
frnm 22
90 4-n
V1ftors
to World War II hero had 92 685 l'oasip"baired Otaya Yamaguchi, ( - J 1404-6 games capturing the
Eiy ^ed Gani mT
"
and all showed pleasant and votes.and Bird 6,638 in the latest jailed and awaiting a murder ladms single crown.
charge,apparently was well pleas
The
Vernon
men
came
thru
with
interesting
personalities.
/e?es the tubes,
un°tticial tabulation.
ed with himself.
surprising strength . as they ran
^UerfoXeT^ anSist^ and
Some of the students spoke
“As General Custer said, ‘My
Police
said
he
showed
no
re
away with the men’s team trophy
^?y Japanese, while others were gosn, where did all those Indians
morse and would have killed —a successful 3507 for 3 games. ’
able
to
converse
slowly,
in
Eng
come from,” Bird exclaimed.
at the insisother leftists if given the chance.
Finally Kelowna bowlers after
^ iC?ada’ agreed to im- lish.
Some
impressions
and
Republican Unopposed
Son
of a colonel in the Japan self registering their poorest perform- opinions
of
Canada
from
the
visi
?D s ividp
'poi't controls
The
Republican
candidate, defense force, Yamaguchi, is a
years’ were able to main
textile pro- tors were: Nisei’s seem to take Frederick J. Titcomb, a success fanatical anti-Communist with a ?f.ce
tain the men’s double crown bv
It so easy in Canada in whatever
they do; the streets here are less ful piosecution lawyer, was unop- record of a dozen arrests after narrowly nosing out a great
violent encounters with leftist comeback by Van. Modern styled
crowded; Canada is the second 34 Tilin the Primar" raCe’ He had demonstrators.
Mjt Koga and Lou Matsuda kept
mosh beautiful country in the
At the same time he is describ the Kelownans in the winners’
The total vote amounted to
world; Nisei’s never seem to take
ed as “polite and well-mannered.
circle with a 1498.
it easy in Canada; never realized about 134,000 of an all-time high
registration
of
190,766.
Without
Congratulations are due to all
oycuto had such a large popu
any
seriously
contended
primary
U.S.
Armed
Forces
Far
East
net
?°J
erS T°r providing an interestlation pf Japanese; etc.
races, only 68 percent of Oahu’s work carried reports on his VIC' lng ,c,omPetlt>ve atmosphere durBefore the discussions ended registered voters turned out. The tory.
ing the well drawn tournev. Foleverything
from Zen Buddhism, less-populated islands of Maui,
IfluDOiV._ A
“
Deeply
Grateful
”
howling smash, around
& Hubert
blWhy uakko-chan dolls, music and cof- Kauai and Hawaii produced 85
if?
b
i?
Wlers
atten<ied the Japa■i^liane^
says the
I
am
deeply
grateful
to
tl^
^. b3-1'8, Zengakuren, and recent percent turnouts.
the
■‘^months^ T gave the U-S. political disturbances had been
people of Hawaii for their over
da™e held at
Rep. Inouye in Tokyo said he whelming
■^afit
»ng of tlle Ja- run thro.ugh.’
display of confidence in the Buddhist Church. The overwas “deeply grateful” to the peo
I
book\? tT1 Harbor.
” Inouye said. “If re-elected
enjoyed the festivi
came to a close ple of Hawaii for renominating me,
fcH*rt Wilkfnj^F Grierson’
ties till the early hours.
l ^ assure the people of Hawaii
with the Japanese girls, dressed him.
that I will continue to vigorously
(TLat’s way
■^oration” Sav un ^raa 0± in their beautiful kimonos, perInouye was in Fukuoka Sunday
.Lr all the benefits that
lorming a lovely dance to the ac and did not know he had won
Yay Way out’ man.)
Yay to go M-C. Nob Ya
companiment of a chorus of Ja until he called his wife in Hono Hawaii may be entitled to and to
panese male voices. Before leav lulu although radio news broad continue to emphasize Hawaii’s j maoka for an A-l effort. SpeakroIe of serving as an item kr^fh best~a. ver7 special
|?a“^onfH
to° ing the hall everyone crossed casts in Tokyo Sunday by the. East-West
bridge.
£ k v the s'vll}?lng Bert Hill
■^ere fn7n 7 that the JapaKeI®wna Buddhist Fujin Kai
P^Peari nfJ0 sink the U S
T
♦
?
T
f°r mother fabulous well-done
I? X^^itheak
-s wer6
-° West,of1he
ifferent
expresniselves
for me
elegant
ects of
dances
lre, in
i nn'li.
swords
Mission Accomplished!
^pan’s Report of
Pearl Harbour
Ignored
12?^ whilst ^ ln here from
iP^ification*
your guns
1%^-"
are Whited to
Impressions of Japan
.
,
f~
’
Sucy
t^rney chair-’
Outside a temple 400 miles
Miss Stark has just returned Of workers went directly to her
A
T
Tokyo, a Japanese woman from an eight-week visit to Ja
concerts from their offices and
Lance in Breezin’ savs
shyly approached Ethel Stark, pan.
f^tOries before commuting home
my famous
Nipponese
conductor of the Montreal Wo
“
The
Japanese
audiences
are
SUpper
the
ruJbv
L
is
^^ WS '
tefi- men’s Symphony Orchestra, and
|Se 1 know v ° dled in 1958,
among the most critical I have
said in broken English, “Please ever encountered,” she said, “But
Cultural Activity
’
I displayed during thei/XXcan6
come back again soon.” The wo if they like your performance,
^be last month or so
man, like many of her relatives they just can’t applaud enough.” vitv^^T iS g,?eat cultural acti- S
±7
J
\
pan
/
Miss
st
ark
said.
^vens sakes, Yuke°
„ friends, hnd earlier travelled
It was a regular occurrence for
People
who
have
not
visited
Ja
I
^
V
f
S
me
a
break will yah’) iq
all the way to Tokyo to hear Miss Miss. Stark to return to her hotel Idea S V?™ 3 Ptecon^iJed ^V0^6^
to' ha™ ^™btark conduct the ABC Tokyo room at night to a “positive gar
f a • Japan can P1-oJ«ce
sporting competition beOrchestra.
den of flowers.” Members ..of the s,V
about an?HVhat he
chea
P
imitations
of
Western
I
k
a
I countnes. (Just what in '
woman
is
typical
of
all
audience constantly sent her fans, gadgets. This mav go on
■ V-Veit.” ’ and they will
he
blu
e-ball-blazes
is that X
the people I met,” Miss Stark perfume and other gifts to show
very small part&of Xi ? P°? tO mean?)
P'
exactly
1
said in an interview. “Wherever I their enthusiasm.
Happy Daze (here we
1 was greeted with great
Mozart, Beethoven and Bach -ern Japan has to offer I was I
go
"i“tMi8uhe* v
e' hindness, and I was often over seemed to be favorites among struck more by the high-standSd
whelmed by Japanese hospitality.” Tokyo audiences, and thousands
tata<«d w we tigM) |
{Cont;nued
;
- Ottawa
s^r. Kei
Section
Japanese
■avertisina
THE NEW CANADIAN
^»”d« Own !» C™d|.n!
s
hi. XXIV.—No. 81
1ST,
005
OtWn
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, i960
TORONTO, ONT..
