Page 1
fetors
To
Japan
I TOKYO —Service-conscious Canadians visiting JaI 71. ^e first time should keep an eye open for
snoerstitions — particularly if they stay in
IS or 'third class hotels.
,
,
i Wav superstitious Japanese have a number phobia,
l^^ir Canadian counterparts who carefully side|Xd die number 13.
. , . .
I Anwiw Japanese, the numbers four and nine (which,
Lydentalv, total 13) portent bad luck; four stands
r death" nine means hard times or bitter experiences,
& a- physical suffering or bankruptcy.
unsuspecting, may find himself booked into
Loin number nine on the fourth floor, and then wonder
rv’ service is so perfunctory. Answer: superstitious
r Aedaff is giving" the badluck room a wide berth.
F (h'course, a first class Tokyo hotel, such as the
I New Otani. ’ Okura, Imperial or Palace, is carefully
Piaffed without concession to superstition.
Warned
Many
„,3! JY-storey Hotel New Otani in Tokyo, for example, Japan’s largest and
most modern hostelrv.
typifies the modern attitude, According to Kichisaburo Okada, general manager
A major modern hotel
b"1fe superstition short'shrift if’if hopes'to sat!
its guests graciously.
hotMhwin
°“e
that any modern Japanese
the numbers game',” Mr. Okada savs.
"hen a younS‘ couple gets married at the
reSe^
Clerk would never dream "of
H ? by assigning them to a room on the
fourth or ninth floor. That would be like a western
assigning newlyweds to room 1313.”
That the influence of numbers is widespread in
wu ^evident by Japanese military practice. During
wortd
no company< Stallion, regiment or
dlV’A°j bore the number four, and militaiy vehicles
omitted the number from their serial numbers.
(•■""i™"""""'..........I,,,,,,lm,'",",,,"...............
“SUKIYAKI”
Cookbook By
MISS STELLA ITO
Of
Japanese
Superstitions
Even the Tokyo telephone system which must use
all numbers, gives superstition its due. The Numbers
four and nine were assigned only when all other num
bers were exhausted. Yet even today many superstit‘?us businessmen won't accept a telephone number
with either a four or a nine in it.
^Like westerners who go to great lengths to avoid
13, there are Japanese who elaborately evade the
number four. Japanese couples frequently try to
avoid having only two children (creating a family
of four.) Some Japanese will walk out of the room
if there are only four persons present and few older
houses in Japan consists of only four rooms.
Apart from being number' wary, the Japanese are
also susceptible to other superstitions. It is, for ex
ample, the height of bad taste to address any letter
nnnunnuu...............niliiiIIII1,llililll.......... ..............
(Continued on Page 5)
’he 11® Canadian
unuiiuiu.it....... mu....... in............. ...
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A storv of J.C.’s By
JESSIE L. BEATTIE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. XXXIII—No. 27
.iiiiiiiiiiiiniiininiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1969
Bag Of Skin's Alter Ego
I
Toronto, Ont
iiiiniiniiiiiiii!iiiJiiiiii!iiijiiiiijtiii!iim.tiiinmn[|jiuHiiH<inin:innHH!tnHiinin!tf:i!HiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiHiiiiHiiniii!iiiii!i!iiiiiiiiii!ii!iiinn>
By STEPHEN BROWN
I
VANCOUVER.—During his hectic three-day visit to VanI tourer recently, more than 5,000 people paid close to $9,000 to
I hear philosopher Alan Watts build verbal bridges between the
I Oriental and Western ways of living and thinking.
I Another 1,000 heard him during a one-day stop in Victoria.
I Huge turnouts for a philosopher — but Watts is no academic.
I
Though he is best known among young people, some of whom
| regard him as a home-grown Western spiriual guru, more than
I half of his listeners here were adults.
|
Some were apparently trying to discover what it is that many
young people claim to be finding in eastern spiritualism.
Others came to hear a thought-provoking entertainer.
!
For Alan Watts is part philosopher and part showman. Part
I icon and part iconoclast.
I
He is a long-time student of Eastern mysticism and spirituality
; yei he is adept at Western-style commercialization of the burgeon
ing interest in the west about such things. '
He writes books describing spiritual enlightenment (or NirBuddhist scheme of things) but laughs when asked
ix he thinks he has experienced enlightenment.
Ottawa Seeking 17 More Expo
Hosts—Prefer Japanese-Speaking
OTTAWA.—The federal Government is still look panese,” Mr. Kniewasser said, but added that
ing for 17 young Canadians to train as hosts and knowledge of the language is not a prerequisite
hostesses for its pavilion at Expo 70 in Osaka,
for .a job.
Andrew Kniewasser, senior as sistant deput
About 95 percent of the visitors to Expo 70
minister of Industry Trade a.: ad Commerce, told at Osaka will be Japanese and the department
the Commons Committee on Finance, Trade ana will provide language training to insure that its
Economic Affairs recently that 20 people had 'pavilion staff is fluent in Japanese by the time
been hired as hosts and hostesses so far, but 3^ Expo 70 opens, he said.
are needed.
Mr. Kniewasser, who was an executive with
“Priority is given to those who speak some J:t- Expo 67 before returning to Industry, Trade and
Commerce,
was
replying
to
questions from Alistair Gillespie
(L, Etobicoke).
The Canadian pavilion will re
SAN FRANCISCO. — Student deration Front and the Select
strike leaders at San Francisco Committee (of faculty and ad flect the theme The Disco very
Words Hinder
State say they will nor repudiate ministration) spent together to of Canada and should cost $11He downgrades words as hindering genuine spiritual awakening the ending' of the 4L month
reach a binding agreement were million, he said. Construction is
ii'11 “kt ^en Buddhist fashion — but writes book after best
strike
on
the
campus.
spent in vain because of the on schedule and the project is
selling book, each full of words about what he himself calls the
They declared recently that grandiose dreams of Hayakawa’s proceeding within its budget, he
most inexpressible of things, enlightenment.
added.
,e IS r*dhxg the crest of a wave of interest in the mystical since they had signed' a binding hawkish political future.”
lwnenc^~w'ie®er aided by drugs, meditation, yoga or simply agreement they would honor it
Goodwin said student leaders
and ^e attitude toward life of the ancient Eastern even though they again blasted
Philosophies.
would begin a program “to re
be had viewed the Orient only from afar until 1961, when acting president S. I. Hayakawa
cruit students who are demand
for assertedly reneging on part
p
Amencan tour g™uP hi Japan.
ing a better education” — with
Japan several times since, but only for of their pact in regard to amnes
emphasis
on. Black students.
n01'^ being drawn back to his California home.
ty for those arrested on campus.
1S’ ^ 54, a strange amalgam of the often conMeanwhile, five persons among
The leaders
declared they
ihcung attitudes of East and West.
TOKYO. — Over 8,000 to one
454
charged with unlawful as
entai
England, he decided to try to synthesize Ori- would “disregard” Hayakawa and
was
the rate of applications for
acomnlpvr .eStern Philosophies. He has in many ways become “begin to build San Francisco sembly in a mass arrest J.an. 23
one
vacancy
in the Japan Hous
h-ng sample of such a^ynthesis.
