4 Page 2- The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 25, 1986 Inquiring Photographer By Dean Randazzoj "Do you think that the newly installed emergency phones will have a noticeable effect on rape around campus?" I Sebastian Dunn, Resident- al College senior: I think that it will have some effect, but since most rapes occur far from phones it's not the only thing that can be done to stop rape. Sheryl Trivers, Business school senior: Since I am an R.A. at Couzens I have made it a point to tell my residents where the phones are located because I think it will have a positive effect. I am pleased to see that some progress has been made to help prevent assualt on campus. Carmen Elston, LSA senior: I don't think they will because their locations are in places where a rape wouldn't occur. So as far as a preventative measure, I would say no. Geneva Kachman, LSA junior: No because the phones are not in secluded places. They should be in areas where rapes are more likely to occur. Who gets raped in front of the Chem. building? Mike Rumpf Urban planning graduate stu- dent; Yes, I think that they will help. The phones dis- tinguish that there is a problem and that some- thing is being done about it , out in the field where it all happens. I Marcia Milito, LSA senior: Yes, the phones will help but they wont get rid of rape altogether. Probably their strongest point is that they make the campus conscientious that a problem exists. Ralph Story, LSA English, lecturer: I can't say statistically but it should have impact. It will at least give women the feeling that they are protected. The phones are accessible, which is definitely a plus. Rape has been a problem for some time in Ann Arbor. Laura Apkarian, LSA senior: Rape is a violent and fast act. I don't see how someone would have a chance to get to a phone unless they knew that they were being followed. But if another citizen heard or Tim Shanahan, Engin - eering junior: The best that the phones could do is report a rape that has already occured. I don't. see how they will prevent a rapist from trying or how they will be helpful in catching a rapist after the act. Rob Fish, LSA freshman: Yes, I think that the emergency phones will make women feel more secure and potential rapists fear getting caught. IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS Chemicals flood into river MIDLAND, Mich.-Michigan environmental workers detected up to twenty industrial chemicals in the the Tittabawassee River after Dow Chemical Co.'s treatment plant flooded, but dont believe the spills endangered residents, an official said yesterday One chemical-hexachlorobenzene-was detected in amounts: higher than state water quality standards, said Terry: Walkington of the state Department of Natural Resources*: Saginaw district office. Since hexacholorobenzene is a cancer-causing chemical which quickly accumulates in fish, the state will monitor fish to detect: any contamination, he said. But he added: "We don't think the' quantity discharged is an immediate health or environmental concern." The tested chemicals have dropped "to background levels, and many of them are not detectable," Wilkington said. Some of the chemicals may have come from sources other than the Dow plant, he said. Medical f ield abuses drugs BOSTON-Nearly forty percent of doctors under age forty admitted in a survey that they used marijuana or cocaine to get high with friends, and a quarter of doctors of all ages said they recently treated themselves with mind-affecting drugs. Overall, more than half the physicians and three-quarters of the medical students who participated in the Harvard University survey said they have used drugs at least once for self-treatment, to get high or to help them stay awake. Only one percent of the doctors surveyed said their drug use had ever caused them to give poor care to patients. "When psychoactive drug use becomes a fad and is approved by the broad spectrum of society, just about all groups get involved," said Dr. William McAuliffe, the study's director. "That includes physicians and pharmacists as well, the people who are usually the keepers of the drugs." French Prime Minister urges UN to halt terrorism UNITED NATIONS-Prime Minister Jacques Chirac of France urged the United Nations yesterday to stamp out international terrorism, which has cost his country nine lives in the past two weeks. Chirac told the 41st General Assembly that terrorism is the most urgent challenge to the world and requires concrete counter- measures, including joint action to improve security in the air and on the sea. "The tragic events in Istanbul, Karachi and Paris prove once again that terorism has become the.systematic weapon of a war that knows no borders or seldom has a face," Chirac told delegates. Nine people have been killed and more than 160 injured in five bombings in Paris since September 8. Space agency to probe comet NEW YORK-The European Space Agency has committed $400 million to a mission to land a space