TH E MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1966 1: PAf F. .TV I £ r rraaaG r.auaa;a. The Week To Come: Events NSA Services to Students Lack Sufficient Publicity 11 ii II SUNDAY, SEPT.11x 7 and 9 p.m.-Cinema Guild3 presents Tom Courtney and Mi-i chael Redgfave in "The Loneli-i ness of the Long Distance Run-E ner." 7 and 9:15 p.m.-Cinema II pre- sents Sidney Poitier in "A Rai-1 sin in the Sun" in Aud. A, Angell] Hall. MONDAY, SEPT. 12l 4 p.m.-Prof. R. M. Hare of the Oxford University philosophy de-1 partment will deliver a lecture on "Meaning and Speech Acts" in Aud. C. 8 p.m. - University President1 Harlan Hatcher delivers his an- nual "State of the University"7 message in Rackham Lecture Hall. Faculty awards will be announced. 8 p.m. - The Children's Com- munity School, an experimental private school for five and six year-olds, will conduct a work- shop in Rm. 3Z of the Union for people interested in working as volunteer assistants in its pro- gram. TUESDAY, SEPT. 13 4 p.m.-Young Democrats meet- ing will discuss their fall program in the multipurpose room of the UGLI. 8 p.m - The Children's Com- munity School, an experimental private school for five and six' year-olds, will conduct a workshop in Rm. 3Z of the Union for people interested in working as volunteer assistants in its program. WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 14 3:30 p.m.-The Department of Architecture will give a lecture by Ernest Brandl, scholar-in-resi- dence at the University of Notre Dame. He will speak on "Adolf Loos-Pioneer of Modern Archi- tecture," at the Architecture Aud. 4:15 p.m.-An Anatomy Depart- ment seminar: Dr. Donald F. Huelke of the anatomy department will speak on "Investigations of Fatal Automobile Accidents - A Final Report." The lecture will be in Rm. 2501 East Medical Bldg. 7:30 p.m.-Prof. Brice Carna- ham of the Engineering College will speak on "An Introduction to Digital Computers and the MAD Language-I" in the Natural Science Aud. 8 p.m. - The Children's Com- munity School, an experimental private school for five and six year-olds, will conduct a workshop in Rm. 3Z of the Union for people interested in working as volunteer assistants in its program. THURSDAY, SEPT. 15 7 and 9 p.m. - Cinema Guild "Joan of the Angels" in Architecture Aud. theI 7:30 p.m.-Prof. O. L. Chavar- ria-Aguilar will speak on "Lan- guage and Politics in India," in the Rackham Amphitheatre; pre- sented by the Linguistics Dept. FRIDAY, SEPT. 16 7 and 9 p.m. -- Cinema Guild presents Jerry Kawaloerowicz's "Joan of the Angels" in the Architecture Aud. 7 and 9 p.m.-Cinema II pre- sents "Breakfast at Tiffany's" in Aud. A. 8 p.m.-Poetry Reading by Joel Greenberg and George Abbott White at the Wesley Foundation, admission free; sponsored by The Michigan Daily. 8 p.m. - The Children's Com- munity School, an experimental private school for five and six year-olds, will conduct a workshop in Rm. 3Z of the Union for people interested in working as volunteer assistants in its program. SATURDAY, SEPT. 17 7 and 9 p.m. - Cinema Guild: Lawrence Olivier's film, "Richard III" in the Architecture Aud. (Continued from Page 1) been able to obtain discounts for students while traveling abroad, operates a travel bureau (Educa- tional Travel, Inc.) offering stu- dents low-cost tour and travel ar- rangements, and makes available for students low-cost insurance policies. In the past several years SGC has made scanty use of these serv- ices and to an even lesser degree informed the student body of the benefits available to them as in- dividuals. In the fall of 1962 University students, in a campus wide refer- endum, voted by a narrow margin to maintain their affiliation with NSA. Although the campus reaffirm- ed its interest in NSA through the referendum SGC did not inter- pret the vote as a mandate to make fuller use of NSA's services on campus, and until now NSA has been little more than a two week trip to the annual summer congress for perhaps half a dozen students. national organization and member schools. But the value of NSA to each campus depends on the delegates and the information they subse- quently pass on to their student governments and the whole stu- dent body. Mark Simons, '67, SGC adminis- trative vice-president and dele- gate to' this year's