Radians Fear Japanese Monopoly
Extreme Leftists Vs
bin "Volunteers” Cut In Export “»«
e one)
Y in the
'■By ■
YUKIE TANEMURA
In Japan Turmoil
xt^
“>= ports'
exports
year.
produced in this country, may
T ' summer, "'Japan further- next vt
””
Last
Though-the Indian summer may
In regard to the suggestion
[don disappear from the Cana- agreed to impose additional ex
TOKYO. — Japanese leftists
.return
the bright leaves of the
■ian market..
n U?S!ed ^at textile exports gathered their forces for a new
port controls. This time hardwood
o Canada have been under rigid wave • of demonstrations follcw- mellowing Maple is already the
■ The Canadian Government has plywood was affected.
■nested Japan to curtail sharpon I'M"? Iarse sacrifi5eJ mg the assassination pf their •instant captive of winter.
As the football and hockey sea
Tokyo
Meeting
on behalf of industry. This principal leader, Socialist Chair
■y.'its export of these vacuum
son
return, the exciting / World
lobes and has. won a tentative
Last week the Trade and Com «S J^n’S *ex«le industry man Inejiro Asanuma, by a 17Series
is in the background again,
was
forced
to
a
ten
days
’
work
taise that this will be done.
year-old rightist student.
merce and Tokyo Foreign Minisr
ootball
is becoming very popular
ttoPPage.
Therefore,
it
is
believtry met with the visiting Cana
1 lemier Hayato Ikeda’s cabinet
I
‘Voluntary” Step
around
the
B.C. interior as many
dian Textile Industry Mission re j
m,ore restrictions are level- met in extraordinary session to local high school
JC’s are drilling
^d lL tbe textile industry, it is
resignation of Public out in the powerful moving
One report here, not confirm garding the Japanese textile doubtful jf they will offer any
Safety Minister Iwao Yamazaki, game.
ed by the Government, is that goods export to Canada.
more
co-operation.
Canada
pointed
out
that
be
who
took responsibility for failJapan has “voluntarily” agreed
n
dle add H the professional
Japan
pointed
out
that
even
cause
of
a
“
slowdown
”
of
p^^mu
out
that
even
n
^
s
,t°
Prevent the assassination B.C.
music
io? discontinue all shipments of
Bions
an interior high school
dian economy and increase of un-' CMadfS
kSS eSporis to of the Socialist leader.
pupu- : hetronic tubes to Canada.
junior
football
league has been
employment.
Japan
should
be
as
£?
oth
^
exports,
such
.Red
banners
billowed
in
the
il mu•Japanese tubes have been floodformed
This
is
good news to
t0 ^ttte Canadian Sa b 2°ng ?°ng etc” in' wind and the police braced themlosely
ij the Canadian market. Some
many
JC
football
fans
and grid
plays
manufacturers have warned they Industry by an influx of exports adX Jn • ■ bonders what Can- Sve? for trouble on Tokyo’s iron performers.
be then- Ja' Capitol Hill,” the main stagefor
’ama)
would be forcedout of produc- And therefore Canada suggested n™
that
Japan
should
substantially
should
^
ntiK
^s
6 points the
pO.»re^er heights the annual
being
anti-U.S.-Japan
security
unless Some protection was
urted.
treaty demonstrations last spring-. p.G. .Nisei 5-pin bowling conclave
liven them by the Government,
Fearful of more violence the Tub-!? Thanksgiving weekend
illent
f Exports of Japanese tubes in
dancPut 3,500 men on riot duty. a* Mendan Lanes in Kelowna. We
Ilie first six months of this year
Of
these 1,800 were posted d°ff our chapeaux chumly (?) to
tee double that of a year ago.
s’ of
around the Diet building com Kamloops and Vancouver bowlers
kliital of 1,895,000 lubes' were
TORONTO, Oct. 17.—The Ja
wsic
pound. More than 30 police trucks who shared honors and trophies
imported, valued at $571,000. In
“
a
2
t
gl
c
nt
clrcle
and
san
?
difthe first half of 1959 a total of panese Youth Goodwill Mission Auld Lang Syne,” and a most were strategically posted in the etc. - Kamloops, lead by Coke Ko
nust ’
same area, their backs boarded yanagi, captured the all-star
MO items were brought in met and .discussed mutual pro
mteiesting evening came to a up against assault by- leftist men s trophy with a three-game
1 go
korth 8288,000.
'
blems with members of the JCCA close.
total of 3562. Koyanagi was also
groups.
Sast
Sales of Japanese tubes in all and others last night at the Tor
ling
- t Tr t
Zengakuren, the big extremist successfully biding his time lead
pf 1959 were valued at $678,000 onto Buddhist Church.
Following a Japanese dinner, Daniel
lor 2,205,000 units.
Inouye Wins ■ student federation which sparked ing the pack in capturing the 6.
the anti-trusty - vio l once and th€ game singles crown totaling 1509
SSJtors individually introduc
i.
Held Conference
Democratic
Nomination
]e
tt"Wing labor unions ’promised , Lets call it a day, Coke—in
ed themselves, and broke into
a
turnout of 100,000 to protest the teresting to note, Mr. Koyanagi
groups
for
discussions
with
the
I finance Minister Fleming conHill
crowd.
Incumbent fatal
stabbin of Asanuma.
a graduate of Kelowna Bowla™* ^vcv^Mnig
P
^ek with Japanese
\ 7 Inouye Saturday night
drome.
But
the
police
discounted
that
,The
Japanese
visitors,
compris
Ambassador Toru Hagiwara and
won the Democratic congressional Lgu_
U1C crowds fell far off
'ure and the
T Vancouver led by the keggling
I e matter of tubes was reported ed of 8 women and 19 men, came election1011
Hawai?s primary the massive protests against the Kozaki girls captured the ladies’
f
101
?
1
all
walks
of
life.
There
were
loliave been discussed. Mr. Hahsecurity pact.
team trophy with a 2973. Followstudents,
profes
flew afterward to Japln Agricultural
opponent Phil Bird, an
More.than 20 policemen were ®“ UJP TJy Miss Kumi Miyama and
sional
lecturers,
teachers,
travel
W an announcement of the cutDklahoma-born
Honolulu
ap'bureau workers, woman’s dress PiianceT salesman, conceded defeat injured in a skirmish with stu- 1 at A ozaki sweeping the ladies
7 is expected shortly.
event with a fine 1362.
.Canada has been putting pres- Fes^nors etc. The group was led after Inouye piled up an early aents hastily mobilized after news
of
Asanuma
’
s
death
spread.
'
Miss
Miyama
illustrated brilliant
„iCtheua^anese
to
impose
Professor
Kisuke
Nagasugi
of
Japanese to i----Asanuma’s
slayer,
slight
Mr curbs on the export n?
ages of and overwhelming lead.
registering
a fleeting
Popular Japanese-American
Ml ’products whichP haw ^
V1Slt
°rS -ra11^ from
frnm 22
90 4-n
V1ftors
to World War II hero had 92 685 l'oasip"baired Otaya Yamaguchi, ( - J 1404-6 games capturing the
Eiy ^ed Gani mT
"
and all showed pleasant and votes.and Bird 6,638 in the latest jailed and awaiting a murder ladms single crown.
charge,apparently was well pleas
The
Vernon
men
came
thru
with
interesting
personalities.
