PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, OCTOER,15, 1966 PAGE TWO TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. OCTOBER 15. Th8fi .. FILMS DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Loneliness and Ind ff U nberto D. is simply an old man who suffers without cause, grace, or understanding. He hasn't' enough bitterness for hatred, nor enough nobility for despair; he has only the capacity to feel deeply how little the world cares for him. street-to no purpose. He can't raise the money, and his eviction nears. At the same time Umberto, an old-school gentleman, is plagued by another kind of dispossession. His landlady hires out his room to philandering couples when he The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- zal responsibility. Notices should be ~ j snt in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding away at Umberto's attachmen; to publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General life, until only the welfare of his Notices may be published a maxi- pet has any meaning for him. It mum of two times on request; Day pet as ay menin forh'nl It Calendar items appear once only. is the dog's blind instinct of -urvi- Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more val which saves the old man from information call 764-8429. suicide and finally inspires him SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15 to go on living. Along the way, Day Calendar though, the poignancy of the man- Football-U-M vs. Purdue, Michigan and-his-dog portraint 3ometimes Stadium, 1:30 p.m. gets a bit too thick to go down Cinema Guild - Vittorio de Sica's easily. "Umberto": Architecture Aud., 7 and 9:05 p.m. But all of Umberto D tieutbles Dept. of Speech University Players on the brink of bathos, and to say Performance - William Shakespeare's that de Sica falls over it in just "Coriolanus": Trueblood Aud., 8 p.m. a few spots is to say a great deal professional Theatre Program Per- for the subtlety of his purpose a: d formance-APA Repertory Company in technique. He does not rhapsodize, Pirandello's "Right You Are": Lydia or even moralize; he is interCsted Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. in Umberto's petulance as w .ll as l iv'-Lilnhuman111',y vvs wWh11G1 11 Man's inhumanity is what ro- isn't home and she herself mar- mantics used. to call, it, and Vit-ries a man who at one point blun- torio de Sica finds no new names ders into Umberto's room by mis- or reasons for it in this strikingly take. Much worse, Umberto's only unpretentious little film. Other friend, the lackadaisical house- writer-directors would have crush- maid, announces without regret ed Umberto with bureaucracy or that someone has made her preg- locked him in a neurosis; he would nant. De Sica neatly winds around look like an old man but his soul the main plot line the suggestion would house a hero or anti-hero, that other lives are being created a Sisyphu or Job. De Sica spurns just as carelessly as Umberto's is the modern bogies and goes back being polluted and strangled, to primitive story-telling. ~_- Student Government Council Approval of the following student sponsoredI events becomes effective 24 hours after the publication of this notice. All pub- licity for these events must be with- held until the approval has become ef- fective. Approval request forms for student sponsored events are available in Room 1011 of the SAB, Phi Sigma Delta, Phi Sig Week, Oct. 7 through 15, Diag. Pi Lambda Phi, Lawn dance, Oct. 22, 1 4-6 p.m., 715 Hill. West Quadrangle Council, All resi- dence hall mixer, Oct, 28, 9-12 p.m., West Quad Dining Room. Placement ANNOUNCEMENTS: Summer Jobs in Europe-A pa~nel dis- cussion of jobs in Europe at 8 p.m. on Oct. 19, Wed., in the Ballroom of the Union. Foreign Service-Final filing date for exam for ForeigntService Exam, under U.S. Dept. of State and U.S. Informa- tion Agency is Oct. 22, applications available at Bureau. Harvard Grad School Scholarships- Application date for scholarships for Harvard Grad School of Arts and Sci. has been advanced to Dec. 1. The form itself must be received by Dec. 1 and supporting documents may be received as late as Feb. 1, 1967, PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS: Gradu- ates and seniors make appointments by 4 p.m. of the day preceding the visits by the following companies. All em- ployers expect to see your file before the interview, Please return forms and update your files as soon as possible. Call 764-7460, General Division Desk. MON., OCT. 17- American Hospital Supply Corp., Ev- anston, Ill.