probe on a comet and bring back as much as 30 pounds of its nucleus to Earth, a scientist said. yesterday. "We're not just talking about a hypothetical mission-it's going, to fly," said John Wood of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass. The launch could come as early as 1995, he said, but likely will be at least several years later than that. Wood, a geologist, is a member of a committee of U.S. and European scientists who have been meeting for a year to propose, experiments for the unmanned flight and are j.ust completing their. report to the European Space Agency. Police intensify search for suspected murderer Jackson WRIGHT CITY, Missouri-Police intensified the search yesterday for a former mental patient sought in a three-state rampage of murder and abduction. Authorities said they believed he was still in the area although the trail was growing cold. "We're assuming that he's still around here," said Missouri Highway Patrol Capt. John Ford. "We're talking about a man who has demonstrated that he has no respect for life or property. If he were out of this area, I think something would have happened by now." Federal, state and local law officers have been hunting for Michael Jackson, 41, since he allegedly went on a crime spree that started Monday in Indianapolis. Ford said the search would not be called off unless evidence surfaced that Jackson was out of the area. He pointed out that there had been no new reports of abductions or stolen cars. 11 E I 11 saw someone might help. in trouble, it GROUP THERAPY~ FOR SEXUALLY ABUSED WOMEN Therapy Group forming at The Counseling Center for women students who had sexual experiences with members of their families and who experience contin- ued problems in living. If you have any question about your participation in the group being appropriate, please call. Group size is limited, and a modest fee will be charged. Group will meet 1%/ hours weekly from September to April. CALL 764-9466. ANTIQUARIAN BOOKFAIR SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER28,10-5 50 Mid-West Dealers Mich. National Guard Armory 2500 S. Washington, LANSING, MI Free Into: Admission 517-332-0112 Li~J~ U~jj~f~tm 128K-5122K $179 512K-1024K $259 128K-1024K $389 180 Day warranty PHONE 747-6629 LEAVE MESSAGE -ru $UAI/N0L6$ COA'liIN6!/ wE~vc GT kq 6 OtvETN6'/, 0'- .0\0 POLICE NOTES Students injured by b.b.'s Two West Quad residents were accidentally shot with a b.b. gun Tuesday night during the annual South Quad-West Quad shouting match. According to Bob Pifer, assistant director of public safety, the case is under investigation with the Ann Arbor Police department. Thereare no suspects in the shooting and no leads on where the weapon was shot from. Neither victim went to the hospital, Pifer said. Jason Meyer and Steve Lee, engineering freshmen, were in a room with about ten other residents on the fourth floor of Rumsey House during the shout- out, when the bullets were shot into the room. Officials investigate fire Officials at the Ann Arbor Fire Department are investigating the cause of a fire at 2738 Hikone that injured two people and killed one Tuesday afternoon, according to Robert Murphy, assistant fire chief. The fire was confined to one apartment in a six-unit townhouse complex. Firefighters removed a woman and her two children from the blaze, while the woman's husband escaped by jumping about ten feet from a window, Murphy said. One of the two children died Tuesday after being taken to. the University Hospital. The woman is in the University Burn Center, and the child is in Mott's Children Hospital. Four of twelve firefighters were sent to the University Hospital for heat exhaustion, Murphy said. -Melissa Birks Correction Michigan Student Assembly LSA representative John Fitzgerald was dismissed from the assembly Tuesday night because he missed 12 meetings. His resignation from the assembly will not be accepted because he was dismissed before he could resign. ' Replacement names will be submitted by LSA +iA n+ rmvnment A MS A I Io A I hJ~e f3idtqmui Dai Vol. XCVII -No.16 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. Editor in Chief....................ERIC MATTSON Managing Editor ..RACHEL GOATLIEB News Editor ...............JERRY MARKON C.ty Editor.......................CHRISTY RIEDEL r'eatures Editor....................AMY MINDELL NEWS STAFF: Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, Laura Bischoff, Rebecca Blumenstein, Nancy Braiman, Marc Carrel, Harish Chand, Dov Cohen, Tim Daly, Rob Earle, Ellen Fiedelholtz, Martin Frank, Lisa Green, Stephen Gregory, Mary Chris Jaklevic, Philip Levy, Michael Lustig, Kery Murakami, Peter Oerner, Eugene Pak, Martha Sevetson, Wendy Sharp, Susanne Skubik, Naomi Wax. Opinion Page Editor...............KAREN KLEIN Associate Opinion Page Editor.................................HENRY PARK OPINION PAGE STAFF: Rosemary Chinnock, Gayle Kirshenbaum, Peter Mooney, Caleb Southworth. 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