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The New Canadian — October 28, 1961

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Page 1

j THE NEW CANADIAN

• Weir ©r
| Weird? ^_______ ^n independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
By RICK MATSUMpTO

K Glancing through the back-files
-—No. 83
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1361
H of The New Canadian, I found an
TORONTO, ONTARIO
iDterestuig aiuch to ^erve as an
B follow-up to last- weeks column.
B If you recall, last week the NC
I printed an article written by
B Harold Weir in -the Vancouver
B Sun. in which he states that JaB panese Canadians should not feel
B insulted by the use of the term
STIRLING, Alta.—Two Sansei
■ “Jap”. To go along- with my views
Sliin and Toyoshi are brothers
B on Mr. Weir, in this column last boys were among four local stu­ and the sons of Mr. and Mrs. S:
B Saturday, I found in the .October dents who were_ recipients of Kinoshita.
B-MBO KIA OOKA—Edmonton
B 26. 1955 issue, this article by awards presented at the October
Nisei . . . borrows romantic ele­
NC
Correspondent
B another Vancouver Sun columnist, Home and School meeting.
TORONTO. — “Five Japanese ments in Japanese art , . . pvoSliin Konoshita, one of seven
■ Jack Scott. This, bear in mind
Canadians”, this weeks art exhi­: duces a rich, vivid action .
■ readers, was written by one of honour students in Warner Coun­
bition at the Hart House of the promise.
■ Mr. Weir’s own colleagues, (Par- ty was tied with Elaine Hardy
KOI
KIT OOKA—brother of
university of Toronto brings to­
for the Fooks and Milne Scholar­
I don tire association, Mr. Scott).
Harry,
from
Vancouver . . . pro­
gether for the first time the
ship of twenty dollars which was
I
By JACK SCOTT
duces
entirely
western kind of
works of 5 of the top Nisei artists
to go to the student with the
painting
.
.
.
often
resembling
in
Canada.
Represented
are:
Ka
­

Van. Sun 1955
PICTURE BUTTE, Alta.—A
highest marks in Grade depart­
Dubuffet
in
it
playfulness
.
zuo
Nakamura,
Takao
Tanabe,
Nisei
was
one
of
fqur
elected
to
B
I sometimes think a fellow mental exams. The architects
often
turning
it
upon
itself
by
Harry
and
Roy
Kiyooka,
and
Shivacant
posts
on
-the
town
council
■ could keep himself -with a con- made an extra scholarship avail­
playingthe
idea
of
the
picture
.
. .
zueye
Takashima.
I slant supply of column subjects able and the two students were in recently held elections. Haruo
depends
heavily
on
rough
texture
Although none of them was
I simply by reading Harold Weir’s each presented with a $20 cheque. Harpo Moriyama, 30, was elected
_ Toyoshi Kinoshita was the re­ to a three-year term of office born in Japan—and only one of . . . have the look of cities after
■ editorial page pillar and attackthe 100 Megaton blast.
■ ing whatever cock-eyed stand he cipient of Elias Shklanka mem­ when he polled 182 votes.
them, Tanabe, has been there—
SHIZUEYE TAKASHITA —
I has taken on almost any matter. orial Scholarship of $25 for the
The newly elected councilman
they
show
a
strong
Japanese
in
­
mostly
western in background . . .

It really is a shame that a man Grade 12 student making the is the son-in-law of Rev. Y. Kaa
striking
contrast between draw­
fluence
in
their
work,
or
in
part
highest
marks
in
English
and
So
­
v amura or Lethbridge, Alberta.
■ who strings words together so
ing- and painting- . . . accomplishof
it;
especially
Nakamura,
Ta
­
I nicely should put them to such cial Studies. A similar award was
_ In other elections in the pro­
also given to Pat Finley for the vince, Makio Nishiyama a school nabe and Harry Kiyooka. Some and perceptive drawings . . . “The
I mischief.
Lovers/’ achieves the' grace ami
I
I try to resist this temptation. girl obtaining the highest marks board candidate was defeated in comments mentioned on the pain­
fluidity of her best drawing’s. Her
I
Only the other day, by steel- in the same subjects.
Raymond.
ters
and
their
work
followingthe
work
and her life covered many
I ing myself, I was able to overopeningof
the
show
on
Friday,
pages
of a recent issue of The
I look Harold’s stand oh the proCanadian
Forum.
October
20th
were:
I posed fluoridation of water in
Although the Hart House show
KAZUO NAKAMURA — in­
I which, if I am not mistaken, he
dicates in his pastoral .moments should be praised for bringing to­
I opposed the. plan because he
a strong- feeling of Orientalism. gether the works of these Japa­
I thinks we ought to have the deAnd in his “string- paintings” such nese Canadian painters who have
I mocratic right to let his cliildas, “Into Space No. 3”—those made such a varied and attractive
I ren’s teeth decay without interTORONTO.—Request for books ing to have the books
please
sent
weightless
spatial
exercises, contribution to Canadian art, the
| ference. This is like arguing that for the popular CBC-TV program
your
request
to
The
New
Cana
which
may
be
among.,
the most directors could have arranged a
I it is an invasion, of privacy to “Lets Speak English” continue to
I have a sewer system; but no, I flood the offices of The New Can­ dian. 4/9 Queen St. W., Toronto underpraised paintings in Cana­ better time and place than to hold
2B along with a cheque or money
it in the same room as students
I mustn’t get on that.
adian. Up to this weekend, the order. As we are selling these da—he exhibits a crisp, clear ap­ art course. When the two repre­
proach
which
can
easily
be
re
­
What I must get to is a com­ NC has handled requests from
books on consignment from the lated to Japanese thought. A sentatives of The New Canadian
pletely unreasonable and unwar­ 140 people across Canada.
publishers
we are unable to ac­ similar spirit breathes life into, finally found and entered the
ranted smear on some good CanParticular
note
must
be given cept COD orders. The prices are: “Two Spheres,” in which Naka­ basement, “show,” a group of in­
| adian friends of mine whose
to the tearful efforts of the Issei
structors were teaching approx­
crime, in Harold’s ibeadie eyes, is ladies who are endeavouring to “Sound Studies” ... . __ ...._....__ $1.25 mura .sets several circles spinning imately 50 odd students how to
2.00 in white space. Other contribu­
that they are of Japanese origin. master the art of English conver­ “Basic Lessons”
tions from him include, “Power ^!’aw some huge orange pump­

