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January 26, 1964 - Image 2

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I I

PAGE TWO

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SUNDAY, JANUARY-26, 1964

PAGE TWO TUE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JANUARY 26, 1964

ARTS AND LETTERS:

Nomura Describes
No, Kyogen Drama
By GAIL BLUMBERG
The culture of Japan is rich in
traditional dramatic forms; No
and Kyogen are two of the oldest
of these, Manzo Nomura, master
of the Kyogen art form, said re-

THIS WEEK'S EVENTS

MANZO NOMURA
REGENTS:
Music School
Completi on
Arnounced
The new music school on North
Campus has been completed, Vice-
President for Business and Fi-
nance Wilbur K. Pierpont told the
Regents at their monthly meeting
Friday.
The school is preparing to move
into the new facility during the
next few months with possible
scheduling of classes there this
summer and complete transfer set
for next fall, he indicated.
The museums building additionj
is also rapidly being completedj
and will be ready for occupancyj
next month or in March.
The Regents also approved re-
quirements for a second B.S.E. de-
gree in the engineering college.
Under the new policy students will
need 14 additional credit hours to
receive the second degree instead
of the present eight.

cently.
The No drama is of a lyric,
serious quality which relies upon
poetry and literary sources, often
presenting a tragic theme, he ex-
plained.
Kyogen, Nomura continued, is
mainly of a lighter vain. It often
handles human situations and
their relations to the themes pre-
sented in the No drama. Thus,
he added, the tone is often hum-
orous.
Comic Interlude
The Kyogen are used as a comic
interlude much in the same way
that the Greek drama use the
Satyr plays to act as a diversion
between their tragedies, Nomura
noted.
Although Kyogen is first a dra-
matic form, a strong element of
singing and dancing is woven into
the plot, he remarked.
The dramatic forms that Kyo-
gen players work with was formu-
lated in the 13th and 14th cen-
turies, although they are presented
in the polished form to which they
had evolved in Tokyo by 1603,
Nomura explained.
The Shogun rule of Japan had
heavily supported the No and.
Kyogen, at which time they grew
and flourished. In 1867, with the
restoration of the emperor, these
dramas were dropped from favor.
Following the second world war,
there was a tremendous upsurge
in their popularity, due mainly to
the American interest in Japan
and its culture. This interest has
been the strongest factor in their
revival within Japan itself, No-
mura commented.
Many of the restored No and
Kyogen performances were de-
veloped for the American occupa-
tion forces, where the Japanese
saw them for the first time.
Carver of Masks
Manzo Nomura is also an expert
mask carver and does most of his
own work. The masks, he explains,
are used in the No drama and for
supernatural characters in the
Kyogen roles. The tilting of a
mask, exposing a different angle,
can change the expression upon
the face of the mask, he said; and
he displayed a mask which
changed from the leer of a devil
to the comedy mask grin.

CAMPUS OPINION

Smoking Report: Disturbed?

t
3
j
'
:
3
1
I,
11
,

Monday, Jan. 27
NOON-5 p.m.-Individual tickets
for the Inter-Quadrangle Council
and Assembly Association presen-
tation Saturday of comedian Dick
Gregory will go on sale at the
Hill Aud, box office.
Tuesday, Jan. 28
3:30 p.m.-Wolf Von Eckardt,
free-lance architectural writer
and critic, will speak on "The
South-West Washington, D.C. Re-
newal Program" in the Architec-
ture Aud.
4:15 p.m.-Prof. Albert Ban-
dura of Stanford University will
speak on "Behavioral Psychother-
apy" in Aud. A.
7:30 p.m.-The International
Students Association will present
a lecture and discussion program
on "The Political Image of the
United States" in Aud. A as part
of their spring cultural series.
Wednesday, Jan. 29
7:30 p.m.-The International'
Students Association will present
a lecture and discussion program
on "The Cultural Image of the
United States" in the Multipurpose
Rm. of the UGLI as part of their
spring cultural series on "Inter-
national Image."
8 p.m.-Prof. Louis L. Orlin of
the Near East history and litera-
ture department will speak on
"Palestine in the Last Centuries
Before Christ" at the B'nai Brith
Hillel Foundation as a part of a
lecture series on "The Jews and
Jesus."
8:30 p.m.-The University Choir,
conducted by Prof. Maynard Klein
of 'the music school, assisted by
instrumentalists from the music
school faculty, will present an