/e?es the tubes,
un°tticial tabulation.
ed with himself.
surprising strength . as they ran
^UerfoXeT^ anSist^ and
Some of the students spoke
“As General Custer said, ‘My
Police
said
he
showed
no
re
away with the men’s team trophy
^?y Japanese, while others were gosn, where did all those Indians
morse and would have killed —a successful 3507 for 3 games. ’
able
to
converse
slowly,
in
Eng
come from,” Bird exclaimed.
at the insisother leftists if given the chance.
Finally Kelowna bowlers after
^ iC?ada’ agreed to im- lish.
Some
impressions
and
Republican Unopposed
Son
of a colonel in the Japan self registering their poorest perform- opinions
of
Canada
from
the
visi
?D s ividp
'poi't controls
The
Republican
candidate, defense force, Yamaguchi, is a
years’ were able to main
textile pro- tors were: Nisei’s seem to take Frederick J. Titcomb, a success fanatical anti-Communist with a ?f.ce
tain the men’s double crown bv
It so easy in Canada in whatever
they do; the streets here are less ful piosecution lawyer, was unop- record of a dozen arrests after narrowly nosing out a great
violent encounters with leftist comeback by Van. Modern styled
crowded; Canada is the second 34 Tilin the Primar" raCe’ He had demonstrators.
Mjt Koga and Lou Matsuda kept
mosh beautiful country in the
At the same time he is describ the Kelownans in the winners’
The total vote amounted to
world; Nisei’s never seem to take
ed as “polite and well-mannered.
circle with a 1498.
it easy in Canada; never realized about 134,000 of an all-time high
registration
of
190,766.
Without
Congratulations are due to all
oycuto had such a large popu
any
seriously
contended
primary
U.S.
Armed
Forces
Far
East
net
?°J
erS T°r providing an interestlation pf Japanese; etc.
races, only 68 percent of Oahu’s work carried reports on his VIC' lng ,c,omPetlt>ve atmosphere durBefore the discussions ended registered voters turned out. The tory.
ing the well drawn tournev. Foleverything
from Zen Buddhism, less-populated islands of Maui,
IfluDOiV._ A
“
Deeply
Grateful
”
howling smash, around
& Hubert
blWhy uakko-chan dolls, music and cof- Kauai and Hawaii produced 85
if?
b
i?
Wlers
atten<ied the Japa■i^liane^
says the
I
am
deeply
grateful
to
tl^
^. b3-1'8, Zengakuren, and recent percent turnouts.
the
■‘^months^ T gave the U-S. political disturbances had been
people of Hawaii for their over
da™e held at
Rep. Inouye in Tokyo said he whelming
■^afit
»ng of tlle Ja- run thro.ugh.’
display of confidence in the Buddhist Church. The overwas “deeply grateful” to the peo
I
book\? tT1 Harbor.
” Inouye said. “If re-elected
enjoyed the festivi
came to a close ple of Hawaii for renominating me,
fcH*rt Wilkfnj^F Grierson’
ties till the early hours.
l ^ assure the people of Hawaii
with the Japanese girls, dressed him.
that I will continue to vigorously
(TLat’s way
■^oration” Sav un ^raa 0± in their beautiful kimonos, perInouye was in Fukuoka Sunday
.Lr all the benefits that
lorming a lovely dance to the ac and did not know he had won
Yay Way out’ man.)
Yay to go M-C. Nob Ya
companiment of a chorus of Ja until he called his wife in Hono Hawaii may be entitled to and to
panese male voices. Before leav lulu although radio news broad continue to emphasize Hawaii’s j maoka for an A-l effort. SpeakroIe of serving as an item kr^fh best~a. ver7 special
|?a“^onfH
to° ing the hall everyone crossed casts in Tokyo Sunday by the. East-West
bridge.
£ k v the s'vll}?lng Bert Hill
■^ere fn7n 7 that the JapaKeI®wna Buddhist Fujin Kai
P^Peari nfJ0 sink the U S
T
♦
?
T
f°r mother fabulous well-done
I? X^^itheak
-s wer6
-° West,of1he
ifferent
expresniselves
for me
elegant
ects of
dances
lre, in
i nn'li.
swords
Mission Accomplished!
^pan’s Report of
Pearl Harbour
Ignored
12?^ whilst ^ ln here from
iP^ification*
your guns
1%^-"
are Whited to
Impressions of Japan
.
,
f~
’
Sucy
t^rney chair-’
Outside a temple 400 miles
Miss Stark has just returned Of workers went directly to her
A
T
Tokyo, a Japanese woman from an eight-week visit to Ja
concerts from their offices and
Lance in Breezin’ savs
shyly approached Ethel Stark, pan.
f^tOries before commuting home
my famous
Nipponese
conductor of the Montreal Wo
“
The
Japanese
audiences
are
SUpper
the
ruJbv
L
is
^^ WS '
tefi- men’s Symphony Orchestra, and
|Se 1 know v ° dled in 1958,
among the most critical I have
said in broken English, “Please ever encountered,” she said, “But
Cultural Activity
’
I displayed during thei/XXcan6
come back again soon.” The wo if they like your performance,
^be last month or so
man, like many of her relatives they just can’t applaud enough.” vitv^^T iS g,?eat cultural acti- S
±7
J
\
pan
/
Miss
st
ark
said.
^vens sakes, Yuke°
„ friends, hnd earlier travelled
It was a regular occurrence for
People
who
have
not
visited
Ja
I
^
V
f
S
me
a
break will yah’) iq
all the way to Tokyo to hear Miss Miss. Stark to return to her hotel Idea S V?™ 3 Ptecon^iJed ^V0^6^
to' ha™ ^™btark conduct the ABC Tokyo room at night to a “positive gar
f a • Japan can P1-oJ«ce
sporting competition beOrchestra.
den of flowers.” Members ..of the s,V
about an?HVhat he
chea
P
imitations
of
Western
I
k
a
I countnes. (Just what in '
woman
is
typical
of
all
audience constantly sent her fans, gadgets. This mav go on
■ V-Veit.” ’ and they will
he
blu
e-ball-blazes
is that X
the people I met,” Miss Stark perfume and other gifts to show
very small part&of Xi ? P°? tO mean?)
P'
exactly
1
said in an interview. “Wherever I their enthusiasm.
Happy Daze (here we
1 was greeted with great
Mozart, Beethoven and Bach -ern Japan has to offer I was I
go
"i“tMi8uhe* v
e' hindness, and I was often over seemed to be favorites among struck more by the high-standSd
whelmed by Japanese hospitality.” Tokyo audiences, and thousands
tata<«d w we tigM) |
{Cont;nued
;
Page 2
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PAGE 6
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Page 7
Wednesday, October 19, I960'
CLASSIFIED
THE NEW CANADIAN
PAGE 7
Feature European.Music
An evening of music, song and
SlThVf ^ Ear°Pean Continent
Hall nF
at the Theatre
Business for Sale
Liternational InstiThe summer months of gay out cannot dance because lessons com
St- Toronto; on
CARTAGE. Well established and good jHda^n°ctober 21st
door living have all quicklv'pass- mence November 4th. Mr. Gordon
under
the
income. One stake body and a van.
October
ed for now we loll indolentlv in Burke will be ably instructing.
Cash deal. Phone EM 6-6667. (Toronto) title. Continental Canadiana”.
Indian
summer.