Japanese
Translation

,
1.00
For a fellow who quotes so sation through the use of these
Station No. 1,” one of the best kins sitting on a little platform.
One
set
(3
books)
...
............
...
4.25
readily from the Good Book, the books and the television show.
in his series of deep, block-filled It made it impossible to view half
includes postage.
Dyspectic Warbler’s embittered
Those who subscribe for these
compositions;
and “Inner Valley,” of the Nisei artist’s paintings.
I essay titled “No Aipologies” was books live not only in the imme­
Perhaps that was the reason
a
successful
study
in texture.'
I more than a little shocking.
diate
area
of
Metropolitan
Tor
­
we
were probably the only two
TAKAO
TANABE

who
went
Argentina Buys
B
*
*
*
onto, but as far west as British
spectators
of the whole show last
to
Japan
last
year
on
a
grant,
has
I This all began when Harold Columbia.
The following table Japanese Trains
Tuesday night. This is an art ex­
also
taken
Japanese
art
as
one
of
I turned his attention to a dispatch shows the areas from which rehibition? Let’s give these deserv­
WASHINGTON. — The
Com- the foundations of his painting.
I I sent from Tokyo Some weeks quests have come:
merce Department reported re­ His, “Hills, Plain and the Setting ed artists a little, better break to
I ago which concerned the life'of
district
no. of requests cently that Argentina’s program Sun,” exhibit the confident mix- 'display their worthy efforts.
I a more or less typical Japanese
for railway reforms for large ture of calligraphy, human forms,
Metro Toronto
109
I family.
large purchases of railway equip­ and suggestions of landscape
9
I
By some curious process of Hamilton
characteristic of Tanabe . . .
ment from Japan.
1
I reading between tire lines Mr. Quebec
greater
vigor . . . more ambitious
Quebec
9
I heir professed' to see these peoA report in the department’s use of color. His other works in­
Alberta
5
I pie as being devoid of any feei­
Foreign Commerce Weekly from cluded are: Mountains in Winter,
7
;he U.S. embassy at Buenos Aires Interior Arrangement With Three
ng of guilt for Japan’s part in B.C.
Total
140
| the Second World War. The fault
said that Argentina has made Black Rocks, and Mountain Vil­
The New Canadian will con- arrangements for acquisition of lage.
'nth this is that it isn’t true.
Vancouver
Some of his works were
tinue
to handle these text books 150
self-propelled
passenger signed with a Japanese block sig­
Mien Harold compounded
The first Canadian Pacific Air­
die felony by a vicious attack on for the benefit of those eager and coaches from Japan for use by nature, and reminded me (Hills,
line’s DC-8 jetliner to fly from
Canadian Japanese, spoke of the studious (people who wish to gain ;he General Sariento Railway, Plain, and Setting Sun of a haunt­
Tokyo
to Vancouver, set a new
arrogance of Ipre-war Japanese fluency in English. Anyone wish- ) with delivery by December, 1962. ing feeling of Slocan, B.C.
speed record on the the 4,700-mile
^ght here in British Columbia”
and claimed that “some of our
flight across the Pacific.
Japanese were so cock-a-hoop
The DC-8, -with 121 passengers
j f1^ s har-d. to believe the whole
and a crew of nine on board, flew
kt of them weren’t in it right up
At Japan
non-stop from Tokyo to Vancou­
k the neck.”
ver in seven hours and 45 minu­
^hen it was suggested to
tes, at an average speed of 600
«ro.d that this may .have been
miles per hour. Top speed reach­
The skyline of Tokyo is being changed rapidly ’ ground to drain subterranean streams off to depths ed during the flight was 628 miles
?°tng a little far he svnftly
couriered with his latest diatribe by a boom of new buildings for Japan’s growing of 6.0-odd feet rather than pump the water to the per hour.
k Much he cited, as evidence of industrialization. But the possibilities of earthBest previous time was estab­
surface during excavation.
Japanese disloyalty, the followquakes rule out skyscrapers and make necessary
Ingenuity has also been seen in use of building lished by a CPA Britannia jet­
prop airliner on Feb. 7, 1959,
, .^n 1912 he heard a Japanese a strange variety of building materials and tech- materials. For example, the Japanese have re­ which
covered the distance in 11
school ooy state
that
“Japan niques.
cently been making concrete out of pumice, rocks hours, eight minutes flying time.
oae day make slaves of us
Law forbids buildings of more than about 100 thrown from volcanoes, for a lighter end-product,
Captain Ralph Leslie of Van­
Sil ’J
feet in height in Tokyo although Japan’s highest
and
have
also
used
chemicals
to
make
concrete
couver
was in command of the
-Ytn.T$3~ a “sloppy” Japanese building, the Diet or parliament, stands at almost
CPA
aircraft
during the record­
who bumped Harold’s 210 feet and other exceptions are known in cities more voluminous and therefore lighter.
breaking jet' inaugural flight.
^ave Mm a “tongue-lashing” like Osaka.
One of the more interesting buildings planned Capt. Leslie “rode” high-velocity
u Bmmised him he’d be hanged
is
the
San-ai, a 100-foot “transparent rocket” of jetstreams traveling at speeds up
If you can’t go up. Tokyo architects say, go
? LMephone pole “when Japan
down. Some buildings are built to penetrate four glass which has no pillars at all.
to 130 miles ner hour.
-ook over B.C.”
Another
is
the
Otemachi
Building,
with
some
or
five
stories
underground.
Mmes, in “incidents on
STOP AND GO
It used to be that underground construction 30 leading firms and 100 stores and a combined
cars when Japanese
working
force
of
8,000.
It
is
visited
each
day
by
Police stopped an average of
aYttIe the worse for sake,” work cost 50 to 70 percent more than above the
heard them talking of surface, but this has been reduced to some 30 per 90,000 people, and consumes 800,000 kilowatte of one out of every five automobile
electricity daily or enough to light a city of 40,000 drivers daily for traffic viola­
^__Kontinued on page 8)
cent by an ingenious system of boring holes under- people.
tions during the first half of 1961.

