Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
-No. 42
Wednesday, May 31, 1961
6 Holiday ’ Over
TORONTO, ONTARIO
Pep. Immigration Minister Davidson Says. . .
Canada May Relax Immigration Laws
^MONTREAL.—The Deputy Minister of Chizu
ship and Immigration said here the internation
situation may force Canada to re! ax its immigration laws and admit immigrants w ho fit with difficulty into the Canadian scene.
Dr. George Davidson said the move mav become essential for Canada to retr
ration among the free countries ol the world.
Dr. Davidson, in an addres
to
National
Travellers Aid Association, indicated that the point
is fast being- reached when Canada.will no longer
be able to base its immigration policy “on en
lightened self interest,” and have to admit immi
grants to help overpopulated countries whether
or not the immigrant fit into the pattern of Can
adian life with relative ease.
This thinking, he said, is a trend rather than
a theory being put into practice, but is spreading
in Canada and the. United States, the two main
countries of the world that can stand an influx
World Relations
He said the issue would ibeeome critical in inter-'
national relations because: countries with overpopulation and refugee.' whom they cannot absorb
may lose, their rood opinion of Canada and the
united States unless help is forthcoming.
The shift from ■national to international, considerations. Dr. Dav
on said, was in general a
shift from self interes to the recognition that immigration has become * a personal, social ami human problem.”
•Teop^e are beginning to think of the open
spaces in other lands, of higher levels of living
^45
which have not been possible for them,” he said. 6
As these facts and pressures becom known,
more and more wo. may find that matters relating
to. .uumigration are no longer matters that lie
within our own control.”
Image Reflects
“The image of Canada abroad
vill leflect Canadas stand on
THREE ATTRACTIVE MEMBERS OF THE “HOLIDAY IN JAimmigration.”
PAN TROD PE are shown at San Francisco International Airport
Dr. Davidson said Canadians
TORONTO.—The Toronto Ja fare Fund”.
(on May 21) prior to their departure for Tokyo via Japan Air Lines’
must prepare themselves for the
Jet Courier. Kikue Miyakawa (left), Kyoko Nakamura (centre) and panese Canadian Welfare Com
(4). The date for the Annual time when they will have to adopt
Toshiko Ikuta (right) are returning home for a rest and a visit mittee—consisting- of one mem
General
Meeting of this organi immigration policies that will be
after spending two years in the United States with the show’
ber
representative
from
each
of
zation was for April or May of in harmony with the international
“Holiday in Japan” was a featured attraction in Las Vegas, and
situation and be ready to render
the necessary services to the£
most recently has been appearing at the Cocoanut Grove in Los the 15 various JC organizations each vear.
Angeles’ Ambassador Hotel.
here—met last Sunday, May 2S
migrants,
(JAPAN AIR LINES PHOTO) and made decisions on the follow
Canada, he said, admitted re
J.C. Nurse Grads
fugees suffering from, tubercu
ing points:
VANCOUVER, B.C.—Japanese losis during World Refugee Year
(1) Election of a executive Canadian girls mentioned
as anA . ^e Government, despite
committee composed of Mr. To- nurse graduates from the Van criticism, has not tightened the
laws it relaxed then, in recogni
kikazu Tanaka, Mr. Toshiaki Su- couver General Hospital nursing tion of the new direction which
school
are:
Kuniko
Tanii
of
?
DawOTTAWA.—Apartment apar all that matters.”
mi, Mr. Shuichi Sasaki, and the son Creek; and Asako Oikawa of immigration, may have to take.
theid is now outlawed in Ontario.
Ronald
Dempster,
property
Of the 200 refugees admitted
New Westminster.
A new amendment to the Fair manager of Montreal Trust, re- J CCA Isseibu.
in
1959 all have been cured with
Accommodation
Practices
act called two instances when Ne(2). Appointment of a treathe exception of 20, and’have
came into effect Monday.
It groes applied for apartments in surer:
McGill
Graduates
Mr. Z. Shin.
taken their place in Canadian
makes it illegal for persons rent the high rent, prestige buildings
MONTREAL.—A few Japa society.
ing apartments in buildings with handled by the firm.
(3). Appointment of auditors:
Dr. Davidson said Canadians
more than six self-contained units
Mr. S. Takashima and Mr. M. nese Canadian-names mentioned
Didn’t Return
receiving degrees from McGill • will have to change their own
to refuse anyone because of race,
“Both applications were accept Heike.
University were as follows: Dip attitude towards immigrants, get
color or creed.
ed
but
the
people
never
came
loma In Public Health Nursing rid of “seeds of smugness,”’and
The
yearly
budget
was
set
at
Passed during the last session
back,
”
he
said.
“
I
guess
they
were
—
Miss Noriko Yamanaka
of admit newcomers as equals on
of the legislature, the amend
$180.00 with contributions from
ment does not apply to very small just testing to see what we would each organization. The Saisei-Kai Toronto, Ont; Bachelor of Science social and political levels.
Degree—Lorraine Inouye of Mon
apartment blocks, rooming houses do.”
specially
contributed
$50.00
this
A
spokesman
for
another
firm
treal;
Bachelor of Engineering
or to homeowners who rent part
said:
“
We
have
a
number
of
nicer
Degree
—
Joe Fujiio -Tanaka of
year.
In
case
of
any
monetary
of their houses.
The ugly face of discrimination apartments which I fear would shortages additional sums will be Montreal; Doctor of Philosophy
has shown itself here infrequent experience a mass exodus of ten dispensed from the “General Wel- —Doreen Kimura, B.A., M.A. of
Montreal.
ly in- the past. Out of five man ants if certain elements moved
in.”
agers _ of large apartment rental
What To Do
agencies interviewed, only one
Anyone
who feels he has been
said he had received complaints
Issues of the “Typical Jarefused
an
apartment for the
from other tenants when a mempanese Cooking” book are still
reasons
now
outlawed
should
•5 °^ a. minority group moved
BLENHEIM, Ont.—The big, bcdy to comipete in the eighth
available at the office of The
complain in writing- to the pro
into a building.
New
Canadian, 479 Queen
brown
eyes
of
Cheryl
Shiomi,
a
annual blossom queen contest, she
All said they had never refused vincial department of labor, 8
Street
West, Toronto 2-B, Ont.
York
St.,
Toronto.
If officials Nisei girl from Cedar Springs, is the first Japanese Canadian
to rent to anyone for the reasons
Since the announcement last
feel
the
complaint
is
legitimate
glistened with tears as she was to win the crown.
row outlawed. But they agreed
week half of the new present
discrimination did exist and that a special form will he mailed to announced the 1961
blossom
stock has been sold.
So if
them.
the law is needed.
you
’
re
interested
please
act
queen
of
Blenheim
District
high
After this is completed and re
. Alex Lysy, who handles rent$1,000.
For
Wrestler
now.
turned the department will under school.
l>200 apartments in 26
The big colorful book con
VANCOUVER, B.C.—Wrestler
buildings in Metro, said he re take an investigation. Violators
tains over 146 LIFE-like (pages
The attractive and popular 17- Mitsu Arakawa is richer by
are
liable
to
a
fine
of
not
more
ceived complaints and lost ten
.with more than 100 recipes of
ants after leasing apartments to than $50 for an indirtdual or not year- old Grade. 12 student is the $1,000.00 after having defeated
colorful Japanese dishes. Price
"\° “mixed” couples.
