Saturday, June 24, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Job outlook improves for college graduates BETHLEHEM, Pa. (A) - Things are a little rosier for today's college grads, with hiring reported up for the first time in three years, the College Placement Council reports. But despite the job improvement - a six per cent increase over a year ago with teachers omitted from the survey - employment prospects were described as still "mighty tight" by the council. Positions remain down from 1969 when available jobs were nearly twice as plentiful. Based on the number hired, the council said college students found the greatest number of openings in merchandising; federal, state and local governments; public accounting; and chemicals and drugs. The council, a non-profit group that provides services to col- leges and employers for students' career planning 'and placement, said the June results bore out predictions of its December re- search - that graduates would A s i s t "slightly better than last yea'r's find employment opportunities class." Employers told the council they are hiring, or plan to hire, 13 per cent more with master's degrees and 25 per cent more with doctrates.,o b s t "From the standpoint of qual- m b site sty this year is probably the best we've ever had," said one SYDNEY, Australia (4) - employer. . Australians opposing the up- cellege placement directors, coming Frencsh nuclear tests also assessing the student ap- said yesterday they would drop plicants, told the council t h is a speedboat, liferafts and para- year's class "showed more chutists into the target area in awareness of the reality of the an effort to discourage the depressed job market." French from proceeding with "However, some pointed out the blasts, that liberal arts students are Four Sydney parachutists generally lacking in knowledge said they planned to leave for about the world of work and the the area south of Tahiti this process of becoming a part of weekend. No date has been an- it," the council added, nounced for the tests, but the "The survey covered posi- French warned all ships and tions available in employing or- planes to stay out of the area ganizations in business, indus- from last Monday on. try, government and nonprofit The leader of the Australian organizations, but did not in- jumpers, Gordon Mutch, said: elude teaching positions in edu- "We definitely have one air- cational institutions," the coun- craft and all the supplies, equip- cil said in a statement. ment and parachutes we need. "Overall, the 782 employers It's all go now. There's noth- in the current study reported ing that can stop us." 47,600 hired compared with 45,- Mutch said his group planned, 000 last year. This still falls to stay at the South Pacific far short of the 70,000 figure for test sit about a month, on the 1970 reported in a similar study theory that the French wouldn't a year ago." proceed with the blasts Page Nine this NeeK91(ftD $1.50PII V. UTAH PHILLPS Capitol snurroun(Ied. Anti-war protestors hold hands around the Capitol Bldg. Thurs- day in Washington. The purpose of the gathering was to request that Congress cut off funds for the Vietnam war. UnityversityReformed Church 1001 E. HURON at Fletcher 10:30 a.m. - WORSHIP Sermon: "God's Ten Commands" Speaker: Rev. Paul Swets G the golden voice of the Great Southwest 1411 Kill STREET Daily Classifieds Bring Results The Fifth Forum Presents: Ann Arbor Cinematheque INTERNATIONAL DIRECTOR'S FESTIVAL NO. 2 ENDS SATURDAY - 3 films for the price of one! (FRANCE) MAX OPHLI'S "LOLA MONTES" with Peter Ustinov, Uskor Werner "The greatest film of all time." -Andrew Sarris Village Voice "One of the loveliest, subtlest, most elegant and haunting movie eyefuls ever devised." -N.Y. Times (FRANCE) ORSON WELLES' "THE IMMORTAL STORY" based on a story by sot Dinesen music by Erik Satie starring-Orson Welles; Jeanne Moreau "WONDERFUL" --Newsweek 'Masterpiece ... Welles back at the very top of his form" --Sight and Sounc (MEXICO) LUIS BUNUEL'S "SIMON OF THE DESERT" with Silvia Pinal (star of "VIRIDIANA") "A masterpiece! W i t h o u t doubt, the sharpest and wit- tiest Bunuel." - Judith Crist N.Y. Magazine "Bunuel at his best and most original."---Kael, New Yorker SAT.-Lola, 1:40; Simon, 3:30 --Story, 4:15; Lola, 5:15 -Simon 7:05; Story 7:55 -Lola, 9:00; Simon, 10:55; Story, 11:40 DIAL 8-6416 r.AT. FRIDAY at 7-9 p. - SAT. and SUN. at 1 -3-5-7-9 p-m. International Shakespeare Cinema Festival SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY The Dick Says: Akira Kurosawa's "THRONE OF BLOOD" with Toshiro Mifune THRONE OF BLOOD is the most acclaimed of Kurosawa's ver- sions of Western literary and dramatic classics adapted to Jap- anese settings (the others are THE LOWER DEPTHS and THE IDIOT). This action-packed version of Shakespeare's MACBETH is set in 16th century Japan during the Sengoku civil wars. As in Kurosawa's other period films, he goes beyond the normal limits of the genre, betraying neither Shakespeare nor the Japanese milieu in which the play is set. Kurosawa's "Macbeth", as play- ed by Torshiro Mifune, is no ordinary villian, "too full of the milk of human kindness." Instead, he is seen as a simple soldier, as physical as his horse, full of exuberance and fire. His "Lady Macbeth" is played by- Isuzu Yamada, the fiendish landlady of THE LOWER DEPTHS. Masaru Sato's music is a creative blend of classic Noh music and Western musical forms. "No doubt about it now: Japan's Akira Kurosawa must be num- bered with Sergei Eisenstein and D. W. Griffith among the su- preme creators of cinema .. (THRONE OF BLOOD) is a nearve-shattering spectacle of physical and metaphysical vio- lence, quite the most brilliant and original attempt ever made to put Shakespeare in pictures . . . Toshiro Mifune (the star of both RASHOMON and SEVEN SAMURAI) . . . is surely the most prodigiously cinematic actor since Doug Fairbanks . . The structure of the film is stark but never static: Kurosawa impels his drama with demonic drive. From its first frenzied episode of plunging stallions and roaring knights, the film hurtles doom- ward lie a gr at bloc oulde flung fro a catapult. The spectator scarcely has time to realize, as the images deafen and the noises decorate his imagination, that he is experiencing effects of cinema seldo matchedineir headlong masculine power of imagination." --Time MAURICE EVANS JUDITH ANDERSON indeGEORGESCHAEFER1 a ofW11TAM SHAKESPARE'S .. 4m SUN.:MACBETH 2:00, 5:35, 9:10 Throne-3:50, 7:25 MON. MACBETH-7:10 Throne - :00 TUES. Throne - 7:15 MACBETH 9:00 WED.: Charlie Chaplin IN "CITY LIGHTS" HEAR LABYRINTH on the Diag SATURDAY-8:00 p.m. I