Page 1
THE NEW CANADIAN
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
TORONTO. ONTARIO
SATURDAY., JUNE 17, 1961
Act That Pushed Japanese Canadians From Coast . .
To Revise War Measures Act
I
B
He
ted
ion?
W c
IP’
—photo by JACK HEMMY
Metro Chief Greets Visiting Mayors
OTTAWA.—A special Commons committee is
being set up to recommend changes in the "War
Measures Act. which gives the Federal Government
almost unlimited emergency powers, to bring the
act into line with the Bill of Rights.
Prime Minister Diefenbaker, in urging the Com
mons to adopt a motion setting up the committee,
said “there is virtually nothing that the governor
in council cannot do within the powers granted
by the Act.”
The Prime Minister hoped the committee could
beg'in work as soon as .possible. Perhaps it could
even exchange views and receive representations
during- the summer when Parliament is in recess.
The Prime Minister, in elaborating this point,
repeated his hope that the present session would
complete its work by the end of this month. If that
were not possible, he suggested Parliament should
adjourn for the months of July and August, so
members could be with their families.
Toronto Nisei Wins Ford Foundation Award
Ht
rev
TORONTO.—“This is how we work things, here, boys’” Metro
Toronto Chairman Fred “Big Daddy” Gardiner (right) explains to
Shinzo Hamai, (centre) mayor of Hiroshima, who with 11 other
NEW YORK.—A Toronto Ni
Japanese mayors attended a reception on June 12th by Metro Toron
to at the Park Plaza Hotel. Japan Consul /Katakame (left) also sei was named as one of the 205
attended. The visiting Japanese mayors visited Toronto as part of students to receive foreign area
a tour, which will cover most of the major U.S. cities, to see dif training fellowships from the
ferent municipal governments in actual operation.
Ford Foundation this year, it was
announced Tuesday. Mr. Ytoshio
Iwamoto, of Elmsthorpe Avenue
in Toronto, will do research on
the development of the Japanese
OSHAWA, Ont.—The Japanese gates, Hon. L. P. Cecile spoke on political novel in Japan. At pre
Canadian Nipponia Home
of the progress on the history of sent he is in Ann Arbor, Michi
Beamsville, Ontario was repre public welfare. He was followed
gan, where he has been studying
sented by Mr. Yasutaro Y'amaga by Mr. Ludlow who explained the
for
the past seven years for his
at the 42nd Annual Convention following history of the advance
B.A. and M.A.
of Old Age Home Supervisors of ment of welfare matters:
“Forty-two years ago when the
Ontario held at the Genosa Ho
He is originally from Vancou
tel here on June 7, 8, and 9. Over municipalities of Ontario began ver and received his high school
300 delegates representing some Old Aged Homes to assist the de
112 Old Age Homes (Governmen stitute old age folks, the home
tal and private operations) at 'was called such names as, “House
tended the gathering'. Represent of Escape”, and “Poor House”,
ing the Ontario government were and the food for the inmates was
The
Toronto
TORONTO.
And
the Minister of Public Welfare, chiefly soup and bread.
Hon. L. P. Cecile, and the Direc sometimes even the soup was Isseibu held its executive meeting
tor of The Home For’ The Aged, missing. All inmates were forced on June 13th and took up the fol
to do work; and any bad be lowing matters:
Mr. L. E. Ludlow and his staff.
(1). A discussion to hold the
haviour
resulted in punishment
After the mayor of Oshawa,
Mrs. Thomas welcomed the dele- and Sunday visitor cancellations. 15th anniversary of the Toronto
“Once the resident of the home JCCA this fall.
(2). The distribution of picnic
left, they were not allowed back
tickets.
as some, would leave the home
(3). A report regarding the
and work during the summer,
spend all their money on beer etc. "Welfare Committee meeting. The
and try to get back in the home contributions from the various
organizations (810.00 each, this
for the winter.
“Improvement of these condi year) are coming in.
MONTREAL. — The, Second tions in our homes was due main
(4).
Report regarding the
Montreal International Film Fes- ly through the efforts of the As Centre by Mr. T. Kameoka. The
taal, which takes place from sociation (Supervisors of old age Issei Advisory Committee will
August 11 to 17 at the Loew’s homes) which was organized hold a meeting on June 21st and
Theatre under
the honorary some 42 years ago. The responsi the General meeting (continua
chairman of Norman McLaren, bilities of the supervisors are tion of the last Centre meeting)
tall include an entrv from Ja great but the hopes and future will be held on June 28th. The
pan. It’s title, The Lost Alibi. It of the welfare of old age is—“The Board of Directors are now con
templating plans “on how to pro
h directed by Hiromichi Horika- End Is Still Far Distant”.
"/' a F°ung- Japanese film-maker
A report on the program of Old ceed with the Centre” and this
Oi the Japanese “new Wave”.
Age Welfare in Great Britain next meeting will receive this re
Other countries
represented was good reference for the work port.
Since the last report at the
ate. Canada. France, Great Bri- in the homes.
General Meeting, the contribution
ja n. Italy, Poland,- USA, USSR,
has increased from $9,000.00 to
Lei many, Holland, Czechoslovaya, and Mexico. The fifteen feaAt present there are 54. city SI 2,400.00 to date.
Proceeds of the successful
^re til ms to receive, their Mon and country homes and 58 private
real premiere have been chosen ones—Salvation Anny, Churches, Centre Bazaar: after deduction
irom recent world (production of and
maintenance
association of the $426.21 expenses, the total
cuistanding quality. Specially se- homes—which total altogether r et proceed was S2.048.04
eC^ -s^°rt films will also be 112 homes in this province and 8,
Aeac^ Progra.m. Although 430 beds. A notable tendency in
Ue Festival is non-competitive recent years is the increase^ of
motion pictures shown will re- bed-care old folks; which requites:
a certificate of participa- about 2 or 3 times more expense
TORONTO.—Mr. Ken Kutand therefore necessitates more
sukake of the Japanese Cana
The Canadian entry is titled, assistance from the government.
dian Centre Office wishes to
Car: e Ranch, directed by Guy L. More time should be spent in duinform all those selling the
Core and Circle Of The Sun cussing this subject,
wa
Centre raffle tickets to send
Tara ":ai1 sntry ot the Moscow a °Teed.
all the collected money, un
^The methods of buying the
:-) directed by Colin Low.
sold tickets, and stubs to the
many high priced medicines for
J.C. Centre Office at 150 Ken
aged folks were discu^ed. A
Cho3-Choo Man Cracks the
wood Avenue in Toronto. He
co-operative way was decided
extends the directors thanks to
, x9-—Railroad officials re- UpOU.
J
all those kind people who have
The citv of Oshawa invited all
^o\9, \Fiap an Osaka stationextended
their help in this prohanged himself because the delegates to a banquet and
U./aa unable to handle rush- General Motors gave a guided
tour of their automobile factory. t
Y. Yamaga Represents Nipponia At Convention
ei-
ar
r
education in Fort William, Ont.
Nine other Canadians were
The
also awarded fe 11 owships.
grants will permit the winners
to receive training in Europe
Russia, Africa, the United States,
and Japan. The. awards are for
the 1961-1962 academic year and
cover maintenance, tuition and
travel costs.
The fellowships are part of the
Ford Foundation’s international
training program aimed at improving' U.S.
competence
in
foreign affairs.
Toronto Isseibu Reports On June 13 Meeting
r.
1ST
0
iF
"d
Entry In Film Festival
ev
Raffle Returns
t
Parties in Agreement
In supporting the committee study. Mr. Diefenbaker said there had been general agreement
among- the parties that something should be done
to remove the restrictive measures inherent in such
an emergency powers act.
Changes were required which “while maintain
ing the need of security” would also “preserve to
the greatest degree possible the rights of- the in
dividual,” said Mr. Diefenbaker.
Mr. Diefenbaker noted that the War Measures
Act had been passed in 1914, when World War I
broke out. It had been on yie statute books since
then, though there had been a lot of discussion
about whether it should remain there or not.
The act only comes into effect on proclamation
by the Government during- war. invasion or insurrection. noted Mr. Diefenbaker the Government
has the power to do almost ;anything for the
“security, defence, peace, order:* and welfare of
Canada.”
-
TORONTO. — Japanese Canadians conferred degrees at the
University of Toronto on May
29th are as follows: Terry Kameoka—Doctor of Dental Su rgery; Daniel Satomi Maruoka and
Jeanne Jitsuko Shigeta—Bache
lor of Science in Pharmacy;
George Koji Okamura—Bachelor
of Architecture; Jean Hiroko Ko
bayashi—Bachelor
of
Social
Work; Ryoko Nancy Takeuchi
and Molly Nobuko Watanabe—
Bachelor of Science in Nursing.
The New Canadian sends congratalations and best wishes for
a bright future to all.
This includes: power to censor
and control and suppress publica
tions, writings, communications
and means of communications;
arrest, detention, exclusion and
deportation, control ’ of harbors,
ports and territorial waters and
the movement of vessels in Can
ada. and also control of transpor
tation by land, air or water; con
trol trade, production and manu
facture, as well as appropriation,
control, forfeiture and disposition
of property.
Mr. Di efen baker noted that a
clause in the Bill of Rights re
stricts the coming into effect of
the proclamation, making it sub
ject to parliamentary approval
afterwards.
But something still had to be
done about “the anomalous situa
tion which has prevailed in two
world wars and following that
while we fought for freedom we
found it necessary to place in
bond as security for the prescrvation of freedoms, the freedoms
for which we fought.”
In previous discussions, mem
bers have been particularly con
cerned about the power to arrest,
deport, and deprive of Canadian
citizenship certain persons.
Hob. Paul Martin (L-Essex
East) Supported the motion to set
up a committee but said it should
have been done much earlier in
the session.
He himself has a private mem
bers bill on the order paper pro
posing amendments to the War
Measures Act, and he said this
fact had “obviously encouraged
the Government to take some
action.”
greeted
This affirmation was
'
with some mirth from Mr. Dief
enbaker and other members of
his party but Mr. Martin stuck
to his guns.
HAM. JCCA Picnic - Lambert Park
13th Concession
11th Concession
9th Concession
o
Hwy. 5
• Waterdown
• Hamilton
(See Dates & Doings For Further Details)
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
TORONTO. ONTARIO
SATURDAY., JUNE 17, 1961
Act That Pushed Japanese Canadians From Coast . .
To Revise War Measures Act
I
B
He
ted
ion?
