Page 1
Vancouver ^^GA asks. *
DISBAND THE J.C.C.A.?
VANCOUVER.—Has the JCCA outlived its usefulness? Thquestion appears to be in-the minds of various Japanese Canadians People’s
TJ-ere
niany Japanese Canadians who wish to
keep the organization alive to work furthex- in the last two proiects
in the city of Vancouver. We have, during the past few years to
Other
exceuGonaT’ mamtai,n that immigration is not a problem except
-ether witn other ethnic groups accomplished the enactment of the' for
Tair Employment Practices Act,” amendments to the “Cemeteri^ filled to^ certain lS^n? y3t
ai™ of integration has been fxdAct,” and an enactment in the Vancouver by-law kown as the T
wark a^sZSCa^
6 "‘^ °f ^ JCCA * 3 buk
Accommodation Practice By-law.” These are almost the last of th*
Jhe ia-St §eiiral meeting the Vancouver JCCA formed a comdiscriminations in our society. Although it is the law of the^mmi-Xj
of course, it is only used as a “standard” upon which our society
tle ciuestion whether the JCCA has outlived its
Should base their behaviour on the matter of racial and reiiX l mfttee S eir general meeting presented the question to the comdiscriminations. : .
. ■ '
b wlmt
I ls a.purpose for the JCCA to exist and if so,
With these accomplishments is there anv other problems whirl,
onVten? aims and short term aims. If there is no
the JCCA should attempt to cux-e ? There is the immigration question
tui^e> tne question then arises “should the JCCA disband?”
The National JCCA has recently submitted a brief to the Minister
a
communicating with the various
throughout the country and has requested an answer to
of Immigration requesting the relaxation of immigration from Tanin
We have heard from various people that the VamZ JCC A tnese questions from each Executive-Council. It will also attempt to
should undertake a project similar to the Toronto JCCA for an Old
(Continued on page 8)
THE NEW CANADIAN
New Canadian
To Welcome
Cinderella Back
TORONTO.—The staff of The
Kew Canadian is happy to an
nounce that an agreement has
been made with Cindy Henmi,
award winner and affiliate of
An independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
CBC, to once again write a .bi
monthly column.
Past readers
will be familiar with her popular
Vol. XXIV.—No. .84
Cinderella” column. Hex’ steady
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1960
TORONTO, ONT work
will be seen beginning Ja
nuary, and a special article of
hers will be appearing in oux* Spe
cial Holiday Issue.
In the line of feminine colum
nists, we have also signed up Miss
Grayce Yamamoto of Notre Dame
College and of late a reporter fox’
the Nelson Times in B.C.
For our Special Holiday Issue,
we have approached other lady .
writers, names such as Michi Ide, |
TOKYO.—On Oct. 21st Japa general elections, expected in Lucy Ikata, and one of the great '
nese Premier Hayato Ikeda firm mid-November. '
“old ones”, (no pun intended!)
ly rejected neutralism for Japan
There are some people in our Mrs. T. M. Kitagawa. Many
and reaffirmed his nation’s strong country who advocate neutral others have been asked to write
ties with the United States.
ism,” Ikeda .said in a pointed re and those who we missed and any
The Prime Minister, who came ference to the opposition Socialist other aspiring writers are asked
to power last July after leftist party. “But these people have ne to take this as an invitation. All
groups demonstrating against the glected to consider the position manuscripts should be in the of
Japan-U.S. Security Treaty forc of Japan in the international fice of The New Canadian before
ed the resignation of Nobusuke situation today. I must say neu- or near. November 5th. PreferKishi, also declared this his gov- tralism
' ”
’ a mere illusion
—' ‘
‘ and a. ably typed and double spaced.
is
ernment was “holding fast” to phantom. We shall never follow Pictures are also welcome.
the controversial pact.
the course of neutralism.”
Ikeda, delivering a major policy
Although he rejected the course
speech before an extraordinary
of
neutralism demanded often in
session of the Diet (Parliament),
asserted that Japan “shall never recent months by the Soviet
follow the course of neutralism.” Union and Communist China, Ike
TOKYO.—The widow of InejiThe Diet session was called pre da declared his intention and de ro Asanuma, Socialist party
sire
to
establish
friendly
rela
paratory to the dissolution of the
chairman who was assassinated
Lower House and the calling of tions with communist nations, in by a 17-year-old ultra-nationalist
cluding Communist China. But he
made it clear he would brook no student, may be a candidate for
interference in Japan’s domestic the Lower House seat held by her
husband.
affairs by the Reds.
The party’s central executive
“My government, while holding
committee
selected Mrs- Kyoko
Karl Julius Baier, President of the Canadian Ethnic Press Club in
TOKYO.—-Police authorities in fast to the basic position of Japan
as
a
free
nation,
will
cultishe Avas
i ron to, presents. Prime Minister Diefenbaker with a scrapbook con- Nagano, some 200 miles north
% fading candidate
editorial comments which appeared in the ethnic papers west of Tokyo, arrested and vate friendly relations with Com- } ' ’
cnn°SK “ie country in connection with the Prime Minister’s recent charged with attempted murder munist countries as much as pos tor a Lower House seat from the
JPeech at United Nations.
a ■woman who tried to kill hex' sible in accordance -with the pri first constituency in Tokyo in the
eslie M Frost, the Prime Minister of the Province of Ontario and four-year-old stepdaughter by mary purpose of our diplomacy generah elections in November to
Mokrzyckh President of New'Canadian Publications witnes- feeding the child broken needles of peace,” he said. “I believe it elect a new. 467-member House of
sea the ceremony.
and pushing needlees and pins desirable to improve gradually Representatives.
The committee believed she
into the child’s body.
our relations with mainland China would
Photo Courtesy of “The Telegram
be a sure winner.
Police said Tokie Matsuda, the through mutual respect fox* each
Mrs. Asanuma was expected to
' 31-year-old common law wife of a other’s position and on the prin make up her mind in a few days
day laborer, also burned the child ciple of non-interference in in whether to run for the Lower
ternal affairs.
with an iron.
House.
The Premier, who preceded
Physicians said they found 46
Emperor Hirohito sent a proxy
TOK tO.—“Even if a flying
yato Ikeda and other political needles ox’ pins in the child’s other members of his cabinet in to the Asanuma home'to extend
s cer should land in front of me, leaders at a political rally at Hi- stomach, head and other parts of delivering policy.reports, said Ja his condolence. Chamberlain Yo
not be surprised. I would biya Public Hall in Downtown the body. They said the child "was pan intends to gradually build up shihiro Tokugawa prayed for the
calmly measure the distance; Tokyo with an American-made “like a pin-cushion” but probably and replenish hex' self-defense deceased Socialist leader and
power as “the proper responsibi made a monetary offering on be
my ,exPosure and snap the speed-graphic camera when Asa would survive.
lity
” of an independent nation.
stutter release.”
half of the Emperor.
numa began delivering a speech.
Some of the needles that had
Sa^ 30-year-old Yasushi The pictures were for the Maini- been forced into the child’s head
th/ 0’ veteran photographer for chi’s evening edition. This is Na and buttocks were as large as r
X ’"^'^u^tion
Mainichi gao’s account of what followed:
phonograph needles. Police said
matS)ap^S’ who snaPPed a dra“At 3:05, three minutes before the case was discovered when the
a5k,on. shot of the assassin- the fatal incident took place, I child, Nagako Yazawa, complain
Inpiir^ Socialist party chairman was standing in front of the stage ed to her father of severe pains.
coS Asanuma by - a fanatic looking up the rostrum where When he took her to a hospital
TOKYO.—You will never con normally do not.
rightist youth, Asanuma was peaking. I had used the pins and needles were dis vince a Japanese that a cow says
A fish swimming through the
moo. It says moe in Japan, and water goes sui sui, a Japanese
dramatic picture of the up eleven of my film packets by covered.
jne. f ’ Otoya Yamaguchi, prepar- then and had only one shot left.
will tell you, and a snake crawl
The woman told police she that is that.
And, a cat says niago instead ing along goes nuru nuru.
of a i a4?ec°nd and fatal thrust Asanuma’s speech was about to wanted to get rid of the mentally
dagger into Asanu- end and I ■was ■waiting to get a retarded child because it was a of meow, and dogs bark wung, _ An airplane flying overhead
wung.
1 OOP eS while a crowd of some good face-picture of him.”
drones boon boon and footsteps
financial burden on her and her
tranJmK0113 looked on, was
It’s all the way sounds are sound kotchi kotchi, while rain
“The political meeting started common law husband. Fukuaki
Virtually falls zaa zaa and thunder booms
over"
around the world shortly after two, attended by an Yazawa. She said she had .been heard and repeated.
radiortA1^ -^ress International audience of more than 1,000 per feeding the child needles mixed' everything sounds
differently goro goro.
than it does to an Canadian ear.
W °, a • and teIeph°to net- sons. As soon as Asanuma start- in with rice since July.
The baby cries ogya ogya,
Automobile horns, for instance, horses neigh, hin hin and a -mouse
one
"as hailed by . all as ed to speak, some 50
au uniformed
unitormed
sound boo boo, not beep beep, or squeals chu chu. When clothes
year O™e best pictures of the rightists, who occupied the front
MAIL TO JAPAN. The Cana honk honk. Church bells toll kang are scrubbed a Japanese will tell
ture'pr6 veteran American pic- row, began to jeer-at him, shout®05i jltOr c.aHed it one of the ing, ‘Shut up, Moscow agent’, da Mail is sailing from Vancou kang, not ding dong. And clocks you, it sounds like jabu jabu. A
^e cen^3111^10 action photos of ‘You arch fool’ and so forth. Asa- ver to Japan and Philippine Is. say katchi katchi, not tick tock.
train whistle toots go go.
Not only do the Japanese hear
lUry.
numa’s
address
was
almost on Nov. 9. The Green Mountain
More familiarly, perhaps, a
State is also sailing from Van things differently, but they have rooster crows koe kay koe koe
fM te*ing routine picsounds for things Canadians and the door bell rings rin rin.
couver to Japan on Nov. 12.
Asanuma, Premier Ha- .(continued on page eight).
Ieda Pro U.S.-Japan
Disavows Neutralism
Widow May Be Candidate
Child Human Pincushion
Assassination Photo Described By Lensman
Japanese Sounds
DISBAND THE J.C.C.A.?
VANCOUVER.—Has the JCCA outlived its usefulness? Thquestion appears to be in-the minds of various Japanese Canadians People’s
TJ-ere
niany Japanese Canadians who wish to
keep the organization alive to work furthex- in the last two proiects
in the city of Vancouver. We have, during the past few years to
Other
exceuGonaT’ mamtai,n that immigration is not a problem except
-ether witn other ethnic groups accomplished the enactment of the' for
Tair Employment Practices Act,” amendments to the “Cemeteri^ filled to^ certain lS^n? y3t
ai™ of integration has been fxdAct,” and an enactment in the Vancouver by-law kown as the T
wark a^sZSCa^
6 "‘^ °f ^ JCCA * 3 buk
Accommodation Practice By-law.” These are almost the last of th*
Jhe ia-St §eiiral meeting the Vancouver JCCA formed a comdiscriminations in our society. Although it is the law of the^mmi-Xj
of course, it is only used as a “standard” upon which our society
tle ciuestion whether the JCCA has outlived its
Should base their behaviour on the matter of racial and reiiX l mfttee S eir general meeting presented the question to the comdiscriminations. : .
