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The New Canadian — November 16, 1960

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Page 1

radian
class aajj
!nl' Otta*o'

31isher,

Kei

Section
’ Japanese
‘Advertising.
ON
hs

'EST,
■5005

executives
1’teous coe on those
■formation

THE NEW CANADIAN
An independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
vol. XXIV.—No. 89

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1960

Brilliant Brothers United

TORONTO, ONT.

May Succeed Self.

Ikeda Favorite For PM

sPoke
executive
ill known.
s continuuests of
e hear 95
pondence
\ffice is
■ thout
.requests
■ions; are

fOlvYO.—Prime Minister Ha­ pected among the nine major fac­
(HIT!) Minister Ichiro Kono 52;
yato Ikeda is virtually certain to tions of the ruling- party.
Takeo
Oiki and Kenzo Matsumu­
succeed himself after the Nov.
Bitter intra-party struggles ra, both former MITI ministers,
20 General Elections.
were waged in September when
rhe big question is how long each faction sought to get as polled 57 votes for their faction;
Ikeda will stay in power -and many of its own men nominated former party vice president Barnserve as president of the faction- as the party’s candidates as pos­ boku Ohno 4b; former MITI Mi­
nister Mitsujiro Ishii 25 and for­
ridden Liberal-Democratic party. sible.
mer Premier Tanzan Ishibashi 10..
No
one
doubts
that
Ikeda
Avill
P^r has
Among the Liberal-Democratic
retain his office after the elec­ party’s 396 candidates, Ikeda’s The remaining- candidates were:
ty’s visitions. Even if the entire slate of ‘ faction” obtained the largest shared by independent members;
’ubs and
186 opposition Socialist candi­ number with 86; former Finance not committed to any faction.
■ rather,
If Ikeda wants to remain in
dates should get elected to the Minister Eisaku Sato and young­
n scene,
power for an extended period he:
lower
house
the
Socialists
would
h refuse
er brother of former Prime Minis­
scill fall far short of the required— ter Nobuuke Kishi, got 56: Kishi will have to see to it that fac­
fee for
majority of 299 Lower House 55; former Foreign Minister tions “friendly” to him emerge'
-rs. Disvictorious at the Nov. 20 elec­
seats.
further
Aiichiro Fujiyama 43; Former tions.
A big battle at the polls is ex- International Trade and Industry
■panese
So far Ikeda has depended on
his faction and that of Kishi and
his brother, Sato.
Mad,
A A^COL^ ER.—Dr. loshihiri Wada (on the right) 'chief of the
Ikeda was voted to succeed Ki­
r, B.C.
shi as party president last Julv
I
tsurgery d^^lmenLof Sapporo University in Japan and pre|
>e ^Pan Chest Surgery Institute, was invited bv Dr. Dear Sirs:
over rival candidate Mitsujiro
aims and objects of the club.
I M A. M McKenzie (centre) to, lecture at UBC. Following his atIshi. Ishi was backed by the soBecause of the long and dif­ called “professional politicians
This is a letter in reply to
kndancC’at the 6tn International Surgery Convention in Austria
ficult
struggle to achieve our de­ group”” while Kishi and Sato,
Former
Club
Member
who
con
­
as Japans representative, Dr. Wada arrived in Vancouver and was
mocratic
rights, I think we have head of the “bureaucrats group,”
tends
that
the
Rec
Socratic
Club
Dr John Wada (left), a former professor of
Hokkaido University and now a professor at UBC’s brain research is guilty of discriminatory prac­ developed an accute sensitivity because most of the members
iiicinuivi
tices hr the policy of limited when, in that area.
were government officials 'before
I membership.
I think that it is time now that entering political careers, sup- '
I wish to repute this statement. we adopt a more mature attitude, ported Ikeda.
at
It is necessary to consider the to become more enlightened,
Sato and former Foreign Mini- '
aims and objectives of the club. rather than to react instinctively ster Aiichiro Fujiyama, are am­
