cl be LItt]an IEIII Ninety-six years of editorialfreedom Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, March 12, 1986 Vol. XCVI - No. 109 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Ten Pages B Ecstasy, a users into a s marring thei found its way While rum( white powd dangerous t amphetamin the drug will including bra The Unite Agency bann as MDMA, Ecstasy: Drug 3y AMY MINDELL about its effects have been plagued by lack of prior research on the drug. Despite this drug hailed for putting its obstacle, they continue to probe into a sub- tate of mental euphoria without stance that remains popular among studen- ir ability to think lucidly, has ts for recreation and therapists who use it to to the University. get patients "in touch with themselves." ors fly among students that the ACCORDING to Laura, a Residential ler or capsule is no more College senior, using Ecstasy makes "your ban its chemical cousins like body feel very fluid, mentally you are in a es, researchers speculate that state of euphoria, you feel good about your- lead to serious physical effects, self and warm toward other people. Ecstasy fin damage. makes you a lot more sociable, and one of d States Drug Enforcement the real advantages is that mentally you're ied Ecstasy, chemically known still very clear." but scientists still concerned "It makes you very, very loving and you can't conceive of violence. It's really over- powering and you know you're on a drug. It helps you get inside yourself, but you want to be with other people too," says Peter, an LSA junior. Students find Ecstasy fairly easy to get on campus. It costs $15-$20 a dose. Laura says at the most "you could have to wait up to two weeks to get it." "It's really easy to get as long as you know people, have connec- tions," agrees Lori, an LSA junior. MOUNTING evidence that the drug leads to dangerous effects remains difficult to leads to danger at 'U' prove definitely, according to Dr. Edward Domino, a professor of pharmacology at the University. He said scientists are reduced to studying drug abusers - not controlled subjects to determine the effects of the drug. "I'd like to see a lot more research on, it," says Domino, an internationally known authority on drugs. Other authorities agree. Dr. Leo Hollister a professor of pharmacology at Stanford University, has researched Ecstasy but says, "the evidence is skimpy. It could be a, lot worse than other hallucinogens. It is very difficult to find solid research." Hollister was unable to find any formal IN......- clinical studies done in the past five years. Hollister's report on Ecstasy attributes no deaths to the drug but he said the drug could still prove lethal. And many Ecstasy users report un- pleasant side effects, including muscle ten- sion, nausea, rapid eye movements, fain- tness, chills, sweating, and physical' exhaustion. "IT WIPES you out the whole next day," says Randy, an LSA senior who has used the drug. "It's so exhausting mentally and See AUTHORITIES, Page 5 Ruling may affect student funding By NANCY DRISCOLL The Supreme Court's refusal Mon- day to let Rutgers University require students to pay a fee to help support the New Jersey Public Interest Research Group could spell disaster for other PIRG and student organizations. The justices, without comment, let stand a ruling that Rutgers' man- datory $4-per-semester fee-even though it is refundable upon request-violates some students' con- stitutional rights. The Public Interest Research Group here (PIRGIM) is currently petitioning to get a similar funding system at the University. THE RUTGERS case, Galda vs. Bloustein, represents the first case in which the "right not to associate" doctrine has been extended to studen- ts who oppose a student fee because some of that fee is used for political 'This case expands students' rights as consumers.' - Joseph Galda Rutgers law student students," said Joseph Galda, who filed the suit. "This case expands students' rights as consumers." Galda, who is now a third-year law student at Rutgers, began lobbying against the fee seven years ago when he was an undergraduate. MEMBERS OF PIRGIM say the funding system they are lobbying for differs from the system used at Rutgers. The system PIRGIM wants would let students check off a box to indicate that they do not want to pay the fee. "Everyone has the right not to pay it outright. It's completely different than the New Jersey PIRG system," said Gary Kalman, a member of PIRGIM. The University's head lawyer, however, said the Supreme Court decision not to review the case makes the funding system PIRGIM is petitioning for unconstitutional. "The essential philosophical point is that if you must pay it and take some action to take it back, then it's wrong," said Roderick Daane, who has followed the progress of the Rutgers case. See CASE, Page 2 Associated Press Blown away Kentucky resident Tim Ward walks through the remains of his neighbor's kitchen after Monday's severe storms. At least 20 tornadoes ripped through Indiana, Ohio, and Kentucky, killing six people and injuring 70 more. organizations. "Ultimately, it's a victory for Gramm-Rudman harmful, says 'U' economist By ADAM CORT The Gramm-Rudman Act, a controver- sial law intended to eliminate the federal budget deficit is a bad piece of legislation resulting from a breakdown in the Federal budget-making process, says a University researcher. F. Thomas Juster, director of the In- stitute for Social Research and an economics professor, said, "Given the