Sansei Students
Awarded Scholarship

Work Of Nisei Artists
Shown At Hart House

Nisei Gains Public
Office In Alberta

“Lets Speak English” Books
Still Available To TV Students

CPA Jet Sets Record
On Initial Flight

Japan’s New Look

^©tch For Children On Halloween Nite

— Drive Carefully

Page 2

PAGE 2

Saturday, Octobe

Yamada Wins Opener
Of Nisei Hockey League

Wakabayashi Leads
Chatham To Victory

Sew

Kiyo Tamora

^CHATHAY, Ont.—Led by AIel
W akabayashi, the Chatham Ju­
StudFn°M°^^
W^yama^fired two goals to lead Yamada^ nior Maroons won a 9-4 decision
Studio to a o-l win oyer Komori Auto Body in the opening o-ame of oi er Windsor in the opening game
of the Ontario Hockey Associa­ ?'
the newly formed Nisei Hockey League.
° °
tion Junior B Border Cities Leap| the
PlajMasl/tS champLnshfp was aUtate^wX giie.
Mel fired three goals for the
aALL AAA SlmAand thW periods "1th M ™"«
Maroons as they broke open a 3-3
gam^00^ Baba SCOred for the Iosei's in the dying minutes of the tie with, a six-goal outburst in the
second period.
Mel’s _ younger brother Herb
Aiil Midey S?0
to a *6-6 tie? S^GetHaS^led Main also tallied for the winners.
nA U^to
—en A

insurance

Blue Shield Health Plans
67 Oakley Boulevard
Scarboro, Ontario

Plymouth 9-PQn

STUDIO

OUR SCHOLARS
and Tom Sumi netted tt.XrXS^^
; The following Japanese Cana­
P M
Players are asked to be at the arena, at 5-00
P.M. as a few final changes have been made regardin? plXeVs and dian scholars will receive thek
their respect teams. These changes wlL be the
university degrees in the up-comseason?'0" ” 8WW™d *° "" be
A thTbSnee rf the ing fall _ commencement gathermgs. University of Western On­
tario:
Standings
_ Bachelor
of
Engineering
Won lost
tied
pts
.Science—Elmer J. Nishimoto, St.
Yamada Studio
j
0
0
2
, Ihomas, Ontario.
Main Auto Body
q
0
1
1
d Lmversity of British Columbia:
Mickey Sato
\
q
0
1
1
bachelor
of Commerce—Mitsuo
Komori Auto Body
q
1
0
0
Miyashita; Koya Yoshida.
Scoring Leaders
■Goals
Ass.
Pts.
Gen Hamada (Main)
Person Sought
3
1
4
Peter Sasaki (Sato)
2
1
3
Chuck Saito (Sato)
Mr. Hideo Harry Mikawa or
1
2
3
Joe Wakayama (Yamada)
anybody
knowing of his where2
2
0
Dave Uchikata (Alain)
a
J°5?
r> and Mrs- Worth
1
1
2
Roy Kobayashi (Main)
°^
St" Vernon, B.C.
1
2
1
Ted Kikino (Yamada)
would like to get in touch with
1
2
1
Future games: Sunday, October 29.
Mikawa worked on
the Worth’s farm in Trinity
?romoL Aut0 Body/vs Mickey Sato
6.00 1 .M. Alam Auto Body vs Yamada Studio
Xu. y near Lumby,. B.C. in
1944.