In both more than $100 for a corporation. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Na- opponent Guy Brunetti recently
is only .$6:00.
cases, the man was Negro and However, consent of the minister sayoshi Shiomi. One of 13 can in the finals of a 10-man-overAlso available are a few
of
labor
is
needed
before
a
pro
top rope wrestling battle royal
me woman white.
didates chosen by the student here at the Garden Auditorium.
issues of “KIMONO” the art
secution.
of the Japanese Dress. Price
Tenants Moved
for this very interesting book
fi^eo^e moved out directly
is only $3.00. Both are avail
after these couples moved in,” he
able by sending cheque or
saig “J think I -would have lost
money-order to this office. No
k M?re tenants but one couple
COD’s, please!
it ’the lease and left in four
TOKYO.—The Ikeda cabinet, Minister Zentaro Kosaka desired thor and commentator on inter
OHths: the other staved for onlv
a year.”
which made news headlines when to name a woman ambassador to national affairs. Her grandfather.
Ian Caunce. rental manager for it appointed Japan’s first woman inject “fresh diplomacy.” It said Prime Minister Tsuoshi Inukai Admit Adopted Child
?e’^ r^al estate, said cabinet member, is now contem Kosaka highly appreciated that a was assassinated by young mili
OTTAWA.—The first child to
^‘dings his firm manages plating the appointment of the number of woman ambassadors tary officers in April* 1932. Her be admitted to Canada for adop
'
Anants of all colors and country’s first woman ambassa have been appointed by other father, the late Takeru Inukai, tion under a federal policy an
dor, the newspaper Tokyo Shim countries and that they have been was justice minister of the Yoshi nounced more than 10 months ago
<<
now.
efficient in the handling of “’de da cabinet in 1953.
never had complaints bun said.
is expected to be a 3-year-old
licate” diplomatic problems.
Mrs.
Masa
Nakayama,
an
Ame
s
Is and if we did our ad—Mrs. Fuji Egami, director of Chinese girl abandoned in Hong
The newspaper said Kosaka the women’s and Juvenile De- Kong when she was 5 years old.
h \OU d be °ne word: move.” rican educated Diet member of
“e{ said.
the ruling Liberal
Democrat has four persons in mind:
partment of the Japan Broad A Montreal English speaking
—Mrs. Kazuo Aso, daughter of casting Corporation.
only things we are inter- party, served as Welfare Minis
couple of Chinese descent have
Can they P^y the ter of the three-month long first former Prime Minister Shigeru
applied for her admission. An
Mrs.
Ayako
Tozuka,
former
ahu1 \ '111 ltey be quiet, respect- cabinet organized by Prime Mi Yoshida. Her husband is a. mining
other
French speaking couple
editor of the Japan Tourist Agen
magnate.
‘•enants ? If the answers to nister Hayato Ikeda.
have also requested a Chinese
—Miss Michiko Inukai, an au- cy’s Travel Magazine.
The newspaper said Foreign
questions are ‘yes/ that’s
girl for adoption.
T,0. J.C, WELFARE COMMITTEE REPORT
APARTMENT APARTHEID OUTLAWED IN ONT.
Nisei 1961 Blossom Queen Of Blenheim
Contemporary
Japan
1st Woman Ambassador
Japanese Cook And
Kimono Books
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
-No. 42
Wednesday, May 31, 1961
6 Holiday ’ Over
TORONTO, ONTARIO
Pep. Immigration Minister Davidson Says. . .
Canada May Relax Immigration Laws
^MONTREAL.—The Deputy Minister of Chizu
ship and Immigration said here the internation
situation may force Canada to re! ax its immigration laws and admit immigrants w ho fit with difficulty into the Canadian scene.
Dr. George Davidson said the move mav become essential for Canada to retr
ration among the free countries ol the world.
Dr. Davidson, in an addres
to
National
Travellers Aid Association, indicated that the point
is fast being- reached when Canada.will no longer
be able to base its immigration policy “on en
lightened self interest,” and have to admit immi
grants to help overpopulated countries whether
or not the immigrant fit into the pattern of Can
adian life with relative ease.
This thinking, he said, is a trend rather than
a theory being put into practice, but is spreading
in Canada and the. United States, the two main
countries of the world that can stand an influx
World Relations
He said the issue would ibeeome critical in inter-'
national relations because: countries with overpopulation and refugee.' whom they cannot absorb
may lose, their rood opinion of Canada and the
united States unless help is forthcoming.
The shift from ■national to international, considerations. Dr. Dav
on said, was in general a
shift from self interes to the recognition that immigration has become * a personal, social ami human problem.”
•Teop^e are beginning to think of the open
spaces in other lands, of higher levels of living
^45
which have not been possible for them,” he said. 6
As these facts and pressures becom known,
more and more wo. may find that matters relating
to. .uumigration are no longer matters that lie
within our own control.”
Image Reflects
“The image of Canada abroad
vill leflect Canadas stand on
THREE ATTRACTIVE MEMBERS OF THE “HOLIDAY IN JAimmigration.”
PAN TROD PE are shown at San Francisco International Airport
Dr. Davidson said Canadians
TORONTO.—The Toronto Ja fare Fund”.
(on May 21) prior to their departure for Tokyo via Japan Air Lines’
must prepare themselves for the
Jet Courier. Kikue Miyakawa (left), Kyoko Nakamura (centre) and panese Canadian Welfare Com
(4). The date for the Annual time when they will have to adopt
Toshiko Ikuta (right) are returning home for a rest and a visit mittee—consisting- of one mem
General
Meeting of this organi immigration policies that will be
after spending two years in the United States with the show’
ber
representative
from
each
of
zation was for April or May of in harmony with the international
“Holiday in Japan” was a featured attraction in Las Vegas, and
situation and be ready to render
the necessary services to the£
most recently has been appearing at the Cocoanut Grove in Los the 15 various JC organizations each vear.
Angeles’ Ambassador Hotel.
here—met last Sunday, May 2S
migrants,
(JAPAN AIR LINES PHOTO) and made decisions on the follow
Canada, he said, admitted re
J.C. Nurse Grads
fugees suffering from, tubercu
ing points:
VANCOUVER, B.C.—Japanese losis during World Refugee Year
(1) Election of a executive Canadian girls mentioned
as anA . ^e Government, despite
committee composed of Mr. To- nurse graduates from the Van criticism, has not tightened the
laws it relaxed then, in recogni
kikazu Tanaka, Mr. Toshiaki Su- couver General Hospital nursing tion of the new direction which
school
are:
Kuniko
Tanii
of
?
DawOTTAWA.—Apartment apar all that matters.”
mi, Mr. Shuichi Sasaki, and the son Creek; and Asako Oikawa of immigration, may have to take.
theid is now outlawed in Ontario.
Ronald
Dempster,
property
Of the 200 refugees admitted
New Westminster.
A new amendment to the Fair manager of Montreal Trust, re- J CCA Isseibu.
in
1959 all have been cured with
Accommodation
Practices
act called two instances when Ne(2). Appointment of a treathe exception of 20, and’have
came into effect Monday.
It groes applied for apartments in surer:
McGill
Graduates
Mr. Z. Shin.
taken their place in Canadian
makes it illegal for persons rent the high rent, prestige buildings
MONTREAL.—A few Japa society.
ing apartments in buildings with handled by the firm.
(3). Appointment of auditors:
Dr. Davidson said Canadians
more than six self-contained units
Mr. S. Takashima and Mr. M. nese Canadian-names mentioned
Didn’t Return
receiving degrees from McGill • will have to change their own
to refuse anyone because of race,
“Both applications were accept Heike.
University were as follows: Dip attitude towards immigrants, get
color or creed.
ed
but
the
people
never
came
loma In Public Health Nursing rid of “seeds of smugness,”’and
The
yearly
budget
was
set
at
Passed during the last session
back,
”
he
said.
