Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, August 13, 1971 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, August 13, 1971 War comes early to Harrogate St. (Continued from Page 3) "And that's what I shall tell the British army." George Caddell is the other son. He lives around the corner in Cavendish Street. He heard the shooting and decided to get to his mother. George, a work supervisor for the city corporation, said: "I opened the front door. There was a soldier outside. He told me to get back in. "I told him what I was about. I wanted to get to my mother. He pushed me back and said, 'If you don't get inside I'll shoot you.' "That's supposed to be pro- tection. They're not fighting the terrorists but the terrorized." Next door, lives 66-year-old Miss Alice Canavon and her in- valid sister. "Two of the soldiers kicked the front door down and charged upstairs and pushed a rifle through the bedroom window," said Alice. Across the road Sean and Martin Murray were sharing a front room bed. Sean is 7. and Martin 3. Their sister Jean is 21. She pointed to three bullet holes in the bedroom wall. The nearest was two feet above the childrens' pillow, the others a few tortes higher. The boys slept through it. The neighboring terrace is called Earl's Court Street. Kath- leen Quinn was standing at her front door, listening to the trou- bles as Belfast women do. She is in a hospital now. Neighbors said a bullet tore off three of her fingers. "A soldier went berserk," one of them said. "I saw a sergeant run down the road yelling, 'Who's shooting? What the hell are you shooting at'?" Across at No. 9, Mary Hen- derson's 21-year-old son Martin was among those "lifted" for internment in the wave of ar- rests which on Monday trig- gered the week's riots and gun- fights. The arrests were aimed at the outlawed Irish Republican Ar- my, which wants to unite Nor- thern Ireland with the predomi- nantly Roman Catholic Irish Re- public. Was Martin one of the out- laws? Mrs. Henderson's answer was inconclusive. "I know my son in the house," she said, "but I don't know hin outside. You don't follow around a man of 21." The soldiers took away her hus- band and her younger son Thurs- day morning. They took away, too, a tricolor - the green, white and gold flag of the Irish Re- public. Mrs. Henderson said the flag wasn't hers: "Some friends just left it here." Oscar Henderson and the youngster were freed within hours. Oscar had a black eye and a graze on his forehead. "They gave us the rifle butts," he said, Complaints like these are mul- tiplying amid the carnage of Belfast. In this case, as in most others, thse army's answer is that its men came under attack from snipers and gasoline bombs as they moved in to clear rebel bar- ricades. The army's problem is that any move against the barricades choking the city is seen in the Catholic areas as the probable forerunner of more arrests. Oliver Napier, a Roman Catho- TV & Air Conditioner RENTALS Hi Fi Studio 121 W. Washington NO 8-7942 Box Offices Open 7 P.M. Show Starts at Dusk Free Kiddie Playounds lic lawyer who is a leader of the middle-road Alliance party, sees fear of internment as the key to the current situation. "The overwhelming majority of Catholics are diametrically op- posed to the IRA. Too many, due to intimidation and terror, are afraid to say so," he said. "But on one issue, virtually every Catholic is unitedhAnd that is an almost psychopathic revulsion and fear of internment. "Many Protestants might find this hard to believe. I plead with them to accept it as true. ''Many decent Protestants may find the Catholic reaction to internment childish and irra- tional. "It may be irrational, but there it is. You cannot argue logically against the inbuilt re- vulsion of one-third of the popu- lation Sokey's friends don't py with nmatches. 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Filmed by David Lean ya4!s Dagtet JPH MILLSLEOMAN SARAH M"DRTY E-TROCO M SUPER FMUM16 ( &GP o w4 PLUS-FRANK SINATRA "DIRTY DINGUS MAGEE" I Fall Term Is Almost 57 Subscribe NOW to r AND GET ALL THIS:- * NEWS . SPORTS " REVIEWS e"ADS Clip this coupon and mail in TODAY-don't miss out Yes, I would like to subscribe to THE MICHIGAN A * DAILY. I agree to be billed later. $10.00 (delivery), $11 (mail)-SEPT. THRU APRIL $5.50 (delivery), $6 (mail) -per Semester (Subscriptions outside Ann Arbor must be pre-paid) NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP .D. NUMBER SiQ FALL TERM Q FALL AND WINTER TERMS --..q.. r. r....r ..r rtr r ...r. wr. ARM Michigan Film Society Ecumenical Campus Center the fine fim series SATURDAY Aug. 14 ONLY Ingmar Bergman's Academy Award-winning Through a Glass, Drkl HARRIET ANDERSSON Max von Sydow Gunnar Bjornsrrand "A powerful personal experience that makes one's senses reel Through Harriet Andersson, one sees the mysteries that move within the dark glass of the human soul."-N.Y. Times. "'Round alt four performers, like summer lightning, plays the fire of Bergman's intelligence and artistry."--New Yorker First Baptist Church 512 4. Huron Ave. off State 7:30-9:15-10:40 p.m. limited free parking free coffee $1 contribution