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The New Canadian — October 11, 1977

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697 People Over 100-year-old in japan
; \jTOKYO ;— Jap bn will have ^697 that. there dwere -122 tmen and 575 Kagoshima-ken, who-was ■ bom
- '

people more?: than 100-. years old. women, who' will--havepassed •the ’ June?29, i'865.
century' mark, 31 more-^than the' V With the death, last November
onlSept. 30,b the b^
history, the -Health arid Welfare total for. last year.
of Niwa Komoto of Shiga-ken,
J^nistry announced .-recently. • : The; number of centenarians has who had been Japan's' oldest for
seven years,'. Izumi is the only
r The report, issuedyahnually be- increased every year since 19711
Honors ; for. the nation’s oldest remaining Japanese to have been
By": CAM MdKENZIE ’
proper name for Ithe'hockey team fore Sept. 15 ;^-;; Respect for .the
Aged Day-—/and the ‘ensuing-El­ citizen, went to Shigechiyo Izumi,. born prior, to the Meiji Restorawas the Sunrise Millers.' •" " *
■<SA-SKATQON;s-.—^ Junzo Tsuji
Cont. on Page 2
£ Owner ■ - Bishop ■ and ’ his' wife derly^ People’s Welfare Week, said 112, < of Tokunoshima island in
of Tokyo/ Japan- was in'/•Saskawent” •along ; to • Japan • with ’ the iiiiiiiiifiiiniiiiniiiiniiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
toon for a.day ra
visiting a
hockey ‘team; - a trip which; entail-:
fri end:. of, ,-lpng. ■ stand in g, ?. retired
ed sdinei^'days by/boat from the
rail roade-rr Johnny Walker.
. \
Canadian west coast and- now can'
•In :<^^ .;.you' don’t/'know/, who
be 1 accomplished by air in- nine
Junzo Tsuji is and.-how he would
hours.

