Page 1
Point
Blank
K
>n
?e
E
By Howard Ikebuchi
THE NEW CANADIAN
_____------------ Anjndependent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
There isn’t much that can be
^id" about Prime Minister John Vol. XXVII—No. 11
| Dkfenbaker, that is, not much
SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 9, 1963
Toronto. Ont.
E eise that he has not already7 said
E himself.
typing Aid Sought
E This man, who gives one the
K uncanny7 impression that he is
some sort of a Guardian of' the
Right, has told the Canadian pubf : lie over and over that he is proud
to be a freedom loving Canadian.
K It almost seems plausible that
E this pride has much to do with
his Government’s policies, some
of which have already been legisTORONTO.—Preparation for _ The General Meeting’ will con
I iated into law or otherwise exthe Toronto JCCA’s membership sist of a summary7 of the year’s
■ pressed through the many7 agendi ive scheduled to take place dur activities, the treasurer’s report
cies of government bureaucracy
ing the coming spring and early and the Isseibu-division’s report
E It could then be said that Mr.
summer
are now being carried as well as the election of officers
E Diefenbaker’s pride in this Canaout
by
the
"Ways and Means Com
E dian heritage is responsible for
mittee.
that which prompted his Govern Plans are underway to have
Members of this committee and
ment to legislate 'a Canadian Bill
a
well-known member'of the Jaother hard working executive panese
of Rights; for that which moved
community as a guest
members have set aside “work
E him to vigorously7 admonish the
r.
Also on the agenda will
nights” at the JCCA headquar
Aparthied policy7 of the present
be
the
:
showing'
of two recent
ters each Monday7 evening’. For films, <
South African Government; for
one of which is entitled.
the
past
several
weeks
they
7
have
that which pushed his Govern been making .a list of Japanese * Scenes of Modern Japan
ment to revise the Immigration
cl
Canadians in the Toronto area freshments will be served
Act. Further, his pride may have
from the voter’s lists. They7 still conclusion of the meeting.
g been the influencing force for
The pi’esent executive ex
have one constituency7 to work on.
g Canada’s open door policy7 to seed
hopes that members of the
The February7 work nights have
| veral hundred tubercular refu
as
Japanese
Canadian communitv
been set for Monday7, Feb. 11, 18,
te gees and their families, and to
ob Toronto will take advantage
and
25th,
beginning
at
7:30
p.m
’
H the one hundred refugee families
opportunity to meet their
at 415 _ Spadina Ave. The com
from Hong Kong. It was also the
JCCA executives and to partici
mittee
is
looking
’
for
typistsrtvho
| dictate of his Government which
can spare the time to .assist them pate in the election of their of
g put a stop to RCMP investigain this tedious, but worthy7 pro ficers. Everyone is cordially7 in
| tions of Chinese residents in conject. Any7 young ladies willing* to vited to attend.
.j nection with the much publicized
assist the JCCA are more than
4 illegal entry7 of 2,000 and more
welcome.
Chinese.
The monthly7 executive meeting
Photo by Jack Hemmy
| k 9uifk glance at these items
of
the Toronto chapter, held on
a will indicate some humanitarian
POINTERS
FROM
A
PRO
Yb.
6th, heard reports on the
I purpose behind each government
various
activities past and fulinger with the- Stanley Cup Champion
| move. Minority ethnic groups, m
.uie,
and
also details of the com
r
,
oiol
p°
Maple
Leafs,
Eddie
Shack,
(left
1
)
gives
pointers
to
Japanese
। (always lobbyring for their own
ing
General
meeting—at the Tor
TOKYO.—Red snow from Red
। particular interests,) may7 mis- Canadian All-stars captain Al Masukawa, prior to the Charitv game
China
fell in western Japan re
onto
Buddhist
Church
on
Feb.
16
। rakenly identify these items as between the Nisei stars and the Canadian Italian Hockey League .at 8:00 p.m.—and the Inaugural cently.
The Japanese Canadian All-stars won 5-3. (details on
I evidence of a tolerant, under- Alt-stars.
page v).
Banquet to be held at Scott’s
Colored snow, red, yellow and
i standing government. A detailed
Restaurant.
brown
was reported in four dif
: analysis, however, of each of the
ferent
Japanese provinces in the
above items will reveal a politic
country’s blizzard zone.
al motive specially designed to
Fishing Boat Taken
Officials of the government’s
give Mr. Diefenbaker a place tn
meterological
agency said there
By
Red
Patrol
Boat
Me Public mind as a Protector
was
nothing
to
alarmed about.
oi Human Rights, a Canadian, in
TOKYO.—A_ Japanese fishing Ibcy explained be
that
strong winds
TOKYO.
—
The
world
’
s
larges
cigarette butts into them.’’
bo'at with a 15-man crew appar fiom Siberia have picked*
tact, towards whom all can look ।
m i
up yel
up to with some'pride
metropolis—Tokyo—is prime for
Asahi claimed that the smell ently has been seized by a Rus- lowish Chinese soil and brought
Recent
u
another earthquake disaster, the
S^°U patrol ship in the Northwest
failed to bring Mr DiSaS Asahi daily newspaper gloomily of gas has been noticeable in the Pacific for alleged violation of it to Japan with the storm.
Some of the Chinese earth
stricken area for the last year. soviet territorial waters, the
image to the platform
mixes
with the snow, resultin'7
“This fire should be taken as Maritime Safety Board reported.
pole of virtue. Instead, they have m i said that lower portions of
1!!
the
polychromatic snowfall.
•2
shown that Mr. Diefenbaker is iokyo are gradually sinking, and an example of what could hap The last message from the 84The
agency spokesman said
not at all reluctant to fabricate bhat as' they7 do, gas mains and pen in a big- earthquake and fire. ton No. 11 Chosei Maru, at about there are several recorded cases
facts” and present them as the water pipes are broken in the The slow, steady7 sinking of the noon Saturday, said a. Russian of colored snowfalls in ancient
ground cracks the steel pipes. If patrol boat had ordered her to
utterable truth to the public.
I process.
Japanese records, but that the
there
were a violent earthquake stop, the board said.
Asahi warned that an earth
« kF b,een caught at this sort
astbig one took place in 1811.
'X
1 ohtical expediency now for quake, by7 fracturing both water wouldn’t every pipe be broken?”
the paper asked.
3 the second time in recent months. | an{J ^as Lnes, could create a di“Flames would swoop into
first time was over the sastrous fire and leave the city7
‘Truth” about Canada’s eco- v'Mth. no water to fight it.
many7 more places, and fires'
nomy: the
MOSCOW. — Russia warned
“Tru'd”
secon^ over the
The paper’s fears were typical would break out everywhere.
It said that such Japanese inJapan this week against allow
holier1 a°°M Canada’s Defence pf the cassanora cries heard often
“Underground
water mains ing foreign troops to be station ■ volvement would face the Soviet
mt -'
in a
city7 that has undergone
te^a^cy to manufacture I near-total destruction twice in would crack in a big earthquake ed on its soil or permiting a Union with the need to take ac
and water supplies would be cut foreign atomic fleet to enter its count of military preparations
5 about, and in, areas of modern times.
econnnC°nSeqriCes as Canadian
Tokyo was almost wiped out in off. Most of Tokyo’s rivers and ports.
being conducted in the imme
defence is a trick a disastrous earthquake and fire mo.ats have been filled in leaving
It said U.S. submarines enter- diate proximity of its frontiers
1C1 bdie Prime Minister bn 1923. Allied bombing’ planes
no reservoirs. The traffic con- ing Japanese ports would pave m implementing its defensive
onp
This makes
the job again in 1945.
gestion would prevent fire en- the way into Japan for U.S. nu- measures in the Far East.
n°t
Commenting on a fire blamed
clear weapons.
areas a= wpii n US brick in other on a broken gas pipe which broke gines from moving about.
Things are leading up to the
The warning was contained in transformation of parts of Japan
about his
S^Y, for instance, out in Tokyo’s low lying Koto
“With all these dangerous facheritage ?
3 e 111 bis Canadian | district a few days ago, Asahi tors, how could the city authori a Soviet note handed to Japa
said:
nese Foreign Minister Masayo into U.S. armed forces strong
ses cope with a major emer shi Ohira by Ambassador Vladi points, the note said.
doehowever, that he
“Thi.
accident exposes the
i Fet an°ther chance to
gency?” Asahi inquired.
mir Vinogradov.
Foreign Minister Ohira, reject
. his trick again.
dangerous condition of this ailing
the note, said the United
ing giant of a city. In truth, we
States would send only7 Nautilusare sitting on top of a volcano.”
^eS» »f Person
that agAPe submarines for the schedu
The Koto explosion killed six
my tempennent is one people and burned down, houses
that
INA, Japan.—To travel allow Kitahara, who officially' anoun- led visit of the 7th Fleet to Ja
1 am « ® ?f
nationality,
persons , \ Taceuious with such with a total of 1,400 square vards ances, food allowances and other ces them to be in love. Then, for pan. These vessels did not carry
amenities contrived to make life the duration of their courtship nuclear weapons.
of floor space.
U^W goes hkd thisT1^^
easier, something new has been each receives a “love .allowance”
“The whole area of Koto ward added: the love allowance.
of 500 yen ($1.38) a month.
Tamdia?1' nationality ?”
apanese Killed In
is suffering from a severe sink- j To the 130 members of
So far one couple has been
Musical
Instrument
united
in
wedlock
following
this
said.
’
Kyomeisha
know that. . ”
ing of the ground,” Asahi
’ j Co. in Ina, Japan, it holds pro- procedure and four couples are Ankara Air Collision
“
The
sinking
is
uneven,
and
LONDON. — Middle East Airyou ask?”
mise of being the most reward engaged. “We’ve had no break
lines
released here the names of
’ • • Maywhat I mean some places gas mains are crack ing allowance of all.
ups as yet, but even if an en
vhe
passengers
aboard the Vised by the subsidence. The leakThe system, as developed by7 gaged couple decide to call it
anTiner
which
collided with
the
com
Muniyuki
Kitahara,
off, there’s no penalty,” said Ki
ing ;
spreads through sewer
| a Turkisn military plane over
president, tahara.
«lVheS0,,aIilF
31-y'ear-old
your pipes and seeps into houses pany’s
works like this:
“You see,” he explained, “the !! Ankara.
'-■‘-aian.”
through the floor boards. SomeA male and female worker are whole idea is to promote produc- | Among 1the 11 passengers, all
times the sewers even catch fire j attracted to each other and want tive efficiency and harmony— 1 of whom were killed x
(Continued on page 2)
was a Ja I panese, Isamu Ninomiya.
because people throw lighted • to go steady. They so inform and it certainly does.”
JCCA Committee Start Plans
For Membership Campaign
On Western Japan
Paper Warns of Possible
Earthquake Disaster in Tokyo
Beds Warn Japan About 0,8. Fleets In Port
Japanese Firm Gives Employees Love Allowances
Blank
K
>n
?e
E
By Howard Ikebuchi
THE NEW CANADIAN
_____------------ Anjndependent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
There isn’t much that can be
^id" about Prime Minister John Vol. XXVII—No. 11
| Dkfenbaker, that is, not much
SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 9, 1963
Toronto. Ont.
E eise that he has not already7 said
E himself.
typing Aid Sought
E This man, who gives one the
K uncanny7 impression that he is
some sort of a Guardian of' the
Right, has told the Canadian pubf : lie over and over that he is proud
to be a freedom loving Canadian.