nd
It must be realized that the club with pre-judged opinions.
bitiously working to succeed Ike­
is purely social in nature, rather
I
' By DORIAN
da in the event that he should
Miss '‘Observer”
than educational or cultural. It
[Continued ^ori Pjpe Eight's
Toronto, Ont.
I
vfe'V ^’ys
The ^ew Canadian carried an open letter from was initiated with the express
I
Chapterpresent and the future of object of facilitating and promot­
1 am*°t oh the active list these last few years, ing social relationships among the
I interested S Sh remain
the organization, and naturally, I was members of the Japanese race,
specifically.
It is quite obvious that for a
are
told,
that,
all
human
activities
are
conditioned
by
geoh
e
minority
group social to achieve
^\tC°vXn^^
social factors—and that, change is synonyTOKYO. — Student assassin
J
the
necessary
cohesion and soli­ Otaya Yamaguchi returned home ■al” to honor “this paragon of Ja­
v
niF thinking, JCCA is a living entity, and as
panese virtue” and “martyr for
JeCV^
with-changing conditions, but, to disband darity necessary for the social last week in a coffin smothered the cause of anti-communism.”
club,
a
singular
.
ethnic
member
­
ieana an end which requires considerable thought and discussions.
with chrysanthemums, symbol of
However, his father, who re­
ship is required.
the Emperor for whom he vowed signed his commission in the
JCC^ as a living entity, because, it was born of JaI am afraid that the writer
J^^adlailS.^ chaotic thought and living conditions, to pro- failed to distinguish between the to be re-born and to kill for Self-Defense Forces after the as­
again.
sassination and who said he was
™^ leadership, and reflected our life in thoughts practice of selective membership
The 17-year-old slayer of Ja­ “sorry” his family had “caused
of Japan^C^^
itS ^wth ^ Parallel to the growth and that of discrimination. Dispan’s top leftist leader, Socialist trouble again” with his son’s sui­
crimination implies the violation Party Chairman Inejiro Asanu- cide, said he preferred a “family
fiel/nfV™6;
apparent achievements of JCCA has been in the of our democratic principles. It ma, made
. atonement
.
for his deed funeral” for his son.
discrimination, in combatting social and political in- refers to the denial of the rights in true Imperial Tradition.
He
Some 50 black-shirted troopers
which have been successfully overcome. But, should commonly enjoyed by the larger hanged himself.
of the Hitler-worshipping Great
existenro cognize the greater intangibles, the impact of its mere Canadian community. In a specific
Just before he nanged himself Japan Patriotic party to which
in
influencing and providing the all important directions instance, it is the inability “to from an electric fixture with nar­ Yamaguchi once belonged troopL" aiid actions of Japanese Canadians? Herein lies my enter an establishment where the row strips of bed sheeting, Ya­ ed along behind the hearse in
contention, that, ifis ajiving. entity.
public is customarily accentuated maguchi scribbled 10 large Japa­
cortege followed by five rightist
to.”
nese characters on the wall of his sound trucks flying huge Rising
Passa?pSn^r’.
political and social horizon appears rosy, the
The Rec Socratic Glub is not
in? fipiH • <au’ Employment and Accomodations Acts; the widen- guilty of the denial of any demo­ detention cell with toothpaste. Sun flags and long black mourn­
Translated his death message ing streamers.
Canadi™ Jn P? .ssions and employment; the tolerant attitude of cratic privileges.
read: “I’ll be re-incarnated seven
In addition to blaring ;praises
_1„VK,
racial
^ general: But, to conclude from these signs, that,
Many clubs of a particular na­ times for his Majesty, the Em­ of the youth for his anti-comH.Hirnation has been stamped out will be premature from ture in Canada demand particu­ peror. Banzai.”.
