PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1967 PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1967 FILMS Surfing as Art Becomes Image Of Beauty in 'Endless Summer' ... rrt.... r.. r. ". t r ,tvr.. r ...: ............ ..... ...n...t4t"........................... .. ......:. :...:. ..^- +-">'": > ?@Si>: ,r .arwts r,. r, ".:." ".4..r,.. r. :h. , .....[n ..... .......... ................ .......... ...:. .. .. ... .... .. ::::' .. { " DAILY OFFICIAL t"'ULLETIN r.;r ih":T.V:.W,.:J.,:....4:"V....~.",::":.V.:".t"r.^. :. .'.'Vrh41 ". .:t"r."...,::r""r 4:VJ V"r,., r .. .. ..... .*. 5.1. ,. . . ..t .!Yr...ht, .,.: ..t.. 11 .. .t. ,^,.. }. ^ .,1,J. r:,,. 1t. ,."1. h.. ....:. J.V. r..... "1 1.....1.... .... ......... .............................r.,.............. .. .. ....... i . ..... . ,. . ........... ":...^.".... "... r. ... .. .... r. ,t.4: ^ .., nt,". r1', h4:4^r. .V.41:";V. ",::r:,.h.n. y.::.1h .:'t. .,.,..,:1t.-}.:1.t.t. r$}.\'th 9 a^d* ......... ..... ....... _ -r, r :,:4 .........:::.t::v.V:::x.w:r::::::.::vh ::::.":fi".:r;}."5;","y {"rr: rrr.aivn'd". o."a:. ...e.r..:.:....a..u,.h.h.,....a.}......t..:iGt..+.......h1.'tr .."" r. h.....4. t By HARVEY WASSERMAN Editorial Director Surfing is a beautiful sport. You paddle straining, your shoulders like no other sport strains them for 15 to 20 minutes on a good beach just to catch one ride, and then you turn around and do the same thing again. Surfing must be the hardest of all sports to learn because if you're only aver- age you've. got to kill, yourself for a week or two before you're good ,nough to have any fun at it. But once you learn, it's magnifi- cent. The sea, the sand, the sun' are all a part of it, but it's the ride, the fast, ,smooth, exhilarat- ing naturalness of becoming the master of a wave that makes surf- ing a totally unforgettable exper- ience. Bruce Brown's "Endless Sum- mer" therefore has the advantage of working with great subject mat- ter, and the film does it justice. The story line is simple. A cou- ple of surfers from California de- cide, with the onset of winter, to follow summer around the world, surfing wherever they go. Brown narrates their journey with all the simple, easy-going humor one finds on the beach. The film is like a home movie; warm, sim- ple, often banal but never mean- ing to be more. It is meant to show a wide variety of surfing surroundings and to include pic- tures of the sport in its most ex- citing moments-and that it does. Brown's cameral work is good, but not great. At one point, where it is obviously bad, one is remind- ed that this is not a Hollywood film or a canned Madison Avenue product-it is the work of a surf- er going around the world photo- graphing surfing and talking about it like a surfer. Surfing could probably use a great poet. To watch it at its best is no less than thrilling; to participate in it is like a dream of power and the sea. Brown is not a poet; nor is he in the nor- mal run of commercial filmmak- ers. And that, perhaps, is one of the most refreshing qualities of the film as a film--it seems to have Everything is relaxed and easy been made because there is a like the sport, and under those sport like surfing, not because conditions one hardly has to strain there is an audience to buy a mo- to believe that three guys would vie. There is no drama, there is go around the world just for the no poverty, there is no pressure, love of surfing. Student Leaders, Rusk To Meet in Washington (Continued from Page 1) -The bombing of North Viet- nam, which has apparently not halted infiltration from the north and south as it was designed to. would have to be justified., -Rusk would have to explain "what the U.S. wants to get out of Vietnam, whether we would be willing to negotiate with the Viet Cong, and whether we would per- mit a coalition or all-Communist government in South Vietnam if that's what the people there vote for." Robinson said he is also seek- ing evidence that the Viet Cong are closely tied to the North Viet- namese. Several reports, includ- ing those by New York Times assistant managing editor Harris- on Salisbury and Miami News edi- tor William Baggs, have contended that the Viet Cong is an inde- pendent entity, although it gets support from Hanoi. Both Salis- bury and Baggs have spent time in North Vietnam this month. As for his own position, Rob- inson said "I have pretty firm convictions that the war is wrong on the basis of reports I've seen, including government reports." He admitted that his position "is not necessarily that of the ma- jority of people on the campus, but the more I can learn about the war, the more information may be available to them through me. "I don't claim to be speaking for everyone," Robinson empha- sized. "But