the investment: (Carter, 1988).

Dear Penny: J. Weishaus, "A Letter to My Wife."

Dear Ody: J. Weishaus, "...And Her Reply."

the situation: a. Gottlieb. (Sylvester, 1989)..

the manuscript: Thomas Merton, Woods, Shore, Desert: A Notebook, May 1968. Santa Fe, 1982.

frontal lobe: (Pearce,1993).

machine: J. Weishaus, "Santa Fe Zen."

I don't read: (Sasaki, 1983).

Eros and Logos: W. Witherup. From, "Charma."

and love: L. Aragon.

And how did Beuys: (Stachelhaus,1991)..

in a deeper sense: (Weber,1987)

I'm very interested: There is another crucial angle to this discussion, evoked by Nancy Hartsock's question: "Why is it, exactly at the moment when so many of us who have been silenced begin to demand the right to name ourselves, to act as subjects rather than objects of history, that just then the concept of subjecthood becomes 'problematic'?" (Mohammed and Lloyd, 1990).

because letters: (Stamelman,1978).

in a nearby: Ibid; p.409.

flexing head: J. Weishaus, "Dancing Up the Mountain."

I intend: R. Jonson. Letter to Guggenheim Foundation, December 1, 1961. Jonson Gallery, University Art Museum, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. Used with permission.

Giacometti: J.Weishaus. From, Notebook. "The terrible thing about dying is that you can only do it once." A. Giacometti. (Lord,1980.)

An Angel: Every Angel brings terror./So I withold myself and keep back the lure/of my dark sobbing. Oh, who is there/to prevail upon? Neither Angels nor men,/and already the ingenious beasts are aware/that we are not reliably at home/in our interpreted world. (Rilke,1972)

to find the place: Letter from J. Bell, 9 Sept 1968.

an eye sitting: M. Hachiya, Hiroshima Diary. Chapel Hill, NC., 1955. pp.114-15. "the dream of this Japanese doctor who was wounded in the world's first atomic bombing and who ministered to hundreds of victims must be counted one of the millennial visions of mankind." (Rhodes,1988).

night's visitor: J. Weishaus, "Eating Words."

fat offerings: J. Weishaus, "Hilltop."

A gateway: C. Corman, "Ise."

library: "In 1956 Daitokuji granted Mrs. (Ruth Fuller) Sasaki permission to build a library and a small sixteen-mat zendo next to the house she had occupied since 1949, and the First Zen Institute of America opened a branch in Kyoto." (Fields,1981). p.208

Ryutaku-ji: Located above Mishima City. #29 of Hokusai's series of woodcuts, Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji is titled "Mishima Pass in Kai Province." Ichitaro Kondo comments, "Since there is no place in the vicinity of Mount Fuji known as 'Mishima Pass,' the location of this print is uncertain."

as far as: D. Fraser. "LSD and All That? Conversation between Gary Snyder and Dom Aelred Graham at the Snyders' home in Kyoto, September 4, 1967. Irmgard Schoegel and Dana Fraser were also present."   (Graham, 1968).

hope: J. Weishaus, "Five Panels from the Monastery of the Pond Dragon."

Nakagawa Soen: Born March 19, 1907 near Hiroshima. At Tokyo University he specialized in the writings of Basho and Shakespeare. In 1950, after many years of intensive Zen training and insights, Nakagawa was appointed abbot of Ryutaku-ji. Because of his knowledge of English, and interest in Western Culture, Roshi accepted more Western students than did other Japanese Zen Masters of the time, and much of his latter years were spent teaching in the U.S. He died March 1984.

Miss Okamura: (Merton, 1988).

Rumor: (Besserman and Steger, 1991).

steps off: J. Weishaus, "Engaku-ji."

Delancy Kapleau: In (Kapleau, 1965) pp 254-268, she speaks at length about her experience at Ryutaku-ju

Lama Govinda: Born in Germany in 1898, Lama Amagarika Govinda and his wife, Li Gotami, lived in Tibet for over two decades, where he was a monk of the Kargyupta Order. Afterwards, they lived in northern India, where Govinda was the spiritual head of the Arya Maitreya Mandala. Lama Govinda spent his last years in the San Francisco Bay Area, living on Alan Watts' houseboat, then in Mill Valley. He died in 1985.

Feldenkrais: Born in Poland, 1904, Morshe Feldenkrais migrated to Palestine at age 14, staying ten years. D.Sc. degree in Applied Physics, the Sorbonne, Paris. British navy, W.W.II, submarine detection research. Studied neuroanatomy, yoga, Eastern philosophies. Became first European to earn a black belt in Judo. Develped his own method of body therapy. Feldenkrais is the author of several books on his practice, including Body and Mature Behavior; Awareness Through Movement; The Potent Self, along with several books on Judo.

the monkey-wrench: (Perez, 1990).

ferociously: (Marrero,1956).

Derrida wants: (Kipnis, 1991).

James Pike: "Dr. James A. Pike was found dead, the victim of a fall, on a rocky ledge in the Judean wilderness two miles from the Dead Sea...His wife Diane said, 'He died in the wilderness where Jesus, according to the Gospels, went to pray and meditate.'" (Fecon, 1969).

He seems: L. Welch. From, "Hermit Poems."

Don Allen: Donald M. Allen was an Editor for Grove Press, and edited the important anthology, The New American Poetry. (New York, 1960).

the aboriginal: (Hall, 1989).

ruins: J. Weishaus, "Ku."

patio's: J. Weishaus, "Questions At Middle Age."

the magnitude: M. Rothko. From a letter to Dominique and John de Menil. 1 January 66, with regards to the Rothko Chapel project.

 

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