.The ichigan Daily Vol. XCII, No. 25-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, June 9, 1982 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages AS A VAILABLE AS A PIZZA City'speed'market active By ELIZABETH SCOTT It's Sunday afternoon. The phone rings. * * * 3:00 "Hello?" "Hello, Lizzie? David. Listen, I've got a Chinese midterm tomorrow mor- ning and 100 characters to memorize until then. Got any speed?" "Well ... no - but my friend might." "I need it by tonight." "That's cutting it pretty close. I'll see what -" "Call me back in 15 minutes. See what you can do." David abruptly hangs up. ** * 3:03 "Hello?" "Annie? It's Lizzie. Listen, got any speed?" "How many hits?" "One's good. But Annie, I need it by tonight." "Jesus! All I've got now is what I'm using for a Chinese midterm tomorrow. I have to memorize over 100 charac- ters." "Yeah, I know how it is." - "Let me call you back in a few minutes to see what I can find. 3:10 * * "Hello?" "Hey, it's Annie, Lizzie. Got you a hit. 75 cents for a Black Beauty. Come by in around a half hour to get it." "It's not for me. It's for a friend, David. Is it all right if he comes around?" "Sure. See you in history lecture." "Thanks, Annie." In forty minutes, David got his speed. In 18 hours, he got a B-plus on his mid- term after studying all night because his eyes wouldn't close and let him sleep. "Speed" refers to any pill, capsule, or powder, comprised of one or any com- bination of amphetamines, caffeine and a variety of chemical additives. IN ANN ARBOR, because it is a relat- ively large town, and because of its hospital, but especially because of the students at the University of Michigan, speed's accessibility is as wide-spread as its large demand. Students rely on speed to help them keep up with their studies. While over- the-counter drugs such as No-Doz are sold to prevent drowsiness, speed is more popular among students. One reason is that speed is the "in" thing to do. Bought from a dealer, it's sneaky and therefore exciting. Speed also causes significant weight loss, and in an era when "thin is in," people, See SPEED, Page 10 Testimony given on Leo Kelly's mental state By GEORGE ADAMS Leo Kelly "had a severe psychological break, and was not in control of his actions" at the time of the April 17, 1981 Bursley murders he is ac- cused of committing, a professor of psychiatry from Michigan State University testified yesterday. Dr. Thomas Gunnings, a clinical psychologist and MSU professor, told jurors that, based on the examinations he gave Kelly last October at the request of Kelly's attorney= "I reached the conclusion that the client (Kelly) was suffering from schizophrenia of the paranoid type and he was not able to judge right from wrong or stop his ac- tions." KELLY, 23, is accused of the shooting deaths of his fellow University students Douglas McGreahan, 21, and Edward Siwik, 19. Gunnings said he believed that Kelly truly could not remember the events surrounding the shooting, as Kelly had testified. "He made a bonafide effort, almost a struggle, to recall events, but could not," Gunnings said. "I thought it was authentic amnesia." GUNNINGS SAID he discovered af- ter his examination that Kelly had long suffered from nightmares, which revealed 'a fear of destruction, of being killed." The nightmares, accor- ding to Gunnings, featured people See KELLY, Page 2 Crepes galore Daily Photo by JACKIE BELL Lila Chehov, seated in high-chair, hasn't yet developed a taste for crepes like her mother Jessica (left) and friend Susan Karoub-Syrpis (right). They dined yesterday at Chez Crepe, a sidewalk cafe located on Main Street. Ypsilanti sets control on arcades By CHARLES THOMSON "I THINK where you have a place cades cannot be located within 1,000 where kids can come, you've. got a feet of a school, bar, or another arcade. Specialtothe Daily responsibility to the community," Jim Cerene Tangalakis, part owner of the YPSILANTI- The City Council Chapman, general manager of Flipper Fantasy Zone, said she supported the passed an ordinance Monday night to McGee Amusement, said yesterday. ordinance because it would make it control video arcades-apparently with "The city has been forced to do it (pass easier for her business to enforce the full support of the city's arcade owners. the new ordinance) because some ar- rules it currently has regarding young The' new rule, even though it cade owners in other places have video-game players. establishes, for the first time, licensing failed." Tangalakis said she would rather requirements and fee schedules for Yp- Passed by an 8 to 3 vote, the new or- have schoolchildren at class during silanti arcades, was hailed by-two of the dinance requires all "coin-operated school hours than in her arcade. "As far city's arcade owners as a necessary amusement devices" be registered as I'm concerned, education is it," she step toward maintaining adequate with the city. It also requires that all said. business standards. arcades be licensed, and that new ar- See YPSILANTI, Page 2