W c
IP’
—photo by JACK HEMMY
Metro Chief Greets Visiting Mayors
OTTAWA.—A special Commons committee is
being set up to recommend changes in the "War
Measures Act. which gives the Federal Government
almost unlimited emergency powers, to bring the
act into line with the Bill of Rights.
Prime Minister Diefenbaker, in urging the Com
mons to adopt a motion setting up the committee,
said “there is virtually nothing that the governor
in council cannot do within the powers granted
by the Act.”
The Prime Minister hoped the committee could
beg'in work as soon as .possible. Perhaps it could
even exchange views and receive representations
during- the summer when Parliament is in recess.
The Prime Minister, in elaborating this point,
repeated his hope that the present session would
complete its work by the end of this month. If that
were not possible, he suggested Parliament should
adjourn for the months of July and August, so
members could be with their families.
Toronto Nisei Wins Ford Foundation Award
Ht
rev
TORONTO.—“This is how we work things, here, boys’” Metro
Toronto Chairman Fred “Big Daddy” Gardiner (right) explains to
Shinzo Hamai, (centre) mayor of Hiroshima, who with 11 other
NEW YORK.—A Toronto Ni
Japanese mayors attended a reception on June 12th by Metro Toron
to at the Park Plaza Hotel. Japan Consul /Katakame (left) also sei was named as one of the 205
attended. The visiting Japanese mayors visited Toronto as part of students to receive foreign area
a tour, which will cover most of the major U.S. cities, to see dif training fellowships from the
ferent municipal governments in actual operation.
Ford Foundation this year, it was
announced Tuesday. Mr. Ytoshio
Iwamoto, of Elmsthorpe Avenue
in Toronto, will do research on
the development of the Japanese
OSHAWA, Ont.—The Japanese gates, Hon. L. P. Cecile spoke on political novel in Japan. At pre
Canadian Nipponia Home
of the progress on the history of sent he is in Ann Arbor, Michi
Beamsville, Ontario was repre public welfare. He was followed
gan, where he has been studying
sented by Mr. Yasutaro Y'amaga by Mr. Ludlow who explained the
for
the past seven years for his
at the 42nd Annual Convention following history of the advance
B.A. and M.A.
of Old Age Home Supervisors of ment of welfare matters:
“Forty-two years ago when the
Ontario held at the Genosa Ho
He is originally from Vancou
tel here on June 7, 8, and 9. Over municipalities of Ontario began ver and received his high school
300 delegates representing some Old Aged Homes to assist the de
112 Old Age Homes (Governmen stitute old age folks, the home
tal and private operations) at 'was called such names as, “House
tended the gathering'. Represent of Escape”, and “Poor House”,
ing the Ontario government were and the food for the inmates was
The
Toronto
TORONTO.
And
the Minister of Public Welfare, chiefly soup and bread.
Hon. L. P. Cecile, and the Direc sometimes even the soup was Isseibu held its executive meeting
tor of The Home For’ The Aged, missing. All inmates were forced on June 13th and took up the fol
to do work; and any bad be lowing matters:
Mr. L. E. Ludlow and his staff.
(1). A discussion to hold the
haviour
resulted in punishment
After the mayor of Oshawa,
Mrs. Thomas welcomed the dele- and Sunday visitor cancellations. 15th anniversary of the Toronto
“Once the resident of the home JCCA this fall.
(2). The distribution of picnic
left, they were not allowed back
tickets.
as some, would leave the home
(3). A report regarding the
and work during the summer,
spend all their money on beer etc. "Welfare Committee meeting. The
and try to get back in the home contributions from the various
organizations (810.00 each, this
for the winter.
“Improvement of these condi year) are coming in.
MONTREAL. — The, Second tions in our homes was due main
(4).
Report regarding the
Montreal International Film Fes- ly through the efforts of the As Centre by Mr. T. Kameoka. The
taal, which takes place from sociation (Supervisors of old age Issei Advisory Committee will
August 11 to 17 at the Loew’s homes) which was organized hold a meeting on June 21st and
Theatre under
the honorary some 42 years ago. The responsi the General meeting (continua
chairman of Norman McLaren, bilities of the supervisors are tion of the last Centre meeting)
tall include an entrv from Ja great but the hopes and future will be held on June 28th. The
pan. It’s title, The Lost Alibi. It of the welfare of old age is—“The Board of Directors are now con
templating plans “on how to pro
h directed by Hiromichi Horika- End Is Still Far Distant”.
"/' a F°ung- Japanese film-maker
A report on the program of Old ceed with the Centre” and this
Oi the Japanese “new Wave”.
Age Welfare in Great Britain next meeting will receive this re
Other countries
represented was good reference for the work port.
Since the last report at the
ate. Canada. France, Great Bri- in the homes.
General Meeting, the contribution
ja n. Italy, Poland,- USA, USSR,
has increased from $9,000.00 to
Lei many, Holland, Czechoslovaya, and Mexico. The fifteen feaAt present there are 54. city SI 2,400.00 to date.
Proceeds of the successful
^re til ms to receive, their Mon and country homes and 58 private
real premiere have been chosen ones—Salvation Anny, Churches, Centre Bazaar: after deduction
irom recent world (production of and
maintenance
association of the $426.21 expenses, the total
cuistanding quality. Specially se- homes—which total altogether r et proceed was S2.048.04
eC^ -s^°rt films will also be 112 homes in this province and 8,
Aeac^ Progra.m. Although 430 beds. A notable tendency in
Ue Festival is non-competitive recent years is the increase^ of
motion pictures shown will re- bed-care old folks; which requites:
a certificate of participa- about 2 or 3 times more expense
TORONTO.—Mr. Ken Kutand therefore necessitates more
sukake of the Japanese Cana
The Canadian entry is titled, assistance from the government.
dian Centre Office wishes to
Car: e Ranch, directed by Guy L. More time should be spent in duinform all those selling the
Core and Circle Of The Sun cussing this subject,
wa
Centre raffle tickets to send
Tara ":ai1 sntry ot the Moscow a °Teed.
all the collected money, un
^The methods of buying the
:-) directed by Colin Low.
sold tickets, and stubs to the
many high priced medicines for
J.C. Centre Office at 150 Ken
aged folks were discu^ed. A
Cho3-Choo Man Cracks the
wood Avenue in Toronto. He
co-operative way was decided
extends the directors thanks to
, x9-—Railroad officials re- UpOU.
J
all those kind people who have
The citv of Oshawa invited all
^o\9, \Fiap an Osaka stationextended
their help in this prohanged himself because the delegates to a banquet and
U./aa unable to handle rush- General Motors gave a guided
tour of their automobile factory. t
Y. Yamaga Represents Nipponia At Convention
ei-
ar
r
education in Fort William, Ont.
Nine other Canadians were
The
also awarded fe 11 owships.
grants will permit the winners
to receive training in Europe
Russia, Africa, the United States,
and Japan. The. awards are for
the 1961-1962 academic year and
cover maintenance, tuition and
travel costs.
The fellowships are part of the
Ford Foundation’s international
training program aimed at improving' U.S.
competence
in
foreign affairs.
Toronto Isseibu Reports On June 13 Meeting
r.
1ST
0
iF
"d
Entry In Film Festival
ev
Raffle Returns
t
Parties in Agreement
In supporting the committee study. Mr. Diefenbaker said there had been general agreement
among- the parties that something should be done
to remove the restrictive measures inherent in such
an emergency powers act.
Changes were required which “while maintain
ing the need of security” would also “preserve to
the greatest degree possible the rights of- the in
dividual,” said Mr. Diefenbaker.
Mr. Diefenbaker noted that the War Measures
Act had been passed in 1914, when World War I
broke out. It had been on yie statute books since
then, though there had been a lot of discussion
about whether it should remain there or not.
The act only comes into effect on proclamation
by the Government during- war. invasion or insurrection. noted Mr. Diefenbaker the Government
has the power to do almost ;anything for the
“security, defence, peace, order:* and welfare of
Canada.”
-
TORONTO. — Japanese Canadians conferred degrees at the
University of Toronto on May
29th are as follows: Terry Kameoka—Doctor of Dental Su rgery; Daniel Satomi Maruoka and
Jeanne Jitsuko Shigeta—Bache
lor of Science in Pharmacy;
George Koji Okamura—Bachelor
of Architecture; Jean Hiroko Ko
bayashi—Bachelor
of
Social
Work; Ryoko Nancy Takeuchi
and Molly Nobuko Watanabe—
Bachelor of Science in Nursing.
The New Canadian sends congratalations and best wishes for
a bright future to all.
This includes: power to censor
and control and suppress publica
tions, writings, communications
and means of communications;
arrest, detention, exclusion and
deportation, control ’ of harbors,
ports and territorial waters and
the movement of vessels in Can
ada. and also control of transpor
tation by land, air or water; con
trol trade, production and manu
facture, as well as appropriation,
control, forfeiture and disposition
of property.
Mr. Di efen baker noted that a
clause in the Bill of Rights re
stricts the coming into effect of
the proclamation, making it sub
ject to parliamentary approval
afterwards.
But something still had to be
done about “the anomalous situa
tion which has prevailed in two
world wars and following that
while we fought for freedom we
found it necessary to place in
bond as security for the prescrvation of freedoms, the freedoms
for which we fought.”
In previous discussions, mem
bers have been particularly con
cerned about the power to arrest,
deport, and deprive of Canadian
citizenship certain persons.
Hob. Paul Martin (L-Essex
East) Supported the motion to set
up a committee but said it should
have been done much earlier in
the session.
He himself has a private mem
bers bill on the order paper pro
posing amendments to the War
Measures Act, and he said this
fact had “obviously encouraged
the Government to take some
action.”
greeted
This affirmation was
'
with some mirth from Mr. Dief
enbaker and other members of
his party but Mr. Martin stuck
to his guns.
HAM. JCCA Picnic - Lambert Park
13th Concession
11th Concession
9th Concession
o
Hwy. 5
• Waterdown
• Hamilton
(See Dates & Doings For Further Details)
Page 2
PAGE 2
Saturday, June 17. ]9Ri
JI CANADA WINS IN JUDO -1 ST TITLE IN 3 YRS I
By LIZ
U.S. states) fight Ko-nan (comprised of 4 U.S. states).