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Page 3

X. 196<

:a turd ay. October 28. 1961

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Page 4

PAGE 4

Page 5

Saturday. October 28. 1961

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Page 7

Saturday, October 28. 1961 -

NE W

Fraser River Fishermen
Earn Poor Income In 1961
STEVESTON. B.C. — Despite ing- had been set aside in October
reports of good fishing and in­ however, heavy fog on that dav
creased production in the amount" Ptyy^ted fishing. Another dav
of canned salmon this year from ol iisiung was alloted later in the
various B.C. fishing districts, the montn but, 40 mph gale wind
fact remains that the Fraser prevented fishing again.
t
Actuallv
Rivers fishing district had one of the two days in October amounted
its poorest seasons. Due to nu­ to about 14 or 15 hours of gillmerous bans since mid-August netting.
the average gillnetter in this area
. Two days have been set aside
recorded one of the lowest income in Novembe
but after that no
years in history.
definite days have as yet been
In September only 3 days of designated.
fishing were allowed and this was
All in all. those who stuck to
restricted to 12 daylight hours.
the
Fraser River district for their
On top of this mesh sizes under
livelihood recorded
9 inches were also banned.
very poor
At first only one day of fish- income.

Domestic Help Wanted

Marriages

SUG IMOTO-IKUTA

EXPERIENCED COOK-GENERAL to live

Raymond, Alta.
Miss Noriko Ikuta, second
daughter of Rev. and Mrs. S.
Ikuta of Steveston. B.C. and
Flight Lieutenant, RCAF, Mamo­
ru Sugimoto, son of Mr. and Mrs.
K. Sugimoto of Raymond. Alta,,
were married on October 21, 1961
at die Raymond Buddhist Churcn
by the Rev. Y. Kuwamura. Re­
ception
followed at
the
El
Rancho. The couple will spend
two months in Florida before reo Canada.

ernon, B.C.
Cyd Fusaye Sakakibara, daugh­
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Kivosuke of
Vernon, B.C. and Mr. Mickey Mit­
suo Yasunaga, son of Mr. and
Kakuji Yasunaga, of Mer­
itt.
exchanged vows on
October
1961 at the Vernon
United Church with the Rev. Dob­
son officiating. Following' a re­
ception at the Vernon Japanese
Hail the newlyweds honeymooned
to San Francisco. The happy
couple are now residing in Mer­
ritt, B.C.

Yamada Studio Photo
VANCOUVER. — “Our good is^ Passengers feel a lot better!”
B.C. people would hang me on
SEKI-FUJITA
the industrial progress of Ja­
the first gooseberry bush if they pan impressed the Highways Mi­
Toronto, Ont.
liad to travel on a highway like nister, particularly in the field
Miss
Florence
F.
Fujita,
daugh­
this,” wrote Highways Minister of electronics.
ter
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Gengo
Fuji­
P. A. Gaglardi this week from
He describes a visit to the Sony ta of Toronto and Mr. Takavuki
Tokyo.
works, now selling transistor ra­
The road he describes climbs dios, television sets and tape re- Seki, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hiteuji
8,600 feet to the famous Nikko c5r^e^ to 106 foreign countries, Seki of Chatham, Ont., were mar­
*
ked on September 23, 1961 at the
*
Park and shrine outside Tokyo.
with Canada as the firm’s fourth Centennial United Church in Tor­
“Our bus had to negotiate 30 largest importer.
SEKINE-WATANABE
onto.
switchbacks and everyone hairVisiting the modern factory—
Hamilton, Ont.
raising indeed,” said Mr. Gaglar­ one of a number in Japan—covMiss
Yetsuko
Watanabe,
di. “The corners are so sharp and ™p several acres, he found it
' IRIZAWA-UYEYAMA
daughter
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Tada­
the inclines so great that they difficult to realize that seven
Toronto. Out. masa Watanabe of Hamilton and
have sentinels at each curve to years ago Sony was a small, de­
Miss Edith Yoko Uyeyama, Ted Isamu bekine, son of Mr. am
warn you.
crepit rundown plant.
daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Soichi Mrs. Giichiro Sekine also of this
“There were so many near
At the factory he saw new de­ Uyeyama of Steveston. B.C. be­ city were wed in the Christ
misses with thick traffic that our velopments in small portable teleChurch Cathedral on October 14,
crowd was in a constant uproar. vision sets, and video tape re­ came the bride of Mr. Arthur Ma­
saaki Irizawa, son of Mr. and 1961. The Rev. K, Imai officiat­
The drivers negotiate on either corders on which a complete TV Mrs. Sawaichi Irizawa of Toron­ ed. Reception followed at the Hill­
side of a bad curve whichever is show can be taped for picture and to, on October 7, 1961 at the Me­ crest Restaurant.
the easier—so no pattern is in sound and played back imme­
tropolitan United Church.
The
evidence, just survival.
diately.
b T. McCreedy officiated.
CHANGE OF ADDRESS
“We asked our guide if they
“This is the Japan that is
Following the reception at the
had many accidents and he non­ booming today. The city is dirty Lord Simcoe _ Hotel the couple
TORONTO.—Mr. and Mrs. Bill
chalantly answered /Yes one just like any large city but the peo­ honeymooned in the Laurentians. Shigeo Nakagawa would like to
the other day with quite a few ple are clean and verv prosper­ Mr. and Mrs. A. Irizawa are now announce the change in their ad­
seriously injured, but no one has ous looking,” he comments.
residing at 65 Gamble Ave. Apt. dress to 432 Lumsden Ave., phone
died from their injuries as yet.”
Tuesday Mr. Gaglardi headed 306 Toronto 6.
i 699-4643.
“That sure made our squeam- for Hong Kong.