The activities Let's see you there to enjoy the
21
Vyf
nC
°V
er
'
Nis
®i
Fellowship
HalTan°m<^hf
laading stars are:
9? 4n9panCe at Hcstin5s Auditorium. among us have been diversified fun. Prizes for special novelty
, n, Schwartz-Czarnecki — Po
51.zb per person!
as changing colors of autumn dances will highlight the evenings
Female Help Wanted
land s answer to Sinatra and
leaves,
however, I think there is event. See you Sunday.
Dana folding cooking-.deLomo; Janina Jasinska—Polish
still
one
urge within us common
n^l
1010
”
m
conjunction
with
fall
geHOME SEWING. Experienced in blouses SgSU1S; Pino Ubaldo-versa- Bu^hht Ch^ch. 8 P
a‘ ,he T°ront° to all. October 23rd. Sunday, will
SANSEI
in single needle machine. Apply ClauIt^13an artist, and manv
mark
.the
commencement
of
an
rette Blouse, 80 Nelson Street ( off John h?w’iraSvr -f ceremonies will
5®n Socraiic opening. Nip- other new season for Club' Rec
St. between Queen and Adelaire) (To
ter Kamtz of CFRB and
FaU FrolicHa Qt 460 Dunras St
ronto). Phone EM. 3-1301.
Socratic, one in which the execu
tive
look forward to, with optim
^mlsau^
A
’
13
^^
1
Club's
Hallowe'en
availaWe at the In
GIRLS to train for dancing instructors. . Ti?ets
Ballroom style. Beginning Sunday, Oct.. ternational Institute, Mike Harris
M
dance at Hagerman's ism and enthusiasm.
25 at 8 p.m. in the evening. Apply at Ticket agency, Prince George
comperson- Everyone welWe open at a new location with
come. Door ^^
prizes.
117 St. Patrick Street (Toronto).
?ote ’ a.nG the Canadian Educa- :29—Montreal. Japanese United Church a new executive headed by affable
There' will be.
p™r at drarch. 12 noon to 10 p m Ace Shirakawa.
SECRETARIAL SERVICES required by a tion Society. All are welcome.
tvexyone welcome,
P
slight changes or adaptions in
large manufacturing company in the
^moriT^' HBS Toronto Sangha Me the clubs usual doctrines. Mem
west end. Phone RO. 2-7593 (Toronto).
CARD OF THANKS
morial Service. 11 a.m.
bership will ;be limited to Japanese-Canadians
only, however
Domestic Help Wanted
. WL ?dsh To express our
November
guests
may
be
allowed
upon in
heaitfelt thanks and apprecia
vitation. This new location located
HOUSEBOY OR HOUSEGIRL. As general
tion to our many relatives and
for modern home. Good wages and
at 460 Dundas West has facilities
pleasant surrounding. BA 5-0722 after
trienas for the kindness and
for free parking- at the rear of the
6 p. m. (Toronto)
sympathy shown us in the loss
building-. For dancing fun and a
of a beloved mother and daugh
See SUS NAGAI
chance
to meet new faces, come
HOUSEKEEPER GENERAL.
Live in.
ter, 1 aye Asano.
out to meet the crowd on October
Bathurst and Lawrence district. Char
432 Parliament Street
Mr. Dick Asano,
kept. Call evenings. RU. 2-3967 (Toronto)
23rd at Club Rec Socratic opening
M CALL YOUR RED CROSS
TORONTO
Mrs. Shigeno Uwate
evening-.
and families.
Phone WA. 4-8427
Rooms to Let
CALENDAR ^ ^ ^^ *° ^en Season 'n New Hall
sSS^S*
I Give Blood
TWO UNFURNISHED rooms with sink.
Danforth and Coxwell district. Phone
HO. 3-6312 (Toronto).
TWO UNFURNISHED rooms with heavy
waring for rent, second floor flat. Duf
ferin and Lawrence district.
Phone
RU. 7-3782 (Toronto).
KEG NEWS
Friday Tern Pin. Oct 14. Maw I
Mori 614 (201, 209, 204); Les Doi
570 (232); Joe Tsujimoto 568
(216); Henry Irie 558 (202); Ben
Ito 557; Jim Irie 554 (221); Ben
Mon 548; Terry Doi 545; Kenny
Doi 539; Tak Takimura 536; Dave
Matsuba 534; Fred Miyazaki and
Sho Mori 530; and Mike Sakura
026,
„ Ladies: Mary Ebata 597 (213,
.^R) (hot bad for a beginner, eh
Toki Yohimetsu 551;
L7?tts $G4’ Alice Nagami
489 (213); Eri Tanaka 475; Roda
Masuda 456; Amy Toki 443; Miy
w ^ Al2’ Ca^Y Sunohara 43§;
T°y°ta and Mita Miyaza
ki 437,
Go For Broker Dies
^??Of'ULU'~Geo^e T. Mild,
tit ^Vetef-n who Playe<Tone of
R ei >?P^rting roles in “Go For
?9 kq ’ ^ October 6. He was the S£mving him are his wife,
1950
SacNik° Kazunaga,
queen
^geles Nisei Week
Queen, and two children.
A MEMORABLE
wedding reception
h&y * 9 x l glEt&©
REQUIRES
ample facilities,
DELICIOUS food
and also
fine atmosphere
P&O^Orient Lines
COME TO
MM HOUSE
L^ee Air-Conditioned
Banquet Rooms
925 EGLINTON WEST
Mall this coupon for free brochure
••••••••••••••®®9»®©©a©®®®©G®®0©©®©©o@e©©ae®©G®©®9
P&O—Orient Unes
629 Hornby Street, Vancouver, B.C.
@
©
©
Sirs: Please send me details on your voyages to Japan.
RU. 1-9123
• Name.
Toronto
• Street
• City————,____________ —State__ _ _______ _____________ •
%*»«««e«M«*»»999««*a«9«eee#«693$$@99e9eooa«ee»9«(
CLASSIFIED
THE NEW CANADIAN
PAGE 7
Feature European.Music
An evening of music, song and
SlThVf ^ Ear°Pean Continent
Hall nF
at the Theatre
Business for Sale
Liternational InstiThe summer months of gay out cannot dance because lessons com
St- Toronto; on
CARTAGE. Well established and good jHda^n°ctober 21st
door living have all quicklv'pass- mence November 4th. Mr. Gordon
under
the
income. One stake body and a van.
October
ed for now we loll indolentlv in Burke will be ably instructing.
Cash deal. Phone EM 6-6667. (Toronto) title. Continental Canadiana”.
Indian
summer.
The activities Let's see you there to enjoy the
21
Vyf
nC
°V
er
'
Nis
®i
Fellowship
HalTan°m<^hf
laading stars are:
9? 4n9panCe at Hcstin5s Auditorium. among us have been diversified fun. Prizes for special novelty
, n, Schwartz-Czarnecki — Po
51.zb per person!
as changing colors of autumn dances will highlight the evenings
Female Help Wanted
land s answer to Sinatra and
leaves,
however, I think there is event. See you Sunday.