The
match was refereed by Frank Hatashita 4th Dan of Hatashita Tor
onto. Ko-nan won 27-20. On the
other mat, Chicago Area (com
prised of 6 U.S. states) faced Ha
tashita Toronto Judo Club. The
Hatashita members- quickly down
ed their opponents to the tune of
KAZUO G. OIYE
BARRISTER - SOLICITOR
Room 103
DETROIT, Afich.—A crowd of
WA 1-560 5
OX. 8-2 2 80 (Bes )
over 4000 judo fans filled the
2 College St., To route
University of Detroit Gym on
June 3rd and watched a Canadian
Black Belt team—coached by Air.
Frank Hatashita of Toronto—
triumph for the first time of the
By RICK MATSUMOTO
Swear history of the Alid-Eastern
Tournament.
The Giants showed their power of last year as they trounced
Thirty-two black belts fought
the Busseis 9-2 under a ten-hit barrage. In the other half of the
In. the final, Hatashita Clubvigorously
for the championship,
twin bill Main Auto took advantage of Yamada errors and walloped
Chartered Accountant
met
the Ko-nan Black Belt Asso
which has been held in the past
them 11-3.
ciation
who
were
winners
in
the
The bats of the Giants began to explode with last years thunder by such Japanese-American judo 1960 competitions. Lead-off man,
3749 Bathurst Street
:
and consistency as they shelled Bussei pitcher- Ray Iijima for ten stars as Johnny Osaka—5th Dan, Bob Fagan of Hatashita Club was
Downsview, Ont.
Pan-American
champion
hits. Giants pitcher Roy Tanaka helped his own cause as he led the and
caught in a hold down—finally
.Vince
Tamura
—
5th
Dan.
ME. 5-8213' — LE. 3-6759 t
attack with a two run homer and a single. Ken Ikeda collected a
In the semi-finals of the black escaping-—but lost 5 points on de
single and-a double while Sumio Tomihiro blasted a homerun over
cision. Fred Matt met Don Speak
the left-centrefield fence. Eddie Hisaki and yours truly got doubles belt division, Jim Alartin—18-■ man of Columbus, Ohio and at
year-old newly promoted Hata
with singles going to the Miwa brothers Davey and Bob.
tacked him relentlessly with uchiTerry Nakamura belted a wrong field double for the Busseis shita black belt—faced Yas Fu matas. Alatt had him in orbit
and also played a fine defensive game. Bob Nishikawa and Ray Iiji kuda, a 4th Dan from Keyo Uni many times but was unable to
SAY IT WITH
versity in Japan and runner-up
ma collected the other two Bussei hits both singles.
get in the throw for the much
to
Toshio
Seino
4th
degree
in
the
’
FLOWERS
At Earlscourt Park lefty Ron Miki hurled a brilliant two-hitter
needed ippon. Speakman
was
160
lb.
division
atthe
19451
A.A.U.
w
•
as Main Auto took advantage of poor fielding on the part of the Nationals meet in San Jose.
\ ca^5h.111 H16 dying secYamada team to set them down to their third straight defeat. Fred
- onds by Matt's lightening fast
.SHARON'S FLORIST
Calif.
The
two
competitors
fought
Nishimura banged out two singles foi- Alain and Gen Hamada batted
uchi-mata for a ippon 'which put
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
hard,
and
cautiously
waited
for
in two runs with a single. Dick Tanaka was the big gun at the plate
the
Hatashita
Club
ahead
by
5
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
for Yamadas with a lowering triple and a,single. Tak Tanaka started the right opportunity to complete points.
for Yamadas and was lifted in the seventh'inning in favor of Ken an all-out attack for an Ippon
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Henk Janssen won his bout
Fukamoto. Mitch Nishimura played a fine defensive game for Ya victory, Fukuda applied various
Res: HO. 6-7962
techniques—frequently knocking with a quick okuri-ashi harai, and
madas and made a brilliant catch in cehtrefield. 942
PAPE AVE., TORONTO
Vice-captain of Hatashita “Club,
Notes: This week (Sun. June IS) the Giants play Yamadas at Martin ho his knees—and won the
*1
Jim
Martin
was
downed
by
Earlscourt Park and the Busseis take on Alain Auto at Christie Pits. match with his superiority.
powerful
Alike
Strauch
with
a
In the other' match, twice
Game time as usual is at 9:30 sharp!
crowned All-Canada Champion waza-ari making the score 20-12
and Pan-American Grand Cham for Hatashita. The two captains
pion, Fred Matt—3 Dan met 1960 of each opposing team met with
BABBI8TEB and SOLICITOB
Detroit Black Belt champion, ultimate victory hanging on' the
out-come.
Hatashita
Club
’
s
Don
James Colgan—3 Dan.
Colgan,
NOT ABT PUBLIC
cautiously
fought
BASIC and ADVANCED INSTRUCTIONS
who is over 6 feet and weighs in McClelland
42 RICHMOND ST. WEST
of KODOKWAN JUDO
around the 270 mark, was held veteran black-belter Frank LeszSuit© 513 Temple Building
down by the powerful Matt with czcyaski who had just success
GLEN N. KAWANO
131 COXWELL AVE., TOR. 8
TORONTO
fully
thrown
the
champion
Fuku
a kuzure-kami shiho shortly after
KODOKWAN 4TH DAN
—
HO. 3-0736
EM. 6-3323
—
Res: RO. 7-3427
da with a uchi-maya in the team
the match began.
In the final match, Fred Matt match against Shufu Yudanshaand Yas Fukuda met.
Fukuda kai. Leszczynski attempted uchimade frequent attacks with o-uchi- mata’s to no avail, and AlcClelWELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS
gari—with Matt’s counter attack land skillfully side-stepped one
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.*|
ineffective for points—and gained and threw him with a hand tech
‘Doctor of Chiropractic
a double waza-ari to beat Matt. nique to receive a clean-cut ippon
Mr. Ishikawa 7th Dan refereed from the referee, Air. Ishikawa
728A ST. CLAIR AVE. WEST
this final match.
making the score 20-12 to give
(,2 Block West of Christie)
Other Canadians competing- in Hatashita Club and Canada the
Telephone LE. 6-8220
this
tournament were: Doug- first black belt team champion
If No Answer Call
Binkley—1st degree of Germania ship.
in Hamilton, Ontario; Leo HaunsBE. 3-3869
SPECIAL ATTENTION FOR TAKEOUT ORDERS
. In the brown belt division, Bob
berger—1st degree of Ajax, On ■^spey, sankyu of Ryerson Hata
TORONTO
tario; Don McClelland, Don Dal- shita Judo Club was defeated in
Open Noon to 3 a.m.
—
Orders to Take Out
rymple—1st degree; Bob Fagan the semi-finals.
12 girls from
EM. 8-2475
131A Dundas St Wu Toronto
—2nd degTee; Henk Janssen—3rd Hatashita Clubs competed in the
degree- who was runner-up to girls division. Joy Gray, sankyu
Matt in the 2nd All-Canada tour of Oakville Hatashita Judo Club
nament.
won the championship over Diane
. The black belt team match saw Dennis, yonkyu of Hatashita
•
Barrister & Solicitor
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
theShufuareatyomprised of 19 home club.
GIANTS AND MAIN WIN GAMES ON JUNE 11
ERNEST JOMORI
Lucien C. Kurata
JUDO EDUCATIONAL CENTRE
GOLDEN DRAGON
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
J. A. BREWIN, Q.C
KWOHGCHOW
CHOP SUET HOUSE
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
For Reservations
EM. 2-0029
em. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
STUDIO
2S4-A YONGE ST.
A
I
l
I
I
EM. 6-2411
ALL-WAY ROOFING SERVICE
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
I
I
FLAT ROOFS
EAVESTROUGHING
TORONTO
TOSH NISHIJIMA
SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK
OX. 9-5941 NISEI OWNED
'‘COVERING ONTARIO”
HI. 7-1100
SUMMER 'SLOW DOWN AND LIVE' CAMPAIGN
Cameron, Weldon
Brewin & McCallum
OTTAWA.—'“There is no rea time saved-to get pleasure out of
son why every motorist shouldn’t the trip.
>et.the fullest enjoyment out of
Drive easily. Ignore others who
lis vacation motor trip,” claims insist of frantic pursuit of what
be Canadian Highway Safetv they seem to think is a sense of
Council. “All it takes is a little superiority or leadership in traf
preparation and some common fic. Let them brag. There may
sense.”
come a day when their eero needs
The Council, sponsoring’ in Can help.
ada the annual continent-wide
Let the tail-gating, horn-honk
Slow Down and Live campaign ing driver pass. Forget the flare
through June, July and August of temper that arises when an
in co-operation with the Associa other driver cuts into the safe
tion of State and Provincial space between your car and the
Safety Co-ordinators, has issued one ahead. He’ll probably still be
a few tips for enjoyable motor- there when you reach vour des
First it advises, the car tination.
Obey
traffic rules.
should be afety checked before Little can be gained and disaster
leaving-. Make certain brake.
can be produced by sneaking in
horn, steering, exhaust, system^ a rule or two of your own.
lights, mirrors, wipers and
..“Generally,” advises the Coun
tires are
;
in top travelling con- cil, "drive relaxed and with pa
dition.
tience. Annoyance at other
Then start early so any sense drivers is senseless. If you must
of rush will be either eliminated be annoyed, watch for some of
or reduced Jo a minimum, and your own driving faults and get
stop when tired or just to enjoy annoyed enough to correct them.
the scenery. Alotorists who set While you drive in traffic, the
tight schedules for trips produce only thing you can teach other
tense nerves and muscles/A fast drivers is how to drive sensibly,
"Up proves only one thing: that and you teach them that bv ex
you might as well have used the ample.”
372 Bay St.
—
EM. 3-4391
179 East Pender VANCOUVER 4, B.C. MU. 2-4641
REAL ESTATE
kami insurance agencies ltd
^itieKamUakaka^a
INSURANCE
res.ALpine 5-2302
(or leave message at AL. 5-1743)
Raymond ^eony PGS. HEmlOCk 3-3692
Toronto
MX^taA^
oiuert
JON ONODERA
Proprietor
HU. 9-4654—HU. 1-8805.
(Residence)
(Business)
540 Eglinton Ave. W.,
Toronto
A
TORIC
OPTICAL
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
K-W^i-i^
118 West Hastings St
VANCOUVER. B.C.
Saturday, June 17. ]9Ri
JI CANADA WINS IN JUDO -1 ST TITLE IN 3 YRS I
By LIZ
U.S. states) fight Ko-nan (comprised of 4 U.S. states).