K It almost seems plausible that
E this pride has much to do with
his Government’s policies, some
of which have already been legisTORONTO.—Preparation for _ The General Meeting’ will con
I iated into law or otherwise exthe Toronto JCCA’s membership sist of a summary7 of the year’s
■ pressed through the many7 agendi ive scheduled to take place dur activities, the treasurer’s report
cies of government bureaucracy
ing the coming spring and early and the Isseibu-division’s report
E It could then be said that Mr.
summer
are now being carried as well as the election of officers
E Diefenbaker’s pride in this Canaout
by
the
"Ways and Means Com
E dian heritage is responsible for
mittee.
that which prompted his Govern Plans are underway to have
Members of this committee and
ment to legislate 'a Canadian Bill
a
well-known member'of the Jaother hard working executive panese
of Rights; for that which moved
community as a guest
members have set aside “work
E him to vigorously7 admonish the
r.
Also on the agenda will
nights” at the JCCA headquar
Aparthied policy7 of the present
be
the
:
showing'
of two recent
ters each Monday7 evening’. For films, <
South African Government; for
one of which is entitled.
the
past
several
weeks
they
7
have
that which pushed his Govern been making .a list of Japanese * Scenes of Modern Japan
ment to revise the Immigration
cl
Canadians in the Toronto area freshments will be served
Act. Further, his pride may have
from the voter’s lists. They7 still conclusion of the meeting.
g been the influencing force for
The pi’esent executive ex
have one constituency7 to work on.
g Canada’s open door policy7 to seed
hopes that members of the
The February7 work nights have
| veral hundred tubercular refu
as
Japanese
Canadian communitv
been set for Monday7, Feb. 11, 18,
te gees and their families, and to
ob Toronto will take advantage
and
25th,
beginning
at
7:30
p.m
’
H the one hundred refugee families
opportunity to meet their
at 415 _ Spadina Ave. The com
from Hong Kong. It was also the
JCCA executives and to partici
mittee
is
looking
’
for
typistsrtvho
| dictate of his Government which
can spare the time to .assist them pate in the election of their of
g put a stop to RCMP investigain this tedious, but worthy7 pro ficers. Everyone is cordially7 in
| tions of Chinese residents in conject. Any7 young ladies willing* to vited to attend.
.j nection with the much publicized
assist the JCCA are more than
4 illegal entry7 of 2,000 and more
welcome.
Chinese.
The monthly7 executive meeting
Photo by Jack Hemmy
| k 9uifk glance at these items
of
the Toronto chapter, held on
a will indicate some humanitarian
POINTERS
FROM
A
PRO
Yb.
6th, heard reports on the
I purpose behind each government
various
activities past and fulinger with the- Stanley Cup Champion
| move. Minority ethnic groups, m
.uie,
and
also details of the com
r
,
oiol
p°
Maple
Leafs,
Eddie
Shack,
(left
1
)
gives
pointers
to
Japanese
। (always lobbyring for their own
ing
General
meeting—at the Tor
TOKYO.—Red snow from Red
। particular interests,) may7 mis- Canadian All-stars captain Al Masukawa, prior to the Charitv game
China
fell in western Japan re
onto
Buddhist
Church
on
Feb.
16
। rakenly identify these items as between the Nisei stars and the Canadian Italian Hockey League .at 8:00 p.m.—and the Inaugural cently.
The Japanese Canadian All-stars won 5-3. (details on
I evidence of a tolerant, under- Alt-stars.
page v).
Banquet to be held at Scott’s
Colored snow, red, yellow and
i standing government. A detailed
Restaurant.
brown
was reported in four dif
: analysis, however, of each of the
ferent
Japanese provinces in the
above items will reveal a politic
country’s blizzard zone.
al motive specially designed to
Fishing Boat Taken
Officials of the government’s
give Mr. Diefenbaker a place tn
meterological
agency said there
By
Red
Patrol
Boat
Me Public mind as a Protector
was
nothing
to
alarmed about.
oi Human Rights, a Canadian, in
TOKYO.—A_ Japanese fishing Ibcy explained be
that
strong winds
TOKYO.
—
The
world
’
s
larges
cigarette butts into them.’’
bo'at with a 15-man crew appar fiom Siberia have picked*
tact, towards whom all can look ।
m i
up yel
up to with some'pride
metropolis—Tokyo—is prime for
Asahi claimed that the smell ently has been seized by a Rus- lowish Chinese soil and brought
Recent
u
another earthquake disaster, the
S^°U patrol ship in the Northwest
failed to bring Mr DiSaS Asahi daily newspaper gloomily of gas has been noticeable in the Pacific for alleged violation of it to Japan with the storm.
Some of the Chinese earth
stricken area for the last year. soviet territorial waters, the
image to the platform
mixes
with the snow, resultin'7
“This fire should be taken as Maritime Safety Board reported.
pole of virtue. Instead, they have m i said that lower portions of
1!!
the
polychromatic snowfall.
•2
shown that Mr. Diefenbaker is iokyo are gradually sinking, and an example of what could hap The last message from the 84The
agency spokesman said
not at all reluctant to fabricate bhat as' they7 do, gas mains and pen in a big- earthquake and fire. ton No. 11 Chosei Maru, at about there are several recorded cases
facts” and present them as the water pipes are broken in the The slow, steady7 sinking of the noon Saturday, said a. Russian of colored snowfalls in ancient
ground cracks the steel pipes. If patrol boat had ordered her to
utterable truth to the public.
I process.
Japanese records, but that the
there
were a violent earthquake stop, the board said.
Asahi warned that an earth
« kF b,een caught at this sort
astbig one took place in 1811.
'X
1 ohtical expediency now for quake, by7 fracturing both water wouldn’t every pipe be broken?”
the paper asked.
3 the second time in recent months. | an{J ^as Lnes, could create a di“Flames would swoop into
first time was over the sastrous fire and leave the city7
‘Truth” about Canada’s eco- v'Mth. no water to fight it.
many7 more places, and fires'
nomy: the
MOSCOW. — Russia warned
“Tru'd”
secon^ over the
The paper’s fears were typical would break out everywhere.
It said that such Japanese inJapan this week against allow
holier1 a°°M Canada’s Defence pf the cassanora cries heard often
“Underground
water mains ing foreign troops to be station ■ volvement would face the Soviet
mt -'
in a
city7 that has undergone
te^a^cy to manufacture I near-total destruction twice in would crack in a big earthquake ed on its soil or permiting a Union with the need to take ac
and water supplies would be cut foreign atomic fleet to enter its count of military preparations
5 about, and in, areas of modern times.
econnnC°nSeqriCes as Canadian
Tokyo was almost wiped out in off. Most of Tokyo’s rivers and ports.
being conducted in the imme
defence is a trick a disastrous earthquake and fire mo.ats have been filled in leaving
It said U.S. submarines enter- diate proximity of its frontiers
1C1 bdie Prime Minister bn 1923. Allied bombing’ planes
no reservoirs. The traffic con- ing Japanese ports would pave m implementing its defensive
onp
This makes
the job again in 1945.
gestion would prevent fire en- the way into Japan for U.S. nu- measures in the Far East.
n°t
Commenting on a fire blamed
clear weapons.
areas a= wpii n US brick in other on a broken gas pipe which broke gines from moving about.
Things are leading up to the
The warning was contained in transformation of parts of Japan
about his
S^Y, for instance, out in Tokyo’s low lying Koto
“With all these dangerous facheritage ?
3 e 111 bis Canadian | district a few days ago, Asahi tors, how could the city authori a Soviet note handed to Japa
said:
nese Foreign Minister Masayo into U.S. armed forces strong
ses cope with a major emer shi Ohira by Ambassador Vladi points, the note said.
doehowever, that he
“Thi.
accident exposes the
i Fet an°ther chance to
gency?” Asahi inquired.
mir Vinogradov.
Foreign Minister Ohira, reject
. his trick again.
dangerous condition of this ailing
the note, said the United
ing giant of a city. In truth, we
States would send only7 Nautilusare sitting on top of a volcano.”
^eS» »f Person
that agAPe submarines for the schedu
The Koto explosion killed six
my tempennent is one people and burned down, houses
that
INA, Japan.—To travel allow Kitahara, who officially' anoun- led visit of the 7th Fleet to Ja
1 am « ® ?f
nationality,
persons , \ Taceuious with such with a total of 1,400 square vards ances, food allowances and other ces them to be in love. Then, for pan. These vessels did not carry
amenities contrived to make life the duration of their courtship nuclear weapons.
of floor space.
U^W goes hkd thisT1^^
easier, something new has been each receives a “love .allowance”
“The whole area of Koto ward added: the love allowance.
of 500 yen ($1.38) a month.
Tamdia?1' nationality ?”
apanese Killed In
is suffering from a severe sink- j To the 130 members of
So far one couple has been
Musical
Instrument
united
in
wedlock
following
this
said.
’
Kyomeisha
know that. . ”
ing of the ground,” Asahi
’ j Co. in Ina, Japan, it holds pro- procedure and four couples are Ankara Air Collision
“
The
sinking
is
uneven,
and
LONDON. — Middle East Airyou ask?”
mise of being the most reward engaged. “We’ve had no break
lines
released here the names of
’ • • Maywhat I mean some places gas mains are crack ing allowance of all.
ups as yet, but even if an en
vhe
passengers
aboard the Vised by the subsidence. The leakThe system, as developed by7 gaged couple decide to call it
anTiner
which
collided with
the
com
Muniyuki
Kitahara,
off, there’s no penalty,” said Ki
ing ;
spreads through sewer
| a Turkisn military plane over
president, tahara.
«lVheS0,,aIilF
31-y'ear-old
your pipes and seeps into houses pany’s
works like this:
“You see,” he explained, “the !! Ankara.
'-■‘-aian.”
through the floor boards. SomeA male and female worker are whole idea is to promote produc- | Among 1the 11 passengers, all
times the sewers even catch fire j attracted to each other and want tive efficiency and harmony— 1 of whom were killed x
(Continued on page 2)
was a Ja I panese, Isamu Ninomiya.
because people throw lighted • to go steady. They so inform and it certainly does.”
JCCA Committee Start Plans
For Membership Campaign
On Western Japan
Paper Warns of Possible
Earthquake Disaster in Tokyo
Beds Warn Japan About 0,8. Fleets In Port
Japanese Firm Gives Employees Love Allowances
Page 2
FA£E 2
teo ^Bf^&@gn^s I
Club Rec Soc. Dance At Nikko Gardens—Sunday
Japanese Train 107 Hours Late
Passengers
Receive
Fare
Refund
_______ w
TORONTO.—Club Rec Socra- i dma
I
*
tic will hold a social dance to- J
‘
| tv-proud railwaymen bowed deep hined^un al on
Trains
morrow. (Sunday) tevening
___ o be- { Movies, of the club’s recent ski —
in th^cr^^e^
embarrassed apology recently
recently ! welcome
welcome the
the train
train’ss 10.0
100 ‘chiibTah
chilblain- htA
TaS\^
n Uvo mh1^
late.
Japan
’
s
“
traSm^aS
tween 8 and 11:15 p.m. at NiL^
,
'~kko | outmg will also be'shown. Every- L
^K,expre®s from Niiga- ed
ed passengers
.passengers as
as they
they stamped
stamped
or saying, If Vom toin • 10S5
Gardens, Dundas St., east of Spa- j- one is
• welcome.
y
/- was 106 hours 20 minutes late off the train
minute
late, your on'S
oecause of snow-blocked tracks
A more concrete, if modest, tram.”
Qe ^Tong
this was believed to be a post form of apology was the refund
One example of thU
Jr. Y.B.A. Valentine Dance At Church Friday
war record.
The 400-mile trip due the passengers: the 1,500 ven for Punctuality wa^ tN^?S?