Dana folding cooking-.deLomo; Janina Jasinska—Polish
still
one
urge within us common
n^l
1010
”
m
conjunction
with
fall
geHOME SEWING. Experienced in blouses SgSU1S; Pino Ubaldo-versa- Bu^hht Ch^ch. 8 P
a‘ ,he T°ront° to all. October 23rd. Sunday, will
SANSEI
in single needle machine. Apply ClauIt^13an artist, and manv
mark
.the
commencement
of
an
rette Blouse, 80 Nelson Street ( off John h?w’iraSvr -f ceremonies will
5®n Socraiic opening. Nip- other new season for Club' Rec
St. between Queen and Adelaire) (To
ter Kamtz of CFRB and
FaU FrolicHa Qt 460 Dunras St
ronto). Phone EM. 3-1301.
Socratic, one in which the execu
tive
look forward to, with optim
^mlsau^
A
’
13
^^
1
Club's
Hallowe'en
availaWe at the In
GIRLS to train for dancing instructors. . Ti?ets
Ballroom style. Beginning Sunday, Oct.. ternational Institute, Mike Harris
M
dance at Hagerman's ism and enthusiasm.
25 at 8 p.m. in the evening. Apply at Ticket agency, Prince George
comperson- Everyone welWe open at a new location with
come. Door ^^
prizes.
117 St. Patrick Street (Toronto).
?ote ’ a.nG the Canadian Educa- :29—Montreal. Japanese United Church a new executive headed by affable
There' will be.
p™r at drarch. 12 noon to 10 p m Ace Shirakawa.
SECRETARIAL SERVICES required by a tion Society. All are welcome.
tvexyone welcome,
P
slight changes or adaptions in
large manufacturing company in the
^moriT^' HBS Toronto Sangha Me the clubs usual doctrines. Mem
west end. Phone RO. 2-7593 (Toronto).
CARD OF THANKS
morial Service. 11 a.m.
bership will ;be limited to Japanese-Canadians
only, however
Domestic Help Wanted
. WL ?dsh To express our
November
guests
may
be
allowed
upon in
heaitfelt thanks and apprecia
vitation. This new location located
HOUSEBOY OR HOUSEGIRL. As general
tion to our many relatives and
for modern home. Good wages and
at 460 Dundas West has facilities
pleasant surrounding. BA 5-0722 after
trienas for the kindness and
for free parking- at the rear of the
6 p. m. (Toronto)
sympathy shown us in the loss
building-. For dancing fun and a
of a beloved mother and daugh
See SUS NAGAI
chance
to meet new faces, come
HOUSEKEEPER GENERAL.
Live in.
ter, 1 aye Asano.
out to meet the crowd on October
Bathurst and Lawrence district. Char
432 Parliament Street
Mr. Dick Asano,
kept. Call evenings. RU. 2-3967 (Toronto)
23rd at Club Rec Socratic opening
M CALL YOUR RED CROSS
TORONTO
Mrs. Shigeno Uwate
evening-.
and families.
Phone WA. 4-8427
Rooms to Let
CALENDAR ^ ^ ^^ *° ^en Season 'n New Hall
sSS^S*
I Give Blood
TWO UNFURNISHED rooms with sink.
Danforth and Coxwell district. Phone
HO. 3-6312 (Toronto).
TWO UNFURNISHED rooms with heavy
waring for rent, second floor flat. Duf
ferin and Lawrence district.
Phone
RU. 7-3782 (Toronto).
KEG NEWS
Friday Tern Pin. Oct 14. Maw I
Mori 614 (201, 209, 204); Les Doi
570 (232); Joe Tsujimoto 568
(216); Henry Irie 558 (202); Ben
Ito 557; Jim Irie 554 (221); Ben
Mon 548; Terry Doi 545; Kenny
Doi 539; Tak Takimura 536; Dave
Matsuba 534; Fred Miyazaki and
Sho Mori 530; and Mike Sakura
026,
„ Ladies: Mary Ebata 597 (213,
.^R) (hot bad for a beginner, eh
Toki Yohimetsu 551;
L7?tts $G4’ Alice Nagami
489 (213); Eri Tanaka 475; Roda
Masuda 456; Amy Toki 443; Miy
w ^ Al2’ Ca^Y Sunohara 43§;
T°y°ta and Mita Miyaza
ki 437,
Go For Broker Dies
^??Of'ULU'~Geo^e T. Mild,
tit ^Vetef-n who Playe<Tone of
R ei >?P^rting roles in “Go For
?9 kq ’ ^ October 6. He was the S£mving him are his wife,
1950
SacNik° Kazunaga,
queen
^geles Nisei Week
Queen, and two children.
A MEMORABLE
wedding reception
h&y * 9 x l glEt&©
REQUIRES
ample facilities,
DELICIOUS food
and also
fine atmosphere
P&O^Orient Lines
COME TO
MM HOUSE
L^ee Air-Conditioned
Banquet Rooms
925 EGLINTON WEST
Mall this coupon for free brochure
••••••••••••••®®9»®©©a©®®®©G®®0©©®©©o@e©©ae®©G®©®9
P&O—Orient Unes
629 Hornby Street, Vancouver, B.C.
@
©
©
Sirs: Please send me details on your voyages to Japan.
RU. 1-9123
• Name.
Toronto
• Street
• City————,____________ —State__ _ _______ _____________ •
%*»«««e«M«*»»999««*a«9«eee#«693$$@99e9eooa«ee»9«(
Page 8
PAGE 8
THE NEW CANADIAN
. Wednesday, October 19 lace
Bridge To The Sun" Ready
Kelowna Kapers
By LARRY S. TAJIRI
(Qoutinued from Page One)
Impressions of Japan
I
THE NEW CANADIAN
(continued from page one)
.important ^
probably the most
cently out of RCAF, left for of art and workmanship than bv
history. Now MetSldwynEA
^c^nb Hollywood
Chicago for a sound new adven ™lr„ methods in mass-produc KUWSA^ferf^ Kei
Poltray the young Japanese dinlnmat -n se ec^d James Shigeta to ture in electronics. (This is worse tion.”
from the mountains of Tennessee in ?
an American girl than pulling teeth!) Good luck _ Miss Stark was invited to con Editor; KEN ^ORt t SeCUon
to endure Pearl Harb™- and i;f"-ee n\a real-life love story which is Ace and hope you caught that duct in Tokyo by the General Di «XMtOr and -«v~
had named Carroll Baker the
^
THa studio already plane ter St. Paul. (Now that’s
Doll,” for the part of Sen T^ who became * star in “’Baby better, Yuke!) (But who in the rector of the Asahi Broadcasting
SUBSCRIPTION
System, and, as well as conduct
S4q7°nn er 6 months
coAon-pickin
’
hades
is
Ace?)
j cast th^VaR^lS
Puller who
mg several Tokyo Orchestras she
o/.UU per year
Bety°uy money local keggers appeared many times on televi
Pn a non-singing dramatic^ role
U.S. and Japan,
Iuodj Tamagi’s Luck Log-gers sion.
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
—1 story, ^“Crimson Kimono.” Contrary
“d?18 interracial love to stage a venture into first diviEMpire 6-5005
kas won fame in Canada.
