THE MICHIGAN DAILY J 1 Effect of Progress on Japan MUSKET Rehearses By BEATRICE TEODORO Japan is changing rapidly, at the expense of its ancient culture, but it must continue to change if the Japanese want a higher standard of living, Prof. Sususmu Kobe said. Kobe is on leave from the eco- nomics department of Waseda University in Tokyo. A recipient of a doctoral degree from the University, 30 years ago, he has returned to lecture on the econo- my of Japan which he says is ex- periencing "one of the fastest rates of expansion, not only in the present world, but in history." One of the manifestations of this rapid growth is the introduction of the automobile age, Japanese style. "Whether we like it or not, it is going to core" Kobe said. "On- ly a dictatorial government can, absolutely control the number of cars. Our government can only make it harder to get drivers' li- Driving Tests He told of the long lines of people waiting to take their driv-f ing test, sometimes standing up' to five hours until the offices close. Some older people, unable to wait day after day, have hired students as drivers. A recent poll by a Japanese automobile company showed that many young people have licenses S already and plan to buy cars with the first money they earn. The majority of motorized ve- hicles in Japan are used for busi- ness purposes. "Roughly 50 per cent are commercial trucks, while the passenger cars are owned by companies to provide transporta- tion for their executives. Taxis also take up some percentages of the cars, so actually very few people own a private automobile." Prices Lowering Kobe sees this number growing. "The number of second hand cars, available is increasing, so the price of all cars will go down. At the same time, the per capita income in Japan is. rapidly rising and more people will soon be able to, buy private cars." He cited the excellent suburban train service as contributing, para- doxically, to the popularity of the automobile. "First, cheap, fast railroad trans- portation has made it easier for people to work in the downtown areas of cities like Tokyo and Osaka. But because the daytime population is so great, the com- muting trains are very crowded. It is no longer a question of whe- ther passengers will have to stand. It is a question of whether there is any room to stand. Evidently the private, comfortable car is more appealing. Thirty-Minute Walk He added that the grain sta- Art Society Holding Sale The fifth annual Christmas Sale Show, of the Ann Arbor Art As- sociation is taking place now through Nov. 26, at the Rackham Galleries. Hours for the exhibition are 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., except-Sunday and Thanksgiving Day. tions in the suburban and "satel- lite" towns are not within walk- ing distance of private homes. "When a man must walk more than 30 minutes to get home af- ter getting off a train, he be- gins to think of a car," Kobe said. Kobe also noted that the con- centration of population in areas limited by zoning laws is forcing the construction of high apart- ments and skyscrapers, which are not representative of the low, smooth Japanese architecture. Work for Nothing Architecture is not the only cultural sacrifice to progress, Kobe said,rEven the famedKa- buki theatre in Tokyo is not a paying proposition. "A lot of minor actors and stage hands are ac- tually people who live near the theatre, shopkeepers and small business men who work for al- most nothing. If they didn't give these services, the Kabuki danc- es would not be self-support- poting."' "These volunteers have an in- interest in the theatre dating back in their fanilies for genera- tions. But under present condi- tions how long can this keep up? I'm afraid that only in a very small way will the culture be preserved." -Daily-Ronald Krone KISMET CAST-- the 60-member east of Kismet, the forthcoming MUSKET produclion, rehearses for opening night. A 32 piece orchestra, the largest for a University student show has been assembled to play the full broadway orchestration of such Kismet melodies as "Bauble, Bangles and Beads" and "Stranger in Paradise." Alpha Phi Omega Celebrating Twenty Years Service at 'U' PROGRAM NOTES: To Feature Classical Works In Michigan