Page 1
’finding
>cl^««
t Ottawj 'l
’W in cssi ]
ick Serving “Instant Noodles” Becoming Big Japan Export Item
yO, — “Instant ramen, ,or
ferved noodle invented in
►ten vears ago and among
internaI^^B^P^nese) is now; inter
nafeoWly known and an .important
ffpreign currency earner.- is only five or:,six years
TUESDAY'
[“instant ramen’’ ' began . to
ported. Its export value
b over 1,000 million yen in
blisher
^ind last year recorded a
lish Efe
hnillion yen sales oversea^
ie Editor
nonding to HO million
Tg.
f Industrial circles believethai Ehis sharp increase can ,bf
ths
uted to the war in South
im where fighting soldiers
WEST
Cynically.
and war-tired people recognize Japanese producer.
the food as an excellent emer Korean producers are selling
their products at a lower price,
gency dish.
Besides South Vietnam, this thus affecting the sales of Japa
good, in South Vietnam
handy food is being exported nese
and
Indonesia.
There are six or
with considerably good results seven such factories
in Hong
to almost all of the other South Kong with two more under
con
east Asian countries, whose peo- struction. One large Japanese
quite familiar with producer also plans to build a
pies
Chinese dishes. Acknowledging plant
in Indonesia.
the profitability of this industry,
Many
Europeans are also “in
many small enterprises have join
stant ramen” fans. The food is
ed in its production.
In South Korea, several com exported to Italy, a country of
panies have entered this line macaroni, where people eat it as
with technical aid by a major a substitute for soup.
IIIIIIIlllHilllllHIIIII|,,,,,,,,ll,,,lll,,i|l,ll,lll,,,l,,l,,,,,,,,,,,,,1I,,,,ll,,,,l,,,,,l,l,,,,,,ll,,l,,,,nn,,ll,,,ll,,,l,l,,,l,,U,I, *,,m^
•nt.
•5 .
“SUKIYAKI”
Cookbook By
HISS STELLA ITO
1
IED
/anted
who most d
>ndly enjoys
:nd vesta
with 3 cElome. Other
able livid
’V (Toronto)
n.
he lie
janadian
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A story of J.C.’s By
JESSIE L. BEATTIE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
inted
nee serve
re fully; aMr. Yoe;
Most enthusiastic exporters are
the small and medium-sized pro
ducers, some < of whom use the
JAS
(Japanese
Agricultural
Standard) mark on their poor
quality goods.
To prevent international dis
trust caused by these poor-quali
ty goods, the Japan Ramen In
dustrial Association has appeal
ed to the Ministry of Internation
al Trade and Industry that the
quality of export goods should
In the beginning a pack of be subject to inspection by the
“instant ramen” was priced at Export Inspection Law and that
about 22 yen, but recently it is an export cartel should be set
up to control their export.
quoted at 15 or 16 yen.
The success in export of “in
stant ramen” was not realized
without effort. Foreign langu
ages depending on their destina
tion. In Southeast Asia, however,
Japanese language is used on
packages to show the goods are
really from Japan, the home of
“instant ramen.”
Another problem is the drop
in export prices because of the
intensive sales competition.
XXXIII—No. 19
TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1969
Toronto, Ont
IliniilHIlHIIllllllllllllllllHHIIHi
awabata's Nobel Address
Dr. S. I. Hayakawa Chides US Nisei
For Being Prejudiced Against Blacks
DITOR’S NOTE:—-Novelist Yasunari Kawabata, winner of
ear’s Nobel Literature Prize, delivered this lecture, entitled
n the Beautiful and Myself,” recently at the Swedish Aca“I deeply feel that most Japanese have a cer
SAN FRANCISCO—Dr. S.I. Hayakawa chided
uesty. Given here is the second part of his Nobel lecture as translated
tain
prejudice against Negroes. I don’t
■int#English by his American translator Dr. Edward Seldenstickei. about 300 fellow Japanese Americans for being know residual
that
I
myself
am entirely free, despite the
prejudiced against Negroes recently.
fact
that
I
have
been
deeply involved in black
on serge;
The acting president of San Francisco State
By -Yasunori Kawabata
manuhete1942.
College
addressed
a
Japanese
American
dinner.
>, Apply 2
“But this is part of the culture of Japan since
WAkutagawa committed suicide in 1927, at the age of thirty-five. He arrived late in a driving rain, and marched
lo).
:
early
in its history. Japan has tried to absorb
Mil mv essay “Eyes in Their last Extremity, I had to say: through a 60-member picket line at the San Fran
cultures
that they thought were superior—Korean,
®ever
‘
alienated
one
may
be
from
the
world,
suicide
is
not
a
cisco Athletic Club.
it___ 2
Chinese, Portuguese, Dutch and the West.
Borm of enlightenment. ■ .However, admirable he may be, the man
“
Support
your
local
puppet,
”
“
Hayakawa
—
flat to rest. ^Wcommits suicide is far from the realm of the saint.
They despised those whom they have not im
I neithei Ronnie Rat’s Houseboy,” the pickets chanted.
. Phone S’
itated'
and Japanese culture has never thought
Inure nor am in sympathy-with suicide. I had another friend
Hayakawa, a native of Vancouver, Canada, talk
Idied young, an avant-garde painter. He too thought of suicide ed at length about his (Nisei) background, then it worthwhile' to imitate anything from within
ale
the black culture.
^the vears, and of him T wrote in this same essay.:- He seem, remarked:
“And therefore, they tend,
^ve said over and-over that-there^ is no art,supen°r odeath,
ig-Zag Sevquite
unconsciously, to look down
iners — fa
to die is to live,” I could see, however, that for him, born
sujimura -j
on
anything
from which they
W Buddhist temple and educated - in a Buddhist schoolhave nothing to imitate.
of
death
was
very
different,
from
that
in.
the
West.
Amon„
ke]
“This has led to a sort of
LOS ANGELES.—As surprising as the demand for his re
who give thoughts to things, is there one who does not think
culture
condecension on the part
Suicide?” With me was the knowledge that fellow Ikkyu (1394- signation by the county administrative officer L. S. Hollinger was
’H
of
the
Japanese.
twice contemplated suicide. I have said, that
tie Feb. 21, Dr. Thomas Noguchi declared (Feb. 25) he would quit
Same Problems
the priest Ikkyu is known even , to children, and because as chief’medical examiner and county coroner.
“Nevertheless, the Nisei have
The Japan-born pathologist intended to step down after testi^^dotes about his limitlessly eccentric behavior have c0®®
n
confronted the same problems
JUIST
in ample numbers. If is said of him that children c ir
* fving at the Sirhan trial. -He will become a pathologist in the county medical service of racial discrimination and preKe to stroke his beard, that wild birds took feed from his hand.
judice that the Negroes have
l#ould seem from all this that he was the ultimate m niM- at no reduction in salary. He is paid $31,000 a year.
Sasaki
confronted.
|mess. that he was an approachable and gentle sort of pr-rest.
His appointment in December 1967 was opposed by the UCLA
“Because we are smaller in
SA^a matter of fact he was an approachable and gentle sort oi and USC schools of medicine on the ground he was too young (he
11
number
than the Negroes by far,
Sest. As a matter of fact he was the most severe and profound of was 40 then) and inexperienced for the job (he had been certified
52
because
of certain advantages of
ONTO
priests. Said to have been the son of an emperor, he entered a forensic pathologist since 1963). During his six month proba
intactness
family struc
Bmple at the age of six, and early showed his genius as a poe ic tionary period, he personally performed the autopsy on the late ture and in ofourour
culture,
we have
^igv. At the same time he was troubled with the deepest ot Sen. Robert F. Kennedy who was assassinated last June 5.
valuable
advantages
that
the
ubts about religion and life. “If there is a god, let him help
Hollinger said a number of complaints and charges about the Negroes do not have.
Rif there is none, let me throw.myself to the bottom of the
way in which Dr. Noguchi runs his office were under investiga
“But we are nevertheless a
& become food for fishes.” Leaving behind these words he sougm tion. But these were never disclosed before the County Board of colored
race of non-whites, and
Khrow himself into a lake, but was held back. On another oc- Supervisors in view of the sudden ..resignation.
the
things
they said about us
sion, numbers of his fellows were incriminated when a priest in
Japanese
in
1942 are not any
I
BDaitokuji Temple committed suicide. Ikkyu went back to Jie
more
than
what
they said about
gple, “the burden heavy on my shoulders,” and sought to starve
Negroes
in
Ku
KIux
Klan circles.