/East-West romances Shibeta nlaJinp K1^?^ 8-. usual ideas about ?1OP-^Kers.onnal:. Tubby, Sus Na- ,!e United
States and Eurolpe as
/the girl (Victoria Shaw) in’thelilm QH3^nAeles ^isei cop, won ka> Michie Hatanaka, Nob Yax t
woman conductor to
iwas in James Clavell’s drama of
Onriwta?„ne?ct fading role maokam and Yukie Tanemura. establish
and direct a full-sym
son,” i„ which he plalrf
Walk Like * D“- How can we miss? (patience, phony orchestra composed exclu- Dig’u Dat-ooh Coo-roo
'"’“'SVy?® -Prejudice gainst the aiSe 7 “ S St°ry
isumura, patience!)
f™y °f women. A graduate of Jash-oo and Coh-hee!
the Curtis Institute in Philadel- t.F?-6? .houses, now the rase in
Donatd"^^™^^^
' (with Glenn Ford,
With All That Handi Cao
' P .’ sbe. Gained as a conductor varlelv J® I?""
1 i(TTGettino u10”? fine now Mr.
'_
"^ Fnt^ Reiner. She is also
f
entertainment
to
at
iHappy.” .
‘
r occupation Japan, Columbia’s “Cry for P? ^ Strike” Harry Tomiye ^xk35^ °,f Vlolin on the faculty tract their customers, reports Pan
cluet statistician—-and a green of The Quebec Provincial Conser
; ^"VlG*^^
™k °n “BrWse t0 t?|e 'b^ for your thoughts after some vatory of Music.
4,000 coffee houses in Tokvo
, A firm belief that cultural ex- there are many that serve rock’n
ol those early scores (ooooooii!)
other WieneJrtoMng^merons^
Ke shot in Japan, VR?teVV^ ^bout Kamloops cnanges are vital to international *od' ,^rt exhibits and poetry read
YBA. As B.C. Y BA convention understanding and world , peace ing along with the coffee' The
;are expected to be made in Hollywood!
^ of JaPanese ancestry
has led Miss Stark to tour many newest thing in Osaka is a’co&
nalon° in November countries.
J house that stages fashion shows
J ,12, -3, G&@ § !) Program in
, kn°w so little about for its clients. While the crowd,
cludes: religious services, lec
tures, discussion, group pictures, Sanaya’ Mie said. “In Japan peo- the £SwJ’ m°dels Parade
v»»g" is Komi (Hiromi) Yama^
“
World of Suzie banquet and dance and bowlinealuays+askeci about Eskimos
^company of the John Patrick Dlav J.1? h.as .the part in the touring tourney. A very interesting pro f. ™ Mounties, and knew very
Aamada did the rOle On the s£mme^
week). Miss gram is assured again.
T.b® about our rich cultural life her trip.
■ the national. company of thj
befo’^ Joking
Te shouM do something
On again to ole Kamloops YBS k
& . ‘^ Retimes had a little
r other Nisei in this troupe art Yoshi »^ Ck Reduction. Among th? —will see you misses Mas Aura, about it.”
double with the language but we
- Mame,” as Ah Tong atd’m JS^uMt M’ ‘T^* “Auntie
bunu Yamada, Mae Uyeda, Barb Eating with- chopsticks taking just resorted to drawing when we
Nisei were in the Broadway conwamt ^d^
A dozen Kato and John Deshima, Roy meals on the floor at low tables
got stuck,” Miss Stark said. “P 0"
-young jeri Miyazaki who headed th Ziu^ W°n^/’ including S’lur and rest ore blanketing
P?y, memories for Miss
so kW «"d
played two months in Las Vegas.
^^^i touring company which the town with convention fever.
and her sister, Miss Doret- ? luMThere
ta K.tark, who accompanied her on long.”’ "
We ”®ver stuck for
-M
P?”1 West Point and a
; Artists’ “H^M^Etern^
Allied
Trend of Japanese Literature Unknown
the . farmers, fishermen, and
cjasses, who make up do a,ot rate very high literarilv. . .
5 " ge y by men who had
^^fary .disasters of'the
the bulk of the Japanese populaJM>an s Toho Productions who want 2° iaAe concluded a deal with made a name for themselves dur- Jf°n- The proletarian writers fill thirties and .forties into which the
previous decade. A few
, play, The Twain.” The dob
.nt to,niake a picture of his screen
Japanese people were plunged bv
will star in the film.
‘ ‘ so includes an agreement that Shibata
a V new writers did emerge Ups gap but, we may feel, in an ihe ruling cliques produced al
excessively
crude
manner,
OcA?k°mitsu Riichi and Kawo?k“?*"kS^
financially
vabata Yasunari. Both men were fas.ionally, as in Kobayashi Ta- most no literature of conse
quence. Most writers did what
associated with the school called kiji s Cannery Bhat (1029), there
C?u di to 'Prevent becoming
stein-s^Fim™^!^
version of
of the
neo'Sensatiorialist" This 1S $P ,vivid a . des^
embroiled
in the propaganda ef
conditions under which the pro
assigned Henry Koster to dFreet
who recently tS TU^rm Haeant in practice letariat lives that the. work still forts of the militarists. A few
use Oriental performers as much S J5 b h?n Production, wants to ai ike
were opposed commands bur attend Oh. But shoyed open sympathy with Jamusical romance which i^set H^
in,
adaptation o ’ the
raing Proletarian” pqiniully
detailed accounts of the Kanp mission," but apart from
Umeki and Pat Suzuki, wh0 nlave
1C/SC°) Camatown. Miyoshi of w-rnd 9 116 unrelieved use
yi- °f Hinso Ashihei the
1 ork: reportedly are unde consider^- on
• ei^e leads i* E vubort
by certain Ussery of the oppressed classes,
Incidents
and the Pacific
ta n™!'?^^
and Kawaba interspersed with scenes of ioy- War did not engender much liter
ta proved themselves5 io be subirhand in
5.-; hand to overthrow the capitalists/ ature which can be read with
thP^’Y4^ ^d4 ^a,..
masters'of
pleasure today.
of, ^^Pbgical fiction. "
ne _ proletarian
literature
ni2e;:MVf/he tweniies o^pied the attention of many voting
abhors, and has since been re
aiscovered and extravagant!v adal tinge is “THrtl^Daugt^
?“/ Project with an Orient H^ned. Viewed by anv normal
machine co
iui
& UIW1’
standards of literature,‘however
H.
S.
TSURUDA
I
I
Doo?rThUaCtlOnS/V^ remarkably
(Japanese Canadian Agent}
|
^e co'°Perahioii of the
Poor. The great virtue of prole35 Rowntree Ave., TORONTO I f
Toronto 'JCCA
.'Youg's was .that thev
dealt with aspects of Japan largeRO. s-ms
I I
s
[
Mitsuba-Kai presents
"""""•’niMiiiiniinniiHiii,„!„„„! !rttS"r? X
Earth
*hc n°rtl patronize
\ 910)
Nagatsuka Ta"l^~
j
Kabuki and Odori
Watch Repair Shop
Kasni, a ponderous if accurate ।
I Oct. 30th, Saturday 2 p.m.
°UR advertisers
portrayal of the lives of hard
328 RrJV^1 LE- 2-7445
press
^
farmers,
there
has
been
r
3*8 Broadview Ave., Toronto
[
Ukrainian Hall at
'""""Ullulmlllllnllulllnlllllmm a marked reluctance on the part H
of many Japanese writers to tfeat
i
j
300 Bathurst Street
:
;
WHKI
(ft
iel«
due
■ nah
■ num
[Oka
[tian
Li
I in tl
3
[ mucl
I ■ the
publi
impo
/Meni
id. re
aw
■ Sid ’
iiave j
ife
I- The
loptimi
I cident
«
than !
