THE MICHIGAN DAILY Malin Predicts Rights Action Two Freshmen Admit Forgery of ID Cards STUDIES 'HEADS OR TAILS': Prof. Edwards Analyzes 'Gamblin become more a component of man- agement, citizen participation and control of governmental operations has almost inevitably degenerat- ed." Keeping governmental support out of religion and reducing cen- sorship in television and radio are two other frontiers which Malin predicted would play a large part in civil liberties fights. Examine Wire-Tapping Wire-tapping and other mech- anical means for catching crimin- als which are used by the police are areas which are due to be examined in the 1960's under the due process clause of the 14th Amendment, he said. "We would, however, be in a lot better standing with the po- lice, even though we oppose wire tapping, if we would support oth- er methods used by them which do not threaten the procedural rights." A last general idea which Mal- in examined was that dealing with "retained rights" of the people. This area includes the military, commerce and police powers which will tend to encroach upon the rights of civilians. Complex Grows "The military-industry com- plex which has become powerful because it has a powerful adver- sary, should not cramp the neces- sities which are important in oth- er segments of society. come a garrison state, we'll have to see to it that the military does not operate recklessly at the price of citizen rights." William Geis. '64, and Thomas Keating, '64, fined Tuesday in Municipal Court on charges of being disorderly, admitted enter- ing the South Quadrangle Library and using the duplicating machine there to make false identification cards. The students and Glen Russell of Dearborn were arrested early Tuesday morning after they were seen drinking on city streets. Geis and Keating told officers that they entered the library through a window on Jan. 11 at 3 a.m. and forged identification cards. Both students refused to com- ment on the incident. They pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct and were fined $35 each by the Municiuap Court. Russell, also pleading guilty, was fined $35 by the court for furnishing intoxicants to minors. Engineers Elect Council Officers The Engineering Council has re- elected Frederick Hornbacher, '61E, president and elected Curtis Fischmach, '63E, vice-president; Thomas DeJonghe, '62E, corres- ponding secretary; John Stark, '61E, recording secretary and Da- vid Seitz, '62E, treasurer. The council is composed of one member from each of the engi- neering societies of the engineer- ing college and ten members from ,the college at large. Ann Arbor police have reported many complaints from local mer- chants about the invalidity of identification cards used by Uni- versity students.' List Countries Band Will Visit The State Department has an- nounced the 10 countries on the itinerary of the University Sym- phony Band, which will go' on tour under the sponsorship of the President's special international program for cultural presenta- tions. The bands is expected to per- form in the Soviet Union, Poland, Bulgaria, Greece, Turkey, Iran, Syria, Lebanon, Rumania and Egypt. The band, first such college unit to make this type of trip, is ex- pected to spend about two months in Russia, after which it will ap- pear at an international trade fair in Cairo for four days. By HARRY PERLSTADT If a coin landed "heads" seven times in a row, could you predict on which side it would land after the next flip? If you predicted "tails" because you think the probability of tails is higher, you are falling into what is called the gambler's fallacy, Prof. Ward Edwards of the psy- chology department explained yes- terday,. Actually the odds remain 50-50. Prof. Edwards is currently do- ing a study of binary prediction in which the subject is to make a choice between two alternatives when the outcome is unknown. Instead of calling heads or tails, the subject could have been re- quired to predict which of the two light bulbs would flash on. The lights would have been fixed so that the left one would flash 70 per cent of the time although the occurrence of the flashes would be at random. Use Poker Chips In the present experiment, how- ever, one group was asked to pre- dict the color of a poker chip drawn out of a bookbag filled with red and blue chips. A second group was asked