algf~ilign atly Ninety-four years of editorial freedom Vol. XCIV, No. 21-S Topigh N. Y. firm plans new textbook store in Union By THOMAS HRACH The opening of another college bookstore on campus may increase the competition for students' textbook dollars - but it probably won't start a price war, according to local bookstores. Barnes and Noble, a New York firm, plans to open a new store on the ground floor of the Michigan Union this December. The advantage the com- pany will have to initially break into the market will be its location, close to the place the University Cellar moved out of two years ago. BARNES AND Noble has become a major supplier to colleges around the country with stores on 45 different college campuses. Yet most of their stores, like those at Wayne State, Cleveland State and the University of Akron, face no competition. Still, Bill Maloney of Barnes and Noble boasted that his company has never failed to operate a successful store in any city since their founding in 1873. Maloney said the new store would *. be a "full line college bookstore," but he did not elaborate on what they would sell besides textbooks. "The potential in Ann Arbor -is great," said Maloney. "The increased competition should be healthy and it should be good for the entire student community." SINCE FOLLETT'S got out of the textbook business last summer, studen- ts have been limited to shopping at either Ulrich's Books or the University Cellar. Now Barnes and Noble is at- tempting to market amid the intense competition for the student dollar. "We think that the University of Michigan is one of the top five schools in See NEW, Page 5 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, July 8, 1984 Fifteen Cents Sixteen Pages Assocatred rress Workers try to clear debris and cut their way into damaged cars to rescue survivors of yesterday's train wreck of the Montrealer in Williston, Vt. 4, injures more than 100 From AP and UPI WILLISTON, Vt. - An Amtrak passenger train with 278 people aboard derailed while crossing a washed-out culvert yesterday, tumbling cars into a streambed, killing at least four people, injuring more than 130 and trapping passengers in a crushed sleeping car. Workers using a crane and blowtor- ches rescued at least five people from the crushed car, but an undetermined number remained trapped inside more than 12 hours after the accident. Rescuers used stethoscopes against the side of the sleeping car to detect movement within, but they said there were no signs of life. NINE CARS of the 13-car Montrealer jumped the weakened track around 7 a.m., officials said. Three cars were mangled as they piled into each other after plummeting down a 30-foot gully in northwestern Vermont. Three people were pronounced dead at the scene, said state police. A fourth person died at the Medical Center Hospital of V ermont in nearby Burlington. the death toll was expected to go higher once rescue worgers were able to open up a crushed car at the bottom of a three-car pile-up. "BODIES WERE just falling every which way. People were screaming for help," said passenger Frank Coles of New York City. "We felta huge jolt. The track was all bent up like a pretzel," said passenger William Armstrong of New York City, who as sleeping when the train derailed. Helicopters and buses were used to ferry out the dead and most seriously See DEATH, Page 7 Cablevision to pursue pirates By DAVID VANKER Ann Arbor Cablevision has begun a campaign which. it hopes will all but eliminate cable piracy by the end of the summer. Television and newspaper ads which began ap- pearing last month aim to discourage residents of the company's viewing area from using its services illegally. "NOW IS AS good a time for (the crackdown) as any," said Cablevision general manager Sharan Wilson. During July, she said, people using services they are not paying for will be allowed to come for- ward without fear of prosecution and without any liability for the services already used. Cablevision plans to seek out and prosecute cable pirates in August. The National Cable Television Business Association estimates that the theft of cable equip- ment and services costs the industry between $500 and $700 million a year. "The whole emphasis of this campaign is to let people know this is a crime, like going into the market and stealing a carton of milk," Wilson ex- plained. WILSON LISTED four types of cable theft: tam- pering with the receiving console; reactivating discontinued service; intercepting a cable signal with a dish antenna or with illegal wiring; and stealing Cablevision equipment. About half of all cable theft involves tampering, she said. Ann Arbor presents particular difficulties, Wilson said, because of its ever-changing population. "I think you probably have more of the theft of See LOCAL, Page 7 Inside: * The Jacksons opened their long-awaited Vic- tory Tour in Kansas City yesterday. See Page 2. " A group of Salvadoran refugees came through Ann Arbor last night on their way to sanctuary in Detroit. See Page 3. " President Reagan has broken one too many of his 1980 campaign promises. See Opinion, Page 6. Los Lobos are a quartet which deserves praise. See Arts, Page 10. * Two Michigan graduates captured spots on the Olympic team. See Sports, Page 16. Outside: Sunny and warm with a high near 80.