1ORONTO.—-Notice to all fun- I
I usually takes six hours.
(5) Add a door prize.
04-82).
" ' chuffed into Hiroshima at ?
lowers. Here's a treat you can I
(6) Dress with white shirt and
q
j
,
T
the Bomb
w
The hissing as the snow-caped
x,u mxvuu
all whip up with' no trouble at I
A.^
0^ are
Japan Na- shook the
, - le exPLsion
tie.
crept into Tokyo’s Uneo tional Railw
all.
------- zay of their custom- pulled b, L1 h’|ust„as ^e 1^ ■
Results: New friends, a mem I station was not steam—Mhe loco ary punctuality
that a passenger Schedule a
11 -PU ed out on
Recipe for Enjoyment
orable evening.
motive^
is
electric.
It
was
the
on
a
cross-country
express
gets
a
cloud
of
4ni
^^^Ees later in
1) Take
friendly crowd
Essentials to insure the best sharp intake of breath through a full refund if his train is iwe
M
Ar
smoke
and dust.
_ spiced with liveliness
results:
trie teeth—registering" enmar- < than two hours late.
Themigata
express
was ston.
(2) Add good music—both fast
--------__
--------------------------.,
ped
by
heavy,
clogginosnowr!?" I
Jr
^-B.A.
Cupid
’
s
Caper
Dance
and slow.
UI
S
A 1
uatc: Friday, Feb. 15
(<>) Mix mtn an atmosphere I
-3me: 8:00 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.
Av, that drifted nine feet deen I
of hearts and cupids.
over .the roadbed, that e’A
Plpce:
Toronto
Buddhis
Church
(4) .Add novelty dances and
°f SMW shoveled I
-admission.: members—50 cents:
prizes.
n o n-m embers—§ 1.00.
derailed a snowplough.
° I
TORONTO. — (Special to NO) 28 and April o.
Five hundreds passengers were I
I People interested in special
interested in ikebana pudedV^
braveL I
E^™p“ ^^s* Speaker At M6. Bdddhist Church j aspects of Japanese life and cul- "Women
—
.
.
PUHed
out
of
Niigata
in
the
midI
| uiiie will find tnere are advan can join the Ikebana"
April Interna
21. The
at 4:0J P-m. last I
tional
tour,
leaving
Apr!'
tages to visiting Japan this
- dhist Church marked the Fe„
Tour includes" 52 hours of in weanesaaj. It was due in To. I
ruary Shotsuki Hoyo Service on lightened Attitudes in Religious spring-, advise George Nishidera,
kyo at 10:08 p.m. that night, but I
.
^'r Lines’ representative struction at the Ikenobo, So^et- k ? a® SuOPPed in its tracks after
, 3?d by welcoming Rev K Self-Analysis.”
SU, Ohara and Saka schools »i;’»3?
of Eastern Cana-'
After the service, a welcome m loronto.
The tour 'is open to beginners
mHes.
Mr.
Nishidera.
points
out
there
on Buddhist Cnurches and a fare supper was attended by members
j
411
^
e
Borrowing five nio-to
is an especially large selection intermediate students, advanced that followed, m^a(sg
well visit to Montreal after a 5 j of the executive where
interestyear absence in Chicago, who big U.S. and Canada counter- oi Japan tours this spring for students and teachers.
the freezing train cars, got sick
Photographers
can
choosecharcoal
______ iuries
inose interested in more than
will be transferred to Seattle in talk ensued before " "good-byes
-rom
fumes in the nnearApril
eat
station
or
douM^
sight-seeing
and
entertainment.
die very near future.
were said.
Rev. St ^ficiatc-d at the j The Montreal Buddhist Church
T_
^V
1
!
.^A
nrA^Cootiei
’
4,
iPhoto
few
hotel
rooms
available.
. ‘"Of course JAL has manv
Ca
J?
are
^
’
b
y
qualified
exp!’v/s with the assistance' of j wishes to thank Rev. Tada for sightseeing tours, too,” he coin^oar out of five made thenHokkyoshi Yasui and in spite of I his sincere interest, his kind reeverY price range.” ReijS" ^ey are designed to in- way
Niigata and envi
e ^ke most scenic attractions rons Those towho
the extreme cold weather. "In,| turn farewell visit, and wish Wm HL.m
^^ sPecial-interest tours, the Ci4"
stuck it out n
Both a spring and fall tour are marxed, on emerging
Memorium” families, their friends ■ everv
r
is
for
garden
and
in Tokyo,
Wo
good health, good fortune flower
enthus
4
ofrered to golfers. The May and
and interested members who had
ower
enthusiasts.
".,
.
ss
^
ns
like
a
dream,
now that
iad and
and Agood success in his future
.
f
October
departures
include
congi egated, were much imureses- endeavours.
An aioand-the-Avoiid
aroundv
garden rounds at some of Japan’s finest it is all over.’’
study tour leaves March 24 un1 £er the leadership of Thomas H courses, a golf clinic, and instrum
by American and Japanese
i merett, assistant director of the Hon
I new York Botanical Garden. Two golf pros.
Selection of Spring Tours
Personal Notes Across Canada
Lucien
| orient garden tours leave March
Obituaries
Engagements
DRIVE SAFELY
AND LIVE!
Point Blank
CHIBA-TAHARA
(Continued from Page One)
VANCOUVER. — Mrs. Shizu
TORONTO.—Mr. and Mrs. NoBanno . of 412 West 19th Ave. curo Tahara recently announced
-n o, no,
Vancouver, passed away, January the engagement of their second come from,’ no, where does site
For Repairs On
16, 1963 at Mount St. Joseph’s daughter Aileen Fumiko to Roy
“Japan.’’
Hospital. Predeceased by her hus x oichi Chiba, son of Mrs. M. Chi- ,, “Ah. ha
.you’re Japanese,
than 4^ years, she ba and the late Mr. I Chiba
iband more
x
vnen : ”
leaves to mourn her passing, two Nikko Gardens. The weddino ’a
JAMES KAMINO |
"No.’-'
cldl^n^^
take pIace
THne L 196.3."
T.V. SERVICE
|
But you just said your mother
was
horn
Japan.
Then,
what
are
%
Funeral services were held at
EM. 4-9913
|
SUZUKI-FUJINO
the Vancouver Buddhist Church
“
Canadian.
”
v
on Jan. IS with Reverends Ka- _ MA-MILTON, Ont,—Mr
Aki
(TORONTO)
At this point they usual.lv go
wamura, Ikuta, Ikuta Jr., and b u.ii»o announced the engageOkano
officiating.
Cremation F^H? of hef second daughter3 Kav avmy snaking their heads thinkfollowed at Vancouver Crema- tc /ad Tadao Suzuki, son of Mr. Hig- perhaps why they asked me
^lestl°n" I suggest some of
tcrium on Jan. 19.
.and Airs. Sukesaburo Suzuki on
•January 27, 1963 at the Fujino ,°“ try ^]s, method. You can
*
*
*
Kashino & Weinberg
^esu assured that, that same per
residence.
KITAMURA
son will not ask such silly Ques
Chartered Accountants
TORONTO. — Mr. '
tions .again. As a matter of fact
Kitamura passed away on Feb
you try this method, and voL
CHANGE OF ADDRESS
221 y ictona St.
Suite 303 j
ruary 5, 1963 at Toronto East
can rest assured that that same
General Hospital.
Funeral ser^A?-1 Wlil not ask such sillv
Toronto, Ontario
Yges vull be held this evening I
TORONTO.__ Mr
que&uons. As a matter of fact
PHONE 363-7441
I
^ ^^^ SPeak to y<>U
। announce the change of the™*
*
*
address to 39 Jocada Road
i
bUGIYAMA
I loronto 15. Ont. Phone- 947
VANCOUVER.—David Yosho * 8°64’
' D
TORONTO BUDDKSTCHURCH »7Z^1
bugiyama of Vancouver passed
SUNDAY FEBRUARY 10, 1963
*
away on January 2S, 1963*.
Nirvana Day
I "00
Religious School
is survived by his wife. K
11 -00 a.M.—Morning Service
t.wo sons and two daughters.
lOKOMO. - Mr. and Mrs.
7-00
New{on Ishiura
Funeral services were held An
Mils Sumiya would like to an
Jan. 30th at the Holv Cro«
EVERYONE CORDlku?"^^^ ’
nounce the change in their ad
Mean Church with the Rev. N J
dress to 29 Oakdene Cres..
Southcott. assisted bv Rev ’ h’
™to 6‘ °nt Ph°ne: 4611
McSherry and Mr. John Shozawa officiating.
Interment took
okok o apanese united chhrcii
place the-following day at Fores1
^BRUARY 10, 1963
CHURCH
A.M., Mghsn Language Service
Lawn Cemetery.
^
S^nacry School
"THe yA°AvP e^P'L S.^
A HEARTY WELCOAE^J’ml'1 Stephen Takada,^JV, B.D.
Give Bfo@d
Births
S^TJ-r^.... ... ........ ~............
CALI YOUg RED CROSS
W A KA BAYA S HT
^ J
701 Dovercourt Rd., Toronto
FJ' :^-V i ■ .-.X < ,^h*l V?' . SY- • y.Nto"^^-.-<.K43vy-'!*'Aw.'
^’"^X ^^kabayashi (nee Nobuko Ebih
happy to a
nounce the birth
a dnuuh
Lori Hideko. on February
10.
1963
tai.
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
_ Office Hours Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO
EM. 6-3323
Hes: RO. 7-3427j
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
Chiropractor, Naturooath
Rheumatism, Discs, Sciatica
Lumbago, Arthritis, Migraine
Nerve Conditions
free consultation
728A St._.CIair Ave. West
(U block west of Christie)
Telephone: LE. 6-8220
if no answer call — 233-3369
TORONTO
SAY IT WITH
FLOWERS
SHARON'S FLORIST
. CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
942 PAPE AVE., TORONTO
Travel Arrangements
Anywhere — Anytime
Air—Ship—Bus—Rail
Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
and Baggage Insurance
„
BRINGING someone over?
Passage arranged by Steamer or At
Call for Reservations or
moritsugu
SERVICE and REPAIRS
MONTREAL
Henrv
I
Ruiko Mor itsu
ma) are happy to announce th
” son. Ken Te
< ib
tn, on Januarv 13.
Roym Victoria Hospital.
i 1
Phone: 759-15S3
Friday, Feb. 15, 1963
I
T•
.
uve Music
8 p.m. to 12:30
J
WCTORIA AUDITORIUM, 53 QUEEN 5^
54
S
Spot Dances
Information—EM. 8-9934
Ont.
Admission: 81.25
,
Everybody Welcome
T. KAMEOKA
113 McCauI St., TORONTO
K. Iwata Travel Service
•A
teo ^Bf^&@gn^s I
Club Rec Soc. Dance At Nikko Gardens—Sunday
Japanese Train 107 Hours Late
Passengers
Receive
Fare
Refund
_______ w
TORONTO.—Club Rec Socra- i dma
I
*
tic will hold a social dance to- J
‘
| tv-proud railwaymen bowed deep hined^un al on
Trains
morrow. (Sunday) tevening
___ o be- { Movies, of the club’s recent ski —
in th^cr^^e^
embarrassed apology recently
recently ! welcome
welcome the
the train
train’ss 10.0
100 ‘chiibTah
chilblain- htA
TaS\^
n Uvo mh1^
late.
Japan
’
s
“
traSm^aS
tween 8 and 11:15 p.m. at NiL^
,
'~kko | outmg will also be'shown. Every- L
^K,expre®s from Niiga- ed
ed passengers
.passengers as
as they
they stamped
stamped
or saying, If Vom toin • 10S5
Gardens, Dundas St., east of Spa- j- one is
• welcome.
y
/- was 106 hours 20 minutes late off the train
minute
late, your on'S
oecause of snow-blocked tracks
A more concrete, if modest, tram.”