. ■ '
b wlmt
I ls a.purpose for the JCCA to exist and if so,
With these accomplishments is there anv other problems whirl,
onVten? aims and short term aims. If there is no
the JCCA should attempt to cux-e ? There is the immigration question
tui^e> tne question then arises “should the JCCA disband?”
The National JCCA has recently submitted a brief to the Minister
a
communicating with the various
throughout the country and has requested an answer to
of Immigration requesting the relaxation of immigration from Tanin
We have heard from various people that the VamZ JCC A tnese questions from each Executive-Council. It will also attempt to
should undertake a project similar to the Toronto JCCA for an Old
(Continued on page 8)
THE NEW CANADIAN
New Canadian
To Welcome
Cinderella Back
TORONTO.—The staff of The
Kew Canadian is happy to an
nounce that an agreement has
been made with Cindy Henmi,
award winner and affiliate of
An independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
CBC, to once again write a .bi
monthly column.
Past readers
will be familiar with her popular
Vol. XXIV.—No. .84
Cinderella” column. Hex’ steady
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1960
TORONTO, ONT work
will be seen beginning Ja
nuary, and a special article of
hers will be appearing in oux* Spe
cial Holiday Issue.
In the line of feminine colum
nists, we have also signed up Miss
Grayce Yamamoto of Notre Dame
College and of late a reporter fox’
the Nelson Times in B.C.
For our Special Holiday Issue,
we have approached other lady .
writers, names such as Michi Ide, |
TOKYO.—On Oct. 21st Japa general elections, expected in Lucy Ikata, and one of the great '
nese Premier Hayato Ikeda firm mid-November. '
“old ones”, (no pun intended!)
ly rejected neutralism for Japan
There are some people in our Mrs. T. M. Kitagawa. Many
and reaffirmed his nation’s strong country who advocate neutral others have been asked to write
ties with the United States.
ism,” Ikeda .said in a pointed re and those who we missed and any
The Prime Minister, who came ference to the opposition Socialist other aspiring writers are asked
to power last July after leftist party. “But these people have ne to take this as an invitation. All
groups demonstrating against the glected to consider the position manuscripts should be in the of
Japan-U.S. Security Treaty forc of Japan in the international fice of The New Canadian before
ed the resignation of Nobusuke situation today. I must say neu- or near. November 5th. PreferKishi, also declared this his gov- tralism
' ”
’ a mere illusion
—' ‘
‘ and a. ably typed and double spaced.
is
ernment was “holding fast” to phantom. We shall never follow Pictures are also welcome.
the controversial pact.
the course of neutralism.”
Ikeda, delivering a major policy
Although he rejected the course
speech before an extraordinary
of
neutralism demanded often in
session of the Diet (Parliament),
asserted that Japan “shall never recent months by the Soviet
follow the course of neutralism.” Union and Communist China, Ike
TOKYO.—The widow of InejiThe Diet session was called pre da declared his intention and de ro Asanuma, Socialist party
sire
to
establish
friendly
rela
paratory to the dissolution of the
chairman who was assassinated
Lower House and the calling of tions with communist nations, in by a 17-year-old ultra-nationalist
cluding Communist China. But he
made it clear he would brook no student, may be a candidate for
interference in Japan’s domestic the Lower House seat held by her
husband.
affairs by the Reds.
The party’s central executive
“My government, while holding
committee
selected Mrs- Kyoko
Karl Julius Baier, President of the Canadian Ethnic Press Club in
TOKYO.—-Police authorities in fast to the basic position of Japan
as
a
free
nation,
will
cultishe Avas
i ron to, presents. Prime Minister Diefenbaker with a scrapbook con- Nagano, some 200 miles north
% fading candidate
editorial comments which appeared in the ethnic papers west of Tokyo, arrested and vate friendly relations with Com- } ' ’
cnn°SK “ie country in connection with the Prime Minister’s recent charged with attempted murder munist countries as much as pos tor a Lower House seat from the
JPeech at United Nations.
a ■woman who tried to kill hex' sible in accordance -with the pri first constituency in Tokyo in the
eslie M Frost, the Prime Minister of the Province of Ontario and four-year-old stepdaughter by mary purpose of our diplomacy generah elections in November to
Mokrzyckh President of New'Canadian Publications witnes- feeding the child broken needles of peace,” he said. “I believe it elect a new. 467-member House of
sea the ceremony.
and pushing needlees and pins desirable to improve gradually Representatives.
The committee believed she
into the child’s body.
our relations with mainland China would
Photo Courtesy of “The Telegram
be a sure winner.
Police said Tokie Matsuda, the through mutual respect fox* each
Mrs. Asanuma was expected to
' 31-year-old common law wife of a other’s position and on the prin make up her mind in a few days
day laborer, also burned the child ciple of non-interference in in whether to run for the Lower
ternal affairs.
with an iron.
House.
The Premier, who preceded
Physicians said they found 46
Emperor Hirohito sent a proxy
TOK tO.—“Even if a flying
yato Ikeda and other political needles ox’ pins in the child’s other members of his cabinet in to the Asanuma home'to extend
s cer should land in front of me, leaders at a political rally at Hi- stomach, head and other parts of delivering policy.reports, said Ja his condolence. Chamberlain Yo
not be surprised. I would biya Public Hall in Downtown the body. They said the child "was pan intends to gradually build up shihiro Tokugawa prayed for the
calmly measure the distance; Tokyo with an American-made “like a pin-cushion” but probably and replenish hex' self-defense deceased Socialist leader and
power as “the proper responsibi made a monetary offering on be
my ,exPosure and snap the speed-graphic camera when Asa would survive.
lity
” of an independent nation.
stutter release.”
half of the Emperor.
numa began delivering a speech.
Some of the needles that had
Sa^ 30-year-old Yasushi The pictures were for the Maini- been forced into the child’s head
th/ 0’ veteran photographer for chi’s evening edition. This is Na and buttocks were as large as r
X ’"^'^u^tion
Mainichi gao’s account of what followed:
phonograph needles. Police said
matS)ap^S’ who snaPPed a dra“At 3:05, three minutes before the case was discovered when the
a5k,on. shot of the assassin- the fatal incident took place, I child, Nagako Yazawa, complain
Inpiir^ Socialist party chairman was standing in front of the stage ed to her father of severe pains.
coS Asanuma by - a fanatic looking up the rostrum where When he took her to a hospital
TOKYO.—You will never con normally do not.
rightist youth, Asanuma was peaking. I had used the pins and needles were dis vince a Japanese that a cow says
A fish swimming through the
moo. It says moe in Japan, and water goes sui sui, a Japanese
dramatic picture of the up eleven of my film packets by covered.
jne. f ’ Otoya Yamaguchi, prepar- then and had only one shot left.
will tell you, and a snake crawl
The woman told police she that is that.
And, a cat says niago instead ing along goes nuru nuru.
of a i a4?ec°nd and fatal thrust Asanuma’s speech was about to wanted to get rid of the mentally
dagger into Asanu- end and I ■was ■waiting to get a retarded child because it was a of meow, and dogs bark wung, _ An airplane flying overhead
wung.
1 OOP eS while a crowd of some good face-picture of him.”
drones boon boon and footsteps
financial burden on her and her
tranJmK0113 looked on, was
It’s all the way sounds are sound kotchi kotchi, while rain
“The political meeting started common law husband. Fukuaki
Virtually falls zaa zaa and thunder booms
over"
around the world shortly after two, attended by an Yazawa. She said she had .been heard and repeated.
radiortA1^ -^ress International audience of more than 1,000 per feeding the child needles mixed' everything sounds
differently goro goro.
than it does to an Canadian ear.
W °, a • and teIeph°to net- sons. As soon as Asanuma start- in with rice since July.
The baby cries ogya ogya,
Automobile horns, for instance, horses neigh, hin hin and a -mouse
one
"as hailed by . all as ed to speak, some 50
au uniformed
unitormed
sound boo boo, not beep beep, or squeals chu chu. When clothes
year O™e best pictures of the rightists, who occupied the front
MAIL TO JAPAN. The Cana honk honk. Church bells toll kang are scrubbed a Japanese will tell
ture'pr6 veteran American pic- row, began to jeer-at him, shout®05i jltOr c.aHed it one of the ing, ‘Shut up, Moscow agent’, da Mail is sailing from Vancou kang, not ding dong. And clocks you, it sounds like jabu jabu. A
^e cen^3111^10 action photos of ‘You arch fool’ and so forth. Asa- ver to Japan and Philippine Is. say katchi katchi, not tick tock.
train whistle toots go go.
Not only do the Japanese hear
lUry.
numa’s
address
was
almost on Nov. 9. The Green Mountain
More familiarly, perhaps, a
State is also sailing from Van things differently, but they have rooster crows koe kay koe koe
fM te*ing routine picsounds for things Canadians and the door bell rings rin rin.
couver to Japan on Nov. 12.
Asanuma, Premier Ha- .(continued on page eight).
Ieda Pro U.S.-Japan
Disavows Neutralism
Widow May Be Candidate
Child Human Pincushion
Assassination Photo Described By Lensman
Japanese Sounds
Page 2
. PAGE 2
THE NEW <CANADIAN
SPORTS
Saturday, Ocfahe,. M
CALE
nKT
ie Cha-no-yu Ceremony Postponed Until Nov. 5 !
AROUND TORONTO
?he Nottawasaga River, in
a -cor tU1?n flnei'y’ pIayed host to
a scoie of successful anglers this
past week. Some of the outstand
’ SfnCa£ mre by Nisei fisherk
Key OSeki
—8% m
&"W
,Kk
’hara-8
b
'••n
12,; tO “c must "' 8™-
^iJ^^y'T^ O^
October
Yomiuri Giants Beat
^ Toronto. Kisaragi ChiK'
'
h. as A
to'Se
“
; X bera
^en held
field on
on
. masquerade dance ^ S >1!o^
Saturday, Oct> 22nd has been
postponed to November 5th Ad
mission is by ticket only’ and
tickets, can be obtained by phontaM§ n'0? »*' (Hamil-’
I Everyone welcome
n to J0 P.^
ln
g‘_the Social Convenors:
i
7 . 'm Jo. Rambow: Jop Fu r.^O^YO,~The San Francisco
DoiTy,^
H
t
T
TE
c
™
Oct
21.
Ken
Irs- Kay Hayashi LE. 2-6378
kumoto—5 Jb. and iq ib Rain TntntS v’ere blanked 1-0 by the
n?;r„ (214); Tom Sumi 575 (211); Les
cows; Tom Madokoro 7 lb RaS Tokyo lomiuri Giants Saturday 4 1488D010thy Nakamachi LE.’ Doi
567- (200); Sam Hayashi 564 (241)of ^ ^^ fe—ball £
W ^“JW10*0.553 217); Chuck Shimizu
Tea Cerem°ny will be held 5“ ;S fTJ?8 (21.3); Frank Kitazaki _Box lunches served at ^I.qq^^
Ed Utsunomiya-535; Jim Bunrs
at the same place, Elmsley Resi- So<203);
,, Host of the fish were taken on
?seen 529
tcW 532; Ken Irie 53I;
Io
get h°ts “S “"i “ 7°“ don’t S^ce on A Mary’s Street, St?
p
™V
’ shrugged San Francis Michael s Campus. Miss Terry
November
4D5?: Nancy Mori 477; Mary Kobaco
manager
Tom
Sheehan
praff-------- ——_ 1
?T'6 ^^ht 'b°th his on at black
Ahc® .Nagamf 474; Tor Hashi- . 8—Toronto. Thp FL
Yamashita will give an odori de- luS^hy .Sunohara. 467; Eri Ta- ■ £°r the Society for OrT'f11! 3ereWl
’
^our'hR hurling of To
held
nt
ELSyfeJudies
£
sfi ttX ■?' latest report kvn
-with ‘ a background ^aha ^3; Eileen Tahara 461; Mary i Mitkyo s two moundsmen.