•I
mself to death. He gave his collected poetry the title Collection
“
So
we
have
been
through the
'3
the Roiling Clouds,” and himself used the expression Roiling
same
thing,
but
we
have been
gads”’ as a pen name. In this collection and its successor are
able
to
cut
through
better
gms quite without parallel in the Chinese and especially the
OSAKA. — Moving pedestrian I Each unit will be supported than the Negroes haveit up
to
| poetry of the Japanese middle ages, erotic poems and poems walks at airports, stations and | seven meters above the ground
this
point
and
therefore
I
want
Tut the secrets of the bedchamber that leave one. in utter astonlocations to ease congestion and encased in a transparent to repeat to you —- for what they
TO'meiit. He sought, by eating fish and drinking spirits and having other
over short distances are no longer plastic tube that will provide
dmerce with women, to go beyond the rules and procriptions a novelty, but planners for Expo users with a bird’s eye-view of said to me is that we do have
pe Zen of his day, and to seek liberation from them, and thus, ’70. to be held in Osaka, Japan, Expo ’70’s pavilions and facili an intermediary role. One of the
contributions we can make to
ping against established religious forms, he sought in Ike pur- have designed one that ■will be ties.
American culture is to act as in
t of Zen the revival and affirmation of the essence of life, oi unique in many respects.
Designed to operate somewhat termediary between the whites
®1 war and moral collapse.
In all, 13 units will be install like a horizontally moving esca and black.
BHis temple, the Daitokuju at Murasakino in Kyoto, remains ed to link various areas of the lator, the “moving sidewalks”
“There are many things the
Renter of the tea ceremony, and specimens of his calligraphy Expo site. In total length, the will cost 730 million yen ($2 mil blacks can learn from the Nisei
“moving sidewalk” system will lion) and will use 1,100 tons of community that will help them
K greatly admired as hangings in alcoves of tea rooms.
K I myself have two specimens of Ikkyu’s calligraphy. One of measure 1,430 meters, probably steel. Of this, 53 tons of steel to prosper better, to work their
tn Ai
is a single line: “It is easy to enter the world of the Buddha, the longest in the world when will go into the vertical pipes, way into the whole -culture betcompleted.
and 700 tons into H-beam and ter and to defend themselves
hard to enter the world! of the devil.” Much drawn to these it 'is
The
Expo
sidewalks
wul
range
CT-beam
horizontal girders that better.
.Its
Rds, I frequently make use of them when asked for a specimen from 78 to 194 meters in length.
“And there are many things
RUY ?Wn calligraphy. They can be read in any number of ways, The 194-meter unit in itself win will support the “moving side
Hdifficult as one chooses, but in that world of the devil added be the world’s longest of its walks” above the ground. Anoth we can explain to the whole
er 240 tons of steel plates will culture because the white culture
Bthe world of the Buddha, Ikkyu of Zen comes home to me
kind.
’
be
used.
now trusts us pretty much on
Ki great immediacy. The fact that for an artist, seeking truth,
Prefabrication of the steel por behalf of the black community
®>d, and beauty, the fear and petition even as a prayer in those
tions is already under way at Ya that will allay the fears of the
Birds about the world of the devil—the fact that it should be
►
white people of the blacks.
wata.
gre apparent on the surface, hidden behind, perhaps speaks w™
g mevitabilitv of fate. There can be no world of the Buddha
Upon completion, the “moving
Role fore Nisei
out the world of the devil. And the" world of the devil is the
sidewalks” will be able to carry
“
We
can
perform a mediatory
V
Srid difficult of entry. It is not for the weak of heart.
ii
TOKYO. — Japanese archaeo 16.000 to 20,000 persons an hour function in this, and especially
g “If you meet a Buddha, kill him. If you meet a patriarch
logists said recently they have at a speed of 40 meters per min- this is perhaps one of the things
|
of the law, kill him.”
germinated seeds which.are l,olu
we can contribute to the future
Expo ’70 (Japan World Expo of our country as America is a
■. ^‘iS i5 a well-known Zen motto. If Buddhism is divided generai- vears old.
aU° -^e sects that believe in salvation by faith and those that
Chickweed and pigweed seeds, sition, Osaka, 1970) will open on very mixed and varied society.
!■
“All of us as Americans have
?.e-in _salvation by one’s own efforts, then of course there must found in ruins of two ancient March 15, 1970, for a six-mon+h
J
run.
The
central
theme
of
this
experiences
that other peoples
Solent utterances in Zen, which insists upon salvation by houses, grew to a height of about
first
event
of
its
kind
to
be
held
of
?
the
world
mostly do not have.
>
own
efforts.
On
the
other
side,
the
side
of
salvation
by
faith,
two inches in a few days, the
pjn- I
jnran (1173-1262), the’founder of the-Shin sect, once said: director of Ibaraki Archaeolo in Asia will be “Progress and
(Cont. on Page 8)
Harmony for Mankind.”
rson i
gical Society said..
■
(Cont. on Page 8)
Los Angeles Japanese Coroner Resigns
GIVE
Moving Sidewalks At Expo 70
Germinate Seeds
1,500 Years Old
>cl^««
t Ottawj 'l
’W in cssi ]
ick Serving “Instant Noodles” Becoming Big Japan Export Item
yO, — “Instant ramen, ,or
ferved noodle invented in
►ten vears ago and among
internaI^^B^P^nese) is now; inter
nafeoWly known and an .important
ffpreign currency earner.- is only five or:,six years
TUESDAY'
[“instant ramen’’ ' began . to
ported. Its export value
b over 1,000 million yen in
blisher
^ind last year recorded a
lish Efe
hnillion yen sales oversea^
ie Editor
nonding to HO million
Tg.
f Industrial circles believethai Ehis sharp increase can ,bf
ths
uted to the war in South
im where fighting soldiers
WEST
Cynically.
and war-tired people recognize Japanese producer.
the food as an excellent emer Korean producers are selling
their products at a lower price,
gency dish.
Besides South Vietnam, this thus affecting the sales of Japa
good, in South Vietnam
handy food is being exported nese
and
Indonesia.
There are six or
with considerably good results seven such factories
in Hong
to almost all of the other South Kong with two more under
con
east Asian countries, whose peo- struction. One large Japanese
quite familiar with producer also plans to build a
pies
Chinese dishes. Acknowledging plant
in Indonesia.
the profitability of this industry,
Many
Europeans are also “in
many small enterprises have join
stant ramen” fans. The food is
ed in its production.
In South Korea, several com exported to Italy, a country of
panies have entered this line macaroni, where people eat it as
with technical aid by a major a substitute for soup.
IIIIIIIlllHilllllHIIIII|,,,,,,,,ll,,,lll,,i|l,ll,lll,,,l,,l,,,,,,,,,,,,,1I,,,,ll,,,,l,,,,,l,l,,,,,,ll,,l,,,,nn,,ll,,,ll,,,l,l,,,l,,U,I, *,,m^
•nt.
•5 .
“SUKIYAKI”
Cookbook By
HISS STELLA ITO
1
IED
/anted
who most d
>ndly enjoys
:nd vesta
with 3 cElome. Other
able livid
’V (Toronto)
n.
he lie
janadian
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A story of J.C.’s By
JESSIE L. BEATTIE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
inted
nee serve
re fully; aMr. Yoe;
Most enthusiastic exporters are
the small and medium-sized pro
ducers, some < of whom use the
JAS
(Japanese
Agricultural
Standard) mark on their poor
quality goods.
To prevent international dis
trust caused by these poor-quali
ty goods, the Japan Ramen In
dustrial Association has appeal
ed to the Ministry of Internation
al Trade and Industry that the
quality of export goods should
In the beginning a pack of be subject to inspection by the
“instant ramen” was priced at Export Inspection Law and that
about 22 yen, but recently it is an export cartel should be set
up to control their export.
quoted at 15 or 16 yen.