munist stand tho
'
One S viewpoint.
sound trucks
lar qualifications for admittance.
Sitting silently beside the cof­ softly quoted some of the poems
Pasb ^een. years have been an unprecedented period of A homogeneous group of indivi­ fin as it rolled slowly through the Yamaguchi composed before his
all avn-i! hi3™ ProsPerity in Canadian economy, absorbing any and duals -is more able to achieve the Tokyo streets was the youth’s death.
father, former
Self
Defense
elforts of ?,inanP?wer. This demand, coupled "with the .educational
f cnn tin ued on ;>nejc eicht}
Force colonel Shimpei Yamagu­
Crested
'a ^°iVernmen^^^ various organizations and many inchi.
the
have been largely responsible for channelling
He wept , while sound trucks
this tendon a,u™ toward racial tolerance and acceptance. But,
into comC^’ however,promising, does not justify us being lulled
OTSU.—Ichiro Kono, a leader from several ultra-nationalist or­
believable acei}c^* ^e human nature being what it is, it is hardly of the Liberal-Democratic Party ganizations trailed alone behind
hst decade°U1
has gone through an abrupt change in these with an eye on the premiership, blaring praises for the youth and
a certain A On n°' therefore, it was no great surprise to me when fled the rostrum in terror when saying, “We thank Col. YamaNation in J}ar® Beliefeuille claimed the existence of a Nazi organi- a man rushed toward him with guchi for dedicating such a fine
different n^’’ a with himself as its leader and branches in five open arms as he was addressing son to our motherland.”
Police said the youth’s suicide
doctrine
J ^^ °Ey surmise the followers of such a a political meeting.
In Kono’s mind was the picture was part of his plan that began
cognize tb* o^21- racJs™ are either unaware or do not wish to re­
Asanuma’s
assassination
order.
6 ^lave implications they will create in our free social of Inejiro Asanuma, the Socialist with
party leader, who was-assassinat­ and was to have included a num­
ed under similar circumstances ber of other leftist'leaders, in­
the nece^k5-311#6 alone, whether true or exaggerated, drives home October
12. .
cluding Communist party chief
opening nn ^ r cons^nl; vigilance, education and wise leadership,
Sanzo Nosaka. To back up this
Kono
returned
to
his
speech
knowledp-p O± ever widening channel for exchange of ideas and
contention police quoted a poem
after
police
seized
the
supposed
s among ethnic groups, that out society may remain free.
assailant and identified him as Y amaguchi "wrote and dedicated
racial orio5Un^y like Canada, where peoples of many national and Goro Ishizaka, a 27-year-old con- to the Meiji Shrine (where the
each other--11 c°mPrJses Canadians, even a cursory knowledge of stmction worker. Goro was drunk spirit of the Emperor Meiji is en­
®S Canad? cusi°ms, traditions and heritage is essential in visualiz- and explained he only wanted to shrined) the day before he killed
Asanuma.
derstandin^k^ 60^ 6 as a whole. Such a knowledge will lead to un­ shake Kono’s hand.
Mr. and Mrs. Tcjuro Inamoto
spite of ou • bSeen peoples, and, eventually will convince us, in
“For the divine land of Gods,- (shown above) tof Toronto, On­
human
deferences, we are essentially human, possessing all
I shall go smiling with clear mind tario- recently celebrated their
1 traits common to us all.
on .a voyage to my death,” the fiftieth (Golden) wedding anni­
poem said.
versary.
dical rea^p- claim JCCA is a living entity, it follows that a perio­
Leaders of the ultra-nationalist
Many of their friends and re­
ds’ ssment anr change is inevitable. We have seen changes in
I CALL YOUR RED CROSS
organizations with which Yama­ latives were invited to a party
guchi was closely associated held at the New Nanking in honor
(continued on page eight)
pledged to hold a “people’s funer- of the couple.
•HXW
ft_z<x
ixe^^'Al. s'l-AVlC

