Page Six rHE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November 7, 1970 j Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November 7, 1970 Draft resistersfind Canada 'harrowing EDITOR'S NOTE: One of the cur-. rent ironies in Canada is the status' of U.S. Army deserters and draft resisters who fled northto pro- test what many of them said was a growing militarism at home and a lack of personal freedom.;Under Canada's War =Measures Act recent- ly imposed to combat terrorism spawned by separatist groups, many of the Americans are finding life across the border somewhat har- rowing. Here is the story of one of them. MONTREAL (AP) - The Amer- ican deserter stopped. The man facing him had a gun. Policeman or terrorist? To a U.S. Army deserter in Quebec under Canada's recently impos- ed wartime security measures, it does not make much difference. The, deserter wheeled - too late. "Halt," said the man with the gun, quietly. The man, a police detective, beckoned with his pistol. And before the, day' was out, t h e American, 23, a veteran of Viet- nam who had deserted the 21st Division of the North American Air Defense Command, h a d been searched, questioned and ordered out of the country. Broke, frightened and aware that getting caught back in the United States woulld mean pri- son, 'he stayed in Canada. He sent for some money and went underground. Many of the 200 American de- setters and thousands of draft dodgers in Montreal were al- ready there. "We used to be a resting place, an open sanctuary for these kinds of people," says Pauline Vailloncourt, a political sci- ence professor with contacts in Montreal's deserter community. "Since the War Measures Act, though, this is clearly not the case." The government invoked the war measures Oct. 16 at the request of Quebec Premier Rob- ert Bourassa and Montreal May- or Jean Drapeau, who feared insurrection. Labor Minister Pierre Laporte and British dip- lomat James Cross had been kidnaped by the Quebec Libera- tion Front, a terrorist group seeking' independence for the province. Laporte was strangled by his abductors. Police began using the war measures to search and arrest without warrants. They took more than 400 persons into custody in 1,600 raids. Federal troops began guarding public figures and key buildings. Legally, t says Bernard Mer- gler, an attorney representing many of those detained under the war measures, American de- serters and draft dodgers should not be affected by the act. "There's nothing in the act that refers to them at all. They could be affected only if their presence wasn't legal in the first place-if, for instance, they hadn't applied for immigrant status. This was so even before the act," he explains. But practically, says Prof. Vaillancourt, the sharp increase in police raids made it much more likely that deserters who hadn't applied for immigrant status, might be picked up. "Just my luck," said the American deserter. "I came up here and find troops and police on the hassle-and that's just what I'd tried to get out of by - coming to Canada. Montreal was supposed to be a nice, quiet place where nobody bothers you."t He had come to Canada on Sept. 1. He panhandled and took odd jobs, like painting a couple's house for a few dollars and some food. He took a cheap room in the McGill University student community, shaved his beard and lived openly. Work was hard to find, but the students and street people were friendly. He thought he might go on to England, where he had lived with his mother as a child and where had joined the U.S. Army so he did not apply for Cana- dian immigrant status. Neither had several others among the 200-odd deserters he encountered in the Montreal area. But not many in the group were worried about it. "Until the war measure," said the deserter. "I was sitting in Drug Aid talking to friends-when you're on an acid trip and you Creak out they give you tranquilizers and calm you down-I wasn't on a trip but just talking to friends -when the first rumor came in. "Somebody said martial law had been declared. I decided this was one thing that had to' be taken into consideration. I split back to my place and I stayed there a couple of days, just sat and wondered what the hell was happening." Finally, he decided he could not sit in his room forever. He waited until 3 a.m. Oct. 20 and went back to Drug Aid. From there, he walked to a friend's basement apartment in a gray- brick building on a street corner. "I was in the process of being, busted," he said. "I didn't even get across the street before I saw the man with his pistol. I didn't know who the hell it was. I thought it might be the FLQ. But I played along because he had a gun. "He escorted me downstairs, where there were two or three more. And I saw they were cops. They had submachine guns and one had a rifle with a sniper scope on it." The deserter and four others were searched, taken to a police station, and then into a police van to immigration offices. He was given 10 days to leave Can- ada. Beyond that date, however, he was still in Montreal, growin another beard and thinking about cropping his wavy brown hair into a crew cut. He was practicing, a limp and talking about puffing out