TOYING WITH TECHNOLOGY See Editorial Page Y 41P A6F ~Iat PATCHY High-85 Low-62 Fairly cloudy; continuing warm Vol. LXXIX, No. 67-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, August 16, 1969 Ten Cents Four Pages TWO MORE KILLED: ' Volence continues summer in V. Ireland capital BELFAST, Northern Ireland (R) - Sniper fire claimed the first British army casualty in Northern Ireland's religious violence and new rioting flared early today in several parts of Belfast despite the p r e s e n c e of bayonet-toting troops. "The area of disturbance has extended: Police and the military are fully engaged," said a police spokesman. "There is sniping from' rooftops, rioting and sizeable crowds in part of the city." The Defense Ministry in London said a British soldier was wounded by a sniper's bullet, but that the wound was not serious and he re- turned to his post. At 3 a.m. today, after 17 hours of savage street fighting, police reported two dead and 224 wounded, 62 by gunshot. This brings the toll since Monday to seven dead and 416 injured. "Stay off the streets if you want to stay alive," warned a Belfast newspaper. enrollment drops 1,000 Enrollment for the summer half term dropped sharply, this year over the comparable period last year, the University reported yesterday. Summer half enrollment stands at 12,745-about 1,000 fewer than last year. The bulk of the decline came in the graduate school where enrollment decreased by about 900 -- from 4j666 last year to 3,757 this year. Officials in the Office of Academic Affairs said the de- cline probably indicates that some students who might have begun or continued graduate study in other years are now either in military service or in draft-exempt occupations. Under a 1967 revision of the' draft law, most students entering graduate school after, a -Associated Press To trustee or not 1o . .. -Associa' ROMAN CATHOLIC PIPERS stride past the burned out s the Protestant Orange Hall in Londonderry, Northern Ir Days of religious rioting have brought in British soldiers to order. The casualty toll since Monday is seven dead and 416 in SEARCH COMMITTEE: Four nominated for SU pres iden By PAT MAHONEY British troops rolled into the ted Presspredominantly Roman Catholic tedPrssFalls Road district and erected hell of barricades between warring Prot- reland. estants and Catholics shortly be- restore fore nightfall. But sniping and ijured. unrest continued there and spread to other parts of the city. Automatic rifle fire crackled through the Sankil, Crumlin Road and Hooker Road districts. Police returned shots from snipers hid- den behind barricades of rubble and furniture and on rooftops. Several bars were set alight and one was razed by flames. Stores in the York Road area near the, city center were damaged and there were reports of looting. At 1.55 a.m.. army headquarters in Belfast reported the Falls Road The Mayo Foundation's two most distinguished trustees, Chief Justice Warren Burger and former President Lyndon Johnson, discuss whether Burger should continue in the $2,000, four-day-a-year job. Dr. Dwight Wilbur, former president of the American Medical Association, looks on. Burger de- cided to keep the position, despite recent opposition to judges holding such posts. The trustees were meeting yesterday in Rochester, Minn. CANADA BARS PASSAGE: 0 Two poison, gas trains m _oving troughstates A trainloa from a shor ously across day, headed be converted Meanwhi phosgene ga Special To The Daily and predominanltly athollcs Divis ments Rock EAST LANSING - The search for a new president of Stre a cordone y he making its Michigan State University has been narrowed down to four a spokesman added: "There is a plant in Ge candidates by a special student-faculty selection committee. hell of a lot of banging and fires!hour. Its ro Although committee members would not comment on their re- and everything going on outside sissippi on I port to the MSU board of Trustees, sources yesterday indicated that there." The eastb three likely candidates are Dr. Paul A. Miller, former provost of MSU In Crumlin Road, where Cath- Canada earli and now president of the Rochester Institute of Technology; James olic houses face Protestant homes to let the tr Miller, president of Western Michigan University; and former Michi- across the rubble-stewn roadway, shore of Lak gan governor G. Mennen Williams, considered the front runner for from machine guns as they drove a northwest the job. silhouetted against flames from rail routes a Early reports yesterday indicated that Acting President Walter burning buildings. port, N.Y. Adams was also on the list, but an unidentified member of the se- lection committee yesterday told the State News, the MSU student e"s newspaper, that Adams was not one of the four candidates. A d m1111 s tratio 1 The committee member also denied other reports that DurwardI Varner, former MSU vice president now chancellor of Oakland Uni- versity, was one of the candidates. Both Adams and Varner have said repeatedly they are not inter- secret troop pac ested in succceeding John Hannah, who left MSU to become director of the Agency for International Development. Varner has asked the committee to withdraw his name from con- trASHINGTON (a) - Adminis- (D-Idaho), afi