evening of "Music for Choral and
Instrumental Ensembles" as the
opening program of the "Con-
temporary Music Festival" in
Rackham Aud. The Festival will
include five concerts from Jan.
29 to Feb. 7. The opening pro-
gram will include works by Sven-
Erik Back, Igor Stravinsky and
Ralph Shapey.
Thursday, Jan. 30
4 p.m.-Prof. Richard W. Jones
of Northwestern University will
speak on "Homeostasis Feedback
or Adaptation?" in Rm. 311 of
the West Engineering Bldg.
4:10 p.m.-Prof. Roman Jakob-
son of Harvard University and the
Massachusetts Institute of Tech-
nology will speak on "Slavik Pro-
sodic Pattern and its Evolution"
in Aud. A.
4:15 p.m.-Prof. E. Cary Brown
of the University of Chicago will
speak on "Empirical Research in
Public Finance and Its Implica-
tions for Fiscal Policy" in rm. 101
of the Economics Bldg.
8 p.m.-The Ann Arbor Civic
Theatre will present Shelagh De-
laney's "A Taste of Honey" in the
Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.
8 p.m.-Mark S. Massel of the
Brookings Institution in Washing-
ton D.C. will speak on "Legal and
Economic Problems of Regulatory
Administration" in the East Con-
ference Rm. of Rackham. A coffee
hour will follow.
8:30 p.m.-The University Mu-
sical Society will present the
Mazowsze Dance Company in H1l
Aud. as the eighth program in the
Choral Union series.

Friday, Jan. 31
8 p.m.-The Ann Arbor Civic
Theatre will present Shelagh De-
laney's "A Taste of Honey" in the
Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.
Saturday, Feb. 1.
8 p.m.-The Ann Arbor Civic
Theatre will present Shelagh De-
laney's "A Taste of Honey" in the
Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.
8:30 p.m.-Ernst Krenek, guest
composer and lecturer, will pre-
sent a program on "Measured
Order-Unmeasured Chance" as
the second concert of the music
school's Festival of Contemporary
Music. Janice Harsanyi, soprano,
and the Stanley Quartet will also
be heard in the program.

:

I

(EDITOR'S NOTE: Standing in a cloud of smoke,.
two Daily interviewers, using unscientific methods of
surveying, polled students in the Fishbowl and East
Medical Bldg. The question: "Do you think the gov-
vernment report has affected the smoking habits of
you or your friends?"
By MARJORIE BRAHMS
Associate Editorial Director
and
GAIL EVANS
Associate City Editor
Has the smoking report scared you?
Some students, when asked this question, shrug-
ged noncommittedly; others, a little more agitated,
replied that they were shaking the habit as soon
as "my first exam is over"; others, standing firm in
the face of government collected data, said they
will keep on smoking.
Elmer White, '64L, sitting at the Young Demo-
crats recruiting table in the Fishbowl, said, "The
report hasn't affected me. Smokers knew before,
even if not statistically, that it hurt them. The
report is like the situation of a woman who knows
she is pregnant, going to the doctor and finding
it out from him.
As a matter of fact," White continued, "I was
going to quit when I heard that Gov. Romney
and Barry Goldwater don't smoke. But then I
heard that Hitler didn't smoke either, so maybe
there's a certain personality trait of those who
don't smoke that I don't want."
At East Med, Jay Cranston, freshman in medical
school who has been smoking one pack of filter
cigarettes a day for five years, commented, "The
statistics are not enough to make me stop smoking.
After all, the percentage of physicians dying of
heart attacks before the age of 6Q far exceeds
the percentage dying from lung cancer." He added,
"I am not convinced the detriments of smoking out-
weigh the pleasures." ,.
Interfraternity Council President Clifford Taylor,
'64, who had stopped in the Fishbowl to check on
rush registration, said he has been thinking about
giving up smoking "because it kills you."

