UPEISun October 14, 1932 3% NIELEAR WAR: UNSTABLE FINGERS ONTHEBUTIUN ‘ A Harvard medical school professor says the risk of nuclear war is increasing, due to incompetence, mental instability and drug abuse among soldiers at nuclear weapons facilities. Dr. James Muller says the army removes 5000 soldiers from nuclear assignments each year- mostly for alcohol and drug abuse—including about 250 each year dis- missed for using LSD or heroin. The risk of an‘ accidental nuclear attack grows , Muller says, as the superpowers build more complicated weapons—reducing the warning time before an attack—and as third world countries gain access to nuclear arms; .without the technical expertise to control them. "We‘ve gotten away with avoiding an accidental nuclear war," Muller says, - "for 20 or 30 years, but we can't get away with it forever." One Day at Paint Lapreou... NO Haas/N 6! flat valve isn‘t For Hue f Lawnsprfnk/ers . , ./,// STUDENT SPECIALS Cut. Blow Dry & Iron \ Rog. $15.0“ $10.0“ KATHY’S Beauty Salon 325 Unlvorsfly Ave. 892-3131 ' 6 TERRY DUNTON Recent Work Oct. 5 -'- 29, 1982 Opening Got. 5, 8 pm. ‘ The Great George St. Gallery Charlottetown, .P.E.l. 'spenttimeineverynejor' ' Manitoba, to Derchester in ROGER CARON: ‘A'S'IORY 'OF LIFE BEHIND BARS ~ WCamn knows about Canada‘s penal system—and he'hms about crime. He was sixteen. when first con- victed for breaking arfl entering. Over a perios of tummy-four years he s thirteen in all! Caron's autobiography Go- ! was published in and won the Governor General's Award for non- fiction. 'For Caron, the completion of his book meant the discovery of dignity and self—worth, as writing replaced crime as his career. Caron talks without self pity from an insiderézs point of view. Roger Caron will be speaking on October 18, at 7:30 pm . Presented'to you by the UPEI ' Student Union. prison across the country, New Bruns‘wick. He was dttbed' 'Mad Dog ‘Ca’ron' by the press for ' a_