A; A BRITISH army marksman stands ready yesterday in Belfast, Northern Ireland as tinned. Gun battles raged through the night in the city. S}Nine illed as fighing rage s in N. Ireland BELFAST s-- British troops and Irish guerrillas firing rockets battled across Belfast yesterday in some of the heaviest fighting the city has seen. Nine persons were killed including a woman, four soldiers and four civilian men. These deaths brought the three-year toll in Ulster to over 435. Six of the victims died before dawn and a civilian man and a soldier were killed yesterday afternoon in a gun battle. The woman was killed by crossfire between troops and snipers while she stood in the doorway of her home in the Springfield Road district. In London, the Ministry of De- fense annaouned it was sending abstansial ncmbsa" of addi-ro tional armored vehicles to North- ern Ireland. The British amy, abandoning its low profile policy of the past three months, stormedtheDivisto Street housing development, half a mile from Belfast's city center, searching for arms and gunmen govtst liarh Irish Repsublican Army (IRA). Troops stayed posted on the development's roofs and bal- sniping con- conies to flush out snipers. La Prof Roger Cramton has Mre tan 700 troops on the Nixon as assitait attorney gen- owestern outskirts of the city foaght a night-long battle with eral in charge of the Justice gunmen operating from the Ro- Department's Office of Legal man Catholic area of a modern Counsel. (OLC). housing development. The nomination, announced The army claimed 35 gunmen b 'were hit in battles throughout Belfast. is subject to confirmation by In London. Defense Secretary the Senate. The post was for- Lord Carrington told Parliament merly held by William Rehn- the situation was one of the ut- quist, now a Supreme Court most gravity. "One can only hope that the people of North- justice. ern Ireland themselves realize As head of the OLC. Cramton Page Three how near they are to disaster," would render legal opinions to he added. the President on constitutional ...... .........i........... ..., William Whitelaw, Britain's ad- issues relating to powers of the ministrator for the province, told the House of Commons that3,000 executive branch of government. rounds were fired at troops from The nomination is the second the Divis Street complex. time that a University law pro- dRockt launchers have also fessor has been selected for a teu been used in the area by terior- high legal post in the Nixon ad- ists foi the fleet lime" he said. Declaring this increased the risk ministration. Law Prof. Thomas of damage and casualties, White. Kauper was named assistant law annonced he had ordered attorney general in charge of the army to 'control the areas the antitrust division last from which the attacks were month. ors, was asked launched." l allegedly ask In Dublin, Prime Minister Jack Cramton. an expert in ad- nd. she said, Lynch charged the IRA is "cold- ministrative law and conflict of rders 'from the ly, calculatingly and deliberate- laws, has been a faculty mem- ly" trying to drive Northern Ir- ber since 1961. uld not be land "into fullscale civil war. nent. In one of his strongest state- Before coming to the Univer- ments to the parliament, he re- sity Cramton was assistant pro- n's traffic fine jected the claim of the IRA that fessor and assistant dean of the $35 cash bond It was carrying foward th University of Chicago Law test the ticket, 1916-1921 battle for independ- give up with- ence. The IRA, he continued, will School. He is a 1950 graduate of enforce their get "no support, resources or Harvard College and received unfair and ii- sympathy from anybody in the his law degree from the Univer- ll. republic." sity of Chicago in 1955, 'Saturday, July 15, 1972 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN News Pho ie: 764-0552 THOMASSEN NAMED: Judge's bond policy contes in suit filed by law student By LORIN LABARDEE David Cahill, a University law student, has filed suit against District Court Judge Pieter Thomassen in regard to Thomassen's policy on jury trials and posting bond in traf- fic and misdemeanor cases. Cahill, in -one part of the suit, contends that Thomassen is not allowing persons arrested on traffic and misdemeanor charges to post the usual 10 per cent or $10 bond as stipulated by state law. According to the suit Thom- assen is demanding that indi- viduals deposit the full bond amount or appear before him to contest the policy. Cahill said that bond in some cases may go as high as $150. Karen Chapin, a cashier at the clerk's office, was mention- ed in the suit. Chapin allegedly informed Cahill that he would have to deposit the full bond with her office, when he was arrested for making an illegal turn. Sophie Carras, a clerk in the criminal division and one of Chapin's supervis why her personne for the full bo "Those are the o judge." Thomassen cc reached for coms "When a persoi is only $16 but a is required to con people naturally out being able to rights. This is u legal," says Cahit Foreign students helped by International Center By BARBARA BIALICK A foreign student probably finds the University lifestyle of jeans and Gino's bewildering when he first arrives. The In- ternational Center (IC) tries to make the transition to Ameri- can life a little easier for stran- gers in a strange land. The IC staff is experienced and capable in handling prob- lems that may arise with visas and immigration. They also act as a clearing house for housing information. A unique program sponsored by the center is an "intensive three-day orientation to Amer- ican culture with an emphasis on life in Ann Arbor," accord- ing to a newsletter. The orientation handbook pro- vides such potentially useful in- formation as how aggressive to be on approaching a person for a date, what it means to "cut" a class, and other significant aspects of daily life at the Uni- versity. The program will be held on the Concordia College campus from Sept. 1-3. The emphasis, according to coordinator Bob Alexander, will be on small, in- formal discussion groups. Some of the topics discussed will be cultural adjustment, aca- demics, social issues and atti- tudes. The IC's International Neigh- bors, and the Volunteers for International Hospitality also aid foreign students. The volunteers conduct shop- ping tours, informal coffee ses- sions and discussion groups. The IC also provides guides called "professional friends' ." These volunteers donate as much time as they desire to help foreign students get througi trying times. Persons interested in becom- ing orientation leaders are in- vited to attend the committee meetings on Thursdays at 4:30 at the IC, 603 E. Madison. Group leaders are required to attend sessions once a week from July through the end of August. The Michigan statute stipu- lating that an individual must deposit with the court clerk, "a suns of money equal to 10 pee- crass of the bail but at least $10," is the basis of Cahill's case. He ts also basinsg iis case on a sism- ilar suit in Wayne Counaty. The second part of Cahill's case is focused on the right to jury trial regardless of the of- fense. Cahill says there is no legal basis for departing from constitutional law in regard to right to a jury trial for all traffic defendants. Cahill'S intent in the suit, which has class action status, is to obtain an "order of superin- tending control" against Thom- assen. Under this order all fu- ture people arrested would be informed of both their right to a jury trial and the bond law. Cahill said, "The constitution, the legislature, and the higher Michigan courts all state that people are guaranteed these rights. It is bad enough when a corporation or ordinary public officials violate the law. But when the courts don't follow their own rules, it's really in- credible,", The case has been assigned to Circuit Judge Ross Campbell, and a hearing is scheduled for September 14. O his iay Democratic presidential nominee George McGovern waves good- bye as he hoards a plane for Washington at Miami International Airport yesterday. McGovern plans to stay overnight in the capital and then fly to South Dakota,