BOWLING
FLAT ROOFS
EAVESTROUGHING

Nisei Mixed Major Bowling League.
Sunday, Oct. 15. Men: Tuck Kataoka 760.
Ladies: Anne Ninaka 623; Chic Yanagi­
sawa 608.

TORONTO

Sunday Parkdale Mixed League, Oct. 22.
Men: Geo. Masuda 554; Jinx Miike 524Jpe Oda SiS; Ken Miyasaki 508; Sandy
Kobayashi 502.
Rose ^yama 493; Kim Onizuka
^88; Mitzi Miyagaki 479; Yosh Oda 456,Shirley Miyasaki 453; Amy Shiga 442Mita Miyasaki 432.
Rose Akiyama

SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK

421-3374 NISEI OWNED

TOSH NISHIJIMA

COVERING ONTARIO
Night Calls: PL. 9-5095 HI. 7-1100

Fri. Nisei Mixed 10 Pin Oct. 20. Men:
Monk Tanaka 553 (212); Geo. Barnes
551 (200); Geo. Nakamura 549; Jim Mori­
ta 533 (215); Mas Kuroda 529 (212); Ken
Doi 5z9; Mickey Cinicola 528 (232); Joe
^.°‘ 527; J°e Yamada 524; Mossy Mitsui

SCORES
Ladies: Amy Toki 488; Mary Ebata 473;
Kim Onizuka 461; Betty Potts 457; Toy
Hashisume 453; Sally Hatanaka 449Marie Kobayashi 445; Toky Yonemitsu
431; Aileen Tahara 420.
*


Nisei Mixed Major League, Oct. 22. Men:
Min Sasaki 798; Hideo Nakagawa 703;
Sanso Sasaki 701.
Ladies: Kim Kono.
Sunday Nisei Mixed Classic Oct. 22,
Men: Phil Candeloro 592 (211, 212); Kaide Shimizu 557; Stan Couligan 545 (210)Ed Utsunomiya 530 (221); Terry Doi 525
(z03); Tad Wakabayashi 522; Tosh Onizuka 517;^ Harry Hayashi 510 .(200); Jim
Morita 506; Tosh Iwai 505; Harry Kadohama.
Ladies: Pam Graham 529 (201); Alice
Nagami 477; Betty Potts 464; Mary Ebata
461.

Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends

Catering te Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM. 2-0029

For Reservations

j

NEW FALL

u
s
T-f
u

ALBERT'S SHOE STORE

Nisei Students Club

1328 Queen St West
Phone LE. 1-1931 Toronto

C,O.D. orders from coast to coast

THREE ROOMS with, parking privileges.
Woodbine and Danforth. Phono after
o:30, OX. 9-9106. (Toronto)

Apartment For Rent
TWO BEDROOM heated Apartment at
60 Huron St. unfurnished, $85. monthly.
Phone EM. 6-5316 (Toronto).

Car For Sale
58 PONTIAC LAURENTIAN. two doer,
radio, good tires and excellent mech^niccl condition. $/75. ask for. Lloyd
Hirabayashi OX. 1-6141 (Toronto).

CALENDAR
OCTOBER:
29—Toronto.
Issei-bu 15th anniversary
concert at Ukrainian Hall, entertain­
ment, supper and binao, 2:00 p.m. to
7:00 p.m.
NOVEMBER:
4—Toronto. Nisei Student Club’s annual
Autumn. Nocturne'* at War Amputation Hall 8:30 to 12:00. Dance to Bob
Smith's Dance Band.
4—Winnipeg. JCCA Keirokai, Manitoba
Buddhist Church Hall, 5:30 P.M.
10—Montreal. Campus Club Scholarship I
Dance, McGill Union, 9:00 P.M.
'
11 —Montreal. JCCA Keirokai, Cardinal
Newman High School, 4835 Christophe.
Colomb.

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii)
PATRONIZE
OUR ADVERTISERS
'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiinii

BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC
22S QUEEN ST. WEST. TORONTO
EM. 8-4847 — OX. 1-3388 (Res.)