his cheeks and lowering eyelids with pads of cotton to chahge his appear- ance. For $10, said his friends, he could purchase a completely new set of identification papers. But he figured he would still try to "make it to* England." So he kept his U.S. passport with a 'peace symbol -tamped in blue near a whimsical notation: "Caution, may be hazardous to health." "It's a hassle," he said. "Com- ing up here from the U.S. these days is like jumping from the frying pan into the fire." Daily Official Bulletin SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7 Day Calendar Ger-ianic Languages and Literatures' and center for Coordination of Ancient ad Modern Studies: Holderlin Bicen- tennial Symposium, Multipurpose Rm., Undergrad. Library, 9 a.m. Football: U-M vs. Illinois: Michigan Stadium. 1:30 p.m. Soph Show: "Can-Can," Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre, 7 and 10 p.m. University Players: "The Odyssey: A Modern Sequel," Trueblood Theatre, 8 p.m. International Coffee House: Rive Gauche: "East Indian Night," Pound House, 1024 Hill Street, 8 p.m. Choral Union Series: Los Angeles Philharnonic Orchestra, Zubin Mehta, conductor, Hill Aud. 8:30 p.m. ORGANIZATION CuhNOTICES U Fellowship, Huron Hills Baptist Church, 3105 Glacier way, Nov. 8, 7:00 p.m. Film Special, "Urbana '70". Small Photo Club Meeting this Sun., 7:00 p.m. 3540 SAB. Members are en- couraged to bring their slides or pic- tures. tures.* * * * The Project Community presents a Children's Film Festival, Sat. 10 a.m. ao noon, Canterbury House - 330 May- nard St. (from Fantasia) A World Is Morn, Gulliver's Travels, Moon Bir d. Tickets at door or 2547 SAB. Admis- sion Charge. Dr. James H. McElhaney, head of the biomechanics division of the Highway Safety Research In- stitute and associate professor or mechanical engineering attended the 1lth International Congress of Anatomy h e l d in Leningrad,. Russia, last month. In the historical Summer Pal- ace he presented a paper, "' Pourous Block Model for Cancel- ous Bone." Prior to his arrival in' Leningrad, stops were m a d e ir, England to visit and confer with researchers a the Motor Indus- tries Research Association and the British R o a d Research Labora-' tory. THE ROSICRUCIAN COSMOCONCEPTION Occult textbook for Western World. Correlates religion and science; explains world mystery; describes invisible worlds, man and method of evolution, genesis and development of our solar sys- tem, astrology as a true science, Christ and His mission. 703 pages. Paperoid cover $3.00; cloth $4.50. -Write to: The Rosicrucion Fel- lowship, P.O. Box 713, Oceanside, Calif. 92054. . eb t e10 oe A Uce s A Vwb S to AUSTIN DIAMOND 1209 S. University 663-7151 JACK THE RIPPER? Palace defends duke Freddie Hubbard APPEARING Fri., Sot., Nov. 6-7-9:30 P.M.-3:30 A.M. Sun., Nov. 8-7 P.M.-12 P.M. IB13 CULTURE CENTER 17111 Third, Detroit Cover charge-No age limit-341-0770 Appeorinq Nov. 13, 14, 15-ROY HAYNES NM Read and Use Daily Classifieds LONDON U)) - Buckingham Palace officials came to the de- fense yesterday of the Duke of Clarence, great uncle of Q u e e n Elizabeth II, disputing beliefs that he may have been Jack the Rip- per, ghoulish murderer of the last century. The duke could not have killed at least two of the Ripper victims because he was away from Lon- don at the time, the officials said after delving through the palace archives. Thomas Stowell, eminent sur- geon who started the furor when he said he knew the identity of the Ripper, declined once more to name the nobelman he says was the murderer, but s a i d nothing likely to end speculation that the killer, known to have slain five London prostitutes and mutilated their bodies, was Edward, Duke of Clarence. London Sunday Times crime writer Magnus Linklater delved into Stowell's facts and descrip- tion of the high-born suspect and found they tallied with the ideas of another expert - Donald Mc- Cormick - who has just repub- lished a b o o k on the 'Ripper's gruesome career. Where Stowell refused to pin a name on his sus- pect, McCormick mentioned the Duke of Clarence. Officially, the duke died. of pneumonia in 1892, but some his- torians expressed belief he was a homosexual who died "crippled by syphilis in a mental hospital. Stowell said his suspect was a young bachelor w h o contracted syphilis on a world tour and was once arrested by police in a raid on a homosexual brothel. 4 I For the student body: FLARES by Levi Farah Wright Tads Sebring CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty Appearing Friday and Saturday nights E Ffull Faithi and Credi Ann Arbor's Greatest Rock Band Open 319 S. 4th Av Mon. thru Fri. 761-3548 Sat & Sun Mon. thru Thurs., no mini um charge READ -JAMES WECHSLER- in 'i I' I What is Circle K? 4 CIRCLE-K is a campus and community SERVICE organization If YOU would like to get involved in: --Working with disadvantaged children --Dealing with ecological problems in the Ann Arbor area --Restoring a run-down playground in the community --Entertaining hospitalized children --Raising funds to support campus and community service projects If YOU would like to: --Meet people --Have fun --Spend an hour or two a week helping someone else COME TO OUR , I I I