The success in export of “in
stant ramen” was not realized
without effort. Foreign langu
ages depending on their destina
tion. In Southeast Asia, however,
Japanese language is used on
packages to show the goods are
really from Japan, the home of
“instant ramen.”
Another problem is the drop
in export prices because of the
intensive sales competition.
XXXIII—No. 19
TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1969
Toronto, Ont
IliniilHIlHIIllllllllllllllllHHIIHi
awabata's Nobel Address
Dr. S. I. Hayakawa Chides US Nisei
For Being Prejudiced Against Blacks
DITOR’S NOTE:—-Novelist Yasunari Kawabata, winner of
ear’s Nobel Literature Prize, delivered this lecture, entitled
n the Beautiful and Myself,” recently at the Swedish Aca“I deeply feel that most Japanese have a cer
SAN FRANCISCO—Dr. S.I. Hayakawa chided
uesty. Given here is the second part of his Nobel lecture as translated
tain
prejudice against Negroes. I don’t
■int#English by his American translator Dr. Edward Seldenstickei. about 300 fellow Japanese Americans for being know residual
that
I
myself
am entirely free, despite the
prejudiced against Negroes recently.
fact
that
I
have
been
deeply involved in black
on serge;
The acting president of San Francisco State
By -Yasunori Kawabata
manuhete1942.
College
addressed
a
Japanese
American
dinner.
>, Apply 2
“But this is part of the culture of Japan since
WAkutagawa committed suicide in 1927, at the age of thirty-five. He arrived late in a driving rain, and marched
lo).
:
early
in its history. Japan has tried to absorb
Mil mv essay “Eyes in Their last Extremity, I had to say: through a 60-member picket line at the San Fran
cultures
that they thought were superior—Korean,
®ever
‘
alienated
one
may
be
from
the
world,
suicide
is
not
a
cisco Athletic Club.
it___ 2
Chinese, Portuguese, Dutch and the West.
Borm of enlightenment. ■ .However, admirable he may be, the man
“
Support
your
local
puppet,
”
“
Hayakawa
—
flat to rest. ^Wcommits suicide is far from the realm of the saint.
They despised those whom they have not im
I neithei Ronnie Rat’s Houseboy,” the pickets chanted.
. Phone S’
itated'
and Japanese culture has never thought
Inure nor am in sympathy-with suicide. I had another friend
Hayakawa, a native of Vancouver, Canada, talk
Idied young, an avant-garde painter. He too thought of suicide ed at length about his (Nisei) background, then it worthwhile' to imitate anything from within
ale
the black culture.
^the vears, and of him T wrote in this same essay.:- He seem, remarked:
“And therefore, they tend,
^ve said over and-over that-there^ is no art,supen°r odeath,
ig-Zag Sevquite
unconsciously, to look down
iners — fa
to die is to live,” I could see, however, that for him, born
sujimura -j
on
anything
from which they
W Buddhist temple and educated - in a Buddhist schoolhave nothing to imitate.
of
death
was
very
different,
from
that
in.
the
West.
Amon„
ke]
“This has led to a sort of
LOS ANGELES.—As surprising as the demand for his re
who give thoughts to things, is there one who does not think
culture
condecension on the part
Suicide?” With me was the knowledge that fellow Ikkyu (1394- signation by the county administrative officer L. S. Hollinger was
’H
of
the
Japanese.
twice contemplated suicide. I have said, that
tie Feb. 21, Dr. Thomas Noguchi declared (Feb. 25) he would quit
Same Problems
the priest Ikkyu is known even , to children, and because as chief’medical examiner and county coroner.
“Nevertheless, the Nisei have
The Japan-born pathologist intended to step down after testi^^dotes about his limitlessly eccentric behavior have c0®®
n
confronted the same problems
JUIST
in ample numbers. If is said of him that children c ir
* fving at the Sirhan trial. -He will become a pathologist in the county medical service of racial discrimination and preKe to stroke his beard, that wild birds took feed from his hand.
judice that the Negroes have
l#ould seem from all this that he was the ultimate m niM- at no reduction in salary. He is paid $31,000 a year.
Sasaki
confronted.
|mess. that he was an approachable and gentle sort of pr-rest.
His appointment in December 1967 was opposed by the UCLA
“Because we are smaller in
SA^a matter of fact he was an approachable and gentle sort oi and USC schools of medicine on the ground he was too young (he
11
number
than the Negroes by far,
Sest. As a matter of fact he was the most severe and profound of was 40 then) and inexperienced for the job (he had been certified
52
because
of certain advantages of
ONTO
priests. Said to have been the son of an emperor, he entered a forensic pathologist since 1963). During his six month proba
intactness
family struc
Bmple at the age of six, and early showed his genius as a poe ic tionary period, he personally performed the autopsy on the late ture and in ofourour
culture,
we have
^igv. At the same time he was troubled with the deepest ot Sen. Robert F. Kennedy who was assassinated last June 5.
valuable
advantages
that
the
ubts about religion and life. “If there is a god, let him help
Hollinger said a number of complaints and charges about the Negroes do not have.
Rif there is none, let me throw.myself to the bottom of the
way in which Dr. Noguchi runs his office were under investiga
“But we are nevertheless a
& become food for fishes.” Leaving behind these words he sougm tion. But these were never disclosed before the County Board of colored
race of non-whites, and
Khrow himself into a lake, but was held back. On another oc- Supervisors in view of the sudden ..resignation.
the
things
they said about us
sion, numbers of his fellows were incriminated when a priest in
Japanese
in
1942 are not any
I
BDaitokuji Temple committed suicide. Ikkyu went back to Jie
more
than
what
they said about
gple, “the burden heavy on my shoulders,” and sought to starve
Negroes
in
Ku
KIux
Klan circles.
•I
mself to death. He gave his collected poetry the title Collection
“
So
we
have
been
through the
'3
the Roiling Clouds,” and himself used the expression Roiling
same
thing,
but
we
have been
gads”’ as a pen name. In this collection and its successor are
able
to
cut
through
better
gms quite without parallel in the Chinese and especially the
OSAKA. — Moving pedestrian I Each unit will be supported than the Negroes haveit up
to
| poetry of the Japanese middle ages, erotic poems and poems walks at airports, stations and | seven meters above the ground
this
point
and
therefore
I
want
Tut the secrets of the bedchamber that leave one. in utter astonlocations to ease congestion and encased in a transparent to repeat to you —- for what they
TO'meiit. He sought, by eating fish and drinking spirits and having other
over short distances are no longer plastic tube that will provide
dmerce with women, to go beyond the rules and procriptions a novelty, but planners for Expo users with a bird’s eye-view of said to me is that we do have
pe Zen of his day, and to seek liberation from them, and thus, ’70. to be held in Osaka, Japan, Expo ’70’s pavilions and facili an intermediary role. One of the
contributions we can make to
ping against established religious forms, he sought in Ike pur- have designed one that ■will be ties.
American culture is to act as in
t of Zen the revival and affirmation of the essence of life, oi unique in many respects.
Designed to operate somewhat termediary between the whites
®1 war and moral collapse.
In all, 13 units will be install like a horizontally moving esca and black.
BHis temple, the Daitokuju at Murasakino in Kyoto, remains ed to link various areas of the lator, the “moving sidewalks”
“There are many things the
Renter of the tea ceremony, and specimens of his calligraphy Expo site. In total length, the will cost 730 million yen ($2 mil blacks can learn from the Nisei
“moving sidewalk” system will lion) and will use 1,100 tons of community that will help them
K greatly admired as hangings in alcoves of tea rooms.
K I myself have two specimens of Ikkyu’s calligraphy. One of measure 1,430 meters, probably steel. Of this, 53 tons of steel to prosper better, to work their
tn Ai
is a single line: “It is easy to enter the world of the Buddha, the longest in the world when will go into the vertical pipes, way into the whole -culture betcompleted.
and 700 tons into H-beam and ter and to defend themselves
hard to enter the world! of the devil.” Much drawn to these it 'is
The
Expo
sidewalks
wul
range
CT-beam
horizontal girders that better.
.Its
Rds, I frequently make use of them when asked for a specimen from 78 to 194 meters in length.