Singers Concert The Michigan Singers, part of the Music School, will give a con- cert at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Aud. Prof. Maynard Klein of the Mu- sical School will conduct, John Flower will play the harpsichord and William Osborn will play -the organ. The program will open with Bach's "Ah! Dearest Jesu," La- Rue's "0' Saving Victim" and Pierluigi da Palestrina's "Magni- 1 I (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) ficat Prim Toni." The Tudor sing- ers will sing the middle part of the program. Their selections will include "Thou Serene, Bright Light" and "I Shall Now Suffer Death" by de Venoso. * * * "Philoctetes" by Sophocles, the first in a series ,of five classical dramas produced by Jerry Sand- ler on a grant from the National Educational TV and Radio Center, will be produced a 1:30 p.m. to-' day over WUOM. The translation of Robert Grene will be used with original music by Jerry Bilik, re- cently an arranger for the U.S. Army Band and the University Bands, The play retells the story of the Greeks' attempt to win the Tro- jan War with the help of Phil- octetes. f Prof. Richard Miller will give a vocal concert with pianist Eugene, Bossart at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in1 Aud. A. A veteran of 250 operatic performances in' Europe, Miller will open with (lasiarini's "Deh lasciatemi it Nemico" and Scar- latti's "Nevi intatte." Miller was first lyric tenor at the Stadt- theater (Opera House) at Zurich. By RISA AXELROD "One of the hardest .jobs in the world is to run a service fra- ternity on a large campus," ob- served Tim Meno, '62, president of Alpha Phi Omega. The fraternity, celebrating its 20th anniversary at the Univer- sity today, often finds itself in DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 4Continued from Page 4) Placement Notices PERSONNEL REQUESTS: New York Civil Service: Openings for college grads in various fields includ- ing education, engineering, social wel- fare, nursing, psychiatry, business, andj law. New York State residence not re- quired for many of available positions. Applications for exams must be in by Dec. 19. U. S. Civil Service, VII Region: No- vember announcement of open exanic has been received at Bureau of Ap- pointments. Openings in fields of agri- culture, business, engineering, ncal- cine, etc. for college grads. Locations primarily in I11., Mich, Wis. Wisconsin Civl Service: Openings for seniors and graduate engineers in elec- trical. civil, and mechanical fields, for work in state commissions. Applica- tions accepted on a continuous basis. ' , HOW TO BEAT THE BEAT GENERATION F My cousin Herkie Nylet is a sturdy lad of nineteen summers who has, we all believed until recently, a lively intelligence and an assured future. Herkie's father, Walter 0. Nylet, is as every- one knows, president of the First National Artificial Cherry Company, world's largest maker of artificial cherries for ladies' hats. Uncle Walter had great plans for Herkie. Last year he sent Herkie to the Maryland College of Humanities, Sciences, and Artificial Cherries, and he intended, upon Herkie's gradu- ation, to find him a nice fat wife and take him into the firm as a full partner. Could a young man have more pleasing prospects? Of course not. But a couple of months ago, to everyone's consternation, .Herkie announced that he was not going into the artificial cherry business. Nor was he going to stay in college. "I am," said Herkie, "a member of the Beat Generation. I am going to San Francisco and grow a beard." Well sir, you can imagine the commotion in the family when Herkie went traipsing off to San Francisco IUncle Walter would have gone after him and dragged him home, but unfortunately be was right in the middle of the artificial cherry season. Aunt Thelma couldn't go either because of her old leg trouble. (One of her legs is older than the other.) competition with the social fra- ternities and clubs on campus. Threefold Role Meno sees the fraternity's role as a threefold one: Service to the University, the community and the nation. In the University area, Al- pha Phi Omega maintains 53 bill- boards around, campus on which its members will post any or- ganization notices. The