“
I
guess
they
were
—
Miss Noriko Yamanaka
of admit newcomers as equals on
of the legislature, the amend
$180.00 with contributions from
ment does not apply to very small just testing to see what we would each organization. The Saisei-Kai Toronto, Ont; Bachelor of Science social and political levels.
Degree—Lorraine Inouye of Mon
apartment blocks, rooming houses do.”
specially
contributed
$50.00
this
A
spokesman
for
another
firm
treal;
Bachelor of Engineering
or to homeowners who rent part
said:
“
We
have
a
number
of
nicer
Degree
—
Joe Fujiio -Tanaka of
year.
In
case
of
any
monetary
of their houses.
The ugly face of discrimination apartments which I fear would shortages additional sums will be Montreal; Doctor of Philosophy
has shown itself here infrequent experience a mass exodus of ten dispensed from the “General Wel- —Doreen Kimura, B.A., M.A. of
Montreal.
ly in- the past. Out of five man ants if certain elements moved
in.”
agers _ of large apartment rental
What To Do
agencies interviewed, only one
Anyone
who feels he has been
said he had received complaints
Issues of the “Typical Jarefused
an
apartment for the
from other tenants when a mempanese Cooking” book are still
reasons
now
outlawed
should
•5 °^ a. minority group moved
BLENHEIM, Ont.—The big, bcdy to comipete in the eighth
available at the office of The
complain in writing- to the pro
into a building.
New
Canadian, 479 Queen
brown
eyes
of
Cheryl
Shiomi,
a
annual blossom queen contest, she
All said they had never refused vincial department of labor, 8
Street
West, Toronto 2-B, Ont.
York
St.,
Toronto.
If officials Nisei girl from Cedar Springs, is the first Japanese Canadian
to rent to anyone for the reasons
Since the announcement last
feel
the
complaint
is
legitimate
glistened with tears as she was to win the crown.
row outlawed. But they agreed
week half of the new present
discrimination did exist and that a special form will he mailed to announced the 1961
blossom
stock has been sold.
So if
them.
the law is needed.
you
’
re
interested
please
act
queen
of
Blenheim
District
high
After this is completed and re
. Alex Lysy, who handles rent$1,000.
For
Wrestler
now.
turned the department will under school.
l>200 apartments in 26
The big colorful book con
VANCOUVER, B.C.—Wrestler
buildings in Metro, said he re take an investigation. Violators
tains over 146 LIFE-like (pages
The attractive and popular 17- Mitsu Arakawa is richer by
are
liable
to
a
fine
of
not
more
ceived complaints and lost ten
.with more than 100 recipes of
ants after leasing apartments to than $50 for an indirtdual or not year- old Grade. 12 student is the $1,000.00 after having defeated
colorful Japanese dishes. Price
"\° “mixed” couples.
In both more than $100 for a corporation. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Na- opponent Guy Brunetti recently
is only .$6:00.
cases, the man was Negro and However, consent of the minister sayoshi Shiomi. One of 13 can in the finals of a 10-man-overAlso available are a few
of
labor
is
needed
before
a
pro
top rope wrestling battle royal
me woman white.
didates chosen by the student here at the Garden Auditorium.
issues of “KIMONO” the art
secution.
of the Japanese Dress. Price
Tenants Moved
for this very interesting book
fi^eo^e moved out directly
is only $3.00. Both are avail
after these couples moved in,” he
able by sending cheque or
saig “J think I -would have lost
money-order to this office. No
k M?re tenants but one couple
COD’s, please!
it ’the lease and left in four
TOKYO.—The Ikeda cabinet, Minister Zentaro Kosaka desired thor and commentator on inter
OHths: the other staved for onlv
a year.”
which made news headlines when to name a woman ambassador to national affairs. Her grandfather.
Ian Caunce. rental manager for it appointed Japan’s first woman inject “fresh diplomacy.” It said Prime Minister Tsuoshi Inukai Admit Adopted Child
?e’^ r^al estate, said cabinet member, is now contem Kosaka highly appreciated that a was assassinated by young mili
OTTAWA.—The first child to
^‘dings his firm manages plating the appointment of the number of woman ambassadors tary officers in April* 1932. Her be admitted to Canada for adop
'
Anants of all colors and country’s first woman ambassa have been appointed by other father, the late Takeru Inukai, tion under a federal policy an
dor, the newspaper Tokyo Shim countries and that they have been was justice minister of the Yoshi nounced more than 10 months ago
<<
now.
efficient in the handling of “’de da cabinet in 1953.
never had complaints bun said.
is expected to be a 3-year-old
licate” diplomatic problems.
Mrs.
Masa
Nakayama,
an
Ame
s
Is and if we did our ad—Mrs. Fuji Egami, director of Chinese girl abandoned in Hong
The newspaper said Kosaka the women’s and Juvenile De- Kong when she was 5 years old.
h \OU d be °ne word: move.” rican educated Diet member of
“e{ said.
the ruling Liberal
Democrat has four persons in mind:
partment of the Japan Broad A Montreal English speaking
—Mrs. Kazuo Aso, daughter of casting Corporation.
only things we are inter- party, served as Welfare Minis
couple of Chinese descent have
Can they P^y the ter of the three-month long first former Prime Minister Shigeru
applied for her admission. An
Mrs.
Ayako
Tozuka,
former
ahu1 \ '111 ltey be quiet, respect- cabinet organized by Prime Mi Yoshida. Her husband is a. mining
other
French speaking couple
editor of the Japan Tourist Agen
magnate.
‘•enants ? If the answers to nister Hayato Ikeda.
have also requested a Chinese
—Miss Michiko Inukai, an au- cy’s Travel Magazine.
The newspaper said Foreign
questions are ‘yes/ that’s
girl for adoption.
T,0. J.C, WELFARE COMMITTEE REPORT
APARTMENT APARTHEID OUTLAWED IN ONT.
Nisei 1961 Blossom Queen Of Blenheim
Contemporary
Japan
1st Woman Ambassador
Japanese Cook And
Kimono Books
Page 2
PAGE 2
THE NEW CANADIAN
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f.
It
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HO. 6-2041
HO. 6-7962
on
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(2909 Grandview Hwy.)
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Page 7
Wednesday.. May 31, 1961
PAGE 7
1
‘Bridge To The Sun’ Finished
i
dates and dain^s
CLASSIFIED
By LARRY TAJIRI
When Mariko Miller visited Denver some months a-o from heO-BON SERVICE AT BUDDHIST CHURCH
Male Help Wanted
home in Gasper, Wyo., she expressed concern on
m^;
.J116TORONTO.—-The annual O- tiie Ryukoku University. Durii
adaptation of “Bridge to tile Sun. the story of an interracia?Ma
GARDEN
Bon Service will be held on July his college days he was a sta
nage whicn her mother, Gwen Terasaki, had written S
hoped, that Jacques Bar who was producing the picture in Paris 15 and 16 at the Toronto Budd wart on the baseball diamond.
irienced
hist Church.
The speaker will be the ReverWith fidelity. She also was concerned whether the Hawaiian S
end
Hogen Fujimoto, minister of
actor’JJ“]es S1IFeta’
^e able to. delineate successfully the
the
Place Buddhist
Church, PICNIC JUNE 24
A FEW
!'oe OiSidenm Terasaki, tlie Japanese diplomat who married a tirl
Penryn, California. He is also,
TORONTO.—Tlie Toronto Niironi Johnson City, Tenn. Given Terasaki’s part is nlaved in
film by Carroll Baker one of the ablest of the movies’ voung actresses National Director of the. Buddhist sei Gospel Church’s Annual Sun EXPERIENCED SALESMAN
Churches of America, Sunday day. School Picnic will be held at
who is best known for “Baby Doll” and “Giant.”