The
match was refereed by Frank Hatashita 4th Dan of Hatashita Tor
onto. Ko-nan won 27-20. On the
other mat, Chicago Area (com
prised of 6 U.S. states) faced Ha
tashita Toronto Judo Club. The
Hatashita members- quickly down
ed their opponents to the tune of
KAZUO G. OIYE
BARRISTER - SOLICITOR
Room 103
DETROIT, Afich.—A crowd of
WA 1-560 5
OX. 8-2 2 80 (Bes )
over 4000 judo fans filled the
2 College St., To route
University of Detroit Gym on
June 3rd and watched a Canadian
Black Belt team—coached by Air.
Frank Hatashita of Toronto—
triumph for the first time of the
By RICK MATSUMOTO
Swear history of the Alid-Eastern
Tournament.
The Giants showed their power of last year as they trounced
Thirty-two black belts fought
the Busseis 9-2 under a ten-hit barrage. In the other half of the
In. the final, Hatashita Clubvigorously
for the championship,
twin bill Main Auto took advantage of Yamada errors and walloped
Chartered Accountant
met
the Ko-nan Black Belt Asso
which has been held in the past
them 11-3.
ciation
who
were
winners
in
the
The bats of the Giants began to explode with last years thunder by such Japanese-American judo 1960 competitions. Lead-off man,
3749 Bathurst Street
:
and consistency as they shelled Bussei pitcher- Ray Iijima for ten stars as Johnny Osaka—5th Dan, Bob Fagan of Hatashita Club was
Downsview, Ont.
Pan-American
champion
hits. Giants pitcher Roy Tanaka helped his own cause as he led the and
caught in a hold down—finally
.Vince
Tamura
—
5th
Dan.
ME. 5-8213' — LE. 3-6759 t
attack with a two run homer and a single. Ken Ikeda collected a
In the semi-finals of the black escaping-—but lost 5 points on de
single and-a double while Sumio Tomihiro blasted a homerun over
cision. Fred Matt met Don Speak
the left-centrefield fence. Eddie Hisaki and yours truly got doubles belt division, Jim Alartin—18-■ man of Columbus, Ohio and at
year-old newly promoted Hata
with singles going to the Miwa brothers Davey and Bob.
tacked him relentlessly with uchiTerry Nakamura belted a wrong field double for the Busseis shita black belt—faced Yas Fu matas. Alatt had him in orbit
and also played a fine defensive game. Bob Nishikawa and Ray Iiji kuda, a 4th Dan from Keyo Uni many times but was unable to
SAY IT WITH
versity in Japan and runner-up
ma collected the other two Bussei hits both singles.
get in the throw for the much
to
Toshio
Seino
4th
degree
in
the
’
FLOWERS
At Earlscourt Park lefty Ron Miki hurled a brilliant two-hitter
needed ippon. Speakman
was
160
lb.
division
atthe
19451
A.A.U.
w
•
as Main Auto took advantage of poor fielding on the part of the Nationals meet in San Jose.
\ ca^5h.111 H16 dying secYamada team to set them down to their third straight defeat. Fred
- onds by Matt's lightening fast
.SHARON'S FLORIST
Calif.
The
two
competitors
fought
Nishimura banged out two singles foi- Alain and Gen Hamada batted
uchi-mata for a ippon 'which put
CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
hard,
and
cautiously
waited
for
in two runs with a single. Dick Tanaka was the big gun at the plate
the
Hatashita
Club
ahead
by
5
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
for Yamadas with a lowering triple and a,single. Tak Tanaka started the right opportunity to complete points.
for Yamadas and was lifted in the seventh'inning in favor of Ken an all-out attack for an Ippon
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Henk Janssen won his bout
Fukamoto. Mitch Nishimura played a fine defensive game for Ya victory, Fukuda applied various
Res: HO. 6-7962
techniques—frequently knocking with a quick okuri-ashi harai, and
madas and made a brilliant catch in cehtrefield. 942
PAPE AVE., TORONTO
Vice-captain of Hatashita “Club,
Notes: This week (Sun. June IS) the Giants play Yamadas at Martin ho his knees—and won the
*1
Jim
Martin
was
downed
by
Earlscourt Park and the Busseis take on Alain Auto at Christie Pits. match with his superiority.
powerful
Alike
Strauch
with
a
In the other' match, twice
Game time as usual is at 9:30 sharp!
crowned All-Canada Champion waza-ari making the score 20-12
and Pan-American Grand Cham for Hatashita. The two captains
pion, Fred Matt—3 Dan met 1960 of each opposing team met with
BABBI8TEB and SOLICITOB
Detroit Black Belt champion, ultimate victory hanging on' the
out-come.
Hatashita
Club
’
s
Don
James Colgan—3 Dan.
Colgan,
NOT ABT PUBLIC
cautiously
fought
BASIC and ADVANCED INSTRUCTIONS
who is over 6 feet and weighs in McClelland
42 RICHMOND ST. WEST
of KODOKWAN JUDO
around the 270 mark, was held veteran black-belter Frank LeszSuit© 513 Temple Building
down by the powerful Matt with czcyaski who had just success
GLEN N. KAWANO
131 COXWELL AVE., TOR. 8
TORONTO
fully
thrown
the
champion
Fuku
a kuzure-kami shiho shortly after
KODOKWAN 4TH DAN
—
HO. 3-0736
EM. 6-3323
—
Res: RO. 7-3427
da with a uchi-maya in the team
the match began.
In the final match, Fred Matt match against Shufu Yudanshaand Yas Fukuda met.
Fukuda kai. Leszczynski attempted uchimade frequent attacks with o-uchi- mata’s to no avail, and AlcClelWELCOME, JAPANESE CANADIANS
gari—with Matt’s counter attack land skillfully side-stepped one
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.*|
ineffective for points—and gained and threw him with a hand tech
‘Doctor of Chiropractic
a double waza-ari to beat Matt. nique to receive a clean-cut ippon
Mr. Ishikawa 7th Dan refereed from the referee, Air. Ishikawa
728A ST. CLAIR AVE. WEST
this final match.
making the score 20-12 to give
(,2 Block West of Christie)
Other Canadians competing- in Hatashita Club and Canada the
Telephone LE. 6-8220
this
tournament were: Doug- first black belt team champion
If No Answer Call
Binkley—1st degree of Germania ship.
in Hamilton, Ontario; Leo HaunsBE. 3-3869
SPECIAL ATTENTION FOR TAKEOUT ORDERS
. In the brown belt division, Bob
berger—1st degree of Ajax, On ■^spey, sankyu of Ryerson Hata
TORONTO
tario; Don McClelland, Don Dal- shita Judo Club was defeated in
Open Noon to 3 a.m.
—
Orders to Take Out
rymple—1st degree; Bob Fagan the semi-finals.
12 girls from
EM. 8-2475
131A Dundas St Wu Toronto
—2nd degTee; Henk Janssen—3rd Hatashita Clubs competed in the
degree- who was runner-up to girls division. Joy Gray, sankyu
Matt in the 2nd All-Canada tour of Oakville Hatashita Judo Club
nament.
won the championship over Diane
. The black belt team match saw Dennis, yonkyu of Hatashita
•
Barrister & Solicitor
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
theShufuareatyomprised of 19 home club.
GIANTS AND MAIN WIN GAMES ON JUNE 11
ERNEST JOMORI
Lucien C. Kurata
JUDO EDUCATIONAL CENTRE
GOLDEN DRAGON
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
J. A. BREWIN, Q.C
KWOHGCHOW
CHOP SUET HOUSE
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
For Reservations
EM. 2-0029
em. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
STUDIO
2S4-A YONGE ST.
A
I
l
I
I
EM. 6-2411
ALL-WAY ROOFING SERVICE
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
I
I
FLAT ROOFS
EAVESTROUGHING
TORONTO
TOSH NISHIJIMA
SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK
OX. 9-5941 NISEI OWNED
'‘COVERING ONTARIO”
HI. 7-1100
SUMMER 'SLOW DOWN AND LIVE' CAMPAIGN
Cameron, Weldon
Brewin & McCallum
OTTAWA.—'“There is no rea time saved-to get pleasure out of
son why every motorist shouldn’t the trip.
>et.the fullest enjoyment out of
Drive easily. Ignore others who
lis vacation motor trip,” claims insist of frantic pursuit of what
be Canadian Highway Safetv they seem to think is a sense of
Council. “All it takes is a little superiority or leadership in traf
preparation and some common fic. Let them brag. There may
sense.”
come a day when their eero needs
The Council, sponsoring’ in Can help.
ada the annual continent-wide
Let the tail-gating, horn-honk
Slow Down and Live campaign ing driver pass. Forget the flare
through June, July and August of temper that arises when an
in co-operation with the Associa other driver cuts into the safe
tion of State and Provincial space between your car and the
Safety Co-ordinators, has issued one ahead. He’ll probably still be
a few tips for enjoyable motor- there when you reach vour des
First it advises, the car tination.
Obey
traffic rules.
should be afety checked before Little can be gained and disaster
leaving-. Make certain brake.
can be produced by sneaking in
horn, steering, exhaust, system^ a rule or two of your own.
lights, mirrors, wipers and
..“Generally,” advises the Coun
tires are
;
in top travelling con- cil, "drive relaxed and with pa
dition.
tience. Annoyance at other
Then start early so any sense drivers is senseless. If you must
of rush will be either eliminated be annoyed, watch for some of
or reduced Jo a minimum, and your own driving faults and get
stop when tired or just to enjoy annoyed enough to correct them.
the scenery. Alotorists who set While you drive in traffic, the
tight schedules for trips produce only thing you can teach other
tense nerves and muscles/A fast drivers is how to drive sensibly,
"Up proves only one thing: that and you teach them that bv ex
you might as well have used the ample.”
372 Bay St.
—
EM. 3-4391
179 East Pender VANCOUVER 4, B.C. MU. 2-4641
REAL ESTATE
kami insurance agencies ltd
^itieKamUakaka^a
INSURANCE
res.ALpine 5-2302
(or leave message at AL. 5-1743)
Raymond ^eony PGS. HEmlOCk 3-3692
Toronto
MX^taA^
oiuert
JON ONODERA
Proprietor
HU. 9-4654—HU. 1-8805.
(Residence)
(Business)
540 Eglinton Ave. W.,
Toronto
A
TORIC
OPTICAL
Complete Care
For Your Eyes
K-W^i-i^
118 West Hastings St
VANCOUVER. B.C.