'
of
English
translation.
There
will
440
1
f
53;
.Betty
Potts
447;
Mita
Miyazaki
Mary
s
St.,
St.
Michael
r
n
Ce
on
St
I I?
emit the Rainbows are bp^in
■ Y^® Japanese scored
^“—Toronto
Tnr^ + n
^mpus. I
also
be
a
.small
Oriental
art
dis433;
EVrin
Yoki
Yonimetsu
’
annual
’
ba
Zaar
n
C
Budd
hist
Ch
UK
J
wa° 5VmOn e^ *'so
h
Muie and Mary Ebata 430
seventh inning when Willie Mavs
(Vot happen mit you?); Marge Sato 459bS 1,J° ^™« ^ topped a high fly by Akira Ku P ay‘ ight refreshments will be Doreen
Sumi 428; Marg Tahara 427
a siIveT collection
will be taken.
Auditorium from 9 p m C(oaf ^^ I k
*
*
* Mary Ebata
nimaist hom^^
^^e1 Ku- , ®n’Pct. 5th, we had a very in- K^,UN1PAcXnTEN’PIN- OcL 23. Tad Waka
mission will be SI nn r° 1 aA-U | ho
come.
’ uu' n^eryone wel- I
te.^sting and informative evenin»• bayashi 560 (232); Barry Gord 560 (229)San Francisco madp
i
''P1^ C°nsu^
Katakami. He
<
S"^'?' ? t]le same inn.Y sketched a brief history of the
development of democracy in Ja
pan—modern Japan ■ is but one
it
hundred years old since it origin- zum?™1 T®^ Kitsuki 525; Toy Has hiume 504;. Terne- Yamanaka 467- Nobbv
h
£
d
.
witn
the
reign
of
Emperor
»e?,?P’T «cldmg was real
fro
.^5; ^my Toki 434; Marie KoI4 ■
S sovereign power was trans- Okadahl 418 ; N^1®7 ihoshi 427; Anne
commercial fishermen!
•
eueat, as good as bur maior kn
k
vS y 3; Ncnicy Masuda 414; Jean
^S te/m®<’ said Sheeham . 1
feired
from
the emperor to the SSl
For Sale
;
Mori 402; Kay TakaOscar Ha task ita
"it wouWn??8 dr°P'Ping the ball, ?K0I^e’ ^Ahhi the establishment of
*
*
^Mary Mitsuki
DAIKKON FOR SAT Fi
b
catches ”d
500 the Constitution of 1947; the em
still alive, (in tbo
Fresh/ W, and
SUNDAY PLAYTIME TEN-PIN Oct 23
peror
became
a
symbol
of
the
PATRONIZE
;F .
said Sheehan. “He -hid
Kai^ka 568 <251); Dick Tanaka only ^“CS^ ^X'bu£ g
hand?”
ln the middIe
his btate, and yet became very much saki 527- r^w536 (2M); Kenny Miya
OUR ADVERTISERS
doser to the people.
sak 52] ' r y Miy?saki 521; Ken Miya- ■■very. Phon. Be"^ «
MiH^ 512 Gio°r^^
(203); jLx i
and answer period’ qaW
/
u
^
510;
Herb
after the delivery of the paper 2k?) ^ the.hell is this? Old Miyahome
Male Help Wanted
) I O°Del° hS WM reUCTcd *V Bi»y ^Vspeciany stimulating. Conexpressed the view
PRESSER WANTED wiaTTW
that Japan s happiest future lay i
1
.Me. Phone BE.
in
h!n
S
e
A
he
Dioderate
course
da
neylo^)
Z
v
me
4,^h
‘
.
1500 Dundas at Dufferin
S¥i -dels KXS
‘ PoLbcal and international Towata 409
‘“^mzuka 413; Speed I CUTTER FOR SWEATFRq v
B
408- . Mary only. Best wa
iorn^H JWsnen«d
policies.
Extremes in the past Tanada 401R°S®
and
balloons
and
J
r
[
t3
.,.
I1
?
wer
s
policies,
LE. -2-4267
of smll *”“’yin11 ^s have pre
*
*
Akiyama Ume, Phone EM. 8-1317 (TorX)0' ^
disastrous and it
Skates
families.
‘ ■
^S‘ Diilitary would proved
be
w?™S° “S ?'■ ?■ “’
unwis? for her to sud(New S reconditioned)
Domestic Help Wanted
b
Izumi 735isolationist when7 TeAy Fujioka 715.
4
she hitherto has been sympathe
Phonda
Masuda
715
/ocu
tic to the West. Whatever change S R^8^ 683 (282); Amy Fuku'
f las"mI’IADJ' ^iSofn^
s£^6Ln£?N^
KEG NEWS
San Francisco Giants
CLASSIFIED
OSCAR'S
Sl^l^ft
E1^ Jr ^ “?- «?>
PHOTO & SPORT
spoken. 'Phone '*. 2g fj".
Travel Arrangements
Last Nihon Ship NoyJ 3
peace”0"
TORONTO, Ont.—The Yasuthe
shimaMaru entered the St LawJapaFese fans were polite
Sssr • ?er had ^ hut 99nR §eaway last Saturday Oct
S th
“ 'roronto
L°
a seat expecting to up and then left again for Japan on
Tuesday, Oct. 25th. The freighter
-Kirkland and McCovey—ban- thl’
TOne °f the vessels belong Turner-501 (203). j a£b5Tshl 501; R.
hall into the bleachers.
° th
• ' f
t v vUU.
■
Air-Ship-Bus-Rail.
Tours-Hotel-Sightseeing
Travollorg Cheques
_ Obtainable
*
nsvsl, Accident
. “d baggage Insurance
rain
Takeda expressed
ruJ-ShS dow, let’s/get some Stt^^ ao'1 ab»^"
^heehan repeatedly plead
ed in the dugout. “You’d
i
X 01 onto at a minimum of at least
that pitcher was Warren Spahn ’’ one a month during the next S
.
bedstarter
at Ja^nese SOI2
su^ sapping- line, The Mitwho won 10 and lost 9 s^hpaw I
dock a freighter
Mikagesan Maru”, here /S’
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
|
* ml (Pron°unced 'Empty'?)
“"HpJa'n'W .league.
worid »aI ‘° °lh
Anywhere — Anytime
rassc
se .608
(279)Yoko
Iwa606
(26$);
S^£m
«
arranged by Steamer or Air
Call for Reservations or
Information-—EM. 8-9934
YONEMITSU |
Watch Repair Shop
Hb. 5-3652 — Rea. i p 9
328 Broadview Ave!^^
[
CONTINENTAL ACCEPTANCE
113 McCauI St. TORONTO
x
CORPORATION LTD.
'
Jhos. T. Onizuka, B.A,
(formerly- Pathey Ffnance Co. Lfd )
KAZUO G. OIYE
BARRISTER
__ SOLICITOR
notary
BARRS?' SOLICITOR and
. NOTARY PUBLIC
eF5^ & Comme™al Loans
181 EAST PENDER ST
VANCOUVER 4zB.c^
•
Jy?®?
ox- 8-2380 (Res.)
2 College St., Toronto
226 QUEEN ST. WEST, TORONTO
hJ!ls ^ good policy to
1 ||
.
”——=
~
LudeH C Kurata
I
J
1 niPTfTk,m
xu' did
I WALES and nnivrAwr < i
and SOLICITOR
j
have the Right POLICY
Consult
I INSURA^r
(
”CAN I
INSURANCE AGENTS J
I
«4 Yong, Slroet
Toronto
WA' ^H
. 7..----------:------- 1 ~
Or Bringing Someon© over?
W® represent all
Lues including
American- President
Northwest Airlines
Canadian Pacilic
As3®rican
? or caU fM
tun information cad
rats#.
DOMIAIIO1V
Travel Office
EM. 4-7331 — Toronto
5S Wellington Street West
900 1
6650
RnllroAw
i
A
uancing instructors,
n
Y e: Beginning Sunday, Oct.
117
lrLthe eVeninV Apply at
rw st. Patrick Street (Toronto).
£ X^ED^ ?r varletT st°re. Week
PhoL W
hours. Responsibilities.
6°® Y.c O1?ashi at WA. 3-0346 after
“ p.m. (Toronto)
IZ™IST‘, Young Nisei girl willing to be-Ff:
typist-bookkeeper for moderc
™d Yon^
arsa.
Phone AM 1-8465 evenings.
(Toronto.)
' 4
J
II
< 11
J- and G.
Painters & Decorators
™ r-pi.
62 RICHMOND ST. WIST
JOHN T. SUGAI
RO. 7-1092
TORONTO
SHINGLING
v
SHEET METAL WORK
Wl ——
Rooms to Let
TWO UNFURNISHED rooms with sink,
y i ^Sn °rL_.bnd Coxwell district. Phone
•••Illium I TWO UNFURNISHED room, vilh heou
Established Over 10 Years
AU-WAY ROOFING SERVICE
01
-
^OT^^ prauo
B s,; RO. 7-3427
FLAT ROOFS
EAVESTROUGHING
1
GIRL CLERK for Variety store. Satur. ays and Sundays only. Experience not
.necessary. Phone WA. 2-8492 (Toronto).
Room 103
.
^^t847 - OX. I-3388 (Res.)
TO JAPAN
Cm
PKME-|?^R NEEDED- Good nay.
6-0725. Vivian Blouses Mfg,
457 Richmond Street West. (Toronto).
K. Iwata Trcivel Service
TRAVELLING
S°“.kE!S' ap^^uS
rot* d>
needle machine. Apply ClauNelson Street ( off John
S ’ .b>ei^en- Queen and Adelaire) (To
ronto). Phone EM. 3-1301.
Ken Doi
I. KAMEOKA
WE HAVE NO
SERVICE CHARGES
fo:
Female Help Wanted
TORONTO
wiring for rent, second floor flat. Dufferin and Lawrence district.
Phone
RU. 7-3782 (Toronto).
0 Ai
DRIVING SCHOOL
$3.00 per hour
ON YOUR FIRST LESSON
. WITH NO OBLIGATION
■"' Classroom Instruction
488 BLOOR ST. W.
■ LE. 2-3656
w
a
S3
c
<72
SPECIALIZING IN TV SERVICE
AND ANTENNA INSTALLATION
o
O
3
®
television
SERVICE
Phone LE. 4-7954-5-6
1338 Queen Street West. Toronto 3
OWNED BY HAROLD MAEDA
o
to
oo
THE NEW <CANADIAN
SPORTS
Saturday, Ocfahe,. M
CALE
nKT
ie Cha-no-yu Ceremony Postponed Until Nov. 5 !