“And there are many things
RUY ?Wn calligraphy. They can be read in any number of ways, The 194-meter unit in itself win will support the “moving side
Hdifficult as one chooses, but in that world of the devil added be the world’s longest of its walks” above the ground. Anoth we can explain to the whole
er 240 tons of steel plates will culture because the white culture
Bthe world of the Buddha, Ikkyu of Zen comes home to me
kind.
’
be
used.
now trusts us pretty much on
Ki great immediacy. The fact that for an artist, seeking truth,
Prefabrication of the steel por behalf of the black community
®>d, and beauty, the fear and petition even as a prayer in those
tions is already under way at Ya that will allay the fears of the
Birds about the world of the devil—the fact that it should be
►
white people of the blacks.
wata.
gre apparent on the surface, hidden behind, perhaps speaks w™
g mevitabilitv of fate. There can be no world of the Buddha
Upon completion, the “moving
Role fore Nisei
out the world of the devil. And the" world of the devil is the
sidewalks” will be able to carry
“
We
can
perform a mediatory
V
Srid difficult of entry. It is not for the weak of heart.
ii
TOKYO. — Japanese archaeo 16.000 to 20,000 persons an hour function in this, and especially
g “If you meet a Buddha, kill him. If you meet a patriarch
logists said recently they have at a speed of 40 meters per min- this is perhaps one of the things
|
of the law, kill him.”
germinated seeds which.are l,olu
we can contribute to the future
Expo ’70 (Japan World Expo of our country as America is a
■. ^‘iS i5 a well-known Zen motto. If Buddhism is divided generai- vears old.
aU° -^e sects that believe in salvation by faith and those that
Chickweed and pigweed seeds, sition, Osaka, 1970) will open on very mixed and varied society.
!■
“All of us as Americans have
?.e-in _salvation by one’s own efforts, then of course there must found in ruins of two ancient March 15, 1970, for a six-mon+h
J
run.
The
central
theme
of
this
experiences
that other peoples
Solent utterances in Zen, which insists upon salvation by houses, grew to a height of about
first
event
of
its
kind
to
be
held
of
?
the
world
mostly do not have.
>
own
efforts.
On
the
other
side,
the
side
of
salvation
by
faith,
two inches in a few days, the
pjn- I
jnran (1173-1262), the’founder of the-Shin sect, once said: director of Ibaraki Archaeolo in Asia will be “Progress and
(Cont. on Page 8)
Harmony for Mankind.”
rson i
gical Society said..
■
(Cont. on Page 8)
Los Angeles Japanese Coroner Resigns
GIVE
Moving Sidewalks At Expo 70
Germinate Seeds
1,500 Years Old
Page 2
i
PAGE 2
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Page 7
uesday,-March. 11, ,1969
PAGE 7
Dates And Doings
“Man, It “Showa” Is!”
By BILL MARUTANI
ipan Photo Show At Trade Centre March 18 to 22
' JI to a good policy: io have the RIGHT POLI CT
*
” that calculatin° by the Japanese calendar
(ba d?s ltls up°n the reion of various emperors) is easy, you’re
either very , learned or you’ve just never tried it.
'
. .^ raost of us know that current reign of Emperor Hirohito
is esignated “Showa” (Peaceful Era) which commenced in 1995
thus making the current year of 1969 “Showa Yonju-yonen ” SUP tO 44 years isn>t t0° bad> although if you‘were’born
n 19„o you may have a problem somewhat similar to trvin^ to
lgU1'e
"^ether noon is 12 o’clock a.m. or p.m. Were vmi then
way™ »? ° Ju‘yOnen’” “Showa-Ichinen” ... or perhaps “Sho-
[ TORONTO.—Japan’s , camera industry will focus on Expo 70
i the second “Japan Photo Show” at the Japan Trade Centre
[arch 18 .—- 22.
’
' Attractions for camera fans at the Osaka World’s Fair will
> previewed with scale models and slides of all the major palions.
. '
'
There will also be an Expo 70 information booth and slide
towings of photographs of Expo 67 taken by award-winningoronto photographer John de Visser.
"
j The show will exhibit the newest in cameras and equipment
On the other hand if you’re over 44 years of age and don’< I
■om leading Japanese manufacturers. Included will be still and
happen
to know who the previous emperor was (or more par
ovie cameras, slides and motion picture projectors and the latest
ticularly the designation of his reign) or don’t know the number
icessory developments. '
v
reign’ d°n,t bOther’ JuSt t0SS away your Pencil and
j uui pda.
Consult
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-4681
Residential Painting
And Decorating
By
KAZ KATO
Can 221-7841
i
11 New Japan Immigrants Invited to Centre Dance
NOW, THE TOUGH PORT
AUTO — FIRE — LIFE
EASTER THIS YEAR comes on April 6th, which, incidentally
TORONTO.—Attention all. new Japanese immigrants to CanALL FORMS
AuXl
T
6
qUi
J
e
C1
°
Se
t0
the
beSt
8
’
eneral
emulation
^f
OF
la! Keep Friday, March 28th'-open because you are all cordially
Apul ith as being, the actual day of Easter. One never knows
vited to attend one of the; biggest social occasions at the Toronto
om ,year to year when Easter comes. Literally, one must be an
.panese Canadian Cultural Centre: The Nisei Karate Club sponecclesiastic
astronomer to calculate the vernal equinox (when the
■red “Karate Boogaloo’’ Dance.
coaault
t
and Hlght are exactly ecIual), then check for
Come out and show us how they “go-go” in Tokyo! And our thUr
KJYO
TAMURA
the first following full moon, then the first Sunday following tha^
rls will show you'the Canadian Style. In fact a half dozen or
tobonto
r
fTUla EaStei’ Sunday may come as early as
^ 366-5812 Res. Pl. 9-831
ore girls will be dancing under the psychedelic lights all evening
7
I
Maich- 22nd or as late as April 25th. For those with slide ™les,
»r your entertainment. Come out and join in or come to sit and
f°r the PaSt century w°uld come to
atch the action with a cool drink.
th.
or
rd.
as
you
wish
There’ll be fantastic door' prizes, spot dances, and hundreds 1
Bum 824.1153
922-1359
' stags looking for action. Qne of the biggest bars ever planned
BLOOD ON THE MOON
ith “out of this world” bartenders swishing drinks and crackling
THEI^’S S0ME sharp reader who muttered to hime will be opera ting for- your enjoyment and pleasure.
q
t}Je Rate for Easter would vary depending on the
ERNEST JOMORJ
latitude
and
longitude
from which the astronomical reading was
d
\
a
,
d
J?
ngirude
So, all you new-Japanese Canadians, come on out and meet
Chartered Accountant
>me old Canadians.. They are dying to meet you. That’s Friday taken. And he s absolutely right. In fact, there was much blood
gening March 28th,beginning 8:00 p.m. at the Japanese Canadian shed among Christians over this issue of dates (they had theiSuit* 403
ultural Centre — the Karate Boogaloo! —N.K.C.
enllTP
f f°rm °Ver SUf>StanCe) and the Em?eror Constantine
130 BLOOB ST. W.
TORONTO j
cal ed a conference in an effort to halt the bickering and killings.
*
♦
But unanimity was never achieved and, for example, to this day
the
Greek Orthodox Church continues to celebrate Easter under
rchitect-artist Nobby Kubota Shows At Isaacs
an original formula first announced by Rome. As a result only
By KAY KRITZWISER
Custom Picture
“.'I' “1 T “ the EaStern “d Western churches coincidentally
PirT25:°5T^‘^P?J h^
P1exig;lass and plastics make celebrate Easter on the same Sunday.
Framing
ml Mj ^a.1 (Jallenge to artists in three exhibitions this week •
“Easter” itself has quite an un-Christian. origin
ne of them is Nobuo Kubota at Isaacs Gallery.
NISHIMURA
the Saxon name of the pagan goddess “Eastre,” the goddess
in, Ku\OtA’ Toronto . architect, has shown sculpture in groun
>'? a^ ^e ^aa?s before,- but' his one-man exhibition is his first of Spring. Moreover the custom of coloring eggs is one borrowed
■enta^0^-^ "'ell. armed. The exhibition has polish exSS
Per®ian and Egyptians who adorned eggs the svmbol
^Ir™ 8hMt To««,o 7, Out.
ta doriglnahty’andwhocould ask more the first time round? of fertility and new birth.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
Tokdo Ntohimura
^
nd
P^d'aluminum piece, lilts around the ceiling
20TH CENTURY ADORNMENT
ong C ^^
a^ial dance, and, farthe?