Page 3
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W. K. GARDENS
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
CATERING TO
Weeding, Club Banquets
Private Dining Rooms
Crown Life insurance Co
900 W. Pender St. (MU. 1-7341)
6650 Heather St. (FA. 5-2528)
Vancouver, B.C.
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W. K. GARDENS
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
CATERING TO
Weeding, Club Banquets
Private Dining Rooms
Crown Life insurance Co
900 W. Pender St. (MU. 1-7341)
6650 Heather St. (FA. 5-2528)
Vancouver, B.C.
X
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Saturday, June 17
PAGE 4
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Page 7
T H E
Sa:iirday, June 17, 1961
PAGE 7
CANADIAN
dates and doings
Personal Notes Across Canada
Marriages
N E W
CLASSIFIED
Male Help Wanted
NISHI-SAKAGUCHI
Bow Island, Alta.
A beautiful bride from Tokyo,
Japan. Miss Kimino Sakaguchi
exchanged marriage vows with
Mr. Saburo Nishi of Bow Island,
Alberta on June 10, 1961 at Pic
ture Butte Buddhist Church with
rhe Rev. Y. Kawamura officiat•ing.
Reception was held at the Lotus
Inn at Lethbridge. Alta.
- TJCCA EXEC. PICNIC MEETING ON JUNE 28
TORONTO.—There will be a
special Toronto JCCA executive
meeting on June 28, 1961 at 41a
each individual.
Remember th
July 1st—115 Si
in rhe afternoon
din a
. George Takaha:
EXPERIENCED SALESMAN
v
YOUTH
The topic of discussion will be
the annual community picnic _ to
Rooms to Let
be held on July7 2, at Jim Rick
U.C.
BAZAAR
OCT.
21
Park. Everyone is urged to atTHREE ROOM FLAT
Annual
TORONTO, Ont.
tend this meeting to summarize
the various committees of the pic- Bazaar of the Toronto Japanese
United Church will be held at. 701 apartment to let
as bingo
me
Dovercourt Rd. on October 21,
personnel, etc
You are als o reminded to hand- 1961. Other organizations kindly
MIZUGUCHI
in vour centire raffle tickets to take note of this date.
STEVESTON, B.C.—Mr. Den- Janet Fujiwara at this time so
Business for Sale
kichi Mizuguchi, t7, passed away that she will not have to contact
at the Vancouver General Hos
pital on June 3, 1961.
Funeral
VAN. JCCA PICNIC AT HUMES PARK JULY 1st DRY CLEANING
service was held at the Vancou
51
ver United Church.
Interment
VANC 0 UVER.—“The Vane Oli open fields, are a
took place at Oceanview Ceme ver JCCA’s Annual July 1st Pic to picnickers at Humes Park,
Domestic Help Wanted
forget your
don’t
tery.
nic will be held at Humes Park, therefore
rackets, and ’WOMAN
tennis
look a:ter
chkh
New Westminster, from 11:00
a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Humes Park is swim suits
on
See. you all at the F
located on North Road, K mile
TS UM U RA - O BARA
Park
WESTON, Ont.—Mr. and Mrs. south of Lougheed Hgwy. There July 1st at Humes
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Scarboro, Ont. Tosh Hori wish to announce the will be a bus leaving the. Japanese
Smiling underneath the um arrival of their son, Isamu Ray School at 10:30 a.m. for the be
brella is Miss Yoshiko Obara, mond, on May 29, 1961.
nefit of anyone requiring trans JOINT SERVICE JUNE 18
TORONTO.—The Toronto Ja
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hiro
portation. .
yoshi Obara of Scarboro, Ontario.
panese
Anglican Church w ill hold
An afternoon full of fun with
The happy groom is Mr. Ken
a
joint
service "Holy Communion iiHimiiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
CARD
OF
THANKS
games and races, raffles and
Service
”
on Sunday, June 18th
Tsumura, son of Mr. and Mrs.
draws, prizes and refreshments,
Seitaro Tsumura of Highland
from
11:00
A.M. The sermon by
We wish to> extend our sin
for the young and old is slated.
the
Reverend
Ken Imai will be
Creek. Ontario.
cere thanks and appreciation
All recreational facilities, such as
Wedding took place recently at
entitled,
‘
‘
God,
rlhe hathen .
for the many messages of love
tennis court, swimming- pool, and
the Scarboro Junction United
and understanding and beauti
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
Church and was officiated by the
ful floral offerings from all
NOTARY PUBLIC
SEE DISPLAY OF BUDDHIST ART — TODAY
Rev. K. Juli. Reception at Tam
our relatives and friends dur
O'Shanter Golf Club followed.
226 QUEEN ST. WEST, TORONTO
ing our recent bereavement ir
TORONTO. — The
Toronto exhibits. The public is cordially
EM. 8-4847 — OX. 1-3388 (Ros.)
the loss of a dear husband and
ITO-TAK ATA
Buddhist Church is at present in invited to attend the first Budd
father, Mr. K. Katsumi.
the midst of observing Buddhist hist art exhibit at 918 Bathurst
Toronto, Ont.
-Mrs. Haru Katsumi,
Emphasis Week from June 11. to Street. At 4:00 P.M. a public lec
St.
Stephen’s-in-the
Fields
And Family.
June IS. Among various activi ture on Buddhist art will be given
Anglican Church was the. setting
bv Mr. Fred Kondo, a local artist.
ties performed during the week
for the marriage of Miss Mae
Kunio Suyama—T.B.C.
on Sat., June 17th from 2:00 P.M.
Kyoko Takata, eldest daughter
WE HAVE NO
of Mr. and Mrs. Moriyoshi Taka
to S:00 P.M. the church, is spon
MEMORIAL
SERVICE
SERVICE
CHARGES
soring an interesting display7 of OBON ODORI IULY 8
ta of Toronto, and Mr. Richard
TORONTO.—Obon Odori
at
Masaki Ito, eldest son of Mr.
Buddhist art.
Mrs. Hatsuye Hasegawa, 69,
Christie
Fits
on
Saturday,
July
7
and Mrs. Fred Ito of Baltimore,
will
be
passed away suddenly on April
Among the displays
Ontario on April 15, 1961. The
22nd, in Kusu Machi, Japan,
such valuable articles as an 400- 8. 1961.
Time is short so we urge all
Rev. Canon Guy Marshall offi
year-old statue of Ming Buddha,
while on her holidays. She was
members
and friends interested
ciated. Sewanins were Mr. and
a calligraphy7 by a famous Budd
the beloved 'rife <of Jiroyernon
in
Obon
Odori
Mrs. Barney Aihoshi.
hist priest, a religious portrayal
------- --------- to
- attend the -praeHasegawa of Montreal, dear
TRAVELLING
of
3
monkeys
drawn
over
300tices
held
every
7 Friday7 night and
After a reception, held at the
est mother of Tsugio, Minoru,
TO JAPAN
years ago, several displays of Saturday noon at the Toronto
Kwong Chow Chop Suey House,
Yukiko (Mrs. Ito), Fumiko
the happy couple honeymooned to
miniature shrines for the indi- Buddhist Church.
(Mrs. Takeno) all of Japan,
T.B.C.
Los Angeles and Vancouver.
vidual homes, and various other
Sylvia (Mrs. Noiseux) of Cal
Or iBringing Som»Thev are now residing at 272
ifornia, Dr. James Shiro and
one <over?
Elgin Street, Cobourg, Ontario.
Wo> represent all
Osamu of Montreal. Interment
REMEMBER HAM. ICCA AND KYOWA KAI PICNIC
linos including
took place in Kusu Machi. A
Amoricau President
memorial service will. be con
Northwest Airline*
HAMILTON.__ The day' for the Hamilton JCCA and the Hamil
CITY DRIVING SCHOOL
Canadian Pacific
ducted by Rev. Ishiura at the
ton Kvowa Kai Annual Picnic is drawing near. We hope that many
and Pan American
S3.00 ner hour
Montreal Buddhist Church on
of
you
will
be
able
to
attend
this
outing.
The
picnic
will
be
held
on
Write or call for
DRIVE ON YOUR FIRST LESSON
June 22nd.
full information and
TRIAL WITH NO OBLIGATION
Sunday, June 25th. at Lambert Park, near Carlisle, about lo miles
rate*.
"Free" Classroom Instruction
from Hamilton.
PATRONIZE
488 BLOOR ST. W.
There will be races for young and old, bingo games-, fukubiki
LE. 2-3656
and fun for all. Prices of tickets will be $1.00 for adults and oOc
OUR ADVERTISERS
for students and children 5 years and over. Tickets may7 be obtained
from any Kvowa Kai and JCCA members.
For those who require transportation, please contact George
Toronto
EM. 4-7331
Kumagai at NE. 7-2063 or Yuji Kumita at FU. 5-0998. Transporta
tion mav be obtained by7 going to the city market place. Cars w ill
SUNDAY, JUNE 18, 1961
55 Wellington Street West
leave at 11 LM. sharp. To alleviate confusion at the picnic grounds,
11:30 A.M.—Sunday Church School
11:30 A.M.—English Language Service
we would appreciate very much if tickets were purchased ahead of
"TEACHING CHILDREN FAITH"
YOITRE DIFFERENT I
time.
Obituaries
Births
Go To Church Of Your
Choice This Sunday
4-
^
A
DOMINKON
Travel Office
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
The Rev. Edward S. Yoshioka, M.A., B.D.
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
—
701 Dovercourt Rd., Toronto
The modern tvay to be
traditionally correct
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH •“ B“a“”' ^
MMMilhing
SUNDAY, JUNE 18, 1061
10:30 A.M.—Religious School
he Bouquet
Invitation Line
11:00 A.M.—Morning Service
2:00 P.M.—Japanese Language Service
EVERYONE CORDIALLY INVITED
Wedding Invitations
SMALL
Thermo-engraved (Raised lettering)
SHOE SIZES
NEW SPRING
£
1 Men's Scott McHales Four Up
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Thermo-Engraving looks and feels like
hand engraving, but costs about half as
much—and it’s ready within the week.
Thermo-Engraving eliminates the cop
per plate that makes hand engraving
so costly and time consuming. Select
from our giant catalogue of flawlessly
correct papers. 11 distinctive styles of
lettering. Weddings priced as low as
S9.00 for 50 and SI3.50 for 100. com
plete with double envelopes and tissues.