be a friend of Walker’s, perhaps
f Tt waJ’s 'all quite' an' excursion.
an explanation is-necessary. .<• ■ ts.
Japdn guaranteed expenses - from >
“ Forty-two ^years oagoz^Walker
the'west coast and:return to That
tookva’hoickey-teamy the —Battle-'
point, * but ’a fair ' amount ~ of.
ford Millers? ttofJapari sfor an ex-’
money was necessary .to get the
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1977
TORONTO, ONTARIO
Vol. 41 — 76
hibition series. That was in an'
team from Battleford'to Vancou­ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinnmiiiiiiiimTiiiiiiiiiiimmimiHiiiihiiim^
eila when/it was. more or less a.
ver and’ along about that time thenovelty /for - "'Canadian ; . teams ; to
■greenbacks were' riot too /plenti-;
p lay^in/.foreign' countries and . a>
fut ’ Omer B
.provided the
f oregone*" c onclusion':' they would
funds ' for the first.' leg •■ of. .the
win; Y
journey -and was almost fully -re­
At the .time, ‘.TsujL?was a stuimbursed through gate receipts ■
derit?inUKeio, Um
from . two?. exhibitions ' in 'Seattleand a prime mover .in,.getting
and’^ Portlan d, ' both - :wonrb " the ; TORONTO^i^-^'^A'S' a<climax>tol invitation read in part : ' “In ' Majesty?'1 Queen Elizabeth ' II in
hpekey going ? in his country.; He
Millers/ 10-1 • and 3-li- lIn; Japan? theiri-recent ? triumphal ' concert recognition of- the- Japanese > Cana- Ottawa,. .October 17th - and 18th,.'
had * learned iralkxuteyt^
.
the Canadians played-seven sgames tour/ the Nikka:'-'Festival Dancers ■ dian>-' Centennial;- Y
-and .^the. 1977.’”,.
through ass’oeiafion^rmth^ staff
and won < - them "all 7 with hgolalie have'^been invited to perform be-' highly successful, national ..tour, of
As^the only performing group/
members^'of?;?the Canaidiari^-Em- .
Burlingham getting three shut-; fore ' th^
at - the < Silver > the Ndkka ^'Festival- DanCers7 the^ among- (the -Asiatics, -/the Nikka ;
bassy .in' \ Japan. He . was. also outs. Their <ovef-all ■ goal average Jubilee ■ celebration '7 in ’ • Ottawa. Canadian ' Folk? Arts: Council . in Festival’ Dancers have, been .. se­
manaiging-’director of Japan’s Na-:
was ,139 for and/nine against. - ■
the* Multicul­ lected to 'represent 'all?'the-' Asian '
This marks yet ‘ another accolade conjun<^6n<:^
tional ^Skating,; 'whichtyb took in;
tural Deparfcriaehte'of "bhe Secre-' groupswho; have immigrated^ to J
fi gure skating,'’; sp eed ’.skating and; ? Perhaps you might-- .wonder for this talented troupe. r
lln a letter addressed ^td Mrs: tary' of 'State wishes'-"to'Invite Canada/ -Mrs. Hay ashi -explained
.what brings Tsuji to ' Canada'.
hockey;
•„ ... ■
Sadayo Hayashi, National. Dii^ec- your ’danicer'S* to participate iri .the that the • theme of th e ■ page an t i s
£ 'Beyond, this/. university ^studies? Well, heland his wife' and. brother,:
Command Performance for Her to depict the growth of Canada:
Tsuji to ok a keen interest in; are'^on”ia vacation,1' but there ; is. tor, Nikka .Festival Dancers, the
resultihg.7 from. '.the contribution
fa.; pin
hockey, ?.? played’.. a .1 bit, himself, another' reason?. H
m'ade 'by the various ' ethnic.
learned ythe rules and became^ manufacturing company in La­
•groups-, which - immigrated - to? this/
one of' theiteading/referees; inythe. combe, --' Alberta/ • the. ‘ ■ name > ‘of
.which Ms - • the * Juhiper Emblems. •TOKYO.--- As many as 90 pep •dealing with living- conditions, 45 country. This is to be done pic-/
nation^,/ \
” ■ :
cent of the Japanese peope think pter cent said earning a living is torially by.a sequence of slides?
iSdj he was chosen, as the ref-’ Tita.--'. •-:
flashed on four -separate screens-:
eree? for the ‘Battleford/-Millers’ ' How^did he start a business in ■of themselves as? middle class, ac­ ■harder this'year than last year,
cording to . a ’ Prime -.Minister’s 48 per. cent said it is about the above the mammoth stage. Simula
series in his * country//That' is Howr Lacombe?
"Again, this came about through 'office survey ’published here re­ same and three per cent-said they taneously, live performances - of;;
he and .Walker became friends.;
the various ethnic dances and?
a. .ho'ckey . friendship. In 1960, a cently.---------------------------------- .
find it easier.
z
,
The •Millers ? woh,t'all
songs will be presented on the;Japan and* perhaps this fact, con­ 'Japanese team was cori tour, in- : - The off ice conducted the survey •' While 64 per cent said they
stage.. ,. _
.
?:
solidated; the friendship. ^
, i - * .Canada arid Tsuji was along.. The: .by .-sending. questionnaires-in. May.; •were satisfied with the present
The ummi^^
froiri Euro-?
7 During the .meetihg£of the two' tourists played against -the La-: ■to 10,000 persons picked at ran­ diving standard®, ■ 35 per cent said
pean countries is represented by ‘
by; dom through the country. . ;
they weren’t.

