Southeast Asians oust Indochinese refugees Wonttnuedfrom Page 9 BUT THE THAIS' greatest anger is directed at the Vietnamese. Military Chief of Staff Sen. Saiyud Kerdphol described the exodus of Chinese from Vietnam and Cambodia as a "racist expulsion that resembles those of the Nazis during World War II." The refugees say Hanoi has per- secuted and intimidated Chinese for the past two years. The plight of ethnic Chinese in Vietnam was one cause for the current hostility between China and Vietnam. Southeast Asian officials also cite security as a reason for barring future Indochinese refugee terntory. Already fearfi military muscle-flexing refugees are a conveni communist infiltrators insurgencies in such Thailand and Malaysia. AND OFFICIALS sa manpower, money, and needed to take care of t become intolerable. What has particul Southeast Asian official relations with Vietna evidence that Hanoi has goal "refugee program The Michigan Daily-Friday, June 15, 1979-Page 11 s from their This, according to refugees and ranking authorities in the region, ul of Vietnam's allegedly includes getting rid of anti- , many say the communists who cannot adjust to the ent conduit for new system, emptying Indochina of its who might fuel 2 million-plus ethnic Chinese, and countries as filling official coffers by extracting "exit fees" from the refugees. y the drain on SOME OFFICIALS in the region other resources claim Hanoi is purposely creating he refugees has strains in Southeast Asia in order to throw the region off balance and arly angered facilitate eventual Vietnames s and worsened domination. m is growing Hanoi has agreed to a U.N.-assisted forged a multi- program of direct emigration from 'of its own. Vietnam to other nations, Senate may approve pot as cancer, glaucoma drug Bly ADRIENNE LYONS Marijuana may be used as a therapeutic drug to treat patients suf- fering from the effects of cancer chemotherapy and glaucoma although it is still illicit, according to resear- chers. However, the drug's legal status may soon change if the state Senate ap- proves a bill which would establish a research program in Michigan to study the uses of marijuana. According to Dr. Charles Koller, an oncologist at University Hospital, "Nothing else works quite as well as this drug (in the prevention of side ef- fects of cancer chemotherapy treat- ments." DR. BARNETT Rosenberg, a Michigan State University bio- physicist, said patients receiving chemotherapy generally experience severe nausea and vomiting. According to Rosenberg, this occurs because the blood carries the drug to a certain por- tion of the brain which reacts to the substance as if it were a harmful chemical consumed by the patient. Doctors can only speculate how marijuana helps, Rosenberg cautioned. "The marijuana blocks the sites (por- tions of the brain) or desensitizes these areas," Rosenberg said. "Some people suggest marijuana makes you so high, you don't care if you are nauseous." Rosenberg, however, said he disagrees with this claim. In the treatment of glaucoma, a disease in which intra-ocular pressure is increased, marijuana "dilates veins in the eye," said Roger Winthrop, state coordinator for the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML). "Glaucoma isn't curable or reversible. If left undiagnosed or untreated, it can lead to blindness," Winthrop said. IF THE BILL is passed, doctors will obtain the marijuana from a federal farm in Mississippi which -grows marijuana legally for research pur- poses. Currently 12 other states have legalized marijuana for therapeutic use. The Senate Health and Social Ser- vices Committee, chaired by Sen. Ed- ward Pierce (D-Ann Arbor), sent the bill to the Senate floor Tuesday. A vote is expected soon from the Senate,, "perhaps even Monday," said Pier- ce's aide Terry Redford. Michigan's program would be modeled after one in New Mexico, and would be run by the State Public Health Department. Discoveries of the use of marijuana in arresting glaucoma first occurred in 1971 at UCLA, Winthrop, said. The discovery became public in 1974. WINTHROP CITED the case of one man arrested for cultivating his own marijuana crop. UCLA tested him and his sight stabilized from taking marijuana. "He should be blind," Win- throp said. The use of marijuana as an antidote to chemotherapy's side effects was discovered in a patient being treated for testicular cancer with cis-platinum, a drug Rosenberg said normally causes nausea in 100 per cent of its users. Rosenberg said the man told the doc- tors the reason he never felt ill after the treatment was because he was smoking marijuana. Rosenberg cautioned that marijuana does not work for all paitents, but reac- tions to chemotherapy, especially cis- platinum, "have been so severe, that some patients have been refusing treatment." IN TREATING a victim of glaucoma or chemotherapy side effects, experts agreed that smoking marijuana seems to work better than taking the drug in the form of capsules or injections, although both currently are being developed. "It's better, or more stable (when) controlled in smoking form," Winthrop said. "Marijuana is not water soluble, and blood is mostly water." Problems have arisen in treatment of persons who are antagonistic toward marijuana smokers, or persons who have never smoked it, Rosenberg said. The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at MLB FRIDAY, JUNE 15 $1.50 ORIGIN OF THE SPECIES: PUNK AND PROTO-PUNK 7 & 10:20-MLB 3 Films on DEVO, ELVIS COSTELLO, RICHARD HELL and the VOIDOIDS, the RAMONES and the DEAD BOYS. Promo films and documentaries give you every side of the New Wave punk rock movement. ISLAND OF LOST SOULS (Erie Kenton, 1933) 8:40 only-MLB 3 Hear the classic line "Are we not men?" in this adaptation of H.G. Wells' "The Island of Dr. Moreau." A scientist on a South Sea island speeds up evolution by transforming beasts into half-men. WithCHARLES LAUGHTON and BELA LUGOSI. "Ingeniously fashioned."-N.Y. TIMES. Tomorrow: COMING HOME DIR. CLAUDIA WEILL 1978 'GIRL FRIENDS' Screenplay by VICKI POLON CAST: Melanie Mayron, Anita Skinner, Eli Wallach, Bob Balaban. An exploration of intimacy involving a day-to-day approach, on-screen per- sonalities that-for a change--seem like real people, and flashes of humor. Susan, a young photographer living in New York, feels betrayed when her friend and roommate, Anne, gets married and moves out. Coping with new- found loneliness, she tries out a new roommate, two attempted affairs (an artist, then a rabbi), and emotional self-sufficiency. "If 'kiss, kiss, bang bangl' can describe the archetypal male movie, the feminine film tends to turn away from the exclamatory to examine the emotional territory in between."-Newsweek TONIGHT at 7:30 & 9:30 Nat Sci Aud $1.50 PIRGIM/ALTERNATIVE ACTION