Come in and see our complete cata
logue’ Matching announcements, at
home cards, enclosure cards, etc.
Phone LE. 1—1931 Toronto
ZJ
WALES & DUNCAN
INSURANCE AGENTS
464 Yonge St., Toronto
Phone WA 1-3171
479 QUEEN STREET WEST, TORONTO 2-B, ONTARIO
Sa:iirday, June 17, 1961
PAGE 7
CANADIAN
dates and doings
Personal Notes Across Canada
Marriages
N E W
CLASSIFIED
Male Help Wanted
NISHI-SAKAGUCHI
Bow Island, Alta.
A beautiful bride from Tokyo,
Japan. Miss Kimino Sakaguchi
exchanged marriage vows with
Mr. Saburo Nishi of Bow Island,
Alberta on June 10, 1961 at Pic
ture Butte Buddhist Church with
rhe Rev. Y. Kawamura officiat•ing.
Reception was held at the Lotus
Inn at Lethbridge. Alta.
- TJCCA EXEC. PICNIC MEETING ON JUNE 28
TORONTO.—There will be a
special Toronto JCCA executive
meeting on June 28, 1961 at 41a
each individual.
Remember th
July 1st—115 Si
in rhe afternoon
din a
. George Takaha:
EXPERIENCED SALESMAN
v
YOUTH
The topic of discussion will be
the annual community picnic _ to
Rooms to Let
be held on July7 2, at Jim Rick
U.C.
BAZAAR
OCT.
21
Park. Everyone is urged to atTHREE ROOM FLAT
Annual
TORONTO, Ont.
tend this meeting to summarize
the various committees of the pic- Bazaar of the Toronto Japanese
United Church will be held at. 701 apartment to let
as bingo
me
Dovercourt Rd. on October 21,
personnel, etc
You are als o reminded to hand- 1961. Other organizations kindly
MIZUGUCHI
in vour centire raffle tickets to take note of this date.
STEVESTON, B.C.—Mr. Den- Janet Fujiwara at this time so
Business for Sale
kichi Mizuguchi, t7, passed away that she will not have to contact
at the Vancouver General Hos
pital on June 3, 1961.
Funeral
VAN. JCCA PICNIC AT HUMES PARK JULY 1st DRY CLEANING
service was held at the Vancou
51
ver United Church.
Interment
VANC 0 UVER.—“The Vane Oli open fields, are a
took place at Oceanview Ceme ver JCCA’s Annual July 1st Pic to picnickers at Humes Park,
Domestic Help Wanted
forget your
don’t
tery.
nic will be held at Humes Park, therefore
rackets, and ’WOMAN
tennis
look a:ter
chkh
New Westminster, from 11:00
a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Humes Park is swim suits
on
See. you all at the F
located on North Road, K mile
TS UM U RA - O BARA
Park
WESTON, Ont.—Mr. and Mrs. south of Lougheed Hgwy. There July 1st at Humes
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Scarboro, Ont. Tosh Hori wish to announce the will be a bus leaving the. Japanese
Smiling underneath the um arrival of their son, Isamu Ray School at 10:30 a.m. for the be
brella is Miss Yoshiko Obara, mond, on May 29, 1961.
nefit of anyone requiring trans JOINT SERVICE JUNE 18
TORONTO.—The Toronto Ja
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hiro
portation. .
yoshi Obara of Scarboro, Ontario.
panese
Anglican Church w ill hold
An afternoon full of fun with
The happy groom is Mr. Ken
a
joint
service "Holy Communion iiHimiiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
CARD
OF
THANKS
games and races, raffles and
Service
”
on Sunday, June 18th
Tsumura, son of Mr. and Mrs.
draws, prizes and refreshments,
Seitaro Tsumura of Highland
from
11:00
A.M. The sermon by
We wish to> extend our sin
for the young and old is slated.
the
Reverend
Ken Imai will be
Creek. Ontario.
cere thanks and appreciation
All recreational facilities, such as
Wedding took place recently at
entitled,
‘
‘
God,
rlhe hathen .
for the many messages of love
tennis court, swimming- pool, and
the Scarboro Junction United
and understanding and beauti
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
Church and was officiated by the
ful floral offerings from all
NOTARY PUBLIC
SEE DISPLAY OF BUDDHIST ART — TODAY
Rev. K. Juli. Reception at Tam
our relatives and friends dur
O'Shanter Golf Club followed.
226 QUEEN ST. WEST, TORONTO
ing our recent bereavement ir
TORONTO. — The
Toronto exhibits. The public is cordially
EM. 8-4847 — OX. 1-3388 (Ros.)
the loss of a dear husband and
ITO-TAK ATA
Buddhist Church is at present in invited to attend the first Budd
father, Mr. K. Katsumi.
the midst of observing Buddhist hist art exhibit at 918 Bathurst
Toronto, Ont.
-Mrs. Haru Katsumi,
Emphasis Week from June 11. to Street. At 4:00 P.M. a public lec
St.
Stephen’s-in-the
Fields
And Family.
June IS. Among various activi ture on Buddhist art will be given
Anglican Church was the. setting
bv Mr. Fred Kondo, a local artist.
ties performed during the week
for the marriage of Miss Mae
Kunio Suyama—T.B.C.
on Sat., June 17th from 2:00 P.M.
Kyoko Takata, eldest daughter
WE HAVE NO
of Mr. and Mrs. Moriyoshi Taka
to S:00 P.M. the church, is spon
MEMORIAL
SERVICE
SERVICE
CHARGES
soring an interesting display7 of OBON ODORI IULY 8
ta of Toronto, and Mr. Richard
TORONTO.—Obon Odori
at
Masaki Ito, eldest son of Mr.
Buddhist art.
Mrs. Hatsuye Hasegawa, 69,
Christie
Fits
on
Saturday,
July
7
and Mrs. Fred Ito of Baltimore,
will
be
passed away suddenly on April
Among the displays
Ontario on April 15, 1961. The
22nd, in Kusu Machi, Japan,
such valuable articles as an 400- 8. 1961.
Time is short so we urge all
Rev. Canon Guy Marshall offi
year-old statue of Ming Buddha,
while on her holidays. She was
members
and friends interested
ciated. Sewanins were Mr. and
a calligraphy7 by a famous Budd
the beloved 'rife <of Jiroyernon
in
Obon
Odori
Mrs. Barney Aihoshi.
hist priest, a religious portrayal
------- --------- to
- attend the -praeHasegawa of Montreal, dear
TRAVELLING
of
3
monkeys
drawn
over
300tices
held
every
7 Friday7 night and
After a reception, held at the
est mother of Tsugio, Minoru,
TO JAPAN
years ago, several displays of Saturday noon at the Toronto
Kwong Chow Chop Suey House,
Yukiko (Mrs. Ito), Fumiko
the happy couple honeymooned to
miniature shrines for the indi- Buddhist Church.
(Mrs. Takeno) all of Japan,
T.B.C.
Los Angeles and Vancouver.
vidual homes, and various other
Sylvia (Mrs. Noiseux) of Cal
Or iBringing Som»Thev are now residing at 272
ifornia, Dr. James Shiro and
one <over?
Elgin Street, Cobourg, Ontario.
Wo> represent all
Osamu of Montreal. Interment
REMEMBER HAM. ICCA AND KYOWA KAI PICNIC
linos including
took place in Kusu Machi. A
Amoricau President
memorial service will. be con
Northwest Airline*
HAMILTON.__ The day' for the Hamilton JCCA and the Hamil
CITY DRIVING SCHOOL
Canadian Pacific
ducted by Rev. Ishiura at the
ton Kvowa Kai Annual Picnic is drawing near. We hope that many
and Pan American
S3.00 ner hour
Montreal Buddhist Church on
of
you
will
be
able
to
attend
this
outing.
The
picnic
will
be
held
on
Write or call for
DRIVE ON YOUR FIRST LESSON
June 22nd.
full information and
TRIAL WITH NO OBLIGATION
Sunday, June 25th. at Lambert Park, near Carlisle, about lo miles
rate*.
"Free" Classroom Instruction
from Hamilton.
PATRONIZE
488 BLOOR ST. W.
There will be races for young and old, bingo games-, fukubiki
LE. 2-3656
and fun for all. Prices of tickets will be $1.00 for adults and oOc
OUR ADVERTISERS
for students and children 5 years and over. Tickets may7 be obtained
from any Kvowa Kai and JCCA members.
For those who require transportation, please contact George
Toronto
EM. 4-7331
Kumagai at NE. 7-2063 or Yuji Kumita at FU. 5-0998. Transporta
tion mav be obtained by7 going to the city market place. Cars w ill
SUNDAY, JUNE 18, 1961
55 Wellington Street West
leave at 11 LM. sharp. To alleviate confusion at the picnic grounds,
11:30 A.M.—Sunday Church School
11:30 A.M.—English Language Service
we would appreciate very much if tickets were purchased ahead of
"TEACHING CHILDREN FAITH"
YOITRE DIFFERENT I
time.
Obituaries
Births
Go To Church Of Your
Choice This Sunday
4-
^
A
DOMINKON
Travel Office
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
The Rev. Edward S. Yoshioka, M.A., B.D.
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
—
701 Dovercourt Rd., Toronto
The modern tvay to be
traditionally correct
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH •“ B“a“”' ^
MMMilhing
SUNDAY, JUNE 18, 1061
10:30 A.M.—Religious School
he Bouquet
Invitation Line
11:00 A.M.—Morning Service
2:00 P.M.—Japanese Language Service
EVERYONE CORDIALLY INVITED
Wedding Invitations
SMALL
Thermo-engraved (Raised lettering)
SHOE SIZES
NEW SPRING
£
1 Men's Scott McHales Four Up
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
1328 Queen St. West
Thermo-Engraving looks and feels like
hand engraving, but costs about half as
much—and it’s ready within the week.
Thermo-Engraving eliminates the cop
per plate that makes hand engraving
so costly and time consuming. Select
from our giant catalogue of flawlessly
correct papers. 11 distinctive styles of
lettering. Weddings priced as low as
S9.00 for 50 and SI3.50 for 100. com
plete with double envelopes and tissues.
Come in and see our complete cata
logue’ Matching announcements, at
home cards, enclosure cards, etc.
