r i mt t n til Vol. LXXXII, No. 60-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, August 10, 1972 Ten Cents Twelve Pages tempien wins race; Bullard, Postill score By CHRIS PARKS A landslide margin of over five thousand votes in Wayne and Monroe Counties, allowed State Sen. Marvin Stempien (D-Livonia) to overtake Walter Shapiro and win Tuesday's Democratic Congressional primary in the 53rd District. Shapiro, after running up a three to one edge over Stempien in Washtenaw County, had held the lead for most of the night. As confirmed totals came in from outside the county Past meets present Democratic presidential nominee George McGovern is flanked at a breakfast yesterday by former running mate Sen. Thomas Eagleton of Missouri to the left and by the confirmed choice, Sargent Shriver on the right. (See story, Page 2). BELFAST PROTES ~ i Catholics BELFAST, Northern Ireland 4P)--Militant Roman Catholics launched yesterday a massive anti - British protest punc- tuated by bombings, gunfire, hijackings and picket vigils outside police and army posts. The violence left a man dead in Newry, where three guer- rillas plant-d a bomb in a ser- vice station. The victim, who was believed to have been prim- ing the charge when it detonat- ed, was the 502nd fatality in three years of Northern Ire- land's bloodshed. The British, however. cap- tured Martin Meehan. a leader of the militant Provisional wing o- the Irish Republican Army, (IRA) in a sweep into the Ar- doyne District of Belfast. It was a major coup for the British bcausv he was one of the moAt wa',t-d aunmen in Noythern reland. He and two comrades made a sensational escape from Bafast's Crumlin Road jail last December. Thousands of demonstrators spilled on to Belfast's rain- swept streets before dawn in a display of anger at the first anniversary of internment without trial regulations that put 700 IRA suspects and sym- pathiz rs in detention. As the protests went on, there was strong speculation in Belfast that the British admin- istrator. William Whitelaw is ready to end internment within a month and open the way for talks on a political settlem-nt. Whitelaw is still holding 283 men in the heavily guarded in- ternment camp at Long Kesh outside Belfast. Meanwhile, soldiers e's.where in Belfast said they shot two guerrilla gunmen. The army claimed that at least one, who was dragged away by comrades, was killed. Three soldiers wore slightly injured. The carefully orchestrated protest began at precisely 4 a m., the hour when the army a year ago barreled into IRA strongholds and lifted suspect- It will be fair and partly cloudy, with a high in the lower 70's. Tonight will be increasing- ly cloudy with a low in the low- er 50's. launch street battle yesterday morning, however, piro and eventually beat him by 1,664 votes - about five per cent. In the other primaries: -Perry Bullard, with 2,730 votes, won a close three-way race in the Democratic state representative race, edging out Peter Eckstein with 1,958 and Helen Forsyth with 1,913; -Fred Postill ran away with the Democratic sheriff's nomi- nation, beating his nearest op- ponent by about 4,500 votes; -City Attorney Jerold Lax was eliminated from the circuit court judge race, finishing last in a field of five candidates; -Undersheriff Harold Ow- ings won as expected in the Re- publican sheriff's primary; -Kathy Fojtik and Elizabeth Taylor won Demicratic county commissioners primaries in the 14th and 15th districts respec- tively, and -A proposition to give the Huron - Clinton Metropolitan Authority a haif-mill taxing authority to construct parks was defeated while approval was given to a constitutional See PRIMARY, Page 12 Stempien crept up on Sha- Tuition suit hearing set A hearing has been set for Aug. 24 in Washtenaw Circuit court for the suit challenging the Uni- versity's method of determining if students must pay out-of-state tuition rates. Ann Arbor attorney Arthur Carpenter filed the suit 1 a st March on behalf ofesix students who pay out-of-state tuition rates. The suit challenges the Uni- versity's ruling that a student is a Michigan resident only if he or she has lived in the state at least six months as a non-stu- dent. Carpenter seeks to end enforce- ment of the ruling and to require the University to grant credit or refunds to all students who have been registered to vote while paying out-of-state tuition since the suit was filed. ed guerrillas in a bid to smash the. organization. In Andersonstown, Belfast, nearly the whole Catholic pop- ulation poured on to the streets. beating metal garbage can lids on the sidewalks, setting bon- fires and stoning the troops. Bomb blasts and gunshots echoed in the streets of Bally- murphy, New Lodge and other Catholic areas. Rioters in the Falls quarter hijacked three buses and a truck and set them ablaze. Also in the Falls, a bank was hung with effigies of Ger- ry Fitt and Paddy Devlin,, leaders of the Catholic - orient- ed Social Democratic and La- bor party, which this week broke the Catholic embargo on talks with Whitelaw. There were similar demon- strations in Newry - where rioters hijacked more buses and set them on fire - Coalisland, A r m a g h and Londonderry, where British troops last week occupied two IRA strongholds. AP Photo Over the bridge, through the woods On their way to patrol action, two South Vietnamese tanks amble across the bridge linking Ilue to a series of defensive firebases south- west of the city. The bases have been the scene of recent fighting and artillery barrages.