AROUND TORONTO
?he Nottawasaga River, in
a -cor tU1?n flnei'y’ pIayed host to
a scoie of successful anglers this
past week. Some of the outstand
’ SfnCa£ mre by Nisei fisherk
Key OSeki
—8% m
&"W
,Kk
’hara-8
b
'••n
12,; tO “c must "' 8™-
^iJ^^y'T^ O^
October
Yomiuri Giants Beat
^ Toronto. Kisaragi ChiK'
'
h. as A
to'Se
“
; X bera
^en held
field on
on
. masquerade dance ^ S >1!o^
Saturday, Oct> 22nd has been
postponed to November 5th Ad
mission is by ticket only’ and
tickets, can be obtained by phontaM§ n'0? »*' (Hamil-’
I Everyone welcome
n to J0 P.^
ln
g‘_the Social Convenors:
i
7 . 'm Jo. Rambow: Jop Fu r.^O^YO,~The San Francisco
DoiTy,^
H
t
T
TE
c
™
Oct
21.
Ken
Irs- Kay Hayashi LE. 2-6378
kumoto—5 Jb. and iq ib Rain TntntS v’ere blanked 1-0 by the
n?;r„ (214); Tom Sumi 575 (211); Les
cows; Tom Madokoro 7 lb RaS Tokyo lomiuri Giants Saturday 4 1488D010thy Nakamachi LE.’ Doi
567- (200); Sam Hayashi 564 (241)of ^ ^^ fe—ball £
W ^“JW10*0.553 217); Chuck Shimizu
Tea Cerem°ny will be held 5“ ;S fTJ?8 (21.3); Frank Kitazaki _Box lunches served at ^I.qq^^
Ed Utsunomiya-535; Jim Bunrs
at the same place, Elmsley Resi- So<203);
,, Host of the fish were taken on
?seen 529
tcW 532; Ken Irie 53I;
Io
get h°ts “S “"i “ 7°“ don’t S^ce on A Mary’s Street, St?
p
™V
’ shrugged San Francis Michael s Campus. Miss Terry
November
4D5?: Nancy Mori 477; Mary Kobaco
manager
Tom
Sheehan
praff-------- ——_ 1
?T'6 ^^ht 'b°th his on at black
Ahc® .Nagamf 474; Tor Hashi- . 8—Toronto. Thp FL
Yamashita will give an odori de- luS^hy .Sunohara. 467; Eri Ta- ■ £°r the Society for OrT'f11! 3ereWl
’
^our'hR hurling of To
held
nt
ELSyfeJudies
£
sfi ttX ■?' latest report kvn
-with ‘ a background ^aha ^3; Eileen Tahara 461; Mary i Mitkyo s two moundsmen.
'
of
English
translation.
There
will
440
1
f
53;
.Betty
Potts
447;
Mita
Miyazaki
Mary
s
St.,
St.
Michael
r
n
Ce
on
St
I I?
emit the Rainbows are bp^in
■ Y^® Japanese scored
^“—Toronto
Tnr^ + n
^mpus. I
also
be
a
.small
Oriental
art
dis433;
EVrin
Yoki
Yonimetsu
’
annual
’
ba
Zaar
n
C
Budd
hist
Ch
UK
J
wa° 5VmOn e^ *'so
h
Muie and Mary Ebata 430
seventh inning when Willie Mavs
(Vot happen mit you?); Marge Sato 459bS 1,J° ^™« ^ topped a high fly by Akira Ku P ay‘ ight refreshments will be Doreen
Sumi 428; Marg Tahara 427
a siIveT collection
will be taken.
Auditorium from 9 p m C(oaf ^^ I k
*
*
* Mary Ebata
nimaist hom^^
^^e1 Ku- , ®n’Pct. 5th, we had a very in- K^,UN1PAcXnTEN’PIN- OcL 23. Tad Waka
mission will be SI nn r° 1 aA-U | ho
come.
’ uu' n^eryone wel- I
te.^sting and informative evenin»• bayashi 560 (232); Barry Gord 560 (229)San Francisco madp
i
''P1^ C°nsu^
Katakami. He
<
S"^'?' ? t]le same inn.Y sketched a brief history of the
development of democracy in Ja
pan—modern Japan ■ is but one
it
hundred years old since it origin- zum?™1 T®^ Kitsuki 525; Toy Has hiume 504;. Terne- Yamanaka 467- Nobbv
h
£
d
.
witn
the
reign
of
Emperor
»e?,?P’T «cldmg was real
fro
.^5; ^my Toki 434; Marie KoI4 ■
S sovereign power was trans- Okadahl 418 ; N^1®7 ihoshi 427; Anne
commercial fishermen!
•
eueat, as good as bur maior kn
k
vS y 3; Ncnicy Masuda 414; Jean
^S te/m®<’ said Sheeham . 1
feired
from
the emperor to the SSl
For Sale
;
Mori 402; Kay TakaOscar Ha task ita
"it wouWn??8 dr°P'Ping the ball, ?K0I^e’ ^Ahhi the establishment of
*
*
^Mary Mitsuki
DAIKKON FOR SAT Fi
b
catches ”d
500 the Constitution of 1947; the em
still alive, (in tbo
Fresh/ W, and
SUNDAY PLAYTIME TEN-PIN Oct 23
peror
became
a
symbol
of
the
PATRONIZE
;F .
said Sheehan. “He -hid
Kai^ka 568 <251); Dick Tanaka only ^“CS^ ^X'bu£ g
hand?”
ln the middIe
his btate, and yet became very much saki 527- r^w536 (2M); Kenny Miya
OUR ADVERTISERS
doser to the people.
sak 52] ' r y Miy?saki 521; Ken Miya- ■■very. Phon. Be"^ «
MiH^ 512 Gio°r^^
(203); jLx i
and answer period’ qaW
/
u
^
510;
Herb
after the delivery of the paper 2k?) ^ the.hell is this? Old Miyahome
Male Help Wanted
) I O°Del° hS WM reUCTcd *V Bi»y ^Vspeciany stimulating. Conexpressed the view
PRESSER WANTED wiaTTW
that Japan s happiest future lay i
1
.Me. Phone BE.
in
h!n
S
e
A
he
Dioderate
course
da
neylo^)
Z
v
me
4,^h
‘
.
1500 Dundas at Dufferin
S¥i -dels KXS
‘ PoLbcal and international Towata 409
‘“^mzuka 413; Speed I CUTTER FOR SWEATFRq v
B
408- . Mary only. Best wa
iorn^H JWsnen«d
policies.
Extremes in the past Tanada 401R°S®
and
balloons
and
J
r
[
t3
.,.
I1
?
wer
s
policies,
LE. -2-4267
of smll *”“’yin11 ^s have pre
*
*
Akiyama Ume, Phone EM. 8-1317 (TorX)0' ^
disastrous and it
Skates
families.
‘ ■
^S‘ Diilitary would proved
be
w?™S° “S ?'■ ?■ “’
unwis? for her to sud(New S reconditioned)
Domestic Help Wanted
b
Izumi 735isolationist when7 TeAy Fujioka 715.
4
she hitherto has been sympathe
Phonda
Masuda
715
/ocu
tic to the West. Whatever change S R^8^ 683 (282); Amy Fuku'
f las"mI’IADJ' ^iSofn^
s£^6Ln£?N^
KEG NEWS
San Francisco Giants
CLASSIFIED
OSCAR'S
Sl^l^ft
E1^ Jr ^ “?- «?>
PHOTO & SPORT
spoken. 'Phone '*. 2g fj".
Travel Arrangements
Last Nihon Ship NoyJ 3
peace”0"
TORONTO, Ont.—The Yasuthe
shimaMaru entered the St LawJapaFese fans were polite
Sssr • ?er had ^ hut 99nR §eaway last Saturday Oct
S th
“ 'roronto
L°
a seat expecting to up and then left again for Japan on
Tuesday, Oct. 25th. The freighter
-Kirkland and McCovey—ban- thl’
TOne °f the vessels belong Turner-501 (203). j a£b5Tshl 501; R.
hall into the bleachers.
° th
• ' f
t v vUU.
■
Air-Ship-Bus-Rail.
Tours-Hotel-Sightseeing
Travollorg Cheques
_ Obtainable
*
nsvsl, Accident
. “d baggage Insurance
rain
Takeda expressed
ruJ-ShS dow, let’s/get some Stt^^ ao'1 ab»^"
^heehan repeatedly plead
ed in the dugout. “You’d
i
X 01 onto at a minimum of at least
that pitcher was Warren Spahn ’’ one a month during the next S
.
bedstarter
at Ja^nese SOI2
su^ sapping- line, The Mitwho won 10 and lost 9 s^hpaw I
dock a freighter
Mikagesan Maru”, here /S’
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
|
* ml (Pron°unced 'Empty'?)
“"HpJa'n'W .league.
worid »aI ‘° °lh
Anywhere — Anytime
rassc
se .608
(279)Yoko
Iwa606
(26$);
S^£m
«
arranged by Steamer or Air
Call for Reservations or
Information-—EM. 8-9934
YONEMITSU |
Watch Repair Shop
Hb. 5-3652 — Rea. i p 9
328 Broadview Ave!^^
[
CONTINENTAL ACCEPTANCE
113 McCauI St. TORONTO
x
CORPORATION LTD.
'
Jhos. T. Onizuka, B.A,
(formerly- Pathey Ffnance Co. Lfd )
KAZUO G. OIYE
BARRISTER
__ SOLICITOR
notary
BARRS?' SOLICITOR and
. NOTARY PUBLIC
eF5^ & Comme™al Loans
181 EAST PENDER ST
VANCOUVER 4zB.c^
•
Jy?®?
ox- 8-2380 (Res.)
2 College St., Toronto
226 QUEEN ST. WEST, TORONTO
hJ!ls ^ good policy to
1 ||
.
”——=
~
LudeH C Kurata
I
J
1 niPTfTk,m
xu' did
I WALES and nnivrAwr < i
and SOLICITOR
j
have the Right POLICY
Consult
I INSURA^r
(
”CAN I
INSURANCE AGENTS J
I
«4 Yong, Slroet
Toronto
WA' ^H
. 7..----------:------- 1 ~
Or Bringing Someon© over?
W® represent all
Lues including
American- President
Northwest Airlines
Canadian Pacilic
As3®rican
? or caU fM
tun information cad
rats#.
DOMIAIIO1V
Travel Office
EM. 4-7331 — Toronto
5S Wellington Street West
900 1
6650
RnllroAw
i
A
uancing instructors,
n
Y e: Beginning Sunday, Oct.
117
lrLthe eVeninV Apply at
rw st. Patrick Street (Toronto).
£ X^ED^ ?r varletT st°re. Week
PhoL W
hours. Responsibilities.
6°® Y.c O1?ashi at WA. 3-0346 after
“ p.m. (Toronto)
IZ™IST‘, Young Nisei girl willing to be-Ff:
typist-bookkeeper for moderc
™d Yon^
arsa.
Phone AM 1-8465 evenings.
(Toronto.)
' 4
J
II
< 11
J- and G.
Painters & Decorators
™ r-pi.
62 RICHMOND ST. WIST
JOHN T. SUGAI
RO. 7-1092
TORONTO
SHINGLING
v
SHEET METAL WORK
Wl ——
Rooms to Let
TWO UNFURNISHED rooms with sink,
y i ^Sn °rL_.bnd Coxwell district. Phone
•••Illium I TWO UNFURNISHED room, vilh heou
Established Over 10 Years
AU-WAY ROOFING SERVICE
01
-
^OT^^ prauo
B s,; RO. 7-3427
FLAT ROOFS
EAVESTROUGHING
1
GIRL CLERK for Variety store. Satur. ays and Sundays only. Experience not
.necessary. Phone WA. 2-8492 (Toronto).
Room 103
.
^^t847 - OX. I-3388 (Res.)
TO JAPAN
Cm
PKME-|?^R NEEDED- Good nay.
