PAGE TWO TIDE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1966 PAGE TWO TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 8.1966 FILMS 'Fires' a Cold Seduction into War Fantasy TIGHT MONEY ISSUE: House Debates Interest Bills Amid Warnings of Recession By PAUL SAWYER1 Kon Ichikawa's "Fires on the Plain," a moving, skillfully made film, begins with a series of un- ruffled closeups of a Japanese of- ficer scolding a young soldier. The scene is Leyte in the last, des- pairing days of the Second World War. The young man, a consumptive, is told to return to the jungle hos- pital from where he has just come, since he will only be a burden to the other soldiers if he stays. As he returns into the jungle, a com- rade bids him, "Don't die until you have to." For nearly two hours the film follows him, doggedly and plotlessly, during which he somewhat half-heartedly takes his friend's advice. At last he gives up. That is the substance of this film. In one respect it is the quin- tessential anti-war film, contain- ing a relentless catalogue of all the horrors, mental and physical, suffered by men during long per- iods of privation. Yet for all the repulsiveness of its subject mat- ter and the violence of its nar- rative, it remains strangely quiet in tone. The camera, for example, does not move very much; the pace of cutting is relatively slow; and the individual shots are taken spar- ingly, in most cases, and with de- liberateness. More importantly, there is little tension throughout. The beginning could scarcely be more pedestrian, more lacking in hints of the grotesque horrors to follow; and the hero's death at the end could hardly be more casual or anti-climactic. The characters are all exhausted men who have large- ly given up hope of surviving the war. They wander from jungle to jun- gle and from field to field in an attempt to elude the Americans, but their energies seem mainly directed towards forestalling the inevitable. Bullets rain from the air, and the men fall into the mud as into a warm bed. At least one advantage of this Geneticist Explains Possible Correlation, Between Blood Types and Birth Trends approach is that the audience is seduced into casually accepting a truly fantastic world. As the scenes progress, the characters de- generate by slow degrees until they have become practically with- out our realizing it, madmen and animals. The whole matter of cannibal- ism is shrewdly intertwined with the theme of human bestiality. When Tamura meets an old friend who has learned to shoot monkeys for their meat, he is afraid the friend will mistake him for his prey. The keenest irony of the film comes at the end when Tamura, after many days of degradations, watches the normal, rustic activi-' ties of the villagers in the distance burning corn husks ("the fires on the plain"). It is only at this mo- ment that he realizes how horribly and completely he and his com- rades have been severed from the rest of humanity. This frightful moral alienation is, at last, shown to be the worst of the horrors of war. All this is not to suggest that "Fires on the Plain is dreary and dull. It sustains interest by the variety of its several episodes, some of which are quite vivid and skil- fully recreated. The graphic scenes at night of the tanks bursting upon the fleeing soldiers is bound to live long in any viewer's mem- ory. This is by no means a pro- found, or a great film. Its virtues are skillfullness and restraint; and its protest, though outwardly muted, is powerful and unmistakable. WASHINGTON 0) - A deeply divided House heard a warning Wednesday that unless it acts to lower rising interest rates the 89th Congress may go down in history for causing a recession and many members may be forced back to private life in November. As debate began on two rival bills dealing with one phase of the tight-money problem, the discus- sion was heightened by deep con- cern over mounting interest rates and lack of lending funds for housing, business and general in- dividual needs. The author of one of the bills, Chairman Wright Patman (D- Tex.), of the Banking Committee, told his colleagues the. country underwent three recessionscduring the administration of President Dwight D. Eisenhower because of "high interest rates and tight money" and signs now point to another. "89th Recession" "If it does come," Patman said, "it should be called the 89th Congress recession, because we have the opportunuity and means of forestalling such a tragedy. "If we in the Congress lie down on the job and do nothing, I am certain that we will see some con- crete action on the part of the voters in November." Patman's bill and another, spon- sored by the Treasury and intro- duced by Rep. Robert G. Stephensi Jr., (D-Ga.), are intended to ease competition for the kind of sav- ings that traditionally have fi- nanced housing loans, now in ser- iously short supply. High interest paid by commercial banks on de- posits left for specified times have been blamed by housing industry spokesmen for drawing money away from savings and loan as- sociations. Patman's proposal would put a 41/2 per cent ceiling on interest paid on commercial bank time de- posits up to $100,000. They