liage three aI P Si C iiFCa 43atly NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 TODAY Doors Open 12:45 DIAL 8-6416 TODAY Shows at 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. Sunday, September 20, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three "EXTRAVAGANTLY F U N N Y performances by Wilder, Griffith, and especially Sutherland !" TIME MAGAZINE "WHAT A PLEASURE TO, LAUGH! The actinvg to a mat is wildly funny!" U.S. fears Marxist growth in Latin America "JUST FUNNY! JUST GREAT!" "VERY FUNNY ... lush and lavish Gene Wilder out of "The Producers" "START THE REVOLUTION WITHOUT ME" CHICAGO TRIBUNE -ICAGO SUN-TIMES " JUDITH CRIST Donald Sutherland fresh, from M*A*S*H WASHINGTON OP) - American of- ficials see the election victory of Marx- ist Salvador Allende in Chile as rais- ing the serious possibility that a major bloc of Latin American nations may come under Communist domination. Countries rhentioned as possible candidates for Communist influencc', in addition to Chile, were listed as Peru, Bolivia, and Argentina. A prominent American official gave this assessment Wednesday to a group of Midwestern publishers, editors and broadcasters at a White House-spon- sored background briefing in Chicago. Under ground rules set by the ad- ministration, the official could not be identified or quoted directly and his remarks were withheld from publication until yesterday evening. The administration official predict- ed Allende's election, barring some ex- traordinary development. If Allende wins, he said, there is a good chance he would, over a period of years, establish some sort of Commun- ist government. In that case, he went on, Communism in the hemisphere would not be con- fined to Cuba which has traditionally had but a small impact on Latin Amer- ica affairs, but would be extended to a major mainland nation. The official said a Communist Chile might be joined, for example, by al- ready divided Argentina, with which it shares a common frontier; by Peru, described as heading in directions that have been difficult to deal with; and by Bolivia, which the official said has been moving in a leftist, anti-United States direction. Anti-Communists in the hemisphere, he said, should not delude themselves that an Allende presidency would not present massive problems not only for the United States but for other hemis- phere countries. It is one of those situations, he de- clared, which is not too happy for American interests. He said the United States is keeping a close watch on de- velopments but that, at this point, its capacity to influence events in Chile is not very great. A Communist-ruled Chile, he said, would render extremely problematical the future of the Organization of American States and the Western Hemisphere Defense Board. President Nixon participated in the session but was not present when Al- lende's victory was discussed.. Although Allende did not win a popular-vote majority in the Chilean victory, he topped a slate of t h r e e candidates and is expected to be elect- ed president by his country's Congress next month. In other developments, the Inter- American Press Association charged yesterday that Communist pressures al- ready are beginning to strangle the news media. It said threats of violence and intimidation are causing sales of news- papers and radio stations, resignations of news officials and dismissal of anti- Marxist newsmen, along with upheav- als within press-related trade unions. The organization added that those practicing intimidation already h a v e gained control over all of Chile's non- government television channels. Meanwhile, is an army day message yesterday, President Eduardo Frei re- minded the armed forces that one of their main jobs is to safeguard freedom and democracy. "I am sure the armed forces will con- tinue 'to be the safeguards of the country's internal and external security, whatever the situations it will have to live through or face," the president said. Frei's words echoed the line adopted, by hisuChristian Democrat party, to make sure the armed forces stand up to any attempt by a future Allende ad- ministration to turn Chile into a Marx- ist state. ANTONIONI'S TWO ENGLISHI MASTERPIECES-THROUGH LANGUAGE TUESDAY BLOW-UP is SO STUNNING THAT YOU WANT TO SEE IT MORE THAN ONCE"-N.Y. POST 'BEST FILM OF- 19661" Notiona society of film Critics d A Corlo Pond ti odvction Antonioni's BLOW-UP: Vanessa Redgrave David Hemmings "Sarah Miles COLOR' fCOMOEO FOR CATURtAUIECES A Premier Productions Co, Inc. Releose "BLOW!UP"-Sun., 2:50, 6:30, 10:10-Mon., Tues., 9:00 only "ZABRISKIF,"-Sun., 4:40, 8:20-Mon., Tues., 7:10 only ''ANTONIONI AT HIS CREATIVE BEST!" -Cue Magazine "CHILLING! It's Embarrassing that a Foreigner Can Take a Quick Look and See What Ails Us While We } Are Still Lost in Our Fallacies." --Jon Clemens, The Record "REVOLUTIONARY! It's So Beautifully Mode, So Beautifully Constructed, and It Has Such a Powerful Ending. I Want to See it Again." -Jonas Mekas, Village Voice ANTOIONI's II'U I 111I p WM ,j<[r{ newsbriefs I By The Associated Press SEN. GEORGE McGOVERN (D-SD) said yesterday he was "thinking seriously about becoming a Democratic presidential candidate in 1972." The South Dakota dove, who made an unsuccessful bid for the Democratic nomination in 1968, said he would defer a decision until after the 1970 congressional elections. COMMUNIST GUERRILLAS opened an attack yesterday on a 2,000 man Cambodian army column preparing to resume a northward push in the government's first major offensive of the war. Radio messages from advance elements of the column said the guerrillas were attacking government forces at a point about 50 miles, north of Phnom Penh, where communist troops brought the offensive to a halt last Monday. For a second day, the press was barred from the front and news- men speculated that this was intended to keep them from witnessing intensified U.S. air strikes in support of the offensive. *.* * OPPONENTS OF PRESIDENT NIXON'S welfare reform bill are convinced they now have the votes to keep it bottled up in the Senate Finance committee. Sen. John J. Williams, (R-Del.) the senior Republican on the committee rand a foe of the bill said yesterday he strongly doubts the committee will approve the bill this session.