*
School Department.
Lorne Park in Clarkson on SaturThe word is that “Bridge to the Sun” has turned out better
The Rev. Fujimoto is a gra- daY June 24. 1961.
than studio expectations and MGM is withholding the release of X duate of the University of Gali- note,
Picture (it originally was to be released this month) in mtier to fornia Santa Barbara campus and
Female Help Wanted
t1 a ^er advance little publicity and the reason is that
A GOOD hom
■net
MGM, which originally purchased the screen rights to the Terasaki
book after its publication by North Carolina WveStv
H-JCCA AND KYOWA-KAI PICNIC JUNE 25
subsequent condensation in Readers Digest, farmed it out to French
ai
HAMILTON.—Well, it’s picnic ground facilities for the kiddie
p^dTr.
Pn1Cture was made as a co-production
time
again.
The
Hamilton
JCCA
barbecue, pits etc. available for
wiih Bai who operates out of Pans. As a result “Bridge to the Sun ”
GIRL
although it takes place in the U.S. and Japan, was considered a and the Hamilton Kyowa Kai in your enjoyment.
vites
you
to
attend
their
annual
Prices of tickets will be $1.00
French production and MGM’s publicity tom-toms didn’t beat for it
picnic. The picnic mH be held
Final production-work on “Bridge to the Sun” was completed Sunday, June 25th, at Lambert for adults and 50c for students
in Hollywood recently with Shigeta and Miss Baker dubbing some Park, at 11 A.M. ' The park is and children 5 years and over COUN1ER CLERK io
Tickets may be obtained from am
scenes on the MGM lot.
a
located near Carlisle Ont. about Kyowa Kai and JCCA members
The picture is principally a love story, beginning with the 15 miles from Hamilton. There
meeting of the girl from Tennessee and the Japanese official in will be swimming facilities, playWashington, then couitship and marriage. Terasaki’s involvement
Rooms to L
in a lasL-minute attempt to prevent a war between the United States
and Japan, hours before Pearl Harbor, by arranging direct com
THREE ROOM FLAT to let. Woodbine
munication between President Roosevelt and the Japanese emperor
and Danforth. Parkina avanabk. Phone
evenings OX. 9-9106'(TorontoL
is reportedly a dramatic sequence in the film. After Pearl Harbor
Gv, en Terasaki decides to take her daughter, Mariko and to accomTOKYO.
TWO UNFURNISHED ROOMS and second
prominent GerPanY Uer husband to Japan aboard the exchange ship Gripsholm. man historian and man of letters well equipped to discuss the Reds. floor fiat wi'h heavy wiring. Near LawHe was a member of the Catholic
Pho:
j/az
In Tokyo Mrs. Terasaki endures the fire-bombing by U S planes had tills advice for Japan’s neu Centre Party and a leader of the (Toronto).
to remain at the side of her husband.
*
• P
tral intellectuals.
Republican Students and Yrouth ROOM TO LET at Porth ana BroadTerasaki returned to her native Tennessee with her daugh
“If Berlin should fall, Tokyo of Berlin in 1930. He fled his view. Bedroom and k !ch<
n A'so unter following her husband’s death after the war. Mariko grew up will be next,” Prince Wertheim homeland in 1933 when the Nazi
shed be room arid Gtchen on third
Poo:
in Johnson City and married a young lawyer, Mayne Miller The F.H.F. Loewenstein said in an takeover put his life in danger.
desire.
Phone
Ws a Iaw Partner of Senator Estes Kefauver and himself ran interview with the Japan Times. Most of his time since then has
for Congress. But Miller is a Democrat and his district is the only
Loewenstein said Japan’s neu
one in Tennessee which has remained Republican since the 1880s tralist sentiments represent tlie been devoted to work with learned
societies in the United States.
Two years ago the Millers moved to Casper. Both are active
negative consequence of a posi
Three and a half million refu
local Democratic politics.
tive, fact—the fact that Japan gees from Communist Europe
*
*
*
never experienced a Soviet oc can not fail to bear witness to
CALL YOUR RED CROSS
A ^ °^ JaPanese ancestry, presumably a Nisei, is the centre cupation.
the realities behind the Iron Cur
oi considerable excitement in the new- United Artists release “The
“If only one island of yours tain, the bespectacled scholarLast Time I Saw Archie.” Cindy, played by Frances Nuyen in the had been occupied,” he declared, writer said.
picture, is suspected of being a Japanese spy when she befriends a “your attitude would be entirely
group of sad-sack GIs at an air base in Denver.
different.” The noted German n.He recalled Russia’s post World
>> ai II land grab in Europe and
_
^e Last Time I Saw Archie,” a story which writer William historian, who was educated at pointed out that not a single
Bowers claims, is a true one, stars Robert Michum as Archie, the Munich, Homburg, Geneva ami country had fallen “victim to
biggest goldbrick in tlie air force, and Jack Webb as Bowers. The Berlin, universities, recalled that
Communism” since the forma
comedy will be released in June.
during the days of the Weimar
tion of the North Atlantic Treaty
Republic German youth used to Organization (NATO).
ponder
Communism for days,
H. S. TSURUDA
Actor Marc Marno, who is of French-Japanese ancestry and
He said if the West could preweeks and months.
(Japanese Canadian Agent)
, ^le. r^e °f Eddie, the, houseboy, in the Broadway company
an°ther 15 years,
The present youth of Gennany V orld Warfor
85 &vwntree Ave., TORONTO
of A Majority of One,” is now at Warner Bros, recreating the
HI might never come.
knows
too
well
the
difference,
be
characterization for the motion picture. In the film Rosalind Russell
RO. W6T3
In this period humanity would
poitiays the Jewish widow from Brooklyn who is involved in a tween the attractive theories and have to be reasserted behind the
romance with a Japanese millionaire, played by Alec Guinness. Tsu- actual practice and they have no Iron Curtain, he warned '
ruko Kobayashi, who was in the Broadway company, is cast as sympathy with communism, he
was quoted as saying.
'
Guinness’ daughter in the film.
Loewenstein,
55,
a
visiting
pro
The New York company of “A Majority of One.” which played
OFFICE
fessor
of
history
and
political
RESIDENCE
.Denver and is now in Los Angeles, has Gertrude Berg and Sir Cedric
EM. 4-1394
2 Vesta Drive
science
at
the
Carnegie
Endow
Hardwicke in their original starring roles. Kanna Ishii is Hardwicke’s
EM. 4-1395
HUdson 5-1365
daughter, in the, stage troupe and Sahomi Tachibana, Yasuko Adachi ment for International Peace, is
and Yogi Matsuoka are in the cast.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
/f
, ..^s Ishii, daughter of one of Japan’s leading dancers, Baku
‘
NOTARY PUBLIC
Ishii, has appeared in “The King and I” and other Hollywood films.
PATRONIZE
Miss Tachibana, who has given dance concerts in New York, is a
1008 Northern Ontario Building
°^ fountain View, Calif. Miss Adachi plays a koto in one
Toronto
OUR
ADVERTISERS
330 Bay Street (art Adelaide)
LE. 2-6378
of the scenes of “A Majority of One.” Matsuoka toured with the
TORONTO
Lonstance Bennett company of “Auntie Mame.”
Tokyo would a»h
I
Si£ q
HISTORIAN WARNS JAPAN NEUTRALISTS
Give Blood!
MACHINE CO.
Cosy Atmosphere
SADAO niKAIDO
JAPANESE AND
OCCIDENTAL FOODS
Specializing In
■fresh meat and fish
order Thurs. and Fri.,
deliver free Saturday
SUKIYAKI and TEMPURA
For Family Parties
FREE PARKING AT
REAR OF STORE
460 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
TORONTO
71 TANSLEY AVE.,
SCAR BORO, ONT.