State College into the most pro pleaded guilty. Judge Joseph G. ing
Corporation’s
apartment
first Donni ecA?ie’ aJS0 hi the past couple of years, perhaps the found and creative institution of Kennedy set sentencing for them
houses in Tokyo’s Setagaya and
Amo 1 Philosopher in Western history.
higher learning in the country.” April 21. They were the first of Suginami wards, it was disclosed
he is
manF younger people, especially university students,
Much of their news conference the demonstrators to face muni recently.
toDDler?
n
lmo ^m a folk hero of the EstablishmentSeveral t °A ^ury Buddha.
was spent in potshots at Haya cipal court hearing. Other de
The rate was a record.
his book?
°* interviewing the man and many hours reading kawa. Spokesman Leroy Goodwin fendants are scheduled to come
The formidable ration was re
i
! me
is none of these things.
read a statement which said “the in groups before various munici gistered for an apartment for
and fairlv lib extl’emely eloquent, urbane, charming, -thoughtful
pal judges.
families with three members or
het that he
whp ma^.no attempt to hide the long hours the Third World LiL he relishes the growing fame of Alan Watts.
more allotted for the two resi
dential wards in Tokyo.
The
.
Well Cultivated
drawing for- a qualified applicant
y^r tourbi^f'^ been well-cultivated. Watts spends much of each
took place.
•'Dinars for slip ^ a and the U.S., giving lectures and leading seThe average rate for more
LOS ANGELES. — The Los solution adopted earlier by the
Hehas^At1,1665 T.a minimum $1,000 plus expenses per visit.
Los Angeles County Commission than 2,000 vacancies offered in
Angeles
County
Board
of
Super
Philosophy Inn P
,13 President of the Society for Comparative
on Human Relations. Jeffrey Ma
blest doinU fm’.L^b^h Publishes a monthly bulletin on Watts’ visors unanimously passed a re tsui of the Japanese American the Kanto District this month
18
opposing
was 69.4 times.
solution
on
March
The society "is n /^^^unds of dues-paying members of the society,
Citizens League was instrument
Sub-Title
II
of
the
Internal
Se^srene^s'oo-profit, says Watts, and exists to increase human
The astronomical competition
al in getting the Human Rela
curity Act of 1950.
While at h™Se ?e gaP between east and west.
tions
Commission
to
take
a
stand
for
the Setagaya-Suginami area
Representing the largest
5 *Ae Dicturp-™6 k borne is the ferryboat S.S. Vallejo, moored
against
Sub-Title
II.
can be explained by the fact that
north of gan p e harbor of Sausalito, an .artists’ colony just eminent unit, besides a state
Text of the Los Angeles Counor
federal
jurisdiction,
the
Los
the area is considered an ideal
Pen Person.
ncisco — Watts gives more seminars, for $25
Angeles County Supervisors will ey Board of Supervisors resolu residential district, the corpora^s an(j se^ aJe /he tape-recordings of public lectures, radio request all congressmen from the tion follows:
WHEREAS, with knowledge of tion explained.
b for a
a°i?ut J-10 of them in a catalogue, ranging from Los Angeles area to “exert their the experience of Japanese Ameinfluence to bring about repeal of
tipi £X1 ?k t0 $3^ for a four-hour seminar.
The previous record was also
can citizens in emergency deten recorded
the
Emergency Detention Act.
in the same area.
•'“Die of Nonsense L°pics ^e Solid Emptiness to Thusness to The
tion, we recognize the danger of
Iuppin^ off x ,
The resolution was introduced Subtitle II of the Internal Secu
The corporation, however, add
nese mini-poern;:
e are two §12.50 recordings of Japa- bv Supervisor Ernest E. Debs, rity Act of 1950 (Emergency De
WattL^T
by Watts.to music.
who stated, “During my recent tention Act), to the civil rights ed that the fortunate winner
-.-.He
J
Prohfically.
Washington visit, I discussed the of all Americans, and
may not move in soon. The va
^bsophica] writin^^3’ m°Si; °^ them startlingly wide-selling for so-called Emergency
Detention
cancy
is not available as yet. It
WHEREAS, American citizens
Act with many members of our
of all nationalities regret that is a theoretical one based on past
^.amon?
^Atts can write with luciditv, color and humor ,conerressional
delegation.
Inc said part of cur recent history,
experience, it explained, adding
consensus is that this is an un
and
that it may take him as long as
and titles
A?. Y paperbacks and have colorful, catchy just law and should be repealed.
WHEREAS, the Emergency
Uns is It! The Book: On the Taboo Against
six
months to enter a public
The vote by the Board of Su(Cont.
on
Page
8)
apartment
house.
pervisors followed a similar re-1
(Cont. on Page 8)
San Francisco State College Strike Over
Over 8000 Apply
For Vacant
"Aparto" In Tokyo
LA. Adopts Resolution Against Detention Law
To
Japan
I TOKYO —Service-conscious Canadians visiting JaI 71. ^e first time should keep an eye open for
snoerstitions — particularly if they stay in
IS or 'third class hotels.
,
,
i Wav superstitious Japanese have a number phobia,
l^^ir Canadian counterparts who carefully side|Xd die number 13.
. , . .
I Anwiw Japanese, the numbers four and nine (which,
Lydentalv, total 13) portent bad luck; four stands
r death" nine means hard times or bitter experiences,
& a- physical suffering or bankruptcy.
unsuspecting, may find himself booked into
Loin number nine on the fourth floor, and then wonder
rv’ service is so perfunctory. Answer: superstitious
r Aedaff is giving" the badluck room a wide berth.
F (h'course, a first class Tokyo hotel, such as the
I New Otani. ’ Okura, Imperial or Palace, is carefully
Piaffed without concession to superstition.
Warned
Many
„,3! JY-storey Hotel New Otani in Tokyo, for example, Japan’s largest and
most modern hostelrv.
typifies the modern attitude, According to Kichisaburo Okada, general manager
A major modern hotel
b"1fe superstition short'shrift if’if hopes'to sat!
its guests graciously.
hotMhwin
°“e
that any modern Japanese
the numbers game',” Mr. Okada savs.
"hen a younS‘ couple gets married at the
reSe^
Clerk would never dream "of
H ? by assigning them to a room on the
fourth or ninth floor. That would be like a western
assigning newlyweds to room 1313.”
That the influence of numbers is widespread in
wu ^evident by Japanese military practice. During
wortd
no company< Stallion, regiment or
dlV’A°j bore the number four, and militaiy vehicles
omitted the number from their serial numbers.
(•■""i™"""""'..........I,,,,,,lm,'",",,,"...............
“SUKIYAKI”
Cookbook By
MISS STELLA ITO
Of
Japanese
Superstitions
Even the Tokyo telephone system which must use
all numbers, gives superstition its due. The Numbers
four and nine were assigned only when all other num
bers were exhausted. Yet even today many superstit‘?us businessmen won't accept a telephone number
with either a four or a nine in it.
^Like westerners who go to great lengths to avoid
13, there are Japanese who elaborately evade the
number four. Japanese couples frequently try to
avoid having only two children (creating a family
of four.) Some Japanese will walk out of the room
if there are only four persons present and few older
houses in Japan consists of only four rooms.
Apart from being number' wary, the Japanese are
also susceptible to other superstitions. It is, for ex
ample, the height of bad taste to address any letter
nnnunnuu...............niliiiIIII1,llililll.......... ..............