Qe ^Tong
this was believed to be a post form of apology was the refund
One example of thU
Jr. Y.B.A. Valentine Dance At Church Friday
war record.
The 400-mile trip due the passengers: the 1,500 ven for Punctuality wa^ tN^?S?
1ORONTO.—-Notice to all fun- I
I usually takes six hours.
(5) Add a door prize.
04-82).
" ' chuffed into Hiroshima at ?
lowers. Here's a treat you can I
(6) Dress with white shirt and
q
j
,
T
the Bomb
w
The hissing as the snow-caped
x,u mxvuu
all whip up with' no trouble at I
A.^
0^ are
Japan Na- shook the
, - le exPLsion
tie.
crept into Tokyo’s Uneo tional Railw
all.
------- zay of their custom- pulled b, L1 h’|ust„as ^e 1^ ■
Results: New friends, a mem I station was not steam—Mhe loco ary punctuality
that a passenger Schedule a
11 -PU ed out on
Recipe for Enjoyment
orable evening.
motive^
is
electric.
It
was
the
on
a
cross-country
express
gets
a
cloud
of
4ni
^^^Ees later in
1) Take
friendly crowd
Essentials to insure the best sharp intake of breath through a full refund if his train is iwe
M
Ar
smoke
and dust.
_ spiced with liveliness
results:
trie teeth—registering" enmar- < than two hours late.
Themigata
express
was ston.
(2) Add good music—both fast
--------__
--------------------------.,
ped
by
heavy,
clogginosnowr!?" I
Jr
^-B.A.
Cupid
’
s
Caper
Dance
and slow.
UI
S
A 1
uatc: Friday, Feb. 15
(<>) Mix mtn an atmosphere I
-3me: 8:00 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.
Av, that drifted nine feet deen I
of hearts and cupids.
over .the roadbed, that e’A
Plpce:
Toronto
Buddhis
Church
(4) .Add novelty dances and
°f SMW shoveled I
-admission.: members—50 cents:
prizes.
n o n-m embers—§ 1.00.
derailed a snowplough.
° I
TORONTO. — (Special to NO) 28 and April o.
Five hundreds passengers were I
I People interested in special
interested in ikebana pudedV^
braveL I
E^™p“ ^^s* Speaker At M6. Bdddhist Church j aspects of Japanese life and cul- "Women
—
.
.
PUHed
out
of
Niigata
in
the
midI
| uiiie will find tnere are advan can join the Ikebana"
April Interna
21. The
at 4:0J P-m. last I
tional
tour,
leaving
Apr!'
tages to visiting Japan this
- dhist Church marked the Fe„
Tour includes" 52 hours of in weanesaaj. It was due in To. I
ruary Shotsuki Hoyo Service on lightened Attitudes in Religious spring-, advise George Nishidera,
kyo at 10:08 p.m. that night, but I
.
^'r Lines’ representative struction at the Ikenobo, So^et- k ? a® SuOPPed in its tracks after
, 3?d by welcoming Rev K Self-Analysis.”
SU, Ohara and Saka schools »i;’»3?
of Eastern Cana-'
After the service, a welcome m loronto.
The tour 'is open to beginners
mHes.
Mr.
Nishidera.
points
out
there
on Buddhist Cnurches and a fare supper was attended by members
j
411
^
e
Borrowing five nio-to
is an especially large selection intermediate students, advanced that followed, m^a(sg
well visit to Montreal after a 5 j of the executive where
interestyear absence in Chicago, who big U.S. and Canada counter- oi Japan tours this spring for students and teachers.
the freezing train cars, got sick
Photographers
can
choosecharcoal
______ iuries
inose interested in more than
will be transferred to Seattle in talk ensued before " "good-byes
-rom
fumes in the nnearApril
eat
station
or
douM^
sight-seeing
and
entertainment.
die very near future.
were said.
Rev. St ^ficiatc-d at the j The Montreal Buddhist Church
T_
^V
1
!
.^A
nrA^Cootiei
’
4,
iPhoto
few
hotel
rooms
available.
. ‘"Of course JAL has manv
Ca
J?
are
^
’
b
y
qualified
exp!’v/s with the assistance' of j wishes to thank Rev. Tada for sightseeing tours, too,” he coin^oar out of five made thenHokkyoshi Yasui and in spite of I his sincere interest, his kind reeverY price range.” ReijS" ^ey are designed to in- way
Niigata and envi
e ^ke most scenic attractions rons Those towho
the extreme cold weather. "In,| turn farewell visit, and wish Wm HL.m
^^ sPecial-interest tours, the Ci4"
stuck it out n
Both a spring and fall tour are marxed, on emerging
Memorium” families, their friends ■ everv
r
is
for
garden
and
in Tokyo,
Wo
good health, good fortune flower
enthus
4
ofrered to golfers. The May and
and interested members who had
ower
enthusiasts.
".,
.
ss
^
ns
like
a
dream,
now that
iad and
and Agood success in his future
.
f
October
departures
include
congi egated, were much imureses- endeavours.
An aioand-the-Avoiid
aroundv
garden rounds at some of Japan’s finest it is all over.’’
study tour leaves March 24 un1 £er the leadership of Thomas H courses, a golf clinic, and instrum
by American and Japanese
i merett, assistant director of the Hon
I new York Botanical Garden. Two golf pros.
Selection of Spring Tours
Personal Notes Across Canada
Lucien
| orient garden tours leave March
Obituaries
Engagements
DRIVE SAFELY
AND LIVE!
Point Blank
CHIBA-TAHARA
(Continued from Page One)
VANCOUVER. — Mrs. Shizu
TORONTO.—Mr. and Mrs. NoBanno . of 412 West 19th Ave. curo Tahara recently announced
-n o, no,
Vancouver, passed away, January the engagement of their second come from,’ no, where does site
For Repairs On
16, 1963 at Mount St. Joseph’s daughter Aileen Fumiko to Roy
“Japan.’’
Hospital. Predeceased by her hus x oichi Chiba, son of Mrs. M. Chi- ,, “Ah. ha
.you’re Japanese,
than 4^ years, she ba and the late Mr. I Chiba
iband more
x
vnen : ”
leaves to mourn her passing, two Nikko Gardens. The weddino ’a
JAMES KAMINO |
"No.’-'
cldl^n^^
take pIace
THne L 196.3."
T.V. SERVICE
|
But you just said your mother
was
horn
Japan.
Then,
what
are
%
Funeral services were held at
EM. 4-9913
|
SUZUKI-FUJINO
the Vancouver Buddhist Church
“
Canadian.
”
v
on Jan. IS with Reverends Ka- _ MA-MILTON, Ont,—Mr
Aki
(TORONTO)
At this point they usual.lv go
wamura, Ikuta, Ikuta Jr., and b u.ii»o announced the engageOkano
officiating.
Cremation F^H? of hef second daughter3 Kav avmy snaking their heads thinkfollowed at Vancouver Crema- tc /ad Tadao Suzuki, son of Mr. Hig- perhaps why they asked me
^lestl°n" I suggest some of
tcrium on Jan. 19.
.and Airs. Sukesaburo Suzuki on
•January 27, 1963 at the Fujino ,°“ try ^]s, method. You can
*
*
*
Kashino & Weinberg
^esu assured that, that same per
residence.
KITAMURA
son will not ask such silly Ques
Chartered Accountants
TORONTO. — Mr. '
tions .again. As a matter of fact
Kitamura passed away on Feb
you try this method, and voL
CHANGE OF ADDRESS
221 y ictona St.
Suite 303 j
ruary 5, 1963 at Toronto East
can rest assured that that same
General Hospital.
Funeral ser^A?-1 Wlil not ask such sillv
Toronto, Ontario
Yges vull be held this evening I
TORONTO.__ Mr
que&uons. As a matter of fact
PHONE 363-7441
I
^ ^^^ SPeak to y<>U
। announce the change of the™*
*
*
address to 39 Jocada Road
i
bUGIYAMA
I loronto 15. Ont. Phone- 947
VANCOUVER.—David Yosho * 8°64’
' D
TORONTO BUDDKSTCHURCH »7Z^1
bugiyama of Vancouver passed
SUNDAY FEBRUARY 10, 1963
*
away on January 2S, 1963*.
Nirvana Day
I "00
Religious School
is survived by his wife. K
11 -00 a.M.—Morning Service
t.wo sons and two daughters.
lOKOMO. - Mr. and Mrs.
7-00
New{on Ishiura
Funeral services were held An
Mils Sumiya would like to an
Jan. 30th at the Holv Cro«
EVERYONE CORDlku?"^^^ ’
nounce the change in their ad
Mean Church with the Rev. N J
dress to 29 Oakdene Cres..
Southcott. assisted bv Rev ’ h’
™to 6‘ °nt Ph°ne: 4611
McSherry and Mr. John Shozawa officiating.
Interment took
okok o apanese united chhrcii
place the-following day at Fores1
^BRUARY 10, 1963
CHURCH
A.M., Mghsn Language Service
Lawn Cemetery.
^
S^nacry School
"THe yA°AvP e^P'L S.^
A HEARTY WELCOAE^J’ml'1 Stephen Takada,^JV, B.D.
Give Bfo@d
Births
S^TJ-r^.... ... ........ ~............
CALI YOUg RED CROSS
W A KA BAYA S HT
^ J
701 Dovercourt Rd., Toronto
FJ' :^-V i ■ .-.X < ,^h*l V?' . SY- • y.Nto"^^-.-<.K43vy-'!*'Aw.'
^’"^X ^^kabayashi (nee Nobuko Ebih
happy to a
nounce the birth
a dnuuh
Lori Hideko. on February
10.
1963
tai.
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
NOTARY PUBLIC
_ Office Hours Saturday
October to April Inclusive
62 RICHMOND ST. WEST
Suite 513 Temple Building
TORONTO
EM. 6-3323
Hes: RO. 7-3427j
Paul K. Asada, D.C., N.D.
Chiropractor, Naturooath
Rheumatism, Discs, Sciatica
Lumbago, Arthritis, Migraine
Nerve Conditions
free consultation
728A St._.CIair Ave. West
(U block west of Christie)
Telephone: LE. 6-8220
if no answer call — 233-3369
TORONTO
SAY IT WITH
FLOWERS
SHARON'S FLORIST
. CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
Peter Sasaki — K. Sasaki
Bus: HO. 6-2041
Res: HO. 6-7962
942 PAPE AVE., TORONTO
Travel Arrangements
Anywhere — Anytime
Air—Ship—Bus—Rail
Tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
Travellers Cheques
Obtainable
Travel, Accident
and Baggage Insurance
„
BRINGING someone over?
Passage arranged by Steamer or At
Call for Reservations or
moritsugu
SERVICE and REPAIRS
MONTREAL
Henrv
I
Ruiko Mor itsu
ma) are happy to announce th
” son. Ken Te
< ib
tn, on Januarv 13.
Roym Victoria Hospital.
i 1
Phone: 759-15S3
Friday, Feb. 15, 1963
I
T•
.
uve Music
8 p.m. to 12:30
J
WCTORIA AUDITORIUM, 53 QUEEN 5^
54
S
Spot Dances
Information—EM. 8-9934
Ont.
