Behind the lines with Ulster's ir94 CMirian :;t Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 'niggers' 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17,;1973 Nixon's right to choose? FOLLOWING SPIRO Agnew's resigna- tion last week, Congress stood ready to guard the national trust against the nomination of John Connally or another strong 1976 Presidential contender. There was much discussion of how the nomina- tion would be handled in both houses. Senate liberals fought to have the Rules Committee expanded to increase their own leverage on the President's choice. The message was clear: Nixon was not to hiave a free hand in selecting the Vice President. When the President announced his choice for the Vice Presidential nomina- tion last Friday, a mood of relief clearly swept over Congress. Most observers agreed that a serious clash between Capi- tol Hill and the -White House had been avoided by the selection of Gerald Ford as Agnew's replacement. E ARE TOLD the Ford nomination. will clear Congress without much ado. Congressional leaders of both parties have nothing but praise for the Presi- dent's decision. Ford, after all, has a re- cord of distinguished service in the House and is generally not considered to be po- tential candidate in 1976. After a per- functory search for skeletons in the Ford closet the Michigan Congressman will be confirmed as the next Vice President of the United States. The above scenario makes it hard to believe that the nation has gone through the trauma of Watergate, with the issue of the President's complicity still unre- solved. With the shadow of Watergate and a variety .of other abuses of power still hanging over the administration, it is difficult to see why the Congress treats the Ford nomination so lightly. And how can one justify the bi-parti- san praise heaped upon the nominee, who was selected because of his unwavering support for what many believe to be the most corrupt administration in the na- tion's history? In a time of grave national doubt over his conduct in office, Nixon has given us one of the last true believers. THE QUESTION Congress should be seriously discussing is whether this President should be allowed to choose the Vice Presidential nominee, his possible successor, while the integrity of his own administration is so clearly in doubt. Some would make a case for the need for swift Congressional action to give the nation a Vice President. But, the nation can get along without a Vice President as it did for over a year following the assas- sination of John Kennedy. Haste in this matter can only serve the needs of a shaky administration at the expense of the national interest. Congressional approval of the Ford nomination at this time would give the benefit of the doubt to a President who has widened the credibility gap to a chasm. Only through waiting until char- ges regarding Presidential misconduct have been fully, explored can the Con- gress perform its constitutional role as a check on the power of the executive. By ROSE SUE BERSTEIN LENA'S HIGH CLASS Confection- ers and Tobacconist on the Falls Road in central Belfast looks at first glance vaguely like many of the other small grocery-news agency storefronts which dot the urban landscape in the British Isles. But Lena's managers to pack into its small floor space a fairly accurate representation of what life is like for the Catholic minor- ity in the six counties of Northern Ireland. On my first visit to Lena's - af- ter the customary strong tea dilut- ed with heavy cream and accomp- anied by biscuits - I met a middle aged man who took me on a tour of the neighborhood I had been warn- ed toavoid. The Falls Road area, one of several Catholic ghettos in Belfast, attracted widespread at- tention when a curfew was impos- ed upon its residents in July, 1970. The Falls, as area residents speak of it, is somewhat of a spectre. Only a few of the many storefronts which line the street actually house operative stores; the rest are abandoned shells of stores bombed out, shot up or otherwise gone out of business. The approach to the Falls starts in downtown proper, an area dis- tinguished by a multitude of barri- cades, each manned by a small cotillion of British soldiers. Castle Street downtown looks like a set from a 1930 movie about Al Ca- pone. Just outside the downtown pro- per Castle Street becomes Divis Street and then Falls Road, men- tioned in Beth Bryant's Ireland on $5 and $10 a Day as the place to go when one has an insatiable urges to witness a John Wayne type shoot out. This type of state- ment represents the glib way (NICRA), just off Castle St. in the downtown business district. Out- side, the sign reads A. L. Brown, Watchmaker,ebut upstairs is a bustling office where I met NICRA's Assistant Organizer, Madge