Phone LE. 1—1931 Toronto
ZJ
WALES & DUNCAN
INSURANCE AGENTS
464 Yonge St., Toronto
Phone WA 1-3171
479 QUEEN STREET WEST, TORONTO 2-B, ONTARIO
Page 8
PAGE 8
*-----..... w
By LARRY TAJIRI
C A NAD I A N______ _____________________
Saturday, Ju^ 17
THE NEW CANADIAN
Nisei Wins $27,000.
for Internment
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each
as a medium of expression and nexus outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada
Miyoshi Umeki’s next motion picture will be “Eleven Is Heaven,”
WASHINGTON. — The Court
id own life story-. The girl from Hokkaido, Japan who became a of Claims set a precedent by I
'T. UMEZUKI, Publisher
u!n^in^ star in *the United States and won the Academy- Award for awarding §27,000 to an American I
KEI TSUMURA.------- 1-----------------------------^....Enslish Editw
..
supporting actress” as Katsumi in “Sayonara” will play- her- woman of Japanese ancestry for
in a production which Producer Ross Hunter is preparing for damages suffered from a wartime I
KEN MORI------------- Japanese Section Editor & Advertising
Universal-International release.
internment program in Califor
EM. 6-5005
479 QUEEN ST. W., TORONTO 2-B, ONTARIO
Miss Umeki is currently recreating her original Broadwav inter nia.
pretation of the Chinese. picture bride, Mei Li, in Hunter's movie
Authorized
as
second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa'
The award was given to MaryQerS1TJ?f the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, “Flower Drum Taki Sonoda now living in Chica
the picture, now shooting in Universal City, is the first high go. It was the first case handled —
bu< get Hollywood movie in which all the major romantic roles are by the courts under a 1956 L
taken by Oriental players. Hunter has given star billing to Miss amendment to the Japanese-Ame
^'Lnies Shigeta as Wang Ta, Nancy Kwan as Linda Lee (the rican evacuation claims act.
role I at buzuki played in New York) and Jack Soo (Goro Suzuki)
The damages stemmed mostly
as Sai tuny Fong.
1 from the loss of two farms near
.
The budget for “Flower Drum Song’- is $5 million and Hunter Imperial and Niland, Calif.
-^w~w^ww^^^rvxro^^v^/W^^z^>^^
is to be congratulated for his courage in using performers of Asian
111 i’e^r°leS’ “Flower Drum Song” probably- will be re SonX “'3 “£' H Japanese And Germans Now Admired, Says Poll
leased around Christmas time.
States from Japan in 1903. He
NEW YORK.—In the months
San Francisco newspaperman who had farmed in the-Imperial Vai- just after the U.S. entered Sec- strated just how much these ini.
id the
novel from the musical and the movie are ley many- years before World War ond World War, a Gallup poll ages have changed in the
since Pearl Harbor.
Mot M
adheres more closely to the spirit and
o
j
,
showed
those
Americans
quesAccording
to
Gallup,
the
Af
plot or the book than the stage musical.
iliss Sonoda left her Los An- tioned regarded their Japanese
In Miss Umeki’s next picture, “Eleven Is Heaven,” which Wil- geles secretarial job in . 1942 to enemy as treacherous, sly-, cruel, ricans ip-olled regard the Japanea
a^ hard-working, and sly, butaU
?- >
2S
.the Plot reportedly will involve an interraUmily after warlike—and hard-working.
artistic,
intelligent, and proni
rea> hfe Mls? Umeki is married to Win Opie, a her father was interned. She and
r
w c
।
_A.rid the adjectives
most rfre sive.
5“
director. Incidentally, there is still talk of ;a TV series in which the rest of the family were
eva
quentlyselected
to
describe
Ger
Miss Umeki will play- the central role.
Asked about the Germans, as
cuated later.
mans were: warlike, cruel, trea- the Eichmann" trial unfolded in
*
*
*
cherous, intelligent—and hard
Israel, Americans described them
Broadway’s Oriental cycle seems to be over for a while At one
working.
o ie Y<°<-\erar-S aS° fcbere "ere three productions (“Flower*Drum
Gallup did a repeat recently of as hard-working, intelligent, pro
this wartime survey. It demon gressive, practical, and brave.
in fdjoininrtfi^^
^etTY^
MONTREAL.—In
the June
£» « o£w
Nisei. Howevek 33 | 17th issue, The Star Weekly has
a two page spread on Nisei So
prano, Mariko Uy-eda of Montreal Earning A “Living" Not So Easy, Youth Learns
and the Bach Choir tour of Ja
KOBE.—The 19-year-old youth youth, armed with a toy pistol
pan. Eloise Cunningham of the
arrested
by police here had gran was to board a foreign ship-in
Weekly reports as follows:
diose
ideas
—he was going to roib the harbor and somehow force the
“When
the Montreal Bach
a
foreign
ship
in the harbor using crew to take sleeping pills. Then,
aForce
Japanese
setting
It
u
A
.
J
,
also
mil
have
men i„ a p3i sett? F'y H°me’ m™'™g three Air Choir sang at the fourth Inter sleeping pills.
he was to flee with loot he estim
national Music Festival at Osa
Police arrested
the youth, ated in advance at 50,000 ven
in hX™o<|^
be
S“” *« b« P-oduced! ka, Japan the most excited singer
in the group was Mariko Uy-eda, whose name was withheld because ($140).
cnees on ^^' Fart S’B
* SMta'S
a young Japanese Canadian-school of his age, on suspision when they . Also in the works were plans
For Mariko, the trip spotted him loitering around the to rob a noodle shop of 30,000 yen
in£lp,S3 ^"spring’' '"” St”T St"™g teacher-.
They searched his room ($83) and glove factory of 15,000
meant she could finally- meet a docks.
and
found
a robbery schedule out- yen ($41).
AMTliZ™ "I “A Wority of One,” the cousin—or any- relative, for that lined on a piece of paper.
Police said the youth explained
matter. “I never had any family
According- to the plan, the he wanted to earn a living.
tycoon and a Jewish widow from lA l oniai?ce between a Japanese in Canada except my- parents and
Bros, with AlJcuiXl, k^
.s now filming at Warner
role in the picture the role of the 11 f Russell. An important feature my- brother and sister,” she ex
Played bv Marc M™ who 1^^
houseboy, Eddie, is being plained, “and as a child I alway-s
Freuch-Jkpanese aiXtrv
' orkt
"’ho is of longed to have cousins like every A-Bomb Death Toll Raised To 320,000
bayashi, also from i£ taS.rw S “k T' ^ Ts“k" Ko- body- else.” She g’ot the chance
HIROSHIMA.—The two Ame diseases necessitating surgical
to meet some almost as soon as
Meanwhile, Masaichi Nwhavi!» !°r?“a” important role.
the choir arrived in Japan. rican atomic bombs that fell on treatment, 6.8 per cent from liver
Tim-t'ch internati»nal prizewinners •is'“ltX St"S10sAe pr°- Among the guests at a reception Nagasaki and Hiroshima nearly- trouble and 5.1 per cent from leu
Hell, has discussed co-nrodur+inne • r
Ra-homon and Gate of
and Warner Bros.
P
1
Jn Japan 'nth Holly-wood’s MGM given for them by Canadian Am 16 years ago instantly- killed kemia. The remainder suffered
bassador William Bull in Tokyo 320,000 Japanese, it was claimed from a variety of complaints, it
were two of Mariko’s cousins. in a. report by- Japan’s association added.
But all they could do was smile against atomic and hy-drogen
Professor’ Kiyoshi Sakuma of
rrance Nuven’s role
Cind^ „
•
Hiroshima university, one of the
at each other: Mariko’s command bombs.
a spy in Jack Webb’s production of “Th’5?1 ^rl.susPected of being of Japanese proved too limited
The report, prepared after members of the investigating
is Played mostly for laughs^
Last Time I Saw Archie,”
to stand the strain, and her three years of research bv spe team, said copies of the report
by Robert Mitchum, who pretends5tobR’Ut a GI- "oldbrick, cousins spoke no English.
cialists, charged that the" U.S. would be distributed throughout
that he s romancing Miss Nuven becaiS £
hlS ?Trior officers
atomic
bomb casualty commission the world.
r After a concert tour of Osaka.
^ent . . . “Two L^vesher
bei^ a Kyoto and Tokyo, where the choir had underestimated the casual
bas her most important role fo^d ^lama
"’hich Nobu
ties from the bombs.
U.S. entry- m the Berlin film festival
dAr%W12i be ^^ °Fficial sang to packed houses and critic
It said that even among Japa The Bacon Bride Suicide
al acclaim: after TV appearances
-Japanese actresses have an Irish
(“how many
and newspaper interviews, Mari nese who appeared to have re
TOKYO.—A bride from a re
Picture which stars Shirlev MacLaine
a Ma°ri gid in the ko finally met the family- at the covered from the effects of the
mote
village in Northern Japan
Latest word on MGM’s “Brido-P Y X
Laurence Harvev . . . home of her uncle Shuzo Odaji- bombing, 141 died between 1956
killed herself because her hus
mru at Toba. There, surrounded and 1959 at Hiroshima atomic band wanted to eat bacon and she
ny relatives at last, Mariko tried casualty- hospital.
did not know what it was, the
to giro MCM
The report said that among 660 Japanese
on a traditional Japanese kimono,
national
newspaper
knelt on the floor with the familv Japanese now affected by- radia Asahi Shimbun reported. She len
andctried her hand at the koto— tion, 42.7 per cent suffered from a note saying: ‘T am sorry, I can
a . 13-stringed _ instrument some leucopenia, 21.4 per cent from not cook city food.”
thing like a zither. She also discoa ered she's a rich woman, bv
Japanese standards. She make's
more money- teaching school than
most Japanese companv direc
YOUR SHOPPING lest
tors.
• NE WS BRIEFS . .