Dennis Schneider, '65, said "If you're going to die,'
you're going to die. Thirty years from now, when
smoking will affect you, there'll be a cure for
cancer. If you play the averages, then it's smwirt
to quit." He- added he had cut down a little.
A freshman in medical school, a long-time
smoker, said he is trying to cut down. "It might
become a trend for doctors not to smoke. The
professors here are urging students to give up
smoking," he noted. He admitted that he felt
some shortness of breath; but he said he is not as
worried about what happens when you keep smok-
ing as he is about what happens when you stop.
Jean Turkish, a freshman in medical school,
said she found the report "frightening, especially
the data about the doubly high mortality rate for
smokers who begin as teenagers." She found the
smoking report compiled by the British government
two years ago to be vaguer than the United States
report, the latter she called "bolder, more straight-
forward and with more evidence."
Another medical school freshman, Leroy Vernon,
said he has cut down from 22 to 12 cigarettes a
day. He puts cigarettes in bunches of 12, wraps
each bunch in tin foil and takes only one pack
a day. He has cut down because of "the knowledge
that there's a link between smoking and cancer."
Daniel Syme, '67, smokes a pack a day and has
been smoking for two years. He stopped for one
week after he'read the report. "The pressures of
the University keep me smoking," he said.
Richard Streb, a freshman medical student, called
the statistics "loaded." The report did not really
give the percentages in the general population for
lung cancer, he said.
Joel Whetstone, '67, said he had just quit that
day and he thinks it will last. He had been
intending to quit for the past two weeks and
after he finished his last pack, he finally did.
Meanwhile, at East Med, two students debated
the merits of smoking. "It's unnatural to smoke,"
one said. "It's unnatural to wear clothes, too," the
other retorted.

A
TASTE
of
HONEY
Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre
JAN. 30-FEB: 1
Box Office
Opens Tomorrow
at 10:00 A.M.
Get Your
TICKETS
Get Your
DATE!

_u

4

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'Calling 'CBN'
Will Feature
Gargoyle Staff.
By DAVID ROSEN
The editors of Gargoyle and an
open discussion on sex and mores
are two features scheduled for -
"Calling 'CBN," radio station
WCBN's new listener-open forum
series at 9 p.m. Sundays.
Tonight, host Chuck London,
'66, will interview John Dobbertin,
Gargoyle editor-in-chief; B o b
Rodes, acting business manager;
John Helgren, art editor and
Denny McIntyre, associate editor.
Commenting on the purpose of
the program, London said that it
is "to bring to the students im-
portant individuals and issues so
that the students may ask ques-
tions or make comments to the
'controversial' guests. It is a free
and open forum, and all comments
are welcome."
According to London, there are
basically two types of programs
on "Calling 'CBN," with listeners
free to call in during the program
and direct questions or comments
to a particular guest present, and
with listeners making comments
during an open-forum broadcast
on four or five selected topics for
that evening.
ORGANIZATION
NOTICES
Use of This Column for Announce-
ments is available to officially recog-
nized and registered organizations only.
Organizations who are planning to be
active for the Spring Semester should
be registered by Feb. 7, 1964. Forms
available, 1011 Student Activities Bldg.
Graduate Outing Club, Hike, Jan. 26,
2 p.m., Rackham Bldg., Huron St. En-
trance.
Russian Circle, Coffee-Conversation,
Jan. 28, 3-5 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg.
Congregational Disciples E & R Stu-
dent Guild, Seminar: 'Interpretation
of the Old Testament," Jan. 26, 7
p.m., 802 Monroe.