boards may be found as close to campus as the Union and the Fishbowl or as far away as the Nursing school. A second function on campus is maintaining a workshop in the Student Activities Bldg. where or- ganizations or individual students may have material mimeographed or dittoed at cost. Alpha Phi Ovxiega gains no profits from this operation; its only source of funds are the 10 paying positions it holds each semester at registra- tion. Scout Leaders In the community the mem- bers of this unique service frater- nity work as Scout troop leaders or assistants. "In fact," he noted Meno, "most of our members have had previous Scouting experience and have joined the fraternity as a continuance of Scouting." The organization's 22 members include fraternity and independ- ents. Any male student is eligible to join. "The only prerequisite is interest, with a capital '11,11 ex- plained Meno.,x Alpha Phi Omega holds an open meeting at the beginning of each semester and conducts a rush sim- ilar to that held in all social fra- ternities. The fraternity is now pledging 12 men, its largest class. Future plans include publishing a spring student directory with names and addresses of transfer students, incoming freshmen and students who have moved since the fall. The directory will be dis- tributed without charge. rgatization__3 3 ,. (I[ I 1 + t I So I went. I searched San Francisco for weeks before I found Herkie living underthe counter of a Pronto Pup stand. "Herkie, how are you?" I cried, looking distraughtly upon his tangled beard, his corduroy jacket, his stricken eyes. "Beat," said Herkie. I offered him a Marlboro and felt instantly better when he took it because when one smokes Marlboros, one cannot be too far removed from the world. One still has, so to speak, a hold on the finer things of life-like good tobacco, like easy-drawing filtration, like settling back and getting comfortable and enjoy- ing a full-flavored smoke. One is, despite all appearances, basi- cally happiness-oriented, fulfillment-directed, pleasure-prone. "Herkie, what are you doing with yourself?" I asked. "I am finding myself," he replied. "I am writing a novel in the sand with a pointed stick. I am composing a fugue for clavier and police whistle. I am sculpting in experimental ma: terials-like English muffins." "And what do you do for fun?" I asked. "Come," he said and took me to a dank little night club where men in beards and women in basic burlap sat on orange crates and drank espresso. On a tiny stage stood a poet reciting a free-form work of his own composition entitled Excema: The , Story of a Boy while behind him a jazz trio played 200 choruses of Tin Roof Blues. "Herkie,"said I, "come home with me to the artificial cherries." "No." said Herkies n madly I want home to tell TTnol Wnlte Going Abroad this Summer? for FREE Brochures and Information to Show, to you~r farents Thanksgivingi Ssee TRAVEL BUREAU 1329 South University Baha'i Stud. Group, Nov. 20, 8 p.m., League. Speaker, Dwight Allen, "The End of Alchemy in Religion." Congr. Disc. E & R Stud. Guild, "what a Christian Believes," Nancy Prime, 10:45 a.m. Bethelehem E & R Church Lounge; 'Peace & Politics in 1960," Norman Thomas & Michael Har- rington, 8 p.m., Congr. Church Pilgrim Hall: Nov. 20. Folklore Soc., Informal Folksing, Nov. 21, 8 p.m. League, flussey Rm. Bring~ instruments, refreshment charge. Gamma Delta, Luth. Stud. Club, Sup- per, Illustrated talk on foreign medi- cal missions by Mrs. Theo. Meves, Nov. 20, 6 p.m., 1511 Washtenaw. Hillel Fdn. The building is open as a dstuyhall Monday through tuesday. stuydy hall, Sunday thru Thursday. 7- 12 p.m., 1429 Hill. Refreshments avail- able for a study break. La Sociedad Hospanica, Tertulia, Nov. 21, 3-5 p.m. 3050 FB. Cafe y conversa- dion. Lutheran Stud. Assoc., Nov. 20, 7 p.m. Hill & S. Forrest Ave. Speaker: Rev. R. Snyder, Faith Luth. Church, Detroit, "History and Use of the Liturgy." Newman Club, Evening of Recollec- tion canducted by Fr. H. Mathey, Nov. 20, 7:30 pm., 331 Thompson. Wesley Fdn., Seminar: "Christianity from the Conservative Position," J. W. Ney, Grace Bible Church, leading the discussion, Nov. 20, 10:15 a.m., Pine Room, i ___.___ .. U! ~W' A A " ~ A .f s12 I II may: I I I I ,I II L/