mten ?in Saskatoon ?'.' recently, it combe.-Jjl^
( who.had the.
■Asked what the government groups entering, the arena from,.. Of a total of 8,220 who .reswas j okirigl y?> sai d; ?55-Had? sthe Marwood: .S^
one side of the'stage, while the;
^nadians .lost, the. /good friend-, Juniper Lodge on. the Calgary—’ ponded, .59 p er cent said they . be­ should do most urgently, 41 per
Edmohtan.'-ihighway/ .just out of longed to the middle class, ; 23 cent said control prices, 24 per immigration from the Orient will?
"ship might never had started.” J
_ ip er cent the lower middle class cent demanded an improved social be from the/opposite -side, of the
i Walker admitted,* Tsuji was a- Lacombe./ *
■v The "connection through" hockey,, and eight .per. ‘cent the upper security- ^system and seven per­ . stage. The building of the trans~good referee, fair.-and knowedgecontinenftal • railway - linking the
between - Tsuji-. and^Swain 'paved; ?middle class.
cent-wanted •better-housing.
' 4 able, and above _ ally a.' wonderful
east .with the west is also por­
the way fo the 'opening of Juniper ' In response to other ^questions
host-Tio? the . Canada ans. -.._ ,
trayed in a live production num­
Emblems i-Ltd.‘ in Lacombe' in
■ A fCllbw 7 with "a- remarkable
ber. In the finale, all the groups
1969. Tsuji also acquired, shares
memory,' Tsuji .easily recalled the
are on the stage together to
p ersonner of ^the rBattleford Mil-: in the Juniper'Lodge, Which since;
symbolize the people of Canada.
has been: sold : to • new rollers.:
iSAN DIEGO, ; Calif; — Union, other races.” Derogatory remarks
jers which^ includ.ed^ -10. players:
Two numbers; were 'selected by.
Swain is now in the tannery-busL of Pan Asian Communites pro- directed toward" *’Asians'"'is “ridi­
Clark Burlingham,; Ab. (Tony)
ness in-Lacombe and Tsuji is his tested. the - use of “racial nick- culous,” it was po.inted out, .. be­ Mrs. Hayashi to be performed by
Rogers, Ron iSutherland, Joe Osrepresentative in: Japan.- . names .that insult Asian Ameri­ cause no entertainer makes jokes the Nikka Festival Dancers at
bom, Doug Cairns, Pete Atkinson;
■ The Japanese' vi sitor - has ■ fac­ cans” on a -recent Tonight Bhow” about blacks or Chicanos that is the .Command Performance. One
Eddie Martinson, Earl /Newibold;
represents the traditional Japa­
tories in Japan doing1 the same when gu'est host George Carlin negative■ or insulting. > - > •- -‘ Johnny Ballendine and Nap Car-:
work 'as his establishment in La­ was rioting the-ethnic songs- of
In' .-the' future, ■.. there . is> no nese classical dance which is the
riei'e.
. ......
combe, but his original and main the 1940s and had. Ed McMahon justifiable reason to use offen- “Sambaso” generally performed
He said to Waker, “We still
business an his /homeland, is.' a andaudienceT laughing hysteria sive, racial nicknames that insult for auspicious - occasions/ The
speak of the' Millers for thear
glassware company, hand paint­ cally, after mentioning “Give a Asian. Americans. Scripts should other is the “Wonderful Canada’’
skill on ice, their speed and their
ing and screen; painting en.glass. J^.ia.(Slap in/the'^
omit racist slurs.that dehumanize number which was the * finale of
clean play. We always remember
the National Odori Concert and
He purchases glass from Canada,
.<In. a letter of. Sept. 13 addressed and degrade people-of color,” she
them, in .Japan.”
choreographed by Tatsumi Yoshi?
claiming he can- buy at a better to the NBC producers at Burr said.
■Sponsor of the Canadian team
price than in Japan.
. ■•. - : : bank, Calif., Virginia Hom Fung . NBC producers were also seen kiyo. “This, number; fits in very
was the late.' F.? Leo Bishop, who
* A son, ;Yqrimasa Tsuji,; and his of jUPAC; called for ? a ^public as being ‘ “insensitive” by paying appropriately-with the theme of
'owned the Bishop Milling Comwife, live' ‘id “ Winnipeg where apology and said “it. should be “stars” fantastic salaries to be the pageant which is- .the multi­
'pamy plants ht .Old'Battleford and
Yorimasa has been'.with a- cabinet embarrassing 'to * continue hiring funny in detrimental and deroga­ cultural diversity of - Canada,’’
Biggar, which, had a famous
people1 who • lack awareness for tory manner.
Cont. on Page 2
trademark, “Sunrise Flour.” The
Cent, on Page 2

Friendship from Canada Hockey
Team VisittoJapan 42 Yrs. Ago

THE NEW CAN ADI AN

Nikka Festival Dancers Invited to Give
Performance Before Queen in Ottawa

90 Percent Jpnz. Feel Middle Class

Asian Group Assails Tonight SRow Host

Page 2

Tue^ay/'OM^

’4

PAGE!