now can yield as much as 512 per cent. The administration-backed Ste- phens' bill would authorize the Federal Reserve Board to set ceil- ings. Stephens attacked the Patman measure as inflexible and said Congress should not substitute its judgment on such matters for the expertise of specialized agencies. "This would be the first step towards destroying the Federal Reserve system by taking away its independence to fix interest rates and giving such authority to the President," he added. This was a reference to a pro- vision in Patman's bill under which the Federal Reserve might reduce interest rates on its own, but could raise them only with presidential concurrence. Phone 482-2056 E&tan A oo&CARPENTER RD ~y m EASTMANCOLOR'|, Shown at 7:40-11:45 ALSO... Shown at 10 00 only CHABERLAIN JOY inr METRO J0 COLOR PLUS: "They Fly Through the Air" 2 Color Cartoons Read and Use Daily Classifieds Chicago--Parents with a certain combination of blood types appar- ently are less likely to have a baby in the springtime than any other time, a University scientist reported this week. The reason seems to be that in the summer, when a springtime baby would be conceived, the mother has a higher level of anti- bodies againsthsomething in her husband's system. Henry Gershowitz, an assistant professor of human genetics in the Medical School, reported his findings at the Third Interna- tional Congress of Human Gen- etics, meeting at the 'University of Chicago. "Our findings may be sheer ac- cident," Gerhowitz said. "But if they are confirmed by other scien- tists th eymay offer something of a clue in the whole range of ques- Across Campus THURSDAY, Sept. 8 7 and 9:45 p.m.-Cinema Guild presents "Fires on the Plain,'' Ichikawa's study of psychological obsessions in Medieval Japan, in the Architecture Aud. FRIDAY, Sept. 9 8 p.m.-The University Players is sponsoring the Porch Players in William Saroyan's "The Cave, Dwellers" in the-Arena Theater on 0 the first floor of the Frieze Build- ing. Admission is free. 7 and 9:05 p.m.-Cinema Guild presents "Fires on the Plain" in the Architecture Aud. tions about blood type distribution and selection within families." The geneticist tabulated the birth months of children "born to mothers with type 0 blood and fathers with .type A-iblood. He found that of 100 'children with type A-1 blood, only 29 were born between February and June. If a normal pattern existed, 42 chil- dren, or five twelfths, would have. been born in those five months. In contrast, the birth month dis- tribution was normal for 142 type O children born of such mar- riages. It was also 'normal for 253 children of both types born to type A f mothers and type O fa- thers." Gershowitz chose the five-month period, instead of the limited March-to-May springtime, to cor- rect variations caused by slight- ly differing lengths of pregnancy or slightly varying times of peak antibody level. It has been known for some time that persons with type O blood have antibodies to some antigen in the red cells of other blood types. Similar antibodies have been detected in the cervical mucus of type O mothers and similar anti- gens in the sperm of type A fa- thers. The antigen-antibody re- action, though not fully under- stood, is thought to be responsible' for infertility among some child- less couples. Abouut eight years ago it was found that anti-A antibodies in- crease in the summer in persons With type O blood. Why this hap- pens is still any scientist's guess; various studies have connected the rise with everything from cosmic radiation to chlorophyll. Gershowitz studied the offspring of type Ormothers and type A-i fathers for two reasons. One is that this combination of parents is most common among children with ABO hemolytic disease, a usually mild blood disorder. Also, the combination is the most common of the many com- binations which geneticists call "Incompatible" - those in which the wife's system carries antibod- ies to the husband's. About 20 per cent of the mar- riages between white persons in America are between persons of types O and A, the most common types. Half are "incompatible" be- cause the wife's type O has anti- bodies against the husband's type A. The other half are "compati- ble" because the mother has type A blood, which does not have anti- bodies against type O. Dr. Gershowitz emphasized thgt this sort of "incompatibility," un- like the well-known Rh factor "in- compatibility," rarely causes a problem for the child or the mother. er- cttonM modern C'olin" DIAL 5-6290 ENDING TONIGHT Shows at 1:00-3:40-6:10-8:45 A' i r E ell rv I I G oodbye dare! Add the artists touch to your surroundings Rent full color, framed reproductions of famous paintings through ART, PRINTL OAN North lounge of the MICHIGAN UNION THURSDAY, FRIDAY, AND SATURDAY Sept. 8,.9 and 10. From 10 A.M. 'til4 P.M. ANOTHER SERVICE OF THE UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES CENTER * aI W ..... ___ _ 1 DIAL 8-6416. Shows Tonight at 7 and 9 P.M. "Everything abouPt'A Shop on Main Street' is just right. What mnore can be said in praise!"-Michigan Daily ACADEMY AWARD WINNER "BEST FOREIGN FILM OF THE YEA R!" 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