arithmetic of the total budget, there is simply no way that the deficit can be eliminated without a tax increase of significant proportion, or what is the equivalent: closing a significant number of tax loopholes." "THE PROBLEM is that Congress and the Administration can't agree on their budget priorities," he said. "Since the normal process of political bargaining isn't working, some other process must be put in place that forces the outcome even if it involves significant costs in terms of ad- verse side effects," Juster said. This process is the Gramm-Rudman law. If Congress and the administration fail to agree on a budget that will reduce the deficit by $36 billion, the outstanding amount will automatically be eliminated by cutting allocated funds for all eligible federal programs by pre-determined per- centages. For example, if a budget in any given year only cuts the deficit by $34 billion, $2 billion in cuts will automatically be made. In the 1986 Forecast Issue of Economic Outlook USA, an IS R. publication, Juster critiques the law and reveals what he thinks are inadequacies. "UNDER Gramm-Rudman, political posturing is rewarded and responsible compromise is (probably) penalized," Juster wrote in the report. Juster's major concern is that the law will disrupt a process by which budgets are negotiated. "Prior to Gramm- Rudman, the administration and the Congress had to find a way' to reconcile their different perceptions of priorities, or to live with the political consequences if they could not come to agreement," he wrote. Under the law, he warns, there will be no rational prioritizing of expenditures. Normally, policy makers react to changing circumstances that require changes in allocations. ... .. .. . . ... . .. ..... ... ... City Council candidates discuss S rent rates By SUSAN GRANT All 10 candidates for the Ann Arbor City Council agreed last night that the city should not impose rent control on landlords, but Republicans were generally more adamant than Democrats in their opposition. Speaking at an annual forum spon- sored by the Ann Arbor Board of Realtors, the candidates were grilled about their positions on issues affec- ting housing and real estate develop- ment. EACH CANDIDATE delivered two- minute opening and closing statemen- ts and fielded 12 minutes of questions from realtors. "At this time I'm against rent con- trol," said Dave DeVarti, the Fourth Ward Democratic challenger to Republican Gerald Jernigan. "I see you people as the primary protectors of (affordable) housing." See CITY, Page 2 Woo Superherostrikes Ann Arbor Students may lose parking lot By MICHAEL LUSTIG A proposal to eliminate the last 16 student parking spaces at Oxford ghousing has sparked dissent between esidents and administrators. David Foulke, assistant director of residential operations, said that while a final decision on the fate of the parking spaces has not been reached, the spaces will probably be taken from the students and added to the, parking facilities of the Oxford Con- ference Center. He added that parking for Oxford staff members will not be eliminated. THE conference center is run by the Executive Education Divison of the Graduate School of Business. The Ox- ford facilities were opened when the business school outgrew its first con- ference center, but it has since acquired additional space with the construction of the new business school building. Attendants of many of the seminars drive in and have not always had enough parking, Foulke said. He said convenient parking is a way of luring businessmen to the Oxford center facilities. Foulke said that when Oxford housing was built there was an initial commitment to provide parking for some residents, that commitment is no longer feasible. THE conference center was built to offset losses in revenue that resulted from a high vacancy rate in the residence hall. Since the construction of the center, Foulke said, the losses have turned into profits. He added that "all students living in residence halls benefit because if Ox- ford was losing money, costs of living in residence halls would have to be in- creased to make up the difference." Referring to students opposition to their loss of parking spaces, Foulke said, "I know there is some unhap- See OXFORD, Page 2 By MARC CARREL Behold! The Man of Molecules, the mega-superhero who tracks down evil-doers while "on patrol" in Megatropolis, has come to Ann Arbor. Woo! It's Megaton Man. Megaton Man, a comic charac- ter in a series of comic books published by Kitchen Sink Press of Princeton, Wisc., is a parody of the superhero genre. And many of his super-good deeds take place in Ann Arbor. "I had friends who went to Michigan," said Donald Simpson, the writer and artist for Megaton Man. "Scenes come from visits I've taken to Ann Arbor. People assumed I went there, but I didn't. I saw a lot of black-and-white foreign films there, though." JUST ABOUT anything at the University-or anywhere else, for See SUPERHERO, Page 2 i m a 0 U 0 r0 a O u 0 Cj 0 TODAY Rhino sex A CONGRESSMAN says he's trying Ato block a request by the Houston Zoo for a $25,000 federal grant to study the mating habits of two rare white rhinoceroses. Ren. Jack Fields Glug, glug EMBERS OF Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity pooled their resources and shelled out $1,500 to bring the fastest beer drinker in the world to Ann Arbor on Mon- INSIDE- DRUG TESTING: Opinion looks at implications of testing athletes for drugs. See Page 4. ose r ma -m U S~ .~E' -