MINORU GEO. NAGAHARA

—ALBION—
Electric Motor Service
Repairs and rewinding to all makes
of Electric Motors

Office Hours Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO



EM. 6-3323

Res: RO. 7-3427

5

Presents

JON ONODERA

aotamn

F-f

n
»
a
a
n

CARLTON-PARLIAMENT^^
phone WA. 2-3696 (Toronto) ‘

o ever5

%
? Men's Scott McHales Four Up

PARKDALE HOUSEKEEPING, nicely furnishea, Jorge, deem single room, very
few restrictions, in adult home," Dufferin-King area. Cail LE. 5-584’ afte
5 P.M. (Toronto).

BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1961
Reformation Sunday
11:30 A.M.—English Language Service
What it means to be a Protestant”
The Reverend Minoru Stephen Takada B.A., B.D.
A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL
701 Dovercourt Rd., Toronto

SHOE SIZES

Rooms to Let

Lucien C. Kurata

TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH

126 Elisabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto

SMALL

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1961
10:30 A.M.—Religious School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Service
BCA's BUDDHIST GUIDE
Rev. Newton Ishiura
2:09 P.M.—Japanese Language Service
EVERYONE CORDIALLY INVITED

a
!

EM. 2-4322

PERSON Hr
work onlv, Hyo in, cleaning
t. Phone RU 2-6187 (Toronto)
PERSON^
RELIABLE
experienced
in
household duties, tour boys
zged, live in. HI. 7-8634* ('

164 Christie St., Toronto
Tel. 532-0054

TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH •>• ■«»« «.

ETWOMGCKOW
CHOP SUET HOUSE

'9-570'3 (Toro:

CAPABLE
downstair

ONE FURNISHED room, corner of Dun­
das and Runneymede Rd. Phone RO.
i-4855 (Toronto)

B.C. HIGHWAY MINISTER, GAGLARDI
TERRIFIED BY JAPANESE MOUNTAIN ROADS

MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.

CLASSIFIED

Personal Notes Across Canada

NOCTURNE
Nov. 4, 1961

HU. 9-4654—HU. 1-8805
- (Business)

War Amputation Hall f
Dancing From 8:30 to 12:00
BOB SMITHS DANCE BAND

2

(Residence)

540 Eglinton Ave. W
Toronto

Page 8

PAGE 8

Saturday, October 28, insi

The Story-teller Of Kyoto

Show Biz

THE HEW CANADIAN
Autnorized - as second

By MUNEHARU KITAGAKI
O:
C
- u 3 DrC’
an °'d man of 7i died peace­
By TAEKO
Weir or-Weird?? .. .
fully in Kyoto, me ancient capital of Japan. With
.
“Blood, Sweat and Stanley Poole,” the comedy LSS, bS\r'k
ms death, a familiar figure disappeared from the
in which Tokyo songstress Sumi Tatsuno has a Editor; KEN MOPi
(continued from page one)
Stc 10a
tEys streets. For some 50 years, passerbys had
role, opened on Broadway at the Morosco Theatre Section Editor “fe
Deen accustomed to seeing Jodo Kumami ridin® “the happy day” when Japan to two approvals and five disapprovals from th~
Manager.
ebising
around in his tricycle wheelchair, pulled bv two would own Vancouver.
sev^ ^ew York newspaper theatre critics.
As
a
man
on
pretty
intimate
dogs, a conspicuous sight with his long hair and
subscription
The Journal-American, which gave the play a
musmehe which made him look somewhat like a terras with several Japanese fa­ good review, called it “simple, amusement.” Amono54.00 per 5 deaths
S7.00 per ye^
milies in those pre-war years, I the dissenters the Post termed the comedy- “stm
Cninese physician or a fortune-teller.
..X0^0 Kumami was a story-teller and a friend of never saw- one who was ever in­ uiously common-place.”
c. ildren. He was born in 1882, son of a poor family toxicated in a public Mace, but ,,
magazine, in its review of the play stated
EMpire S-5005
in OsaKa, and after his parents’ death was brought eyen giving credence to these “in- tnat “the laughs are strictly AWOL.”
cidents

it
is
hard
to see how
up by his brother m Ako, a town famous in JapaJn its pre-Broadway tryout, “Blood, Sweat and
they justifly such a sweepin.
Stanley .Poole - fared a little better with the critics.
Eurns on his legs crippled him
“k ^ Ep ^hen he accidentally upset a lighted generalization.
in .New.Haven, where the play opened the two
true that a few of th.
on lamp, being unable to walk, however, seems to
critics
received the comedy favorably; and in Phi­
older people, embittered by the
have spurred his imagination.
ladelphia
the play received one favorable notice,
Barrister & So'
%1
lops’ years of discrimination in
^^ ^it3^ ambitions was to become an artist. He
cm^ moderate approval and one pan.
this country and with sentimental
vent to Kyoto to study under a master and, while ties to their homeland, may have
Sweat and Stanley Poole” deals with i ' Cameron, Weldon
he earned a meagre living by drawing designs fo1’ had a divided loyalty in their
,in the peace-time army and stars Darren Mckimonos, he began to make up fairy tales to enter- hearts, but the rank and file of Gavin of TV’s “Riverboat” fame and Peter Fonda.
Brewin 5 MoCalluir. j
Sumi Tatsuno, who is listed in the play as Sumi
-ain his neighbors’ children. As thev told their thp Jopanese population was as
A73 J*6 J01e of Mrs. Rooney a Japanese
372 Bay Si.