(Continued on Page 5)
’he 11® Canadian
unuiiuiu.it....... mu....... in............. ...
STRENGTH FOR THE
BRIDGE
A storv of J.C.’s By
JESSIE L. BEATTIE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
Vol. XXXIII—No. 27
.iiiiiiiiiiiiniiininiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1969
Bag Of Skin's Alter Ego
I
Toronto, Ont
iiiiniiniiiiiiii!iiiJiiiiii!iiijiiiiijtiii!iim.tiiinmn[|jiuHiiH<inin:innHH!tnHiinin!tf:i!HiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiHiiiiHiiniii!iiiii!i!iiiiiiiiii!ii!iiinn>
By STEPHEN BROWN
I
VANCOUVER.—During his hectic three-day visit to VanI tourer recently, more than 5,000 people paid close to $9,000 to
I hear philosopher Alan Watts build verbal bridges between the
I Oriental and Western ways of living and thinking.
I Another 1,000 heard him during a one-day stop in Victoria.
I Huge turnouts for a philosopher — but Watts is no academic.
I
Though he is best known among young people, some of whom
| regard him as a home-grown Western spiriual guru, more than
I half of his listeners here were adults.
|
Some were apparently trying to discover what it is that many
young people claim to be finding in eastern spiritualism.
Others came to hear a thought-provoking entertainer.
!
For Alan Watts is part philosopher and part showman. Part
I icon and part iconoclast.
I
He is a long-time student of Eastern mysticism and spirituality
; yei he is adept at Western-style commercialization of the burgeon
ing interest in the west about such things. '
He writes books describing spiritual enlightenment (or NirBuddhist scheme of things) but laughs when asked
ix he thinks he has experienced enlightenment.
Ottawa Seeking 17 More Expo
Hosts—Prefer Japanese-Speaking
OTTAWA.—The federal Government is still look panese,” Mr. Kniewasser said, but added that
ing for 17 young Canadians to train as hosts and knowledge of the language is not a prerequisite
hostesses for its pavilion at Expo 70 in Osaka,
for .a job.
Andrew Kniewasser, senior as sistant deput
About 95 percent of the visitors to Expo 70
minister of Industry Trade a.: ad Commerce, told at Osaka will be Japanese and the department
the Commons Committee on Finance, Trade ana will provide language training to insure that its
Economic Affairs recently that 20 people had 'pavilion staff is fluent in Japanese by the time
been hired as hosts and hostesses so far, but 3^ Expo 70 opens, he said.
are needed.
Mr. Kniewasser, who was an executive with
“Priority is given to those who speak some J:t- Expo 67 before returning to Industry, Trade and
Commerce,
was
replying
to
questions from Alistair Gillespie
(L, Etobicoke).
The Canadian pavilion will re
SAN FRANCISCO. — Student deration Front and the Select
strike leaders at San Francisco Committee (of faculty and ad flect the theme The Disco very
Words Hinder
State say they will nor repudiate ministration) spent together to of Canada and should cost $11He downgrades words as hindering genuine spiritual awakening the ending' of the 4L month
reach a binding agreement were million, he said. Construction is
ii'11 “kt ^en Buddhist fashion — but writes book after best
strike
on
the
campus.
spent in vain because of the on schedule and the project is
selling book, each full of words about what he himself calls the
They declared recently that grandiose dreams of Hayakawa’s proceeding within its budget, he
most inexpressible of things, enlightenment.
added.
,e IS r*dhxg the crest of a wave of interest in the mystical since they had signed' a binding hawkish political future.”
lwnenc^~w'ie®er aided by drugs, meditation, yoga or simply agreement they would honor it
Goodwin said student leaders
and ^e attitude toward life of the ancient Eastern even though they again blasted
Philosophies.
would begin a program “to re
be had viewed the Orient only from afar until 1961, when acting president S. I. Hayakawa
cruit students who are demand
for assertedly reneging on part
p
Amencan tour g™uP hi Japan.
ing a better education” — with
Japan several times since, but only for of their pact in regard to amnes
emphasis
on. Black students.
n01'^ being drawn back to his California home.
ty for those arrested on campus.
1S’ ^ 54, a strange amalgam of the often conMeanwhile, five persons among
The leaders
declared they
ihcung attitudes of East and West.
TOKYO. — Over 8,000 to one
454
charged with unlawful as
entai
England, he decided to try to synthesize Ori- would “disregard” Hayakawa and
was
the rate of applications for
acomnlpvr .eStern Philosophies. He has in many ways become “begin to build San Francisco sembly in a mass arrest J.an. 23
one
vacancy
in the Japan Hous
h-ng sample of such a^ynthesis.
State College into the most pro pleaded guilty. Judge Joseph G. ing
Corporation’s
apartment
first Donni ecA?ie’ aJS0 hi the past couple of years, perhaps the found and creative institution of Kennedy set sentencing for them
houses in Tokyo’s Setagaya and
Amo 1 Philosopher in Western history.
higher learning in the country.” April 21. They were the first of Suginami wards, it was disclosed
he is
manF younger people, especially university students,
Much of their news conference the demonstrators to face muni recently.
toDDler?
n
lmo ^m a folk hero of the EstablishmentSeveral t °A ^ury Buddha.
was spent in potshots at Haya cipal court hearing. Other de
The rate was a record.
his book?
°* interviewing the man and many hours reading kawa. Spokesman Leroy Goodwin fendants are scheduled to come
The formidable ration was re
i
! me
is none of these things.
read a statement which said “the in groups before various munici gistered for an apartment for
and fairlv lib extl’emely eloquent, urbane, charming, -thoughtful
pal judges.
families with three members or
het that he
whp ma^.no attempt to hide the long hours the Third World LiL he relishes the growing fame of Alan Watts.
more allotted for the two resi
dential wards in Tokyo.
The
.
Well Cultivated
drawing for- a qualified applicant
y^r tourbi^f'^ been well-cultivated. Watts spends much of each
took place.
•'Dinars for slip ^ a and the U.S., giving lectures and leading seThe average rate for more
LOS ANGELES. — The Los solution adopted earlier by the
Hehas^At1,1665 T.a minimum $1,000 plus expenses per visit.
Los Angeles County Commission than 2,000 vacancies offered in
Angeles
County
Board
of
Super
Philosophy Inn P
,13 President of the Society for Comparative
on Human Relations. Jeffrey Ma
blest doinU fm’.L^b^h Publishes a monthly bulletin on Watts’ visors unanimously passed a re tsui of the Japanese American the Kanto District this month
18
opposing
was 69.4 times.
solution
on
March
The society "is n /^^^unds of dues-paying members of the society,
Citizens League was instrument
Sub-Title
II
of
the
Internal
Se^srene^s'oo-profit, says Watts, and exists to increase human
The astronomical competition
al in getting the Human Rela
curity Act of 1950.