Phone AM. 5-8446.
$
MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS NOW!
Phone EM. 6-5589
EM. 6-5711
HOME BAKED - THE BEST
• Pies, Cakes, Pastries, Cookies etc.
• Mochi-Kashi, Senbei
BAKE
X?
460 Dundas Street West (just east of Spadina)
Phone EMpire 6-2164
•
Toronto
1
SHOP
460 Dundas St. W., Toronto
(Next door to the Continental Co-op)
Phone EM. 6-3691
See SUS NAGAI
432 Parliament Street
TORONTO
Phone WA. 4-8427
PAGE 7
1
‘Bridge To The Sun’ Finished
i
dates and dain^s
CLASSIFIED
By LARRY TAJIRI
When Mariko Miller visited Denver some months a-o from heO-BON SERVICE AT BUDDHIST CHURCH
Male Help Wanted
home in Gasper, Wyo., she expressed concern on
m^;
.J116TORONTO.—-The annual O- tiie Ryukoku University. Durii
adaptation of “Bridge to tile Sun. the story of an interracia?Ma
GARDEN
Bon Service will be held on July his college days he was a sta
nage whicn her mother, Gwen Terasaki, had written S
hoped, that Jacques Bar who was producing the picture in Paris 15 and 16 at the Toronto Budd wart on the baseball diamond.
irienced
hist Church.
The speaker will be the ReverWith fidelity. She also was concerned whether the Hawaiian S
end
Hogen Fujimoto, minister of
actor’JJ“]es S1IFeta’
^e able to. delineate successfully the
the
Place Buddhist
Church, PICNIC JUNE 24
A FEW
!'oe OiSidenm Terasaki, tlie Japanese diplomat who married a tirl
Penryn, California. He is also,
TORONTO.—Tlie Toronto Niironi Johnson City, Tenn. Given Terasaki’s part is nlaved in
film by Carroll Baker one of the ablest of the movies’ voung actresses National Director of the. Buddhist sei Gospel Church’s Annual Sun EXPERIENCED SALESMAN
Churches of America, Sunday day. School Picnic will be held at
who is best known for “Baby Doll” and “Giant.”
*
School Department.
Lorne Park in Clarkson on SaturThe word is that “Bridge to the Sun” has turned out better
The Rev. Fujimoto is a gra- daY June 24. 1961.
than studio expectations and MGM is withholding the release of X duate of the University of Gali- note,
Picture (it originally was to be released this month) in mtier to fornia Santa Barbara campus and
Female Help Wanted
t1 a ^er advance little publicity and the reason is that
A GOOD hom
■net
MGM, which originally purchased the screen rights to the Terasaki
book after its publication by North Carolina WveStv
H-JCCA AND KYOWA-KAI PICNIC JUNE 25
subsequent condensation in Readers Digest, farmed it out to French
ai
HAMILTON.—Well, it’s picnic ground facilities for the kiddie
p^dTr.
Pn1Cture was made as a co-production
time
again.
The
Hamilton
JCCA
barbecue, pits etc. available for
wiih Bai who operates out of Pans. As a result “Bridge to the Sun ”
GIRL
although it takes place in the U.S. and Japan, was considered a and the Hamilton Kyowa Kai in your enjoyment.
vites
you
to
attend
their
annual
Prices of tickets will be $1.00
French production and MGM’s publicity tom-toms didn’t beat for it
picnic. The picnic mH be held
Final production-work on “Bridge to the Sun” was completed Sunday, June 25th, at Lambert for adults and 50c for students
in Hollywood recently with Shigeta and Miss Baker dubbing some Park, at 11 A.M. ' The park is and children 5 years and over COUN1ER CLERK io
Tickets may be obtained from am
scenes on the MGM lot.
a
located near Carlisle Ont. about Kyowa Kai and JCCA members
The picture is principally a love story, beginning with the 15 miles from Hamilton. There
meeting of the girl from Tennessee and the Japanese official in will be swimming facilities, playWashington, then couitship and marriage. Terasaki’s involvement
Rooms to L
in a lasL-minute attempt to prevent a war between the United States
and Japan, hours before Pearl Harbor, by arranging direct com
THREE ROOM FLAT to let. Woodbine
munication between President Roosevelt and the Japanese emperor
and Danforth. Parkina avanabk. Phone
evenings OX. 9-9106'(TorontoL
is reportedly a dramatic sequence in the film. After Pearl Harbor
Gv, en Terasaki decides to take her daughter, Mariko and to accomTOKYO.
TWO UNFURNISHED ROOMS and second
prominent GerPanY Uer husband to Japan aboard the exchange ship Gripsholm. man historian and man of letters well equipped to discuss the Reds. floor fiat wi'h heavy wiring. Near LawHe was a member of the Catholic
Pho:
j/az
In Tokyo Mrs. Terasaki endures the fire-bombing by U S planes had tills advice for Japan’s neu Centre Party and a leader of the (Toronto).
to remain at the side of her husband.
*
• P
tral intellectuals.
Republican Students and Yrouth ROOM TO LET at Porth ana BroadTerasaki returned to her native Tennessee with her daugh
“If Berlin should fall, Tokyo of Berlin in 1930. He fled his view. Bedroom and k !ch<
n A'so unter following her husband’s death after the war. Mariko grew up will be next,” Prince Wertheim homeland in 1933 when the Nazi
shed be room arid Gtchen on third
Poo:
in Johnson City and married a young lawyer, Mayne Miller The F.H.F. Loewenstein said in an takeover put his life in danger.
desire.
Phone
Ws a Iaw Partner of Senator Estes Kefauver and himself ran interview with the Japan Times. Most of his time since then has
for Congress. But Miller is a Democrat and his district is the only
Loewenstein said Japan’s neu
one in Tennessee which has remained Republican since the 1880s tralist sentiments represent tlie been devoted to work with learned
societies in the United States.
Two years ago the Millers moved to Casper. Both are active
negative consequence of a posi
Three and a half million refu
local Democratic politics.
tive, fact—the fact that Japan gees from Communist Europe
*
*
*
never experienced a Soviet oc can not fail to bear witness to
CALL YOUR RED CROSS
A ^ °^ JaPanese ancestry, presumably a Nisei, is the centre cupation.
the realities behind the Iron Cur
oi considerable excitement in the new- United Artists release “The
“If only one island of yours tain, the bespectacled scholarLast Time I Saw Archie.” Cindy, played by Frances Nuyen in the had been occupied,” he declared, writer said.
picture, is suspected of being a Japanese spy when she befriends a “your attitude would be entirely
group of sad-sack GIs at an air base in Denver.
different.” The noted German n.He recalled Russia’s post World
>> ai II land grab in Europe and
_
^e Last Time I Saw Archie,” a story which writer William historian, who was educated at pointed out that not a single
Bowers claims, is a true one, stars Robert Michum as Archie, the Munich, Homburg, Geneva ami country had fallen “victim to
biggest goldbrick in tlie air force, and Jack Webb as Bowers. The Berlin, universities, recalled that
Communism” since the forma
comedy will be released in June.
during the days of the Weimar
tion of the North Atlantic Treaty
Republic German youth used to Organization (NATO).
ponder
Communism for days,
H. S. TSURUDA
Actor Marc Marno, who is of French-Japanese ancestry and
He said if the West could preweeks and months.