Centendriq ris... ^ v?: \-^- iC6ht< bom. Pagp 1 / C ^/* £ .L TheNewCanadian

EnvirorraentalistQ^S^

,
willreceive..-.,a /letter tpf. cqhgratu/ I ' ZEMablitii<^ 7i^
!^i. In-the runner-up'spot:was/Ma- lations and^ia silver /cup ^from'l
Premiere’. Takeo • -Eukuda - during I
sutsCrq^Sato^^
/‘ Association: of - Ontario >;.
; j / -r.>ahdj70uui^j^
who ■
& WTth^birthaay El derlyDeople’s --Welfate /W
TO&VO
'in January.' 4?oi^ ?'b^
rimonth > Wliite-wthiskerod / Izumi,' i_> w^h oJ •
beaders /of •' two' preserves
T.UMEZVKIPUBLISHER
/ ~ environmental / prdtectibh-/groups/ 5 -The groups'" are /the/Hbkkaiclo । aft^s-iSato /was Japan’s /1 oldest- now/.reLghs'.-as -'.Japan’s/- 61des.t;-|- I'b^^WUMJRi^fC^
protested recerity'.against a' pro-^ Federation of Environment' (Pro- I woman' Matsu"/ --Yoshikuni'"’. -of ( lives .with" his daughter "Kama, 7 6,j ; < -Englf^^SiKti^lEJIto '
in a hbm'e surrounded 'by sugary I
/_
postal• that Sapporo, host to the' t emotion and - the Natl bhal Federa-' -BeppUj -Ofta-ken. / - Japanese Section Editor '
1972 Winter ^ 'Olympic -"'Games,' tibri bl Environment Protectin' ; ’They’, were ^followed .by-/nine' -can’/fields'S-and.- the., sea nncfe^L
s'tage the games again in* 1984.'-/" . Gfbi^ps^ iSapp oro is /the ^Chpi tai /of' persons ’^ach ah2 the 105 and 406 mote Tokunoshima * Island. / . - -I < Published on every Tuesdaya
- ana "Fridays '
Jn appeals deliveTed rt6 'the En­ Hokkaido, Japah’s : hofthernmosti’ age;%racfet /and "32 people- whd:, -He rises at'5 a.m.-every morn- L*
ing; takes :a walk, eats, a hearty J /
suB^ipnoN;;?:
vironment • A^ehK»y,<\-*thfe i:) two- ?m'a,in:’island? • ' ’
/n.'; . ‘‘“J" have .reached .'the/age of.-104.
groups said authorities had-failed
The . iSapporo City Assembly / Tokyo has the -largest number breakfast of‘meat, vegetables and I ‘
- ’ $15u00 for one year.
(to honor their promise to restore unanimously approved: a' -resolu- i of centenarians with 45, followed rice; and/^then works in his-gar-I/
' $9.00 for Six Mohths
Mt. Eniwa,'-/site"-of' the. ‘downhill i ti on: ireceh tly >^ llihg 7for holding1 byiJ^ago®hima/wuth/34, /Hokkaido len*.
•;
479 Queen Street West,
.:. Whenx questioned about . this! ; ~ ' Torjmto'yt^tJzIOy^
ski run. in/Ehe.>i9y‘2\^
to* ^ the719^5games>ih;rSappbfb. ’ . -/ with ^2 hhd Okinawa vith; ;31.
The
92rnen anti 377 elixir, to life, he said he has never J 1 . / z ' • PHONE 366.5005
its original condition.
.
The . plan has been approved
They’also said Niseko and Fu­ by the standing committee of ithe l-womeh. - who are or will become brooded over . troubles and is. -a I
rano, prospective'/ sites - /f / the ’ Jaipam-Olymipic. Committee and -isr|’100-:yea.rs.? .old .between April 1 dedicated - - drinker .' of. the local
.
1984 games/ lie in . natural parks’ expected to receive - formal appro­ this year arid March' 31 next year “shochu” spirits; '.
whose ..environments, should;,be. val at’a"general meeting soon.

