Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, May 13, 1971 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, May 13, 971 Street drugs may be harmful (Continued from Page 3) stitutes included amphetamine -One sample purchased as and scopolamine. psilocybin, a hallucinogen, con- According to Lamps, the re- tained only PCP; sults of the study are helpful in -Samples of methylenedioxy- making known the problems of amphetamine (MDA), a d r u g bad street drugs, but he s a ys available in great quantities in "People are still going to have the streets last summer, c o n- good trips on bad drugs a n d tained this drug but in addi- bad trips on good drugs - there tion to other drugs. One sample is just no way of knowing of MDA contained only LSD; "There's often no rationality and to drug taking. A lot of people -Drugs which were frequent- are just out of touch with their ly found in mixtures or as sub- bodies," he says. PLEASE NOTE DIAL TIME SCHEDULE! 5-E290 PATI~tIS BEST! BEST PCTURE 1 4W innE rrof i .F . AC MY AWARDS BEST DIRECTOR P tiOfG'C.Sc. rf/ KARL MALDEN id'I"PAIN* RflfN" IasF,, Shown Daily at 3:30 and 8:45 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST SCREENPLAY SHOWN DAILY AT 1:35 AND 6:45 'Brass': Hip versus corn Continued from Page 2) Most of the acting was quite well done. William Hall was a sufficiently earnest army man turned freak, and Robert Arm- strong as Fuzzio, the f a m i y leader, deserved more and bet- ter lines because he was quite funny given the opportunity. Judy Reicker was a humorous Lt. Trudhomme, although her character as a man-hungry fat girl sometimes became offen- sive - not her fault, of course. At best, The Brass and Grass Forever, was like a production of one of those parodies of mu- sicals from Mad magazine. The satire was not at all sharp; Hut it doesn't really matter where The Brass and Grass Forever is concerned. I for one liked it better than the music of the prize winning Company. SMC leader to speak Monday (Continued from page 1) that since yams are nearing for his school's students, Camejo would not be able to ipeak there if asked to. Pioneer High School principal Theodore Rokicki has declined comment on the incident. ECONOMIST WARNS: Ecological interest may fall (Continued from Page 3) for it appears that health, safe- ty, and environmental factors do not have a significant effect over the long run upon purchase decisions," Wilhelm says. Wilhelm cites several reasons for what he believes has prompt- ed the apathetic attitude to- wards environmental issues. Consumers, he says are not willing to make the sacrifice of higher taxes for environmental improvement or higher prices for safer products and efforts by industry to stop pollution. "If one were to add up t he total of what it would cost to make all the improvements en- vironmentalists have been ask- ing, it would run to hundreds of billions of dollars. Wilhelm also believes the pub- lic doubts the credibility of the environmental campaignhbe- cause many of the fears which have been expressed are based on doubtful standards and re- search. "The recent scare over mer- cury poisoning, for instance, leaves one wondering if any of the so-called experts know what they are talking about. We have seen fishing in the G r e a t Lakes banned because of the discovery of mercury compounds in the fish. "We have seen the govern- ment force the withdrawal of I DIAL62-6264 Core of STATE &orLIBERTY STS. NOW THE ELECTRIFYING BROADWAY HIT IS ON THE SCREEN! thousands of cans of tuna from the market because of the pre- sence of mercury . . . And yet the government and the experts cannot tell us what levels of mercury in food are danger- ous to humans over either thhe short run or the long run," says Wilhelm. Wilhelm believes one of the chief reasons for the public's lack of concern for environ- mental issues is simply that they have become "turned off". Be- causethe issues have been over- stated, he said, people are no longer paying much attention to them. A recent poll of Ann Ar- bor area residents, however, seems to indicate that, in Ann Arbor at least, the public is not losing concern over environ- mental issues. A 70.3 percent majority of residents who answered t he questionnaire said they were prepared to pay higher taxes for government anti-pollution measures. A 65.5 per cent ma- jority said they were willing to pay higher prices to support the cost of anti-pollution mea- sures by industry. An 81.2 per cent majority said they favored stronger govern- ment action to protect c o n - sumers. The poll was sponsored and analyzed recently by Rep. R a y - mond Smith (D-Ann Arbor and was answered by about 7,000 area residents. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication o the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to room 3528 L.S.A. Bldg., before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publica- tion and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items appear once only. Stadent organization notices are not accepted for ph- lication. For more information, phone .4-270. THURSDAY, MAY 13 Da y Calendar AmericanH s eritage Night: Olymple Peninsula State of washington, Mich. Leagu Cateria, 5 p.m. spring Film Festival: "Charly," AuI A. Angell Ball. 7. 9. 11 p-i- Scottish Country Dance: Coed, in- struction, women's Athletic Bdg. o, Fcrest St.. Upstais