-BA in Econ., Engl., Gen. Lib, Arts, Math, Psych., Pharm. and all fields of Chem. for Mgmt Trng., } Trng., Mkt. Res., Merchan., Prod., Pub- Polymer, Analytical, ChE, Physical, Mkt. Res., Personnel, Purchasing and l lie Relations, Sales, Gen. & Tech. Chem. BS. Development-Transporta- Sales. Writing and Data Process. tion Economist, Information Specialist: TUES., OCT. 18- WED., OCT. 19- EnginEering-Heat Transfer, Instrumen- Marathon Oil Co., Detroit, Mich. - Detroit Edison Co., Detroit, Mich.- tation, Biomedical, Design, Circuit, An- Afternoon only. BA in Econ. and Gen. BA & adv. degrees in Econ.. Psi ch. & alyst. Computer Applications and Elec- Lib. Arts for Mgmt. Trng, Territorial Soc. for Personnel. tronic.=ath and Physics-Statistician, Sales and Sales Rep. Travelers Insurance Co., hartford, Physicist. Operations Res., Oper. Anal., Central Intelligence Agency, Wash., Conn.-Any degree in all fields. inter- Human Factors Engr. or exper. Psy- D.C.-Career Trng. Program - BA or ested in math. Insurance (Home Offices. chologist. Chem. Physicist. Grad work, good grades, good health : Mgmt. Trng., Personnel, Sales and Ac- Positions in intelligence-BA & adv. tuary Trng, For further information please call degrees in Math, Programming, Geog., Civil Service Commission, Detroit, 764-7460, General Division, Bureau of Econ., Chinese Area Stud., Lib. Sci., Mich -Primarily to inform interested Appointments, 3200 SAB. Russian Area Stud., Poll Sci., Hist., students about the many career op- Psych. (PhD only). Secretarial/Clerical portunities under the FSEE. Make ap-EMN oitmntwthreEutrNG (INEE.JRJNG PLACEMENT INTER- --for young women interested in for-p ointment w recrter area ViEWS: Make interview appointments elgn assign. Econ. Res.-all levels de- of interest: Soc. Secur.. Admin., Soc. IE SMaeitrew ponmns grees, Econ., Hist., Geog., Area Stud.. Secur. Payment Ctr.. Great Lakes Nav- at Room 128-H, West Engrg. Bldg. Phone -Econ., Hist., Military Hist. and Poll, mission and Railroad Retirement Board OCT. 2- SBe., Russ. & Chinese Area Stud., Oper. and General Civil Service recruiter. Allied Chemical Co. Anal., Math Stat. and Bus. Ad. All Ralston Purina Co., St. Louis, Mo. - Dravo Corp. level degrees. Engineers and Scientists Afternoon only. Any level, any major Hercules Powder Co. -Analysts or Project Officers for for- for Mgmt. Trng., Product., Sales & Mississippi Valley Structural Steel Co. eign scl. and tech. res. Trans. Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, C.I.A.-Continues interviewing (see Peoples Gas, Light & Coke Co. Mich.-BA & adv. degrees in Bus. Ad., Tuesday listing for further informa- Scott Paper Co. Chem. (analy., organ.) and Microbiol. tion). Standard Oil Co. of Calif. & Chevron for Biol., Zool., Mgmt. Trng. and Sec- CURRENT POSITIONS: Res. Co. retarial. Midwest Research Institute, Kansasi U.S. Govt. Federal Communications Caterpillar Tractor Co., Peoria, Ill.- iCty, Mo.-Biol. Sci.-Assoc. Bacteriol., Comm. BA in Econ.,.Engl., Journ., & Math Senior Toxicologist, Tech. Asst., Senior U.S. Navy, San Francisco Bay Naval for Advertising, For, Trade, Mgmt. Immunologist. Chem.