Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY PaeEgt H IHIA AL I AMCHITKA BLAST: Canadian protest rises against poposed U.S. nclea tes sie Election results (Tabulations are as of 2:00 a.m.) Winners are in bold-face type (*) Denotes incumbent Figure in parentheses is percentage of precincts reporting Races for governor $y The Canadian Press Demonstrations against . the United State's Amchitka Island nuclear test have gained mo- mentum in Canada this week. Government bodies, labor un- ions, student groups, women's organizations and anti - pollu- tion advocates have held pro- tests, or announced plans for them. Demonstrations are planned today in Niagara Falls, Windsor, Sarnia-Port Huron, Toronto, Re- High Court in final Sin (Continued from page 1) quickly added, the penalties which go with a man floating around on a . marijuana binge or 'staggering around drunk, or out on an over- dose of heroin are something for the legislature to decide." Ravitz, in his rebuttal further explained the entrapment of the possession charge. The courts have already ruled that Sinclair was unlawfully entrapped for al- leged sale. Since it was this en- trapped sale which gave rise to the h discovery of possession, the evidence is clearly inadmissible." gina, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver. Demonstrators say they will concentrate on the bridges to the United States in three of those cities: the Ambassador Bridge in Windsor, the Blue - Water Bridge at Sarnia - Port Huron, and the Peace Bridge in Vancouver. Meanwhile, a converted mine- sweeper with 28 peace advocates on board, The Greenpeace Too, steamed towards Amchitka, one t deliberates [Clair appeal As the hearing came to an endI Peace strike{ set for today (Continued from page 1) war is de-escalating" as a prime reason for decreasing popularity of war protests such as strikes and rallies among college students. 0"High school students are tak- ing up the slack in this area," he said, but also added that "college students are turning more to the solid power of the anti-war vote and committee action." He added that today's strike isi part of the build-up for the Nov. 6 anti-war demonstrations scheduledi for 16 regional centers around the1 country, including Detroit. The significance of the forthcom- ing Detroit demonstrations, said Fowler, will be the expected cross-A section of participants, especially; the labor element.- , Both the strike and Saturday'sI demonstrations are being sponsor-j ed locally by the Detroit Coalition to End the War, nationally by NPAG and the People's Coalition for Peace and Justice.1 Ravitz made one last appeal. "One thing we are all obliged to think about," he said, is what nine and a half to ten years means. Think where you were nine and a half to ten years ago. Think what Sinclair is being deprived of. This is the last place we have fo' justice." The courtroom emptied and the judges retired to take under ad- visement the appeal. There was no indication how soon a decision might come from the seven-man court, but Ravitz said he hoped it would be within four weeks. After the hearing the Rainbow people read a statement Sinclair had sent to the trial: "The buck stops here. Either I am a vicious criminal or a political prisoner. There is no middle ground." Leni Sinclair, Sinclair's wife, had b-rself chained and gagged to a chair wearing a sign reading "political imprisonment in the Supreme 'Court." Sinclair's actions were to protest the rejection of a motion by Sinclair that he appear in person and argue his own case. "This is an effort to dramatize the situation that John Sinclair is presently held in. Also attending the hearing were Sinclairs' parents. "John has convinced me, Leni Sinclair said, that the marijuana laws are used in a discriminatory manner to clout people over the head who the government wants to clout. As the crowd cheered, Sunny Sin- clair, Sinclair's .daughter, made her statement. "Free John Now" she cried. Jackie Vaughn III (D-Detroit), also at the hearing announced to the crowd that he and 10 col- leagues in the legislature have filed an amicus brief to free Sin- clair and have introduced a bill into the legislature to strike all penalties John is forced to suffer by. of the islands in Alaska's Aleu- tian chain. They plan to moor off Am- chitka's three-mile limit during the underground test firing of a five megaton Spartan missile warhead.' The device, which the U.S. A t o m i c Energy Commission (AEC) said