CLASSIFIED

Hockey.. . .

’ ''

Help Wanted

Cont. from Page 1

I r
*-| HOME

sewdnig,
steady work,
making shop in-St. .Bondface for centre, part, can be removed . forJ Couturies .meithdd, sample: heces110 .ybalrs., Yorimas a.. m et ^h i s 5 pai-1 lohg distance .skating,” he said. J sary. Apply pers^
. Ws a-itaT\ry . fr-^
.^1 »^^ W«»*S»^<>T, Tlta^;^
a 'ents at Vahcbuver and is driving'
Walker and the'Sunrise-Millers
them across the^West..
The senior Tsuji'talked of the’ went to Japan„-..42 years .ago. It
-great^ fchanges 'in /af££fictal:/rinks 1 ’was - interesting -to. 'hear two;
in 'aiMl' ’around -his*~ih*6m'e ■'city/ friends-talking of then and how..
\ Incidentally, Tsuji ‘thinks 'Can-,
Tokyo, -oyer .the years.- :
• /“When -the .Battleford, Millers: 'ada’is a wonderful - country, - andf
were /there in 1935, I /think* there.; through', connections .in -hockey?
was <one’: arena. Now we -'have; and business - he has '-many friends ■
‘about < 15 ' and - some /are z ; built * across the country.,. especially^
end-to-ehd and so constructed,.'the ( from the Lakehead west;
~ Authentic tifa^
J

K. HORI REAL ESTATE

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REAL ESTATE CONSULTANT
. 7 -SELLING<AND BUYINGOF HOMES
ARRANGING AND* SELLING OF MORTGAGES
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-/ .’From the ,Toronto .schools, • thedancers -'who 'will be /performing
?
■in 'Ottawa/are./Sharon..Mbni'shita,t
£
Joahhe’ ' NagaDtakiya^ <^
Su-^
yama, 'Karen■ /Mori,. Kathy• -Euji4
mbtb, -TWen'^y'’ Kumdi,- “Chiyoko
hum/ iPam - 'Ohashi, /MegumiNakamura,/ Jane 'Yoshida, 7Caro-*
Jine Takeda, and. Naomi Tanaka/
Mts. Irene Tsujimoto -and Mrs?
Harumi Nakamura will supeivise’the Toronto girls:
/•

$9.00 for 6. ^Months.

CITY

Corit. "from 'Page 1

- expected to Jam. the arena. .The;
The dahcers 'perforrning th'e third *and finial. performance willt
“Sambaso” are Janet Makihara, be/held on Tuesday evening, -Oct./
•Sherri-Kajiwara; and -Midori Ya-? 18th, .at the Ottaw a -'Civic Arena.-.
manaka. all from, the .Tatsumi' > All-performances will be wide—
Schodl" in . Vanro
' They ' will lycovered by- television and radio?
accompanied
Tatsumi on a national hook-up. It- should?
Ybshikiyo, /N 'a°t i'o_n a4Choreo­ be quite'an * event, and certainly a
grapher <bf'/'the'/Nikka .Festival- great tribute to the Nikka’Festi-j
’val Dancers. —- National J.C.C.S.
Dancers.
said :Sadayo.

The New Canadian
-

?