-Organic, Appl. Shipyard. AM( '4 I De Sica's camera narrates Um- The movie begins on what ap-' pears to a be a note of political protest; a crowd of pensioners, one of whom is Umberto feebly demon- strates for a raise in allowances, and is easily dispersed by the po- lice. Umberto needs 15,000 lire to satisfy his landlady, a husky blonde who saves her compassion for the staged sentimentality of opera. He peddles his watch and books, spends a pleasant rentless week in a charity hospital, tries to cadge a loan from a friend, and even comes close to begging on the berto's hardships with gentleness in his innocence. and irony. It watches all the com. -- promises with respectability that poverty forces on the old man, and ORGAN I ZAT I ON peers at him desolately through a hole in the wall of his room made NOTICES by workmen building a new parlor for his landlady. Carlo Battisti portrays Umberto with a meek solemnity that firmly welds to- USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- gether the comic and pathetic;NOUNCEMENTS is available to officialy gethr te cmic nd athticrecognized and registered student or. halves of the character. ganizations only. Forms are availaule in Room 1011 SAB. qenterat iottces Inaugural Ceremonies for New CRLLB Center Facilities: Oct. 17, 10 a.m., Rack- ham Bldg., Harlan L. Lane, director, Center for Res. on Language & Lan- guage Behavior and A. Geoffrey Nor- Sman, vice-president for research, U-M. 11-12 noon-Open House at CRLLB Facilities, 220 E. Huron St. at 5th St. Conlference on Language and Language Behavior Agenda: Major Address I - 11:30 p.m, A. P. van Teslaar, director of education, SHAPE, Paris; director Sprachkybernetisches Forsehungszen- trum, Heidelberg, Germany. Major Ad- dress I-Oct. 18, 8:30 a.m., James J. Jenkins, director of research, Center for Res, in Human Learning, Univer- sity of Minnesota. Major Address III -Oct. 18, 1:30 p.m., John B. Carroll, professor of educational psychology, Harvard University. Full program for the three sessions that follow each major address and further information is available at CRLLB, 220 E. Huron. only one figure in the movie, occasionally splashes tears o, the lens - Umberto's mongrel dog. Each new disappointment chips * * * Graduate Outing Club, Canoeing and bicycle trip, Sun., Oct. 16, 2 p.m., Rack- ham Bldg., Huron St. entrance. * * Graduate Student Council, Business meeting, Mon., Oct. 17, 7:30 p.m., West Conference Room. Rackham Bldg. I i ,: E i Activists Change Emphasis; Turn' to Political Candidates (Continued from Page 1 unhappy about the trend. At An- groups are working there to lib- tioch College, Vice-President J. eralize school regulations. "These Dudley Dawson thinks the shift youngsters seem to think they will be a key asset to the move- have a lot of rights and no re- ment. 'r c " 1 a 4Irn t~riwrI -_ sponsibilities. ,It's annoying," says Aigner. But not all administrators are, A1cross Camputts SATURDAY, OCT.15 7 and 9 p.m.-Cinema Guild will present. Vittorio de Sica's "Um- berto " in the Architecture Aud. 8:00 p.m.-The University Play- ers will perform in Shakespeare's "Cpriolanus'' in,_ the Trueblood Aud.* 8:00 p.m.-The APA Repertory Company will perform iriPiran-° dello's "Right You Are" in the Lydia Mendelsohn Theatre.. SUNDAY, OCT. 16 2:30, and 8 p.m.-The APA Rep- ertory Company will perform in Pirandello's 'Right You Are" in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. 7 and 9 p.m.-Cinema Guild will present Vittorio de Sica's "Umber- to D" in the Architecture Aud. 'Get Things Done' "There are many people inside the political system who are sym- pathetic with the activist's goals. By working through political chan- nels the students have a greater chance of getting things done." University Vice - President for Student Affairs Richard L. Cutler praises recent student interest in low-rent housing. Last spring stu- dents organized a campaign to elect city council candidates sym- pathetic to their interests. "It was an effective idea," says Cutler. "These kids are finding that to get things done you have to have a broader power base. Hence, the shift to politics. As you moderate your group position, it's easier to find recruits," he continued. "If your goal is to assassinate the president you get few recruits. If you sit-in you get a few more. If you want to petition you get more. And if you work in a po- litical fashion you get even more. "As anti-establishment as these kids want to be," adds Cutler, "they are discovering they have to adopt some of the methods of the establishment to be effective." * * * Doctoral Examination for Roger Newrtan Student Association, Art Munson Turpening, Geology & Min- film: "Golden Coach," starring AnnaI eralogy; thesis: "A Linear