While at h™Se ?e gaP between east and west.
tions
Commission
to
take
a
stand
for
the Setagaya-Suginami area
Representing the largest
5 *Ae Dicturp-™6 k borne is the ferryboat S.S. Vallejo, moored
against
Sub-Title
II.
can be explained by the fact that
north of gan p e harbor of Sausalito, an .artists’ colony just eminent unit, besides a state
Text of the Los Angeles Counor
federal
jurisdiction,
the
Los
the area is considered an ideal
Pen Person.
ncisco — Watts gives more seminars, for $25
Angeles County Supervisors will ey Board of Supervisors resolu residential district, the corpora^s an(j se^ aJe /he tape-recordings of public lectures, radio request all congressmen from the tion follows:
WHEREAS, with knowledge of tion explained.
b for a
a°i?ut J-10 of them in a catalogue, ranging from Los Angeles area to “exert their the experience of Japanese Ameinfluence to bring about repeal of
tipi £X1 ?k t0 $3^ for a four-hour seminar.
The previous record was also
can citizens in emergency deten recorded
the
Emergency Detention Act.
in the same area.
•'“Die of Nonsense L°pics ^e Solid Emptiness to Thusness to The
tion, we recognize the danger of
Iuppin^ off x ,
The resolution was introduced Subtitle II of the Internal Secu
The corporation, however, add
nese mini-poern;:
e are two §12.50 recordings of Japa- bv Supervisor Ernest E. Debs, rity Act of 1950 (Emergency De
WattL^T
by Watts.to music.
who stated, “During my recent tention Act), to the civil rights ed that the fortunate winner
-.-.He
J
Prohfically.
Washington visit, I discussed the of all Americans, and
may not move in soon. The va
^bsophica] writin^^3’ m°Si; °^ them startlingly wide-selling for so-called Emergency
Detention
cancy
is not available as yet. It
WHEREAS, American citizens
Act with many members of our
of all nationalities regret that is a theoretical one based on past
^.amon?
^Atts can write with luciditv, color and humor ,conerressional
delegation.
Inc said part of cur recent history,
experience, it explained, adding
consensus is that this is an un
and
that it may take him as long as
and titles
A?. Y paperbacks and have colorful, catchy just law and should be repealed.
WHEREAS, the Emergency
Uns is It! The Book: On the Taboo Against
six
months to enter a public
The vote by the Board of Su(Cont.
on
Page
8)
apartment
house.
pervisors followed a similar re-1
(Cont. on Page 8)
San Francisco State College Strike Over
Over 8000 Apply
For Vacant
"Aparto" In Tokyo
LA. Adopts Resolution Against Detention Law
Page 2
PAGE 2
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Page 7
I Tn^av.__April 8, 1969
I Samurais In J.G, Cultural Centre Film Festival
PAGE 7
Dafes And Doings
D ia a good policy to
be. tha RIGHT POU GY
TORONTO—A full scale “Samurai” picture is the choice of
the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre Film Society for April
13 with two showings at 3 and 8 p.m.
"F°°d Dem°" APdl 15
The April selection transports you back to another era. The IaPMO\VRFAa^
film is set in the year 1857. Commodore Perry had signed a treaty that; ^t^?^* ^ “' M°”t-! report.
with the Tokugawa Shogunate three years earlier, but the feudal
svsteni apparently is still in full force in this drama.
Church. d250 St Urbnin
H
‘ le ^lontreal Buddhist
April 13th begrlnning 7-30 p.,n
'
The hero of the film is severely penalized for advocati
Admission is 81.00 per person.
5 form, with the consequence that he is led to killing the lord of the
casrle and flees into the hills. He is pursued by the lord’s onb- petizers! Our iiiltL-uct^
hors-d’oeuvre and apdaughter, her fiancee, and the clan’s top swordsman who were order| ed to assist the girl accomplish a vendetta. In the meantime there
gold in the hills — a variety of characters enter the picture.
o
oe provided at the demonstration.
s.
men's greed is bared, turning them to behave like animals.
I
;
;
:
i
!
•‘Sword of an Animal” is directed by Gosha Hideo, the creator
of “Sanbiki no Samurai” (a James Bond type of fast actino
suspenseful action drama). He has added new dimensions iin his
version of .a "full scale Samurai drama or jidaigeki”. It has evervthing and much more than you would normally expect in a Samurai
picture. It is an adult picture.
Mikijiro Taira, the hero, and Go Kato co-stars as the exper
swordsman, supported by Shima Iwashita, Yoko Mihara and *
host of others.
An Invitation to Expo 70” — a new short film feature recently
received by the Japan National Tourist Organization, will also be
shown through the courtesy of their Toronto office. __ J.C.C. Centre
Commit
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 36S-46S1
Residential Painting
And Decorating
By
Reports Daie Change
I
apologize to those toeonvenien^Ti^
Committee wish to
S2±K M™ •«<*« that, .lieiwJ Xt".±“t.S:
causes
and
unavoidable
hundred orders hav
n
S
hetl chW Receipts of over
Initially announced to take
°- thtrF°^a,na Committee,
rama. the show will
j March during the Foode
Fashion Show on April 26.
P aCe dunng and after the ^ana
Sho^ThTllnSr^^
Sh S^h^k
the
I
TB toSoL^^
their time for this project.
k
KAZ KATO
Call 221-7841
i
AUTO'
— fire — LIFE ’
ALL FORMS
OF
INSURANCE
S aW Studl° for bating
consult
KIYO TAMURA
family Portrait Show Committee
tobonto
366-5812
When Buying Or Selling A Home
Call: KEN HORI
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perlvale CrM.
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough
TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO
Sales - Service
Franchised Dealer For
RCA. Victor — Color & B.W.
TORONTO.—The Northeastern YWC A
sponsoring a
s'lTv
it’starts on April 17th
8 P'";
Northeastern Y.W.C.A, 2532 Yonge Street.
are “'^
K
J1’1-! 9? °Tld & NeW Japan ~ Mr' J- M- Thurlow — Don Mills C I
- pul -4. Japan; The Industrial Giant — Mr. K. Yamada. —
Consul of Japan.
Dr. L. B. Graham —
Q T
School of Social Work — U of T
8: Japanese Arts - Prof. David Waterhouse - Eastern Study
Bum
824-8153
B*m
922-1353
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered
May 1. Social Evolution & Family Life __
t
,
Centre — U. of T.
Max- 10 Japanese
Arts - Dr. M. Ueda - E. S. C. - U. of T.
May “: Jravel JJ.nts - Japan Travel Association.
May -.J: Expo '70! — Japan Travel Assoc.
June o: Gastronomic Adventures — Mrs. J. M. Thurlow — YWCA
Res. Pl. 9-8317
Accoantant
Suita
403
| 130 ®k°°B ST. W.
TOBONTO |
Custom Picture
Framing
Television — Stereo — Etc.
2893 Lawrence Ave. East At
Brimley Rd.
Tom Iwamoto
Scarborough
Phone 759-1583
Tosh Muraki
It’s Private! No Time Limit!
Get the most enfoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food!
Plenty of free parking I
CHINA
92a Eglinton W. Toronto
HOUSE
—
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
Nisei Service and
Church School - Sun.
11:30 A.M.
English
Rev. G. S. Imai, 444-5159
701
i Japanese — Rev. Y. C. Horikoshi, 766-5632
701 Dovercourt Rd.
A warm welcome to all.
923-6877
S. of Bloor
KINO’S MARKET
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
St. John s Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave
SERVICES:
Sund°7: §undaY School 2:00 P.M. Worship Service 3:00 P M
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
tnday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P M
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
RU. 1-9123
918 Bathurst
SUNDAY. APRIL 13. 1969
Hana Matsuri
10:30 A.M. Religious School
Morning Service — Rev. Newton
2:00 P. M. Japanese Service
St.