Dancers ...;‘ /

■i

Japanese Canadian Cent. Society .
' .As the Japanese Canadian ’Centennial Braws to:
a close your local Society welcomes any sug'gestiohs
for a suitable mbmento to -commemorate this ^his­
toric event."
.
- j

/ havetheRight Policy v
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Carlton St. lOth floor - Toronto 2-A,1 Ont.
- ’ Phone'^68^4631

Wedding And ■
- -Photo Finishing ;
In the afternoon^ performance
on . Oct. 17th -at 2:30 /p'jmc -hfefore
■ Sumida
“"‘
Her .Majesty' the Queen,- 8,000Photographic
sefhooi "children. will be-in attend­
ance. That /evening at 8: pjm;;
another performance twill ibe -h eld
for /the general public 'when -an-'
/other capacity.-crowd of'9,000 -is

SERVICE IS QUICK and Eco.
-nomical. Since all- works
from picture taking to prints
‘finishing; is doneby our - staff.
PHONE 423-8143

Japanese" Canadian . Cultural

Centre

123 iWYNFORD DRIVE, DON MILLS

:All suggestions must be forwarded in writing '
with - sufficient details to ^outline, their ■ proposal.

15th AN N IVERSARY DANCE
Saturday, October 15,1977 — 8:00 p.m; -1:00 a.m.

Submissions will be ^received until; Nov^!5 1977
7 by :/^r. P. Matsumiya '2109 17 St.-Coaldale,andMr.
7 T. Kanashirb, 2418—10 Ave. N., Lethbridge.

Kimsnu &4(wse rtes
:Norfl«h China

FEATURING

Butch Watanabe & His Orchestra
Door Prizes • Bar Facilities • Refreshments
. $5.00 per .person — $6.00 at door

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Page 3

Tuesday, October 11, 1977

TORONTQ JAPANESE. G0SPEI; CHURCH

Zen Meditation
Therapy

* / Sk \ John’s . Presbyterian, •_ Broadview, '-at - Simpson/?Ave.
^-Sunday,. School;- an^^
v/
?Tuesday:Prayerarid; StudyFellow^
p.m./
7 \ Friday : Young Peoples Christian- Fellowship? 8 K)0 p.m;
Phone contact : Mr. Su Yokota 425-6128, Mr. H. Yoshida 46171686.

f
J

ZEN MEDITATION THERA­ • of mind-' whichd s, in part; the putPY, by Tomio Hirai. Japan Publi­ come of the, former, two.k^. .
cations, Inc., Tokyo, 1975. Pp.104.
Many ancient. Zen attributes
$3.25. '--•' ■ C /’ ’
were /studied o and their, effect

v. SEICHO-NO.IE
TRUTHOFLIFECHURCH

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~

?

TORONTO- BUDDHIST’CHURCH
918 BATHURST ST., TORONTO


Telephone:J534-4302 "I/

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Sunday, October.-16, 1977.

J 10:30 a.m. Sunday School
-.? . ll:00?a.m. Joint (Morning Service*. .,
(No, Service at 2:00 p.nE on<this, Sunday)
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’ ;. Warm. .Welcome To , You;

