f f f" f A NINA :Aug. 29-30, THE SEVENTH SEAL. dir Ingmar Berg- r * man, 1956. With Max Von Sydow and Bibi Andersson * :Aig. 31-Sept. 1 ,;SUNSET BOULEVARD. dir. Billy Wil-: f der, 1950. With Erich Von Stroheim, Gloria Swanson, , * Win. Holden, H-edda Hopper, Cecil B. DeMille, Jack f Webb.f b 3 If'Y... -: .:- EPTEMBER== 4* FREE Wednesday Showing * STRIKE. dir. Sergei: I Eisenstein 1925. The only Eisenstein feature not f * shown in Anan Arbor. Plus THUNDER OVER MEXICO : *- -ctfrom Eisenstein's rushes of Que Viva Mexico. *, 5 and 6--A TIME IN THE SUGN. dir.,Sergei Eisenstein. ;, r The, second film from footage of the unfinished Que: * Viva Mexico. Though these rarefy .seen films lack the : * editing of Eisenstein, the briliance of this man and g= his 'crew is unnmistakable: Long short: "Esenstein" * a biographica[= study. ' 7 and 8--THE SEVEN SAMURAI. di. #Ikura Kurosawa* f 1954.f 2 2n 13-'KING AND COUNTRY. dir. Joseph Losey,: 1964. With Dirk Eogarde and Tom Coutenay.u If a*nd 15--IL GRIDO. dir. Michelangelo Antonioni, , i 7 952.r 4 17. and 18-"SIXTH ANN ARBOR FILM FESTIVAL - * WINNERS AND HIGHLIGHTS. Home from tour-the' *, world's fines retrospective showing of recent indepen-% * i dent films.f 1 *1' andl 20-SIBERIAN LADY MACBETH. dir. Andre * 21 and 22- HAMLET. dir. A. Kozintsev. (Russian ver- * : sion). Agreed-"the. mst successful film of Shakes- peare yet to be made."' ; 25, 26 and 27-OEDIPUS REX. 'in Greek.z I28 and,29-.:THE FUGITIVE KIND. dir. Sidney Lumet, r+ ' 1960. With Marlon Brndo and Anna Magnani. s U '2*FRE -OCTOBER- . 2*FREEWednesday Showing * Special multi-film r .* program from Museum of Modern Art-THE COM- ING OF SOUND. With the first shots on film of . .Mickey Mouse and scenes from The Jazz Singer.; 3 3 and 4-L.A TERRA TREMA. dir. Luchino Visconti. ,. 5 and6-PATHS-OF GLORY. dir. Stanley Kubrick, 19- * 57. With 'Savio Montagali, Kirk Douglas and Adolphe f * Menjou.: 510 and 11--BED AND SOFA. dir. Abram Room, 1929.u *12 and 13--LOS OVIDADOS. dir. Luis Bunuel, 1950. { * * FESTIVAL WEEK OF D. W. GRIFFITH * r 14-GRIFFITH SHORTS *15-BIRTH OF A NATION. 1915. ' -16--HEARTS OF THE WORLD., 1921.".fI :17--BROKEN BLOSSOMS. 1919. I Y4' t 8-W'tAY DOWN EAST. 1920.{ :1- 4?TPLERAbJI. 1916. D-= 1+.-S'T LIFE WONDERFUL. 1924. ..4 and- 25--ARSENAL.. dir. A. Dovshenko, '1929. (Si- f t tet). "the most telling shaft cinema has ever direct- u * ed against war," *26 and 27-A NOUS LA LIBERTE. dir. Rene Clair. 1931. g * * THREE FOR HALLOWEEN * *30- * DEAD OF NIGHT. English, 1946. With Mi- I } chael Redgrave. *30 and Nov. 1-*FORBIDDEN PLANET. dir. Fred Wit- ' : cox, 1 956.~ Color.,"The best of the science-fiction in- ' l trselo productions of the 1950s." w fI '2 .NOVEMBER- .and 3--* WOMAN OF THE DUNES. dir. Hiroshi * Teshigahcara, 1963.# #,7 and 8-THE THIRD MAN. dir. Carol Reed, 1949. ;. Story by: Graham Greene. With Orson Welles, Joseph* * Cotten and Trevor Howard. *9 and TO-.-VIVRE SA' VIE. dir.k.Jean-Luc Godard. An : * old story-from the spokesman of the Pepsi Gen- I * eration and the greatest living filmmaker. A prosti-.. *.tute (Anna Karmna) sells her body but not her soul. ;1 I13- * FREE Wednesday Showing* Trio of Classic * documentaries. * THE LAND. dir. Rt. Flaherty, 1941. LAND WITH- ; OUT BREAD. dir. Luis Bunuel, 1932. SONG OF U r CEYLON. prod. John Grierson. 14 and 15--MAHANAGAR (The Great City). dir. Sat- * yahis Ray, 1963. Bengali with U.S. subtitles. S16 and 17--BIKE BOY. dir. Andy Warhol, 1967. Star- * ring Ann Arbor's Anne Wehrer.I *21 and 22--BALLAD OF A SOLDIER. dir. Grigori Chuk-; * hart, 1959. *23 and 24--OPERATION ABOLITION. House Commit- * tee on Un-American Activities' film on Dirty com-* mies and OPERATION CORRECTION. The ACLU's * answer.i r N 5ad6--MOROCCO. dir, Jos, Von Sternberg, 1930. r With Marlene Dietrich. :7 and 8--EAST OF EDEN. dir. Elia Kazan, 1954. Traub- M * ,led youth-with James Dean, Julie Harris, Raymond; Massey." *12 and 13--GOS WEST YOUNG MAN. dir. Henry Hath-' * away, 1936. With Mae West.r *14 and 15--THE LAVENDER HILL MOB. dir. Chas. U Crichton, 1951. Starring Alec Guiness and Stanley: * Holloway-robbing 'a mint., r I 7:00 and 9:05--Thursday through Sunday (some Wednesdays); THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, Augjust 27, 1968 SalaiesOBLIGATION TO GBROW;. I ow hghcan b4d et ercetHf hisfl' ga-rl 3,0ht U u g t(Continued from Page 1) jiected, the Ur uate nrollent.of students wa I and law students are most vul- tough451 ls a (Continued from Page 1) nerable under present laws, but ofb3,54hisd tep I Nnslay tes schaseqip Vice President for Academic Af- beidte , rnent and supplies w ere given the fairs Allan F. Smith suspects the predictions ha A~tcL ~gan pioritySecon year raduae stuentisti7,0cb. b ! ~lowest prior ity for increases in