Toronto •
7? i 5 f
^.stories, more and more children critical of the militarists as any
flocked to him. Finally, his small room would not other Canadian.
war bride and—wife of an Army PFC.
EM. 3-4391
|
*
*
*
I? l
? had. to hire a large public meetng had. A.jout this.time, he organized the Kyoto
011 “The Ugly American” began on Aum
The really regrettable thing■ a
yany Tale Club which held regular meetings for about Weir’s piece is that it re­ 9 "t? Se shooting of exteriors in Thailand. °'
?°5s and girls and published a monthly magazine lives all of those myths that
Mylon Brando’ Eiji Okada, who
Paul K. Asada, D.C., ND.*;
m which his stones appeared. But he did not con- were born in the heat of the war A 2
fT his role ^ “Hiroshima, Mon
|lne JiS act’vltles x”°r children to inventing stories
Amour
Pat
Hingle,
Arthur
Hill
and
Joeehm
Bran
­
• ’Doctor of Chiropractic
i
for them: he also arranged baseball teams and years and which caused us to do in the leading roles.
treat our Japanese citizens dis728A ST. CLAIR AVE. WESTS
exc^sAuns ana or^an’zed summer camps.
. George Shibata also has a role in this film.
gracefully.
They had paid en- •

Gmldren loved him, and called him “Sensei” ough, God knows, for that, with­
(^ Block West of Christie)
;
*
*
(master). They used to push his wheelchair for out starting all over again.
Telephone LE. 6-8220
Drum Song” was not one of
him and in exchange he gave them drawings illusRodgers and Hammersteins’s smash hits, it was a
The facts are simple enough.
If No Answer Call
tiaung scenes from his stories.
r There never was a Japanese popular item for summer stock this year.
BE. 3-3869
commemorate the tenth anniversary of the Canadian of the first, second or
At the Carousel Theatre in Farmingham, Mass.
Kyoto hairy Tale Club, Kumami organized* Kyoto’s third generation who was ever
TORONTO
anceTUS1Ca S6t & recOrd gross for seweir performiirst story competition for schoolchildren in the accused of any treasonable acts.
Town Hah in 1920. More than 10 schools took part
The evacuation from the coast­ n dn the cast of this production were Conrad Yain the competition, which was sponsored bv a lead- al area was carried out in a man­ ^a’-F?n Akimoto, both of 'whom played in the i
Jal>anese newspaper. On another occasion, the ner which ruined them financially.
riginal Broadway cast, Terri Funai, Masako Ishid -a fymkai3111S campaign for LieuBoys I’d gone to school with, guio and Na onia Kimura.
& Ur^e ~ Antarctic expedition, an event two of them among the first to ,, The film version of “Flower Drum Song,” which
v Inch opened up vistas of a new world in the child- volunteer for service, were treat­
Nancy Kwan and Miyoshi
1 Vn 3 imagination. When Britain’s Prince of Wales ed like criminals, their parents’
e
W1. Premiere at San Francisco’s Golden
Anywhere — Anytime
?
° A APrib 1922’ ^ Club ^ ^i a possessions sold at ridiculouslv Gate Theatre on Noy. 17.
S nade^ by master dollmakers of Kyoto low prices.
Air-Ship-Bus-Rail
In other communities, however the film will bp
to illustrate the famous fairy tale of the Tongue^n hJie Japanese communitv released around Christmas time.
Tours-Hotei-Sightseeing
Cut Sparrow.
6
Travellers Cheques
there never was at anv time a ,
In order to publicize “Flower Drum Song,”
. Obtainable
came .to money. Jodo Kumami, like suspicion of what Harold Weir there are. plans to have a three-day Flower Drum
Travel, Accident
S y.-?
W? imPractical. From time to time, calls the “cock-a-hoop” attitude.
ln San ^T^co’s Chinatown to tie in
financial difficulties forced him to close the Club. Quite the opposite.
and Baggage Insurance
with the premiere of the film.
They wanted desperately to
mAA®111?8 Wlea !le had been evicted for not pavfrom a11 across bhe country have
' °,his ^ent’ aa eight-year-old girl who had listened
that they were Canadians been united to the
premiere, and producer Ross
i
ri u founa lum in the shveet and brought and they put up with their eva­ Hunter and some of the stars of the film are also
BRINGING SOMEONE OVER?
a
'Parents’ wh« owned a hotel, ap- cuation, which was done as if “Pl™ted n° be ? a‘kendance on opening night of
» etJ ?eU’ daugbter’s generosity and allowed him they were cattle, with patience
r low er Drum Song.-’
I Passage arranged by Steamer or Al:
to stay for a year.
and humility, bewildered bv the
Call for Reservations or
a benefit with the pro­
Kumami wrote many tales, but lack of monev antagonism against them, but de­ ceeds to be split amongbethe
San Francisco Chinese
Information—EM. 8-9934
him flOm ^oUectin° them, in book form, termined to accept what we call,
of the San Francisco County
V
course of time the manuscripts were so ^Tongly at times, the demo­ Hospital and the Laguna Honda Home for the
and ^s.K Usually the stories began with cratic process.
Aged.
'
A
few
of
these
people,
some
of
*
*
had simple -dramatic
i’ ^ d r
CUef charactei’s "'ere ants, butter­ them my friends from those dis­
Japanese actress Keiko Kishi flew in to Tokyo
tant days, have been able to reflies, dragonflies, rats, mice, rabbits and goldfish
^L
he,r bTe “ T^F13 to begin work on the film
f,
reco^utlon of Jodo Kumami’s activities turm to these parts and are re­ XZan y0/
13 McCaul St. TORONTO
h "T1 be a
for children only came a few years ago, and bv establishing
themselves
and,
then his name meant little to the rising generation
them so well, I have to
K. Iwata Travel Service
tell Harold that his views are ir“ °Ct- 28
-mema to story-telling. In 1953, the old man who lesponsible and cruel to innocent
*
*
$
had given joy to hundreds of youngsters was pre- men and women and that there
wheel-chair bv X ib a time when apology is good raiklimingjOi “Marco Polo,” which stars Rory
an? Y °k° Tam, has been in progress for
1
L of Ivvoto- but even this brought him no for the soul as well as the readerseveral weeks new.
/m£ou?iVhi^
k int° a street caD and was ship.
movie,. which will be in Cinemascope and
if °
- mjuied. He was not at home in the world
(Editors note)
So you see Eastmancolor, is being filmed in Italy by an Italian
woF?d7n m;ichmes’ any more dlan be was in the I
company.
- j
?'°1‘d 9f modern entertainment. When he -ot well leaders. Harold Weir has been on
&r geMral re,eaSe I
af|er bis accident he again went back to usino- his nis anti-Japauese campaign for in fSTFisS' bf>
some years now, and it seems
old, trustworthy dog-powered tricvcie-chair °
*
*
*
a n^J
one of ’his friends asked thin, even his. office “buddies”
Nisei Relays Q«een and
chink that he is some-kind-of-a- NisM Se to vis? h
tO Tld some ^boolchild- irresponsible-nut. '
VXeek attendant; bas the role of Francisca
1 to nsu nun. The request was granted
n
v
Perhaps Louie St. Laurent SAS T m0V16 -^'^ Side St°UV” which was a
group 01 boys and Eirl5 brought oSal’i
should read Mr. Scott’s column boughtadMay mUS1Cal bef°re the movie rigbts., were
memo to console the forgotten storyteller with a I too, eh ?
i
“Zi V?s”ly a v1'™' visit wkSM
u,!1?6.1110^^13 in song and daace the lives I
edited to tears, and remarked that he was
I
and loies of New Vork’s Puerto Rican populace I ^OOQ K6G^»i^^
BIGGER
HALIBUT
aPPF that now he was ready to die.
Jo Anne, by the way, had a walk-on rohTin TV’s I
«
The female halibut mav wei°n
h\Ky°^ there are stdl »l'anv grown-un neonU
Laramie