Mode F11- Magnani, in color, Oct. 15, 8 p.m., ter," Sat., Oct. 15, Room 2045 Natural Newman Center, 331 Thompson. Science Bldg., at 9 a.m. Chairman, J. * * * M. DeNoyer. Folk Dance (WAA)-Folk dance, Mon.,-- Oct. 17, 8:30-10:30, WAB. Summary of Action Taken by Student * * * Government Council at Its Meeting Square Dance Club, Co-ed square October 13, 1966 dancing and organizational meeting, Approved: That the following are Oct. 15, 8-11 p.m., Women's Athletic the established dates governing the Bldg. All student and faculty mem- 1966 fall elections for the Student Gov- bers invited to attend this first dance ernent Council: and organizational meeting. Oct. 17-31-Registration and petition- * * * lug for vacancies on the Student Gov- Lutheran Student Chapel, Hill St. at ernment Council. S. Forest Ave., Sun., Oct. 16, worship Oct. 31-5 p.m. registration and peti- services at 9:30 ahd 11 a.m. Bible study tioning closes. with a short candidates led by Dr. George Mendenhall at 9:30 meeting at 5 p.m. a.m. Supper at 6 p.m. followed by pro- Nov. 1-9 a.m. campaigning opens. gram at 7 p.m.: "Contemporary Theol- Nov. 14-5 p.m. candidates' tenta--I ogy" by the Rev. David Ullery, tive expense accounts due. ia ** * Nov. 15-5 p.m, candidates, final ex- International Program Council and pense accounts due. Film Club International, Present a Nov. 16-9 a.m. to 6 p.m. election day double feature night of two interna- Approved: That SGC allocate $120 tional movies: "Father Browkn(The I to thevoter registrationcommittee Detective)" from Britain and "The for the Congressional Candidate Open Householder" from India. Both are Forum to be held Oct. 26. comedies in English, Oct. 22, 7:30 p.m., Approved: That $700 of the previous- Natural Science Aud. ly allocated $1000 for the 18-year-old * * * vote be sent to the Michigan Central Gamma Delta, Supper at 6 p.m. fo1- Committee. lowed by 6:45 p.m. program: David Approved: That John Preston, Cindy Wulff of the psychology department Sampson and Mike Dean be appointed speaking on the interplay between re- as SGC representatives to a committee ligion and psychology, Oct. 16, 1511 which will study the judiciary sys- Washtenaw, University Lutheran Chap- { tem and make recommendations for el. improvements. "HO WLINGLY FUNNY" 1 -8o~au e..ri~ r m Tun. TONIGHT LAST TIME! Shakespeare's CORIOLANUS brought to the stage by UNIVERSITY PLAYERS Trueblood Auditorium 8 P.M. A RARE THEATRICAL EXPERIENCE! toin," but you'd be surprised, Snow White GI B~U(YxrouSe Ton ight at 8:30 p.m. folk music? yes that's true 330 Maynard $1 25 per person droll? yes that's true ED & PATRICIA REYNOLDS will not perform a folk rendition of "When the Moon Comes Over the Moun- 4 0 II k "Rich and Intrigning! Seasoned by Wit!"-Detroit News "'Right You Are' Jnst Right! All of Then Fascinating." -A.A. News "Played with Distinction and Skill!"-Toledo Blade ft J - Phone 482-2056 E& tan CARPENTER ROD FREE HEATERS-OPEN 6:30 P.M. NOW SHOWING IT TEARS YOU APART WITH SUSPENSE! PRUL JULIE InEWlMAn ANDREWS "BRILLIANT" -Brendan hill. Thal f ,w MORGAN / RLJRED HITCHCOCK'S Shown 'TODR CURTI 11:25 A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHfN .r 'I in,1 *ICOLORt PETITIONING for the Board of T,: , CINEMA fgUi'D will be held on Oct. 19 from 7:30-11:30 I1 I I ALSO.. The Story of a Wild'> One ! N~?RO~JIN6 TnAYLOR BRFNPABROOKS '. CHAD EVERE T MNTROOUCNG i OO Shown at 8:40 Only_ PLUS-"SEA SPORTS OF TAHITA" 2 COLOR CARTOONS *1 A Sign up now for interview at 2538 SAB I 9 r _ ii I I1 BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND CINEMA UI STARRING Stephen Boyd, Raquel Welch, Edmond O'Brien, Donald Pleasence, Arthur O'Connell, William Redfield and Arthur Kennedy, Color by Deluxe. "TELUFRIDAY "THE BLUE MAX" DELTA GAMMA I presents I PETER SELLERS ... GEORGE C. SCOTT checky young American defies the deadly Mr. Dominion to save kinky London ingenue! PHI SIGMA DELTA AND 11 in hr. Stranielove THURSDAY-FRIDAY -SATURDAY .. A A IA ,- the,. switchedoa thrillers! i SUESSAAMNA)"R { 1. :.: t .wish to thank you for your contributions to our fund-raising drive for the AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY a I I III