PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1FRIDAV. '.gFPTFXMV..R. 1(!. IOR-Ot PA E TO.I E _ _ ..) IL '~n v~pr'~i1wn1,i o rnx",Mx, IZ xZ2mnr~ lv, JOhJ hw Kropf Releases UAC Prospectus, Describes Concern with Individual TOO LONG, TOO DRY: 'Rain Must Fall A Mere Drizzle By HUGH HOLLAND By KATHRYN TEICH Releasing the prospectus for the coming year at. the newly merged University Activities Cen- ter,- James Kropf, president, em- phasized the .contnuing purpose of the organization to serve as a link between individual students and the university community. As the prospectus of the exep- utive committee expresses it, "The concern of UAC is the student- the individual, yet the 1 in 30,- 000,. and his relation to the fac- ulty, administration, the campus communityi The object of UAC is to allow individuals to .meet and to exchange ideas-to learn from' oneanother on a- 1-to-i basis;" To implement this design, UAC is adding to its usual program of, events. The expected Creative Arts Festival (Joan Baez has already' agreed to come); the Symposium, this year covering "The Future of American Individualism, and in- cluding such speakers as Martin Luther King, James Burnham, Richard Hofstadter; as well as the UAC coordinated activities such as Musket, Homecoming, Soph Show and Winter Weekend. One of the major additions to UAC activi- ties will be the spring semester Writer-in-Residence program fea- turing Louis Lomax, author of "The Negro Revolution."' The new programming will be along more individual-oriented lines, particularly in the area of academic affairs. "Books and Cof- fee" sessions will appear about the middle of this semester, giving authors on campus a chance to speak to the student body about their own works. "Last Chance Lectures" will give professors the opportunity of speaking to stu- dents as if for the last time. Another service offered is a free monthly calendar of the Arts, beginning publication this Octo- ber. Kropf reported that the major concern of 'the presidency this year would be the best possible use of space,- both in the Union and League buildings and on North Campus. Kropf feels that the committee chairmen will be com- petent to continue largely at their own discretion, allowing the pres- ident to give his attention to the Board of Directors of the Union, and to the University ad- ministration. In line with the* orientation of UAC toward the campus communi- ty, Kropf has also announced that the new training '.program for freshmen will' be directed toward learning not only about UAC, but also about the major activities on campus. He indicated that this would also facilitate a greater co- ordination of services now being offered off campus.. Kropf also discussed the out- come of the summer program, an experiment designed to :neet the needs of campus during, summer session. Aimed chiefly at the student who would otherwise have left campus on weekends, because of the lack of anything to do, Kropf called the program a suc- cess A jazz concert featuring lo- cal artists, a dance on State Street, a trip to -Greenfield Village for foreign students, and a Hatcher Open House, were well attended. However, said Kropf, the offi- cers are still not satisfied with the response. He went on to state that "the fact-that the undergrad- uate population on campus dur- ing the summer is growing does not excuse us for the number of graduate students who found little in the program to attract them. Although the summer campus will retain a different composition than the campus during the rest of the year because of the large number of people here to get their masters and doctoral degrees, I' foresee a program that will slow-j ly grow with the larger number of undergraduate students that will be arriving on campus." Facts would seem to be bearing out Kropf's statement, for while' UAC expected 'most of the work during the summer to be done by members previously involved in the organization, the bulk of the people who did work were newly arrived undergraduate students. At The State Theater Tradition is a fine thing, and often the safest method is to follow it. However, there are cer- tain films which suffer from too great an adherence to tradition. "Baby The Rain Must Fall" is such a film. Tradition plays its part in three basic ways in this film: the story, the casting and the length. Of these, loyalty to the last destroys the film. The plot is drawn from the re- cently discovered American folk- myth material source, the Mod- ern Southwest. In this dry arid land, with its sparsely vegetated plains, its ambling space and its small dusty towns, highly charg- ed emotions can be dealt with through several carefully selected and symbolic characters. The best example of this genre seems to be "Hud" (or perhaps "The Mis- fits"). From "Bus Stop" on down they all deal with the same basic format. "Baby The Rain Must Fall" fol- lows this trend faithfully with its locale in Columbus, Texas. Its characters are local folk inter- related through blood P exper- ience. Its emotions are aw and brutal. The plot centers around Henry Thomas, a "born loser" just out of the pen and his wife. Thomas is a rock 'n roll player who has to sing. He also has a mother-hatred problem. But that's all tradition- al. The casting is the second point. Three big names, Steve McQueen, Lee Remick and Don Murray. All give competent portrayals and all seem suited for the roles. McQueen shows promise again of develop- ing into a serious actor of high quality, but it is the quiet under? playing of Don Murray which seems the finest here. But all is for naught. The film is too long. Hollywood developed a tradition long ago that stated a film should be at least 70 minutes to 90 minutes long. Perhaps more, never less "Baby The Rain Must Fall" is a 30 minute movie that is dragged out till it quits. Obviously an attempt 'to -con- sume time and mimic the fine work in "Hud," the photography is constantly replete with arty use- less shots of birds, grass and pot- ted plants. The result: instead of a thun- derstorm, "Baby The Rain Must Fall' 'is a slow, obnoxious drizzle. - ff BERKELEY REPORT: Heist Study Says Protestors Represent Intellectual Elite'' 104 &WMi. i'w...........ti...............a....,.,.........., .,..,,.., a 1 " r * r r presents r * r RENE PA PPAS TONGH atlad , . r * I CINEMA GUILD * - Filmed in reece and one of,.the most beautiful ,; fpthe filmed Greek clssics.; I r ON TH E SAME: PROGRAM- ; I. ..n I I I he emfinedgrelssics. * r a ;.I N T HE A RC HIT ECT U RE A U DITOR IUM a AOMI:SSIONs FIFTY C ENTS r r InTmum ESftAwww =ME PROGRAM: .. ...