6-0725. Vivian Blouses Mfg,
457 Richmond Street West. (Toronto).
K. Iwata Trcivel Service
TRAVELLING
S°“.kE!S' ap^^uS
rot* d>
needle machine. Apply ClauNelson Street ( off John
S ’ .b>ei^en- Queen and Adelaire) (To
ronto). Phone EM. 3-1301.
Ken Doi
I. KAMEOKA
WE HAVE NO
SERVICE CHARGES
fo:
Female Help Wanted
TORONTO
wiring for rent, second floor flat. Dufferin and Lawrence district.
Phone
RU. 7-3782 (Toronto).
0 Ai
DRIVING SCHOOL
$3.00 per hour
ON YOUR FIRST LESSON
. WITH NO OBLIGATION
■"' Classroom Instruction
488 BLOOR ST. W.
■ LE. 2-3656
w
a
S3
c
<72
SPECIALIZING IN TV SERVICE
AND ANTENNA INSTALLATION
o
O
3
®
television
SERVICE
Phone LE. 4-7954-5-6
1338 Queen Street West. Toronto 3
OWNED BY HAROLD MAEDA
o
to
oo
Page 3
lnrdav. October 29, 1960
THE NEW CANADIAN
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TOMORROW
INSURE TODAY
FOR A SURE
ted
blouses
Clauff John
X (To-
W. K. GARDENS
Crown Life Insurance Co
900 W. Pender St. (MU. 1-7341)
6650 Heather St. (FA. 5-2528)
Vancouver, B.C,
uctors.
0c;.
ply at
5^
Weei
lilies,
after
to
ui
^r b
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
CATERING TO
Wedding, Club Banquets
Private Dining Rooms
aiix
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S3
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o
3
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area,
nto.)
pay.
ifg->
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wo J
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K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
»Y
if-
Authorized Agent for AH Airlines =
0 AND P T t^HP^IZED AGENT FOR
- ND P LINES, AMERICAN PRESIDENT LINES
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Saturday, October 29, I960
__THE NEW CANADIAN
/Personal Notes Across Canada
PAGE 7
Adventists On The March !
tfstes and doings
dav
Japauese Seventhwith ^11S Church, together
rT'emi°ny at tlle Toronto Buddhist over S1' C WrChes the worId
TANAKA-NAKASHIMA
On ?ctober 8, I960 with
commence its annual
SJ!Lerend Newton Ishiura of- Han-P
Hai vest Ingathering World ServVancouver, B.C. ficiating1C® campaign in Toronto.
On Friday,
November
the is on Spadina Road, near College
The Vancouver Canadian Me rJrin^palsare daughter of Mrs
A/Ventist Church is well- fourth,
•
the
Nisei
Student
’
s
Club
Dancing will be
morial United Church was th e ? ”<>?oto of Toronto, Ont and A110?11 for* operating- the va^t. ■is presenting its annual dance, ana Spadina.
setting on October 1, 1960 for ata’S “1 te' K Kuwabara
^orks~hospitals, sana- ithe Autumn Nocturne. Everyone fiom eight o’clock to one o’clock
the marriage of Miss Miyoshi Na also of Toronto.
^Pepourums, orphan- is
- most welcome to attend this for the price of $1.00 per person,
waf
W
?
iDg
’
a
^Pton
bee our ad in this issue of The
kashima, daughter of Mr. and
a°^si. home-for-the-aged,
etc open
(
dance.
New
Canadian.
which
extend
all
over
the
globe
Mrs. T. Nakashima of Comber,
quests at the
_
If you happen to have that
N.S.C.
Ontario, and Mr. Minoru Tanaka, Sai Woo Chop Suey.
Accordiir
to thec JAev.
Rev. ueorK
George eveni
come aowi
down
Q
a
L,
J ?»
.v free
u why
’ •> not. vume
son of Mr. and Mrs. I. Tanaka
Pastor of Japanese and join the rest of the crowd
of Vancouver, B.C. The Reverend
church here, their healing insti- Y ou’---------re sure "to meet someone you
y^L0IS- Quebec.—An “IkebaMitsui officiated.
know.
If you don’t see any fami
reHont
^Ulld 111 tbe rem°test
two h f
WOrld’ more than liar faces, all is not lost because na • demonstration was the highAfter the ceremony, a recep
an<! Mrs' Sadajiro Asari
the meeting of the Lady’s
kdlld .countries are bene- "e still promise you a pleasant o
tion took place at the Lotus Gar of Steveston, B.C. wish to anW
thar humanitarian ef- evening of dancing to music that ^V? °f St- J°hn Fisher Church
den.
t le ^agement of their ioit. there are almost 350 insti- has been especially selected to of Valois/Quebec on October 20.
*
$
v’yek°’ t0 M1’ Richard i21OnS’ ^Raffed by well-trained suit you, and you, and vou. Now x.i11 tune with the fall season,
Shigenobu
Kanegawa,
son of Airs
AKUNE-NISHI
111 ?eir °"m schools is the time to plan with the dance Mrs. J. F. Horisaki opened her
I"rtaKmeS” of
demonstration with a red Maple
m the U.S. and Canada.
less than a week away.
Steveston, B.C.
The Autumn Nocturne is goin°- and a baby pom-pom composition,
kca^ Pr°jects include that
The wedding will take place on
Marriage vows were exchanged
NnJuv01} ^neral H°spital in to be held at the UNF Hall which followed by a Nageire -of- Wild
Kose -branches and Mums. As a
on October 8, 1960 between Miss
?n ^ Steveston North York. The Rev. Aso said
finale,
Driftwood was combined
Itoko Nishi, daughter of Mr. and Buddhist Church with the Rev. S,
beginning next year, this
'^N^^tficently
with cone bearing
K.
Ikuta
officiating
5
.
Mrs. H. Nishi of Steveston, B.C.,"
feplM
1 expand its bed capa
I
me
branches.
This arrangement
Sewanins
were
Mr.
and
MrsThe
next
meeting
of
the
Tor
and Mr. Roy Akune; son of Mr.
cities by 240. In Oshawa the On
leceived
a
tremedous
ovation
K.
Ohno
of
Barnwell,
Alberta.
onto
Chapter
JCCA
will
be
held
and Mrs. U. Akune also of Steves
tario Conference of SDA’s de
from
the
ladies
and
the
Reverend
on
Thursday,
October
27th
from
ton, B.C., at the Steveston Bud
cided to. build a modern Homef?ri'^e^ This will be com- 8.00 P.M. at 415 Spadina Avenue, r athers who were present.
dhist Church. The Reverend S.
A brief history of Ikebana was
2nd floor front.
Ikuta officiated.
by the end of 1960 and
The
meetingday
has
been
presented
prior to the demonstra
Following the marriage vows,
with be available for Japanese
changed
to
Thursday
in
hopes
of
tion
by
Miss
S. Yasunaka.
i
an
J
Mrs
Tos
hio
Ryoji
(nee
residents.
a reception was held at the Com
Haruko
Sano)
are
happy
to
ahaccommodating
those
members
Seisho ,Kai
munity Centre.
nr^lnian^y
vast Adventist who are attending- night school
*
*
*
^Unce lhe hirth of a son, Geffrey
j t
Programs are niaintain- and various other winter-time
i^AUy°slli 011 September
ed by the members of the church, activities during the week. How- I
24th,
I960
at
St.
Michael
’
s
IZAWA-WATANABE
CARD OF THANKS
Hos- but once a year at this time, they
ever, if this should still be incon
pital in Toronto, Ontario.
appeal to the general public for venient to the majority, please
London, Ont.
liberal
contributions so that they mention it to the Executive.
We wish to express our heart
October 8, 1960 was the date
can expand their works.
Their
felt thanks and appreciation to
The Agenda, tentatively, is as
when Miss Toshiko May Watana
overall goal is $3,500,000 of which follows:
our many relatives and friends
be, daughter of Mr. T. Watanabe
for
the kindness and sympathy
eiinn™
ai
™
se
ohnrch
here
shares
1.
Reading
of
the
Minutes
of London, Ont., became the bride
KUBO
$1100.00.
The
Rev.
Aso
said
that
shown
us in the loss lof our be
2. Correspondence
of Mr. Iwao John Izawa, son of
his
church
is
also
asking
the
pubI
loved
daughter,
Susan.
_
Mr.
Hisaji
Kubo,
86,
died
3.
Treasurer
’
s
Report
Mr. S. Izawa of Spuzzum, B.C.
on
Air. and Airs. S. Fukumoto
4... Committee Reports:
Following the ceremony a re °ctobAr 24th at a club house in he to remember their Japanese
a. Social
ception was held at Hook’s Res- tlie Cninatown section of Toronto, language Radio Program which
b. Special Events
Uuiant in London.
The happy Ont. The funeral was arranged is being broadcast in Ontario as
ss
c. Finance
couple honeymooned to the “Blue by the Toronto JCCA Isseibu aiid well as lit Colorado and Brazil
every
Sunday
morning.
The
local
d.
Bridge
Club
Grass State” of Kentucky in the' took place on the 27th at Thomp
SAY IT. WITH '
e. Choir
son’s Funeral Home. The Rever station which carries the Japa
United States.
FLOWERS
nese program is CHWO 1250 ki
f. ... others
*
*
* '
end K. Shimizu officiated.
locycles ,from 8:00 to 8:30 a.m.
5. Issei-hu Report
Tb? Adventist solicitor will
6. Unfinished ,Business
MATSUNO
BABA-OMOTO
SHARON'S FLORIST
identify himself with the official
a. Kabuki
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
A pioneer resident of Raymond, pamphlet and ribbon. Kind con
Toronto, Ont.
b. Fall Program
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
Alberta, Mr. Toyoichi Matsuno,
7. New Business
,
b^° Omoto became the passed away this week at the sideration is urged and much ap
Bus: HO. 6-2041
preciated by the church.
REMEMBER, friends,. Observ
bnde of Mr. Masao Baba at a
Raymond' Hospital.
Res: HO. 6-7962
ers, and prospective new mem
942 PAPE AVE., TORONTO
bers are. always welcome'.
Marriages
Remember "Autumn Nocturne" on Nov. 4th
“Ikebana” Highlighted
Engagements
dien
W„
nt.
005
JCCA Meeting Oct. 27th
0
► 1
-A .
>
Births
Obituaries
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
Rev. K. Shimizu M.A., B.D. — Rev. E. Yoshioka M.A., B.D.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30,’1960 — 11:30 a.m
"REFORMATION SUNDAY"
A
B'Ne ClaSS — 11:30 a'm- Church School
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
®
^.rcourt Rd., Toronto
I
SEE.
GEORGE K. NISHIDERA
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.*
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH 918 Bathurst St. j
2
p
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1960
a.m., Religious School
Il:00 a.m., MORNING SERVICE
Sangha TYBS Memorial
. 2:00 P'm- laPanese Language School
E R Y O NE CORDIALLY INVITED
for thorough travel arrangements
‘Doctor of Chiropractic
728A ST. CLAIR AVE. WEST
Cosmopolitan Travel Bureau
(,2 Block West of Christie)
Telephone LE. 6-8220
132 Dundas Street West
If No Answer Call
BE. 3-3869
EMpire 4-6288
Toronto
TORONTO
I
D^MS WIO^ STORE
F. A. BREWIN, Q.C
Barrister & Solicitor
your shopping list
I
f
I
9 SAKURA RICE
6 MARUKIN SHOYn
•' VINEGAR
t SUGAR
•
* EGGS
® S™H MEAT
©MANJU
6 MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
Cameron, Weldon
Brewin & McCallum
372 Bay St.
—
EM. 3-4391
Toronto
PHONE EM. 4-7692
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
WELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS
golden dragon
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
284-A YONGE ST.
