Thursday, August 12, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Thursday, August 12, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Street people get free fun By JIM IRWIN In an effort to offer local street people free recreational activities suited to their interests and needs, the Summer City program was begun on June 1, and, its coordinators feel, has continued to run very successfully. Every Monday; Wednesday, and Friday a blue school bus rented for the program picks up a load of people on the corner r ' of State and N. University streets and heads for nearby lakes or activities such as horseback riding, fishing, hiking, canoeing, .5| and, on one trip, organic farming. On Tuesdays and Thursdays Summer City meets at Ozone House, a local home for runaways, and volunteers teach leather work, candlemaking, astrology, yoga and folk music. Summer City also sponsors the weekly Wednesday rock concerts on People's Plaza in front of the University's Adminis- tration Bldg. Although the Summer City program was created primarily for the Ann Arbor street community and local young people who don't have anything to do, it is open free of charge to anyone who wants to participate. The bulk of the participants have been local street people and jr. high-aged youth, according to the program's coordina- tors, but they have also included a number of University stu- dents and even a 70-year-old woman on one trip. The program is staffed primarily by volunteers and funded by the Ann Arbor city government. Lunches for participants have been donated regularly by several women's organizations. According to Denise Moreault, one of Summer City's co- ordinators, the program grew out of recognition that there were practically no summer jobs available in Ann Arbor, and that a growing number of street people were having trouble finding food or community recreation programs to meet their interests and needs. -Daily-Gary vmlan Summer City is not a prefabricated program just handed to interested paticipants, Moreault says, but a flexible, unre- See SUMMER, Page 7 Summer City sponsors (ai( the famed blue bus Belfast fighting continues ,as death toll reaches 23 BELFAST, Northern Ireland 0) Factional warfare in the rubble of Belfast's barricaded streets claimed five lives yesterday, raising to 23 the number killed in Northern Ireland's current wave of violence. Latest to die was a civilian cut down in Bel- fast last night by a hail of gunfire aimed at British soldiers. An army spokesman described the victim as "a completely and utterly innocent person" talking with friends near a military patrol. Although there was a comparative lull in Bel- fast last night, the fighting has been almost continuous since dawn Monday. It has left more than 100 persons injured and thousands home- less. About half the shops and offices in the city center were closed. With the bulk of bus services suspended, few civilians were getting to work. Food shops in outlying areas reported a run on supplies, and shortages from a break down in the distribution systems. The first victim of the present outbreak died Saturday. The others fell during intensified vio- lence following massive arrests by British troops of suspected terrorists of the outlawed I r i s h Republican Army - (IRA). The suspects have been interned without trial. Late Show Tonight 10 p.m. I An IRA leader, who arrived last night in Dublin, capital of the Irish Republic, said his men were running short on arms and ammunition and would not have enough "if we have to continue to fight the British army. "It seems a clear tactic of the army to en- gage our men in gun battles so that our supplies will run out and leave the Catholic community helpless." Civil rights in jobs, housing and voting had been the major demands of the Catholic minor- ity in Northern Ireland, until the most recent wave of violence this year. Extremists from the IRA, which wants to make divided Ireland into one state, have since mounted a terrorist cam- paign that has taken attention away from the civil rights dispute. Britain has more than 12,000 troops in Pro- testant-dominated Northern Ireland. Informed sources in Dublin estimated recently that the IRA had 1,000 men under arms in the British- ruled province's six counties, British Home Secretary Reginald Maudling met in London for 90 minutes Wednesday with Foreign Minister Patrick Hillery of the Irish Republic. No details were disclosed, but Hillery was said to have pressed for an emergency conference of the leaders of London, Belfast and Dublin. SUMMER WOMAN WITH A ROSARY around her neck finds a British army sharpshooter on her door step in Belfast's Market area yesterday. Joseph E LOv'ne presenis a Mke NrCtOis Ftm si r g ~a Nc t-oi") " Canoice Beiger "'CARNAL KNOWLEDGE' I have experienced only three or four movies that I was genuine- ly sorry to see end. I was sorry to see 'CARNAL KNOWLEDGE' end" vincent Canby N.Y. 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