sideration, and Adams once told reporters he did not want the post tration sources have acknowledged partment refu because "administration is not my bag." Adams is an economics pro- a secret 1964 military agreement of the agreeS fessor at MSU. Thailand that would place U.S. tions Commit MSU board chairman Don Stevens said yesterday that the trustees troops under Thai command if Stalking ou will soon begin interviewing the candidates. He added that it has been put into effect. session, Chur a month since the candidates were interviewed by the selection com- But they contend this could be "Rumor has i 'nittee and that they may no longer be interested. If that is the case, done only if the U.S. government only contem Stevens said, the committee will be asked to submit more names. decided, through Constitutional American tro Although Stevens said he hopes the board will name the new processes, that such a move would ment that w president in mid-September, another trustee, Kenneth Thompson be in the national interest. them under T (R-East Lansing) admitted yesterday that much work remains to be troops fighting in Asia under for- gress, but thi done and said he could not predict when the new president would be eign command was raised public- have a right named. ly this week by Sen. Frank Church know it now,' ANN ARBOR FISH MARKET By The Associated Press d of World War I poison gas, barred t route through Canada, rolled cauti- the northern United States yester- for a New York factory where it will d into peaceful use. le, another shipment of the liquified as, sold from the Defense Depart- y Mountain' Arsenal in Colorado, was way uneventfully toward a plastics ismar. La., at a cautious 30 miles an ute was through Tennessee and Mis- 1 Illinois Central and Rock Island lines. ound shipment was refused entry into er in the day when authorities refused ain take a short cut along the north 9 ke Erie. After standing three hours at Indiana siding, the train changed 1 end headed for its destination at Lock- a cnowl ed t wi 1 Thail As it rumbled along, a brief controversy swirled over its routing through Ohio. A spokesman for the railroad that took over in Indiana, the Baltimore & Ohio, said the train would have to be cleared at the Ravenna, Ohio, ordnance plant before final delivery. However, the plan was abandoned and the B&O later announced the army and the U.S. Depart- ment of Transportation had requested the train be sent on.! The original announcement, declaring there' were- serious questions about the delivery of the train, said: "the cars pose no threat in their pres- ent c6ndition while standing at the Ravenna ordnance plant and will be moved under all pos- sible safeguards when the B&O is given further instructions for the handling of this train." But the later statement, apparently released before the train arrived at the ordnance plant, said: "In compliance with requests py the Army and the Department of Transportation, the Balti- - more & Ohio Railroad has can-; celed its plan to hold the special AS train at the Ravenna, Ohio, ord- nance plant and will proceed with- out delay to Buffalo, N.Y., where it will be turned over to the Erie- and Lackawana Railroad." Railroad spokesmen would not elaborate , passage of the amendments' were no longer eligible for II-S student deferments. The num- ber of such students has dou- bled over last year. Graduate school officials could not be reached for comment last night. Students enrolled in classes of- fered by the literary college-both undergraduates and graduate stu- dents-number 3,233, down from last year's 3,989. Part of the difference is attrib- utable to, the general decline in graduate enrollment. In addition, 277 students are enrolled in the newly established library science school. Last year these students were counted in the literary col- lege totals. Enrollment in the architecture college is placed at 153, down from last year's 159. The dental school has 27 student technicians, down from 30 last year. 'Enrollment in the education school dropped sharply - from 1,962 last year to 1,818 this year. The number of students in the business administration school. was set at 201. Last year the school enrolled 597 in the sum- mer half term-251 degree candi- dates and 346 participants in special postgraduate conferences. The conferences this year were held in the spring half term. The engineering college has 584 degree candidates , and 1,126 par- ticipants in postgraduate courses at the Chrysler Center. Last year's figures were 670 and 970. In the Law School, there are 236 students, up from last year's 186. In the Medical School, there are 1,137, up from 1,128. Music School enrollment is 557, down from 684. I Enrollment in the natural re- sources school is 93, down from 97. Enrollment in the nursing school is 584, up from 559. Eighteen are enrolled in the pharmacy college, down from 22 last year. There are, 1269 in the public health school, down from 285, and 198 in the so- cial work school, down from 202. There are 197 graduate students enrolled in inter-college programs, up from 181 last year NY draft board hit y vandals NEW YORK ti -- Vandals broke into a Queens Selective Service headquarters e a r 1 y yesterday and ransacked files and dumped draft records