(Japanese Canadian Agent)
, ^le. r^e °f Eddie, the, houseboy, in the Broadway company
an°ther 15 years,
The present youth of Gennany V orld Warfor
85 &vwntree Ave., TORONTO
of A Majority of One,” is now at Warner Bros, recreating the
HI might never come.
knows
too
well
the
difference,
be
characterization for the motion picture. In the film Rosalind Russell
RO. W6T3
In this period humanity would
poitiays the Jewish widow from Brooklyn who is involved in a tween the attractive theories and have to be reasserted behind the
romance with a Japanese millionaire, played by Alec Guinness. Tsu- actual practice and they have no Iron Curtain, he warned '
ruko Kobayashi, who was in the Broadway company, is cast as sympathy with communism, he
was quoted as saying.
'
Guinness’ daughter in the film.
Loewenstein,
55,
a
visiting
pro
The New York company of “A Majority of One.” which played
OFFICE
fessor
of
history
and
political
RESIDENCE
.Denver and is now in Los Angeles, has Gertrude Berg and Sir Cedric
EM. 4-1394
2 Vesta Drive
science
at
the
Carnegie
Endow
Hardwicke in their original starring roles. Kanna Ishii is Hardwicke’s
EM. 4-1395
HUdson 5-1365
daughter, in the, stage troupe and Sahomi Tachibana, Yasuko Adachi ment for International Peace, is
and Yogi Matsuoka are in the cast.
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
/f
, ..^s Ishii, daughter of one of Japan’s leading dancers, Baku
‘
NOTARY PUBLIC
Ishii, has appeared in “The King and I” and other Hollywood films.
PATRONIZE
Miss Tachibana, who has given dance concerts in New York, is a
1008 Northern Ontario Building
°^ fountain View, Calif. Miss Adachi plays a koto in one
Toronto
OUR
ADVERTISERS
330 Bay Street (art Adelaide)
LE. 2-6378
of the scenes of “A Majority of One.” Matsuoka toured with the
TORONTO
Lonstance Bennett company of “Auntie Mame.”
Tokyo would a»h
I
Si£ q
HISTORIAN WARNS JAPAN NEUTRALISTS
Give Blood!
MACHINE CO.
Cosy Atmosphere
SADAO niKAIDO
JAPANESE AND
OCCIDENTAL FOODS
Specializing In
■fresh meat and fish
order Thurs. and Fri.,
deliver free Saturday
SUKIYAKI and TEMPURA
For Family Parties
FREE PARKING AT
REAR OF STORE
460 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
TORONTO
71 TANSLEY AVE.,
SCAR BORO, ONT.
Phone AM. 5-8446.
$
MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS NOW!
Phone EM. 6-5589
EM. 6-5711
HOME BAKED - THE BEST
• Pies, Cakes, Pastries, Cookies etc.
• Mochi-Kashi, Senbei
BAKE
X?
460 Dundas Street West (just east of Spadina)
Phone EMpire 6-2164
•
Toronto
1
SHOP
460 Dundas St. W., Toronto
(Next door to the Continental Co-op)
Phone EM. 6-3691
See SUS NAGAI
432 Parliament Street
TORONTO
Phone WA. 4-8427
Page 8
PAGE 8
Wednesday, MavL31J9G1
ewime
THE NEW CANADIAN
Brief Briefs
^are
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each we Ias a medium of expression and news outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada
40 Unchartered Mis.
~ Cinderella
TOKTO.—A Japanese
survey
RASHOMON - 1961 DRAMA FESTIVAL-WINNER team announced it has discovered
40 unchartered mountains" under
the Pacific between Japan and
Guam. Some of the peaks . rose
to 6400 feet.
T. UMEZUKI, Publisher
_
KEI TSUMURA_____ __________
English Editor
KEN MORI-------------- Japanese Section Editor & Advertise
i
^asJlom°n”> kased on the stories by Ryunosuke Akutagawa,
aaaPted -r the American stage by'Fay and Michael Kanin, bv an
all Caucasian cast, directed by Mr. John Holmes, an authority on
EM, 6-5005
479 QUEEN ST. W„ TORONTO 2-B, ONTARIO
apanese theatre, was of special interest to me for several reasons.
Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottaw '
U
Firstly, its Jneme deals with the basic passions of lust, greed, fear.
P!,v~Pass'OIls 'v^c^ actors and actresses would give their eye
t° P°ctiay. Secondly, it was a matter of personal curiosity. Sales To Japan
ould an English-speaking Occidental cast take an awkwardly transVANCOUVER. — British. Co
a
scriPL surmount apparent physical hindrances, and present a lumbia ports handled $140,000,000
performance which would even be one-tenth as good as the Jauanese
OTTAWA.—Japanese embassy
of the $178,000,000 worth of goods.
7,
starred Machiko Kyo, Rentaro Mifune and Masayuki Canada exported to Japan in' officials say Japan’s decision to ^°*as hut that is not the °^al
attitude of the Japanese
AlOrI A11 r lastly, the art of acting is my most time-consuming hobby.
1960, Shumichi Azuma, directori buy trial shipments of hard ment,” said an official of the
All of this, of course, colour* my reactions to the “Rashomon”
e en-..
1 or- wheat from the U.S. is “not ne bassy.
as presented by the Drao Players of Toronto, at the recentJ)oniinion of the Japan Trade Centr
cessarily
’
’
an
act
of
retaliation
Japan is
Drama bestivaUheld here in Montreal. The Drao Players-and their onto, said in an interviev
m«te of .U.S.taking
Sid XL *
against Canada.
diiectoi, air. Joan Holmes, deserved the. numerous prizes and awards I
■
•
»
a
Hbwever, an embassy spokes Kansas which would
conferred on them. It was, and I moan it most sincerely an interest
man conceded there probably was rectly with Canadian hard^wheat
ing performance which I would not have missed. Only those who have Missed By 100 Feet
‘‘some hard feelings in some
had the experience of working in an alien medium can appreciate
commercial
circles” in Japan over
KATMANDU, Nepal.—A Ja
the work that must have gone into their presentation. The cast’s
smaller quotas imposed on Japa
movements were Japanese, the sword-play was verv good “tachi panese expedition trying to scale nese imports into "Canada.
he 23,238-foot Jugal Himal peak
mawari and the setting and costuming were suggestive of a period
Cut Imports
n the Nepalese Himalayas has
in Japan a thousands years ago.
LOS ANGELES—Llovd Bu^
The new quotas, announced last
With all this, I should have been satisfied, However, the more ieen forced to give up only 100
one becomes involved in the theatre, the more one studies the tech feet from the summit. The 13 week, substantially reduced im- of international operations of
niques of the drama, the more critical one.becomes until one can no climbers were driven back by bad porrs of textile and electronic Screen Gems announced both
Spanish and Japanese dubbins
products.
onger enjoy_dramatic presentations merely as entertainment pure weather and exhaustion.
has
started on the entire first
Reports
from
Tokyo
state
the
e’ °ne fl?‘ds o^self hoping for a performance which will
9
9
Japanese are “almost apoplectic” year’s production of The Flint,
gup the auoience by their heartstrings, and move them to an emoover the quotas. The main argu stones.
SnawPeri!uCe which will make them a little more than what they
Hand-Sized
TV
Camera
The Hanna-Barbera animated
n b^re they entered the theatre that night. The Drao presen
ment of the Japanese is that their
tation did not achieve this. I kept sitting there waiting for
TOKIO. —An -all-transistor, country last year bought $68 mil show, one of the top new entries
moment when I would be stirred out of my complaisance to shout miniature TV camera which can lion more from us than we bought of the current TV season in the
E ’E'S byvo! bravo!” It was interesting Late taSLi■ ^
U.S., has just been sold to Ja
■’e held in one hand' is drawing from them.
pan.