since I was elected, people must have had some kind of faith in my ability to under- stand issues and communicate them." He also contended that "some people have tacitly accepted the war because of lack of knowledge about it." Robinson summed up his pur- pose in attending the meeting with Rusk as "a means to gain additional information about the war so as to help communicate this information to students on the campus." The Daily Offilcal 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 3519 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 764-8429. SATURDAY, JANUARY 28 Day Calendar Cinema Guild-Jean Vigo's "Zero de Conduite": Architecture Aud., 7 and 9:05 p.m. School of Music Concert--"Contem- porary Directions": Rackham Lecture Hall, 8:30 p.m. General Notices Senate Assembly Meeting: Trueblood Aud., Frieze Bldg., Mon., Jan. 30, 4 p.m. Martha Cook Bldg.: Applications for residence are due no later than Fri., Feb. 3. First appointments may be made through Tues., Jan. 31. TV Center Programs: On Sun., Jan. 29, the following programs produced by the TV Center will have their initial telecast on Detroit stations: 8:30 a.m., WXYZ-TV, Channel 7 - "Understanding Our World Who. Will Watch the Watchers?: Cops and Citi- zens." A Detroit police official joins Law School faculty members in an ex- amination of the image of the mod- ern American policeman and his rela- tionship to society. 12 Noon, WWJ-TV, Channel 4-"Ger- many Today. History, Horror and Hope." A documentary of German history from the 17th century until today, and some hard questions about the future. Placement ANNOUNCEMENTS: ADDITIONAL INTERVIEW: MON., JAN. 30- Addison Wesley, Reading, Mass. - IAcross Camputs SATURDAY, JAN. 28 7:00 and 9:05. p.m.- Cinema Guild will present Jean Vigo's "Zero de Conduite" in the Archi- tecture Aud. 8:30 p.m.-The School of Music will present a concert, "Contem- porary Directions" in Rackham Lecture Hall. SUNDAY, JAN. 29 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. - Cinema Guild will present Jean Vigo's "Zero de Conduite" in the Archi- tecture Aud. Seeking all LS&A majors for college1 representatives in Michigan. VISTA Week-Jan. 30-Feb. 1. Reps. at 3200 SAB, 9-12 & 1:30-4:30. Applica-2 tions, literature, speakers available to groups, contact Bureau. No appoint- ments needed to see reps. PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS: Gradu- ates and seniors make appointments by1 4 p.m. of the day preceding the visits by the following companies. All em- ployers expect to see your file before1 the interview Please return forms and update your files as soon as possible.c Call 764-7460, General Division Desk.f MON., JAN. 30-c U.S. Department of Labor, Cleveland,1 Ohio-BA/adv. degrees Math, Poll. Sci.,? Econ. & Stat. for Public Admin., Stat., Econ. surveys.T VISTA-See announcement above. TUES., JAN. 31- Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp., To- ledo, Ohio-BA Econ., Engl., Gen. Lib. Arts, Math & Speech for Mgmt. Trng.,C Personnel, Purchasing, Sales & Trans. Central Intelligence Agency, Wash.,E D.C.-BA/adv. degrees Econ., Engl., Lan- guages, Gen. Lib. Arts, Geog., Geol., Law, Libr. Sc.,LMath, Phys. & Poll. Sc. for Cartog., Comput., Libr., Sec. & other. Liberty Mutual Insurance, Boston, Mass. - BA/adv. degrees Math, Econ., Engl., & Hist. for Casualty & Property underwriting, Sales, Claims & Loss Pre- vention. VISTA-See announcement above. Michigan Consolidated Gas Co., De- troit - BA/adv. degrees Econ., Math, Phys. & Chem. For Computing, Mgmt. Trng., Stat. & Controller's office. Jacobson Stores, Inc., Jackson, Mich. -BA Econ. & Gen. Lib. Arts for Mgmt. Trng. & Merchandising. WED., FEB. 1- Brtnswick Corp., Chicago-BA Econ. & Chem. for Territorial Sales. Detroit Civil Service, Detroit - BA/ adv. degrees Archit., Chem., Econ., Fine Arts, Gen. Lib. Arts, Hist., Journ., Math, Nat. Res., Forest., Pharm., Poll. Sl., ORGAN IZATION NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered student or- ganizations only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. #*** Folk Dance Club (WAA), Folk dance, Mon., Jan. 30, 8:30-10:30 p.m., Wom- en's Athletic Bldg. Young Democratic Club, Meeting to canvass voters for city elections, Sat.. Jan. 28, 1:15 p.m., 706 Oakland (down- stairs). #*#** India Students' Association, Mindi movie: "Naya Daur" (with English sub-I titles), Jan. 28. 