‘Observer’ Retaliates

JCCA — A Personal Point

Assassin’s Funeral

Drunk Terrorizes Kan©

5Oth

I Give Blood

Page 2

PAGE 2
THE NEW. CANADIAN

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Page 7

Wednesday, November 16. 1960

THE NEW CANADIAN

PAGE 7

)*»®®9®e«»«»eeeeeeeeeee <

CALENDAR
tee«e9ee*M««eee«#tee*o

dates and doings

Final Drive To Top Sales

TORONTO.—With the 1960
Canada Savings Bonds campaig-n
222 jts fi.naI week, officials
November
oi the Ontario payroll savings
18—Vancouver. Nisei “Hi-Teeners will
organization are making- a con­
hold a November Dance at Hastings
certed
effort to chalk up a 10
Auditorium from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Ad­
inform you of: etc
k
.percent increase over last year’s
mission will be $1.00. Everyone wel­ fL^rm^^r to;bein
g presented ^
_ . ..
the “Fall Fling”
come.
19—Toronto. Kidokwan Judo Institute's by the Toronto JCOA.
nA

Ine latest figures on sales
Tournament at 7:00 p.m. in the YHMA
Remember the date: Saturday, through the payroll savings plan
For an evening of fun and November 19th.
Bloor and Spadina.
:
in Toronto area total $16,438,000
20—Toronto. Toronto Burdhist Church dancing, do come out, and in adTime: 8:00-12:00.
perpetual memorial service.
of the 1960 objective.
supporting
25—Toronto. Lou Miya's Gym presents the° TJCCA
yar Amputee Hall (Bay
Organizers in the area are: W.
"Mr. Central Canada 1961" contest.
and its wonderful & Wellesley) See you there!
Harrison, G. W. Beatson J W
Also Mr. Toronto—Jr. Mr. Ontario etc."
oik. Piizes for novelty dances7
and live muusic. 394 Euclid Ave.
Annett,
L. M. Sellery, R. H. Fab
—TJCCA
27—Toronto. Toronto Buddhist Church
i
1
Pisher, R. ’Gibson, M.
annual meeting.
v F^ir36 Jr” G‘ Strange and
hi. A. Warren.
. Among the leading organizers
More than fifteen teachers of
in volume of sales and percent­
good attendance in order that the
---- ^OrE?to Buddhist - Religious
age of objective attained to" date
«..™, ,....,
,
, „„
— School (Sunday School) will be parents and children may show are: E- A. Warren, 97.9% and G.
FemaleHeJpW
• (honored on November 20th at a appreciation to the consistent W. Beatson, 97.4%.
“Recognition Dinner” which be­ service these teachers are givin.
Supervisor for the region is W.
COUNTER GIRL for dry cleaner. West
End. Steady or part time. ‘ LE. 6-614L gins from 4:30 P.M.
C. Lamont.
(Toronto).
________________r ll^2122^^?118 were distributed to the church.
C. G. Beatty, regional.director
New, teachers who joined the
of
the campaign, says the enOPENING Japanese Import Shop. Want- cE°,
n
- ^S^tered children staff
since
the
staff
since the fall term will also
v
7lerf or i?les purposes. of the Religious School to assure be
introdncS
s™° week will see an all-out
Enterbrises 316
SIR —-------- --------------------- e ug nmoaucea.
Apply by mail: Dorian Enterprises,
effort by the 55 supervisors and
Avenue Road, Toronto Ont.
-

Chance To Enjoy Yourself And Support TJCCA

organizers throughout the pro­
vince to “go over the top”.
The latest figures on sales
through payroll savings plans in
Ontario
establishments
total
§70,657,000 for 85% of the 1960
objective.

A MEMORABLE
BEDDING RECEPTION

Buddhist To Honor Teachers At Dinner

A ^ciEicn
CLASSIFIED

GIRL WANTED for variety store. Week
days with good hours. Responsibilities
Phone Vic Ohashi at WA. 3-0346 after
6 p.m. (Toronto)

'

Nakamura

To

Hang'