TORIC
OPTICAL
OPTOMETRISTS
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
SPECIAL ATTENTION FOR TAKEOUT ORDERS
g^Pen Noon to 3 a.m.
—
Orders to Take Out
8'2475
131A Dundas St W„ Toronto
STUDIO
EM. 6-2411
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER. B'.C.
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
Saturday, October 29, I960
__THE NEW CANADIAN
/Personal Notes Across Canada
PAGE 7
Adventists On The March !
tfstes and doings
dav
Japauese Seventhwith ^11S Church, together
rT'emi°ny at tlle Toronto Buddhist over S1' C WrChes the worId
TANAKA-NAKASHIMA
On ?ctober 8, I960 with
commence its annual
SJ!Lerend Newton Ishiura of- Han-P
Hai vest Ingathering World ServVancouver, B.C. ficiating1C® campaign in Toronto.
On Friday,
November
the is on Spadina Road, near College
The Vancouver Canadian Me rJrin^palsare daughter of Mrs
A/Ventist Church is well- fourth,
•
the
Nisei
Student
’
s
Club
Dancing will be
morial United Church was th e ? ”<>?oto of Toronto, Ont and A110?11 for* operating- the va^t. ■is presenting its annual dance, ana Spadina.
setting on October 1, 1960 for ata’S “1 te' K Kuwabara
^orks~hospitals, sana- ithe Autumn Nocturne. Everyone fiom eight o’clock to one o’clock
the marriage of Miss Miyoshi Na also of Toronto.
^Pepourums, orphan- is
- most welcome to attend this for the price of $1.00 per person,
waf
W
?
iDg
’
a
^Pton
bee our ad in this issue of The
kashima, daughter of Mr. and
a°^si. home-for-the-aged,
etc open
(
dance.
New
Canadian.
which
extend
all
over
the
globe
Mrs. T. Nakashima of Comber,
quests at the
_
If you happen to have that
N.S.C.
Ontario, and Mr. Minoru Tanaka, Sai Woo Chop Suey.
Accordiir
to thec JAev.
Rev. ueorK
George eveni
come aowi
down
Q
a
L,
J ?»
.v free
u why
’ •> not. vume
son of Mr. and Mrs. I. Tanaka
Pastor of Japanese and join the rest of the crowd
of Vancouver, B.C. The Reverend
church here, their healing insti- Y ou’---------re sure "to meet someone you
y^L0IS- Quebec.—An “IkebaMitsui officiated.
know.
If you don’t see any fami
reHont
^Ulld 111 tbe rem°test
two h f
WOrld’ more than liar faces, all is not lost because na • demonstration was the highAfter the ceremony, a recep
an<! Mrs' Sadajiro Asari
the meeting of the Lady’s
kdlld .countries are bene- "e still promise you a pleasant o
tion took place at the Lotus Gar of Steveston, B.C. wish to anW
thar humanitarian ef- evening of dancing to music that ^V? °f St- J°hn Fisher Church
den.
t le ^agement of their ioit. there are almost 350 insti- has been especially selected to of Valois/Quebec on October 20.
*
$
v’yek°’ t0 M1’ Richard i21OnS’ ^Raffed by well-trained suit you, and you, and vou. Now x.i11 tune with the fall season,
Shigenobu
Kanegawa,
son of Airs
AKUNE-NISHI
111 ?eir °"m schools is the time to plan with the dance Mrs. J. F. Horisaki opened her
I"rtaKmeS” of
demonstration with a red Maple
m the U.S. and Canada.
less than a week away.
Steveston, B.C.
The Autumn Nocturne is goin°- and a baby pom-pom composition,
kca^ Pr°jects include that
The wedding will take place on
Marriage vows were exchanged
NnJuv01} ^neral H°spital in to be held at the UNF Hall which followed by a Nageire -of- Wild
Kose -branches and Mums. As a
on October 8, 1960 between Miss
?n ^ Steveston North York. The Rev. Aso said
finale,
Driftwood was combined
Itoko Nishi, daughter of Mr. and Buddhist Church with the Rev. S,
beginning next year, this
'^N^^tficently
with cone bearing
K.
Ikuta
officiating
5
.
Mrs. H. Nishi of Steveston, B.C.,"
feplM
1 expand its bed capa
I
me
branches.
This arrangement
Sewanins
were
Mr.
and
MrsThe
next
meeting
of
the
Tor
and Mr. Roy Akune; son of Mr.
cities by 240. In Oshawa the On
leceived
a
tremedous
ovation
K.
Ohno
of
Barnwell,
Alberta.
onto
Chapter
JCCA
will
be
held
and Mrs. U. Akune also of Steves
tario Conference of SDA’s de
from
the
ladies
and
the
Reverend
on
Thursday,
October
27th
from
ton, B.C., at the Steveston Bud
cided to. build a modern Homef?ri'^e^ This will be com- 8.00 P.M. at 415 Spadina Avenue, r athers who were present.
dhist Church. The Reverend S.
A brief history of Ikebana was
2nd floor front.
Ikuta officiated.
by the end of 1960 and
The
meetingday
has
been
presented
prior to the demonstra
Following the marriage vows,
with be available for Japanese
changed
to
Thursday
in
hopes
of
tion
by
Miss
S. Yasunaka.
i
an
J
Mrs
Tos
hio
Ryoji
(nee
residents.
a reception was held at the Com
Haruko
Sano)
are
happy
to
ahaccommodating
those
members
Seisho ,Kai
munity Centre.
nr^lnian^y
vast Adventist who are attending- night school
*
*
*
^Unce lhe hirth of a son, Geffrey
j t
Programs are niaintain- and various other winter-time
i^AUy°slli 011 September
ed by the members of the church, activities during the week. How- I
24th,
I960
at
St.
Michael
’
s
IZAWA-WATANABE
CARD OF THANKS
Hos- but once a year at this time, they
ever, if this should still be incon
pital in Toronto, Ontario.
appeal to the general public for venient to the majority, please
London, Ont.
liberal
contributions so that they mention it to the Executive.
We wish to express our heart
October 8, 1960 was the date
can expand their works.
Their
felt thanks and appreciation to
The Agenda, tentatively, is as
when Miss Toshiko May Watana
overall goal is $3,500,000 of which follows:
our many relatives and friends
be, daughter of Mr. T. Watanabe
for
the kindness and sympathy
eiinn™
ai
™
se
ohnrch
here
shares
1.
Reading
of
the
Minutes
of London, Ont., became the bride
KUBO
$1100.00.
The
Rev.
Aso
said
that
shown
us in the loss lof our be
2. Correspondence
of Mr. Iwao John Izawa, son of
his
church
is
also
asking
the
pubI
loved
daughter,
Susan.
_
Mr.
Hisaji
Kubo,
86,
died
3.
Treasurer
’
s
Report
Mr. S. Izawa of Spuzzum, B.C.
on
Air. and Airs. S. Fukumoto
4... Committee Reports:
Following the ceremony a re °ctobAr 24th at a club house in he to remember their Japanese
a. Social
ception was held at Hook’s Res- tlie Cninatown section of Toronto, language Radio Program which
b. Special Events
Uuiant in London.
The happy Ont. The funeral was arranged is being broadcast in Ontario as
ss
c. Finance
couple honeymooned to the “Blue by the Toronto JCCA Isseibu aiid well as lit Colorado and Brazil
every
Sunday
morning.
The
local
d.
Bridge
Club
Grass State” of Kentucky in the' took place on the 27th at Thomp
SAY IT. WITH '
e. Choir
son’s Funeral Home. The Rever station which carries the Japa
United States.
FLOWERS
nese program is CHWO 1250 ki
f. ... others
*
*
* '
end K. Shimizu officiated.
locycles ,from 8:00 to 8:30 a.m.
5. Issei-hu Report
Tb? Adventist solicitor will
6. Unfinished ,Business
MATSUNO
BABA-OMOTO
SHARON'S FLORIST
identify himself with the official
a. Kabuki
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
A pioneer resident of Raymond, pamphlet and ribbon. Kind con
Toronto, Ont.
b. Fall Program
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
Alberta, Mr. Toyoichi Matsuno,
7. New Business
,
b^° Omoto became the passed away this week at the sideration is urged and much ap
Bus: HO. 6-2041
preciated by the church.
REMEMBER, friends,. Observ
bnde of Mr. Masao Baba at a
Raymond' Hospital.
Res: HO. 6-7962
ers, and prospective new mem
942 PAPE AVE., TORONTO
bers are. always welcome'.
Marriages
Remember "Autumn Nocturne" on Nov. 4th
“Ikebana” Highlighted
Engagements
dien
W„
nt.
005
JCCA Meeting Oct. 27th
0
► 1
-A .
>
Births
Obituaries
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
Rev. K. Shimizu M.A., B.D. — Rev. E. Yoshioka M.A., B.D.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30,’1960 — 11:30 a.m
"REFORMATION SUNDAY"
A
B'Ne ClaSS — 11:30 a'm- Church School
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
®
^.rcourt Rd., Toronto
I
SEE.
GEORGE K. NISHIDERA
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.*
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH 918 Bathurst St. j
2
p
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1960
a.m., Religious School
Il:00 a.m., MORNING SERVICE
Sangha TYBS Memorial
. 2:00 P'm- laPanese Language School
E R Y O NE CORDIALLY INVITED
for thorough travel arrangements
‘Doctor of Chiropractic
728A ST. CLAIR AVE. WEST
Cosmopolitan Travel Bureau
(,2 Block West of Christie)
Telephone LE. 6-8220
132 Dundas Street West
If No Answer Call
BE. 3-3869
EMpire 4-6288
Toronto
TORONTO
I
D^MS WIO^ STORE
F. A. BREWIN, Q.C
Barrister & Solicitor
your shopping list
I
f
I
9 SAKURA RICE
6 MARUKIN SHOYn
•' VINEGAR
t SUGAR
•
* EGGS
® S™H MEAT
©MANJU
6 MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
Cameron, Weldon
Brewin & McCallum
372 Bay St.
—
EM. 3-4391
Toronto
PHONE EM. 4-7692
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
WELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS
golden dragon
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
284-A YONGE ST.
TORIC
OPTICAL
OPTOMETRISTS
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
SPECIAL ATTENTION FOR TAKEOUT ORDERS
g^Pen Noon to 3 a.m.
—
Orders to Take Out
8'2475
131A Dundas St W„ Toronto
STUDIO
EM. 6-2411
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
KWONGCHOW
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
118 West Hastings St.
VANCOUVER. B'.C.
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
Page 8
ft
s
11^
w
PAGE 8 '
THE NEW CANADIANSaturday, October 29, 19^
TO™Act of Patriotism?
THE HEW CANADIAN
pre-war ultra-naw Wh° attempted to assas- in his behalf.
Sankei said Aramaki did not + VANCOUyER.-The B.C. CenDUt^°li^?d as sec°nd class ™
(continued from, page one)
y ^i^'^f Premier Nobusuke
-JCCA Scholarship of
Post Office Department otta^ '
Kishi last July has been freed on feeT apologetic for* attempting to S’00 f°r the 1960-61 term at di owned out by these shouts and
~
bail ,ffter only two and a half Kill Kishi.was awarded to Miss Naomi two or three times the rightists
"I
did
it
as
a
true
patriot
who
months confinemenet.