Ishiura
Telephone:
Fire - Burglary — Bonds — Automobile
534-4302
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
SKATES
Liability — Glass
general insurance
Phone 964-9000 William R. Bell
P cial Discounts on Store and Business
P
Package Policies
^sign Insurance Service, 2 College St., Tor.
Your Home
SPRING TOUR TO JAPAN, 1969
*
For detailed information contact
Compass Travel Service Ltd.,
Mas (Ron) MENDE
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
OPEN FBI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
515 Main Street, Vancouver
Phone 682-2241
Lichee Garden J
118 Elizabeth St.
Skate Sharpening
551 Danforth Ave-,
MAY. 11th, (Sunday)
(Dining Lounge)
Through
Toronto, Canada
Phone 364-3481
Formal
Rentals
Now For
beddings
Dances Etc,
(4 Lines To Serve You)
CATERING SERVICE — “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
real ESTATE LTD.
or Dr.
Red & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C.
Phone 355-2211
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
,
11:00 A.M.
BuY and Sell
I278JZe3tro#t' Toron,°7- °»>
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
Tokio Nishixnura
Banquet Facilities
757-5184
For Business Or Private Parties
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Smail)
DINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY
Of Toronto
custom made suit
437 DANFORTH AVE
PHONE: 463-8104
I
I Samurais In J.G, Cultural Centre Film Festival
PAGE 7
Dafes And Doings
D ia a good policy to
be. tha RIGHT POU GY
TORONTO—A full scale “Samurai” picture is the choice of
the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre Film Society for April
13 with two showings at 3 and 8 p.m.
"F°°d Dem°" APdl 15
The April selection transports you back to another era. The IaPMO\VRFAa^
film is set in the year 1857. Commodore Perry had signed a treaty that; ^t^?^* ^ “' M°”t-! report.
with the Tokugawa Shogunate three years earlier, but the feudal
svsteni apparently is still in full force in this drama.
Church. d250 St Urbnin
H
‘ le ^lontreal Buddhist
April 13th begrlnning 7-30 p.,n
'
The hero of the film is severely penalized for advocati
Admission is 81.00 per person.
5 form, with the consequence that he is led to killing the lord of the
casrle and flees into the hills. He is pursued by the lord’s onb- petizers! Our iiiltL-uct^
hors-d’oeuvre and apdaughter, her fiancee, and the clan’s top swordsman who were order| ed to assist the girl accomplish a vendetta. In the meantime there
gold in the hills — a variety of characters enter the picture.
o
oe provided at the demonstration.
s.
men's greed is bared, turning them to behave like animals.
I
;
;
:
i
!
•‘Sword of an Animal” is directed by Gosha Hideo, the creator
of “Sanbiki no Samurai” (a James Bond type of fast actino
suspenseful action drama). He has added new dimensions iin his
version of .a "full scale Samurai drama or jidaigeki”. It has evervthing and much more than you would normally expect in a Samurai
picture. It is an adult picture.
Mikijiro Taira, the hero, and Go Kato co-stars as the exper
swordsman, supported by Shima Iwashita, Yoko Mihara and *
host of others.
An Invitation to Expo 70” — a new short film feature recently
received by the Japan National Tourist Organization, will also be
shown through the courtesy of their Toronto office. __ J.C.C. Centre
Commit
William Wales Ltd.
Insurance Agents
2 Carlton St. 10th floor
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 36S-46S1
Residential Painting
And Decorating
By
Reports Daie Change
I
apologize to those toeonvenien^Ti^
Committee wish to
S2±K M™ •«<*« that, .lieiwJ Xt".±“t.S:
causes
and
unavoidable
hundred orders hav
n
S
hetl chW Receipts of over
Initially announced to take
°- thtrF°^a,na Committee,
rama. the show will
j March during the Foode
Fashion Show on April 26.
P aCe dunng and after the ^ana
Sho^ThTllnSr^^
Sh S^h^k
the
I
TB toSoL^^
their time for this project.
k
KAZ KATO
Call 221-7841
i
AUTO'
— fire — LIFE ’
ALL FORMS
OF
INSURANCE
S aW Studl° for bating
consult
KIYO TAMURA
family Portrait Show Committee
tobonto
366-5812
When Buying Or Selling A Home
Call: KEN HORI
K. HORI
REAL ESTATE
MEMBER OF TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD
14 Perlvale CrM.
Phone: 261-5194
Scarborough
TOM’S TELEVISION & RADIO
Sales - Service
Franchised Dealer For
RCA. Victor — Color & B.W.
TORONTO.—The Northeastern YWC A
sponsoring a
s'lTv
it’starts on April 17th
8 P'";
Northeastern Y.W.C.A, 2532 Yonge Street.
are “'^
K
J1’1-! 9? °Tld & NeW Japan ~ Mr' J- M- Thurlow — Don Mills C I
- pul -4. Japan; The Industrial Giant — Mr. K. Yamada. —
Consul of Japan.
Dr. L. B. Graham —
Q T
School of Social Work — U of T
8: Japanese Arts - Prof. David Waterhouse - Eastern Study
Bum
824-8153
B*m
922-1353
ERNEST JOMORI
Chartered
May 1. Social Evolution & Family Life __
t
,
Centre — U. of T.
Max- 10 Japanese
Arts - Dr. M. Ueda - E. S. C. - U. of T.
May “: Jravel JJ.nts - Japan Travel Association.
May -.J: Expo '70! — Japan Travel Assoc.
June o: Gastronomic Adventures — Mrs. J. M. Thurlow — YWCA
Res. Pl. 9-8317
Accoantant
Suita
403
| 130 ®k°°B ST. W.
TOBONTO |
Custom Picture
Framing
Television — Stereo — Etc.
2893 Lawrence Ave. East At
Brimley Rd.
Tom Iwamoto
Scarborough
Phone 759-1583
Tosh Muraki
It’s Private! No Time Limit!
Get the most enfoyment from your wedding
reception or anniversary
Plenty of delicious food!
Plenty of free parking I
CHINA
92a Eglinton W. Toronto
HOUSE
—
TORONTO JAPANESE UNITED CHURCH
Nisei Service and
Church School - Sun.
11:30 A.M.
English
Rev. G. S. Imai, 444-5159
701
i Japanese — Rev. Y. C. Horikoshi, 766-5632
701 Dovercourt Rd.
A warm welcome to all.
923-6877
S. of Bloor
KINO’S MARKET
TORONTO JAPANESE GOSPEL CHURCH
St. John s Presbyterian, Broadview at Simpson Ave
SERVICES:
Sund°7: §undaY School 2:00 P.M. Worship Service 3:00 P M
Tuesday: Prayer and Study Fellowship 8:00 P.M.
tnday: Young Peoples Christian Fellowship 8:00 P M
Phone Contact: Mr. S. Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 461-1686.
RU. 1-9123
918 Bathurst
SUNDAY. APRIL 13. 1969
Hana Matsuri
10:30 A.M. Religious School
Morning Service — Rev. Newton
2:00 P. M. Japanese Service
St.
Ishiura
Telephone:
Fire - Burglary — Bonds — Automobile
534-4302
DANFORTH
SPORTING GOODS
SKATES
Liability — Glass
general insurance
Phone 964-9000 William R. Bell
P cial Discounts on Store and Business
P
Package Policies
^sign Insurance Service, 2 College St., Tor.