on the floor. It was the third such raid in the city in six weeks. The police said they did not know the extent of damage or how anyone gained entry to the offices. Left behind at t h e Jamaica, Queens, draft headquarters was a note pinned to an American flag, signed "O'utraged Citizens." Police did not reveal the con- tents of a typewritten note. It was learned that the message indicat- ed the intruders were the same ones who vandalized a Bronx Se- lective Service office Aug. 3. Dam- age there was slight and opera- tions were not hampered. The Queens note said the raid- ers would reveal their identities later in Washington and New York. The Queens center on the top floor of a two-story building houses records of six local draft boards in that county. About an hour after dawn, The Associated Press received a tip on the Queens raid by a young man who refused to give his name. He said over the telephone: "All the I-A files were disrupted. They were torn up and paint was poured on them." The anonymous caller said he was not a member of the raiding party, which he described as "a group of outraged Americans who; just came together." Last July 1, a group of women vandalized a Manhattan draft headquarters, scattering files of 13 local boards and leaving behind an anti-Vietnam war leaflet. Two days later, six women were arrested at an antidraft demon- stration in Rockefeller Center af- ter the Defense De- used to bring a copy nent to a closed ses- enate Foreign Rela- tee. at of the committee ch told the Senate: t that the plans not plate the use of ops, but an arrange- ould actually place Thai command. true, not only Con- te American people to know it - and "he said. Cockles By LETICIA CRUNLEY Food Editor In Dublin if you wanted some fish, all you had to do was hail Molly Malone wheeling her wheel barrow through those dark and narrow streets. And in Ann Arbor, all you have to do is zip down to Detroit St. and see the Calverts. Although no songs have been written yet about Don and Boy- deen Calvert, they're rivaling Miss Malone's trade at their three-year old Ann Arbor Fish Market. "It's just something I wanted to do," says Don about his deci- sion to open the business. "I've been interested in fish for a long time and the market is some- thing we think the town need- ed." The most recent market be- fore the Calvert's closed about mussels - aliiiive oh! Lt. Gen. Richard Stilwell, who Tnn signed the agreement for the The two shipments, totaling 300 United States and w a s one of tons, touched off controversy. three Pentagon representatives to Prominent among the critics was appear before the committee, re- a state governor. fused to comment on Church's Gov. Robert Ray of Iowa, whose statement. state was crossed by the New' Secretary of Defense Melvin R. York-bound train, said he would Laird has said members of t h e i complain directly to the White committee could see the agree- House. ment if they would come to the Ray said neither he nor any Pentagon. state agencies were notified the The agreement was signed ac- train was coming and "an accident cording to administration sources, on this train could have been dis- to reassure a worried Thai gov- astrous . . . I think I know why ernment that the United States they tried to keep it a secret. They would respond under Southeast didn't want any objections." Asia Treaty Organization commit- _-- ments if Thailand were threaten ed by Communist Pathet Lao and North Vietnamese troops f r o in neighboring Laos. The main feature of the agree- : -1< ment is that U.S. troops could be committed to help Thai forces stop Communist troops in Laos }- before they reached Thailand, the sources said. Under the plan, the over-all Al- lied command would be exercised by Field Marshal Thanom Kit- tikachorn, prime minister of Thai land. Stilwell, chief of the U.S. I ' military assistance command in! Thailand when the agreement was drawn, was to serve as ground forces commander, the sources ! said. Should Red China launch a gen- eral offensive in Southeast Asia, according to the sources, Gen. Wil- liam Westmoreland - then U.S. commander in South Vietnam - I was to become Allied field force; commander for Southeast Asia. The sources argued that the k . agreement does not broaden the U.S. commitment in Thailand bey- ond that already in the SEATO are 592 students, up from 578, and ter they tore up what they said at Flint there are 533, up from were draft records stolen from the 475. Manhattan headquarters. I On the Dearborn campus, there crab, whitefish, salmon, trout, sole, red snapper, oysters, clams, squid, an occasional turtle and many fish you've never heard of. The lobsters are flown in straight from Maine, Don says. Many ocean fish come direct from Boston or from Seattle and Western Oregon, depending on what fish it is. And some are picked up at a central seafood pool in Detroit. Although things were some- what slow in the opening months of business, Don says now that business is picking up the "peo- ple are becoming interested in eating fish again," he main- tains. And many of them are in- terested in buying it down on Detroit St. In the nearly 31 , years the Calverts have been in business they have acquired a. considerable list of- regulars. ma_:::; ., ; . ; r.z .;: 0