to predict the color of the chips which they were told had been previously arranged, and a third group was asked to make. color predictions after being told that the test administrators would purposely try to fool them. He found that the subjects be- haved the same during the experi- ment regardless of what they had been told they were doing, but that the subjects who had money at stake did bette'r' than those who were paid by the hour. Fallacy Prevails Prof. Edwards said that the gambler's fallacy was prevalent in the beginning of the 1,000 predic- tions each subject made in the light bulb experiment. As the test wore on, the fallacy of predicting the right light after the left light had flashed several times in a row was supplanted by an opposite fallacy of predicting the left light after it had flashed severa in a row. The present experiment, is supported by the Air For fice of Scientific Researc the Institute for Scienc Technology, will gather in tjon on how people make de and aid in the developmr systems which will allow pe perform most efficiently. To Semninar Toy On Employmen Prof. Lee Danielson of I dustrial Relations departn the School of Business Ad tration will lead a semin "Fundamentals of Moderi ployment and Selective Mi at 8:30 a.m. today in the Mi Union. PAID ADVERTISEMENT I C AF E P ROM ET HE AN . .. 508 E. Wi l liam Gigantic FINAL-RAMA TWO BIG 90-MINUTE SHOWS Fri. and Sat. Nite 8:30 & 10:30 P.M. featuring FOLK SINGERS AL YOUNG & MIKE SHERKER plus ANDY ANDERSON at the piano Reservations phone NO 2-6362 or NO 8-9661 Door charge 75c per person ROYAL SADLER'S BA E TWELES Special Engagement TODAY ONLY - - ~ atlastIn brilliant ootar and on the speotaole screen ... the Incomparable! MAROT FONTEYN dancesITHE RO YACL BALLET SWAN LAKE, Aet II music by Pletr Tchalkovsk THE FIREBIRo Mlusio by gor Stravinsky ONDINE 4 Mast b Hans Werner Henze Filmed in EASTMAN COLOR Continuous Shows DIALNO 8-6416 1 olS oc r t presents.7 THURSDAY and FRIDAY "Les Enfants Terribles" SATURDAY and SUNDAY "The Prince and The Showgirl" NOTE: By special request, we are extending our F season.. Next week, Thursday and Friday, January 26tha 27th, we shall show LILLI, starring Leslie Caron and 2 Ferrar; and on Saturday and Sunday, January 28th and 29 Paul Muni as Zola and JosephSchildkraut as Dreyfus Academy Award winning THE LIFE OF EMILE ZOLA. I A STARTS TODAY TWO OUTSTANDING ENCORE HITS! . ~ * ~ ~3 EN~ 4U EDMUND PIRIOfM * Jeui-uI sI4 a..* 0112NEMASCOPE in COLOR .1fMRILo, ALSO VAN JOHNSON 0 I "B IN "BRIGADOON" The Student Prince at 2:45, 6:20, and 9:55 11 "Brigadoon" at 1:00, 4:35, and 8:10 EXTRA WEEK BY SPECIAL REQUEST Sat., Sun., Jan. 28-29 Thurs., Fri., January 26-27 "L LII William Dietere's (Color) "TH E LIFE OF with LESLIE CARON, MEL FERRER, EMILE ZOLA" JEAN-PIERRE AUMONT ACADEMY AWARD with PAUL MUNI, GLORIA HOLDEN, Short: Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome" JOSEPH SCH I LDKRAUT Age d'Or Award, Brussels Film Festival 1958 ACADEMY AWARD - Best film of the year ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50 CENTS S.G.C. CinemarjuId TONIGHT and Tomorrow at 7 and 9 SATURDAY and SUNDAY at 7 and 9 JEAN COCTEAU'S THE PRINCE M A T a. T RAIRI PRN E 4 METRO- GOLDWYN-MAYER presents A EUTERPE PRODUCTION Once each year, during Easter school vacation, ta million kidkcelebrate the Rites of Spring and migrate to the land of the Beach Party, the 17 Beer Bust and agame known as boy-girl-Bingo. At this time, local residents s unite in prayer, chaperones . i run for their ives and .'policemen turn in their badges.- ere the Boys Are" is the larious story of how four made out on their vacation-and why YOU have every right to a few grey hairs. < So muster your courage, Sparents,and see "Where the Boys Are' You might as7 well know what you've long suspected. And you deserve a good laughI One of the most original and versatile talents of our time, Jean Cocteau, began his rise to fame as a 21-year-old whose counsels impressed the Diaghilev Circle for whom he composed several ballet sce- narios. Indeed, of Parade, the best known of these, with mu- sic by Satie and costumes and sets by Picasso, Lifar has writ- ten that Cocteau was the true choreographer rather than the then inexperienced Massine. Simultaneously, Cocteau was promoting the group of youth- ful composers known as Les Six, who reacted against