Your Home
SPRING TOUR TO JAPAN, 1969
*
For detailed information contact
Compass Travel Service Ltd.,
Mas (Ron) MENDE
(near Carlaw)
George Fukusaka
Phone: HO. 3-7400
OPEN FBI. UNTIL 9 P.M.
515 Main Street, Vancouver
Phone 682-2241
Lichee Garden J
118 Elizabeth St.
Skate Sharpening
551 Danforth Ave-,
MAY. 11th, (Sunday)
(Dining Lounge)
Through
Toronto, Canada
Phone 364-3481
Formal
Rentals
Now For
beddings
Dances Etc,
(4 Lines To Serve You)
CATERING SERVICE — “TAKE-OUT” ORDERS
real ESTATE LTD.
or Dr.
Red & White
Food Store
Slocan City, B.C.
Phone 355-2211
TORONTO BUDDHIST CHURCH
,
11:00 A.M.
BuY and Sell
I278JZe3tro#t' Toron,°7- °»>
SOUTH OF WOODLAWN
Tokio Nishixnura
Banquet Facilities
757-5184
For Business Or Private Parties
WEDDING RECEPTIONS (Large or Smail)
DINNER MUSIC NIGHTLY
Of Toronto
custom made suit
437 DANFORTH AVE
PHONE: 463-8104
I
Page 8
PAGE 8
—-----------^2l>_2iPiiU)
Zen
W?sdom\^
Cent, from Page One
Psychotherapy East and West and Th<
19§q
iThe New Canadian
„
WnttSL tliird and present wife, 50-year-old Marv Jane Watts
(he calls her Jane-O), agrees.
•
Like Clockwork
. “Being responsible,” she says, "is generally thought of as
is worked out7th'Sk-like precision?7 theSe days’ his schedule doing something you don’t want to do. But it isn’t.”
i
Watl5 five years ago in New York, where she was
seminars and " sa7w!cl7' S
ke , fave nine public lectures or a ready lollowing Zen Buddhism. Like Watts. J.ane-0 wears sandaL
„
groups in between. ‘ h
mnumerable
commitments to private almost constantly.
an
a
the studious
English
S^^
ofe
hM1 infrom
Can^-y
"bo 39
^ altar boy at
ago declared
foui-Ayears’. he had steady been grooving on things
Oriental for
»iee'iSX”«h’ff 1 "Md
Chinese
thrillers. All
nese villain ”
d to become engineers. I wanted to be a Chi-
?L*ans tn Ied Watts’ ",ierest to Buddha.
Mysticism. Feared
,^n mysticism. Watts says many westerners fear it — and
f.7 JT1' h rUgS lk? LSD’ “escaIine and marijuana which he savs
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY
can -elp bring out mystical awareness — because they think of
AND FRIDAY
awareness of being at one with the universe as •'•'something lik“
communism.”
? bhe ?e°PIe 1 know who are aware that thev are on" •ti—tjjj. ioUMURA English pj^
h,.Se vhoIe universe are different — they have different stvles"
KEN ^J11 JaPanese Editor’0*
fereiiceS^^Jngle™011
the whole thin° is what makes "difAnu Advertising.
pokey old
about the
Western individualism are the sanm thinib'Z^ based °n the ‘ego in a skin bag’ idea of people. °
. ,
”
Case’ they say the skin-bag ego should serve thp
•
is school state, m the other case that it should serve itself.”
. ^ben
ad discover each others’ thoughts, we will nisenvex
young son ri^Anto'Bfddhtlfl a hospital, followed his eccentric
of th? Buddhist Society “Engfi
’’’ at
“ 88,' is
“ still
Sti“ treasurer in-V^utV 0He‘ T®7101^y is avowing this discovery by open«nS SpthT auotber. From radio and TV we are m^t
™SMt“«feV
’” ,alcr
HaKF^’0" bet"n the Ea*tern attitudes ‘and S^l£
.
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
EMp
Male Help Wanted
tian minister0^ ^ JUSt ^s^ fit nW Personality to be a Chris-
£<JE^ gardeners wanteOfaT?
oiyb (Toronto).
depressing. And That’s' ^he
+V ,m^ans gloomy, dank,
tern religion.
6 atmosPhere that hangs around wes-
SHIPPER-packer, experienced f0- a-^rlS' A^essive, good op^
yj?11' steady good wages. Acdv T^r
(Toronto).
“ '
be
J°N is Superficial — honey to catch flies
cietiesIf they'say someoneTr^ g'^ sexuaI regulation soirregular sex life.
n m“ ln sin’ ^ means he has an
Over-Theoretical
,
• ^u! education is over-theoretical. It
basic relations to the material world __ completely neglects our
ma-,
mg, housing and love-making. All that’s farming, cooking, cloth
with the factorv^he owns^hh^nt6 ai1 and water of a community
Says Watts: “We are moving into an left out.”
era where• we i are ’findne owns, it is not a sin in the ecclesiastical sense.
mg we have nothing to haiK on
on to
to __
— PVArvineverythin,
instead of lookino- for a nhep___________
ex
eix thing is relative, So
,
Hard-Hearted
should learn to swim or fly.”
^^ °n t0’ to take a stand> we
secreS-'?lr^^
* f” sleeping with their
in conflict with iT and b^fW^^
?aS Part of ^ture instead oi
■What is Watts’ philosophy? Mo™^^^
^^“« ~ of
P
aX^ &St™ ^ilosophies for th^Wes^
feo^S^’iS,11^ either psychotherapy or a religion
^ :KTT“ce his ^^^ “”&
of -W^TM^
of skin,
as, Watts {put
it,* is an
an H1UJ1UI1,
illusion.
’
S
a
g K ?e yoUnS’er generation feels that their elders
i
Th
-----. .Its roots are
are deep
deep in
i„ Judeo-Christian
^-Christian theological
theoiogica! imagery
^S
G<* “a*“*l«-Pe>^^
separate from c'XY
8 5
we descYibe the world in language, we break it into I expire’hme^'splXl"^ 1O° KP'°re outer slMe° We want to
bits.. But in nature, it all goes together.
bad?'Tag □±?3± in
ean we sav they
"Just as a heart goes with a stomach, the world
are
insect
Drug.: ale £S^
“ “ P«
b-d^ bacteria goes with human life.”
Ss-says seri°us mistakes are made bv men whn d°
J
soverunggg’“A KPma« —
is no
“Mu16’1' sense of separation from nature’is unreal
it leads to laughter
ing hh^lf7^
h^s
-ts without harmBut don t the holv men
*
to achieve enlightenment on their owS ™ 5Pun’ drugs in order
Says&" 17tS
^
.
Pot Smokers
selves
G
S An*ellZ1^ the world instead of ZiSng
say: ‘I came Lre “hey aTread',*™?'! ^ysMeameng^ drugs long bem 7hlS
baPPening because most people still
y°U dWn,t ~ you eanm out of
Matts unorthodoxy carries over to his view
..gg^
Insteadof Sv
........ .p.iA^^
? 3 W-y of accepting responsibilitv. |
t^®^#”1 ‘° P""Se tO
n
Only if you
an art. lou need the direc-
in a rising tide of Eastern
beading- it?