draft quotas may not be as large vreatic. the new budget. Despite rising as originally predicted. Nvrhls costs for many goods and services Smith further predicts that the. gaionrsito sril ~purchased by, the University, most tuition hike, also forced by bud- "Even if ni A A. A&-departmental operating budgets get cuts is not likely to affect established, e in nonsalary areas will be held at enrollment. versity must s. I the 1967-68 level, according to a "I don't know at what pointfoth ned The University will share $211,- it never has previously," the, vice equipped to gri y 298 with Wayne State University president explains. ers," he contin for a joint Institute of Gerontol- Meanwhile, the undergraduate At the b, ogy, and $200.00 for a joint com- enrollment, while fairly stable, is Smith tites su, O FFICE HO RSter network with Wayne and posing a serious problem for ad- ern, Western. Michigan State University. missions officers. A jump in the emn as exhibit The $200,000. for the computer number of college-bound "high tial for growtl netorkwil no berelase, hw-school seniors, which began in sity. " ever, unless the institutions raise 1964, has hit undergraduate units, "We have o -8II sourJIIJ4~.~. achig fuds.rm te particularly the literary college. the graduate a sources.once the predictions have been el," Smith exj The , higher education bill allo- made admissions officers face the If the gradt Compla ints-9- 11:30 s ates a total of $251 million to far greater, problem of adjusting creases, the 60 (~ff. state colleges and universities, $8 the ideal (based on the number graduate ratio Off~ice Hours-- 4.ilo less than recommended by of students who want to attend ^50 split. the University). to the real. In, fact, c MichganStae Unverityre- The literary college announced schools and th+ ceived $62.3 million which was the last winter it intended to s~ut' tion services s second highest appropriation of freshmen enrollment 'because of immediate pot, Cl s ii d 6 - 5 7the 11 state supported, schools crme aiiisadinufcet "fagau C a s f d- 6 0 57and colleges. The figure is $8irme aiite n nufcin fagau Cal btef1GnA1 2.301andt230million less than MSU requested. ois freshmen. Nb 1 However, the admissions office n i was "too well along the road" on FOR F UN AND E admitting new students to be able Uisp~lay-/ 4-055~4' to cut any. I PROFIT- A compromise was reached and dIJ. LSA agreed to keep freshman en- Office Hours- 12:3 0-4 rollment ,at the 1967 level of 2970 (Continu Read and U/se applicants as long as 180 fewer leaders, anxd w transfer applicants were admitted. ed by the Re I Daily Classifieds The 'School of Architecture ',nd Council to ma i Design followed suit,. putting a tions for all mx ___________________________________________________freeze on new enrollment and yersity commu. raising admissions standards. es students, f -'-^--^--'- --- -----Admission to the University .has istrators. ° become steadily more selective as The bylaws (the number of qualified applicants'judiciary systE climbs. This irritates state legis- dents at least, lators who feel this institution .patterned a te: NTALshold ccet al qalifed ppl- A thir ul fcants. gents had two The decisions to cut or stabil- hoc committee ize enrollment are a turnabout they also had from the University's stance out- Fleming reorg EE s rF~v ce lined in 1963 and 1966 enrollment of Student A: projection reports. written this b: In 1966, the University viewed of the Regent pe m nh nd d li e "the obligation to grow as being it large portii plitical. social, economic and blw Call 1mrTheTestdn Tet report coupled that state- suThstnio mntwh the prediction that by,' of this bylaw E~I T ~ C LI~ ~ L 71 (1975, the state's universities and would constitt 1IJAC TV REi~NTAFLS) U662-5671 colleges would be flooded with of policies wi 150,000 more students than they been abandon ha ndled in that year. for some, they ________________In 1968, the 1963 report pro- Jections to its _____ of the bylaw1 *only days befo: ;.. .., - _ s enrollmeut go.* uiversity would en-'tionly ten students, it can handle tdents. The number'! a 50 per cent growth without as predicted to swell staff and space changes," the' vice 975. r president says: st fall's, enrollment IL Even the uncertain draft sit- agging only slightly 4uation is not expected to relieve. io ections, the 111963 yve been judged un- sSmith says, the! ll realizes" its obli- 1wT. iew universities are every existing uni- still grow to provide 3of the state., some schools. are 'ow faster than oth- nues. Baccalaureate level, ach schools as East- Central and North- ting greater poten- ti than the Univer-' )ther obligations at and professional 1ev- plains.I [ate enrollment' in- 0:40 undergraduate- Dmay become a 