IHA presents £~ante t~apie Saturday, Oct. 4 - 8:30 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM TICKETS: $2.00 -$2.50-$3.00 on sofe at SAB Sept. 29 - Oct. 3 Mail Orders and Block Ticket Requests (Sept. 22- Oct. 1) I HA Concert, 1511 Student Activities Bldg. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor A FESTIVAL OF GERMAN EXPRESSIONIST FILMS Sept. 29-FREE-SIEGFRIED'S DEATH KIEMHELD'S REVENGE dir. Fritz Lang (1924 Sept. 30-FREE-7:00-THE STREET dir. Karl Grune (1923) 9:05-NOSFERATU (DRACULA dir. F. W. Murnau (1922) Oct. 1-DOUBLE FEATURE of Fritz Long 7:00-DESTINY 9:05-DR. MABUSE, THE GAMBLER Oct. 2-VARIETY dir. E. A. Dupont (1925) starring Emil Jannings Oct. 3-GOLEM dir. Paul Wegenerr 1920) -parable of a man with power to createlife Oct. 4-THE CABINET OF DR'CALIGARI dir. Robert Wiener (1920-The Original Oct. 5-THE CAT AND THE CANARY dir. Paul Leni ( l 927 "THEY NEVER END!" 6628871 ARCHITECTURE 75c (or free) AUDITORIUM the news today by The Associated Pres and College Press Service BOLIVIA'S NEW MILITARY REGIME broke its silence yesterday about the fate of deposed civilian President Luis Adolfo Siles Salinas, saying he was granted safe passage to Chile. Information Minister Alberto Bailey announced Siles flew to the Chilean town of Arica from La Paz aboard a Bolivian air force plane yesterday afternoon. Siles was accompanied by the bishop of La Paz and the former minister of public health, Jorge Rojas Tardio. The only remaining major question in the new regime of Gen- eral Alfredo Ovando is what will happen to the Bolivian subsidiary of Gulf Oil Corporation. One of the government's first moves was to overturn the Boliv- ian petroleum code of 1955 under which Gulf Oil had come to Bolivia on a multimillion-dollar program of oil and gas exploration. There have been repeated demands by leftist groups for nation- alization of Bolivian Gulf, but Ovando said that whether the firm would actually be nationalized "will be studied later on." THE HOUSE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE, in a sudden shift of position, will open hearing Tuesday on President Nixon's proposal for basic reform of the draft law, it was announced yesterday. Chairman L. Mendel Rivers. (D-SC) had previously talked of beginning hearings later this autumn. Rivers' action is a victory for Nixon and Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird who have been pressing for draft reform since May, when Nixon first sent his proposal for a lottery system to Con- gress. In urging draft reform the administration has cited reduced manpower needs and desire to remove inequities, but it also hopes that changes will help quiet college antiwar protests. NIXON ADMINISTRATION OFFICIALS expect a speedup in withdrawal of U.S. troops from South Vietnam next year but without any fined time schedule or target date for a pullout of all American forces, it was learned yesterday. South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu said at a news conference yesterday he is not looking for replacement of all the Americans by the end of next year, and U.S. officials said they expect President Nixon will strive to meet Thieu's requirements for arms and equipment to support South Vietnamese forces. At his news conference Friday, Nixon rejected proposals to impose a deadline with the argument that they would make it hard- er to achieve an early, negotiated settlement. But his -advisors have hinted he is facing a conflict between diplomatic and domestic{ political aspects of his troop withdrawal plan. MEXICAN LABOR AND PROFESSIONAL GROUPS an- nounced yesterday they will march next week to, protest the U.S. crackdown on drug smuggling from Mexico. "Becaus: of Operation Intercept our border cities are turning into ghost towns," said Jose Escalante, a director of the Revolutionary Labor Federation. "If this situation continues thousands of good people will be badly hurt." Escalante said demonstrations will be held next week in three border tows--Tijuana. Tecate, and Mexicali. The days for th marches have not been set yet. Antiwar effort to escalate WASHINGTON (A') -- Some antiwar leaders said yesterday the lull in protest activity is about over, promising massive action unless President Nixon guarantees speedy withdrawal of all U.S. troops from Vietnam. "People have been waiting to see what Nixon was going to do," said David Hawk, co-director of the Vietnam Moratorium Committee. "Now, we're going to start it up again." At a news conference, leaders of the committee announced plans for a nation- wide chain of demonstrations as the first step in a "broad-based political organizing campaign." Hawk said the project, which started as primarily a campus activity, now is aimed at reaching the larger community in cities across the country. Activities Oct. 15 will include, Hawk said, classroom boycotts, a number of mass ral- lies, candlelight p~arades, memorial services in churches, and ceremonies for reading the rolls of those killed in Vietnam. The protesters plan also to canvass local communities with leaflets and door-to-door recruiting. "There will be a continuing effort after Oct. 15," said Sam Brown, another co- director of the committee and former cam- p~aign aide of Sen. Eugene McCarthy. "We view this as a long-term effort," Brown said. "We intend to build a move- ment that would make it imperative that the United States withdraw from Viet- nam." Nixon took note of the coming demon- stration in his Friday news conference but said "under no circumstances will I be affected whatever by it." Hawk said Nixon's announcement that. 35,000 additional men will be withdrawn from Vietnam and suspension of the No- MIfritigan vember'and December draft. calls are