“
*>°ith America or as actually spear1 a*
and et ^e
Watts: “The awful truth
And a tough question to finish C°ntributed 3 ^reat deal to it.’
How does Ahn
Superstitions . . .
Priest editor,
and for:mer
(Cont. From Page 1)
describe
himself?
a
d
Harvard
research
fellow
to a friend or associate in red thumbs hidden
in the fingers I
I v ear manv dismiLp-s
i
ink.
Not to do so.
b’ eIe^ant in ;
- • according
------ *...... » to local long- silver-grev hair
“The .»,Kmf^ &Xfea black silk suit
The reason: red ink in Japan tradition, means that one of the’-1on a cigarello.
is to wish death upon the person parents will die. Sadder yet, the many disguises
who can wear
-------- — the genuine fake.”
to whom you are writing When son or daughter won’t be'able to-------------- -- -----a Japanese girl really wants to be with the parent in his last T
I Law . . -.
break things up with her bov- hours.
(Cont. from Page One)
friend, a letter in red
When posing for photographs. I Detentim
the point across.
he Japanese frequently jockev
the
middle position.
internal security .’ rarfc“' o/wm If"81 S"
Japanese standing on the side- to avoid
Beason, it is believed that thM hqu] & -n • and Person who pro- Detention Aeojand
walk when a hearse goes by. one in the middle will be the v
1 engage m. or probabform
with their first of the trio to die.
I ..
1
conspire with others to ED HJLJugTKER BESOLV•
J,I? acts of espionage or ED that this Board's position be
known- to a11 members of
Can
be macerated L ^V^oual
delegation from
m
detention
camps,
and
i
.
t
m
Angeles
area,
with a re
T I F ^ J^LREAS, a person under the
l 479 QUEEN STREET WEST
quest
that
they
exert
their
influ
f Emergency Detention Act will
ence
to
bring
about
repeal
of
the
TORONTO 2-B. ONT.
’
r
brou-hfc to trial under
1 h ’ 5atrin?tead will be judged Emergency Detention Act.
Please find enclosed $__________
Fieliminary Hearing- Office^
for which I I
D Renew my subscription
i
and a Detention Review Board
Enter my new subscription for------- year/month» J | wherein the detanee must pTo^
।
hu innocence, but the govern
c-r
•
Effective April 1. 1969
ment is not required to disclose
।
J
.o.OO for six months
•
$9.00 per year.
'HTCeKOr 7roduce witnesses to
।
J
WhVpfa^^
and
। NAME (MR. MRS. MISS) .
vioHs?
3aid
Procedures
1
yofate all constitutional guaran।
One can truthfully sav onlw “T Inm
future hold what it may. '
‘
'
The New Canadian
F^ER COMPANY special sales'
Zig-Zag
Sewing
Machines, Vacua-Cleaners, etc.
Home deEonsbcfor
call — Mrs. Tsujimura, 621-0684
onto).
MEN'S SUITS
Chris Nomura
YOUR
JBLQfD
।
।
CITY
i
PROVINCE
ZONE NO.
j
neces>arx, a> existing laws
procedures are available and
completely adequate to sa^guard
interna’ security.
RFW AHEF0Rt: BE IT
RESOLVED that this Board
hereby expresses Its opposing
-
?'
chans
team
was
the greatest
gift of all
to Japan & all Ports
Oni
lured
is a ■
now
in Fc
of th
to Foi
Eager
Packing Crating
Poii
sen it
office,
feasor
his ai
first
presidi
All Custom Papers
Arranged
Beca
time,
Eord d
By Air, Rail,
Land & Sea
Overseas
FuIIy Insured
Hon
Call
Arrow World Wide
Peo|
. tor
889-6269
Metro Toronto
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
I
Gem
mak
pres:
W
ulati
chan
Parti
sip h
self
team
from
132 Baldwin St., Toronto
Phone 368-9225
Takara Jewellers
ADDRESS
D
E.1
star
dust
Made To Measure
And Alterations
SHIPPING
recommend LSD ? I asked.
a ^eetivcLpe^^
Articles Wanted
j
— Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
mid as So. Toronto, Suite 1402. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
? ^(ie;
Hong I
fas tea
a some
* Laboi
-nts, j
^ots i
bo pre.
r--ta
?£
y geti
^^Ij
* -^ of:
i
—-----------^2l>_2iPiiU)
Zen
W?sdom\^
Cent, from Page One
Psychotherapy East and West and Th<
19§q
iThe New Canadian
„
WnttSL tliird and present wife, 50-year-old Marv Jane Watts
(he calls her Jane-O), agrees.
•
Like Clockwork
. “Being responsible,” she says, "is generally thought of as
is worked out7th'Sk-like precision?7 theSe days’ his schedule doing something you don’t want to do. But it isn’t.”
i
Watl5 five years ago in New York, where she was
seminars and " sa7w!cl7' S
ke , fave nine public lectures or a ready lollowing Zen Buddhism. Like Watts. J.ane-0 wears sandaL
„
groups in between. ‘ h
mnumerable
commitments to private almost constantly.
an
a
the studious
English
S^^
ofe
hM1 infrom
Can^-y
"bo 39
^ altar boy at
ago declared
foui-Ayears’. he had steady been grooving on things
Oriental for
»iee'iSX”«h’ff 1 "Md
Chinese
thrillers. All
nese villain ”
d to become engineers. I wanted to be a Chi-
?L*ans tn Ied Watts’ ",ierest to Buddha.
Mysticism. Feared
,^n mysticism. Watts says many westerners fear it — and
f.7 JT1' h rUgS lk? LSD’ “escaIine and marijuana which he savs
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY
can -elp bring out mystical awareness — because they think of
AND FRIDAY
awareness of being at one with the universe as •'•'something lik“
communism.”
? bhe ?e°PIe 1 know who are aware that thev are on" •ti—tjjj. ioUMURA English pj^
h,.Se vhoIe universe are different — they have different stvles"
KEN ^J11 JaPanese Editor’0*
fereiiceS^^Jngle™011
the whole thin° is what makes "difAnu Advertising.
pokey old
about the
Western individualism are the sanm thinib'Z^ based °n the ‘ego in a skin bag’ idea of people. °
. ,
”
Case’ they say the skin-bag ego should serve thp
•
is school state, m the other case that it should serve itself.”
. ^ben
ad discover each others’ thoughts, we will nisenvex
young son ri^Anto'Bfddhtlfl a hospital, followed his eccentric
of th? Buddhist Society “Engfi
’’’ at
“ 88,' is
“ still
Sti“ treasurer in-V^utV 0He‘ T®7101^y is avowing this discovery by open«nS SpthT auotber. From radio and TV we are m^t
™SMt“«feV
’” ,alcr
HaKF^’0" bet"n the Ea*tern attitudes ‘and S^l£
.
479 QUEEN ST. WEST
EMp
Male Help Wanted
tian minister0^ ^ JUSt ^s^ fit nW Personality to be a Chris-
£<JE^ gardeners wanteOfaT?
oiyb (Toronto).
depressing. And That’s' ^he
+V ,m^ans gloomy, dank,
tern religion.
6 atmosPhere that hangs around wes-
SHIPPER-packer, experienced f0- a-^rlS' A^essive, good op^
yj?11' steady good wages. Acdv T^r
(Toronto).