50- only the graduate .e continuing educa- seem to exhibit any tential for growth. ate program now has _ _ _ __ the pressure on the graduate schools to expand. The number of graduate school applications is up this year and many estimates show only one out of six appli- cants is available for the draft. +M Despite their shortcomings and on the basis Nbf their merits, Smith says projections will continue to be .made. A program of "controlled growth"' would prove satisfactory to the state, while realistically recognizing the financial limita- - tions imposed on this institution. The Federal Office of Educa- tion ten-year growth projections wants predictions of student body size and student-faculty ratios. The State Board of Education, conceived almost four years ago, "is starting to develop demo- # graphic projections of the kind we're all interested in," says Smith. Furthermore, it is expected the Arthur Ross, new vice president for state relations and planining, will concentrate on re-evaluation of, enrollment projections and long ' range planning. .w controversy' lusions students ued from Page i) vill set up, if accept- egents, a. University ake conduct regula- iembers of the Uni- unity--which includ- faculty and amn a m r-will also set up a ,m which, for stu- twill apparently be er JJC. ly meeting the Re- bylaws from the ad' e before them-and one from President ganizing the Office Jfairs. Fleming had aylaw at the request its and had left in ions of the present ts and faculty had bjections to passage v:they felt . that it ;te a reaffirmation, hick had, de facto, ied. More important Y had procedural ob- spassage. The draft had been completed are the July 'Regents' student and faculty that they had not 7the document and nendations., exceptionally obj ec- nany who felt that ation was fallig back mctice of railroading rough without giving niversity community ,ce in its content. committee to _draft is formed after what many feel was an instance of an attempt at just {that practice. Administration drafted bylaws w'hich supposedly would have en- acted 'the recommendations of the the Hatcher Commission (which were quite pro-student) but which were actually at variance with them in a number of impor- tant points. f .Although most students-and fa-, culty members were quite' happy with the results of the July Re-, gents meeting-the ,end of driving restrictions, rescinding' the OSA's disciplinary, power and deferring action on the bylaws--the Regents are still .treading thin ice.I They seem to be perhaps a bit naive about the mistrust and frus- tration harbored, by most student leaders. One Regent. expressed 'be- wilderment at the detailed fashion in which the ad hoc committeec was submitting recommendations. He asked them to; just submit statements of ,principle, adding "we can take care of the Wording" The students aren't ready to trust the Regents with anything, even' if it is as seemingly unim- portant as a choice of words:, they've been burned before. At their September or October meeting the Regents will, act on the recommendations of 'the ad hoc committee. The way they handle these recommendations will determine- to a great extent whether twor years of relative peace on campus will continue or whether Ann, Arbor will. be the scene of yet another student re- bellion. meeting ands leaders felt tI time to study make recomi This was e, tionable to mx the administra- into an old pma leigslation thrl the entire Un. any efective vo The ad hoc the bylaws was NEW TUITION LEVELS Following are the University's new annual tuition levels: " Increase over 1968-69 last year )ERGRADUATE (Michigan residents) $ 480 $ 60 DERGRADUATE (out-of-state) Si1,540 ! $240, kDUATE (residents) $ 540' $ 80 &DUATE (out-of -state) $1,648 $248 UND UND GRA GU) LAW, (residents) LAW (out-of-state) MEDICAL, DENTAL. AND PUBLIC HEALTH SCHOOLS (residents) FEDICAL, DENTAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH SCHOOLS (out-of-state) S 680 $1,740 $ 960 $2,240 $240 $ 60 $240 "The Hour Of The Wolf" is the hour between night and dawn. It is the hour when most people die, when sleep is deepest, when nightmares are most real. It is the hour when the sleepless are haunted by their deepest fear, when ghosts and demons are most powerful. "The Hour Of The Wolf" is also the hour when most children are born. ~:. ., .' ........ .. ... ... t'.. CINEMtA II Popular movies from all periods and in experimental films' Show every Friday and Saturday night mm mm m - mm mm - mm m mm mm - - - m mm m mm, rirrCLI P-OUT-'COUPON "m mm - - mm mm - m - mm m - mm m mm - mm - mmm m mmm As a welcomeing gesture to new students and a "thank you" to returning students for their :wonderful patronage in the past ; _____________we offer this: 4I m A