I ■I observi
I Iwfefc
■deprive
I up’to a
<1 ■riously
Ito prev
Iw-thi
In’se.Ja;
I But t
hue asp
Rational
Mfeeli:
l ist puts
but rath
assassin
g which if
■Io mote
■ fration
■ "'Here
■from tot
■U to act
■prosperit
| yonemitsu"
Sunday, October 23rd
■ ^Wj
Present- ti
■ (8 majes;
a‘! ^ N
■hsvilli
ffl^g give
®iest X-ra
■
Home
O*seive
Mby ou
■ rn®” Uh
H^A hel
Party for ■
a^e meal,
by alj
IM th(
Dcmcing 8 to H p.m.
1?^ Us 1
&%
CITY DRIVING SCHOOL
53.00 per hour'
FALL frolic
(
!-”^ Queen W.
| Toronto
—
LE. 2-6
I Tickets available from JCCA
| And Mitsuba-kai members
|
S1.25
presented by
LE. 2-3656
Club Rec Socratic
I
Buraia
'I
i
BABEIstkh aad SOLICITOR
I
notary public
*3 T8fflpl9 Building
«2 iUCHMOND ST. WEST
EM. 6-3323
----------
OFFICE
£M. 4-1394
EM. 4-1335
TORONTO
_
n
„
Res.: RO. 7-3427
RESIDENCE
P™*
RtmS,° 5-1365
MUdson
|
NIPPON CLUB HALL
in the rear
ft'My,
460 DUNDAS ST. W.
“HOP *
For Complete Reed Estate Service
hrneC'ahZe ln G^tware °f Quality From The Orient
q
erware
Porcelain Tableware — Household
Scrolls —Wood Handiwork—Framed Pictures And
Tables J- DoUs S
Japanese Folding Screens And
Accessories etc etc d Statuettes — Flower Arrangement
3 v*'»»j CIL,
TOSH IWAI
1^0 A n
barrister, solicitor
notary public
a ^y with
H y°chiso.
^ ^ Co-op. ’
1779'A^A^OaTH AVE., TORONTO
(two blocks East pl Cox-well)
BUSINESS 6
RESIDENCE'
°
PH ONT
HO. (9-0551
■Wished
; K^s the
■ H aber’s R,
■Mor ol
15°' The
HS tour
Bl001® be]
1^> and ■
Br^ent
■ Maft j
UM learn,
■ ^ and
1^to ai
■re ^
11
j |
n3llDTf°rth Ave" Toronto
(1 block east of Pape Ave)
Tel. HO. 3-7831
Store Open: 9 cum.—9 p.m.
THE NEW CANADIAN
. Wednesday, October 19 lace
Bridge To The Sun" Ready
Kelowna Kapers
By LARRY S. TAJIRI
(Qoutinued from Page One)
Impressions of Japan
I
THE NEW CANADIAN
(continued from page one)
.important ^
probably the most
cently out of RCAF, left for of art and workmanship than bv
history. Now MetSldwynEA
^c^nb Hollywood
Chicago for a sound new adven ™lr„ methods in mass-produc KUWSA^ferf^ Kei
Poltray the young Japanese dinlnmat -n se ec^d James Shigeta to ture in electronics. (This is worse tion.”
from the mountains of Tennessee in ?
an American girl than pulling teeth!) Good luck _ Miss Stark was invited to con Editor; KEN ^ORt t SeCUon
to endure Pearl Harb™- and i;f"-ee n\a real-life love story which is Ace and hope you caught that duct in Tokyo by the General Di «XMtOr and -«v~
had named Carroll Baker the
^
THa studio already plane ter St. Paul. (Now that’s
Doll,” for the part of Sen T^ who became * star in “’Baby better, Yuke!) (But who in the rector of the Asahi Broadcasting
SUBSCRIPTION
System, and, as well as conduct
S4q7°nn er 6 months
coAon-pickin
’
hades
is
Ace?)
j cast th^VaR^lS
Puller who
mg several Tokyo Orchestras she
o/.UU per year
Bety°uy money local keggers appeared many times on televi
Pn a non-singing dramatic^ role
U.S. and Japan,
Iuodj Tamagi’s Luck Log-gers sion.
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
—1 story, ^“Crimson Kimono.” Contrary
“d?18 interracial love to stage a venture into first diviEMpire 6-5005
kas won fame in Canada.
/East-West romances Shibeta nlaJinp K1^?^ 8-. usual ideas about ?1OP-^Kers.onnal:. Tubby, Sus Na- ,!e United
States and Eurolpe as
/the girl (Victoria Shaw) in’thelilm QH3^nAeles ^isei cop, won ka> Michie Hatanaka, Nob Yax t
woman conductor to
iwas in James Clavell’s drama of
Onriwta?„ne?ct fading role maokam and Yukie Tanemura. establish
and direct a full-sym
son,” i„ which he plalrf
Walk Like * D“- How can we miss? (patience, phony orchestra composed exclu- Dig’u Dat-ooh Coo-roo
'"’“'SVy?® -Prejudice gainst the aiSe 7 “ S St°ry
isumura, patience!)
f™y °f women. A graduate of Jash-oo and Coh-hee!
the Curtis Institute in Philadel- t.F?-6? .houses, now the rase in
Donatd"^^™^^^
' (with Glenn Ford,
With All That Handi Cao
' P .’ sbe. Gained as a conductor varlelv J® I?""
1 i(TTGettino u10”? fine now Mr.
'_
"^ Fnt^ Reiner. She is also
f
entertainment
to
at
iHappy.” .
‘
r occupation Japan, Columbia’s “Cry for P? ^ Strike” Harry Tomiye ^xk35^ °,f Vlolin on the faculty tract their customers, reports Pan
cluet statistician—-and a green of The Quebec Provincial Conser
; ^"VlG*^^
™k °n “BrWse t0 t?|e 'b^ for your thoughts after some vatory of Music.
4,000 coffee houses in Tokvo
, A firm belief that cultural ex- there are many that serve rock’n
ol those early scores (ooooooii!)
other WieneJrtoMng^merons^
Ke shot in Japan, VR?teVV^ ^bout Kamloops cnanges are vital to international *od' ,^rt exhibits and poetry read
YBA. As B.C. Y BA convention understanding and world , peace ing along with the coffee' The
;are expected to be made in Hollywood!
^ of JaPanese ancestry
has led Miss Stark to tour many newest thing in Osaka is a’co&
nalon° in November countries.
J house that stages fashion shows
J ,12, -3, G&@ § !) Program in
, kn°w so little about for its clients. While the crowd,
cludes: religious services, lec
tures, discussion, group pictures, Sanaya’ Mie said. “In Japan peo- the £SwJ’ m°dels Parade
v»»g" is Komi (Hiromi) Yama^
“
World of Suzie banquet and dance and bowlinealuays+askeci about Eskimos
^company of the John Patrick Dlav J.1? h.as .the part in the touring tourney. A very interesting pro f. ™ Mounties, and knew very
Aamada did the rOle On the s£mme^
week). Miss gram is assured again.
T.b® about our rich cultural life her trip.