r

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-
sity of Michigan for which The
Michigan Daily assumes no editor-
ial responsibility. Notices should be
sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to
Room 3564 Administration Build-
ing before 2 p.m. of the day pre-
ceding publication, and by 2 p.m.
Friday for Saturday and Sunday.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 26
Day Calendar
School of Music Degree Recital -
Ralph Strobel, oboist: Lane Hall Aud.,
4:15 p.m.
Cinema Guild-Vadim's "Les Liaisons
Dangereuses" plus short, "A Trip with
Currier and Ives": Architecture Aud.,
7 and 9 p.m.
General Notices
College of Lit., Science and Arts, and
Schools of Business Admin., Education,
Music, Natural Resources, Nursing and
Public Health: Students who received
marks of I, X, or No Report at the end
of their last semester or summer ses-
sion of attendance will receive a grade
of "E" in the course or courses unless
this work is made up. The final date
of acceptance for make-up grades this
semester is Feb. 20, 1964. Students
wishing an extension of time beyond
this date should file a petition with
the appropriate official of their re-
spective schools.
In the School of Nursing, the above
information refers to non-Nursing
courses only.
Joint Judiciarly Council: Petitioning
& Interviewing for JJC and Committee
on Standards and Conduct. Petitions
available in OSA, Dr. Bingley's office.
Interviewing Mon., Jan. 27.
Events Monday
Wrestling-U-M vs. Illinois: Intra-
mural Bldg., 4 p.m.
Naval Reserve Research Company 9-3
Lecture-Edward Fitzgerald, Mich. Bell
Defense": Kellogg Aud., 8:30 p.m.
Engineers: "Interviewing Workshop'
will be conducted by Prof. John G
Young, Director, Engrg. Placement
Service, Mon., at 4 p.m. in Room 1042
E. Engrg. All interested students are
invited and and engineers who expect
to graduate this year are especially
urged to attend this meeting.
Dept. of Microbiology Seminar-The
Institute of Science & Tech. and Dept
of Microbiology will present Prof. E
u:-

New Paper Back titles
arriving daily
Be sure to browse
FOLLETT'S
PAPER BACK DEPARTMENT
State St. at North University

M. Moster, Dept. of Bacteriology, Univ.
of Wisconsin. His topic will be "Clos-
tridium Botulism in Great Lakes Fish."
At 4 p.m., in Room 1528 E. Medical
Bldg.'
Anatomy Seminar-Dr. Carl Hirsch,;
Univ. of Goteborg, Sweden, will speak
on "Anatomy and Function in the,
Lumbar Spine." In 2501 E. Medical;
Bldg. at 11 a.m.
Placement
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
Dow Chemical Company Patent Law
Scholarship-This scholarship is avail-
able to men & women who wish to en-
ter the field of chemical patent law.
Must have a BS degree with major in
Chem., Pharm., or Chem. Engrg. Schol-
arship will be in amount of $1,000
per yr. & may beused at one of the
following Mich. law schools: Detroit
College of Law, U. of D. Law Sch.,
Univ. of Mich. Law Sch., or Wayne
State Univ. Law Sch. For further in-
formation, please contact General Div.,
Bureau of Appts., Ext. 3544.
School of Advanced International
Studies, Johns Hopkins Univ., Wash.,
D.C.-Announces graduate fellowships
for 1964-65 in varying amounts up to
$3,500. For grad study in international
affairs. BA degree with pref. a bkgd.
in econ., hist., poli. sci., & 1 modern
foreign lang. Also graduate fellowships
for its Bologna Center in Bologna,
Italy, for specialized western Euro-
pean studies. Degree with pref. bkgd.
in econ, hist. & poli. sci. & at least
1 Western European language. For
further information & forms write: Ad-
missions Office, School of Adv. Inter-
national Studies, 1740 Massachusetts
Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036
Must apply by March 1.
POSITION OPENINGS:
Saginaw General Hospital, Saginaw,
Mich.-Immediate opening for a Ther-
apeutic or a Therapeutic & Teaching
Dietitian.
Ayerst"Labs, Div. of American Home
_Products Corp., Royal Oak, Mich~. -
Pharmaceutical Salesman, for Lansing-
Battle Creek area. Hdqts. in Lansing.
Degree in one of the sciences, pref.
1 Biol., Chem., or Pre-Med. Exper. in
Sales. Age 24-35. Prefer married. To
represent products to Physicians, drug
stores & hospitals. Some overnight
travel required.
a National Gypsum Co., Buffalo, N.Y.-
Seeking young man between age of 28
& 32 who has a degree in Arch. En-
grg. or Civil Engrg. to cover a selected
list of architects & engineers in the
Chicago-Peoria-Springfield, Ill, area.
Should have several yrs. exper. of
working in the profession.