^hp^ma,
who has 'shown a •
then- propaganda leaflets Editor; KEN Mort T?Ctlon
The newspaper Sankei Shim- worried about my country,” Abra- ^’^hy and remarkable record.
into
the
air. Once a young right- Section Editor and A(he?S
bun reported that Taisuke Ara Jjaki was quoted as saying. “I —Miss Uchiyama was born in
jst ‘trooper’ jumped onto the Manager.
using
(dt
that
Kishi
shouldn
’
t
be
left
maki, the 65-year-old pre-w?r ex
uapan and came to Canada for
an
d
^rew
the
leaflets
he
^
’
^
for
inviting
social
disorder
subscription
treme rightist who stunned the
first time in 1955 at the age nad in his hana into the air toS4S7°oner 6 monihs
nation when he stabbed Kishi after jamming through the Diet of thirteen. She did not have too
Asanuma. This youth' was
S/.UU per year
v
Parliament)
the
(U.S.-Japan)
with a .knife at the premier’s of
much,
knowledge
of
English
at
told
by
the
public
hall
officials
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
ficial residence last July 14, was security trenty like a magician.” the. time but entered Grade 6 in
saM, however, he believed .Courtney, B.C. After moving to ‘;o. jeturn to his seat. I saw no
released from prison late last
EMpire 6-5005
policemen in the-hall.”'
monun on 100,000 yen (8277) bail. the security treaty with the U.S. Vancouver, she proceeded into . At 3:06 p.m. a fight broke out
Sankei said it was “surprising” was necessary for Japan but did Graue 8 at Kitsilano High and by between a rightist and Socialist looked calm and mv first
that the man who was involved not. agree with the way Kishi’s
courses at summer school supporter right behind me. Police S1^‘ofHum was that he was cute.’’
passed the bill
in a manslaug'hter case was re- ■- caoinet
and by correspondence, she skip- came in and forced, the two to t i J knevy that was the last film
He
also
said
that
he
tried
to
leased after a relatively short
pc;d Grade .11. She . marked her leave the hall. This took about 1 Rd S°J
back to mv car ’’
carry out the assassination atperiod of confinement.
giaduation
in June with an aver- two minutes. Most of the other Su5sS2:^
on
Kishi
as
his
own
will.
Aramaki has been charged with
?ge . °f 85.63%. Miss Uchiyama cameramen followed .the police to
manslaughter and is now await- , 1 olice authorities said that is supported by her mother who take The pictures, but I remain ar«-d
k !tu“ “is
Aramaki was released because an
i?he- Tokyo District investigation into his case re- ' is also a graduate of UBC, and ed where I was. I thought my'
i®
P ■
as a newspaper uhotn.
w
W!l1 try him, had vealed he.had no connection with
b° study for a career in P^?r yould not print a picture 6iapher seven years
tW;
i
“confident!^
'
not. set the date.
field of—medical research.
of the fight. The attention of the he
The. newspaper said that the any rigntist organization.
d hls
, With the hard work she has- Audience was switched to the shutter-release.
f'
Aramaki “pro- spown arid the talents she was fight.”
assassin is already Idok- ^?ly,^led that
to
£'
a
?
n
fame
and
g
a
gradua
t
e
of
the
Chiba
ing forward to a business of sell“Then I saw a young man run- University, near Tokyo, maihrhS
given we are sure that Miss Uchi
attempting to injure yama will fulfill her- intentions. ’Vn° toward the stage and climb
X"«fler he '“pletC! hw
m photography chemistry i3 “
.Kishi. We believe he (AraJe ^^s 011 the right hand side. bachelor and lives alone 'in Yo
■
th
?
‘
eat
Pkasure
that
the
y^.),,never intended to kill Mr
£W
quoted as sayi 11 g
’■
abIc to assist, in a small My first thought was that he was kohama City.
.
.
,
!fehe f’aS ab e to leave prison AlSni;
anokner
rightist
'who
was
about
pa
z
1£
L
Promising
young
lady.
Kel1 y°U the Secret t0 stay
former secretary of the , Aramaki said, “I am ah old
Ute following letter was re j —row more leaflets from the
nan.. I might receive one year’s ceived
ln an emergency,” he said
by Dr. G. Ishiwara, presi stage.
the
Z?Japanese
t’ "'ho wasParlia
called ^riS^nment- After I complete
fl
S °fte* as you can
the6 Father °of
dent of the JCCA, from Miss
But at the next moment I saw Anu you 11 ?
C0XTRO1
learn
to
stay
calm
mentarism, had paid 8100,000 yen n.y sentence I hope to have a busi Uchiyama):
even
if
you
lose
your
eS
a
white
stick,
about
one
footTonk
2
ness of selling, books.”
TORON
“Dear Sir:
i
in the young, man’s right hand; month salary.”
e
I wish to thank the Vancouver ^e
■ Mrs. Jea
,to the rostrum and I
^.a nao < said he would like to
Japanese. Canadian Citizens As mought he was going to. hit Asa- yisit Paris in the future. “I Hke
(Co,,^ fram Page One)
above, sta
sociation for awarding me their numa. 1 took my camera into po to travel ana bachelorship ,B.
week for ■
*1
fY^f0 Iea<i a free life. I £
?>-»s and spol.ts
in the Centennial Scholarship of $100.00 sition, and through the lens I saw
of the citj
1 deeply- appreciate the honor of
committee also hopes to commune J S
011 the J“A. The being awarded this scholarship the boy enbrace the Socialist lead- not be able to keep calm when I
ning
for •
/. suddenly remembered the 5,2 PariSia" bM“tiE'”
in Vancouver to see what the i>m™«
k lhe ™',ws ethnic groups and,
very
grateful
for
vour
present'nK
Kisln. incment in which former
organizations.
/e puipose and aim is for their respective
kind interest and help in my'uni(Nobusuke) Kishi was
He said he was sorry about
former ma
'’ersity career.
,ln hls thl^h by a rightist Asanuma’s death because “as a
their friends,’-for their opiSoklf vou^M^V^x op kHc readers or
All eligi
I hope'tb do my best at the uni- innatic.
pcrson Asanuma was nice and
-the organization such as-the JCCA
t^nt there is a need for' jersity so that I may be a credit
vote in the
“The next moment the boy and wKK1' He WaS Very C00Perative
your views. If you feer£
gwe us yQur peasons
be-held on
o the Japanese Canadians and Asanuma still embracing * each vith ,us cameramen.”
be free to say so. eve* ITorganization, please to your Association'. I am plan- other staggered back to the left
• v"5
but we hope that U nf to ^lve- Remain anonyI calmly
to ^ke courses leading to a Sr a5?UT •■ree feet.
inknng of your thoughts towards the JCCA? Y°U W1 glve us some
and hope to go into either
1 ^ad to readjust my
Biocnemistry or Physiology
LONDON.—The medical journ
*
,
Vancouver Bulletin that after graduation I can so SUIVM set my distance at
al
Lancet reported that when a
•into
some field of medical re- k “As I pressed my shutter the
^"‘^’an.Jaipanese lo bVcautd’to?^^^
the first
^
tle
? 4was asked if there was
search.
his ^ond
bp’^'b active as a member of Hip vs L ‘ m
'He has been coni
.
y
history of. mental illness in
you "again-for award- thiubt While the Socialist chair
■
NEWYO
n
;
is
family
he replied, “Yes, aun
this scholarship.
man staggered back again the boy
■
:
six
Americ
tie went to America in 1930.”
• ) ours very sincerely,
B where he
racial discr
Naomi Uchiyama.”
2y "TCie?Ce- He
to the
9
A three-]
police and-confessed to killing- his
Vancouver Bulletin
assassination of grandmother with a hatchet in
■
ing
and rac
Socialist party chief Inejiro AsaHAVE
YOU
BEEN
COMPLETELY
CHECKED
B
ed says 27, (
foTAkh’^ h°1TibIe' memory
B restricted to
oM
Nakaraura. a 29-year- ^13 Aomori prefecture.
I big a place
for
your
winter
driving
th^Vn
0
^
p
?
lice
:
“
b
was
just
like
kyo rag' Plcker.
Yort’d£(S Lijadley Crickard, New
B of their, rac
When Nakamura heard of the Both
kdded Asanuma.
■
“Racial si
comedian
known
Open till 9 p.m. eVery- Tuesday and Thursday
assassination he was torn by a Both killings could have been
■
is
sustained
avoided with a little talking.”
r
4
We
Of^
Disband JCCA?-
JUgjhf batty, old chap!
Guilty Conscience Wins
Sing er Marries W ritcr
?
B lar attitude:
■ housing incl
■ government,
The rep or
■ ■ Commission
■ - set up by t
■ public.
It says Ai
ly. affected i
ation are 1
—chiefly Ne
nese, Chines
I rigidly rest
licence lo marry
24%? r’ ¥ss Ishimoto
her first
5 tl”rf
Autumn Nucturng
I
presented by
1281 QUEEN STREET EAST
Nisei Student’s Club
(just east of Leslie)
Floral Arrangements
PHONE: HO. 6-0274
Friday, November 4th
Time 8 p.m. to 1 a,m.
o everJ
Admission $1.00 per person .
a I
_179 East Pender VANCOUVER 4. B.C. MIT ?_4M1
U.N.F. HALL - COLLEGE 5 SPADINA
JON ONODERA
'
T.mi„a | j INSURANCE
ltd
F o r m s
o f
I
A R 1NE
n \
1 n S U r a n c e
Oakley Boulevard Scarboro, Ontario
Phone Plymouth 9-8317
DAVE’S
^
46 LILYWOOD RD.,
TORONTO 19
___ representing
HU. 7-3361
4-1427 or OX. 9-3776
T6S. ALpine 5-2302
SMALL SHOE SIZES
TVS RADIO
SERVICE
M. YANAGISAWA
TORONTO, Ont.
c^l^e Kantltakaka’ia
(or leave message at AL. 5-1743)
u^^^^IM
Purchase Their Homes ThXcrh
<R«Menee) '
MO Eghnton Ave. W
Toronto
A H
Th
HU. 9-4654—HU. 1-8805
Mn’Tl?
|
[
—Dave Azuma-
Mexican-Ain
Puerto Rica;
l
“Occasions
- ation also is
numbering 5
The report
lions for re
14
-crimination,
J- Attack
duct rather I
far easier
actions—by
of public opii
^1
lbeir attitud
"'ill change
way.”
, 2- Change
10 influence
attitudes. “I
I
j
Proprietor
Distinctive
Kiy.
I
I
I
I.
I
NEW FALL STYLES
JUST ARRIVED
SIZES FROM 1 & UP
4
-
Men's Scott McHales Four Up
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
—Phone LE. 1-1931 Toronto
C.Q.D. orders from coast to coast
B' Pressure is i
j attempts at ]
1 3. Exert in
|
mortgage
I
I
brokers,
agencies.
le
I Kabuki y
TOKYO.—I
a noted Kab
^ainaguchipr
,
Okamura 3
’ng leniale im
*H,collaj
®? a perform;
hospitalized si
'
s
11^
w
PAGE 8 '
THE NEW CANADIANSaturday, October 29, 19^
TO™Act of Patriotism?
THE HEW CANADIAN
pre-war ultra-naw Wh° attempted to assas- in his behalf.