WHAT WILL BE ADORNED on Easter Sunday will be all
d bv invill ^eS/'S ^t- C?l°rless plexiglass tubes suspendthose gals appearing in their brightest best, and it’ll inevitably
fakes
bo aover
height
which
es them vulnerable to ,smears'from hairy heads
5 foot
8.
boost their spirits . . . barring a tragedy of two ladies showing
h™d
WOrks in low-shine black painted up with the same outfit. But also will be adorned the church, par
ahdhood’s
as in Bissection IV. It’s like ticularly the chancel, with, tulips, hyacinths, lillies and so forth.
- flattens on Lf aClng Angers to make a cathedral roof, and A cascade of bright colors and sweet, intoxicating scent of flowers
nens out the same way.
’
P sSght^^
fIoor ^placement to stand all symbolic of the risen Christ.
A few years ago this writer decided to put a small, a ver”
•ith accents
these pieces
'hese touXs
^
lun&«s that hinge, locks that lock, small, challenge to the thinking members of his Methodist Church
‘cation of thp
to be a httlejp^
utter sophis- The suggestion was something such as follows.
n ot the black forms really, need anything else?
The Easter flowers, symbolic of the risen Christ, beautiful
“U^tandew^T HI Ras ^
sparing sculptural line
Slocan City, B.C.
and estnetically pleasing as they are, nevertheless are but fleetimr:
bln air will
Airi 11 be gone~ tomorrow. On
n the other hand,
* if the Church
O'
ition of a
^ d\n& - ''^^^ ?ach other^
—but
the
Ut[^
he impish
^^ ad
ad 1 they
Phone 355-2211
>on. The fun-wLP e ^es it changing perspective and dimen- | wishes to concretely uplift the meaning of the risen Christ and
n ingredient
n_,aPproaclv can also-prove that space is as much
at the same time practice the Christian love that we speak of
&tculcnL in art as material. •
why not rebuild the church body of Christ by taking all this
thousands of dollars of “flower money” and help in the rebuild
ing of a burned-out church in Mississippi ? I honestly thought
they’d go for this one, a little challenge, but with a potential for
SPORTING GOODS
an awful lot of meaning.
SKATED
But . . . they turned it down. They wanted their flowers more
What was I saying about “hangups” of form over substance be
jockey Equipment
fore?
Skate ‘Sharpening -
INSURANCE
I
KINO’S MARKET
R®d & White
food Store
DANFORTH
EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
21 Dundee011*
d
Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
^ Toronto, Suite 1402. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By.Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
St. John's Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School 2:00 P.M. Worship Service 3:00 PM
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
»* Elizabeth ^ ''“■'S
.“
Toronto, Canada
Nisei Service and Church School — Sun. 11:30 A.M,
English — Rev. G. S. Imai, 444-5159
Japanese — Rev. Y. C. Horikoshi, 766-5632
701 Dovercourt Rd.
A warm welcome to all.
S. oi Bloor
Phone 364-3481
CATOnrar- “
To Save You)
BERING SERVICE - -TAKE-OUT- ORDERS
Banquet Facilities
tem™,)!?™!L9' Private Parties nSSB7n’’!?S
“ 8—“)
^^^225-^810 NIGHTLY
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 1969
Spring Higan
10:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service — Rev.' Newton Ishiurd
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service — Bev. F. Watanabe
918 Bathurst St.
Telephone: 534-4302
: ,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
OPEN FBI. UNTIL S PM
Formal
Rentals
N®w F«
Weddings
alna
Of Toronto
CUSTOM MADE SUIT
Stu Nagai _
437 DANFORTH AVE,
PHONE: 443-8164. ~
i
PAGE 7
Dates And Doings
“Man, It “Showa” Is!”
By BILL MARUTANI
ipan Photo Show At Trade Centre March 18 to 22
' JI to a good policy: io have the RIGHT POLI CT
*
” that calculatin° by the Japanese calendar
(ba d?s ltls up°n the reion of various emperors) is easy, you’re
either very , learned or you’ve just never tried it.
'
. .^ raost of us know that current reign of Emperor Hirohito
is esignated “Showa” (Peaceful Era) which commenced in 1995
thus making the current year of 1969 “Showa Yonju-yonen ” SUP tO 44 years isn>t t0° bad> although if you‘were’born
n 19„o you may have a problem somewhat similar to trvin^ to
lgU1'e
"^ether noon is 12 o’clock a.m. or p.m. Were vmi then
way™ »? ° Ju‘yOnen’” “Showa-Ichinen” ... or perhaps “Sho-
[ TORONTO.—Japan’s , camera industry will focus on Expo 70
i the second “Japan Photo Show” at the Japan Trade Centre
[arch 18 .—- 22.
’
' Attractions for camera fans at the Osaka World’s Fair will
> previewed with scale models and slides of all the major palions.
. '
'
There will also be an Expo 70 information booth and slide
towings of photographs of Expo 67 taken by award-winningoronto photographer John de Visser.
"
j The show will exhibit the newest in cameras and equipment
On the other hand if you’re over 44 years of age and don’< I
■om leading Japanese manufacturers. Included will be still and
happen
to know who the previous emperor was (or more par
ovie cameras, slides and motion picture projectors and the latest
ticularly the designation of his reign) or don’t know the number
icessory developments. '
v
reign’ d°n,t bOther’ JuSt t0SS away your Pencil and
j uui pda.
Consult
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-4681
Residential Painting
And Decorating
By
KAZ KATO
Can 221-7841
i
11 New Japan Immigrants Invited to Centre Dance
NOW, THE TOUGH PORT
AUTO — FIRE — LIFE
EASTER THIS YEAR comes on April 6th, which, incidentally
TORONTO.—Attention all. new Japanese immigrants to CanALL FORMS
AuXl
T
6
qUi
J
e
C1
°
Se
t0
the
beSt
8
’
eneral
emulation
^f
OF
la! Keep Friday, March 28th'-open because you are all cordially
Apul ith as being, the actual day of Easter. One never knows
vited to attend one of the; biggest social occasions at the Toronto
om ,year to year when Easter comes. Literally, one must be an
.panese Canadian Cultural Centre: The Nisei Karate Club sponecclesiastic
astronomer to calculate the vernal equinox (when the
■red “Karate Boogaloo’’ Dance.
coaault
t
and Hlght are exactly ecIual), then check for
Come out and show us how they “go-go” in Tokyo! And our thUr
KJYO
TAMURA
the first following full moon, then the first Sunday following tha^
rls will show you'the Canadian Style. In fact a half dozen or
tobonto
r
fTUla EaStei’ Sunday may come as early as
^ 366-5812 Res. Pl. 9-831
ore girls will be dancing under the psychedelic lights all evening
7
I
Maich- 22nd or as late as April 25th. For those with slide ™les,
»r your entertainment. Come out and join in or come to sit and
f°r the PaSt century w°uld come to
atch the action with a cool drink.
th.
or
rd.
as
you
wish
There’ll be fantastic door' prizes, spot dances, and hundreds 1
Bum 824.1153
922-1359
' stags looking for action. Qne of the biggest bars ever planned
BLOOD ON THE MOON
ith “out of this world” bartenders swishing drinks and crackling
THEI^’S S0ME sharp reader who muttered to hime will be opera ting for- your enjoyment and pleasure.
q
t}Je Rate for Easter would vary depending on the
ERNEST JOMORJ
latitude
and
longitude
from which the astronomical reading was
d
\
a
,
d
J?
ngirude
So, all you new-Japanese Canadians, come on out and meet
Chartered Accountant
>me old Canadians.. They are dying to meet you. That’s Friday taken. And he s absolutely right. In fact, there was much blood
gening March 28th,beginning 8:00 p.m. at the Japanese Canadian shed among Christians over this issue of dates (they had theiSuit* 403
ultural Centre — the Karate Boogaloo! —N.K.C.
enllTP
f f°rm °Ver SUf>StanCe) and the Em?eror Constantine
130 BLOOB ST. W.
TORONTO j
cal ed a conference in an effort to halt the bickering and killings.
