Page 8-Tuesday, July 29, 1980- The Michigan Daily 4 Athletes, upset by early disco closing, storm Olympic village MOSCOW (UPI) - Western athletes, angered by the early closing of the Olympic village discotheque, ram- paged through the sprawling compound early yesterday in a venting of their frustrations and boredom only eight days into the Games. Reports said some shouted "Free Afghanistan!" during the food- throwing and shouting incident, but the protest by Australians, Britons, Brazilians, French and Swedes was ap- parently aimed at the disco's 11 p.m. closing time. SOVIET POLICE intervened twice and peacefully ended the disturbance two hours after it began in the crowded second-floor disco and spread to a food hall in the closely-guarded compound where about 40 competitors tossed food. Witnesses said at one point several athletes shouted "Liberate muder, mystery, and forbidden love. and BENJI Wed ==; $1.50 ii 5:30 Afghanistan!" but Swedish Olympic sources said the chants apparently were mis-heard and were for French singer Silvie Vartan, whose name close resembles the freedom shout in Fran- ch. It was the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan that prompted the United States to lead the boycott of the Moscow Games, depriving the XXII Olympiad of hundreds of world-class athletes from 65 nations. WITNESSES SAID the most likely reason for the incident was boredom. Most athletes have been in Moscow sin- ce before the Games began July 19 and the biggest diversion at the tightly guarded Olympic village is the disco. "Many of the sports finished yester- day - swimming and some of the others - and the athletes wanted to dance," said Salvador Sobrino, a Mexican diver. "The music stopped and everyone wanted to keep dancing. "Some people were sitting on the floor and they started shouting. When I saw that, I left to my room," he said. A British athlete said, "There were plenty of people who were there who had a lot to drink when they closed the disco and wanted to carry on. It moved across to the food hall and there was some food-throwing. It was all the Western nations." In the competitions, athletes from communist countries continued to dominate, but Spain and Brazil each picked up a yachting gold medal. A Russian won thecycling individual road race. After Sunday's events, the mid-point in the two-week Games, Western athletes had won only 22 of the 113 gold medals awarded and communist-bloc nations had won 91 and 82 per cent ot the 341 gold, silver and bronze medals. The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative Presents at Aud. A: ° $1.50 TUESDAY, JULY 29 PARIS BELONGS TO US (Jacques Rivette, 1960) 7:00 AUD. A A tabor of love, this is considered by many to be the film,,that besat mta phe spitit at the French "Newt Wae. Outwardly aconventional "whodunit," it depicts a world defined by con- tusiattacttspiracyandtttissedatttnectiotns-itt *th"r wrd,themoder nworl*ld.Thsist*ehfilm that AntaitetDaitel atd hi fatmily go a o in TrufatsThe 400 thans. "Ontaoftthe citteta's nearest equivalents to Kaoka."-SIGHT AND' SOUND.InFrenchwithEnglishsubtitles. THE SPIDER'S STRATAGEM (BernardoBertolucci 1969) 9:00 AUD. A The son of a murdered anti-fascist hero wishes to inveattgatehisatather'saasaaatian. Returning aothe to'wanwherehistathet died thirty yeaat before, he finds that, strangely, thingsore not awhat theysenm. Basedonaahaorttyb JorgeLais Batges. "Poss bly Bertoltc s si plest aad atost gloaang aark. An engrasaing film. A "i"n a*ntetai t t." --J dithCst.Itaiaa aith English subtitles. Tomorrow: THE THING and ATTACK OF THE 50-FOOT WOMAN in Aud. A. Building for sale Pan American World Airways has announced it has agreed to sell the 59-story Pan Am building in midtown Manhattan to the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. for a real estate record-breaking $400-million. Miami group tries to k*l ilingual polic I MIAMI (AP) - A European im- migrant fluent in six languages has collected more than 7,000 signatures on a petition to abolish Dade County's bilingual programs and make Miami an English-speaking city again. Emmy Shafer insists she isn't anti- Cuban, but she feels the Dade County Commission's 1973 declaration making the Miami area bilingual in Spanish and English encourage Latins to ignore American ways. AS A RESULT, she said, non- Hispanics feel like "prisoners living in their own community." There are about 600,000 Latins in metropolitan Miami, about 40 per cent of the total population. Since July 15, Mrs. Shafer has organized "Citizens for Dade United" to collect signatures on petitions to outlaw use of Spanish in county gover- nment. She says she already has more than 7,000 signatures toward the 26,213 required to place the proposal on the Nov. 4 ballot. IRONICALLY, THE vote would have to be taken in both English and Spanish because Dade County is under federal order to conduct all elections in both languages. The proposal would prohibit the coun- ty from spending the $200,000 a year it now budgets to have an Office of Latin Affairs and to promote Spanish culture. Shafer also objects to requirements that applicants for many jobs speak Spanish. Many firms in Miami do a thriving business in Latin America. Eduardo Padron, a Cuban and dean of instruction at Miami Dade Com- munity College's downtown campus, said Latins would turn back the referendum. "We're here to stay," Padrom said. "We're not going away. Latin American businessmen and tourists already are concerned about an anti- Latin and anti-Cuban feeling here. These people with the petition show ignorance and a lack of understanding what Miami is all about in the 1980's." But carpet-cleaner Allen Joyce, 19, who dropped by to sign up, objected to using public money to promote Spanish. E 4