J. W. Greer Co., Wilmington, Mass.
-Openings include: Indust. Engnr.,
Indust. Refrigeration Engnr. & Mech.
Design Engnr. Should have exper. in1
field of medium size, semi-automatic &1
automatic special machinery. Men who
have been in food processing field on
an industrial level would be ideally
suited. Also openings for Sales Trainee
& Service Management Trainee - ME,
degree for these positions.
Sarkes Tarzian, Inc., Bloomington,7
Ind.-Various openings including: Sales
& Application Engnr.; Design, Res. &
Dev. Engnr.; Technical Writer; Project
Engnr.; Research Physicist; Model1
Maker.
Armstrong, Lancaster, Pa. - Seeking
Individuals for Advertising & Promo-1
tion Dept. Some immed. openings &t
some in June. Degree English, Journ.,
Advertising or Bus. Ad. Ability to write
clearly & effectively desired because1
work involves developing mktg. plans,
preparing adv. campaigns, planning1
promotion programs, etc. Age up to 28
yrs. of age.
For further information, please call1
General Div., Bureau of Appointments,
3200 SAB, Ext. 3544.1
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS, Bureau'
of Appointments-Seniors & grad stu-
dents, please call Ext. 3544 for ap-
pointments with the following:
TUES., JAN. 28--
Atomic Energy Commission, Argonne,
III.-Men and women, May and Aug.
grads. (PM only). Seeking MS in Liberal
Arts, Publ. Admin., Bus. Ad., Engrg. or
Physical Sciences, Physics, Math, Chem.,
Health Physics, Bacti. & Biochem. Po-
sitions: Mgmt. Trng., Office Mgmt.,
Personnel, Publ. Admin., Publ. Rels.,
Purchasing, Internship & trng. prog.
U.S. citizenship.
Service Bureau Corp., Detroit, Mich.-
Men; May & Aug. grads. U.. citizenship.
Seeking degree in any major field of
study. Positions: Territorial Sales. Lo-
cation: Det. & throughout U.S.
WED., JAN. 29-
Kroger Co., Detroit, Mich.-Men, May
& Aug. grads. U.S. citizenship. Seeking
Gen. Liberal Arts. Positions. Retailing
& Management Trng.
American Hospital . Supply Corp.,
Evanston, II1.-Men, May & Aug. grads.
U.S. citizenship. Seeking degree in any

