THE MICHIGAN DAILY WMVF MVl ARPTF. RIZ, 541 14ft 1 T~lE ICHICAN BATY Yy 4Z Ab.J4 .PAX, "Mir 1 EMISLn ZU, lUb7 ;7 einema= MSU Fee Janus Short Fil By CHARLES HOWELL What drew 3,600 people to Cinema Guild last weekend when the Janus short film program, part I, was shown? The answer lies, in part, in the simple at- traction of short film-no matter what the kind. The usual movie strain is gone; the audience goes through an enjoyable 10 or 20 minutes, knowing they won't have to strain on the same subject for perhaps the normal. hour and a half. This isn't a degrading analysis of an audience; it is an acceptance of the ability to concentrate and enjoy, being fully aware that one will not have to do it for long. It is the same principle television commercials have furtively sought to fullfill. This is not to say that the short film is less challenging. In fact, because narrative style need not bhe sustained for ninety minutes, it can be experimented with. Thus, "one-joke plots," still photography montage, or, a single incident is justified. Two hours of short films include the whole range of this experimentation, The ultimate draw at Cinema Guild last weekend was the most important; they were good films. In the Richard Lester film "Run- ning, Jumping and Standing Still Film," one could see clearly the early roots of the Beatles movies to come.- The Truffaut fans showed inE force to see "Les Mistons," his seldom-seen early short. The sen- timentally was there; the glori- fication of popular cinema Was there; and the subtlety was there. And, of course, the audience was treated to its portion of psychede- lia. Jordan Belson's "Allures," bill- ed as a "hallucinogenic voyage into the distances of outer space," was, in fact, a quite enjoyable color creation of a computer-pro- gramaler's geometric creations. Some idea of the Janus Filmns for this weekend at Cinema Guild can be given through this meaty principle when the A&P pack- ages a slab of meat, they put the best side on the bottom. When Janus Films packaged their Ar- turus collection of short films, they put more of the better films in the second program. For instance, in a Japanese cartoon, voices drone and bark the word 'ai" ('love') while a battleax drags her husband around on a leash. Men and women, in Godard films are always having trouble with each other, but the root of it is not deadly alienation; it is just that they are doing different things. 0 In "All the Boys Are Called Patrick," his first film, Godard's characteristic heavy traffic in in- tellectual frivolity is fairly light; some book covers, posters and magazines, including the obliga- tory 'Cahiers du Cinema.' s Shine at Guild * Two more films of Valerian Beckett's "Act Without Words" Borowczyk amplify his fascination epitomizes frustration. In George with the reconstruction and re- Dunning's "The Apple," the frus- arrangement of wrecked and sun- trated noble goal turns out be a dered fragments. The cartoon fetish. "Concert of M. Kabal" has a fe- So we have a collection of the male bluebeard. "G a m e s of charming and hideous disorders of Angels," also by Borowczyk, ex- mankind. plores with animated contempora- We are saved in the end as a ry painting mankind's greatest dis- Methodist boy named Hugh Hefner aster of self-annihilation. explains how he is making "The 0 Bettiol's animation of Samuel Most." Plan Stirs Controversy (Continued from Page 1) 8 900 requests for lower fees have already been processed by the newly formed Office of Fee Re- duction.. Students whose parents have re- fused to submit their income tax returns were placed in the maxi- mum tuition group during regis- tration week. Those who claimed to be self supporting were desig- nated as dependent on their par- ent's income if they make less than $3000 annually. RADIO-TV BLACKOUT: Goldwater Reveals Shenanigans Used at '64 GOP Convention 0, Care With FormsI The Fee Determination Office reported that "great care is be- ing taken with the copies of tax Six young members of The Uni- Richard S. Stewart, assistant pro- returns to be sure there is no re- iersity of Michigan faculty re- fessor of classical studies who is lease of the income figures or ceived awards of $500 each today also -teaching in the Residential names." If parents request it, the for their "enthusiastic and inno- College. forms will be