Admission: 81.25
,
Everybody Welcome
T. KAMEOKA
113 McCauI St., TORONTO
K. Iwata Travel Service
•A
Page 3
^hday, February 9, 1963
1963
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K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
0 ©
Zd K
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W. K. GARDENS
Authorized Agent for All Airlines
AUTHORIZED AGENT FOR
P and O LINES, AMERICAN PRESIDENT LINES
3
° ix # 71
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b
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Crown Life Insurance Co
127 EAST PENDER STREET
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Phone MU. 1-6642—0455
1550 West Georgia St.
Vancouver, B.C,
CATERING TO
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Private Dining Rooms
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Page 7
Saturday, February 9. 1963
PAGE 7
Baseball Star At Home Leaf Star Big Hit
Playing In Japanese Loop Shack Packs Arena A® . ^isei Stars
BROOKLINE, Mass. — Okay,
Provided
Provided with
a. six-room
Mickey Mantle, so you hit a flock :ouse, a fine salary and an inof home runs last year.
But
McManus went on to
when’s the last time you got a
TORONTO.—The Nisei Hockev
14 home runs, drive in 62
estimated crowd of 2,000 pre-game ceremony.
gift box of seaweed? .
League
’All-stars were successful
runs and bat .2x8 while plaving
jammed the west end arena,
TJie Nisei .-all-stars opened the
Which may be a rather diverse only half the 130-game schedule" on two fronts last Tuesdav night and another 500 were turned
scoring
in the first period as the
way of getting into a story about
at
George
Bell
Arena.
Not
only
1 missed 60 games with a le°away at the gate, to see the game
crowd
roared
approval at the fast
aid
they
assist
the
Canadiana Japanese baseball player, -at
-, said the refugee from
with rampageous Toronto Maule
that.
x tfe. ^^ and Kansas Citv Italian Hockey League stag'e a Leaf star Eddie Shack in the fea pace set by the two teams. Satch
■rujimoto, who along with netJapanese
baseball — which Sin w 1 e"dWi “P abMl overwhelmingly successful bene- ture role of referee.
fit
night
for
the
minder
Ted Mianishi was the
Ontario
Hospital
anks just below being emperor
CIHL president Louis Janetta
Association
of
star
of
the
game, scored the first
Volunteers,
but
s an occupation in the minds - , zi^ec about the seaweed, Jim
presented Mrs. Bruce MacKinnon,
they
also
came
of
his
two
goals with the help
out
on
top
of
a
of Nipponese fans—features such chucxied. ‘It’s customary in Ja
vice-president of the Volunteers
of
Jolm
Kitamura.
He then made
stars as Koiyama, Nagashima, pan for a person to bring a pre- 5-3 score.
with a cheque for $1,201.50 in a
the
score
2-0
early
in the second
Muriyama, McManus.
sent when visiting someone. This
frame aided this time bv Gen
No, that wasn’t an Irish lino carries over to baseball, which is
Hamada.
type operator sneaking in with fantastically popular over there.
led Kakino raised the count
the name McManus. One of the’
So v hen a player had a g-ood
to
3-0 with a goal in the opening
leading players in Japanese base game or hits a. home run or such,
minutes
of the final frame on a
ball is 26-year-old Jim McManus a fan—or even a writer—will
three
way
passing play with Dave
of Brookline, who got weary of yrmg a present'when he talks to
Mitobe
.and
Rick Yoshida. Then
TORONTO. — Top and bottom । gue lead, but ace defenseman Ted
bouncing around American minor him. One day I was presented
the
Italian
leaguers
came to life.
leagues a year ago.
with a nice box full of seaweed. places in the Nisei Hockey Lea Kakino also toppled from the
Ronnie
fired two
To the Japanese that’s a deli- gue standing's changed hands as j scoring- leadership as he g-ave
Very Happy
a. result of last Sunday’s games way to Sato’s ace rearguard, and Pat Romaldi one, while John
Satch Fujimoto. Fujimoto picked Kitamura tallied for the Nisei,
After one season as first base
Comparing baseball in the two at George Bell Arena.
up two assists to go one point to make the score 4-3 with less
man with one of Japan’s top nations, McManus said the Japa MAIN AUTO BODY
ahead of Kakino in the race for than four minutes left to play in
teams, the Tokyo Whales, Mc nese brand would stack up “at
vs STADIUM GARAGE
the g-ame. With the Italians
the scoring crown.
'
Manus—or “Macu’’ as he’s called least on a par” with a ton mino1’
pressing fox- the equalizer, Gen
A
last
second
goal
by
Pee
Wee
by Japanese players—wouldn’t league club.
George Anzai opened the scor Hamada broke a,way and fired a
rurukawa earned Main Auto a
trade his job for Ford Frick’s.
_ ' The overall strength and depth 1-1 tie with Stadium Garage in ing in the first frame as he rap rinkrwide pass to Tak Tanaka.
‘T just couldn’t do anywhere is greater in U.S. baseball,” he j tlie opening game of last week’s ped home Fujimoto’s rebound for The Rickey Sato captain (in the
a 1-0 lead. Ken Kanda duplicat Nisei Hockey League) made no
near as well playing baseball in said. “The Japanese would like triple header.
ed Anzai’s feat for the Photo- mistake as he fired the clincher
the United States,’’ the 6-foot-3. very much to have playoffs be
After
223-pound slugger said while .pre tween the two nations in what Stadium i scoreless first stanza, grapners as he knocked in the into the Italian net.
went out in front 1-0 rebound from a long shot by John
paring to return for spring train would really be a World Series.
It was a hard hitting contest
iir the middle frame as Hideo Kitamura.
But they know they’re not ready Higashi found the target on a
right from the opening whistle,
Then Sam
’ with help as the heavier Italian stars, espe
“'Not financially or any other for that quite yet.”
pass from Glen Katsuyama and from brother Tanaka,
Tak
and
Fujimoto, cially Chuck Davidson
way. The reception in Japan has
Chuck Saito.
(ItaBetter Pay
tallied the winner which lifted ian???) let loose with some
been almost unbelievable since
Then, in the dying seconds of the Insurancemen into first place. bone-crushing
McManus stressed that Ja
we first arrived and found half
checks. Howevei’
the
contest, with Stadium at
pan
’
s
better
players
would
not
be
my team waiting at the airport
the
Japanese
A11-stars
ilillMililllllllllliillllllilffi
interested in coming' to the Unit- tempting to make a player
to greet us.”
their
speed
to
good advantage
e'i States to play major league change, Furukawa banked a shot
carried
the
play
for most of the
HOCKEY
SCOPES
“Us” is Jim, his pretty wife, baseball.
off the cross-bar into the net for
Why?
game.
Diane, and their two-year-old5
and STATISTICS
“We -just couldn’t p.av them the equalizer. The buzzer sound
A girl’s game between the Tor
son, Brian, nicknamed “B.J.”
ed
as
the
Main
players
rushed
enough in the United States to
onto
Maplettes and the North
make it worth their while. Play to congratulate Furukawa.
western
Hospital Nurses prior to
LEAGUE STANDINGS
The tie was a costly one for
ers in Japan are very well paid
the feature contest, provided
W
and they probably at least double Stadium in that it dropped them
Pts many laughs as disc jockeys Al
their salaries by engaging in out into the league cellar, whereas, Mickey Sato
8
3
3 19 Boliska and Mike Darrow of ra
a
win
would
have
moved
them
side
businesses.
Yamada
Studio
And most of
8
4
2 18 dio station CHUM, kibitzed with
ower6
them have good investment pro- into a tie for the last plav-off Japan Camera
4
5
4 14 referee Eddie Shack. The Leaf
berth.
grams going.”
Main Auto Body
star was also the target of manv
5
6
Thenhe
fired
the
clincher.
Dufferin
Cleaners
autograph-seekingyoungsters,
b
8
1
DUFFERIN CLEANERS
11
. proprietor
and'
he
patiently
signed
as many
Stadium
Garage
2
4
8
10
“We have .a five-day week, you
vs JAPAN CAMERA CENTRE
as he could before the game and
know. We get every Friday and
Dufferin
Cleaners
finally
JON ONODERA
during- the intermissions.
Monday off, regardless of the moved
GAMES TOMORROW
out of the Nisei Hockev
postponements since thev are League cellar, a position they
4 pun. Main Auto Body vs
up at the end of the sea have kept since the start of the Mickey
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805 made
Sato
son. Most of the games are play season, with a 5-2 trouncing of
5 p.m. Stadium Garage vs Ja
ed at night, so I’m home all day. Japan
(Business)
(Residence)
Camera
Centre.
The pan Camera Centre
The games are all televised. The Camerashop are now winless in
6 p.m. Yamada Studio vs DufPhone 36G-10G9 re information
parks
are very unixorm
uniform in size ftheir last four starts having
iamb die
ferin
Cleaners
GOLF LESSONS & PRACTICE
tied
540 Eglinton Ave, W.
nd shape. The fans love us. The cone game, and losing three.
Discontinued & New Golf Equipment
people everywhere are wonder
120 Wellington St. West
Fred Yamashita paced the
Toronto
SCORING LEADERS
ful. And the sports writers bring’
Geo. Clifton’s Golf School
Cleaners with a two-goal per
us presents.”
G
A
Pts
formance, while George Shimono,
Fujimoto,
MS
7
13
20
Al Masukawa and Gerry Oye
It is cr good policy to
13
6
.19
fired the othex* goals.
Nobby Ka kino, YS
have
the RIGHT POLICY
Wakayama, YS
8
8
16
Fujino
assisted
on
both
of
Ya
KIDOKWAN JUDO INSTITUTE
Tsuji, YS
Consult
9
5
14
mashita’s markers.
1T. Tanaka, MS
328 Dupont St. Toronto
8
3
11
Benny Murata and Ray Hinat- Masukawa, SG
WALES and DUNCAN
QUALIFIED NISEI BLACK BELT INSTRUCTORS
5
6
11
su tallied for the losers.
Yoshida, MS
3
INSURANCE AGENTS
8
11
Special Instructors For Children On
MICKEY
SATO
Katsuyama,
SG
7
4
11
Friday Evenings And Sunday Afternoons
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Shimono, DC
vs YAMADA STUDIO
7
3
10
Sasaki,
MS
4
6
Phone WA. 1-3171
10
After several weeks of chai- longing Yamada Studio for the
| league leadership, Mickey Sato
J took a 2-1 decision as the two
| teams met head-on in the 6 p.m.
f finale of . last Sunday’s trio of
| games.
MEMBER OF G.R.C.A.
|
Yamada not only lost the leaFLAT ROOFS
Beat Italians 5-3 in Charity Game
Mickey Sato Beat Yamada 2-1 To Move Into First
Place; Satoh Fujimoto Takes Over Scoring Lead
I
o
i
^)i
1
st
s
ALL-WAY ROOFING SERVICE
SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK
eavestroughing
TORONTO
TOSH NISHIJIMA
421-3374
$
$
9
$
$
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC.
"COVERING ONTARIO”
Night CMs\ PL. 9-5095
$
NISEI OWNED
HI. 7-1100
i
j
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
WOHGCT0W
CHOP SUET HOUSE
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
221 VICTORIA ST., TORONTO
EM. 3-5002
OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
Buy & Sell
284-A YONGE ST.
Your Home
DUNDAS UNION STOBB
$
Through
your shopping list
?
t
Representing
StOSH IWAI REAL ESTATE^
BROKER
48 GALBRAITH AVE.
Bus: 755-7371
Res: AM. 1-2581
EM. 6-2411
g SAKURA RICE
5 MARUKIN SHO YD
g VINEGAR
9 SUGAR
3 EGG3
S SUKIYAKI MEAT
9 MANJU
© MANY VARIETIES OF ARASE
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
j
i
J
9
5
j
I
PAGE 7
Baseball Star At Home Leaf Star Big Hit
Playing In Japanese Loop Shack Packs Arena A® . ^isei Stars
BROOKLINE, Mass. — Okay,
Provided
Provided with
a. six-room
Mickey Mantle, so you hit a flock :ouse, a fine salary and an inof home runs last year.