They
feel
that
if
Canada
wants
S “p dsh f
?e advance notices in the Toronto press.
iders from all over the world,
Hanna-Barbera’s Huckleberry
J 1ns Kashomon
’ lacked depth.
n
I Jaou E’ectric Companv. of To- to improve its trade nicture it
ls a dlfficult one. Last night’s set was ima- kY<U says it was designed for would be fairer to cutback tex- Hound, the first made for TV
Sedkri^
the sta^^a^U TV camera Se ?/d electronic imports from animated scries to undergo anv i
d w
d^aImg remnants of the Great Ra,sho- cannot reach, whether in industry, ‘-he U.S. where Canada, has an dubbing, now is sold in over 30
unfavorable trade balance.
We countries,"' which brings it close
weri somiL^^
the Court where the action unfolds, science or home entertainment/
buy more from the U.S. than they to being an all time international
best seller.
buy from us.
Huck now speaks six lan
N bt Official
eottM^
g “’“ Nisei Beat To Death
guages:
Spanish,
Portuguese, I
.apparently is some German, Japanese, French and
at ^ feeling m Japan over the English.
I
-------------definitely^ th^moS^^^^
Gate’ and which chair beat a fellow patient to ged diabetic confined to a wheel- J
JAPAN DISSATISFIED OVERQUOTaW
Japan “Flintstones”
name’ were not
interpretation of character which
with a 20 pound sand-filled
P^
For Complete Real Estate Service
by the existence of four different veS^oMhe3
Li Mariano P. Llagas, after in-
In Metro Toronto
The Bandit, the Wife, the .Medium and thLv^dcutter thev alThlve
their version. Which is the true one? This question nhc/
tp
sponsibihty upon the actors. This is where I found theDno Pkv
?Ctlv the *atal rounds on ShiSl° Yamashita., 44, went to an
ward and attacked an-
TOSH IW/5!
dent in last nighPs performance
l~th£e^^
as'reenient ^th Adjudicator Michel St Denis’
second victim, John J.
^e"on as the winner of the Best Actor Award. I would have P^w’iD8 able to disann LiaMichael ‘X., KL£ K"rf‘ ?!g“.’ bi^«' scale. If gX^ suffered only «
LXXmXn'a, Bandit with a genuine Restraint "and a kind b Ll« - “
as he' was
murder.‘his attitudA V
3S he glves his ^eusion of the y0^.!,01’ murder, that he killed
partiv subdued bv
t
y
1° behold of animal defiance D-unmshita because he wouldn’t
* suuyueu by Jie strange formalitv of a Court of T
let me steal food.”
ZenmLp'-u^
if pu?'“d tio far- In «>• Duel Scene J ,„
He arracKed Walker,
mJ?
Walker, hhe said,
‘SX 'A?™; ^ P°ss«^ a humorous
’
because
he and Yamashita talked
too much.
As a diabetic. Llagas had been
. ?R a stoct diet, hospital
authorities said. Yamashita was
aware of the diet, and attempted
to stop Llagas from taking extra
from stupidity rathe "than%romd“Xr^
seemed to spring food.
Major’s Samurai Husband mPt™d
David
Woodcutter (Rov Passanol
^A!00111^ which it required. The
niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiinijijiiiiiiiijjijiii
XOTABT PUBLIC
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO
EM. S-3323
Kes: KO. 7-3427;
fishing tackle
BUSINESS 5
PHONE
RESIDENCE
HO. 9-0551
YAMASA SHOYU
Magill Export Import Ltd.
Box 2003
(2909 Grandview Hwy.)
Vancouver, B.C.
"OTOMI TO
KIRAREYOSABURO"
(Color)
Starring
Kokichi Takata, Michiko Sana
Also
"YUYAKEGUMO"
,„ . \ /„ ^ j"^
Lucien C. Kurata
(two blocks East of Coxwell)
Presents
a
BAHRlgTES and SOLICITOR
1779-A DANFORTH AVE., TORONTO
NIKKA KOGYO SHA
tures were Japanese
u ei" S moments and gesboth physical and nient'if’cunhL
to P1o°^ct th°se qualities,
nt a daughter of ^
f
? Sa"™ai to look twice
capable of proJold!^
1
household, let alone marry her, or
the nobility. This. I believe is \ matter^f
woman of
tation. The role of the Wife
kf Jaak of depth of interpreto her personalkv. U a tou/
of the finite facets
the challenge. Miss BlLteinX UnL-6 ^OI
actress who can meet
ters. The Mother (Ja^U
did not heIP ^atsmall but imoortant part and
m a- bSf)lthe Poignancy in her
to convey the terr Vof h
±
Anderson) failed
the account of a housewife describing a I
™re
account of the black terrors of a
L St?et accident than an
For myself personallG the'bnn \^leSSJL-Wanden^ hi limbo
lett much to be desired. But fo’-dms^
of “Rashomon”
—' Vmua. Presentation Award, to m.
Member of Real Estate Board Photo Co-op.
Starring
Shinji Tanaka.
I uko Mochizuki
At The Lasalle Theatre
Dundas at Saadina
H e specialize In Giftware Of Quality From The Orient
Lacquerware — Porcelain Tableware — Household
Ornaments—Bamboo, Wood Handiwork—Framed Pictures And
Scrolls
Oriental Jewellery — Japanese Folding Screens And
Tables
Dolls And Statuettes — Flower Arrangement
Accessories, etc., etc.
F. >e ha;* — Rod end Reel
Rapairs
OSCAR'S
i 1500 Dundas (at Dufferin)—LE, 2-42S7
r
iniiiimimniiHiiHiHiiiimnifHHUH
733 Danforth Ave.,-Toronto
(1 block east of Pape Ave.)
Tel. HO. 3-7831
Store Open: 9 a.m.—9 P-^-
Wednesday, MavL31J9G1
ewime
THE NEW CANADIAN
Brief Briefs
^are
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each we Ias a medium of expression and news outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada
40 Unchartered Mis.
~ Cinderella
TOKTO.—A Japanese
survey
RASHOMON - 1961 DRAMA FESTIVAL-WINNER team announced it has discovered
40 unchartered mountains" under
the Pacific between Japan and
Guam. Some of the peaks . rose
to 6400 feet.
T. UMEZUKI, Publisher
_
KEI TSUMURA_____ __________
English Editor
KEN MORI-------------- Japanese Section Editor & Advertise
i
^asJlom°n”> kased on the stories by Ryunosuke Akutagawa,
aaaPted -r the American stage by'Fay and Michael Kanin, bv an
all Caucasian cast, directed by Mr. John Holmes, an authority on
EM, 6-5005
479 QUEEN ST. W„ TORONTO 2-B, ONTARIO
apanese theatre, was of special interest to me for several reasons.
Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottaw '
U
Firstly, its Jneme deals with the basic passions of lust, greed, fear.
P!,v~Pass'OIls 'v^c^ actors and actresses would give their eye
t° P°ctiay. Secondly, it was a matter of personal curiosity. Sales To Japan
ould an English-speaking Occidental cast take an awkwardly transVANCOUVER. — British. Co
a
scriPL surmount apparent physical hindrances, and present a lumbia ports handled $140,000,000
performance which would even be one-tenth as good as the Jauanese
OTTAWA.—Japanese embassy
of the $178,000,000 worth of goods.
7,
starred Machiko Kyo, Rentaro Mifune and Masayuki Canada exported to Japan in' officials say Japan’s decision to ^°*as hut that is not the °^al
attitude of the Japanese
AlOrI A11 r lastly, the art of acting is my most time-consuming hobby.
1960, Shumichi Azuma, directori buy trial shipments of hard ment,” said an official of the
All of this, of course, colour* my reactions to the “Rashomon”
e en-..