last night would not be fired "before Saturday," has a force equivalent to five million tons of TNT. Critics of the test charge the explosion could trigger tidal waves and earth tremors and generate pollution hazards. Am- chitka is located on the San An- dreas fault. A Washington Federal District Court judge refused Monday to halt the test, finding unfounded the objections of environmental- ists that the AEC has withheld information about possible ad- verse effects of the test. Opponents of the test include the Canadian Federal Govern- ment, which last night announced it was sending additional civil defense personnel to British Co- lumbia for the test, and Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel. The test, code-named Canni- kin, has been personally ap- proved by President Nixon. The prototype Spartan warhead is de- signed as part of the United States anti-ballistic missile sys- tem. See earlier story, Page 3, News Digest. MISSISSIPPI (50 per cent) William Waller, Democrat ........... Charles Evers, independent...'....' KENTUCKY (33 per cent) Wendell Ford, Democrat ............. Tom Emberton, Republican........ .286,370 80,573 .276,923 .235,736 ' ' es Daily Official Bulletin WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3 mixed result yay Calendar Physics Discussion: B. Gidas, "Coup- ling Constant Analytical and Borel (Continued from page 1) Summability in Model Field Theories," Political experts had seen the Randall Lounge. 11 am. contest as a test of strength for Computing Center: W. Riddle, "Anal- ysis of Complex Systems," 130 Physics- outgoing Mayor Carl Stokes who Astronomy Bldg., Noon, had been the first elected black Anatomy Lecture: W. Ackerman, "Re- mayor of a major U.S. city. verse RNA Transcription," 4804 Med. Sci. 11, 1:10 pm. Stokes had thrown his support Ctr. for Human Growth & Develop- behind Arnold Pinkney, a black m't: 0. Mickelson, MSU, "Nutritional independent on the city Board of Production of Obesity," Towsley Ctr, Education.2pm LSA Coffee Hour: Special Guest, A low turnout in the city's pre- Roger Heyns, 2549 LSA Bldg., 3-4:30 pm. dominantly black sections coupled Zoology & Ctr. for Human Growth & with an unusually heavy vote in DevE M. Jacobson, Johns Hopkins. "Genetics vs. Environmental Effects in the white West side, however se- the Development of the Nervous Sys- cured Perk's election. tem," 1400 Chem. Bldg., 4 pm. Law and order police thief Frank Physics Colloquium: B. Donnally, Lake Forest Coil., "Polarized Protons, Rizzo won, as expected, in Phila- Deuterons, and Electrons from Meta- delphia in a race which shreded stable Hydrogen," P&A Colloq. Rm, 4 traditional party loyalties. pm. Statistics Seminar: J. Flora, "Bayes Rizzo, a Democrat running un- Non-parametric Selection Procedures," der the slogan "Rizzo means bus- 2440 Mason Hall, 4 pm. iness" made deep in-roads into Botany Seminar: E. McWilliams, "Comparttive Ecology of Three Coloniz- traditionally Republican Italian ing Amaranthus Species," 1139 Nat. Sci. neighborhoods, while the Republi- Bldg., 4 pm. can, Thatcher Longstreth, ran Dance Program: Master Classes, Gra- strongly among normally Demo- ham Technique, Barbour Studio, ele- mentary, 7:15 pm.: advanced. 8:30 pm. cratic blacks and white liberals. StatisticalResearch Lab: "CON STAT Longstreth, however, ran less and MEANTEST," Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30 strongly than expected a m o n g pm. ISchool of Music: Contemporary Fes- blacks, while Rizzo rolled up huge tival, Hill Aud., 8 pm. CORDUROY Slim Fits (All Colors) For the student body: LEVI'S Races for mayor CLEVELAND (66 per cent) James Carney, Democrat ...................44,456 Ralph Perk, Republican .................... 58,619 Arnold Pinkney, independent .............. 53,566 PHILADELPHIA (90 per cent) Frank Rizzo, Democrat .....................358,780 W. Thacher Longstreth, Republican ........303,085 BOSTON (100 per cent) Louise Day Hicks, Democrat................70,214 *Kevin White, Democrat .................'...112,875 SAN FRANCISCO (45 per cent) Joseph Alioto, Democrat ....................44,348 Dianne Feinstein, Democrat................ .24,854 Harold Dobbs, Republican ...................31,798 E. Lansing liberals win Bells .......