But
McManus went on to
when’s the last time you got a
TORONTO.—The Nisei Hockev
14 home runs, drive in 62
estimated crowd of 2,000 pre-game ceremony.
gift box of seaweed? .
League
’All-stars were successful
runs and bat .2x8 while plaving
jammed the west end arena,
TJie Nisei .-all-stars opened the
Which may be a rather diverse only half the 130-game schedule" on two fronts last Tuesdav night and another 500 were turned
scoring
in the first period as the
way of getting into a story about
at
George
Bell
Arena.
Not
only
1 missed 60 games with a le°away at the gate, to see the game
crowd
roared
approval at the fast
aid
they
assist
the
Canadiana Japanese baseball player, -at
-, said the refugee from
with rampageous Toronto Maule
that.
x tfe. ^^ and Kansas Citv Italian Hockey League stag'e a Leaf star Eddie Shack in the fea pace set by the two teams. Satch
■rujimoto, who along with netJapanese
baseball — which Sin w 1 e"dWi “P abMl overwhelmingly successful bene- ture role of referee.
fit
night
for
the
minder
Ted Mianishi was the
Ontario
Hospital
anks just below being emperor
CIHL president Louis Janetta
Association
of
star
of
the
game, scored the first
Volunteers,
but
s an occupation in the minds - , zi^ec about the seaweed, Jim
presented Mrs. Bruce MacKinnon,
they
also
came
of
his
two
goals with the help
out
on
top
of
a
of Nipponese fans—features such chucxied. ‘It’s customary in Ja
vice-president of the Volunteers
of
Jolm
Kitamura.
He then made
stars as Koiyama, Nagashima, pan for a person to bring a pre- 5-3 score.
with a cheque for $1,201.50 in a
the
score
2-0
early
in the second
Muriyama, McManus.
sent when visiting someone. This
frame aided this time bv Gen
No, that wasn’t an Irish lino carries over to baseball, which is
Hamada.
type operator sneaking in with fantastically popular over there.
led Kakino raised the count
the name McManus. One of the’
So v hen a player had a g-ood
to
3-0 with a goal in the opening
leading players in Japanese base game or hits a. home run or such,
minutes
of the final frame on a
ball is 26-year-old Jim McManus a fan—or even a writer—will
three
way
passing play with Dave
of Brookline, who got weary of yrmg a present'when he talks to
Mitobe
.and
Rick Yoshida. Then
TORONTO. — Top and bottom । gue lead, but ace defenseman Ted
bouncing around American minor him. One day I was presented
the
Italian
leaguers
came to life.
leagues a year ago.
with a nice box full of seaweed. places in the Nisei Hockey Lea Kakino also toppled from the
Ronnie
fired two
To the Japanese that’s a deli- gue standing's changed hands as j scoring- leadership as he g-ave
Very Happy
a. result of last Sunday’s games way to Sato’s ace rearguard, and Pat Romaldi one, while John
Satch Fujimoto. Fujimoto picked Kitamura tallied for the Nisei,
After one season as first base
Comparing baseball in the two at George Bell Arena.
up two assists to go one point to make the score 4-3 with less
man with one of Japan’s top nations, McManus said the Japa MAIN AUTO BODY
ahead of Kakino in the race for than four minutes left to play in
teams, the Tokyo Whales, Mc nese brand would stack up “at
vs STADIUM GARAGE
the g-ame. With the Italians
the scoring crown.
'
Manus—or “Macu’’ as he’s called least on a par” with a ton mino1’
pressing fox- the equalizer, Gen
A
last
second
goal
by
Pee
Wee
by Japanese players—wouldn’t league club.
George Anzai opened the scor Hamada broke a,way and fired a
rurukawa earned Main Auto a
trade his job for Ford Frick’s.
_ ' The overall strength and depth 1-1 tie with Stadium Garage in ing in the first frame as he rap rinkrwide pass to Tak Tanaka.
‘T just couldn’t do anywhere is greater in U.S. baseball,” he j tlie opening game of last week’s ped home Fujimoto’s rebound for The Rickey Sato captain (in the
a 1-0 lead. Ken Kanda duplicat Nisei Hockey League) made no
near as well playing baseball in said. “The Japanese would like triple header.
ed Anzai’s feat for the Photo- mistake as he fired the clincher
the United States,’’ the 6-foot-3. very much to have playoffs be
After
223-pound slugger said while .pre tween the two nations in what Stadium i scoreless first stanza, grapners as he knocked in the into the Italian net.
went out in front 1-0 rebound from a long shot by John
paring to return for spring train would really be a World Series.
It was a hard hitting contest
iir the middle frame as Hideo Kitamura.
But they know they’re not ready Higashi found the target on a
right from the opening whistle,
Then Sam
’ with help as the heavier Italian stars, espe
“'Not financially or any other for that quite yet.”
pass from Glen Katsuyama and from brother Tanaka,
Tak
and
Fujimoto, cially Chuck Davidson
way. The reception in Japan has
Chuck Saito.
(ItaBetter Pay
tallied the winner which lifted ian???) let loose with some
been almost unbelievable since
Then, in the dying seconds of the Insurancemen into first place. bone-crushing
McManus stressed that Ja
we first arrived and found half
checks. Howevei’
the
contest, with Stadium at
pan
’
s
better
players
would
not
be
my team waiting at the airport
the
Japanese
A11-stars
ilillMililllllllllliillllllilffi
interested in coming' to the Unit- tempting to make a player
to greet us.”
their
speed
to
good advantage
e'i States to play major league change, Furukawa banked a shot
carried
the
play
for most of the
HOCKEY
SCOPES
“Us” is Jim, his pretty wife, baseball.
off the cross-bar into the net for
Why?
game.
Diane, and their two-year-old5
and STATISTICS
“We -just couldn’t p.av them the equalizer. The buzzer sound
A girl’s game between the Tor
son, Brian, nicknamed “B.J.”
ed
as
the
Main
players
rushed
enough in the United States to
onto
Maplettes and the North
make it worth their while. Play to congratulate Furukawa.
western
Hospital Nurses prior to
LEAGUE STANDINGS
The tie was a costly one for
ers in Japan are very well paid
the feature contest, provided
W
and they probably at least double Stadium in that it dropped them
Pts many laughs as disc jockeys Al
their salaries by engaging in out into the league cellar, whereas, Mickey Sato
8
3
3 19 Boliska and Mike Darrow of ra
a
win
would
have
moved
them
side
businesses.
Yamada
Studio
And most of
8
4
2 18 dio station CHUM, kibitzed with
ower6
them have good investment pro- into a tie for the last plav-off Japan Camera
4
5
4 14 referee Eddie Shack. The Leaf
berth.
grams going.”
Main Auto Body
star was also the target of manv
5
6
Thenhe
fired
the
clincher.
Dufferin
Cleaners
autograph-seekingyoungsters,
b
8
1
DUFFERIN CLEANERS
11
. proprietor
and'
he
patiently
signed
as many
Stadium
Garage
2
4
8
10
“We have .a five-day week, you
vs JAPAN CAMERA CENTRE
as he could before the game and
know. We get every Friday and
Dufferin
Cleaners
finally
JON ONODERA
during- the intermissions.
Monday off, regardless of the moved
GAMES TOMORROW
out of the Nisei Hockev
postponements since thev are League cellar, a position they
4 pun. Main Auto Body vs
up at the end of the sea have kept since the start of the Mickey
HU. 9-4654 — HU. 1-8805 made
Sato
son. Most of the games are play season, with a 5-2 trouncing of
5 p.m. Stadium Garage vs Ja
ed at night, so I’m home all day. Japan
(Business)
(Residence)
Camera
Centre.
The pan Camera Centre
The games are all televised. The Camerashop are now winless in
6 p.m. Yamada Studio vs DufPhone 36G-10G9 re information
parks
are very unixorm
uniform in size ftheir last four starts having
iamb die
ferin
Cleaners
GOLF LESSONS & PRACTICE
tied
540 Eglinton Ave, W.
nd shape. The fans love us. The cone game, and losing three.
Discontinued & New Golf Equipment
people everywhere are wonder
120 Wellington St. West
Fred Yamashita paced the
Toronto
SCORING LEADERS
ful. And the sports writers bring’
Geo. Clifton’s Golf School
Cleaners with a two-goal per
us presents.”
G
A
Pts
formance, while George Shimono,
Fujimoto,
MS
7
13
20
Al Masukawa and Gerry Oye
It is cr good policy to
13
6
.19
fired the othex* goals.
Nobby Ka kino, YS
have
the RIGHT POLICY
Wakayama, YS
8
8
16
Fujino
assisted
on
both
of
Ya
KIDOKWAN JUDO INSTITUTE
Tsuji, YS
Consult
9
5
14
mashita’s markers.
1T. Tanaka, MS
328 Dupont St. Toronto
8
3
11
Benny Murata and Ray Hinat- Masukawa, SG
WALES and DUNCAN
QUALIFIED NISEI BLACK BELT INSTRUCTORS
5
6
11
su tallied for the losers.
Yoshida, MS
3
INSURANCE AGENTS
8
11
Special Instructors For Children On
MICKEY
SATO
Katsuyama,
SG
7
4
11
Friday Evenings And Sunday Afternoons
464 Yonge Street, Toronto
Shimono, DC
vs YAMADA STUDIO
7
3
10
Sasaki,
MS
4
6
Phone WA. 1-3171
10
After several weeks of chai- longing Yamada Studio for the
| league leadership, Mickey Sato
J took a 2-1 decision as the two
| teams met head-on in the 6 p.m.
f finale of . last Sunday’s trio of
| games.
MEMBER OF G.R.C.A.
|
Yamada not only lost the leaFLAT ROOFS
Beat Italians 5-3 in Charity Game
Mickey Sato Beat Yamada 2-1 To Move Into First
Place; Satoh Fujimoto Takes Over Scoring Lead
I
o
i
^)i
1
st
s
ALL-WAY ROOFING SERVICE
SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK
eavestroughing
TORONTO
TOSH NISHIJIMA
421-3374
$
$
9
$
$
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR and
NOTARY PUBLIC.
"COVERING ONTARIO”
Night CMs\ PL. 9-5095
$
NISEI OWNED
HI. 7-1100
i
j
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
WOHGCT0W
CHOP SUET HOUSE
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
Seating Capacity 240
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
EM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
221 VICTORIA ST., TORONTO
EM. 3-5002
OX. 1-3388 (Res.)
Buy & Sell
284-A YONGE ST.
Your Home
DUNDAS UNION STOBB
$
Through
your shopping list
?
t
Representing
StOSH IWAI REAL ESTATE^
BROKER
48 GALBRAITH AVE.
Bus: 755-7371
Res: AM. 1-2581
EM. 6-2411
g SAKURA RICE
5 MARUKIN SHO YD
g VINEGAR
9 SUGAR
3 EGG3
S SUKIYAKI MEAT
9 MANJU
© MANY VARIETIES OF ARASE
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
j
i
J
9
5
j
I
Page 8
PAGE 8
feB®$e Film Industry Faces TV Competit
Iob
THE NEW CANADIAN
TOKY
indust^- m
X, k !«“ *wL!? ^J???^ ^ 14 boost exports of motion may be driven out of
tion■ Picture,
picture industry
1C iaviir
may be dliven out of the market
When compared with pictures
keen competition from the teie°- m 1962.
to
810
million
—
by
since
major foreign distributors
PM Office
msion industry but manages to those in major movie-producing around 1968.
are
likely
to move positivelv to
countries,
the
1961
average
ad
maintain its financial position by
More positive governmental handle European pictures also, L UMEZUKI, Publisher Ricr
raising admission fees. The in mission fee in Japan about 24 assistance in motion picture ex and new, powerful distributors matsumoto; Engnsh^S?1
dustry knows that the only way cents, is much lower than $1.50 ports is strongly desired and es with international financial back- Editor;
Ediw KEN MORL T 6e tlon
lor survival is to produce quality (the equivalents of the respective tablishment of a body to specia ing may appear. .