Davison. NICRA tacitly supports the Official wing of the IRA, especially now that the lat- ter's political wing, the Repub- lican Clubs, is a recognized legal entity. Despite this recognition, only Unionist-pro-British-litera- ture is sold in the established downtown bookshops anJ news- stands, whereas the Republican News must be distributed either by local carriers or sold by Cathclic shops in the Catholic neighbor- hoods. After my briefing at NICRAX, I ambled up to the Falls Road, where I made my first visit to Lena's. As the Youth Hostel was to be my base inthe quiet areas so did Lena's become my outpost on the Falls. When Lena and her customers learned that I was an American student-journalist, they spared no effort to tell me their impressions of the troubles, to m- troduce me to others who would corroborate their reports anduto acquaint me with the neighborhood at first hand. Lena's itself had survived two shooting attacks. Lena pointed out the bullet holes and reworked win- dows as evidence, a n d asserted that the bullets came "right down from the Shankill Rd." The ma- chinist who served as my first neighborhood guide took me to sev- eral landmarks, including a Pro- testant church which now serves as a local citizens' advice office, but which had weathered fifty years in an almost entirely Catho- lic area with no physical damage. Such a fate was not shared by the A hearse explodes in Church Lane, Belfast "The Catholics are just like our coloured in New Zealand. They don't like to work. They have big families, they have noisy parties and they tend to make an awful mess." 1ptlsimlsm tm m a~ss~itgsetssagmseitsaeiis m a tspots grew increasingly suspic- ious) - I explored yet another area, the Ballymurphy housing es- tate.. Ballymurphy is known as a Provisional stronghold, .but it is also known for the high percent- age of its residents who have a son, father or a brother interned in the Long Kesh detainment camp. The day I visited was designated for sending shipments to internees, and I help carry boxes of food- stuffs and presents to the loading area. One of the women w h o helped organized these package de- liveries told me that families used to send meats and thermos bottles of tea and hot soup until this priv- ilege was curtailed recently. Outside three boys were play- ing in the backyard. Theytasked whether I were a student and where I was from and they volun- teered that they were trying to get ride of the British soldiers. I asked them how they planned to accomplishmthis goal, andthey re- plied "by throwing stones a n d shouting at them," then teased me for wearing funny shoes and pro- ceeded with their ball game. When I returned to the Falls, a crowd had gathered outside the Royal Victoria Hospital, and two Ulsterbuses blocked the Falls to traffic. Bystanders told me that a Saracen armored car - had come around a corner through a r e d light and hit one of the IRA's "Peo- ples taxis", injuring a passenger. Fearing violence, the bus drivers abandoned their buses in the mid- dle of the road and waited as the crowd gathered. A priest emerg- ed from the hospital and assured the crowd the victim would be all right, but the crowd did not dis- perse. A teen-aged youth approached me. "Want to buy a bus, r e a 1 cheap?" le snickered and walked away and I waited for something to hap- pen. After perhaps three quarters of an hour the bus drivers return- ed to drive their buses back down- town, but by the time they arrived, school had let out and the buses swarmed with schoolchildren, all of them most reluctant to cooper- ate. Soldiers streamed out of near- by Springfield Barracks, chasing after the rock hurtling students with their infamous rubber bu'let guns. Ittwas at this point that I derided to make my way back to Lena's. "Did you see what happened down by the hospital?" the folks there asked, anxious to hear my impressions. They were relieved when my impressions matzned their expectations. I finished my day with a visit to the Citizens' Defense Committee, a legal aid group. There I had yet another cup of tea and another cupcake while I watched eight and nine year old girls drop off let- ters for delivery to their fathers at Long Kesh, heard that alb the patrons at a small Catholic bar had been arrested for no appar- ent reason and then released, and talked with Tony Conlon, a volun- teer CDC worker. He outlined the work CDC goes - essentially it aids prisoners and their families - and argued with another volunteer about their tactics. I flinched -s a parade of Saracens rolled down the Falls, and Tony suggested I should return to the hostel. First, though, we had to return to Lena's. Tony was curious when I said I had to stop by to visit a friend but he was satisfied whep my friend turned out to be Lana. He and Lena compared notes (an what to show me next and then sent me off toward the downtown in a People's Taxi. They and the taxi driver all agreed that I should not walk back to the hostel as I Answer needed on wiretaps ' THILE THE Vice Presidency has recent- ly become the focus of the public eye, Watergate and the aura of paranoia which it justifiably stimulated has almost dropped out of sight. With the sensational revelations of high Presidential aides no longer forthcoming, television networks have suspended their daily coverage of the Senate Watergate hearings. Even the President's continued refusal to release his taped conversations has become something of a dead issue. Yet, the report Monday of Supreme Court Justice William Douglas that the court's conference room was bugged raises once again the questions of surveillance and wiretapping which were never re- solved, even after the Watergate disclo- sures. The 1970 Huston plan for political sur- veillance, which included such measures as eavesdropping, burglary and opening mail, raised a storm when it was first re- 'vealed last spring - but we have heard little about it or the general issue of sur- veillance since that time. TODAY'S STAFF: News: ban Biddle, Della DiPietro, Eugene Robinson, Steven Selbst, Rolfe Tessem Editorial Page: Zachary Schiller, Eric Schoch, Chuck Wilbur Arts Page: Elizabeth Coulis, Jeff Sorensen Photo Technician: Terry McCarthy EVEN AS Douglas reported on the al- leged Supreme Court bugging, the Government decided to drop its case against 15 Weatherpersons rather than reveal how it obtained its information against them. It is hard not to believe the contention of the group's lawyers that the Govern- ment dropped the case because a hearing would have disclosed illegal acts such as burglary, wiretaps and mail searches to obtain evidence. As if to confirm suspicions of the ex- istence of widespread surveillance for po- litical purposes, the New York Times re- ported Monday that a "national security" wiretap placed on a staff member of the National Security Council was retained long after he had left the Government to work for the Muskie campaign. THE IDEA THAT "national security" wiretaps are legitimate if used to dis- cover news leaks is a highly dubious one to begin with; it is a practice upon which virtually no limitation can be placed, since only the President can determine what "national security" it. The question of surveillance, raised once again by these recent reports of wiretaps and other Governmental prying, has never received an answer despite the hubbub which erupts each time a new in- cident occurs. It is time that an answer be found. many tourists and residents of Ire- land pass over the troubles as nothing more than nuisance to be avoided by judicious choosing of the proper neighborhoods to visit and avoid. For example, at the Belfast Youth Hostel, which is safely nest- led for away from the "trouble spots," the wardens and local high school students who congregate there advise visiting hostelers on various sights to see and those to avoid. Heading the latter list is the infamous Falls Road area along with its "Prod" counterparts, the Shankill Road and Sandy Row. It was somewhat anxiously, then, that I set off to talk with some of the citizens of Belfast. I stopped first at the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association Catholic churches included in our tour. From Lena's I resumed my solo walking tour and waited until school let out so that I could witness the expected gang fight- ing between the Protestant a r d Catholic youngsters. Such legend- ary fighting never broke out in my presence. It undoubtedly does not occur near the schools them- selves because of the de facto se- gregation under which the Catholic students attend subsidized paro- chial schools and the Protestants attend state-run schools. On my second day of wanderng through the "problem" areas - against the advice of the hostel warden (one day was presumably excusable as a curiosity nait be- yond that one's visits to trouble The next day, the. New Zealand- er again engaged me in conversa- tion, and I kept having flashbacks to my talks with the people along the Falls. "I can see why you're upset about the troubles," he said. "But you don't understand them, being of your type." I wasn't sure what he meant by that, until he went on to tell me "the Jews are an industrious lot, like the Protest- ants here." I hoped I was turn- ing green in front of his face, but I knew I wasn't and if I had he would not have noticed, so intent was he on finishing his simpiified guide to the Irish question. "If there are ten people working together one will take over a' the boss, it's just human nature. And here he'll be a Protestant because they're better workers and hust- lers. Now if you give a Catholic