In

requires
ample facilities,

DELICIOUS FOOD

AND ALSO
FINE ATMOSPHERE

COME TO

Galiery XII

^? scx°Pe of Canadian paintThree Air-Conditioned
abstract building isolated on the he can be subtle, too; and no mat­
BOOKKEEPER General office wL^L^ | 00^
field
Banquet Rooms
vast, mysterious plain. His taste ter how exuberant his imaginabin'll 1. » 1_
in color and texture is most fas­ tion, he always seems to be in
925 EGUNTON WEST
Domestic Help Wanted
?» aSaSS SHa™®Tom tidious, and there is freshness in control of the complexities. The
his weaving of green tree pat­ ^-L221* “Bacchante Riding- a
RU. 1-9123
Child on a Panther” indicates
MOTHER'S HELPER in modern bungaWXtaP°siti0n. The first is a terns.
% Doctor's home with two children
^n 01 such refinement that for
TORONTO
Town is brash in comparison, that, though he chose the nonSwi^nL11 conveniences. Bathurst what he has to say he needs no an adventure who goes all out in figurative, he knows something
and Wilson. Phone ME. 3-3688 (Toronto) | more than Straws and scratch^
about the figurative, too.
having his fling, prodigal of
Rooms to Let
vertical or horizontal seams, a energy and incident, provocative
aEES
aft. ^Ha^S ~"“S ^ ’-th
^“
ideas and his titles—“Parking
Problem,” “You Can’t Miss It,”
Interior of a Holiday,” “The
lon& Lorizon- First Infernal Submarine”—in­
Koom and Board .
| . s> and the close-up of the' veN ventive in the exploration of magrasses of “October”. To ine *:er^i as in hhe colleges, such
ROOM AND BOARD for a young perA Big Majority of Japanese Canadian Customers
Phone OX°^
district' ‘Block Structures” are not that as The Very First-Time Clock,”
. nwne ua. o-oo4o (Toronto/
Purchase Their Homes Through
at all; those black patches are made up of tissue paper, string
like samples of tweed. But Naka­ and toothpicks, among other
Apartment For Rent
mura can deal with solids when things. “Pendulum” shows how
r'L^^L^V “ duPlex/$120.00 month,
ne likes, as in “Fortress,” an sumptuously he can use color; but
“each district. Parking. WA. 1-6617
representing
lioronto).

Buy Your House Through
The Most Successful Realtor in Toronto

M. YANAGISAWA

Business Personal

SPECIALIZING IN TV SERVICE
AND ANTENNA INSTALLATION

etc.
Phone LE.

H/T^ JOBS. Raggage

?-nd Reasonable.
/-3310 anytime (Toronto).

?Lrmi^nd groups. Phone LE.
u-'Lor CH. 4-9475. Ask for Archie
Miyashita (Toronto).
Ar erne

TELEVISION Q O © G '0

______ Land For Rent

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Phone LE. 4-7954-5-6

LOT FOR RENT. A five to ten acre lot
o/HTogartdenog 10Cated tarty mi e
en
L °nt°' ,Ontario. Freshly brok^ Jour and a half feet deep. For
’ p» ;£“? “Ii ch- u,s! ^

1338 Queen Street West Toronto 3

OWNED BY HAROLD MAEDA
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
Doctor of Chiropractic
728A ST. CLAIR AVE. WEST
(V2 Block West of Christie)
Telephone LE. 6-8220
H No Answer Call

BE. 3-3869
TORONTO

OFFICE

EM. 4-1394
EM. 4-1395

RESIDENCE
2 Vesta Drive
HUdson 5-1365

KEN WILES LIMITED REAL ESTATE
OFFICE

HU. 7-3361
TORONTO, Ont.
Res.rLE. 4-1427 or OX. 9-3776

Sail APL...
economy class

YONEMITSU

A. E. McKaque, Q.C.

Watch Repair Shop

BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC

HO. 5-3652'— Res: LE. 2-7445
’ 828 Broadview Ave., Toronto

1008 Northern Ontario Building
330 Bay Street (at Adelaide)
TORONTO

only $295^0

Lucien C. Kurata
iiiiiiiii it tiHtwn it tiinuii u nnsi m

i B.4RRISTER and 8OLIOITOB
I
NOTARY PUBLIC

I

Suite 513 Temple Building
32 RICHMOND ST. WEST

TORONTO
J EM. 6-3323

Res.: RO. 7-3427

Lbw budget travel to the lands of the Orient includes:
comfortable accommodations; a delicious variety of
food, deck sports, games, parties and a host of other
shipboard activities. Sailings from San Francisco every
three weeks. Fare in dormitories from $295; 4, 6 and
8-berth rooms from $360; fares to Honolulu from $90.
Space Available Now on These Sailings:

President Wilson.............. ... ............................ Dec. 6*, Jan. 21

e Specialize In Giftware Of Quality From The Orient
gr
acquerware — Porcelain Tableware — Household
ScroT611^^^00’ Wood Handiwork—Framed Pictures And
Tables
Cental Jewellery — Japanese Folding Screens And
~
^oHs And Statuettes — Flower Arrangement
accessories, etc., etc.

paramount
U tDr°r,h Ave" Toronto
ii^®084 of Pape Ave)

gift

shop

Tel. HO. 3-7831
Store Open: 9 a.m.—9 p.m.

(*Dec. 8 from Los Angeles)

.President Cleveland

Dec. 28*, Feb. 12
(*Dec. 30 from Los Angeles)

See Your Travel Agent for Reservations and Complete Information

See SUS NAGAI
432 Parliament Street
TORONTO
Phone WA. 4-8427

AMERICAN PRESIDENLLINESM
29 Broadway^ New York 6— Digby 4-3260

Page 8

PAGE 8
THE NEW CANADIAN

Dorian

Sh&esday, November 16 „,,

Assassin's Funeral
local chapters may

^d^Lrs^r^

{Continued from Page One)

, -The souls of the young- men
motherland is to deny oneself and
Authorized as second i
I
dedicated their lives to his
observations mn threTfacts
und^t°od to base their
neglect one’s ego.
Bost Office' Dep£°^
majesty
remain
always
unchangT UMEZUKI
Pubin ttawo I
is achieved; secondly, the existence* of Tpa and Tohtieal equality ed regardless of the'time/’^one i
1 ,Went t0 Hibiya Pub­
TSUMURA,
Eni
”-’
^ I
impression of segregated' tightk to
T b1 cl'eatW an
poems said.
^° Kull Asanuma) I first Editor; KEN MORT Tbec^|
°^
ht
^
ouId
ieave
a
will
be
­
and sports activities can be^el^atrdMn ™^^
Thirdly, social
Bolice praised
Yamaguchi’s
Section Editor and \/ap-ness I
their own respective fields
“^
f° many clubs existing in conduct prior to his suicide
that
m Persuaded myself
Adi erasing I
that if I should do so I could not Manager.
said that in the three
avoid
expressing
my
petty
perSUBSCRIPTION
K°mg generalitiees. The third is d
i ^
from fore­ weeks he spent at the Tokyo me- mom wishes ,in .the Will.
S%ner 6 months
cases of social welfare. From timp to f^Slb e ?ks^^
except in tr°pohtan police department the
per year
enemv
°J
ht
su
ch
egoism
was
the
and. indigent come to the attention of"^/3565 of /Pyless aged youth would rise at 5 a.m. volun- eneJKy of my dedication to my
4/9 QUEEN ST. WEST
tarily
clean
his
cell,
ibow
in
the
Attempt to contact a representative
^ey in turn
motherland.”
y
EMpire 6-5005
or personal attention. Such cases
^°I information ■ r?cjQ°n °f the Imperial PalaceK MT
for any agency to contact a ball
?V’ j11^’ k will be awkard and before meals, pray to the Im­
any other representative body.
01 a dance club for lack of- perial ancestors.
.
When not being questioned,
stajof
JCCA at this cMeW Yamaguchi practised Zen Buddh,1SlrT,p??lce said, sitting quietly,
By LARRY s. TAJIRi
mainly directed toward problem^
an^ purposes were
'were many taxing its efforts
, concernmg ourselves, and they I- Once he told the officer: “I do
But, since its own h use
to
^11 measure, not feel sorry for my deed betimely to turn its eyes to Can nd£Y Pu>+in order, will it not be
member correctly ito^
^ety in-genera! ? If I re- cause J ¥ve done it I°r mv
the equal basis i£Ssu^ action on motherland. But 1 will have to
W deed when I look
from time to time and ser^w^n
True’ R has d“e so" I J*0?®
ton
1
J
fr
°
m
^e view that I have
taken positive steps to contribute toT™^
nS °An volition,
Killed a person.”
Nisei, Jerry Harada’wliA
Rifles, is the storv of n
constructive programs? The field is wide .A y016^ ^ creative,
.Tip also told police: “My contoll Led
unlimited scope for service.
aiSAVlde and l°ng range, offering.
Viction is that true loyalty to the
ably vull interest many adults a*
e t®ena^e reader, it prob
das,
who
operate
a
farm
in'