I Section Editor and A.dvSanese
films.
. - currencies) in the United States”
lize in market research for mo
The Japanese motion picture pHanager.
‘
using
cents
in
Britain,
38cents
in
• J^e Japanese motion picture
vie exports is needed.
industry calls for the Governb
rance
and
in
Italy
.26.
industry embraces 115,000 -work
ments protective measures, in'
J Q^EEN ST. WEST
S^0.^6
revenue
totalled
Imports Under Control
ers, earns about $202,000,000 an
eluding
the
so-called
“
screen
EMpire 6-5005
.Presently imports of motion
nually, and exports nearly S3 - $189 million (including tax) in
quota
system
under
which
the
_____
?2 milIion in 1960, and picture are subject to the ap
300,000 worth of movies.
of foreign films______________________ ---- ------ -----$203
million
in 1961. In 1961, the proval of the Finance Minister percentage
,.Tbe postwar production peak
screened will be limited to a cer- I
released
motion
pictures,
both
i ‘t8 Foreign Exchange tain level. This system is consisot iilms was established in 1960
r^
an
™
e
and
tois^
numbered
Control
Law, but preparations tern with GATT provisions and
amounting to 547 on the release
<ffiCC|OEh
• Y8 Percentage of foreign are making steady progress for
basis. In 1961, the production fi
finally topped 34 per cent iieer remittance of earning's. If 8Yn,tn® Japan-U.S. treaty of
gure dropped to 535, and in 1962.
,
ot
-the
total in the January-June and when Japan removes con fxie.ndship, commerce and navi- I
it was likely to have decreased!
gation and the Anglo-Japanese
A
further to approximately 372. A period of 1962 (105 films). Coun- trols over foreign exchange, ex
treaty of commerce, establishA* emaie Help Wanted
notable trend is toward the pro t^-wise, American films -fopped cessive competition may take ment
and navigation. Great Bri- designer^----- V— ----------------- —
the list , with 129 (60 per cenU Place temporarily among film
duction of quality pictures. At ■n 1961, followed by Italian ^
tan, Hance and Italy are adopt- of SSVbioS
Japanese importers
pi esent 18 companies are engaged ducts with 33, French with 27 importers.
mg this system.
train someone with previous^aLorv^v1
in
m the production of feature and British with 18.
____
|penence. Apply EM. 6-0702 (Toronio)’
liims, five of which accounted for
EXPERIENCED desierner
I
In recent years, triple fea
nearly 75 per cent of the total
time Also experienced operators steady
tures
are
increasing
as
a
result
pioducvion in 1961. Last year the
employment. Apply. Exclusive
J %y
Phone 368-5983 '(Tornumber of films longer than 4.000 ox keen competition, but this
meters, (more, than 2.5 hours run lowers the rate of attendance Fi*y0»LTe“ Pta^-lin' I
l“n
tied to
ning time) increased conspic- 'frnover, eventually aggravating
uosly.
:
I : the financial position of movie
theatres.
Color Films Increase
■ Educational and dbcumentarv
fJnis numbered 251 in tHms are being produced in in
2M tad
faatHtota fct.
Sot
18.
,
or 4/ per cent of total pro- creasing quantities for school 217,
score. Jeep Seki tallied 588 to whh fl poii^
Guction. I he percentage rose to eaucation, social education, in
finish second behind Ken in
1
the firsf six months dustrial education, public rela Friday loop. Terrv Doi with J TadKtagawa tallied a three“f 49m. host of the films are tions for companies, or television. ■582 was third. Marv £(, ±’ 5™ ^ of 21 t0 ’*«« A Class
S3).st” *■» 5 «»
wide screen” types, and one 70
^°duction reached 1,100 in ed best of the ladies with a 531 . if f” /^’ 26th' Sam Tanaka
mm film wav made in 1961 '061. Tne production of motion
score. Amy Toki and Tov Hashi- a 771 t "8 and -Nobby Fujisawa 'C Domesc ic Help Wanted
and two in 1962.
-ores Of 498 k "^
mcmres
exclusively
for
television
. It is hoped, however, that the
A MAID to live in, modern new home"
industry will push the produc is also on the increase, amount7«
to 1,074 while domestic news- .e^ S1"^ Ten Pin P^^^
“ ^uji- Kon?cr a^^^
tion ot quality films more- vigor
9
r
°d
u
ced
numbered
370
in
ously and that foreign exchange i V vJL ,
a J fe?
U??b ^ster
B Class competition w Bil'
Flat For Rent
enable cb.e industry to make more
mV.
LCT sPot honors. Jits Haraga’s 739 scire tX t™
>
Exports On Increase
lestiTceon will be lifted so as to
19M when the nation’s exp:ct?re? in collaboration
AT. 2-3873^ (Toronto) P” ”"“h- Ph“
an its foreign counterparts l-oib trade resumed, exports of
shoot oil overseas locations and ^on^cturesalso’reyCbut
use foreign talents.
w« ^ ^-ler
H^w1" niarkets were limited to isUSslSXSi a?5 i»%
’ -x21^11 and California also pl,t , (B0S ^ «' Ss£ ^X'lte
Iheie are live major distribuKAZUO G. OIYE
i a channels for domestic films i5 v r 1ZenSI °f Japanese anBARRISTER, SOLICITOR
which are dominated by five ma- astiy live, and markets formerRO1 vas ^°^ Meggers in Vith a 677.
NOTARY PUBLIC
joi motion picture companies. In ^ ?ter Japanese influence such d’-v
^!Se- ,Ten Pin Sun' Lt A Perfect game of 450 was
2 College St., Toronto
tact, these companies account for Th he Rrkyus and Formosa, te - Mixed loop with a 589 at the thro^n by Mr. Kaye Iiiouva S
the
export
value
of
1947
was
a
Room 103
T Per cent of the total distribu
mere
$32,000.
WA.
1-5605
' OX. 8-2280 (Res.)
tion. As to imported films, nine
where
oieign and nine Japanese distri
“Hashimon” which won
buting companies are handling Se Grand Prix at the Venice
icreign motion pictures which wmkfeS^^
August 1951 drew
Co°mJ)es led the ladies for the
OFFICE
RESIDENCE
number 230 to 250 annually,
''■oild attention to the Japanese
EM. 4-1394
FOUR
SHIPS
2 Vesta Drive
week with a 522
EM.
4-1395
HUdson 5-1365
r
face. ef the big- challenge ’potion picture industry and at
Aiiee Nagami
MAIL. TO JAPAN. — Four
•
?
sam
e
time
encouraged
tU
tronr television in particular, dis
h
°uer 500 games For ships will soon be leaving for
A. E. McKague, Q.C.
* K^ 1 SC01’es of 519 and Japan. They are: on Feb. 12 from
tribution revenue hit the ceiling industry to produce quality picaround 1959 at $108 million. As Sr In ^Q^6™3^01131 c°nsuu- o01 respectively.
Vancouver—Oregon Mail; Feb.
Barrister & Solicitor
far as Japanese films are con
The gals proved better than
x^d11 San Francisco—Presi
cerned, their distribution revenue
tne men m the East End Nism dent Roosevelt; Feb. 15 from
NOTARY PUBLIC
increased gradually tintil I960
1008 Northern Ontario Building
League as Yosh Oda Vancouver — Kiso-Haru Marubut began to turn downwards m
330 Bay Street fat Adelaide)
both
lant 572 t^Pie, to top ana Feb. 23 from San Francisco
In 1961, Japanese movies were
n\e-™time, - the distribution
TORONTO
.
m
en
ladies.
Goro
aS many as 51 co^ A.awaguchi was best of the felnitio of Japanese films to foreign
pictures was 74 to 26 in 1961.
4 T However, stable export 547 ?
Harely Hatanaka at
Harry
Hayashi at 546
rf
them. a“Olml fe *ut Wf
Declining Attendance
<
followed
by
Kawaguchi
in the
Bus: EM. 6-9797 . Res: LE. 3-6759
In 1958 attendance set a post
nort^h
n
'
(Hlon
Picture
exwar record of 1,127 million and
m
ibeen 021 the basis of lied 486 to finish in second spot
the number of attendances aver
Barrister A Solicitor
P '
the
fiat
fee
system, but in 1960 among- the g'irls.
ERNEST TOMORI
aged 12 3 per capita. But these
krat!° °f the films exported
Cameron, Weldon
*
*
*
to decline around
1Jo9 and dropped to S63 million u,‘dei J^18 Pei'centage system inChartered Accountant
cieased to 21 per cent. The latter site-31 4Ve pin action saw Kaid*
Brewin & McCallum
in that year and 9-2
*
million in a
fc
U
T?
P
“
“
Sl
"
A
?
**of
1960.
Suite 1618
372 Bay St.
—
Toronto
"tajois_League with a 793 Tad
The number of movie houses
EM. 3-4391
2 CARLTON ST.
TORONTO
Government encoura^ Miura 7 61 and Sanzo Sasaki 749
Ln® fJe htSthest in postwar vears
T
e
®
econd
and
third
in
thrt
rr^r^n ^,45^ but decreased to potion picture exports because order Gln
Terakita at 691 and
this year. During 1961-69 tnen net foreign exchange earn- ^ ??O 3
"he
^2e Y10^6 houses were liquid i g- rate is fairly high. In fact
179 East Pender VANCOUVER 4, B.C MU. 2-4641
ated at a daily rate of 1.6 houses die nite (export value—film, im west ox the fair-sex.
Admission fees now tend uu- port cost) export value is 88 7 w'PTTTi?" ml on the
North American
long & kami realty Itd
vaidb. In 19o7, it was 62.02 ven Jer cent, as against 76.1 per cent ^fe '?Coart,
re. ia first place as
for metel products and 70.8 p*r
<ents~(excluding
tax) on the average but rose to cent for cotton textile. On a lon^ was k6 xrth 22 Points. Westroc
term basis, it will not be impol 5 Jn che runner-up spot with
kami insurance agencies Itd
19 pointe, while Tad’s Sportin-
Boiling
Scores
F. A. BREWIN, 0.G,
H
SMALL
SHOE SIZES..
CLEJRANCE SALE!
Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
I up to 14
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
I N S U RANCE
^!^e Kamitakaka'iares- CYpress 9-5345
TORIC
OPTICAL
OPTOMETRISTS
Complete Care
1171 Dunlop, North Burnaby
(or leeve messas® at Al-.5-1743)
Raymond J^eong, res: HE. 3-3692
WELCOME JAPANESE CANADIANS
6O1MW DRAGON
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
?
?
NOU SERA ING BUSINESSMEN’S LUNCHEONS
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
ESTATE
ONLY $1.00
?