returned by certified vative teaching" of undergrad- * * * mail, but after the amounts are uates. On Friday, Sept. 22, 8:00pm audited each year, the remaining The awards were provided by a "Generation," the inter-arts maga- forms will be destroyed as soon gift from the Standard Oil of In- zine, will present Prof. Radcliffe as they are verified. diana Foundation, and were pre- Squires, of the English depart- 'Trustee Donald Stevens express- sented by U-M President Harlan ment, in a poetry reading from ed confidence that the trustees Hatcher. Recipients were selected his new book "The Light Under could iron out some of the inequi- by a faculty committee upon nom- Islands." The reading will take ties of the plan. ination by department chairmen. place in the Wesley Foundation. Kermit Smith, assistant to the The.e is no admission charge, and provost and director of the Fee Honored were Jerry H. Bilik, as- Tefresn adsn ageand Determination Office, told The sistant professor of music; William refreshments and an autographing Daily that any changes in the J. Anderson, assistant professor of party will follow the reading wording of the plan could not pos- aerospace engineering; Calvin B. sibly go into effect this year. DeWitt, associate professor of bi- "Statistics Seminar" - Profes- He said that although he has' ology at Dearborn Campus; John sor David L. Burdick will speak on received many letters opposing the W. Hagen, assistant professor of "Best Asymptotic Properties of a plan, only a very small minority psychology; David G. Shappirio, Sequential Test for Symmetry," at have threatened not to pay the associate professor of zoology, and 4:00 p.m. in room 3201 Angell Hall. tuition increase. NEW YORK (P' - Barry Gold-' water says his supporters at the 1964 Republican National Conven- tion were prepared to black out radio and television coverage by any network that "got a little too obnoxious." Describing some of the strategy and counterstrategy during the campaign, Goldwater revealed yes- terday, "We had every cable of every television company and every radio company marked up in the loft of the Cow Palace. "If anybody got a little too ob- noxious to our - us - they could, always have cable trouble," said the former presidential candidate in a recorded one-hour interview on the National Education Tele- vision network. Another political maneuver he described was the case of the miss- ing bullhorn batteries. "You might recall Sen. Hugh Scott got up once with the bull- horn, and it didn't work. The bat- teries weren't in it," he said. "We had all kinds of things planned," he continued. "We even had a plan once to try to keep Hubert Humphrey's plane crew locked up in their room so they couldn't get out and fly some- place." "What happened," he was asked. "They got out the window," said Goldwater. He said of these tactics, "These are the little things you do. It is perfectly fair in love and war." Appearing with Goldwater on the program titled, "That Was the Election That Was," was his run- ning mate in 1964, William E. Miller, now a lawyer in Buffalo, N.Y. Subtitled , "A Light-Hearted in his hand. Miller recalled that he and his wife were about to retire in their hotel room when she remembered. her hair dryer was in the next room. As he went to retrieve it the doorknob came off and he stood pajamaless, in front of a well-lighted second floor window. On a more serious note Gold- whom he was about to ask to be his running mate, for fear Miller wouldn't accept the nomination. Goldwater had generous words for Humphrey but described President Johnson in sharp terms: "This man in the White House is probably the cutest, smartest, throat-cuttingest political oper- ator I have ever run into." Reminiscence of '64," the inter- water said on the day he won the view touched on some of the less- nomination in San Francisco his er moments in the campaign such own polls showed President John- as the night Miller found himself son would take 80 per cent of the nude on the second story of a vote. Wyoming hotel with a doorknob He said he didn't tell Miller. I _ v _m_._ NO 2-6264 bare STARTS. TOMORROW 'I ....................................................................'v*.................. ... r .... ......"... ....,........................ . .......... . r.r. . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN . . . . ........a r irh........r .......:,4.S . 4..." .".: .: .... ...... .................................................,............. ....... .................,.w...................................................:w:.:.::.:r The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- tal responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be"published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 Day Calendar College of Engineering and National Academy of Engineering Sesquicenten- nial Meeting - "Engineering for the Benefit of Mankind": Registration, Rackhan. Lobby, 8 a.m.; first session, Hill Aud., 9 a.m. Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- itar-"Management of Managers No. 37: 146 Business Administration Bldg., 8:15 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Center for Programmed Learning for Business Workshop - "Programmed Learning Workshop": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. College of Engineering-Prof. P. G. Saffman, California Institute of Tech- nology, "Rise of a Body Through a Ro- tating Fluid in a Container of Finite Height," Room 325 West Engineering Bldg., 4 p.m.; coffee will be served at 3:30 p.m. in Room 214. Statistics Seminar-Prof. David L. Burdick, "Best Asymptotic Properties of a Sequential Test for Symmetray," Room 3201 Angell Hall, 4 p.m. Faculty-Doctoral Seminar-Prof. H. P. Galliher, "Some Operations Research Problems in Regional Medicine," 229 West Engineering Bldg., 4 p.m. College of Engineering Lecture-Prof. Brice Carnahan, University of Michi- gan, "An Introduction to Digital Com- puters and the MAD Language": Natur- al Science Aud., 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. General Notices Psychology Dept. Colloquium: Prof. Wells Goodrich of the Univ. of Mich. Mental Health Institute, "Four Pat- terns of Early Marriage," Fri., Aug. A, Angell Hall. 4 p.m. Graduate Students: Expecting to re- ceive a master's or professional degree in December 1967 must file a diploma application in the Graduate School's Office of Student Services by Fri., Sept. 22. No student can be recom- mended for a degree unless he has filed formal application in the Gradu- ate School by that date. LS&A Seniors and Juniors Advanced Classification Winter Term 1968: Cur- rent seniors may begin making appoint- ments with their counselors on Wed., Sept. 20. Juniors and second semester sophomores may begin making their appointments on Mon., Oct. 2. Appoint- ments are to be made in person at the Junior-Senior Counseling Office, 1223. Regents' Meeting: Fri., Oct. 20. Com- munications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands no later than Oct. 5. Doctoral Examination for Michael F. Zweig, Economics; thesis: "Forecasting State Tax Revenues," Tues., Sept. 19. Room 19 Economics Bldg., at 9:30 a.m. Chairman, D. B. Suits. Doctoral Examination for John An- thony DeSanto, Physics; thesis: "Some Aspects of Three-Particle Scattering," Tues., Sept. 19. Room 629 Physics- Astronomy Bldg. at 1:30 p.m. Chairman, M. H. Ross. year as Vogue Jr. Editor, trip to Paris Office Representative insurance. with Vogue editors covering Paris col- FRI., SEPT. 29 (All Day)- lections. Must graduate in '67-68 year, John Hancock Mutual Life Insur- . prior to Sept., '68. Blanks due Oct. 20. ance Co., Detroit, Mich.-Bach. and Those elegible to submit thesis noti- Masters degrees in Engl., Gen. Lib. fied Dec. 18; thesis due Feb. 5, win- Arts, Hist., Philo., Psych., Speech, Soc. ners notified April 15. and Bus. Ad. for life insurance sales and management. PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS: Those F wishing to interview the following em- or further information please call ployers must have forms in the Bureau 764-7460, General Division, Bureau of by the end of this week. Employers ex- Appointments, 3200 SAB. pect to see this resume. Call 764-7460I for appointments, and come to General SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE: Division, 3200 SAB, to get forms. 212 SAB- MON., SEPT. 25 (a.m. only)- Georgian Bay Lines, Detroit, Mich. Montomer-Wad, An AborMic -Immediate employment for waitresses, M ntgomery-arde king Bac.Mich. bus boys, bell hops, etc. Good wages Masters degrees in Gen. Lib. Arts for and tips. * * * Management Training throughout De- Contact Summer Placement Service, trolt Metropolitan area. 212 SAB, Lower Level, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. TUES., SEPT. 26 (p.m. only)- Monday-Friday. Aetna Life and Casualty, Group Di- vision, Detroit, Mich.