*
♦
But unanimity was never achieved and, for example, to this day
the
Greek Orthodox Church continues to celebrate Easter under
rchitect-artist Nobby Kubota Shows At Isaacs
an original formula first announced by Rome. As a result only
By KAY KRITZWISER
Custom Picture
“.'I' “1 T “ the EaStern “d Western churches coincidentally
PirT25:°5T^‘^P?J h^
P1exig;lass and plastics make celebrate Easter on the same Sunday.
Framing
ml Mj ^a.1 (Jallenge to artists in three exhibitions this week •
“Easter” itself has quite an un-Christian. origin
ne of them is Nobuo Kubota at Isaacs Gallery.
NISHIMURA
the Saxon name of the pagan goddess “Eastre,” the goddess
in, Ku\OtA’ Toronto . architect, has shown sculpture in groun
>'? a^ ^e ^aa?s before,- but' his one-man exhibition is his first of Spring. Moreover the custom of coloring eggs is one borrowed
■enta^0^-^ "'ell. armed. The exhibition has polish exSS
Per®ian and Egyptians who adorned eggs the svmbol
^Ir™ 8hMt To««,o 7, Out.
ta doriglnahty’andwhocould ask more the first time round? of fertility and new birth.
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
Tokdo Ntohimura
^
nd
P^d'aluminum piece, lilts around the ceiling
20TH CENTURY ADORNMENT
ong C ^^
a^ial dance, and, farthe?
WHAT WILL BE ADORNED on Easter Sunday will be all
d bv invill ^eS/'S ^t- C?l°rless plexiglass tubes suspendthose gals appearing in their brightest best, and it’ll inevitably
fakes
bo aover
height
which
es them vulnerable to ,smears'from hairy heads
5 foot
8.
boost their spirits . . . barring a tragedy of two ladies showing
h™d
WOrks in low-shine black painted up with the same outfit. But also will be adorned the church, par
ahdhood’s
as in Bissection IV. It’s like ticularly the chancel, with, tulips, hyacinths, lillies and so forth.
- flattens on Lf aClng Angers to make a cathedral roof, and A cascade of bright colors and sweet, intoxicating scent of flowers
nens out the same way.
’
P sSght^^
fIoor ^placement to stand all symbolic of the risen Christ.
A few years ago this writer decided to put a small, a ver”
•ith accents
these pieces
'hese touXs
^
lun&«s that hinge, locks that lock, small, challenge to the thinking members of his Methodist Church
‘cation of thp
to be a httlejp^
utter sophis- The suggestion was something such as follows.
n ot the black forms really, need anything else?
The Easter flowers, symbolic of the risen Christ, beautiful
“U^tandew^T HI Ras ^
sparing sculptural line
Slocan City, B.C.
and estnetically pleasing as they are, nevertheless are but fleetimr:
bln air will
Airi 11 be gone~ tomorrow. On
n the other hand,
* if the Church
O'
ition of a
^ d\n& - ''^^^ ?ach other^
—but
the
Ut[^
he impish
^^ ad
ad 1 they
Phone 355-2211
>on. The fun-wLP e ^es it changing perspective and dimen- | wishes to concretely uplift the meaning of the risen Christ and
n ingredient
n_,aPproaclv can also-prove that space is as much
at the same time practice the Christian love that we speak of
&tculcnL in art as material. •
why not rebuild the church body of Christ by taking all this
thousands of dollars of “flower money” and help in the rebuild
ing of a burned-out church in Mississippi ? I honestly thought
they’d go for this one, a little challenge, but with a potential for
SPORTING GOODS
an awful lot of meaning.
SKATED
But . . . they turned it down. They wanted their flowers more
What was I saying about “hangups” of form over substance be
jockey Equipment
fore?
Skate ‘Sharpening -
INSURANCE
I
KINO’S MARKET
R®d & White
food Store
DANFORTH
EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
21 Dundee011*
d
Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
^ Toronto, Suite 1402. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By.Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
St. John's Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave.
SERVICES:
Sunday: Sunday School 2:00 P.M. Worship Service 3:00 PM
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Friday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
»* Elizabeth ^ ''“■'S
.“
Toronto, Canada
Nisei Service and Church School — Sun. 11:30 A.M,
English — Rev. G. S. Imai, 444-5159
Japanese — Rev. Y. C. Horikoshi, 766-5632
701 Dovercourt Rd.
A warm welcome to all.
S. oi Bloor
Phone 364-3481
CATOnrar- “
To Save You)
BERING SERVICE - -TAKE-OUT- ORDERS
Banquet Facilities
tem™,)!?™!L9' Private Parties nSSB7n’’!?S
“ 8—“)
^^^225-^810 NIGHTLY
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 1969
Spring Higan
10:30 A.M. Religious School
11:00 A.M. Morning Service — Rev.' Newton Ishiurd
2:00 P.M. Japanese Service — Bev. F. Watanabe
918 Bathurst St.
Telephone: 534-4302
: ,
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
OPEN FBI. UNTIL S PM
Formal
Rentals
N®w F«
Weddings
alna
Of Toronto
CUSTOM MADE SUIT
Stu Nagai _
437 DANFORTH AVE,
PHONE: 443-8164. ~
i
Page 8
PAGE 8
Kawabata . .
Cont. from Page One
it^6 *ood than be re-born in paradise, and how much more shall
bad- This view of things has something in comX
kyk Sk?V0Jld 3f the, Buddha and world of the devil,
and yet at heart the two have their different inclinations. Shinran
also said: I shall take not a single disciple.”
Here are two religious poems by Ikkyu:
“When I ask you answer. When I do not you do not.
What is there then in your heart, O Lord Bodhidharma?”
“And what is it, the heart?
It is the sound of the pine breeze in the ink painting.”
ykidlkill him. If you meet a patriarch of
Here we have the spirit of Zen in Oriental painting. The heart
the law
law, kill him.” k 1 Sha /Ot -take a Slmple disciple.” In those of the
ink painting is in. space, abbreviation, what is left undrawn.
two statements, perhaps, is the rigorous fate of art.
In the words of the Chinese x
painter Chin Nun®-- “You paint the
--'" and
—1 you hear the sound of the
- ” And' the priest
veil,
wind.
. . rn/en?I/eJS no worship of images. Zen does have images branch ”
b^ ia- te ha Where the.reSimen of meditation is pursued, there Dogen
.• ik
°nce mo^e: “Are there not these cases? Enlightenment
voice of the bamboo. Radiance of heart in the peach bios-— neither
nor
SefThp
1 7images
p"^5 n
?r pictures
p.!ctuJes of Buddhas
Buddhas, nor are there' scrip- smo the
.
with beeves
P S‘ S fi°r J°ng hours silent and motionless,
Ikenobo
i
x ^en70’ a master °f flower arranging, once said (the
£
y H -l sed- Presently he enters a state of impassivity
from ah ideas and all thoughts. He departs from the spH remark is to be found in his Sayings): “With a spray of flower*
i!f?at8r’ 01^ ev°ke5 the vastness of rivers and mountains.”
a"dthen ers
realm of\nothingness. This is not the nothingness
§arden too, of course, symbolizes the vastness of
> ^P^ess of the West. It is rather the reverse a uSviv nJtn/p
ctuie.
The
Western
tends to be symmetrical, the Japanese
?pirit ln which everything communicates freelv with ever/ garaen asymmetrical,garden
and this is because the as™tiTha
of fen and^he
There are of course masters
asvnShv1
tO syTbollze multiplicity and vastness. The
ea’ and
disciple is brought toward enlightenment bv
changing questions and' answers with his master Ind he studied
of course, rests upon a balance imposed by delicate
the scriptures. The disciple must, however alwavs
eS‘ ,.N°tkin§' ls more complicated, varied, attentive to
Jhen the Japanese art of landscape gardening. Thus there
efforts
and
attfin enlightenment through his owl
in whilHhV3 W t le dl’y landscaPe, composed entirely of rocks
t^ns and
St°nes -ives egression to mourn
f
anc
ineis
that
are
not
present,
and even su^a-ests the waves
d’scardl,ng’ of word's,” it lies “outside words” Truth is in
And so we
• have the extreme of “silence like thunder”
in
the
£rdeSa Sutra. Tradition has it that Bodhidharma a Vimalakirit
In- sSSS SSs‘“=5
^ZeP”"“c3na ^
the sixth cent«^ and’wassouthern
the founder
silent meditation in a seated posture derives from Bodhidharma.
autumnal
DIARCH 30th, (Sunday)
MAY 11th, (Sunday)
*
» ss S' fc? ^.-
a hundred flowers. The "Teat SKtPA»f£i"t ™ore b!.'lsh,"es! than
ceremony and flower arranaino- *
centuiy mastei' of the tea
lene^fe
For detailed information contact
Compass Travel Service Ltd.,
515 Main Street, Vancouver
Phone 682-2241
It’s Private! No Time Limit!