congress, ex- plained that by publicizing the ideas, programs and resolutions discussed at the congress on cam- pus NSA will be able to reach and influence each student. One major problem at the Uni- versity has been the absence for the past two years of an NSA co- ordinator to serve as the middle- man between the national organi- zation and SGC and the students. It would be the coordinator's job to correspond with the na- tional office in Washington, make Council members and committee chairmen aware of NSA's infor- mation resources, set up programs for students on campus and pub- licize NSA's travel, discount and insurance plans to all students. + Use Daily Classifieds +V The annual congress provides the primary contact between the 7 and 9 p.m. - Cinema; "Breakfast at Tiffany's" :II in I.. presents Jerry Kawaloerowicz's I Aud. A. FILMS 'A Fine Madness' Tries Humor But Triteness Overcomes Truth ALL STUDENTS WELCOME Sunday, September 11 the film- "DAVID AND LISA" (first program in a series on Mental Health) at the PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS CENTER 1432 Washtenaw Supper-6 P.M. Film-7 P.M. (Come for either or both, but please make supper reservations-665-6575) By JOYCE WINSLOW 1 Sean Connery, Joanne Wood-9 ward and New York City star inl "A Fine Madness" which premier- ed at the Michigan last night. New York City was great.3 Sean Connery was fair as Sam- son Shillitoe, poet and carpet-l cleaner who sponges off women and takes their money too. Sam-; son is a self-made non-conformist. He over-tipples at prestigious poetry reading and topples the pillars of society and sobriety by admonishing Park Avenue dow- agers: "You are all roses. Get out of your corsets and blossom." Samson refuses to pay his first wife alimony. As a result he is always on the run from a short, fat summons server who pursues him, via stagnant script and over- dramatic camera shots, through gymnasiums, around traffic jams, up seven flight walkups and down into the trashcans of the Bowery. While Samson is running, his faithful *ife (Joanne Woodward) is pushing salami sandwiches in a lower Manhattan deli. Among the pickles is a little pathos. Faithful wife fears big, brawny husband will soon perish because he has ceased to publish. In fact, he hasn't published since his "Helle- boor," which sold around 120 copies. To save her man from suicide, she retains the services of a psy- chiatrist who specializes in sooth- ing raw talents. West becomes enamored by Shillitoe's verse: "We have come a long way toward ignorance, and it has all been up- hill," and spends long evening sessions counselling him.I However, plot builds upon plot. Dr. West (Patrick O'Neal) spends# more time with his couches than; he does in his bed. His wife can1 console herself with harp lessons" just so long. Inevitably, she is led astray by Samson in a whirl of" passion. Ah, Fate. "A Fine Madness" tries to be a funny picture. It fails. It tries to extol Samson as a modern noble savage, a fun-loving society- shunning Huckleberry Finn whose reasoning is soundly logical only when viewed isolated from the rest of society. It too, fails. Samson seems more like a Bond gone bad than an individualized Yossarian. And the script, situation, and cir- cumstances are too boring to be bawdy and too trite to be truth. The photography of Manhattan is excellent, but to see the movie for that would be madness. - I Get the bug in Europe. Pick up your Volkswagen in Europe and save a bundle on import costs and European travel expenses. Your local VW dealer handles everything: purchase, delivery, insurance, licensing, the works. Just tell him where you want it delivered: France, Italy, Great Britain, Ireland, Germany, Denmark, Belgium, Switzerland or The Netherlands. Howard Cooper Volkswagen 2575 S. State St. Please send me your free illustrated brochure and price list. Authorized t Name SAdd ress SCity Zone-Statej You can't find The spunky Honda S-90 is designed with the distinguished T-bone frame. Unique and tough as a fullback. A narrow 24" at its widest point, it fits in most anywhere. And fits into slim budgets, too. A gallon of gas goes farther than 140 miles. The high performance 90cc engine tops 60 mph. Join the team. Come in for a test ride soon. State St. DOWNTOWN HONDA 4rso t U'TI"N lI I 11 ro illsM