Sankei said Aramaki did not + VANCOUyER.-The B.C. CenDUt^°li^?d as sec°nd class ™
(continued from, page one)
y ^i^'^f Premier Nobusuke
-JCCA Scholarship of
Post Office Department otta^ '
Kishi last July has been freed on feeT apologetic for* attempting to S’00 f°r the 1960-61 term at di owned out by these shouts and
~
bail ,ffter only two and a half Kill Kishi.was awarded to Miss Naomi two or three times the rightists
"I
did
it
as
a
true
patriot
who
months confinemenet.
^hp^ma,
who has 'shown a •
then- propaganda leaflets Editor; KEN Mort T?Ctlon
The newspaper Sankei Shim- worried about my country,” Abra- ^’^hy and remarkable record.
into
the
air. Once a young right- Section Editor and A(he?S
bun reported that Taisuke Ara Jjaki was quoted as saying. “I —Miss Uchiyama was born in
jst ‘trooper’ jumped onto the Manager.
using
(dt
that
Kishi
shouldn
’
t
be
left
maki, the 65-year-old pre-w?r ex
uapan and came to Canada for
an
d
^rew
the
leaflets
he
^
’
^
for
inviting
social
disorder
subscription
treme rightist who stunned the
first time in 1955 at the age nad in his hana into the air toS4S7°oner 6 monihs
nation when he stabbed Kishi after jamming through the Diet of thirteen. She did not have too
Asanuma. This youth' was
S/.UU per year
v
Parliament)
the
(U.S.-Japan)
with a .knife at the premier’s of
much,
knowledge
of
English
at
told
by
the
public
hall
officials
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
ficial residence last July 14, was security trenty like a magician.” the. time but entered Grade 6 in
saM, however, he believed .Courtney, B.C. After moving to ‘;o. jeturn to his seat. I saw no
released from prison late last
EMpire 6-5005
policemen in the-hall.”'
monun on 100,000 yen (8277) bail. the security treaty with the U.S. Vancouver, she proceeded into . At 3:06 p.m. a fight broke out
Sankei said it was “surprising” was necessary for Japan but did Graue 8 at Kitsilano High and by between a rightist and Socialist looked calm and mv first
that the man who was involved not. agree with the way Kishi’s
courses at summer school supporter right behind me. Police S1^‘ofHum was that he was cute.’’
passed the bill
in a manslaug'hter case was re- ■- caoinet
and by correspondence, she skip- came in and forced, the two to t i J knevy that was the last film
He
also
said
that
he
tried
to
leased after a relatively short
pc;d Grade .11. She . marked her leave the hall. This took about 1 Rd S°J
back to mv car ’’
carry out the assassination atperiod of confinement.
giaduation
in June with an aver- two minutes. Most of the other Su5sS2:^
on
Kishi
as
his
own
will.
Aramaki has been charged with
?ge . °f 85.63%. Miss Uchiyama cameramen followed .the police to
manslaughter and is now await- , 1 olice authorities said that is supported by her mother who take The pictures, but I remain ar«-d
k !tu“ “is
Aramaki was released because an
i?he- Tokyo District investigation into his case re- ' is also a graduate of UBC, and ed where I was. I thought my'
i®
P ■
as a newspaper uhotn.
w
W!l1 try him, had vealed he.had no connection with
b° study for a career in P^?r yould not print a picture 6iapher seven years
tW;
i
“confident!^
'
not. set the date.
field of—medical research.
of the fight. The attention of the he
The. newspaper said that the any rigntist organization.
d hls
, With the hard work she has- Audience was switched to the shutter-release.
f'
Aramaki “pro- spown arid the talents she was fight.”
assassin is already Idok- ^?ly,^led that
to
£'
a
?
n
fame
and
g
a
gradua
t
e
of
the
Chiba
ing forward to a business of sell“Then I saw a young man run- University, near Tokyo, maihrhS
given we are sure that Miss Uchi
attempting to injure yama will fulfill her- intentions. ’Vn° toward the stage and climb
X"«fler he '“pletC! hw
m photography chemistry i3 “
.Kishi. We believe he (AraJe ^^s 011 the right hand side. bachelor and lives alone 'in Yo
■
th
?
‘
eat
Pkasure
that
the
y^.),,never intended to kill Mr
£W
quoted as sayi 11 g
’■
abIc to assist, in a small My first thought was that he was kohama City.
.
.
,
!fehe f’aS ab e to leave prison AlSni;
anokner
rightist
'who
was
about
pa
z
1£
L
Promising
young
lady.
Kel1 y°U the Secret t0 stay
former secretary of the , Aramaki said, “I am ah old
Ute following letter was re j —row more leaflets from the
nan.. I might receive one year’s ceived
ln an emergency,” he said
by Dr. G. Ishiwara, presi stage.
the
Z?Japanese
t’ "'ho wasParlia
called ^riS^nment- After I complete
fl
S °fte* as you can
the6 Father °of
dent of the JCCA, from Miss
But at the next moment I saw Anu you 11 ?
C0XTRO1
learn
to
stay
calm
mentarism, had paid 8100,000 yen n.y sentence I hope to have a busi Uchiyama):
even
if
you
lose
your
eS
a
white
stick,
about
one
footTonk
2
ness of selling, books.”
TORON
“Dear Sir:
i
in the young, man’s right hand; month salary.”
e
I wish to thank the Vancouver ^e
■ Mrs. Jea
,to the rostrum and I
^.a nao < said he would like to
Japanese. Canadian Citizens As mought he was going to. hit Asa- yisit Paris in the future. “I Hke
(Co,,^ fram Page One)
above, sta
sociation for awarding me their numa. 1 took my camera into po to travel ana bachelorship ,B.
week for ■
*1
fY^f0 Iea<i a free life. I £
?>-»s and spol.ts
in the Centennial Scholarship of $100.00 sition, and through the lens I saw
of the citj
1 deeply- appreciate the honor of
committee also hopes to commune J S
011 the J“A. The being awarded this scholarship the boy enbrace the Socialist lead- not be able to keep calm when I
ning
for •
/. suddenly remembered the 5,2 PariSia" bM“tiE'”
in Vancouver to see what the i>m™«
k lhe ™',ws ethnic groups and,
very
grateful
for
vour
present'nK
Kisln. incment in which former
organizations.
/e puipose and aim is for their respective
kind interest and help in my'uni(Nobusuke) Kishi was
He said he was sorry about
former ma
'’ersity career.
,ln hls thl^h by a rightist Asanuma’s death because “as a
their friends,’-for their opiSoklf vou^M^V^x op kHc readers or
All eligi
I hope'tb do my best at the uni- innatic.
pcrson Asanuma was nice and
-the organization such as-the JCCA
t^nt there is a need for' jersity so that I may be a credit
vote in the
“The next moment the boy and wKK1' He WaS Very C00Perative
your views. If you feer£
gwe us yQur peasons
be-held on
o the Japanese Canadians and Asanuma still embracing * each vith ,us cameramen.”
be free to say so. eve* ITorganization, please to your Association'. I am plan- other staggered back to the left
• v"5
but we hope that U nf to ^lve- Remain anonyI calmly
to ^ke courses leading to a Sr a5?UT •■ree feet.
inknng of your thoughts towards the JCCA? Y°U W1 glve us some
and hope to go into either
1 ^ad to readjust my
Biocnemistry or Physiology
LONDON.—The medical journ
*
,
Vancouver Bulletin that after graduation I can so SUIVM set my distance at
al
Lancet reported that when a
•into
some field of medical re- k “As I pressed my shutter the
^"‘^’an.Jaipanese lo bVcautd’to?^^^
the first
^
tle
? 4was asked if there was
search.
his ^ond
bp’^'b active as a member of Hip vs L ‘ m
'He has been coni
.
y
history of. mental illness in
you "again-for award- thiubt While the Socialist chair
■
NEWYO
n
;
is
family
he replied, “Yes, aun
this scholarship.
man staggered back again the boy
■
:
six
Americ
tie went to America in 1930.”
• ) ours very sincerely,
B where he
racial discr
Naomi Uchiyama.”
2y "TCie?Ce- He
to the
9
A three-]
police and-confessed to killing- his
Vancouver Bulletin
assassination of grandmother with a hatchet in
■
ing
and rac
Socialist party chief Inejiro AsaHAVE
YOU
BEEN
COMPLETELY
CHECKED
B
ed says 27, (
foTAkh’^ h°1TibIe' memory
B restricted to
oM
Nakaraura. a 29-year- ^13 Aomori prefecture.
I big a place
for
your
winter
driving
th^Vn
0
^
p
?
lice
:
“
b
was
just
like
kyo rag' Plcker.
Yort’d£(S Lijadley Crickard, New
B of their, rac
When Nakamura heard of the Both
kdded Asanuma.
■
“Racial si
comedian
known
Open till 9 p.m. eVery- Tuesday and Thursday
assassination he was torn by a Both killings could have been
■
is
sustained
avoided with a little talking.”
r
4
We
Of^
Disband JCCA?-
JUgjhf batty, old chap!
Guilty Conscience Wins
Sing er Marries W ritcr
?
B lar attitude:
■ housing incl
■ government,
The rep or
■ ■ Commission
■ - set up by t
■ public.
It says Ai
ly. affected i
ation are 1
—chiefly Ne
nese, Chines
I rigidly rest
licence lo marry
24%? r’ ¥ss Ishimoto
her first
5 tl”rf
Autumn Nucturng
I
presented by
1281 QUEEN STREET EAST
Nisei Student’s Club
(just east of Leslie)
Floral Arrangements
PHONE: HO. 6-0274
Friday, November 4th
Time 8 p.m. to 1 a,m.
o everJ
Admission $1.00 per person .
a I
_179 East Pender VANCOUVER 4. B.C. MIT ?_4M1
U.N.F. HALL - COLLEGE 5 SPADINA
JON ONODERA
'
T.mi„a | j INSURANCE
ltd
F o r m s
o f
I
A R 1NE
n \
1 n S U r a n c e
Oakley Boulevard Scarboro, Ontario
Phone Plymouth 9-8317
DAVE’S
^
46 LILYWOOD RD.,
TORONTO 19
___ representing
HU. 7-3361
4-1427 or OX. 9-3776
T6S. ALpine 5-2302
SMALL SHOE SIZES
TVS RADIO
SERVICE
M. YANAGISAWA
TORONTO, Ont.
c^l^e Kantltakaka’ia
(or leave message at AL. 5-1743)
u^^^^IM
Purchase Their Homes ThXcrh
<R«Menee) '
MO Eghnton Ave. W
Toronto
A H
Th
HU. 9-4654—HU. 1-8805
Mn’Tl?
|
[
—Dave Azuma-
Mexican-Ain
Puerto Rica;
l
“Occasions
- ation also is
numbering 5
The report
lions for re
14
-crimination,
J- Attack
duct rather I
far easier
actions—by
of public opii
^1
lbeir attitud
"'ill change
way.”
, 2- Change
10 influence
attitudes. “I
I
j
Proprietor
Distinctive
Kiy.
I
I
I
I.
I
NEW FALL STYLES
JUST ARRIVED
SIZES FROM 1 & UP
4
-
Men's Scott McHales Four Up
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
—Phone LE. 1-1931 Toronto
C.Q.D. orders from coast to coast
B' Pressure is i
j attempts at ]
1 3. Exert in
|
mortgage
I
I
brokers,
agencies.
le
I Kabuki y
TOKYO.—I
a noted Kab
^ainaguchipr
,
Okamura 3
’ng leniale im
*H,collaj
®? a perform;
hospitalized si
'