le
st°ry tells of the Rnra
lished in their particular field of endeavor and
^ vWe
estabafter Pearl Harbor.
“ CaM°™e>. and what happened t^
exPausion or new horizoS tC
eidenUlcco^j^™^
came about almost

fCC^- lhe entohasis of the past could u
'■ 1S applicable to
Hee Canadian society as a whole, of which w^aTe^I^
the
(continued from page one)
«L??^ Sl°" “
4ee ?£t w"’? out ri
resign.
Her?'
do we wish for oig^uture^eneratiS
°f envir°nment
b?h V0ted for Ikepositive programs to implement
to ^ese and . t
e last party convention I Japanese Lember of ^LoSS’’ Sergeant Stanel Uno, first
StO P1’esent and future of JCcT Wh^011’ C°Uld be the a^s- Mhich
elected Ikeda as its presb
building a wall around ourselves ?
Can accus.e us then, of i
| sergeant of detectives.
geles polree department to be m"de
Sato’ £°lltlcaT observers note that

lic

Written Almost By Accident

I

j Ikeda Favorite

broth?P Kishi, sup?
d Ikeda as his own succestht
tOl PlaJ the SMle r0le
' Shi1^ P^yed* in succeeding
It b nearly 20 years since Pear? Ho,.?
”ilh ’
. Ikeda as the Kishi cab
J,LSSs t0 "^o™ ‘he hectic veL or t' .^
generation
trade
in- WPing. “Burma Rifles” is on
f
e ^^Y 194()s have little
dustry minister, was
one and
of the
W l£?S °f the cabinet and reader which has a stirring sto?y
tell?' "T1
the adolescent
him. ^ ^ S SUPPort to succeed ?nraeriCans’ with Japanese faces beh^pN about how a group
challenge.
races, .behaved during their years of
After the Nov. 20 elections
’““Xe*?™^
in MGM’s drama „f a Ja.
J’Mmg party’s nine major fac
twns
will know how
much mand as ar>y actor in Hdllywdod ^Fiicr
^un’ 1S as niuch in destrength each commands.
rolTBaker in the picture this mohth
StarLs work opposite Car
tract which will permit him
a -Provision in his contor s Production of Rodgers
for tke Iead ^n ^ss
musical goefinto
“FIo"er Dr™
Althoup-h rio cncifinrv'L
i
P^Quclion ©arly next surin^
“Flower Drum Song/ Shigeto
by ^^o*’ as yet on
possibly opposite Miyoshi Umeki whn^b
-he romantic le^'
I Cnma in the .original New York cast
PIctVre bride frorn
a hit on Broadway as Linda I
Suzuki, who made such
her marriage last spring to New^
Song” ^‘
may not.be available for the mo
^ Photographer Mark Shaw and
her to re-create her role Hunton ’
^ Producer Hunter wants
y'?Ats to cast “Flower Drum
]”cidentally, has announced he
of Oriental descent.~
Sng completely with performers

si £TMS^

presents its

to

fall fling
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, i960
At WAR AMPUTATION HALL
Wellesley at Bay '
j ADMISSION $1.00
x prizes
__
PRIZES

«tft

,HwMSW^

prizes

actual locfles o/the ^tory'^

Young. Japanese diplomat
Paris and Tokyo.