in- adequate. "Unless the Nixon administration makes a genuine commitment to the withdrawal of all American forces-unless he departs from the policies that led the country down the road to disaster, this fall will witness the largest, most broad-based and sus- tained movement forthe immediate with- drawal of all United States forces from Vietnam that this country has ever seen," Hawk said. Brown said Nixon's statement Friday that he would not be influ$fced by opposition on campuses "is the kind of rigid stand which contributed so much to the bitter- ness of debate during the last days of the Johnson administration." The committee also ran an advertise- ment in the Sunday edition of the New York Times carrying endorsements from a number of well known persons of the plan- ned Oct. 15 activities. Da3iti %#k~oufI roiit Page Sunday, September 28, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Czechs oust anti - Soviets JUMBOY' I F M-M-m-m-m, yummie! A giant hamburger of % lb. U.S. Govt. pure beef topped with let- tuce, tomato, movonnaise ,onions oickles and ketchup. Order Your Subscription Today 764-0558 Cernik heads new cabinet PRAGUE i? -- Czechoslo- vakia's r ul i n g Communist party swallowed its 1968 state- ments condemning the SO- viet invasion a n d reshuffled the federal government yes- terday in the first stage of a deep purge of party and state officials left over f r o m the Alexander Dubcek reform era. T h e party Central Committee ended shortly before dawn a two- day session of probing into the past. Several hours later Premier Oldrich Cernik's federal cabinet resigned in response to party or- ders. Cernik himself survived the purge and was asked by President Ludvik Svoboda to form a new cabinet, his third since April 1968. Cernik's new cabinet was an- nounced last night. The Czecho- slovak Communist. party has re- turned power to several old-line Communists prominent before 1968 and moved to tighten central control over the new Czech and Slovak state governments. Czech State Premier Stanislav Razl, a moderate, will be replaced in the next few days by Party Sec- retary Josef Kempny, a rising conservative star, the sources add- ed. Under a plan disclosed Satur- day night, Kempny and Slovak Premier Peter Colotka also will become deputy federal premiers. Kempny was also one of a doz- en new conservatives reportedly added to the Central Committee to replace some 15 ousted liberals. Another newcomer was said to be Pavel Auersperg, one-time secre- tary to Stalinist President Anton- in Novotny. Novotny's minister of culture, Karel Hoffman. .was reported chosen as the new minister of post and communications, replacing Milan Smolka. Hoffman has been accused of cutting Czechoslovak radio off the air in August 1968 just as it was announcing the Soviet invasion. ISTEwRS I West of Arborland ~-Associatted Press 10ippinii a Iwccze An American visitor finds shopping easy in the border town of Tijuana. Crowds of U.S. customers have virtually disappeared at all towns on the Mexican border since Operation Intercept began. Catholc Protestant factions clash in streets of Belfast BELFAST, Northern Ireland 0iP Angry Catholics, who took down Hier use of CS gas in Belfast an -Gunfire crackled in the streets their street barricades earlier this Londonderry stirred loud civilia of Belfast before dawn Sunday,. month after guarantees of pro- protests. firebombers set two Roman Cath- tection by the British army, be- Truckloads of British troop olic homes ablaze and a Catholic gan building a new barrier in the moved in to reinforce soldiersi mob attacked a police station. trouble zone. They shouted for the Catholic district and the soun I e itroops to gard the nehborhood Can this marriage last? GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe d an cps in nd Mon., Sept. 29 Noon Luncheon 25c Discussion of Prof. Platt's "What We Must Do" (Series: "The Future") TUES., SEPT. 30 NOON LUNCHEON PROF. RAYMOND TANTER, Dept. of Political Science: "Influence of Foreign Aid in Latin America" 25c F our persons were wounded. British troops put up barbed wire barricades which hampered firemen trying to reach the flam- ing houses. Police reported three youths were wounded in a clash between Catholics and Protestants, and another 15-year-old boy was hit in the leg by a bullet fired by "unknown persons." The first street clash occurred just after midnight when Protes- tant and Catholic crowds faced each other on Sackville Street. Troops inthe mgidle were hit by flying stones and bottles. To drive back the threatening crowds, t!e soldiers fired one can- nister of CS gas-a potent mix- ture of smoke and tear gas. Ear- of gunfire clattered in the; streets. Army reports said the trouble flared when firebombers secretly crossed the Belfast "peace line"' manned by British troops, and set the houses ablaze with bottles of gasoline. Catholics and Protes- tants gathered at opposite ends of Sackville Street and stones began to fly. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 Meeting of Student Religious Liberals Barbecue Supper at 7 P.M. TONIGHT AT 8:00 P.M. PREMIERE TUESDAY! "EXCITING ~r r ._,,, "ALL FIRST RATE" 20th Century-Fox presents RICHARD BURTON REXHARRISON in the Stanley Donen Production "STAIRCASE" a sad gay story P, . "TAIEY DONEN- i. byCHARLES DYER 8 d uoy , p y N t~DUY MORL -PANAVISION"COLOR[by eLu x R DOUBLE FEATURE EA C ELLLENT1II -Detroit Free Press Toledo Blade SEPTEMBER 30-OCTOBER 12 IA7WlcTh cyaicM6' "FUN AND GAME' TAUGHT !" IS MOTHER NEVER -Guarino, Daily News / Sept. 16-Sept. 28, 1969 Irresistibly fascinating . .." Ann Arbor News SH AKESPEA RE'S RICHARD EASTON Directed by John Houseman - , plus PLAY" by -amelBecet 4- 6uy ataa d C~ eodtr I ;.