several
weeks
ago.
e
i
v
XOT
1118
ns^ childhood memory rf ZZita
as much as 500 pounds, compared
*
*
and Mildren e\V^
young people to about o0 pounds for the male. '
k1 s^anette Tanaka has the role of Fleur,

F. A. BREWIN, Q.C.!

Travel Arrangements

T. KAMEOKA

■nd?°bln ^bimatsu plays the part of Marianne
nT m°^e ‘T^l at 4 O’Clock,” which is
aSP° ab many of the theatres now.
filmed on the island of Maui in

SAY IT WITH

SHARON'S FLORIST

sial!.
lwo magazines i^vn
,
bring him recognition
b«en trying
to
and for vminAh'r^.^ o J ta.es never really die:
still ningie ’^tb^
a™und there is
(UNESCO)
*
" Once upon a time. . . ."

CITY-WIDE DELIVERY

Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
942 PAPE AVE., TORONTO
®®®®»®S38Z2KWS!»s»

JUDO educational centre

T^vo other members of the cast who are famiFilipino-Caucasian beautv
B baya Luna and Chmese-American Warren Hsieh.
. iaS^ Luna, who has played almost everv tvpa
of exotic role except a Filipino, plays the part o?
Camille, a Polynesian girl.
u
Warren Hsieh has the role of “Napoleon.”

CITY DRIVING SCHOOL I

BASIC and ADVANCED INSTRUCTIONS

GLEN N. Kauav/1 sodoswanjudo
KODOKWAN 4TH DAN
131 C°XWELL AVE.. TOR. S
~

------------ —

———HO. 3-0736

Whole Family

a News

- ’Facts
• Family Features

Th* Christian Science Monitor
On* Norway St., Boston 15, Mess.
S*nd your newspaper for the ^~*
Checked. Enclosed find my check or
money order. 1 year $20 □
_
* months $10 □
3 months $2 □

KAZUO G. OIYE
BARRISTER — SOLICITOR

ir^AL V,J1“ ^^ OBLIGATION
"-use" Classroom Instruction

572 BLOOR ST. W.
LE. 2-355S

Noma

notary
Room 103
j
WA. 1-5605
OX. 8-22S0 (Res.) I
2 College Sb, Toronto
j

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Address

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Zob*

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