I
I

II
I

i For
■Astaire
IDC-8C J<
|S. JAL’s
lAsano sa
land, her
I Tokyo, ai
Ito servic
I make the
kith the

is Hollywood and in the

I
e Tennessee girl who married a
locations are planned in Washington,

peared in. rifmanticTeads ii/Hollw16^Nisei actresses have ap-

DECEMBER 5th
Eb?GT ®S JEAN
MAYOR
(advertisement)
I
^lllllllllllllll|l||||ii;|„||||„„„,.l

^orepMM^

1

■ The Re,
■Bated whe:
them Machiko Kyo Shiriev Yom? m
S in rscent years—among
Eiko Ando, Micto KobS^
N6bu McCarthy,’ ■banded to,
■ate club. rl
^e2e..aPcest?W since Sessue
man of Japa- Bps to les
Pencil” in Hollvwood in
staito-ed in “The Vermillion
■dances foi
ghter of the DragolW'tom
hi« ^st talkie, “DauJoe” and “Smss Famil^R^
®uch
as “Tokyo ,■ From this
were in character roles.7
Einson, but .these latter appearances jBbers brin.

. (Boss Merril], y$3.95)1Sv^^^^
“Zen Showed Me the Way,”
J column in the Pacific CiH^ ^ Hosokawa discussed in a recent
activity in California
n H’ rWaWaKawa noted that anti-Japanese
m 1922;' Hayakawa
hls decision to Quit Hollywood
life during
an attempt on his
quake. He writes Hint he
C*31jaJiC scene which involved an earthtoward him rather than nwn^ne^ tnat a P3^3 was rigged to fall

it IS a good policy to
have the RIGHT POLICY

Consult

j wales and duncan $
I insurance agents i
I

the work
with our 2-Account Plan
-*

Aacmt Ai^dw? " P™al Chequing
keep yo/rXl JS
»

new peace of mind. Y

<64 Yong9 Street. Toronto

J

Ph°n» WA. 1-3171

J

machine co.
H: S. TSURUDA
1

RPaAT eanadian Agent)
Rowntree Ave.. TORONTO
RO.

balance grows, you’ll gain

notes in hi $ bookw °n ™y Hfe took pIace in early March, 1922,” he

celebrating thePcompleHon CfnWIeted’/^
spoke at a dinner
marks:
completion of the picture. He quotes from his re­
uTho ot-h
d'
discrimination against
taken concerning the current
legislation that will do them
^L * UmC0UntD'. and the passage if
this company (Robertson-Cniptof^ 6^? 6 harm. I have learned that
crimination against the Tanan bus taken a position in favor of diswas made during the filmS?^^
an attempt on my life
it was unsuccessful. I was warned^ Vermillion Pencil’. Fortunately
cause for me* to remain^n Knn1^ a state, there is no longer any
my last day.”
am ln Holl^ood. l am going to leave. This is
• w&k-TJa. ^de °uly one picture, “Daughter of the Dragon”
in Hollywood in thenexto^ve
yeais- _
—Pacific Citizen

■ word of mi
■ to its pres
■ the beginr
■ this is a p
B At any

■ as a pub!
I participate
■ Persons wi
Btion whate
I Perhaps
I® inadvei
I mis-interpr
B and objects
I The duti
■ dub, past
B to help gu
Inmost of :
I™, public
I ^igation
■ ‘‘on of the
|oered indis<
t10 state th
■ -'D membe
I* of mi.
B "berate fah
I • Bein& hi

B Augment a
B any critic! si

TOKYO.-

the Canadian
bank
of<aps
commerce
300
canada
ro

sims-

A 1 I

R o r m s

1 Oakley Boulevard
Toronto

LE. 2-6378

O f

Insurance
Phone
PLymouth 9-8317

y-year-old
-^mission t
W- Japan’s
\ l:Ce the a to
“*1,
*L dam
j^an to M

-'L beautv