im- pressionist vagueness, and in his "Le Coq et I'Harlequin" formulated their creed with aphoristic brilliance. Plays, stories, and librettos flowed off his pen. He illustrated his own and others' books. Such a var- ied and propulsive esthetic re- sponse indicated that sooner or later the temptation to work in the cinema would be irresis- table. The special situation in France with its cine-clubs and cineastes, provided the audi- ence at whom Coctau was aim- ing his first film, the haunting and difficult Blood of a Poet. It did not make its way else- where-apart from the Fifth Avenue Playhouse. Cocteau did not make an- other film until twelve years later. While France was occu- pied, he made L'Eternal Retour which was not uninfluenced by its expected "Nordic" public. After the war, Cocteau was re- sponsible for the creation of a spate of films: Beauty and the Beast, a masterpiece of mood and decor; the enigmatic Or- pheus; Ruy Blas; Les Parents Terribles; The Eagle with Two Heads; and the film we shall be showing this Thursday and Fri- day, Les Enfants Terribles. From the standpoint of con- tent, these films have nothing in common, but each is shaped by the style of the creator, a blend of romantic feeling disci- plined by dry irony. The ingre- dients are there in varying pro- portions, from the effulgent Ruy Blas to the astringent Par- ents Terribles. Asan artist, working in leisure and with no extra-human doctrines to set forth, Cocteau has stamped these films with his own image. His is a personality caught be- tween decay and affirmation. He is fascinated by contrasts and rescued by his sense of polarity between two impossible voids. In prose, Cocteau is of necessity aphoristic. There are those who feel that his film creations are his most expand- ed and most important work. Les Enfants Terribles-rather weirdly Englished as The Strange Ones - recounts the story of a brother and sister rangement Bach made from a B minor concerto for 4 violins to an A minor for four claviers, which are here heard on four pianos. Whether you love ok hate your brothers and sisters -or have none - the film is compelling but not instructive. In The Prince and The Show- girl, our feature Saturday and Sunday, Sir Laurence Olivier, again producing, directing, and acting, again plays the Prince but this time to Marilyn Mon- roe's Ofeelya. Incongruous? Well, it is difficult to imagine "Oh Gosh!" being delivered "trippingly on the _tongue." Miss Monroe says this is pre- cisely why the movie is so fas- cinating: "I know I would go to see a movie starring Sir Laurence Olivier and Marilyn Monroe ... the casting is so- how do you say it-incongru- ous." Commenting on the fact that MGM had wanted to do the film with Charles Boyer and Grace Kelly as its stars, Miss Monroe adds "I thought of do- ing it myself, but only if .I could play opposite somebody really incongruous, someone like Larry. I mean, there'ssuch a difference in our! back-' grounds." Though it'is not Miss Mon- roe's background which usually draws attention, she got her wish and we, consequently, have a colorfulsophisticated farce on royal intrigue - political and amorous. The story, which is taken from Terence Rattigan's London hit "The Sleepless Prince," involves the Regent of a mythical state (Olivier) who is in London for George V's coronation. Arrogant, mon- ocles and with a pinch of lech- ery in his royal makeup, the Prince arranges to have an American chorus girl brought to his rooms for a midnight snack. But the feather-brained and stout-hearted girl who ar- rives falls in love with him and even attempts to heal the poli- tical breach between the Re- gent and his teen-age son who wants a motorcycle and a gen- eral election. In the last few years, Miss Monroe has become the center of a minor controversy. On one side, there are those who feel she possesses a fine comic tal- ent, and on the other, those who feel her comic abilities are overrated. However, Sir Lau- rence Olivier said "Her per- formance turned out quite a surprise to me . . . She sur- passed everything I asked of her. She is a very good actress and fun to work with."Indeed, it also appears that under Sir Laurence's graceful and witty direction Miss Monroe was able to substitute skill for silhouette starring DOLORES HART - GEORGE HAMILTON\ YVETTE MIMIEUX - JIM HUTTON RARRARA NiCHOIS PAULA PRENJISS II