7:30 p.m., Natural Sci- ence Aud, * * # University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw, Jan. 29, 9:45 and 11:15 a.m. services. The service will be conducted by the Rev. A. T. Scheips. Bible class at 11:15 a.m. * * # Young Friends, Ice skating, if weath- er permits, Sun., Jan. 29, 5 p.m., Friends Center, 1416 Hill. * * * Phi Sigma Society, Lecture by Dr. Lawrence Shobodkin, Dept. of Zoology: A Predictive Concept of Evolutionary Fitness," Jan. 30, 7:30 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. Phych., Public Health, Social & Social Work. For Art & Des., Botany, Comput- ing, Mgmt. Trng., Personnel, Public Ad., Public Rel.. Purchasing, Recreation, So- cial Work, Stat., Trans. & Writing. Central Intelligence Agency-See Tues- day's listing. Procter and Gamble Market Research, Cincinnati, Ohio-BA any field for Mkt. Research. VISTA-See announcement above, POSITION OPENINGS: N. American Philips Co., Inc., Norel- co, N.Y.C.-Eastern locations. Mktg. Mgr. for Audio Visual Equip., Material Han- dling Engineer, Organic Chemist, Ex- perimental Physicist, Product Sales En- ;ineer, Manager of Manufacturing, Re- gional Field Rep., Medixal X-Ray dept., Mktg. Specialist for high-reliability, Senior Organic Chemist. Foesco, Inc., Steel Mill Prod. Div., Cleveland, Ohio-Sales-Account Execu- tives, somewhat technical but tech. degree not required. Chicago, Pitts- burgh or Cleveland. Degree in any field, some work bkgd. in heavy industry, sales expbr. desirable, 3-7 yrs. out of school, Itek Business Products, Detroit, Mich. Join The Daily Sports Staff -Sales Representatives, out of school few yrs. with sales exper. Graphic arts or office equip. desired, degree spe- cialization not important. Local Medical Research-Research As- sistant, full-time, quantitative anal. chemical exper. Degree in chem. or re- lated field. Local Firm-Cataloger, MLS or ex- per, in cataloguing with BA degree. M. or F. County of San Joaquin, Stockton, Calif.-Planner II and Planger III, and future vacancies for Planner I. Consolidated Packaging Corp., Chica- go, Il1.-Sales Promotion Manager, BBA/ MBA, Mktg., Ad., or Engl./Journ, de- grees, extensive exper. in planning sales promotion. Niagara Mohawk Power Corp., Syra- cuse, N.Y.-Engineering positions, Nu- clear, Chemical, System, Plant, Mgmt. Trng. and design openings. Garden City Public Schools, Garden City, Mich. - Administrative Asst.- Bus. Mgr. MBA/CPA and exper. with school finance. American Hoist & Derrick Co., St. Paul, Minn.-Graduate Metallurgist for Gen. Foreman of steel foundry in Bay City, Mich. Degree plus exper. in equip- ment & procedures in steel industry. For further information please call 764-7460, General Division, Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB. UNION-LEAGUE CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL presents MICHAEL HAMBURGER POETRY READING SUNDAY, JANUARY 29 2:30 P.M. UGLI MULTI-PURPOSE ROOM FREE A 9 Snowstorm Paralyzes State; Area Highways impassable 4' " i (Continued from Page 1) State Police were manning road blocks on I-94 turning back motor- ists heading east from Paw Paw. . Both 1-94 and 1-96 were closed leading into Benton Harbor, which reported all hotels and motels filled by stranded motorists. "It's incredible," was State Po- lice Cpl. James Jeffreys' descrip- tion of storm conditions around Battle Creek, where it was er- roneously reported for a time a woman in labor was on Interstate 94, the main eastwest artery in Southern Michigan. FaIse Alarm The woman's truck-driver hus- band finally made it into Battle Creek behind snow plows. The Red Cross found them lodging in a private home. The woman was only four monts pregnant. In paralyzed Lansing, Mayor Max Murningham appealed to everyone to "stay home unless you are employed in an essential business or industry." Detroit Greyhound bus head- quarters reported it was attempt- ing to send no buses west or north, although schedules were being operated to the south and east, although most of them would be far off schedule before reaching their destinations. Detroit Metropolitan Airport was reopenend to traffic at 8:30 a.m. after having been closed all night. io i Dial 8-6416 "A BEAUTIFUL FILM"-The New Yorker GRAND PRIZE WINNER 1966 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL CtAUCE GIROIJZ A MAN -. ANd A WOMAN . . "A SPLASHY, SURFSOAKED SLEEPERI BREATHTAKING! IMAGINATIVE! The nicest surprise to happen in a long time. Unless you just enjoy turning your back entirely on life, you should not miss the breathtaking shots!" 1W !I q r ABRUCE BROWN ILM IN "COLOR a CL d i *Before Sesquicentennial filI an annecdotal, ', Q a ! .. . pictorial history of the University of Michigan Sponsored by UAC and Sigma Delta Chi, Professional Journalistic Society UAC MUSKET '67 ur the new musical INDIVIDUAL TICKETS Lydia Mendelssohn Box Office 10 A.M.-5 P.M. All Seats $2.50 Performances: Date: Fri.-Sun., Jan. 27-29 Thurs.-Sat., Feb. 2-4 IT'S HERE ...... TODAY! " 4 Special Sesquicentennial Publication Now available for $1.00 at the following stores: A -I-'_ iI ' 1 ri -dv y ct III #.t WV AGAW ,t Affii I I li',. rollett s 3iater s