five quid he'll go off to the pob instead of trying to increase it. I turned away momentarily and remembered my tour guide along the Falls. "I work in a skilled job," - he was some type of ma- chinist - "and the Protestants in the easier jobs have been earn- ing more than I. This isn't a relig- ions war, It's political. They have the better homes and the better jobs and they want to keep them." And my friend in Lena's came to mind, too. "You don't see any of those" - he motioned toward a passing Saracen - "up where you live, do you? You know why? Because w're the coloureds of Ire- land." he proclaimed. I passed through downtown Bel- fast once more, watched as Little-, wood's, one of the large British department stores, was evacuat- ed for a bomb scare, had my per- son and my purse checked by sev- eral sets of soldiers, surveyed the barbed wire barricades, remem- bered that only Hitler's govern- ment shared with the Ulster re- gimei the right to intern women in this century. I thought about South African President Vorster's remark that he would trade in, apartheid for one Special Powers act, and then I set off for Dublin. On the way, I passed ,a poster leftover from lastesummer's elec- tions. "Keep Ulster in your safe!t hands, Vote Unionist. Vanguard." I looked down at the box of candy Lena had given me for the long ,ride ahead. Smiling on the cover was the name "Something Spec- ial." I smiled back, and the lorry trudged slowly toward the South. Rose Sue Berstein is a former edi- tor of The Daily. Letters to The Daily should be mailed to the Editorial Di- rector or delivered to Mary Rafferty in the Student Pub- lications business office in the Michigan Daily building. Letters should be typed, double-spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Direc- tors reserve the right to edit all letters submitted. had planned. Very few people walking around in the gloomy Belfast dusk except soldiers and intrepid natives. I had heard stories about the British soldiers with blackened faces - the residents call them Ulster mummers - who whisper t )air- ;; tain their secrecy, but I had nto desire to meet one myself. 44 'Back at the hostel the warden e and his wife finally told me their opinion of the troubles, although I had intuitively estimated their feelings from earlier comments they had made. They find the Falls area "depressing" and "boring" and couldn'tunderstand why a foreigner wvould w a nt to v i s i t there. A visitor from New Zealand fin- ally articulated what the natives would not say. He was a fifty-ish businessman slumming it in the hostel, ostensibly in Belfast on a business trip although he told me he had been born just outside the city. The problem, he said, "is that the Catholics are just like our coloureds in New Zealand. They don't like to work. They have big. families, they have noisy parties, C~tea CLSand they tend to make an awful '. ea gas mess. That's what the problem is." Moral symbol for WAN" 'S L' E A44i Wig Lk :S .1 x 1 tJ Y Y " s /r Ulster children ,run from Spiro Agneu By BOB SEIDENSTEIN SPIRO, OF COURSE you did not do anything wrong. Oh we believe you Spiro. We believe you. Shame on your accusers! You would never act to lessen our faith in you. Dishonesty? No, you were not dishonest. You just did things for people. You were helping peo- ple. Isn't that what public service is all about? And if you can not help others, well then the only person left to help is ... But forgive me Spiro, I digress. Just because you did favors for people is no reason for you to be punished. And what a punishment. My heart goes out to you. It is far too strict. Why, just to think that in this country of due process the press could conspire to destroy you and prevent your morality from becoming the law of the land. Will the press stop at nothing? AS YOU HAVE said so many times, the law is for the protection of society. We have no place nation national prominence was soon to occur. From county executive to governor of the state known for its crabs. The future was bright, so why risk it by even the faintest appearance of mal- feasance? You would never do that, even if your ethics permitted it. BESIDES, A GIFT is just that. They gave you things because they liked you and your warmth and truly touching human concern. They loved you Spiro, they really did. Those bridges and roads had to be built. Public convenience and safety depended on it. So, with your typical courage and with the aid of the contractors, you acted. The people were grateful. Politics is a high calling in life. Many shrink from their responsibilities, but not you. You called a spade a spade. You knew a ghetto when you saw it. You knew and were outraged to think that welfare recipients, people who should have been thankful to their government and its institutions,