- * * *w TWO WESTERN GROWER organizations have announced plans to fight Cesar Chavez's nationwide boycott of lettuce sold without the label of his United Farm Workers Organizing Coms- nitte. The. California Council of Growers and the Western Growers Associatioin announced a campaign Friday to convince growers and the general public that their lettuce is also union-produced under: Teamster's' union contracts. Chavez has termed the Teamsters agreement "sweetheart con- tracts" and has called for a boycott in 64 cities "until the last lettuce grower is signed." A JETLINER WAS HIJACKED to Havana yesterday by a a man who originally demanded the plane fly to Cairo so he could t help the Palestinian guerrillas. The unidentified hijacker, who said he was a Marxist and on b leave from the Marine Corps, took over the Boeing 727 carrying 90 S passengers soon after it took off from Pittsburgh on a flight to0 Boston. According to the planes pilot, John, Harkin, it was during the stopover that the crew talked the hijacker out of the flight to Cairo1 on the grounds that the plane did not have enough fuel or proper s flight charts. u ist state. collegye SAN DIEGO, Calif. (1") - The University of California's "Third College" - described by the cata- logue as a study of social prob- lems and by a state legislator as an "experiment in racism"-opens Monday with 200 underprivileged students, half from m i n o r i t y groups. A Califlornia assemblyman, John Stull, contends the courses range "from straight' Mickey Mouse to thinly veiled racism, with a smat- tering of legitimate courses thrown -Associated Press Pre-attack calm~ Palestinian guerrillas stroll past a land rover in the streets of Ramtha, yesterday, a few hours bey' fore Jordanian armed forces attacked the city. A guerrilla communique broadcast by Radio Bagh- dad subsequently claimed guerrillas had beaten off the attack. 250 PARTICIPANTS The student-run Course Mart: Making and taking your own class By DAVID EGNER Professors aren't the only ones at the University who can start courses for credit. Students scan, too. They've started Military in Modern America, Environmental Studies, Counter-Culture and six others this semester. Thanks to the Course Mart, a student-run program which began to offer courses in spring term 1969, LSA students with a faculty sponsor and a professor or grad- uate student willing to teach a enrolled in Course Mart classes ac- cording to Course Mart co-ordi- nator Scott Bass '70. Bass says there weren't enough Course Mart places this term to accommodate all interested students. He says two courses-Philosophy of Sci- ence Fiction and Photographic Expression - were "closed five minutes after registration began" September 1. Six courses are now filled, he adds. Course Mart instructors are all volunteers; Bass explains, because "we don't have any money to pay PWTH POPUM STARTS WEDNESDAY FIFTH"AVENUE AERLUIy IA HE 111DOWNTOWN ANN Anson "RIDER ON TH--AINI" 1NFORMATION 76137Q00 H n mamme UN ION-LEAGUE w +a:s::'rs:iii:r::: a :,.;.:4' GET YOUR MAN WITH A SWantAd - class can submit course proposals; teachers." to, the student-faculty Course, Mart committee for approval. If money doesn't draw instruc-. And if a course is approved both tors to teach Course Mart courses, by Course Mart and by the literary what does? college curriculum committee, it "I wanted to teach students becomes a regular college offering. about the law and how to deal About 250 students are currently with police," says Charles Aver- broo k, Law '72, who teaches Legal Rights and, Police Practices. Averbrook adds, "It will do them good if they go on to law school and even if they don't. But thef University doesn't offer any un- dergrad law courses. So I decided to." John Goodsped, '71, says that class "is a very interesting course, and the only one of its type." He says readings for the courseare "as' hard or harder", than those of other courses he has taken. Bass says he does not know how many courses will be offered by Course Mart in the Wint er term. He said students who want to start new courses should submit their proposals to the S t u d e n t Counseling Office by November 12. One problem plaguing the Course Mart is lack of publicity, Bass says. Students who want to see what, courses are being of- fered by Course Mart must go to the Student Gounseling Office be- caus? Course Mart classes are or- ganized too late to meet the dead- line for inclusion in the LS&A catalogue, Bass explains. 603 E. Liberty DIAL 5-6290 Doors Open 12:45 Others, however; disagree. The catalogue of the new college -as yet unnamed-says the aim is the ,"study and alleviation of social problems." To start, "the relevance of science to human lives":is being studied as well as "the dimensions of the urban crisis," understanding non-West- ern cultures and nations and com- munication. School officials say students can choose from four majors: science and technology, urban and rural development, Third World Studies and' communications. The school was proposed to uni- versity regents7 by faculty of the 6,000-student University of Cali- fornia at San Diego in January as a seven-year experiment to draw low-income minority students with three qualities: motivation, per- sistence and potential. Only half of the students who applied to the "Third College" were ,admitted the first year. Of those half would never have been accepted by the university 1 as t year because of course and grade requirements, says a university, spokesman. The formerly inadmissible stu- dents made it under a special UC waiver, used to bring in minority students and,# those considered economically disadvantaged. They include black athletes and music- ians regarded as assets to t h e academic community but unquali- fied 'scholastically. Ninety per cent of the f i r s t students are getting some financ- ial support, either grants of the federally and state funded Edu- cational Opportunity Program or federal loans. A school aspokes- man says at least 70 per cent of the students are from neighbor- hoods poorer than the university average. Provost Joseph Watson, 30, a black born in Harlem, has been a chemistry professor on the San Diego campus since 1966. Last year. he was the only black teach- er on campus.. Now,he says, half of the eight transfers and nine new faculty members in the new college are nonwhite. Watson isn't concerned about getting a formal name for the school. "Maybe we'll have a, name four years from now when the first class graduates and can help find the right one" he said. ~flies the 747 to Madrid cqALd~ntt9 3 NEW Plays For-YOU! 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