Mariko Oyeda In Japan
*
DUNDAS UNION STORE
• SAKURA RICE
• MARUKIN show
9 VINEGAR
• SUGAR
’ EGGS
• S^EIYAEI
MEAT
® MANJU
• MANY VARIETIES OF ARARE
PHONE EM. 4-7692
Travel Arrangements
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
1877 AH
Air-Ship-Bus-Rail
Tours-Hotei-Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
and Baggage Insurance
JACK
for your toeddrug candids
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
Call for Reservatioiis or
Information—EM. 8-9934
|HEW
V
-- Peterlee Crescent
Islington, Ontario
BElmont 3-3095
T. KAMEOKA
113 McCaul St TORONTO
K. Iwata travel Service
That was the year when sailor Manzo Nagano stepped ashore at
New Westminster to become the first Japanese immigrant to
Canada. He started it all. And in between the years to 1961, r
of all that has happened in the twisting corridors of our hist orv:
riot and uprooting, birth and travail, unease and ultimate pi
All these and more—will be discussed in the History of
Japanese Canadians, But remember: The History still needs your
financial support,
*-----..... w
By LARRY TAJIRI
C A NAD I A N______ _____________________
Saturday, Ju^ 17
THE NEW CANADIAN
Nisei Wins $27,000.
for Internment
Published on Wednesday and Saturday of each
as a medium of expression and nexus outlet
among those of Japanese origin in Canada
Miyoshi Umeki’s next motion picture will be “Eleven Is Heaven,”
WASHINGTON. — The Court
id own life story-. The girl from Hokkaido, Japan who became a of Claims set a precedent by I
'T. UMEZUKI, Publisher
u!n^in^ star in *the United States and won the Academy- Award for awarding §27,000 to an American I
KEI TSUMURA.------- 1-----------------------------^....Enslish Editw
..
supporting actress” as Katsumi in “Sayonara” will play- her- woman of Japanese ancestry for
in a production which Producer Ross Hunter is preparing for damages suffered from a wartime I
KEN MORI------------- Japanese Section Editor & Advertising
Universal-International release.
internment program in Califor
EM. 6-5005
479 QUEEN ST. W., TORONTO 2-B, ONTARIO
Miss Umeki is currently recreating her original Broadwav inter nia.
pretation of the Chinese. picture bride, Mei Li, in Hunter's movie
Authorized
as
second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa'
The award was given to MaryQerS1TJ?f the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, “Flower Drum Taki Sonoda now living in Chica
the picture, now shooting in Universal City, is the first high go. It was the first case handled —
bu< get Hollywood movie in which all the major romantic roles are by the courts under a 1956 L
taken by Oriental players. Hunter has given star billing to Miss amendment to the Japanese-Ame
^'Lnies Shigeta as Wang Ta, Nancy Kwan as Linda Lee (the rican evacuation claims act.
role I at buzuki played in New York) and Jack Soo (Goro Suzuki)
The damages stemmed mostly
as Sai tuny Fong.
1 from the loss of two farms near
.
The budget for “Flower Drum Song’- is $5 million and Hunter Imperial and Niland, Calif.
-^w~w^ww^^^rvxro^^v^/W^^z^>^^
is to be congratulated for his courage in using performers of Asian
111 i’e^r°leS’ “Flower Drum Song” probably- will be re SonX “'3 “£' H Japanese And Germans Now Admired, Says Poll
leased around Christmas time.
States from Japan in 1903. He
NEW YORK.—In the months
San Francisco newspaperman who had farmed in the-Imperial Vai- just after the U.S. entered Sec- strated just how much these ini.
id the
novel from the musical and the movie are ley many- years before World War ond World War, a Gallup poll ages have changed in the
since Pearl Harbor.
Mot M
adheres more closely to the spirit and
o
j
,
showed
those
Americans
quesAccording
to
Gallup,
the
Af
plot or the book than the stage musical.
iliss Sonoda left her Los An- tioned regarded their Japanese
In Miss Umeki’s next picture, “Eleven Is Heaven,” which Wil- geles secretarial job in . 1942 to enemy as treacherous, sly-, cruel, ricans ip-olled regard the Japanea
a^ hard-working, and sly, butaU
?- >
2S
.the Plot reportedly will involve an interraUmily after warlike—and hard-working.
artistic,
intelligent, and proni
rea> hfe Mls? Umeki is married to Win Opie, a her father was interned. She and
r
w c
।
_A.rid the adjectives
most rfre sive.
5“
director. Incidentally, there is still talk of ;a TV series in which the rest of the family were
eva
quentlyselected
to
describe
Ger
Miss Umeki will play- the central role.
Asked about the Germans, as
cuated later.
mans were: warlike, cruel, trea- the Eichmann" trial unfolded in
*
*
*
cherous, intelligent—and hard
Israel, Americans described them
Broadway’s Oriental cycle seems to be over for a while At one
working.
o ie Y<°<-\erar-S aS° fcbere "ere three productions (“Flower*Drum
Gallup did a repeat recently of as hard-working, intelligent, pro
this wartime survey. It demon gressive, practical, and brave.
in fdjoininrtfi^^
^etTY^
MONTREAL.—In
the June
£» « o£w
Nisei. Howevek 33 | 17th issue, The Star Weekly has
a two page spread on Nisei So
prano, Mariko Uy-eda of Montreal Earning A “Living" Not So Easy, Youth Learns
and the Bach Choir tour of Ja
KOBE.—The 19-year-old youth youth, armed with a toy pistol
pan. Eloise Cunningham of the
arrested
by police here had gran was to board a foreign ship-in
Weekly reports as follows:
diose
ideas
—he was going to roib the harbor and somehow force the
“When
the Montreal Bach
a
foreign
ship
in the harbor using crew to take sleeping pills. Then,
aForce
Japanese
setting
It
u
A
.
J
,
also
mil
have
men i„ a p3i sett? F'y H°me’ m™'™g three Air Choir sang at the fourth Inter sleeping pills.
he was to flee with loot he estim
national Music Festival at Osa
Police arrested
the youth, ated in advance at 50,000 ven
in hX™o<|^
be
S“” *« b« P-oduced! ka, Japan the most excited singer
in the group was Mariko Uy-eda, whose name was withheld because ($140).
cnees on ^^' Fart S’B
* SMta'S
a young Japanese Canadian-school of his age, on suspision when they . Also in the works were plans
For Mariko, the trip spotted him loitering around the to rob a noodle shop of 30,000 yen
in£lp,S3 ^"spring’' '"” St”T St"™g teacher-.
They searched his room ($83) and glove factory of 15,000
meant she could finally- meet a docks.
and
found
a robbery schedule out- yen ($41).
AMTliZ™ "I “A Wority of One,” the cousin—or any- relative, for that lined on a piece of paper.
Police said the youth explained
matter. “I never had any family
According- to the plan, the he wanted to earn a living.
tycoon and a Jewish widow from lA l oniai?ce between a Japanese in Canada except my- parents and
Bros, with AlJcuiXl, k^
.s now filming at Warner
role in the picture the role of the 11 f Russell. An important feature my- brother and sister,” she ex
Played bv Marc M™ who 1^^
houseboy, Eddie, is being plained, “and as a child I alway-s
Freuch-Jkpanese aiXtrv
' orkt
"’ho is of longed to have cousins like every A-Bomb Death Toll Raised To 320,000
bayashi, also from i£ taS.rw S “k T' ^ Ts“k" Ko- body- else.” She g’ot the chance
HIROSHIMA.—The two Ame diseases necessitating surgical
to meet some almost as soon as
Meanwhile, Masaichi Nwhavi!» !°r?“a” important role.
the choir arrived in Japan. rican atomic bombs that fell on treatment, 6.8 per cent from liver
Tim-t'ch internati»nal prizewinners •is'“ltX St"S10sAe pr°- Among the guests at a reception Nagasaki and Hiroshima nearly- trouble and 5.1 per cent from leu
Hell, has discussed co-nrodur+inne • r
Ra-homon and Gate of
and Warner Bros.
P
1
Jn Japan 'nth Holly-wood’s MGM given for them by Canadian Am 16 years ago instantly- killed kemia. The remainder suffered
bassador William Bull in Tokyo 320,000 Japanese, it was claimed from a variety of complaints, it
were two of Mariko’s cousins. in a. report by- Japan’s association added.
But all they could do was smile against atomic and hy-drogen
Professor’ Kiyoshi Sakuma of
rrance Nuven’s role
Cind^ „
•
Hiroshima university, one of the
at each other: Mariko’s command bombs.
a spy in Jack Webb’s production of “Th’5?1 ^rl.susPected of being of Japanese proved too limited
The report, prepared after members of the investigating
is Played mostly for laughs^
Last Time I Saw Archie,”
to stand the strain, and her three years of research bv spe team, said copies of the report
by Robert Mitchum, who pretends5tobR’Ut a GI- "oldbrick, cousins spoke no English.
cialists, charged that the" U.S. would be distributed throughout
that he s romancing Miss Nuven becaiS £
hlS ?Trior officers
atomic
bomb casualty commission the world.
r After a concert tour of Osaka.
^ent . . . “Two L^vesher
bei^ a Kyoto and Tokyo, where the choir had underestimated the casual
bas her most important role fo^d ^lama
"’hich Nobu
ties from the bombs.
U.S. entry- m the Berlin film festival
dAr%W12i be ^^ °Fficial sang to packed houses and critic
It said that even among Japa The Bacon Bride Suicide
al acclaim: after TV appearances
-Japanese actresses have an Irish
(“how many
and newspaper interviews, Mari nese who appeared to have re
TOKYO.—A bride from a re
Picture which stars Shirlev MacLaine
a Ma°ri gid in the ko finally met the family- at the covered from the effects of the
mote
village in Northern Japan
Latest word on MGM’s “Brido-P Y X
Laurence Harvev . . . home of her uncle Shuzo Odaji- bombing, 141 died between 1956
killed herself because her hus
mru at Toba. There, surrounded and 1959 at Hiroshima atomic band wanted to eat bacon and she
ny relatives at last, Mariko tried casualty- hospital.
did not know what it was, the
to giro MCM
The report said that among 660 Japanese
on a traditional Japanese kimono,
national
newspaper
knelt on the floor with the familv Japanese now affected by- radia Asahi Shimbun reported. She len
andctried her hand at the koto— tion, 42.7 per cent suffered from a note saying: ‘T am sorry, I can
a . 13-stringed _ instrument some leucopenia, 21.4 per cent from not cook city food.”
thing like a zither. She also discoa ered she's a rich woman, bv
Japanese standards. She make's
more money- teaching school than
most Japanese companv direc
YOUR SHOPPING lest
tors.
• NE WS BRIEFS . .
Mariko Oyeda In Japan
*
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K. Iwata travel Service
That was the year when sailor Manzo Nagano stepped ashore at
New Westminster to become the first Japanese immigrant to
Canada. He started it all. And in between the years to 1961, r
of all that has happened in the twisting corridors of our hist orv:
riot and uprooting, birth and travail, unease and ultimate pi
All these and more—will be discussed in the History of
Japanese Canadians, But remember: The History still needs your
financial support,