1 or- wheat from the U.S. is “not ne bassy.
as presented by the Drao Players of Toronto, at the recentJ)oniinion of the Japan Trade Centr
cessarily
’
’
an
act
of
retaliation
Japan is
Drama bestivaUheld here in Montreal. The Drao Players-and their onto, said in an interviev
m«te of .U.S.taking
Sid XL *
against Canada.
diiectoi, air. Joan Holmes, deserved the. numerous prizes and awards I
■
•
»
a
Hbwever, an embassy spokes Kansas which would
conferred on them. It was, and I moan it most sincerely an interest
man conceded there probably was rectly with Canadian hard^wheat
ing performance which I would not have missed. Only those who have Missed By 100 Feet
‘‘some hard feelings in some
had the experience of working in an alien medium can appreciate
commercial
circles” in Japan over
KATMANDU, Nepal.—A Ja
the work that must have gone into their presentation. The cast’s
smaller quotas imposed on Japa
movements were Japanese, the sword-play was verv good “tachi panese expedition trying to scale nese imports into "Canada.
he 23,238-foot Jugal Himal peak
mawari and the setting and costuming were suggestive of a period
Cut Imports
n the Nepalese Himalayas has
in Japan a thousands years ago.
LOS ANGELES—Llovd Bu^
The new quotas, announced last
With all this, I should have been satisfied, However, the more ieen forced to give up only 100
one becomes involved in the theatre, the more one studies the tech feet from the summit. The 13 week, substantially reduced im- of international operations of
niques of the drama, the more critical one.becomes until one can no climbers were driven back by bad porrs of textile and electronic Screen Gems announced both
Spanish and Japanese dubbins
products.
onger enjoy_dramatic presentations merely as entertainment pure weather and exhaustion.
has
started on the entire first
Reports
from
Tokyo
state
the
e’ °ne fl?‘ds o^self hoping for a performance which will
9
9
Japanese are “almost apoplectic” year’s production of The Flint,
gup the auoience by their heartstrings, and move them to an emoover the quotas. The main argu stones.
SnawPeri!uCe which will make them a little more than what they
Hand-Sized
TV
Camera
The Hanna-Barbera animated
n b^re they entered the theatre that night. The Drao presen
ment of the Japanese is that their
tation did not achieve this. I kept sitting there waiting for
TOKIO. —An -all-transistor, country last year bought $68 mil show, one of the top new entries
moment when I would be stirred out of my complaisance to shout miniature TV camera which can lion more from us than we bought of the current TV season in the
E ’E'S byvo! bravo!” It was interesting Late taSLi■ ^
U.S., has just been sold to Ja
■’e held in one hand' is drawing from them.
pan.
They
feel
that
if
Canada
wants
S “p dsh f
?e advance notices in the Toronto press.
iders from all over the world,
Hanna-Barbera’s Huckleberry
J 1ns Kashomon
’ lacked depth.
n
I Jaou E’ectric Companv. of To- to improve its trade nicture it
ls a dlfficult one. Last night’s set was ima- kY<U says it was designed for would be fairer to cutback tex- Hound, the first made for TV
Sedkri^
the sta^^a^U TV camera Se ?/d electronic imports from animated scries to undergo anv i
d w
d^aImg remnants of the Great Ra,sho- cannot reach, whether in industry, ‘-he U.S. where Canada, has an dubbing, now is sold in over 30
unfavorable trade balance.
We countries,"' which brings it close
weri somiL^^
the Court where the action unfolds, science or home entertainment/
buy more from the U.S. than they to being an all time international
best seller.
buy from us.
Huck now speaks six lan
N bt Official
eottM^
g “’“ Nisei Beat To Death
guages:
Spanish,
Portuguese, I
.apparently is some German, Japanese, French and
at ^ feeling m Japan over the English.
I
-------------definitely^ th^moS^^^^
Gate’ and which chair beat a fellow patient to ged diabetic confined to a wheel- J
JAPAN DISSATISFIED OVERQUOTaW
Japan “Flintstones”
name’ were not
interpretation of character which
with a 20 pound sand-filled
P^
For Complete Real Estate Service
by the existence of four different veS^oMhe3
Li Mariano P. Llagas, after in-
In Metro Toronto
The Bandit, the Wife, the .Medium and thLv^dcutter thev alThlve
their version. Which is the true one? This question nhc/
tp
sponsibihty upon the actors. This is where I found theDno Pkv
?Ctlv the *atal rounds on ShiSl° Yamashita., 44, went to an
ward and attacked an-
TOSH IW/5!
dent in last nighPs performance
l~th£e^^
as'reenient ^th Adjudicator Michel St Denis’
second victim, John J.
^e"on as the winner of the Best Actor Award. I would have P^w’iD8 able to disann LiaMichael ‘X., KL£ K"rf‘ ?!g“.’ bi^«' scale. If gX^ suffered only «
LXXmXn'a, Bandit with a genuine Restraint "and a kind b Ll« - “
as he' was
murder.‘his attitudA V
3S he glves his ^eusion of the y0^.!,01’ murder, that he killed
partiv subdued bv
t
y
1° behold of animal defiance D-unmshita because he wouldn’t
* suuyueu by Jie strange formalitv of a Court of T
let me steal food.”
ZenmLp'-u^
if pu?'“d tio far- In «>• Duel Scene J ,„
He arracKed Walker,
mJ?
Walker, hhe said,
‘SX 'A?™; ^ P°ss«^ a humorous
’
because
he and Yamashita talked
too much.
As a diabetic. Llagas had been
. ?R a stoct diet, hospital
authorities said. Yamashita was
aware of the diet, and attempted
to stop Llagas from taking extra
from stupidity rathe "than%romd“Xr^
seemed to spring food.
Major’s Samurai Husband mPt™d
David
Woodcutter (Rov Passanol
^A!00111^ which it required. The
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EM. S-3323
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HO. 9-0551
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"OTOMI TO
KIRAREYOSABURO"
(Color)
Starring
Kokichi Takata, Michiko Sana
Also
"YUYAKEGUMO"
,„ . \ /„ ^ j"^
Lucien C. Kurata
(two blocks East of Coxwell)
Presents
a
BAHRlgTES and SOLICITOR
1779-A DANFORTH AVE., TORONTO
NIKKA KOGYO SHA
tures were Japanese
u ei" S moments and gesboth physical and nient'if’cunhL
to P1o°^ct th°se qualities,
nt a daughter of ^
f
? Sa"™ai to look twice
capable of proJold!^
1
household, let alone marry her, or
the nobility. This. I believe is \ matter^f
woman of
tation. The role of the Wife
kf Jaak of depth of interpreto her personalkv. U a tou/
of the finite facets
the challenge. Miss BlLteinX UnL-6 ^OI
actress who can meet
ters. The Mother (Ja^U
did not heIP ^atsmall but imoortant part and
m a- bSf)lthe Poignancy in her
to convey the terr Vof h
±
Anderson) failed
the account of a housewife describing a I
™re
account of the black terrors of a
L St?et accident than an
For myself personallG the'bnn \^leSSJL-Wanden^ hi limbo
lett much to be desired. But fo’-dms^
of “Rashomon”
—' Vmua. Presentation Award, to m.
Member of Real Estate Board Photo Co-op.
Starring
Shinji Tanaka.
I uko Mochizuki
At The Lasalle Theatre
Dundas at Saadina
H e specialize In Giftware Of Quality From The Orient
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OSCAR'S
i 1500 Dundas (at Dufferin)—LE, 2-42S7
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733 Danforth Ave.,-Toronto
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Tel. HO. 3-7831
Store Open: 9 a.m.—9 P-^-