f Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 13, 1972 1* GRAND OPENING z 0 GRAND OPENING GRAND OPENING GRAND OPENING GRAND OPENING GI heroin use jumps in Thailand 6~> to ยง t &very H . 66865 0 z z WASHINGTON (P)--The Defense forces in Thailand during the North matically over the past year, in as hard drug users. He defined Department yesterday reported a Vietnamese spring offensive, Wil- part because of the declining troop hard drugs as heroin, ampheta- five-fold increase in the use of bur's assistant, Maj. Gen. John population and widespread drug- mines and barbituates. The mili- heroin and other hard drugs among Singlaub, said ,only five-tenths of detection and rehabilitation pro- tary' population totals about 2.5 the 45,000 U.S. servicemen in one per cent of Air Force person- gra-,.s. million. Thailand. nel tested for heroin use turned He noted that in July and Of the 57,000, he said nearly half Dr. Richard Wilbur, the Penta- up positive. But in recent months, August not a single drug addict or about 28,000 have been rehabili- gon's chief medical officer, attri- he said, that figure increased to was found in Vietnam among the tated and returned to duty. An- buted the higher rate to the larger 2.5 per cent. GIs tested. He said the figures for other 14 per cent or 7,900 are still troop population, better techniques Most of the Americans in Thai- Thailand were not available. undergoing treatment, while about for detecting heroin use, and the land are Air Force personnel. Since the Defense Department 18,000 or 32 per cent were dis- availability of drugs in Thailand, Although the rate of drug abuse o p e n e d its world - wide battle charged from the services,, he said. where he said they are easier to increased in Thailand, Wilbur told against drug use in the armed The remaining 5 per cent or about come by than in Vietnam. a news conference that use of hard forces in Jurte 1971, Wilbur said 3,000 were transferred to the Prior to the buildup of U.S. drugs in Vietnam had fallen dra- 57,000 servicemen were identified Veterans Administration, he said. STUDIES CITED DES, morning-after pill, linked to cancer 0 z z aw '0 z z Y1 A. 0 at our NEW LOCATION 70 z z 316 South State St. (FORMERLY WA HR'S BOOKSTORE) t * A fine selection of New Books, Paperbacks, Hardbacks " Always a Sale Going on. Be careful - you can save to 80 percent at z Border's Book Shop on Fine Remainders. 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NOW 7.95, ap A Z Ou Or m _Z Z~ ?+ 0 dU OY m Z Z 0 r z z z c 0 m 0 m Z Z 0 -U z z 0 0 mU 0 0 rn Z Z (Continued from Page 1) for prostate cancer, it has beenf shown to be ineffective, and pos- sibly to induce cardiovascular dis- ease and internal blood clotting. Oral contraceptives, which are also synthetic hormones,are known to cause blood clotting in women prone to develop varicose veins. The hottest debate locally sur- rounds the use of DES as a morn- ing after pill. University Health Service was one of the first places to use the morning-after pill, and doctors say it has had consider- able success here in preventing un- wanted pregnancies. There is no danger to the wo- man who takes the morning-afterI DIAL 5-6290 "**** 4 STARS, HIGHEST RATING!" N.Y. Daily News PG BUTTERFLIE1 ARE FREE G ODI --WN 3ELEEJILICRRI Shows at 1-3-5-7-9:05 P.m. pill, so it will continue to be used, says Dr. Robert Anderson, Di- rector of Health Service. Anderson adds that so far, the only evidence of DES causing can- cer is in relation to females with abnormal sexual organs. "You can't possibly relate this to a nor- mal, healthy female," he 'says. Studies by Dr. Lucille Kuchera, of Health Service show the most serious side effect of the morning- after pill to be nausea and vomit- ing. Since the study was complet- ed only last year, no evidence of long-term effects is yet available. Kuchera, who has made previous statements to reporters defend- ing use of the pill, declined further comment at this time. But Donald Holstein of the Cal- ifornia Bureau of Food and Drugs points out that lack of evidence does not imply vindication of DES in any form. "The fact that studies done to. support the accepted 'safe' uses of DES at low doses are apparent- ly unavailable, should certainly cause the practitioner to hesitate to offer DES at high doses to his S\ I AND 1 M E1 ING1 217S J 2PM.- 2AM morning-after pill expressed the opinion that all women requesting the pill should be told about its possible dangers. "I would rather be scared and make an intelligent decision than ignorant and make an unwise one," she said. cattle being fattened for market. Findings that DES causes cancer in exeprimental animals h a v e prompted the FDA to limit this use of DES as well. A ban on DES in cattle feed will go into effectnext January, since studies showed that DES remains There is no general Health Ser- in the liver of animals after vice policy on administration of slaughter. the pill, Anderson says, or on what Even under the ban, farmers women are told before receiving it. i ill still be able tot implant DES "Health Service doesn't dictate in the ears of animals at birth. to any physician how to practice,' DES administered in this way he explains. "Each visit is a pri- spreads more slowly throughout vate encounter between the doctor the animals body. A bill recently and the patient." passed in the Senate orders a He added that Health Service "complete ban" on DES unless would "encourage" doctors to say tests prove implantation does not that the pill would not be given if leave DES residues in meat. patients for novel uses," he states. course, when my last period was, Even if DES should prove in the and if I had ever contraceptives," long run to be harmless to the wo- one woman said. "I was told that man who takes it, Herbst's studies the pills would make me a little indicate that there may still be sick and nauseous, but I was never danger of cancer to a child the told what the pills did, how they woman might already be carrying. acted, or what effect they would Some doctors at Health Service have on my system." say that for this reason they She said she had gotten the would not give the pill to any wo- pills in July or August of 1971, but man who might already be preg- that a roommate who took them nant and who felt that she could less than a month ago was given not have an abortion. virtually the same counseling. One Health Service doctor, who None of thewomen interviewed declined to be identified, claimed said they had beenasked about to tell all girls who felt they could abortion, even those who had re- not have an abortion about the ceived the pills recently. None cancer-causing effects DES might recalled being told about possi- have on their daughters. The doc- bilities of cancer in their off- tor adds that in two recent cases, spring. girls have refused the pill after be- For nearly twenty years, live- ing given this information, stock producers have used DES as One student who had taken the a "growth booster" in the feed' of there was any chance of preg- - - ;- nancy from a previous intercourse. MC ONEY NOTE Several women interviewed by The Daily say they were given lit-! BLACKPOOL, England (A) - tle counseling before getting the } Sign in the window of a Lanca- morning-after pill. shire loan company: "Month to "I was asked when I 'had inter- month resuscitation." Miiss J on her way! She's layered the scrambled look. . .glen plaid and tweed, by College Town. The mix of buoyant plaid and classic tweed give Miss J the season's best silhouette. 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