Get the most enjoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
Henty of delicious food!
Plenty of free parking!
CHINA
»25 Eglinton W. Toronto
HOUSE
RU. 1-9123
—
Fire - Burglary - Bonds - Automobile
Liability — Glass
GENERAL INSURANCE
Phone 964-9000 William R. Bell
Special Discounts on Store and Business
Package Policies
Ensign Insurance Service, 2 College St., Tor.
lias for its whiten^
and for payment of postage^ 3
1
s
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY ^
AND FRIDAY
.
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
•»<»»< eamel-
SUBSCRIPTION
w
$4.00 per S months
$7.00 per year
Your Home
Through
11
WB
CLASSIFIED
Wanted
Tosh Iwai
1527
Toronto 16
757-5184
TOM'S TELEVISION & RADIO
Sales — Service
Franchised Dealer For
RCA. Victor — Color & B.W.
Television — Stereo —: Etc.
2893 Lawrence Ave. East At
Brimley Rd.
Tom Iwamoto
Scarborough
Phone 759-1583
Tosh Muraki
;. z
TELEVISION and appliance sera |ss
technician wanted. Must be fully -t®
perienced. Phone 259-3102, Mr. te»
(Toronto).
p
Domestic Help Wanted '>
$200 per month. Someone whomosidS
all likes children and secondly enjon ®
cooking both Japanese and wesis®
food. To work with family with 3 cisS
dren in centrally located home. (Ms ®
help
kept.
Very comfortable EviuBsi
quarters with phone and TV (TotoklM
Box 10, The New Canadian.
gR
_ ________ Help Wanted_____ |
a single bud is set out in the alcove
OPERATORS, experienced on ss-ir
machines for large clothing Qanu'ak-®
be'dew™
er. Dufferin and Lawrence, AddIv 2«
Orfus Rd. 787-1871, (Toronto).”
BE
water. The most splendid of mangeS loathe
dl'°PS
comes in Mav when a
&ements tor the tea ceremony —■— --------:------------ ——— nJ
Business for Sale
B
again there is’but a single white^bud^TwavI^
but heFe
Not only'are there drops"
dew upon it BEAUTY parlor for sale. Hair 47^?;®]
is frequently nSoed ’”
“'^ "P™ the flo"er’ the
f" 'chair, dresser with mirror, etc. 922-.il: Ss
.
(Toronto).
»j
is old Tga7 hSthVTxteenth ^1^'
the highest rank
commands the highest nriep Wb ' S^eTteeikb centuries, and it
its colors and it
Take
H
Iga ?as been dampened',
afresh. Iga yas fir d
h^be+aUty Such as to awaken one
and the smoke from the fuel'
teinpei’atures. The straw ash
and, as the temped
“ oK^± suirt^ce,
the colors were not fabricated hn 16 A S01J of ^laze, because
at work in the kiln S
rather the result of nature
to be called quirks aAd freak o T kH^T^
TCh varieties us
surfaces of old Iga X
The ,rough austere, strong
It breathes to the rhythm
uptuous glow when dampened,
of the tea ceremo^^
fkjers.jhe taste
fore using, to give'it its own soft gtav
b°"' ' m01stened
Ils s“) ^ -“:^^
V'T too is in
their own form* ” Brin^ino- n
" ai]d sdands should appear in
arranging, th^efo^
school of flower
withered branches and in
do"ei:5 m broken vessels and
see an awakening’to the hear^/thelgbten™^ Here Ws
influence of Zen And in if°* i Japanese spirit, under the
living in.the feS“ Jf ^^^“tH T *
T
------------------------------------------------------ o
compiled in the tenth rpntmw /
\ t’ ie Tales of Ise,
lyrical episodes, numbers of' which e •
Japauese collection of
In one of them v
an tha
5 Sp \gM be cal1^ short-stories,
invited guests, put out floZ: 1
1Wara n° ukiHi^a> having
Call
yistariamfhe trading f<S^
a large Jar a most unusual
a half feet long.” ° P ‘ f flo"ers was upwards of three and
Hayakawa . . .
(Continued from Page I1)
MAS. (Ron) MENDE
i
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
EMpire 6-5005
SHIPPING
]
to Japan & all Ports
By Air, Rail,
Land & Sea
Overseas
t
Packing Crating
IOU vtand- in Union Square in
^“’^hraiidsc0 and ex-Bulgarians
ex-Kussian. ex-Japanese. ex-Ch;nese, ex-Filipinos and others win
pass by.
,
Have
capacity that we
don t know about as a result of
? a-ble t0 resolve differences
"hich is part of our national
genius as Americans.”
is
All Custom Papers
Arranged
Ii
Fully Insured
b
f
Arrow World Wide
si
1 di
(To Be Continued)
Buy and Sell
K
KEN MORI Japanese Editor B
And Advertising.
[1
Male Help
VX “bvfc’V ceAmSv
clea^y’gniet”, th™
SPRING TOUR TO JAPAN, 1969
The New Canadian^
889-6269
Use New Canadian Ads
For Best Results
Metro Toronto
i®
When Buying Or Selling A Home
Call: KEN HORI
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
W
P1
if
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
M Perivale Cres.
Phone: 261-5194 j
Dr. Hayakawa then told about
Scarborough
a report from Israel where Jew*
trom many countries of Europe
^Anfp?nd Asia had returned to
establish a Jewish
nation. At
first these Jews from many land* §
were always fightin ’, but it was
the American Jew
who were
always able to gi
the Jews
from many nations to work toPlace: Japanese Cane th n Cultural Centre
gether.
123 Wynford Drive
“We have this talent and we
^p^ne>e. Americans are quite
Dance to the Mogambo Band
-rdie.1kldd^ °‘ ^’ not only'cu’t
§
turallj but m terms of race.
EVERYONE WELCOME
1 think we all have a
Sat. diarch 15, 1969
8:00—12:00 P^ j
^?ai’ great opportunity. I a]5.>
Bar
Junk we have a great obliga
S2.00 per pe^j
tion.Sa
Toronto Japanese Language
School Benefit Dance
Kawabata . .
Cont. from Page One
it^6 *ood than be re-born in paradise, and how much more shall
bad- This view of things has something in comX
kyk Sk?V0Jld 3f the, Buddha and world of the devil,
and yet at heart the two have their different inclinations. Shinran
also said: I shall take not a single disciple.”
Here are two religious poems by Ikkyu:
“When I ask you answer. When I do not you do not.
What is there then in your heart, O Lord Bodhidharma?”
“And what is it, the heart?
It is the sound of the pine breeze in the ink painting.”
ykidlkill him. If you meet a patriarch of
Here we have the spirit of Zen in Oriental painting. The heart
the law
law, kill him.” k 1 Sha /Ot -take a Slmple disciple.” In those of the
ink painting is in. space, abbreviation, what is left undrawn.
two statements, perhaps, is the rigorous fate of art.
In the words of the Chinese x
painter Chin Nun®-- “You paint the
--'" and
—1 you hear the sound of the
- ” And' the priest
veil,
wind.
. . rn/en?I/eJS no worship of images. Zen does have images branch ”
b^ ia- te ha Where the.reSimen of meditation is pursued, there Dogen
.• ik
°nce mo^e: “Are there not these cases? Enlightenment
voice of the bamboo. Radiance of heart in the peach bios-— neither
nor
SefThp
1 7images
p"^5 n
?r pictures
p.!ctuJes of Buddhas
Buddhas, nor are there' scrip- smo the
.
with beeves
P S‘ S fi°r J°ng hours silent and motionless,
Ikenobo
i
x ^en70’ a master °f flower arranging, once said (the
£
y H -l sed- Presently he enters a state of impassivity
from ah ideas and all thoughts. He departs from the spH remark is to be found in his Sayings): “With a spray of flower*
i!f?at8r’ 01^ ev°ke5 the vastness of rivers and mountains.”
a"dthen ers
realm of\nothingness. This is not the nothingness
§arden too, of course, symbolizes the vastness of
> ^P^ess of the West. It is rather the reverse a uSviv nJtn/p
ctuie.