major field of study. Positions: Mgmt.
Trng., Sales Promotion, Territorial Sales
(1 sales prog. requires 15 hrs, of bin-
logical sci. or chem., but all other sales
progs. will consider all majors).
Social Security Admin., Baltimore,
Md.-Men & women, May & Aug, grads.
U.S. citizenship. Seeking: Soc., Econ.,
Psych., Anthro., Stat., Health & Medi-
cine, Operations & Admin. Positions:
Survey Statisticians, Social Insurance
Research Analysts in home office. only.
Interviewers will be here later covering
field and branch offices.
EDUCATION DIVISION:
Beginning Mon., Feb. 3, the follow-
ing schools will have representatives at
the Bureau to interview candidates for
the 1964-1965 school year.
MON., FEB. 3-
Garden Grove, Calif. (Garden Grove
Union High School) - Civics, Econ.,
Geog., Engl., French, Sciences, Elec-
tronics, Math.
Long Beach, Calif.-Elem. 1-6; Lib.,
Outdoor Ed., Spec. Ed.-Ment. Ret.,
Deaf, Ortho., Sec.-Art, Bus. Ed.,.Dist.
Ed., Engi., Spanish, French, German,
Russian, Home Ec., Ind. Arts; Lib., Mu-
sic, Math, Girls" PE, Biol. Sci., Phys.
Sc., Soc. St./Engl., Read., Ment. Ret,
Deaf.
Suffield, Conn.-Tentative - Elem.
1-6, Lib.; Girls PE gr. 4-7; Boys PE
gr. 4-7; Sec. Guid. (woman); Elem.
Guid.; Sci gr. 8 & 9; Soc. St. gr. 8-12;
Math/Scl. gr. 7; Engl/Soc. St. gr. 7;
Art.

TUES., FEB. 4-
Garden Grove, Calif.-Same.
Birmingham, Mich.-Elem. K-6, Lib.,
Art, Vocal, French, Spec. Ed., V.T.,
Read.; J.H. - Home Ec., Sci., Dev.
Read.; J.H./S.H.-Engl., French/Span-
ish; Sec.-Ind. Arts, Art, Engl/W. Hist.,
Math.
Huntington, N.Y.-Elem. 1-6; Vocal
Music; Sec.-Engl., Fr., Span., Russ.,
Latin, Math, Art, Ind. Arts, Guid.,
Read., iLb.; J.H. Gen. Sci.; J.H. Gen.
Music.
WED., FEB. 5-
Park Forest, Ill. (Rich Twp. H.S.)-
Vocal Music (Male); Biol/Chem.; Math
(Modern); Math/Chem.; Girls' PE.
THURS., FEB. 6-
Chappaqua, N.Y.-Elem. 1-5, 6th gr.
Math/Sci.; J.H.-Math/Sci.; Engl., Soc.
St.; H.S.-Phys. Sci./Earth/Chem., Math
-gr. 9 & 10, Bus. Ed.
Katonah, N.Y.-Elem.; Sec.-Math;
Sci.; Engl., Fr.; Germ., Span.
Villa Park, Ill. (Dist. No. 45)-K-8;
J.H. Spanish/French; Sp. Corr.
FRI., FEB. 7-
White Plains, N.Y.-Elem. K-6, Ment.
Ret.; J.H.-Math, Gen. Sci., Fr., Span.,
Home Ec.; Sec.-Engl., Soc. St., Earth
Sci., Chem., Biol., Math, Bus. Ed.,
Span., Ind. Arts, Art, Girls PE.
Make appointments about one week
in advance.
For appointments and additional in-
formation contact the Bureau, 3200
SAB, Ext. 3547.

UNIVERSA.
CITY STUDIOS
Cars Audrey.
Grant Hepburn
Everything
you've ever
Swanted to
see in a
picture
Charade
a STANLEY DONEN Producbou
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Walter atthau /James Coburn
A Ui Rete TECHNICOLOR*
DIAL
5-6290
_ _ _ _ _ Shows at
1,3,5, 7,9 :
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.* - - * - - - - - - - . - - . - -

DIAL
2-6264

jam

ENCORE
ENGAGEMENT

4 Shows Daily
at 1:00-3:35
6:15 and 8:55

STUDENTS and FACULTY

Dial 662-8871 for

Gin ema uild
Program Information

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DIAL 8-6416
r'EXTRAORDINARY!'I
-Time Magazine
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"TERRIFIC."
-Crowther. N.Y. Times

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Do Something Exciting & Different For Spring Vacation

THE FIRST

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JAMAICA JAMBOREE
8 Glorious Days in Limbo-Land
At Runaway Bay, the Riviera of the Caribbean

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