“ /^

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andFindOut Now!
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Unlimited; earnings> potential • No capital investment o Oppor-.
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"Or; . /
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By Appointment
Mon. -— . Friday 9—6, Sat. 9—1.-^
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1977 GROUP FLIGHT TO JAPAN
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5“proven.” Torn example the Zen
GiMtoH Picture
•condition described as the oneness1,
'
^
of the- active, and the-., static is/
NISHIMURA ^
Toward, the.middle,of this, book, according to Dr. Hirai, a phen­
PICTURE FRAMES,
Dr. Hirai- writes: “If Zazen- were omenon known, as ;AIpha.j blocking■
UNM«m» MiMt.; I«#to.- ». Oi
no' more than a religiousVexercise; -^ that is, the Alpha..wave emisSOOTS OF WOODLAWN
it /would—lack the/ scientic-sub- sioh. is interrupted by the Beta,
TpKIO NISHIMURA
stantiation and '.the .universal ■emission; so that the mind is calm
PHONE .923-6877 ?
applicability to make it useful .to and:,;.- - static " and
still remainsthe general pbpulati on. But . ; . I- “.tensely? aware and receptive of.
became convinced that there must surroundings.” > =
be v something more involved than / “! saw,” writes the -, author,
religious issues., al one.’This led me- “that if records could" be made of
to t^e suspicion that 'brain waves brain-wave patterns of people in
FISHING TACKLE
have a~role to play in ’the success Zazen meditation, it would' berpos­
& worms :1
of /Zazen .and. that if Zazen’s ef-. sible to remoye. the mystical veil
1202 DANFORTH" AVE
fects could he convincingly- ex- that has surrounding (sic) this j
plained; dn ’/terms, of cerebral •practise for centuries. Furthe f, it
physiology,: this' -method >of medi- would be possible to prove beyond
m-woi
Ration - might/ well be- a : spiritual doubt that Zazen can be7 of help J
training' system of unparalleled in establishing* and* maintaining,
-scientific applicability.” ;.
.. - mental health.”
He then set about with elec­
And. this is just what-he does
trodes , and -brain-wave? recording in this book — a translation- of
machines
to,* investigate ' the- the 1974 . Japanese original. In
physiological; - mechanisms'•■'•.: in- presenting this material he first
evolved 'in. .the- seated meditation deals with the practise and. Ire­
called Zazen. <
> ‘
suits of Zazen, land then, in the
The everyday brain waves pro­ second section. gives the theory,
duced by us are* Beta; when we that is “the scientific basis of the
’become disturbed..- or excited-- we Zazen method,” ending" up with a
■produce Gamma waves;' when strong case for the therapeutic
resting’ or while going, to sleep, results of this . kind of m'editahowever, /5we
produce . Alpha tion.
waves; ^while/asleep we produce ■In so doing, -he has translated
Delta and , Theta . waves. All of the Zazen experience into terms
these ' have-ictheir characteristic which are probably more welcome
"patterns on the polygraph.
to our times/than/ara./^^ words
Dr. Hirai,/with his electrodes "of the-: various ; priests and sages,
and electroencephalograph, -dis­ which makes up the literature of'
covered that people doing Zazen this-religion; But he has -not;: con­
produced mainly Alpha waves. tributed to the experience as ex-'
Since he believed that“if .; - • perience —^ nor did he intend to.
a way were devised to cause (the He has given the- how’s and thej
brain) to - emit only Alpha waves, why’s and’his; interest in Zazen
the. brain ' would >remain free of is in its therapeutic value and not
tension . anti (sic) upset,” he . de­ in its revelatory possibilities. The
cided that he .had found just such experience has certainly not beena method .in, Zazen itself; By prov­ enlarged, but it has been account-’
ing the existence of the emission ed for. ■
of Alpha waves during .meditation / To see Zazen, and. eventually
he had proved the efficacy; of Zen itself, as therapy, however,
Zazen and explained why- this somewhat limits' the role which
seated, meditation was thena- this ./religion has • traditionally
played. To translate the poem of
There were many different ex-. Zen into, scientific prose’ is, un­
-perimentSi • He measured, for-ex­ avoidably, to neglect further as­
ample, body movement during pects of Zen itself. Many, may
meditation and -discovered that a feel relief that in this book a
^mentally stable person can re-, mystery- has . -been cleared up.
.main physically stable for a fixed Others may feel’that mystery is
period of time.” That “the smaller necessary to take anything, very
■the range of■. his; body (movement seriously, or feel anything very
■in that period of^time,,tihe.more deeply.
stable the -mind is likely to -be.”
All of this, however, ’is beside
^ Income Tax Reduction
This • was correlated' with Alpha the point of Dr. Hirai’s- thesis and
Retirement Income
j
‘ Family/ Protection r.
wave production and. those brains has little to do with his book. His
/
Disability - Pay Checques
producing most were most stable. aim ds - succinctly stated in the
Mortgage Redemption
The tests continued (many of quotation at the beginning of this
College-Tuition Fund*
them outlined in this book) and review.- If Zazen were no more
pr> Hirai was"able to isolate’those than? a religious exercise, he .says,
NATIONAL LIFE
components- of Zazen which con­ itwould not be useful to . the
OF CANADA
tributed "to Alpha wave produc­ general population. This ds a p i ob522 UNIVERSITY AVE7? J
tion; These are breath control, lematical statement, but- it well
. SUITE 700, TORONTO
posture control, and that stability defines his intentions.
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Taesday, -October. 11^ 1977

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