The
Western
tends to be symmetrical, the Japanese
?pirit ln which everything communicates freelv with ever/ garaen asymmetrical,garden
and this is because the as™tiTha
of fen and^he
There are of course masters
asvnShv1
tO syTbollze multiplicity and vastness. The
ea’ and
disciple is brought toward enlightenment bv
changing questions and' answers with his master Ind he studied
of course, rests upon a balance imposed by delicate
the scriptures. The disciple must, however alwavs
eS‘ ,.N°tkin§' ls more complicated, varied, attentive to
Jhen the Japanese art of landscape gardening. Thus there
efforts
and
attfin enlightenment through his owl
in whilHhV3 W t le dl’y landscaPe, composed entirely of rocks
t^ns and
St°nes -ives egression to mourn
f
anc
ineis
that
are
not
present,
and even su^a-ests the waves
d’scardl,ng’ of word's,” it lies “outside words” Truth is in
And so we
• have the extreme of “silence like thunder”
in
the
£rdeSa Sutra. Tradition has it that Bodhidharma a Vimalakirit
In- sSSS SSs‘“=5
^ZeP”"“c3na ^
the sixth cent«^ and’wassouthern
the founder
silent meditation in a seated posture derives from Bodhidharma.
autumnal
DIARCH 30th, (Sunday)
MAY 11th, (Sunday)
*
» ss S' fc? ^.-
a hundred flowers. The "Teat SKtPA»f£i"t ™ore b!.'lsh,"es! than
ceremony and flower arranaino- *
centuiy mastei' of the tea
lene^fe
For detailed information contact
Compass Travel Service Ltd.,
515 Main Street, Vancouver
Phone 682-2241
It’s Private! No Time Limit!
Get the most enjoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
Henty of delicious food!
Plenty of free parking!
CHINA
»25 Eglinton W. Toronto
HOUSE
RU. 1-9123
—
Fire - Burglary - Bonds - Automobile
Liability — Glass
GENERAL INSURANCE
Phone 964-9000 William R. Bell
Special Discounts on Store and Business
Package Policies
Ensign Insurance Service, 2 College St., Tor.
lias for its whiten^
and for payment of postage^ 3
1
s
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY ^
AND FRIDAY
.
T. UMEZUKI Publisher
•»<»»< eamel-
SUBSCRIPTION
w
$4.00 per S months
$7.00 per year
Your Home
Through
11
WB
CLASSIFIED
Wanted
Tosh Iwai
1527
Toronto 16
757-5184
TOM'S TELEVISION & RADIO
Sales — Service
Franchised Dealer For
RCA. Victor — Color & B.W.
Television — Stereo —: Etc.
2893 Lawrence Ave. East At
Brimley Rd.
Tom Iwamoto
Scarborough
Phone 759-1583
Tosh Muraki
;. z
TELEVISION and appliance sera |ss
technician wanted. Must be fully -t®
perienced. Phone 259-3102, Mr. te»
(Toronto).
p
Domestic Help Wanted '>
$200 per month. Someone whomosidS
all likes children and secondly enjon ®
cooking both Japanese and wesis®
food. To work with family with 3 cisS
dren in centrally located home. (Ms ®
help
kept.
Very comfortable EviuBsi
quarters with phone and TV (TotoklM
Box 10, The New Canadian.
gR
_ ________ Help Wanted_____ |
a single bud is set out in the alcove
OPERATORS, experienced on ss-ir
machines for large clothing Qanu'ak-®
be'dew™
er. Dufferin and Lawrence, AddIv 2«
Orfus Rd. 787-1871, (Toronto).”
BE
water. The most splendid of mangeS loathe
dl'°PS
comes in Mav when a
&ements tor the tea ceremony —■— --------:------------ ——— nJ
Business for Sale
B
again there is’but a single white^bud^TwavI^
but heFe
Not only'are there drops"
dew upon it BEAUTY parlor for sale. Hair 47^?;®]
is frequently nSoed ’”
“'^ "P™ the flo"er’ the
f" 'chair, dresser with mirror, etc. 922-.il: Ss
.
(Toronto).
»j
is old Tga7 hSthVTxteenth ^1^'
the highest rank
commands the highest nriep Wb ' S^eTteeikb centuries, and it
its colors and it
Take
H
Iga ?as been dampened',
afresh. Iga yas fir d
h^be+aUty Such as to awaken one
and the smoke from the fuel'
teinpei’atures. The straw ash
and, as the temped
“ oK^± suirt^ce,
the colors were not fabricated hn 16 A S01J of ^laze, because
at work in the kiln S
rather the result of nature
to be called quirks aAd freak o T kH^T^
TCh varieties us
surfaces of old Iga X
The ,rough austere, strong
It breathes to the rhythm
uptuous glow when dampened,
of the tea ceremo^^
fkjers.jhe taste
fore using, to give'it its own soft gtav
b°"' ' m01stened
Ils s“) ^ -“:^^
V'T too is in
their own form* ” Brin^ino- n
" ai]d sdands should appear in
arranging, th^efo^
school of flower
withered branches and in
do"ei:5 m broken vessels and
see an awakening’to the hear^/thelgbten™^ Here Ws
influence of Zen And in if°* i Japanese spirit, under the
living in.the feS“ Jf ^^^“tH T *
T
------------------------------------------------------ o
compiled in the tenth rpntmw /
\ t’ ie Tales of Ise,
lyrical episodes, numbers of' which e •
Japauese collection of
In one of them v
an tha
5 Sp \gM be cal1^ short-stories,
invited guests, put out floZ: 1
1Wara n° ukiHi^a> having
Call
yistariamfhe trading f<S^
a large Jar a most unusual
a half feet long.” ° P ‘ f flo"ers was upwards of three and
Hayakawa . . .
(Continued from Page I1)
MAS. (Ron) MENDE
i
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
Toronto 2-B, Ont.
EMpire 6-5005
SHIPPING
]
to Japan & all Ports
By Air, Rail,
Land & Sea
Overseas
t
Packing Crating
IOU vtand- in Union Square in
^“’^hraiidsc0 and ex-Bulgarians
ex-Kussian. ex-Japanese. ex-Ch;nese, ex-Filipinos and others win
pass by.
,
Have
capacity that we
don t know about as a result of
? a-ble t0 resolve differences
"hich is part of our national
genius as Americans.”
is
All Custom Papers
Arranged
Ii
Fully Insured
b
f
Arrow World Wide
si
1 di
(To Be Continued)
Buy and Sell
K
KEN MORI Japanese Editor B
And Advertising.
[1
Male Help
VX “bvfc’V ceAmSv
clea^y’gniet”, th™
SPRING TOUR TO JAPAN, 1969
The New Canadian^
889-6269
Use New Canadian Ads
For Best Results
Metro Toronto
i®
When Buying Or Selling A Home
Call: KEN HORI
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
W
P1
if
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
M Perivale Cres.
Phone: 261-5194 j
Dr. Hayakawa then told about
Scarborough
a report from Israel where Jew*
trom many countries of Europe
^Anfp?nd Asia had returned to
establish a Jewish
nation. At
first these Jews from many land* §
were always fightin ’, but it was
the American Jew
who were
always able to gi
the Jews
from many nations to work toPlace: Japanese Cane th n Cultural Centre
gether.
123 Wynford Drive
“We have this talent and we
^p^ne>e. Americans are quite
Dance to the Mogambo Band
-rdie.1kldd^ °‘ ^’ not only'cu’t
§
turallj but m terms of race.
EVERYONE WELCOME
1 think we all have a
Sat. diarch 15, 1969
8:00—12:00 P^ j
^?ai’ great opportunity. I a]5.>
Bar
Junk we have a great obliga
S2.00 per pe^j
tion.Sa
Toronto Japanese Language
School Benefit Dance