-..a Across Campus - . HELD OVER 2nd WEEK Shown at 1 :00 3:00-5:00-7:00 & 9:10 FRIDAY, SEPT. 10 j 9 a.m.-The American Associa- tion of University Women will hold their 13th Annual Used Book Sale, in the shop room of the SAB until 1 p.m. 9 a.m.-The second session of' the Fifth annual Tax Seminar, "Unraveling Michigan Taxes," will be presented by the Institute of Continuing Legal Education of the University Law School, Wayne State University School of Law, and the State.Bar of Michigan, in Rackham Auditorium from 9 a.m. until 5:15 . p.m.' 4:00 p.m.-Mike Hannon, 'Los Angeles policeman suspended for activities in CORE and peace movements, will speak on the po- lice role in the Watts riots in Room 3-R of the Michigan Union. 4:15 p.m.-The department of psychology will present Dr. Claude Flament from the Center for Study of Social Science in Aix-en-Prov- ence, France, speaking at the. Psychology Colloquium on "Task Structures, Group Structures and Communication. Networks," in Aud. B. Join The Daily Sports Staff 7 and 9 p.m.-The Cinema Guild will present "Antigone" in the Architecture Auditorium.. SATURDAY, SEPT.11 9 a.m.-The second session of the Fifth Annual Tax Seminar will continue in Rackham Auditorium. 8 p.m.-Vice-President for Stu- dent Affairs Richard Cutler will welcome University foreign stu- dents in Rackham Lecture Hall. A reception will follow in the League Ballroom, 8:30 p.m.-The Student Zionist Organization will present the film "Let My People Go" at the Hillel Foundation. Refreshments will be served. A recent study undertaken by a research psychologist has dis- closed that student leaders par- ticipating in protest groups rep- resent a kind of intellectual elite, the New York Times said recently. Reporting to the American Psy- chological Association at its 73rd annual meeting in Chicago, Dr. Ralph Heist said that the student leaders of campus movements de- manding free speech and protest- ing public policies are the cream of the academic crop. Dr. Heist and a team of eight investigators from the Center for the Study of Higher Education, at the University of California at Berkeley, based the report on five years of tests and interviews with 5000 students in eight colleges and an additional study of 240 students in Berkeley's Free Speech Movement. Dismisses Theory Heist dismissed the theory that last year's disturbances at Berke- ley were caused by outside agita- tors, saying that such suggestions probably arose "because people couldn't credit students with the ability to organize such a well- directed and meaningful protest." On the contrary, Heist insisted that his study illustrated that the student leaders would be very well able to undertake and complete such a program. Out of the team's graphs, charts and statistical correlations grew a profile of student leaders of "goal oriented or social problem move- ments" which the investigators distinguished from "adolescent re- bellions." Unusually Serious Such campus leaders, Dr. Heist said, are much more committed to the process of learning than the majority of students and are more independent of their cultural past. Indeed, because of their "un- usually serious pursuit of educa- tion" Henst called them the "nu- cleus of future scholarship." In the Berkeley study, for ex- ample, 69 per cent of the arrested students surveyed were found to rank high on the "intellectual orientation" scale. In a control group of 150 students selected at random, the per cent ranged from 13 for freshmen to 31 for seniors. Majority of Students Of the schools surveyed three liberal arts colleges-Swarthmore, Antioch and Reed-were found to have a majority of students fit- ting the leadership prdfile and participating in - pretest' move- ments. At Berkeley and Sin F'ancsico State, two state universities, both students categories were in the minority. And in three denomi- national schools,. St. Olaf .Cllege, the University of Portlaid and the University of,the Pacific, there were "virtually no protests. and no students with inIellictual commitment found in the other schools." Heist's study was sponsored by a grant from the Carnegie Foun- dation and has not yet been puba lished. f I1 I I T HE N EW Entna t n. CARPENTER ROD0 ENDS TONIGHT "GENGHIS KHAN" "The Outlaws Is Coming" a,' I HELD OVER Through Saturday ^i :?tt 4X. i : 'M1 ?? 4i f" "4 petitions ovailable I announces... MORE 4 for CENTRAL COMMITTEE Leonard Bernstein's Vibrant Musical WES'T MUSKET office First Floor Michigan League CQ$TANaM~GI DOUG McCLURE - GLENN CORBET ' PATRICK WAYE Ii I i glorious:' -N.Y. Posh 1stRun -AltColor STARTS TOMORROW AND 66AL Shown at 1&:15 662-6264 3:10-5:05-7:00 & 9:051 STEVE LEE DON MIIEEI-REMKK-MUHRAY PAKUA - the IGAi'Si *isto ,lJfaf'/ 0AND0 i : TMALLRIGHT 0000** pP sa IM CARMICHARl ACTrBy.1HOMAS SUNDAY WILLIAM WYLERS "The COLLECTOR" k~ COLUKSCOPr Order Your Day ow Phone 764-0558 11 } I THE LOVE- SORY OF A BORN'- -'LOSER.. SUBSCRIPTION OFFICE ~i OPEN WEEKDAYS, 10-1, 2-5 * ' ' Sunday: JANE FONDA in "Joy HOUSE" Sept. 18th: "HELP"' I where the UA#tion is * LIVE BANDS AND DANCING EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT AT THE UNION Sponsoed by UAC's Social Committee BIG CLUB ONCE A MONTH ... - UNION'BALLROOM, 9-12 P.M. DANCING ADMISSION $1.00/couple LITTLE CLUB few 11 EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT (Except Big Club Night) 1- E ® The poignant aramatc ciassic. U a(&j