“ '
be
J°N is Superficial — honey to catch flies
cietiesIf they'say someoneTr^ g'^ sexuaI regulation soirregular sex life.
n m“ ln sin’ ^ means he has an
Over-Theoretical
,
• ^u! education is over-theoretical. It
basic relations to the material world __ completely neglects our
ma-,
mg, housing and love-making. All that’s farming, cooking, cloth
with the factorv^he owns^hh^nt6 ai1 and water of a community
Says Watts: “We are moving into an left out.”
era where• we i are ’findne owns, it is not a sin in the ecclesiastical sense.
mg we have nothing to haiK on
on to
to __
— PVArvineverythin,
instead of lookino- for a nhep___________
ex
eix thing is relative, So
,
Hard-Hearted
should learn to swim or fly.”
^^ °n t0’ to take a stand> we
secreS-'?lr^^
* f” sleeping with their
in conflict with iT and b^fW^^
?aS Part of ^ture instead oi
■What is Watts’ philosophy? Mo™^^^
^^“« ~ of
P
aX^ &St™ ^ilosophies for th^Wes^
feo^S^’iS,11^ either psychotherapy or a religion
^ :KTT“ce his ^^^ “”&
of -W^TM^
of skin,
as, Watts {put
it,* is an
an H1UJ1UI1,
illusion.
’
S
a
g K ?e yoUnS’er generation feels that their elders
i
Th
-----. .Its roots are
are deep
deep in
i„ Judeo-Christian
^-Christian theological
theoiogica! imagery
^S
G<* “a*“*l«-Pe>^^
separate from c'XY
8 5
we descYibe the world in language, we break it into I expire’hme^'splXl"^ 1O° KP'°re outer slMe° We want to
bits.. But in nature, it all goes together.
bad?'Tag □±?3± in
ean we sav they
"Just as a heart goes with a stomach, the world
are
insect
Drug.: ale £S^
“ “ P«
b-d^ bacteria goes with human life.”
Ss-says seri°us mistakes are made bv men whn d°
J
soverunggg’“A KPma« —
is no
“Mu16’1' sense of separation from nature’is unreal
it leads to laughter
ing hh^lf7^
h^s
-ts without harmBut don t the holv men
*
to achieve enlightenment on their owS ™ 5Pun’ drugs in order
Says&" 17tS
^
.
Pot Smokers
selves
G
S An*ellZ1^ the world instead of ZiSng
say: ‘I came Lre “hey aTread',*™?'! ^ysMeameng^ drugs long bem 7hlS
baPPening because most people still
y°U dWn,t ~ you eanm out of
Matts unorthodoxy carries over to his view
..gg^
Insteadof Sv
........ .p.iA^^
? 3 W-y of accepting responsibilitv. |
t^®^#”1 ‘° P""Se tO
n
Only if you
an art. lou need the direc-
in a rising tide of Eastern
beading- it?
“
*>°ith America or as actually spear1 a*
and et ^e
Watts: “The awful truth
And a tough question to finish C°ntributed 3 ^reat deal to it.’
How does Ahn
Superstitions . . .
Priest editor,
and for:mer
(Cont. From Page 1)
describe
himself?
a
d
Harvard
research
fellow
to a friend or associate in red thumbs hidden
in the fingers I
I v ear manv dismiLp-s
i
ink.
Not to do so.
b’ eIe^ant in ;
- • according
------ *...... » to local long- silver-grev hair
“The .»,Kmf^ &Xfea black silk suit
The reason: red ink in Japan tradition, means that one of the’-1on a cigarello.
is to wish death upon the person parents will die. Sadder yet, the many disguises
who can wear
-------- — the genuine fake.”
to whom you are writing When son or daughter won’t be'able to-------------- -- -----a Japanese girl really wants to be with the parent in his last T
I Law . . -.
break things up with her bov- hours.
(Cont. from Page One)
friend, a letter in red
When posing for photographs. I Detentim
the point across.
he Japanese frequently jockev
the
middle position.
internal security .’ rarfc“' o/wm If"81 S"
Japanese standing on the side- to avoid
Beason, it is believed that thM hqu] & -n • and Person who pro- Detention Aeojand
walk when a hearse goes by. one in the middle will be the v
1 engage m. or probabform
with their first of the trio to die.
I ..
1
conspire with others to ED HJLJugTKER BESOLV•
J,I? acts of espionage or ED that this Board's position be
known- to a11 members of
Can
be macerated L ^V^oual
delegation from
m
detention
camps,
and
i
.
t
m
Angeles
area,
with a re
T I F ^ J^LREAS, a person under the
l 479 QUEEN STREET WEST
quest
that
they
exert
their
influ
f Emergency Detention Act will
ence
to
bring
about
repeal
of
the
TORONTO 2-B. ONT.
’
r
brou-hfc to trial under
1 h ’ 5atrin?tead will be judged Emergency Detention Act.
Please find enclosed $__________
Fieliminary Hearing- Office^
for which I I
D Renew my subscription
i
and a Detention Review Board
Enter my new subscription for------- year/month» J | wherein the detanee must pTo^
।
hu innocence, but the govern
c-r
•
Effective April 1. 1969
ment is not required to disclose
।
J
.o.OO for six months
•
$9.00 per year.
'HTCeKOr 7roduce witnesses to
।
J
WhVpfa^^
and
। NAME (MR. MRS. MISS) .
vioHs?
3aid
Procedures
1
yofate all constitutional guaran।
One can truthfully sav onlw “T Inm
future hold what it may. '
‘
'
The New Canadian
F^ER COMPANY special sales'
Zig-Zag
Sewing
Machines, Vacua-Cleaners, etc.
Home deEonsbcfor
call — Mrs. Tsujimura, 621-0684
onto).
MEN'S SUITS
Chris Nomura
YOUR
JBLQfD
।
।
CITY
i
PROVINCE
ZONE NO.
j
neces>arx, a> existing laws
procedures are available and
completely adequate to sa^guard
interna’ security.
RFW AHEF0Rt: BE IT
RESOLVED that this Board
hereby expresses Its opposing
-
?'
chans
team
was
the greatest
gift of all
to Japan & all Ports
Oni
lured
is a ■
now
in Fc
of th
to Foi
Eager
Packing Crating
Poii
sen it
office,
feasor
his ai
first
presidi
All Custom Papers
Arranged
Beca
time,
Eord d
By Air, Rail,
Land & Sea
Overseas
FuIIy Insured
Hon
Call
Arrow World Wide
Peo|
. tor
889-6269
Metro Toronto
"EAR PIERCING"
By Appointment
I
Gem
mak
pres:
W
ulati
chan
Parti
sip h
self
team
from
132 Baldwin St., Toronto
Phone 368-9225
Takara Jewellers
ADDRESS
D
E.1
star
dust
Made To Measure
And Alterations
SHIPPING
recommend LSD ? I asked.
a ^eetivcLpe^^
Articles Wanted
j
— Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.
mid as So. Toronto, Suite 1402. Phone 363-0952
Eve. By Appointment
Hiro Kawaguchi, Art Watanabe
? ^(ie;
Hong I
fas tea
a some
* Laboi
-nts, j
^ots i
bo pre.
r--ta
?£
y geti
^^Ij
* -^ of:
i