118 West Hastings St
12 NOON TO 4 P M
Open Noon to "T™ F°’ ™»~
—
Orders to Take Out
EM. 8-2475
IMA Dundas St. W„ Toronto
feB®$e Film Industry Faces TV Competit
Iob
THE NEW CANADIAN
TOKY
indust^- m
X, k !«“ *wL!? ^J???^ ^ 14 boost exports of motion may be driven out of
tion■ Picture,
picture industry
1C iaviir
may be dliven out of the market
When compared with pictures
keen competition from the teie°- m 1962.
to
810
million
—
by
since
major foreign distributors
PM Office
msion industry but manages to those in major movie-producing around 1968.
are
likely
to move positivelv to
countries,
the
1961
average
ad
maintain its financial position by
More positive governmental handle European pictures also, L UMEZUKI, Publisher Ricr
raising admission fees. The in mission fee in Japan about 24 assistance in motion picture ex and new, powerful distributors matsumoto; Engnsh^S?1
dustry knows that the only way cents, is much lower than $1.50 ports is strongly desired and es with international financial back- Editor;
Ediw KEN MORL T 6e tlon
lor survival is to produce quality (the equivalents of the respective tablishment of a body to specia ing may appear. .
I Section Editor and A.dvSanese
films.
. - currencies) in the United States”
lize in market research for mo
The Japanese motion picture pHanager.
‘
using
cents
in
Britain,
38cents
in
• J^e Japanese motion picture
vie exports is needed.
industry calls for the Governb
rance
and
in
Italy
.26.
industry embraces 115,000 -work
ments protective measures, in'
J Q^EEN ST. WEST
S^0.^6
revenue
totalled
Imports Under Control
ers, earns about $202,000,000 an
eluding
the
so-called
“
screen
EMpire 6-5005
.Presently imports of motion
nually, and exports nearly S3 - $189 million (including tax) in
quota
system
under
which
the
_____
?2 milIion in 1960, and picture are subject to the ap
300,000 worth of movies.
of foreign films______________________ ---- ------ -----$203
million
in 1961. In 1961, the proval of the Finance Minister percentage
,.Tbe postwar production peak
screened will be limited to a cer- I
released
motion
pictures,
both
i ‘t8 Foreign Exchange tain level. This system is consisot iilms was established in 1960
r^
an
™
e
and
tois^
numbered
Control
Law, but preparations tern with GATT provisions and
amounting to 547 on the release
<ffiCC|OEh
• Y8 Percentage of foreign are making steady progress for
basis. In 1961, the production fi
finally topped 34 per cent iieer remittance of earning's. If 8Yn,tn® Japan-U.S. treaty of
gure dropped to 535, and in 1962.
,
ot
-the
total in the January-June and when Japan removes con fxie.ndship, commerce and navi- I
it was likely to have decreased!
gation and the Anglo-Japanese
A
further to approximately 372. A period of 1962 (105 films). Coun- trols over foreign exchange, ex
treaty of commerce, establishA* emaie Help Wanted
notable trend is toward the pro t^-wise, American films -fopped cessive competition may take ment
and navigation. Great Bri- designer^----- V— ----------------- —
the list , with 129 (60 per cenU Place temporarily among film
duction of quality pictures. At ■n 1961, followed by Italian ^
tan, Hance and Italy are adopt- of SSVbioS
Japanese importers
pi esent 18 companies are engaged ducts with 33, French with 27 importers.
mg this system.
train someone with previous^aLorv^v1
in
m the production of feature and British with 18.
____
|penence. Apply EM. 6-0702 (Toronio)’
liims, five of which accounted for
EXPERIENCED desierner
I
In recent years, triple fea
nearly 75 per cent of the total
time Also experienced operators steady
tures
are
increasing
as
a
result
pioducvion in 1961. Last year the
employment. Apply. Exclusive
J %y
Phone 368-5983 '(Tornumber of films longer than 4.000 ox keen competition, but this
meters, (more, than 2.5 hours run lowers the rate of attendance Fi*y0»LTe“ Pta^-lin' I
l“n
tied to
ning time) increased conspic- 'frnover, eventually aggravating
uosly.
:
I : the financial position of movie
theatres.
Color Films Increase
■ Educational and dbcumentarv
fJnis numbered 251 in tHms are being produced in in
2M tad
faatHtota fct.
Sot
18.
,
or 4/ per cent of total pro- creasing quantities for school 217,
score. Jeep Seki tallied 588 to whh fl poii^
Guction. I he percentage rose to eaucation, social education, in
finish second behind Ken in
1
the firsf six months dustrial education, public rela Friday loop. Terrv Doi with J TadKtagawa tallied a three“f 49m. host of the films are tions for companies, or television. ■582 was third. Marv £(, ±’ 5™ ^ of 21 t0 ’*«« A Class
S3).st” *■» 5 «»
wide screen” types, and one 70
^°duction reached 1,100 in ed best of the ladies with a 531 . if f” /^’ 26th' Sam Tanaka
mm film wav made in 1961 '061. Tne production of motion
score. Amy Toki and Tov Hashi- a 771 t "8 and -Nobby Fujisawa 'C Domesc ic Help Wanted
and two in 1962.
-ores Of 498 k "^
mcmres
exclusively
for
television
. It is hoped, however, that the
A MAID to live in, modern new home"
industry will push the produc is also on the increase, amount7«
to 1,074 while domestic news- .e^ S1"^ Ten Pin P^^^
“ ^uji- Kon?cr a^^^
tion ot quality films more- vigor
9
r
°d
u
ced
numbered
370
in
ously and that foreign exchange i V vJL ,
a J fe?
U??b ^ster
B Class competition w Bil'
Flat For Rent
enable cb.e industry to make more
mV.
LCT sPot honors. Jits Haraga’s 739 scire tX t™
>
Exports On Increase
lestiTceon will be lifted so as to
19M when the nation’s exp:ct?re? in collaboration
AT. 2-3873^ (Toronto) P” ”"“h- Ph“
an its foreign counterparts l-oib trade resumed, exports of
shoot oil overseas locations and ^on^cturesalso’reyCbut
use foreign talents.
w« ^ ^-ler
H^w1" niarkets were limited to isUSslSXSi a?5 i»%
’ -x21^11 and California also pl,t , (B0S ^ «' Ss£ ^X'lte
Iheie are live major distribuKAZUO G. OIYE
i a channels for domestic films i5 v r 1ZenSI °f Japanese anBARRISTER, SOLICITOR
which are dominated by five ma- astiy live, and markets formerRO1 vas ^°^ Meggers in Vith a 677.
NOTARY PUBLIC
joi motion picture companies. In ^ ?ter Japanese influence such d’-v
^!Se- ,Ten Pin Sun' Lt A Perfect game of 450 was
2 College St., Toronto
tact, these companies account for Th he Rrkyus and Formosa, te - Mixed loop with a 589 at the thro^n by Mr. Kaye Iiiouva S
the
export
value
of
1947
was
a
Room 103
T Per cent of the total distribu
mere
$32,000.
WA.
1-5605
' OX. 8-2280 (Res.)
tion. As to imported films, nine
where
oieign and nine Japanese distri
“Hashimon” which won
buting companies are handling Se Grand Prix at the Venice
icreign motion pictures which wmkfeS^^
August 1951 drew
Co°mJ)es led the ladies for the
OFFICE
RESIDENCE
number 230 to 250 annually,
''■oild attention to the Japanese
EM. 4-1394
FOUR
SHIPS
2 Vesta Drive
week with a 522
EM.
4-1395
HUdson 5-1365
r
face. ef the big- challenge ’potion picture industry and at
Aiiee Nagami
MAIL. TO JAPAN. — Four
•
?
sam
e
time
encouraged
tU
tronr television in particular, dis
h
°uer 500 games For ships will soon be leaving for
A. E. McKague, Q.C.
* K^ 1 SC01’es of 519 and Japan. They are: on Feb. 12 from
tribution revenue hit the ceiling industry to produce quality picaround 1959 at $108 million. As Sr In ^Q^6™3^01131 c°nsuu- o01 respectively.
Vancouver—Oregon Mail; Feb.
Barrister & Solicitor
far as Japanese films are con
The gals proved better than
x^d11 San Francisco—Presi
cerned, their distribution revenue
tne men m the East End Nism dent Roosevelt; Feb. 15 from
NOTARY PUBLIC
increased gradually tintil I960
1008 Northern Ontario Building
League as Yosh Oda Vancouver — Kiso-Haru Marubut began to turn downwards m
330 Bay Street fat Adelaide)
both
lant 572 t^Pie, to top ana Feb. 23 from San Francisco
In 1961, Japanese movies were
n\e-™time, - the distribution
TORONTO
.
m
en
ladies.
Goro
aS many as 51 co^ A.awaguchi was best of the felnitio of Japanese films to foreign
pictures was 74 to 26 in 1961.
4 T However, stable export 547 ?
Harely Hatanaka at
Harry
Hayashi at 546
rf
them. a“Olml fe *ut Wf
Declining Attendance
<
followed
by
Kawaguchi
in the
Bus: EM. 6-9797 . Res: LE. 3-6759
In 1958 attendance set a post
nort^h
n
'
(Hlon
Picture
exwar record of 1,127 million and
m
ibeen 021 the basis of lied 486 to finish in second spot
the number of attendances aver
Barrister A Solicitor
P '
the
fiat
fee
system, but in 1960 among- the g'irls.
ERNEST TOMORI
aged 12 3 per capita. But these
krat!° °f the films exported
Cameron, Weldon
*
*
*
to decline around
1Jo9 and dropped to S63 million u,‘dei J^18 Pei'centage system inChartered Accountant
cieased to 21 per cent. The latter site-31 4Ve pin action saw Kaid*
Brewin & McCallum
in that year and 9-2
*
million in a
fc
U
T?
P
“
“
Sl
"
A
?
**of
1960.
Suite 1618
372 Bay St.
—
Toronto
"tajois_League with a 793 Tad
The number of movie houses
EM. 3-4391
2 CARLTON ST.
TORONTO
Government encoura^ Miura 7 61 and Sanzo Sasaki 749
Ln® fJe htSthest in postwar vears
T
e
®
econd
and
third
in
thrt
rr^r^n ^,45^ but decreased to potion picture exports because order Gln
Terakita at 691 and
this year. During 1961-69 tnen net foreign exchange earn- ^ ??O 3
"he
^2e Y10^6 houses were liquid i g- rate is fairly high. In fact
179 East Pender VANCOUVER 4, B.C MU. 2-4641
ated at a daily rate of 1.6 houses die nite (export value—film, im west ox the fair-sex.
Admission fees now tend uu- port cost) export value is 88 7 w'PTTTi?" ml on the
North American
long & kami realty Itd
vaidb. In 19o7, it was 62.02 ven Jer cent, as against 76.1 per cent ^fe '?Coart,
re. ia first place as
for metel products and 70.8 p*r
<ents~(excluding
tax) on the average but rose to cent for cotton textile. On a lon^ was k6 xrth 22 Points. Westroc
term basis, it will not be impol 5 Jn che runner-up spot with
kami insurance agencies Itd
19 pointe, while Tad’s Sportin-
Boiling
Scores
F. A. BREWIN, 0.G,
H
SMALL
SHOE SIZES..
CLEJRANCE SALE!
Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
I up to 14
ALBERT'S SHOE STORE
I N S U RANCE
^!^e Kamitakaka'iares- CYpress 9-5345
TORIC
OPTICAL
OPTOMETRISTS
Complete Care
1171 Dunlop, North Burnaby
(or leeve messas® at Al-.5-1743)
Raymond J^eong, res: HE. 3-3692
WELCOME JAPANESE CANADIANS
6O1MW DRAGON
CHOP SUEY HOUSE
?
?
NOU SERA ING BUSINESSMEN’S LUNCHEONS
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
ESTATE
ONLY $1.00
?
118 West Hastings St
12 NOON TO 4 P M
Open Noon to "T™ F°’ ™»~
—
Orders to Take Out
EM. 8-2475
IMA Dundas St. W„ Toronto