-Any degree, any ENGINEERING PLACEMENT SERV-4 major, for Home Office, Group Home ICE: Make interview annointments at Room 128-H, West Engineering Bldg. SEPT. 25- Crawford & Russell. Texas Instruments, Inc.-Semiconduc- tor Div. Wyandotte Chemicals Corp. SEPT. 26-- Continental Aviation & Engineering. Continental Motors Corp. Digital Equipment Corp. Keeler Brass Co. Texas Instruments, Inc.-Semiconduc- tor Div. Warwick Electronics, Inc. SEPT. 27- Avco Lycoming Div. Bucyrus-Erie Co. Douglas Aircraft Div. - McDonnell Douglas Corp. Mechanical Handling Systems, Inc. & American ChainN Cable. Sanders Associates, Ind. Sperry Rand Corp. - Univac Data Processing Div. & Federal Systems Div. Center. United States Gypsum Co. - Research _ _ . - - - Phone 434-0130 gKn r .CAR PENTER ROAD OPEN 7:30 P.M. NOW SHOWING Shown at 8:15 Only SONY FRANCIOSA RAQOELWELCH I t CINSCOPE COLOR by DELUXE Also ... S Shown at " 10:00 Only the COLORBYDELUXE ® PLUS-"RIVIERA REVELRIES" COLOR CARTOON NNW Dial 5-6290 ENDING THURSDAY ENDS TONIGHT "MADE IN ITALY" . 0 0THURSDAY e e De Broca's Crowning Touch! r - U ALAN BATES PIERRE BRASSEUR JEAN-CLAUDE BRIALY GENEVIEVE BUJOLD ADOLFO CELl FRANCOISE CHRISTOPHE JULIEN GUIOMAR MICHELINE PRESLE MICHEL SERRAULT,, c P HILIPPE DE BROCA COLOR.- ELUXE-TEC--NISCOPE D-M,t,bd by LOp*'t PCiu'*s Cbrvo'at-*' They're yo ung... they're in love I UTI* C I "An amazing poignant film! It is beautifully balanced . excellent performances." -N.Y. Times Starring AcademyAward SANDY DENNIS Winner theyt killtP peo pie. T I I CO-STARRING MICHAEL J. POLLARD-GENE HACKMAN{ESIELLE PARSONS Written by DAVII N~ti' AN and RIIB XVIOR - M.;c ty~Cnai~ Stuse 'radnced by ARREN BEAMl- DOqcled by ARTNUHU 0 TECHNICOLOWR07 07 - W''.' :!E^ °2lOS.-SEVEN ARTS W Doctoral Examination for Norman Ar- /\ RA NI ZATIONt thurtCatison, Chemistry; thesis: "An f .I',t\lt.. il'.l Investigation of Synthetic Routes to Indole Alkaloids Containing the 2-Az- NO e Eabielclo (3.3.1) Uonane System," Tues., N.C S Sept. 19, Room 3003 Chemistry Bldg., at 2 p.m. Chairman, Richard G. Law- ton. USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially Doctoral Examination for William recognized and registered student orga- Michael Boorstein, Metallurgical Engi- nizations only. Forms are available in neering; thesis: "ThesKinetics of Solu- Rm. 1011 SAB. tion of Several Gases in Liquid Iron and Iron Alloys," Wed., Sept. 20. Room Engineering Council, meeting, Sept. 3018 East Engineering, at 2 p.m. Chair- 20, 7 p.m., 3511 SAB. man, R. D. Pehlke. UM Amateur Radio Club sponsors Doctoral Examination for Harriet Su- code and theory classes, beginning zanne Katcher Pollatsek, Mathematics; Wed., Sept. 20, 7 p.m., Room 2080 East thesis: "Groups Generated by Trans. Engineering Bldg., for four available vections over Perfect Fields of Char- classes of amateur license-novice, acteristic Two," Wed., Sept. 20, Room technician, general and amateur ex- 2429 Mason, at 3 p.m. Chairman, J. tra classes. McLaughlin. 1 FRIDAY Hayley Mills John Mills in "THE FAMILY WAY" I I I I """" U I TONIGHT AT 8:00 P.M.! Starts Today ACRES FREE PARKING RI NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION FOX EASTERN THEATRE n If FOXVILLaUiE 375 No. MAPLE RD. -769-1300 Continuous Showings Daily 1:00-4:45-8:30 q UM Scottish Country Dance Society holds dance meeting every Wednes- day, 8-10:30 p.m., WAB Lounge. University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw, sponsors a get-acquainted hour with new students, Sept. 20, 9 p.m., also at 10 p.m. midweek devotion with Holy Communion. - * Southern Asia Club: Bag lunch meet- ing on Thurs., Sept. 21, at 12 noon in Room 1 of Lane Hall. Prof. Roger Smith of the political science depart- ment will speak on "Research Prob- lems in Southeast Asia." Anyone inter- ested is invited to attend. Placement ANN6UNCEMENTS: Vogue's Prix de Paris-First prize: a i UM Rifle Club invites shoot every Wednesday, Rifle Range. you to learn to 7-9 p.m., ROTC I 14 NOW SHOWING "A BRILLIANT MOVIE!" From the makers of "DEAR JOHN; -NOW Ye"mA"agazin a different kind of love story. }ftSigma 1 ,3i f\K. Tm EAkw RE -L I I a SEEM 64169F *-W,, Tli i M I 6-