$8.50 DENIM Bush Jeans $10.00 Bells .... $8.00 Boot Jeans . $7.50 Pre-Shrunk . $7.50 Super Slims . $7.00 CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty Wednesday, November 3, 1971 Hillel Foundation: F. Littel, Temple Univ., The Holocaust: Moment of Truth for Christians," 1429 Hill St., 8:30 pm. Rive Gauche : Lecture, J. Nystuen, 1024 Hill St., 8:30 pin. 1 (Continued from page I) first. Will missed the six-man cut off by about 400 votes. Summer primaries, like those of East Lansing, combined with other problems appeared to mini- mize the effect of the student vote in most parts of the country. The major problem has been voter registration, as only 21 states have temporary or final decisions SWP hopeful campaigns (Continued from page 1) nating in an end to capitalistic society. The party has run presi- dential and vice presidential can- didates since 1948, but the current campaign is the most intensive to date. She added that the party sup- ported the antiwar movement, the black movement, the women's movement, the chicano movement and others. Jenness said one of the purposes of her campaign was to provide a viable alternative to the Republi- can and Democratic parties, which she claimed are basically the same. Jenness, a native of Atlanta, Ga., has been active in SWP for several years. She will be on the ballot in 33 states this year, andl says she hopes to run the biggest socialist campaign since Eugene Debs ran for President in 1920. Jenness, 30, says she and her running mate, Andrew Pulley, 21, are unconcerned over the fact that they both are under 35, the re- quired age to serve as President. Jenness has previously run for mayor of Atlanta, and was a can- didate in the 1970 Georgia guber- natorial race. In her speech, Jenness likened the condition of prisoners involved in the shootouts at Attica to the condition of all people in America. She said, "People identify with Attica because they are reflections of their own struggle there." "The prisons show the racism that pervades America from top to bottom," she said. She 'said the SWP has no blue- print for the achievement of a so- cialist society, but that mass move- ments would organize around spe- cific demands which could iot be met by capitalistic society. "Then," she said, "socialism will come." 0 $6.98 4 which allow students to register in the towns where they attend college. Some of the rulings came after the registration deadline for this election, and in many towns, stu- dents ran into trouble with city officials in trying to determine their rights to register. However, in East Lansing the candidates felt the impact of the student vote both in the results and in the issues raised hroughout the campaign. Most were student- oriented, with candidates giving their views on environmental pro- tection, low-cost housing, reut- controls, and police-community re- lations. Several candidates also empha- sized the need for better com- munications between the city and the university. In addition, the "Project: City Hall" candidates made electoral reform a major issue of their campaign. They charged that the vAty's switch from a February to an August primary was an attempt to disenfranchise students not in town during the summer. In addition, they worked hard to make registration easy for stu- dents in the short time the new However, several students in- terviewed said they were unfa- miliar with the candidates' views, and a survey taken by a graduate communications c la s s reported that 42 per cent of the students could not identify the candidates. Griffiths, however, said the re- sponse of the students had been "gratifying."G majorities in the city's Italian and Jewish neighborhoods, provid- ing his margin of victory. Rizzo himself was the major campaign issue with opponents charging his law and order poli- tics meant suppression of the black community. In one of last night's few vic- tories for urban liberals, incum- bent Mayor Kevin White defeated, for the second time, his opponent, Congressional Rep. Louise Day Hicks (D-Mass.). Hicks was generally considered to be a "backlash" politician while White was viewed as a racial mod- erate. In San Francisco, controversial Mayor Joseph Alioto was re-elected to a second four-year term, scoring a sweeping victory over 10 chal- lengers. Alioto, who's record has been blemished by alleged connections with the mafia won easily over lawyer Harold Dobbs and Dianne Feinstein, president of the city Board of Supervisors. 