■ the national. company of thj
befo’^ Joking
Te shouM do something
On again to ole Kamloops YBS k
& . ‘^ Retimes had a little
r other Nisei in this troupe art Yoshi »^ Ck Reduction. Among th? —will see you misses Mas Aura, about it.”
double with the language but we
- Mame,” as Ah Tong atd’m JS^uMt M’ ‘T^* “Auntie
bunu Yamada, Mae Uyeda, Barb Eating with- chopsticks taking just resorted to drawing when we
Nisei were in the Broadway conwamt ^d^
A dozen Kato and John Deshima, Roy meals on the floor at low tables
got stuck,” Miss Stark said. “P 0"
-young jeri Miyazaki who headed th Ziu^ W°n^/’ including S’lur and rest ore blanketing
P?y, memories for Miss
so kW «"d
played two months in Las Vegas.
^^^i touring company which the town with convention fever.
and her sister, Miss Doret- ? luMThere
ta K.tark, who accompanied her on long.”’ "
We ”®ver stuck for
-M
P?”1 West Point and a
; Artists’ “H^M^Etern^
Allied
Trend of Japanese Literature Unknown
the . farmers, fishermen, and
cjasses, who make up do a,ot rate very high literarilv. . .
5 " ge y by men who had
^^fary .disasters of'the
the bulk of the Japanese populaJM>an s Toho Productions who want 2° iaAe concluded a deal with made a name for themselves dur- Jf°n- The proletarian writers fill thirties and .forties into which the
previous decade. A few
, play, The Twain.” The dob
.nt to,niake a picture of his screen
Japanese people were plunged bv
will star in the film.
‘ ‘ so includes an agreement that Shibata
a V new writers did emerge Ups gap but, we may feel, in an ihe ruling cliques produced al
excessively
crude
manner,
OcA?k°mitsu Riichi and Kawo?k“?*"kS^
financially
vabata Yasunari. Both men were fas.ionally, as in Kobayashi Ta- most no literature of conse
quence. Most writers did what
associated with the school called kiji s Cannery Bhat (1029), there
C?u di to 'Prevent becoming
stein-s^Fim™^!^
version of
of the
neo'Sensatiorialist" This 1S $P ,vivid a . des^
embroiled
in the propaganda ef
conditions under which the pro
assigned Henry Koster to dFreet
who recently tS TU^rm Haeant in practice letariat lives that the. work still forts of the militarists. A few
use Oriental performers as much S J5 b h?n Production, wants to ai ike
were opposed commands bur attend Oh. But shoyed open sympathy with Jamusical romance which i^set H^
in,
adaptation o ’ the
raing Proletarian” pqiniully
detailed accounts of the Kanp mission," but apart from
Umeki and Pat Suzuki, wh0 nlave
1C/SC°) Camatown. Miyoshi of w-rnd 9 116 unrelieved use
yi- °f Hinso Ashihei the
1 ork: reportedly are unde consider^- on
• ei^e leads i* E vubort
by certain Ussery of the oppressed classes,
Incidents
and the Pacific
ta n™!'?^^
and Kawaba interspersed with scenes of ioy- War did not engender much liter
ta proved themselves5 io be subirhand in
5.-; hand to overthrow the capitalists/ ature which can be read with
thP^’Y4^ ^d4 ^a,..
masters'of
pleasure today.
of, ^^Pbgical fiction. "
ne _ proletarian
literature
ni2e;:MVf/he tweniies o^pied the attention of many voting
abhors, and has since been re
aiscovered and extravagant!v adal tinge is “THrtl^Daugt^
?“/ Project with an Orient H^ned. Viewed by anv normal
machine co
iui
& UIW1’
standards of literature,‘however
H.
S.
TSURUDA
I
I
Doo?rThUaCtlOnS/V^ remarkably
(Japanese Canadian Agent}
|
^e co'°Perahioii of the
Poor. The great virtue of prole35 Rowntree Ave., TORONTO I f
Toronto 'JCCA
.'Youg's was .that thev
dealt with aspects of Japan largeRO. s-ms
I I
s
[
Mitsuba-Kai presents
"""""•’niMiiiiniinniiHiii,„!„„„! !rttS"r? X
Earth
*hc n°rtl patronize
\ 910)
Nagatsuka Ta"l^~
j
Kabuki and Odori
Watch Repair Shop
Kasni, a ponderous if accurate ।
I Oct. 30th, Saturday 2 p.m.
°UR advertisers
portrayal of the lives of hard
328 RrJV^1 LE- 2-7445
press
^
farmers,
there
has
been
r
3*8 Broadview Ave., Toronto
[
Ukrainian Hall at
'""""Ullulmlllllnllulllnlllllmm a marked reluctance on the part H
of many Japanese writers to tfeat
i
j
300 Bathurst Street
:
;
WHKI
(ft
iel«
due
■ nah
■ num
[Oka
[tian
Li
I in tl
3
[ mucl
I ■ the
publi
impo
/Meni
id. re
aw
■ Sid ’
iiave j
ife
I- The
loptimi
I cident
«
than !
I ■I observi
I Iwfefc
■deprive
I up’to a
<1 ■riously
Ito prev
Iw-thi
In’se.Ja;
I But t
hue asp
Rational
Mfeeli:
l ist puts
but rath
assassin
g which if
■Io mote
■ fration
■ "'Here
■from tot
■U to act
■prosperit
| yonemitsu"
Sunday, October 23rd
■ ^Wj
Present- ti
■ (8 majes;
a‘! ^ N
■hsvilli
ffl^g give
®iest X-ra
■
Home
O*seive
Mby ou
■ rn®” Uh
H^A hel
Party for ■
a^e meal,
by alj
IM th(
Dcmcing 8 to H p.m.
1?^ Us 1
&%
CITY DRIVING SCHOOL
53.00 per hour'
FALL frolic
(
!-”^ Queen W.
| Toronto
—
LE. 2-6
I Tickets available from JCCA
| And Mitsuba-kai members
|
S1.25
presented by
LE. 2-3656
Club Rec Socratic
I
Buraia
'I
i
BABEIstkh aad SOLICITOR
I
notary public
*3 T8fflpl9 Building
«2 iUCHMOND ST. WEST
EM. 6-3323
----------
OFFICE
£M. 4-1394
EM. 4-1335
TORONTO
_
n
„
Res.: RO. 7-3427
RESIDENCE
P™*
RtmS,° 5-1365
MUdson
|
NIPPON CLUB HALL
in the rear
ft'My,
460 DUNDAS ST. W.
“HOP *
For Complete Reed Estate Service
hrneC'ahZe ln G^tware °f Quality From The Orient
q
erware
Porcelain Tableware — Household
Scrolls —Wood Handiwork—Framed Pictures And
Tables J- DoUs S
Japanese Folding Screens And
Accessories etc etc d Statuettes — Flower Arrangement
3 v*'»»j CIL,
TOSH IWAI
1^0 A n
barrister, solicitor
notary public
a ^y with
H y°chiso.
^ ^ Co-op. ’
1779'A^A^OaTH AVE., TORONTO
(two blocks East pl Cox-well)
BUSINESS 6
RESIDENCE'
°
PH ONT
HO. (9-0551
■Wished
; K^s the
■ H aber’s R,
■Mor ol
15°' The
HS tour
Bl001® be]
1^> and ■
Br^ent
■ Maft j
UM learn,
■ ^ and
1^to ai
■re ^
11
j |
n3llDTf°rth Ave" Toronto
(1 block east of Pape Ave)
Tel. HO. 3-7831
Store Open: 9 cum.—9 p.m.