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City.............. .....State. ......Zip........... .t,, l ;, { rA m >:. $395 0 .INCREASED SECURITY Rapes emerge as 'U' problem (Continued from Page 1) Those few victims whose cases do reach court, must -con- stantly prove their credibility' as a witness. Barbara Kurtz,women's ad- vocate at the University, claims, "This is one of the few cases where the victim must prove she is totally innocent, and this is hard for women to prove as long as commercials advertise wom- en as sexual objects." An initial investigation into a rape case usually 'entails, ac- cording to police Sergeant Wil- liam Canada, spending 20-30 minutes just getting to know the victim to assure that Canada will get the information he needs to arrest the rapist. One woman, who had been abducted and raped while walk- ing from her car to her sorority house, said that she had to relay Severyminute detail in chrono- logical order for about two to three hours during her prelimi- nary examination. "I was glad I did, because by morning I had blocked many of the details out of my mind and couldn't remember a lot of what had happened", she recalled. Before a jury, women often find is difficult to prove she "resisted to the utmost" the man's attack because in an as- sault situation many women fear they must either submit to their assailant, or be killed. Heyns talks on Berkeley years at coffee hour Roger Heyns, the controversial former chancellor of the University of California's Berkeley campus, will be the special guest at today's When asked what is the best way for women to react to an accoster, Canada says, "Most rapists get enjoyment out of resistance and the look of fear on their victim's face, so I can't say. Sometimes fighting back will only further infuriate the already insane rapist." Woman's advocate Kurtz be- lieves "women are unused to reacting physically but when there is no weapon involved, I would suggest some sort of self defense." When faced with the situa- tion one raped victim recalls, "I'm sure I didn't have any choice, this men could have crushed me with his bare hands. And all the time Boston Strang- ler ideas kept coming to me so I didn't try to resist." Another victim recalls, "They put a knife to my throat and said don't scream or we'll kill you.I didn't fight,sbelieve me, I was the mdlst passive docile person. I was just glad to be alive." Another woman who has ex- perienced rape says, "Now I carry a knife when I travel alone. It's only a two inch pocket blade, but it sure could startle someone." Policewoman Mary Smith ad- vises that although most types of tear gases are illegal to car- ry, hair spray is often just as effective-if you have time to get it out and aim at thie man's face. Smith also reminesces about some of the old methods, such as carrying a hat pin on the in- side of your coat, firmly plac- ing your knee where it hurts, and wearing old spike heels which have at least one pur- pose. But there is no pat answer or method to deal with a rapist, as their individual' personalities and motivations differ radically. Canada lists categories of rapists: "First there's the real rapist who could care less about his victim." "Then there's the man," he continues, "Who has been sex- ually repressed and will vent his frustration on anywoman on the street. Women who were victimized related varied encounters with both deranged, and sane men. "First he tried to seduce me," said one women, "then he just grabbed me and used me for his purposes. But afterward, he apologized and tried to give me some money." Another woman, raped by Vietnam veterans who spoke to her about all the "chinks" they had rapes1 overseas, told her, either put out, or we'll knock you out". "And then they wanted me to pretend that I enjoyed it", she related. A third victim confided that her assailants were "kinky" characters as they performed the sex crime as a male-fe- male team. After abducting her for four hours and raping her some place near Whitmore Lake, she was dropped off near Yost field house and told, "Don't tell anyone about this because it doesn't happen to nice girls". Again, her accosters wanted to give her money. "Rape," this woman con- cludes, ."is not something that should be sensationalized, all I really want to say about it, is to tell other women to be more practical". TG Delta Sigma Delta Fraternity FRIDAY, Nov. 5, 8-11 p.m. Live Bond & Refreshments 1502 Hill St. WEEK OF THE SIX MILLION WEDNESDAY, NOV. 3-8:30 P.M. Dr. Franklin Littel Director of Religious Studies at Temple University WILL SPEAK ON "THE HOLOCAUST; MOMENT OF TRUTH FOR CHRISTIANS" at HILLEL HILLEL FOUNDATION 1429 HILL ST. 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